{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-04-27","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1937-10-29","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413339\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" wsvrm\nU\nioa\nEffort Made to Buy Soccer\nGoal Minder, England\n\u2014Page Thirteen1\nVOLUME 3\u00ab\nFIVE CENT8 PEN COPY\nNEL80N, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-FRIDAY MORNINQ. OCT. 29. 1937.\nNUMBER 190\nu\nGerman Guns\" Dominate Gibraltar\nOkanagan  Member  Would\nWelcome New Settlers to B. C.\nWOULD ABSORB\nFARMERS FROM\nTNE CANADIAN\nDROUGHT AREA\nFederal  Government\nShould Finance the\nMove Says Bull\nWOULD TIGHTEN\nMARKETING ACT\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP)-Britlsh\nColumbia's 19th legislature today\nsettled down to its first business\nsession\u2014the address in reply to the\nspeech from the throne moved and\nseconded\u2014then adjourned until tomorrow afternoon.\nIn moving the address Fred Crone\n(Lib.-Vancouver Centre) expressed\nbelief  the  provincial  government\nwould have to restore municipal\ngrants to pre-depression levels or\nassume a larger share of hospital\nlzation and educational costs.\nHe  noted  a sharp  increase  in\nI traffic  accidents  during  the past\nlyear  and  mentioned  examination\nlof drivers and vehicles as a means\nlof reducing the accident toll. (See\n\u25a0Page 11 for story pn Mr, Crone's\n\u25a0Speech.)\nI Captain Cecil Bull (Lib.-South\n\u25a0Okanagan) voiced approval of pro-\nlyincial marketing legislation in sec-\nlonding the address. Of his home\nIconstituency Captain Bull said tree\n\u25a0fruit production had increased 50\nIper cent during the past 10 years.\n|lWO PROBLEM8        _,._.\u201e_,.;\n,.   Two problems on which he believed the government should take\nj action, Captain Bull declared, were\nI the absorption of people coming\n1. from the prairie drought areas and\nI Increase   of   British   Columbia's\n| population.\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nthief Justice of\nCourt of King's\nBench Passes On\nIwiNNIPEG, Oct. 28 (CP)- Hon.\n1. A. Macdonald, chief justice of the\nJourt of King's Bench, died here\nIday following a lengthy illness.\n\u25a0 Born in Charlottetown, August 17,\nB58, he was educated in his native\nfovince and there admitted to the\npr in 1883. In that year he moved\nJi Portage La Prairie and set up a\nIw office. He remained there until\nIs appointment to the Court of\n|ing's Bench brought him to Winning in 1906.\nJ He was named chief justice of the\nlourt of King's Bench in 1927 fol-\nIwing the death of Chief Justice\nI. G. Mathers.\nJapan Would Halt War\nif Given 5 Provinces\nPARIS, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014A high Japanese source disclosed to the Associated Press today what were said to be\nthe minimum conditions on which Japan was willing to\nnegotiate peace in China.\nJapanese terms were said to be:\n1. Temporary occupation by Japan of China's five\nnorthern provinces;\n2. Creation of a neutral zone about Shanghai from\nwhich Chinese troops would be excluded and in which\norder would be maintained by an international police\nforce of Japanese, British, United States, French and Italian troops.\nSHIP RELEASED\nI LONDON, Oct. 28 (AP)-The admiralty announced tonight the Brit-\nlli freighter Stanray, captured by\nli Insurgent Spanish trawler in the\nlay of Biscay yesterday, had been\npleased.\nLumbermen Who Held\nIhip in Port Given\nIncreases   in   Wages\nJ ST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Oct. 28 (CP\n\u25a0able)\u2014Striking lumbermen in the\nlaite Verte district were granted\nInlands for increased wages after\n[ey had seized the Newfoundland\nkvernment coastal steamship Arils where  union   representatives\nId company officials were confer-\nTig, it was revealed here tonight.\nThe loggers, 500 strong, went out\nstrike a week ago, demanding\nadvance of 50 cents a cord at\nJi stump for cutting wood for Bolter  company   of   England.   The\npner rate was $2 a cord.\nAnnouncement    this    afternoon\n1  the  strike  had  been  settled\n1 the men had received their in-\n\u25a0ases.\nSUCCESSION PROBE\nADJOURNED\nTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014The suction duty enquiry into two Booth\nates was adjourned to November\nlotlny by Commissioner A. J. Gor-\not Windsor to permit W. N.\nley, estate counsel, to test the\nJrmission's jurisdiction before a\n\u25a0gc of the supreme court of Ont-\nSLIDES TIE UP B.C. RAILROADS\nHeavy Damage on P. G. E. Where Rains Cause\nof Torrents that Wash Out Bridges; Hunter\nDies in Washington Gale; East Suffers\nBy The Associated Press\nOne life was lost on the west coast and more than 200 families\ndriven from their hornet In the eatt latt (Thurtday) night by torrential rainstorms and flooded riven.\nA 60-mlle gale lathed the coast of Washington, disrupting communication! on the Olympic Peninsula and causing one death.\nIn the eatt, a steady downpour swelled the riven of Pennsylvania,\nMaryland and Weit Virginia, threatening a repetition of the floods In\nthote areat early thit year.\nThe main business streets of Cumberland, Mo., ttood under\neight inches of water. The Potomac river continued riling.\nHalf of Ridley, W. Va., across the river from Cumberland, wat\nunder water. Up and down the Cumberland valley townt were Inundated, schools were closed and residents were quitting their hornet.\nA similar exoti-js wat under way In Central Weit Virginia. The\ntowns of Buckhannon, Weston and Sutton were virtually Isolated.\nIn Pennsylvania, the historic \"flood city\" of Johnttown awaited\na predicted crett of at least 12 feet on the Stonry Creek river. The\nflood stage there It 14 fset\nWashington State Hunter Drowned;\nMile-a-minute Gale Hits Village\noed he had proceeded nearly as far\nas he could go and had seen no signs\nof stranded hunters or the body ot\nRaymond Smith, Port Angeles,\ndrowning victim, yesterday.\nThe weather was Improving and\nthe Hob slowly receding late today.\nForks, 60 miles west of here and\nrallying point for the Elk hunters\nand Olympic peninsula settlers fleeing the floods and tree-blockod\nmountain roads, faced a \"drought\ncrisis\" despite a two-inch rainfall.\nFearful of colds from exposure,\nhunters crowded the state liquor\nstore at Forks and cleaned it out of\nwhiskey.\nThe Indian village of La Push\nwirelessed the mile-a-minute gale\ndid little damage, but that two women narrowly escaped death when\ntheir automobile virtually was buried by an earth slide.\nFour Feet of Water Floods P. G. E.\nTracks; Transcanada Highway Shut\nforced a railway bridge out of\nline.\nBetween these two breaks in the\nP. G. E. system, tiny Brackendale\nwas isolated as all communication\nwith the town of 200 population was\ncut off.\nOfficials of the British Columbia\nElectric Railway Company which\nsupplies Britannia mine on Howe\nSound with power, said they expected service to the mine would be\nrestored late today. The high-tension line to the property was washed\nout on a steep mountainside along\nthe Sound.\nA C. P. R. train was delayed by\nslides in the Fraser canyon east of\nVancouver. The C- N. R. morning\ntrain was also slide-bound for some\nhours.\nRoad crews sought to clear a\nthree-quarter-mile slide that blocked the trans-Canada highway in\nthe canyon, but did not think it\nwould be opened to traffic for two\ndays.\nPORT ANGELES, Oct 28 (API-\nHampered by broken communication and transportation systems,\nnorthwest Washington took stock of\nlast night's gales, rainstorms and\nflooding streams.\nAnxiety was expressed for the\nsafety of Edward Cripe, 34, of Port\nAngeles, and Ted Roschert of Grape-\nview, who left an elk hunting camp\na mile and a half below Jackson\nranger station west of here Sunday\nnight and had not returned to their\nparked car. One other hunter was\nknown drowned.\nGame protector Fred Rice, who\npatrols the area, telephoned In the\nreport. Cripe's sister, Mrs. Jack\nEldridge, said here he was an \"experienced woodsman and hunter.\"\nA coast guard plane piloted by\nLieut. K. P. Maley, on a flight up\nthe flooded Hoh river valley, radi-\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP) -\nWork crews tonight awaited recession of flood waters before: attempting to repair damage done to Pacific Great Eastern railway's roadbed cast of Squamish, B. C, today\nas regular service was restored on\nCanadian Pacific and Canadian National lines through the Fraser canyon into Vancouver.\nStorms that dropped more than\nthree inches of rain over the southern coast district of British Columbia earlier in the day had tied\nup all railway communications in\nthat area.\nFour miles eatt of Squamish, 90\nmiles north of here at the head\nof Howe Sound, where ths P. G. E.\nrails end, the raging Memquam\nriver tore out a railway bridge\nwhich officials of the line tald\ncould not be repaired until early\nnext week. A few mllei further\neast the Chee Kye river covered\ntracks to a depth of four feet and\nScience to Study\nthe Dionne Quins\nTORONTO, Oct. 28 (CP)-Science\nwill look at the Dionne quintuplets,\nstudy their physical and mental development and chart a course for\ntheir future in a unique week-end\nmeeting of 250 child specialists, psychologists and students.\nFifty Americans are coming to\nToronto for a Saturday gathering\nwith Canadian specialists at which\nthey will hoar reports on the children's physical and mental development, discuss their future and\noffer suggestions to Dr. Allan Roy\nDafoe, their medical guardian.\nNEW BELGIAN CABINET\nBRUSSELS, Oct. 28-Emile Van-\ndervelde, Belgian socialist leader,\nwas today asked by King Leopold\nto form a new cabinet. He declined. Henri De Man, retiring finance minister, accepted the assignment.\nKING AND QUEEN\nMAY VISIT INDIA\nWINTER '38-'39\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP Cable)-\nThe King and Queen are unlikely\nto visit India before the winter of\n1938-39.\nAnnouncement In the speech\nfrom the throne, read at the opening of parliament on Tuesday,\nthat they will go, however, ends\nprolonged speculation and doubts\nabout the proposed Coronation\nDurbar at Delhi, enabling extensive preparations to begin immediately.\nJAPAN CARRIES\nTHE BATTLE OF\nSHANGHAI INTO\nHOME DISTRICT\nBritish   and   French\nLines Imperilled\nin New Push\nBRITISH OFFICER\nIS FIRED UPON\nBy Lloyd Lehrbas\nAssociated Preu Foreign Staff\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 29 (Friday)\n(AP)\u2014The tide of the great battle\nfor Shanghai rolled westward today,\nbringing new perils to large sections of the international city in\nwhich many foreigners have their\nhomes.\nVictorious at Tazang and Chapel\nJapanete army and marine units\nwere being steadily reinforced all\nalong the northern bank of the\nSoochow creek, new front weit of\nthe International settlement.\nIndicated area of the impending\nfighting is a strip some five miles\nwide, from Soochow creek on the\nnorth to the Whangpoo river on the\nsouth, including fine residences and\ncountry clubs.\nSome of this territory is Inside\nthe British defence lines. The western districts of the French concession and international settlement\nwere gravely threatened by the approach of the conflict.\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nROBINSON HAS\nCARSON  DEPUTY  SPEAKER\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP)-Robert\nCarson (Lib., Kamloops) was unanimously chosen deputy speaker of\nthe legislature today.\nPremier Pattullo moved the nomination.\nResignation of Ralph Robinson,\nsenior constable of the Nelson city\nforce, was placed before the Nelson\npolice commission Thursday and accepted, Mayor J. P. Morgan announced. The resignation took effect\nimmediately.\nConstable Robinson has been a\nmember of the city force for 14\nmonths, succeeding to the post vacated by Constable H. E. Penny.\nMayor Morgan stated Robinson's\nsuccessor had not yet been appointed, and until an appointment was\nmade, a special officer would be on\nduty for a few days.\nIt is understood the former constable will return to Lethbridge,\nwhere he formerly resided.\nReich's Newest Bid for Air Supremacy\n\u2022\nWith the nations of Europe racing for supremacy in the air, the\ndevelopment by Germany of this new pursuit airplane, the HE112,\nplaces her a step ahead of her rivals, according to German experts. The\ncraft is built for speed, being capable of better than 300 miles an hour,\nalthough the single motor boasts but 685 horsepower. The airplane is\narmed with two machine-guns and 6-10-kilogram splinter bombs. At\nTOP is a view of the airplane on the ground. BELOW, a photo-diagram,\nshowing detailed construction. (1) Motor, (2) Motor-carriage. (3) Blowout. (4) Intake valve for compressor. (5) Mstchipt-guns on each side.\n(6) Safety wall. (7) Wing tank. (8) Landing gear folded back. (9) Cannon\non each wing. (10) Crossbar. (11) Splinter bar\/they,-* each side, (12)\nWing flap. (13) T_nk'1n body;6. 'airplane.\" (14) Adjustable seat for pilot.\n(13) Container for grease. (16) Wind protector. (17)' Transparent streamlined section. (18) Mast for antenna. (19) Telephone and radio compartment. (20) Mechanical pneumatic control of guns.\nConsolidated High School Scheme\nIs Given Indorsation at Erickson\nSIX KILLED AS\nAUTOS COLLIDE\nVINTON, Iowa Oct. 28 (AP)-Six\npersons were killed and three others\nseriously injured in a head-on crash\nof two automobiles on a highway\nfive miles south of here tonight.\nThe accident occurred when an\nautomobile in which two bachelor\nbrothers were riding collided with\na sedan containing seven other\nIowans.\nThe dead are:\nMrs. Raymond Brown, Cedar Rapids, Iowa.\nMarie Lee Brown, 3, her daughter.     \u2022\nMrs. O. A. Newton, Grundy Centre,\nIowa.\nMrs. Bud Shaw, Grundy Centre,\nIowa.\nJohn Roach, Vinton.\nMrs. Harry E. Newton, Grundy\nCentre.\nAbe Roach, brother of John, was\nin a critical condition at the Vinton\ncity hospital.\nAlso in the hospital were Mrs.\nArt Robins and her five year old son,\nDouglas, both of Grundy Centre.\nDoctors said their injuries were not\nbelieved to be severe.\nli\nPull on Ostrich\"\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 28 (API-\nAdd \"pull an ostrich\" to robbery\nvernacular.\nH. F. Linebaugh, didn't understand\nwhen a hold-up man commanded\nhim to do so at his filling station.\n\"What do you mean?\" asked Linebaugh.\n\"Bury your head in your arms,\"\nordered the robber.\nLinebaugh did, and the thief walked out with $50.\nGillis Chairman\nLiberal Caucus\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP)-Liberal\nmembers met in caucus today after\nadjournment of the British Colum-\nbia legislature's first business session and appointed Dr. J. J. Gillis\n(Yale) chairman.\nCapt. Sid Leary (Kaslo-Slocan)\nwas reappointed chief government\nwhip in the legislature.\nThe caucus broke up after an hour\nwithout mention of any major legislation.\nMussolini Plans\nFight lo Ihe End\nAgainst the Reds\nROME, Oct. 28\u2014Premier Mussolini will bestow medals of valor in\ntheir honor tomorrow as 1,000,000\nmen mobilize throughout Italy in\ntribute to all Italian volunteers who\nhave fallen in Spain.\nThe mobilization tomorrow will\nserve a second purpose of showing\nhow quickly Italy can muster an\narmy of citizen-soldiers.\nFascist  commentator!  summed\nup   Mussolini's announcement of\nhli program for the 16th year of\nFascism at:\n1. Acceptance of Germany's\ncolonial claims.\n2. Recognition of the elementary rights and needs of nations\nand revision, before It li too late,\nof the peace treaties.\n3. Retpect for Faicltt Italy and\nthe prominence of her empire,\nwhich Mussolini tald was created\n\"without touching a single corner\nof the emplrei of others.\"\n4. A peace abroad that reflects\nthe Internal peace In Italy.\n6. A fight to the end against\ncommunltm.\n(See Page 14 for story on\nMussolini's Speech.)\nPOWER OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT TO\nDISALLOW PROVINCIAL LEGISLATION\nIS REFERRED TO THE SUPREME COURT\nOTTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014 While\nthe Dominion government's decision\nwith respect to Alberta's banking\nand newspaper legislation remains\nin abeyance until next Tuesday\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King announced tonight question of the federal government's power to disallow provincial legislation had been\nreferred to the supreme court of\nCanada.\ntoday the prime minister said no\nannouncement would be made- on\nthe three banking and newspaper\nacts which still await assent, but\nthat in compliance with a suggestion from Premier Aberhart of\nAlberta the power of the federal\ngovernment to disallow would be\ntested. He said decision on the three\nacts would be announced following\nFollowing a long cabinet council Tuesday's cabinet council.\nSurprise   Result 116-7\nVote; Two Centres\nStill to Vote\nBy C. F, HAYE8\nCRESTON, B.C, Oct. 28-Erlck-\nson lined up in favor of the new\nconsolidated high schol at Creston\nby a vote of 16 to 7 at a well attended meeting of ratepayers tonight.\nThe favorable decision indicates\nstrong presentations of the arguments in favor of consolidation by\nthe three speakers, James Cook, J,\nE. Van Ackeren and Alf Spencer,\nas previous to the meeting the opinion was general that Erickson was\ndefinitely against the move. This\nimpression was also manifest at the\ntrustees' conferences preceding the\ncommencement of the ratepayers'\nmeetings. At these conferences Erickson trustees had never favorably\ndiscussed the proposition.\nAfter tonight's splendid indorsation at Erickson, consolidation\nseemed assured by a vote of eight\nto one. The count is now six to one\nand meetings have only to be held at\nAlice Siding and Creston, both of\nwhich are expected to record a\nfavorable vote.\nFRAHCO BLOCKS\nEHTIRE (OAST\nPALMA, Mallorca, Oct. 28 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Inturgent strategy In the\nmajor offentlve that General\nFrancisco Franco hopei will conquer all Spain became clear, observers tald tonight, ai Franco\nnamed this Balearic Island port\nhli main naval base and announced a blockade of the entire Spanish coastline still in government\nhands.\nItaly Will Demand\nShowdown With the\nSoviet Government\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Havas\nNews agency tonight stated it\nlearned from usually reliable\nsources that Italy had made \"wholesale withdrawals\" from its troops\nwith the insurgent Spanish forces\nin advance of arrival in Spain ot\nthe international commission to be\nsent by the non-intervention committee.\nBelief grew here, Havas said, that\nthese withdrawals made the 40,000\nfigure given by Rome as the\nstrength of its men in Spain \"more\nor less exact.\"\nThe despatch added that Italy,\nsupported by Germany, will demand a \"showdown\" with Soviet\nRussia at tomorrow's meeting of\nthe non-intervention sub-committee, according to predictions\nIn   diplomatic  circles.\nThe Soviet has refused to make\nfurther payments towards cost of\nnon-intervention   meetings.\n\u2014Lloyd Qeorge\nBUT ADMIRAL KEYES SAYS THAT\n\"NEITHER ITALY NOR GERMANY' IN\nPOSITION TO STOP BRITISH NAVY\n'Smoke Screens' Can Mask Threatening Guns,\nand L. G. Asks If \"Smoke Screens\" Idea of\nSafety in Case of War; Warns Nation\nMUSSOLINI JUST WAITING ON GERMANY\nTO GAIN STRENGTH BEFORE HE STRIKES\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP)-Wartime\nPrime Minister David Lloyd George\nand retired Admiral Sir Roger Keyes\nfought a mythical naval battle of the\nfortress of Gibraltar today as they\nclashed in the house of commons.\nLloyd George aiierted \"German\ngum\" now dominate the ttralti\nand the admiral answered: \"Nothing can stop the British navy,\"\nadding: \"Neither Italy nor Germany\" wai in a position to close\nthe ttralti.\nSir Roger said \"smoke screens\"\ncould mask any gum that threatened Gibraltar and allow British\nthlpping  through  the   ttralti.\n\"That tatliflei me,\" Mr. Lloyd\nGeorge snapped back. \"I ask the\nsupporters of the government If\nthat li their Idea of our position\nIn a great war\u2014dependent on\ntmoke screens.\"\nMr. Lloyd George was compelled\nto leave the house after his speech\ndue to a cold. Later in the session\nWalter Elliott, secretary for Scotland, described him as \"the nearest\nthing to a dictator we have produced, in this country since the days\nof Oliver Cromwell.\"\nDANGEROUS BASTION\nMr, Lloyd George called Spain\n\"one of the most dangerous bastions\" for the British or French empires. Sea routes of both Britain and\nFrance were \"practically in the\nhands of Mussolini and Germany\"\nin the Mediterranean, he asserted.\nHe declared Mussolini wanted\n\"peace In Europe\u2014until rje and hli\n\u2022 felloWdlrtawSreready, and\"af-\nfirmed Mussolini \"makes a great\npretence he It fighting the redi\n. .. but above all he wantt domination In the Mediterranean and\nNorth Africa and reconstruction\nof an empire.\"\nNon-intervention and th\u00bb J7-na-\ntion   non-intervention   cornmltte^\nLLOYD GEORGE\nwere condemned by tin white-halM\ned Welsh statesman.\n.\"BOASTED FAILURE\" ,\u25a0\nNon-intervention was ''a boasted\nfailure\" and the \"greatest, basest\nfraud and deception ever perpetrat-\n(Continued on Page Twelve)\nPooley's Primroses (m\nShow at House Opening\nLibs Wear Roses While C. C. F... MarcK\nin With Red Roses; Tom Uphill III; Medals\nNumerous as House Opens Session\nBy B. A. McKELVIE\nVICTORIA\u2014Pageantry and tradi\ntion inseparable from British parliamentary institutions always delight\nthe honore-i guests and gallery occupants at the opening of British\nColumbia's legislature. There are\nlocal traditions that are becoming\nas much a part and parcel of the\nlegislative ceremony as are those\nhoary institutions imported from the\nMother ot Parliaments. One of these\nlocal customs is the appearance of\nthe Pooley Primroses.\nHarry Pooley K.C. is no longer in\nthe house. He finished 25 years of\npublic service last session and retired to take his ease among his\nneighbors of Esquimau. Harry Pooley\u2014one of the old school of Tories\n\u2014followed the lead of his distinguished father and sported a primrose on \"opening day\". When Harry\ncame lo the Legislature a quarter of\na century ago he brought with him\na great bouquet of the Conservative\nblooms, and handed out a buttonhole for each member of Premier\nMcBride's following. Each, year\nthereafter he cultivated special blossoms for the annual event. As time\nwent on the Pooley Primroses became as much a feature of the first\nday as was the speech from the\nthrone.\nLast year when Harry Pooley relinquished the seat that he had held\nfor so l\"ng, and as \"Father of the\nHouse\"   went   into   retirement,   it\nwas thought that the Primrose Trf\ndition had ended. ;\nDr. F. P. Patterson and his seven\nConservative colleagues wer\u00ab nervously awaiting the moment when\nthey would signal the re-appearance\nof that party as a definite factor in\nLegislative affairs. \"Pat\" Maitland,\nthe veteran parliamentarian of the\ngroup, was recalling how he first\nentered the chamber adorned with\na Pooley Primrose. There was a\nknock at the door,-A small parcel\nwas handed in, all moist and fragrant. \"Mr. Pooley's compliments\"\nsaid the bearer. It contained eight\nPrimroses. The Pooley tradition remains. , , ,\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00bb\nAway back In the brava days of\nbluff, Honest John Oliver, Hon. T.\nDufferin Pattullo, wore a red rosa\non opening day. Gradually other\nministers adopted the custom, and\neven Honest John himself occasionally submitted to flaunting a crimson bud. At this opening day, however, the Liberal stalwarts marched proudly into the assembly chamber each adorned with a flaming\nrose. Hardly had they taken their\nseats, when in trooped the seven\nC.C.F. members, all wearing broad\nsmiles\u2014and red roses.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPremier Pattullo, through lonl\nyears in publie life, has perfectee.\n(C.ntlnutd op Page Twelve)\nWife of the Head of\nChinese Government\nHurt in Auto Crash\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 29 (Friday).\n(AP)\u2014Injury of Mme. Chiang Kai-\nShek in an automobile accident\nwhile travelling between Nanking and Shanghai was disclosed\nofficially today.\nMme. Chiang, Wellesley-educat.\ned wife of the head of the Chinese\ngovernment and army and secretary general ofthe Chinese national alrforce, tuffered a fractured rib\nand ihock.\nThe accident occurred last Saturday midway between Nanking\nand Shanghai when a rear tire\nof her automobile bunt.\nShe wai catapulted 14 feet out\nof the car into a muddy pool\nwhere lhe lay unconscious.\nHangar Saved in\nan Airport Fire\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 28 (CP)-Fire\ndestroyed the repair and store shop\nof   Wings   Limited   at   Stevenson\nfield, Winnipeg airport, here today\ncausing loss of an estimated $5000\nto $7000, partially covered by insurance. Firefighters prevented the\nblaze from spreading to the company's hangar, filled with 'planes,\n40 feet away.\n&mW\nWea\n(M\n        m^ \"M\nMin. Max,\nNELSON    52 63\nVictoria   _  _ 51 59\nNanaimo    46 63\nVancouver   _ 56 64\nKamloops  _.._. 58 66\nPrince George   46 64\nEstevan Point _  50 56\nPrince Rupert _ _ 40 50\nLangara   _.   46 50\nDawson    *  22 26\nSeattle  _ - 60 63\nPortland \u2014, 65 76\nSan Francisco   56 70\nSpokane      50 56\nLos Angeles \u00ab 56 72\nKelowna  \u2014\u201e....__. 53 64,\nPenticton   _  -. 58 \u2014\nGrand Forks  52 62\nKaslo   _\u00bb 49 \u2014\nCranbrook   * 46 60\nCalgary   46 64\nEdmonton    38 53\nSwift Current _ - 50 76\nMoose Jaw  \u2014 52 62\nPrince Albert - 36 54\nSaskatoon   38 74\nQu'Appcllc   42 76\nWinnipeg  34 66\nForecasts, Koolenay\u2014 Fresh but\ndecreasing southeasterly winds. Fair,\nwarm by day cool at night.\n\t\n H        '    i     .1 mi.v,M^umw^lMm^\u25a0 .^w      ,   \u25a0 nm {.in .,,,,\n^'jy^w^.'-fpi^fi.tuiii!.i,'v.ijpu^\nPAGE TWO\t\nWindsors to Go\nto Pacific Coast, lo\nHollywood, Miami\nPARIS, Oct. 28 (AP)-The Duke\nand Duchess ot Windsor are planning to double swing across the\nUnited States trom New York to\nHollywood and back to Miami, a\nclose associate disclosed today.\nThe westward trip would lake the\nduke along a northern route while\nthe eastward journey would be\nthrough the south.\nAfter arrival in Florida they plan\nto visit a Caribean island not yet\ndecided upon. A friend ot the\ncouple said Washington and Pittsburgh already were on the list of\nplaces likely to be visited. He added\nthat some industrial areas ot New\nEngland wero almost certain to be\nIncluded.\nThe duke's retinue for the American tour will Include his equerry,\nDudley Richard Forwood, and his\nbodyguard, Inspector David Storicr.\nMr. and Mrs. Charles E. Bedaux,\nhosts of the couple when they were\nmarried at Chateau De Cande last\nJune, may accompany them part ot\nthe way after preparing a welcome\nfor them in New York.\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 28 (AP)-\nThe Washington Post said in a\ncopyright story today that Harold\nSims, attache ot the British embassy, and Mrs. Sims will he hosts\nto the Duke and Duchess of Windsor during their visit hero next\nmonth.\n.\u25a0\u25a0 The attache and hla wife can\nentertain officially or otherwise,\nthe paper explained, since Sim's\npost is an honorary one carrying no\nsalary.\nNorman May lo\nBe King Scout\nInformation that a fourth Coronation King Scout certificate would\nbe awarded in Nelson was given\nJ, M. Dronsfield, district commissioner of Scouts, when he received\nfor signature the qualifying papers\nof Norman May.\nThree such certificates already\nheld in Nelson constituted a unique\nrecord in B.C. scoutdom inasmuch\nas the three were in the same troop,\nthe First Nelson. Fernie was the\nonly other troop in the province to\nequa} this. With Scout May also\nlisted for the highest ranking in\nscouting, the First Nelson will have\nfour Coronation King Scouts.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B.C.-FR1DAY MORNINO. OCT. 29. 1J37.\nASTHMA\nSutiwlntendeht of large ho\u00abpttal\nIn California wlrei for \"Davit\nAtthma Remedy 7895\" and writes\n\"on account of the iplendld remits on a former patient we\nwanted this for a new case. Get\nthli Internal remedy at any drug\n\u25a0tore, 64 doiei $3.75.\nMercury Higher os\nRain Falls, Nelson\nThursday saw another dark and\nrainy day in Nelson. Rain slanted\ndown from leaden skies at intervals\nand up until 5 p. m. .09 inch had\nfallen.'\nTemperatures were at the highest\nlevels for some days, the minimum\nbeing 52 and the maximum 63.\nPattullo Hopes\nKeep Tolls Low\non Fraser Bridge\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP)- To\nkeep the tolls low on the new Pattullo bridge over the Fraser river,\nthe British Columbia government\nis tentatively planning to ask the\nlegislature for permission to levy\nfor only a portion of the $4,000,000\ncapital expenditure on the structure\nPremier Pattullo said today.\nThe province expects to sell the\nold Fraser river bridge to the Dominion government for railway use.\nThe premier said he expects word\nsoon from Ottawa on its decision to\nbuy the old bridge.\nPending this, of course, the tolls\nfor the Pattullo bridge cannot be\nsettled.\nBishop Johnson\nal Consecration\nEDMONTON, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Rt.\nRev. Charles Leo Nelligan was\nconsecrated Roman Catholic Bishop\nof Pembroke Diocese in Ontario in\na colorful but solemn and impressive ceremony here today at St.\nJoseph's cathedral.\nDignitaries of the church, garbed\nin brilliant vestments, representatives of the crown, the judiciary,\nand the federal, provincial and\ncivic governments, and a delegation of clergy from Pembroke diocese attended the ceremony.\nMore than 100 members of religious sisterhoods and 1000 laymen\nfound seats in the cathedral, richly\ndecorated with the papal white and\ngold banners, and regal red draperies.\nArchbishop H. J. O'Leary of Edmonton vested his former vicar-\ngeneral with the bishop's symbols\nof authority.\nThose attending the consecration\nincluded Lieutenant-governor J. C.\nBowen of Alberta; Archbishop W.\nM; Duke of Vancouver; Bishop E.\nBunoz of Prince Rupert; Bishop\nMartin Johnson of Nelson, B.C.; and\nlhe famed norlhland flying prelate,\nBishop Gabriel Breynat, Vicar\nApostolic of the Mackenzie.\nRt. Rev. B. V. Ladyka of Winnipeg, Urkrainian bishop for Canada,\nalso witnessed the ceremony.\nGuide for Travellers\n'TS^^^^ \u25a0    '\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\ng--si-e a\nHume Hotel.\nNelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   .   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME\u2014G. W. Hicks, Kamloops;\nM. E. DeLaurier, Mr. and Mrs. A. J.\nCrowe, H. Thompson, C. B. Stewart\nand party, % G-. D. Walk\", R- W.\nFowles, j. S. Davenport, .A. M.Mc-\nCurrach, Mr. and Mrs. J. Armes,\nVancouver; Mr. and Mrs. B. Grass-\nman, R. P. Wilmot, Victoria; Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Armes, Williams Lake,\nB. C; D. Matheson, Trail; W. W.\nMorgan, Wcnatchee; Mr. and Mrs.\nG. H. Thompson, Cranbrook; G. Mclnnes, Howser; M. B. Stein, Mr. Driver, G. T. Wadsworth, Montreal;\nD. McLeod, Medicine Hat; Mr. and\nMrs. R. H. Kirkup, Kelowna.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n''y\/here the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE  ROOMS\nLicensed Premises\n;.24 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelson. B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. and L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nROOMS $1.00 AND UP\nFrei Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon 8t. Phona 89?\nH. WA8SICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortablo Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS.  E.  MADDEN,  Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled,\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C., HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throuahout\nDufferin Hotel aTmerson'TiTo.\n900 Seymour 8t.      Vancouver, B.C.    Coleman. Alta., Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Posscngcr and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135 Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nM. H. MclVOR. Prop.\nHALLOWE'EN PARTIES\nARE HELD AT SCHOOLS\nObserving Hallowe'en on the last\nday of school for three days, many\nclasses of Central and Hume schools\nThursday afternoon held little parties of their own in their rooms.\nWith themselves ln costume and\nthe rooms gaily decked out in Hallowe'en decorations, the pupils enjoyed games and refreshments.\nDamage $500 in\nKimberley Road\nDamage amounting to $550 to two\ncars and minor injuries to five persons occurred when autos driven\nby Frank A. Redding of Kimberley\nand D. R. Jones of Lumberton met\nin a head-on collision on the Cran-\nbrook-Kimbe.ley road. Damage to\nRedding's car was $250 and to Jones'\n$300. Bessie Bell and A, Hoglund,\nwho were with Redding, were slightly injured as were S. Herbert of\nCranbrook and William Griffiths\nand Arnold C. Jones of Lumberton,\npassengers in the other car.\nCharged before John Leask, stipendiary magistrate, with driving\nto the common danger, Redding was\nfound guilty and fined $15 and\ncosts.\nOxford Students\nof Aristocratic\nBlood in Wreck\nPIDDINGTON, Oxfordshire, Oct.\n28 (CP-Havas)\u2014Hon. Peter Wood,\n21-year-old second son of Lord\nPresident of the Council Viscount\nHalifax, was seriously injured today in an automobile accident on\nlhe London-Oxford road. He was\ntaken to Oxford hospital. His life\nwas in no immediate danger.\nThree other Oxford undergraduates were in the car, which collided\nwith a truck, but were not seriously\nhurt. They were W. D. Ormsby-\nGore, son of Colonial Secretary\nWilliam Ormsby-Gore; John Jacob\nAstor, son of Viscount Astor, and\nHon. Hugh Fraser, brother of Lord\nLovat.\nSUPERINTENDENT OF\nPRESBYTERIAN MISSION\nWORK IN B. C. IS DEAD\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Oct.\n28 (CP)\u2014Rev. Robert James Douglas, 72, for 40 years associated with\nthe Presbyterian Church in Can\nada, will be buried here Saturday\nafternoon. He died Wednesday at\nhis home.\nRev. Mr. Douglas' was born In\nEarltown, Colchester, N. &, and\ncame to British Columbia 33 years\nago. He had been superintendent\nof Presbyterian Missions in the province since 1926.\nEvangelist Says\nProphecies Are\nBeing Fulfilled\nEvangelist John E. Barnes, speaking at the Pentecostal tabernacle,\nrevealed to a large congregation\nsome astonishing facts concerning\nPalestine and its resuscitation after\na period of many generation. He declared that the fulfillment of prophecy, as stated in the Scriptures,\nwith such amazing precision should\nset the whole world thinking, especially the agnostics and atheists.\nMore than 2500 years ago Isaiah\nthe phophet gave a graphic picture\nexactly of what is taking place today in Palestine. In chapter 61,\nverse 4. is read \"And they shall\nbuild the old wastes, they shall\nraise up the former desolations, and\nthey shall repair the waste cities,\nthe desolations of many generation.\nThe evangelist explained that in\nthe days of the Lord s earthly ministry, Palestine was by no means a\nland of desolation. The Romans\nwere great builders. They built\nroads, aqueducts and citadels in\nPalestine and adorned many of their\ncities. However, a few years after\nthe prediction of Christ, that the\nmagnificient temple of Herod would\nbo razed to the ground and there\nnot be left one stone upon another,\nflames were sweeping over the temple buildings, melting the gold in the\nstructure until it ran down in the\ncrevices of the stones. Thus the\nphophecy of the Lord was fulfilled.\nFollowing the destruction of Jerusalem by Titus in 70 A. D\u201e the era\nof building in Palestine ended and\nthere began \"the desolation of many\ngenerations\" foretold by Isaiah,\nSince Great Britain was given\nlhe mandate over the land to make\nit \"a national home for the Jews,''\na rapid and remarkable transformation has taken place.\nJews were returning in steady\nstreams to the land and buildings of\nmagnificient types wore going up\neverywhere. New cities were being\nformed and the land of waste was\nnow astounding the whole world\nwith its beautiful orange groves,\nproducing nearly ten million boxes\nof Jaffa oranges in 1936 with grapefruit and other lucious fruits in\nabundance.\nThe speaker pointed out many\nmarvellous fulfillments of prophecy,\npossibly one of the most outstanding\nbeing the statement made by Moses\n3500 years ago that \"Asher be blessed with children; let him be acceptable to his brethern, or let him\ndip his foot in oil.\" This prophecy\nwas being fulfilled at the rate of\nabout a million gallons daily.\nProphecies concerning the Dead\nSea becoming a mecca and the dry\nlands becoming \"pools of water\"\nwere shown by Mr. Barnes to be\nnow actual facts.\nGOITRE EXPERT IN B.C.\nMERRITT, B. C, Oct. 28 (CP)\nDr. F. R. Gerl, German authority\non thyroid glands and goitre, left\nhere today for Chicago and New\nYork, after a brief visit here with\nan old friend, Penrhyn Goldman.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS, H, S. ALLEN\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28\u2014Memorial\nhall was the scene of a lovely fall\ntea Wednesday afternoon when Arthur Chapman chapter, I.O.D.E., entertained a large number of guests.\nMrs. C. E. Devitt and Mrs. F. A.\nNewell of Rossland presided at the\ntea table, which was centred with\nan exquisite cut-glass bowl of yellow and bronze chrysanthemums\nflanked on either side with silver\nsconces holding lighted yellow tapers. The hall was beautifully decorated with vases of chrysanthemums and marigolds, Mrs. A. C.\nGraham having charge- of the flowers. Mrs. F. E. Dockerill and Mrs.\nC. E. Jestley received the guests.\nLittle Winnifred Millar selected the\nprize tickets, the holders being: Miss\nKatherine Stimmel, \u25a0 cedar chest,\nfirst; Dr. W. Leonard, pair of blankets, second; and Ethel Merry of\nAnnable, blanket, third. The committees included'.- Serviteurs: Mrs,\nR. H.' Welton, Mrs. D. S. South-\nworth, Mrs. A. B. Thompson. Mrs.\nDonald MacDonald, Mrs. W. F.\nTruswell, Mrs. W. O. Devitt, Mrs.\nJ. S. Johnson, Mrs. M. M. Goldstein,\nMrs. Eric Jackson, Mrs. D. Turn-\nbull, Mrs. D. S. Moynes, Mrs. William Cameron, Mrs. G. J. Kinnis,\nMrs. E. M. Stiles, Mrs. Leo Levy and\nMrs. E, W. Cowie; culinary arrangements, Mrs. Donald McLeod, Mrs. F.\nW. Jackson, Mrs. Bruno Lerose, Mrs.\nF S. Willis Mrs. W. E. Mulliner and\nMrs. T. H. Ollis; tickets, Mrs. V. C.\nHuvcke and Mrs. D. C. Irwin.\nMiss Ada Brown of Nelson was a\ncilv visitor Wednesday night.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Hall, 2834 Victoria  drive,  Vancouver,  announce\nBARGAIN\nROUNDTRIP\nFARES\nON SALE NOV. 6 and 7\nFrom Trail, Caitlegar and\nNelson.\nAlto Intermediate points\nbetween Castlegar and\nNelson.\nTO ALBERTA POINTS\nMedicine Hat and West.\nCalgary and South.\nTickets good to leave destination not later than\nNovember 10.\nFor full particular!\nApply local agent\nmkts*\/}*wWm%'m**e,mm\\\\lrWWw\nthe engagement of their eldest\ndaughter, Mary, to Walter J. Stewart, son of Mrs. L. Beaumont of\nTrail, the wedding to take place at\nSt. Paul's Presbyterian church, Vancouver, early in November.\nMr. and Mrs. Keith Kettlewell of\nRossland were city visitors Thursday afternoon.\nMr. and Mrs. K. B. Woodward of\nPrince George are in the cily for\nthe Teachers' convention. Mr. Woodward, provincial inspector of schools\nin the Prince George district, was\nformerly principal of Trail Central\nschool.\nMrs. J. G. Best was hostess for\n(he East Trail branch of tlie Women's Auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nchurch, entertaining tlie following:\nMrs. Alex Stainton, Mrs. C. Jones,\nMrs, T. Hinton, Mrs. A. T. Wilkinson, Mrs. H. Johnson, Mrs. W. Sim-\nmonds, Mrs. C. T. Conry, Mrs, A.\nYates, Mrs. A. Dawson, Mrs. R. H.\nScott and Mrs. W. P. Robertson; and\nMrs. G. Brant of Vancouver.\nMrs. Evelyn Baillie ot Kamloops,\nmatron of the grand chapter of British Columbia, Order of Eastern\nStar, who has paid her official visit\nto Columbia chapter No. 32, Trail,\nis the guest of Mrs. J. H. Woodburn.\nThe B branch of the Women's\nAuxiliary to St. Andrew's church\nmet at the home of Miss Joy Kemp.\nAssisted by Miss Doris Johnson and\nMiss Connie Can, the hostess served\ndelicious refreshments.\nAflcr spending a few days visiting friends in Rossland and Trail,\nMrs. A. J. Cleeton of Cascade returned to her home Thursday morning.\nColumbia chapter No. 32, Order of\nthe Eastern Star, tendered a banquet honoring the matron of the\ngrand chapter of British Columbia,\nMiss Evelyn Baillie of Kamloops.\nChrysanthemums and candles in trie\nlodge colors of blue, yellow, white\nred and green were used throughout\nas decorations. Mrs. William Wood\nwas convenor for the banquet and\nwas assisted by Mrs. G. W. Wheat-\nley. Mrs. David Forrest, Mrs. Robert\nSommerville, Mrs. Hugh McWhin-\nnie, Mrs. T. Couch, Mrs. J. L. Webster. Mrs. William Rae, Mrs. James\nDeans. Mrs. W. McCready, Mrs. R.