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COPY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCT. 87. 1937.\nNUMBER 188\nNippon Plane Again Fires on British\nBUILDING OF A\nFRAME SURFACE\nPLANT AT MICHEL\nTO BEGIN AT ONCE\nMay Start on Limited\nProduction in Month\nor Six Weeks\nCAUSE OF GREAT\nFIRE IS UNKNOWN\nFERNIE, B.C., Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014\nGangs of workmen today labored\nin smoke and smouldering ash,\nclearing the site of yesterday's\ncolliery fire at Michel so reconstruction might begin without delay.\nOfficials of the Crows Nest Pass\nCoal Company which operated the\ncolliery said temporary frame\nsurface plant would proceed at\nonce. Fire pumps today continued\nto pour tons of water Into the debris.\nCompany spokesman Bald limited coal production might be resumed In a month or six weeks.\nEight months or a year will be\nneeded to Install a new permanent plant,\n$750,000 DAMAGE\nAT LEAST\nOfficials said they could not estimate accurately the damage caused by yesterday's early morning\nblaze, but \"suggested\" the lowest\nfigure would be $750,000. That figure would probably be increased\nwhen inspectors can examine equipment at first hand.\n(Continued on Page Three)\nSCHACHT TELLS\nOF RESIGNATION\nBERLIN, Oct. 26 (AJP)-Pr. Hjal-\nmar S-hic.il announced informally\ntoday his resignation as minister of\neconomics had been accepted by\nReichsfuehrer Hitler, but Nazi officials denied any decision concerning him had been reached.\nDr. Schacht told a group of guests\nat a party to Douglas Jenkins, United States consul general, who is\nleaving shortly for London, he considered himself discharged from his\nduties in the ministry since yesterday.\nDr. Schacht said, whimsically:\n\"The official announcement of\nmy resignation will be made yesterday, today or tomorrow.\"\nTo this, authoritative government\nsources replied:\n\"How can Schacht say this when\na decision has not even been made?\"\nMarler Appeals\nto the Canadians\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014A call\nfor Canada and Canadians to take\ntheir rightful place among the nations and do their share to promote\npeace and understanding in the\nworld was issued tonight by Sir\nHerbert Marler, the Dominion's\nminister at Washington.\nIn an address at a dinner given\nby the Canadian Club of New York\nin honor of himself and Lady Marler, Sir Herbert said these aims\ncould be achieved by \"preservation\nof our national unity, the development of our country, consultation\nwith our sister members of the British commonwealth, the preservation of the most friendly and intimate relations with the United\nStates and the application of methods of conciliation with other nations.\"\nBRUSSELS MEET DELAYED\nBRUSSELS, Oct. 26 (AP)\u2014The\nforeign office announced today\nthe Brussels nine-power conference set for Oct. 30 to seek an\nend to the Chinese-Japanese conflict had been postponed until\nNov. 3\u2014because of the crisis created by resignation of the government of Premier Paul Van\nZeeland.\nJudge Disagrees as \"Monty\" Is Acquitted\nby Jury in Seven-Year-Old Robbery Case\nJURY TAKES VA\nATTLEE TAKES THE\nGOV'T. TO TASK\nFOR ITS \"WEAK\"\nFOREIGN POLICY\nSir John Simon Calls\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>- -Attention to the -\nArmament Plans\nMAXTON SLAMS\nPALESTINE POLICY\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP)-The\nBritish government was pledged\ntoday to the search for peace In\nthe far east and Spain aa the King\nopened parliament In a ceremony\nsurpassed in color only by his coronation.\nThe speech from the throne, delivered by the King In the house\nof lords, noted Great Britain's rearmament \"now Is making rapid\nprogress\"; forecast \"energetic\nsteps\" to protect the country's\npopulation from air raids; and declared the government would\nbroaden its social policy.\nSir John Simon, chancellor of the\nexchequer, led in the house of commons for Prime Minister Chamberlain, who suffered a gout attack.\nATTLEE   CRITICAL\nClement Attlee, leader of the Labor opposition proposed a motion\nJAPAN MOPS UP\nThe photographer took his life In\nhis hands to secure this excellent\nphoto of Japanese \"mopping up\"\noperations in the Chapei district of\nShanghai. \"Mopping up\" is the .jniU\n'ft_ry_lfphefnl_tic teYin for stamping out whatever life is left after\nthe artillery bombardment has done\nits work.\nfor formal debate next Friday,\nsaid:\n(Continued on Page Two)\nPattullo Only One\nSitting Continuously\nSince 1916 Election\nVICTORIA, Oct. 26 (CP)- Premier Pattullo drew laughter at the\nopening of British Columbia's 19th\nlegislature today when he observed\nhe was the only member of the\nhouse who had been a member continuously since 1916. He hoped the\nhouse would recognize the fact he\nhad thus attained his majority, the\npremier said.\nOnly two other members of the\npresent legislature served in the\nhouse when the premier won his\nfirst seat\u2014Hon, John Hart, finance\nminister, and Hon. K. C. MacDonald, agriculture minister. They\nhave not served' continuously, however.\nTHREE DIE IN\nPLANE CRASH\nCOWLESVILLE, N.Y., Oct. 26\n(AP) \u2014 A red-wirl^ed airplane\ncrashed in a mushy field near here\ntonight, and farmers found in the\nwreckage the bodies of two men and\npart of a woman's body.\nFrom papers found in the ship\nCoroner James A. Kneller said the\ntwo men had been identified as Pilot Richard Babcock, 23 of St. Johns,\nVt, and Austin Feuchtwanger, 27,\nof Riverside, Conn. The only other\nperson in the plane was believed\nto have been Feuchtwanger's mother, Mrs. Austin Feuchtwanger.\nSCHOOL DISTRICTS ADJACENT TO\n(RESTON BEHIND CONSOLIDATION\nCanyon 38-3 in Favor,\nand West Creston\nVotes 9-3\nCRESTON, B.C., Oct. 26-An almost unanimous vote in favor of a\nproposed consolidated district high\nschool at Creston has been recorded\nso far in three interested districts\nin vhich ratepayers have marked\ntheir ballots\u2014Arrow Creek, Canyon\nand West Creston,\nFollowing a 100 per cent favorable\nvote at Arrow Crcok Monday after*\nnoon, a meeting at Canyon Monday\nevening recorded a vote of 38 to 'A\n:n iavor in the second lmgesi of\nthe nine school sections which would\nbe embraced in the proposed consolidation.\nTuesday afternoon Alfred Spencer\nV\nt-\nJames Cook and J. E. VanAckeren,\nthree special committeemen elected\nto present the case for consolidation, were at West Creston and at\nthe close of the rate payers meet-\nin*; the vote was 9 to 3 in favor of\nthe new plan.\nTho favorable consideration shown\nat West Creston is notable in the\ncreation of the new high school\nwill necessitate more than 100 p^r\ncent increase in the West Cvccton\nschool tax rate,\nCanyon's approval is also noteworthy as Canyon has successfully\noperated a one room high school,\nleaching all grades, for the past\nthree years.\nMr. VanAckeren of the committee\nof three is a member of Canyon\nschool board md Mr Spencer is a\nformer trustee at Canyon.\nTonight the committee is holding\na niLcting at Wynndel.\nManitoba Has Three\nNew Paralysis Cases\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 26 (CP)-Wee\ncases of infantile paralysis, two\nfrom Winnipeg and one from Portage la Prairie, were reported to\nManitoba health authorities today.\nThe numbr of Manitoba cases since\nJuno totals 270 compared with 487\nlast year for the same period.\nDEADLOCK IN VOTE\nON AUSTRALIAN\nSENATE\nSYDNEY, Oct. 27 (Wednesday) (CP-Reuters) \u2014 A close\nbattle for senate scab developed today as proportional representative ballots were counted\nfrom Saturday's general election in Australia.\nWith results still to indecisive to indicate whether the\ncoalition government had retained its grip on the senate or\nhad lost control to Labor, figures were issued to show voting in South Australia' and\nQueensland was a virtual deadlock.\nIn South Australia 113,776\nvotn; were counted for government candidates against 113,651\nfor Labor. In Queensland it was\neven closer, 198,403 for the government and 198,448 for Labor.\nHEATED MEETING\nSEES POWERS IN\nDEADLOCK STILL\nON SPAIN CRISIS\nRussia Faces Possible\nDiplomatic Isolation\nfor Her Stand\nPOWERS AGREE\nON COMMISSION\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (AP)\u2014Soviet\nRussia faced possible diplomatic\nIsolation in the 27-natlon non-intervention committee tonight after a heated meeting at which the\ncommittee decided again to refer\nthe whole Spanish problem to the\ngovernments backing \" efforts to\nisolate the Spanish war.\nBelligerent rights for tbe con\ntending Spanish factions and unanimity In granting those rights\nwere still chief causes of the committee's deadlock despite minor\nconcessions by both the1 Russian\nand   Italian   representatives,\nThe next committee session was\nset for Friday.\nOnly one major barrier was hurdled\u2014an agreement on establishing\na commission to determine the num\nber of foreign volunteers fighting\non each side in Spain.\n(Continued on  Page Two)\nFORMER SLAVE DIES\nPREECEVILLE, Sask., Oct. 26\n(CP).\u2014Walter G. Prattler, 94 year-\nold negro, twice sold as a slave, and\nwho drove a mule team with the\nUnion forces in the American Civil\nwar, is dead. Born in Missouri in\n1844 he often related how he had\nseen his father and mother sold in\nslavery and he had been sold twice\nhimself.\n$25,000   MORE   TO\nFINISH VERNON\nARENA\nVERNON, B.C., Oct. 26 (CP)\n\u2014Vernon ratepayers today voted favorably on a $25,000 bylaw\nwhich will complete and equip\nwith artificial ice a new sports\narena here.\nA year ago an earlier $25,000\nbylaw was endorsed to provide\nfor the construction of the arena\nto its present stage.\nMedicine Hat Has\nThree New Cases of\nInfantile Paralysis\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta., Oct, 26\n(CP)\u2014Three new cases of Infantile paralysis were reported\nhere today, all from the district\nnorth-east of Brooks, Alta, The\nthree raised the total number of\ncases reported from this city and\nthe surrounding district to 76. No\ncases have occurred in the city so\nfar this month.\nPREMIER KING HAS\nNO WORD OF THE\nWINDSORS' PLAN\nOTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP)-AI-\nberta's legislation affecting\nbanks and newspapers was stud-\nled at today's cabinet council\nbut no decision on the government's sland will be made\nknown before Thursday, Prime\nMinister Mackenzie King stated\ntonight. A cabinet council is\nscheduled for Thursday ami at\nits close, he intimated, some announcement might be made.\nQuestioned on appointment of\na successor to Lieutenant-Governor Bruce of Ontario, whose normal term of office expired yesterday, Mr. Mackenzie King said\nthere had been no resignation\nand no new appointment, and\nMr. Bruce would carry on for\nthe present.\nThe prime minister was questioned on tbe possibility of the\nDuke and Duchess of Windsor\ncoming to Canada in the course\nof their forthcoming visit to the\nUnited States. He said he had\nno information of the Duke's\nplans, other than what he read\nin newspapers.\nHOURS TO CLEAR\nHOLLYWOODMAN\nLISTENERS CHEER\nJudge Prevents John\nMontague Speaking\nto Jury\nFRIEND OF GREAT\nIN FILMS SMILES\nHOLLYWOOD, Oct. 26 (API-\nDebonair John Montague, acquitted tonight In Ellzabethtown,\nN.Y., of a seven-year-old robbery\ncharge, Is coming back to Hollywood for an ambitious seven-year\nprogram as a movie actor, radio\nentertainer and professional golfer.\nMontague, whose amazing, almost Incredible exploits on the\nlinks helped win him friends with\nHollywood movie personages, has\nsigned a contract with Everett\nCrosby, Bing's older brother, calling for $1,000,000 over a period of\nseven years,\nBing, who signed an affidavit\nattesting to Montague's good character, was en route to Hollywood\ntonight with his brother from\nSpokane, Wash.\nELIZABETHTOWN, N. Y\u201e Oct\n26 (AP)\u2014John Montague, fabulous Hollywood golfer, was acquitted tonight by an Adirondack\nmountain jury of a seven-year-old\nrobber charge.\nThe verdict was announced af-\n\u2022<.r feupsmd one-heh* hours of\ndeliberation.\n(Continued on Page Three)\nReorganization of\nTory Party Plan\nof Hon. Earl Rowe\nALLISTON, Ont., Oct. 26 (CP)-\nHon. Earl Rowe's future plans include general reorganization of the\nConservative party in Ontario \"from\nthe bottom up, and perhaps from\nthe top down,\" the Conservative\nleader told a nominating convention\nhere today.\n\"The luture of the Conservative\nparty is in the hands of its members,\" Mr. Howe said in his address,\naccepting his nomination as the\nparty's candidate in the Dufferin-\nSimcoe federal by-election November 15. He said he would remain\nas leader until relieved of office by\na convention.\nWOULD SUBSIDIZE\nEVERY FOURTH\nCHILD\nMAIDSTONE, Kent, Oct. 26\n(CP Cable)\u2014Countess Baldwin,\nwife of former Prime Minister\nBaldwin, today suggested in\nneedy families every fourth or\nsubsequent child should be subsidized or a grant made for a\ncertain period.\nOpening a hospital maternity\nunit. Lady Baldwin said the suggestion might be revolutionary\nbut it might stop \"illegal irregularities.\"\nNON-CONFIDENCE\nMOTIONPLANNED\nBY MRS. SLEEVES\nIN LEGISLATURE\nPoints  to  Failure  to\nPut in Force Health\nInsurance Act\nTWO OTHER C. C. F.\nMOTIONS COMING\nVICTORIA, Oct. 26 (CP) -\nThree Cooperative Common-\nwealth Federation members filed\nnotices of motions In the British\n'Columbia legislature today,\nIn a non-confidence motion filed by Mrs, D. G. Steeves (Vancouver-North), the house wat asked to resolve that the government\nhad \"forfeited the confidence of\nthe people In neglecting to put the\nhealth Insurance act Into operation\" and that a comprehensive\nhealth scheme be endorsed.\nThe notice read in part: \"Whereas\nthe government has not brought the\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nMINERS TRAPPED\nBY BLAST IN\nALASKA\nANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct. 26\n(AP)\u2014An explosion which shook\nthe Evan Jones coal mine 60 miles\nfrom here trapped the day shift in\nthe mine today.\nAt least three men, Injured,\nwere rescued by the night shift,\ntheir names and extent of their\ninjuries were not known, nor was\nthe number of men trapped in the\nmine immediately available.\nLATE NEWS FLASHES\nELECTED KELOWNA\nALDERMAN\nKELOWNA, B. C, Oct. 26 (CP)-\nGeorge Wilber Sutherland, Kelowna\nmerchant, today was elected to the\nKelowna city council by a majority\nof 370 votes to 184 over his only other opponent, W. B. Hughes-Games.\nPRINCE WAIVES\nPRELIMINARY HEARING\nHONOLULU, Oct. 26 (AP) -\nPrince David Kalakaua Kawanan-\nakoa silently waived preliminary\nhearing today on a second degree\nmurder charge growing out of the\ndeath of his half-caste common law\nwife, and returned to jail to await\na possible double dose of punish\nment. In addition to the preliminary proceedings, prosecuting officials moved to revoke his probation\non an old manslaughter charge, resulting from the death of a girl in\nan automobile accident.\nRANGERS BEAT\nAMERICANS\nEDMONTON, Oct. 26 (CP)-New\nYork Rangers came from behind to\ndefeat their intra-city rivals, the\nAmcHcans, 6-5 in overtime here tonight in the second game of the National Hockey league teams' western\nCanada exhibition series. First\ngame was a 2-2 tie. Third game will\nbe played in Calgary tomorrow.\nROBERT BEATS WAGNER\nQUEBEC, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014 Yvon\nRobert, Montreal wrestler, won two\nconsecutive falls from Rough House\nBob Wagner, of Portland, Ore., in\nthe main event of a wrestling card\nhere tonight.\nWALLACE TO MEET\nCARROLL TUESDAY\nTORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP)-Play-\nfair Brown, Toronto boxing promoter, announced tonight he had matched Gordon Wallace, Vancouver welterweight, and Eddie Carroll of Ottawa, in a 10-round bout here next\nTuesday night,\nTARD1EU CLAIMS HE\nSUBSIDIZED DE LA ROCQUE\n\u2022 LYON, France, Oct. 26 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014Andre Tardieu today stated in\ncourt here that during his tenure as\npremier of France he subsidized\nColonel Francois Do La Rocque\nwhile the pro-Fascist leader was\nchief ot the now-disbanded Croix de\nFeu. \"He lied,\" De La Rocque retorted, testifying in his own behalf\nshortly afterward. Tardieu's admission came during his testimony\nas a character witness for Duke\nPozzi Di Borga, a former lieutenant\nof De La Rocque, who is suing the\ncolonel for libel on grounds he attacked the duke's patriotism.\nREV, C. W. GORDON IN\nSERIOUS CONDITION\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Hospital attendants reported tonight\nRev. C. W. Gordon, 77, former\nmoderator of the Presbyterian\nchurch and noted as an author\nunder the pen name, Ralph Connor, Is In a serious condition. He\nunderwent an operation two\nweeks ago. Dr. Athol Gordon, a\nnephew and attending physician,\nsaid he had noted some improvement today.\nWOULD CRAMP\nCOUNTERFEITERS STYLE\nMONTREAL, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Central collection agencies for the gathering and disseminating of information on counterfeiting was advocated before the International World\nPolice convention today by K. H.\nHroekhoff, commissioner of police\nin Amsterdam, Holland.\nLORD8 ADOPTS REPLY\nTO THRONE SPEECH\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP Cable)-\nThe house of lords tonight adopted\nthe address in reply to the speech\nfrom th throne after Labor criticized the speech for its omission of\nreferences to what they regarded\nas important matters.\n1\nFORTUNES REST\nON OUTCOME OF\nCESAREWITCH IN\nSUFFOLK TODAY\nMillions Wagered and\nMore Millions in\nSweepstake\nEPIGRAM FAVORED\nBY SLIGHT MARGIN\nNEWMARKET, Suffolk, Oct. 26\n(CP Cable)\u2014As 33 probable starters were made ready here tonight for tomorrow's running of\nthe Cesarewitch stakes a final call-\nover of cards at the Victoria club\nIn London showed James V. Rank's\nEpigram will go to the post fav-\norite, but by a slim margin.\nEpigram was quoted at 11 to I\nIn second place by a fraction was\nSir Abe Bailey's Maranta at 100 to\n9. Previously these two campaign\ners were quoted as co-favorites.\nThe 2y4-mile test will be eagerly\nwatched all over the world. In addition to settling heavy bets in this\ncountry, it will decide the division\nof the large pool in the Irish hospital\nsweepstakes.\n(Continued on Page Twoj\nHOOVER SLAMS    .\nU. S. PRESIDENT\nBOSTON, Oct. 25 (AP)-Declar-\nIng a .coalition p\u00a3anti?new.dealer-\nwas '\"devoutly to be wished for\"\nHerbert Hoover tonight called on\nthe republican party first to draft\na new declaration of principles that\nwould fuse the foes of the Roosevelt\nadministration.\nThe former president of the United States both reiterated his call\nfor a national convention of republican leaders prior to the 1938\ncongressional elections and asserted\nflatly he did not want any public\noffice.\nCriticizing the Roosevelt regime.\nHoover asserted ncw dealers \"seek\nto make us believe that, abuse can\nnot be cured without that creeping\ncollectivism called planned economy.\"\nDandurand Will\nRepresent Canada\nat Brussels Meet\nOTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014 Senator\nRaoul Dandurand will represent\nCanada at the nine-power conference on tho Sino-Japanese conflict\nmeeting in Brussels November 3,\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King announced tonight. He will be assisted by Hume Wrong, Canadian\nresident delegate to the League of\nNations at Geneva as technical adviser, and Pierre Dupuy of the Canadian legation in Paris, as secretary.\nSenator Dandurand is a minister\nwithout portfolio and government\nleader in the upper house. He is a\nveteran of many League of Nations\ngatherings and headed Canada's\ndelegation at the recent League\nassembly.\nIEWISH TRUCK DRIVER\n..     KILLED IN HOLY LAND\nJERUSALEM, Oct. 26 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014Following a period of comparative calm, acts of terrorism in the\nHoly Land broke out anew today\nwhen a Jewish truck driver on the\nJericho road was shot to death by\nunknown assailants, and an Arabian policeman accompanying him,\nwas gravely wounded.\nJapan Apologizes\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014Acceptance of Tokyo's formal\napology and promise to make \"the\nnecessary compensation\" for the\ndeath of Private R. McGowan of\nthe Royal Ulster Rifles \"accidentally\" killed when a Japanese\nplane machine-gunned a British\noutpost at Shanghai last Sunday\nwas predicted tonight.\nThe note, submitted here today,\nalso promised an inquiry would\nbe Instituted to Insure punishment of those guilty of the attack,\nRUSSIAN PRINCE DIES\nHOT SPRINGS, Va., Oct. 26 (AP)\n\u2014Prince Serge Wolkonsky, 17, who\nleft Russia after the revolution of\n1917, died here yesterday after an\nillness of six days.\nTROOPS RETURN\nFIRE; CHINESE IN\nA RETREAT FROM\nCHAPEI AT DAWN\nJapanese Take NorttvJ\nStation After a\n2-Month Battle\nITALIAN OFFICER\nFATALLY INJURED\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 27 (Wednesday). (AP)\u2014British authorities to> .\nday reported a Japanese plan*\nopened fire with Its machine gurtl\non British outposts In the vicinity of Jessfleld Park.\nBritish troops guarding the bor- j\nders of Shanghai's International\nsettlement returned the fire with |\nmachine guns.\nTroops who witnessed the Incident said that from the manner In I\nwhich the Japanese plane flewj\naway they believed It had been]\nhit.\nThe new Incident occurred M|\nChinese forces started a full retreat from battered Chapel directly across Soochow creek from the J\nInternational  settlement.\nCHINESE RETREAT\nSHANGHAI, Oct, 27 (Wednesday). (AP)\u2014Chinese defenders oil\nShanghai began a general retreat I\nfrom war-shattered Chapel atl\ndawn today unable longer to with*\nstand the Japanese military steam-.\nroller along the entire battle-lln\u00bb|\nnear Shanghai.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nPREMIER WARNS\nOF DICTATORSHIP\nOTTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP)-Unles|\npeople were careful to preaerylj\ntheir hard-won liberties, the question between dictatorship and de*\nmocracy now being fought in Asll\nand Europe \"might be fought otf\non this continent as well,\" Prima\nMinister Mackenzie King warnefl\nan audience here tonight.\nVoicing a plea for maintenance\nof the \"two old political parties\"\nwhich, he said, produced the great>\nest democratic institution the worloj\nhad ever known, Mr. Mackenzie\nKing warned against \"subversive\nmovements' 'active in Canada ani\nlooking toward disunity of the Dominion.\nSECOND RANSOM\nBILL TURNS UR\nCHICAGO, Oct. 26 (AP)- Discovery of a second ransom bill ini\ntensif'ied the search for the kid'\nnappcrs of aged Charles S. Ross today.\nA $10 note from the $50,000 paid in\na vain'attempt to obtain the release\nof the retired manufacturer was\nfound by Frank H. Strcmmel, an employee of the Association of American Railroads.\nHe reported he received it at a\nloop department store where he\ncashed a check yesterday.\nCopper Price Is Cut\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (API-\nLeading producers of copper today\nlowered the price of copper one\ncent to 12 cents a pound.\nKennecott was the first to quote\nthe reduced price, followed by\nAnaconda and other major producers.\nCHINA CLIPPER AT ALAMEDA.'\nALAMEDA, Calif., Oct. 21 (APJ\n\u2014The Pan American China clip;\nper, fog bound for three hours\nlanded at 12:05 p.m. today at It\nAlameda base.\n57ie\nWeajt\n$1 DIVIDEND FOR U. S. STEEL\nNEW YORK, Ocl. 25 (API-Directors of United States Sleel Corp.\ntoday declared a dividend of $1\non the common stock.\nMin. Max,\nNELSON  42 56\nVictoria   48 56\nNanaimo ...48 57\nVancouver \u2022\u2022 52 56\nKamloops  46 56\nPrince George 40 46\nEstevan Point  52 56\nPrince Rupert 42 54\nLangara 44 49\nAtlin  34 40\nDawson  30 34\nSeattle   52 60\nPortland      52 62\nSan Francisco 54 58\nSpokane    46 72\nLos Angeles  58 60\nKelowna   39 59\nPenticton    _ 40 \u2014\nGrand Forks  32 62\nKaslo   41 \u2014\nCranbrook   52 65\nCalgary  .-. 36 74\nEdmonton   36 62\nSwift Current  30 60\nMoose Jaw    .32 60\nPrince Albert   32 50'\nSaskatoon    28 60\nQu'Appclle   34 50\nWinnipeg     24 52:'\nForecast, Okanagan and Koott\nnay \u2014 Moderate to fresh variabl\nwinds, mostly cloudy and some\nwhat cooler, becoming showery, ;\nI\n.mm\n ,    _\nt^wtIt^^^\u2122^\n'rmmfmem?m*s*sp^^\n\"You Did, Noll\"\nRetorts Gardiner\nlo R. B. Bennett\nOTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP) .-Agriculture  Minister  Gardiner  today  retried to charges made by Conservative Leader Bennett to the effect\nGardiner was using relief funds\nfor the purpose of building a political machine in Saskatchewan.\nHis reply was a denial and an\nassertion the only time relief in\nSaskatchewan was distributed by a\npolitically - controlled organization\nwas when Mr, Bennett was in office at Ottawa and the Andersen\nConservative'regime held power at\nRegina.\nft\nI\nMIEN WHO\nFEEL OLD\nGet Back New Youth,\nEnergy, Vitality\nToo many men to-day feel tired out all\nic time- can't work, hate lo get up mom-\n!(\u25a0, ..aren't the vitality to do the things\nley used to do.   A weak unhealthy liver\nmscd hy modern living, soft foods, lick ol\n;erciic, is the chief reason.   Your liver is\nic storehouse for glucose or the \"energy\nj part\" of the food you eat\u2014it supplies energy\n(o muscles, tissues and glands.  K it ii not\nstrong and active no wonder you feel old!\nTake \"Fruit-a-tives\", it will build up your\nliver like nothing else will.   You'll be surprised how young you soon feel. 25c, 50c,\n111 Druggists.\nIFRUITATIYEStS\nBARGAIN\nROUNDTRIP\nFARES\nOn Sale Nov. 5 and 6\nFrom Trail and Castlegar\nNov. 6 and 7 from Nelson\nTO ALBERTA POINTS\nMedicine Har and West\nCalgary and South\nTickets good to leave destination not later than\nNovember 10.\nFor full particular! apply\nto local agent.\n&4c\nFerry Is Being\nTowed (reston\nCreston's new ferry for service on\nthe Kootenay river at the crossing\nto Reclamation Farm, which has\nbeen under construction at Fair-\nview by C. F. McCharles since August, started for Creston Tuesday\nunder tow by William Desjardins'\nlaunch Attagirl. and if no weather\nsetbacks are encountered, should\nreach its destination Wednesday.\nThe new ferry, built at a contract\nprice of $10,165.10, has been equipped by the public works department\nwith a tractor engine to drive its\nmodest side-paddles, which will propel it back and forth in the lane\nbounded by two guide cables, its\npower design beinp the simplest\npossible. It is the first side-paddle\nferry in the province, and utilizes\na principle already found of service\nacross the line, including higher up\non the Kootenay river at Bonners\nFerry,\nKen Scatchard of the public\nworks mechanical staff has gone\nwith tlie ferry, to see it go into operation.\nIt can carry five trucks at a time.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-WEDNE8DAY MORNING. OCT. 27, 191\n12 A DAY LOSING\nLICENCE TO DRIVE\nVICTORIA, Oct. 25 (CP)- Automobile drivers of British Columbia\nare having their licences suspended\nat the rate of 12 a day for multiple\nreasons, ranging from failure to\nprove financial responsibility, to intoxication, according to figures from\nthe provincial police traffic branch,\nThe 1062 drivers at present suspended include those falling within\nthe above classifications as well as\nothers whose licences have been\ntaken from them for sale statements,\ntheft of cars, driving while their\nlicence was under suspension, altering licence plates, manslaughter\nor being physically unfit to drive.\nAdmits Hurled\nStones Through\nChurch Window\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26 (CP). -\nFrank Hill, 51, walked into police\nheadquarters and admitted throwing stones through seven windows\nat downtown first United church.\nHe was arrested.\nMORE ABOUT\nNon-intervention\n(Continued From Page One)\nAnother barrier, \"token\" withdrawals of volunteers as evidence\nof good faith, was sidestepped.\nITALY AND  RUSSIA\nIN AGREEMENT\nOn one of the rare occasions in\nthe committee's checkered history\nItaly and Russia seemed to be in\nagreement on one point\u2014refusal to\naccept in advance whatever findings\nare made by the commission determining the number of volunteers.\nThough informed quarters said\nForeign Secretary Eden had persuaded Italian Ambassador Count\nGrandi to withdraw Italy's refusal to\nbe bound in advance by the commission's findings, Italian sources said\nno such agreement would be made\nuntil personnel of the commission\nand its duties have been approved.\nUnanimous agreement on granting of belligerent rights! formed one\nof the stiffest committee problems\nand upon that Russia stood alone.\nAll powers except Russia have\nagreed to grant belligerent rights\nto the Valencia (government) and\nSalamanca (Insurgent) regimes\nwhen \"substantial progress has been\nmade\" in withdrawing volunteers.\nA machine for making macaroni\nhas been acquired by North Dakota's Agricultural College Experiment\nStation, so that wheats best for macaroni can be tested.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel\n.Nelson, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\n\"E. J. Heilly, E. L. Mclntyre, N.\nJohnson, Mr. and Mrs. G. Eisenhau-\ner, Spokane: B. W. Olcott, G. W. Olcott, C. W. Olcott, C. J. Bailer, Portland; R. Ruston, Gray Creek; D\nF. Coleman, New Denver; II, G.\nWilcox, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Norrie-\nMORE ABOUT\nCESAREWITCH\n(Continued From Page One)\nFollowing the two leaders in the\nodds were E. Robson's Solar Bear\nand W. Ahearn's Nightcap III, each\nquoted at 100 to 7.\nOTHER   ODDS\nOther odds were:\nNear Relation, winner in 1935,\nand Faites Vos Jeux at 15 to 1;\nPunch. 17 to l; Fet, the 1936 winner,\nand Buckleigh. 18 to 1; Miss Windsor. 28 to 1; Correa, Harewood. Sir\nCalidore, Idaho and African Lily,\n33 to 1; Muscovado, Fox Star, Wcath-\nervane and Castanelle 35 to 1; Or-\nganeau, Dytchley and Titlark, 40\nto 1; Prudent Act, 45 to 1; Zeros, 50\nto 1; Repondant; 55 to 1; Grecko, 60\nto 1; Beleaguered. Empire Son,\nFairlead, Spartan III, Tote Investor\nand Archduke II, 100 to 1; Carioca,\n200 to 1.\nThe going was expected to be\ngood, recent rains having moderated the lirmness produced by the\ndraught.\nAt tonight's call-over an additional \u00a3250,000 (about $1,237,500)\nwas wagered. In the last two days\nthe wagering on the various entries has reached \u00a3500,000 the\nlargest betting recorded tor many\nyears.\nBLACK   FELL\nSCRATCHED\nLord Derby scratched his Black\nFell today when he was reported\nlame. G. Bennett's Third Hazard\nwas also declared out of the race.\nA prize fund of \u00a31,582,763 in the\nIrish hospitals sweepstake will be\nsettled by the race. One Canadian\n\"Gypsy\" holding ticket LL53627,\nhas a 9 to 1 chance for a first\nprize of \u00a330,000. His ticket is\non Epigram, Another Canadian,\nJ. E, Sparrow of North Vancouver,\nhas a chance on Solar Bear and\ntwo hold tickets on Maranta. Altogether 20 Canadians drew horses\nlisted as starters.\nFernie Scouts Win\nMany 1937 Badges\nFERNIE, B. C-Scouting in Fernie has had a satisfactory year according to reports presented at the\nannual meeting of the Fernie Boy\nScout association Tuesday. Vice-\nPresident G. E. Elkington presided\nin the absence of President E. K.