{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404934":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-12-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1934-09-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404934\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Rainbow, U.S.A. Yacht; Is\nVictor 3rd. Race\n***\u2014\u2022 Pa&e Seven\nMl 10     _,)*\nVICTORIA  |\nurns      J\ni! lft 011\nUnemployed Have Done Great\nWork Across Canada\n-\u2014Pa&e Four\nVOLUME St\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNINO, SEPT. 21. 1934\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNUMBER  1)1\nGERMAN IS HELD IN LINDBERG CASE\n$13,750 OF RANSOM MONET IS FOUND\nARREST WILL SOLVE 1932 KIDNAPPING\nSAY POLICE; TWO PERSONS INDENTIFY\nMAN HELD; NOTES PASSED FOR GAS SALE\nOle Knutsen Plunges fo\nDeath in Rossland Nine\nB.C. Has Big Trade\nWith the Japanese\nFALLS OVER 80\nFT. INTO OPEN\nLE HOI STOPE\nBody Lands in Water\nand Is Not Found\nby Rescuers\nPLAN TO DRAG FOR\nHIS BODY TODAY\nMEISNER, WANTED MAN\nIN LABATT CASE, HELD\nSurrenders in Detroit But Claims He has\nPowerful Alibi; Savs He Was Home\nin Cincinnati at the Time\nThrown Into Stope as\nCar Hits Timber on\n300-Foot Level\nDETROIT, Sept. 20 (CP).-Asserting he did not \"have the first thing\nto do with this kidnapping,\" David Melsner, one ot two men sought by\nCanadian and Detroit authorities in connection with the kidnapping a\nmonth ago of John Labatt, Ontario brewer, surrendered to, detectives here\ntoday.\nMelsner said he could produce \"all the witnesses in the world\u2014even\npolicemen.\" to prove he was ln Cincinnati at the time of the kidnapping\nfor $150,000 which, so far as known, haa not been paid to date. .\nMAKES NO CONDITIONS WHEN SURRENDERS\nHe surrendered to Inspector John Hoffman, of the special lnvestiga-\n it tlon squad, after making an appoint-\nltOSSI.AND, B.C.. Sept. SO \u2014\nRasmus Knutsen Rodenell. aae JS.\n\u2022commonly known as Ole Knutsen,\nworking for Walter Scorsle, on ttie\nlatter's lease, In the old Le Boi\nmine, met death about in o'clock\nthis morning when he fell 80\nfeet Into an open stope, partly\nfilled  with  water.\nBodenell,  who  l\u00ab a Norwegian.\nhad  been employed at the mine\naboot 20 days and was supposed\nto be familiar with the worltliigh\nwhere flcorg-le's lease is located. He\nhad taken ont five loads of on\nand   was   taking   out   the   sMh\nwhen In some way he missed the\nswitch and, Instead of snlnj out\nthrough the tunnel to the Black\nBear  dump,  went along the  300\nfoot   level   to   a   stope   used   by\nother  leasers   for   dumln*.   waste,   j\nThere   was   a   tmlber  across   the   i\ntrack at this point and the car  !\napparently   hit   this   and   turned\nsideways   throwing   Rodcnell   Into   !\nthe open stope.\nWATER liEPTH\nUNKNOWN\nIt la not known lust how deep\nthe water la in the stope sa the\nengineers familiar with the mine\nare all out of town. Mr. Scorglo\nwm lowered into the stope by a\nrope but could find no trace of the\nunfortunate man. The mine has\nbeen cloeed an long ladders are\nbeing constructed and dragging operations will be carried on tomorrow. The water in the stope ts ao\noold thwt It Is not thought there\nis any chance of the body coming\nto the surface by Itself.\nHe la known to have a brother ln\nTrail but so far the police have\nbeen unable to locate him.\nVernon Indians\nSight a Moose\nVWNON, B. C., Sept. JO (OP)\u2014\nIndians on the reserve near here report having sighted a moose, the\nfirst ever noted here within the\nmemory of any of the residents of\nthla district.\nR. STRACHAN IS\nDEAD IN EAST\nMine Inspector Dies\nFrom Heart Attack\nWhile in M'real\nHIRjrat, B. \u00ab., Sept. It-word\nwas received here today frem Montreal of the passing of Government\nMine Inspector Robert strachau,\nformerly of Fernie, but lately stationed at Nelson.\nMr. 8trachan waa returning from\na trip to the old country hut hed\nto stop In Montreal owing to a\nheart attaek.\nIlls son -lames was with him\nduring the last two weeks. The\nfuneral wlll be held In Fernie, bnt\nother details are not yet available.\nMr. Straehan waa moved to Nelson\nabout 18 months ago to become\nchief mine Inspector of both East\nand West Kootensy and a sub-inspector was placed at Pernle. Prior\nto being placed at Pernle Mr.\nStraehan served ln the eame capacity\nat  Rossland.\nMr. Straehan was bom ln Olaagow, Scotland, and has resided tn\nthe district for many years, his\nfamily having been brought up ln\nthe Kootenays. Mrs. Straehan died\nseveral years ago.\nMr. Straehan' Is survived by *a\ndaughter, Mrs. W. D. Burgess, a\nson, Jsmes, a lawyer In Michel and\na sister, Mrs. T. D. Stark of Vancouver, former Nelson resident.\nNine Killed, 200\nHurt in Quake\nMEXICO, D.F., Sept. 20 <AP)-\nBelated dispatches to the newspaper La Frensa said today at least\nnine persons were killed, 200 injured and thousands made homeless\nby an earthquake last Saturday\nnight ln the state of Jallisco.\nUpset Pail Costs\nFirm Sum of $350\nVANCOOVKR, Sept. JO (CP)\u2014Se-\nqel to the upsetting of a pall on\nMarch 23, when Mrs, Agnes S.\nMcCuloch was splashed, was heard\ntoday In supreme court when her\nactions for damages against the\nOrnamental Bronze Co., Ltd., was\ndismissed without cost on the basis\nof a 9350 settlement of her claim.\nEmployees oj the company were\nIn charge ot the pail which upset\nend splashed the contents over Mrs.\nMcCulloch as she was passing the\ndepartment store on whleh the\nbraaswork was being polished.\nMEISNER\nment. Hoffman said Melsner surrendered without any conditions.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nHUNDREDS ARE\nTHOUGHT DEAD\nIN A TYPHI1\nSchools   Collapse   as\nTyphoon Roars in\nJapan's States\nSEAS INUNDATE\n2000 HOMES\nGreatest  Disaster  in\nTwo Years Believed\na Certainty\nTOKYO, Sept. 21 (Friday) (AP)\n\u2014 A sehool building collapsed\nupon E00 small children In Kyoto\nduring a disastrous typhoon which\nroared across central and eastern\nJapan today, causing some 200\ncasualties, Including many deaths,\nRengo (Japanese) news agency reports laid today.\nAt least 20 persons were reported\nkilled or Injured near Kyoto when\ntwo passenger trains were overturned by the wind. A filling\nachool houae at Momoyama, near\nKyoto, -Mused 10 known deaths.\n20000 HOMES UNINOATED\nInrushing  seat   Inundated   2000\nhouses in the village oT Fukura.\nnear Kobe, and many were feared\nto have drowned. The blow struck\nGlfu at 10:30 a.m., at a velocity of\n78 miles an hour.\nOsaka police reported more than\n100 persons were known to have\nbeen killed there.\nThe newspaper Asahi said there\nwere Indications that the greatest\nHON. HERBERT MARLER\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20  (CP).\u2014\nCa\n20\nRelations between Canada and Ja*\npan remain as friendly as ever,\/Hon.\nHerbert Marler, Canadian minister\nto Japan, said today on his arrival\nhere en route to Tokio to resume\ndirection of the legation after several montht' furlough.\n\"Canadians should exert every effort to promote peace and good will\nbetwen ourselves and all the nations\nof the orient\" he said. \"Unless we\nhave that, we cannot promote our\ntrade.\n\"It It an Interesting fact that Can*\nada's exporta to Japan touch every\nsingle province In Canada.