\nT. Ellison, Mrs. A. C. Clark, and\nMrs. Lloyd Crowe. H. G. Wilcox of\nVancouver, past grand patron for\nB.C., J. H. Woodburn of Trail, sentinel of the grand chapter, and Mrs.\nJ, A. Curran of Nelson, grand representative, were the other honored\nguests present.\nA silver tea under the auspices of\nthe Women's Auxiliary to St. Andrew's church was held at the home\nof Mrs. H. C. Caldicott, Topping\nstreet. Thursday afternoon.\nThe Smelter Social club held a\nsuccessful smoker Wednesday night\nat Colombo hall. About 175 guests\nand members were present. The artists contributing were: Jock Allen,\ncomic Scotch songs; Sam Powell,\ncomic songs; Thomas Nixon, recitation; and \"Scotty\" Drysdale, bagpipes; Mr. and Mrs. Barrieau, tap\nand other dances, accompanied by\nMrs. Deanson, piano. The Veterans'\norchestra was in attendance and the\nbrass quartet from the orchestra\ngave a number of items. Timothy\nBuscombe was speaker of the evening and Arthur Latham acted as\nmaster of ceremonies. The eommit-\nlee consisted of: Ernest Spain, William Priest, Joseph Hardie, Arthur\nLatham, Jack Powell, D. J. Duffua\nFINK'S mi\n;\n1 Month End SPECIALS '\nFriday \u2014 Saturday \u2014 Monday \u2014 Tuesday\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\ni\nSIX PIECE BEDROOM SUITE\nComplete\nfor\n$189-5\u00b0\nA very nice modern suite\nthat anyone would like to\nown. Made of selected walnut veneer with inlay trim.\nLarge roomy drawers with\nburnished copper and agate\npulls. The suite consists of\nlarge dresser with plate glass mirror. Roomy\nchiffonier, vanity with long plate glass mirror. Upholstered bench and two single beds.\nThe suite was priced at $275.00.\nMonth End Special at\t\nTABLE LAMPS\nat $3.95\nColored porcelain vase base with\nshaded parchment shades that make\nan attractive lamp for your living\nroom,\nBED LAMPS\nParchment or silks in a good variety\nof colors, at, (PI QC\nEach $l.Ud\nBreakfast\nNook Sets\nBuffet, Dropside Table and Four\nof   maple   or   green\nShaded and gob! li ed.\n6 pieces,\nAt \t\nColon\n$39-75\n2-Piece Chesterfield Suites\n^srjgm^TSI\nTwo Piece Suite\ngood\nSquar\nV\nm i 5\n\u25a0<?\u00a3.\nH\nB   S{   \u00b0-\nK*\nS-^rf\nS3\n\u2022  S'-r\nrt\n' of\nrt>\n\u202215\nCu\n: |?\nr*\n\u2022  o> *\nH\u00bb\nP\n'      <\n0\n-<\nr\u2014*\n:    g\nCD\nUiq-\nOO\n0\n3\nA lovely chair of beige and green with the chesterfield In contrasting shades of rose and beige. Truly a beautiful suite for\nthe person desiring only 2 pieces. Regularly $175.00. We offer\nit to you at our Month End Sale for\t\n$87-50\nAnoC.er 2 Piece SUITI\nIn green and brown corded velour. Steel constructed throughout. Reversible spring filled cushions. Regular\n$165.00.   ...\nDry Goods SPECIALS\n39\"   PRINTED  VOILES.\nSuitable for kitchen or\nbedroom curtains. 1 C\u00ab\nSpecial, yard .... 1 Jv\nTEA SETS. 36\" Cloth, 4\nnapkins.      Handworked.\nSdal:' 69c\n36\" CRETONNES. Regular to 50c yard, ffl AA\nSpecial, 3 yards. \u00abpl.UU\n39\"  MARQUISETTES.\nFine quality. All colors.\nRegular to 45c yard.\nSpecial, dM AA\n4 yards .pl.UU\nEXTRA SPECIAL VALUE\nBELDING NEEDLEWORK PACKAGES\nLuncheon Cloths, Runners, Laundry Bags, etc. Pack-   |_ja|f\nStriped\nTurkish\nTowels\nSTRIPED  TURKISH\nTOWELS. Large size.\n&\".': 49c\nage includes embroidery threads and instruction\ncharts. Your choice.\nPrice\nDON'T MISS THESE\nVALUES.\nFIN*5.\n,mit\"\u00a3d\nFURNITURE\nDRAPERIES\nPHONE 553\nBAKER ST.\n upp\nmm\n*mwwm^mmmmrf-\nwiimsm-1,1... mwtu.mmiiWJ\n\u2022m*msmw9mmmmwmff\n|46(\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014FRIDAY MORNING. OCT. 29. 1937.\nView Crinolines\nbut Talk Shorts\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP)-Wiih elaborate  autumn festivities in  sight\nJ2MM\nBtoumitifot\nit seems in keeping that a London\ndesigner should show crinolines\namong his models at a fashion\npresentation. They swept the floor\nand were given the wide swaying silhouette by layers upon\nlayers of stiffening sewn under the\nfrills.\nHowever, the fashions that are\ncreating most London conversations\nare those illustrated in the new\ngovernment booklet \"Recreation and\nPhysical Fitness\" which shows a\nshort baglike dress as the most\nsuitable costume for women doing \"physical jerks\",\nThe Women's league of health and\nbeauty are up in arms. \"We've worn\nshorts ever since we started,\" one\nofficial said. \"That was seven years\nago, and we're not going to change\nnow\".\nOffice workers who belong to a\nhuge \"Keep Fit\" association feel\nthe same way. \"Shorts are freer and\nneater and more modest,\" one ex-\nFOR SOMETHING DELICIOUS\n. , . for something different . , . for that\nImpromptu bridge game or Sunday night\nsupper . 4 . Rogers1 Golden Syrup, rich and\nflavorful, stands by to help when you bake.\nStir luscious spoonfuls of Golden Syrup into\nyour gingerbread batter, your spice-cakes, or\nmacaroons, and they will come out of the oven\ntantalizingly crisp and tasty as never before.\nRogers* Golden Syrup has so many uses and\ncombines so perfectly with other ingredients\nln cooking and baking that it should have a\npermanent place on your shelf, as a time-\nsaver and as a confection for special treats.\nROGERS\nGOLDEN SYRUP\nManufactured in\nBritish Columbia\nplained. \"You can't hang upside-\ndown in a skirt and see what you\nare doing.\"\nThe National Fitness campaign\nofficials who published the book are\nfinding it hard going. One cynical\ngymnasium instructor, however, remarked gloomily \"what does it matter what they wear? They won't\ntake any real exercise anyway!\"\nMiss D. E. Lowe\nNew Denver Bride\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-St. Stephens Anglican church was the scene\nof a wedding at U a.m. Wednesday\nwhen Miss Dulcie Ellen Lowe, only\ndaughter of Mrs. C. I. Vandergrift\nand the late S. A. Lowe of Vars,\nOnt., was united in marriage to\nNeil Clayton Tattrie only son of\nNeil Tattrie and the late Mrs. Tattrie of New Denver. Rev. F. Browne\nvicar officiated.\nThe church was decorated by\nfriends of the bride. A large number of relatives and friends attended\nthe ceremony.\nThe bride entered the church on\nthe arm of her stepfather, C. I.\nVandergrift, who gave her in marriage.\nMiss Willa Alywin was the brides\nmaid and only attendant. She wore\na dress of brown silk crepe trimmed\nwith gold, with hat and shoes to\nmatch, and carried a bouquet of\nbronze chrysanthemums.\nRoss Workman was best man.\nThe bride wore white silk taffeta\ntrimmed with ruffles and a silk net\nveil with wreath of pearls. She\ncarried a bouquet of roses and\nmaiden hair fern.\nThe bridegroom's gift to the bride\nwas a gold wrist watch and to the\nbridesmaid a necklace with amethyst  setting.\nMrs. A. Levy presided at the organ. During the signing of the register Mrs. C. Thring sang \"0 Promise\nMe\".\nD. P. Morgan and Lawrence Tattrie were ushers.\nOne hymn was sung \"The Voice\nThat Breathed O'er Eden\". Immediately following the wedding a reception was held at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. C. I. Vandergrift. Mrs.\nVandergrift received the guests\nwearing a gown of navy georgette\nwith a corsage of carnations and\nroses. The spacious living room was\nbeautifully decorated with white\nstreamers, wedding bells and bronze\nchrysanthemums.\nRev. Mr. Browne proposed the\ntoast to the bride to which the bridegroom responded.\nAfter the reception, attended by\nrelatives and friends, the couple\nleft for a honeymoon at Spokane\nand coast cities. The bride chos.:\na travelling dress in rust with navy,\nwith a navy coat and hat and accessories to match. On their return\nthey will reside at New Denver.\nGrand Forks Young\nPeople Entertained\nGRAND FORKS, kc.-Mr. and\nMrs. Eli Ralph entertained the senior group of St. John's Young\nPeople's society at a weiner roast\nand bonfire on their ranch Friday\nevening. Games and contests, featured the evening's entertainment.\nMiss Ruth Eureby and Mrs. Claire\nJones accompanied the group singing with their accordions. The party\nlasted till midnight, and the group\nthen surrounded the host and hostess and sang \"For They are Jolly\nGood Fellows.\"\nA vote of thanks was given to\nMiss Eureby and Mrs. Jones for\ntheir assistance in the evening's\nentertainment.\nill\nJsifl\n'WjSf&m,\n\"Neighbour* envy ut. We tell them\nto use St, Charles Milk* for their\nbabiea, tool\"\nSt. Charles Milk is so nourishing, so safe,\nit is small wonder that babies all over\nthe country are thriving on its goodness,\nPurest of rich country milk evaporated\njust a few hours after milking time,\nSt. Charles is always extra fresh ... and\nextra good because it is irradiated for an\nadded supply of tlie important Sunshine\nVitamin 13.\nAsk your doctor about St. Charles for your\nbaby. He knows its purity and high quality.\nSt. Charles improves your cooking.\nMakes a more delicious cup of coffee\nor tea.\n*A BRITISH COLUMBIA \/^-Cft\nPRODUCT\nLook \/or (he B.C. Label\n2ferafe*fct ST. CHARLES MILK\nThe Better Irradiated\nEvaporated Milk\n\t\nButton, Button\nEvery Woman\nWears 'Em Now\nSome New Buttons Made of Cntalin\nBy  Central  Press\nButton, button, who's got the button? Every woman has a good many\nthese days. Buttons are bigger and\nbetter and more worn than they\nhave been for years.\nMany of this season's buttons are\nvery elaborate. Many of them are\nmade of catalin, which is a plastic\nmaterial discovered when someone\nwas trying to make synthetic rubber during the World War. It is\nused to make jewelry, toilet articles\nand ever so many other things.\nSome of the buttons shown are: top\nright, brown catalin with gold top;\nleft, shades of brown and tan; next\nright two of clear catalin with\ndouble rows of rhinestones; below,\nblack on crystal catalin; the three\nremaining, left, are carved in various shades, the lower one, clear\ncrystal with black top.\nVISITORS  FROM  OVERSEAS\nARE KEEN ABOUT CANADA\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Back\nfrom Canada, where they spent\nfrom a few days to two weeks as\nguests in Canadian homes, 80 English school girls are telling England of how much they enjoyed\ntheir visit. Several have been asked\nto lecture on their experiences at\ntheir  schools.\nThe venture of exchange visitors\nhas proved so successful that it\nwill be tried on even a larger scale\nnext year and several of the English girls who went to Canada also\nplan to return for a more comprehensive tour.\nSURPRISE PARTY\nAT CASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\u2014Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. F. Woodrow held\na surprise party in honor of their\nguests, Mr. and Mrs. W. Jarvis of\nTarry's, who were celebrating their\nsecond wedding anniversary. The\nevening was spent with games and\ncontests, prize-winners being presented with fireworks which were\ndisplayed as the guests departed.\nThose present were Mr. and Mrs.\nT. L. Bloomer, Mrs. J. Morrison,\nMrs. R. West, Mrs. A. Lampard, Mrs.\nW. Dams, Miss Pearl Dams, Mrs.\nJ. Lawson, Miss Jean Lawson, Mrs.\nB. Trussler, Mrs. D. White, Mrs. A.\nEremenko, Mr. and Mrs. F. Wood-\nrow, Mr. and Mrs. W. Jarvis, Mrs.\nJ. McKinnon, Mrs. W. Houston, Jack\nMcKinnon, Jack Lawson and Margaret Trussler.\nOctober, 14, Mrs. J, McKinnon\ngaye a farewell dinner in honor of\nMiss Eleanore Pratt and Miss Marion Pratt who left with their sister\nand parents for Prince George on\nthe following Sunday. Those present included members of Mrs.\nMcKinnon's Sunday school class.\nGames were played and the party\ntook the form of a handkerchief\nshower for the guests of honor.\nFriday a ranee was held in Cor\nonation hall by the Castlegar Community club.\nWHIST AIDS THE\nBOY BANDSMEN\nNelson Boys' Band, of some 30\nmembers, under the direction of\nSpence J. Newell, presented a pleasing concert as a prelude to a progressive whist drive of 14 tables\nin the K.P. hall Wednesday evening.\nPrize winners in the whist, which\nwas sponsored by the Ladies' Auxiliary to the band, were Mrs. Martin Lund, ladies' first; Mrs. E,\nGeorge, ladies' consolation, R. A.\nThompson, men's first; and S. L.\nVingo, men's consolation.\nMaster of ceremonies for the\nwhist was Jack Draper.\nMrs. L. Pickard was convenor for\nthe refreshments, assisted by Mrs.\nChester Robinson, Mrs. R. Morgan.\nMrs. Joseph Romano, Mrs. Samuel\nBarton, Mrs. A. Gallicano, Mrs, William Graham, Mrs. Albert Harrison\nand Mrs. David Beattie.\nProgram of the band concert follows:\nSerenade, \"The Twilight Hour\"\u2014\nFrancis A. Myers; medley, \"Southern Melodies\"\u2014Al Hayes; waltz,\n\"Dreamy Dawn\"; march, \"The Getaway\"; march, \"Side by Side\".\nSALTAN DTEA~\nAT NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER-A sale and tea\nwere held Oct. 15 in the K.P. hall\nby the Pythian Sisters of Lucerne\nTemple, No. 17. The hall was decorated in Pythian colors of red,\nwhite, blue and yellow and vases\nof flowers, carnations, snapdragons,\nsweet peas and marigolds.\nTables were decorated with the\nPythian colors and centred with a\nvase of carnations, with Mrs. J.\nDraper, Mrs. R. W. Crellin and Mrs.\nF. L. Beggs in charge.\nTea tables were in charge of Miss\nEdna Shannon, Miss Gladys Coombs\nand Mrs. J. Klien. The kitchen\ncommittee consisted of Mrs. Clever\nand Mrs. J. Depretto. Mrs. T. Avi-\nson received the guesls.\nA cushion was won by Mrs. Jack\nTaylor and a bridge lamp by T. R.\nFliht.\nROSSLAND CATHOLICS\nENTERTAIN IN HONOR\nOF MISS McMASTERS\nROSSLAND, B.C.-The Catholic\nWomen's league enjoyed a pleasant\nsocial evening when they entertained in honor of Miss Anne Mc-\nMasters of Vancouver, fourth national vice-president of the Catholic\nWomen's league of Canada. Miss\nMcMasters gave an Interesting report of the meeting of the national\nconvention held recently in Kingston, Ont, and reviewed the work\nof the league in general. Refreshments were served at the close of\nthe evening.\nMiss Manning Is\nBride at Fernie\nFERNIE, B. C-A quiet wedding\nwas solemnized Thursday, October\n21, at the United church manse when\nMiss Grace Evelyn Manning, elder\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Manning, became the wife of William\nMartin, son of Mrs. D. Martin. Rev.\nJ. H. Matthews officiated. The\nbride wore a sand colored crepe\ndress with brown trimmings and\naccessories, and a corsage of car\nnations and fern. She was attended\nby her sister, Miss Doris Velma\nManning, who was dressed in brown\nand orange. The groom was sup\nported by his brother, Robert Mar\ntin. A wedding supper was served\nat the home of the bride's parents,\nat which about sixty guests were\nseated. A reception for friends of\nthe newly-married couple was held\nduring the evening. Mr. and Mrs,\nMartin will reside in Fernie.\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B. C-J. C. Vipond\nhas arrived from Trail to replace\nArthur Oliver.\nHenry Godderis, who has been\nacting C. P. R. agent since the departure of W. B. Martin, was called\nto Vancouver by the death of Mrs.\nGodderis' mother.\nMr. and Mrs. B. F. Whiteside have\nreturned to Nelson after visiting the\nlatter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T.\nSimister.\nMrs. D. S. Timmons of Seattle, is\nvisiting her son here, E. G. Timmons\nand is a guest of Mrs. R. Long.\nBert Jones, of Cranbrook, was a\nvisitor at the end of the week.\nW. G. Littlejohn called on friends\nat Cranbrook last week.\nJ. S. Wilson of Sirdar was a Creston visitor Saturday. He reports\nmining aclive on the properties\ndown the lake.\nMrs. P. McKinley of Medicine Hat\nhas returned after visiting at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. C, McKinley.\nMr. and Mrs. Leonard Olson and\nfamily, who came here from Norway in 1924, and have occupied a\nranch cast of town, are moving to\nYahk to reside,\nMr. and Mrs. F. Knott and Miss\nFrances Knott, who have been holidaying in England, are sailing for\nhome at the end of the month.\nMrs. A. Miller of Wasa, visited\nher daughters, Mrs. Hector Stewart\nand Mrs. John Miller, jr.\nimo ia m\nDon't wait until someone tells you how good\nthe new Nabob IRRADIATED Coffee is . . . prrlet\na tin today and discover a taste sensation. Nabob\nIRRADIATED Coffee, vitalized by .the life-giving\nelements of sunshine, through the application of\nultra violet rays, is more healthful, more digestible and retains all its former flavour and aroma.\nKELLY   DOUGLAS   &   CO.   LTD.\nVANCOUVER,    CALGARY     AND     WINNIPEG\nIRRADIATED   TODAY   FOR   YOUR   HEALTH  TOMORROW\n ! f\t\nMrs. R. Dodd and Mrs. F. Speaker\nand son, Fred, were Cranbrook visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Quade of Missoula, Mont., have been visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. L. Heric,\nMrs. Bale is home from Moose\nJaw, to which city she was called\ndue to the serious illness of her son.\nMr. Bale is remaining for a few\ndays.\nAnnouncement of the forthcoming\nmarriage of Miss Holly Emily Mary.\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Bond\nand John Dewick of Nelson, only\nson of Mr. and Mrs. A- F. Dewick\nof Vancouver, is of interest here\nand in Nelson. The ceremony is\nscheduled to take place at the United church, Canyon, Saturday, November 6.\nMiss Dorothy Pearl Kirby and\nWilliam Leonard Blair, both of\nYahk, were married at Trinity United church manse, Friday, Rev.\nAndrew H. Walker officiating. Witnesses were Mr. and Mrs. D. G.\nSmith. The party returned to Yahk\nafter the ceremony, where the groom\nis a well known rancher.\nCRESTON, B.C.-W. F. Burgess\nof Kelowna is replacing W. B. Martin, who left for Port Moody earlier\nin the month.\nMrs. Sanderson relurncd to Moose\nJaw Monday, after visiting her sister, Mrs. F. H. Jackson.\nFrank Putnam, M.P.P,, and Mrs.\nPutnam, left Thursday for Victoria,\nwhere the former is attending the\n1937 session of the British Columbia\nlegislature.\nE. E. Richards of Victoria was a\nvisitor during the week, speaking at\na well attended meeting of the British Israel association on the subject\n\"The World and Armageddon\".\nMiss Phyllis Hamilton, R,N\u201e of the\nKootenay Lake General hospital\nstaff, Nelson, is a guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hamilton.\nJ. W. Williams was in town from\nCorn Creek Friday. He reports more\nhunters out in quest of ducks and\ngeese this season than for some\nyears at Will'ams Lake.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Nadon have\nreturned from a visit at Fernie.\nMrs. Weir and Miss Maisie Moore\nhave returned to Vancouver, after\nvisiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Ferguson.\nMrs. McCuIlough has returned to\nher home at Huscroft. She has been\na patient at Creston hosiptal.\nMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Anderson.\nnee Doris Ferguson, who were married at Bonners Ferry, Ida., earlier\nin the month, have taken up housekeeping at Creston.\nMr. and Mrs. Percy Robinson and\nM. J. Boyd visited Mr. and Mrs. G.\nA. Hunt at Kitchener during the\nweek. Mr. and Mrs. Ray McKel-\nvey and daughter, Shirley, also visited Kitchener friends.\nHospital Women's auxiliary had\na successful fruit and vegetable\nshower for Creston hospital Saturday, Three hundred ten jars of canned fruit, etc., were turned in. Tea\nwas served to all visitors,\nWIN PRIZES IN\nNAKUSP CARDS\nNAKUSP, B.C.-The Pythian Sis\nters of Myrtle Temple, No. 16, spon^\nsored a whist drive and bridge in\nthe Knight's of Pythias hall Frl\nday evening.\nThere were eight tables of bridge\nin the lower hall and eight tables of\nwhist in the meeting room upstairs.\nBridge prize winners were Mrs.\nC. Short, J. W. Butlin, .and Mrs.\nColgrave of Edgewood and E. Weed-\nenhammer. Prizes for whist went to\nMrs. de Yeager of Edgewood, W,\nCarlson, Mrs. J. Olson and C. Campe,\nDancing followed supper served\nafter cards. Assisting with the music\nwere Mrs. J Parent Jr., E. J.'Leveque, C. B. Hambling and C\nCampe.\nTwin Purses Instead\nof Pockets Is Latest\nPARIS, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014New twin\npurses are men's answer to woman's\nneed for more pocket room.\nBoth purses in the twin sets dan\ngle from the same frame. One hold:\nthe \"vanities\" of the hour, rouge,\npowder, smokes, the other the more\nserious things of life, such as passports, money and samples to b<\nmatched.\nSchiaparelli features twin purses\nin black antelope, mounted on rigid\nblack frames and set back to back\nwith their flap closings turned outward.\nMaggy Rouff goes one better in\nnumbers with a triplet style\u2014each\ndangling purse in a- different color.\nShe bunches suede purses in purple, green and red on a single handle and varies them in size as well\nas color. No need to think twice\nwhere the letter is or the doorkey,\nwhen there's bag color and size\nboth to help you.\nVionnet features a capacious bag\nshaped like a brick, in black antelope for afternoon, or in lame for\nevenings. It is just a box with a single strap over the top and it has\ncompartments for everything,\nMarjorie Francis\nHas 14th Birthday\nParty, New Denver\nNEW DENCER, B.C.-Oct. 16, Mrs.\nA. Francis entertained in honor of\nher daughter, Miss Marjorie Francis, who was celebrating her 14th\nbirthday,\nGames and dancing held sway.\nDancing starter with the \"Virginia\nReel\".\nMiss Hazel Flint assisted Mrs.\nFrancis at the piano for the dancing,\nA supper was served at midnight\non small card tables, one of which\ncontained the birthday cake with\nits 14 pink candles.\nInvited guests were Miss Hilda\nCrellin, Miss Olive Tattrie, Miss\nHazel Flint, Miss Blanche Meers,\nMiss Dagmar Olsen, Miss Margaret\nBroughton, Miss Marguerite Campbell, Miss Marjorie Francis, Donald\nFrancis, Stanley Aylwin, Ellison\nCrellin, Barney Johmson, Colin\nCampbell, Murdie Campbell, James\nBurkitt, Billy Tattrie of Sandon, and\nNeil Tattrie.\n\u2022YOU CAN'T BUY BIGGER\nVALUE T,HAN KELLOGG'S!*\n-\u00a7-\n\"Nothing my grocer .ells give,\nme more for my money than\nKcllogg's. They're a genuine\nbargain!\"\nKellogg's Corn Flakes lead\nthe world in sales because\nwomen know genuine value.\nCrisp, wholesome goodness\nthat everybody loves. Always\noven-fresh and ready to serve\nwith milk or cream.\nAt all grocers. Served by\nhotels and restaurants everywhere. Madeby\nKellogg in London, Ontario.\nMf^ CORN FLAKES\nMatJa, Bettor\u2022 Packed Better\nTaste Belter\nPAQE   THRU\n''flft?S^^^''viJ^ry*'*'*'w,^am.:W^''':-'\nS?gM\u00abS_.\n__ if, easy to understand*\nchefs, in 'P\u00b0tleSn3... they\nHeiM kitchens, untdtwy\nhave attained that match-\nt7snavou..oundon.y.n-\nHElNZ\nTOMATO KETCHW\nstjmfy. -\nMAID TO ORDER\n\u2022 Serving Heinz Soups\nis like having an extra\nmaid and no extra wages\nto pay.\nThey are not condensed, but completely\ncooked in the Heinz\nkitchens \u2014 really ready\nto heat and serve with\nno additions and no\nwork. Selected meats\nand vegetables go into\nthem. Spices are brought\nfrom the far-off Orient\u2014\nextra flavour, lasting\nfragrance. In the cream |\nsoups there is real cream\n\u2014actually thicker than\nwhipping cream.\nSmall batch cooking,\nperfect timing-and sealing, hot and fresh from\nshining kettles, gives you\nthe home-made taste\nthat makes Heinz Soups\nso different. Order an\nassortment now. They'll\nsave you hours and please\nthe whole family.\nHEINZ-\nEvery Wanted Kind\nCreim of Tomato, Cream of\nAsparagus. Cream of Celery, Cream\nof Mushroom, Cream of Spinach,\nCream of Green Pea, Cream of\nOnion. Scotch Broth. Turtle, Con-\naomme. Bean, Vegetable, Cora\nChowder. Vegetable Beef Soup,\nChicken with Rice, Chicken with\nNoodles, Ox Tail.\nJstlH^l\n.CREAM Of\nTomato\n\\ soup\/\n\\iR0DDf\n\"*\\_\\ \u25a0\n\"   fl ^\n. Doctor wants baby's ^^d thoroughly\n\u2022EU, perfectly\u2022cootod an mea5U_.\nSea. Heinz Strained Food a     ^\nBaby?\".^\/.3^. to doctors,\nstrainedFoods  \u00abe Qur\nmothers and nurses.^\nHEINZ   57\\\nSTRAINED FOODS ^\nI\n \u2022\"'\n\u25a0  J-.< \u25a0 .'-    '\u2022.:<*\u25a0\u25a0..\n4   tSlm.\\itu\\i    ill\n pi\n\u25a0^\u2014^\nmmmmm^f^W!'1 \u25a0\u25a0 m\nPAGE FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ. OCT. 29, 1937.\nCRITIC   LAMENTS   PUBLICS   LIKING  FOR   TRIVIAL  PLAYS\n\"Money in Laughter\" Says London\nCritic; Light Comedy Is Popular\nBy   I.   NORMAN   SMITH\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nLONDON, Oct. 2B (CP) \u2014 One\nprevalent opinion on the state of\nthe London stage was reflected in\nthe statement in The Observer the\nother day by St. John Ervlne, the\nprominent author and playwright,\nthat these were melancnoly times\nfor the lover of the drama.\n\"It seems to become harder and\n, harder for a dramatist to obtain\nperformance for a play of mora substantial quality than a macaroon,\"\nwrote Mr. Ervme in his weekly column.\nYet a sufficient number of people think pretty highly of London's\nstage this fall, enough to pack the\ntheatres so that it is something of\na problem to find a house for a new\nK\no look no further than the same\nFinest Quality Always\nIf\nSALADA\nTEA\ncopy of The Observer one could\nfind, for instance, the views of Hubert Griffith, the newspaper's theatre correspondent: \"The autumn\nseason has started strongly and\nsteadily and there are now a number of good plays that people are\nkeenly anxious to see.\"\nMr. Griffith listed the successful\nplays no showing, plays old and new\nbut each with a good future:\n\"French Without Tears\", \"George\nand Margaret\", \"Victoria Regina\",\n\"Old Music\" \"Time and the Con-\nways\", \"Bonnet Over the Windmill\".\nand more.\nYet the regrets of so established\na critic and writer as St. John Er-\nvine perhaps warrant attention in\nthe face of box office hilarity. \"Why\nis it,\" he asked, \"that in a time when\nso many fine novels are being published so few plays to match them\nare being produced?\" \"Gone With\nthe Wind\", by Margaret Mitchell:\n\"And So Victoria\", by Vaughan\nWilkins; \"Act ot God\", by Fryn\nTennyson Jesse; and \"They Seek a\nCountry\", by Francis Brett Young\n\u2014these four books had been published this year.\n\"But has tlie playgoer any hope\nof finding four new plays equal in\nquality to these novels staged in\nuie West End in one year?\n\"The disparity is not due to the\nlimitations which the stage imposes\nupon the dramatist. Shakespeare\nand Shaw can say more in five acts\nthan the majority of novelists can\nCurlew Offers\nSPECIAL\nPumpkin\nFlavored\nIce Cream\nMfiB\n4\nPalm Dairies Ltd\nPHONE 900\nBAKER ST.\nThis new and de-\nliciously different\nflavor will be an\nasset for your Hallowe'en party that\ncannot be over emphasized.\nBanana\nhints for\nhousewives\nMenu Hint\nTomato Juice\nCubed Steaks    Riced Potatoes\nCreamed Turnips   Banana Scallops\nTopioca Pudding    Cookies\nTea\nBananas used to have rather a\nbad name. They were considered\nindigestible. But no more. They\nare now pretty nearly the top of\nthe heap as far as modern dietitians\nare concerned. Most people prefer\nto eat them in their native state,\nnicely ripened, but they are very\ngood cooked, so let us branch out\nand see how many ways we can\nserve them.\nBANANA SCALLOPS - Melted\nfat or oil, one egg, one and one-half\nteaspoons salt, six firm bananas,\nthree-fourths cup fine corn flake\ncrumbs, break or cracker crumbs or\ncorn meal. For shallow frying have\none inch of fat or oil In frying pan.\nFor deep fat frying have deep kettle one-half to two-thirds full of\nmelted fat or oil. Heat fat to S75\ndegrees F. (or until a one-inch\ncube of bread will brown In forty\nseconds.) Beat egg and add salt.\nSlice peeled bananas crosswise into one-inch thick pieces.   Dip into\negg and roll in crumbs or com\nmeal. Shallow fry or deep fat fry\nin the hot fat one and one-half to\ntwo minutes, or until brown and\ntender. Drain on unglaied paper.\nServe very hot.  Serves six.\nBanana Milk Shake\nChildren cheer the necessary\nglass of milk when Its in a \"shake\"\nmade with bananas. This is the\nway it is made:\u2014 Take one fully\nripe banana, one cup cold milk. Slice\nbanana into a bowl and beat with\nrotary egg beater or electric mixer\nuntil creamy... or press banana\nthrough medium mesh wire strainer\nwith a spoon. Add milk and mix\nthoroughly. Serve cold. This makes\n12 ounces\u2014two medium-size drinks.\nPumpkin Cream Pis\n1 cup sugar\n2 tablespoons cornstarch.\n1 teaspoon cinnamon.\n14 teaspoon nutmeg.\nV. teaspoon ginger.\n'A teaspon cloves.\nVs teaspoon salt\n2 cups evaporated milk.\n1 cup cooked or canned pumpkin.\n2 eggs, separated.\nMix Vs cup sugar, cornstarch,\nspices and salt together. Stir ln\nmilk and pumpkin. Cook 20 minutes, over boiling water, stirring\nfrequently. Remove from heat and\nstir Into slightly beaten egg.\n.ay in 700 pages. Sean O'Casey tells\nus more about Ireland in 'Juno and\nthe Paycock' than is told by all the\ncontemporary Irish novelists put\ntogether. An author does not need\nspace; he needs imagination.\"\nNor is me rault all in the public's\ntaste, for, as Mr. St. John Ervlne\ncontends \"if the public is willing\nio read a novel in which the author\nmakes a serious effort to interpret\nlife, we may suppose that it will, if\nit is well enough trained, be willing\nto witness a play in Which the\ndramatist attempts the same task.\"\nPRODUCTION\nCOST FACTOR\n\"The supreme cause of the disparity between the novel and the\nplay is the cost of production. . . .\nA manager will not attempt to\nchange the taste of the public because he runs the risk of ruin if\nhis attempt is not immediately successful. Twenty novels can be published for the cost of a single play,\nand.the publisher can hope to make\nhis expenses and probably a profit\non the whole 20, but the theatre\nmanager cannot be certain of recovering what he has spent on the\nplay.\n\"There's money in laughter; so\nthe theatre manager produces lighter and lighter comedies. As his\nplays become Increasingly trivial,\nIntelligent people increasingly abstain from going to see them, until\nat last we reach a point at which\nthe manager finds ne has ruined\nhimself by giving the public what\nhe thinks it wants. His house is\nfrequented only by the boneheads\nand numbskulls who must always\nbe tittering; and giggling, and he\ndare not drive them out by producing better work.\n\"The circumstances of lhe theatre\nare sucli that the cost of producing a play must always be greater\nthan the cost of publishing a book,\nbut until we have reduced the cost\nof play production enormously we\ncannot hope to make the theatre\nthe entertainment of the community; it must continue to be the luxury\nNasturtiums for\nIndoor Bloom\nNew nasturtiums In no tlmo\nATTEMPTING to pot nasturtiums for flowering Indoors often\nleads to disappointment. A better\nway is to take slips of the plants before they are damaged by frost\nand plant them for rooting purposes ,as shown in this Garden-\nGraph, and you can have nasturtiums blooming indoors this winter.\nRoot the slips in moist sand or\nin a sand and peat mixture. Use\nthe tips ofyoung shoots. They should\nbe three to four inches long. Tlie\nslips will ropt in from four fo five\ndays. Afterwards they can be pott-\nted in a soil mixture that is not too\nrich. If too rich a soil mixture is\nused, a leafy plant with few flowers\nwill result.\nWhen taking slips remove any\nbuds, since they will use up the\nenergy which .should go to root\ngrowth. Do not place the cuttings\nin water before planting, for this\nwill interfere with the callus which\nforms over the cut section. Do not\nplace the slips in the sun until after\nroot growth starts.\nToo much emphasis can hardly\nbe placed upon the necessity for\nwatering all evergreens, both broad-\nleaved and coniferous, during each\nspell ot dry, warm weather until\nthe ground freezes.\nSome of the hardy annuals, such\nas snapdragons, verbenas, candytuft, pinks, stocks, darkles and\nphlox may be sown just before\nfreezing weather in fine soil, to\nprovide extra early bloom next\nyear.\nof the trivial-minded and the resort\not all boneheads.\"\nWhich from St. John Ervlne is a\ncastigation not flavored with sour\ngrapes for he is the author of \"Anthony and Anna\", a comedy that in\nits 800th production this month is\nenjoying the longest run in London.\nCuistColds\n\u20221*1    ...Distressing symptoms\n'ft     relieved by rubbing on\nVJSJS5\niiiairmnmrai\nSoft, Silky and Fluffy Blondes . . .\nFollow Oil Treatment With Careful\nShampoo lor Fluffy Blonde Tresses\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nNO BLONDE who has any sense\ncould want to possess hair that is\ndry, brittle and like so much straw\nto the touch. Yet frequent shampoos have a tendency to put hair\nin just such a condition. They aro\napt to remove too much of the natural oil from the hair.\nIf you have light hair, and feel\nthat to keep It in presentable condition you must shampoo it frequently, by all means Intersperse\nan oil treatment or two among\nyour regular shampoos. For such\ntreatments help to counteract the\ndrying effects of frequent soap and\nwater applications.\nThe method of administering such\noil treatments is very simple, and if\nyou want a thick, luxuriant head of\nhair, by all means use them. They'll\ndo your hair no end of good!\nIf you do go in tor healthful hot\noil treatments, however, do not follow the treatments by a haphazard\nshampoo. For il you do, I m pretty\ncertain that you'll be writing In and\ncomplaining that you find it diffi\ncult to remove all the oil from your\nhair,  and  there  is  nothing  more\napt to detract from one's loveliness\nthan hair that is sticky and oily.\nHOW TO GIVE\nSHAMPOO\nJust to be sure that you obtain\nthe most satisfactory results at the\nfirst trial, I'm going to tell you\nJust how to shampoo your hair\nafter such a beneficial oil treat-\nment. In the first place, don't wet\nyour hair with hot water before\ndoing the shampooing. Apply a\ngood, liquid shampoo to your hair\nfirst, and raise a rich lather with\nyour fingertips.\nThen rinse your hair with lukewarm water, repeat the lathering\nand rinsing, and continue this procedure until all the oil has been removed. And as the final step, use\na lemon rinse or a rinse composed\nof a pint of warm water and two\nteaspoons of baking soda, in order\nto remove any least vestige of the\noil and to make your hair soft,\nsilky and fluffy.\nA smartly dressed Parisian wore\na gray woollen dress with a little\nPersian Iamb jacket which had a\ntiny muff attachment.\nFOR THE SERIAL\nSEE PAGE TEN\nNew Evening\nHem Lines\nShow Your Slippers\nTaffeta!       Velvet!\nAfter years of floor-sweeping hemlines, it's smart to show your silver\nslippers! Up in the front go the\nnewest evening gowns to show a\nflash of slim ankle . . . down in\nthe back for a grand lady air. See\nthem today!\nMilady's Fashion Shoppe\nGeorgina L. Brown\n449 Baker St. Phont 874\nFREEMAN and LEEW Furniture Company\nPhone 115\nOffering\nThe House of Furniture Styles\nNELSON, B. C;\nEaele Block\n6\u00ab\u00a35*HH$\u00a3\u00a3gs\nMonthly\nPayments\nAvailable\nSelected Hard*\nwood Frames\nDouble Tempered\nSprings Secured\nWith Helicals\nReversible Spring-\nFilled Cushions.\nWill Not Sag\nThree\nPieces\nTrade in\nYour\nOld Suite\nHardwearing Mo-\ndern Covers\nChoice of Many Colors\nDeep, Soft, Upholstery for Comfort\nModerne and Conventional Designs\n mm\n**^wmmmkm^:Wm\nmmmmmmmmmm^i^sjim^^^.m^^^^\niMlO\nLovely Lines for\nLittle\nLadies\nToday we offer a complete\nselection of half-size Dresses for afternoon and street\nwear in novelty crepes and\nsheers in shades of royal\nblue, navy, burgundy,\nbrown, green, violet and\nblack, Chic touches of jewelry trim, metallic, bead or\nbraid embroidery, Sizes\nI6V2 to 26Vi. Prices from\n$695\nup\nCREPE  HOSIERY\nSPECIAL\nAll colors, all sizes,     Ct\\\u201e\nPair    UMC\nJERMAN\nHUNT\nReady-to-Wear\nPhone 200     Nelson, 8. C.\nNf.LSON DAILY N-W8, NELSON. B. (..-FRIDAY MORNING. OCT, 29, 1937,\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nHonoring her house guest, Mrs\nW. R. Baxendale of Trail, Mrs. R.\nL. McBride entertained al bridge at\nher home on Hoover street recently\nwhen she chose vari-colored chrysanthemums and dahlias for her living room decorations. Mrs. McBride's\ninvited guests were1. Mrs. Baxendale, Mrs. C. W. Appleyard, Mrs.\nA. J. Mackay, Miss M. H. Cameron,\nMrs. Nelly' ot Florida, Mrs. L. V.\nRogers, Mrs. Harold Lakes, Mrs. Leslie Craufurd, Mrs. Alex Leith, Mrs,\nE. E. L. Dewdney, Mrs. Wilfrid Allan, Mrs. R. W. Hinton, Mrs. S. P.\nMcMordie, Mrs. Guy W. Davis, Mrs.\nP. G. Morey, Mrs. John Cartmel,\nMrs. Nelson Murphy, Mrs. W. H,\nShoes for the\nFormal Season\n$4*95\nup\nNow is your chance to secure a really smart pair of\nevening Slippers. Shoes that\nwill set off any gown.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfaskion\nFLOUR\n49 lbs.\n98 lbs.\n. $2.19\nKEYNOTE\u2014Packed by Robin Hood Mills. Every\nsack fully guaranteed. Thit will probably be your\nlast chance for some time to buy Flour at these\nlow prices.\nCOUNTRY CUSTOMERS KINDLY ADD 20c PER SACK FOR FREIGHT\nFOUR\nDAYS\nSAFEWAY\nThese prices effective\nFriday, Saturday, Monday, Tuesday, October\n29, 30 and Nov. 1 and 2.\nDOMESTIC SHORTENING r*?~ 2 lbs. 29c\nGRAHAM WAFERS \u201e..._. 16 ox. pkt. 20c\nCARBOLIC SOAP      ____. 4 bars 17c\nPORK and BEANS TO8 3 tins 25c\nDILL PICKLES\u2014Libby's .. Tin 21c\nRITZ or CHERRIO BISCUITS\u2014Pkg. 16c\nMAZOLAOIL Pint tin 30c\nBAKER'S CHOCOLATE     8 oz. pkg. 18c\nSUNNY BOY\nCEREAL\nPkg    2dti\nMAXIMUM\nTEA\nLb.\n47f.\nBUTTER\nHighway, 1st Crade\nAlberta\n3 Ibs.\n$1.05\nTOMATO JUICE\nLIBBY'S\n10i\/2   oz.\n4 tins 23c\nSODAS\nWooden Box,\nPrice   \t\n37c\nPITTED                CLACE              PRESERVED\nDATES               CHERRIES              CINCER\n2 Ibs 25<f Per Ib 30? Per Ib 19<\nPASTRY FL0ute39c\nCLACE              CUT PEEL           CURRANTS\nPINEAPPLE              16 oi.                  32 oi.\n6 rings   . .   25<* Pkg 24<> Pkg 30.+\nCANDY \u00a3\u2022;\u2022\u25a0 2 lbs. 35c\nAPPLES\u2014Mcintosh Box $1.05\nBANANAS\u2014Excellent fruit 3 Ibs. 23c\nGRAPEFRUIT\u2014Large 4 for 23c\nORANGES\u2014Sweet, juicy 2 dox. 85c\nGRAPES 3 Ibs. 25c\nMUFFETS OXYDOL\" POLIFLOR\nQuaker Large WAX\n2 pkgs. ... 21<* Pkg.  .....  19^ Tin    45^\nBaking Powder \u00a3i\nMAGIC\ntin 23^\ntin 65f\nCASTILE SOAP\u2014Caravan    10 bars 23c\nPUMPKIN-Aylmer2,\/2's,  Tin lie\nCOCOA\nCowan's,\n16 oi. tin\n24c\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Birk's, 2's........ 2 tins 29c\nPICKLES\u2014Polly Prim's .... 18 oz. jar 23c\nCHINA OATS\u2014Robin Hood .... Pkg. 25c\nSILVER WEB TISSUE 10 rolls 25c\nSOAP\u2014P. fr G-, limit 6     _..\u25a0. 6 bars 19c\nI LB. COFFEE\u2014Airway    Both Pf #}c\n1 LB. CHEESE\u2014Chateau  for   J7\nSUGAR\nWith Purchase of\n$1.00 of\nGroceries\n10 Ibs\t\n62c\nPEANUTS 3 Ibs. 29c\nCome in and See Our Meat Prices This Week End\u2014THE BEST FOR LESS\nSWIFT'S PREMIUM LAMBS, VEAL, BEEF, PORK, ETC.\nDELICIOUS AND CUT TO PLEASE YOU\nPICNICS\u2014Lb    17c\nHAMBURGER and SAUSAGE MEAT\u2014\n3 Ibs. for.       25c\nSIRLOIN STEAK, LOIN VEAL CHOPS,\nLOIN LAMB CHOPS, LOIN PORK\nCHOPS\u2014Lb. 23c\nPRIME RIB ROLLED ROASTS BEEF,\nLb.   20c\nPOT ROASTS-Lb.  8c and 10c\nRIB BOILING BEEF\u2014Lb. 6c\nBABY STILTON CHEESE\u2014Lb 25c\nVEAL SHOULDER STEAKS\u20142 Ibs.. 25c\nWeAeserve the Right to Limit Quantities\nNO PHONE ORDERS SATURDAY Safewa\n^matsmssimmmsUmmasetsni,\nGrubbe, Mrs. Harry Burns, Mrs.\nWilliam Waldie, Mrs. C. D. Blackwood, Mrs. W. T. Fotheringham,\nMrs. L. E. Borden, Mrs, James\nO'Shea, Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs.\nHugh W. Robertson, MrB. Beale of\nCranbrook, Mrs. E. G. Smyth, Mrs.\nJ. G. Bunyan, Mrs. H. Rosling, Mrs.\nGordon Hallett, Mrs. W. M. Cun-\nliffe, Mrs. H. H. McKenzie, Mrs.\nE. C. Wragge, Mrs. F. F. Payne and\nMrs. W. M. Walker.\n\u2022 C. S. Squires ot Robson visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Phichel\nand son of Kqkanee spent yesterday ln Nelson.\n\u2022 J. J. Campbell was in town\nfrom Willow Point yesterday.\n\u2022 MisS Ada Brown and Miss\nKathleen Riesterer visited Trail\nWednesday and were guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Harrop.\n\u2022 Neil Munro of the Kootenay\nBelle mine visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Ruth MacDiarmid of Robson spent yesterday shopping in\nthe city.\n\u2022 Grenfell's cafe was the scene\nof a jolly pheasant dinner Wednesday when Dr. R. C. Shaw and\nMurray Clark were joint hosts. Covers were laid for 14. Guests were:\nMr., and Mrs. Alex Fleming, Mr.\nand Mrs. Kirby Grenfell, Mrs. Murray Clark, the Misses Val and Thel\nma Houle, Miss Toots Houston, Miss\nCora Smythe, Harry Horton, Harry\nHulls and Robert Clerihew.\n\u2022 John Krawski of Castlegar is\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 F. B. Kaun was in town from\nCreston yesterday.\n\u2022 Major Angus Davis M.E., of\nthe Durango mine at Ymir was a\nbusiness visitor in town Wednesday.\n\u2022 Miss Ivy Honeysette of Apple-\ndale visited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 Victor Erickson of the Kootenay Belle mine was a recent shopper in town.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hufty, Silica street, had as their guests yesterday their daughter Mrs. Earl Fitzpatrick of Trail and her children.