\nStewart. Scoutmaster's Carroll and\nCrabtree reported on the activities\nof the two troops. Particular mention was made of the interest shown\nby the boys in fire prevention and\nthe fighting of fires. They had talks\non these subjects and were given\nthe opportunity of inspecting the\napparatus used by the local fire\ndepartment. Several of the scouts\nhave won their fireman's badges.\nIn all the two troops won about 80\nbadges indicative of certain attainments in various lines of interest.\nCub-Mistress, Mrs. Percivall was\nnet present but her report describing the work of the First Fernie\nWolf Cub pack, and reporting a very\ngood year, was read by her assistant,\nMiss Frances King.\nin the election of officers H. P.\nWilson was reelected honorary president; Harry Cox, honorary vice-\npresident; E. K. Stewart, president;\nG. E. Elkington, vice-president; A.\nB. King, secretary-treasurer. Rev. M.\nC. T, Percivall, A. L. McPhee, Rev,\nJ. H. Matthews, J. V. Rowers and\nJ. F. Crookston were elected as an\nexecutive committee. The executive\nwas requested to appoint a women's\nsocial executive to assist the Scout,\nin their social functions. The Scoutmasters, their assistants,, the Cub\nmistress and her assistant received\nthe thanks of the meeting for their\nwork and were confirmed in their\npositions for the coming year, The\ncomplete staff included Mrs. Percival as cub mistress with Miss\nFrances King as assistant; P, Carroll, scoutmaster, Troop 1, with G.\nOwen and Frank Corrigan as assistants; F. Crabtree, scoutmaster, troop\n2, assisted  by Brinley  Morris.\njoker Nails Horse\nShoe on Foreign\nOffice Portals\nLONDON, Oct, 26 (AP)\u2014A horseshoe was nailed neatly to a foreign\noffice door before the nonintervention subcommittee met today to resume discussion on getting foreign\n\u2022fighter's out of Spain. Officials\nquickly removed it.\nClothing Is Sent\nto Saskatchewan\nSt. Paul's Shipment\nIncludes Aid From\nNew Denver\nResidents of Nelson district arc\ncontinuing their drive to help their\nless fortunate fellow citizens on the\nprairies. On Monday, a shipment of\nabout 25 sacks and seven bales of\nclothing left for Radvillc, Sask. The\nshipment was gathered and sent by\nSt, Paul's United church and contained an allotment from New Denver.\nToday another shipment of nearly\nItie same size, gathered by Trinity\nUnited church and containing a\ni large contribution from the Sheep\nCreek district, will be sent to Saskatchewan.\nftm\nMORE ABOUT\nBRITISH HOUSE\n(Continued From Page One)\n\"The house regrets that your Majesty's advisers, by their weak and\nvacillating policy in foreign affairs\nwhich has  gravely  imperilled  the\nprospects of lasting peace and national security\u2014have betrayed the\nj principles of the League of Nations\nj and have seriously diministed Brit-\n| is), influence; and by their lack of\nI any  constructive and fundamental\n| proposals and raising the standard\n| of life of the people or for establish-\n| ing  economic  prosperity  up  to  a\nJ just and enduring basis, have for-\nj feited the confidence of this house.\"\nSir John Simon replying to Mr.\nAttlee's   remarks,   said   opposition\ncriticism of the government's foreign policy had already been voiced\nat the  last  foreign  policy  debate\nin the house. \"It appears to me our\ndifficulties are very largely arising\nfrom hard and concrete facts and\nrelations, which are not to be disposed of by general phrases.\"\nSTRESSES  PROGRESS\nHe stressed progress the government was making in the realm of\nrearmament, pointing particularly\nto anti-aircraft defence. The government \"were sacrificing nothing\" of\nthe program of social improvement,\nhe said.\nSir Archibald Sinclair, Liberal\nleader, urged lowering of international trade barriers.\nJames Maxton, Independent Labor expressed surpise Palestine\nhad   not   been   mentioned   in   the\nHiAiTHOR\nROYAL CITY\nNBW'WESTMINSTER, B.C. Oct.\n26 CCP>.~J. B. Priestley, the British author, reached here from the\nUnited Kingdom. Mr. Priestley\nwill meet Mrs. Priestley and his\nchildren in Arizona shortly for the\ntrip home,\nExpect Shortage\nof Anti-Freeze\nShortage of anti-freeze for winter\ncar driving is already expected,\nNelson dealers stated the shortage\nwas anticipated. So far comparatively few individuals have purchased anti-freeze for their cars, but\ngarages have been stocking up.\nIt was at first thought that demand for glycerine by munition\nmakers was responsible for the\nshortage, but information has since\nbeen received that comparatively\nlittle glycerine is used in the car\npreparation. The shortage is due,\nit is explained, to inability of manufacturers to keep pace with demand\nUse of anti-freeze has been increasing rapidly as more and more\ncars are kept in commission during\nthe winter.\nYahk Constable\nMoved to Nelson\nConstable M. Martin, provincial\npolice officer at Yahk, has been\ntransferred to Nelson to take the\nplace vacated by Constable D G-\nNeff, now with the Cranbrook city\ndetachment. Constable D. D. Mc-\nIndoe of Cranbrook, will replace\nConstable Martin at Yahk.\nCLOUDS AND RAIN PUTS\nEND BRIGHT SUNSHINE\nAfter a day and a half of glorious\nsunshine when Nelson climbed back\ninto the weather man's good graces,\ndark clouds welled up Tuesday afternoon and climaxed in a heavy\nshower.\nBefore the clouds began their\nmarch across the heavens, the sun\nshone for four hours. Minimum and\nmaximum marks were 42 and 56,\nROWE NOMINATED\nALL1STON, Ont,, Oct. 26 (CP)-\nHon. Earl Rowe, Ontario Conservative leader, today was the unanimous choice as Conservative candidate in the November 15 federal\nbyclection in .Dufferin-Simcoc.\nThe byclection was caused by Mr.\nRowe's resignation, as member in\nthe house of commons for Dufferin-\nSimcoc, to lead the Ontario Conservative party in the October 6\nprovincial elections.\nFour other nominees withdrew in\nMr, Rowe's favor.\nMr. Rowe will continue to head\nthe Ontario Conservatives if sent to\nthe commons in the byclection.\nCHARGED THEFT OF\nTRAVELLERS CHECKS\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26- (CP) -\nCharles Jones, negro, is in jail today\ncharged with retaining $300 worth\nof travellers' checks, allegedly stolen\nfrom Oliver Beaulieu Monday.\nMatthew Shaw,\nEx-Nelsoniter\nDies al (oast\nA   C.P.R.   Conductor\nat Nelson and\nGrand Forks\nAnother retired Canadian Pacific\nconductor in the person of M. P.\nShaw, formerly of Nelson, died\nTuesday afternoon at his home at\nCounty Line, in the Frasei valley.\nWord ot his death was received here\nlate Tuesday by his brother, W. \u00a3.\nShaw. Had he lived he would have\nbeen 71 years of age in January.\nMr. Shaw, familiarly known to\na large circle of friends as Matt'\nShaw, came out from Midland. Ont.,\nto Nelson about 35 years .go After\nworking out of Nelson for many\nyears, he was transferred to Grand\nForks, and was still running out of\nGland Forks when he retired, six\nyears ago, and movud to County\nLine. He never married, and bcth at\nNelson, Grand Forks, and County\nLine one of his sisters, Miss Nellie\nShaw, kept house for him.\nHe is survived by two sisters and\nfive brothers, the other sister being Mrs. Charles Birce of County\nLine. The brothers include C. D.\nShaw, for many years a Canadian\nPacific conductor running out of\nNelson and a former Nelson alderman,, now living at the coast, and\nW. E. Shaw of Nelson.\nThe funeral will be held at Ncw\nWestminster Thursday afternoon.\nJAPAN RECALLS NICKEL\nTOKYO, Oct. 26 (CP-Havas)-\nThe pinch of war today hit the circulation of nickel coins, which were\nordered withdrawn. They will be\nreplaced by paper bills. The coins\nwill be converted into metal for the\nuse of the war industries.\nSENTENCED TO DEATH\nMOSCOW, Oct. 26 (AP)-Four\nmen were sentenced to death at\nArchangel today on charges of poisoning prize dairy cows and \"other\nanti-Soviet wrecking\" in the cattle\nbreeding industry.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING.\nCORPORATION   NETWORK\n5:00 Gilbert MacLean, tenor, Tor.;\n5:15 Campbell  Sisters, songs;  5:30\nNational Sing Song, Charlottetown;\n6:00 Drama,   Montreal;  6:30  Spot-\nthrone speech, declaring \"the most j light parade, Mon.; 7:00 Prof. Cov-\niniportant part of the government's entry, talk; 7:45 News, weather. Tor\nPATTULLO WILL REVISE MINING\nLAWS; GO AFTER TOURIST TRAFFIC\nLowenthol, J. H. Hamilton, J. Frith,\nJ. R, Jackman, J. L. Green, J. H. ,\nBennett, Vancouver; J. G. Irving,\nTrail; J. Christenson, Kingsgate; A. I\nJackson, Hollyburn, B.C.; Mrs. J.\nA. Ragotle, Ainsworth; V. Stott, C.\nRoscoe, Calgary\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE  ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Touri't and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phona 234\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA  Welcome Awaits You\nJAS.   E.   MADDEN,   Prop,\nCompletely  Remodelled,\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn tho HEART ot the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throughout\nDufferin Hotel aTatoso\"^.\n900 Seymour St.      Van:ouver, B.C.    Coleman, Alta,, Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nVICTORIA, Oct. 26 (CP)-Legis-\nlation to create a new department\nof trade and industry in the British\nColumbia cabinet, and improve administration of the securities and\nolher acts was forecast today by\nLieutenant-Governor Eric W. Hamber in his speech from the throne\nat the opening of the first session\nof the 19th provincial legislature.\nHis honor, in a short address\nwhich emphasized lhe general improvement in business conditions\nduring the past year, said the new\ndepartment would co-ordinate \"several activities now carried on by\nvarious departments.\"\nIt would lay stress on the tourist\nindustry, and endeavor to assist\ngenerally \"in expanding business\nand expanding trade.\"\nThe lieutenant-governor said it\nwas to be regrettedunrest continued\nin many parts of the world and \"wo\nnow find several nations engaged\nin physical combat with its attendant suffering and destruction, and\nthat great apprehension exists that\nWEEK-END EXCURSIONS\nTO SPOKANE\nGood Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.    Final   return   following\nTuesday.\nFrom South   torn aa    Round\nNelson       95\"\u2122     Trip\nCREAT NORTHERN Railway\n1 other nations may become involved.\"\nI MINING GOOD\nj \"The mining industry experienced\n; the best year in its history through\n\u25a0 a broadening diversification in min-\n! oral production,\" he said. \"One mining industry is today in a better\nposition to meet changing world\nconditions and consequently to assure stabilization of the industry\nthan at any ttrrie in the history of\nthe province.\"\nHe said consideration was being\ngiven to the establishment of lode\nprospecting and training camps to\nsupplement the work carried on in\nthe placer-mining camps already\nestablished by the government.\n\"Amendments will be made to\nvarious mining acts,\" his honor\ncontinued. \"This is essentially to\nmeet changing conditions and our\nmining acts will be consolidated\nin order to make it easier for\nprospectors and operators entering the mining industry thoroughly to understand the rights and\n, obligations existing under our\nmining laws.\"\nHe said the government continued\na \"progressive policy of road improvement and surfacing\" and there\nwas a marked increase in the num-\ner of visitors vising Eritish Columbia highways.\nNorman Whittaker was chosen\nspeaker of the house succeeding\nHon. H. G. Perry who resigned\nthat post after the June 1 provincial elections.\ngeneral responsibility\u2014yet unrnen\ntioned every day\u2014are the acts of\nviolence (in the .Holy Land) and\nthe steps taken to preserve order,\ngoing far beyond the decent necessities of the case.\"\nThe address in reply to the speech\nfrom the throne was moved by Captain Harold Balfour and William\nMabane, Captain Balfour brought\nlaughter with a dig at War Min-\n' ister   Leslie   Hore-Belisha   for   his\nI frequent appearance in press photographs. He dryly said that if public-\nj ity continued \"we will have to impose  a  quota   system\"  on  cabinet\nJ members and \"those members of\nthe opposition who would like to\nbo in the cabinet\".\nATTACK NAVAL\nINACTION\nThe debate was adjourned after\nan attack by Miss Eleanor Rath-\nbone, Independent, and William\nGallacher, only Communist in the\nhouse, on the royal navy for its\nactions or alleged lack of action in\nincidents arising out of the Spanish\ncivil war.\nWedgwood Benn. Labor, also attacked the navy's observance of\nthe three-mile limit in Spanish civil\nwaters. Alfred Duff Cooper, first\nlord of the admiralty, defended the\nfleet.\nonto; 8:00 Restless Bows, Vancouv\ner; 8:30 Waltz Inter mezzo, dir.\nMeredith Willson, N.B.C.-L.A. 9:00\nRed Gap Social, Regina; 9:30 After\nTwilight, Edmonton; 10:00 News and\nWeather, Vancouver; 10:15 Songs to\nRemember, Vancouver; 10:45 Pioneer talk.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW   KFI   KPO   KOMO\nS90      620     640    680       920\n5:00 One Man's Family, Carlton\nMorse drama; 5:30 Meakin's Musical News; 6:00 Beaux Arts Trio;\n0:30 Thrills, drama, Gaync Whitman, narrator., David Broekman's\nOrchestra; 7:00 Your Hit Parade,\nguests, Richard Himber's Orchestra;\n7:45 I Want a Divorce; 8:30 Amos 'n'\nAndy, blackface comedians;8:15 Uncle Ezra.s Radio Station EZRA; 8:30\nOlsen and Johnson, comedy, Gertrude Neisen, orchestra; 9:00 Town\nHali; 10:00 Hews Flashes; 10:15\nEverybody's music; 10:30 Ellis Kimball's orch.; 11:00 Joe Rcichman\norch,; 11:30 Archie Loveland's orch.\nINDIAN IS CONVICTED ON\nRAPE   CHARGE,   NANAIMO\nNANAIMO, B. C\u201e Oct. 26 (CP)-\nSimon McL.an, Indian of the No. 1\nNanaimo reservation, today was\nconvicted of rape and sentenced to\n18 months imprisonment retroactive\nfrom last April. McLean was accused of attacking a 22-year-old Indian woman on the reservation last\nApril 11.\nCRESTON MAN SERVING\n30-DAY (AIL SENTENCE\nRoy C. Gorrill, sentenced to 30\ndays in jail for having liquor in a\npublic place, was escorted to provincial jail at Nelson by Constable\nR. H. Hassard of the Creston detachment, provincial police. Gorrill\nappeared before Col. E. Mallandaine,\nstipendiary magistrate,\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.nw and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135 Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nI M.  H. MclVOR,  Prop.\n\"Theral   How doei this (ace look?\"\n\"As happy ai if ho were smoking a Sweet Cap!\"\nSWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTES\n\"Th purest form in n'liicli tobacco can be smoked.\"\u2014faucet\nVANCOUVER NOW HAS\nHUMAN FLY BURGLAR\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26 (CP).-A\n\"human fly\" burglar is being sought\nby police.\nLatest victim of the athletic prowler is W. D. Frith, whose residence\nwas looted of jewelry.\nThe  burglar  apparently  climbed : 6:30 Frank Bull, sports MDL; 6:4.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790     970     1180     1430     1470\n5:00 Eddie Duchin's orch.; 5:30\nHollywood News; 5:45 Norsemen\nquartet; 6:00 Melodic contrast; 6:00\nChild Association of America; 7:00\nChester Howell; 7:15 Nolla Day\nsongs; 7:30 Waltz ' interlude; 8:00\nLand of Whatsit, drama (KGO);\nVagabonds. Negro male quartet; 8:15\nLum and Abner, comedy; 6:30 News;\n8:45 Gus Haenschen and orch.; 9:00\nMart Kenney's orch.; Melody Time\nKPO; 10:00 Frank Castle's orch.;\n10:30 Jimmy Grier's orch.; 11:00\nPaul Carson, organist.\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKVI    KOIN    KNX    KSL    KOL\n570      940       1060     1130     1270\n5:00 Maurice's orch.; 5:30 Melodic\nStrings; 6:00 Andre Kostelanetz'\norch., Deems Taylor, commentator,\nguests; 6:30 Colonel Jack Major; 7:00\nGang Busters, drama; 7:30 Hobby\nLobby; 8:00 Poetic Melodies (KSL);\nScattergood Baines. drama; 8:15\nBoake Carter, news comments; 8:30\nEddie Cantor, Deanna Durbin, and\ncompany; 9:00 Cavalcade of America; 9:30 Bob Crosby's orch.; 10:00\nJoaquin Grill orch.; 10:15 Your Witness, drama; 11:00 Ted Fio-Rito's\norch.; 11-15 Tommy Tucker's orch:\n11:30 Red Norvo's orch.; 11:30 Sterling Young.\nDON LEE NETWORK\nKOL Seattle\n5:00 Laughing with Canada; 5:15\nSnyder and Ross; 5:30 Louis Rich's\norch.; 5:45 Theatrical revue; 6:00\nNews Flashes; 6:15 Phantom Pilot;\ndrain  pipes\nwindow.\nto reach an unlocked\nW. E. WILLIAMS THIRD\nMEMBER DAIRY BOARD\nVICTORIA, Oct. 26 (CP)-W. E.\n\u25a0Williams. K.C., has been named\nthird member of the lower mainland dairy products board, to act\nwith W, T. McArthur, representing\nthe independent producers, and E.\nD, Barrow, representing th co-operative producers.\nLIQUOR PROFITS OFF\nREGINA, Oct. 26 (CP) - Liquor\nprofits of the Saskatchewan government stores for the six months\nending September 30 last were $628,-\n119, about $25,000 lower than the\ncorresponding period last year. The\nfigures were issued today by Premier W. J. Patterson.\n1000-MILE BIKE TRIP\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 26 (CP)- Ross\nThompson, 22-year-old Edmonton\nyouth, today completed a 1000-mile\nbicycle journey to this Manitoba\ncapital in search of a job as mechanical draughtsman, He says he\nwill go to Toronto on his wheel if\nhe can't get work aoon,\nConcert: 7:00 Horace Heidt's orch;\n7:15 The Tunesmiths; 7:30 Lone\nRanger, drama; 8:00 Meet Some\nPeople; 8:15 Restless Bows; 6:30\nTed Weems' orch.; 8:45 Pages from\nExperience; 9:00 Newspaper of the\nAir; 9:15 Guy Lombardo's orch.;\n9:30 Vincent Lopez' orch.; 10:00\nAlong the Waterfront; 10:15 Jimmy\nJov's orch.: 10:30 Larry Kent's orch.;\n11:00 Halibut Fishing News; 11:05\nJimmy Lunceford's orch. M; 11:30\nFrank Sortino's orch., MDL; 12:00\nMidnight Matinee.\n910 k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail '   1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock;. 8:00 Request; 0:30\nMorning Bulletin; 9:30 Old Timer;\n10:00 Radio Kitchen; 10:15 What's\nNew?; 10:30 Radio Chef; 11:00 Backstage Wife, E.T.; 11:15 Kootenay\nEchoes; 11:30 News review; 12:00\nEasy Aces; 12:15 Spokane welcomes\nyou; 12:45 Musical Moments; 2:00\nWomen's magazine; 2:30 See CBC\nnetwork except: 4:00 Club matinee;\n4:15 Cecil and Sally; Times Presents; 5:00 Theatre news; 5:45 Barnacle Bill; 7:00 The Buccaneers; 8:00\nKings Men; 8:45 Home Folks Frolic; 10:45 Lullaby Land.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 *\n5:15   Uncle   Mickey's  Club;   6:45\nSports   Resume;     News   Review;\nStocks;   Heal   Life.. Drama;   7:05\nWhispering Jack Smith; Financial\ntalk; 7:30 Skipper Scans the News;\n8:00 Canadian Japanese association;\nLaddie Watkis, songs; 8:45 NBC\nThesaurus; 10:30 News.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCanary 10,000 w\n5:00 Concert Masters; 5:30 The\nBuccaneers; 5:45 The King's Men;\n6:20 Spotlight Parade; 7:15 There\nwas a Time; 8:30 Gypsy Fortunes;\n9:00 News Flashes; 9:30 Peacock\nCourt; other periods: Records.\nSHORT WAVE PROCRAMS\nBRITISH   EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSD 11.75 mcs. (26.63 m.)\nGSC 9.58 mcs. (31.32 m.)\nGSB 9.51 mcs. (3155 m.)\n9:20 a.m. Dance music. 9:30 Dance\nmusic.   10:00\u2014Big  Ben.  News  and\nonnocuncement. 10:20 Ladies' night.\n11:00\u2014Music by Delibes. 11:10\u2014The\nCesarewitch stakes. 11:30 \u2014 Organ\nand piano recital. 12:00 noon\u2014B.B.C\nNorthern orch. 12:45\u2014Interval. 1:00\n\u2014News and announcement-. 1:20\u2014\nSongs of the Cities. 1:50\u2014The Cesarewitch Stakes. 2:05 \u2014 Food for\nthought.  Three short  talks. 2:25\u2014\nIntermission.\nINTERNATIONAL\nJohannesburg 11:00 a.m. \u2014 The\nmusic of Noel Coward. ZTJ, 49.2 m\u201e\n6:09 mc.\n. Tokyo, 1:45 p.m.\u2014Nagauta selections by the Troupe of Eizo Kineya.\nJZK, 19.7 m., 15.16 mc.; JZJ, 25.4 m\u201e\n11.80 mc.\nRome 3\u2014Folk songs; Sport news;\nVocal concert. 2RO, 25.4 m., 11.80\nmc.\nBerlin 3:45\u2014\"Strange Marriages,\"\na phantastical musical incident.\nDJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 mc.\nSchenectady 3:45\u2014Spanish musical program. W2XAD, 19.5 m\u201e 15.33\nmc: W2XAF, 31.4 m, 9.53 mc.\nHuizen, Netherlands 4 \u2014 Happy\nprogram. Special broadcast for America. PCJ, 31.2 m., 9.59 meg.\nBudapest, Hungary 4\u2014\"Two Hungarian Love-songs\" by Sandor Ver-\ncss; Vocal quartet of the University\nchoirs. Hat4, 31.8 m., 9.12 meg.\nLondon 4:10\u2014 \"Beneath the Green\nWillow,\" an episode from Izaak\nWalton's \"The Comnleat Angler\".\nGSP, 19.6 m\u201e 15.31 mc; GSD. 25.5\nm\u201e 11.75 mc; GSP, 31.5 m., 9.51 mc.\nBerlin 6:15\u2014The Kaleidoscope of\nOpera. DJD. 25.4 m\u201e 11.77 mc.\nSantiago, Chile 6:40\u2014Concert by\nthe faculty of the Arts Museum.\nCB960, 31.2 m., 9.60 mc.\nLondon 7:30 Tho BBC Empire\norch. GSB. 25.5 m.. 11.75 mc; GSC,\n31.3 m., 9.58 mc; GSB, 31.5 m., 9.51\nmc.\nTokyo 9:45\u2014Young men's mixed\nchorus. JZK, 19.7 m\u201e 15.16 mc.\nSydney, Australia, 1:30 a. m.\n(Thursday) \u2014 Chimes from G.P.O.\nSydney. VK2ME, 31.28 m\u201e 9.59 mc\nWHITE\nSee the\nWonderful\nNew Selection\nOi KROEHLER\nChesterfields\nAT\nFURNITURE\nDRAPERIES\nPhone 553\nBaker St.\nProcter Ladies' Aid\nPlan Sale and Tea\nOn Thursday afternoon the regular meeting of the Ladies' Aid of\nthe United church was held at the\nhome of Mrs. M. MacKinnon.\nMrs. O. Johnson presided over the\nbusiness meeting. It was decided\nthat a sale cf work and tea be held\nearly in December.\nMembers attending were: Mrs. O.\nJohnson. Mrs. W. Muirhead, Mrs. J,\nMcLeod, Mrs. J. Hurst. Mrs. G. Donaldson, Mrs. N. McLeod, Mrs. L.\nBullock, Mrs. C. M. Lancaster, Mrs.\nP. Bouer, Mrs. A. R. Johnston, Mrs.\nA. Batchelor, Mrs. J. Ferguson. Miss\nMae Muirhead and Mrs. MacKinnon.\nFrench Plane\nSets New Record\nPERNAMBUCO, Brazil, Oct. 26\n(CP-Havas). \u2014 The Lieutenant de\nVaisseur Paris, Giant French flying\nboat, landed on the Brazil coast at\n9 a.m. P.S.T. today, setting a world\nrecord for straight-line distance flying by a seaplane.\nwouldTmalcamate\ngrain organizations\nBRANDON, Man., Oct. 26 (CP)-\nMovement for unification of cooperative farm organizations in Manitoba gained momentum at the United Farmers of Manitoba convention\nhere today as delegates adopted a\nresolution favoring amalgamation\nof two grain handling organizations,\nUnited Grain Growers Ltd. and\nManitoba,Pool Elevators.\nDON'T CATCH COLD\nNew way gets rid of Colds amazingly quickly. Just use \"NOSTROLINE,\" new British remedy. Ends\ninfection in nose, throat, chest.\n\"NOSTROLINE\" clears head, opens\nbreathing passages, stops nasal discharge. Banishes Catarrh overnight.\nRelieves Head Noises and Catarrhal\nDeafness. 50c. It must be \"NOSTROLINE\". Sold by: Mann, Rutherford\nCo, Druggists, Nelson. (Advt.)\nGENERAL\nELECTRIC\nPte-leiUd\nRADIOTRONS\nitUni'l'EI.Uk -lECTHC CO, MUTI\nRADIOTRONS told by your\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nDealer\nNelson Electric Co.\nBAKER ST. PHONE 163\nHORSE\nSCOTCH\nNmnft\nYour Brand I\nalways be glad\nWhite Horse\"\npolicy from now on to\nScotch,   Let quality\nchoice . . . make it\n. . a joy to your\nDotilcl In Scotland\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by yie Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia.\nWmmWMmm\n T\nmmmmm^Ste****!!,**^\nWJPPP\ny!\u00bbP\u00bbP\u00bbI!lPPP\ni'TW^n.-Tii.. ,-w\n$<fl\u00bb\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-WEDNESDAY MORNING. OCT. 27. 1937,\nPAGE  THREI\nSMILLIE AGAIN\nIS RELIGIOUS\nCOUNCIL HEAD\nRossland Meeting Is\nTold of Koolaree\nOperation\nDEFICIT $10.61\nTO BE DIVIDED\nROSSLAND, B. C. Oct. 26\u2014R. W.\nSmillie of Nelson, was elected president of the Religious Education\nCouncil of West Kootenay at the\nannual meeting of that organization\nin St. Andrew's United church. H. E\nGore, also of Nelson, was named as\nvice-president; Charles F. Daly, of\nRossland, second vice-president;\nMrs. W. K. Kettlewell of Nelson,\nsecretary; and Miss Frances Parker\nof Nelson, treasurer.\nh. Whittaker of Trail, will serve\nas chairman of the Young People's\nunion; R. Sydney Horswill of Nelson, as convenor of the boys' camp\ncommittee; and Miss Amelia Hanna\nof Nelson, of the girls' committee,\nlee.\nThe meeting followed a banquet\nattended by about 45. who laid\nplans for a bigger and better camp\nin 1038.\nCAMP FINANCES\nIn considering the financial report for the past year, Mr. Gore\nchairman of the finance committee\nstated it as largely due to the generosity of a few of the members that\nthe capital account showed a deficit\nof only some $200. In the operating account for the past year, it was\nshown that some 01 junior boys; 30\nsenior boys, 11 girls, 15 senior girls\nand 25 young people, made up the\ncamps at Koolaree last summer, receipts amounting to $1564.40.\nExpenses for the camp amounted\nto $1620.26, which left a deficit of\nsome $55.86. From this should be\ndeducted $45.25, to be transferred\nto the capital account, being used for\nlumber.\nDEFICIT $10.61\nDIVIDED\nThe result was that only $10.61\ndeficit was left. It was decided to\ndivide the deficit equally between\nTrail, Rossland an_ Nelson.\nFred Robbins, chairman of the\nboys' work committee, gave a report of the boys' camp at Koolaree\nand paid glowing tribute to the\nbenefits of the camps.\nMrs. D. G. McArthur stated that\nthe girls' camp had progressed well.\nRev. Dr. M. W. Lees, Trail, said\nthat the camp was one of the most\nenthusiastic he had ever seen and\nsuggested that the camp be held the\nsame dates in 1938 and that it would\nbe a tenth anniversary camp. The\nYoung People's union had pledged\nthe building of a small launch.\nGENERAL COMMITTEE\nA general committee consisting of\nrepresentatives of the denominations\nconcerned in the Koolaree camp was\nappointed, consisting of Rev. J. G.\nHolmes, Nelson; Gil Kaye, Rossland;\nRev. F. G. St. Denis, Trail, and Miss\nFrances Parker, Nelson.\nAdjutant D. J. Hammond of the\nSalvaton Army, Nelson, pledged his\nsupport and stated that the camp\nhad a great influence on the lives\nof boys and girls attending.\nIn opening the meeting, Mayor J.\nE. Gordon of Rossland, welcomed\nthe delegates as did W. K. Esling,\nM. P., who paid glowing tribute to\nthe work of the West Kootenay religious educational council. Mr.\nDaly moved a vote of thanks and\npaid a compliment tq the work of\nMr. Esling and cooperation in the\norganization.\nDiversion al\nShoreacresin\nMain Road Now\nWestern end' ol the Shoreacres\ndiversion, comprising the section\nwest of the Shoreacres bridge over\nthe Slocan river, came into use Saturday,- the General Construction\ncompany, which is building the diversion, making the cut at tne western end, to turn traffic through. The\ncut is now being completed. This\nsection of the diversion is about 2000\nfeet in length.\nThe portion of the diversion east\nof the bridge was taken in about\nthree weeks ago.\nAnother 10 days at the present\nrate of progress might complete the\nShoreacres diversion, a certain\namount of surfacing, besides finishing of the cut at the west end, remaining to be done.\nOn the Hall-Apex project on the\nNelson-Nelway highway, the General Construction company now has\nthree power shovels and three compressors, and a fleet of trucks to\ncorrespond, and a lot of material is\nbeing shifted.\n100 Enjoy Whist,\nCatholic Hall\nWith 24 tables in play, about 100\nCatholics and friends made merry\nat a successful military whist drive\nin the Cathedral hall Tuesday night.\nPrize winners were Mr. and Mrs,\nAlbert Hamson and Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn DeGirolamo with scores of\n44.\nJames Eccles was whist manager.\nIn charge of refreshments. Was\nMrs. J. H. Vivian, assisted by Mrs.\nAlex McLellan and Miss Mary McDonald.\nFor nervoQineu and that depressed feeling.\nA quick acting- tonic tablet. Rftnewa\nitrength, ambition, and vitality. They\nbring back the spirit of youth. Three\nDollar*, one month's treatment, at drug\n\u25a0tores or direct Nox Laboratories, Toronto.\nOn \u00bba!e at Mann, Rutherford Co.\nDruggists (Advt.)\nMONK\nt^^c.usEm|\n.\u00abumul\u00ab\u00bb   \"V        ,,drh.u-\n_.,.,\u201e p.W. \u00ab\u2022*\u2022\" , th.\n\u2022' '\" ntn.\n,gh\n275\n\u25a0\"\"\"\"\" .Mir \"\u00bb\"*  ,hrou!\n,'Provl   th'ir ;\nilr uwl'\nIN PILLS\nOR    THE   KIDNEYS\nMORE ABOUT\nMICHEL FIRE\n(Continued From  Page One)\nThey said six carloads of machinery were standing on tracks\nwithin the fire zone, and a loss of\n$150,000 would be sustained if it\nproved to be ruined by the blaze.\nThe five which roared through\nparts of the plant valued at $990,000,\nstarted in the boiler room of the\ndry cleaner, but cause of the outbreak has not been determined,\nspokesman said. Coal dust explosions added danger to the blaze,\nand company officials ordered spectators and firefighters beyond the\ndanger area.\nThe burned tipple at the colliery\ncost $400,000 to install, the wet\nwasher $100,000, the dry cleaner\n$50,000, lhe dry washer $100,000, and\ntwo box car loaders $440,000. Three\nCanadian Pacific railway box cars\nwere destroyed, and several smaller units of the plant.\nPlan to Open Trail\nRink November 8\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 26\u2014According\nto present plans, Trail skating rink\nwill open November 8, probably\nwith the annual hockey carnival,\nManager William Ramsay said today.\nInspection and repair of the ice-\nmaking machinery is now under\nway, and it was expected the floor\nwould be taken up this week-end.\nTRAIL TRAFFIC BYLAW\nVIOLATORS TO APPEAR\nCITY COURT FRIDAY\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 26-. A great\nnumber of citizens, who have violated regulations of the new street\ntraffic bylaw which went into force\nrecently, will appear before Donald\nMcDonald, deputy police magistrate,\non Friday in city police court, which\nwill open at 3 p.m.\nTRAILITE SENTENCED\n30 DAYS WITH HARD\nLABOR ON TWO COUNTS\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 26-Appearing\nin city police court today on two\ncharges, one for vagrancy ahd the\nother for damaging cily properly in\nIhe jail, Nicholas Amnesty was given two sentences of 15 days in Nelson jail wilh hard labor to be served concurrently.\nMEMBERSHIP OF BIRD\nCLUB NOW OVER 120\nMembership of the Nelson Badminton club since the season's opening has steadily mounted and now\nover 130 membership tickets have\nbeen issued. In some cases two tickets have gone to one member. However, the present membership is estimated at 120.\nAt lhe season's opening, it was the\naim of the club to establish a membership of 170.\nHBC FISH SPECIALS\nON SALE WEDNESDAY\n193 PHONES 194 FREE CITY DELIVERY\nSOCKEYE SALMON-       e*CaA\nFraser Gold, i\/_s; 2 tins .... Jarr\nPILCHARDS\u2014Clover |A(4\nLeaf, 1s; tall; per tin   .   ... '\"T\"\nTUNA  FISH\u2014Blrk'i, 1*JA\nwhite meat, '\/2s; each       Sr\nWHOLE CLAMS\u2014Saan-   _>Qf_\nIch, 1s, tall; 2 tins .. \"'T\nOYSTERS\u2014Sea  Coast, 4-  |D|J\no.. t-ns; each *&**\nCHICKEN HADDIE-Llly ftoA\n1s; per tin Or\nCRAB MEAT\u2014Korean,     jfA\nI'\/at; per tin   \"*r\nLOBSTER\u2014Eagle   Brand,  yjm\\\n'\/.s; per tin   Sir\nSHRIMP\u2014Wet  Pack,\nBlack Label, 1s; per tin\nKIPPERED  HERRING\u2014Crosse\nR.  Bla.kw.H'i, 16-02.