\"\nThe minister said the subject was\nof special interest to British Colum\nbla because of the character of\nCanada's exports to Japan\u2014lead,\nzinc, paper, fish, lumber, all product! of this province.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstockt irregularly lower.\nToronto mines\u2014Lower.\nNew York\u2014Stockt closed slightly\nhigher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up % to V, cent.\nLondon\u2014 Bar eilver and other\nmetals higher.\nNew York\u2014Bar silver, copper,\nlead and zinc unchanged; tin higher,\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar up\n1-32 to 1.0314.\n\"Jafsle,\" Intermediary In the Lindbergh Kidnap Case\nand One of the Ransom Letters\nLLOYD GEORGE CAUSTICALLY TALKS\nOF POLITICAL, MILITARY STUPIDITY\nTories Served With His Wsr\nCabinet With Great Reluctance, He Writes\nBy TH0MA8 T. CHAMPION\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONpON, Sept. 20 (CP cable)-\nThe same critical attitude toward\npoliticians as David Lloyd George\nhas already exhibited toward field-\nmarshals and admirals, is revealed\nin the third volume of his memoirs,\npublished tomorrow morning.\nBut he returns again to admirality\n\"stupidity \" and he compares, caustically, tm speed with which the\nBritish forces and the United States\nforeet got into action, altogether\napart of courae, from the yeart ln\nbetween.\nCOALITION  DISLIKED HIM\n\"The majority of tory ministers\nunder the Asquith coalition were\ndefinitely opposed to my premiership,\" he writet ln this volume,\nwhich takes up at the time when\nthe \"Welsh wizard\" succeeded Herbert Asquith In tha premiership,\nDecember, 1916.\nLLOYD GEORGE\n(Continued en Ptgt Ttn)\nP*-\\H C**Tow\nAX\nSMS\no \\t\nKidnapping To oft\nPloce, March\n1933\nBABE FOUND\nDEAD IN MAY\nGangsters Were\nVnable Make\nContact\nTHE LINDBERGH CASE IN\nTABLOID\n(By the Associated Press)\nThe scene: The secluded Lindbergh home In the lonely Sour-\nland mountains, near Hopewell In\nNew Jersey.\nTha time: 10 p.m., March 1,\n1932.\nCharles Augustus Lindbergh Jr.,\nfound missing from hla crib In the\nsecond floor nursery.\nA warped wooden shutter had\nbeen unlocked. Dirt tracks on the\nfloor and window llll. Footprints\nin tht earth below. Indentures In\nthe earth, possibly thost of a ladder.\nTht  kidnappers'  ransom  nott,\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Ttn)\nFight for lives\nRegina   Motorists  Struck\nTrain; Three Others\nAlso Injured\nLeft is shown Dr. John A. F. Condon, welfare worker, vrho paid out\nIhe $50,000 ransom money in the Lindberg kidnapping case in April, 1932.\nCondon was known as \"Jafsie\" and has identified Bernard Hauptmann.\nheld in New York, as the mat) to whom he delivered the money. Above\nIs also shown one of the notes received by the Lindberghs after the kidnapping. Hauptmann is of German extraction and writing on the note_5\nhad led police to believe the kidnapper was a foreigner. Later it was\nlearned that the ransom notes were written in th same handwriting as\nwas used by Hauptmann on hit auto licence.\nREGINA, Sept 20 (CP) .-Victims\nof one of the most sensational railway crossing smashes to occur within Regina city limita In recent\nyears, three well-known Regina\nwomen were fighting for their lives\nin two city hospitals late tonight\nwhile three other women who figured In the same crash received cuts\nand bruises, and shock.\nThe tlx are:\nMrt. Sid Lowthian, driver of the\ncar, uncontclout, her tkull fractured from vault to base, her nose\nbroken, head and body cut Condition very serious.\nMrs. Knight Wilton, wife of well-\nknown Canadian radio commission\nviolinist; fractured pelvis, compound fracture of the right leg, cuts\nabout the head. Condition quite\nserious.\nMrs. Henry Ward, fractured left\narm, several fractured ribs, internal\ninjuries of undetermined seriousness and cuts and bruises on face,\nleg and arms. Condition this afternoon serious, but regarded at more\nhopeful at midnight.\nMrs. H, V. Dalley, wife of the\nmanager of the Robert Simpson,\nWestern, Limited, in Regina. Concussion and shock and a severe\nscalp wound along the top of the\nforehead. X-ray taken and condition at present fairly good.\nMrs. Alex. J. A. Kelt, scalp wound,\ncut over right eye and suffering\nfrom shock. Condition not serious.\nMrs. T. Hird, slight cut on head.\nMrs. Hird was thrown completely\nclear of the car.\nThe women were Injured when\nthe car they were riding ln to the\nRegina golf course was struck by a\nCanadian Pacific railway oil-electric\ntrain.\nGovernment Will\nCheck on Income\nand Gas Taxation\nFall Down Stairs\nFatal in Calgary\nTwo Rod Riders Are Hurt and\nHospital Patients; One\nHas Foot Amputated\nVANCOUVIR. Sept. M (CP) \u2014\nComplete reorganization of enforcement and collections of Income taa\nand levies on lasollne and fuel\noil wlll be undertaken in Vancouver\noffices of the British Columbia's\ngovernment on Prlday by Hon. John\nHart, minister of flnanoe.\n\u2022TILL HUNT FOR YOUTHS\nTIMAGAMI, Ont., Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014\nAt tearch continued tonight for two\nyouths, lost in the densely wooded\ncountry near this northern Ontario\ntown, the father of one of the\nyouths said there was a probability\nthey had sufficient provisions to last\nthem for tome time.\nThe missing youths are Stanislaus\nFranchot and David Reitman of\nNiagara Falli, N.Y.\nCALOART, Sept. JO (AP)\u2014John\nVert, 82-year-old Calgary resident,\nwat dead todsy. while Mrs. Hla\nLarkln. 33, transient of Gull Lake,\nBask., and Emil LeBcau, 24. of Hull,\nQue., were ln hospital, sll ylctliAe\nof aooldents ln Calgary and vicinity.\nVert was fatally Injured when he\nfell down stairs ln a local hotel.\nRldlnf ths \"rods\" westward, accompanied by her husband, Mrs.\nLarkln wu seriously Injured when\nahe attempted to board a freight\ntrain at Shepherd, Alta. Her clothing caught In a csr and she wat\ndragged a considerable distance, suffering deep scalp wounds and back\nInjuries. LeBeau, riding on the same\ntrain, fell under the wheels as he\nlumped from a car on arrival In\nthe Calgary yards. His left foot was\nao badly mangled It had to be amputated at the hospital.\nJudge MacGill Is\nJustice of Peace\nVICTORIA. Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Helen\nGregory MucOlll, Judw of the Juv-\nenlle court In Vsncouver, has been\nappointed a Justice of the peace by\nthe British Columbia government.\nAmes, Investment\nBanker, Is Dead\nTORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Alfred\nErnest Ames, 68-year-old head of\nthe' A. E. Ames Company Limited,\ninvestment bankets of Toronto, died\nat his home here tonight after a\nthree weeks' Illness. He had Men\nln poor health for some time but\nhis condition became serious three\nweks ago and he died st six o'clock\ntonight.\nSturgeon River\nFind Important\nTORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP)-An\nInterim report received today by\nthe department of mines from gov\nernment geologists in the newly dis\ncovered gold fields of the Sturgeon\nriver area, said \"any one of the\nshowings of groups of claims inspected would rank at an important\ndiscovery.