\n\u2022 Henry Giegerich of Kaslo visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded W. P. Dickson of Willow\nPoint.\n\u2022 Albert Shrieves of Balfour\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. Millar, Kootenay Bay merchant, was a recent visitor in town\nen route to Vancouver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bell and\nfamily visited relatives in Trail\nWednesday.\n\u2022 Mrs. James Robinson, who has\nspent the past four months visiting her son-in-law and daughter.\nMr. and Mrs. J. M. Gordon, Josephine street, leaves this morning\nfor her home in Winnipeg.\n\u2022 F. Peters of Kaslo spent Wednesday in the city.\n\u2022 Frank Brooks was in town\nyesterday from Appledale.\n\u2022 G. McConick of Sanca visited\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. James Forshaw\nof Ymir visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 G. A. Gordon pioneer of Silverton, was in the city en route to\nCalgary, where he goes for a holiday,\n\u2022 Alex Finlayson formerly of\nProcter who has been in the Great\nSlave district was in town en route\nto the coast.\n PAGE   MVE\nCHARGES 84-YEAR-OLD\nHUSBAND \"UNFAITHFUL\"\nROGERVILLE, Tenn., Oct. 28\n(AP)\u2014Mrs. Ellen Jones, 83,\nsought a divorce from 84-year-\nold William H. Jones today.\nMarried 57 years and the\nmother ot eight children, Mrs.\nJones asked her freedom on the\ngrounds her husband treated her\n\"cruelly\" and was \"unfaithful.\"\nShe named a young woman aa\nco-respondent.\n\"Big Apples\" New\nDance Brings Down\nDrink Store Ceiling\nPHILADELPHIA, Pa\u201e Oct. 28 -\n(AP).\u2014The \"big apple\" dance craze\nclosed a liquor store here.\nDancers in a hall over tho store\nbecame so enthusiastic doing the\n\"big apple\" the store's ceiling fell.\nThere were no casualties among the\nwhisky bottles.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n(,, PILLS\n.\"'XCKACHf.\nCAnnouncinQ\nFORMAL\nOPENING\nOF NELSON'S\nNewest and Smartest Ladies' Wear Shop\nSaturday, October 30th, Is\nOPENING DAY\n6*\nA personal message...\nfrom Edith A. Carrothers\nAfter months of planning, choosing the pick\nof the market, and modernizing, our store is now\nready for business. It is with pride that we extend\nan invitation to the public to visit this new Ladies'\nStore.\nYou will find this a friendly store\u2014all working together for the interest of the customer-\noffering value, quality, and service that will merit\nyour continuous patronage.\nAmid modern surroundings you will find one\nthing old fashioned\u2014the sincere hearty welcome\nthat awaits you. So please visit our store and feel\nfree to inspect our merchandise.\n\u2014Edith A. Carrothers\nOUR LARGE and VARIED\nDISPLAYS WILL INCLUDE\nIn Dresses\n\u2022 WOOL DRESSES AND SUITS\n\u2022 AFTERNOON DRESSES\n\u2022 COCKTAIL DRESSES\n\u2022 DINNER DRESSES\n\u00a7 EVENING DRESSES\n\u00a7 EVENING CLOAKS\nIn Coats\nThe famous Hurlingham models, camel hair coats,\nand Lewis hand woven Harris Tweeds are included\nin our lovely selection together with many smart\nmodels in dressy coats. '\nP'Wt\nIn Millinery\nWe will be carrying the well known Lady Astor\nmake which includes every model that is ultra\nsmart for this fall and winter season\nIn Hosiery\nIt will be our pleasure to show you a complete line\nof Butterfly Hosiery in every new fall shade anH\nin all sizes.\nEDITH A.\nCARROTHERS\nAnnable Block\nIf You Are\nNot Slender\nThen it will please\nyou to know that we\nmake a specialty of\ncatering to you. The\nsame exquisite\nyouthful styles that\nyour \"slender sister\" wears are especially adapted and\ncarefully designed\nto  fit your  figure.\nSizes from 14 to 50.\nPrices from\n$10\n.00\nto\n>45\n00\n \u2014\n-1\t\nIWPPPPPSPIPPSBIfflffP\n\u00bbJlWW4^P^W\u00ab^P<'^.W-^^?w\u00bbff!?\nPAGE SIX\nJMmm Sathj Jfarog\nEstablished' April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED,\n216   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.\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 29,1937.\nCZECHS MENACED\nEvery once in a while a new illustration is provided by\nthe Fascist powers for the fable of the wolf and the lamb.\nThe most recent example is the attack in the Nazi press\non Czechoslovakia. The German newspapers suggest that\nCzechoslovakia., statesmen are toying with the idea of a\nwar with Germany.\nFor Czechoslovakia to attack Germany would be even\nless likely than for the lamb to assault the wolf. Even with\nRussian backing the Czechs know perfectly well that they\nwould have great difficulty defending their own land and\nthat their chances of conquering Germany are negligible.\nThe truth of the matter is that Czechoslovakia has\ngreat resources which Hitler covets. The huge Skoda armament plant, second only to Krupps among European munition makers, is in Czechoslovakia. So are the great Bata\nboot factories which might be used to equip troops.\nThe German press is completely under the. direction\nof the government. When it launches a campaign against\na neighboring land on such trivial grounds as the breaking of a pro-Nazi meeting by Czech police, there must be\nsome ulterior motive. It is quite possible that the German people are being prepared for intervention in Czechoslovakia, nominally on behalf of the oppressed German\nminority, really in order to acquire the resources of the\nneighboring land.\nAn attempt has already been made to detach all Czechoslovakia's allies and to make other nations believe that that\ncountry is merely an outpost of Bolshevism. There is no\nreal justification for this view in the opinion of competent\noutside observers.\nThe Czechs have done everything in their power to\nconciliate Germany. Recently an art exhibition was cancelled because some of the caricatures reflected on Nazi\nleaders. But the Czech press is almost fed up with the\nGerman campaign. One newspaper warns Germany that\nthe Czechs cannot be brought to love the Germans by these\nmethods.\nCzechoslovakia is a rampart of democracy in Central\nEurope. It would be a tragedy if she were to become another\nSpain or China as the result of Nazi-ambition.\nEnlist the interests of stern morality and religious\nenthusiasm in the cause of political liberty, as in the time\nof the old Puritans, and it will be irresistible.\u2014Coleridge.\nTREBITSCH-UNCOLN AGAIN\nIgnatius Timothy Trebitsch-Lincoln turns up again.\nHe is a Buddhist abbot at Tientsin, an associate and friend\nof the puppet Emperor of Manchoukuo, and an ardent advocate of the Japanese cause. There is no more extraordinary character in history than Trebitsch-Lincoln. No\nOppenheim novel ever conceived a more amazing international scalawag than this human chameleon.\nHe was born in Hungary and drifted to England where\nhe became a Presbyterian missionary in a London slum.\nThen he became a high church curate and finally in 1910\nwas elected to the British house of commons. When war\nbroke out this apparently-ardent patriot succeeded in becoming a censor in the war office. However, the British\nauthorities became suspicious of his activities and before\nhe was arrested he fled to the United States to spread German propaganda and boast of his achievements as a spy.\nWhen the United States entered the war he was arrested and in 1919 returned to England where he was convicted of forgery. After a three-year term he was deported.\nHe went to Germany but backed the wrong movement and\nthe next he was heard of was in Asia. Several years ago\nhe traveled through Canada on the way to England as a\nBuddhist monk. There was a question as to whether to\narrest him or not, but he was unmolested. Now apparently he is high up in the Buddhist faith, an abbot, a friend\nof the Emperor of Manchoukuo. He is wearing the Japanese coat. However, if Japan should lose out he could just\nas rapidly become a Chinese Confucianist or a Russian\natheist. ;> ' ^'9*'J&\u00abirW*^\u00bbr^.\u2022\u00bb#\u00bb\u00a3,$\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NEL80R. B. C.-FRIDAY MORNING. OCT. 29, 1937.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the\nwriter. A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines in typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nMountford Urges\nBoycott Japanese\nGoods, Hits Fascism\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014When  anyone  gels  an  idea\nthat they would like to sec in print,\nthey generally say, put it in the ''Nelson News\". Feeling that way at the\npresent time I think, no doubt, that\nyour readers would be interested to\nhear of the awakening of the Canadian people to the realization of the\neconomic force for peace that a boycott has on the goods of a fascist\naggressor. I speak of the growing\nboycott on Japanese goods, We have\nmany   public   societies   in   Canada\nwhicli favor this boycott, such as:\nTrades and Labor congress,\nThe Canadian Teacher's federation\nThe  Council  for  Social  Service,\nChurch of England,\nThe National Council of Women,\nThe   A.F.   of   L.   the   C.I.O.,   the\nCP. of Canada,\nThe Alberta legislature,\nUnited Farmers of Canada.\nOther public bodies are swinging]\ninto line to boycott Japanese goods, j\nJaoan is financing its intolerable I\nattack on China with its foreign\nexports. With the proceeds of these\nexports whicli amount ed to $1,-\n50(1,000,000 last year, it buys war ma-\nlerial to blast the lives of innocent\nChinese people.\nDuring the duration of attack on\nChina, all goods stamped \"Made in\nJapan\" are stained with innocent\nblood.\nDon't help fascist aggression by\nbuying their goods. Unless fascist\naggression is curbed now, it means\nthat Canada will be involved in war\nlater on,\nBuy no silk from Japan, better the\nwomen to go without silk stocking\nnow, then their husbands and sons\nlater on. Already some teachers are\ntelling their pupils not to buy Japanese toys.\nPublic conscience is .stirring,\nbranding the exporters of war material as criminals, who draw their\nbloody profits frnm tlie dead bodie;\nof Chinese mon, women and children,\nIn this noble enterprise large\nnumbers of Canadian people arc\nnow actively engaged: let us swell\ntheir ranks. This is a part of th;.\ngreat crusade for ncace  in  which\nBy   ]. B.C.\nSOME PARTY\nA man and his wife were driving back into town after an evening at a roadhouse. Suddenly the\nwife spoke up:\n\"What're you doing? Watch out\nfor those cars. You're too close!\"\n\"Are you nuts?\" asked the husband.\n\"Nuts? Hoddya get that way?\"\n\"Well,\" said the husband, \"you're\ndrivin'.\"\n\u2022   \u2022   t\n\"JUCKPULVER\"\nAND \"COWITCH\"\nAustralians are often amused at\ntheir quaint censorship, which rigorously bans innocuous books, films\nand plays from entering tbe country.\nRecently many of them chuckled\nover the post office's list of prohibitions:\nBalkan or suffragette bombs.\nDublin  Stout  Extract.\nElectric snuff.\nJuckpulvers.\nStypefying gas.\nDisinfecting pistols.\nRubber-covered wire.\nExhausted tea.\nBludgeons.\nSandbags.\nKnuckledusters.\nWalking sticks containing bayonets.\nMaxim silencers for firearms.\nExplosive cigars.\nCowhage or cowitch.\nNeither will the Australian post\noffice deliver parcels containing\ngrebes, owls, macaws, or parrots of\nthe genus Sittace.\nDiligent research failed to reveal\nwhat is a \"juckpulver\", although\none magazine humorously suggested it was \"another name for that\nfearsome compound electric snuff\".\n\"Optanin\" 'and \"oxygenopathy\"\nalso defied the Commonwealth's\nbest-qualified medical men. \"Cowhage\" transpired to be the hairs on\nthe pods of a tronical climbing plant\nof the bean family.\nBrightly commented Smith's\nWeekly: \"Thank heavens we haven't  been   juckpulverised   yet,   nor\nlike those other, darker lands, ex-\nEosed to the hideous menace of\n>ublin stout extrat, Suffragette\nbombs, and unrouged Lucerne linseed.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n'ROUND TOWN\nHere and there\u2014Nelson skating\nrink devoid of floor with nice clean\nsand showing over the piping\u2014and\nthe walls of the ice sheet boasting\na new coat of paint\u2014Won't be long\nbefore the boys will be darting\nhere and there af,ter the elusive\npuck\u2014and up town on a street corner were Pat Aitken, coach of the\nNelson Lea\/s, Tom Wilson and Bob\nCrerar of the executive\u2014and they\nwere talking hockey\u2014I never met\na more enthusiastic trio\u2014so if their\npredictions are right we will have a\nhockey team\u2014Dave Webster high\nupon a scaffold getting the windows\nof the Nelson library in shape\u2014for\ninstallation of storm windows\u2014Bob\nClerihew down from Kimberley\u2014\nhe says he's been fishing again\u2014\nDr. L. E. Borden leaving the hospital and getting into an auto about\nthe noon hour \u2014 Harry Wassick\nstruggling with a. big package being\ncarted into his home\u2014A fine .bouquet of flowers on Louis Choquette's\nwagon\u2014William Stubbs out for a\nwalk\u2014and having a discussion with\nBill Gibson\u2014Bill Harkness loading\nbutter\u2014and stopping to look over a\nwell wrapped automobile tire amid\nthe cargo on a truck\u2014Barney Archibald down town and not walking\nvery spryly\u2014he had a fall out at\nthe mill he is dismantling at Salmo\n\u2014And I just heard the news editor\nis ill\u2014so that's enough for today-\nHave a lot of other things on my\nmind.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nWHAT A COMEBACK\nA salesman taking his bride south\non their honeymoon, visited a hotel\nwhere they boasted of their fine\nhoney.\n\"Sambo,\" he asked the colored\nwaiter, \"where's my honey?\"\n\"Ah don.'t know, boss,\" replied\nSambo, eyeing the lady cautiously,\n\"She don' work here no mo'.\"\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nMORE THAN ONE WAY\nTHERE ARE more ways than\none to sltin a cat. And there are\nalso more ways than one to avoid\na losing finesse. One of the nicest\n13 to make the opponents do the\nJob (or you by luring them Into a\nlead which could end all guesswork,\n4.AK7 4\n*)2\n4, A 10 9 5\n4-10.3\n\u2022>J 6 5\n\u00bbK. 7 .\n\u2666 43\n*AQ87\n4 Q 10 8 2\n\u00bbQ8.\n4862\n4654\n(Dealer: East North-South vul-\njerable.)\nWest was the starter of the bidding here with 1-Heart, North\novercalling at 1-Spade, East showing his fit at 2-Hearts, West lifting it to 4-Hearts and North doubling. When West trumped the\nthird round of spades, he realized\nthat he was certain to lose one\ntrick in diamonds and therefore\ncould not afford a trump loser.\nThe Q of trumps was likely to\nbe In the North In view of the dou\nble, hut of course might be held\nby South. Instead of guessing,\nWest decided to attempt to deceive the opponents. He led the\ndiamond J to the fourth trick.\nThis made It look to North as If\nWest was getting ready to ruff out\nsome losing diamonds. In order to\nprevent that he came in with the\nA and led trumps at once, to cut\ndown ruffs. As the most cursory\nexamination of the hands will disclose, this solved West's probletr\nwlth no necessity of guessing.\nTomorrow's Problem\n4 10 9 8 4\n3\nV7643\n48532\n4 None\n4765\n\u00bb82\n\u2666 A.\n4Q 10 7653 2\nt\niM.\nS.\n4A2\n\u00abAK0-\n4 Q J 10 4\n4K8 4\n4KQ J\n9 Q J 10\n4K9 7 6\n4A J 8\n(Dealer: South. Mirth-South\nvulnerable.)\nWhat Is the correct defense\nagainst 3-No Trumps by South.\nNorth having bid clubs twice'\nLooking Backward . \u2666 \u2022\n\"COTTONWOOD CITY\"   \u00a32\u00a3\nSelf-Help Given by Camera Tour of Depression\nMushroom; New Homes Built on City's Outskirts\nTEN YEARS AGO\nOctober 29, 1927\nThe name of the town of Duck\nCreek near Creston has been changed to Wynndel.\u2014School board, talked over the possibility of building\na junior high school\u2014Ian Ritchie,\nLome Stewart and Ronald Conway have received bronze medals\nas prizes for their Confederation essays written last June\u2014R. H, Devitt has returned to Trail from the\ncoast\u2014Harold Mclnnes, Parker Williams and Mike Butorac of Trail\nbagged a four-point black-tailed\nbuck at Grand Forks\u2014Mrs. Leslie\nCraufurd lias returned from Toronto\u2014Dr. M. F. Keeley was in\ntown from Trail\u2014T. G. Carter, formerly vice-principal of the Nelson\nCentral school and now principal\nof the Trail Central school was a\nvisitor in town.\nthe Trail Mission circle. \u2014 Miss\nLouise Cunliffe of Nelson is visiting\nMrs. D. J. Brown at Rossland.\u2014G.\nA. Lafferty returned to Rossland\nfrom Nelson. \u2014 Major Frederic B\nYoung, formerly of Invermere, has\nbeen released from confinement in\nSwitzerland\u2014Pte. E. L. Bealby, is\non his way home from the front-\nMrs. David Smeaton of Juneau, Alaska, is visiting Mrs. William Seamon.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nOctober 29, 1917\nLieut. R. S. Ashby, son of Captain and Mrs. Ashby of Soulh Slocan, was injured when his plane was\nshot down by enemy planes.\u2014C. F.\nNelson M.P.P. of Ncw Denver was\na visitor to Slocan City\u2014Mrs. A. M,\nO'Donnell was elected president of\nTHIRTY   YEAR8   AGO\n(Oct. 29, 1907.)\nR. A. Brown has been appointed\ncity electrician\u2014 il. 13. McDcrmid\nand Charles F. McHardy have returned from Creston\u2014John Moe,\ndistrict passenger agent of the\nC.P.R. is on a visit to the Crow\ncountry,\u2014Henry Ewert has left for\nMontana.\u2014Several glass houses are\nbeing constructed at the ranch of\nR. Savile Francis.\u2014H. Irving, Kaslo\nis in the city\u2014W. H. Aldridge of\nTrail is in town\u2014C. M. Rogers of\nCreston is in Nelson.\u2014W. H. Aldridge of the Consolidated Mines and\nS S. Taylor came in from Moyie \u2014\nMr. and Mrs. W. T. Fotheringham.\nnewly married, have taken up residence on Silica street.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nR*OOTS OF A TREE\nThe roots of ono tree will never\ntouch those of another underground,\nThis fact was established by Professor M. A. Raines, of Howard university, who for years has investigated the matter. Further, he finds\nthat in tree and plants of the same\nspecies, the roots of the younger invariably bend slightly so as to allow\nthe roots of an older plant to pass.\nMost plants and trees are sensitive, and Professor Raines thinks\nthat the roots give off some elusive\ncompound \u2014 probably electric \u2014'\nwhich repels. He has trained roots\nto meet each other, but when nearly\ntouching, they invariably turn aside.\n\u2014Montreal Star.\n\"BIG BUSINESS\"\nHow Mr. Woodsworth and his boys\ndn love an opportunity to throw\nbrick-bats at \"big business\"! And\nyet where would the country be\nwithout \"big business,\" without men\nof skill and courage and determina-\nthere is a place for young and old,\nwe can ail play a part.\nNo silver bullets for Japan\nDown with fascist aggression.\nTHOS. E. MOUNTFORD.\nWvnndel BC.  Oct  27.\ntion who are willing to work and\nstruggle and invest their money\nto put big business enterprises across\u2014incidentally, providing jobs\nfor thousands, meeting burdensome\nand unnecessarily high tax bills and\ngenerally keeping the nation going,\n\u2014Windsor Star.\nAUNT HET\nBy   ROBERT QUILI.EN\nAs the Camera Sees Cottonwood. City\n1\u2014A cosy home in a rustic setting.\n2\u2014Preparing for the winter.\n3\u2014Logs served the pioneers also.\n4\u2014A woman's hand is evident.\n5\u2014Complete to the chair on the porch.\n6\u2014Nestled among the trees,\n7\u2014The view is best from a vantage point\n8\u2014It's tiny but it's home.\nBy ERIC RAMSDEN <\nThe old swimmin' hole has been filled in by time and mud.\nThe old shooting butts where as kids we lay in the hot sun after\nan hour in the muddy water of that old hole are still there, but\nthey're breaking down and you'd never know them for what\nthey were. The old cattle trails dewn the hillside are almost\nundistinguishable, and a long fence keeps cattle off the flat.\nThe old target house is gone, and even its location is hard to\ndetermine. The concrete of the old target stands remains, but\nthe lifts have disappeared; and of the butts only the 1000-yard\none, high on a bank, retains a vestige of its former timbering.\nThe rifle range isn't that any more\u2014it's \"Cottonwood City\",\nformerly a cattle range, but now a picturesque setting for\n45 or 46 homes.\nA depression mushroom, \"Cottonwood City\" might be\ncalled \"squatters' valley\", for that's what it is. At the same\ntime it is a tribute to folk driven by depression who have tried\nand to a surprising degree have succeeded in establishig themselves as home-makers. It's all in the viewpoint. At the present time the federal government apparently is taking the view\n! that the residents of \"Cottonwood City\" are squatters, and a\ni report has gone in outlining the situation. The rifle range, for\n! years the charge of the department of national defence, is now\nj in the hands of the department of mines and national resources and orders to the government's uninvited guests to\nmove along are anticipated.\nPRIMAL URGE TO BUILD A HOME\nBe that as it may, \"Cottonwood City\" today is a splendid\nstudy of human interest and of the primal urge of man to establish himself on the land, to make himself a home. It is a\nstudy in self-help.\n'Way up by the old target pits lives one fellow with a definite sense of humor, probably inspired by Nelson's recent street\nnaming and house numbering campaign. His home is a log\nshack, the cracks filled with\"'\nclay, and over the front dcor\nhangs this sign:\nPhotos by Staff Photographer*\n9\u2014A home of which anyone might be proud.\n10\u2014An old timer and his simple home.\n11\u2014Shade trees are important too.\n12\u2014Homes in a woodland glade.\n13\u2014A home developing on new ground.\n14\u2014Thick logs will keep kiddies warm.\n15\u2014A lot of work in building with logs.\n\"This town has gone modern\nThe hostess used to ask you how\nmany lump- and ^ow she asks you\nhow many fingers.\"\n\"606 COTTONWOOD\nBULLY VARD\"\nA fellows interest, if he\nwalks through \"Cottonwood\nCity\", is torn in half a dozen\ndirections. Here's a home that\nplainly shows a woman's hand\nin the curtains and a line ot\nwind. Over there is a cottage\nset among flowers, a bloom-\nscented rockery at the foot of\nthe garden leading down to a\npool with a grass-covered island in its centre. A little further along is a new swimming-\nhole for tho youngsters, but the\nsame muddy bottom as the familiar\npond of 15 or 20 years ago.\nAXE-SQUARED LOGS\nHere's a cottage hewn out of the\nwhite washing billowing in the'bush, logs squared with an axe and\ninterlocked at the corners. Along-*\nside it is another eottage built of\nthe completely round cores of veneer logs, the marks of the lathe spur\nstill showing at the end. Up on the\nbank is a shelter that's a bit ramshackle, roofed with thick squares\nof moss, and on another bank is a\nlog-built home with sacks stuffed\nin the eaves against the weather.\nAs to exterior finish of these\nhomes: you can take your choice\nof hewn logs, round logs, split logs,\ncedar shakes, shingles, clay stucco,\nclay and whitewash, rough boards\ntar paper and so on and on. Unintentionally rustic are some of the\nhomes and deliberately rustic are\nothers. Shelters only are some of\nthem, real homes are others.\nNearly ell of them have a bit of\ngarden and a root house. You see,\nthose people were sent to \"Cottonwood City\" by the depression, and\nthey know what a root house full of\nvegetables can mean in the winter,\nwhen a fellow can't just go to a\nstore and get his food over the\ncounter.\nTHEY'RE  NEIGHBORS\n\"Cottonwood City\" is complete\neven to philosophy. A number of\nits residents are old timers on relief, living on a scant allowance,\nand they have lots of lime to talk\nThey settle affairs of state daily, and\nif you should overhear a couple\nof old fogies talking, the debate will\nprobably be between the government and the working man. You'll\nprobably hear \"It's not the government I blame so much as the working rn^n himself\"\u2014and you'll probably feel that they are your own\nneighbors.\nMostly those \"Cottonwood City'\nhouses are homes, and many of them\nare being improved with additions\nand new outbuildings. You'll see\nlhat, despite hard limes and trees at\nihei\" doors available for f :rewood. I\nthey've saved the big and little trees-\nlhat make shade and rust'c beauty.\nThey've made homes, not shelters\nalone.\nOf course, the garbage collection\nservice is rather lacking in its completeness of coverage, and in this\nday of can openers you may be appalled by the odd pile of tin cans\nand garbage. And the sanitary arrangements \u2014 they're essenlLlly\nprimitive.   If  mayhap  you  should\ncomplain that the sanitation at one\nend of \"Cottonwood City\" is not\nexactly the best for the other end\nof the \"city\", since Cottonwood\ncreek runs its course from one end\nof the valley to the other and\nserves as the \"city's\" water main,\nit's admitted that running water\ncleans itself in a hundred feet or\nV. Questions V.\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Daily News, ln no\ncase will '.he name of the person\nasking the question be published.\nF.E.E., Nelson \u2014 When dessert i_\nserved in a dessert dish set on\na plate, should a person when\nfinished place the spoon in tho\ndessert dish or on the plate beneath it?\nUsually on the plate, but the relative sizes of the plate and dish\nmust be considered.\nD.W., Castlegar\u2014Could you tell me\nhow to make clay pottery?\nWould suggest that you obtain the\nbook of the'Carnpfire Girls series\non the subject as it would require\ntoo much space for this column and\nis handled very well in that book.\nA.J.. Nelson\u2014What year and date\ndid the U.S. enter the World War?\nApril 6, 1917.\nF.G.,   Nelson\u2014Where   is  the  soap\nbox derby operated:1\nIt is sponsored and promoted by\nnewspapers in many cities in ths\nUnited States and in eastern Canada as a good will builder in conjunction with the Chevrolet Motor\ncompany. Elimination contests are\nheld in the cities and ti\\e finals are\nstaged by the Beacon-Journal, Akron, Ohio, where a special concrete\nramp and grandstand has been built.\nThis year over 100,000 saw the\nfinals. The winner gets a four year\nuniversity course at any recognized\nuniversity. Full information may be\nobtained from All American Soap\nBox Derby. General Motor Building.\nDetroit. Mich.\n_____\t\n-__-__.\n:'    \"'\n-\n ********mn{\\\\ pi ipi wi~ m^-WliBmmvimmmwmi\" \\ -wmmmwmmmMmmmm\"wvkl9mwmm\ni-u\nFEED PRICES UP SI TON, FIRST\nMOVE IN NEARLY THREE WEEKS;\nCANNED GOODS AT 1936 LEVELS\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C^FRIDAY MORNING. OCT. 29, 1937.\nCoat Is Short, Swagger\nDealers Surprised as\nHad Been Advised\nExpect Advances\nNO CHANGES IN\nMEAT AND EGGS\nMaking their, first move In nearly\nthree weeks, feed prices advanced\non the wholesale market Wednesday, bran, middlings and shorts each\nbeing up jl a ton. Flour was. un-.\nchanged. Previous to this advance\ndealers had the quietest period,\nwith respect to prices, in months.\nPreviously they were barely *ble\nat times, and completely unable\nat others, to keep their price list-\nin order for more than a day or so\nat a time.\nWholesale grocers expressed surprise Wednesday in the price levels\nof canned goods. Markets were described as \"'very, steady\" with quotations in many cases almost the\nsame as a year ago, despite earlier\nadvices from canners that materials\nand labor were up and that higher\nprices could be expected. New tomato products, at a level close to a\nyear ago, are considerably lower\nthan a few months ago, when shortages forced prices sharply up. Some\nsizes of tomato juice are already\nout of canners' stocks.\nSome canners are already short\nof gallon goods, but these are ln\nwholesalers' stocks and the situation is normal. Limited quantities\nof gallon packs are put up each year\nand are moved out early.\nSugar and milk  quotations are\nalso \"about the same\".\nNUT8 TO GO UP\nSultana nuts are expected to advance, but dealers state prices here\nwill not be changed until new supplies are bought, at the higher\nprices. The sharp shortage of peanuts in the district eased'somewh'''\nthis week with the arrvr.1 of a c.r-\nload from the Orient, contra-ted\nfor some mpnths ago. To meet the\ndemand the firm which received the\nnuts has its Toaster In operation almost night and day.\nNorwegian sardines ar* scheduled to advance, it is reported.\nCanned shrimps are up considerably.\nNew crop dates are expected to\narrive in a fewdays, and California\nfresh dates are already on the mar\nket, iwth a second shipment expected shortly.\nAustralian grapefruit are on the\nmarket locally for the first time,\nhaving arrived along with a quantity oi Australian oranges now taking the place of the California\nproduct, which is at the end of its\nseason.\nFresh artichokes, fresh olives and\nhothouse tomatoes are also on the\nmarket. The potato movement is\nextremely slow.\nFor the second successive week\nno changes were reported in meat,\nbutter and egg prices. Fresh eggs\nremain extremely scarce.\nCHEE8E WEEK\nNational cheese week will be\ncelebrated October 29 to November 6.\nCarlot receipts of the week included three cars of groceries; two\nof flour and feed, one of flour, two\nof corn, three cars of hay\u2014two of\ntimothy from the Okanagan and\none of Grand Forks alfalfa\u2014one car\nof peanuts, one of Australian oranges, one of tomatoes and other\ncanned vegetables, on* of salt, one\nof sugar and two of meats.\nAmong arrivals anticipated are a\ncar of bananas and a car of confections.\nA car of Jam was shipped Wednesday to Swift Current, sask.\nPrincesses Enjoy\nLessons in Golf\nLONDON, Oct, 28 (CP)- Their\nlatest lessons have found high favor with Princesses Elizabeth and\nMargaret Rose. They are learning\nto play golf with miniature clubs,\ncontinuing with the sport even\nthough they have returned south\nr-\u00bb~i Scotland.\n\"ore garden space has been set\n\u2022 de for the use of the royal family\nduring their week-ends at York cot.\ntage, Windsor Great park, and while\ntheir father and mother plan the\ngardens, the younger royalties will\nbe Immersed ln the old Scottish\ngam* of cutting down their handicaps.\nThe giant Bequola trees of the Pacific coast have been called the blg-\nR\u00bbst plants known to man.\nKASLO Social...\nKASLO, B. C\u2014S. N. Ross, sup- they are\nerintendent of hte Whitewater mine Creek.\nat Retallack, was a visitor in town\nMonday.\nMembers of St. Marks Anglican\nchurch Women's Auxiliary met in\nthe Sunday school room Friday and\npacked a large bale of clothing to\nbe shipped to the prairies.\nMrs. Watts of Riondel spent Saturday in town.\nEric Bacchus of Birchdale spent\nMonday here.\nL. McLellan was down from the\nUtica mine during the week-end.\nC. W. Webster was a visitor to\nNelson Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Creech of Ymir\nwere Saturday visitors to Kaslo,\nBen W. Olcott and Carl J. Bailer of Portland, Ore., arrived in the\ncity Friday and left Saturday to\n, visit mining properties in which\nInterested on Woodbury\nt Friday visitor\nM. Adams was\nto Nelson.\nMiss \"Babs\" Stoker has left for\nVancouver after spending several\nmonths in town with her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nFloyd Garrett.\nMr. and Mrs. Roland Edwards of\nYmir spent the week-end in town\nvisiting Mrs. Edwards' father, A.\nL. Grayling, an4 brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr, and Mrs. William Hendren.\nEd Amell was a Saturday visitor\nin town en route from Nelson to\nhis home at Lardeau.\nH. Thomlinson was a visitor in\ntown during the week-end, leaving Saturday for Lardeau.\nA. Masson arrived in town, Friday from Nelson and left Saturday\nfor his home at Poplar,\nR. C. Moffitt and H. Thomas of\nSeattle and J. E. Barbour of Wilmer\narrived ln the city Friday and left\nSaturday for the Lardeau district\nto Inspect mining properties in\nwhich they are interested.\nMiss Maud Healy, who was for a\nshort time a guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nFred Webber, left Saturday for her\nhome at Healy's Landing.\nMrs. Walter Wright was a Satur-\n>r to NeU\nJeorgo  Johnson  was\nday visitor to Nelson.\nfrom\nup\nAinsworth for the week-end.\nMrs. F. S. Chandler was a visitor\nto Nelson Saturday.    .\nH. Graves of Ymir was a Saturday visitor in the city.\nG. Halsney of Retallack was a\nweek-end city visitor,\nGeorge Hugh McKay was a visitor to Kaslo Saturday, leaving for\nhis home at Vancouver Monday.\nM. Dore of Gerrard was a city\nvisitor during the week-end.\nMrs. R. Langille and infant daughter left Victorian hospital Sunday\nand are guests of Mrs. Langille's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs, George Ba-\nIhort swagger mink coat with tubular effect, saddle shoulder line, petal collar.\nThere are short furs and long\nfurs, trimly fitted coats, boxy lines\nand short, bunchy models. The coat\npictured was taken at the Thistledown race track in Cleveland, where\nthere was a parade of models just\nas if it was dear old Paris. This\nmodel shows the new short, swag-\njer mink coat, which gives the ef-\n!ect almost of a tubular silhouette.\nNotice the new saddle shoulder\nline and the petal collar.\nSome of the new coats are en-\nBy LISBETH\ntlrely collarless, some with small\ncollars\u2014much smaller than in previous years. This is a youthful trend\nand I am wondering how the older\nwomen will react. For them the\nlarger collar is definitely more flattering.\nGIB80N 8TYLE\nCOPIED\nThe Gibson girl of the Gay Nineties is influencing the fashioning of\nfurs this season, according to some\ndesigners. Black is the most important color in fur coats, in Russian\ncaraculs and Persian lamb. A full-\nlength coat of black caracul trimmed in Persian lamb, being a model\nwhich illustrates the trend.\nFor the college wardrobe, brown\ncaracul in boxy swaggers are the\nlatest. Cord fastenings at the turnover collar are youthful and chic.\nAn interesting model for the college girl I saw was in white lamb.\nIt was flared, with the effect of a\nyoke, and is suitable both for daytime or evening wear\u2014killing two\nbirds with one stone, as it were.\nDoukhobor Offender Less to Blame\nThan Counsellors Asserts Haskins\nASK YOUR CKOCIR FOR\nGOLD MEDAL\nMALT EXTRACT\nDARK, LIGHT, STOUTEX AND HOP FLAVOR\nHighest Quality\u2014The Best for Your Money\nB.C. Distributors: JAMES MARTIN A CO., VANCOUVER, B.C.\nAdvisors  Told   Him'\nHe Needn't Obey\nthe Law\nCalled to this district by the discovery that some carloads of apples\nof Doukhobor production were being shipped out without the producer having complied with the\nNatural Products Marketing act by\nobtaining a licence, W. E. Haskins\nof Kelowna, chairman of the interior tree fruit board, after investigation ot the matter, concluded that\nthe Doukhobor concerned was less\nto blame than some of his counsellors, and adjusted the matter without applying a penalty.\n\"I do not blame the Doukhobors\nso much,\" commented Mr. Haskins\nin discussing the case, \"for they\nhave been Incited to disregard the\nprovincial act by what they have\nheard from other people.\n\"First, they hear many people,\nincluding even government officials\nadvancing the theory that a man\nmay do what he likes with his own\nproduct. Now, this is a pretty the-\nSAY,WHAT'S HAPPENED HERE?\nTHIS TASTES SWELL\n-\nory, but a theory only. For example, how many agricultural products are there that are not subject\nto grading regulations by the Dominion government? For many,\nmany years the Dominion government has been prescribing the exact\nway a producer must grade, pack,\nand mark his product before offering it for sale. Right at the start,\nthese advisors are on wrong ground.\nDESTINATION\nNOT'A FACTOR\n\"Next, the Doukhobor producers\nhave the belief that if their products are to enter Into interprovincial\ntrade, that is, are going to be exported to another province, they\ncannot be regulated by a provincial\nlaw. This view has been held by a\nlarge percentage of the lawyers until this last judgment of the British\nColumbia court of appeals, but now\nthey must revise their opinions\u2014\nunless they wait for a privy council\njudgment.\n\"The regulation that this producer broke was the one providing that\nno one can pack, store or transport\ntree fruits within the province without having first acquired a licence\nfrom the board to do so. Under this\nprovision it is a matter of indifference where the fruit is going, whether to the local market here, or\nacross the provincial' border. It is\nthe packing, storing and transporting that is being regulated, and this\nregulating is, according to the court\nof appeals, within the competence\nof the province.\n\"Not wishing to give \"the shipper\nin question any chance to feel persecuted when ne was acting apparently in good faith, I have adjusted\nthe matter on the basis of payment\nof the proper fees for the cars that\nhave gone forward, and issuance of\na licence; but this should be warning to all concerned that compliance\nwith the regulations is going to be\nrequired.\"\nNew Denver Girl,\nect of Search,\nSups With Friend\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-Some of\nthe New Denver citizens were\naroused to action Monday evening\nwhen it was reported Alice Powell,\n8-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nDave Powell was lost. A large\nnumber ot friends were out looking for her. It was learned later she\nwas having supper with a friend.\n.j__.\nObjc\nAbout six per cent of telephone\ncalls get a \"don't answer\" response,\njudging by a check on New York's\n8,000,000 daily calls.\nAir Hostess Has\nColorful Career\nIrene Martinez, air hostess, hasn't\nhad her job very long, but she is\none of those persons to whom things\nhappens.\nIrene speaks Spanish, as is required of the hostesses ot her line\nwho run on what is know as its\n\"Great Lakes to Gulf route\", out of\nBrownsville, Tex. Thus when a\ndashing Mexican captain was a\npassenger and knew so little English that he could only order ham\nand eggs \u2014 which he detested \u2014\nIrene was able to help him out and\nteach him enough of the language\nso that he could vary his menu.\nOn his return to his native Mexico, the captain sent orchids to\nIrene.\nBy her tact and knowledge of a\nforeign tongue, Miss Martinez was\nalso able to avert an International\nmisunderstanding when prominent\nvisitors from a foreign land failed\nto understand the itinerary planned\nfor them and were highly incensed\nthereby. Taking command of a\ntense situation Miss Martinez was\nable to restore peace and tranquility, to the relief and gratitude\nof the consul from the visitors'\nland.\nSo far Miss Irene has received\nthree proposals of marriage, two\nfrom plain business men, and another from a New York newspaperman who \"left his heart in Texas\".\nShe is still on the job, however.\n'Smile Queen'\nPlans lo Teach\nBy LILIAN CAMPBELL\nMiss Dorothy Fitzgerald, Kent\nState college graduate, Kent, Ohio,\nrecently was appointed new secretarial science teacher in the Fenn\nschool of commerce, Cleveland, 0.\nIt is prophesied that the course\nis destined to be very popular at\nFenn, for Miss Fitzgerald was Smile\nQueen, May Queen, most popular\ngirl on the campus, and holder of\nalmost all the honors, social and\nscholastic, that may be bestowed on\na co-ed. Fenn is predominantly a\nmale college.\nShe is the first appolnte* to the.\nFenn faculty direct from college.\nThe secretarial science department\nbeing operated at Fenn this year\nwill be a two-year option in the\nfive-year management course offered by the business administration school. It will come under the\nco-operative plan, giving enrolled\nstudents 12 weeks of study at the\ncollege, followed by the same period\nof employment in offices to practice\nwhat they learn ln college. Training of commercial teachers becomes\na major function of the department,\nto meet a sharp demand in Ohio\nfor such teachers.\nMrs. Theodore H, Smith, associate professor of finanee, will head\nthe new department.\nFascist Girl Athletes\nCause Paper Clash\nROME, Oct. 28 <CP-Reuters) -\nPhotographs of Fascist girl athletes whose annual championship\nmeet was watched by Premier\nMussolini, have led to a clash between the official Vatican newspaper Osservatore Romano and the\nFascist press.\nPhotographs of the girl, ln their\nsports kit appeared in Fascist\nnewspapers, but not in the Osservatore Romano.\nThe girls' shorts were too ihort,\nsaid the Osservatore, their shirts\ntoo tight, their championships\n\"disgusting and unseemly.\n\"Let those who are in favor of\nthese contests for girls take a look\nat these photographs,\" the newspaper added.\n\"Let them ask themselves if they\nwould go to those winning posts\nto choose their partners for life.\nDo they find the real Italian woman in these masculine muscles,\nthese horse-like leaps, these twisted\nfaces?\"\nCRANBROOK Social...\nWear Bright Blouse\nWith Your Fall Suit\nPARIS, (CP) - Bright colored\nblouses are worn with fall suits.\nA dark green suit is highlighted\nwith a blouse of fuchsia-colored\njersey. A quiet smoke-gray model\nis lifted up in the color scale by\na tuck-in blouse ot magenta satin-\nsurah.\nAn afternoon ensemble in black\nwool has a velvet blouse, half red,\nhalf green, the velvets Joined, front\nand back. In a slanting line from\nshoulder to hip.