\ntin   \t\n2I<\n27*\nSARDINES-\ntins\n-Brunswick;\nTrail Gyros and\nGyrel.es Gay al\nSpecial Meeting\nCelebrate    Founders'\nDay, Supper, Music\nand Speeches\nTRAIL. B.C., Oct. 26\u2014Founders'\nday was fittingly observed at a\nspecial supper meeting of Trail\nGyro club in Crown Point palm\nroom tonight when the wives and\nsweethearts of members were the\nguests.\nSpeeches by members, entertainment and songs comprised an interesting program.\nLloyd Crowe, president, spoke on\nthe \"History of Gyro International\".\n\"History of District No. 8\" was the\nsubject of an address by Ernie\nCook and Dick Fowler outlined the\n\"History of the Trail club since its\ninception November 19, 1932,\n\"Chuck\" Tyson provided club members with much food Jor thought\nwhen he spoke on \"What We Get\nOut of Gyro\", offering suggestions\nto increase interest \"in Gyro\".\nTom Temple, Trail member who\nattended the Grand Forks club's\nbirthday party and installation recently, presented an interesting report on the affair.\nMr. and Mrs. Barrieu entertained\nwith songs and dances, Miss Deen\naccompanying them at the piano.\nReturns From Eost\n\"Trail Needs New\nArena\"\u2014Lerose\nRink  Too  Small   for\nRotary Carnival\nLast Week\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 26-Need of a\nnew arena in this city was expressed\nat the regular luncheon-meeting of\nTrail Rotary club in Crown Point\nhotel palm room today when the\nmeeting was thrown open to suggestions for the 1938 carnival. Chief\nrequirement for the next carnival would be a more adequate place\nin which to hold it, it was agreed.\nAl the carnival staged last Friday\nnight the rink was tightly jammed\nwhen the event of the year opened\nand many were turned away.\nMayor Bruno Lerose suggested\nthat in the spring citizens of Trail\nput their shoulders to the wheel\nand build a new arena, one lhat\n\"we would be proud of and ore that\nwould house such events as the Rotary carnival comfortably.\" Something had to be done sooner or later\nhe felt and \"now is the opportune\ntime\".\nDrawing for a set of curling stones\nwas held at the meeting and F. W.\nBrown Trail pioneer who was a\nguest pulled the lucky ticket from\nthe drum the other portion of which\nwas held by A. E. Haynes,\n\"I feel just as happy as if I'd won\nan Irish sweepstake\", Mr. Haynes\ndeclared.\nGuests at the luncheon included:\nJ. Y. Murdoch, Toronto; W. Roscoe,\nNoranda, Que.; John Knox, Tim-\nmins, Ont.; A. B. Sanborn, Rotarian,\nFernie, B.C.; R. C. Vaughan, Montreal; F. W, Brown, C. W. Guillaume,\nTrail; \"Bird\" Abrams, New Westminster Rotary club; Dr. Neidig,\nCalgary Rotary club; A. E. Coun-\nsell, New Westminster Rotary club;\nand A. J. Wood, Winnipeg Rotary\nclub.\nmanager of the W. W. Powell Co.\nLtd., match block factory in Nelson, has returned from a visit to\nthe east. He arrived in the east\njust at the time of the stock market\nbreak,\nEASY WINNER\nLAUREL, Md., Oct, 25 (AP) -\nBack in the races after a five\nmonths layoff, War Admiral galloped 1 1-16-mile in 1:46 today to\nwin his \"comeback\" dash.\nThe brown son of Man O' War\nraced easily and crossed the line\n2Mj lengths ahead of J. A. Manfuso's\nAneroid, and 6'^ lengths in front of\nE. D. Shaffer's Floradora.\nEducation Leader\nto Speak in Trail\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 26\u2014On Thursday the evening before the Kootenay\nTeachers' convention to be held here\nOctober 29 and 30, Dr. H. B. King,\nwill give a public address in the\nKnox United church. Dr. King was\nin charge of the construction of recently issued courses of study for\nB.C. schools and is one of the leaders\nof education in the province, having\nbeen employed by the government\nto advise it in educational matters.\nOn the same program will be\nheard the Trail Concert trio, which\nconsists of Mrs. C. H. Wright, piano;\nOtto Neidermann, violin, and Theo\nPadberg, violin.\nThe Orpheus choir quartet will\nmake their initial public appearance.\nTeachers' banquet, previously announced to be held at the Halo-Can-\nadese hall on Friday night, will be\nheld in Colombo hall.\nMORE ABOUT\n\"MONTY\"\n{Continued  From Page  One)\nA crowd of nearly 100 natives of\nthis little summer resort town remained to hear the verdict.\nImmediately, the crowd rose to\nIts feet and cheered lustily.\nMontague smiled broadly. A\nhalf dozen persons attempted to\nshake his hand. First to extend\ncongratulations was his chief\ncounsel, James M. Noonan of Albany, N. Y.\nThe elderly judge repeatedly\nbanged his gavel for order, and instructed Sheriff Percy Egglefield to\nremove all spectators standing in\nthe aisles.\nJUDGE DISAGREES\nHe addressed the jury:\n\"Gentlemen, this verdict was\nnot In accord with what I think\nyou should have returned. That,\nhowever, is up to you.\"\nNoonan moved immediately \"for\nexoneration of my client and release of the bail.\"\nMontague, famed for his golfing\nfeats in Hollywood, where he was\nthe friend of moving picture celebrities, had been free on $25,000 bail.\nHe was charged with participating in the seven-year-old $700 robbery of the roahouse of Kin Hanna\nat Jay, N. Y., when he was known\nas Laverne Moore, of Syracuse, N. Y.\nATTEMPTS TO SPEAK\nTO JURY\nBefore the jury was discharged,\nand just after Noonan, chief defence\ncounsel, personally thanked the\njury, Montague rose with a smile\non his face and said;\n\"Gentlemen of the jury.\"\nJudge  Owen  banged   his gavel\nand announced\n\"This Is no show.\"\nThen the crowd stormed noisily\nout of the courtroom and waited at\na side entrance for Montague's exit.\nHe was besieged by both men and\nwomen,   old and young.\nGoldsmith Meets\nBear North Shore\nAs 'Ted {\"Popeye\") Goldsmith\ncrossed the beach op the north shore\nopposite the Launch club, to push\noff in his canoe for towif, shortly\nbefore 5 o'clock Tuesday afternoon,\nhe encountered a big black bear\nhelping himself to berries. Goldsmith jumped for the canoe in a\nhurry, but after pushing out a\nshort distance, paused a while to\nwatch bruin, the bear remained\nbusy with its own concerns and\nshowed no interest even when a\nstone was shied at him.\nHere to Examine\nMining Property\nMr. and Mrs. W. G. Norrie-Loew-\nenthal of Vancouver arrived in Nelson by motor Tuesday from Trail,\nhaving driven up from the coast.\nMr. Norrie-Loewenthal, who is the\nwell known consulting engineer, is\nhere to make an examination of a\nmining property.\nHASKINS PASSES\nTHROUGH TO CROW\nW. E. Haskins of Kelowna, chairman of the interior tree fruit board,\narrived in Nelson Tuesday night,\nbut remained only between trains,\ncontinuing on to the east, presumably to Creston. Among others contacting him while here were R. T,\nSimpson and C, V. Meggitt, the latter of Grand Forks.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. S. ALLEN\nTRAIL, B.C. Oct. 26\u2014Miss Mary\nN. Murray who has been visiting her\nbrother-iivlaw and sister, Mr, and\nMrs. V. C. Huycke, Green avenue,\nleft on Sunday for Port Alberni to\ntake over her duties ns matron of\nthe West Coast General hospital.\nMiss Murray motored to the coast.\nG. Morton of Vancouver is in the\ncity.\nMrs. D, B. O'Neaill of Slocan City\nis a visitor today at the home of\nMrs, D. B, Merry, Annable,\nF, S. Gray, provincial sanitary inspector was in town yesterday,\nThe Knights of Pythias were hosts\nlast night to another of their series\nof partner bridge parties with 34\ntables in attendance. Mrs. W. Doubt\nand N. Waters captured the high\nscore, Miss G. Dufferin and Lorln\nMercer second, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nClay, third and Mr, and Mrs, J.\nByron, fourth. Mr. and Mrs. Dave\nMinto were awarded a special prize.\nThe bridge was held in the K.P. hall.\nMrs. Ronald O. Baker and babv\ndaughter left for Vancouver where\nthey will visit for the next 10\ndays with Mrs. Baker's grandmother,\nI Mrs. Reid and other relatives.\nI    Mr. nnd Mrs. W. J. Flintoft of Nelson were Trail visitors on Sunday\nevening.\nAmo.ig those who left for Vancouver this morning was Mrs. Howard Stinson who will spend about 10\ndays  in  that city.\nMrs. G. L. Merry, Annable, left\nthis morning for Penticton where\nshe will visit at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack Foster. Mrs. Merry\nis Mrs. Foster's grandmother.\nMr. and Mrs. C. G. Harrison, Main\nstreet, have had as their guests Mrs.\nE. T. Coleman of Vallican who has\nreturned to her home.\nA Vancouver visitor for the next\ntwo weeks will be Mrs. Dan McDonald who is spending a vacation\nwith Mrs. James Thompson and\nMrs. Clem McCormick.\nMiss Rose Severn wns among the\nski enthusiasts who made the trip\nto the ski cabin in Rossland on\nSunday, where renovations are being made in preparation for the\ncoming season.\nW. K. Esling, M.P. is a visitor to\ncoast cities this week.\nRossland Will\nLevel Lois for\nan Outdoor Rink\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 26-The\nRossland Amateur Hockey association, which is planning to construct\nan out of door rink on Second avenue near the depot for the use of\nthe juniors asked the city council\nat its meeting Monday evening to\nhave th? proposed site leveled off,\nThe request  was granted.\nSigns will be erected on Columbia\navenue from Monila to Georgia\nstreets and on St. Paul street from\nColumbia avenue to the railway\ntracks setting a speed limit of 20\nmiles per hour.\nA request for a light in the alley\nbetween Monte Cristo and St. Paul\nstreets and between Sixth and Seventh avenues was referred to the\nfire water and light committee with\npower to act.\nThe city will purchase a wreath to\nbe placed on the Cenotaph on Armistice day.\nThe request of the Cooperative\nTransportation society for a \"No\nParking\" sign to be placed in front\nof their garage on Columbia avenue\nwas granted.\nThe city will donate tn the Rossland Swimming Pool association a\nsum equal to lhe association's 1937\ntaxes.\nINSURE  TRACTOR\nFire insurance to the amount of\n$5000 will be placed on the new\ntractor, and the question of covering for public liarjility will be referred to the city solicitor.\nAlderman Cooper reported 33 man\ndays on water works, part of which\nwas spent on lowering the line in\nthe B.A.C. grounds. A test of the\nfire truck since installation of new\ngears showed increased power in\nclimbing the hills, but a slight loss\nof speed on the level.\nAlderman Cunningham, chairman\nof the fire, water and light committee reported receipts for the first\nnine months of 1937 to be $89,476 as\nagainst $86,551 in the same period\nin 1936. Expenditures for 1937 were\n$77,658, as against $72,721 in 1936.\nWith the number of new houses\nbeing constructed this year, Alderman Cunningham looks to see next\nyear's revenue jump by at least\n$5000.\nAlderman  Galliem,  chairman  of\nINCORPORATED  a?n MAY 1670.\nSPECIALS FROwTtHE STAPLE DEPARTMENT\n27\" Flannelette Millends, 11 __ 8    \u2022*_-_\"._\u25a0   \u2022>\u25a0  _ \u25a0_   ..__*\u00ab....\nYard   UC     RAYON PLAID CLOTHS\n52x68 colored linen cloths, frl AA New anc! different these beautiful\nEacn <pl.UU | cloths, will wash easily and are col-\n27\" Cotton Crepe,' \" \"        11.1 \u00b0^\\- '\" harmonizing plaids. Suit-\nYard           UC b^ for breakfast or luncheon \/*A\n__\u201e,.. ... _, ,     ,\u201e _._,     J! tables. 51x51.  Each    UJt\n36   Kimona Cloth, regular 69c, QQ\/\u00bb \u00bb\t\nFor, yard OUC SATIN CUSHIONS\n42\" Fig Marquisette, regular 35c, 1 7 | 10 only satin novelty cushions. As-\nYard     A' ** | sorted colors.  Slightly damaged in\n42\" Fig Marquisette, regular 45c, 1Q | transit. Reg. value $1 49. rti\n!_!lijj^^,^^:^ To Clear' each \"\"C\nENGLISH WOOL CREPES\n54\" Broad Crepes in all the new fall colors. An excellent fabric for smart fall dress.\nColors are Harness tan, Aintree green, Wineberry, Tuxedo blue, Raisin brown (M Oft\nblack. YARD     $1.Z\"\nthe board of works, reported 79 man\ndays   on   street   maintenance,   four'\ndays on flumes, nine days on the j\nskating rink and     three days on j\nthe ball park.\nThe tender of John Mueller of I\n$10 for :\\ lot above Esling Park was i\naccepted on condition that he put no I\nobstructions on the street, Mr. Mucl-'\nler plan? to erect a small homo to\ncost in the neighborhood of $800.\nGYROS TO RUN STAND ^   I\nPermission was granted the Ross-\nland Gyro club to operate the \"hog I\ndog\" stand in the rink during the j\nskating season. A deposit of $10 I\nwill be required to insure that part,\nof the rink being left in good con-'\ndition at the close of the season,\nThe tender of Morley Newman of\n$30 for two lots on Sixth avenue on\nwhich he plans to erect a $2400 home\nwas laid over until plans of the\nhouse are submitted.\nAlderman Cunningham objected\nto five out of the seven members\nof the council attending the convention of the Union of B. C. Municipalities contending that two representatives would have been plenty,\nOther members of the council pointed out that due to there being such\na good delegation to stress the points\nRossland's bonds had been marked\nat $20 higher than they would have\nbeen otherwise,\nAlderman P. J, Gallic brought to\nthe attention of the council the flagrant non-observance of the Lord's\nDay act, and asked if some mean?\ncould not be taken to do away with\nmany of the unnecessary noises\nheard around the city on the Sabbath.\nPROVINCIAL SANITARY\nINSPECTOR AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C, Oct. 26\u2014F. S. de-\nGray of Victoria, provincial sanitary inspector, made an official visit\nto this district yesterday.\nMr. deGray checked the sanitary\nconditions of Trail Creek, and conferred with city officials in regard\nto the proposed sewerage system\nfor Annable, recommendations regarding this matter to be released\nin his Victoria report.\nRossland Procuring\nCase Resumes Today i\nAfter Two Full Dayi\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 26\u2014Case ol\nRex vs. Leo P. Langdone and Mary\nLangdone, charged jointly with pro*:\ncuring, proceeded in camera for its*\nsecond full day at Rossland courl\nhouse before Judge J, G. H. Thompi\nson Tuesday, Case will be resumes\nWednesday morning at 10 o'clock. |\nParker Williams, Trail, is crowif\nprosecutor and A. G. Camerori-\nTrail, counsel for the defence,\nASTHMA\nDon't ait up night*, choking, whMiing,|\u00bbrob*\nlor breath. Get speedy relief. Take RA\/.-MAU\nCapBiilps. Thousands um them to mak#\nbreathing easy and stop persistent bronchial\ncoughs overnight, liasy to take\u2014no smokes, DQ\nsprays, no snuff. Safe- Not habit-.orraingj\nRelief\u2014or money back. 60o and %l at nil\ndruuEiets. Good.orC!iror.icllronchitifl,too. *\u00bb\nTomplotMi'a RAZ-MAH Capsular\nFISH is one of the best foods you can eat regularly. It is delicious.'.'. can be served in scores of ways\n...in delightful recipes. There are over sixty varieries of Canadian Fish and Shellfish available for\ndainty meal-time menus.\nFish provides good health and good nourishment. It is rich in proteins for energy and strength ... in\nvitamin A for promoting appetite and digestion; and vitamin D, the sunshine vitamin so essential to\nchildren... in the mineral salts needed for physical well-being... and rich in iodine and other elements\nthat contribute to general good health.\nMake ANY DAY A FISH DAY. Serve fish often through the week ... it makes a welcome, appetizing\nchange. No other food gives you more value for your money... more nourishment jor every cent expended... than Canadian Fish and Shellfish.\nAnd remember... whatever your choice ... fresh water fish, seafish, or shellfish ... this healthful, nourishing, economical and delicious food is always available to you in prime condition, either fresh, frozen, smoked, canned, pickled,\nor dried.\nDEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES, OTTAWA\nMadied! WRrra\nFOR IRE [BOOKLET\ni\n-\n^illiP-\"\n\"*\"\u2022-..\n\u25a0 .. ...'.'\nANY     D\nDEPARTMENT OI' FISHERIES,\nOTTAWA.\nPlease sent! mc your free 52-paRe\nBooklet, \"Any Day a Fish Day\", con-\ntaininR 101) delightful and economical\nFish Recipes.\nI     AJJreu\nI\nH      DAY\n 1\n\u25a0j \u25a0 -  ;; '\n-^mmMM^\n\u25a0fiM\nft.* ;,-\u25a0\u25a0 ,\u25a0-... IftW.i.-^.qfr-j .WJfc^fl     '\n '\n^fmmmsmsmstrtj^rrwr--^-rr^^\n| PAGE FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING. OCT. 27, 1M7.\nMORE REFORMS  SOUGHT   IN MARRIAGE ACT IN BRITAIN\nEnglish Divorce\nLaw Reform Union\nIs Not Satisfied\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014The Divorce Law Reform Union welcomes\nthe passing of A. P. Herbert's Matri-\n, monial Causes act, but intends to\npursue still wider grounds for di-\nI vorce in Great Britain, it was made\nf plain at the annual meeting of the\nI union.\n\"The union must go on with its\ni work, despite the passing of the\nI'new act.\" said Howell Smith, chair-\nj man.\n! \"There are, still many urgent re-\ni forms that require our attention. We\ni are going to press for divorce on\nthe grounds of chronic drunkenness\n! of husband or wife, and also in the\n\u25a0 case of sentences of life imprison-\n| ment after remission of the death\n' sentence.\n'\u2022'    \"We must continue to press for\nj the addition of these as grounds for\ndivorce until they are actually ob-\nj lained through act of parliament.\"\nj For His Own Sake . . .\nTot Must Learn lo\n! Respect Properly\nRights of Others\nBy GARRY C.  MYERS,  Ph.D.\nWhen my eldest son was about\nthree\u2014he is three and twenty now\u2014\nI was with him in Bedford park,\nBrooklyn. N.Y., near which we liv-\n\u25a0 ,ed. He had a rubber ball, with which\n' he was playing on the grass. There\nwas a large sign. \"Please keep off .\nand I saw it. A big policeman soon\nrebuked me with, \"Can't you read?\"\n. I met the rebuke with silent rage.\n(.removing the child from the grass.\n\/But that policeman was right, and\n.1 was wrong. He was enforcing tlie\n.'law; I was deliberately violating it\n\u25a0 and training my child at a tender\nI age to do so. too. Whereas the tot\nhardly hurt the grass, I was hurting liim, hurting his character, A\nprinciple was involved. I trust lhat\nI have proved more sensible to this\nprinciple since that day.\nYou go with your young child to\nvisit in a homo. You sit and do\nnothing while you see this child\nthreatening to destroy or mar property of your hostess. You assume\nthat he is loo little to understand\u2014\nhe is so young! Perhaps you think\nthe owner should not mind. But\ndo you consider what the damage\nto the child is?\n, What happens to his moral growth\nif you allow him to injure or destroy your neighbor's flowers,\nShrubs or lawn, especially if you\nfail to justify the righteous indignation of your neighbor? Suppose\nyour toddler goes with you to the\ngrocer's, and roves about handling\narticles there. If you have regard\nfor the grocer's rights you will restrain that child. There is still a\nbigger reason why you should restrain him and teach him never to\nhandle articles in a store\u2014his character.' Many children learn to pilfer\nwhile in a store with their parents.\nIt is easy lo keep things lhat are in\nthe hand.\nPLAYING IN\nBUILDING MATERIALS\nPerhaps there is more building\nrow than usual in your neighbor\nhood. Undisciplined children are\ninclined to visit the scene of construction after the workmen leave\n|to play in the pile of sand, romp\n|._ver the stacks of tile, brick and\nBimber. When the frame of the\n'building has beeil erected these\nchildren will rove all over it and\nlater play hide and seek and games\nof chase in the rapidly growing\nhouse.\nI Often these rompers will do dam-\n'age to the property or tools. And\njthere are dangers: some children\n,are injured\u2014broken bones, cracked\nmeads. Yet most of these wounds\nmay heal. The other injuries to\n'the child may leave scars forever\nin their moral character. The trespassing child is wounded inwardly\nand is learning wrong notions about\nhis rights and the rights of others.\nFor his sake we cannot afford to\nlet him trespass on this property\nIf he goes there at all. it should be\nonly with the knowledge nnd permission of the owner, and even then\n\"under close supervision of his par.\nents. It is the small things such as\nj,these which are big in building\ncharacter in our children.\nFor black afternoon or evening\ndresses white flower hats are very\nsmart. The flower hats are usually\nof velvet. Or black hats witli a\nwhite  flower  trim   are   chic.\nA variation in the slim coats is\nParisian lamb that fastens with\nslide at the side.\nSmile? That's Easy!\nEvery Day..\nProper (are and\nGrooming Needed\nfor Lovely Hands\nBy   GLADYS   GLAD\nA New York skin specialist recently said that he considers a\nbeautiful hand as rare as a really\nperfect face. And truly perfect\nfaces, he believes, certainly are\nrare. But he also adds that one seldom sees a hand so ugly that it\ncannot be improved upon and given\na semblance of beauty.\nFrances Dee, screen actress, has\nbeen endowed witli a shapely figure, lovely features, and also correspondingly lovely hands. And she\nclaims that her hands are beautiful\nchiefly because she knows how to\ncare for and groom them properly.\nProper care and grooming of the\nhands do have a great deal to do\nwith their attractiveness. And one\nof the chief points in nail care that\nFrances Deo is particular about is\nthat she preserves the delicate lines\nof the half-moons on her finger\nnails. When the half-moons on the\nfinger nails are clearly defined and\nproperly shaped, they add to the\nbeauty of the finger tips. However\nit sometimes proves quite a difficult\ntask to keep the half-moons pcr-\nPlont Single Early\nand Later Varieties\nof Tulips Together\n1ALLER  PARWINS\nBLOOM  IN  MAY\nHoward, two-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Hopkins of Salmo,\ndoesn't find it hard to smile for the cameraman.\u2014Photo by McGregor.\nSerial Story . . .\nDead Reckoning\nBy BRUCE HAMILTON\nChapter 17\nSix o'clock in the afternoon in\nDr. Harold Arkwright's drawing\nroom. He had wandered in rather\nvaguely, and sat moodily, picking\nat the hem of the brocade on his\narmchair.\n\"You've got the fidgets, Tim,\"\nsaid Arkwright brusquely, 'Want\na drink?\"\n\"Thanks-I think I will. . . . Yes,\nI'm a bit out of sorts.\"\n\"Want me to run you over?\"\n\"No, I haven't come to that yet.\"\nHe smiled, but his face quickly\nreturned to gravity. \"It's just that\nI'm not on terms with myself. . . .\nI'm worried, Harold,\"\n\"Well, let's have it,\"\n\"What -about your little lot In\nthere?\"\nHe nodded toward  the  surgery.\n\"They can wait, Come\u2014what's\non your mind?\"\n\"Esther.\"\n\"What about Esther?\"\n\"That's just it\u2014I don't know. . . .\nAnd I don't know why I've come\nto you. I suppose it's because you've\nknown her since she was a baby. . .\nI thought, after our talk a few days\nago, things would be better. . . .\nWell, they aren't, There's no resilience in her. She gets more and\nmore apathetic, more hopeless. . . .\nAs if she's giving up the struggle.\nAnd I seem to have lost all power tn\nhelp her. . . . Harold, it's breaking\nmy heart to see her going the way\nshe's going. Isn't there anything I\ncan do to pull her out?\"\nArkwright pursued his lips.\n\"Aren't you making rather heavy\nweather? She hasn't struck me as\nbeing as bad as all that.\"\n\"You haven't seen her relaxed,\nShe can buck herself up when she\nwants to, but it's purely artificial.\"\n\"I still think you're exaggerating. You know, when she came to\nme the other day\u2014her trouble wasn't the trouble of a woman who\nwas giving up hope.\"\n\"It might have been clutching at\na straw. ... I tell you, I'm frightened for her sometimes. Her dreams\n. . . . And not only them. Sometimes it seems fo me that she feels\nshe ought to have died, that she's\nonly leading a sort of posthumous\nexistence now,\"\nArkwright shook  his  head.\n\"You're getting morbid, Tim, . . .\nThere may he something in what\nyou say, but I think your trouble\nis mainly subjective.\"\n\"Maybe you're right. I hope so.\nanyway. . . , Harold, how would it\nbe if I took my holiday a bit earlier\nthis year, and stayed away rather\nlonger? We might go on a sea voyage. Don't you think a sea voyage\nmight help Esther?\"\n\"Tlie old prescription. ... It\nmight work out: you'd be none the\nworse for it, anyway. All * right,\nif you're waiting for my authority\ngo ahead with your sea voyage.\nAnd in the meantime I'll think over\nwhat you've said, and have another\nlook  at  Esther in  a  day  or two.\nPour a teaspoonful of thick, fruit\/\nH.R\nSAUCE\ninto the\nand you'll have\nthem asking for\na second helping\nBut  don't\nhave to,\"\nworry   more   than   you\nThe lounge of the William and\nMary. Tim had fallen into the habit\nof ringing up Alma from the surgery when his last patient was\ngone, about once a week. If she\nwas at home and disengaged, she\nwould generally agree to come\ndown to the hotel for a glass of\nAmontillado.\n\"Alma, will you do something\nfor me?\" he said abruptly, after a\nlonger pause than usual.\n\"Yes, of course, I will, Tim, if\nit's something I can.\"\n\"You're  pretty   free   during   the\nday, I know I want you to\ngo out of your way to see Esther,\nevery now and then. Drive over\nto The Wilderness any time; she'd\nalways be glad. . . . You see, 1\nhave my work. . . . She needs\nsomebody sympathetic, to take her\nout of herself. Somebody who can\nhave a bracing influence on her.\"\n\"Of course I will. ... As often as\nshe can stand me.\"\n\"I'm frightened about her, Alma\n.... You see, you never knew her\nas she used to be. She's so different\n\u2014it's  almost  terrible.  As   if  she's\n01   0;t.q   I   '  '  * '3A|[   0}   TTIM   ne   }S0[\nleave her alone.\"\nHe looked up, and to his surprise\nhe saw that Alma's eyes had filled\nwith tears.\n\"You know, Tim,\" she said, \"I\nthink you're about the nicest man\nI've ever met.\"\n. . . And so to Esther herself.\nTim's first step was to cut off\nher supply of drugs. Ever since her\nreturn home her sleep had been\nscanty and fitful. She hardly ever\nhad any difficulty in going off,\nhabitually reaching for her bed\nthoroughly exhausted; for during\nconvalescence every little movement worked on her nerve cells\nwith tenfold attrition. But her wak-\nings were frequent, and, as has been\nseen , often violent. Sometimes,\nhowever, she would open her eyes\nquietly soon after midnight, with\nthe dismal certainty that sleep\nwould not return to her for many\nhours.\nFor the first few weeks, since\nshe was no longer in pain, an attempt had been made to induce\ngradually a habit of natural sleep.\nShe was given no drugs during this\ntime, but the results were so unsatisfactory that a compromise was\nquickly made by which she was\nallowed 15 grains of aspirin every\nother night, (It should be said that\naspirin had never been a familiar\nrecourse at. The Wilderness in the\nway it is in many modern households.) v\nThis produced a marked improvement, though by no means complete\nalleviation. The nurse had been in\nthe habit of administering the aspirin, mixing it with a glass of barley\nwater, When the nurse left Tim\ntook over this duty, and he began\nexperimenting at once.\nDuring the first week he gave\nher the dose as prescribed, noting\nits normal effect on her. In the second week he graduated it off, letting her have lfl grains on Tuesday, five on Thursday, and five\nagain on Saturday. No very marked change was produced. Esther,\nof course, had no idea she was not\nreceiving her draught properly. He\ngave her barley water as usual, and\nas it had always effectively concealed the flavor she noticed no\nchange. Tim would take the proper\ndose out of the bottle and dispose\nof it\u2014either taking it himself, or\nletting it dissolve and run away\nwith the waste as he washed himself in the bathroom basin.\nThe third week he let her have\nthe barley water straight, and, as\nhe had anticipated, suggestion and\nhabit began to prove too weak to\ndo (he work of the drug. She became noticeably more restless, her\nwakeful periods came sooner and\nwere longer protracted, and on the\nFriday she had another nigh4 mare.\nHer loss of sleep left its mark on her\nface\t\nIt was about this time that Grant-\nley. Harold Arkwright, and Alma\nShepherd, following up Tim's hint,\ncame to appreciate that his anxiety\nwas based on rather firmer ground\nthan they had suspected. . . . Tim\nwas well satisfied, but he was not\ngoing to force things on. He wanted\nthe initiative fo come from Esther;\nand it took about 10 days for her\nto come ft tiie point.\n(to Be Continued)\nFRANCES   DEE\nPossesses Lovely Hands\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nMenu  Hint\nSausages Baked in Bananas\nBaked Stuffed Potatoes\nCabbage. Apple, Celery Salnd\nPumpkin Pie       Cheese        Coffee\nI always think of sausages for\nSunday morning breakfast with\nwaffles, pancakes or toast. That\nis the way we serve them, although\nvery occasionally I do serve them\nfor dinner or lunch. Here they are\ncooked in a new way, which, for\nthose of us who like adventures in\ncooking, will be interesting fo try.\nI am giving you my old favorite\npie recipe, which is very economical, and a new one, which dresses\nup the good old-fashioned pumpkin\npie no end.\nToday's Recipes\nSAUSAGES BAKED IN TUNA-\nNAS -\u2022\u25a0- Six bananas, impeded; six\nto twelve small link sausages (size,\ntwelve to sixteen sausages to the\npound.) Slit each banana lengthwise from tip to tip to form a pocket, being careful not to cut through\nthe skin on the under side. Place\none or two link sausages in the\nopening of each banana. Arrange\nbananas in baking dish, slit side up,\nand bake in a moderate oven 1375\ndegrees F.) about fifteen to twenty\nminutes or until sausages are done.\nServes six. Suggestion: To brown\nsausages, place under broiler two\nto three minutes after baking, or\nfry until light brown before inserting into banana for baking.\nPUMPKIN OR SQUASH PIE -\nOne and one-half cups strained\npumpkin or squash, scalded with\ncup hot sweet milk; one-half cup\nsugar, one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon cinnamon, one egg, slightly\nbeaten. Pour into unbaked pastry\nshell and bake in moderate oven for\nabout 40 minutes, or until set nnd\nthe crust brown,\nPUMPKIN CHIFFON PIE \u2014 One\nbaked nine-inch pie shell, one table\nspoon gelatin, one-fourth cup cold\nmm\nTwo-ln-one tiiUp planting\nBy planting a mixture of both\nthe early blooming tulips and the\nlate blooming types together, one\ncan enjoy two months of tulip\nbloom, instead of only one, in the\nsame area of ground.\nAs shown in this Garden-Graph,\nfirst plant a row of the early tulips,\neither single or double varieties,\nwhich will give you bloom in April.\nNext plant a row of the late blooming tulips, either Darwin, Breeder\nor Cottage tulips, which will bloom\nin May. This planting can be repeated two or three times, depending\nupon the width of your tulip border or bed.\nThe single early tulips have the\nmost brilliant colorings. These range\nfrom 10 to 14 inches in height The\ndouble early tulips do not grow as\ntall as the single types, nor are their\ncolors as clear and vivid as the\nsingles, but the blooms last longer,\nfectly exposed, for the cuticle,  if\nneglected, tends so quickly to adhere to the nails and to conceal\nthem either partially or entirely.