\nRadio Operator Was\nUrged Keep Silent\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP). -\nGeorge I. Magna, first assistant\nwireless operator on the Morro\nCastle, today told a federal board\nInvestigating the disaster in which\n32 lives were lott that a Ward Line\nrepresentative told him \"to cooperate with the Ward Line and you'll\nbe taken care of.\"\n\"Keep vour mouth thut,\" Alagna\nsaid Starjey R. Wright, Ward Line\nrepresentative, told him. \"Don't say\nanything to anyone. Come to my\noffice and this thing will blow\nover.\"\nThe alleged conversation took\nplace on board the coast guard cutter Tam*-***. after the last remaining\nofficers and members of the crew\nhad' been taken off the bumin**:\nliner, Alagna told Dickerson N.\nHoover, federal steamship inspector\nin charge of the investigation.\nEarlier In the day Alagna told in\ndetail of his efforts to get Acting\nCaptain W. Warms to order an S O S\ntent out\nFiv. trips and \"strong pleading\"\nwere necessary, Alagna testified, before Capt. Warms gave him the\norder to send the S O S \"about 3:25.''\nAlagana had been assigned to the\nbrid*>\", he said, lo relay Warms'\norder lo Chief Operator George\nRogers in the wireless room.\nBABY CHARLES AUGUSTUS\nLINDBERGH\nANNE MORROW LINDBERGH,\nthe Mother.\nCOL. CHARLES LINDBERGH,\nthe Father.\n\"Jafsle\" and Taxi\nDriver Pick\nHim Out\n$10 GOLD NOTE\nLEO TO ARREST\nWas Seen Nearby\nLlndy Home In\nYear'$2\nBy FRANCIS A. JAMIESON\n(Copyrltjht, 1934, Associated Press)\nNEW YORK, Sept. 20.\u2014In\nswift, dramatic moves in ths\nLindbergh kidnapping case,\npolice today announced the arrest of Bruno Richard\nHauptmann, a German alien,\nthe finding of part of the ranaom money and declared a\nsolution of one of the greatest\nmysteries of modern time was\nassured.\nPolice Commissioner John\nF. O'Ryan, who announced\nthat $13,750 of the $50,000\nransom money paid for the\nbaby, later found dead, was\nrond in Haaptmann's cellar\nin the Bronx, was asked:\nWILL SOLVE CASE\n\"In your opinion, does this\nsolve the Lindbergh kidnapping?\"\nGeneral O'Ryan conferred\nfor a few minutes with J. Edgar Hoover, head of ths\nbureau of investigation of the\nUnited States department of\njustice, and said:\n\"Yes, it will.\"\nAfter an afternoon filled\nwith sensational rumors that\n(Continued on Page Sevan)\nTwo Flying Boats\nArrive at Coast\nNelson Assizes\nOpen October 9\nVICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CPl\u2014The\ndate ot the opening of the Nelson\nassises has been chengeel from October 8 to October *) by provincial\norder.\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Tw\u00bb\ntwin-engined flying boats, lor duty\nst the Royal Canadian sir force\nstation here, have arrived aftar a\nflight from Ottawa, piloted by Squadron Leader L. F. Stevenson and\nFUsht Lieut. A. J. Aahton.\nThe flight required several weeka\nbecause of unfavorable weather la\nOntario and on the prairies but\nthe pilots made excellent time on\nthe final leg of the Journey, making the hop from Moose Lake, New\nJasper, Alta., to Vancouver ln eight\nhours, IS minutes.\nGangsterism and\nTrotzky Blamed in\nSpain's Uprising\nMADRID, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014The tab-\ninet today armed Minister of interior Rafael Saiazar Alonso with\npower to put Spain under martial\nlaw should alleged plans for an extremist uprising, believed thwarted,\nbe carried out.\nMeanwhile, \"American gangster-\nIsm and Leon Trotay's fourth Internationale figured in Alonso's comment on the abortive \"proletarian\"\nrevolt, which authorities ssld would\nhave been the bloodiest ln Spain's\nhistory.\nTHE WEATHER\nMin. Max.\nVictoria _ 50\nNanaimo  47\nVancouver    48\nAtlin  -  32\nKamloops    34\nPrince George 18\nPrince Rupert \u2014 44\nEstevan Point.\nSpokane \t\nPortland\t\nSeattle \t\nSan Francisco .\nPenticton \t\nGrand Forks\n. 52\n.64\n. 54\n. 50\n.54\n'28\nNelson  - - 30\nVernon   \u2014\nCalgary 20\nEdmonton   - 22\nQu'Appelle 28\nCranbrook - 26\nWinnipeg 34\nMoose Jaw \u2014\u2022\u25a0 24\nDawson  26\nPrince Albert  28\nForecast. Nelson and vicinity-\nLight to moderate winds, lair, not\n(much change in temperature,\n60\n65\n68\n44\n62\n56\nH\n56\nM\n74\n1(1\n64\n31\n64\n68\n32\n50\n46\n48\n65\n48\nSO\n50\n48\n rtlit TWO\nTHE  NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON.  B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNING,  SEPT. 21.  1M4\nLACROSSE TEAMS\nPLAYONSUNDAY\nTrail Plans for an Invasion of\nNelson\nTRAIL, Sept 20\u2014Triili lacrdsse\nDonns '<\nKIDNEY\n%, PILLS\nteam will Journey to Nelson Sunday\nto meet the lake city team in the\nthird game of the season, and ln anticipation of it, the Trail team went\nthrough a fast workout Thursday\nevening. They will have another\npractise Friday.\nOwing to an error in arrangements\nNelson prepared for a game last\nSunday but Trail failed to appear.\nAccording to Barney Archibald, the\nTrail team will travel for lure this\nSunday. The lineup li expected to\nbe a stronger one than Nelaon faced\nlast time and the team play wlll be\nmuch better also.\nexpect in\nSCOUTS START\nWINTER WORK\nLkKiDN^.\u00b0;\nHi .Q\u00abr iT__cH?_,l{ '   ..il'\n$3E3J.\nTRAIL, Sept. 20\u2014The Boy Scout\ntroops, the Rover Scouta and the\nWolf Packi, have atarted their winter courses and within a week or\ntwo it is expected they will be well\non their way. Meeting! have already\nbeen called and work aligned for\nthe winter.\nNext month, according to A. A.\nAnnandale, it is hoped to itart a\ntraining courie for leadera whereby\nanyone interested ln the work may\nhave the opportunity to attend the\ncourie. Mr. Annendale will be in\ncharge of it.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C., Hotels\n\"Finest in th* Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONE 787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nFree Bui Service Nelson B.C. George Banwell, Prop.\nFIRST MEN ARE\nHUME \u2014 J. S. Ilaawell, B. S. S.\nMsOougall, B. Clarke, L. Llghtstone,\nt. C. Cunllffe, IB*, t. S. H. Winn.\nJl. B. Tllton. Dr. and Mrs. Ray, W.\nJ. Uoyd, Mr. and Mrs. A. Murand.\nMr. and Mrs. H. R. Fullerton, S. J.\nCoo*. C. T. Trump. Vancouver;  C.\nA. Tula, W. R Lawrence, A. If.\nSlmms, Pentleton; W. 8. Applegate,\nCalgary: R. J. Cat, Toronto; B. N.\nSharp, Tmlr: E. Heuaer, Montreal;\n0. Sibley, Medicine Hat; Mr. and\nMr. and Mrs. R. Morris, Idmonton;\nc. prldeaux, Princeton.\n(77.e Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is King\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel,\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n124 BAKER ST. PHQNE ID NELSON, B.C.\nSAVOY \u2014 B. K. Melvln, Salmo;\nB. J. Hargreavea, K. W. Borgens,\nCalgary; J. A. Miller, Nakusp; 0.\nLlndstrom,  Howser;   Mrs.  M.  Cum\nmlngs, Silverton; T. neteher, Toronto; H. Manning, Revelstoke; L. 6\nTattrle, Oliver.\nMadden Hotel\nA Wtlcome Awaits You\nJAB.  E. MADDEN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot and Cold Witer\nbl   till   HEART   ot  the   Clt;\nNew Grand Hotel\nF.   U   KAPAK,  Prop.