\nOrganize Youth\nin Empire Ways\nLONDON, Oct 28  (CP) - The\nvisit of the 350 Canadian school\nboys and girls to England for the\nCoronation and the Empire Youth\nRally in Albert Hall addressed by\nLord Baldwin has had an interesting sequel.\nIt is now proposed to organize an\nEmpire Youth Movement with\nsomething of an \"Order of Chivalry\" In its constitution. The purposes are to be educational and\nimperial with the object of consolidating the Empire Youth as a\nworld force for peace, goodwill and\ncooperation.\nPlans are being made for a magazine, tho interchange of students,\nrallies in different parts of the\nempire and at longer intervals in\nforeign countries, to be both recreational  and   cultural   in  nature.\nArrangements are also on foot\nfor the organization of a Parliament of Empire Youth, a \"City of\nYouth\" with headquarters in some\neasily accessible and suitable building.\nUpward, Backward\nNew Coiffure Trend\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (CP)-In\ntimes of international tension women favor elaborate coiffures, according to leading hair-stylists who\nnote a trend towards early 19th-\ncentury modes of hair-dressing.\nSpeakers at the annual convention of the New York State Hairdressers and Cosmetologists association drew a parallel between the\nNapoleonic era and the present\ndisturbed days of dictatorships in\npredicting women will seek to recapture the \"charm and glamor\" of\ncoiffures of the directoire, empire\nand restoration periods.\nThis means, according to the stylists, lhat the \"page-boy\" fashion in\nhair definitely is out. Instead, they\nsaid, all hair will be up at the back\nof the head, with curls requiring\nornaments, even fur to match the\nfur worn on gowns and wraps, also\ncombs and tuck pins. In a word the\nnew trend is to move the hair upward and backward, rather than\nbackward \u00bbnd downward.\nEuropean styles ot hair-dressing\ndo not find favor at present with\nAmerican stylists, said Max Gart-\nman, official of the convention; the\nHollywood style, however, is widely accepted.\n\"Young matrons and older married\nwomen are going in keenly for the\nHollywood mode,\" he said.\nEagle Members Are\nHosts at Whist and\nDance on Wednesday\nAfter the business ot their regular\nmeeting, members of Nelson lodge\nNo. 22, F.O.E., were hosts to their\nfamilies at a successful progressive\nwhist drive and dance Wednesday\nni_.nt .     .   --\nPrize winners wer* Mrs. A. g.\nOliver, ladles' first; Mrs. A. H.\nSmith, ladles' consolation: Paul\nHunden, men's first; and A. Vulcano, men's consolation.\nWilliam Scott was master ef ceremonies for the whist and Albert\nSmith for the dance.\nRefreshment committee was composed of F. W. Johnson, Archie Renwick, Albert Smith, Frank Trozzo,\nEugene Stangherlin and William\nScott\nGermany's compulsory health insurance system has a set-up including more clerks and officials than\nphysicians.\nPAGE SEVEN\nMagazine in U.S.\nRecalls Career ot\nMazode la Roche\nBOSTON, Oct. 28 (CP) - \"Beginning novelists will do well to\nremember the record of that valiant Canadian, Mazo de la Roche,\"\nsays the Atlantic Monthly for October, referring to a short story\ncalled \"Electric Storm\" in that issue.\n\"For 15 years she served an apprenticeship in letters, and during\nthat formative period she wrote\nnovels, short stories and plays.\nChristopher Morley was the first\nAmerican critic on our side of the\nborder to announce her 'discovery'\nbut although other reviewers and\neditors followed suit, the reading\npublic gave her only passing attention. Then in 1027 her novel\n'Jalna' was awarded the Atlantic\nNovel Prize of $10,000 and Miss\nde la Roche stepped into the limelight. Little did she realize that\nthat turbulent family, the White-\noaks, were to occupy her waking\nand sleeping moments for the next\n10 years.\n\"Today Miss de la Roche live*\nhappily in England with her two\nadopted children, Esmee and Ren*\nMichael, Her literary offspring, the\nWhiteoaks, have come to dwell in\na half-a-million homes. They have\nbeen the subject of one of London's\nmost popular plays and they live\non in her outer consciousness when,\nas at the present, she closes the\ndoor of her mind against them in\norder to write short stories.\"\nFINDS MESSAGE\nISLAND HARBOR, N. S. (CP) \u2014\nRalph Head picked up a note ln th*\nharbor here that was thrown into\nthe ocean last June by a seaman\non his way to Montreal from Hall-\nfax. The note, enclosed in a tin can,\nwas legible, Head said.\nBritish Consols\nCELLO TIPS\n'HATCH YOURLIPS\nTH* Popirfor\nHealth DrinK\nfor Young and\nOld Alike\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u2014Miss Nancy\nMcCrindle and Miss Margaret McCrindle entertained at the tea hour\nat the home of their parents, Mr. and\nMrs. M. McCrindle. Guests were\nMiss Enid Shankland, Miss Grace\nFlett, Miss Phyllis Ward, Miss Mae\nKennedy, Miss Florence Finley, Miss\nMargaret Scott, Miss Eileen Johnstone, Miss Ruth McKowan, Miss\nNancy Miles, Miss Frances Parks,\nMiss Kathleen Haley, Miss Zoe Gibbons, Miss Berta Jones, Miss Helen\nGilroy, Miss Ethel Neily. Miss Margaret Henderson, Miss Billy Neily,\nand Miss Muriel Little.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Dartt of Golden\nhave been visiting in the city.\nMrs. Forest of the Public Works\ndepartment, who has been supplying\nin Golden, has returned to the\ncity.\nMr. and Mrs. E. L. Paterson, have\nreturned to Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Johnstone, who\nhave been visiting their daughter\nat New Denver, have returned to\nthe city.\nThose receiving the high scores\nat bridge at the St. Mary's card\npaMy this week were Mrs. J. Conroy and Mrs. Krown and at whist,\nJ. Kludash and T. Pattison. The\ndoor prize was won by Mr. Desh-\narnais.\nMiss Miriam Byorkman, who has\nbeen a guest of Mr. and Mrs. R.\nBell has returned to Canal Flat.\nMrs. W. Wnsiliew and son William of Kimberley are guests of\nMr. and Mrs. Ukrainctz.\nMr. and Mrs. Lawrence Herchmer of. Fernie, were recent city\nvisitors.\nMrs. Harold Brown, who has been\nvisiting relatives in Scotland, has\nreturned to the city.\nJudge and Mrs. Thompson, who\nwere visiting In Golden and Revelstoke, have returned to the city.\nMrs. Galbraith and daughter Patsy, of Spilimachene, are visiting\nfriends In the city.\nMr. and Mrs. J. W. Bellamy have\nreturned to their home at Thunder\nHill.\nMrs. R. Knickerbocker and daughter Barbara of Calgary are guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. McBurney.\nMr .and Mrs. J. McKinnon have\nreturned to Vancouver.\nMr. and Mrs. D. McCowan were\ncity visitors on their way from\nVancouver to Montreal.\nMr. and  Mrs. Howard King of\nGolden arc visiting in the city.\n, Ronald  Moffatt of the Imperial\nBank staff at Golden is visiting his\nparents Mr. and Mrs. R. Moffatt.\nMr. and Mrs. B. McDonald of\nKingsgate were guests of Mr. McDonald's parents, Mr, and Mrs. W.\nB. MacDonald.\nMrs. Charles Cook has left for\nVancouver where she will reside.\nMrs. Lome Watson of Vancouver\nis visiting friends here.\nMrs. foote and Mrs. Lindsay of\nKimberley were recent city visitors.\nRev. J. F. Bell is attending ihe\nPresbyterian synod meeting at Victoria. He was accompanied by Sherman Harris.\nMr. and Mrs. James Drew and\nfamily of Vancouver are visiting\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Drew here.\nIN THE MORNING\nFOR&t%ALLDAY\nCRISP, golden-brown Shredded Wheat Is\n100 per cent whole wheat-nothing\nadded, nothing taken away.    It supplies\nNature's vital food essentials In a most\nappetizing and digestible form.   That's why\nIt's so good for everybody.   It helps keep\nboth mind and body alert\nand vigorous for work\nand   play.    You'll  like\nShredded  Wheat with\nmilk or cream \u2014with\nfruits and berries, fresh\nor canned.\n12 Wj biscuits In ever\/ box\nTHS\nCANADIAN SHREDDED WHEAT\nCOMPANY, UNITED\nNllf-r* Fall* \u25a0 Canada,\nGoing Shopping\nSHREDDED WHEAT\nMADE IN  CANADA - OF CANADIAN WHEAT\n mmmmmmmmmwwmmgwmmmm\nmmmmmmm^mmwr*wfim^mm^\nPAGE EIGHT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, OCT. 29. 1937.\nSATURDAY-A day to\nSHOP and SAVE ON THESE\nEXTRA SPECIAL VALUES\nFROM EVERY DEPARTMENT\nChildren's Jersey\nDRESSES\nAny young miss will find\nherself attractively dressed in one of these. Sizes 8\nto 14 years.\nBay Day ...\n.$1.98\nNew Home Frocks\nZipper and high' neck styles. Some belted\u2014some with notched lapels in a fine\nassortment of florals, plaids. Sizes 14-40.\nBay Day \t\nPYREX CUPS ond\nRACK\nWe've never had them so\nlow priced before. Be\nearly because these won't\nlast long. i'A\nBay Day QjC\nSUGARS and\nCREAMS\nFloral pattern, table size,\nlimited quantities.  SA\nDomet Flannel\nWORK SHIRTS\nPuliover  style with   one\npocket.   It will pay you\nto buy two shirts at ht\\\nthis price. Bay Day  ( JfC\nAyres Famous\nGraduated\nBlankets\nThey're as soft and fleecy\nas you could wish an>\nblanket to be with deep\nrich colored borders. Bay\nDay, i(7'Q7\nPair ......... t}l,Vt\nBay Day, Pair\nGINGHAM CHINA LUNCHEON SETS\nWith Table Cloth and Napkins\nNicely finished gingham pattern luncheon sets In blue,\ngreen or yellow, and a table cloth and four napkins to\nmatch. Each set includes 4 cups, 4 saucers, 4 luncheon\nplates, 1 sugar, ,1 cream, 1 teapot, 1 luncheon cloth\nand 4 napkins. (tl AC\nBay Day, Set Jl.jQ\nGENUINE PYREX CASSEROLE AND\nCHROMIUM FRAMES\nFamily size genuine Pyrex casserole and frame. Marvellous value at this low pricing. rfij ?a\nBaVprice \u25a0 Wit?\"\nTEA SETS\nAssorted floral patterns.\nEach set includes, 6 cups,\n6 saucers, 6 plates, 1 teapot, 1 sugar jnd 1 cream.\nBay Day,\nSet\t\n$1.00\nPYREX\nPIE PLATES\nand Chromium\nframes.\nBay Day. Complete $1,00\nMen's and Young Men's\nTwo Pants SUITS\nAll wool tweed and worsted suits for fall and winter\nwear. Style, quality and service combined at a good\nsaving. Neat checks and plain suits in regular and fancy\nbacks. You'll like the fit\u2014comfort, and\nsmart appearance of these suits. Sizes! ;.^i a\\sm,.*\\(i\n36 to 44  * \u25a0\u25a0 *\nlt\nMEN'S SHIRTS\nOne of the finest shirt values we have ever offered. All\nfused collars\u2014expert tailoring\u2014Fine fitting cuff\u2014full\ncut. An amazing selection of colorful stripes. (l-I A\nSizes 14 to 17. Bay Day $1.1\"\n9-- SPECIALS\nNO PHONE ORDERS\nSemi-Service Hose\nEvery pair full fashioned and first quality! The newest\nfall shades in sizes 8V2 to 10V_. Be down at door opening to avoid disappointment. \u00ab\u00ab\nBay Day, Pair    4\u00ab\/C\nWOMEN'S WOOL PANTIES ond VESTS\nSeconds of a famous old country mill but defects are so\nslight they will not impair wearing qualities. ne\\\nLimited quantities. Bay Day, Garment Ojd\nCut Glass Tumblers\n6Fn, 25c\n9 oz. size tumblers with a cut design. Ord\ninarily sold at 2 for 15c. Bay Day\t\n'ISL\nCarbolic and Toilet Soaps\nThe well known Royal York lines. Hurry down to get\nyour share of this bargin. (No dealers       \/. t\\r*\nsupplied). Bay Day     Qfq-    \u00a3jC\nBoys' Black Drill Pants\nZipper pockets\u20143 button high waist band.      (M AA\nSizes 6 to 18 years. Bay Day, Pair tPI.Ull\nWomen's Brushed\nWOOL\nSWEATERS\nAll the new smart color\ncombinations including\nsolid yellow and orange.\nPatch pockets\u2014full zipper\u2014knitted waist band,\ncollar and cuff. *<j An\nBay Day J J.jO\nBoys' Frieze\nJACKETS\nAll wool navy frieze with\nneat fitting sport backs;\nside strap and full zipper\nfront. Sizes 6 to fro'PA\n18 years. Bay Dayjp^.Dj\nBuy That NEW   DRESS Now\nnl %1 fin rtraacCM\n$5-00\nAt the height of the season we are selling usual $7.00 dresses\nin a grand style assortment at clearance prices. Silk crepes,\nSatins, Satin Back crepes, Moires, Taffetas\u2014gored styles\u2014\nSwing styles\u2014afternoon dresses\u2014evening dresses.\nSizes 14 to 44. Bay Day\t\nHeavy\nWork Socks\nWe brought these hard\nwearing socks in especially for this sale. Heavy\nweight in dark grey only.\nBay Day,\n3 Pairs ....\n50c\nWOMEN'S SWEATERS\nA special clearance purchase of botany\nwool sweaters in plain and fancy weaves.\nSizes 36 to 42 in the cardigans, 34 to 40\nin the pullovers. en-t  nr\\\nBay Day $1,1\"\nWOMEN'S SKIRTS\nThey're made from ends of high priced\nmaterials in glorious styles that will make\nyou want \u25a0 several. Tweeds, fleeces,\nkasha cloths\u2014good colors.\nSizes 14 to 20. Bay Day\nSILK CREPE\nand SATIN\nBLOUSES\nIf you're in the market for a blouse by\nall means shop now!\nEggshell and white\n\u2014short and long\nsleeves \u2014 assorted\nstyles.\nBay Day\n.$1:79\nGARMENT\nBAGS\nMade of smart patterned cretonne, in\nassorted colors. Have\nstrong metal frames,\nhold eight garments.\nDome fasteners. 54\ninches in length \u2014\nBay\nDay ,,,,.\n9c\nVacuum Bottle*\nHurry down please. This\nis the lowest price we've\noffered these at! 1 pint\nsize. Will keep liquids\nhot or cold for 24 nn\nhours. Bay Day .. \u00a3\\jC\nBotany Wool\nDress Socks I\nGood range of patterns In\nall the wanted shades. A\nspecial purchase!\nBay Day, Pair ...\n[SPECIAL!\nSilk Crepe Hose\nRegular $1*5\u00b0\n98c PAIR\nWe can only offer you such an outstanding value because of a special purchase for Bay Day. Regular $1.50\nwhisper crepe hose. So buy now for your future needs.\nSizes 8'\/_ to lOVi in shades of rifle, moondusk, Lon-\ndon mist, jaunty and hickory nut.\t\nPerrin's Sample French\nKID GLOVES\nMen's Romeo\nSLIPPERS\nJust the thing for evenings at home. Brown\nleather uppers and flexible leather soles\u2014rubber heels. (hi nr\nSizes 6 to 11. ..Jpl,\"D\nOutstanding yalues will be found In this group of\nsampldvPrendrkftl gloves. Also a few fin\u00ab suedes. We\ncannot repeat on this special buy so be early for your\nchoice. Pleasing best fall shades, and\nassorted sizes.\nPair\nJL85\nHot Water Bottles\nGuaranteed for one year. Buy now! We can't  in\nguarantee to repeat at this price. Bay Day ....   4 jC\n29c\nIMPORTED TIES\nTies actually worth twice\nas much. A grand selection of patterns and CC*\ncolors. Bay Day ..   DDL\nMEN'S DRESS PANTS\nFor sport or every day wear. Dixon tweeds, twills, worsteds, all wool tweeds in fawn, grey, brown, navy and\nblack. With belt loops. Sizes 29 to 44. et%n r\\n\nBay Day \\}L\\lO\nLet the North Wind Blow\u2014We're Ready\nWITH A GREAT BAY DAY SALE OF\nMen's\nOvercoats\n\u2022 GUARDS, RAGLAN AND SLIP ON STYLES\n\u2022 ALL WOOL TWEEDS\n\u2022 HARMONY LINED\n\u2022 BELTED OR HALF BELTED BACKS\n\u2022 CREY AND BROWN CHECKS, PLAIDS\nDuffle\nBAGS\nSmart covert cloth shopping bags, extra large size\nwith dome fasteners. Bay Day\n$1.00\nBRASSIERES\nSpecial purchase of\nabetter quality brassiere. Tea rose and\nwhite. A splendid\nvalue. I a\nBay Day ...   1\"C\nSAFETY PINS\nSteel. 50 on      C\nring .; D\\i\nBrass. 50 on\nring\t\n9c\nSALT AND\nPEPPER SETS\nA bargain in fine\nquality hand cut\ncrystal in assorted\nshapes. You'd expect to pay twice as\nmuch for this high\nquality. Put away a\nfew sets now for\nChristmas Gifts.\nBay Day.\nPair  ...\niSc\nRhinestone\nJewelry\nA special purchase of\nsmart jewelry\u2014clips and\npins, etc.\nBay Day, Piece\nk\nin all the latest styles and models.\nSizes 35 to 44\t\n*12\u00ab\nHANDKERCHIEFS\nPractical handkerchiefs in plain white linen or bright\nfloral prints in fine cotton and dainty pastel\nshades in lawn. Bay Day, each\t\n_ik\nEnglish Sewing\nCOTTON\n200-yard spools, in\nsizes 40, 50, 60. In\nwhite or black. Bay\nspools   iyc\nLINEN\nTHREAD\nSpecially priced  for\nthis event. Assorted\ncolors. Bay Day, j\n3 spools\nGenuine Point\nBLANKETS\nOnce a year we make this sensational offer. And this Is\npossible only because of slight errors made by weavers.\nDon't miss this opportunity to purchase genuine Hudson's Bay \"Point\" Blankets at far below the usual price,\n3V2 POINT SECONDS\nThese famous blankets in beautifully rich colors. The\nslight imperfections do not impair the wearing qualities\nof these luxurious blankets. Size 63x81 <P19 (_J\ninches. Bay Day, Pair $IJ.iri\n4 POINT SECONDS\nThe 4-point blankets are 72x90. Every housewife should\ntake advantage of this opportunity\u2014we certainly can't\npromise anything like it again. mi r-n i\nBay Day, Pair J)lD.J\/4\n. MAY BE PURCHASED ON THE BAY BUDGET PLAN\nART SILK TABLECLOTHS\nWe have proved over and over that these little art rayon\ncloths are very popular. They are made in bright plaid\ndesigns in a wide range of colors. They are washable and\ncolor fast. Good size for luncheon or breakfast       [\"A\nuse. Size 51 x51. Bay Day    jjC\nMILL CLEARANCE\nIRISH EMBROIDERED TABLECLOTHS\nFine quality oyster linen tablecloths, embroidered in\nbeautiful patterns and colors. They would make a fine\ngift for showers or Christmas. *1 [\"7\nBay Day jl.Jl.\nEmbroidered Tablecloth Squares\nThere is a world of beauty and color In these lovely Irish\nembroidered   linen   squares\u2014pastel   shades   or   ecru\ngrounds;\u2014matching embroidery. They make\nlovely gifts. Sizes 43x43. Bay Day\t\n$1:60\nFEATHER\nCOMFORTERS\nWell filled and covered\nwith high grade sateen.\nSize 60x72.\nEach \t\n$6.97\nKRINKLE\nBEDSPREADS\nSize 78x90. Another,\ngreat Bay Day special.\n\u2022Limited quantities only,\nso get down (f 1 AA\nearly! Bay Day . jpl.UU\nIRISH EMBROIDERED LUNCH SETS\nYou may use these yourself or put them away for a gift.\nBeautifully embroidered in an extensive range of patterns and colors. 36x36 and 4 serviettes. (fti -'in\nEach set boxed. Bay Day, Set J1.4\"\nGENUINE MADIERA\nEMBROIDERED PILLOW CASES\nHere's something to tuck away for gift-giving. Beautiful\npillow cases, hand embroidered in a wide range of patterns with rose scalloped edges. (PI .0\nBay Day, Pair M.lO\nTHE WELL KNOWN \"CHARIOT\"\nPILLOW CASES\nFine cotton pillow cases of the famous \"Chariot'\nThey are well made and will give good service.\nRegular size. Bay Day, Pair\t\nbrand,\n29c\nTHREE PIECE\nBOWL SETS ,\n3 handy size bowls in the\nlovely Baleek pattern\n(imitation) on each bowl.\nSet of 3.\n|j  Bay_Day ....\u201e_\nODD NAPKINS\nWe   anticipate   a   great\nrush for these. Come\nk\nKitchen\n:s\nHandy sets for\nup  around   the\nIncludes,   1   jug mop,   1\nscouring mit, 1 dish cloth\nBay Day,\nSet\t\ncleaning\nkitchen.\n19c\nearly. Bay Day, Each\nUNBLEACHED\nSHEETS\nThese are unbleached and\nhemmed ready for use.\nSheets of durable cotton.\nSize 70x86 inches. Only a\ntew to go! nn\nBay Day, each ...' \/ jjC\nART SILK\nBEDSPREADS\nMill seconds of higher\npriced lines. You'll have\nto hurry as we've only a\nBav'Day \u201e\u201e.   $1.94\nWOMEN'!. IfTTft\nSHOES\nRegular $3.95 and $5,00\nA stock clearance of broken assortments,\npicked from regular stock and repriced.\nThis group includes serviceable arch\nmodels and ties as well as dressy patterns. Good range of sizes. (pO if.\nBay Day t)6A\\l\nFOOTWEAR\nMEN'S STRONG WORK BOOTS\nBuy these now at a substantial saving. Black grain blucher cut uppers, plain toe style. Rubber heels and solid\nleather soles pegged and sewn. ftn nts\nSizes 6 to 11. Pair $L.l J\nWOMEN'S FUR TRIMMED\nMOCCASIN SLIPPERS\nWarm, good wearing slippers for house\nwear. Brown, green, blue, grey and wine\ncolored leather uppers\u2014padded soles\nand heels\u2014cloth lined and fur trimmed\nwith black fur. Easily worth\n$1.50. Sizes 3 to 8\t\n$100\nBrown Betty\nTEA\nPOTS\nAn extraordinary bargain\nfor Bay Day, |\"n '\nEach       1UC\nSf^tewft'Btni (tomjiAtt\u00a3.\nNCORPORATED   2?? MAY 1670.\nBOYS' BLACK DRESS OXFORDS\nChoose that extra pair from these dressy black oxfords.\nNeat round toes, blucher cut pliable leather uppers, good\nwearing sewn soles and rubber heels. <*\u25a0\u00ab aa\nSizes 1 to 5'\/. <p[.\\TJ\n\u201e^i-M---_Ja--i.,\nIliiiHilMaHMaaaHHiHaHjgHjH\n \t\n.Wiliypiipiiiii^piiiipiwiiip,\nIINipiVjlfl|pffp^jWP^^.ta\n.4.\nis. (.Ward Wins\nCranbrook Golf\nSingles Crown\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Outplaying\nter opponent, Miss Margaret Robin-\non, in an eighteen hole final, Mrs.\n3. Ward Sunday captured the ladies\nIngles championship at the Cran-\nirook Golf and Country club.\nFailure of Mrs. P. Coe to turn\n)Ut for play gave the Captain's\n>rize competition to Mrs. 0. C.\nJedpath( finalist.\nWinners of the Hidden hole competition were F. Fergie and E. Hill,\n30th of whom carded -8 scores,\nwhile Dr. W. A. Fergie, with a-9\nwas second.\nResults follow:\n| Ladies' championship\u2014Mrs. Fer-\nEie beat Mrs. Marshall, Miss Mar-\nBret Robinson beat Mrs. N. Ho-\n;arth and Mrs. Ward beat Mrs. Fer-\nie.\nCaptain's prize\u2014(first round)\nIrs. Bulman defeated Miss Jessie\n[unter; Mrs. Gilroy defeated Mrs.\nIcKowan; Mrs. Burgess defeated\nliss A. Woodland; Mrs. Redpath\nefeated Mrs. Osborne; Miss Norma\nIpence defeated Mrs. Argue; Mrs.\n'. Coe defeated Miss Doris Corwe.\n(Second round)\u2014Mrs. Bulman\nefeated Mrs. Gilroy; Mrs. Redpath\ndefeated Mrs. Burgess; Mrs. Coe\ndefeated Miss Norma Spence; Mrs.\nMrs. McBurney defeated Miss Catherine Fergie.\n(Semi finals)\u2014Mrs. Redpath defeated Mrs. Bulman; Mrs. Coe defeated Mrs.  McBurney.\nBaptists Celebrate\n37th Anniversary of\nChurch at Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-Members of\nthe Baptist church held a celebration in honor of the 37th anniver-\nsary.of the establishment of a church\nof that denomination in Cranbrook\nThursday evening. Supper was serv.\ned by members of the ladies' committee, and the guest table was centred with a three-tier birthday cake,\na gift of Mrs. W. H. Stender.\nRev. E. E. King acted as chairman, and those called upon for\nshort talks were Mayor T. M. Roberts, Rev. F. V. Harrison, Rev. R. W.\nHardy, J. H. Tabor, and F. Con-\nstantine.\nCommunity singing, lead by W. R.\nReid with W. Taylor at the piano,\nwas enjoyed and selections were\nrendered by a choral group in which\ndifferent organizations were represented with Mrs. M. B. Freeman at\nthe piano.\nWilliam Haynes performed magic\ntricks, and the evening closed wtth\nthe singing of \"Blest B? the Tie\nThat Binds.\"\nThe - male sea spider carries the\neggs that the female spider has laid.\nGolden Kootenay Apples\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNINQ, OCT. 29, 1937.\nKaslo Old Timer\nIs laid at Rest\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Mrs. Jessie Ann\nRiddell was laid to rest in the\nI.O.O.F.plot in the upper city cemetery Thursday. Funeral services\nwere held in the afternoon from\nSt. Andrews United church, the\npastor, Rev. J. Fielding Shaw officiating. The church was filled with\nsorrowing relatives and friends. The\nnumerous floral tributes were unusually beautiful. During the ser\nvice the choir sang \"Forever with\nthe Lord\" and \"Savior Breathe an\nEvening Blessing\".\nPall bearers were Cameron Clarke,\nS. A. Hunter, John Paterson, P. M.\nElder, B. F. Palmer, and F. H, Abey.\nThe late Mrs. Riddell, who was in\nher 85th year, has been in ill health\nfor some time and died at her home\nTuesday evening. She was a native\nof Scotland and came to Canada\nwhen about 15 years of age. Later\nshe became the bride of John Riddell. the ceremony taking place in\nHamilton, Ont. Early in the '8u\"s\nMr. and Mrs. Riddell came west\nand settled in Saskatchewan. In\n1897 the family moved to Kaslo,\nwhere residence has been maintain\ned ever since. Mr. Riddell died about\n25 years ago.\nA member of the Presbyterian\nchurch she, at the time of union,\nbecame an ardent worker for St.\nAndrews church; she was a member\nof the Kaslo Ladies' Hospital aid\nand a faithful worker in the Red\nCross society during the Great War\nyeaVs, she was also a member of\nthe Kaslo and District Women's\ninstitute until advancing years and\nfailing health curtailed her activities.\nImmediate survivors are one son,\nJohn A. Riddell of Kaslo and two\ndaughters, Mrs. C. W. Wester of\nKaslo and Mrs. George Anderson\nof Kelowna all of whom were with\ntheir mother during her last Illness\nand passing. Ten grand-children also\nsurvive. One daughter, Mrs. H. Rainbow, died in Hedley, B.C., about\ntwo years ago.\ninvermere Bride to\nReside at Rossland\nWINDERMERE, B. C\u2014Miss Mary\nHall Fratcr, daughter of Mrs. T. F.\nFrater of invermere was married\nto Harold Harrison, of Rossland, on\nOct, 15. The bride wore an attractive\nautumn costume of rosewood tweed,\nwith contrasting accessories. Mr.\nand Mrs. Harrison left for Rossland,\nwhere they will make their home.\nCranbrook Ladies\nColled (32 Jars\nfor the Hospital\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-The Ladies'\nAid of the St. Eugene hospital held\ntheir annual Jam, fruit and pickle\nshower this week when the members of the association and others\ncanvassed  the  city.  Six  hundret\n \"- PAGE NINE\nthirty-two Jars of Jam, fruit and\npickles were collected, and also donations of fruit and money.\nThose in charge of the various\nstreets of the city were Mrs. F.\nParks, Mrs. C. Gill, Mrs. G. M. Argue, Mrs. F. W. Green, Mrs. Godfrey, Mrs. J. F. Scott, Mrs. A. J.\nIronside, Mrs. H. A. McKowan, Mrs.\nC. J. Little, Mrs. Caldwell, Miss Enid\nHome, Miss Ruth McKowan, Mrs.\nK. Barber, Mrs. G. Hanna, Mrs. A.\nD. Bridges, Mrs. M. F. MacPherson,\nMrs, M. McCrindle, Mrs. J. F. Bell,\nMrs. F. V. Harrison, Mrs. G. E. L.\nMacKinnon, Mrs. Bradley and Mrs.\nT. A. Moore.\n&    y\nI \u25a0 te\n'SSfeVj\nWMt&-jLkJr*>Mri.%\nThese three golden apples held by Mrs. Stanley Nordqulst of\nNelson are not th. Three Golden Apples from the Garden of the\nHesperides that were the object of Hercules' quest, but some \"orchard\nrun\" Twenty-Ounce Pippins brought down from his ranch at Kaslo\nby H. A, Pearson, chairman of the tourist and publicity committee\npf the Nelson board of trade. But the Golden Apples of the story\ncould hardly have been their superior.\n.ossland Social,.\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nIROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 26\u2014Miss\nla Pollock entertained friends Sat-\nfday at her home on Fourth ave-\n\u00bbe. Among those present were Miss\nBvian Woodward, Miss May Marin. Miss Curtis Triggs, Miss Ida\n\u25a0sing, Mias Eda Vetere, Miss Del-\npine Vetere, Miss Adelyn Thors-\nistein. Miss Viola Brooks, Miss\nillie Sdao, Miss Millie Fisher, Miss\nka Hawk, Miss Doris Metzgar, Miss\n\u25a0ertha Dupperon, Miss Juanita Orr,\npr. and Mrs. G. Ezart, Ross Jack-\nbn, David Jorgenson John Ling,\nfarry Stinson, M. Smith, John Cook,\ntenneth McGuire, Archie Neill.\n[ames Roselock, Amos Ruelle, Hen-\nMatthews, Lome Robertson,\nlume Pollock, Harry Dixon, Al-\n[m Dixon, Bert Stinson and Mr. and\nps. D. Dick.\nJ Mrs. Robert Richardson, assisted\n|y Mrs, Thomas Wood, entertained\nhonor of the ninth birthday of\nter daughter,  Marion.  The  after-\nloon  was spent with music and\ncompetitions.  Those  present  were\nnuriel   Cooper,    Peggy   Johnson,\nbrma   Bray,   Inga   Bonde,   Betty\nVood, Peggy Welsh, Ramona Conc-\nIhi, Joan Smith, Mary Vetere, Betty\nTelsh, Dora Dawson, Billy Richard-\non,   Robert  Richardson   and  the\nuest of honor.\n[ROSSLAND, B.C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nOliver Reinkka entertained at dinner Thursday. Guests were: Mr. and\nairs. Arthur Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank Coates, Mr. and Mrs\". R.\nVfaitland, Mrs. N. J. Hamilton, Mrs.\n3. Fried Mrs. Blanche Stidel and\nj-unnar Beckman.\nMrs. George McNaughton has arrived from Winnipeg to join her\npusband and take up residence here.\nMrs. A. Riva, who has been a\nuest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Dick, has\nleturned to her home in Banff. She\npas accompained by Miss Betty\nDick who will visit her until Christ-\npas.\n\\ Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ezart have\nleturned from a holiday at their\nprmer home in Vancouver.\nJMiss Doris Metzgar entertained\n; luncheon in honor of the birth-\nlay anniversary of her mother, Mrs.\n\\ H. Metzgar. Those present were\nBrs. 0. Osing, Miss Lorna Triggs,\nErs. E. Wilson, Mrs. Edward Wil-\npn, Mrs. Wallace Hawkins, Mrs.\namuel Irvin, Miss Millie Sdao,\npe hostess and the guest of honor.\nJ Louis Profili is visiting in Wcst-\nIridgc.\n1 H. W. Collins of Grand Forks Is\nguest ot his son-in-law and\nlaughter, Mr. and Mrs. L. Colenso.\nT F. W. Brown of Oakland, Cal.,\npas in the cily today. Mr. Brown\nfitnc lo Trail about 1895, and was\nIppointed postmaster in 189(1. hnld-\npg that position until his removal\nto California ln 1924. The first\nTrail fair was held in the old post-\noffice at Trail, Mr. Brown encouraging the ranchers to bring in their\nproduce and offering various prizes,\nuntil the affair assumed the proportions of a real fair.\nA surprise party was tendered\nMiss Gertude Mara, Thursday evening, the affair being arranged by\nMiss Eileen Mara. Games and dancing were enjoyed. The table was\ncentered with a birthday cake, decorated in pink and white. This present included Misses Jean McDonell,\nTheresa Cran, Rene Clelland, Joan\nHarrison May Sommerville, Joyce\nGordon, Mary Ling, Gertrude Crawford, Eileen Berg, Marie McDonald,\nCatherine McLean, Doreen Wilson,\nIrvin Conroy Robert Scott, Harry\nDonaldson, George Craige, Mike\nDelich, Hans Johnson, Harry Woog-\nman, David Cran, Frank McLean,\nRay Cullinane, John Clark, Joseph\nBiello, Ira Page, Allison Martin and\nthe guest of honor.\nA quiet wedding was celebrated\nin St. Andrew's United church,\nRossland, when Miss Catherine\nMary Alicia Barclay, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. Wlllian G. Barclay of\nFruitvale was united in marriage to\nNorman Stuart Johnson, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Charles W. Johnson, of\nThrums. Rev. T. W. Reed officiated\nand the young couple were attended\nby Mr. and Mrs. George Watson.\nThe bride wore a blue travelling\nsuit. After the ceremony a wedding\nbreakfast was served at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Watson, after which\nthe bridal couple left for Fruitvale.\nThey will reside in Thrums.\nThe Dorcas Circle met Friday\nevening at the home of Mrs. Franklin N. Ellis. Quite a little sewing\nwas done and a pleasant social hour\nenjoyed. Those present were Mrs.\nWilliam Blackwell, Mrs. Harold\nKeffer, Mrs. J. Craig, Mrs. C. Corbett, Mrs. William T. Trembath,\nMrs. N. J. Hamilton, Mrs. A. Kamm,\nMrs. J. Bellamy Mrs. Fred Ellis,\nMrs. Howard Ferguson and the\nhostess.\nMrs. R. D. Fabrlck and children\nand Mrs. Fabrick's mother, Mrs.\nWalter Hadley, left this week for\nSilverwood, Ore., where they plan\nto take up residence,\nRev. D. S. Catchpole was a Nakusp visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. Ray Doell of California are renewing* old acquaintanceships in the city as the guests\nof Mr. Docll's mother, Mrs. W. D.\nWillson.\nSt. George's Guild held a pleasant\nsocial evening at the home of Mrs.\nT. White, Fifth Ave. Mrs. George\nBrown. Mrs. D. S. Catchpole and\nMrs. Leslie A. Read assisted in serving.\nMADE IH IOC0, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nLIMITED\n\u25a0._HH_BH\n iy<fipwi\u00ab\u00bbw^\u00bb^^\n\u00abW\"*\u00absy\u00bbJ!>P5\u00bb*'ffPipais^^\nPAQE TEN \u2022\nBefore Hallowe'en . \u00bb\nAdvises Teachers\nStress Property\nRights ol Others\nBy GARRY C. MYER8, PH. D.\nAbout a year ago, when my\nyoungest son was in junior high\nschool, he reported at lunch one\nday the discussion conducted in his\nhome room and assembly programs\nconcerning good citizenship during\nHallowe'en. This delighted me. It\nindicated that this school was attempting to lead its students to\nthink of right conduct in their respective neighborhoods\u2014that the\nschool generally has sadly neglected\nthanks to those philosophers of education who have said you teach citizenship only through situations\nright at school.\nIt seems to me that the finest\nthing the school could do would be\nto put strong emphasis on right conduct away from school. Scores of\nof students who are good citizens\nat school are pesis in their respective\nCROWING  DEAF  WITH\nHEAD   NOISES?\nTRY THIS\nIf you are growing hard of hearing\nand fear Catarrhal Deafness or if\nyou have roaring, rumbling, hissing\nnoises in your ears go lo your drug-\nis. and get 1 ounce of Parmint (double strength), and add to it Vi pint\nof hot water and a little granulated\njugar. Take 1 tablespoonful four\ntimes a day.\nThis will often bring quick relief\nfrom the distressing head noises.\nClogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucus\nstop dropping into the throat. It is\neasy to prepare, costs little and is\npleasant to take. Anyone who is\nthreatened with Catarrhal Deafness\nor who has head noises should give\nthis prescription a trial.        (Advt.)\nNEURITIS MADE\nIT IMPOSSIBLE\nTO RAISE ARMS\nVancouver   Resident   Found\nRelief With Harris'\nWondro\nHer neuritis was so severe ln Its\neffects that Mrs. King writes she\nwas unable to raise her arms. That\nwas before she took Harris' Wondro.\nHead in her grateful letter to Mr.\nHarris how she found relief and felt\nbetter in every way.\n\"Dear Sir:\u2014I suffered for several\nyears with neuritis, in fact so much\nthat I could not raise my arms. I\ntried many different treatments but\nnothing helped me and I got in a\nvery run-down condition. I began\ntaking Harris' Wondro about a year\nago and after taking six bottles' I\nwas completely recovered. It not\nonly rid me of the neuritis but 1\nfeel better in every way. I had no\nreturn of Neuritis whatever for\nwhich I am very thankful. It gives\nme great pleasure to recommend\nHarris' Wondro to other sufferers.\n\u2014Yours truly. Mrs. M. M. King,\n3841 St. Catherine Street, Vancouver,\nB.C. Phone Fairmont 3792R.\"\nWhat Harris' Wondro was able to\ndo for Mrs. King, it is able to do\nfor you, too, because Harris' Wondro supplies needed elements to\nevery part of the body, building up\nthe blood and system and strengthening the stomach and digestive\norgans. Order a treatment for yourself, today! a,\nHarris' Wondro is for sale at all\ndrug stores and is obtainable \u00bblso\nin boxed capsule form. A bottle of\nHarris' Laxico, a medicine for constipation, is included free with every\npurchase of Harris'Wondro. If your\ndruggist cannot supply you, order\ndirect from George Harris and Son,\nHerbalists, Calgary, Alta.     (Advt.)\nneighborhoods, some of them being vandals and thieves. Anyway\nthere probably is only one opportunity to do wrong at school to a hundred opportunities to do wrong outside of school. Powerful character\nbuilders are those teachers who\nlead their pupile to do right in\ntheir presence to want to do right\naway from them. The same applies\nto parents.\n8CHOOL  HAMPERED\nThe school has been hampered in\nits influence on conduct and character through the delusion that character building rests primarily on effective student organizations and\nactivities at school. These are making a contribution to be sure; but\nnot so much as most school leaders\nsuppose. Often they Have helped the\nschool administrators to feel satisfied with this work at training in\ncitizenship.\nAdded to this delusion is the one,\nall too prevalent, that ideals cannot\nbe taught, Fortunately some school\nadministrators and teachers are ridding themselves of this delusion and\nare setting out to lead their pupils to\nthink about and talk about all sorts\nof situations at home and outside of\nschool where they must constantly\nmake moral choices, and are constantly tempted to do what they\nknow is not right.\nEncouraging signs there are in\nthe development of guidance programs in which children from the\nkindergarten upward are led to\nthink and talk and write about\ntheir experiences outside of school,\nof how they might respect their\nparents, be a better brother or sister, better playmate; of how they\nmight learn to shoulder some of\nthe home responsibilities and make\ntheir homes happier; of how they\nmight respect the property rights\nand other rights of the neighborhood\u2014learning to want to be better citizens 'out of school.\nCauses . . .\nThe Doctor Tells\nthe Latest Ideas\non Common Colds\nBy l-OGAN CLENDENING, M. D.\nThe cold virus\u2014if a virus is the\ncause of the common cold\u2014enters\nthe body through the lining of the\nno.se. Why it enters at any particular time is a mystery, but according to the theory of Dr. Lloyd\nArnold, it occurs when the lining\nhas been chilled enough to cause\nan anemic condition. This theory\nmakes sense, inasmuch as it accounts both for the infection and\nthe influence which temperature\nhas on the origin of the common\ncold.\nCertain people are sensitive to\ncold; some people are resistant. In\ncold-resistant patients, nose temperature returns to normal in ten\nminutes. In susceptible persons it\nrequires from 30 minutes to two\nhours for the lining of the nose to\nreturn to normal temperature.\nThe treatment of chronic recur\nrent colds, as recommended by Dr.\nArnold, is a warm morning bath, fol\nlowed by a cold one, one hour's walk\nin the open air regardless of wea\nthor, and a low carbohydrate diet-\nall designed to change the heat\nsensitive person to heat-resistant or\nnormal.\nDUE TO NASAL\nINFECTION\nThe common form of a chronic\ncold, however, is probably, due to\nchronic infection of the nasal sinuses. In the course of time this\nproduces a chronic bronchitis from\npus dropping into the bronchial\ntree from the nose. These patients\nare very sensitive to change in temperature and drafts, and any draft\nproduces a flare-up of their acute\ninfection with all the symptoms of\na cold. They .say on these occasions that they have \"caught cold\".\nAs a matter of fact, they have simply lighted up an old chronic infec-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NEL80N, B.C.\u2014FRIDAY MORNING., OCT. z*. i\\nu\nJust a Line ...\nBoy Says He Loves\nGirl but He Fails lo\nTake Her Places\nBy  VIRGINIA  LEE\n\"Dear Virgina Lee: How would\nyou like to be a girl who has a\nlover who claims he loveS her and\nholds her in his thoughts, but never\ntakes  her  anywhere?\n\"True, he planned to see me last\nsummer and his plans failed because\nit was so illusive to me, but he\nknows where to find me if he really\ncares to. He knew then.\n\"Now, do you think it would be\nvery improper, Virginia Lee, if I\njust suggest, now that fhe autumn\nis so invigorating and the leaves\nare changing so, a trip up north\nwould be so grand; a steak cooked\nout in the open would be appetizing. And let that be only half of it,\nor a smaller part of it. His company\nwould be so comforting and inspiring.\n\"He has taken much fun from me\nand I hardly feel equal to what I\nwould like, but really the way he\nhas played me it is time it is settled. I wish he would ask me, but\nhe never does. What shall I do?\n\"PLAIN WEARY.\"\nWell, that is a somewhat ambiguous letter Weary. It looks very much\nto me that the young man says nice\nthings to you just because he knows\nyou'll swallow them and be flattered, but he doesn't mean them.\nI agree it is high time to call his\nbluff. Make the suggestion of the\ntrip to the autumn woods with the\nsteak, etc., and see if he accepts. If\nhe doesn't I certainly wouldn't\nwaste any more time with him. You\nwill know he is just one of those\nguys with a line, and devote yourself  to  more worthy members of\nthe strong sex.\n*   *   *\nOh, oh, I expected this:\n\"Dear Virginia Lee: I have just\nread Lonely Country. Blue Eyes'\nletter and I thought I would sit\nright down and write to you.\n\"I can't find a fellow who is decent and good looking. They are\nconceited and have Bad dispositions, or are fast, etc. Are there any\nthat can take a girl out for a good\ntime? By that I mean take in a show\nor a dance, and treat her decent?\n\"Do all the fellows nowadays\ndrink, smoke and act fast? I don't\ncare whether the fellow has a car\nor money as long as he is decent and\nrespectable. I'd like to find a fellow\nwho likes to spend an evening at\nhome listening to the radio and\nmaking\" candy instead of always\nwanting to go somewhere.\n\"WAITING FOR A GOOD MAN.\nToo bad you and the boy who\nwrote can't get together. I'd be will\ning to bet anything, though, that\nyou wouldn't suit each other. It i.\nodd how many people think the mv\nknown must be so much more at'\ntractive than what they have at\nhand. Of course, there arc plenty o\nnice boys.\nProtect Your Investment\nTJOME Owners anxious to protect\ntheir investment .gainst depreciation have an excellent opportunity to\nfinance repairs and improvements now;\nNever before was money so readily\navailable and on such favourable terms.\nIn cooperation with the Dominion\nGovernment's Home Improvement Plan,\nthis bank will furnish to home owners in\ngood credit standing the necessary funds\nfor such work ns:\nInstalling a New Heating System\nBuilding a Recreation Room\nModernizing Your Plumbing\nPutting in a New Bathroom\nRedecorating Your Living Room\nRe-Roofing or Re-Flooring\nRenewing Farm Buildings\nConsult our nearest Branch Manager,\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOF CANADA      \"\nW. R. GRUBBE\nManager Nelson Branch\nAll Dionnes Are\nHeavier, All but\nMarie Are Taller\nCALLANDER. Out., Oct. 28 (CP)\n\u2014Most of the Dionne quintuplets,\nthree years and five months old today, continued to gain in weight\nand height during the past month.