\nThe whole trick in preserving attractive half-moons lies in giving\nthem proper care. The nails must\nnot be neglected, and the cuticle\nmust not be given an opportunity\nto adhere. Any girl who really\nwishes attractive finger tips should\nnot be content merely with a weekly manicure. That is important of\ncourse, but in addition to this, a\ngirl has to give her finger nails\ndaily care, if she's aiming for perfection.\nGIVE  DAILY  MASSAGE\nIf you are attempting to develop\nor preserve perfect half-moons on\nyour finger nails, you should give\nyour cuticle a daily massage. Tlie\ncuticle is very sensitive and tender, you know, but when neglected,\noften tends to become thick and\nhorny. A bit of cotton should be\nwrapped around the end of an\norangewood stick, to massage the\ncuticle, and then dipped in cuticle\noil or warmed olive oil. Then each\nnail should be gone over with ths\noiled tip, working from the nail tip\nup to the cuticle. Next'the orange-\nwood stick should be passed over\nthe base of each nail and the cuticle\ngently pushed back. This should be\nrepeated over each finger tip every\nsingle day, in order to keep the\ncuticle supple and in good condition.\nTreatment Varies . . .\nAthlete's Foot Is a\nFungus Growth; It\nTakes Many Forms\nBy LOGAN  CLENDENING,  M.  D,\nWith the return of the fall season, the population in gymnasiums\nis increasing, and the old problem\nof what is called \"athletes foot\"\nagain is a matter of important consideration.\nThere are many misconceptions\nabout athletes's foot, one of the most\nprominent being that it is exclusively confined to athletes. The common name generally used by doctors for it is \"ringworm\", and here,\nagain, there is some confusion, because it is not due to a worm and\ndoes not always form in rings,\nIt is caused by a vegetable fungus known as trichophytin, which\ngets into the superficial layers of\nthe skin and causes an eruption,\nwhich may go through several\nstages, The commonest form is an\nacute eruption of blisters which itch\nand which occur on the soles of\nthe feet. Very common also are the\nchronic forms which occur in between the toes in the form of a red,\nweeping eruption. Either of these,\nespecially if excessively scratched,\nmay become infected from the nails\nwith a secondary pus infection.\nChronic form include a scaly,\neczematous type on the upper surface of the foot and the toes. Many\nof these eruptions are what\nknown as \"ids\" and are not due to\nthe presence of the fungus itself,\nbut are areas of eruption made\nhypersensitive from the original fo\ncus of infection.\nTREATMENT VARIES\nTreatment will vary with all\ntypes,   and   no   single   method   of\nhints for\nhousewives\nwater, three egg yolks, two-thirds\ncup brown sugar, one-half cup milk,\none and one-half cups cooked and\nstrained pumpkin, one-half teaspoon salt, one-half teaspoon cinnamon, one-half teaspoon nutmeg,\none-fourth teaspoon all-spice, three\negg- whites, three tablespoons sugar. The pumpkin may be canned,\nor it may be steamed or baked. Add\ngelatin to cold water and let soak\nwhile preparing other ingredients.\nPut egg yolks in top part of double\nboiler, beat well with rotary beater,\nstir in brown sugar, milk, pumpkin,\nsalt and spices. Cook, stirring constantly until thickened slightly. Remove from heat and stir in softened\ngelatin. Cool until mixture begins\nto thicken. Fold in egg whites beaten stiff with sugar. Pour into baked\npie shell and place in refrigerator\none hour or longer or until filling\nis firm enough to cut. Spread with\nwhipped cream and sprinkle salted\nnutmeats over it before serving.\nCRANBERRY CONSERVE - One\nquart cranberries, one whole orange,\none-half cup raisins, one cup walnuts, sugar. Grind first three ingredients together. Add equal amount of sugar, and the walnuts, cut\nfine, Cook until thick and seal at\nonce in small jars.\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nBuying Beans and Peat\nGreen beans should be uniform\nin size if they are to cook evenly.\nTest beans for freshness by seeing\nif they snap when they are broken in half. The best peas will be\nvelvety to touch, bright green in\ncolor (never yellow) and rather\nplump. Plumpness indicates that\npods are filled with peas of even\nsize.\nLuncheon Dish\nBarbara Stanwyck, moving picture\nstar, suggests the combination of\ncreamed mushrooms and diced ham\nserved on either toast or rice for\nluncheon or Sunday night supper.\nBreakfast Substitute\nPineapple juice, flavored with a\nlittle lemon, is an interesting substitute for orange or tomato juice\nat breakfast, Anita Colby, beautiful screen player, suggests.\n_i_\nSonnysayings\nNutria Trims Slim,      What Should She Do ?,\n' Loves Man Who Is\nNutria Trimmed Coat\nNutria is used to trim this slim\ncoat of natural colored Shetland\nwoollen. The coat is cut on straight\nlines.\nScarf and blouse are brown wool\njersey. Nutria makes the front\npart of the hat, which has a crown\nof dark brown antelope,\nI think we is gettin' into a huntin'\ncountry. They is a gamy tang in\nU_e air! >\ntreatment will be successful in all\ncases because there are many forms\nof the fungus, and all varieties are\nnot killed by the same agent. Salicylic acid, sulphur, thymol and iodine are the most beneficial drugs.\nX-ray treatment probably is more\nvaluable than any of them as a\nroutine. Even so, the condition may\nbe very chronic and recurrent.\nThe standard medicament is\nWhitfield's ointment, the active ingredient of which is salicylic acid\nwith benzoic acid in an ointment\nbase. Application of this ointmenf\nwill relieve the majority of acute\ncases.\nWhen secondary pus infection\nhas occured, this must, be taken\ncare of by antiseptic lotions, hot\napplications and soothing applications before an attempt to kill tlie\nfungus  is made.  A  weak solution\nIntemperate, and\nCan't Forget Him\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nDizzy is not at all dizzy. Sha\nhas been going with a boy for a\nyear and loves him very much. He\nhas many faults, she tells me, but\nthe chief fault is that old bug-bear\u2014\ndrink. She knows through painful\nexperience in her home what it\nmeans when the man of the house\ndrinks, and she just can't bear to\nmarry one who doesn't know\nenough to temperate in his habit.\nThe great trouble is that she can't\nforget him and loves him so hard\nthat she. bursts into tears when\nshe thinks about him. She doesn't\nwant to go out with other boys,\neven with one who likes her very\nmuch and wants to go with her.\nThe pain of parting doesn't seem to\nbe getting any better, and she does\nnot know what to do.\nWell, dear, you certainly would\nhave to love a man a very, very\ngreat deal fo continue loving and\nfaithful all through a long lifetime\nof drinking and what it entails. You\nare a wise girl to realize that in\nspite of your love for this boy,\nyou could not be happy if you married him. The sad part of it is that\nso many men like him are so very\nlovable, Wives go through all sorts\nof suffering and stay faithful to the\nend. But I wonder if it is worth the\npain? It is certainly a test of love\nto live with a man for years, to see\nhim intoxicated time after time, to\nwait night after night for him tn\ncome home, agonizing over what\nmay have happened to him. Of\nnever knowing whether there is\ngoing to be money for the rent, if\nthe children are going to have food\nand clothes, and worst of all, are\ngoing to be maimed mentally because of the shame of such a father.\nI can only advise you, dear, to go\nout with other boys until you get\nover your love for him. You are\nyoung and will forget in time if you\ntry hard enough. Why do you not\ntalk to your mother? Her experience and advice would be worth\na great deal to you.\nof potassium permanganate as a\nfoot wash is often valuable In such\ncases.\nIt will be readily seen that the\ncondition is not as simple as lt appears, and in most cases requires\nexpert advice and treatment, rather than home treatment and amateur remedies.\nFEATURE\n\"JET STOVE POLISH\nClean, cooking hot iteel top itoveJ\nwithout danger, or blackening\nSold at stores, Kelly Douglas Jobbers\nHELENi \"No wonder Alice looks worn out \u2014with all the\ntime she spends slaving ove.r her baking.\"\nMARIE i \"Poor thing \u2014let's tell her our secret about The\nQuaker Easy Method.\"\nTHE MODERN QUAKER\nMETHOD OF EASY BREAD\nBAKING-SAVES TIME-\nTROUBLE-WASTE-\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nYou can learn these amazingly simple\nbaking secrets FREE by simply mailing the coupon below.\nNo more kneading, overnight setting or expensive failures. Quaker\nFlour and \"The Quaker Easy Method\nof Baking\" takes all the labour out\nof baking\u2014and saves hours of time.\nQuaker Flour will delight you too!\nIt's not ordinary flour but milled by\nThe Quaker Oats Company to meet\nthe special demands of Canadian\nhousewives for a finer, better all-\npurpose flour.\nuaker Flour\n\u25ba Always the Same   \u2022 Always the Best\nfor Bread, Cakes and Pastry\nNO MORE DRUDGERY\nFOR THESE WESTERN\nWOMEN...READ WHAT\nTHEY SAY:\n\u2022 \"No old-fashioned baking methods\nfor me. I use Quaker Flour and The\nQuaker Easy Method of Baking. Any\nwoman who hasn't tried it should do\nso, and save herself a lot of work and\ntime\"\u2014 Mrs. If7. A. Beam, Yorkton,\nSaskatchewan.\n\u2022 \"The Quaker Easy Method of Baking with Quaker Flour has saved me\nso much time and trouble I wish I\ncould tell every woman about it. I\nuse Quaker Flour for every baking\npurpose\"\u2014 Mrs. J. L. Sborr, Vort\nFrances, Ontario.\n\u2022 \"No more kneading and overnight\nsetting for me. The Quaker Easy\nMethod of Baking with Quaker Flour\nnot only saves me all this trouble and\ntime, but my results are much better\nand I never have a failure\"\u2014 Mrs.\nF.J.Smith, Miher, B.C\nValuable Baking Book FREE\nThe Quaker Oats Company, Dept. L-64\nSaskatoon, Sask.\nPlease send tne copy of booklet \"The\nQuaker Method of Easy Bread Baking.\"\nName -\nAddress-\nDealer's Name-\nutf-i\n_M_^ai\nH\nJam\n\u25a0MB..\n\u25a0HI\n iqpRMipipi\nr\n^*'*mfsm**m9^mmm^mMM\nmmmmmwmmmm-\ntSI\n      NELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON. B.C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING, our. 27. 193;\n1 I\n. PAGI   FIVE j\nKing, Queen and Princesses, Dukes,\nEarls, Peers in a Gorgeous Pageant\nat Opening of British Parliament\nBy GEORGE  HAMBLETON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP)-In splendid pageantry, the King opened\nparliament today. It was the first\noccasion on which His Majesty,\nwith the queen by his side, had addressed the lords and commons in\nparliament assembled.\nThe speech from the throne, read\nby the king, pledged the government to attempt to restore peace in\nwar-wracked Spain and China. It\nsaid energetic steps would be\ntaken to complete air-raid protection and promised additional\nhelp to the needy.\nIt revealed the king had invited\nKing Leopold of Belgium to visit\nhim in November and King Carol of\nRumania to come to London next\nspring. Referring to the proposed\nIndian durbar, it said his majesty\nwas looking forward \"to the time\nwhen it will be possible for me to\nvisit my Indian empire,''\nThe speech promised air raid protection at home and forecast more\nhelp for needy families.\nStorms had swept over the country during the week-end. But this\nmorning opened in soft October sunshine. Early crowds lined the streets\nfrom Buckingham Palace lo West-\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nLOWERY'S\nGROCETERIA\nQUALITY AND SERVICE\nALWAYS RELIABLE\nPHONE 406\nFree Delivery\nDOCTORS CHECK\nKIDNEYS FIRST\nBecame they know thit healthy Kidneyi\nremove from the blood the waste matter\n\u2014the excess acidj and poisons, formed\nhy the erer-changing human body as it\ndecays and rebuilds itself. But if the\nKidneys (ail, illness surely follows. Backache, Rheumatism, Impure Blood, Lack of\nEnergy, Too Frequent Urination, Sleepless-\nnest, Headaches\u2014all may result from faulty\nkidneys. Al a health safeguard\u2014as a wise\nprecaution\u2014regulate your kidneys frequently with Dodd's Kidney Pills\u2014for over fifty\nyears the favorite Kidney remedy\u2014non-\nhabit forming\u2014 safe. 105\nDoddsKidneyPills\nEvening\nSlippers\nDuring t h e\ngay formal\nseason be\nsure that\nyour feet are\ndancing i n\nAndrews'\nshoes. They\nare smartly\nstyled \u2014 i n\nnew colors\u2014\nwith lines\nthat will lend\nyour feet!\ndistinction\nminster, And, as the golden coach\nmoved slowly over the sanded road,\ncheering rose in waves, handkerchiefs and flags fluttered their welcome.\nThe House of Peers presented\nsuch a scene as only the ancient\ncustoms.of Britain afford. Peers in j\nscarlet robes cut with bands of \u25a0\u25a0\nminiver crowded the benches. Numbers stood in the aisles. Back and\nforth across the chamber peeresses'\njewels flashed in facets or light.\nPRINCESS EXCITED\nWATCHER\nPerched on high, pedestals above,\nthe dusty statues of Norman kings,\nclad in chain-armor, looked gloomily down on the moving scene. In\nthe royal gallery, which leads to the\nHouse of, Peers, sat little Princess\nElizabeth, an excited spectator.\nOdd companions sat together in\nthe ambassadors' box. There was\nIvan Maisky, the Soviet ambassador,\nin plain evening dress. On his left\nsat Count Dino Grandi, of Italy, his\nbitter opponent on the Spanish nonintervention committee. To M.\nMaisky's left was Joachim Von\nRibbentrop, envoy of Germany. The\nChinese ambassador sat in the front\nrow. A short distance behind him\nwas the ambassador of Japan.\nOn a bench just in front of them\nall were the Archbishops of Canter-,\nbury and York.\nTen minutes before noon a sea\nof robes and uniforms rippled and\nthen rose as the Dukes of Gloucester\nand Kent, accompanied by their\nduchesses and the Princess Royal,\nentered the chamber. The Duchess\nof Kent took a seat beside Princess\nAlfce, Countess of Athlone, who\nwelcomed her with a kiss.\nTRUMPETS RING OUT\nEight minutes passed. The lights\nsank. In the half gloom the dusty\nstatues of the Norman kings looked\ndustier still. Diamonds glittered in\nthe wavering light. Trumpets rang\nout. Pursuivants, heralds, kings-of-\narms, gorgeous in contour, slowly\nentered the chamber. Then as the\nKing and Queen slowly crossed the\nthreshold, the chamber was flooded\nin light.\nThe great assembly rose. The\nQueen, resting her left hand on\nHis Majesty's right arm, took her\nscat on her throne. The King sat to\nher right. A peer, bearing the cap\nof maintenance, stood on the steps\nof the throne to the King's right,\npeers bearing the sword of state\nstood to Ius left.\n\"My lords, pray be seated.\" The\nKing's words carried quietly across\nthe hall. Then the King, slowly and\nwith short, frequent pauses, read\nthe speech from the throne, outlining the government's program\nfor the session.\nThe speech ended. The royal procession re-formed and moved slowly again from the chamber. The\nfaithful Commons, headed by the\nspeaker, Captain E. A. Fitzroy, returned to their own chamber to\nconsider the \"address in reply to His\nMajesty's most gracious speech from\nthe throne.\"\nBut that will not be their first\norder of business. For, in assertion\nof the ancient right to consider\ntheir own business before business\nfrom the crown, the Commons first\nwill consider the oulawries bill. The\nbill again will disappear with nothing heard of it again for another\nsession. Thus Westminster preserves\nits ancient traditions.\nOutside the crowds again were\ncheering as the great coach passed\nslowly down Whitehall. It is scarcely a year ago since they cheered\nKing Edward VIII.\nPOLi^\\^ATaTwRONC\nHOUSE; PLUMBING IS\nSTOLEN AT VANCOyVER\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct. 26 (CP)\n-Landlord J. Y. Adam can take a\not without complaining, but here's\nlis story.\nIn a letter to the civic board of\nworks today, Adam said a tenant\nmoved without notice from one of\nhis houses and he found it open\nand the furniture and household\nutensils gone.\nHe notified police to watch the\nplace. Again he paid a visit and\nfound it open and plumbing missing. Even the bathtub had been\nmade ready for removal.\nThe police, he said, had been\nwatching the wrong house.\nR. ANDREW\nand Company\nLeaders in Footfashion\nHillyard's\nFairwoy Grocery\n(Opposite Standard Cafe)\nPhone 264   Free Delivery\nService   Quality   Cleanliness\nPersonal Shopping Specials\nFOR WEDNESDAY MORNING ONLY\nCOFFEE-Chase and Sanborn's \u201e.._ Ib. 36c\nBAKING SODA-,   .pound package 10c\nSYRUP - Rogers 2's tin 16c\nOXO CUBES large tin 20c\nCORN FLAKES g^ffM\u2122... 3 pkgs. 25c\nCAKE FLOUR - Swansdown        pkg. 29c\nSOAP - Fels Naptha 4 bars 25c\nCHIPSO - Large     Package 19c\nSALMON-Fraser Gold M't 2 tins 28c\n\u2022   A pretty wedding was solemnized at St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral Tuesday morning when Mildred\nAvonia, eldest daughter of Mr. and\nMrs.  John  Hancock,  became  the\nbride  of  William  I.  McDonough,\nyoungest son  of Mrs. E.  McDonough of Calgary, and the late E.\nMcDonough.   Rev. J. G. Holmes officiated.    Entering  the  church   to\nthe strains of Lohengren's Wedding\nMarch, played by Mrs. G. K. Ashby.\nthe bride, on the arm of her father,\nlooked radiant in a gown of coronation blue tricoline, trimmed with\nglazed braid'    forming a Russian\ntunic style, and a turban hat with\nveil to match.   She carried a bouquet of pink and rose carnations\nand  maidenhair  fern.    Miss  Constance Hancock, sister of the bride,\nwas her only attendant.  She wore a\ntunic dress of myrtle green, trimmed\nwith while, and a hat to match.   A\ncorsage of white carnations completed the ensemble.   The groom was\nsupported by Cy Balcombe of Nel\nson.   During the signing of the reg\nister, Mrs. Ernest Marsden sang \"0\nPerfect Love.\"   After the ceremony\na wedding breakfast was held at\nthe  Golden  Gate,  where Mrs.  S,\nCouch and Mrs. Marsden sang solos\nand   duets,   accompanied  by   Mrs.\nAshby and Ernest Marsden.    The\nguests then departed to the home\nof Mr. and  Mrs.  Hancock, Cedar\nstreet, where the bride cut the three-\ntier wedding cake. Rev. Mr. Holmes\nproposed a toast to the bride and\ngroom.  Both responded. The couple\nleft by car for Spokane and Seattle,\nthe   bride   wearing   a   Saxe   blue\nfrieze travelling suit with hat and\naccessories to match.   On their return they will reside in Nelson. Invited guests were Rev. Mr. HolmcG,\nMrs. E. McDonough, Calgary, Mr.\nand Mrs. Carl McDonough, Mr. and\nMrs.   Edward    McDonough,   Miss\nGrace McDonough and Master James\nMcDonough,  all  of the  Kootenay\nBelle mine, Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nTattrie. Relief Arlington mine, Mr.\nand   Mrs.  W.   Smith,  Drinkwater,\nSask.. Mr. and Mrs. C, Moore, Mr.\nand Mj-s. R. Sackmaster and Mr.\nand Mrs. David Werry, Seattle, Mr.\nand Mrs. Kenneth Crosby, Trail, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Macrone and Mr. and\nMrs. J. H. Duck, Bonnington, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ernest Marsden, Mr. and\nMrs. S. C. Couch, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nSquires,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Edward\nGould, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Mitchell,\nMrs. G. K. Ashby, Mrs. A. E. Cuth\nbert, Mrs, A. Printzlcr, Mrs. A. Mat\nassa, Mrs. K. Fleck. Mrs. C. Parks.\nMiss Elsie Smith, Miss Madge Fitzpatrick, Miss Margaret Ellison, Miss\nJosephine Riley, Miss Gwennie Macrone, Cy Balcombe and Alvin Balcombe.\n\u2022 W. E. Graham was a guest in\ntown from Slocan City.\n\u2022 C. McDonough of the Kootenay Belle mine was a city visitor\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Levesque was a guest\nin town from Slocan City.\ne Mr. McKay was a visitor in\nthe city Monday from Balfour.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. P. Dietrich of the\nRelief Arlington were guests in\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 C. Lindow spent yesterday in\ntown from Salmo.\nt Mrs. Katherine Morris, Fair-\nview, has left to visit Vancouver.\n\u2022 C. F. Duplet of Robson was a\nvisitor in town.\n\u2022 Ernest Marsden of the Relief\nArlington mine is visiting his family\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. P. G. Morey and son John\nmotored to Trail yesterday to visit\nGuy who is a patient at Trail-Tadanac hospital suffering from a burn.\n\u2022 Miss Edith Nelson of Kitchener visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 R. H. Spurway has returned\nfrom a six-month visit to England.\n\u2022 Linus Morrison, who was a\npatient at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital has left for his home.\n\u2022 C. Dickie of Slocan Park spent\nyesterday shopping in town.\n\u2022 Jerry Towgood, who motored\nto Sandon Monday, lias returned to\nthe Queen mine at Salmo.-\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Lane\nwere guests in town from the Queen\nmine.\n\u2022 Shoppers in (own Monday in\neluded the Hon. Mrs, Arthur Scott\nLauder of Queen's Bay.\n\u2022 Mrs. P. Coleman of Deans\nhaven visiipd Nelson Monday\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Phillips,\nCarbonate street, had as their guest\ntheir daughter, Mrs. F. Cartwright\nof the Kootenay Belle mine.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. S. Miros of Tag-\nhum were shoppers in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. Islip of Nakusp visited\nNelson  yesterday.\nt J. A. Catton of Erie spent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. G. C. Lanskail left\nyesterday on an extended visit to\nMontreal.\ne Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Manning\nof the Relief-Arlington mine were\ncity   visitors  yesterday.\n\u2022 J. Boyd of Cranbrook is a\nguest in town.\n\u2022 Sam Alexander is a visitor in\nNelson from Kimberley.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Pratt left yesterday\nfor Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mrs. George Bradley of Salmo was a visitor,in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. S. Kirkpatrick of\nTrail visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Paul Lincoln, who was a\npatient at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, has returned to her home\non Stanley street.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Scovill of\nPerry Siding visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. K. D. Rees left yesterday\nfor Vancouver to spend a holiday\nwithaher parents, Mr. and Mrs. W.\nR. Gibbon.\n\u2022 J. W. White of Nakusp visited\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded George Findlater of Willow Point.\n\u2022 Mrs. Lome Watson, who visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. How;\nard Parker at Slocan City, left yesterday for her home at Vancouver.\n. \u2022 Mrs. Oscar B. Appleton of\nSunshine Bay was a guest of her\nsister, Mrs. H. H. Pitts, Cedar street,\nen route to Robson.\n\u2022 Robert Peaters of Salmo visited town  Monday.\n\u2022 Visitors in the city yesterday\nincluded William Kennedy of South\nSlocan.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. H. Baillie of Kamloops\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 'George E. Irwin has left for\nVancouver.\n\u2022 J. P. Bell of Park Siding\nspent yesterday in the city.\nMrs. P. Gansner, Granite road,\nleft yesterday for Vancouver,\n\u2022 Mrs. M. E. Aylwin of New\nDenver, B.C., announces the engagement of her daughter, Lillie\nMay, to Ernest Doney, only son of\nMr. and Mrs. E, Doney of Sandon,\nB.C. The wedding will take place\nat Saint Stephen's church, New\nDenver, November 10 at 1 o'clock.\nBUCHAN'S NEW\nBOOK PRAISED\nDEATHS\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014 The\nNew York Times today reviewed\nat length \"Augustus,\" the latest book\nby John Buchan, who is Lord\nTweedsmuir. Governor-General of\nCanada.\nThe book describes the life of Oc-\ntavius Augustus, ruler of Rome at\nthe time of Christ. The reviewer.\nRalph Thompson, said that \"for presumably good reasons of his own.\nthe Governor-General of Canada\nhas picked this as the proper time\nto bring forth a laudatory study of\nthe Fuehrer principle in politics.\"\n\"Not,'of course, the principle as it\nis applied today,\" he wrote. \"But\nwriting of an age long past\u2014and\nunder the name of John Buchan,\nstudent of history and private citizen\u2014the Governor-General has\nfound it possible to speak as frankly\nas he pleases. The result is of ever\ngreater interest to democrats than\nto students of ancient civilization.\"\nBy The Canadian  Preu\nCONCORD, N.H.\u2014Frank Cross-\nley, 55, vaudeville actor.\nTORONTO - Ernest H. Senior,\nK.C., 48, authority on insurance and\ncompany law.\nPARIS\u2014Duke of Talleyrand, husband of Anna Gould, daughter of\nlate Jay Gould, after her divorce\nfrom Count Boni de Castellane. The\nduke was a descendant of Charles\nMaurice Talleyrand-Perigord, the\nFrench diplomat and statesman of\n18th and  19th  centuries.\nPATTULLO LAUDS\nLATE DR. TOLMIE\nAllen Is Fined\nAs the outcome of an auto colli\nsion on Baker street Monday after\nnoon, Richard, Allen paid a fine of\n$17.50 in city police court Tuesday\nwhen he appeared before William\nBrown, police magistrate, on a\ncharge of driving to the common\ndanger.\nA car belonging to W. K. Clark,\ndriven by Allen, figured in a collision with the car owned by J. H.\nArgyle while the latter vehicle\nwas parked on Baker street.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 26 (CP)- The\nlegislature assembly stood twice today, in silent tribute to the late Hon.\nS. F. Tolmie, premier of the province from 1928 to 1933, and to C.\nK. Courtney, law clerk from 1906\nto 1936.\nPremier Pattullo said he had called on Dr. Tolmie a short time before his death. The former premier\nwas cheerful, buoyant, and had no\ncomplaint, Mr. Pattullo said.\n\"Dr. Tolmie possessed the superlative faculty of making friends,\" said\nthe premier. \"I don't think he was\nany too enamored of public affairs,\nyet had conscientious scruples as to\npublic duty. His career as a public servant was long and honorable\nand of the responsible offices he\nheld I believe he liked the ministry\nof agriculture at Ottawa more than\nany others.\n\"His death was a distinct loss to\nhis native province and to the\nnation.\"\nDr. Frank P. Patterson, leader\nof the Conservative opposition, followed Mr. Pattullo in paying tribute\nto the late premier.\nTardieu Was in\nLeague With Fasci\nLYON, France, Oct. 26 (CP-Havas)\u2014 Andr Tardieu admitted in\ncourt here today that while he was\npremier he subsidized Colonel Francois De La Rocque, pro-Fascist\nchief of the now disbanded Croix de\nFeu.\nThe veteran statesman, who headed cabinets in 1929, 1930 and 1932,\ntestified at libel proceedings\nbrought by Duke Pozzo Di Borgo\nagainst De La Rocque on the ground\nthe latter had impugned the duke's\npatriotism.\nTardieu testified he was in touch\nwith De La Rocque over an 18-\nmonth period, and in April, 1932-\nonly a month before his last govern\ntnent fell\u2014paid him 60,000 francs.\nMcCALLUM LIB.\nCHOICE IN ONT.\nSYDENHAM. Ont., Oct. 26 (CP)\n\u2014 Angus McCallum, of Sunbury,\nwas chosen Liberal candidate for\nthe Frontenac-Addington federal\nbyelection November 15, It was nee-\nessitatcd by the resignation of Hon\nColin Campbell. Liberal, to con\ntest the Addington scat in the On\ntario elections Oct. 6-\nFESTIVAL COMMITTEE PREPARING\nSYLLABUS MAY EVENT, NELSON\nTRAFFIC DEATHS\nUP (7.5 PER CENT\nNumber of Cars, B. C.\nHighways, Increased\nOnly 10 Per Cent\nVICTORIA, Oct. 26 (CP)- While\nthere was only a 10 per cent increase in the registered number of\ncars operating on British Columbia\nhighways, there was a 47.5 per cent\nincrease in the number of persons\nkilled in automobile accidents during the first nine months of this\nyears, according to provincial police\nmotor statistics.\nNinety persons were 'killed in\ncrashes to the end of September.\nTo the end of last month there\nwere 3434 accidents reported and\nlast year during the same period\nthere were 2682. The property damage so far this year has been $317,-\n615 as against $226,817 last year.\nINSULIN IN\nTABLETS NOW\nBy 8TEPHEN J. MCDONOUGH\nAssociated Press Science Writer\nROCHESTER, N.Y., Oct. 26 AP)-\nA new method of treating diabetes\nwith insulin swallowed in small\ntablets instead of by injections with\na hypodermic needle, was forecast\ntoday before the National Academy\nof Sciences.\nThree   University   of   Rochester\nEhysicians, Dr. John R. Murlin, Dr.\n,awrence E. Young, and Dr. William A. Phillips, announced that they\nhad successfully treated some human beings and dogs suffering from\ndiabetes with the new solid preparation.\nThe compound is composed of insulin and hexyl-resorcinol, a common antiseptic and fever- reducing\ndrug. The resorcinol acts as an em-\nulsifier to clean fat from the linings of the stomach and intestines\nby making it more soluble in water\nthan it normally is.\nButcherteria\nPhone Moure   phone\n527   m\u00bbw\u00bb    528\nWednesday and Thurtday\nSPECIALS\nKOKANEE TROUT:    1n\nWHiTEFiSH; QCjj\nEach JOC\nLOIN PORK CHOPS: OA\nLOIN VEAL CHOPS: OCj\nLOIN LAMB CHOPS:\nLb\t\nBONELESS STEW\nBEEF: Lb\t\nMINCED STEAK:\n2 Ibi\t\n25c\nlie\n25c\nHAMBURGER and SAUSAGE MEAT: OP,,\n3 Ibs sLM\nMan Injured in\nAuto Crash Still\nin Serious State\nGeorge Fofinow. most seriously\ninjured of the five men riding in a\ncar which plunged over a 125 foot\nembankment at Peter Verigin's\nTomb at Brilliant, is still in rather\na serious condition at Kootenay\nLake General hospital, his attending physician reported Tuesday.\nThe man suffered severe lacerations of the face and a sprained left\nhip.\nPeter Laktin, admitteB to the\nhospital at the same time as Fofinow\nwith three broken ribs, wa* reported\nto be much improved.\nFofinow and Laktin with John,\nPete and Nick Cheveldave, were\ndriving in a car near Peter Veregin's\nTomb at Brilliant, when the car\nshot across the road, leaped a fence\nwithout touching it, and rolled and\ntumbled 125 feet down a rocky em-\ni bankment, landing on the C. P. R\ntracks, The car turned over seven\ntimes in its wild journey.\nPOT ROASTS: Q^.-i\nLb. up from     OC\nBOILINC BEEF: Ol _i\nBibs Z4C\nSTEWING VEAL and OC-\nLAMB: 2 Ibs \u00a3\u00ab)l\nru\"D:......20cj\nBACON: Sliced, OC    |\nCALVESLivER: OO^\nSIRLOIN STEAK:''' OC |\nROUND STEAK: '\" OA    |\nFREE DELIVERY\n1\nTRY A WANT AD\nMay Cure Cancer by Refrigeration;\nOne Hopeless Case Saved in Test\nBy HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE\nAssociated Press Science Editor \u25a0\nCHICAGO, Oct. 26 (AP) - A\n, new attack on cancer by use of\nrefrigeration, on the principle\nthat wild growth of this disease\nmay be cured as the growth of\nplants and some animals is\nstunted by cold, was announced\nto the American College of Surgeons  here  today.\nThe experiments all were done\non human beings. Among them\none case of \"hibernation\" of a\ncancer was produced. Under refrigeration this particular cancel'\nhas disappeared although the pa-\ntionl had been pronounced \"hopeless,\"\nThe refrigeration technique was\nannounced as \"a new point of\nview'' by Temple Fay. M.D., professor and head of the department\nof neurosurgery and George C.