\nWeekly and Monthly Dales\nHot  and  Cold  water\nSingle goo up     Double (1.90 up\nRooma f 10 \u2022 Month tnd Dp\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phone M7L\na  WASSICK\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooma\nMiners* Head .uarteri\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nRooma from Mo to $t_0\nMonthly 110 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and oold\nwatar in every room\nCOS Baker tt. Phone go\nVancouver, B. C, Hotels\n\u2014~~~~~Z ''VOUh VANCOUVER HOME\"\nRENOVATED Duf f CHll  HOtOl\nPHONES\nELEVATOR\nA. Patenon, late of Coleman, Alta., Prop,  900 SeymourSt,, Vancouvtr\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight and Passenger\nSPECIAL SUMMER EXCURSION FARE\nOF FARE AND ONE-QUARTER, RETURN, From\nTRAIL\nTO BALFOUR, AINSWORTH and KASLO\nEXTENDED TO SEPT. 30TH, 1934\nTicket! on sale Dally Return Limit Sept. 10\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ltd.\nJ. M. DOUGHTY, Trail  Agent \u2014 PHONE (42\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\nDally   Truck\nService\nPhone\nNelson\n77\nFREIGHT LINE\nJ. C. \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. PROP.\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    SERVICE\nAT  ALL  TIMES\nLeaving Nelion\nat t a.m.\nI'hone\nTraU\n13 or 191\nLeaders May Be Sent\nBehind, Saturday\nFootball\nLONDON. Sept. 10 (CP cable) \u2014\nKeen struggles are ln proepect on\nSaturday aa eloaely-bunehed leaders\nof the first division of the English\nfootball league resume the campaign. Sunderland, laadari. are at\nhome to Derby County, but with\nfour other cluba only a game or\nleas behind the top some ahlftlng\naround may be expected.\nManchester City and Preston North\nEnd, splitting second place, are\nlikely to have grim battlaa on thalr\nhanda. The city Tlalt Lilceater City,\nwho are only three polnta back of\nthem, while Preston, up from the\naecond dlvialon and making a gallant fight, entertain Chelsea.\nArsenal, atlll a full game behind\ntha leaden, are expected to put\nJamea, Copping. Roberts and Hulme\nback into tha lineup for tbe match\nat Sheffield Widneiday. _verton,\ntied with Arsenal ln tha third\nbracket are home to Huddersfield.\nFlashes From tho Wires\nNEW YORK\u2014Wife and nephew. and C.CJ. party working toward\nof Bruno Richard Hauptmann h\"ld\nfor queationlng in Lindbergh raniom caie. Hauptmann'i handwriting\ntallica with that of ransom notes.\na dictatorship in Canada. He op*\nposed any luch step, he declared.\nSACRAMENTO - SUU Demo-\nNeighbor! reveal he haa been idle I critic party adopts Upton Sinclair'!\nand \"playing\" stock markt L ai well platform virtually in full.\nas imbibing beer freely at neighbor-1 \t\nhood beer garden. |    MONTRIAk\u2014Revision of coniti-\n  tution and canom compleUd b* gen-\nTORONTO\u2014Canadian authorities | eral synod of Anglican church,\nmoved ipeedily Thunday night by\nasking for a provisional warrant tor\nthe extradition of David Meisner,\nheld ln Detroit, to Canada for investigation in connection with Labatt kidnapping.\nNEW YORK-Police find that\nHauptmann, held ln connection\nwith Lindbergh kidnapping, had a\njob as carpenter ln the neighborhood of the Lindbergh home at time\nKINGSTON\u2014General council of\nUnited church goes on record as opposing all war and records approval\nof Canadians going on record for\ncontrol of armament manufacture.\nLEWIS FAILS\nLIFT CROWN\nFalls to Londos in 50-\nMinute Bout;\nSlam Ends It\nWRIOLEY FIELD, Chicago. Sept.\n10 (AP)\u2014Ed \"Strangler\" Lewla failed ln hil eforta to regain tha world*!\nheavyweight wrestling champlonahlp\nHARROWSMITH,   Ont.-Poiltlve\nitepe to remedy the evil! revealed I tonight,\nby probe of price -(breads and maaa \u25a0    Baton a record-breaking crowd Of\nbuying wlll be demanded at next\nsession of parliament said Hon. H,\nof kidnapping. He had acceis to' H. Stevens. Many more shocking\nlumber yard where lumber obtained to make ladder to reach babe.\nWASHINGTON-Rev. Piul\nYoung, American missionary to\nEcuador, was combined preacher\nand aaleaman for gas bombs made\nby hli brother in Plttiburgh, lenate\nmunitiona probe la told.\nTOKIO\u2014Japaneae armed forces in\ngreat military display fly 78 battle\nplane! over 490 mllee between Da-\nrlen and Hilnklng, Manchukuan\ncaplUl. Japanese claim they are to\nbe Urget of U.S.A. following announcement of U.S. plans for naval\nmanoeuvre! off Alaska next year.\nFour so Far Use Plan\nDevised to Help\nDelinquents\nOnly four delinquent provincial\ntaxpayers of the Nelion-Creston riding have io far applied for permis-\nlion to \"work out arrears of taxes,\nH. W. Stevena, aisiitant district engineer, lUted hen Thuraday. two\nof tham an now on tho -Job, and\nthe two others ahortly will be.\nA portion of the $1,000,000 loaned\nthe province by the Dominion haa\nbeen allocated to a \"working out\ntaxes\" fund, from which tax payment will be made to the provincial\ntreasury on behalf of thoae working\nout arrears. Only one yeart antars\nmay ba worked out by a delinquent,\nthough in some case! a man will\nb\u00ab delinquent for two yeara, aa\nthere was no Ux sale last year.\nGETS CERTIFICATE\nIn order to benefit by the \"working out taxes\" plan, a delinquent\nfor 1931 or 1832 Uxei for apply to\nthe provincial collector for the district, tor a certificate showing the\namount of the year's arrears which\nhe owes. He then takes this certificate to the public worka engineer,\nwho arranges for htm to go on the\npayroll for the amount shown in\nthe certificate.\nFinally, the worker gets a tax\nreceipt, and the provincial treasury\ngets tha Ux from the loan.\nThe plan was devised to help the\nrural lind-owner whose property\notherwise would be sold for taxes.\nNEUON HAS\nHEAVY FROST\nA comparatively heavy frost that\nup hill was recorded at two degrees, touched vegeUble and flower\nplants s'.tghtly throughout the city\nThursday morning. In Fairview sev\neral gardens were nipped, and up*\ntown licVwalks were white for a\nshort time.\nDipping to 80 early Thursday, the\nminimum Waa the lowest so far this\nseason. During the afternoon the\nmercury reached 68 degrees. Heavy,\ndark clouds in the evening gave\npromise of rain.\nBrownie* Cose in\nAppeal Court Is\nOff Until November\nEDMONTON, Sipt. go (OP)\u2014Adjournment until the November alt-\ntings of the Alberta appeal court ot\nthi appeal ln the Brownlee-MacMH-\nu n seduotlon caaa Waa granted here\ntoday on adjournment wai aaked\non the grounds the evidence wu\nso extensive that court reporters\nhad not had time, owing to tha vacation period, to transcribe lt.\nTO RELIEVE CATARRHAL DEAFNESS AND\nHEAD  NOISES\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTraU\nPhone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. H. McIVOR, Prop.\nNelson\nPhone\n35   ,\nHENDRICKS'  KASLO - N ELSON\nMOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE\nLEAVING KASLO AND RETURN-MON., WED, and FM.\nLEAVES K\/Sl.O 5:45 AM       LEAVES NELSON 11 A.M.\nNelson Depot\u2014 City Service Station  Phone 5    \u25a0     Kaslo, Phone 31\nPROMPT   EFFICIENT   SERVICE\nIf you have Catarrhal Deafneaa or\nare hard ot hearing or have head\nnolaes go to your druggist ind get 1\nounoe of Parmlnt (double strength),\nand add to It V, pint ot hot water\nand a little granulated sugar. Take\none tablespoonful four times a day.\nThla wlll often bring quick relief\nfrom the dlitrenlng head noises.\nClogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucue atop\ndropping Into the throat. It la eaay\nto prepare, costa little and la pleas\nant to take. Anyone who has\nCatarrhal Deafness or head nolaes\nahould give this prescription a trial.\nTORONTO\u2014Rt. Hon. Mackenzie\nKing  charges  both  Conservitlves\n33,000 spectators, Lewis, graying and\nportly, want down to crushing defeat in hit match with Jim l.ondos.