\nWith the exception of Marie,\nsmallest of the quintet all registered increases in height. Marie remained 351\/4 inches tall while Emilie added one inch to her height; Cecile\nand Yvonne, % inch each, and Annette, Va inch. The latter four all\nmeasures 36'^ inches in height.\nAnnette and Yvonne each weighed 33 pounds, the former registering a loss of *Vj pound and the latter\na gain of V-i pound, Marie remained\nthe lightweight at 29Vi pounds while\nCecile gained \\k pound to scale 32M.\nand Emilie weighed V* pound more\nat 32.\nlion. Cure of the nasal infection\nwill, in most instances, relieve their\ntroubles.\nThese chronic nose and chronic\nbronchitis people are very numerous They deserve our sympathy,\nalthough they do not always get it,\nWe are inclined to believe that they\nare fuss-budgets and cranks about\ndrafts and weather changes. They\nare not even recognized as a distinct disease entity by the medical\nprofession. Doctors also are in\nclined to minimize their troubles and\nmake fun of them.\nStill another form of chronic colds\noccur in those people who have respiratory allergy. Some are sensitive to plant pollens, but these\nhave a seasonal type of respiratory\nallergy. Those who are sensitive\nlo foods and animal dander, an\nthe ones who are likely to have re\ncurrent attacks of what are often\ndiagnosed as colds all the year\nround. Treatment here consists in\nrecognizing the condition, discovering what animal or food is responsible for it, and protecting the\npatient from contact.\nSerial Story . . .\nDead Reckoning\nBy BRU&E HAMILTON\nCHAPTER IS\nand the worst.   Had he then over-\nEYSTON TEST RUN\nAT TERRIFIC CLIP\nBONNEVILLE SALT FLATS,\nUtah, Ocl. 28 (AP).-Capt, George\nT, E. Eyston drove his mighty\n\"Thunderbolt\" through a measured\nmile at a terrific clip today.\nDespite handicaps, his mechanical\npowerhouse flashed through a glaring dawn at 300.6 m.p.h,, exceeding\nSir Malcolm Campbell's speed over\nthe same course, in the same direction, when he established the present official mark in 1935.\nCampbell's mark for the first run\nwas 304.311 and for the return trip\n20.8013.\n100 DIE IN HUGE\nSYRIAN WATERFRONT\nDAMASCUS, Syria, Oct, 2B (CP-\nHavas)\u2014More than 100 persons were\nkilled today when a huge waterspout engulfed the village of Demu\nnortheast  of here.\nThe walcr in the wake of the spout\nattained a level of nearly 10 feet\nand severed highway communica-\ntiAs between Damascus and Bag-\nhadad\nOn the Sunday that Tim Kennedy\nhad fixed for poisoning his wife,\nand on the morning of which he had\nmade all his preparations except\nthose for the ultimate act, Dr.\nHarold Arkwright came to The\nWilderness to tea.\nNormally the Kennedys were regarded as being \"at home\" on\nSunday afternoons, though since\nEsther's accident the tradition by\nwhich their friends were encouraged to drop in without invitation\nhad lapsed somewhat. Tim had\nhoped to keep this particular afternoon free of visitors, as he did not\nwant to give Esther a chance of\nrevealing a state of mind inconsistent with reckless despair on the\nsame evening. He was annoyed to\nfind Harold, the last person he\nwished to see, turning up for tea,\nbut he was not at first seriously put\nout. So long as there was only one\nvisitor, he felt capable of keeping\nEsther under observation, noting\nher demeanor, and perhaps to a certain extent controlling it.\nBut it happened that Esther was\nin the worst possible mood for his\npurpose. It was not an extravagant gaiety, which might have been\npsychologically plausible as reaction after a desperate decision had\nbeen irrevocably made. It was something more disconcerting, a calmness and serene hopefulness such as\nshe had not shown for many months.\nOne might have supposed that\nher subconscious mind had divined his objective, had grasped\nthe role she was expected to play,\nand was determined not to play\nit. In one-half hour over the teacups she so undermined the defenses Tim had laid down that his\npurpose began to waver. She spoke\nof the coming Mediterranean holiday with an eager anticipation\n(which, he reflected bitterly, he\nhimself had helped to induce) and\na detailed reference to the itinerary\nand the opportunities for sight-seeing it afforded that were difficult\nto reconcile with an intention to\ncommit suicide within a few hours.\nIt was true that such strange\ncontradictions were not unknown.\nTim had read of many cases where\npeople .apparently in the best of\nspirits and full of their plans for\nthe future, had died by their own\nhands almost immediately after'\nwards. But the thing was a paradox, however often it happened in\nbona fide cases, and the tendency\nwas to create doubt. ... It was\nhowever, with the aim of insinu.\nating this idea in such a way that\ntlie outcome would appear credible\nthat Tim took Dr. Arkwright away\nfor a walk round the garden when\ntea was over.\nAfter they had talked of trivialities for a few minutes, he said\nabruptly:\n\"Esther's In great spirits this\nafternoon.\"\n\"She is indeed,\" Arwright agreed.\n\"It looks as if you've got her really\ninterested in this cruise.\"\n\"I know. . . . That's what de\nlights me so much. Do you know\nthat up to this afternoon I haven't\nbeen able to get her to work up\nthe slightest enthusiasm. I've shown\nher the steamship company's folders. I've taken her over the route\non the map, given her stuff to read\nabout the different places. And until today she hasn't shown a spark of\ninterest. It was as if she was just\nhumoring me and didn't really\nmean to go. ... I can't understand\nwhat's made her change about so\nsuddenly, but it's a safe bet I'm not\ncomplaining.\"\nDr. Arkwright nodded.\n\"Perhaps  she's   really   taking\nlurn for the better.    These things\ndo go in leaps; it's hardly ever\ngradual upper curve. . . .\"\nTim left it at that; he was not\ngoing to push his suggestion more\nexplicitly. He began to talk about\nhis roses; and it was only by degrees that he realized that Ark'\nwright was unusually silent and\nunresponsive. Presently the older\nman interrupted him.\n\"By the way, Tim,\" he said. \"I'm\nglad to have a chance of a word\nwith you. I really came over today\nwith that in mind.\"\nTim looked at him quickly.\n\"Oh, yes? . . . What was it you\nwanted to say?\"\n\"It's an idea that occurred to\nme, only last night. ... It may be\nfantastic, and you'll have to forgive me if I've got hold of the\nwrong end of the stick. . . . But I\nthink I ought to mention it, just\nto reassure you, in case there'f\nanything in it.\"\n\"Come on, Harold. This isn't like\nyou.\"\n\"Well\u2014we've had one or two\ntalks about Esther lately, and\nyou've taken a rather dismal view.\nWhat I want you to tell mo is this\n\u2014was there anything particular at\nthe back of you mind?\"\nThe question came so near home\nthat Tim almost lost countenance.\n\"At the back of my mind?\" he\nrepeated slowly. \"Anything par\nticular . . . upon my word, Har.\nold, I haven't an idea what you are\ndriving at.\"\n\"I see I must be more explicit\n. . . It's just this \u2014 looking back\non what you've said, the hints\nyou've given about her state of\nmind, a suggestion that you were\nseriously alarmed, your uneasiness\nwhen I prescribed medinal \u2014 it's\nonly now come to me what you\nmight really mean. Tell me, Tim\ndo you or have you ever entertained the idea that Esther might\ntry to do away with herself?\"\nFor Tim the question could not\nhave timed for a less propitious\nmoment. To create an atmosphere,\nlo lodge the germ of an idea\u2014\nthat was one thing. But to get\ndown to cases, and that at the\nvery eleventh hour, was the very\nlast thing he could have anticipated,\nRELIEVES\nFiery, Itching Skin\nHere is a surgeon's prescription\nnow dispensed by chemists at trifling cost.\nNot only does this great healing\nantiseptic oil promote rapid and\nhealthy healing in open sores and\nwounds but boils and simple ulcers\nare relieved and cleanly healed.\nIn skin diseases the itching of\nEczema is instantly stopped. Pimples\n\u2014skin eruptions dry up and scale\noff in a very' few days. The same\nis true of Barber's Itch, Salt Rheum\nand other inflammatory skin dis\norders.\nYou can obtain Moone's Emerald\nOil (full strength) in the original\nbottle at Mann, Rutherford Co. or\nany modern drug store. (Advt.)\nreached himself, been too bold in\npressing his suggestion? . . . The\nnature of the question gave him\nan excuse for hesitancy, and he\nsought desperately to steer away\nfrom danger.\nHow can I answer that? . . .\"\nHe felt his way. \"The idea oc-\ncured to mc. I won't deny it. . . .\nBut it was . more a vague apprehension than a concrete fear.\nPut it like this, Harold-iif I were\nin her place, the question would\narise in my own mind, whether it\nwas worth going on. ... I don't\nsay I'd choose suicide, but the issue would be a real one. And I've\nwondered if Esther's mind works\nthe same way. I don't pretend to\nhave an absolute understanding of\nher. I doubt if a man ever understands a woman completely, however close they are. . . .\"\nArkwright nodded his understanding. \"Have you never tried to\nfind out from her direct?\"\n\"Good heavens, no \u2014 God forbid\nthat I should put such a thought\ninto her head\"\n\"I see your point. But all the\nsame it's a pity you didn't. . . .\nYou're on the wrong track, Tim,\nand if only I'd realized before I\ncould have saved you a lot of\nanxiety. You can get this fear out\nof your head entirely. Esther has\nno suicidal tendency whatever. As\nan uncle of hers, I've known her\nsince she was a child, and I'm quite\npositive. . . . She's under the\nweather now, maybe, but she'll win\nout of it. I never knew anyone\nwith a stronger will to live. She'd\nnever have survived the early\nstages without it, Tim, you must\nsee that.\"\n\"Yes, I suppose so.\"\nTim felt suddenly tired, as 11\nall the power had been drained out\nof him.\n\"It was stupid of me to worry.\nI see now the idea's absurd.\"\nQuite hopeless now. He would\nnever dare to fly in the face of so\npositive an assertion. . . . They\nstrolled back to Esther, who greeted them gaily.\n\"Well, Uncle Harold, haj Tim\ntold you the secret?\"\n\"What secret?\"\n\"I don't know. You must ask\nTim.\"\n\"What's all thl\u00ab about a secret?\"\nTim inquired.\n'That's what I'd like to know.\nCome on, Tim, tell UJ.\"\n\"Tell us what?\"\n\"Why you've been so mysterious\ntoday.\"\n\"But I haven't been mysterious.\"\n\"Oh. yes you have. Item one.\"\nShe checked off the points on her\nfingers. \"You spent the whole of\nthis heavenly morning scribbling\naway in the library, Item two\u2014\nyou suddenly dashed away from\nthe table at lunch, in the middle\nof your soup. No proper explanation offered. Item three \u2014 mysterious disappearance immediately\nafter lunch. No explanation at\nall. Item four\u2014you seize Uncle\nHarold, before he'd had time to\ndigest his tea, and whisk him off\nas ii we were in a bad play, and\nI had to be left alone lor my big\nscene. . . . Honestly, Uncle Harold, didn't he come across?\"\nArkwright shook his head,\n\"Not a single word.\"\n\"Then what do you think lt Is?\"\n\"I don't know. Something sinister, I expect\"\n\"I know\u2014he's writing a hook.\nA detective story. . . . Are you\nwriting a detective story, Tim?\"\nTim smiled blandly, and tried to\nlook mysterious.\n\"Ah\" he said.\nYes, quite hopeless now. ... Two\nhours later, as he tore up the letter\ninto tiny fragments, and pulled the\nwater-closet plug' upon them, he\nreflected bitterly that Esther had\nearned her reprieve. ... Or rather\npostponement; for there was to be\nno commutation of the sentence.\nHis mind was already busy again.\n(To Be Continued)\n\"Myth\", Says Douglas\nof Press Freedom\nLONDON, Oct. 2. (CP). - Major\nClifford Douglas, head oi the Social\nCredit movement, declared today\nthe \"freedom of the press is a myth.\"\nSpeaking to the Aldwych club\non \"why bother about iinance?\"\nMajor Douglas said \"the press of\nthe world, with a few notable exceptions, is not iree to discuss this\nquestion except from the side of\nthose who profit by iinance.\"\nHe said that probably 75 per cent\nof property in England was directly\nor indircetly controlled by banks or\nlarge insurance companies, and that\nall International problems facing\nthe world could be traced to the\nfinancial system.\nWINCH WOULD EXTEND SILICOSIS\nBENEFITS OUTSIDE METAL FIELDS\nAUTO MAINTENANCE\nTRADES UNDER B. C.\nAPPRENTICESHIP ACT\nVICTORIA, Oct 28 (CP) \u2014 The\ntrades of automobile maintenance\nIncluding painting, trimming and\nradiator work, and bollermakeri\nand pattern makers were brought\nunder the provincial apprenticeship act by government order today.\nTHROAT CUT\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP)- Police today ordered inquiry into the\ndeath oi Phillip Desilet, whose body\nwas found in an east end cabin\nwith the throat cut and a razor lying nearby yesterday.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Dr. J.\nLyle Teliord, (CCF-Vancouver east)\ntoday entered notice of motion asking a return be filed of all correspondence, all tenders submitted, and\nall contracts in connection with supplying bridges and timbers used or\non hand to be used for the construction of the Pacific Great Eastern\nrailway.\nA motion standing In the name\nof Ernest E. Winch, <CCF| Burnaby) asks that benefits from compensation  for silicosis  be made\navailable to workers In any and\nall   Industries   Instead   of   being\npaid to those In the metalliferous\nmining Industry as at present\nIt says the Workmen's Compensation board has power to extend the\nscope of these benefits to workmen\nln any industry In which they are\nliable to become afflicted with sBi\\\ncosis.\nGET THI BUT\ndSej4ttetbaUuf\nDEWAR S\nSf)a>afJ]s}uatt\nJOHN DIWAR a. \u00bbOHl LTD.,\nrhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\nWr**\"**\"*'^**6-\n\u2022i\nsays TOM LANG\n'rT.H_.EE years ago I was getting only\nJ_ two months' work a year. Kept toy\nmissus scratching to get us enough to\neat and a few clothes for the kiddies.\nBut now that I'm working steady our\ntroubles ate over. And the way I figure it we're helping a lot of you\nother boys around here, too. Jack Mills\nworks in a shoe factory and we've\nbought new shoes for the whole family in the last two months. Bill Thomas\nis a cutter; Henry Jameson works in a\ntextile plant \u2014 and we've been able\nto buy some badly-needed new clothes.\nWe've done a bit of painting \u2014 Dick\nMorris works in a paint factory. We've\nbought some new furniture for the\nboys' room and it was made by the\npeople Sid McRae works for.\n\"No wonder you fellows have steady\njobs, too, because there are 33,000\nothers at work in the same industry\nas myself and we are all spending\nmoney on the things you other men\nmake.\n\"Or look at it the other way. I work\nin an automobile plant and nine men\non this street have bought new cars this\nyear. That's why I'm making steady\nmoney and it has a whole lot to do\nwith why you are, too!\"\nTom ttmg I' right, but he might have carried hit conversation a step further, Canada's\nbusy factories arc buying millions of dollars\nworth of rate materials and machinery each\nyear and that means a steady demand for\nthe products of Canada's farms, forests, factories and mines.\nHealthy, growing industries are vital to the\nwelfare of Canada; a personal benefit lo\nevery Canadian.\nThere ire 18,000 workers la Canada's automobile plant., tad\n11,000 employed in the 20. parts\nmanufacturers' planta. An aver-\n\u25a0ge of four to a family means\nover 130,000 people whole pros-\nperity depends in whole or in\npart on the activities of the\nmotor car builders. Add u\nwell, the employees of railway,\nwho live by traffic and you have\na huge cross-section of Eastern\nCanada \u2014 a Kroup of people\nwho contributed much of tho\nJtfl.Ooll.oon spent last year for\nWestern fsrm products. There- .\nfore, all Canada, West as well\"\nas -est, is vitally interested in\na sound and well.supported\nCanadian Automobile Industry,\nFor statistical anal further In-\ntarnation about thit industry,\nwrite to Automotive lads\/sir let, 1006 rMmA49\nBuilding, Toronto,\nAUTOMOT\nDUSTRIES\n_a_M\n ^^\"^^^^W\u00abl>^^\u00abWP*^ipPPfP!\u00ab?f<\nWWPWaVjflWtapWpWW^\n|Hl3l\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON, B.C.\u2014FRIDAY MORNING. OCT. 2.. 1937.\nWauchope, Colorful British Army\nFighterand Administrator of Old\nSchool, Resigns Palestine Job\nCLEAN FALSE TEETH-\nGET RID OF STAINS\nNew Eniy Way\u2014No Brushing\nStert-Kleen. amazing new d.icovery, re-\nmovci blackest stains, tarnish, tartar Itke\nmagic. Just put false teeth or bridges In a\nglass of water and add Stera-Kleen powder.\nNo messy brushing. Recommended by den-\ntUts\u2014approved by Good Housekeeping. At\nall druggliU. Money back If not delighted.\n(Advt.;\n$> LONDON, Oct. 28 (CF-Havas)-\nSir Arthur Wauchope, high commissioner for Palestine, resigned\ntoday for reasons of health.\n, Ailing for some time, Sir Arthur\nonly a few days ago left a nursing\nhome.\nHe commanded a Highland brigade in the South African war and\nwhere his uncle, the famous General \"Andy\" Wauchope, was killed,\nDuring the great war he commanded the Second Battalion of the Black\nWatch, first in France, where he\nPHILCO\n...the \"BUY-WORD\"\nin NELSON\nPHILCO C7XX* DoinejticancJForf iBti\nReception. Philco Cone-Centric Auto*\nmstic Tuning. Inclined Control Panel.\nPhilco Inclined Sounding Board. Concert Grand Electro-Dynamic Speaker.\n3-PointTone Control. Automatic\nVolume Control, 2 Tuning U.-uutcs.\nGorgeoui Walnut Cabinet. $149,50\nAn\namazing new\nkind of\nRadio \/\nAUTOMATIC TUNING\nPHILCO\n,   with\nINCLINED CONTROL PANEL\nYes, Philco is the \"buy-word\" here as it is everywhere I\nAnd no wonder! With Philco Automatic Tuning on the\nInclined Control Panel, there's no delay when you want\na station. One glance shows the call letters of all your\nfavourite stations... a flick of the finger brings them in\n. . , tuned easily, gracefully, instantly . .. and with\nabsolute precision!\nFiner reception, tremendous power, superb tone, matchless cabinetry! Ask your dealer to demonstrate this\namazing new kind of radio... the 1938 Philco Double-X\n... available in a choice of five new models!\nEASY TERMS . . . LIBERAL TRADE-IN\nALLOWANCE\nPHILCO C10K' Domestic nnd\nForeign Reception. Oversize\nElectro-Dynamic Speaker. Pentode Audio System. Philco\nForeign Tuning System with\nColour Dial. Automatic Volume\nControl. 2 Tuning Ranges.\nBeautiful Walnut Cabinet\n$\n105\n.50\n\u2022 For best results, insist on a Phitett\nHigh-Efficiency Aerial to insure\ngreatest foreign reception.\nWHOLESALE   DISTRIBUTORS\nMACKENZIE, WHITE &\nDUNSMUIR, LIMITED\nVANCOUVER       VICTORIA       NANAIMO       NELSON\nNEW   WESTMINSTER       PENTICTON       VERNON\nPHILCO\nradio wu couplr *lib\nthe CtnidiiD Electrical\nCode ind tit lictoicd by\nPHILCO RADIOS SOLD IN NELSON BY\nMcKay & Stretton\nPHONE 544    MEDICAL ARTS BLOC.    NELSON, B. C.\nwas twice wounded, and later in\nMesopotamia.\nIn 1924 he was sent to Berlin as\nhead of the British section of the\nintec-Alliad military control commission. To his troops he was always known as \"Walk-up\" Wauchope.\nHe has been held to be a most\nefficient administrator, with a keen\nsense of humor on occasion, and is\nknown to have contributed to both\nArab and Jewish causes out of his\nown pocket.\nSir Arthur Wauchope, who has\nborne the brunt of Palestine's disorders over the past few years, feared neither Arab nor Jew. He is a\nwiry, 63-year-old Scot, and since\n1931 has administered the mandate\nover Palestine which Great Britain\nholds -from the League of Nations,\nendeavoring all the time to bring\nabout a lasting peace between the\nJew and the Arabs.\nTestimony to his efficiency, in the\neyes of the British government, is\nfound in the extension last year of\nhis term of office for a second five\nyears.\nNo whisper of blame has been attached to his name over the recent\nrioting. He has been regarded rather\nas the strong man of the troubled\ndays.\n28,140 Die in\nU. S. Traffic in\nNine Months\nCHICAGO, Oct. 28 (AP).\u2014The\nnational council reported today\n28,140 persons died In United\nStater, traffic accidents during the\nfirst nine months of 1937, a nine\nper cent increase over the total\nfor the same period last year.\nAged Resident\nNelson Passes\nGeorge C. Williams, a resident of\nNelson for many years, died Thursday morning in Kootenay Lake General hospital after a lengthy illness.\nHe was 84 years of age. For some\ntime he had lived alone in a small\nhouse in Fairview. He was born in\nEngland in 1853.\nSurviving him are a brother in\nAustralia, a brother and a sister in\nLondon, two sisters in Victoria and a\nson, A. G. Williams, in Victoria.\n\u25a0 PAGE ELEVEN\n(rone for War on Auto (rashes;\nForced Insurance; Drivers' Tests\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP),\u2014Fred\nCrone, Liberal member for Vancouver centre, today called upon the\nBritish Columbia legislature to give\nserious consideration to the question of compulsory insurance for\nautomobiles or \"ultimate ownership\nliability.\"\nMr. Crone, moving the address in\nreply to the speech from the throne,\npointed to the rising number of traffic accidents and resulting fatalities\nand said:\n\"Authorities everywhere are waking up to the fact that probably the\nworst hazard we have in traffic today is the man behind the wheel.\"\nHe had \"no hesitation\" in saying the number of careless drivers would be reduced by 10 per\ncent if hazards could be corrected\nby mental, physical and practical\ntest of drivers and mechanical\ntest of automobiles,\nFrom January to September this\nyear 3434 accidents were reported,\nan increase of 752 or 28 per cent over\nthe same'period last year. Injuries\ntotalled 1830, an increase of 105 or\n11.9 per cent and deaths numbered\n90, an increase of 29 or 47.5 per\ncent.\nProperty damage amounted to\n$317,615 an increase of $90,797, or 40\nper cent.\nOn the other hand motor vehicle\nlicences had increased from 98,797\nto 108,660 or only 10 per cent.\nReferring to compulsory insurance for automobiles. Mr. Crone\nsaid the province had to \"wake up\nto the fact that we have passed the\ntime when we should be sympathetic because of isolated cases that\ncannot stand insurance, or that cannot pass physical or mechanical examinations.\"\nAID FOR CITIES\nFurther aid was urgently needed\nfor municipalities.\nMr. Crone believed he spoke for\nall municipalities when he said they\nwere not particular whether the\ngovernment restored their grants or\nwhether it assumed a larger share\nof hospitalization  and educational\ncosts.\nThe new Liberal member did not\nbelieve one citizen would object it\nthe government levied for additional revenue if that revenue were\nused for the express purpose of helping municipalities.\nTlie past year the Vancouver\nmember said, had seen the greatest number of traffic accidents\nand the greatest number of fatalities in any year since motor vehicles had been in operation. The\npercentage of increase in accidents\nwas out of proportion to the increase in cars, and Mr. Crone also\npointed out that most of the serious and fatal accidents had happened on highways where there\nwas no particular traffic hazards.\nTurning to compulsory insurance\nfor motor cars, Mr. Crone said the\nmembers would be amazed if they\nrealized the number of fatalities\nthat take place where dependents\nare left helpless and homeless due\nto the fact that neither party concerned in the accident carried any\ninsurance.\nSpeed limits with villages, towns\nand cities should be established for\nthe protection of all concerned, the\nVancouver member said.\nThe government should concentrate on better roads for the next\nfour years. Mr. Crone was glad to\nsee that the minister of public works\nhad undertaken a program that was\nintended to produce a surfaced road\nfrom one end of the province to\nthe other and from the United\nStates border to Alaska.\nFLOOD BOOMS\nLAUNDRY WORK\nFiELDALE, Va., Oct. 28 (API-\nFlood waters on the Smith river\nhere boomed the laundry business\nin nearby cities. Three million towels in a cotton mill bleachery\nneeded washing after the muddy\nwaters receded.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN  BROADCA3TING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n5:00 Cariboo Gold Miner; 5:15\nRecital, from Montreal; 5:30 Pictures in Music, from Halifax; 6:00\nBackstage, Woodhouse and Hawkins, orch. dir. Isaac Mamott, Winnipeg; 6:30 Night Shift, Anfus School\nof Commerce, described by R. T.\nBowman, Winnipeg; Hunting with\nBow and Arrow; 7:30 Our Game\nSupply; 1:45 News and the weather,\nfrom Toronto; 8:00 By the Sea,\ndirector, Percy Havey, Vancouver;\n8:30 Hawaiian Nights, Winnipeg;\n9:00 Interlude, Regina; 9:30 String\nQuartet; 10:00 News and Weather,\nVancouver; 10:15 Sindy de Santi's\nOrchestra, Vancouver; 10:45 1 Cover\nthe Waterfront, Pat Terry, raconteur.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW   KFI   KPO  KOMO\n590 620 640 680 9.0\n5:15 Army Band concert; 5:30\nPaul Martin and orch.; 6:00 Johnny\nO'Brien Harmonicas; 6:15 Sper's\nFootball Forecast; 6:30 Josef Hor-\nnik and his orchestra; 7:00 First\nNighter, drama; 7:30 Jimmie Fiddler, gossip; 7:45 Dorothy Thompson, People in the New:;; 8:00 A mus\n'n' Andy, blackface corredians; 8:15\nUncle Ezra's Radio station E-Z-H-A;\n8:30 Court of Human Relations,\ndrama; 9:00 Terry Franconi, tenor;\n9:05 Trump Davidson or.; 9:15 Book\nParade KPO; 9:30 Reggie Child's\norch.; 10:00 News Flashes; 10:15\nSports-Graphic. Ira Blue; 10:30 L\u00bbon\nMojica and his Orchestra; 11:00\nJoe Reichman's orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR XEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Stringwood ensemble; 5:30\nEddie Swartout and his music; 6:00\nVarsity show; 6:45 Norman Sper,\nfootball; Tommy Dorsey's orch.;\n7:30 Detective series; Mr. Fortune;\n8:00 Land of Whatsit, dr. KGO; Vagabonds, Negro male quartet; 8:15\nLum and Abner, comedy; 8:30 Today's news; 8:45 Eddie Varzo's orch.;\n9:00 Henry Busses orch,; 9:15 Wonders of Earth and Sky; 10:00 Frank\nCastle's orch.; Master Singers; 10:30\nJimmy Grier's orch.; 11:00 Charles\nRunyan, organist.\nPHILCO RADIOS SOLD IN TRAIL BY\nKline Brothers\nPHONE 533 BAY AVENUE TRAIL, B. C.\nBUY ONLY THE BEST IN RADIO!\nSEE OUR COMPLETE STOCK OF PHILCOS\nRossland Coop, Society\nPHONE 52       COLUMBIA AVE.       ROSSLAND, fi. C.\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\nKVI KOIN KNX ISL KOL\n670 ' 940 1050 1130 1270\n5:00 Hammerstein's Music Hall;\n5:45 Judy and her Jesters, harmony; 6:00 Hollywood Hotel, music, dr.; 7:00 The Song Shop; 8:00\nPoetic Melodies KSL; Scattergood\nBaines, drama (Pacific); 8:15 Boake\nCarter, news comments; 8:30 Alice\nFaye with Hal Kemp's orch.; 9:00\nGuy Lombardo's orch.; 9:30 Ted Fio-\nRito's orch.; 9:45 Orrin Tucker's\norch.; 10:15 Listener's Digest; 10:45\nClyde McCoy's orch.; 11:00 Pasadena Civic Auditorium; 11:30 Tommy Tucker's orch,\nMUTUAL DON LEE NETWORK\nKOL, Seattle, 1270 k, 236.1 m, 5000 w\n5:00 The Charioteers; 5:15 Wash.\nResearch Bldg.; 5:30 Dick Stabile's\norch.; 5:45 Theatrical Revue; 6:00\nNews Flashes; 6:15 Phantom Pilot;\n6:30 Frank Bull, sports; 6:45 Friday\nEvening concert; 7:15 The Tune-\nsmiths: 7:30 Lone Ranscr. dr.; 8:00\nOrgan Recital; 8:15 Mickey Alpert's\norch.; 8:30 Songs of the Islands;\n8:45 Fancy's Fabric; 9:00 Newspaper of the Air; 9:15 George 01-\nsen's orch,; 9:45 Vincent Lopez'\norch.; 10:00 Along the Waterfront;\n10:15 Dick Stabile's orch.; 10:30\nLarry Kent's orch.; 11:00 Halibut\nfishing news; 11:05 Jommy Lunce-\nford's orch,; 11:30 Frank Sortino's\norch.; 11:45 Midnite Matinee.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 w\n5:15 Uncle Mickey's Club; 6:15\nNews; 6:45 Sport Resume; 7:00\nStocks; Real Life Drama; 7:05 Whispering Jack Smith; 7:30 Skipper\nScans the News; 8:00 Sid Mullet!;\n8:15 Jimmy Dick, tenor; 8:30 Welfare Federation; 10:30 News.\nBlackmailer, Says Court ol Woman\nWho Sued (lark Gable, but Frees\nHer of Penally lor Fraud by Mail\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28 (AP)-\nThe United States circuit court of\nappeals today reversed the conviction of Violet Wells Norton for\nmail fraud in connection with a\nletter she sent Clark Gable, screen\nactor.\nMrs. Norton, an English woman\nand one-time'resident of Winnipeg,\nwas convicted April 23, 1937, on the\nbasis of a letter the nrosecution\ncharged she mailed Gabfe March 7.\n1936 naming him as the father of\nher daughter Gwendoline.\nIn the letter, Mrs. Norton stated\nshe had illicit relations with the\nactor in England in September,\n1922, and Gwendoline was born the\nnext June.\nThe court held the letter did not\ncome within the statue concerning\nmail fraud, but it was a \"scheme\nto coerce or extort and is a specie\nof blackmail.\"\nNon-Tidal Fish Hatcheries Are\nHanded Over lo Province Hands\nUnder an order-in-council at Ottawa of recent date, federal non-\ntidal fish hatcheries in British Columbia, for the propagation of sport\nfish, have been turned over to the\nattorney-general's department on behalf of the province, according to\nreports in Vancouver newspapers.\nHon. Gordon S. Wismer, attorney-\ngeneral, Is reported to be making\npreparations to extend control by\nthe officers of his department to\ncover these operations.\nThe hatcheries as enumerated in\ncoast reports embrace those \"located at Cultus lake, Kootenay lake,\nKamloops, Penask lake. Summer-\nland, Fish lake and Beaver lake.\"\nThis would seem to embrace the\nexisting open air plant at Argenta,\non Kootenay lake; but it is believed\nit covers also all unused hatchery\nequipment, such as that at Nelson\nnow in storage.\nNo word has been received by\nthe hatchery staff at Nelson as to\nfuture movements,\nTWO COLLECTIONS *\nMISSED .\nAs the Nelson hatchery was a\nyear-round institution operating on\nimported Kamloops trout eggs, local eggs from the smaller Kamloops\ntrout of Cottonwood and Six-Mile '\nlakes, kokanee or redfish eggs col-1\nlected from Kokanee and other j\ncreek mouths, and eastern brook\ntrout eggr collected at Violin lake,\nit was seldom that its troughs were\nentirely empty,\nNormally the hatchery staff would\nnow be collecting the eastern brook\ntrout eggs; in fact the spawning\nwould now be at or past its peak.\nThis is the second collection missed tn the short time the hatchery\nhas been in storage\u2014since September 1\u2014as the redfish collection at\nfirst authorized was cancelled, It\nwould have involved setting un the\nequipment in the basement of the\nDill building.\nA complete new hatchery at Nelson, in its own building on Cottonwood creek, is the hope of the various local organizations that have\nbeen asking the authorities for action as soon as policies are determined.\nCOULD HARDLY\nCLOSE HANDS\nHad Rheumatism and Neuritis\nBi\n\"I Buffered severely\nfrom Rheumatism ami\nNeurHii,\" write\u00ab Mr.\nW. J. Trtcy ol Toronto.\n\"I could' hardly walk\nupstairs or close my\nhands. After taking Fruitatircs four days\nthe swelling left my hands and knees. I\ncould climb stairs and ladder. 1 advise any\nperson suffering u I did to take Fruit-a-\ntires. They give quick relief.\" Try this\nreal fruit juice, herb and Ionic prescription\nof a famous Canadian doctor, lf you suffer,\nIhey might clear up your case too. 25c.\nand 50c.   No substitute.  At druggists.\nFRUIT ATIVES.K.\n{CAUSE knitted products bearing the\nPenmans label aid tn promoting the\nenjoyment of comfort and good health,\nmothers find Penmans \"95\" and \u2666'it\"\nUnderwear a contribution to the well'\nbeing of active children.\n910 k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail 1000 \u00bb\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7.15 Musical Clock; 8:00 Request program;\n8:30 Nelson Bulletin Board; 9:30 Old\nTimer; 10:15 Whafs New?; 10:30\nRadio Chef; 11:00 Backstage Wife,\nE.T.; 11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:39\nNews; 12:15 Spokane Welcomes;\n12:45 Colville Rangers; 1:05 Concert\nTime; 2:00 Woman's Magazine; 2:30\nSee CBC network except: 4:00 Club\nmatinee; 4:15 Cecil and Sally; 4:30\nTimes presents; 5:00 Theatre News;\n5:15 Talking drums; 5:45 Barnacle\nBill; 6:45 Hollywood Spotlight; 7:00\nThe Buccaneers, E.T.; 8:00 King's\nmen; 8:45 Home Folks Frolic.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10.000 *\n5:30 The Buccaneers; 6:30 Red\nHead Family; 8:00 College Daze;\n9:00 News Flashes; 9:30 Peacock\nCourt; 9:45 Garden of Melody.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSD 11.75 mci. (25.53 m.)\nGSC 9.58 mcs. (31.32 m.)\nGSB 9.51 mcs. (31.53 m.)\n9:20'a.m.\u2014Bernard Crook quintet.\n10:00\u2014Big Ben. News and announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nTokyo 4:45 p.m.\u2014A talk on current  topics   (with  English  translation). JZK, 19.7 m., 15.16 mc; JZJ,\n25.4 m\u201e 11.80 mc.\nRome 3\u2014Rosila Jemma Wade:\n\"Just speaking on\"; Concert. 2RO,\n25.4 m, 11.80 mc.\nBerlin 3\u2014His Majesty's Inspection, radio play. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77\nmc.\nLondon 4:05\u2014\"Books about China\nand Japan,\" a talk by Sir Frederick\nWhyte. GSP, 19.6 m\u201e 15.31 mc; GSD\n25.5 m.,  11.75 mc;  GSB, 31.5 m\u201e\n9.51 mc.\nBoston 5:15\u2014Musical period. WI-\nXAL, 49.6 m. 6.04 mc\nBerlin 5:45\u2014Interview of the\nmonth. DJD, 25.4 m\u201e 11.77 mc\nCaracas 6:00\u2014Dance music. YV-\n5RC, 51.7 m\u201e 5.8 mc.\nLondon 6:40 \u2014 \"The Noble Art,\"\nechoes from the old-time prize\nfights and from the modern boxing\nring. GSG, 25.5 m\u201e 11.75 mc; GSC.\n31.3 m., 9.58 mc; GSB, 31.5 m., 9.51\nmc.\nPittsburgh 8:30-DX club. W8XK.\n48.8 m\u201e 6.14 mc.\nTokyo D:45\u00bbA talk on current\nproblems. JZK. 19.7 m.. 15.16 mc.\n<jh& fe^miA M&t&y\nThe Final 2 Days of Our\nFALL appliance SALE\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\u2014OCTOBER 29 AND 30, WE ARE GIVING\nFREE\nOne Year's\nSupply of\nSOAP\nWITH THE PURCHASE OF A NEW BEATTY APPLIANCE\nTHIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO\nEnd Household Drudgery\nAT LOWEST COST POSSIBLE\nAsk Us About Canada's\nLowest Priced Standard\nWasher, the Model G\n$70-95\n321 BAKER ST.\nNELSON FACTORY BRANCH\nTELEPHONE 91\n \u25a0      \u2022\"\u25a0-' J^vyTpr-1.*-'- \u25a0;..\u25a0\"\"\u2022 -wwiww\nfwmmmwtv-ymi'----'v\nINTELLECTUAL UNITY OBJECT NEW\nCURRICULUM DR. KING DECLARES\nAT TRAIL; CONTINUOUS CHANGES\nLost Youngster at\nRossland Finds His\nWay Radio Station\nROSSLAND ,B. C, Oct. 28-Ross\nland district was thrown into a\nfrenzy of searching parents, boys\nand citizens Wednesday afternoon\nwhen three-year-old son of Gordon\nSladen was found to have wandered\naway from home about 11 o'clock\nin the morning.\nIt was at first feared the youngster had been hurt in wandering\nthrough dense brush about his home\nbut an intensive search failed to find\nihe child. Finally a message came\nfrom radio station CJAT that a\nyoungster had wandered there. It\nwas the boy.\nConsolidation Is\nVoted by Majority\nCanyon Taxpayers\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 By an almost\nunanimous vote Canyon school section ratepayers spoke in favor ol\njoining forces with the eight other\nvalley school districts in the crea-\nlion of a consolidated high school\nat Creston.\n,The meeting was held at Canyon school Monday evening, and\nthe vote was 38 in favor to three\nopposed. There was an attendance\nnf 82, of which 32 were ladies. The\nchairman of the gathering was W.\nH. Kolthammer.\nJ. E. Van Ackeren, secretary of\nthe Canyon school trustees, opened proceedings, outlining the purpose of the gatherings, and was\n'followed by A. Spencer of Wynndel, James Cook of Creston and Mr.\nVan Ackeren, the three constituting the special committee appointed to prepare and present the case\nfor consolidation.\nMr. Spencer oonfined his re\nmarks to placing before the meeting the estimated cost of financing\nthe nine district- under consolidation, the expense including the\nerection of a six-room addition to\nthe present high school at Creston, to provide accommodation for\na prospective opening day attendance of around 400 embracing\nGrades 7 to  12 inclusive.\nJames Cook gave a concise but\npractical talk on the advantages of\nthe new high school, particularly\nfor children from rural sections\nwhere high school facilities were\nnot up to standard to be expected\nfrom the proposed new school at\nCreston. Mr. Van Ackeren spoke on\nthe bus and transportation feature,\nexpressing a firm conviction that\nif the school was introduced great\nimprovement in existing highways\nmust inevitably follow.\nMORE ABOUT\nShanghai City\n(Continued From Pag\u00bb One)\nHungjao airdrome, about three\nmiles southwest of Shanghai, was\none of the principal objectives.\nREFUSE SAFETY\nIn devastated Chapei an intrepid\nChinese battalion continued its fight\nlo the death against encircling Japanese forces, rejecting an Anglo-\nAmerican offer of asylum within the\ninternational settlement. British\nand American commanders had\nhoped thus to remove danger ot\nstray bullets and shells flying into\nthe international settlement when\nIhe Japanese made their threatened\nattack to wipe out the battalion.\nMajor General A. P. D. Telter-\nSmollett, British commander, was\nunder fire yesterday when two Japanese tanks sprayer, a bridge across\nSoochow creek with machine-gun\nbullets. The general was standing\nwith a group of British officials\nand American movie cameramen at\nihe southern end of the bridge when\nlhe tanks moved to positions at the\nnorth end and opened fire without\nwarning.\nIn north China the Japanese reported continued progress along the\nrailway entering Shansi province\nfrom Hopeh province and were said\nto be within 65 miles of Taiyuanfu,\nShRnsi capital.\nSeek to Provide More\nThan Something\nto Learn\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 28-Intellectual\nunity throughout the schools was\nthe main object of curriculum\nchanges. Dr. H. B. King, technical\nadviser to the provincial minister\nof education, stated when he spoke\non the practical and social implications of the new curriculum in\nKnox United church tonight.\nPurpose of the new system was\nto achieve at least thiee objectives\nof education: exploration, guidance\nand provision for individual differences.\"\n\"A school system that does not\nprovide for individual differences\nwill fail in regard 'to the greater number,\" he said. \"The old\ncurriculum met the needs of some\npeople but not the great majority\nand certainly not the great number\nattending secondary schools.\"\nThe function of exploration was\nto find out what a student could\ndo, what he was fitted for and what\nhe liked to do.\n\"Many do not see the necessity of\nthe expense of putting libraries in\nschools,\" Dr, King said, \"but surely\nof all places, is not the fitting place\nfor a library a school?\"\nBy learning the proper use of the\nlibrary the student learned to acquire knowledge for himself, and\ninstead of having one text book on\na subject he learned to obtain different authors' views on it.\nCONTINUOUS PR0CES8\nChanges in the curriculum were a\ncontinuous process. Changes in the\npast were made in different grades\nhaphazardly, but new changes were\nbeing made with the idea of maintaining intellectual unity. The new\ncurriculum provided more than\nsomething to learn. The individual\nmust be thought of to obtain growth\nof personality, and the social aspect\nto prepare a student lor a place ln\nsociety in the future. The world was\nfull of propaganda and the young\nmust learn to deal with it with critical intelligence.\nUnder the old system a student\nwho was backward in Grade IX,\nwas considered inferior and it was\nthought that the school was better\nwithout them.\" Naturally some took\nan inferior attitude\", Dr. King explained, but- in many cases these\nwere the type that later on in life\nemploy the  superior\" student.\nTRIBUTE TEACHERS\nDr. King spoke highly of teachers\nin the province, who were sacrificing much to Improve themselves by\nattending summer schools and buying books, not because they felt\nthey had to, but because they felt\na keen sense of duty.\n\"If the cities cooperate with the\neducational board of the province,\nwe may realize the objectives so important in the individual lives of the\nyoung people and so important for\nthe same and efficient operation of\na democratic organization later in\ntheir lives,\" he concluded.\nA. B. Thompson was chairman.\nThe Orpheus quartet and instrumental trio consisting of Mrs. C. H.\nWright, Theo Padberg and Otto Nei-\ndermann provided splendid entertainment.\nPHOTOSTAT COPY\nOF B. N. A. ACT IS\nIN THE ARCHIVES\nOTTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP)--If anyone wants to see a certified copy of\ntbe British North America act, Canada's constitution, he can find it on\n..1 loose photostat sheets at the public archives here.\nThe act was copied in the house\nof Lords at London at the request\nnf Dr. J. F, Kenney, acting Dominion archivist, after Alberta's premier Aberhart said in a speech at\nEdmonton Sept. 6; \"Nowhere can\nthere he found tlie original copy of\nthe British North America act\u2014\nCanada's constitution.