\nHenny, M.D.. director of the department of physics, Temple University school of medicine, at\nPhiladelphia.\nThe type of cancer refrigerated\nis metastasizing carcinoma. It\nis the kind which spreads from\none part of the body to another.\nIt is one of the most dangerous.\nDr. Henny, the physicist, devised instruments which could be\nplaced on the human body to\nlower temperature in specific regions.\nThe most immediate and striking result of the refrigeration\nwas \"prompt and gratifying relief of pain.\" There was temporary improvement in the general\nnutritional state of the patients.\nWhere the refrigeration instruments-could \"be applied directly\nto tlie cancer growths have shown\nsome diminution in size. Microscopical examination of the refrigerated growths showed\n\"marked degeneration'' of the\nwild cells.\nThe report says the experiment\nhas not been going oil long\nenough to draw any conclusion\nas to the ultimate result of refrigeration.\nTest  Pieces Will  Be\nSame as Used at\nVancouver\nPreparations lor the syllabus of\nthe 9th annual music festival to be\nheld in Nelson in May, 1938. are well\nunder way, members of the executive announced Tuesday. At a\nmeeting Monday night, the committee decided to adopt the same test\npieces for the festival which will be\nused at the Vancouver festival, May\n16. This will enable Kootenay students to participate in the coast festival and have the same chances as\nthe coast students. Tentative dates\nfor the festival ar\u00ab set for May 4,\n5, 6 and 7,\nAdditions to the syllabus this year\nWill be a vocal duet for boys or girls\nunder 20, a trio for boys or girls\nunder 20, and a mixed quartet for\nboys or girls under 20.\nHeretofore in the adult section\nmen and women have competed\nagainst each other in the championship class. In the 1938 festival\nhowever, women will compete\nagainst women and men against\nmen.\nAn intermediate championship\ncompetition has been added in the\npiano class. Competitors between\nthe ages of eight and 12 will compete for tlie junior championship\nand competitors between 13 and 20\nfor the intermediate championship.\n\"Instrumental ensemble open\"\nwill lake the place of the instrumental trio open, and any combination up to eight pieces is allowed. Their test piece will consist of chamber music of their own\nchoice.\nIt is the intention of the committee to have a separate adjudicator\nfor the elocution class.\nExecutive of the festival is composed of Leslie Craufurd, president;\nA. J. Cornish, E. A. Mann, Victor\nGraves, J. W. Robb, George Horstead and Ross Fleming.\nSWISS PREMIUM SPRING LAMBS\nDELICIOUS\nLegs          Ib. 25c\nLoin .'. Ib. 23c\nShoulders  ~~ lb. 15c\nSAFEWAY\npromtiMnlchUd pircholoilri\n\/\nWE RESERVE  THE RIGHT TO\nLIMIT QUANTITIES\nSAFEWAY STORES\nLIMITED\n'new improved palmolive has hew mildness, new lovely perfume, new hmpnes^astuonger\nDONALD AND I\nvsilyamnouve every day...\nSAYS faU \\>\u00a3&~>yL\n\"Palmolive is the perfect beauty treatment,\" Mrs,\nDampsyadds. \"The blending of Palm and Olive Oils\nmakes the lather wonderfully cleansing and refreshing.\"\nAnd \u00bbo, like millions of women everywhere, Mrs.\nDarap.y agrees with Dr. Dafoe. Like the guardians\nof the lovely Dionne Quins, she has selected\nPalmolive exclusively for use in her home.\nMothers I Choose Palmolive Now |\nWhy ahould your children useanysoaplejs gentle, less I\nsoothing than the soap chosen for the Dionnes? Why |\nnot decide now, that only Palmolive, made with Olive |\nOil, will ever touch your children's tender skin I\nAnd you too, who want to keep your complexion \u2022; V\nsmooth and lovely through the years I Why not give\nyour skin the beauty care that only Palmol ive's careful\nblend of Olive and Palm Oils can give. Why not use\nsafe,pute,gentlePalmoliveforyour own face and bathl\n^    -\u00bb      . \"_ _\nDR. DAFOE SAYS I\n\"At the time of the birth of the Dionne\nQuintuplets, and for sometime afterward,\nthey were bathed in Olive Oil...When\nthe time arrived for soap and water baths,\nwe selected Palmolive Soap exclusively for\ndaily use in bathing these famous babies.\"\n# It's easy to abuse eye.\n\u2014Just by reading or work\nIng under poor light\u2014and\nIt Is easy to avoid abuse.\nSimply fit eyerysocket with\nLaco Mazda Lamps of 60\nwatts or more. Laco Mazda\nLamps supply good light at\nlow cost.\nCharges Official\nCriminals' Friend\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP)-A\ncharge that fingerprints of aides of\nMarinclli, New York county clerk,\nmight show 20 or 30 \"men with\ncriminal records\" and \"one or two\nfugitives from justice\" came from\nThomas E. Dewey, special rackets\nprosecutor, today as New York's\nmunicipal campaign raced down the\nhome stretch.\nThe Tammany district leader was\nchallenged by Dewey, candidate for\ndistrict attorney and running mate\nof Mayor Laguardia, to answer with\nfingerprints Dewey's charges that\nMarinelli was a \"political ally of\nthieves, pickpockets, thugs, dope\npeddlers and big-shot racketeers.\"\nThe charges were unanswered by\nthe clerk.\nHONOR WRITER OF\n'WHEN YOU AND I\nWERE YOUNG, MAGGIE'\nHAMILTON, Ont., Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014\nGeorge Washington Johnson, Went-\nworth county school teacher, who\nwrote \"When You and I Were\nYoung, Maggie\" is to be honored\nin death. The Hamilton branch of\nthe Native Sons of Canada will unveil a cairn here Saturday to his\nmemory.\nSAYS ORGANIZATION\n'BADGE OF SANITY'\nLONDON, Ont, Oct. 26 (CP) \u2014\nIf retail merchants organized so\nshould their clerks, George S. Houg-\nhan, executive secretary of the Retail Merchants Association of Canada, told 450 retail grocers and merchants here last night. He thought\norganization was \"a badge of sanity\" in this generation.\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\n.... VASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Wednesday and Thursday\nChoice Steer Beef\nSirloin Steaks, Ib. ... 25*\nPot Roasts, Ib. 101 & *2<\"\nLean Boneless Stewing,\n2 lbs.   25*\nJuicy Round Steaks,\n2 Ibs  43*\nBoneless Corned Beef,\nLb  17*\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibs. ..\nVeal Loin Chops, Ib. .\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. .\nLamb Chops, 2 Ibs. ..\nPork Tenderloins, Ib. .\nPork Lean Spare Ribs,\n2 Ibs\t\nReal Calf Liver, Ib. ..\n25*\n25* j\n15*\n35p!\n35<?i\n!\n33*\n28*\nCreamery Butter, Thistle\n3rd grade, with meat order,\n2 Ibs  59\u00ab?\nFresh Eggs, local A, pullets,\nDoxen  45*\nBreakfast Bacon, fresh\nsliced, Ib 37*\nKokanee Trout, fresh\ncaught, Ib  18*\nBreakfast Sausage, fresh\nmade, 2 Ibs 25*\nHamburger, choice, fresh,\nLb 10*\nMushrooms, fresh from\nVancouver, Ib 40*\nCash and Carry\nOnly\nLamb Stewing, 3 Ibs. 25*\nVeal Stewing, 3 Ibs. 251\nBoiling Beef, 5 Ibs. 25*\nPure Lard, Ib 15*\nSmoked Haddie Fillets,\nLb 20*\n^mmmmmimm\n1\n wmmmmmmjmm\nwp\nj\nNWE SIX\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING. OCT. 27. 1937,\nMriamt Satlij News\nEstablished April 22, 1902. Ii\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED,\n218  Baker  Street,    Nelson,    British  Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers  of   the   Audit  Bureau   ot   Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1937.\n| SPEED LIMIT NOT BEST DETERRENT\nThere are rumors from Victoria that Hon. Gordon S.\nWismer, the attorney general, is in favor of establishing\nonce again in British Columbia a definite speed limit for\nautomobiles.\nit is to be hoped that he will do nothing of the kind.\nWhere the most experienced and most enlightened\ntraffic control is in effect in many parts of the world, the\nj speed limit has been abolished. It is obviously absurd to\nsay that to kill a pedestrian at 25y_ miles per hour is more\ncriminal that to kill a pedestrian at 24V2 miles per hour.\nThe principle upon which we are now working, which is\nthat of punishment for driving to the common danger,\nworks out far better. There are conditions in which a speed\nof 15 miles per hour is far too great; there are other conditions under which a speed of 50 miles per hour is safe.\nMUSSOLINI AND EGYPT\nMussolini seems to be putting on a Little Red Riding\nHood act with Egypt. Although new Italian contingents\nhave been rushed to Libya, the Italian colony which borders Egypt, II Duce reassures the Egyptian government by\nstating that the Italian troops will not be used against\nEgypt.\nThe Egyptians are not so sure. Like Little Red Rid-\n| ing Hood they are distrustful of the long white fangs,\nand not too much impressed by the pretty speeches. Misri,\nthe newspaper which is supposed to reflect the views Of\nthe Egyptian premier says: \"It would be vain to say we\nare able to defend our country against the invader. We\ncannot confront the Italian army or airplanes. We are\nobliged to count on Great Britain. If the latter concentrates her forces on the Suez Canal we will have to defend alone the greatest part of our territory. The danger\nis great.\"\nRecently Egypt has achieved her freedom. She is now\nan independent nation, a member of the League of Nations.\nBut her relationship with Great Britain is perhaps more\ncordial than it ever was before. She realizes that Italy\nwould be glad to use in Egypt the same tactics she did in\nEthiopia, and would do so but for the protecting arm of\nBritain.\nThat Britain is not taking the matter too casually\nis shown by the visit to Cairo of Alfred Duff Cooper, first\nlord of the admiralty.\nWhatever happens during the next few weeks it is improbable that Britain will be as unprepared as she was two\nyears ago when the Ethiopian fiasco occurred,\nIt is doubtful if Mussolini's position is showing any\nreal improvement. The Ethiopian adventure has been unproductive of any economic returns whatever. The guerilla\nwarfare which is continuing is costly both in lives and\nequipment. Last month, according to dispatches from\nRome, 102 Italian troops including 44 officers, and an unspecified number of native troops, were killed. This brings\ntotal admitted losses since January 1035 to over 4000, In\naddition 117! Italian laborers succumbed to disease in\nthe new empire.\nWith Ethiopia still undisgested, and the Spanish\nstruggle taking even larger numbers of troops, Mussolini\nwould he bold indeed to attack Egypt, although the situation in Palestine is playing into his hands,\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nTOOR FALSE CARDS\nTHERE ARE times when a\nfalse-card, Intended to fool the opponents, gives them more Information than if the natural play\nhad been made. It is unwise,\ntherefore, to get the habit of always trying to toss off high cards\non tricks taken by the- defenders.\nIt can be better In some situations,\nto offer a complete lack of information rather than a strained\neffort at misinformation\n\u2666 K 10 8\nV 10 8 7 6 4\n\u2666 Q3\n*J 10 6\n\u2666 A Q J 6\n\u00bbAKQ85\n\u2666 K\n+ Q8J\n(Dealer: East. East-West vulnerable.)\nSouth opened the bidding on\"\nthis deal with 1-Heart, which West\nraised to 2-Hearts and South took\nto 4-Hearts. That was the stand-\nard bidding at every table of a j\nduplicate tournament, and also the\nsame opening lead was made in |\nevery case, the K of clubs.\nIn every Instance but one, the I\nSouth player put the deuce on the\nopening trick and West then\nshifted to the diamond J, as he\nfelt that Ills partner's three spot\nwas probably the bottom of a\nhnldlhrr which contained also the\n3 and 8. At only one table did\ntho South player put his club Q\non the first trick.\nThis caused the man ln the\nWest, Edgar F. Tlerney of Spring-\nHeld, Mass., to put on his \"thinking cap\". Since tha deuce had not\nappeared, he knew that his partner did not have three cards. If\nhe had, they would have been the\n8, 3, and deuce, ln which event his\npartner would have played the\ndeuce. East therefore had either\na doubleton consisting ot the 3 and\ndeuce, and was starting a high-\nlow, or else the 3 was a singleton.\nConsequently, West knew positively that the declarer still held the\nclub 8 and possibly the deuce.\nWith this dependable reading,\nMr. Tierney laid down the club A\nand then followed with a third\nclub, which his partner ruffed.\nThe diamond A thereupon set the\ncontract.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTomorrow'! Problem\nt\\ A8\n\u2666KQ964\n\u2666K8432\n* K 10 6 5\n:;\nf 3\n\u2666 10 7 ft\n#J6 4 2\nN.\n+ 42\n\u00bbA7 .\n\u2666 AQ J9\ni, A 10 9 8\n3\n\u2666 Q J9 7\n\u00bb J 10 3 5 a\n\u2666 5\n+ KQ5\n(Dealer. East. Neither side\nvulnerable.)\nWhat la the correct bidding of\nthis deal 7\n..Between Yoeaed\nBy\ne\nB.C.\nGRANNY BECAME SHOCKED\nMolly had just arrived back from\na char-a-bancs outing.\n\" How did you enjoy yourself,\nMolly?\" asked her grandma.\n\"On, it waB all very beautiful,\nbut you should just see the 'Devil's\nGorge'!\"\n\"My dear,\" reproved the shocked\nold lady, \"you shouldn't speak like\nthat ol your friends. I expect the\nride and the fresh air gave them\nan appetite.\nADDRESS TO A WILD GOOSE\nI was sitting idly dreaming\nin the sunshine yesterday\nWhen I saw a wandering wild goose\npassing on its southward way.\nCrippled, helpless, near despairing\nenviously I watched its flight\nTill its swift and easy fairing\ncarried it out of my sight.\nLong I sat and deeply pondered\nstriving nature's aim to guess\nNaught divined though much I wondered\nwhile I pencilled this address.\nWondrous wanderer of the air\nWho would not with thee exchange\nShed this load of camping care\nFor thy glorious boundless range.\nFloating free at dizzy height\nBalanced on thy waving wing\nNothing can impede thy flight\nNor disturb thy forward fling.\nFar below the landscape spreads\nLike a map for thee to scan\nNothing holds for thee to dread\nSave the sordid haunts of man.\nWhere his dwellings most abound,\nWith keen vision, looking down\nThou canst see him on tho ground\nNature's error, ape and clown.\nLives his life in strife and want\nBoasts that he was born' to rule\nOf his follies makes a vaunt\nAnd foolish knows not he's a fool\nHome to thee is arctic like\nHome to thee is tropic sand\nHome .the wavy way you takp\nHome is water, air and land.\nPerfect gem of nature's art\nStream-lined courser of the air\nWelt adapted to thy part\nProof of mother nature's care.\nWould I could this body cast\nTake thy form and with thee rise\nPartner of thy kingdom vast\nNavigator of the skies.\nIf again I'm corporate\nAnd the choice of form be mine\nNever will I hesitate\nWandering wild goose it is thine.\nSIMPLE SAM\nHERE AND THERE\nJ. B, Oray commenting on a story\nrelated to him by J. F. Chapman-\nJerry Muesel hiking down the street\n\u2014and Jerry walks with one foot inclining inward \u2014 Charlie Darraugh\nout for a walk without a hat\u2014and\nlighting a cigarette as he went down\nthe street\u2014And some of the staff\nwas sitting in the editorial sanctum\n\u2014complaining of lack of energy\u2014a\ntired and depressed feeling\u2014And as\nthe discussion went along\u2014someone\nsuggested low clouds, lack of sunshine, etc., was the cause\u2014which\nseems about right\u2014and while in the\nmidst of the discussion on that \"don't\ncare\" feeling\u2014a truck went by\nloaded down with what are commonly termed rough boxes\u2014which\nmore or less added a more depressing note to the conversation\u2014And\nso feeling non-energetic\u2014that's all\nthe gossip for today\u2014Outside of the\nfact that Tom Penny was commenting on the beer situation\u2014and I told\nhim the hot rum season had arrived\u2014and some bright guy asked\nwhich was better in hot rum\u2014ice\nin cubes or fine ice\u2014but I didn't\nbite and say either kind\u2014for who\nwants ice in hot rumj-And I started\nwith J. B. Gray and must end the\ngossip with him today\u2014I saw him\npick up a $10 bill\u2014look it over\u2014and\nhave the chap who had pulled it out\nof his pocket\u2014claim the bill\u2014and\nhave it returned\u2014and J. B. commenting something about the profits\nof the day being shot.\u2014\nON OTHER FOOT\nJapanese claim that a recent atrocity picture was really posed by the\nChinese. So we will put this down\nwith the other canard about there\nbeing a war on.\nENOUGH TO GO ON WITH\nThis letter was received by a\nSouthwark schoolmaster:\n\"Please excuse John for being\naway yesterday. He played traunt.\nBut please, don't lick him. The two\nboys he was with licked him; a\nlorry driver he hung on lo licked\nhim; a man who owned a dog he\nhit licked him; the greengrocer\nlicked him for taking an aRple; 1\nlicked him when he came home,\nand his father licked him when ho\ncame home. So you need not lick\nhim this time.\"\nSTEALING HIS THUNDER!\nLooking Backward...\nTEN YEARS AGO\nOctober 27, 1927.\nMembers of the Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood\nand Independent Doukhobors will\ngather at Brilliant to commemorate\nthe death of their leader, Peter\nLordy Verigin, who was killed in\na railway coach explosion at Far-\nron, October 29, 1924\u2014Mrs. W. A.\nElsdon and children have returned\nto Bonnington from visiting Mrs.\nElsdon's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G.\nN. Gilchrist at Nelson\u2014R. B. Milne\nis a visitor in town from Kaslo.\u2014\nMiss Olive Bealby has returned\nfrom visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hugh\nKing at Golden\u2014Colonel and Mrs.\nJ. Murray were city visitors from\nSouth Slocan.\u2014A. G. Strudwicke nf\nKitchener is a guest of Mr. and Mrs,\nW. S. Watson at Creston.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nOctober 27, 1917. '\nR. F. Green, M. P., is in town\nfrom Revelstoke.\u2014Mrs. Florence\nBoyd of the B. C, Telephone Co.\nstaff left to spend a week with her\nparent:;, Mr. and Mrs. Frank H.\nDelves al Trail\u2014British airmen in\nSeptember downed 274 German\nplanes.\u2014W. K. Esling of Rossland\nis a visitor in Nelson.\u2014D. Bingoy\nof Trail is a visitor in town.\u2014Lead\nshipments to the Trail smelter will\nagain be received, commencing on\nNov. 1.\u2014Mrs. W. G. Ternan return-\ned to Rossland from a visit to Mrs\nJ. Hunter in Spokane.\u2014Mrs. H.\nParker was elected president of the\nSlocan City Red Cross branch for\nthe year.\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\" John Fraser have returned from a visit to the\ncoast..\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nOctober 27, 1907.\nA complete system of 19 letter\nboxes is to be established in the\ncity.\u2014W. A. McDonald lias returned from the Greenwood assizes.\u2014\nH. E. Macdoncll, district freight\nagent ofthe C. P. R. is being transferred to St. John, N. B\u2014 Good progress is being made with constructing a roller rink.\u2014Mrs. Moore, wife\nof Captain Moore of the steamer,\nInternational, is leaving for a trip to\nNew Brunswick\u2014G. Ncelands, O.\nHarris and Mr. Lindsley returned\nfrom a hunting trip Jo the White\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nSTRIKES ARE COSTLY\nCanada had 17ii strikes in the first\nsix months of 1937. This is one factor in the progress of recovery. It\nis when economic conditions are\nimproving that strikes occur, and\nthey occur because we have not\nyet learned to make necessary adjustments of wages to prices and\nother changing conditions by negotiation. The strike is a costly and\nfutile system; cosily to labor and\nindustry and futile because it does\nnot settle anything\u2014it is negotiation\nand reason that make the settlement\u2014Moose Jaw Herald.\nEAGER FOR THE FARM\nThe Ontario Agricultural college reports the largest freshman\nclass in its history, proving that\nyoung farmers throughout the province are constantly growing more\nappreciative of tho value of instruc\ntion in scientific agriculture to the\nend that they may make the most\nof their opoprtunities through the\nadoption of improved methods and\npractices.\u2014Brockville Recorder and\nTimes.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nGrouse   mountains.\" They   bagged' tines\nthree   cariboo,   one   containing   30\nINCONSISTENT HITLER\nWhat a crusader always lacks,'\nhowever, is a sense of humor. Hitler:\ninsists that just as it is for the Gcr- j\nmans alone to decide whether Ihey\nwant Nazi rule and for the Italians\nalone to decide whether they want\nFascist rule, so it ought to be for the\nSpaniards alone to decide what sort i\nof rule they want. His idea of making sure that the Spaniards decide\nthis for themselves seems to be for\nGermany and Italy to send soldiers,\nmunitions, airplanes, guns, etc.. to\nhelp in this decision\u2014Montreal\nStar.\nWorkers in a famous glass factory in Germany have an orchestra,\nand play instruments made of glass.' don't she tune her radio down\n\"If Amy is so anxious to do good\nworks and help relieve the sufferin'\nof   poor   afflicted   humanity,   why\nV. Questions ??\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader ot\nthe Nelson Dally News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\n.skins lhe question be published.\nF. S.. Wynndel\u2014Will you give me\nthe authors of the following novels: \"Think,of the Earth\"; \"My\nPets\"; \"Farmer's Glory\"; \"Release\"?\nIf you will write to the Ryer-\nson Press, Queen and John Street,\nToronto, Ont., they will be able to\ngive you the information.\nA. B. C, Nelson\u2014Was Pearl Buck\nthe authoress let out of the missionary society because of her\ncommunist sympathies or did she\ngive up her religion and become\na Buddhist?\nPearl Buck voluntarily resigned\nin 1933 to save the Presbyterian\nBoard of Foreign Missions embarrassment caused by a difference of\nopinion between her and other\nchurch members over some of her\ntheological views.\nMrs. W. B.. Fruitvale\u2014Would you\nplease tell me the value of small\nfive cent pieces dated: Victoria,\n1891; Edward VII., 1903; George V,\n1916. and 1919?\nThey are worth- their face value\nonly.\nE. J. L, Trail\u2014Where should I\nwrite to get my birth certificate?\nI was born in Brooklyn, New\nYork, and don't know whether or\nnot I was registered or whether\nI was born in a hospital or at\nhome.\nWrite to the County Clerk, New\nYork,' giving him the date and what\ninformation you can.\nModernize\nYour Home\nThrough the\nHOME\nIMPROVEMENT\nPLAN\nRemodel your present\nbathroom\u2014install an extra bathroom. Remodel\nthe kitchen sink with a\nnew pattern fixture.\nIt will pay you to call 666\nbefore doing any remodelling.\nPhone 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING & HEATING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nP.O. Box 646       313 Baker St.\nTHECUMPS\nBy Gut Edsort\nYOU HAVE A PROPOSITION) ? WHAT\nGALL\/ YOU FRAMED ME-AN INNOCENT\nMAN-JUST TO GET A LIGHTER.\nSENTENCE FOR YOURSELF\u2014 DO\nYOU THINK FOR A MINUTE THAT\nI'D HAVE ANY FURTHER.\nDEALINGS WlfH YOU -YOU\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Ruts Wettover\n|ADANCIN6\nACADEMY\n|WEU.,OF I\n|au.thin\u00ab.|\njl THOUSHT\nENSA-JED;'\n, V\/UAS ABSA.1C VMS\nvue&e about towSb\nJU-CBB you UVTBIZ.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManu.\nTHIS IS THE JIGGS RESIDENCE- ISN'T\nIT? WELL-I'D LIKE TO SEE MR.JIG66\nI'M SELLING RADIOS- DO YOU THINK I\nCAW SEE HIM?   .\nHE'S AVERY BUSY MAMi\nBUT I'LL\" SEE IF I CAM\nWAKE HIM UP- .\n'fr.' 1917, bn| Ftuun Syn-icilt. Inc. World njhu mnvld\nTHERE'S A 5ALESLA0Y\nHERE-SIE-TO SEE TOU-\n31B- IN REGARDS ; -\nTO BUYING A\nRADIO\t\nOH-IS THAT SOf WELL-\nSO ONE CAN SELL ME\nA RADIO-AH', WELL\u2014\nWAIT A MIHUTE-PLL\nTALK TO HER--I'LL\nSHOW \"YOU HOW TO\nGIT RIO OP THEM--\nTHREE\nUri\n&i\n'\u00b122\nm\n^^^^\n. :...:   ,.' . \u25a0\n \t\n,      . r. .- ..     .\nWPgPWffllfP^\nw\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B, C\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, OCT, 27. 1937.\nMilitary Tactics on the Grid\nBy BURNLEY\nSPORTING NEWS\ntfajoi\nBob\nAUO MUCH.\nSA&SEOF\nMiss, state: Are Top coaches.\n\"MiuYAHy\nSTRATE0\/\n\u2022seems--a\nBe effective\"\nl\/l FpcSlBAU.\/\nOut of the\nBy Eric Ramsden\nPRESS BOX\nPRESS CLIPPINGS\nABOUT TRAIL\nBrousing around in a flock of\nnewspapers we learn that Casey\nJones, who played smart baseball\n\u25a0witli Trail this year, may also be a\nhockey player. He was with George\nIrvine's Bruins at the coast last\nseason.\n'Tis said that Bill Carse of Vancouver Lions, knowing he was going\nup  to  the Philadelphia  Ramblers,\nand instructed by Guy Patrick to\npick  up  a  candidate  to   take his\nplace,   recommended   Jack   Benoit.\nLeos  have  the former  Trail  goal\nstar,  Percy  Jackson,   in  the  nets.\n3   Bemoaning the loss of 29 or more\n\u25a0players, Winnipeg lists Johnny Mc-\n\u25a0 Crcedy and Dick Kowcinak. of the\nI'Peg junior Monarchs last year, as\niTrail recruits.\nI KEEPING STRINGS ON\nISCODELLARO\nBill Forst of the Province reports\nI Guy    Patrick,    Vancouver    Lions'\nI maestro, as figuring that he'll keep\n[strings   on   Duke   Scodellaro,   the\nj prairie net-minder, who is coming\nthere from Trail. If he lives up to\n[advance   dope  Guy   dcclpres   he'll\n|carry him as an extra goalie.\nHe also reports Patrick thusly:\n\"The   Lions'  master-minder   has\nbeen at this hockey business long\nEnough to realize that the budding\nplayer is the one who makes the\npest  investment.\n\"I've  sent Bobby  Kirk.  Charlie\nilason, Bryan Hextall, Clint Smith.\nLome Mercer and Bill Carse up to\npie big time,\" Guy explains. \"The\npext to go might very well be this\nDan Maley of the Montreal Royals,\nvho'll be working out in our am-\nkteur school Monday. Or it might\npe Al Roster of Regina, That baby\nweighs  194 pounds and he's only\n|twenty years old. What a defence\nnan he'll make for somebody when\nlhe fills out.\"\n.   .   .\nINEW   TRAINER   FOR\n|ROSSl.ANO SQUAD\nRandy Parker, formerly  wtth  a\nBrandon commercial hockey club,\nis to be trainer for the Rossland\nMiners\u2014or should we say Rangers\n\u2014in the forthcoming Kootenay\nhockey circuit. Randy has been\nstudying about bones and such, and\nas a player learned a lot about\nhockey bumps, so it's figured he\nought lo be able to do something\nabout it. \"Ace\" Bailey earlier in the\nseason was named club trainer, and\nour information doesn't say whether\n\"Ace\" is retired or whether he'll be\nalong to help. Most hockey teams\ncould well use a couple of men.\nWe hear, via underground, that\nRossland is having executive troubles again; and we hope it's an un-\njpstified, unfounded and utterly\nlalse report, for that sort of grief\ncan play hob with a team.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nKIMBERLEY ASKS FOR\nHOCKEY DOPE\nI'm not sure what Bill Leaman of\nKimberley thinks this column is,\nbut he asks for on early list of\nwill line up for the Allan cup play-\nteams in the east and west as they\ndowns. I'd like to know too, Bill,\nand will get you what I can as soon\nas possible\u2014after we catch up with\nlhe Kootenay league lineup.\nWithout revealing any secrets,\nhowever, I can tell you that down\nWinnipeg way they figure Fort\nWilliam, Moose Jaw and the Flin\nFlon as probably Ihe best bet for the\nwestern senior crown. Sorry; but\nthey don't mention Kimberley.\nDID YOU  KNOW?\nThat \"Pat\" Brabazon, provincial\n'police officer, is the possessor of\ntwo honored rugby caps, won in the\nold country. The \"rugger\" caps are\nawarded annually to outstanding\nteam members. One of Pat's bears\ntwo dates and the other one\u2014indicating three successive years as\na leading member of his team.\nCorporal C W. A. Barwis can\ndo startling things with a cricket\nbat. they do say. Constable D. G.\nNeff. departing these shores for\nCranbrook used to play rugby at\nthe coast.\nMeyer to Manage\nKansas Ciry Team\nKANSAS CITY, Oct. 26 (AP)-\nBilly Meyer, last year with Oakland\nof the Pacific Coast league, was\nnamed today by the New York Yankee chain system as manager of the\nKansas City American Association\nteam for next season. Meyer will\nsucceed E. W. (Dutch) Zwilling.\nGeorge Weiss, general manager\nof the Yankee farm system, said\nZwilling might be placed elsewhere\nin the organization.\nMaber's Bowlers\nWin First Game\nLegion Tourney\nR. H. Maber's trundlers took their\nfirst and the initial step up the\nLegion Christmas tourney ladder\nMonday night when they sank Pete\nBorsato's crew before a 786-771 assault.\nScoring laurels were claimed by\nMaber with a 167 single and Jim\nSpencer with a 315 aggregate.\nTeams and scores follow;\nMaber\n1st   2nd   Tot\nMrs. G. Hunt     65   122-187\nJ. Spencer   165   150-315\nR. H. Maber   117   167-284\nTotal       786\nBorsato\nM. Palmquist     90     92\u2014182\nC. Miller   144   133\u2014277\nP. Borsato   150   162-312\nTotal    771\nLegion Bird Club\nHopes Open Play\nfor Season Today\nPlanning to get their season's\nplay under way, members of the Canadian Legion Badminton club hope\nto complete organization tonight.\nThroughout the week a drive has\nbeen carried on by members striving to boost the membership to 30,\nSome 18 bird enthusiasts announced\ntheir intentions of joining at last\nweek's meeting.\nFIVE RANKING HOCKEY PLAYERS\nARE ADDED TO TRAIL'S ROSTER,\nDOZENS MORE TO SEEK TRYOUTS\nChallenge Matches\nto Mark Wednesday\nBowling at Legion\nOne night a week, Wednesdays,\nhas been left open for challenge\ngames in the schedule of the Legion\nBowling club, the remainder of tlie\nevenings to be taken up with the\nChristmas mixed tourney.\nSome interesting challenge as well\nas intercity matches are anticipated,\nand two squads are already lining\nup for next Wednesday.\nWHY NOT BE HONEST\nABOUT \"AMATEURS\" IN\nHOCKEY, ASKS WRITER\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP).-Claim-\ning \"everyone knows\" hockey players in England are paid, Trevor\nWignall, the well-known sports\nwriter, believes \"a great blunder\nlias ben made in still labelling\nhockey with the amateur tag.\"\nRADIANT WINS\nNEWMARKET^ Oct. 26 (CP). -\nMiss Dorothy Paget's Radiant, a\nfilly by Glandford-Resplendent, today won the Criterion stakes, two-\nyear-old event over six furlongs\ndefeating Lieut.-Colonel Giles Lod-\ner's Golden Eagle by two lengths.\nSir Abe Bailey's Rezende, another\nfive lengths back, was third in the\nfield of seven. Radiant started at\n4 to 6, Golden Eagle at 11 to 4 and\nRezende at 8 to 1.\nEA8T-WE8T SERIES OFF\nSARNIA, Ont., Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Calgary Bronks. finalists in the western\nCanada rugby football union with\nWinnipeg's Blue Bombers, were notified by Manager Jackie Baker today an east-west post-season contest here with Sarnia Imperials\nwould be impossible.\n.Removal Arena\nBoxla Floor lo\nCommence Today\nIce Ready for Skating\nand Hockey Season,\nNovember 15\nLast vestige of the 1937 boxla sea-\n| son vanishes today when a start\n| will be made in removing the boxla\nI floor at the Civic Centre arena in\npreparation for ice making and the\n! hockey and skating season.\nIce making will probably commence November 7, stated Denis St\nDenis, managing secretary of the\ncommission, on Tuesday. Everything will be in readiness for Nel\nsonites to don their blades for their\ninitial skate November 15 .