\ngenerally recognlaad aa tttleholder.\nunder the floodllghta at Wrlgley\nfield.\nLewis  waa slammed  to  the mat\nrevelations of low wages wlll be\nmade known. He charges Mr. King\ndeclared he knew of sweatshops in\n1898 and that Mr. King waa now\ncriticising the government because< *\u2122__^ J\"*\u2122 ,?\u00b0id_ wl...Ii\"<1?'\nsuch conditions had been revealed.\nHe wondered what Mr. King had\nbeen doing in the past 38 years.\nVICTORIA \u2014Tax rebate powers\nopen to all municipalltiea Invoked\nin respect to Burnaby by authority\nof government.\nleaping on him like a cat to apply\na punishing hammerlock and a\nthree-quarters Nelson. Lewis gamely\ntried to squirm out ot lt, but fell\nvictim to defeat after they bad been\nwrestling 48 mlnutei and 37 seconds.\nLondos weighed 309 and Lewis\n340 pounds.\nSPOKANE\u2014The brightest prospect! ytt developed for ending the\nstreet car strike here resulted from\na nine-hour meeting, ending Thursday, of strikers and employer!, said\nCharles W. Hope, Seattle executive\nsecretary of the regional labor board.\nName Delegates\nLib Convention\nAn official list ot delegatei named\nby the Nelion Liberal! to attend the\nnominating convention of the Weit\nKootenay Liberal anoclatlon on October 3 is aa follows: W. Stubbs, W.\nR. Smedley, J. R. Hunter, Roy\nHunter, D. D. McLean, M. O'Donnell, J. P. Dufy, W. W. Ferguson,\nP. J. Rahal, C. McKlnnon, P. Murphy, J. P. Bumi, Mrs. D. D. McLean, Mrs. Hugh Roil, Mn. A.\nStubbs. Mrs. B. F. Whiteside, Mrs.\nJ. P. Duffy, Mrs. J. Mclvor, Mrs.\nW. B. Lutes.\nDELEGATES\nBANQUETED\nCRERAR LIFTS\nMANAGERS CUP\nNelson Agency North\nAmerican Life in\nTop Place\nBringing in the Nelson agency in\nfirst place ln the midsummer campaign of the North American Life\nAssurance company, Manager R. _.\nCrerar has won the manager! trophy, the Nelson agency heading the\nlist of 14 agencies throughout the\nDominion that produced over-quota\nAGENCY WINI\nLadies Play Golf\nFinal Saturday\nTRAIL, Sept. 20\u2014Mrs. P. T. Mclntyre and Miss Florence Rutledge\nwill meet in the finals ot the ladles'\ngolf tournament at the Rotsland*\nTrail golf course Saturday afternoon. The winner will hold the\nBlaylock oup, emblematic of the\nclub champlonahlp for women, for\nthe coming yeer.\nMrs. Mclntyre beat Mill McKlnnon to gain the final bracket and\nMiss Rutledge beat Mrs. Lord to\nenter the final bracket also.\nYANKSSMJG\nWAYTOWIN\nTake Tigers by 11-7 to\nCut Lead to 5V_\nGames\nR, I. Crenr\nThe first game of the aeml-flnals\nof the local hdlea' softball playoffs, between tha Aces and Bluebirds, Wednuday evening, ended ln\na 19-19 tie, whan the game waa\ncalled tor darkness at the end ot the\nny's house organ, the Nalco News j fifth inning. The next game la\ntenatlvely   sat   for   Saturday   after-\nDANCING\nFEET\nStay Soft, Dry\nand Cool When\nRubbed with\nii: I l___i_i-i.il\nk   -*mmtmttm_Wm*tm<***_.\nnrcircn_ni\n150 Attend; Action Is\nKeynote, States\nArchbishop\nin the neighborhood of 1M aat\ndown to a banquet given by membera of the Nelson sub-dlvlslon to\ndelegatea attending the Cltholle\nWomen'! league convention In Nelson, In the Hume Silver ball, room\nThursday night. The banquet brought\nto a close tha two-day session ot\nthe league and waa featured by an\naddreaa given by His Excellency\nArchbishop W. M. Duke of Vancouver, who paid a fine tribute to the\nwomen'a organisation for lta work.\nA program ot toasts, speeches and\nmualcal numbera followed the refreshments.\nArchbishop Duk* expressed his\nregret at not having been able to ba\npresent at the beginning of tha convention, but stated that he had\nbeen extremely interested In ths lut\nday'a proceedings. He fait that the\nconvention bad been an outatand-\nIng success 'and a great inspiration.\nA convention brought home, he said,\nthe results of United work.\nACTION   KEYNOTE\n\"The keynote ot the whole life\nof our Holy Father has been action.\nHe is trying to bring sbout the participation of tha laity ln the work\nof the bishops, to teach, sanctify\nand govern. The laity should sanctify\nthemselves by the sacraments; by\nobedience; by making the laws of\nthe church better known. Oftentimes ln this way the work of the\nhierarchy passed into the hands of\nthe laity.\n\"On the feast of the Holy Rosary\nthere Is to be a demonstration ln\nVancouver, with regard to Catholic\naction; It behooves all Canadians\nto study different questions, and\nto obtain a better press, Two great\narms of the Catholic action are\nclosed retreats and study clubs. As\nopposed to this there is Catholic\nInaction; we have lost privileges\nand rights we should enloy because\nOf Catholic Inaction. I can't tell\nyou how much the Catholic Women's\nleague haa lielped the church.\"\nHis excellency said ln regard to\nthe motto: \"For God and Canada,\"\nthat it waa under the inspiration\nof the beloved King that the work\nwaa done for the country, and under\nthe inspiration of the sovereign Pontiff thst the work for God wss\ndone.\nINABLE  ATTEND\nHe brought a massage of regret\nfrom Rev. T. M. Nlcol. arohdlocessn\nchaplain, at his Inability to be present at the convention, and the cs-j    _,_    -r    -   .   ,n_M_       .\n\u00a352 li thiVe^a^'of'L'Uue ' mJ-^jS^'Vi^-SJ^-hK2\nP\"^o\u00abtth*iThf.ov0,re'lln.:Xr!- ** ***** ***** ~- Heddle of\nHoly  Father the  Pope.\"  waa made' o'ewiu.\nby   Archbishop     Duke;     to   \"The | *      .    ,,\u201e_..,..\nLeague\"' by Mrs. John Moehsr, past      Mrs. Charles Davis of Warfleld is\ndiocesan   president;   \"Our   Guests,\" , a patient in the Trail-Todanac hos-\nby Miss Helen Scanlan, Nelson: \"Our. pital.\nHostesses.\" by Mrs. W. Q. Colnnolly. j\nVancouver,  president of  hte senior \\    Gaylord Richardson has returned\nsub-dlvlslon  and  to  \"The  Juniors\"   home from  Idaho, where he was, }or th, Bluebirds.\nby   Miss   Mary  Devereux,   president! visiting his brother. Almeda   Graves\nNELSON BOARD\nBOOSTS BINGAY\nWill Help Make Trail\nBanquet as From\nKootenay\nAt the mid-month luncheon ot\nthe council of the board of trade\nThursday, it was decided to cooperate with those already working to\nget a large Nelson delegation at the\nTrall-Rossland complimentary banquet next week to T. W. Bingay, at\nTrail.\nIn retiring from the post of vice-\npresident In charge of finances of\nthe Consolidated Mining It Smelting Company of Canada, to devote\nhimself to the work ot the provincial\ngovernment's advliory economic\ncouncil or \"brain strait,\" of which\nhe ll a member, Mr. Bingay leaves\nhoiti of friendi and well-wishers\nin Nelson, u well as ln the metal\ncities, it wu pointed out It was\nsuggeited thlt Nelson builneu men\nwould with to cooperate In making\nthis event a Kootenay testimonial\nto Mr. Blngay.\nSecretary P. O. Moray wei in\nstracted to cooperate with J. R.\nHunter, who has been working on\nthe matter with R. L. McBride.\nRIPORT ON BOOK\nA report by Arthur Balrd, chairmen ot the publicity committee,\nrespecting the illustrated gift book\non Nelson and lta surrounding district, ihowed material progreis\nmede.\nH. B. Oore Initiated a dlicussion\non holidays, ot which he thought\nthere were not enough.\nThe opposite side of the debate\nwas taken by J. A. McDonald, who\nseld lt the buslneu men of Nelson\ndevoted more time to trying to\nsell goods, Instead of leu, the community would be better off.