\"\nNEURITIS\nOn-  tliiiiK th_U helpt It to .\nwirtn a dUh, pour in Min-\n\u25a0rd'i. Then nib lhe linim\nPain mmi off I\nMORE ABOUT *\nLloyd George\n(Continued From Page One)\ned by great nations on a weak people.\" It operated to favor the Insurgents, he said. If all volunteer.;\nin Spain were withdrawn tomorrow, non-intervention which had\nprevented aid from reaching the\nSpanish government would have accorded superiority to the insurgents\nwhich might make the difference\nbetween victory and defeat, Lloyd\nGeorge, said.\nHe predicted a decisive battle\nwas probably approaching In Spain\nand said it \"may decide the fate\nof Spain; it may decide the fate of\nEurope; It may decide the Issue\nwhether Europe Is going to be\ncontrolled by Democracy or dictatorships.\"\n\"If democracy is beaten in this\nbattle,\" he said, \"or, if Fascism is\ntriumphant in this battle His Majesty's government can claim that\nvictory for themselves.\n\"If the objects of non-intervention were to place Great Britain and\nFrance at a great disadvantage in\nany future war that may take place\nthe committee has been a triumph.\"\nFASCIST THREAT\n\"And we are going to prolong\nthe life of the committee that\nmakes this possible,\" he shouted\nas he declared submarine bases,\nairdromes and heavy guns of the\nFascist powers threatened empire\nand French shipping In the Mediterranean.\nMussolini's ambttions went beyond\na desire to assure an insurgent victory in Spain, Lloyd George said.\n\"You have got to consider what\nhe is doing in pouring his troops\ninto Libya, in conquering Abyssinia, in interfering in Palestine, in\nfortifying a portion of the Red Sea\nand in building air and submarine\nbases in the Balearic islands and\nanother in the Canaries.\" he added.\nITALY REAL DANGER\n\"There are German guns at Gibraltar. Is he doing that merelv to\nachieve a victory for General Franco?\"\nItaly, not Germany, constitutes the\nreal danger, for the reich is not yet\nadequately equipped with trained\nreserves to undertake action, Lloyd\nGeorge continued.\nThere has been loo much talk of\nvolunteers and not enough of foreign-supplied munitions, which have\nbeen the real secret of the insurgents' successes, Lloyd George declared.\nThe non-intervention policy, he\nsaid, had been dishonored by nations\nwhich have no regard for tnelr own\ngiven word and has cast discredit\non the powers which have permitted\nthe others to flout it.\nHe complained that in the far east\nas well an in Europe, Britain's\nstrategic position no longer is what\nit has been in (he past.\nParents at Romney, protesting\ndistance children had to walk to\nschool, formed a private school for\nI. hem.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-FR1DAY MORNING. OCT. \u00bb, 1W7,\nRich Ore Shoot on\nFifth Level Sheep\nCreek Found Fourth\nRich ore shoot previously opened\nfor 220 feet on the fifth level of the\nSheep Creek Gold Mines limited\nproperty at Sheep Creek has been\nentered on the fourth level, states a\ncoast broker's bulletin. The shoot\nhas been drifted upon for 75 feet\non the fourth level and \"is reported\nto be of excellent grade over that\nlength and to average about four\nfeet in width,\"\nMining Circles\nPerturbed Over\nMine Ad Plans\nRumors that the extensive amending of mining acts forecast in the\nspeech from the throne at Victoria\nTuesday may embrace the Mineral\nSurvey and Development act, under\nwhich the system of resident engineers was set up in Hon. William Sloan's time, are current in\nmining circles in Nelson, and steps\nto ascertain what may be the government's plans are being taken\nby the Chamber of Mines for eastern British Columbia.\nOperations of the resident engineers have already been extensively\nreorganized by Dr. J. F. Walker,\ndeputy minister, and suggestions\nhave been heard of a movement to\nconcentrate the department's technical men at Victoria.\nIn the past both the Chamber of\nMines and the Nelson board of trade\nhave repeatedly upheld the system\nof having resident engineers. For\nmany years, or until about three\nyears ago, the Kootenay had two\nresident engineers.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nBulbs   of   evsry   description   at\nGRIZZELLE'-. Phone 187.      (31S8)\nElectrical    Contracting.     F.    H.\nSMITH, 313 Baker St. PHONE 666.\nSEE CIVIC AD. FOR TONIGHT'S\nSPECIAL.\n(3189)\nWant person to drive car to Van.\ncouver.   Box 3184, Dally News.\n(3184)\nNELSON GOLF AND COUNTRY\nCLUB ANNUAL DANCE, NOV. 12.\n(3180)\nHeadquarters for dancs and party\nnovelties. Nelson Stationery Co.\n(3048)\nSecond hand fiction books at\nWalt's News. (18 Baker. Come in\nand browse around. (2702)\nBURGESS, THE DEPENDABLE\nLINE, 1000 HOUR A. Powerhouse\nBattery, B el C Radio Batteries.\nHipperson's. (3170)\nMadam\u2014Tike off that apronl   Our\ncooks will do the work.\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\n(3102)\nKitchen Electric Clocks.   Colors\nred, green and cream. $3.95 each.\nMcKAY A STRETTON\n(3140)\nGolfers, attention: Although the\ndining room is closed, locker rooms\nwill be open until Sunday night.\n(3183)\nSaturday only Special demonstration of Oil Burning Heaters.\nGould, 117 Vernon, opp. the New\nGrand Hotel. (3186)\nNEW ORE SHOOT\nON CALEDONIA\nIS PROMISING\nSilver Content Is Up\nReports McCready;\nShip Sample\nFive-ton sample shipment of ore\nmade from the new ore shoot on\nthe east ore body, recently opened\nup in the Caledonia mine at Blaylock, B.C., assayed 0.06 ounces in\ngold, 191.40 ounces of silver and\n58.31 per cent lead, reports George\nE. McCready, owner and operator.\nOver three ounces of silver to one\nunit of lead, a large increase in\nsilver content over former shipments, was shown. Crude ore from\nthe west ore body averaged 1.25\nounces silver to 1 per een of lead,\nalthough the silver content in lead\nconcentrates was higher at 1.65\nounces to 1 per cent lead, he said.\nThis new discovery in Mr. Mc-\nCready's opinion is the missing portion of the vein that had faulted,\nthe displacement being over 200\nfeet.\n\"Geological conditions in the face\nof the tunnel, are exceptionally\npromising for an increase in size\nof ore body\u2014the present width is\n16 inches of high grade\u2014on the advancement ot drift,\" he added. \"Just\nas soon us the necessary outside\nwork is completed, No. 2 level will\nbe driven ahead and dimensions\nof the ore body ascertained.\n\"No stoping will be attempted at\npresent, but ore taken out in the\ncourse of development will be shipped to keep track of values.\"\nStudents Gay at\n'Welcome' Dance\nWith school spirit, mirth and melody ruling among.students and ex-\nstudents, Nelson high school held\nits \"welcoming\" dance in the school\nauditorium Thursday night. Laughter and gaiety were heard on every\nside as a large crowd danced to the\nmusic of the \"Swingsters,\" the high\nschool orchestra, which has been\npracticing diligently for the past\nmonth for its big event.\nThe occasion was a welcoming\ndance for new students who entered\nfrom the junior high school and outside points in September.\nSpecial meeting Nelson Registered\nNurses' assoc. to be held at 8 p.m.\ntonight, Nurses' Home. Miss Helen\nRandall, Guest Speaker.        (3179)\nThe Gayest Party of the year\u2014\nThe Hallowe'en Masquerade In K. P.\nHall, 8almo, Tonight, Oct. 29. Fun,\nNoise, Novelties for all. They'll all\nbe there In costumes. (3166)\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, TONIGHT, OCT. 29. EVERYBODY WELCOME. TICKETS\nAT COLLINSON'S JEWELRY\nSTORE. (3130)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nRendal, John\u2014Died October 27.\nBody rests at Davis Funeral parlors\nuntil 2 p.m., Saturday, where services will be conducted by Rev. T. J,\nS. Ferguson. (3191)\nNELSON - KASLO\nRead  DAILY SERVICE\nRead\nDown\nUp\nP. M.\nA. M.\n4:40     Lv.\nNelson\nAr,\n9:30\n5:32   Lv.\nLongbcac:\nLv.\n8:40\n5:55    Lv.\nBalfour\nLv.\n8:28\n6:30   Lv.\nAinsworth\nLv.\n7:50\n7:05     Ar.\nKaslo\nLv.\n7:15\nSample Fares From Nelson to:\nW. E.\nO.W.\nRT.\nEx.\nLongbeach\n......$ .55\n$1.00\n$ .70\nBalfour\n 70\n1.30\n.90\nAinsworth\n    1.10\n2.00\n1.40\nKaslo \t\n    1.65\n3.00\n2.10\nGreyhound\nLines\n221 Baker\nSt.\nPhone\n800\n(2719)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nROOM AND BOARD. 512 CARBON-\nate street. Phone 273-L.      (3190)\nMORE ABOUT\nHouse Opening\n(Continued From Page One)\nhimself in the art of doing things\ngraciously. The premier is known to\nhis political friends and opponents\nalike as a man possessed of a generous and sympathetic nature. His\nacknowledgment of genuine regret\nat the passing of his old antagonist\nand predecessor in office, Hon. Simon Fraser Tolmie was truly affecting, as. was his reference to the\nuntimely passing of C. Knox Court-\nenay, for 30 years, law clerk of the\nlegislature.\n* *   \u2022\nIt was in tribute to the memory of\nDr. Tolmie that the voice of Dr.\nFrank Patterson was first heard in\nthe house. In seconding the motion\nof condolence moved by the premier, Dr. Patterson paid high tribute\nto the neighborliness, the generous\nspirit and the public service of the\nman who took office against his\npersonal inclination in a spirit of\nservice. \"The loss is not that of\nBritish Columbia alone, but of Canada, for Dr. Tolmie was a national\nfigure\" he concluded, as the entire house rose and stood with bowed heads for two minutes,\n\u2022 a    a\nThere is a good deal of the boy\nabout Premier Pattullo. It is one of\nthe traits that has won him friends.\nWhen, in adjourning the legislature\nat its opening for two days, he explained that the university was going to confer upon him the degree\nof doctor of laws, and some of his\ncolleagues would like to be present\nupon that occasion, he appeared so\nboyish about it all, that there was\nnot a single objection raised in a\nsmiling house.\na    a    a\nThe opening of the Nineteenth\nlegislature is entitled to be recorded\nas the \"Day of Medals\". Never were\nthere so many decorations assembled in the historic chamber. They\nglittered and gleamed on nearly\nevery manly breast on the government side. The ministerial row was\na blaze of color. Every minister except Hon. Wells Gray jingled and\njangled with every movement, while\nthe guard of honor was simply\nweighted lop-sided with glittering\nmetal\u2014and all because everyone in\npublic life or of rank in the navy\nand army had acquired in the past\nyear tbe Jubilee and Coronation\ndecorations.\n.   .   .\nThere were but two absentees\nwhen the legislature opened. One\nwas George M. Murray, who has\nnot yet returned from the orient,\nwhere he and his good wife were\ncaught in the meshes of war in\nShanghai, but finally got ship to\nSingapore. The other was Tom Uphill. The Labor member for Fernie\n\u2014who is general favorite with everyone\u2014arrived in Victoria nursing\na bad cold, which compelled him to\nabsent himself from the opening\nceremony. Tom Uphill now holds the\ndistinction of being second only to\nPremier Pattullo m point of continuous service in the legislature.\na    \u2666    a\nW. T. Straith, fourth member for\nVictoria, like George Murray of I_.il-\nlooet, was in Shanghai when the\nJapanese invasion took place. Mr.\nand Mrs. Straith had a harrowing\nexperience before they succeeded in\ngetting aboard a steamer for Japan.\n3 Inches Rain in\nVancouver Storm\nVANCOUVER,   Oct.  28\u2014   The\nDominion Meteorological bureau\nreported October rainfall had totalled 8,14 Inches or 2.42 Inches\nabove the 31-year average for the\nmonth. The two-day storm that\ncleared away today brought 3.13\nInches of rain.\nSchools Close for\nAnnual Convention\nKootenay Teachers\nTrail, Rossland, Nelson and many\ndistrict schools will be closed today'for the annual convention of\nthe West Kootenay Teachers' association, this year being held in\nTrail. It is believed the convention\nwill be one of the largest in the\nhistory of the association.\nMORE ABOUT\nLEGISLATURE\n(Continued From Page One)\n\"The first responsibility which\nstrikes me as being very imminent\nat the present time and one which I\nbelieve the government has under\nconsideration,\" the South Okanagan\nmember said, \"is our duty to put\nourselves in a position to absorb\ncheerfully and adequately those m-\nfortunate people who come to us\nfrom the drought-stricken areas of\nthe prairies.\n\"The financing of this, I feel, is\ndefinitely a Dominion matter.\"\nIn connection with increasing\nBritish Columbia's population Cap1\ntain Bull remarked:\n\"There is not the slightest doubt\nin my mind that if Italy, Germany\nor Japan had owned this province\nin the past 10 years the population\nwould have been infinitely greater\nthan it is today.\"\n\"The third matter, which if sue\ncessfully met would help facilitate\nthe solution of the other two, is I\nthink to examine the present econ\nomic situation of our province, not\nfrom the inside, biased with the nat\nural feeling of relief having recovered from a very desperate depression to more normal times\u2014of having almost as it were, been saved\nfrom drowning, but from the point\nof view of an outsider, unbiased\nobserver. What do we find in this\nrole of observer?\n\"We find we are almost back to\nnormal trade conditions, yet there is\nstill a great deal of poverty every\nwhere. Then, let us sum up our\nposition:\nNO RIGHTS OVER\nCURRENCY\n\"The province has no sovereign\nrights over currency and credit-\nany change In our economy Is\nentirely In the hands of the Dom\nInlon government What can we\nIn British Columbia do to dls\ncover a new economy of abund\nance and still retain the old social\norder? What can we do to see\nour province used to Its full capacity for   humanity?    Colonel\nLawrence In his book \"Seven Pillars of Wisdom\" said: 'There Is\nonly one thing In the world worth\nworking for, and that Is the Impossible.' That, Mr. Speaker, Is\nthe answer to my question, We\nhave not the authority, as I have\nalready stated, so we have the\nsetting for the Job worthwhile.1\nCaptain Bull said it was very difficult for him to understand why\nsome of the primary producers in\nother branches of primary production have opposed marketing legis\nlation. It must be, he thought, that\nthey are not sufficiently hard up,\nor, more likely, that they have not\nbeen thrown through a first-class\nselling war. He hoped, for their\nown sakes, that they soon would\ngive it loyal and undivided support,\nfor without that support it would\nbe very difficult to obtain the benefits that should accrue from such\nlegislation.\n\"As long as they can'agree on the\nprinciple involved \u2014 and no fair-\nminded person can disagree if he\ntakes the trouble to study the matter\u2014any detail of operation can be\novercome by patience, tolerance and\ndetermination,\" said Captain Bull.\nPLAN TO IMPROVE\n\"If anyone Is so mlig_ul-_d as to\nhave designs on our marketing\nact, I have no hesitation In saying they are wasting their time,\nbecause what we have today we\nIntend to hold and Improve. Without It we are sunk,\" he added.\nThe fruit industry, he claimed,\nwas the most reliable in the whole\nprovince as a distributor of purchasing power.\nIn 10 years production of tree fruit\nhad increased by 50 per cent in\nspite of the fact lhat in 1931, 1932\nand 1933 the average price received\nwas only about two cents a box over\nthe cash outlay. Nearly everything\nthe grower bought was obtained in\nBritish Columbia, while only ten\nper cent of the fruit was sold in the\nprovince.\nDifficulties in the past consisted\nof irrigation and marketing. The\nformer has been overcome. Marketing legislation will solve the second\nproblem.\nYoung Players\nSeeking Berths\nNelson Hockey\nDrumheller   Finalist\nGoalie Contender\nfor Position\nFour young hockey players, all\nbut one just out of junior ranks, and\nall with their hockey future before\nthem, will make it tough for candidates for the Nelson Maple Leaf\nhockey team when workouts begin\nshortly. Each has been in fast\ncompany, and each is looking for\nmore speed in the Kootenay league,\none of the best in the country for\nyears past.\nCompeting for Bill McKay's place\nIn goal will be Jesse Seaby, 21-year-\nold 170-pounder, who was one of the\nmajor factors in the drive of Drumheller Miners to the Alberta provincial finals last season. Jesse\nlearned his hockey in Stettler, home\ntown of Walter Duckworth, and\nthen served his junior apprenticeship with Edmonton Athletics, one\nof the top-ranking Alberta junior\nclubs.\nDonald McDonald, centreman, last\nseason was with the fast-stepping\nMoose Jaw junior club. He received his hockey education in that\ncity. McDonald is a right-hander,\naged 20, and weighing 150 pounds.\nProduct of Regina, one of the\ngreatest hockey cities of the west,\nJack Tomson is a candidate for right\nwing. After going through the ranks\nin Regina he graduated to the well-\nknown Acesl ast season. He is 20\nand weighs 172 pounds.\nNorman Schneph arrived at Nelson via the Calgary Radios, fast-\nstepping junior squad. He played\nintermediate with the speedy\nGleichen, Alta., team before being\ndrafted by Radios last season. Norman is 20 and weighs 150.\nJapanese Forces\na. Yellow River\nTHCNTSIN, Oct. 29 (Friday) (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Japanese forces in North\nChina have \"symbolically\" reached\nthe Yellow river, objective of their\ndrive toward the south.\nThe first Japanese bombs exploded on the banks of the Yellow river\nsince the current hostilities began\nwhen a plane squadron raided Chinese reinforcements proceeding toward northern Shantung province\nyesterday after crossing the Yellow\nriver, 25 miles northwest of Tsinan,\nShantung capital.\nJapanese fliers reported heavy\ncasualties among the Chinese.\nLABOR MAY HAVE A\nSMALL MAJORITY IN\nAUSTRALIAN SENATE\nSYDNEY, Oct. 28 (CP-Reuters)-\nPolitical observers today said no\nmajor change in the standing of\nAustralia's general election could\nbe expected until the middle of next\nweek, when the distribution of preference votes will be completed.\nThe results so far indicate Prime\nMinister Joseph Lyons' government\nwill have a reduced but comfortable\nmajority in the house of representatives. In the Senate, however, there\nis a possibility of Labor obtaining\na small majority.\nNakusp Hears of\nIndians' Customs\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014Wee-yat-ta-kish\nKoo-ya-mah, or Chief Couger interpreted, gave' a series of three lectures on Indian life and customs in\nNakusp over the week-end.\nThe speaker, thoroughly conversant with the life of the North\nAmerican Indians, spoke first to the\nschool children early Saturday evening. Later that evening and again\nSunday evening, he addressed gatherings in the United Church. The\nlectures were illustrated with samples of Indian handi-craft, bead-\nwork, lace and leather work. Each\ntribe, Chief Couger said, specialized\nin some type of work, his own\ntribe being specialists in bead-\nwork.\nSunday evening he explained how\nthe missionaries first came to Idaho, his home.\nWee-ya-ta-kish Koo-ya mah who\nwas visiting at Halcyon arrived at\nNakusp Saturday, taking the boat\nsouth again Monday morning.\n$200,000 FIRE\n8YDNEY, N.8., Oct 29 (Friday)\n(CP)\u2014Damage which early estimates placed at between $'00,000\nand $200,000 was caused by fire\nwhich swept through a three-\nstory brick building and damaged\ntwo others In this Cape Breton\ncity's main business street early\ntoday.\nNearly 100 Cards\nWill Go to 54th\nMen About Reunion\nJust under 100 reply postcards\nwere addressed in Nelson Thursday\nnight, to former members of the\n54th battalion resident in the West\nKootenay, notifying them of the reunion banquet here on November\n18, the anniversary of the taking of\nDesire Trench on the Somme. A\ncommittee of six, headed by W. J.\nWaters, secretary, and S. P. Bostocki\nassembled all the names they could\nsecure. It is hoped that any ex-\nmember of the battalion not on the\nlist will get in touch with Secretary\nWaters, and that the reunion will be\nthe largest to be held.\nJoseph Parent of\nNakusp Is 70 Years\nOld; Given a Parly\nNAKUSP, B. C. - The oldest\ntimer in Nakusp, Joseph Parent,\ncelebrated his seventieth birthday\nOctober 15.\nMr. Parent came to Nakusp 41\nyears ago to open up camps for the\nYale Lumber company owned and\noperated by Pete Genele.\nA year later Mrs. Parent joined\nher husband here and the family\nhave been residents of Nakusp\nsince.\nThe evening of Oct. 15 some 20\nfriends surprised Mr. Parent at\nhis home, conveying birthday congratulations.\nCoronation whist prize winners\nbeing Mrs. J. Parents, Mrs. R.\nBuerge, C. L. Hiltz, R. Buerge and\nMrs. E. J. Leveque, Mrs. Matheson,\nA. E. Fowler and A. Matheson.\nBingo winners were Mrs. F. May-\noh, Mrs. C. L. Hiltz, E. Wieden-\nhammer and R, B. Bush.\nRefreshments were served at\nmidnight. The table \u2022was attractive\nwith bronze and yellow chrysanthemums. A large brithday cake\noccupied a central position.\nGuests were Mr. and Mrs. J,\nMotherwell, Mr. and Mrs. A. Matheson. Mr. and Mrs. F. Mayoh, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. Buerge, Mr. and Mrs.\nE. J. Leveque, Mrs. J. Parent, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. L. Hiltz, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Hiltz, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Fowler, E. Wiedenhammer, R. C. Bush\nand L. Parent.\nWealthy Apples\nDominate Market\nCalgary Reports\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct. 28-\nWholesale dealers in agricultural\nproduce report little change in\nprices including hay, grain and feed\nwith exception of scratch feed-\ndown $2 per ton. The demand for\npotatoes has slackened with considerably supply on hand. A liberal\nsupply of honey is being received\nfrom Ontario, Manitoba and Alberta.\nHothouse tomatoes are advancing in\nprice and a good demand prevails\nfor all green Vegetables. Mcintosh\napples, extra fancy, $1.75 to $1.85;\nfancy, $1.60 to $1.65 box. Delicious,\nextra fancy, $1.85 to $1.90; fancy,\n$1.65 to $1.75. Wealthy, fancy, $1.40\nand No. 3, $1.15 to $1.20 box.\nCALGARY\u2014Potato digging and\nbeet harvesting in southern Alberta is proceeding feverishly with\nprospects of a heavy crop of both\ncommodities. Business in fruits and\nvegetables is slow to fair. Wealthy\napples of the cheaper grades continue to dominate the apple market.\nWealthy No. 3 is selling at $1.25 box.\nDelicious, fancy, $1.75; Mcintosh\n$1.80 and Snow $1.80 box. D'Anjou\npears, fancy. $2.75, C grade $2.50.\nDuchess and Howell, No. 3, $1.60\nbox. Concord grapes have enjoyed\na better than ordinary demand with\nOntario commanding a premium\nover those from B.C. Ontario grapes\nat 45 cents and B.C.'s 43 cents a\nbasket. Onion prices continue firm.\nHothouse tomatoes $2.50 crate.\nTRANSFER CAPITAL\nVALENCIA, Oct. 28 (CP-Havas)-\nA decree transferring the Spanish\ncapital from Valencia to Barcelona\nwill be published on Saturday, it\nwas reported today.\nLATE NEWS FLASHES\nEDMONTON\u2014More dangerous\ninside the blueline, New York\nRangers outicored New York\nAmericans 3-1 In the fourth game\nof their western Canada exhibition series. Rangers have won\ntwice and lost once. The other\ngame was a tie.\nVANCOUVER  CONTRACT\nOTTAWA\u2014The department oi\npublic works announced contract\nlor counter screen and fittings for a\nVancouver public building had been\nawarded to Carter-Halls\u2014Aldinger\nCo., Ltd., Vancouver, at $84,229.\nLEAF8 SIGN FOX\nGALT, Ont. \u2014 Toronto Maple\nLeafs of the National Hockey\nleague signed Jack Fox, former\nWinnipeg defence star, and assigned Mm to their farm team-\nSyracuse Stars of the International-American league.\nSOVIET 8EARCH WIDEN8\nMOSCOW \u2014 Four large planes\neoulnoed for flyins in the polar\nnight were entrusted with the Arctic search for Sigismund Levaneff-\nsky. missing transpolar flyer, and\nhis five companions.\nROBERT VICTOR\nTORONTO \u2014 Yvon Robert of\nMontreal defeated Marvin West-\nernberg, Tacoma, Wash., In the\nmain bout of a wrestling card.\nRobert, 220 pounds, won two of\nthree falls.\nBODIES RECOVERED\nANCHORAGE, Alaska - Twelve\nbadies have been recovered following an explosion in the Evan Jones\ncoal mine.\n80VIET-JAPANE8E CLASH\nTOKYO\u2014Soviet and Manchoukuo detachments clashed. No casualties were reported In the border Incident.\nGERMANY, SOVIET INVITED\nBRUSSELS \u2014 Germany and the\nSoviet Union were invited by Belgium to take part in the nine-power\nconfab. November 3.\nMUSICIAN DEFENDANT\nIN SUPREME COURT CASE\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP)- A\nformer Calgary orchestra player was\nnamed defendant in a suit launched\nin supreme court here today by a\nVancouver couple who seek to recover $5000 they claim to have lost\nin a fake mining venture.\nMr. and Mrs. P. W. Mackenrot\ntestified they wero induced to invest $3340 cash and surrender their\nequity in a Vancouver house on\nrepresentations regarding mining\nproperty in the Atlin district of\nBritish Columbia. The representations were contained in a prospectus allegedly issued by Frank Henderson, who played in a Calgary hotel\norchestra several years ago.\nRED (ROSS TO\nUUNCH DRIVE\n$2500 NELSON\nBirch-Jones Outlines\nOrganization for\nDistrict\nCANVASS WILL\nBE COMPLETE\nDetailed organization of an ac\ntive Red Cross campaign in Nelson district which it was hoped\nwould, by December 2, net $2500\nfor the B. C. division of tha Red\nCross was unfolded Thursday evening to Nelson campaign advisory\ncommittee members by Hugh M,\nBirch-Jones, commissioner for B. C,\nspeaking at temporary headquarters established at 316 Baker street,\nHe also outlined Red Cross activities.\nA. T. Horswill was named chairman of the committee, with E. E,\nL. Dewdney as campaign treasurer;\nMines, schools, business houses,\nhomes, and district centres would\nall be covered in the campaign, il\nwas explained.\nDetails of the move, Mr. Birch-\nJones revealed, were organized by\nthe advisory committee, only the\nactual canvass being left to com*\nmittee members, who wer-: yet tc\nbe chosen. The members of the advisory body would form their own\ncommittees from members of th.\norganizations which they represented.\nFOUR DIVISIONS\nThese committees here, he said\ndivided into divisions, each tt\nhandle a certain part of the canvass\nDivision A canvassed for specia\ngifts and donations, Division B\nstores and individual business; Div\nision C, business staff by an ap\npointed member of the staff; ant\nDivision H, residential districts anc\nneighborhood stores.\nEach canvasser would be equip\nped, he stated, with a folder con\ntaining Red Cross pins, pamphlet\nand remittance envelopes. Cardt\nwith the name of the prospect to be\ncanvassed, his business and address\nwere also to be included in thi\nequipment, and in this way .thi\npossibility of any one person beini\ncanvassed twice was eliminated.\nBehind-the-scene work, organ!*\ning the actual canvas, would con\ntinue until November 25. The can\nvass would be carried on until De\ncember I, while an extra day wa\nallotted for \"cleanup\" work.\nThe advisory committee include\nMayor J. P. Morgan, F. F. Payne\nE. E. L. Dewdney, Dr. H. H. Mac\nKenzie, W. B Bamford, A. T. Hors\nwill, Dr. C. M. Bennett, H. E. Thain\nE. J. Goos, L. H. Choquette, R.'I\nHorfon, Mrs. H. E. Thain, Mrs. C. F\nMcHardy. Mrs. H. H. MacKenzie\nMrs. C. W. Tyler, Mrs. E. J. Sharde\nlow and Mrs. W. S. King.\nPOI80N CONFISCATED\nCHICAGO.-A11 but a few of th\nmore than 700 small bottles of slixi\nof sulfanilamide, which caused mot\nthan 50 deaths in the United State\nhave now been confiscated, feder\nofficials said.\nWife Who Was\nCross and Touch\nPut Hecself Right wit\nKruschen\n\"I am 39 years of age,\" a womal\nwrites, \"Yet some days I have beel\nfeeling and looking 100 years ole\nI would get fits of exhaustion fd\nno good reason at all. I was no1\nfit to live with because I would b,\nso cross and touchy. I did not seen\nto have any ambition to do m;\nhousework, and I was tired all th\ntime.\n\"Two years ago I had sciatica al\ndown my left side from the hip\nMy doctor says all this is causei\nthrough my nerves. I took Krus\nchen and found it helped me ver;\nmuch. Since I started taking it\nam a different person. My worl\nseems a lot easier and I have a lo\nmore energy.\"\u2014(Mrs.)  G.M.\nThe \"little daily dose\" of Krus\nchen puts an end to tiredness am\ndepression, because it restores th\neliminating organs to proper activ\nity by providing them with thi\ndaily reminder and daily aid tha\nthey require. Cleansed and in\nvigorated blood is sent circulatini\nall over the system, carrying nev\nvitality to every nerve ana nev\nvigour to every limb. (Advt.'\nWE WISH TO IMPRESS ON YOU\u2014\nTHAT WE DO SELL AND WILL SELL\nMICHEL\nCoal Creek Coal\nThe fire on Monday will\nnot effect production to\nany great extent.\nWEST TRANSFER\nPHONE 33\nESTABLISHED IN 1899\n*\n Jfilpplfip^\nmH\nNEL80N DAILY NEW8. NELSON, B.C-FRIDAY MORNING, OCT. 89, 1937.\nOut of the By Eric Ramsden\nPRESS BOX\n-PAGE THIRTMN\nGOALIE OFFERED $5000 THROW GAMES\nIT MIGHT HAVE BEEN\nEXPECTED\nCoast reporters tell us Duke\nScodellaro of Bellevue-Trail and\nJoe Benoit of Edmonton-Trail are\nstandouts among slmon-pures at\nGuy Patrick's Vancouver hockey\nschool. That isn't surprising, they're\nfrom the Kootenay league.'\nColin Gamlin, in coast amateur\nhockey for years and years and\nyears, Is turning out again this season with George Irvine's Bruins.\nPrince Albert Mintos, who were\nbrushed aside by Kimberley on the\nAllan cup trail two years ago, have\n. 21 candidates including seven holdovers from last year, four home\ntown and tow district prospects, and\neight newcomers from afield. The\naverage weight of the boys is about\n180 pounds. Eddie Oatman, for two\ngeasons coach of Yorktovw Terriers,\nwill handle the team.\nSECRET TRAINING IS\nMOOTED IN NELSON\nInformation has trickled into the\nPress Box that although no instruc\ntions have been issued by the club\nmanagement, members of and candidates for the Nelson Maple Leaf\nhockey team are doing a lot of quiet\ntraining in their own corners. They\nfigure it's not going to be easy to\nmake the team this season, and that\nanyone who can get the Jump on\ncondition wil. be more likely to get\na call. I saw five hockey players\nworking on a jog together\u2014with\ngrins as wide as slices of watermelon.\nThe grapevine also whispers thai\n\"Chum\" Arcure, who is 'known to\nhave a fancy for softball and baseball, received an unusual memento\nfrom a gal pal in Spokane\u2014a green\nturtle with this legend on its back:\n\"Carl Hubbell, ace pitcher.\" Of\ncourse, I couldn't vouch for this\nstory, but here it is.\na     a     *\nKimberley's Sorenson boys, Chris\nand Carl, were formerly with Pat\nAitken, Nelson coach, as juniors in\nCalgary. They graduated to the\nPacific coast pro loop, performing\nwith Calgary, Portland, et al, we're\ntold.\nLester Patrick's Line of Youths\nExpected lo Give Gray Hairs to\nOpposing National League Coaches\nBy GEORGE MAGUIRE\n(Canadian Preu Staff Writer).\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP).-Thc\nsecond phase of New York Rangers\nyouth movement will be unveiled\nwhen the National Hockey league\nopens its 20th season next month\nand, in the opinion of Boss Lester\nPatrick, a bumper crop of grey hairs\namong contemporary coaches may\n.be expected.\nPatrick started bringing youngsters up from his Philadelphia farm\nclub of the International-American\nleague last season to replace parts\nof a machine that was starting to\ncreak with age. Bill and Bun Cook,\nChing Johnson and the other originals who helped captured two Stanley cups and missed the playoffs but\nonce in 11 tries, had come to be\nknown as the old men of Manhattan. Now they have given way to\nyouth.\nFive rookies were on the Ranger team that reached the championship finals last spring, to be\nhalted there by Detroit's highflying Redwings. They were Defenceman Babe Pratt and Joe\nCooper, Forwards Neil and Mac\nColvile and Alex Shibicky.\nNow Patrick is bringing another\nforward unit of \"colts\" up from\nhis farm. Centre Clint Smith of\nSaskatoon   will   be   flanked   by\nBobby Kirk and Bryan Hextall,\nWinnipeg speedsters, on the new\nattack-line.\nOther than replacing his former\nthird line with the youngsters, the\nRanger mentor has made only two\nchanges of importance. Murray Murdoch, blueshirt \"original\" who earned the title of \"iron man\" by playing in almost 600 consecutive games\nwith the Ranges, has been sent to\nPhiladelphia to captain the Ramblers. Frankie Boucher, the foxy\ncentre who is no longer young, has\nbeen named assistant coach and will\nnot see much duty on the ice.\nThese moves meant shuffling the\nsecond line. It will be pivoted by\nPhil Watson, with Lynn Patrick and\nCecil Dillon on the wings.\nThe Colvilles and Shibicky will\nhold down first-line duty, Now that\nthe \"kids\" have a year's experience,\nPatrick expects they will go places.\nLester does not believe he has\nany defence worries. Davie Kerr,\ntighter than a solitary confinement\ncell when in form, will be back between the goal-pipes. The veteran\nbumpers, Art Coulter and Ott .Heller, will form the first defence-line\nwith Cooper and Pratt relieving.\nButch Keeling, who was second\nhighest scorer in the league last\nseason, will be retained as \"trouble-\nshooter\" extraordinary, Boucher also\nwill be available for utility duty.\nRossland Hockey Material Peppy;\nYoungsters ill Tall and Husky\nCoach Rene Morin Has\nMany Players for\n1937-38 Club\nBy A. R. JOY, Trail\nROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. 28-Pros-\npective material of the Rossland\nMiners Hockey club is bubbling over with youth and pep. Last night\nwe saw them going through gym\npaces, instructed by Trig Nora, iron\nman of the outdoors, noted for his\ncross-country skiing prowess. Trig\nholds a gymnasium class five nights\na week and the hockey club has\nprovided the talent with membership tickets and told them to go out\nand get in shape. They already\nlooked in splendid shape for each\nwent through his exercises with lhat\nzip we all see in a hockey player\non skates. Coach Rene Morin told us\nthat eight of (hem haven't yet had\na smoke or their first drink.\nFINE SPIRIT\nThere is a fine spirit prevalent\namong the Rossland boys. They all\nappear good humored\u2014though we\ncan't say how tough they might be\nin a hockey battle\u2014like lots of clean\nfun and treat each other as equals.\nThey give one the impression that\nthey will not be hard to handle.\nFor goal-tending the club has\nthree lads signed up: Ross Forrest,\nwho has guarded the net for miners\npreviously; Al Laface, only 20, member of the junior team last year and\nof whom everyone that saw him\nspoke highly; and Maurice Willams,\nlast year with the Regina junior\nAces.   Williams is 20 also.\n\"Rocky\" Davies, Tommy Johnston and Jock Walmsley, former defenceman, and three new players\ncomprise the defence materials. Of\nthe newcomers there are Gerry Ped-\nigrew, formerly of North Battleford\nBeavers; Orald Neil, previously in\nthe Winnipeg Commercial league;\nand \"Rusty\" Wynn, who pitched\ngood ball for Trail this season, and\nwho was formerly with the Edmonton South Side Athletics, last year\nwith the Edmonton Superiors and\nthe Luscar Indians.\nPcdigrew is 21 years of age, stands\nabout six feet, and weighs 182\npounds. Neil, 23, is a skookum lad.\nWynn tips the beam at 170 pounds\nand is 22 years of age.\nHUSKY FORWARD\nForward material is as plentiful\nas that for other positions. Stan\nSmith, 165 pounds, star of \"Scotty\"\nRoss' Trail juniors last year, will be\none of the centres. Jack Lindsay,\nwho started with the North Battleford Beavers, and played tho last\ntwo seasons with the Toronto university, plays centre or left wing.\nHe weighs about 160 pounds, and is\n22 years old. Cheddy Thompson, one\nof the North Battleford Beaver\nchampions last season, will also be\nout in front. Cheddy is only 21\nand carries 160 pounds.\nRonald McKinnon, left wing or\ncentre, hails from Portage La Prairie\nHis weight is 160 pounds. He is six\nfeet in height and his age is 22\nyears. Cleve Cowland, a left winger, came from the Prince Albert\nMintos. He is 21 years of age,\nweighs 158 pounds, and stands 5 feet\nII inches. Norman LaCree, a former Regina lad, plays right wing. His\nheight is 5 feel 10 inches, and his\nweight 160 pounds.\nOf last year's team there are Mike\nWelykochy, Jack Hanson, Bob Sal-\nmond, Gerry Wanless, Jimmy\nSchrump and possibly Len Wade and\nBob Marshall.\nThe whole bunch are a hefty lot\nand should be a tough crew for any\nsquad to break through.\nBUT ASTON VILLA GOALKEEPER\nTURNS LETTER OVER TO BOSSES\nAston Meets Coventry on Saturday; Arsenal\nHas Many on Injured List; Chelsea Leader\nin First Faces Strong Bolton Club\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP Cable)\u2014\nAn anonymous letter, purporting\nto come from a betting lyndleate\nand ottering Fred BlddlMtojie,\nAlton Villa goalkeeper, \u00a31000\n($4950) to \"throw\" matchea l\u00ab being Investigated by English Football League authorities.\n\"It is our Intention to bring\nabout a few shock results, as It is\nour experience that shockers upset football coupons,\" the letter\nread,. \"For every match you lose\nwe are prepared to pay \u00a3750\n($3712.50) with \u00a3250 ($1237.60)\nbonus, It Is when the English\ncup-ties come round that we Intend to reap a rich harvest with\na few sensational results.\"\nBlddlestone Is not letting the\nmatter worry him. He turned the\ncommunication over to the soccer\nauthorities and he and his teammates settled down to training for\ntheir tussle with Coventry City,\none of the feature matches on Saturday's card.\nCOVENTRY LEADS\nUnbeaten in the campaign to date,\nCoventry leads the second division\nwith a one-point margin over Sheffield United and two over Aston\nVilla. Sheffield United is favored\nto win a home match against Stockport County.\nChelsea will have a hard job to\nretain leadership of the first division\nover the week-end.   The pension\ners, with a single point lead over\nWolverhampton Wanderers and\nBrentford, visit Bolton Wanderers.\nOn the other hand Wolverhampton\nand Brentford are favored with\nhome fixtures. The Wanderers entertain Grimsby Town and in the\ncorresponding match last year ran\nout winners 5-2. Brentford is also\nexpected to defeat Portsmouth, bottom-placed club.\nAR8ENALIN BAD WAY\nArsenal, riddled by injuries, has\nnot chosen its team ttj play Middlesbrough at Highbury. Kirchen is\nsuffering from a thigh Injury and\nHunt, centre-forward, has a bad\nknee.\nHobbling along at the bottom of\nthe second league, Plymouth Argyle\nthis week signed Clarence Bourton\nCoventry City forward, who has\nscored nearly 200 goals for the mid-\nlanders. In 1931 he netted 49 goals\nin 40 matches for Coventry, creating\na record for Third Division, Southern Section football.\nNotts County Is likely to retain\ntop .berth in the Southern Section in\na match against Queen's Park Ran\ngers. In the northern loop Lincoln\nCity, Chester and Gateshead are\nbracketed for the leadership. Lincoln and Gateshead have home\ngames against Rotherham United\nand Carlisle United, but Chester\nvisits Hull and may drop out of the\ncontention temporarily at least.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nTop-Notch Soccer Expected as\nGlasgow Meets Aberdeen Eleven\nToronto Baseball\nStar May Make a\nPlace in Hockey\nTORONTO, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Bobby\nPorter, Toronto's husky international league baseball player, left\ntoday for Lake Placid, N.Y., to try\nout wilh Montreal Maroons of the\nNational Hockey league. Porter has\nnever played professional  hockey.\nManager Tommy Gorman invited the slugging outfielder to try for\na defence berth on his team. Before\nhe turned professional in the spring\nof 1936 to play ball for the Toronto\nclub, Porter played hockey for the\nJunior Toronto Marlboros,\n\u00ab*\u00ab*   at\nClancy Has His\nMaroons in Fine\nShape for Nov. 6\nLAKE PLACID, N. Y\u201e Oct. 28\n(CP)\u2014Tommy Gorman, who coached Montreal Maroons last year,\nwatched the team prance through a\nspirited two-hour drill today under\nits new mentor, King Clancy.\nAccompanied by Art Cayford, the\nMaroon's secretary-treasurer, the\nclub president said he was well satisfied with the way Clancy had conditioned the team for the opening\nNational Hockey league game in\nMontreal November 6 when Maroons meet Boston Bruins.\nPaul Runge, alternating defence\nand attack, is almost a certainty\nto be carried with the team.\nCarl Voss, centre obtained from\nNcw York Americans last season,\nin a trade for Joe Lamb, is due for\none of his best seasons, Gorman said.\nOut with injuries and sickness most\nof last season, Voss has regained his\nformer speed and play-making ability.\nFernie High School\nTakes First Battle\nIntercity Soccer\nNATAL, B. C.\u2014In the first of a\ntwo game series for the Michel-\nNatal-Femie high school championship Saturday Fernie whitewashed\nthe Michel-Natal team 4-0.\nThe feature of the Ferine play\nwas their combination plays lhat\nhad the Michel-Natal learn on the\nun throughout the game.