\nSKATING CLUB\nNelson Skating club may possibly\noperate on the same schedule as last\nreason, when Wednesday evenings\nand Sunday afternoons were allotted. Additional time may be arranged in the event of a fancy skat-\n, ing club being organized. -,\nFew vacancies have to be filled\nto bring the Skating club's membership to the 175 maximum, W. K. I\nGunn recently stated. ,\nFour New Men and Three Pros on\nProspect List For Kimberley's\nWorld Champs, Kootenay Hockey\nHarry Brown Is Back;\nBotterill   Plans\nto Retire\nPRATT AGAIN ASKS\nAMATEUR STATUS\nKimberley Dynamiters, world's\nanvjteur hockey champlong after\nfighting to the Canadian title two\nseasons ago, have four new candidates in camp this season, and\nmay in addition have the services\nof three ex-pros should they gain\nreinstatement. The total roster,\nIncluding the three \"possibilities\",\nIs 20.\nHarry Brown, who aided Kimberley along the Allan cup trail and\nthen put in a season in England,\nis back with the Dynamiters. Harry's return strengthens an already\nstrong defence and indications are\nlhat it may be given still further\nweight. A newcomer'named Dick is\nsaid to be a likely-looking lad.\nBOTTERILL TO RETIRE\nFred Botterill plans to retire from\nthe game. Tlie tall wingman was an\nindifferent defenceman at Trail and\ndrifted into intermediate hockey,\nthen put in a comparatively uninteresting season at defence for Dynamiters when they were among\nthe Kootenay \"also-rans\". He finally established himself as one of the\nsteadiest and most valuable men in\nthe league when he was shifted up\nto the wing.\nThese   announcements   from   the\nKimberley camp, together with the\nannouncement that three ex-pros\nare expecting reinstatement, put\nDynamiters in the spotlight. The\nwell known Sorenson boys, Chris\nand Carl, are expecting amateur\ncards along with Jack Pratt, well\nknown in the Kootenays for his\namateur record in this district and\nhis work in pro leagues. Jack was\nreinstated a year ago, but turned\nnut with Portland for a brief spell\nlast season, necessitating re-reinstatement. It was under Pratt's\ncoaching that Kimberley broke out\nof the also-rans.\nNEW CANDIDATES\nOf the newcomers \"Scotty\" Ness\nof Calgary was at the New York\nAmericans' hockey school at Calgary and is reputed to be a fast\nman. Leo Baribeau, Edmonton, is\nhighly recommended, and Watkins\nof Jasper Park is hoping to set a\nfast pace.\nJohnny Achtzener remains as\ncoach.\nThe Kimberley Roster, regulars\nbeing named first, are:\nGoal\u2014Eric Hornquist and Ken\nCampbell.\nDefence\u2014Bill Burnett, Paul Ko-\nzak, Bill Robertson and Tom Almack; Harry Brown, last year in\nEngland; and Dick, a newcomer.\nForwards\u2014Ralph Redding, Hugo\nMackie> Doug Keiver, \"Red\" Goble.\nGordon Wilson and \"Puffy\" Kemp;\nWatkins, Jasper Park; Leo Baribeau, Edmonton junior; \"Scotty\"\nNess, Calgary.\nCandidates if reinstated \u2014 Chris\nSorenson, Carl Sorenson and Jack\nPratt.\nWRESTLING\nBy The Associated Press\nWILMINGTON, Del. _ Vincent\nLopez, 220, Los Angeles, defeated\nBilly Hanson. 215, Salt Lake City,\n(straight falls).\nPORTLAND. Mc\u2014John Murphy,\n186. Medford. Mass., pinned Manuel\nCoilcz, 189, Mexico, (31:50).\nATLANTIC CITY, N.J. - Ray\nSteel, 212, Los Angeles, pinned Reb\nRussell, 215, Memphis, (22:12).\nJim Allan Top Winner Kelson Golf\nTourneys; Wins Two Title Trophies\n3} Starters lor Cesarewitch\nNEW MARKET. Suffolk, Oct. 20\n(CP). \u2014 Thirty-three campaigners\nwere listed today ns probable start-\ni ers in tomorrow's Cesarewitch slakes\nas Sir Alio Bailey's Maranta and\nJames V. Rank's: Epigram continued\nas joint favorites.\nThe field included two former\nwinners, Sir Alfred Butt's Near Re-\n, jation, who v:on in 1035, and Mrs,\nSidney Freeman's Fet, the vicbr\nlast. year, ns well as His M.ijesty:;\nFairlo;uI ana ;i number of French\nI candiciaies.\n, Nopnar. Richards was engaged to\nride E, Robson's Solar Bear, one of\n{ the favorites;. M. Allemand, instead\nI of R. firethes. will come from France\nI to  ri lo  Henri  Count's  Harav\/ood.\n| The Kill nf Derby's Black Fepl\nand G. Bennett':, Third Hazard were\n1 scratched today, reducing Ihe field\n1 to  33.\n.    The   probable   starters,   together\nLwith   revised   riding   arrangements\nland owners, respectively, are:\nBuckleigh, Carslake, Lord Glanely.\nDytchley. Bcasey. R. Tree.\nNear Relation, Ferryman, Sir A.\n--:uU.\nI   Nightcap 111, Marshall, W, Ahem.\nSolar Bear, G. Richards, E. Rob-\nton.\nGrgneau, Villacourt, J. Hcnncssy.\nEpigram, Beary.-J. Rrank.\nPunch. S. Wragg, T. Wcstheid,\nSir Calidore, Nevett, A. Redman.\nMaranta, Weston, Sir A. Bailey.\nMiss Windsor, E. Smith. Maharajah of Rajpipla.\nHarewood, Allemand, Henri Court,\nAfrican Lily, C. Richards, L. Wilson.\nFet, Richardson, Mrs. S. Freeman.\nIdaho, D. Smith, K. Macomber.\nArchduke II. Pratt, J. Davis,\nCorrca. Blackshaw. Lord Derby.\nPrudenl Act, Christie, Sir T. Dixon.\nMuscovado, Sharpe, Mrs. F. Barlow.\nRepondant, Gilbert. Mrs. B. Cohen,\nCarioca, Smirke, Maharajah of\nRajpipla.\nSpartan III, H. Wragg. Lord Dufferin.\nWeathorvnnp, Lane, Sir A. Bailey.\nFaites vos Jeux, Maher, Ludy\nNuthall.\nCastnnelle, Evans. H. Gray,\nTote Investor, Clayton, P. Hald-\nwin,\nTitlark. Miles. Lord Ellsemere.\nBeleaguered. Wells. N. Chrisley.\nZeros. Lynch. J. Ismay.\nEmpire Son, FUton, D. Maire.\nCrecko, Wing. A. Sainsbury.\nFox Star. Robertson. C. Glorney,\nFairlead, Sprague, His Majesty.\n\u25a0 \u25a0      il iiiiii-iUM\nMrs.  H.  Lakes Wins\nKootenay Title and\nNoxon Cup\nGolfing honors of the 1937 season\nat the Nelson Golf and Country club\nwere well distributed, but the greatest share of honors came to rest on\nJames Allan's youthful shoulders.\nAllan, sparkling junior, won the\nC. I. L. cup after a stiff battle with\nWalter Duckworth, and later took\nthe club's junior crown from Ken\nMcBride, last season's holder. With\nMrs. Wilfrid Allan he was runner-\nup in the Smyth shield consolation\nround. He was also runner-up in\nthe club men's singles championship tourney.\nTo cap it, he was one of four golfers, to record a hole in one on the\nNelson links this season. Mrs. Robert Watson, Roy Pollard and a Vancouver visitor were the others.\nLadies were not left out of the\nsportlight. Mrs. Harold Lakes turned in an outstanding performance\nduring tournament play, for besides\ntaking the Kootenay Ladies' Golf\nassociation championship at Kaslo,\nshe won the Noxon cup for ladies'\nhandicap singles; and was runner-up\nfor the Smyth shield with Ken McBride, and also was runner-up in\nthe Ruth Armstrong rose bowl tourney for the club ladies' singles title.\nComplete results of the season's\ntourney play follow:\nWilson cup\u2014B. Townshend, winner; Leon Lubetl, runner-up; Harold Lakes, consolation winner; and\nW. W. Ferguson, runner-up.\nNoxon cup\u2014Mrs, Harold Lakes,\nwinner; Mrs. A. G. McKay, runner-\nup; Mrs. A. C Whitehouse, consolation winner; and Mrs, R. L. McBride,\nrunner-up.\nKootenay Golf association (Anderson cup)\u2014Bert Clark, of Trail, winner; and R. L. McBride of Nelson,\nrunner-up; B. Townshend, first\nflight winner, and R. W. Nesbit of\nTrail, runner-up; Harold Lakes, second flight winner, and J. Atwell of\nTrail, runner-up; Roy Pollard, third\nflight winner, and H. Fowler of\nVancouver, runner-up; F. G. Schroeder, fourth flight winner, and Gordon Roynon, runner-up; John Fraser, fifth flrght winner, and Bruce\nSutherland, runner-up.\nSmyth shield, (mixed foursome) \u2014\nB- Townshend and Mrs. Robert Watson, winners, and Ken McBride and\nMrs. Harold Lakes, runners-up; Roy\nPollard and Miss 'Connie Smith,\nconsolation winners; James Allan\nand Mrs. Wilfrid Allan, runners-up.\nC, I. L. cup\u2014James Allan, winner:\nWalter Duckworth, runner-up; C.\n(Buck) Lambert, consolation winner, and R. E. Crerar, runner-up.\nBlanche Pollard trophy\u2014Mrs. A,\nC. Whitehouse, winner; Mrs. Lome\nS. Bradley, runner-up; Mrs. Robert\nWatson, consolation winner, and\nMiss Margaret McLeod, runner-up.\nAppleyard cup (junior championship)\u2014Jim Allan, winner; and Ken\nMcBride, runner-up.\nMcBride cup\u2014H. W. Seamon, winner; and R. L- McBride, runner-up.\nCups and trophies are to be presented at the annual dance to be\nheld shortly.\nTwo   Forwards   From\nTeg Monarchs\nAmong Them\nDUCHAK FROM\nBATTLEFORDS\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 26-Names already well known in Canadian hockey have been added to the Smoke\nEater roster this season. Put them\nalongside those veterans who have\nhoisted the orange and black high\nin the hockey standings in recent\nyears and you have a combination\nthat should go places in Canada's\nglistening sport this season.\nEligibles among the names sup-'\nplied by club secretary Jim \"Webster today are five almost certain\nto land playing positions with the\nTrail entry in West Kootenay league.\nDozens more are known to be in\nthe city, eager for a tryout to show\nclub officials what they've got.\nFIVE WELL KNOWN\nOutstanding among the new arrivals are two young forwards from\nlast year's Canadian junior champions, Winnipeg Monarchs Dick Kow-\nsinak and George McCready. They\nwere wing mates of Pete Langelle,\nsigned by Conny SmyttTe of Tor-,\nonto Leafs. Dick patrols the left\nlane and George is a right winger.\nThen there is Dave Duchak, star\ncentreman of last season's Battleford Beavers, Allan cup finalists,\nand Dave Buchanan, sub-goalie with\nthe same club.\nAnother lad who comes here with\nsomething of a reputation in hockey circles is Doug Norris, last year\nwith Prince Albert Mintos.\nIt is expected ice will be available the second week in November\nand drills will get underway about\nthat time.\nPa Jackson Is\nDead in England\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP).\u2014Nicholas Lane Jackson, grand old man\nof British port, died today. He\nwould have been 87 years old on\nNov. 1.\nKnown to the sporting world\nas \"Pa\", Mr. Jackson founded the\nthe famous Corinthian amateur\nfootball club nd the London Football association, and assisted In\nformation of the Lawn Tennis\nassociation council.\nB. C. Bowlers\nto Empire Gomes\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26 (CP). -\nBritish Columbia lawn bowlers will\nsend a rink to tlie Empire games at\nSydney,  Australia.\nSiebert Signs Up\nMONTREAL, Oct. 26 (CP)-Babo\nSiebert, the taciturn big defence-\nman, signed a ncw contract with\nMontreal Canadiens today to'end\nthe holdout worries of the French-\nCanadian entry in the National\nHockey league. No details ot the\ncontract were made public in an\nannouncement which followed a\nbrief conference between Siebert\nand Club President Ernest Savard,\nSCOTLAND AND\nWALES MEET\nTHIS SATURDAY\nCARDIFF, Wales, Oct. 26 (CP\nCable)\u2014Undefeated in last year's\nthree matches, Wales, champions of\nfhe international soccer tournament,\ndefeated Scotland here Saturday.\nThe 1937 campaign opened October 23 when a young English\nteam overwhelmed Ireland 5-1 at\nBelfast.\nSeasoned players who have gained top rating in league matches will\nline up for this match. Five stars\nwho have kept Glasgow Rangers in\nthe forefront of Scottish league warfare in recent years are included in\nthe north o' the Tweed eleven, while\nHearts and Aston Villa each have\ntwo.\nWales is retaining seven players\nfrom the team that edged out a 2-1\nvictory over Scotland last year.\nThe teams:\nWales \u2014 Goal, Gray (Chester);\nbacks, Turner (Charlton Athletic),\nHughes (Birmingham); halfbacks,\nMurphy (West Bromwich Albion),\nHanford (Sheffield Wednesday);\nRichards (Birmingham); forwards,\nPhillips (Aston Villa), Leslie Jones\n(Coventry City), Perry (Don-aster\nRovers), Bryn Jones (Wolverhampton Wanderers), Morris (Birmingham).\nScotland\u2014Goal, Dawson (Rangers); backs, Anderson (Hearts),\nCumming (Aston Villa); halfbacks,\nMassie (Aston Villa), Simpson,\nBrown (Rangers); forwards, Main\n(Rangers), Walker (Hearts), Frank\nO'Donnell (Preston North End),\nMcPhail (Rangers), Duncan (Derby\nCounty).\nPAGE SEVEN\nDahlstrom to Play\nMUSKEGON, Mich., Oct, 26 (CP)\n\u2014Cully Dahlstrom, last season with\nSt. Paul of the American associ\nalion, will hold down a regular\ncentre position with Chicago Black\nHawks in the opening National hockey league game in Chicago, Nov\nember 4, Coach Bill Stewart an\nnounced today.\nThe rookie has been so impressive\nin workouts, Stewart said he would\nwork between Pete Palangio, who\nstepped up from the American association last winter, and Bill Kendall, right winger, traded lo Toronto\nMaple Leafs for Pep Kelly for the\nlatter part of last season.\nYOUTH TO CARRY THE TORCH FOR\nTORONTO LEAFS FOR THIS SEASON\n(This is the first of a Canadian\nPress series of stories on prospects\non National Hockey league teams,\ntraining for opening of the schedule November 4, others will follow.)\nBy Sydney Gruson\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Youth\nwill carry the torch for Toronto\nMaple Leafs in the coming National\nleague campaign, the old stalwarts\nhave gone and in their place Conny\nSmythe has assembled the youngest\nof his veterans and mixed them with\nbudding minor leaguers and a few\noutstanding amateurs.\nHalf the defence the Leafs started\nthe 1935-36 season with is gone-\nHappy Day to New York Americans and King Clancy to coach\nMontreal Maroons. It is yet unknown whether Smythe has uncovered replacements of sufficient skill.\nThe makings of a great hockey\nclub lie in the surviving members\nof Toronto's front lines, where Harvey (Busher) Jackson, Syl Apps,\nCharlie Conacher, Gordon DriUon,\nBill Thorns and Buzz Boll will carry\nthe burden of offensive. There's\nunlimited power among these forwards. But, making the defence\nproblem all the more acute, they arc\nnot the best back-checking men in\nthe business.\nThe oldest member of the team at\n28, Reginald (Red) Horner, will team\nwith young Jimmy Fowler as the\nNo. 1 rearguard in front of Walter\n(Turk) Broda. Reg Hamilton, in all\nprobability, will draw a third regular bertli on the defence.\nThere Is a fourth, and perhaps a\nfifth, to be chosen from Jack Church\nJack Howard, Chuck Shannon, Jack\nFox, a member of Winnipeg's Dom\ninion junior champions, and Bob\nDavidson, a forward who has been\nshifted back in Leaf workouts at\nGait.\nPunch, Smythe expects, will be\nadded to the attack by Murph\nChamberlain from Sudbury's Allan cup Tigers and Bill Thomson,\nformer Port Arthur Bearcat and\nregarded as one of the best amateur wlngmen In the country last\nseason. They are fighting for regular spots along with Regis (Pep)\nKelly, Nick Metz and a half-dozen\nSyracuse stars who can go up\nfrom the International-American\nleague If they show enough prior\nto Leafs' November 4 opening\nPete Langelle may make the N. H,\nL. in one jump from junior ranks.\nAlso from Winnipeg's championship\nMonarchs, Langelle has big-league\nclass.\nGone from the Leaf roster, besides\nDay and Clancy, are Frank Fin-\nnigan, retired, Jack Shill and Art\nJackson, sold by Smythe in the\ngreatest rebuilding campaign attempted since the club relinquished\nthe Stanley cup in 1933.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\n(Associated Press Sports Writer).\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP).\u2014Don't\nlook now, but a southern and mid-\nwestern college are flirting witli\nDoug Dashiell, hustling young head\ncoach of the U. of Nevada. . . . Each\noffers a three-year contract. . . .\nYep, Doug is a-listening. . . . This\nweek's feed box special is Yale\nover  Dartmouth.   . . .  Take   it  or\nleave it Good hick and plenty\nof it to old Casey Stengel up there\nin Beantown. ... If you ask us,\nPrexy Bob Quinn made another of\nhis shrewd moves. . . . Baby Strib-\nling, who once showed promise as\na fighter, now is a high pressure\nauto salesman at Hattiesburg, Miss.\n... Pa is president of the firm and\nMa is vice-president. . . . Business\nis booming, . . , Henry Armstrong\nis a 3 to 2 favorite to life Petey\nSarron's featherweight crown Friday night when Mike Jacobs bows\ninto the garden. . . . Al Jolson, the\nmammy singer never has taken a\ncent of Armstrong's ring earnings,\nRalph Gold, the fight manager, is\ntaking bows for going to England\nand snagging Ginger Foran, called\nthe best featherweight In the Empire. . . . New York scribes, busy\ndoing Bill Terry's Christmas shopping for him, say another bid for\nDolph Camilli of the Phils is the\nnext piece of Giant business. . . .\n(whjch would be O.K. for Dolph).\n. . . Joe Gould, who piloted Jimmy\nBraddock to the heavyweight title,\nhas taken Tom Bcaupre, Dallas\nheavyweight under his wing and is\non the market for a leading south-\ncm lightweight. . . . Just three\nyear? ago, John A. Heydlcr, resigned\nafter 15 years of distinguished service as president of the National\nBaseball league.\nThat new Pitt Athletic policy was\nkept secret since July because Pitt\nfelt it would only be laughed at for\ntrying to reform its football. . . .\nTwo smoky city scribes, Jess Carver\nand Chet Smith, found out Panther\nplayers really were pushing brooms,\netc, and informed Athlclic Director\nJames Hagan they were going to\nprint what they knew about his\nnew deal. ... So he decided to\nspring it himself. . . . One and all\nsay Hagan is a grand fellow and 10(1\nper cent sincere in what he is'trying to do.\n(96 FIREARMS LICENCES ISSUED\nAT NELSON, CRESTON AND SALMO\nGIVE GOVERNMENT REVENUE $2TU\nBROADRIBB-FARR\nROW IN BRIJISH\nCOURT\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (AP) -\nTommy Farr, British Empire\nheavyweight boxing champion\nand his manager, Ted Broadrlbb, exchanged a series of\nblows through their lawyers\ntoday when Broadrlbb sought\nan interim injunction to restrain\nTommy from participating in\nboxing exhibitions here except\nunder his management.\nFarr maintains the contract\nhas been mutually broken. His\naffidavit alleged that during his\nfight with Joe Louis, Broadribb\nvirtually blinded him for two\nrounds of the fight by an overdose of eye lotion and mishandled him throughout his United\nStates visit, \"as a result of which\nI cannot bear him in my presence.\"\nBroadribb's counsel accused\nFarr of \"seeking to kick down\nthe ladder by which he climbed\nthe fence.\"\nThe hearing was adjourned\nuntil tomorrow.\nFIGHTS\n(By The Associated Preu)\nPHILADELPHIA - Fred Apostoli,\n162, San Francisco, stopped Tony\nCelli, 173, Portland, Me. (2).\nCHICAGO-Harvey Woods, 12DV4,\nSt. Paul, outpointed Paul Lee, 124V4,\nIndianapolis (8),\nSALT LAKE CITY\u2014Jackie Burke,\nOgden, Utah, knocked out Luke Wallace, St. Paul, (3) weights unavailable.\nPHILADELPHIA-Fred Apostoli,\n162, San Francisco, technically\nknocked out Tony Celli, 173, Portland, Me., (2).\nAlmost Half Are for\nBirds, Deer and\nBlack Bear\n300 DEER TAGS\nALSO TAKEN OUT\nTotal o_ 696 firearms licences Issued through the government office\nat Nelson\u2014including those issued\nat Creston, Salmo and lake points-\nhave returned a revenue of $2786\nfor the period August 1 to October\n25, a summary reveals. In addition\n300 deer tags at 25 cents each accounted for an additional $75.\nBy far the greatest number of licences, 420, were those issued to\nresident British subjects and entitling them to shoot game birds,\ndeer and black bear. These licences\naccounted for almost halt the revenue. Farmer's licences of the same\ntype enabling a farmer to shoot off\nhis own property, and sold for ?2,\nnumbered 162. Numbers of farmers\nobtained free permits covering their\nown property.\nThirty-three Kootenay residents\nprepared to go out for big game by\npurchasing $6 licences. Seven residents who were not British subjects paid $12 each for \"resident\nextra general\" permits.\nTo cover both hunting and trapping of fur-bearing animals, \"special\" Ticences at $10 were issued to\n62 Kootenay residents.\nThe government also collected in\nthe district, during the August 1-\nOctober 25 period, $300 from visiting nimrods who paid $25 each for\nhunting and fishing rights.\nCooney Weiland\nCaptains Bruins\nHEBSHEY, Pa., Oct. 26 (AP).-\nRalph (Cooney) Weiland, the Owen\nSound master of the poke and hook\ncheck, has been elected captain of\nBoston Bruins.\n'Riders and Argos Charge Each\nOther With Deliberate Roughing\nOTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP)-Charges\nand counter-charges flew thick and\nfast today as Ottawa Rough Riders\nand Toronto Argonauts carried on\na longe-range review of last Saturday's game in Toronto.\nArgonauts, through President\nTommy Alison, charged Bunny\nWadsworth, 260-pound middle, with\ndeliberate roughness in the breaking of Harry Sonshine's jaw.\nOttawa, Rough Riders countered\nwith the charge Argo players ganged Ehvood McFall, a young outsider\njust up from junior ranks, and broke\nhis leg with a deliberate kick.\nAlmost the only definite result of\nthe wordy duel was a grand buildup for Saturday's return game here\nwith officials of the Rough Riders\nconsidering whether they should\nbuild additional bleacher stands to\naccomodate the crowd.\nArgonauts made their complaint\nto Dr. Andy Davies, president of\nthe Big Four, insisting Wadsworth\nbe suspended pending a full investigation of his play on Sunshine.\n\"SAW NOTHING\"\n\"I was at the game and saw nothing of an attack on Sonshine by\nWadsworth.\" Davies said today. He\ntold of meeting Referee Joe Breen,\numpire Pean Bennett and Frank\nTurville, head linesman, after the\ngame and not one of them considered Wadsworth fouled the Argo\nsecondary. Wadsworth was penalized on the play for a high tackle,\nnot deliberate roughness.\nJimmy McCaffrey, manager of\nRough Riders, said team members\nwere prepared to take affidavits\nMcFall's leg was broken when an\nArgo Player kicked him while he\nwas lying on the ground, after being\nclipped from the play,\nDavies, who set McFall's leg after\nthe game in Toronto, said it was a\ndirect fracture and could have been\ncaused by a kick.\nAND GET YOUR CHOICE FROM OUR\nSPLENDID RANGE OF\nChristmas\nCards\nDevote a few minutes of your time now\nto your Christmas card selection . . .\nYou have the advantage of our wide\nrange of exclusive and inexpensive cards\nfeaturing etchings, snow scenes, modern\ndesigns, wonderful colorings, etc.\nDrop us a line requesting our Christmas\ncard samples . . . We know you will be\ndelighted. You will find them exclusive\nand inexpensive.\nTOWN CUSTOMERS: Phone 144, OUR\nAGENT WILL CALL PERSONALLY.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.\n266 BAKER STREET NELSON, B. C.\n _ ,\nmm\nijmn\\mmmi--w>!>mmmu\nwmwmrw\nMmsmkwytmmm\\r^^\nJohn Sparrow of\nSweep Fame Was\nNelson Resident\nJohn E. Sparrow, North Vancouver carpenter, who drew a ticket on\nthe horse Solar Bear in the Irish\nhospitals sweep on the Cesarewitch\nrace to be run Wednesday in England, was a resident of Nelson for\na number of years before and during the war, and he and Mrs. Sparrow and their son Jack are remembered by many old timers, particularly those who lived up the hill.\nThe Sparrows came from .Portsmouth, Eng., and settled in Nelson\nabout 1912, living on South Cherry\nstreet, near the Mountain station.\nMr. Sparrow worked nt his trade of\ncarpenter with Waters k Pascoe,\nand later with John Burns k Son.\nMrs. Sparrow belonged to the\nDaughters of England lodge here.\nOld friends recall that Mr. Sparrow tried to enlist here, but was\nunable to pass the medical examination. Before the war was over they\nmoved to Vancouver.\nSPENT TIME IN\nENGLAND\nTheir home has been in North\nVancouver for many years, latterly\nai 350 East Twenty-fifth street, one\nof the newer sections, where Mr.\nSparrow built, Mr. Sparrow being\nemployed as a cabinet maker. When\nthe 1929 depression sot in, Mr. and\nMrs. Sparrow went to England,\nwhere Mr. Sparrow obtained work\nthe day after his arrival. Later he\nreturned to British Columbia. A\ncouple of years ago Mr. and Mrs.\nSparrow went to England again,\nreturning to North Vancouver last\nMay. Their son, John H. Sparrow,\nafter spending a year up north with\nthe Dominion hydrometric service,\nbecame a foundry worker, and is\nnow an executive of the Pacific\nFoundry, Vancouver. He married\nabout 1927, and resides in North\nVancouver.\nKING OF EGYPT\nTO WED JAN. 6\nCAIRO, Oct. 2. (AP) \u2014 The wedding of King Farouk of Egypt, 18,\nyoungest reigning Moslem, and the\n17-year-old daughter of an Egyptian high, court judge, is officially\nset for Jan. 6.\n5LAYS BROTHER, 19,\nWHO \"BEAT ME UP\"\nRALEIGH, N.C., Oct. 26 (AP)-A\n14-year-old boy was held in jail here\non a murder charge today after he\ntearfully confessed slaying his old\nbrother \"because he beat me up.\"\nThe boy's brother, Joseph Lee Williams, 19, a bullet wound in his abdomen, died last night.\nCivic Centre Hall\nlo Be Marked Off\nlor Indoor Tennis\nIn eager anticipation of a full season's play members of the Nelson\nIndoor Tennis dub have arranged\nwith the Nelson Civic Centre commission to have the recreation hall\nfloor marked off for tennis as well\nas badminton, Tlie work is to be\ndone either this Wednesday or next,\nAn encouraging membership fee\nhas been arranged and members\nare now actively engaged in recruiting new players. A minimum\nmembership of 25 is their aim. Norval R. German, acting treasurer. F.\nB, Wells and Dr. L. J, Maurer, organizers, are in charge of the membership campaign.\nThree sessions a week. Wednesday afternoon and evenings, Friday evenings from 5 to 10:30 p.m.\nand Sundays from 9 a.m, to 1 a.m.\nhave been allotted to the racquet-\nwiclders.\nNrlfion My Nrros\nMember ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCT. 27. 1937.\nHOUSES   WANTED\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy \u2014 _ $   .05\nBy carrier per week _ _     .25\nBy carrier per year   13.00\nBy mail In Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\n\\hree months ,1 80; six months\n\u00ab'..0l), one year J6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S.. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion _ $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions   _   .88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion  _   .33\n3 tines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions     _ 1.32\n2 lines. 1 month   2.86\n3 lines. 1 month   4.29\nFor    advertisements    of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox   numbers   lie  extra.  This\ncovers any number of insertions\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nHELP WANTED\nWE HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS\nto obtain positions as Letter Car-\nriers. Postal Clerks, Customs Examiners, Clerks and Stenographers, etc., and can help you. Write\nus for proof and free information\n|    M. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg\nI    Oldest in Canada, (2731)\nRELIABLE YOUNG LAD, ABLE TO,\nmilk $10 a month, Ap. Jacob Hiem-\nstro, Ross Spur, P. O., B. C.\n(3151)\nGLANCES INTO THE MIRROR OF\nLIFE IN KOOTENAY-BOUNDARY\nSHEEP CREEK, B. C\u2014Vere McDowell, mine superintendent of the\nKootenay Belle, returned on Satur-\nway evening accompanied by his\nbride who before her marriage was\nMiss Treswell of Kelowna. They received a most hearty welcome. Most\nof the Creek kiddies awaited their\narrival at the store, being treated to\nice cream meanwhile. The company\ntruck and several cars drove to\nmeet the young couple and formed\na jolly procession. The children were\narmed with noise-makers, and made\ngood use of them. On arrival at the\nstaff house, Mr. and Mrs. McDowell\nwere the recipients of congratulations from staff and employees,\nMr. and Mrs. Jimmy Read have\nbeen away for the past week.\nMrs. Waters of the Queen mine\nhas returned from Nelson where she\nlias been confined by illness in the\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\nCharlie Nairn, Seymour Robertson and Jimmy McDonough made\na business trip to Nelson on Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. A, Thompson and\nMrs. Ted McDonough were Nelson\nvisitors Thursday.\nBoyce York motored to Trail on\nSaturday.\nMrs. B, York and Mrs. McNabb\nspent Saturday in Nelson.\nMiss Marie Naylor of the nursing\nstaff of Kootenay Lake General\nhospital was a visitor at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mellor on Monday.\nBillie Butler, who for the past\nfew weeks has been seriously ill\nin the Kootenay Lake General hospital, was a visitor at the Creek on\nMonday, en route for his home\nwhere he will recuperate,\nThe new skating rink being made\nbelow tlie Queen mine is nearing\ncompletion.\nj Mr. nnd Mrs. Mclntyre of the\nReno mill were down to take part\ni in the welcome party for Mr. and\n1 Mrs, Vere McDowell.\nEXPERIENCED WAITRESS RIGHT\nLunch Cafe. 453 Josephine St.\n(3087)\nYOUNl_rMA^\"6N~FARMrABLE TO\nmilk. Karl Jansen, Brouse, B. C,\n(3152)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGIRL, EXPERIENCED IN COOK-\ningt aged 22, would like to assist\nin home for room,   board. Ph. 46,\n(3134)\nYOUNG MAN ALSO BOY 16 WANT\nwork on ranch. State wages, Box\n3150, Daily News. (3150)\nYOUNG MAN DESIRES WK. BY\nday or month Box 3142 Daily News\n(3142)\nRich Indian\nPlunges\nMADRAS, India.\nThe wealthy Indian\njah of Vizianagram\ndeath today from\nresidence. The Raja\ntuberculosis and a\ncide was returned\nRajah\nto Death\nOct. 26 (AP) -\nprince, the Ra-\nplunged tn his\na tower at his\nih suffered from\nverdict of sui-\nPERSONAL\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE. NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorators and other\nstimulants. One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(2724)\nWANT A GOOD SIDELINE? OR\nfull time proposition? Proven\nSpecialty that repeats. No ex\npcrience or treatment. Excellent\nadvance commission. Box 3137,\nDaily News. (3137)\nFRESH SANITARY RUBBER LA-\ntex special guaranteed 25 for $1 00\nWrite for free catalogue. National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton. Al\nberta. (2725)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubbers. Send $1.00 for 15\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St.\nW. Vancouver. (29571\nFAT IS A DISEASE. AGGRA-\nvates Diabetis. Reduce now.\nTwenty-one days investment $1.00\nBox 3098. Daily News. (3098)\nWANTED\nWANTED SECOND HAND OUT-\nboard engine, 4 H. P. (approx.)\nState make, age, etc., N. B., Berch\ndale, via Kaslo, B. C. (3153)\nWANT TO RENT or BUY SHINGLE\nmill. Box 3077, Daily News.\n(3077)\nWANTED\u2014KITCHEN STOVE AND\nfurniture. Phone 827-R.       (3146)\nFREEDOM OF PRESS*\nFOR MOVIE SUBJECT\nNEW YORK. Oct. 26 (AP) -\nEdward Chadorov, Hollywood film\nwriter, went to work today on the\nsiory adapting the forthcoming mo-\nlion picture, 'Freedom of the Press,'\nbased on the history of the Associated Press.\nWANTED BABY'S CRIB. APPLY\nBox 3162, Daily News. (3162)\nBONDS\n10,000 Nelson, .>,_%, due 1955 <S\n103V_, yield $4.20. 19.000 Nelson\n3Vs%, due 1957 ff 96, yield $3.80.\nChas. F. McHardy, Phone 135.\n(3111)\nPhone 144\nWILL BUY MODERN BUNGALOW\nif price reasonable. Reply Box\n3115, Daily News. (3115)\nFOR SALE\nWANTED SMALL COTTAGE, 3 OR\n4 rooms. Modern. Reply Box 3113,\nDaily News. (3113)\nPROPERTY,\nETC.\nHOUSES. FARMS.\n. FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept, of Natural\nResources. C.P.R, Calgary. Alia\n(2723)\nVERY DESIRABLE HOME WITH\nt three acres of land, located on\n'Kettle River, close to Grand Forks,\nmust be sold. No reasonable offer\nrefused. S. T. Hull, Grand Forks.\n(3126)\n7 RM. BUNGALOW. SMALL DOWN\nPmt. 1121 Hall St. Call bet. 5-7 p.m.\n(3076)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog. pocket-\nbook, lewelry or fur, or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou We will collect from the\nowner.