\nPresident R. W. Hlnton was In\nthe chair.\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nDetroit     95 81\nNew York   e\u00bb 67\nCleveland   \u2014 '9 _\nBoston      73 73\nSt.  Louis    M 7\u00bb\nPhllsdelphl*     M 71\nWaahlngton    \u2022' '1\nChicago   \u00bbl li\nBoston\n\"settled business.\" Incidentally, the\nNelson agency is the first western\none to hold a midsummer campaign\naward.\nRegarding this event, the com*\npai\nHerald, aays:\n\"Nelson's winning of the first\naward will be a popular one, as this\nis the first time that either trophy\nhas travelled to the west. Mr.\nCrerar's agency has been prominent\nthroughout the campaign, becoming\nrunner-up early in August, and\nleader during the middle of the\nmonth.\"\nThe other trophy referred to is for\nsecond honors, won by Windsor,\nOnt.\nAt the close of the campaign the\n.\u00ab4B\n.sin\n.511\n.497\nm\n.451\nMl\n.357\nf\/KEEPS\/\nDFTROIT, Sept. 30 (AP)\u2014After\nthree tight, wall played gamu, Detroit Tigers and New Tork Tankees\nlet down today and engaged ln a\nsession of heavy hitting and loose\nfielding which ended with New York\ntha winner, 11-7. ThU gava the\nYanks an even break ln the urlea\nand reduced the Tiger lead to SVi\ngamea.\nNew   Tork        11   11   I\nDetroit       7   14   4\nBroaca and Jorgena; Marberry, Hog-\nsett, Hamlin, Sorrel and Hayworth.\nSt. Loula      4    \u2022   1\nMerena and Tinkle, Legett;  Bin-\nholder and Grub.a\nPhlladlephla        <   11   I\nChicago   ...  \u2014 _   8    13\nMarcum. Dietrich  and F. Hayu:\nBarnshaw   ud   Shea.\nWashington      -   17  0\nCleveland   ....-    9 11   1\nCohen  and  Phillips;   Harder and\nBrenael.\nGYROS TIE THE\nKINSMEN NINE\nThe first gama of Nelson's \"UttU\nWorld Serlea,\" between the Kinsmen's and Gyro's softball tesms,\nended ln a 9-9 tla wben darkneu\nforced the game being called after\nfour and a half innings of fiat and\n\"noisy\" play on Thuraday evening\nThe Gyro's pushed four runa acroea\nthe plate In tha first of the fifth\nInning to tie up the acore, but\nlt was far too dark to allow the\nKinsmen's club to bat ln the last\nof the fifth.\nGIRLS PLAY TIE\nSOFTBALL GAME\nnoon at 3 go o'clock\nThe Bluebirds ware forced to taka\nthe field without tha services ot\nthree of tbelr regular players, but\nhome runs by Blaine Beeston and\nJean Spiers, and a double by Alice\nDunn, gave them three runa with\nnone down ln tha first half ot the\nopening Inning. Then tbe Acea\nstarted to alam the ball all over\nthe lot, and at tbe end of thl second Inning the score stood 14-5 ln\nthe A\u00abs favor.\nJeln Patterson and Hazel Spiers\ntook tha field for the Bluebirds at\n14 agencies that equalled or sur*\npased last year's total business for' the start of tbe third inning, and\nJuly and August were rank:d as I the game atarted to awing In the\nfollows: 1, Nelson; 2. Windsor; 3, Bluebird, favor'.Thay scored six\nChatham: 4 Port Arthur; 5 Wash-! \u2122\u00bbj\u00bb ^^LT^m^L'T.\nIngton; 8, Ottawa; J, Hamilton; 8,\nCharlottetown; 9, Sherbrookc; 10,\nVancouver; 11. Montreal: 12, Central Ontario; 13, Montreal Uptowi;\n14, Ontario Districts.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nl\u00abAn.li, HnMI.I\na Cs., LiaKtS, tm*.\nVancouver Juniors.\nAddresses were given by Very Rev.\nJ. C. McKenzie. Nelson: Rev. A. K\nMsclntyre, Roasland: Rev. W. B.\nMcKensle. Kelowna; Rev. Leo Hob-\neon. Trail.\nThou who contributed to tht\nmualcal program were W. J. Stur-\ngain and Mrs. J. Bennett, vocal\neoloe: Mils Ella Desjardlns snd Benny Monteleene, violin and piaho\nduets,  Miss pesjsrdlns,  piano aolo.\nIn each of the fourth and fifth lr\n\u25a0lings, while the best the Acu could\ndo waa acore ona ln the third and\ntwo In each ot tha fourth and fifth\nInnings.\nThe Aces poled out only one home\nrun by Elvera Matheeon, but they\nbunched their hlta better ln the\nfirst part ot tha* gama than did the\nBlueblrda. Elvera Matheson and Aria\nSaare each icored four runs, white\nWllma Milne and Clara Talberg,\nscored three runs each for the Aces.\nClara Talberg. first base; Arts\nSaare, catcher, shd Peggy Donsld-\nson, third bsaa played well ln ths\nfield for the Aoes, the work ot the\nformer being outstanding.\nElvlna Arlt. poled out two home\nruns for the Bluebirds. Elaine Beeston. hit a home run and two\ndoubles. Hsael Spiers, Dorothy\nWheeler snd Jesn Bplers, also hit\nhomers for the Bluebirds. Mary\nLong made three htte In three official times at bat.\nElaine Beeston. Alice Dunn and\njean Patterson starred ln the field\nwent   the   route\nWater Level Now\nDown to 214 Feet\nThere Is no halt yet to the decline\nof the watet ln Kootenay lake and\nthe West Arm, and at Nelson the\ngauge now ihows the level to be\nwithin two and a fourth feet of the\nlow water mark. The reading at\nnoon was 2.24 feet. This is a decline of three-fifths foot since Labor\nday, when the level stood at 3.05\nfeet.\n,   ,on the mound for the Aces. Dor\nMrs. Clifford Morgan and daugh-1 otlly weeler pitched tor the Blue\nter have  returned home from\nholiday spent with relatives at Cle\nElum, Wash.\n-, \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Simpson have\nreturned from a holiday at Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMrs. Charles Bird, Riverside, who\nleaves shf-tly for Greenwood, where\nshe will reside, was presented Tuei-\nday evening during session ot the\nPythian Sister lodge with an Insignia\nring, Mrs. D. Duffus, chief, making\nthe presentation. Mrs. Bird, who\nhas for years been an active lodge\nworker, waa complimented for her\nendeavor! and given best wlshei\nfrom all members.\n.   *   *\nMrs. T. H. Davis is a patient in\nthe Trail-Tadanac hospital.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. G. G. Cummlng and baby\ndaughter returned to their home\nyesterday from the Trfiil-Tadanac\nhospital\nbird! until the fourth Inning when\nsh* wu relieved by Haaei Spiers.\nloco Gets Into\nBoll  Playoffs\nVANCOTJVER, Sept. 30 (CPl\u2014loco\nImperials tonight dsfeatad Van-\ncouver'a Japaneae Auhls. 9-8 ln tha\nseventh and deciding game Ot tbe\nTerminal league baaeball playoffi\nand won the right to meet tha\nwlnnera of the Victoria-Arnold and\nQulgley aerlea for the Britlah Columbia title.\nOrillia Wins\nORILLIA, Ont., Sept. M (CP)-\nOrlllle Terrier! took the Ontario\nsenior lacrosse championship here\ntonight taking a second straight\nwin from Cornwall Island Indians\nby a score of 10-4.\nCOURT ELLEN  HAS ITS\nANNUAL DINNER PARTY\nTha Put Chief Ringer's club of\nCourt Elian No. 8812, held theli\nannual dinner and theatre visit\nThursday evening. Those attending were Mrs. E. Jarvls, Mrs. L.\nDunk, Mra. w. Hesaell, Mrs. J. Joy.\nMrs. J. Talt, Mra. T. Poster, Miss K.\nMsssey and Mra. R. Vyu.\n\"Copyright Wrlgley's, 1\u00bb34\"\nMID IT COSTS YOU _\n4    LE55\nGo into Hie matter of proofing and ywi will find it k for\nmort economical to do a thorough job, and be done with it,\nroiher than go on ytar afttr year with constant repair Wk\nTht makers of Hte famout DiroiD roofs now offer yoy Daro- ,\nLock, o ntv type of inter locking shmgle which is good for\nHit life of tho building, tt is provided in a range of attrac-\nHrt, permanent colors, and saves 20 por etnt on tho cost of\no row slate surfaced roof. Lay yoar ntw DuroUck roof\nfight orer oM shingles; no litter to clean op; no damogt to\nflavor bods, end yoa save fool oH Winter with rtw antra\n\u25a0notation.