\nThe first half ended 2-0 for Fernie. Whitelaw and Wilson wero the\nmarksmen.\nAlthough playing with the wind\nihe* Michel-Natal team could not\nmatch stride with the Fernie team\nin the last half. The visitors made\nil 4-0 on quick goals by Boese and\nWhitelaw. The latter scored on a\npenalty kick. The Michel-Natal\nteam tried desperately to avoid a\nshut-out but to no avail. They missed many a golden opportunity to\nscore. ,  ,,\nThe second game of the series\nwill be played at Fernie Saturday,\nOct. 30. P. Chain of Natal refereed.\nWRESTLING\nNEW YORK\u2014Vincent Lopez. 220,\nLos Angeles, defeated Cliff Olson,\n216, Minneapolis (20:12). Olson unable to continue.\nHOLYOKE, Mass\u2014George Clark,\nScotland, defeated Tommy Rae,\nSouth Hadley, Mass., two of three\nfalls.\nWORCESTER. Mass.\u2014Sieve Casey. 235, Ireland, defeated Tax Bailey,\n330. Missouri, straight falls.\n. TRENTON. N.J.-Karl Davis, 228,\nMemphis, pinned Jack Kennedy,\n225. Texas (40:00).\nDENVER\u2014Gus Sonnenburg, -05.\nBoston, defeated Benny Ginsberg,\n218, New York, 25:10.\nMotherwell at. Top of\nHeap Meets Second\nRate Organization\nGLASGOW, Oct. 28 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Unbeaten In 13 games but with\nsix drawn matches to date In the\n1937-38 Scottish football league\nschedule, Glasgow Rangers go to\nAberdeen for Saturday's feature\nmatch. The Dons have taken\nmaximum points from the Glasgow club twice only In the last\nfour years.\nThe battle at Pittodrle Park promises to produce top-notch football.   Rangers were on top of the\nheap  until   last Saturday when\nMotherwell   took   advantage   of\ntheir 2-2 deadlock with Hamilton\nAcademicals to assume leadership.\nMotherwell defeated Falkirk 3-2.\nMotherwell goes to Edinburgh to\nmeet Hibernians, lowly-placed eleven. Indications point to a victory\nfor the visitors.\nStill \"hot\" over last year's 5-1\ndrubbing, Hearts are out for revenge this Saturday at Hamilton.\nThe Edinburgh team played poorly\nlast week, drawing 0-0 with Clyde,\nbut they hope to regain top form\nagainst the Accies this week-end.\nCELTICS PLAY AWAY\nTied with Hearts for third position\nCeltic and Dundee have away games.\nThe Celts are entertained by St,\nMirren while Dundee, early-season\nleader, goes to St. Johnstone, Falkirk, three points in the rear, plays\nin Glasgow against Partick Thistle.\nOther Glasgow encounters are\nscheduled for Shawfield Park and\nHampden Park, Kilmarnock provides the Clyde opposition while the\nAmateurs are hosts to Queen of\nSouth.\nRemaining fixtures are to be\nplayed at Ayr and Greenock. Ayr\nis visited by Third Lanark and Arbroath goes to Morton. Both home\nteams won promotion\" to the major\nleague this year.\nSecond division pacemakers are\nfavorites. Raith, with a one-point\nlead over Albion Rovers, has a\nhome game against Leith Athletic\nand Albion goes to Montrose.\nCARNERA BROKE\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014Primo\nCamera, former heavyweight boxing champion, placed his liabilities\nat \u00a34324 ($21,404) with no assets, it\nwas announced by the bankruptcy\nreceiver at a meeting of creditors\ntoday.\nCamera, absent from the meeting,\ncame to England early this month\nto obtain permission to fight only\nto run into a sheriff bearing an income tax bill of \u00a3124 and a judgment of \u00a34200 in a breach of promise suit. He filed a bankruptcy petition and returned to Italy out\nplans to come back here in six\nweeks.\nOTTAWA RUGGER WILL\nPLAY SATURDAY MATCH\nOTTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP)-Bunny\nWadsworth, 260-pound middle of\nOttawa Rough Riders, will play here\nSaturday against Toronto Argonauts\nthe club that tried to have him suspended for the season for rough\nplay.\nWadsworth was exonerated today\nby Dr. Andy Davies, president of\nthe Big Four, of charges levelled by\nArgonauts that he deliberately broke\nHarry Sonshine's jaw in a game in\nToronto last Saturday.\nWARWICK WINS\nLEICESTER, Eng., Oct. 28 (CP).\u2014\nWarwickshire defeated Leicestershire 27-0 in a rugby union, county\nchampionship match.\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nAssociated Press Sports Writer\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)-Mickey Walker, former welterweight\nchampion is batting 1000 as master\nof ceremonies in a W. 48St, cafe.\n. . . Casey Stengel must be slipping,\n. . . He'll get $3000 less for managing\nthe Bees next year than he got for\nnot managing the Dodgers.. . . Lou\nAmbers, the lightweight king, is\nback in town after a month's hunting trip on which he killed\u2014three\npheasants.. , . The father of Johnny\nDundee, once a great featherweight\nchampion, died yesterday. . . . Two\nfamous names \u2014 James Fennimore\nCooper and Blllie Burke-^an effective end combination for the Marquette football team.\nThe racing business must be ex-\nftensive, at that. . . . Two other mil-\nionaires will soon follow C. V.\nWhitney's lead and get out.. . . Bob\nQuinn of the Boston Bees used the\ntelephone on two occasions 44 months\napart to sign the same manager.. . .\nIn 1934 he called Casey Stengel\nat Glendale, Cal., to land Casey for\nthe Dodgers, and the other day he\ncalled Casey at Omaha, Tex,, to\noffer him the Boston berth.. . . Jim\nErwin, manager of Petey Sarron,\nthe featherweight champ, will promote boxing snows in Birmingham\nthis winter,\nThe reason Henry Armstrong is\na favorite to trim Petey Sarron tomorrow night is that since the first\nof the year the west coast negro\nhas scored kayos in 21 of his 22\nfights. . . . Jake Mintz of Pittsburgh is a promoter who will gel\nalong. ... He had John Henry\nLewis matched with Arturo Godoy.\n. . . John Henry went to a hospital\nfor a long stay.. . . Instead of throwing in a substitute, Mintz called\nthe show off, ... He took a financial licking, but made friends.\nSCRAP BOOK\nBy Bradley\nBy A. R. |.\nALONG TRAIL'S SPORTS WAY\nCanadian athletes who will go to\nSydney, Australia to carry Canadian colors in the British Empire\ngames are finding training conditions a bit tough. The \"games\" are\nto be staged in January and the\nCanucks, who include Trail's Pat\nand Joe Haley, will not leave the\nfrigid clime until the end of December. Trail's contingent departs\nfrom Vancouver. Joe tells us that\nan indoor meet might be held at\nNew Westminster to give the lads\na chance to get in some competition\nbefore going to sea.\nCities that have Indoor tracks as\nwell as Canadian team -representatives are most fortunate. Pat and\nJoe are using the Butler park, in\nwhich they both got their start, and\nare finding for sprints and jumping,\nthe present weather slightly cold.\nHowever the necessity to keep\nwarm while wearing their flimsy\npractice suits might provide some\ninducement to go at it a little\nharder.\n\"A stove sure would be a welcome installation in one of those\nsheds at the park,\" Joe told us,\nwhile he hugged a radiator in the\npost office.\nIt is surprising what has been\nfound in-this city when the need\nhas been an urgent one, so perhaps\nsomeone can dig up an old heater\nfor these two lads whom we don't\nappreciate half enough.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nOne would think that these lads,\nhaving attained the heights they\nhave with their style of performing\nthe high jump, wouldn't be looking\nfor a new method of getting over\nthat flimsy cross-stick. But no, not\nthese lads.\n\"We've got a new 'roll'\" said\nJoe, \"and I think we might be able\nto do more with it. At least we're\npracticing it and we're going to\ngive it a good trial.\"\nThe Haley brothers are looking\nfor someone who has a movie camera to take shots of them going over\nthe bar. When a man is sprinting\nanother can tell him his faults, but\napparently it is not the case in high\njumping. By means of photos, the\nlate George Murray, who was Joe's\noriginal instructor, pointed out his\nfaults. Joe's seen how other trainers\ncheck up on their athletes and tells\nus that moving pictures are the\n\"latest\".\n\"Whn you are going over the bar,\"\nsays Joe, \"you're supposed to do\none thing with one part of your\nanatomy and another thing with\nanother and it is difficult to know\nwhether you are doing them at the\nright time to give you the greatest\nheight. By having motion pictures\ntaken you can look at each individual picture and see how your\nlegs, arms and body are working,\"\nHere's a chance for some amateur\nor professional cameraman to get\nsome photos that he would be proud\nto have in his collection.\nWomen always have had a reputation for organizing. After its first\nweek, tlie Trail Business Women's\nFive-Pin Bowling league has increased from six to eight teams.\nFive games were played last Wednesday with six teams of five players. Yesterday 40 ladies smashed\npins at Memorial hall.\n* a   *\nWinter sports are gradually getting under way. Men's 10-pin bowling has been played for some time;\nbadminton commenced this week;\nthe lodges' carpet bowling loop is\nunder way; basketball opened last\nnight; volunteers are playing bridge\nin the fireball.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nChange of seasons means little\nto Bill Gopp. He's still taking his\ndaily plunge in the jcy Columbia.\nNELSOHGOLF\nCLUB (LOSES\nTHIS SUNDAY\nThis week-end only of 1937 remains for Nelson golfers, for after Sunday the Nelson Golf and\nCountry club is to be closed for the\nseason, Dr. H. H. MacKenzie, president, stated Thursday.\nAlthough the season was brought\nto an official close October 10 in\nthe \"Auld Lang Sync\" tourney, the\nfine weather has kept golfers engaged weekly in medal sweep competitions.\nClosing activity of the season will\nbe the annual golf club dance. Trophies won throughout the season\nwill be presented.\nNo Basketball\nPractice Until\nMonday Evening\nSaturday basketball practices for\nNelson basketball association squads\nhave been postponed, and teams will\nnot lake the floor until Monday\nevening.\nWax laid for the Masonic ball will\nhave to be removed from the recreation hall floor and the work will\nnot be completed for\" tlie evening\npractice periods.\nMonday's practice schedule follows:\n6:30 p.m.\u2014Catholic Girls' club.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Maple Leaf girls.\n8:30\u2014Fairview Falcons and Grocers.\nLazzeri Leaves\nYanks for Cubs\nCHICAGO, Oct. 28 (AP).\u2014Tony\nLazzeri, for 12 years star second\nbaseman for New York Yankees,\nwas signed today by Chicago Cubs\nas player and coach for 1938.\nDUTCH ZWILLINC TO\nMANAGE OAKLAND\nOAKLAND, Calif., Oct. 28 (AP).\n\u2014E. W. \"Dutch\" Zwilling succeeds\nBill Meyer as manager of the Oakland club of the Pacific Coast Baseball league.\nMeyer was named recently by the\nNew York Yankee farm system to\ntake over Zwilling'.^ duties as manager of the Kansas City club.\nLAWSON LITTLE\nTlie main reason that amateur\ngolfers, on stopping up lo professional play, as did Lawson Little,\nfail to match their efforst as \"simon\npures\" is because of the fact the\npros conduct the majority of their\nmatches on the medal play system\n(one man against the field), whereas\nthe amateurs play under the match\nplay rules (one man against another).\nIn match play the golfer has only\nto defeat the man he is playing at\nthe time to advance, and it is possible to play a couple of comparatively poor rounds and yet reach\nthe finals. However, in medal play,\nthe competitor's every stroke counts,\nfor it is his total score that decides\nhis success.\nLittle was almost unbeatable as\na match player, but he has been\nanything but a signal success in\npro ranks.\nWilkes, Centre\nfor Fishmen, Is\nBest All 'Round\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Oct.\n28 (CP)-Bill Wilkes, high scoring\ncentre on Ncw Westminster Salmonbellies, 1937 Mann cup holders, tonight was awarded the R. L. Mait-\nland cjjp. The award is made annually by the Intercity Box lacrosse\nleague to ihe player voted most valuable to his team and for sportsmanship and assistance to .nmior\nlacrosse.\nWilkes joined Salmonbellies last\nyear, coming here from Orillia\nwhere he had played on three\nchampionship Terrier teams, and led\nthe Royal city team to victory in the\nrecent Mann cup final against his\nformer teammates, first Canadian\nlacros.se championship for British\nColumbia in 1(1 years.\nMrs. Townshend Takes Ladies' Open\nand Golf Club 1937 Singles Titles\nCarlson Open Champ\nand   Watson   Club\nSingles Titlist\nOutshining the whole Nelson golfing field as far as championship\ntourneys winnings were concerned\nMrs. Harold Lakes, closed her season the proud possessor of the Kootenay Breweries cup and Ruth Armstrong Rose owl, emblematic of the\nladies' open golf championship and\nNelson Golf and Country club championship, respectively.\nCarl Carlson captured the Leith\ncup in one of the men's premier\ngolf events of the season\u2014 the men's\nopen championship. Men's club\nsingles championship and Appleyard-Lowe cup was won by Robert\nWatson.\nComplete resulls of these tourneys,\nomitted in a previous listing, follows:\nLeith cup (men's open championship)\u2014Carl Carlson, winner and\nKen McBride, runner up; V. C.\nOwen, first flight winner and Harold Lakes, runner up; L. A. McPhail, second flight winner and P.\nHalliwell of Trail, runner u\"; J.\nMitchell of Trail, third flight v,finer\nand Dr. H. H. MacKenzie. runner\nup; John Fraser, fourth flight winner: and Harold Putnam, runner up;\nE. C. Wragge, fifth flight winner\nand E. T. Stromstead, runner up.\nKootenay Breweries trophy  (la-\n(Ikic\/uptum p\nALL-DAY FACE-FRESHNESS\nsliaOe cmcc dam wm a -\nROLLS RAZOR]\nIn automatically itroppod and honod\nhollow-ground blade shovel you\ncleanly, -lowly, comfortably. No\nbladei lo buy.\nV #*f *        ROLLS SH A VINO BOWL-JI .00     REFILLW0. ,\ndies' open championship) \u2014 Mrs.\nTownshend winner nad Miss E. E.\nHughes of Fernie, runner up; Mrs.\nA. C. Whitehouse, first flight winner and Mrs. R. L. McBride, runner\nup.\nAppleyard-Lowe cup (men's club\nchampionship) \u2014 Robert Watson,\nwinner and James Allen, runner up;\nL. A. McPhail, first flight winner\nand V .C. Owen, runner up; F. G.\nSchroeder, second flight winner, and\nJim Cherrington, runner up; Otto\nGill, third flight winner, and C.\n(Buck) Lambert, runner up.\nRuth Armstrong Rose bowl (ladies' club championship) \u2014 Mrs.\nTownshend, winner, and Mrs. Harold Lakes, runner up; Mrs. R. Watson, first flight winner, and Miss\nConnie Smith, runner up.\nSTRONG SQUADS\nFOR THE HOWIE\nMORENZ BATTLE\nMaroons-Canadiens to\nBattle All-Stars\nin Benefit Game\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)- Sixteen Montreal Maroon and Canadien\nhockey stars will blend their color\nand craft in the Howie Morenz\nMemorial Fund game Tuesday night\nagainst an all-star National Hockey\nleague team as the 1937-38 professional hockey picture is previewed\nhere.\nAfter final selections were made\nyesterday, Wilf Cude and Pudgy\nBill Bevcridge were slated to share\nnetminding duties behind the stalwart defence combines of Babe Sie-\nbert-Waltcr Buswell and Marvin\nWentworth-Lionel Conacher. The\n\"Big Train\" is coming out of retirement for the occasion.\nThe Montrealers will have variety\nin tho centre-ice spot with Pit Le-\npine blocking traffic with a sweeping hook-check and Paul Haynes\npurveying his skillful playmaklng.\nBob Gracie may supply speed down\nthe middle lane while Russ Blinco\nwill do the close in sharpshooting.\nGracie is an improbability, however\nas ho has not yet come to terms\nwith Maroons.\nFlanking Ihe pivot-men on the\nright will be Tiny Johnny Gagnon,\nEarl Robinson and veteran Jimmy\nWard, while on the portslde, Baldy\nNorthcott, Toe Blake and darting\nAurel Joliat will harass the all-\nstars. Joliat and Gagnon were\nMorenz' line-mates before the\n\"Stratford Streak\" died last season at the height of a gTand comeback.\nLed by Jack Adams of Detroit\nRedwings, who will direct them\nfrom tho bench, the following, will\nform the N. H. L. all-stars; Normie\nSmith, Ebbie Goodfellow and Marty\nBarry of Detroit; Tiny Thompson\nand Eddie Shore of Boston Bruins;\nRed Horner, Busher Jackson and\nCharlie Conacher of Toronto Maple\nLeafs; Happy Day, Sweeney Schriner and Ncls Stewart of New York\nAmericans; Harold (Mush) March\nand Johnny Goltselig of Chicago\nBInck Hawks; Frank Boucher and\nCecil Dillon of New York Hangers.\nA. S. Horswill\nIs Head Legion\nBadminton Club\nPlan to Open Season\nin Legion Hal1\nMonday\nA. S. Horswill was named president of the Canadian Legion Badminton club for the 1937-38 season\nopening Monday evening and J, T.\nMoon was elected secretary.\nRepainting of court lmes wai\nstarted Thursday and everything\nwill be in readiness for the season's\nopening.\nSome 25 players signified their intention to join the club.\nFour days a week\u2014Monday, Wednesday. Friday and Sunday\u2014have\nbeen allotted.\nFIGHTS\nCHICAGO \u2014 Buddy Knox, 197,\nDayton, 0., stopped Eddie Cordere,\n183V,, Providence, R. I., (9).\nNEW HAVEN, Conn. \u2014 Eddie\nBlunt, 217, Ncw York, outpointed\nAl Gainer, 173, New Haven (10).\nSIOUX CITY, Iowa-Willie (Gorilla) Jones. 154, Akron, O., outpointed Andv Miller. 152, Sioux City (8).\nSOUTH BEND, Ind.\u2014Jimmy Ad-\namick, 188',., Midland, Mich., stopped Lou Thomas, 190, Indianapolis,\nIndiana heavyweight champion (3).\nmi eo\nc^VW^TCH WHISKY\nITHOSf\nklNOW\nBOTTLED IN\nSCOTLAND\nThis advertisement is not published by the\nLiquor Control Board or bv the Government of British Columbia..   .\n.\na\u2014...\u00ab\n-\n 1UJHP.WWMMIU1.  IW. IHIII\nmm*mmmmmmm.\nmsmmmmm\nmmmm*mmr*m.\nPAGE FOURTEEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELBDm, d.c\u2014rrtiDRT ntonmrta, ovri. a., 1--T.\nWise Pennies Invested in Want Ad Opportunities Grow Up to Be Dollars\nMussolini Comes Out Flat for\nGiving Germany Africa Colonies;\nLondon Times Takes Same View\nROME,   Oct.   28   (AP)\u2014Premier\nMussolini, celebrating the 15th anniversary of the Fascist march on\nRome, declared today it is \"necessary\" that Germany be restored to\nher \"place in the African sun.\"\nII Duce thus voiced support for\nGermany's resire for return of her\nlost colonies. He spoke in the presence of 100,000 fascists from all parts\nof Italy.\nA German delegation, sent to\nRome by Chancellor Hitler for the\ncelebration, heard the premier,\nalong with other foreign diplomats,\nMussolini turned to what both\nnazi Germany and fascist Italy term\nthe threat of \"Bolshevism\" in\nEurope.\n\"For durable and fruitful peace it\nis   necessary   that   bolshevism   be\neliminated in Europe,\" he told the\nmassed Blackshirts and visitors.\n\"It   is   necessary   that   some\nclauses of the (great war) peace\ntreaties be revised,\" he went on,\n\"It   is   necessary   that   a   great\npeople, the German people, have\nonce more the place to which it\nts entitled and which it once possessed in the African sun.\"\nThe   premier   shifted   to   Italy's\nown colonial possessions.\n\"It is necessary that Italy he\nleft   tranquil   because   she   has\ncreated her empire with her own\nblood   and   with   her   resources\nwithout touching a single corner\nof the empires of others,\" he said.\nHe defended Italy against what he\ncalled foreign criticism in connection with the recently imposed 10\nper cent capital levy for rearmament.\n\"We cannot be judged by these\n. ridiculous   standards,\"   Mussolini\nsaid. \"In fascist Italy capital is at\nthe orders of the state while in\nthe great democracies the phen-\nominon Is exactly the opposite\u2014\nthe state is the servant of capital.\"\nMussolini expressed appreciation\nfor the presence of Hitler's representatives, declaring:\n\"This proves that' besides the\nRome-Berlin axis there is developing an ever greater solidarity between the regimes and ever more\nsolid friendship between the  two\npeoples.\"\nThe watchword with which Italy\nwished to inaugurate the 16th year\nof fascism, could be expressed by\u2014\n\"peace.\"\n\"This word has been abused in\nthe bleating sheepfolds of the so-\ncalled great democracies,\" he asserted,\nTIMES FOR GERMANY'S\nCLAIM\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (CP-Havas.-\nThe Times today urged a colonial\nsettlement with Germany.\nDiscussing Germany's claims, the\nTimes in an editorial said a large\nnumber of letters published in its\ncolumns recently had revealed \"a\nvery general desire for a peaceful\nsettlement with Germany.\n\"There is certainly no support in\nthis country for the view that the\npeace of the world would be assured\nby a mere reversal of the colonial\nsettlement of Versailles,\" the Times\nadded. \"But there is equally no\nsu^ort in this country nor the\ncrude belief that the Versailles settlement must persist for all time\nin every detail and without a revision for which its own clauses\nprovide.\"\nThe editorial urged that a colonial\nfield be opened to the Reich by the\ncommon action of three or four\ngreat colonizing powers with con-\ntigous African territories. (Great\nBritain, France, Italy, Belgium and\nPortugal control a large proportion\nof Africa.)\n\"Nothing worthwhile will be\nachieved with attempts to check\nGermany's expansion by keeping\nit in the limits fixed 20 years ago\nand in seeking to encircle the\nReich like elephants surround\nthe tiger in the jungle,\" the Times\nargued.\n\"Let us make a supreme effort so\nfar as Great Britain is concerned\nto do what is possible for appeasement before a dangerous point is\nreached. The German appetite for\nexpansion is not to be satisfied-\nit may even be stimulated\u2014by an\nisolated gesture,\"\nPooley Against\nPolice Changes\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP)-R. H,\nPooley, K.C., British Columbia's attorney-general from 1928 to 1D33\nand member of the legislature for\n\u25a0many years, expressed opposition\nlast night to proposals that would\nchange police administration systems in Victoria and Vancouver.\n\"It was responsible for the change\nfrom the elective system of naming\npolice commissions in Victoria\u2014and\nI changed it overnight after I had\nreceived proof of tampering with\nthe records of the department, tampering with the criminal records,\nand interference,\" he said.\nDEATHS\nBy The  Canadian  Press\nMONTREAL \u2014 Dr. Jean Ernest\nBousquet, 56. delegate, French-Canadian medical fraternity to several\ninternational congresses.\nNEW YORK - Mrs, Florence\nMorse Kingsley, 78, author of \"Titus\n\u2014a Comrade of the Cross\".\nWINNIPEG\u2014P, A. (Harry) Smith,\n59, newspaper, one of original members of Princess Pats.\nESTEVAN, Sask.-E. W. Garner.\n50, manager Truax-Treaer Coal\nmines.\nNEWCASTLE-ON-TYNE- Majnr-\nGcnrral Sir Frederick Landon, 77,\nchief inspector ouartermaster-gen-\neral's services during the Great\nWar.\nLONDON-Diana Wilson, 40, English actress.\nTALK PLANS\nREFORESTATION\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP) .-Reforestation measures for British Columbia were discussed at length to.\nday when representative lumbermen of the province met Hon, A.\nWells Gray, minister of lands, and\nE. C. Manning, chief forester, at a\nconference.\nMatters were not settled and\nothers meetings may be necessary\nshortly.\nOn the delegation were Ross\nPendleton, chairman of the loegers'\ncommittee; Bruce Farris of Great\nCentral Lake, Phil Wilson, F. Brown\nand R. V. Stewart, secretary of the\nLoggers' association of British Columbia.\nPeggy Primrose\n\"Last Friend\" oi\nJohn Bull Editor\nLONDON, Oct. 28   (CP-Cable)-\nThe last friend of Horatio Bottom-\nley, who paid his funeral expenses,\nwas located living quietly in London today and promised to dispose\nof the ashes of the ruined financier.\nShe did not say how.\nHer name is Mrs. Peggy Lowe.\nShe said she would obtain the ashes\nfrom the undertaking establishment where an urn containing the\nremains of the one-time member\nof parliament who served a jail\nsentence for fraud was discovered\nyesterday on a shelf. She was\nknown to the undertaker as \"Miss\nPeggy Primrose.\"\nAs he lay dying in the public\nward of hospital in 1933, a penniless, broken man after serving more\nthan five years of his seven-year\nsentence, Bottomley asked that his\nashes be scattered over the estate\nhe once owned at Upper Dicker,\nSussex.\nFor many years prominent in\nBritish finance, politics and journalism and founder of the weekly\n\"John Bull,\" Bottomley was convicted at the Old Bailey in 1922 of\ndefrauding poor investors under the\nguise of raising money for war\npurposes. He was expelled from the\nHouse of Commons.\nRich Radium\nin Argentina\nBUENOS AIRES, Oct. 28 (CP)\n\u2014The Argentine government today announced the discovery of\nrich deposits of radium and uranium In Cordoba province.\nDr. Luciano Catalano, provincial director of mines, said the\ndeposits \"may prove the richest\nso far found in the world.\" The\nminerals are within a district reserved for government explita-\ntion.\nSUMMERLAND TO VOTE\nON NEW WATER LINE\nSUMMERLAND, B.C. Oct. 28\n(CP)\u2014Summerland -ratepayers will\nNov. 13 vole on an $80,000 by-law\nfor the replacing of the municipality's domestic water service\npipeline.\n12,169 Veterans of\nWar Are Receiving\n$3,935,012 Yearly\nOTTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP)-At the\nbeginning of October, 12,189 Canadian war veterans, who had served\nin a theatre of war, were receiving\nthe war veterans allowance. This\nis $20 a month for single men, and\n$40 for married veterans. The annual disbursement represented by\nthis figure, according to the pensions department, is $3,935,012.\nThe number of ex-service men\nwho come within the care of the\nwar veterans allowance commission\nis increasing, as the veterans attain the age of 60. Of the total\nnumber, 8,125 receive the allowance\nby reason of age, while 4044 get the\ngrant on account of being disabled\nto the extent of being industrially\nunemployable. When a veteran\ndies the allowance is continued to\nhis widow for one year; at present\n177 widows receive the grant.\nTwenty-five per cent of those receiving the war veterans allowance\nreside in British Columbia. \u2022\nBy provinces the allowance Is distributed as follows:\nProvince Recpts.        Amt,\nQuebec       1172      $ 390,687\nNova Scotia      646 211,565\nOntario        4324        1,463.751\nManitoba        1168 360,659\nSaskatchewan   628 188,064\nAlberta            928 269,741\nBritish Columbia   2984 948,906\nMaritimes      319 103,639\nGive Send-Off\nlo News Carrier\nROSSLAND. B. C.-On the eve of\nhis departure for Vancouver, where\nhis family are taking up residence,\nRussell Smith, Nelson News carrier,\nhad a practical demonstration of the\nfact that even in this age of rush\nand bustle faithful service does not\ngo unrecognized. Over 100 of his\ncustomers \"chipped in,\" and as a\ntoken of their appreciation, Russell\nis in possession of a beautiful leather purse, containing a substantial\nsum of \"brand new\" bills. The gift\nwas accompanied by many expressions of regret over his leaving the\ncity, and good wishes for his happiness and prosperity in the future.\n\"Sic Him\" She\nCries and Thug\nFlees From Dog\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP). -\nPolice today sought the armed holdup man who fled from the store of\nMrs. J. Milhvard last night when\nthe woman called upon her small\ndog to \"sic him!\"\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\n\u25a0II Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  $   .05\nBy carriei per week      .25\nBy carrier per year \u00ab_ 13.00\nBy mail In Canada, to sub*\nsenbers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nUuee months -.180; six months\ni'd.m, one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $750.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nIlea Line\n(Minimum 2 lino)\n2 lines, per insertion _ $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions    88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per tnsertion  _   .33\n3 lines. 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\nGOOD OPPORTUNITY OFFERED\nto experienced salesman to handle\ncalendars, advertising novelties,\netc. Attractive commissions, good\nterritories open. Give full particulars. International Lithographing Company, Ltd., Toronto.\n(3181)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNG MAN ALSO BOY 16 WANT\nwork on ranch. State wages. Box\n3150, Daily News. (3150)\nYOUNG MAN DESIRES WK\u00bb BY\nday or month Box 3142 Daily News\n(3142)\nPERSONAL\nMENI 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 experience or investment. 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. Alberta. (27251\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubbers. Send $100 for 15\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St.\n_W_Vancouver. (2957)\nFAT IS A~DISEASE. AGGRA\"-\nvates Diabetis. Reduce now.\nTwenty-one days treatment $1.00.\nBox 3098. Daily News. (3098)\nTHE GUMPS\nWant Ads Get Results\nBy Cus Edson\nWANTED\nWANTED SECOND HAND OUT-\nboard engine, 4 H. P. (approx.)\nState make, age, etc., N. B., Berch-\ndale, via Kaslo, B. C. (3153)\nBABY^SGb'CART INGOOrTCON-\ndition. Apply 711 Nelson Ave.\n(3168)\nLEGAL NOTICES\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER\nOF BEER LICENCE\nNOTICE is hereby given that, on\nthe 27th day of November next, the\nundersigned intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for consent\nto transfer of Beer Licence No. 4007\nissued in respect of premises being\npart of a building known as Allan\nHotel, situate at No. 308 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, British Columbia,\nupon the lands described as Lot\nNos. 2 and 3, Block No. 12, Official\nPlan of Nelson Cily, Nelson Land\nRegistration District, in the Province of British Columbia, from Cat-\nerina Pisapio, Nelson, B. C, to Alfred Andrew Vassar of Nelson, British Columbia, the transferee.\nDATED at Nelson, B. C, this 27th\nday of October, A. D. 1937.\nA. A. VASSAR,\nCATERINA PISAPIO,\nApplicant and transferee.\n(3173)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nFOR SALE: TEAM OF HORSES,\nwell matched, roans, weight 1450\neach, also wagon and harness,\nEllison Milling Co. (3169)\nPURE BRED~THREE YEAR 0~LD\nJersey bull. Appleton Bros., R. R. 1\nNelson. (3183)\nBONDS\n10,000 Nelson, 414%, due 1955 @\n103%, yield $4.20. 19.000 Nelson,\n3V_%, due 1957 @ 96, yield $3.80.\nChas. F. McHardy, Phone 135.\n(3111)\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM, BOARD OPTIONAL, FUR-\nnace heat. Electric hot water tank\nBox 3171, Daily News. (3171)\nROCK CREEK MAN IS\nMADE FENCE VIEWER\nVictoria, Oct, 28 (en-Four\nprovincial appointments were announced today. Walker Aikens, Tak-\nla Landing, was named stipendiary\nmagistrate for Cariboo and Prince\nRupert; Walter A H. Gil, game warden of Fort Nr.aa'n as stipendiary\nmagistrate and coroner; G. H. Pitman, Rock Creek as fence viewer for\nGrand Forks-Greenwood district\nand Jacob Eckstein of Wyatt Bay\nas justice of the peace.\nThe Emperor Nero played a pipe\norgan\u2014not a fiddle.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\nETC., FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write [or full information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources. C.P.R, Calgary, Alia\n(2723)\nVERY DESIRABLE HOME WITH\nthree acres of land, located on\nKettle 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)\nHOUSES   WANTED\nWILL BUY MODERN BUNGALOW\nif price reasonable. Reply Box\n3115, Daily News. (3115)\nWANTED SMALL COTTAGE. 3 OR\n4 rooms. Modern. Reply Box 3113,\nDaily News. (3113)\nWANTED AT ONCE SHACK OR\nsmall house. Box 987, Nelson.\n(3187)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nFOR RENT- 5 ROOM, MODERN,\nnew hou.se. Well furnished, electric heating system and all electric\nappliances. Ph. 520-R, Box 788.\n(3163)\nFOR RENT A LARGE BRIGHT\nfront room for light housekeeping,\nhalf block from Central school.\nApply 384 Baker St. (3128)\n3 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE FOR\nrent. Steam heated. Ph. 369 R 1.\n(3172)\nLT. HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS. 918\nKootenay Street. (No children.)\n(2987)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for renL    Annable Blo^k\n(2727)\nSEVEN ROOM HOUSE IN FAIR-\nview. Apply Box 2853, Daily News.\n(2853)\nSEE KERR APTS FIRST\n(3029)\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.    (2728)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you l,.\"l a cat or dog. pocket-\nbook, Jewelry or fur or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without rosl to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nFOR SALE\nPIPE  TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock (or immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver. B.C.\n  (2720)\nMILK BOTTLES; BOTTLE CAPS]\nBottle Brushes; Milk Can Brushes;\nHypro White Fluid Disinfectant;\nVeterinary Vaseline. The Brackman-Ker Millg, Co., Ltd.   (3185)\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)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS,   KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\n(2722)\nLLOYD WICKER BABY BUGGY.\nUsed one year. $15. Can be seen\nat Williams Transfer. (3095)\nICE CREAM, NEWS STAND AND\nconfectionery store Fruitvale, B. C.\nBox 3167, Daily News.__^ (3167)\nHOTSEHOLTTfURNITURE. AP~-\nply after 6 p.m. 718 Silica St.\n(3145)\nJUBILEE HEATER PRACTICALLY\nnew. Bargain. Phone 289L3.\n(3161)\nWE SELL EVERYTHING AT BAR-\ngain prices. The Ark Store. (2761)\n3 HEATERS, 618, VICTORIA ST.,\nMrs. Oakes, alley entrance, (3078)\nTWIN BED SUITE, PRACTICALLY\nnew. Phone 508L2. (3106)\nAUTOMOTIVE\n1 Q9fi BUICK SEDAN $65 will\nXt\/auO handle. Payments $15 per\nmonth.\n1 Q9Q F0RD   ROADSTER.   $65\nX-eJuO will handle.\nBUTORAC MOTORS\nTRAIL, B. C.\nHudson,   Terraplane.   Packard,\nLaSalle, Cadillac.\nPontiac  and   Buick  Carl\nG. M. C. Indiana and White\nTrucks and Busses,\n(2937)\nFOR SALE FORD LIGHT DELIV-\nery, licenced and cheap. Ph. 264,\n(3129)\nLOST-MINK STOLE AT CAPITOL\nTheatre Saturday. Reward. Box\n401, Kaslo. (3148)\nGARDEN AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nLAMBERT,   BINGS   AND   MOR-\nello Cherry Trees, 1 year, $1.00.\nRed   Delicious   Apple   Trees,   2\nyears, $1.00.  T. Roynon, Nelson.\n(3182)\nWANT   ADS.  GET   RE8ULTS\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayeri\nE W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter    301-305 Josenhine\nSt., Nelson, B. C.  (2778)\nGRENVILLEl. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 428\nFall Street, Nelson, B. C, P. O.\nBox ,No   726   Representing shin-\n_per]s interest, Trail, B. C.     (2779)\nHAROLD  S7~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)\nChiropractor.\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Wettover\nOFFICER CLAMCy WANTS TO TALK TO WTuuE\n\\NHAT CAM I\nOO FOP YOU 2\nABOUT THIS BUftffLAa\nEY CALL THE CAT-VJEr\nI TRACED HIM TO VCUT-. &ACk\n| YARD AMD THEN\n) HE DISAPPEARED\nX WAS K.IQHT HEfcE ALL EVENINS __\nIN THE HOUSE WITH >OU_f-EMEMBE&\nTILLIE Z\nSAY, FPESH\n<3UY_\\NHO\nA\u00a3|<ED YoO\nFOP.  AN\nALlEM 1\nJ. R. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk.\n(2781)\nCorsets\nSpencer corests.   Surgical Belts M\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St. Ph. 668\n\u25a0\u2022278?)\nBRINCINC UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManus\nI WANT YOU TO GO TO JUDSE\nJAGIU AND GET A BIT MORE\nACQUAINTED WITH HIM- HE'S\nA WONDERFUL LAWYER- HE\nPASSED THE BAR WHEN HE\nWAS TWENTY-ONE--\nHE'S NEVER\nPASSED ONE\nSINCE I'VE\nKNOWN HIM-\nBY GOLLY- MAGGIE\nWANTS TO PICK\nALL ME FRIENDS\nFOR ME\u2014 SHE\nWON'T EVEN LET\nME PICK\nNO.SIR-BUTHEWAS\nALL IN THIS MORNING.\nHE WENT OVER TO\nTHE HU6H PAYALOTT\nCAFE- YOU'LL FIND\nV_^ HIM THERE-\nMAGGIE-I'M WITH\nJUDGE JAGIN- WE\nARE TALKIN' OVER\nA CASE HE JUST\nOPENED-I'LL\nNOT BE HOME\nUNTIL LATE-\nEngineers and Surveyors\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nDISTRICT MANAGEMENT\not the Mutual Benefit Health and \u00abec.\nassoc. now under supervision of\nFrank A. Stuart and E L. Warburton. Office: Aberdeen Block,\n577 Baker St., Nelson, P. O. Box\n389. (2794)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 503     324 Vernon Street\n 7\"85)\nH E. STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine k Mill work a\nsnecialty Fully eouipned shop Ph.\n93, 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\nH. D DAWSON Nelson. B C\nMine Surveys and Reports\n__ B. C. Land Surveyor.       (27831\nBOYDC~~AFFLECK FruTJvale B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n,278-1)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert   Mortician      Lad;   Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n  (2785)\nDAVIS  FUNERAL  SERVICE\nEmbalming k Plastic Work\nLady Mortician Assisting\nPhone 95. Ambulance Service.\n(2780)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD\nReal Estate Insurance. Rentals\n311, Baker St., Phone 68.      (2737)\nR. W DAWSON. Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197\n(2788)\nD    J     ROBERTSON.      NOTARY\nPublic. Nelson. Phone 157L. (2798)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list ot 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 lhat 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 Renrints. eight for 25c. .CRYSTAL PHOTOS, WILKIE. SASK.\n(2800)\nSanitariums\nC D. BLACKWOOD,   Insurance of\nevery description.  Real Est Ph 99\n(2789)\nH E. DILL, 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 ' i-ERRT AGENT   FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For bcltei rates\n'2792)\nCHAS. F McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.       (27.3)\nDR. ALDRICH. SPOKANE. WASH.\nHeart. Stomach. Kidney. Bladder\nDiseases Ireated.   X-ray work.\n(2801)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S      SASH      FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker St\n(2802)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY.   SELL   k   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.    The Ark Store\n2803)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it is on time all lhe time.\n345, Baker St, Nelson. (2701)\nmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm________\u25a0____________\u25a0______________\u25a0\nsmmm^^^^^mmm^^^mm\n :'\u25a0_\u25a0_* '?'':,''-\u2022   \u2022\u25a0\u25a0-<\u25a0\nWmmmwmmmm-mmwm^mmmwmmmum*^^^\nwm\nl\n4\/5\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NEL80N, B.C.\u2014FRIDAY MORNINQ, OCT. 29. 1937.\n-PAGE FIFTEEN\nPRICE OF DOMESTIC COPPER IS CUT IN NEW YORK\nNEW YORK HAS\nA BUYING RUSH\nEarly   Rise   Falls   as\nTraders Cash in\nSorne Profits\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014Recovery fuel in the form of altered\nmargin regulations today steamed\nup one of the sharpest stock market\nrallies in several weeks.\nA buying rush that put the ticker\ntape several minutes behind in the\nfirst hour lifted quotations one to\nsix or more points. Traders cashed\nin some profits in later proceedings\nand extreme advances were reduced\nmaterially. Volume also dwindled.\nA rebound In the last hour, however,\nagain pressed the market's recording facilities and leading issues finished not far under their tops of the\nsessiort.\nAction of the federal authorities\nIn reducing the speculative purchasing ante from 55 to 40 per cent\nwas viewed as highly stimulating,\nfew kicks were heard regard'ng\nboosting of the short selling margin\nto 50 per cent.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks retained an advance of 1.2\npoints at 49. This was 4.01 points\nabove the year's low. Transfers\namounted to 2,457,560 shares compared with 1,063,320 yesterday.\nDISTILLERS'   INCOME\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014National Distillers Products Corp.,\nwhisky and spirits manufacturers,\nfor the September quarter reported\ntoday net income of $1,301,461 before the federal undistributed profits\nsurtax, equal to 64 cents a common\nshare.\nThis compare, with net Income of\n$1,367,830 or 67 cents a share in the\npreceding quarter and $1,320,946 or\n65 cents a share in the September\n1936 quarter.\nFor the first nine months of 1937,\nnet income was $4,094,399, equal to\n$2.01 a common share, against $4,-\n081,394 or $2 a share in the like period last year.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP) .-Closing:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a343 12s 63,\nup \u00a3 2s (M; future \u00a343 17b (id, up\n\u00a31; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a348, up\n10s; asked \u00a350, up \u00a31.\nTin spot \u00a3211 15s, up \u00a34 5s;\nfuture \u00a3211 10s, up \u00a34 5s.\nBids; Lead spot \u00a318 Hi 9d, up\n12s 6d; future \u00a318 6s 3d, up Us 3d.\nZinc spot \u00a317 3s 'Jd, up 8s 9d;\nfuture \u00a317 8s 9d, up lis 3d.\nBar gold declined one penny at\n140s 7d.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 19 l5-16d.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\nand future 12.00; export 10.95.\nTin firm; spot and future 48.75;\nfuture 4862%.\nLead steady; spot New York 5.50\u2014\n55- East St. Louis 5.35.\nZinc steady; East St. Louis spot\nand future 5.75.