\nLOST-MINK STOLE AT CAPITOL\nTheatre Saturday. Reward. Box\n401, Kaslo. (3148)\nFOUND   ROWBOAT..   APPLY ,E,\nSimpson. Red Sands. (3154)\nAUTOMOTIVE\n1 Q9fi BUICK SEDAN $65 will\nX\u00ab7-dD handle. Payments $15 per\nmonth.\n1Q9Q F0RD R0ADSTER- ?65\nLotattJ will handle.\nBUTORAC MOTORS\nTRAIL, B.C.\nHudson,   Terraplane.   Packard,\nLaSalle.  Cadillac,\nPontiac  and   Buick   Cars\nG. M. C. Indiana and White\nTrucks and Busses.\n(2937)\n5 or 6 USED FORDS\nANDCHEVROLETS\nPrices ranging, $50, $100,\n$150 and $200\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(NELSON) LTD.\nNelson Office Trail Office\nPhone 117 Phone 740\n(3157)\nPIPE  TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver. B.C.\n(2720)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company  Ltd\n250 Prior St Vancouver. BC\n(2721)\nCOMPLETE ORCH. DRUM OUTFIT\nSnap. Box 3147, Daily News.\n (3147)\n7-INCH DIAMTR, 8-INCH STROKE\nsteam engine in good condition.\nCrystal Laundry, Trail, B. C.\n(3149)\nMAN'S SADDLE. USED THREE\ntimes. Cost $35. Will take $10. Apply 414 Falls Street. (3083)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo. Ltd., Nelson. B. C. (2722)\nLLOYD WICKER BABY BUGGY.\nUsed one year. $15. Can be seen\nat Williams Transfer. (3095)\nHOUSEHOLD FURNITURE.    AP-\nply after 6 p.m. 718 Silica St.\n(3145)\nJUBILEE HEATER PRACTICALLY\nnew. Bargain. Phone 289L3.\n(3161)\nLARGE NORGE REFRIGERATOR,\nbargain for cash Ph. 242R evenings\n(3065)\nHOUSEHOLD  FURN.    McCLARY\nrange. Dishes, etc. 812 Victoria St.\n(3132)\nWE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR-\ngain prices. The Ark Store.J2761)\nrHEATERS, 618, VICTORIA ST..\nMrs. Oakes, alley entrance. (3078)\nTWIN BED SUITE. PRACTICALLY\nnew. Phone 508L2. (3106)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nFOR RENT A LARGE BRIGHT\nfront room for light housekeeping,\nhalf block from Central school\nApply 384 Baker St. (3128)\nLT. HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS, 918\nKootenay Street. (No children.)\n(2987)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.   Annable Block\n(2727)\nFOR SALE '25 DODGE.   IN GOOD\nrun. order. Mrs. B. E. Miller, City.\n(3067)\nFOR SALE FORD LIGHT DELIV-\nery, licenced and cheap. Ph. 264.\n(3129)\nUfn Wnnt AH Dr,  It'   R00M AND BOARD, 419 SILICA\nLet Q  Want AQ  UO  It:      Street. Room for two. (31041\nSEVEN ROOM HOUSE IN FAIR-\nview. Apply Box 2853, Daily News.\n(2853)\n2 RM. SUITE. AP. THE CHALET.\nEast of B. C. Veneer Works.\n(3082)\nATTRACTIVE 6 ROOMED HOME,\nclose in; furnace. Apply 302 Baker.\n(3110)\nSEE KERR APTS FIRST\n(3029)\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter    301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (2778)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 428\nFall Street. Nelson. B. C, P. O\nBox   No   726   Reoresenting shio-\nper's interest, Trail, B. C.     (2770)\nHAROLD  S,T~ELMES\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist\nRepresenting Shippers\nROSSLAND,   B. C.\n(2841)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(2780)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d c. neuro-\ncalometer and  X-ray    16   years\nexperience. McCullock Blk. (2781)\nCorsets\nSpencer coresls.   Surgical Belts M\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St. Ph. 668,\n\u2022'2782)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH. D DAWSON Nelson. B. C\nMine Surveys and Reports\nB. C. Land Surveyor.       (2783)\nBOYD C AFFLECK Ffuitvale^B C..\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n,2784)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert   Mortician      Lady  Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(2785)\nDAVIS   FUNERAL  SERVICE\nEmbalming & Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95. Ambulance Service.\n(2786)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n311, Baker St., Phone 68.      (2787)\nR W   DAWSON. Real  Estate. In\nsurance.   Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197\n(2788)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD,   Insurance of\nevery description.  Real Est. Ph 99\n(2789)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nDISTRICT MANAGEMENT\nof the Mutual Benefit Health and ace.\nassoc. now under supervision of\nFrank A. Stuart and E. L. Warburton. Office: Aberdeen Block,\n577 Baker St., Nelson, P. O. Box\n389. \u2022 (2794)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lath\u00ab\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring. Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 503     324 Vernon Street\n___   '2795)\nH E. STEVENSON, Machinists.\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine k Mill work a\nspecialty Fully eouipoed shop Ph.\n03, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (2791)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE L. WARBURTON, REPRESENT.\nIng C. C Snowdon. oils, greases,\npaints, etc. Agent mine machinery, rails, pipe steels, sheet iron,\netc. Steam coals Office 518\nWard street, Phone 53. (2797)\nNotaries\nD.   J     ROBERTSON,      NOTARY\nPublic. Nelson. Phone 157L. (2798)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor. list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(2799)\nPhotography\nOUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 AL-\nmost doubled that of 1935. There\nmust be a reason. A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Finishing done in our plant.\nYour films developed and printed\n25c Reprints, eighl for 25c. KRYS-\nTAL PHOTOS, WILKIE, SASK,\n(2800)\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH. SPOKANE, WASH.\nHeart, Stomach. Kidney. Bladder\nDiseases treated.  X-ray work.\n(2801)\nSash Factory\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.    (27281\nFOR RENT FRONT BEDROOM,\nclose in, 408 Victoria. (3064)\nROOM AND BOARD\nH. E. DILC. AUTO AND FIRE Insurance. Real Estate. 508, Ward St.\n(27901\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance.   Annable Blk.\n (2791)\nSEE  D.   L   KERR,  AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(2792)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (27!)3i\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker St\n(2802)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY.   SELL k   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.   The Ark Store.\n2833)\nWatch Repairing\nWHEN SUTHERLAND REPAIRS\nyour watch it is on time all thai\ntime. 345 Baker St., Nelson.   (2701N\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nGiving a Hobo Party Is an Ideal Hallowe'en\nNovel Plan Can Be Used Indoors\nor Outside With Equal Success\nLittle  Preparation\nNeeded and Cost\nis Slight\nBy Seth and Margaretta Harmon\nDo you want your Hallowe'en\nparty to pack the most fun for your\nguests into the least amount of trouble and expense for yourself? Then\ngive a Hobo Party. It will be the\ntalk of the town for a long time\nafterward.\nWith a heavy black pencil, write\nthis invitation on the backs of labels\ntorn from tin cans\u2014tomato labels\nare funniest.\nCAN you tramp to my Bandana Barbecue?\nThere's a place in the Hobo Jungle\nfor you.\nOf different vegetables bring along\ntwo\nTo throw in the pot for a Mulligan\nStew.\nWear your oldest duds of brightest\nhue\u2014\nWe'll put cares on the bum before\nwe're  through.\n(Your name and  address  and  the\ntime of the party)\nThe best place to give your Hobo\nParty is in ihe back yard, if you have\na yard big enough for the crowd to\nrun around in. and if the weather\npermits. A picnic ground is fine. too.\nor a meadow or orchard if one is\nhandy. A big attic, a roomy basement or a barn loft is ideal for the\nparty indoors.\nHAVE A CAMPFIRE\nArrange lhe biggest kettle you can\nfind over an imitation campfire in\nthe centre nf the room or yard. Decorate with festoons of emply tin\ncans. Provide a moveable seat for\neach guest -- small kegs, wooden\npacking boxes, or cushions made by\nstuffing burlap bags with straw.\nWhen the guests arrive, seat them\naround the fire, holding their vegetables on their laps, The first, game\nis \"Preparing the Mulligan\". Each\nmust prepare his two vegetables as\nyou direct, in the manner of forfeits. The following list suggests\nthings to do with the different vegetables. You can easily improvise\nothers.\nPotato: Cut into sections so there\nis only one eye in each piece, or\npoke nut all the ryes witli nn apple\ncorer.\nOnion: Peel it behind one's back,\nor hand each guest a slice to hold\nunder hjs nose while all sing \"Weep\nNo More My Lady\".\nCabbage or lettuce: Tell one's fortune by pulling off each leaf in turn,\nsaying \"She loves me, she loves me\nnot\",   or   walk   a   certain   distance\nttizMedal\ntfnz dan StiltSac\/el\nj while balancing the vegetable on\nI one's head.\n1 Carrot or parsnip: Dip small end\nj in ink and write one's full name, or\ni cut it lengthwise into ten slices.\nCelery can be made into buttonhole bouquets for each guest, roll\n; turnips   on   the   floor   with   one's\n! nose, g-.iess tlie number of kernels\n; in an ear cf corn. etc.\n1    After  the  stunts  are  completed,\n] the scraps of vegetables are dumped\nI into the kettle over the fire.\nI GATHERING\n|THE WOOD\n|    \"Gathering the Wood' is the next\nI stunt, and  is sure to get a laugh.\nHave all the guests stand in a circle,\nj facing the fire. At a given signal,\n' each drops lo his hands and knees\nand  crawls to  the  centre  pushing\nhis head against the side nf the kettle. After all heads touch, the host\nsays. \"Fine. Now we  have all the\nwood together. You may take your\n1 seats\".\nI    \"Strike a Match\" provides a fine\n! way to pair up couples for the next\ngame. Before the party, sort out into\ni two tin pails, sets of articles which\nj always go in pairs. Into one pail, for\nexample, put a bottle and into the\nother its cork; a collar into one pail\nand a necktie into the oilier. Other\n| pairs   lo  be  so   divided   might   be\nI sail  and pepper shakers,  hnok and\neye. shoe and shoe-siring, knife and\nfork,  etc.   ],et   each   girl   select   an\narticle from one pail and Ihe boys\nfrom  the  other.    Then  each  must\n\"strike   a   match\"   by   finding   the\ni article which matches  the one  he\n1 selected.\nFor the \"Wash Up\", each couple.\nchosen above must carry a wet cake\nnf soap across the yard or room and\ndrop it into a basin of water. The\nplayers may touch the soap only\nwith table knives, one of wnicli is\ngiven to each player at the start.\nThe knives must not be stuck into\nthe soap, The couples who get the\nsoap into Ihe basin without dropping it on the way are allowed to\nwash the losers' face in the basin of\nwalcr, .\nA \"Tin-Can Stilt Race\" will create a fun riot. Before the party, prepare several pairs of tin-can stilts\nas shown in the illustration. Punch\nnail holes on opposite sides of an\nempty can near the bottom, and\npoke a stout cord four feet long\ninto one hole and nut the other. Tie\nthe ends of the cord together to\nmake a loop which can be held in\nIhe hand when the boy or girl walks\non the cans as shown.\nTHE STILT RACE\nFor the race, line up several players on their stilts at the starting line.\nAt the signal they start out. Anyone\nwho steps off a can or falls down\nI must return and start over again.\n; The fastest boy and girl racers are\ni each awarded a can of marshmal-\n| lows or some other canned con-\nj fection,\n\"Putting Cares on the Bum\" will\n; calm things down a bit before lunch\njis served. Willi chalk, draw a tramp's\ni head and back on the fence, barn\n[ door or on a sheet nf wrapping paper tacked to the wall. Have a num-\n! ber nf small cards lettered with\nj amusing ailments, such as Head-\nj nche, Bunions, Stiff Neck, Broken\n1 Rib,   Cauliflower   Ear,   Dandruff,\nCharley-Horse, etc. Blindfold each\nplayer in turn and start him toward the tramp's picture with a pin\nstuck through one of the labels. The\nplayer who gets his ailment pinned\nnearest the proper place on the\ntramp's back wins a bottle of candy\npills.\nServe appropriate refreshments in\nkeeping with the hobo idea. If the\nparty is held indoors, wrap up a sugar doughnut and a tasty sandwich\nor two for each guest in blue or red\nbandanas, which are tied to the end\nof sticks, hobo-style. Place these in\nthe big kettle with the sticks standing up. After each guest has taken\none of them, stage a parade with\neach \"hobo\" carrying his lunch over\nhis shoulder. For the Mulligan Stew,\nserve mixed fruit salad on paper\nplates and have lemonade or hot\nchocolate in tin or paper cups.\nIf the Hobo Parly is held outdoors,\nhave a real barbecue lunch\u2014hot\ndogs roasted over a campfire, toasted apples or marshmallows, and a\nhot drink served from a big coffee\npot.\nBefore the crowd goes home, announce that you will award a medal\nto whomever they elect as the best\nall-around hobo at the partv. Hold j\nan empty tin can over the head of\neach H-'-'t in turn. On the one who\nreceives the loudest applause, pin\nthe medal with a big safety pin.\nThe medal is the lid of a syrup can\nwith a string and a big red rib-\nbon attached, as shown in the illus-;\ntration.\nANSWERS TO LAST\nSATURDAY'S PUZZLES\n1.   Crossword Puzzle Solution.\n2.   The diamond is F, art, arias,\nfrights, Tahoc, Ste\u201e S.\nSPARTAN  SIMPLICITY\nBook Agent (to farmer): \"You\nought to buy an encyclopedia, now\nthat your boy is going to school.\"\nFarmer: \"Not on your life! Let him\nwalk, same as I did.\"\n\"Ice cream helps the complexion,\"\nsays a doctor. Sundae's child is fair\nof lace.\nFIRST AID\nMr. Newlywed: This meat tastes\nfunny.\nMrs. Newlywed: Well you see dear\nit got burnt, so I put a little ointment on it.\nA window in Dundee\nIs known as a \"wundee\"!\nKANGAROO WOULD BE TRIPLE WINNER\nIF ANIMALS HELD AN ATHLETIC MEET\nIf the animals held athletic meets,\nthe kangaroo, that queer native of\nAustralia, would probably hold the\ntitles for broad jump, racing and\nboxing.\nSo unusual is the kangaroo, that he\nreally can't be compared with any\nother animal. With hind legs over\ntwice the size of his front legs\nand a stiff, thick tail almost as long\nas his body, he looks very clumsy,\nbut it is these powerful legs and\ntail that enable the kangaroo to\njump from twenty to thirty feet in\none bound, and to travel so quickly\nthat the fastest hunting dogs cannot overtake him.\nExcept occasionally when feeding, the kangaroo doesn't use his\nfront legs for support. He holds an\nupright position, and when he's\nresting he curls his stout tail under\nhim and sits on it.\nNOT A FIGHTER.\nHe never looks for trouble, and\nwill not fight unless he is cornered.\nHis only means of defense is the\nvery long sharp claw in each of his\nhind feet. When he is in danger\nof attack he will speed away with\nspringing leaps, but if cornered he\nwill turn and fight desperately.\nResting on his tail, he will allow the\nenemy to attack and then will box\nwith his front paws or hold him\nwhile, with swift strokes, he wounds\nor kills his victim with his terrible\nsharp claws.\nIn Australia the kangaroos are\nconstantly hunted because they destroy the grazing fields needed for\ncattle and sheep. Their skins are\nvery valuable, and the natives use\nthe tail to make soup.\nKangaroo hunting has become\nsuch a sport that especially swift\ndogs, called kangaroo hounds, have\nbeen bred to run the animals down.\nWhen pursued, the kangaroo wi\nrun into shallow water, and when\nthe dogs attack him he will grab\nthem, one after the other, and hold\nthem under water with his powerful legs and tail until they drown.\nKangaroos can be easily tamed,\nand are trained by their owners to\nbox with them.\nIN THE DOGHOUSE\n\"Your husband is always complaining that he leads a dog's life.\"\n\"Yes. he comes home with muddy\nfeet, makes himself comfortable in\nfront of the fire, barks until he is\nfed, and then growls.\"\nLOST ART\nThe Guide: \"Yes, it must be over\na thousand years old.   You can take\nit from me they don't build such\nancient castles nowadays.\"\nFOftTHE\nPUZZLE\n-FANS-\nA good Hallowe'en word starts\nword square for you.   The secon\nline means \"all right,\" the third 1\ntitle, and the fourth means looks at\nBONE\nO\t\nN\t\nE\t\n\u2022 2.\nHere's a real Hallowe'en problem\nCart you find your way to the luscious pie and avoid the terrible\nghost? Use your pencil, and donl\ncross over any lines.\nJ.HV1S\n(ANSWERS SATURDAY)\nTHE ADVENTURESOF PETER PEN\nBy NICK NICHOLS\nThe gang decides to use the last\ndrop of the Snow flower dew to\nsave Pickle's life. He has been\nturned to stone and we can't be\nmean enough tn leave him that\nway. although he is our mortal\nenemy.\nYou might expect as much! The\nfirst thing Prince Pickle does is\ngive Bobo a bont! Pickle thought\nthe dog was going after his precious stick of peppermint candy. I\ndoubt if Bobo would eat itl\n\"I want my Pop. . .1 want my\nPop!\" is all that you can get out\nof this son of King Snarl. What\nshall we do with him, now that\nwe've saved him? We must be\non our way to the City of Gold.\nHans suggests lhat we take him\nback lo the Cave of the Gnomes\nand leave him with the Gnome\nKing. He does this much against\nthe wishes of His Majesty! But\nwe must be on our way\u2014we have\nlost enough time.\nThe Gnome King takes charge.\n\"You should be ashamed to act\nthis way,\" he says. \"Whv, you I\nowe your very life to this littlp\ngang Come on. now. go to b9f\\[fi\nand in the morning we'll find your ,\nfather.\" Pickle just sits.\nmmmmmm\n_B.M_._M\n,-iM\n \u2014\nmm\nmw-m-\nmmmm\nmmm\niipMWWiPI^\n4o3\nil lecls Weakness\nChicago Market\nmess at Chicago, attributed to\nisiness of stock markets, was\nicted on the Winnipeg grain ex-\nige today, sending wheat futures\nI 3V_-cent high points to close\nto % cent higher. October at\nWi, November $1.24, December\n1%-%, and May tl.lVrs-Vi.\njspite salos of Canadian wheat\nexport estimated around 750,000\nlets and reports of a fair export\ne in United States hard winter\nat, buying thinned and trading\nled dull near the close,\n.'ofit-taking paired 31.\u20142%-cent\nances in mid-session deals,\nrisk trade was induced at the\n[ling on a bullish estimate of the\n' Australian crop. The report was\nlonsible for unexpected higher\nids at Liverpool.\n, J. S. Broomhall estimated the\n;tralion crop would be 140,000,000\nhels, slightly more than the small\n. produced in 1934 of 133,400,000\nhels.\niverpool eased from its high\nats to close l7\/ed to t.d higher.\nmos Aires at noon was l3\/_ cents\nher.\n.enewed demand for top grades\nred spring cash wheat was re-\nted. Spreads improved 1_ cent\nh Nos. 1 and 2 Northern selling\ns and 15 cents above the Oc-\ner future, respectively. Only a\nill trade was confirmed. Durum\nces eased.\nloarse grains futures were steady,\ne futures zoomed nearly three\nits but recessions occurred. Vol-\n.e of trade was small.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (AP).-Closlng:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a343 6s 3d,\nup 5s; future \u00a343 13s 9d, up 5s; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a349, up \u00a31; asked \u00a350, up \u00a31.\nTin spot and future \u00a310 15s, off\n\u00a31 10s.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a318 5s, up 8s 9d;\nfuture \u00a318 3s 9d, up 7s Jd.\nZinc spot \u00a317, up lis 3d; future\n\u00a317 3s 3d, up 10s.\nBar gold declined Vi penny at\n140s 7d. (Sterling price equivalent\nto $34.80).\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 19 15-l.d.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\nand future 12.00; export 11.05.\nTin steady; spot and nearby\n48.62',.\u201476; future 48.50.\nLead steady; spot New York 5.50\n\u201455; East St, Louis steady; east St.\nLouis 5.50\u201455; cast St. Louis 5.35.\nZinc steady: East St. Louis spot\nand future 5.75.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nMONTREAL\nBar gold in London down two\ncents to $34.80 an ounce in Canadian funds; 140s, 7d in British.\nSilver futures closed steady, unchanged to five points up today\nNo sales. Bids: Oct., Nov., and Dec\n43.95; May 43.70.\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 12.65;\ntin 51 !4; lead 5.30; zinc 5.10; antimony 17.50; per 100 pounds f.o.b\nMontreal, five-ton lots.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBayonne  \t\nColumbia Oils\nDurango    \t\nEuphrates\nRoyal Can    .  ..\nUtica   \t\nBid\nam\n.09\n.06\n.04\n.12\nAsk\n\u202205 li\n.20\n.09',.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low\n'Industrials   136.79 131.77\nRails     34.49 33.10\nUtilities     22.29 21.25\nBonds              \t\nClose Change\n1-32.78\u2014off 1.65\n33.33\u2014off .71\n21.39\u2014off .72\n95.06\u2014off   .35\nToronto Stock Quotations\nNE8:\non Mines Ltd 02',.\nlermac Copper  55\nxandria Gold       .01 y.\njlo-Huronian       3 80\n;osy Gold Mines 30\ntfield Gold  20\n3ria Rouyn Mines 04',.\nec Mining Co 05 Vi\namac Rouyn 18\nkficld  Gold   59\ne Metals Mining 15\nttie Gold Mines      1.02\njood Kirkland  46\nMissouri 39\ni)o Mines Ltd  10\nlorne Mines     7.60\ntt Trethewey    04V4\nfalo  Ankerite       11.00\nJiker Hill Extension 1314\npadian Malartic    96\n00 Gold Quartz           1.50\nItle-Trethewey       65\nItral Manitoba      05\n\u2022al Patricia      2.10\nougamau         24'\/.\nilium M & S  65\n|t Copper      2.25\nSgas Mines     1.40\nlaurum Mines      1.05\nlolidaled M & S    54.00\nJcwater        14-li\nle Mines Ltd     40.00\nlinion  Explorers    04\nIral-Siscoe Gold   23\nJ Malartic    86\nIrado Gold         1.69\nlonbridge Nickel      5.30\nferal Kirkland 09\nJicoeur Gold 39\n(ies Lake        .       .15\n1 Lake Gold  48\nBelt .  26\nInada Gold Mines 10\nhdoro  Mines   05V;\nInar Gold M'nes 74\nid Rock Gold  95\nIker Gold  16Vi\nlinger         12.00\n>ey Gold   27\nHson Bay M k S    20.00\n(.national Nickel    45.00\n; Consolidated    21',_\nWaite    44\nlola Gold  27\nJr-Addison        1.70\nIkland Lake       1.16\n\\t> Shore Mines     49.25\nnaque Contact  03 Vi\nItch Gold         61\npel Oro Mines 11-li\nItle Long Lac        4.50\nIcassa Mines     4.55\nIcLeod Cockshutt      l.OO\njdsen Red Lake Gold 61\nInitoba & Eastern 02'\/.\nIndy    15\nllrobic Mines  01',.\nJIntyre-Porcupinc       33.50\n\u25a0Kenzie Red Lake      103\nIvittie-Graham 15\nIwatters Gold   35\nning Corporation     1.75\nInto Gold  05\nIneta Porcupine      1.65\nprris-Kirkland    19\nTplssing Mining       1.80\nIranda       46.25\nIrmetal 90\nBrien Gold     3 25\nkiega Gold ... ...      .36\nImour Porcupine      2.71\nTrkhilt Gold 10\nWe M  09\ntmaster Cons 40\nlid   Oreille        1-65\nIron Gold 75\nkleCr'ow Gold      4.00\nOil\nSullivan Consolidated\nSylvanite   ..\nTashota Goldfields\t\nTeck-Hughes Gold    .\nToburn Gold Mines .\nTowagamac   \t\nVentures Limited \t\nWaite Amulet \t\nWhitewater \t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nYmir Yankee Girl\nOILS:\nAjax   \t\nA P Consolidated\nBritish American\nBritish  Dominion    ..\nBrown Oil   ....\nCalmont\nCalgary k Edmonton\nChem Research \t\nCommonwealth   \t\nDalhousie      \t\nEastcrest        \t\nFoundation\t\nFoothills     \t\nHighwood   \t\nHome \t\nImperial     \t\nInter Petroleum  \t\nMcColl Frontenac   \t\nMerland       \t\nModel \t\nMonarch Roy \t\nNordon\n.. 3.15\n2 01\n1.12\n.64\n32\n2 90\n.22\n.36\n.78\n.021.\n.00\n1.35\n.35\n,85\n1,35\n2.98\n.011.\n.85\n.52 Vi\n.   .17\n_ury Basin    2-40\njneer Gold \t\nImier Gold \t\nj\/ell Rouyn Gold ...\nIslon East Dome .\nIbec Gold\nId-Authier      \t\nJ Lake Gold Shore\nIves MacDonald   ...\nlo Gold Mines \t\nIhle Gold Mines ....\n|he Long Lac\nAntonio Gold \t\n|wkey Gold\n\u00abp Creek Gold \t\nIrritt Gordon \t\nloe Gold       \t\nlelters  Gold   \t\npen Malartic\nBacona Rouyn \t\nInthony\nOkalta     \t\nPacalta    \t\nPantepec\t\nRoyalite\t\nSouthwest Pete  \t\nTexas Canadian   \t\nUnited   \t\nVulcan \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power\t\nBeatty Bros \t\nBell  Telephone\t\nBrazilian T L & P\nBrewers & Distillers .\nBritish American.Oil .\nBrewing Corp      \t\nBrewing Corp Pfd\t\nB C Power A \t\nB C Power B     \t\nBuilding Products \t\nBurt F N Co\nCan  Bakeries  A  \t\nCan Bakeries Pfd  \t\nCanada Bread Co .....\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car k Fdy \t\nCan Cement       \t\nCan Cement Pfd\t\nCan   Dredge   \t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Pacific Railway .\nCan Ind Ale A \t\nCan Ind Ale B \t\nCan   Wineries\t\nCarnation Pfd\t\nCons Bakeries\t\nCons Smelters \t\nCosmos    \t\nDominion Bridge  \u2014\nDominion Stores '\t\nDom Tar k Chem\t\nD Tar k Chem Pfd ...\nDistillers Seagrams ...\nFanny Farmer   \t\nFord of Canada A \t\nGen Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear   Tire   \t\nGypsum L k A\t\nHarding Carpet\t\nHamilton Bridge\t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd .\nHinde Dauche \t\nHiram  Walker \t\nIntl   Metals   \t\nIntl Milling Pfd \t\nImperial  Oil  \t\nImperial Tobacco\t\nInternational Nickel....\nInternational Petrol ...\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nKelvinator\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\nMassey   Harris   \t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMontreal  Power  \t\nMoore Corp\t\nNat Steel Car\t\nOnt Steel Prods \t\nOnt Silk Net \t\nPage   Hersey   \u201e\t\nPower Corp   \t\nPressed Metals\t\nSteel of Can \t\nStandard Paving \t\n1.00\n2.78\n.03%\n4.70\n2.25\n.49\n4.70\n1.40\n.08\n6.51)\n.27\n.25\n20.50\n.16\n.30\n.37\n1.76\n.51\n..   .25\n.50\n.11\n.22\n_   .45\n.12\n1.10\n18.25\n30.25\nii.no'\n.06\n.37\n.25\n.18\n.95\n.111.\n.. 5.25\n32.00\n.30\n1.40\n.17\n1.00\n3\n14\n102\n161.\n5 V.\n20 y,\n11.\n14\n321.\n4Vi\n421.\n32\n3\n41\nVA\n7%\n9\n9%\n90\n33\n33 li\n8\n4 Vi\n3'i\n2r,\n97-:,\n16\n53%\n20\n3111\n6\n7'i\n80\n13=4\n2011\n1714\n9V4\n80\n714\n314\n8\n55\n16\n3714\n8\n97%\n18',',\n13\n45\n291',\n2314\n2014\n1314\n314\nOli\n10>4\n20 Vi\n\u25a0\u25a0 31%\n2014\n15\n6\n811\n14%\n2314\n64 V,\n2'\/s\nNtLSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B, O^WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, OCT, ZT, 1S37,\nMarket and Mining News\nEXPORT COPPER\nPRICE HARDENS\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)-Sales\nol export copper at 11.05 cents a\npound were reported in the foreign\nmarket today, an increase of about\n.22^ of a cent, Sales kept the price\nranging between 10.83 cents to 11.05\ncents a pound, C.I.F. European baso\nports.\nCoincident with the activity in\nexport copper the refinery buying\nprice for scrap copper was advanced\nVi cent a pound, making No. 1\nheavy wire copper scrap 9 cents a\npound or roughly the equivalent of\nWk cents a refined pound.\nMONTREAL LIST\nIS IN RETREAT\nMONTREAL. Oct. 26 (CP)-Iso-\nlated gains brightened the picture\nas a general retreat started on Montreal exchange today.\nDown more than three points\nwas Smelters at 54 while Noranda\ndipped two, Nickel lost 1% at 45.\nDominion Bridge resisted pressure and closed up two points at 33\nwhile Steel of Canada gained\npoint and United Steel %. Steady\nselling whittled Dominion Steel\ndown Vi to 13%. Oils sold off in\ndraggy selling.\nA two-point gain showed for St.\nLawrence Paper preferred at 55,\nPrice Brothers preferred slid a point.\nWheal Reads on\nAustralian (rop\nCHICAGO, Oct. 26 (API .-Late\nreactions in wheat prices today virtually wiped out earlier gains of 2!fe\ncents a bushel inspired by bullish\nAustralian crop forecasts.\nSelling of wheat futures increased\nwhen the Chicago December delivery approached $1 a bushel. The\nsubsequent reaction was intensified\nby sharp setbacks of securities and\nby a dip in the corn market despite\nword of fresh export purchases of\ncorn.\nAt the close, wheat was unchanged\nto % higher compared with Monday's finish, Dec. 97%\u2014%, May 9714\n\u2014Vs, corn Vs\u2014Vs down, Dec. 5814\u2014Vs,\nMay 59%, and oats unchanged to\n14 off. _________\nWholesale Price\nIndex Unchanged\nOTTAWA, Oct. 26 (CP)-The Dominion bureau of statistics reported\ntoday its wholesale price index for\n567 commodities remained unchanged Oct. 22 at 84.7 in the weekly comparison, but was well above the\n76.9 figure of a year before. Base\nyear is 1926.\nIndex number of nine classifications with Oct. 15 and Oct. 23, 1936\nfigures in brackets: Vegetable products 68 (87-79); animals and product 80.9 (81.7-72.9); fibres and textiles 70.6 (71-69.5); wood, its products and paper 76.3 (76.8-89.5)\niron and products 105.1 (105.4-88.2)\nnon-ferrous metals and products\n76 6 (77.5-70.7); non-metallic minerals and products 87.2 (87.2-84.9);\nchemicals and allied products 81.9\n(81.6-78.6); farm products 88.8 (85,9\n76.4).\n12G3.i   128       125%   12614\n1251i    125%    123;li    124\n121       1211.   119%   11914\n113\n53 H\n50 li\n47-1;,\n4514\nCll-v,\n61'.\n60%\n591,\n118%   117      1171.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Grain\nfutures quotations;\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWheat:\nOct. ..\nNov.  ......\nDec\t\nMay\nOats:\nOct\t\nNov.  .   .\nDec\t\nMay\nBarley:\nOct. .\nNov.   ..\nDec.   .\nMay     ...\nFlax:\nOct.   ..\nDec\t\nMay   \t\nRye:\nOct,\nDec.   .\nMay\n53'.\n5114\n47'i\n43;i\n62',.,\n61\" i\n52'i\n49\" i\n4fi'i\n44%\n62\n61'.\n:,'.v-n\n58 _,\n17814   178*4   178\n178%   180       178\n83'k\n84 li\n85%\n86\",\n82;i\n8314\n42';,\n49\",\n\u25a0'.\u00ab'',1\n45\n62\n61%\n51)\".,\n58:,\n18014\n17812\n178%\n83%\n82%\n83%\nCASH  PRICES\nWheat\u2014No. 1 hard. No. 1 northern 14814; No. 2 northern 14014; No.\n3 northern 1181.; No. 4 northern\n11214; No. 5. 107ii: No. 6, 10414; feed\n7914; No. 1 garnet 12114; No. 2 garnet 118V.; No. 1 durum 100%; No. 1\na.r.w. and No. 4 special lOOVi; No. 5\nspecial 10214; No. 6 special 00Vi;\ntrack 144; screenings $5.50 per ton.\nOats No. 2 c.w. 53; feed 4914; No. 1\nfeed 47ii; No. 2 feed 4314; No. 3\nfeed 40%; track 4914.\nBarley\u2014Malting grades: 6 and 2-\nrow ex. 3 c.w. 62; others: No. 3\nc.w. 61; No. 4 c.w. 5914; No. 5 c.w.'\n58'4; No. 6 c.w. 57%; track 60-14.\nFlax-No. 1 c.w. 180%; No. 2 c.w\n176%; No. 3 c.w. 155%; No. 4 c.w.\n150%; track  178%.\nRye-No. 2 c.w. 83%.\nC.N.R. SEPTEMBER\nEARNINGS LOWER\nMONTREAL, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Decrease of $020,152 was shown today\nin Canadian National railway's September net revenues of $2,342,485,\ncompared with $2,962,637 in September, 1930. Operating expenses advanced $593,627 to $15,587,954, compared with $14,904,327, while operating revenues dropped $26,525 to\n$17,930,439, against $17,956,964 last\nyear.\nLAMAQUE MAY PAY\nDIVIDENDS IN TWO YEARS\nTORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP-While\nmaking no predictions President D.\nL. H. Forbes of Teck-Hughes Gold\nMines told shareholders at today's\nannual meeting it is likely Lamaque\nGold Mines, a subsidiary, could retire $1,590,000 in outstanding bonds\nand be in position to pay dividends\nwithin two years. Teck-Hughes has\n70.8 per cent interest in Lamaque\nand has 100 per cent board representation.\nWant Ads Get Results\nExchanges\nMoney\nMONTREAL, Oct. 26 (CP)\n-Brit-\nBy tha Canadian Preu\nish   and   foreig\nnexchange\nclosed\nClosing exchange\nAt Montreal\u2014Po\nrates:\nsteady  today.  Nominal  rates  for\nand 4.9514: U.S.\nlarge amounts:\ndollar 1.00; franc 3.34.\nArgentina, peso\n.2975.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.9514; Ca\nBrazil, milreis,\n.0570.