\nAsk r*tt local Mar fat coat *t\u2014MH ea*i\nrOn  pOVrtCOMTI.\nImmmU*-*-\nitfl\n*mfm.Sm\\kmm\n(.IIM\nmice\n,1 ret*\n.\u2022mt\nt-l*\nu.1\nT\u00ab8t.\n\u00ab.1\u00bb \u25a0\nIt ,\u00bb\u00bb\n,| b\u00ab>*\n\u2022\"\u25a0\u2022nirs\n\u2022i **\u2022*\n\u00ab*\u00ab\u2022'\u2022\n(\u25a0Mr*-\nKuafaetini to\nSidney Roofing & Poper Co., IH.\nTVUrlt sill Vineo-mr\nDUROIOCft\nA DUROIDROOF WITH EVERY\nSHINGLE SECURELY LOCKED.\n HRE, SMOULDERING UNDER THE FLOOR.\nBREAKS OUT THREE TIMES AT NAKUSP\nDamage Heavy to Residence\nof J. W. Bailey Over\nTwo Days\nNAKUSP. B.C.. Sept. 20. \u2014 Fire\nbroke out at the residence of J. W.\nBailey at 8 o'clock ln the morning.\nrhe flames started near the chimney\nand spread into cupboards near by.\nneighbors thought tbe fire wu extinguished, but at 11 o'clock evl-\njenoe of tire waa again seen.\nThe alarm was raised ln town and\ntuny ruahed to the aoene. With\nminor damages the flm wsa again\nitopped.\nCitizens were alarmed indeed next\nmorning when yet another outburst\nDocured. Evidently lt had been\n\u25a0mouldering tn the floor Joists. As\nnon as the flames were controlled\n,he helpers set about tearing the up-\nitalrs floor apart to Insuro against\nturther trouble.\nMuch damage haa been done, the\ntire having spread to almost every\nroom In the house. The house was\noovered by Insurance.\nFIBE BRIGADE FINANCES\nA aecond meeting of the Nakusp\nFire Brigade waa held to discuss\nFinancial matters. It was decided\nto give a dance, the hall, music and\nidvertlslng being given free. A bas-\ntetbatl exhibition game was also ar-\n'anged to precede the dance. Pro-\nseeds wlll go toward the purchase\n>f new pipe which Is gractly needed.\n\"VO LEAVES\nThe  tug   Columbia   hu  left  for\ntobson where it will be ln readiness\nor the winter run.\nA dance was held ln Brouse Community hall under the auspices of\n,he   Improvement   society.   A   good\nrowd   attended  from  both  Brouse\nmd Nakusp.\nA meeting of the Nakusp branch\nif the Canadian legion wu held ln\n.he   club   rooms   when   satisfactory\niporta of the recent Legion celebra-\n,lon were heard.\nS. Samuelson of New Denver wm\nNakusp visitor.\nIASKETBALL  PLANNED\nBasketball enthusluts met to disuse the winter sporta program. The\nttendance was good and great ln-\nirest wu shown. Arrangements were\nnade for the annual meeting,\nR. McWhirter and E. E. Johnson\nive returned from Okanagan Lsnd-\nng.\n.   Draper of New Denver wss a\nuslness visitor here.\nA  Stanley motored to New Den-\nir.\nMr. and Mrs. O. Moore and family\nif Trail were guests of Mr. Moore's\nlother.\nMiss Vera Porter of Revelstoke Is\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Bat-\nirshall.\nMrs. W. Crockett    has    returned\nom Vancouver where she hM been\nlending a vacation.\nMrs. W. Q. Battershall and daugh-\nIr Jean returned from Revelstoke.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Johnstone and\nJoyce  Johnstone  of  Silverton\n\"ere visitors here.\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Rogers of Ar-\now Park motored to town.\nP. Woodrow of New Denver wu a\nIty visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. Wm. Marshall of Ar-\nrw Park were motor visitors here.\nB. Robertson of Burton motored to\ntskusp from Burton.\nC. Evans, who hM returned from\nthe forestry lookout on Saddleback\npeak where he hM been employed\nduring the aummer, hu left for Nelson.\nMrs. N Muters returned after\nspending a week In Silverton.\nMrs. W. Mosley left for Trail where\nshe wlll Join her husband.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Wagstaff lett for\nSldmouth.\nMrs R. C. Skelton\nRobson Women's Institute\nHears of Trip Around\nthe World\nROBSON. B.C., Sept. 20.\u2014The September meeting of the Robson Women's Institute wu held at Mrs.\nWebster's home with a large attendanoe.\nThere .were several visitors present.\nMrs. Poxlee reported on the dental\nwork which was done for four of\nthe children ln Nelson which was\nsatisfactory.\nMrs. Ballard spoke of the enjoyable garden party at Mrs. Chalmer's\nwhen the members of the Robson\nInstitute were guests of the Thrums\nInstitute. Thirteen of the ladles\nwere able to attend, and spent a\npleasant social afternoon.\nThe Institute sent a thrift exhibit to the Edgewood exhibition.\nThe president asked the members\nto submit suggestions for the fall\nmeetings, which were to be sent\ntn to the secretary during the\nmonth.\n\u2022 An Interesting paper was read by\nMrs. R. C. Skelton giving an account of her world trip, starting\nfrom the time she left Vancouver,\nMarch 1 until she arrived ln Robson, August 9.\nA hearty vote of thanks was given Mrs. Skelten at the cloee.\nMrs. Thorp sang a song In a\npleasing style.\nRefreshments were served by the\nJoint hostesses, Mrs. Webster, Mrs.\nHett and Miss Irvln.\nMrs. Semple of Ottawa was a\nhouse guest of Mrs. Squires.\nMrs. Gayton and son Roddy have\nleft for their home at Powell River\nafter spending the summer at the\nhome .of Dr. and Mrs. Gayton of\nRobson.\nMr. and Mrs.'Wright have left for\nheir home tn Brandon, having spent\nthe summer vacation at thetr ranch\nhere.\nGeorge Cuttress of Trail wu a\nweekend visitor with Mr. and Mrs.\nSkelton.\nMr. and Mrs. Porteous were Robson visitors.\nLeslie Crauford of Nelson took the\nAnglican service on Bunday morning, also holding afternoon service at\nCutlegar.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Carter were Nelson visitors.\nLONDON (CP)\u2014The postmaster-\ngeneral has opened an air mall service to South Africa via Germany,\nleaving every Friday.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n55 Can. Press News\n00 In Old Madrid\n15 In the Shadows\n30 C.R.B.C. String Quartet\n00 Program of the Nations\n30 News and Weather Forecast\n38 Billy Bissett's orch.\n:00 The Four Gypsies\n:15 Woodhouse and Hawkins\n:30 News\n:45 Ralph Lear, tenor\n:00 Theatre of the Air\n:30 Dance  orch.  Trail\n:00 Evening Jim and Irit Todd.\nKHQ\n690\n3:00\n5.30\n7:00\n7:15\n7:30\n7:30\n7:45\n7:45\n8:00\n8:15\nN.B.C.-KGO  NETWORK\nKGW KFI KGO KOMO KJR\n620    640    790    920      970\nFirst Nighter\nJack Benny, Mary Livingstone\nAmos 'n' Andy.\nGene and Glenn\nP. Martin, banjo (KGO-KHQ1\nOne Man's Family (KOA and\nEast)\nThe Phillistine (KGO, KFI1\nEdna Fischer, pianist, (KGW,\nKGA)\nConcert, vocalists, orch.\nOne Man's Family, dram. ter.\n8:45 Cliff Nazarro, tonor.\n9:00 Melody Masquerade\n9:30 Tom Coakley's orch.\n10:00 News Flashes\n10:15 Orchestra\n10:55 Press-Radio News\n11:00 Gus Arnheim's orch.\n11:00 Tom Gerun's orch. (KGO)\n11:30 Orchestra, Portland\nYOUR GROCER HAS\nTHIS SONNY WAY\nTO BETTER HEALTH\nCheck Common Constipation\nwith a Delicious Cereal\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI     KFRC    KOIN    KSL   KOL\n570      610      940        1130     1270\n6:00 In the Modern Manner\n6:00 Everett Hoaglund's orch. (DL)\n6:45 Cadlile and London\n6:45 Military Band (DL)\n7:00 Ukelelc Ike\n7:15 Human Side of the Newt\n7:30 True Story Court\n8:00 Herbie Kaye's orch.\n8:30 Sam Robbin's orch.\n8:30 Rube Wolfe's orch.\n8:45 Friday Night Frolic (DL)\n9:00 Ben Pollack's orch. (DL)\n9:15 Hobbies, Wilbur Hall (DL)\n9:30 Harold Grayson's orch. (DL)\n9:30 Carlos Molina's Tango orch.