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 12.65;\ntin 51.25; lead 5.35; zinc 5.15; antimony 17.50; per 100 pounds f.o.b.\nMontrael, five-ton lots.\nBar gold In London up one cent\nat $34.84 an ounce In Canadian\nfunds; 140s 7d in British. The fixed\nWashington price amounted to $34.99\nin Canadian.\nSilver, futures closed steady and\nunchanged today. No sales. Bids:\nOct. 44.60; Nov. 44.60; Dec. 44.60;\nMarch 43.95; May 43.70.\nLondon Rallies\non Margin Change\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP).-Wash-\nington news of a change in margin\nrequirements and subsequent improvement of the stock market in\nNew York created a rally on the\nLondon exchange today which held\nup to closing time, and the prices\nof leading American issues closed\n$1 to $4 or more higher.\nGains were general in all groups\nand the market closed with a fjrm\ntone. Commodity and metal prices\nreflected Improvement of stocks.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low\n30 Industrials  -  138.31 132.58\n20 Rails     34.33       33.09\n20 Utilities _   22.67       21.64\n40 Bonds    \u2014        \t\nClose Change\n135.22\u2014up 2.96\n33.74\u2014up .84\n22.11\u2014up .78\n94.32-off   .07\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAfton Mines  02V4\nAldermac  Copper   57\nAlexandria Gold  OVk\nAmm Gold  26\nAnglo Huronian      4.00\nArgosy Gold 30\nArntfield Gold  28\nAstoria Rouyn _ 04\nAztec Mining   05'\/4\nBagamac Rouyn  _      .24\nBankfield Gold  70\nBase Metals   18\nBeattie Gold      1.14\nBidgood Kirk   51\nBig Miss  41\nBobjo Mines 11%\nBralorne Mines      7.80\nBrett Treth     04\nBuf Ankerite      11.35\nBunker Hill Ex  13%\nCan  Malartic        1.04\nCariboo Gold Q      1.50\nCastle Treth _ 65\nCentral Man  .-..      .05\nCentral Pat      2.27\nChibougamau    22\nChromium M k S  56\nCoast Copper      2.25\nConiagas   Mines         1.40\nConiaurum Mines     1.25\nCons M & S     56.50\nDarkwater    14%\nDom Mines      44.25\nDom Explorers   04\nDorval Siscoe       .22%\nEast Mai  91\nEldorado Gold     1.70\nFalconbridge Nickel       5.25\n.42\n.15\n.48\n.25\n.08\n.05%\n.80\nFed Kirkland  08%\nFrancoeur Gold\t\nGillies Lake \t\nGod's  Lake   _\t\nGold Belt\t\nGranada Gold  \t\nGrandoro Mines\t\nGunnar Gold \t\nHard Rock Gold     1.05\nHarker Gold  11\nHollinger     12.15\nHowey Gold  29\nHudson Bay      21.00\nInt Nickel    46.25\nJ M Con       .25\nJack Waite  44\nJacola Gold  28\nKerr Addison      1.78\nKirkland  Lake         1.26\nLake Shore     50.25\nLamaque Contact 04\nLeitch Gold  66%\nLebel Oro  12\nLittle Long Lac     4.95\nMacassa Mines     4.95\nMacLeod Cockshutt      1.02\nMadsen R L  69\nMan k East  02\nMandy Mines 15\nMalrobic Mines  01%\nMclntyre Pore     36.00\nMcKenzie R L      1.09\nMcVittie Graham  15\nMcWatters Gold 35\nMining Corp     1.85\nMinto Gold  05\nMoneta   Pore        1.75\nMorris Kirk   18\nNipissing Mining _     1.90\nNoranda     48.00\nNormetal \t\n 85\nO'Brien   Gold   \t\n      3.85\n 41\n     3.10\nParkhill Gold   \t\n 13\n 10\nPaymaster  Con  \t\n 46\nPend   Oreille\t\n      1.89\n 90\n      5.25\n      3.45\n      2.29\n      1.31\n 79\nQuebec Gold \t\n 36\nRead Authier \t\n      3.10\nR L Gold Shore \t\n 32\n 35\nReno Gold \t\n 77\nRitchie   Gold   \t\n 02%\nRoche L L\t\n mVi\n     1.37\nShawkey Gold\t\n 37\nSheep Creek Gold \t\n 88\nSherritt Gordon\t\n      1.42\nSiscoe   Gold   \t\n     3.15\n 01%\nSladen Malartic \t\n.95\n 53\nSt Anthony 17%\nSudbury  Basin  .      2.50\nSullivan   Cons    _    1.00\nSylvanite        2.94\nTashota   Gold    03%\nTeck Hughes  Gold _     4.95\nToburn   Gold    _    2.40\nTowagamac       .52\nVentures Ltd       4.60\nWaite Amulet  _     1.51\nWhitewater  07%\nWright Hargreaves      6.80\nYmir Yankee Girl  19%\nOILS\nAiax Oil  28\nA P Con       .26\nBrit American   .._   21.00 .\nBrit Dom 12\nBrown Oil 30\nCalmont 42\nCalgary & Edmonton     1.90\nChem Research 51\nCommonwealth  28\nDalhousie 59\nEastcrest   11%\nFoundation Fete   22\nFoothills    55\nHighwood Sarcee 12\nHome Oil      1.11\nImperial Oil     18.60\nInt Pete  _   30.25\nMcColl Frontenac \u201e.. _    10.00\nMerland  07\nModel Oil 38\nMonarch Roy 26\nNordon _ 19\nOkalta    92\nPacalta  12\nPantepec -     4.90\nRoyalite     32.00\nSouthwest Pete  60\nTexas Can     1.45\nUnited Oil  17\nVulcan Oil     1.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power     3\nBeatty Bros    15\nBell Telephone     162\nBrazilian   Traction    _   18%\nBrew k Dist  \u2022 5%\nBrit American Oil     20%\nBrewing Corp      1.60\nBrewing Corp pfd     15%\nB C Power A     13\nB C Power B     4%\nBuilding Products  -   42\nBurt F N Co     32%\nCan Bakeries A  .\u2022     3\nCan Bakeries pfd  _   40\nCan Bread Co      4V4\nCan Bud Malt      7%\nCan Car k Foundry    10\nCan  Cement     9%\nCan Cement pfd    94\nCan Dredge  -    33\nCan Malting  ~ __   34\nCan Pacific Rly      8%\nCan Ind Ale A _     5\nCan Ind Ale B     3\nCan Wineries      3\nCarnation pfd  _    97%\nCons Bakeries \u201e   16\nCons Smelters     56\nCosmos       19%\nDom Bridge    31\nDom Stores      6\nDom Tar &  Chem  ....      7%\nDom Tar k Chem pfd    84\nDist  Seagrams    \u201e    14%\nFanny Farmer      21%\nFord of Canada A     18\nGeneral Steel Wares      9%\nGoodyear Tire    80\nGypsum L & A     IVi\nHarding   Carpet     3%\nHamilton Bridge       7\nHamilton Bridge pfd     52\nHinde Dauche    16\nHiram  Walker    37%\nInt Metals    10\nInt Milling pfd     97%\nImperial Oil          18%\nImoerial Tobacco    13V<\nInt\" Nickel     46%\nInt  Pete       30%\nLoblaw t       23_>\nLoblaw B   21\nKelvinator    21\nMaple Leaf Milling     3%\nMassey Harris      6%,\nMcColl Frontenac    10\nMontreal Power    29%\nMoore Corp      33%\nNat Steel Car     27\nOnt Steel Prods    15\nOnt Silk Net      6\nPage Hersey     89\nPower Corp _    16\nPressed  Metals      23\nSteel of Can       66\nStandard Paving     3\n\u2014\u2014aaaaaaaaaaa__\nOILS AHD BASE\nMETALS FIRMER\nTrading Dull, Coast;\nLucky Jim Is Up\nFraction\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP) -\nPrices closed generally higher on the\nVancouver stock exchange today\nwith oils and base metals leading\nthe upward trend. Trading was dull\nand   transactions   totalled 134,134\nVulcan Oil advanced 15 cents at\n1.12, Calgary & Edmonton 11 at 1.91\nand Calmont 5 at 43. Okalta at 1.00\nand Home at 1.12 each gained 7,\nCommonwealth 3 at 28 and Royalite\n$1.75 at $32.25. Mercury at 17% and\nA. P. Consolidated at 26 both firmed 2.\nB.C. Nickel topped base metal\ntrading and closed up 3 at 12. Pend\nOreille added 15 at 1.85 and Reeves\nMacDonald 5 at 35. Grandview at\n10% and Lucky Jim at 2% were\nfractionally higher while Nicola held\nunchanged at 4%.\nPremier Gold was fairly active\nand gained 7 at 2.22. Pioneer at\n3.30 and Reno at 75 were unchanged. Bralorne slipped 5 at '7.75.\nCariboo Gold Quartz 4 at 1.51 and\nMinto % at 4%. Other golds were\nquiet and mostly unchanged.\nWinnipeg Wheal\nCloses Lower\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 28 (CP) .-Influenced largely by action at Chicago, wheat futures on the Winnipeg grain exchange lost early one-\ncent advances to close % cent lower\nto % cent higher, October at $1.24%,\nNovember $J.22%\u2014%, December\n$1.18% and May $1.16%-%.\nThe two-cent decline at Chicago,\nincreased western Canada wheat\ndeliveries and the largest Russian\nshipments in six years, all had a\ndepressing influence on the market.\nOctober wheat lost two cents in\nmid-session trading but rallies occurred near the close. Exports of\nCanadian wheat were estimated at\nonly 250,000 bushels.\nSpreads for Nos. 1, 2 and 4 Northern grades eased a cent. Premiums\nfor one and two Northern continued\non the downgrade, 18 and 12 cents,\nrespectively, above the other future.\nLiverpool close was %d higher\nfor October wheat and l%d to 14d.\nlower for. distance futures. Buenos\nAires at noon was 1%\u20141% cents up.\nBlack Sea shipments totalled 4,-\n544,000 bushels this week, an increase of almost 1,000,000 bushels\ncompared with last week. Shipments a year ago were 2,544,000\nbushels.\nCoarse grains moved with a narrow range in dull trading. Barley\nfutures advanced a cent on export\nsupport though it took only a few\norders to move .prices either way.\nCONSERVATION OF THE\nFORESTS GETS BACKING\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP)-The\nBritish Columbia Loggers' association, comprising the chief logging\noperators of the province, said at a\nmeeting here last night thcv would\ncooperate fully with the British Columbia government in its campaign\nto conserve forest lands.\nTo work out plans for next year's\nconservative program, representatives of the industry will confer\nwith Hon. Wells Gray British Columbia minister'of lands, in Victoria\nthis week.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High  Low   Close\nGREAT BRITAIN IN\nFULL SYMPATHY WITH\nU. S. ON TRADE FENCE\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP)-Sir John\nSimon, chancellor of the exchequer,\ntoday told the house of commons\nthat \"His Majesty's government are\nin full sympathy with the aims of\nthe United States government in regard to trade barriers.\"\nAnswering the question of Rupert\nde la Bere, Conservative as to\nwhether Great Britain would move\nto establish an \"economic comradeship\" between the two countries,\nthe chancellor merely reiterated that\n\"informal discussions\" were continuing between Britain and United\nStates to find a basis for trade nego-\nKelowna Woman Beats Empire\nin Big Apple Packing Contest\nOTTAWA, Oct. 28 (CP).\u2014Mrs.Iso- [land. The prize for first place was\nbel Stillingfleet of Kelowna, B. C,  <> Bold medal and $100\n.\u201e       _,     _\u201e,\u2022_\u201e       ,.    J    Competitors were required to pack\nwon the apple-packing contest at|(ive  b\"oxes o\u00a3       ^ twice daily\nthe Imperial fruit show which has \u25a0 throughout the show^ Points were\njust ended at Birmingham, England.\nSpeed and skill in packing apples\nwere deciding factors in the competition.\nThe competition was open to\npackers from all parts of the Empire and the Canadian woman won\nover a group of British packers and\ngirls from Australia and New Zea-\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nLISTED: Bid\nA P Con  26\nAmal Oil  07%\nAjtec Min Co 05%\nBig Missouri  42\nBrit Dom Oil 12\nBralorne          7.75\nBridge Riv Con 02\nC & E Corp     1.91\nCalmont Oil  43\nCariboo Gold      1.51\nCoast Brew      12.75\nCom'wealth Oil...\nDentonia\nGold Belt Mines.\nHome Oil \t\nInter Coal \t\nIsland Mount ....\nKoot Belle\t\nMak  Siccar  \t\nMcDoug Seg Ex .\nMcLeod Oil \t\nMinto   \t\nModel Oil \t\nPioneer Gold\t\n.28\n.10%\n.25\n1.12\n.21\n.77\n1.02\n.01%\n.17\n.   .04%\n3.30\nPremier Gold      2.22\nPremier Border 01%\nQuatsino        02'\/8\nRel Arlington  17\nReno Gold  75\nReeves MacD  35\nSally 05\nSalmon Gold  06\nSheep Creek  87\nSilbak-Premier   _..    2.00\nSpooner Oil        \u2014\nTaylor B Riv  04\nVanalta   Ltd\nVidette    \t\nWesko    \t\nCURB:\nAnaconda \t\nAssociated Oil\t\nBaltac Oil \t\nBluebird    \t\nB C Nickel\t\nCongress     \t\nCork Province\t\nCrows Nest new .\nDalhousie Oils ...\nDavies Pete \t\nDunwell Min \t\n.05%\n.25\n.08%\n.0(1\n,03\n.01\n.12\n.02 %\n.00%\n.05y4\n.52\n.30%\nAsk\n.27%\n.08\n.07\n.43\n7.80\n.03\n1.93\n.44\n1.55\n13.00\n.29\n.12\n1.15\n.23\n1.05\n.02\n.18\n.32\n.05\n.44\n3.50\n2.24\n.01%\n.19\n.76\n.40\n.08\n.90\n2.15\n.27\n.06%\n.30\n.15\n.10%\n.05\n.12%\n.04\n.32\n.03\nEast Crest Oil\t\nFairview Amal ...\nFederal Gold \t\nFoundation Pete .\nFreehold Oil \t\n.10\n.04%\n.02\n.20%\n.06\nGeo Copper  20\nGeo River .\nGolconda    \t\nGold Mountain ...\nGrandview   \t\nGrull-Wihksne    ...\nHaida    \t\nHedley St \t\nHighwood Sarcee .\nHome Gold\t\nIndian Mines \t\n.01\n.07\n.02%\n.10%\n.07%\n.053i\n.02\n.12\n.01%\n.01%\n.05\n.02%\n.07\n.01%\n.07%\n.02%\n.11\n.09\n.05%\n.03\n.14\n.02\nKoot Florence  01%      \u2014\nLakeview Mine ....\nLowery Pete\t\nLucky Jim \t\nMadison Oil \t\nMar Jon Oil \t\nMercury Oil\t\nMerland Oil\t\nMcGillivray     \t\nMill City Oil \t\nNicola\t\nNoble Five \t\nNordon Oil\t\nOkalta com \t\nPacalta\t\n.01\n.11\n.02%\n.06\n.07\n.17%\n.06\n.15\n.10\n.04%\n.04\n.18\n1.00\n\u25a012%\n.01%\n.03%\n.06%\n.07%\nPend Oreille      1.85\nPorter Idaho  03%\nPilot Gold  01%\nQuesnelle Q       \u2014\nReliance   01%\nReward Min 06\nRoyalite Oil     32.25\nRufus Argenta    OIV4\nRuth Hope  01%\nSilver Crest         \u2014\nSilversmith       01%\nSouthwest Pete ...._      -30\nStandard S L _      .25\nSunloch Mines 11\nUnited Distillers 90\nUnited  Oil    16%\nViking Gold 00%\nVulcan Oil       1.12\nWaverly T new 00%\nWellington Mines..      .02%\nWhitewater     08\n.12\n.04%\n.04%\n' 1.05\n.13\n1.90\n.04%\n.02\n.07%\n.01%\n.07\n34.00\n.01%\n.04%\n.02%\n.18\n.01\n1.15\n.00%\n.02%\nallotted as follows: Style and appearance, 15; alignment, 10; bulge,\n10; height of front at ends, 10;\nfirmness, 12; wrapping, 10; time 33.\nFor Mrs. Stillingfeet the contest\nprovided an opportunity to return\nto her birthplace for she was born\nnear Birmingham 28 years ago. She\ncame to the Okanagan valley with\nher parents at the age ot two.\nShe won the right to represent\nCanada at the contest in a stiff elimination trial at Vernon, B. C. Twelve\ngirls from different apple-growing\ncommunities in British Columbia\nwere entered and Mrs. Stillingfeet\nwon the trip to Birmingham by a\nnarrow margin.\nAlthough Canadian growers, particularly those in British Columbia,\nwere pioneers in the packing of\napples in boxes much of the fruit\ngrown tn the United Kingdom is\nnow packed in this way.\nWheat Slightly\nHigher, Chicago\nCHICAGO, Oct. 28 (AP).\u2014Fresh\nexport business in North American\nwheat today totalling 1,250,000 bushels helped to bring about late ad-\nvances in prices after material set\nbacks.\nAbout 400,000 bushels of United\nStates hard winter wheat was included in the new export purchases.\nThere was considerable talk current\nRussian wheat is proving to be of\ninferior quality.\nAt the close, wheat was %~%\nabove yesterday's finish. Dee. 96%\u2014\n%, May 96-96%, corn Vs off to 1\ncent up, Dec. 58%\u201459, May 59%\u2014\n60, and oats unchanged to % cent\nadvance.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nWHEAT:\nOct\t\nDec\t\nMay   \t\nOATS:\nOct\t\nNov.  \t\nDec\t\nMay   \t\nBARLEY:\nOct\t\nNov.   .....\nDec\t\nMay   \t\nFLAX:\nOct.\nNov.\nDec.\nMay\nRYE:\nOct.\nDec.\nMay\n123\n119\n117\n51%\n51%\n46%\n44%\n61\n60%\n59%\n58%\n179\n179\n177\n177\n81%\n82\n83%\n123%\n119%\n117%\n120%\n116%\n115\n53%    51%\n47%\n45%\n61%\n60%\n59%\n58%\n46%\n44%\n60%\n60%\n58%\n57%\n122%\n118%\n116%\n53%\n51%\n46%\n45\n61%\n60%\n58%\n57%\n180%   179      180%\n\u2014        \u2014      179\n177%\n176%\n177%\n177%\n176%\n176%\nB2%\n821\/3\n83%\n81%\n81%\n82%\n81%\n83\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain   1%\nAssoc Brew of Can  12\nAssoc Tel & Tel  6%\nBathurst P k P A  11%\nBell Telephone   162\n\"razilian T L k P  18%\nB C Power A   34%\nB C Power B  5%\nBuilding Products   41\nCanada Cement   0%\nCan Cement pfd   95\nCan North Power   18%\nCan Steamship   3\nCan Steamship pfd   10%\nCanadian Bronze  _  37\nCan Car & Fdy   10\nCan Car & Fdy pfd  21%\nCan Celanese   18%\nCan Celanese pfd   108%\nCan Ind Ale A   5\nCan Ind Ale B  3%\nCan Pac Rly  .\".  11%\nCockshutt Plow   9\nCon Min & Smelting  56%\nDistillers Seagrams   14%\nDominion Bridge   31\nDominion Coal pfd   18%\nDom Steel & Coal B   14%\nDominion Textile   \u25a0 72\nDryden Paper  8%\nFoundation C of C  12\nGen Steel Wares   9%\nGurd Charles  9\nGyp Lime k Al.ib   7%\nHamilton Bridge   7\nHoward Smitli Paper   15%\nH Smith Paper pfd   98\nImp Tob of C   13%\nInter Nickel of Can   46\nLake of the Woods   17\nMassey Harris   6%\nMcColl  Frontenac   10\nMontreal L H k P   29%\nNational Brew Ltd   36%\nNat Brew pfd   37\nNat Steel Car   27%\nOgilvie Flour Mills   190\nOntario Steel Pr.ds   17\nPower Corp of Can   15%\nQuebec Power   16%\nSt Lawrence Corp  6%\nSt Law Corp pld   19\nSt Law Paper pfd   54\nSouth Can Power   12%\nShawinigan W & P   21%\nSteel of Can   66%\nSteel of Can pfd  57\nWestern Grocers   57\nBANKS\nBank of Canada  -  56%\nCanadienne Nationale   154\nCommerce  162\nMontreal    -  195\nNova Scotia   295\nRoyal   173%\nAbitibi P k P Co   2%\nAbitibi 6 pfd   23\nBeauharnois Corp   6%\nBathurst P & P B   5%\nBrew Corp of Can  1.60\nBritish American Oil ,  20%\nB C Packers   10%\nCan Malting Ltd   33%\nCan Dredge k Dock  34\nCan Vickers   4%\nCan Wineries   2%\nCons Paper Corp  8%\nDominion Stores  _ _. 6\nDonnacona Paper A  8\nDonnacona Paper B  7%\nFord Motor A   18\nFraser Co Ltd   18\nImperial Oil   18%\nInter Petroleum   30%\nInter Utilities A   6\nInter Utilities B  85\nMacLaren P & P   21\nMitchell Robt    10\nPage Hersey Tubes   88\nRoyalite Oil   32\nThrift Stores   Vi\nUnited Dist of Can 85\nWalker-Good k W   37\nWalker-Good pfd   17%\nCASH PRICE-\nWHEAT:, No. 1 hard and No. 1\nnor. 142%; No. 2 nor. 136%; No. 3\nnor. 116%; No. 4 nor. 108%; No. 5\n104%; No. 6, 101%; feed 77%; No. 1\nGarnet 119%; No. 2 Garnet 116%;\nNo. 1 durum 97%; Nos. 1 A. R. W.\nand 4 special 104%; No. 5 special\n100%; No. 6 special 90%; track\n139%; screenings $5.50 per ton.\nOATS: No. 2 C. W. 53%; No. 3 C. W.\nand Ex. 1 feed 50%; No. 1 feed 48V4;\nNo. 2 feed 43%; No. 3 feed 40%;\ntrack 49%.\nBARLEY: Malting grades: 6- and\n2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 61%; others: No. 3\nC. W. 60%; No. 4 C. W. 58%; No. 5\nC. W. 57%; No. 6 C. W. 56%; track\n59%,\nFLAX; No. 1 C. W. 180%: No. 2 C.\nW .176%; No. 3 C. W. 155%; No. 4\nC. W. 150%; track 177%.\nRYE: No. 2 C. W. 82%.\nPITTSBURGH, Oct. 28 (AP)-Colonel Jacob Ruppert, owner of the\nNew York Yankees baseball club,\nbecame president of United States\nBrewers' association today for\nthe 16th time.\nPURCHASE RATIFIED\nELORA, Ont., Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Share\nholders of T. E. Bissell Company,\nElora, today ratified an agreement\nto purchase the Aurpra, Ont., firm\nof J. Fleury's Sons. Tlie new organization is known as Fleury-Bis-\nscll limited.\ntesUm\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAl Chem   165\nAm Can    96\nAm For Pow ....    5\nAm Mac k Fdy   14%\nAm Smelt & Re   57\nAm Tel   157\nAm Tob    74\nAnaconda     311.\nAtchison     42\nAuburn   Motors   11%\nAv Corp      4\nBaldwin         9%\nBait k Ohio    14%\nBendix Av     14%\nBeth Steel     51%\nBorden     21%\nCanada Dry     13%\nCan Pac      8%\nCerro de Pasco   48 %\nChes k Ohio ....   40%\nChrysler      74%\nCon Gas N Y ....   26%\nC Wright pfd ..     4%\nDupont     129%\nEast Kodak   170\n12%\n0%\n5%\n17%\n34 li\n22%\n42',,\n32'1\nEl Pow & Lt\nErie \t\nFord Eng ....\nFord of Can\nFirst Nat Stores\nFree Texas\nGen Elec ...\nGen Foods .\nGen Motors     43%\nGoodrich     21%\nGranby       5\nGreat Nor  pfd  30\nGreat West Sug   30\nHecker Prods ..    8\nHowe Sound ....   53%\nHudson   Motors   10\nInter NickW    47%\nInter Tel & Tel    7%\nKenn Cop _   37%\nLow\n159%\n89%\nV-n\n13%\n55%\n152%\n73\n29%\n40%\n10\n3%\n8%\n13%\n13%\n48%\n21\n13%\n8%\n45%\n39%\n71%\n24%\n3%\n122%\n183\n11%\n17%\n33%\n21%\n41%\n32%\n42\n20%\n4%\n28%\n3(1\n7%\n5(1 %\n9%\n45\",,\n7\n34%\nClose\n161\n94\n4%\n13%\n56%\n154%\n73\n30%\n41\n10%\n3%\n9\n13%\n14\n51\n21\n13%\n8%\n46\n39%\n73%\n25%\n4\n122%\n169\n12%\n9%\n5%\n17 %\n33%\n21%\n42%\n32'.:.\n42\",\n20%\n5\n29%\n30\n7%\n51\n9%\n46%\n7%\n35%\n22\nKresge S S   17%\nKroegger k Toll 20\nMack Truck .... 25%\nMilwaukee   pfd 1%\nMont Ward   43%\nNash Motors .... 13%\nNat Dairy Prods 16%\nN Pow & Lt .\nN Y Central .\nPac Gas & El\nPack Motors .\nPenn R R   25%\nPhillips Pete .... 46%\nPure Oil   14%\nRadio Corp   8\nRadio Keith Or 5%\nRem Rand   15%\nSafeway   Stores 26%\nShell Un   20%\nS Cal Edison .... 20%\nSouth Pac   22%\nStan Oil of Cal 34%\nStan Oil of Ind 35%\nStan Oil of N J 53%\nStew Warner .... 14\nStudebaker  8%\nTexas Corp   45\nTexas Gulf Sul 32\nTimkcn Roll ....\nUnder Type ....\nUn Carbide \t\nUn Oil of Cal ..\nUn Aircraft  ....\nUn Biscuit   19\nUn Pac  97\nU S Pipe  35%\nU S Rubber  29\nU S Steel   62%\nVan Steel   17%\nWarner Bros .... \u25a0 9V4\nWest Elec   103%\nWest Unin     33\nWoolworth   41%\nWrigley   63%\nYellow Truck . 11%\n16%\n19%\n24%\n1%\n41\n13%\n15%\n7%\n20%\n25%\n6% 6\n23%\n45%\n13%\n7%\n4%\n14%\n25%\n19\n20%\n20%\n32%\n34%\n51%\n13\n8%\n44 ' 1\n31%\n46\n67\n77\n20%\n18%\n18%\n93\n32%\n27%\n50%\n16%\n8%\n99%\n31%\n40%\n63%\n11%\n48\n67%\n82\n21%\n20%\n16%\n19%\n25\n1%\n42%\n13%\n15%\n7%\n21%\n26\n6\n24\n46%\n14%\n7%\n5%\n15%\n25 lit\n19%\n20%\n21%\n33\n35%\n52%\n13%\n8%\n44%\n31%\n46%\n87\n79\n21%\n19%\n19\n97\n33%\n28%\n62%\n17%\n8%\n103\n32%\n40 Vi\n63%\n12%\nRum Prices lo\nBe Down in B.C.\nVICTORIA, Oct. 28 (CP).-A new\nprice list in government liquor\nstores will go into effect Nov. 1.\nThe only major change is in the\nprice of rum. A reduction in customs tariffs will permit a cut of 25\ncents on 25-ounce bottles of brands\nput up by the board and 10 and\n15 cents on proprietary brands.\nThe price of British Columbia\nbeer and ale in Fraser Valley towns\nhas been reduced to the same as\nin Victoria and Vancouver, the\nbreweries having agreed to absorb\nfreight charges. The reduction\namounts to 10 cents on a dozen\npints in some towns and five cents\nin others,\nSEPTEMBER EARNINGS\nOF C. P. R. SHOW DROP\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014 Decrease of $281,171 was shown today\nin Canadian Pacific Railway's September net earnings of $3,141,712,\ncompared with $3,422,884 for the\ncorresponding 1936 month.\nWorking expenses increased $324,-\n278 to $11,213,558, against $10,889,280\nwhile gross earnings advanced only\n$43,107 to $14,355,271, compared with\nthe corresponding period's $14,312,-\n164.\nB. C. Mill Burns\nKAMLOOPS, B. C, Oct. 28 (CP)\n\u2014Twelve men were out of work today at Tarry's sawmill, 40 miles\nsouth east of here on the Vernon-\nKamloops highway, when fire destroyed the eight-year-old plant early this morning.\nNo insurance was carried.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP)-Transatlantics maintained a firm tone in\ntoday's stock market. Other groups\nclosed steady. Oils and mines were\nin demand. Gilt edged issues and\nforeign bonds were quiet.\nClosing: C. P. R. $8%; International Nickel $47%; U. S. Steel $61%;\nBritish American Tobacco 108s 9d;\nConsol Gold Fields 73s l%d; East\nGcduld \u00a39%; H. B. C. 26s 6d; Rho-\ndesian Anglo Am 24s 6d; Royal\nDutch \u00a340; Woolworth 72s 6d.\nBonds: British 2% per cent Consols \u00a374%; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a3100%; funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3110%.\nVancouver Wheat\nStraight  Tough\nNo. 1 hard    129%      127%\nNo. 1 nor    129%      127%\nNo. 2 nor    124%      122%\nNo. 3 nor    107%       105%\nNo. 4 nor    102%        99%\nNn   5 wheat              _     96%          94%\n     85%        82%\nFeed   \t\n73%        70%\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014Butter spot\u2014Quebec fresh 29%-%.\nEggs: A large 41A.\nWheat, No. 1 nor. 1.52%; barley\nNo. 3 C. W. .70%; oats, No. 2 C. W.\n.61%; feed .57%; flour 8.10; hay No.\n1, ton 9.00.\nMAGISTRATE FINES\nSELF ON AUTO CHARGE\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C,\nOct. 28 (CP)\u2014Magistrate H. L.\nEdmonds today fined himself\n$2.50 on a traffic violation charge.\nHe received a \"ticket\" earlier\nin the week for leaving his car\nmore than an hour on the main\nstreet.\nToday in police court he pleaded guilty, and assesed himself\nthe usual fine.\nGATESHEAD, Eng. (CP)\u2014Thomas White, accused of cruelty to dogs\nand cats, was sent to jail far three\nmonths and disqualified froili holding a dog licence for 25 years.\n217 UNEMPLOYED\nSIGN FOR WORK\nVANCOUVER, Oct 28 (CP)-The\nVancouver offices pi the British Columbia relief department announced\ntoday 217 single unemployed men\nhad registered for work in the government sponsored forestry camps\nthis year.\nThe office reported that another\n600 were expected to enroll before\nMonday when the camps will be\nopened.\nSMELTERS TAKE\nUPWARD TREND\nTORONTO, Oct. 28 (CP)-The ui\nward trend was continued on sul\nstantial volume today on the Toronto share market, helped by spasms\nof strength in New York, resulting,\npresumably, from the announcement\nthat margin requirements on stock\npurchases would be lowered Nov. 1,\nGains of 1 to 2 points were registered by Toronto index groupings.\nFinal prices showed Smelters up\n1%, Nickel %, Noranda 1% and Hudson Bay %. Dome's gain was cut\nto % and Lake Shore, Mclntyre and\nHollinger finished fractions on the\ndown side.\nSenior oils traded actively at better prices and the paper, steel, utility\nand food stocks posted more gains\nthan losses.\nJudges Damn\nCruiser Officers\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28 (AP).\n\u2014The circuit court of appeals charged United States naval officers today with \"gross recklessness\" and\nviolation of international rules of\nthe sea today in the cruiser Chicago  collision  case.\nThe Chicago and the motorship\nSilverpalm collided in a fog off the\nCalifornia coast Oct. 24, 1933. Two\nnaval officers and a clerk were\nkilled, and the cruiser was almost\nsevered.\nThe circuit court held today that\nthe Chicago was to blame for the\ncrash as well as the Silverpalm\nwhich previously had been held liable in a memorandum opinion by\nthe district court here.\nThe decision declared flatly the\ncruiser was proceeding at a reckless and dangerous speed in the fog,\nmisled officers of another merchant\nship, the Albion Star, by its signals\nand entries in the Chicago's log\nbook were altered after the crash.\nOgilvie Flour Net\nProfits Increase\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014 Increase of $131,428 was shown today\nby Ogilvie Flour Mills company in\nnet profits of $1,062,252 for the fiscal\nyear ended August 31, compared\nwith $930,824 in the preceding\nperiod.\nNet profit, after deducting depreciation, directors' fees and taxes\nwas equivalent to $12.29 on 75,000\nno-par-value shares outstanding,\ncompared with $10.54 a year ago.\nFranc Stronger\nNEW YORK, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014 European currencies were generally\nahead in terms of the dollar today\nin foreign exchange dealings, as the\nFrench franc showed further\nstrength.\nThe franc gained .00% of a cent at\n3.36%, and the pound sterling moved\nup % cent at 4.95S. The Canadian\ndollar was up 1-32 cent at 1.00 1-32.\nIn London the United States dollar closed at 4.95 11-16 to the pound\ncompared with the overnight rate\nhere of 4.95%.\nDividends\nFrost Steel k Wire, first preferred, 19y4 per cent, payable November 10 to shareholders of record\nNovember 1. This payment will\nbring dividends on the first preferred shares up to date.\nMcColl Frontenac Oil company,\n10 cents for quarter ending Nov. 15.\nBorden Milk company, 40 cents.\nVulcan Oils Limited semi-annual\ndividend of five cents per share\npayable Dec. 20, 1937.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Oct. 28 (CP).-Re-\nceipts, to noon, cattle 80, calves 22;\nhogs 45; no sheep.\nCattle trade slow; prices steady.\nCommon butcher steers 2.00\u20143,25;\ngood butcher heifers 4.50; good cows\n3.00-3.25; good veal calves 4.50-5.00;\ngood stocker and feeder steers 3.50-\n4.00.\nNo hog sales; yesterday's prices,\nselects 7.75; bacons 7.25; butchers\n6.75.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid Ask\nBayonne         .07% .08\nColumbia Oils  07 .09\nDurango     06 .07\nEuphrates    -   ,04 .05%\nRoyal Canadian 13 .17\nUtica    -   - .09%\nWOOD 18 RE-ELECTED THE\nHEAD OF U. F. OF MANITOBA\nBRANDON, Man., Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014\nJ. S. Wood of Oakville today was\nre-elected president of the United\nFarmers of Manitoba for his third\nconsecutive term.\nThe annual convention here also\nelected Neil Wright of Swan River,\nMan., as vice-president.\nFRANC  IMPROVE8\nLONDON, Oct. 28 (AP).\u2014United\nStates dollars were quoted $4.95\n11-16 to the pound at the close today, a decline of 5-16 of a cent. In\ncontrast, New York's overnight\nterling rate was $4.95%.\nFrench francs showed improvement at 147.31 to the pound against\n148.56 yesterday.\nQUARTER (ENT\nPER POUND IS\nTHE CUT MADE\nNo Indication Step\nWill Be Followed\nby Producers\nNEW YORK, Oct 28 (AP) \u2014\nA leading custom smelter today\nreduced the price of domeitio\ncopper to 11% cents a pound, from\nthe 12-cent level prevailing for\ntwo days.\nThere was no Immediate Indication   that  domestlo   producer*\nwould follow the lead.\nEarly In September the smelting\ndivision of the Industry Instituted\na lower price than producer! by\nlowering the metal from 13 cent*\nto 12 and then advanced It to 12'\/2\ncents. Early this week It fell\nback to 12 cents and leading producers met this quotation.\nFractional Gains\non Montreal List\nMONTREAL, Oct. .8 (CP)\u2014Piloted by metals, the stock market rod*\nnumerous selling wavelets today and\nreached port with gains of fraction*\nto more than a point.\nCanadian Car preferred climbed\nmore than two points to 22 while,\nthe common advanced one. National\nSteel Car and C.P.R. were up fractionally.\nMetals charted a generally smooth\ncourse after mid-session selling and\nNoranda at 47V* and Smelters at\n561. closed with gains of a point\nor so each. Nickel closed only Vs\nhigher.\nLosses of Vs each showed for St.\nLawrence Paper preferred and Howard Smith. Price preferred gained\na point at 54 while the common,\nBathurst and St. Lawrence Corp.\npreferred firmed narrowly.\nUp fractions each were Brazilian,\nMontreal Power, Shawinigan, Power Corp., Dominion Steel B and\nUnited Steel.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto, Montreal and New Tort\n\u2014Stocks closed higher.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Wheat 94 cent lowtf\nto >\/. cent higher.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs off truck\nsteady at 8.15,\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver unchanged,\nother metals higher.\nNew York\u2014Silver, lead and ilna\nunchanged; export copper higher.\nMontreal \u2014 Silver unchanged.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton steady; rubber and sugar higher; coffee lower.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollar 1-32\nhigher at 1.00 1-32.\nCOAST HOTELMAN IS .\nMOVED TO WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 28-Appolntment\nof Thomas Karl Demorest of Vancouver, as an assistant manager of\nthe Royal Alexander hotel, Winnipeg, is the announcement by T.\nChester, general manager of th*\nCanadian Pacific Railways Western hotels. The appointment is effective this month.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)\u2014British and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2974.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9554.\nBrazil, milreis, .0560.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3010.\nDenmark, krone, .2213.\nGermany, rcichsmark, .4018.\nHolland, florin, .5528.\nHungary, pengo, .1976.\nIndia, rupee, .3746.\nJapan, yen, .2890.\nNew Zealand, pound, S.98T2.\nNorway, krone, .2491.\nPoland, zloti, .1893.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9292.\nSweden, krone, .2556.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank ol\nCanada.)\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Pre\u00bb\u00bb\nClosing exchange rates: ,\nAt Montreal-Pound 4.95 15-32; V.\nS. dollar .99 31-32; franc S.37.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.95%; Canadian dollar 1.00 1-32; franc 3.36%.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 147.5 francs; U,\nS. dollar 29.72 francs; Canadian\ndollar 29.71 francs.\nIn Gold\u2014Pound 12s Id; U. S. dol<\nlar 59.34 cents; Canadian dollar 58.32\ncents.\nNEW COMPANIES\nVICTORIA. Oct. 28 (CP).\u2014New\ncompanies granted incorporation include:\nCentral Zeballos Gold Mines Ltd.,\n(N.P.I..) $150,000, Vancouver.\nWells Mining Corporation, $100,-\n000, Vancouver.\nCrystal Creameries Ltd., 100 sharu\nno par value, Cranbrook.\nNEW YORK, Oct, 28 (AP)\u2014Trading enthusiasm inspired by the federal reserve board's action on stock\nmargins spilled over into the bond\nmarket today and gave the corporate list a substantial lift. Early\ngains of 1 to more than 3 points wer*\nwhittled down.\nForeign bonds ending higher included Belgium 6s, Italian 7s\u201eand\nUruguay 6s.\n pup,1 -mm.\nH0RNET8 WIN\nDETROIT, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014Pittsburgh Hornets of the International-\nAmerican Hockey league overcame\na three-goal handicap tonight to\nconquer Detroit Red Wings, champions of the National Hockey league,\n7-6; in a wild-scoring game.\nn_L3DN DAILY NEW8. NEL80N, B.(..-FRIDAY MORNING, OCT. 29. 1937.\nHUSBAND'S DEATH  MYSTERY\nPORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 28 (AP)\n\u2014Investigation in to the deaths of\nRuth, 13, and Dorothy Ledford, 15,\nclimaxed by the arrest Tuesday\nnight of their step-mother, Mrs. Agnes Ledford on a first degree murder charge, was extended today to\ninclude the death of her former husband, John Matson, in 1932.\nAPPEAL DATE SET\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 28 (CP) -\nJudge C. L. Lennox in county court\nyesterday set the hearing of an appeal by Arne Johnson, president of\nLocal 2783, Lumber and Sawmill\nWorkers' Union, from an assault\nconviction for November 12.\n;;\nFRIDAY AND\nRoyal City Canned Goods Special\nZ tlm Tomatoes, -'\/_., 2 tins Green Cut Beans, 1 tin No. 4 Peas, QAn\n1 tin Golden Corn-96o VALUE for   04C\nHALLOWE'EN SPECIALS\nFRESH ROASTED PEANUTS\u2014\n2 Ibi -\t\nMIXED CANDY\u2014GOOD QUALITY:\n2  Ibs -\t\nPUMPKIN SUNBEAM-2\/_.;\n2 tins -\t\n25c\n35c\n29c\nLIBBY'8 TOMATO JUICE\u2014101^ or tin;\n4 for\t\nSWIFT'S BROOKFIELD PURE PORK SAUSAGE\u2014 Fresh;\nLb. carton \t\nCHASE  AND  SANBORN   COFFEE-\nLb. tin  -\t\nHILLS BROS. COFFEE\u2014There Is none better;\nPer Ib - -\t\nCAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP\u2014\n3 tins _..- - \t\nBORDEN'S CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK\u2014\nLb. tin -\t\nDAD'S OATMEAL OR COCONUT COOKIES-\n2  doz. _\nSANI-FLUSH\u2014\nTIN\t\n5 BARS P 4 G SOAP, 1 DISH CLOTH\nALL   FOR   \t\n25c\n25c\n39c\n49c\n25c\n35c\n23c\n25c\n23c\nSATURDAY\nVALUES\nAT THE\nSTAR\nFruits and\nVegetables\nSWEET SPUDS\nLb. 22c\nSPINACH\nLb 19c\nBRUSSEL   SPROUTS\nLb. 29c\nCELERY\nSpecial   tender   -I (T\nwhite; 2 Ibs   13C\nTURNIPS\nKosiancic; OCT..\n7 ibs zac\nPARSNIPS\n4Lb. 15c\nCARROTS 4  BEETS\nBunches  JL I C\nCAULIFLOWER\nLb. 15c\nHUBBARD SQUASH\nlp_: 4c\nGRAPE   FRUIT\nCalifornia, good QKrt\nsize; 6 for  UuC\nGRAPE  FRUIT\nFlorida, extra     QC_>\nlarge; 2 for  i_j'}C\nGRAPES\nLb, 29c\nPEAR8\nBartlett; np.\nBasket   tilDC\nPLUMS\nBasket   .SOC\nCRANBERRIES\nK 29c\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nFavorite for over a quarter of a century an <! still leaders in their field,\nGREENHILL\nand BELLEVUE\nSTEAM AND DOMESTIC COALS\nA size for every purpose\nLump\u2014Washed Furnace\u2014Stoker\u2014Blacksmith,\nDISTRICT ACENTS\nBurns Coal&CartageCo.\nPHONE 53 wholree8taal,eland NELSON, B.C.\nSlazenger\nBadminton\nRACKETS\nFrom $2\u00ab50 to $]C00 Each\nALSO\nSLAZENGER ASSOCIATION  BIRDS\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nRIDES COYOTE\nVANSCOY, Sask., Oct. 28 (CD-\nRide 'cm cowboy had a new meaning for Henry Gilbertson, a Van-\nscoy lad. Walking across a field the\nsmall boy decided to jump over a\nbig Russian thistle but his attempts\nfailed and he landed in the middle\nof a weed patch on the neck of a\ncoyote.\nTRUCKERS WIN INCREASE\nSARNIA, Ont. (CP).A brief strike\nheld up trucking operations on the\nncw provincial highway between\nForest and No. 7 highway. Drivers\ndemanded increased haulage rates\nand the strike broke up when contractors acceded to demands.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Bide\n\" f.^f    Rose\n^Beauty Parlor]\nPHONE  317\nPcrmanents,    Facials,\nMan'..tiring, ole.\nHALLOWE'EN\nDECORATIONS\nFOR PARTIES\nAND\nDANCES\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nTRY   A   WANT   AD\nHallowe'en lo Be\nMarked Saturday\nSpecial Police Will Be\non Duty, Police\nChief Warns\nHallowe'en, that night of witches,\ngoblins, jack-o'-lanterns and hilarious costumes, will this year be celebrated Saturday night in Nelson\ninstead of the usual date, October\n31, as the latter falls on a Sunday.\nNOTICE\nPolice Dept.\nNotice is hereby given that any person found injuring, destroying or removing property on Hallowe'en will be prosecuted to the full extent of\nthe law. The public is requested to assist the police in preventing damage to property.\nParents are earnestly requested to warn children\nagainst damaging private property.\nBy Order,\nALEX. STEWART,\nChief of Police.\nTONIGHT\nTHE   DANCE   OF   THE   SEASON\nMASONIC\n-.BALL.-\nCIVIC   CENTRE\nTickets     $1.00\nPER\nPERSON\nDANCINC     AT    9:30\nBUFFET LUNCH 11-1:00\nMusic by\n\"The TROUBADOURS'\nCet Your Tickets Today\u2014at\nCollinson's Jewelry Store\nEverybody Welcome\n\u2014 YOUR OWN\nCIVIC THCATRC\nNOW TILL SATURDAY\nCOMPLETE   AT\n6:55-AND\u20149:05\nA HAClViFICEI\u00abT OTCASION!\nPLUS THE  FIRST CHAPTER\nOF OUR  NEW SERIAL\nTHE SCREEN'S !\nMOST DARING  |\nDYNAMIC STAR\nin a Tornado!\n,   , of\nAction-Drama!\nNAT UVINE Pnttith\nKEN\nmm\n*   TARZAN-\nMYSTERY.\nMOUNTAIN]\n12\nSHORT FEATURES\n\"Stranger Than  Fiction\"\n\u2014:PLUS:\u2014\nCARTOON\n\"DUCK HUNT\"\nSPECIAL\nADMISSION\nPRICE\nUP TO 7 P.M.\n20c\n.Then Our Regular 25c.\nAdmission\nDoors Open at 6:30\nWindows of city stores have for\nsome days been displaying a wealth\nof masks,\" black cats, witches, fireworks, jack-o'-lanterns, and candles,\nin preparation for the grand occasion.\nAlex Stewart, chief of police, stated Thursday there would be several\nspecial police on duty, and issued a\nwarning, stating the children\u2014and\nthose at other times not children-\ncould have all the fun they wished,\nbut that persons committing any\nreal damage would be dealt with\nto the extent of the law.\nMAYOR TO PRESIDE AT\nANTI-COMMUNIST MEET\nMONTREAL, Oct. 28 (CP)-Mayor\nAdhemar Eayriault today accepted\nan invitation of 200 University of\nMontreal students to preside at an\nanti-communist meeting next week\nas Mr. Justice F. J. Curran granted\nAlaskan Governor\nFavors Seattle as\nAir Mail Terminal\nSEATTLE, Oct. 28 (AP)\u2014Governor John W. Troy of Alaska said\n.today he was \"heartily in favor\" of\nmaking Seattle and Junvau termini\nof a proposed new air mail route\nlinking the territory with the United States.\nTroy said he believed the coast\nroute was the most logical, although\nan inland route through Edmonton,\nAlta., connecting with airlines in\nMontana, would be better than\n\"none at all\".\nan interim Injunction restraining\nthe mayor from interfering with a\nscheduled meeting of the Friends\nof the Soviet Union tomorrow night.\nOrder COAL Now\nYOU NEED IT FOR THESE\nColder Fall Days\nWE HAVE JUST THE FUEL TO\nSUIT YOUR EVERY NEED\nGALT LUMP Ton $10.50\nGALTSTOYE .......    Ton $9.00\nJEWEL LUMP .,-.,... Ton $10.50\nHILLCREST LUMP . Ton $10.50\nDRY WOOD\nIN ALL LENGTHS\nPHONE 35 FOR PROMPT\nSERVICE & DELIVERY\nNelson Transfer\nNelson's Leading Used Car Dealers\nPHONE 35 NELSON, B.C.\nRoyal Scott\nTopcoats\nCoatings by\nKynoch of Keith\nScotland\nSee these new fleece topcoats, tailored by Fashion-Craft from Kynoch\ncloths. The ideal topcoat,\ngiving you warmth without weight.\n$37.50\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nGOOD WILL LINER BOOED\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 28 (AP)-\nShouts and \"boos\" from more than\n200 pickets of maritime unions and\nChinese organizations greeted Japan's unofficial goodwill mission\nwhen it arrived on the liner Tat-\nsuta.Maru.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSEE PAGE TWELVE\nLADIES'\nSHOES\nONE PRICE ONLY\n$2-W\n\u2022 TIES\n\u2022 PUMPS\nt   STRAPS\nt   OXFORDS\nGODFREYS*\n LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n378 BAKER       PHONE 270\nTODAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 and 9:06\nAND\nSATURDAY\nTHE    .;\/;,\nGREATEST\nADVENTURE\nROMANCE\nIN THE WHOLE EXCITING HISTORY OF THE SEVEN SEAS\n* GARY COOPER\nHi. grandest role as the\nman who playf(_%GoJ on\nthe decks of a burning ship!\n\u2022 GEORGE RAFT\nHis finest performance as\na vagabond of the sea who\nvalued friendship above lifel\n\u2022 FRANCES DEE\nHer most appealing portrayal asthegirl who accused\nher lover of murder at seal\nA Paramount Picture with\nFRANCES DEE-HenryWilcoxon\nHarry Carey \u2022 Olympe Bradna\nRobert Cummings \u2022 Virginia Weidler\nFeature ar 2:33, 7:33 and 9:39\nPrices: Nice 25c-15c\u2014Matinee 25c-10e j\nCOLORED CARTOON\u2014\"UNCLE TOM'S BUNGALOW-\nNOVELTY\u2014\"DEXTERITY\" and PARAMOUNT NEWS\n\\\n\u25a0    '\nernrnm\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1937_10_29","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0413339","@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":"1937-10-29 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1937-10-29 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\/1.0413339"}