\nnadian dollar 1,00;\nfranc 3.3314.\nGermany, reichsmark, .401'\nAt   Paris\u2014Pounc\n148,20\nfrancs;\nJapan, yen, .2888.\nU.S. dollar 29.9314 francs; Canadian\nNorway, krone,\n.2488.\ndollar 29.93 francs\nSweden, krone.\n.2553.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s Id; U.S. dol\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nlar 59.39 cents; Canadian dollar 59.39\nCanada).\ncents.\nVancouver\nStock Exchange\nLISTED:\nBid\nAsk\nBid\nAsk\nA P Con      \t\n.26\n..       .07\n..      .0514\n.27\n.07%\n.07%\nFederal Gold .\nFoundation Pete ....\nFreehold  Oil  \t\n.01%\n.22\n.07\n\u2014\n.24\nAztec Min Co\t\n.07%\nBig Missouri\t\n.40\n.42\nGeo Copper \t\n.20\n\u2014\nBrit Dom Oil\t\n\u2014\n.16\nGeo Enterprise ......\n\u25a00114\n\u2014\nBralorne\t\n..     7.50\n7.70\nGeo River \t\n.01\n.01%\nBridge Riv Con ..\n..      .02 '\n.04\nGolconda   \t\n.07\n.08\nC k E Corp\t\n1.80\n1.82\nGold Mountain\t\n.0214\n.02%\nCalmont Oil \t\n..      .38\n.39\nGrandview   \t\n.1014\n.11\nCariboo Gold ....\n..     1.50\n1.52\nGrull-Wihksne \t\n,06%\n\u2014\nCoast Brew \t\n..   12.50\n13.00\n.0414\n.WI,\nCom'wealth Oil .\n.27\n.28\nHccla Mining  \t\n9.25\n10.50\nDentonia\n..      .0914\n.10%\nHedley St \t\n.0214\n\u2014\nGold Belt Mines .\n.25\n\u2014\nHighwood Saroee ..\n.12\n\u2014\nHargal Oil \t\nHome Oil \t\n.15'4\n.0114\n\t\n..     1.12\n1.15\nIndian Mines \t\n.01\n.01%\nInter Coal \t\n..       .21\n\u2014\nInter  Gold  \t\n\u2014\n.03\nIsland Mount ....\n.75\n.80\nKoot Florence\t\n.01%\n,02\nKoot Belle \t\n..     1.02\n1.05\nLakeview Mine ....\n.01\n.01%\nMak Siccar   \t\n.01\n\u2014\nLowery Fete \t\n.12\n\u2014\nMcDoug Seg Ex .\nMcLeod Oil \t\n.1714\n,19\n.02%\n.02%\n.34\n.0614\n.07\n.05\n..       .37\n,05'A\n.42\nMar Jon Oil\n.06'4\n.17\n\u25a007%\nModel Oil \t\n\u2014\nPioneer Gold \t\n..     3.25\n3.40\nMeridian new \t\n\u2014\n.01\nPremier Gold\t\n..     2.05\n2.10\nMerland Oil \t\n.0614\n.07\nPremier Border .\n.0114\n.01%\nMetaline Metals ....\n.05\n.08\nQuatsino\t\n\u20220214\n\u2014\nMcGiJHvray   \t\n.15\n\u2014\nRel Arlington \t\n..      .17\n\u2014\nMill City Oil\t\n.10\n.12\n.75\n.78\n40\nMonarch R \t\n.2614\n.04\n.30\nSally   \t\n__\n.05\nNoble Five \t\n.04\n.04%\nSalmon Gold\nSheep Creek \t\n08\n.17\n\t\n..      .85\n.86\nOkalta com\t\n.96\n1.00\nSilbak-Premier   .\n..     1.60\n2.00\nPacalta   \t\n.1014\n\u2014\nSpooner Oil \t\n..      .16\n\u2014\nPend Oreille\t\n1.65\n1.75\nTaylor B River ...\n.04\n\u2014\nPorter Idaho \t\n.03',4\n.04%\n.06\n.07\nPilot Gold \t\n.01%\n.02\nVidette \t\n..      .25\nQuesnelle Q\t\n.07\nWesko           \t\n.12\n.14\nReward Min\t\n.01%\n.06%\n.01%\nCURB:\n.07\n.06\n\u2014\nRoyalite Oil\nRufus Argenta\t\n31.00\n.01%\n32.50\nAssociated Oil\t\n.01%\nBaltac Oil    \t\n.03\n.01\n.0814\n.05\nSilversmith   .\nSouthwest Pete    ..\nStandard S L \t\n.01%\n.35\n.22\n.02\n\u2014\nB C Nickel \t\n.28\nBunker Hill \t\n.   18.00\n20.00\nSunloch Mines\t\n.10\n\u2014\nCongress\n.      .03\n.04\nSunshine Mining....\n13.50\n15.00\nCork Province\t\n.      .0014\n\u2014\nUnited Distillers....\n.85\n.90\nCrows Nest new .\n,      .05\n.05%\nUnited Oil \t\n.16%\n.18\nDalhousie Oils ...\n.50\n.60\nViking Gold \t\n.00%\n.0014\n.30\n.31\n.04\n.95\n.00%\n1.05\nDunwell Min \t\nWaverly T new ....\n.00%\nEast Crest Oil \t\n.      .10\n\u2014\nWellington Mines ..\n.02\n.02%\nFairview Amal .\n.      .0414\n.05\nWhitewater\n.07'4\n.08\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain ,  1%\nAssoc Brew of Can  11\nAssoc Tel & Tel  -  6%\nBathurst P k P A  11%\nBell Telephone   161\nBrazilian T L k P ...-  16%\nB C Power A  33%\nB C Power B _ 5%\nBuilding Products   42\nCanada Cement   9%\nCan Cement pfd _  90\nCan North Power  18\nCan  Steamship   3\nCan Steamship pfd\nCanadian Bronze\nCan Car k Fdy\nCan Car k Fdy pfd\nCan Celanese\nCan Celanese pfd\nCan Ind Ale A  .\u2022\u00bb\nCan Ind Ale B   3%\nCan Pacific Rly  8\nCockshutt Plow   8%\nCon Min k Smelting  54\nDistillers Seagrams   14\nDominion Bridge   32\nDominion Coal pfd   17%\nDom Steel k Coal B  13%\nDominion Textile   72\nDryden Paper ...,  914\nFoundation C of C   11%\nGen Steel Wares   9%\nGurd Charles   8%\nGyp Lime 81 Ala   7%\nHamilton   Bridge     7\".,\nHoward Smith Paper   16%\nH Smith Paper pfd   98\nImp Tobacco of C   13\nInter Nickel of Can   45\nLake of the Woods   15%\nMassev Harris  6%\nMcColl Frontenac   10%\nMontreal L H k P   29%\nNational Brew Ltd   36%\nNat Brew pfd   37\nNat Steel Car   26\nOgilvie Flour Mills  195\nOntario Steel Prods   12\nPower Corp of Can   15%\nQuebec Power   14%\nSt Lawrence Corp  814\nSt Law Corp pfd  19%\nSt Law Paper pfd  55\nSouth Can Power   12%\nShawinigan W k P  20%\nSteel of Can   65%\nSteel of Can pfd  57\nWestern Grocers   57\nBANKS\nBank of Canada   56%\nCanadienne Nationale   153\nCommerce    160\nMontreal  197\nNova  Scotia   295\nRoyal   177\nCURB\nAbitibi P & P Co  2%\nAbitibi 6 pfd  _ 22%\nBeauharnois Corp   ' 6V4\nBathurst P k P B   5\nBrew k Dist Van   5%\nBrew Corp of Can   1%\nBritish American  Oil    20%\nB C Packers   11\nCan Malting Ltd  33\nCan Dredge k Dock   32\nCan Vickers   4\nCan   Wineries     2%\nCons Paper Corp   814\nDominion   Stores    6\"4\nDonnacona Paper A  7%\nDonnacona Paper B  _... 7%\nFord Motor A   17%\nFraser Co Ltd   1614\nImperial Oil   13\nInter   Petroleum     30\nInt Utilities A     5\nInter Utilities B      85\nMacLaren P k P   18'\nMitchell Robt   II)\nPage Hersey Tubes   88\nRoyalite   Oil    :.... 31\nThrift  Stores   '\nUnited Dist of Can       85\nWalker Good & W   38\nWalker Good pfd    18\nNEW YORK UST\nTURNS LOWER\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)-Wide\nswings in today's stock market resulted in a slackening of momentum\nand a general downturn of leaders\nat the close.\nWhile losses, on the whole, ranged from fractions to two points,\nthere were a few particularly depressed issues off 7 or so. At the\nsame time several advances were\nin evidence.\nA down-slide at the opening was\nsucceeded by a quick reversal when\ninitial losses of one to five points\nwere converted into gains of as\nmuch.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks dropped .9 of a point at\n48.2. Transfers totalled 1,815,640\nshares compared with 2,335,920 Monday.\n\u2014  PAGE  NINE\nB.C. REVENUE IS UP $1,250,1\nEXPENDITURES INCREASE $2,110,000\nGolds Unchanged\nas Oils Advance\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Prices of leading oil issues surged forward on Vancouver stock exchange\ntoday while golds were mostly unchanged and base metals mixed.\nTrading was light, transactions totalling 158,870 shares.\nCalgary k Edmonton Oil was up\n15 cents at 1.80, Okalta 12 at 96 and\nHome 6 at 1.12. Commonwealth\nheaded activity and closed up 8 at\n27 and Calmont 3 at 38. A. P. Consolidated gained 2 at 26 and United\n1% at 16%. Royalite added $1 at\n31.00 and Mercury 1 at 17.\nBralorne Gold advanced 15 at 7.50\nand Sheep Creek 2 at 85. Minto\neased % at 5. Pioneer at 3.15, Premier at 2.05, Big Missouri at 40 and\nReno at 75 were unchanged.\nIn the base metals, Pend Oreille\nlost 5 at 1.65 and B. C. Nickel a fraction at 8%. Whitewater firmed %\nat 7% while Reeves MacDonald at\n35, Lucky Jim at 2% and Nicola at\n4 were unchanged.\nSMELTERS SLIPS\nTORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Stocks\nperked up moderately around midday but lost their recovery force\nas the session advanced, turning\ngains into narrow losses before tlie\nclose of today's stock market. Base\nmetals displayed the main weakness\nin the late transactions, showing\nlosses of 2 to 3 points among the\nlenders.\nHeavy trading in a group of the\njunior golds made the aggregate\nvolume figure at 805,000 shares appear more important than the quality of the buying warranted. A penny issue, Amm Gold, accounted for\na trade of 230,000 shares on a gain\nof 3% to 20%. The penny issues divided about equally on losses and\ngains.\nHeavy selling of Eldorado featured the morning session and the\nprice broke to 1.50. Brokers mentioned the discovery of radium ore\nin northwestern Ontario as the explanation for Eldorado's weakness\non the presumption that Eldorado\nwould in time have a competitor in\nradium production. The price recovered to close at 1.69, off 26 cents\nnet for the day.\nSmelters finished 3% down at 54,\nNickel 1% down, Noranda 2 down\nand Hudson Bay 14-point down.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER,  Oct. 26   (CP)   -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight Tough\nNo. 1 hard   134\nNo. 1 northern   134\nNo. 2 northern   129\nNo. 3 northern   110%\nNo. 4 northern   105%\nNo. 5 wheat    99%\n6 wheat     87\nNo.\nFeed\n75\n132\n132\n127\n107%\n10214\n96\".,\n84%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAl Chem \t\nAm Can \t\nAm For Pow ....\nAm Mac k Fdy\nAm Smelt k Re\nAm Tel \t\nAm Tobacco\nAnaconda \t\nAtchison\t\nAuburn   Motors\nAv Corp \t\nBaldwin   \t\nBait & Ohio ....\nBendix Av \t\nBeth Steel \t\nBorden   \t\nCan Dry \t\nCan Pac \t\nCerro de Pasco\nChes k Ohio ....\nChrysler  \t\nCon Gas N Y ....\nCorn Prods \t\nC Wright pfd ..\nDupont   \t\nEast Kodak \t\nEl Pow k Lt ....\nEric \t\nFord English ....\nFord of Can\t\nFirst Nat Stores\nFree Texas \t\nGen Elec \t\nGen  Foods   \t\nGen Motors \t\nGoodrich \t\nGranby ..\nGreat Nor pfd\nGreat West Sug\nHecker Prods ..\nHowe Sound ....\nHudson   Motors\nInter Nickel\t\nInter Tel & Tel\nHigh\n164\n92\n4%\n14\n57-%\n156\n74\n31'4\n42%\n10%\n4\n9%\n14%\n13%\n50%\n28 %\n13%\n8%\n4(i\".\n40%\n72%\n2(1'4\n51%\n4\n130%\n169%\n11%\n9%\n5\n18\n36\n22%\n42%\n33\n42%\n20%\n4%\n29-%\n29%\n8%\n53\niSl-4\n47\nm\nLow\n160\n89%\n4%\n13%\n53%\n151\n73\n29\n40%\n9%\n3%\n8%\n13\n12%\n4(i%\n27%\n12%\n8%\n45'.,\n39\n67%\n24%\n53 '4\n3%\n12414\n169\n10%\n9\n5\n18\n30\n20%\n40%\n326\n40\n19%\n4%\n20%\n29\n8\n49\n8%\n45\n6%\nClose\n16114\n89%\n4%\n13%\n58\n151\n73%\n29'4\n40%\n9%\n3%\n8%\n1314\n13%\n47%\n28\n12%\n8%\n46\n39\n69\n25\n53%\n3%\n12414\n160%\n10%\n9\n5\n18\n36\n21\n41\n3214\n40%\n20 %\n4%\n27 \"2\n29%\n8\n49\n8%\n45%\nKenn Cop\t\nKrcsge S S \t\nKroegger k Toll\nMack Truck ....\nMilwaukee   pfd\n38%\n1714\n18%\n25%\n1%\nMont Ward    42\nNash Motors\nNat Dairy Prods\nN Pow k Lt\t\nN Y Central ....\nPac Gas k E! ....\nPack Motors ....\nPhillips Pete\nPure Oil     13%\nRadio Corp     7%\nRadio Keith Or    5\nRem Rand     15%\nSafeway  Stores\nShell Un \t\nS Cal Edison ....\nSouth Pac \t\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan'Oil of N J\nStew Warner ..\nStudebaker\nTexas Corp \t\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roll ....\nUnder Type    6514\nUn  Carbide     .   95%\nUn Oil of Cal ..   20V*\nUn Aircraft    18%\nUn Biscuit     18%\nUn Pac    95%\nU S Pipe     35\nU S Rubber ....   2814\nU S Steel     61%\nVan Steel     16%\nWarner Bros ....    8%\nWest Elec   105\nWest  Union  ....   33%\nWoolworth     41V*\nWrigley     63%\nYellow Truck....  12y\u00ab\n13%\n15%\n7%\n20%\n25%\n(i%\n43%\n2.'. In\n19\n2014\n22\n33%\n35%\n52\n13%\n8%\n44%\n3114\n48\n35\n16%\n18%\n24\n1%\n211%\n12%\n14%\n7%\nI'-\".\n25%\n(i-%\n42%\n13%\n7%\n4%\n14%\n24%\n13%\n20\n20%\n32%\n33%\n50%\n12\n7%\n42%\n30%\n46%\n65%\n94%\n20%\n17%\n18%\n94%\n34\n75%\n56\n15%\nVis\n98%\n32\n30%\n63%\n11%.\n35%\n17\n1814\n24%\n1%\n4014\n13\n15%\n7%\n19%\n2ft\",\n43%\n13%\n7%\n4%\n14%\n24%\n181',\n20\n20%\n32',\n33%\n50'4\n12%\n7%\n42%\n30%\n47\n65%\n94%\n20%\n17%\n18%\n04%\n34\n25%\n58\n16\n7%\n99\n33 %\n39%\n03%\nU%\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL. Oct. 26 (CP)-Spot-\nQuo. fresh 28%-29.\nEggs spot\u2014Ont. A-large 41A; A-\nmedium 38A.\nButter futures\u2014Firmer, %-% cent\nup; Oct. 2814-29; wheat, northern\nNo. 1 1.58%; barley C.W. No. 3 .71%;\noats C.W. No. 2 .63%; feed .59%;\nflour, 8.10; bran 26.25; shorts 28.25;\nmiddlings 39.25; hay No. 1 ton $9.\nFRANC SLUMPS\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP)\u2014The\nFrench franc slumped today .03%\nof a cent at 3.33%. Tlie pound sterling remained unchanged at 4.95%-\nThe Canadian dollar was unchanged\nat par.\nThe U.S. dollar in London closed\n1-16 of a cent higher at 4.95 1-16 to\nthe pound.\nMALARTIC GROSS\nPRODUCTION HIGHER\nTORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Cana-\ndian Malartic Gold Mines Ltd. reports gross metal production of\n$269,918 from 60,406 tons of ore milled in the three months ended September 30 compared with $206,866\nfrom 32,948 tons in the corresponding period of 1936.\nThe operating profit for tlie period was $113,069 compared with\n$78,438 in the same three months of\nlast year.\nFALCONBRIDGE NICKEL\nPROFIT IS $266,967\nTORONTO, Oct. 26 (CP)\u2014Falcon-\nbridge Nickel Mines, Ltd., today reported net profit of $266,907 for the\nthree months ended September 30,\nagainst $353,083 in the preceding\nquarter and $287,878 in tlie corresponding period of 1936. Capital\nexpenditures included $323,534 on\nthe plant and equipment and $43,-\n622 for mining development, compared with $619,294 and $57,511 in\nthe 1936 period.\nFRENCH FRANC  IS WEAK\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (AP). \u2014 The\nUnited States dollar moved up 1-16\nof a cent in final foreign exchange\ntransactions today, at 4.95 1-16 to\nthe pound.\nFrench francs were weak, ending\n148.28 lo the pound against 147.06\nyesterday.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 26 (CP).-British\nColumbia's revenues soared to the\nnew high mark of $28,102,612 during the last fiscal year, according\nto the public accounts tabled in the\nlegislature today by Finance Minister John Hart.\nTotal government expenditures\nwere $34,258,779 with capital expenditures of all kinds totalling $6,156,167.\nOf the capital expenditure $3,844.-\n000 was used for unemployment relief and $2,198,367 for construction\nof the new Pattullo bridge.\nApart from $1,706,603 for direct\nrelief $2,467,230 not provided for in\nthe sinking funds, tne government\npaid tlie cost of government out of\nrevenue, exclusive of capital borrowings for public works.\nGross increase in debt was shown\non the balance sheet at $5,022,700.\nEXPENDITURES\nIn brief the accounts showed:\nTotal ordinary   expenditures,   including   debt\nredemption   $25,413,589\nRevenue surplus spent on\nrelief     2,689.022\nCapital expenditures      6,156,167\nTotal overall\nexpenditure     34,258,779\nCurrent revenues     28,102,612\nBorrowings     6,156,167\nTotal     34,258,779\nThe balance sheet shows an increase of assets of $13,230,180 and\nan increase of liabilities of $11,644,-\n197 or an increase in excess assets\nover liabilities of $1,485,983.\nTotal of outstanding debentures,\nbills and other stock at the end of\nMarch is shown as $183,022,247,\nagainst $178,001,547 the previous\nyear.\nThis debt includes; B. C. stock\nand debentures $125,386,236; treasury bills to the bank $6,050,906;\ntreasury bills to the Dominion government $31,345,079. Mortgage on\nBritish Columbia house in London\n$80,025.\nTreasury bills owed to the Dominion increased $3,800,000 during\nthe year.\nREVENUE SURPLUSES\nIn a new statement put Into the\naccounts, Mr. Hart says the aggregate revenue surpluses in the three\nyears ending last March 31 were\n$6,472,373. Out of this a debt maturity of $3,500,000 was paid on\nMay 15, 1936, leaving $2,972,373 to\nbe applied on relief costs.\nIncome   and   personal   property\ntaxes  produced  $6,777,424,  an  all-\ntime record, compared with $5,986,-\n834 in the previous year.\nLIQUOR PROFITS UP\nThe government's liquor board\nturned over $3,607,315 in profits\nagainst $3,061,808 in the preceding\nfiscal period.\nThe gasoline tax produced $2,-\n719.710 and the motor licence fees\n$2,627,179, or a total of $5,346,889,\ncompared with $4,823,846 the previous year.\nVarious levies on timber produced\n$2,983,391 against $2,822,456.\nA decrease was shown in succession duties which were off from\n$1,067,101 to $835,047. Land taxes\nwere up from $1,434,500 to $1,507,502\nand rural school taxes produced\n$662,757 against $596,764.\nThe provincial revenue as a whole\nwas $3,800,000 better than estimated\nin the provincial budget, estimates\nbeing $24,312,541 and actual collections $28,102,012.\nOrdinary expenditures exceeded\nestimates by $1,300,000, being $25,-\n413,589 against an estimate of $24,-\n193,594.\nThe ordinary expenditure wai\n$2,170,000    higher   than    In    the\nfiscal year 1935-36 and revenues\nwere   $2,250,000   higher   than   In\nthat year.\nThe largest increases in expenditure over the previous year were\n$1,000,000 more on public works;\n$686,000 in the provincial secretary's\ndepartment, largely for hospital\ngrants, pensions to mothers, superannuation costs, mental hospitals\nand the provincial board of health;\nand $330,000 more for education,\nmostly in per capital grants for\nteachers' salaries.\nBONDS TUMBLE\nNEW YORK, Oct. 26 (AP)-The\ncarrier group was singled out in a\nfaltering bond market today and\nlost fractions to around 3 points,\nThe Associated Press averages for\n20 rails dropped .7 of a point to 78,4.\nWith the Spanish non-intervention crisis dominating European\nnews, French, German and Italian\nloans dropped fractions to around 3\npoints. French 7s were off 3 to 110\nwhile Milan 6Mjs fell 1 V-t tn 62%.\nJapanese issues pushed up fractions\nto around a point. South American\nobligations were generally improved.\nWHEAT GRADING FAULTY\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 2fi (CP)\u2014 Concensus of domestic, British and foreign millers is that, due to special\ncharacteristics of Garnet wheat, it\nwould be best to grade this variety\nalone, Dr. W. K. Geddes, chief\nchemist for the board of grain commissioners, today told the Turgeon\nRoyal Grain commission.\nDr. Geddes said that, while in\nEurope last summer, he found chief\ncomplaint against the Canadian grading system was lack oC uniformity\nin different shipments of corresponding grade.\nTRY    A   WANT   AD\nMARKETS AT\nAGLANCE\nBy the Canadian Preu\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Stock! Irregularly lower.\nNcw York\u2014Stocks doled lowei,\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat 1\u00bb,_ to Vi ceitti\nhigher.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogi off truok\nsteady at $8 to $8.15.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver unchang\u00ab4|\nother metals higher.\nNew York\u2014Silver, lead and tint\nunchanged; export copper firmer,\nMontreal\u2014Silver steady.\nNcw York\u2014Cotton and sugar unchanged; rubber lower; coffee high*\ner,\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollai \\av\nchanged at par. ,-,--\n.  ,1\nCalgary LivestocR\nCALGARY, Oct. 26 (CP). ~ Rf\nceipts to noon, cattle 108; calves 841\nhogs 2, no sheep.\nCattle trade slow; prices steady.\nGood butcher steers 4.50\u20145.00; co#\nmon to medium $2.75-^1.00; common\nto medium heifers $2.75'to $.3.50;\ngood cows $3.00\u2014$3.25; good veal\ncalves $4.50\u2014$5.00; good stacker and\nfeeder steers $3.50\u2014$5.00.\nNo hog sales; selects, yesterday's\nclose, $7,60; bacons $110; butchers\n$6.60. \/\nB i \/,\nhdSe HAPPY\nIT'S A REALLY SATISFYING FEELING TO KNOW\nTHAT YOU HAVE ORDERED YOUR\nChristmas Cards Early. \u2666 \u2666\nYou can select from a stock that Is absolutely fresH\nand complete ., . and one that is exclusive and inexpensive.\nOUTSIDE CUSTOMERS WRITE NOW\nFOR OUR SAMPLES\u2014OUR PRICES\nARE VERY REASONABLE.\nIf in town, PHONE 144\u2014We will have\nour local agent, Miss Arthur, call upon\nyou personally.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPT.\n266 Baker Street Nelson, IS, C.\nmm\n mm\nmm\nPAGE TEN\nHALLOWE'EN\nDECORATIONS\nFOR PARTIES\nAND\nDANCES\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nSell It With a Want Ad\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCommence Any Time\nBarbara Howard\nto Go From B.C.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 26 (CP). -\nIrene Wall, national secretary of the\nWomen's Amateur Athletic Federation of Canada, announced today\nthe selection of girl athletes to represent Canada at the British Empire\ngames in Australia. The list has been\nforwarded for final approval to M.\nM. Robinson of Burlington. Ont.,\nsecretary of the British Empire\ngame's selection committee.\nThe seven-girl team will include\nRobina Higgins, Winnipeg field\nevent star; Jeannette Dolson, Toron-\n\u2022SEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumbing repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. 815        301 VICTORIA St.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON, B.C-WEDNE8DAY MORNINQ. OCT. 27. 1937.\nto, Barbara Howard, Vancouver,\nAileen Meagher, Halifax, Isobel\nBleasdell, Montreal, all sprinters;\nEvelyn Goashawk, Winnipeg broad\njumper and sprinter and Yvonne\nDingley, Vancouver hurdler, broad\nand high jumper.\nMiss Wall said the A.A.A.F. of\nC. had petitioned the games committee to have Roxy Atkins, Toronto hurdler and sprinter, included on the regular team if sufficient\nfunds were available.\nMiss Atkins has been olacert nn\nthe reserve list along with Isabella\nMiller, high and broad jumper,\nHamilton; Thelma Norris, broad\njumper and sprinter from Calgary\nand Violet Montgomery, Winnipeg\nsprinter.\nST.- JOHN'S Antigua, (CP). -\nOrdinances were passed at a meeting of this island's legislature to\nenable the general legislature to\nprovide laws for payment of workmen's compensation and minimum\nwage for laborers. Special resolutions were passed, expressing appreciation to the secretary of state\nand the colonial development advisory board for grants to assist\npeasant agriculture.\nEntertain Your Friends in a\nWarm Home With\nHillcrest \"Natural\"\nCROW'S NEST COKING COAL\nNELSON TRANSFER Co., Ltd.\nNELSON ACENTS PHONE 35\nMORE ABOUT\nNon-Confidence\n(Continued From Page One)\nprovisions of the health Insurance\nact into operation, and whereas it\nhas been reported that health insurance would not be brought into\noperation until the Rowell commission had reported, therefore, be ;t\nresolved -that this legislature is of\nthe opinion that the government\nhas forfeited the confidence of the\npeople in neglecting to put trie\nhealth insurance act into operation\nand be it furtherfore resolved that\nthis legislature endorses the principle of a comprehensive health insurance scheme.\"\nON  OLD AGE PENSION8\nE. E. Winch (Burnaby) filed notice ot motion stating that the old\nage pension is barely sufficient to\nmeet the most meagre living expenses of the recipients and \"the\nDrovision of medical needs is a matter fully worthy of the immediate\nearnest and most sympathetic consideration of this government.\"\nAmendment of the provincial\nelections act is asked in a notice f\\t\nmotion filed by Harold E. Winch,\nC.C.F.-Vancouver East.\n\"An analysis of the recent general\nelection will disclose an imperative\nneed for amendments to the act,\"\nthe notice reads, and asks that a\nselect committee of the house be appointed to inquire fully into the operation of the provisions of the act.\nSETS GOLF RECORD\nKITCHENER, Ont., Oct. 26 (CP)\n\u2014Lloyd Tucker, professional at the\nRockway civic course, set a new\nrecord for the course when he covered it in 65, turning in a 32 and 33.\nWant Ads Get Results\n>!,\u00a3>\nR\nose\nBeauty Parlor]\nPHONE 317 '\nPermanents,    Facials,\nManicuring, etc.\nImportant\nAnnouncement\nIt was with a feeling of deep sorrow that\nwe learned of the tragic fire that wiped\nout the tipple at the Crows Nest Pass Coal\nCo. early Monday morning\u2014We wish at\nthis time to extend our regrets to the company, directors and workers.\nHowever \u2014 After a long-distance call\nto the Management we are happy to\nannounce that we will still be able to\noffer you \u2014\nMICHEL\nLump\nStove\nMine Run\nCOALS as in the past, and in a few\ndays, after arrangements have been\nmade, to announce the continued pro-\nduction of all Stoker Coals.\nWe congratulate the executive of this pioneer\ncoal mining firm on their prompt action in resuming production.\nWest Transfer\nCompany\nAuthorized Michel Dealers in Nelson\nPHONE 33       Established 1899       BAKER ST.\nLady Followers of\nthe \"Roarin' Game\"\nPlan Organization\nNelson lady curlers plan this week\nto organize for their 1937-38 season's\nactivities. With the season expected\nto open November 15, an effort will\nbe made to establish a strong membership before the opening of play.\nIt is expected the maximum membership of 50 will be increased.\nThe tiny one-celled alga plant can\nhave a billion offspring in a single\nmonth, and if these invisible weeds\ngrow too numerous in a pulic water\nsupply, the water may acquire a\ngrassy, fishy or otherwise obpection-\nable taste.\nIndia was the native home of the\ncastor oil plant.\nNews of the Day\nBulbs   of   every   description   atl\nGRIZZELLE'S. Phone 187.      (3158)\nBoys' Band Whlit tonight K. P.\nhall, 25c.   Boys playing.        (3160)\nEAGLES ATTENTION \u2014 meeting\ntonight at 7:30. Social evening 8:30.\nMembers and families cordially Invited. (3165)\nClco  paste for home and  office\nuse.  Nelson Stationery Co.     (3048)\nEDISON  MAZDA  LAMPS, F. H.\nSMITH, PHONE 666, 313 Baker St.\n(2694)\nNow In Stock. LETTER BOXES 1\nLETTER PLATES.   Hipperson's.\n(3027)\nHigh school dance, Oct. 28 In the\nhigh sch. aud. 50c and 35c 8 to 12 p.m.\n(3159)\nBritish Newspapers and Magazines.\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\n(2743)\nYou are always welcome at the\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\n(3102)\nWanted \u2014 Shoeshlner \u2014 Porter.\nKootenay Barber Shop. Baker St.\n(3072)\nYour gift problem Is made easy\nwith portraits. Make your appointment now.\u2014THE VOGUE.      (2662)\nWanted\u2014Plums,    Green    Gages,\nHuckleberries,  early  apples.    The\nMcdonald jam co.        (2717)\nLadles' Curling club meeting city\nhall, Friday, 29th, 3 p.m. All ladles\nInterested cordially Invited.    (3164)\nWELFARE APPEAL\nPlease place your parcel on Verandah Wed. morn,   See hand bills.\n(3097)\nHALLOWE'EN COSTUME DANCE\nOCTOBER 30.   WILLOW POINT\nATHLETIC CLUB. Prizes, Novelties.\n(3156)\nDRINK\nColumbia\nLager\nFor\nComplete\nEnjoyment\nKootenai\nBrewerie\nLimited\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard  or  by  the  Government  of\nBritish Columbia.\nLadles ot Catholic women's\nLeague, Sub-division, will be at\nhome, TODAY, October 27th,\nSouth Slocan Hall. (3139)\nAn Innovation In Mantel Radio\u2014\nA 5-statlon Automatic ROGERS for\nonly $99.95.\nMcKAY & STRETTON\n(3140)\nHE INDIVIDUAL!  We'll give you a\nwave that suits you and your\npersonality \u2014 Phone 386.\nVENUS BEAUTY SALON\n(3155)\nPHONE 144 and have our local\nrepresentative,   Miss   Arthur,   call\nand show our CHRISTMAS CARDS.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n(2890)\nMASONIC BALL - THE DANCE\nOF THE SEASON-AT THE CIVIC\nCENTRE FRIDAY, OCT. 29. EVERYBODY WELCOME. TICKETS\nAT COLLINSON'S JEWELRY\nSTORE. (3130)\nNELSON - KASLO\nRead DAILY SERVICE\nDown\nP.M.\n4:40\n5:32\n5:55\n6:30\n7:\nLv. Nelson Ar.\nLv.   Longbeach   Lv.\nLv. Balfour Lv.\nLv.   Ainsworth   Lv.\nAr. Kaslo Lv.\nSample Fares From Nelson\nO.W.   R.T.\nLongbeach   $ .55   $1.00\nBalfour  70    1.30\nAinsworth     1.10    2.00\nKaslo     1.65    3.00\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker St. Phone 800\n(2719)\nRead\nUp\nA.M.\n9:30\n8:40\n8:28\n7:50\n7:15\nto:\nW.E.\nEx.\n$ .70\n.90\n1.40\n2.10\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR RENT\u2014 5 ROOM, MODERN,\nnew house. Well furnished, electric heating system and all electric\nappliances. Ph. 520-R, Box 788.\n(3163)\nJ. A. C. Laughtop\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Bldg\nR. 8 R. Grocery\nSuccessors J. A. Irving & Co.\nQUALITY GROCERIES AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPHONE 161\nFREE  DELIVERY\nBOYS' SWEATERS\nPullover styles with V-\nneek.\u201495^ and $1.50\nPullover styles with Polo\nneck\u2014$1.00 and $1.75\nPullover with cadet collar\nin Vi xipper in a heavy\nrib $2.95\nCoat Style, full zipper, in\nfine botany wool $2.95\nAges 6 to 16 in all the\nabove.\nGODFREYS'\n  LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE  CLOTHES\"\n378 BAKER        PHONE 270\nYOUR OWN  \u2014\nCIVIC THCATRC\nNOW TILL WEDNESDAY  Tw\u00b0 Shom\n6:50 and 9:05\n\"MICHAEL\nO'HALLORAN\"\nBy CENE STRATTON PORTER\nOnce every few years, out of Hollywood comes a picture\nso forceful, so compelling that it wins acclaim wherever\nit is shown, Such a picture is \"Michael O'Halloran.\"\nWith WYNNE GIBSON, WARREN HULL,\nJACKIE MORAN and CHARLENE WYATT\n~ PLUS -\nMeet Nero Wolfe\nWith EDWARD ARNOLD\n\u2014 COMING THURSDAY \u2014\nIRENE DUNNE    ROBERT TAYLOR\n\"Magnificent Obsession\"\nMORE ABOUT\nSINO-JAPAN\n(Continued From Page One)\nJapanese naval units fought their\nway into the bitterly-contested north\nstation in the haze of dawn and at\n6:15 a.m. the rising sun flag was\nraised above the shell-pocked station that withstood two months of\nthe heaviest pounding.\nBritish sentries on duty nearby\nat the international settlement border heard Japanese bugles blare as\nthe red-and-white banner fluttered\nover the captured objective.\nJapan's forces also occupied the\nKiangwan racecourse, just north of\nShanghai, another long-fought sector of the north Shanghai front,\nThe backbone of the Chinese\ntroops were retreating in good order,\nwell organized unit by unit, most of\nthem escaping the Japanese enveloping movement and were expected to\nreorganize defences quickly on the\ncreek banks.\nGeneral Chiange Kai-Shek, head\nof the Chinese government, moved\nclose to the Shanghai war scene, arriving at Soochow, between Shanghai and Nancing, presumably to\nbolster Chinese operations personally.\nEven after the Japanese flag was\nhoisted over the north station at\nShanghai heavy explosions resounded through the region. Since the\nChinese were known to have mined\nthe area it was believed mines had\nbeen set off after the Japanese\nmoved in.\nAn  Italian  grenadier,  Antonio\nYour Friends must put up with your\ncough\u2014you owe  It to them to do\nsomething for it-\nTry Horehound  Menthol &  Honey\nCough Syrup at\u2014\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPhone 1\nGlove Time\nNo cold hands with these\nwarm gloves for dress,\ndriving, work. In peccary,\nsuede, mocha goat skin or\ndeer skin, silk lined, wool\nlined or unlined.\n$1.50 to $5.25\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nPadula, was added to tht fo\neign casualty list when he wai f\ntally Injured by an antl alrcra\nshell. It was believed tht the\nhad been fired at a Chinese plar\nthat raided Japanese positioi\nacross from the Italian-guard!\nsector.\n\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0__\u25a0 _\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nFOR HEAT AND COMFORT\nBurn\nMcGlLLIVRAYCOAL\nBest for Steam and Home Furnaces\nHIGHEST QUALITY COAL FROM\nCROWS NEST PASS\nWilliams Transfer\nPHONE 106      ESTABLISHED 1918      613 WARD ST.\nNEW ADMISSION PRICES\nEVENING 25c and 15c\u2014MATINEE 25c and 10c\nmmammms\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1937_10_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0413318","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1937-10-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1937-10-27 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0413318"}