\n10:00 Merle Carlson's orch. (DL)\n10:30 To be announced.\n11:30 Harold Grayson's orch.\n11:30 Merle Carlson's orch.\n600 k CJOR\nVANCOUVER\n6:15 Musical Program\n6:45 News Varieties\n7:15 Don Flynn, piano\n7:30 Dr. Lyle Telford\n8:00 News\n8:15 Songs, poems, trio\n8:30 Baseball Broadcast\n10:15 Jack Williamson's orch\n500 m\n500 w\nTood hat a lot to do with how\nyou feel and how you look. For instance, you need plenty of \"bulk\"\nwith your meals to avoid the risk\nit common constipation.\nThit ailment frequently causes\nheadaches, loss of appetite and energy. Yet, in most caset, it can be\novercome pleasantly and esfely by\neating a delicious cereal.\nKellogg's All-Bran furnishes\n\"hulk\" in convenient and concentrated form. Laboratory tests thow\nthe \"bulk\" in All-Bran it safe and\neffective. In fact, it is much like\nthat found in leafy vegetables.\nWithin the body, the fiber of All-\nBran absorbt moisture, and forms\na toft mast. Gently, thlt clears out\nthe inteatinal wastes.\nIn addition. All-Bran provides\nvitamin B and iron.\nItn't thit tunny way better than\ntaking patent medicinet \u2014 so often\nharmful? Two tabletpoonfult of\nAll-Bran daily are utually sufficient. Chronic caset, with each\nmeal. If serioutly ill, eee your doc-\nt tor. All-Bran makea no claim to\nbe t \"cure-all.\"\nEnjoy All-Bran as a cereal, or\ncook into appetising recipet. Be\nture you get Kellogg't All-Bran.\nIt containt much more needec\n\"bulk\" than part-bran products. Ir\n' the red-and-green package. Made\nby Kellogg in London, Ontario.\n680 k\n8AN\n6:30\n6:45\n7:00\n7:15\n7:30\n7:45\n8:00\n8:30\n00\n30\n10:00\n11:00\n11:30\nKPO 441 m\nFRANCISCO 50,000 w\nJust Around the Corner\nAir Adventure\nCollege Daze\nSports Revue\nComedy Stars, E.T.\nBig Yank Mavericks\nPaul Pendarvis' orch.\nGray Gordon's orch.\nCrime Clues, E. T.\nPick and Pot, E.T.\nLog o' the Day\nGus Arnheim's orch.\nCharles Runyan organist\nKJR\n309.1 m\n5000 w\n970 k\nSEATTLE\n6:00 Song Bag\n6:30 Hollywood on Parade\n6:45 Air Adventurei\n7:00 Mystic Asia\n8:00 To be announced\n8:15 Metropolitans\n8:45 Carefree Capers\n9:00 Souvenirs\n10:00 Till Tomorrow\n10:25 Northern Lights\n11:00 Rev. Harry H. Ness\n1050 k KNX 285.6 m\nHOLLYWOOD 60,000 w\n8:15 Synagogue of the Air\n6:45 Air Adventure\n7:00 Watanabe and Archla\n7:15 Prof. C. F. Lindtley\n7:30 Lawrence King tenor\n7:45 King Cowboy\n8:00 The In-Laws\n8:15 Electric Transcription\n8:30 Charlotte Woodruff, Henry lb-\nlings, soloists\n9:00 News\n9:15 Amagon\n9:30 Musical Headlines, E.T.\n9.45 Stadium Boxing.\n10:45 Pete ronlrelli's orch.\n(0*31\n-THI NELSON DAILY NEW*. NILtON.  1.C--PRIDAY MORNINO. \u00bbIPT. 14. 1M4-\nHOI THRU\nFall and Winter Lines Days\nat The Bay SATURDAY and MONDAY\nNEW ARRIVALS AT THE BAY\nNew fall goods are arriving daily and values are wonderful. Below ars listed some\nof the outstanding \"Economy\" specials. A new standard of value for the Staples\nDepartment\nIRISH LINEN TEA TOWELS\nIrish Linen tea towels, pure Irish crash cloths, and large enough to\nreally please. Red lettered borders. HBC SPECIAL, Each\t\n1*\n-     LARGE HUCK DISH TOWELS\nLarge attractive checks in green, blue, gold or rose. Extra large siie. A\nsplendid value. Each  \t\nIf\nENGLISH \"ADMIRALTY\" TOWELS\nAs supplied to the British Navy. A fine quality \"Man's Towel\". White\nwith red hemmed border. A large siie towel. Each\t\n49\nENGLISH FLANNELETTE SHEETS\nWhipped singly and of extra large size, 70 x 90. The kind you have\nalways wanted.  Pair  \t\n*2-75\nWomen's Fur-Trimmed\nCOATS\n\u00bb\n1J.9S\nThese are coat values that speak for themselves. They aro\nmade of new rough or smooth soft weaves, are lavishly\ntrimmed with fur collars and cuffs, well lined and warmly\ninterlined. Dark shades.\nSmart Fall Millinery\nNEW MADEIRA TEA CLOTHS\n36 inch hand embroidered cloths of fine\nlinen in white or cream Spanish linen.\nHBC SPECIAL, Each\t\n$1.75\n50 in. SHADOW CLOTH\nFast colors and modern designs in four\ncolor tones. A superb value. Yard\t\n49\n\"CHARIOT\" SHEETS and\nPILLOW CASES\nLong wearing English sheets of very fine quality,\ndrawn thread hems.  Size 81x100.      C*i AC\nPillow Cases to match. QCt\nPair .;     ***-\u25a0'\nMercury Snuggles\nand Vests\n79c to 98c each\nYou will want more than one\nset of these fancy knitted garments that are so cozy and\nsnug fitting. Vests have adjustable straps, or lastex tops\nand panties are finished with\nlastex band at the waist and\nfitted knee. Flesh. Small, medium and large.\n$1-M\nCot your new hat? If not see this\ngroup of felt models in a large\nvariety of sizes. Dressy or tailored\ntypes. Good color range.\nOutsize Flannelette\nGowns\n\u00bb1\u00ab\nWhy feel chilly, when we have\nthese heavy flannelette gowns\nthat are so roomily cut. V neck\nand long sleeves. In white.\nMEN'S DRESS SHOES\nAn outstanding value in men's black or brown calfskin\noxfords or black calf boots,' made over combination\nfitting lasts with Goodyear welted\nsoles. Medium, square or round toes. An \u00a3****%   Afi\nideal shoe for dress or business wear. \u2122 **_\\\nPair         **W\nWOMEN'S FASHION SHOES\nIn brown or black suedes or black or brown kid or calf. Ties and oxfords with fancy stitchings and overlays made with flexible soles   *f,**_\\ _QC\nCuban, spike or military walking heels. Suitable for afternoon, dress or\nstreet wear. Width AA to D. Pair\t\n3\nCHILDREN'S SHOES\nBlack gunmetal calf and dressy patent straps\nwith cushion soles, made over correct fitting\nlasts that give full foot comfort to growing\nfeet.   Solid leather soles, rubber heels.\n5  to V\/i    S1.B5\n8 to 10'\/2   ?2.25\n11   to 2Vz    ?2.50\nBOYS' BOOTS\nSpecially made for hard wear in black\nblucher style with sewn and nailed\nsoles, rubber heels, made in half sizes\nover nature form lasts.\n11  to 13Vi 12.35\n1 to 5V4 '*\u2022\u2022'*\nINFANTS' LAMSDOWN\nor CHINCHILLA COATS\nWarmly made coats, finished with roll\nor tailored collars. Colors and white.\nSizes 1 to 3 years. OT AC\nEach\nCHILDREN'S FLEECE\nLINED BLOOMERS\nWarm, practical bloomers in sand, navy,\npink and cream. Sizes 2 to 14     OA\u00a3\nyears.\nMen's Fall SUITS\nExtra Pants\nMen Do not miss this opportunity. A new fall suit tailored\nexpertly from the latest fall samples.\nStyles for men and young men. Every  ft **ttf ^^ CA\nsuit with extra pants. \" J^ ^P\nSuit   *^\nDRESS SHIRTS\nWe have the finest selection of dollar\nshirts that any man would wish to wear.\nPlain and fancy shades. Collar attached\nand separate collar style. Each \t\nn\n\u2022oo\nMEN'S\nPULLOVERS\nFine wool pullovers in new\nshades. Close fitting elastic\nknit waistbands.\nEach   \t\nMEN'S DRESS\nSOCKS\nMen's  light weight  fancy\n98f\ndress   socks.\n4 Pairs for\nService Weight\nSILK HOSIERY\nNew Shipment\u2014Choose several pairs of these\nFull fashioned service weight pure thread silk,\nsilk to picot top, new range of colors. Subsland- JLAa\nards of $1.50 lines. Sizes 8'\/i to lOVi. W ^T\nSpecial, Pair \t\nWOMEN'S CAPESKIN GLOVES\nSplendid gloves for fall wear. Smart slip-on\nstyle, neat fitting and serviceable. Colors arc ft W ^J^\ndark brown, grey and black. Sizes 6 to IVi.       ~~ g_\nPAIR \t\nWOMEN'S SILK AND WOOL HOSIERY      J>f*t{\nPenman's fine quality silk and wool full fashioned hosiery, in new fall ~^~*f\nshades. Sizes 9 to lO'\/z. PAIR\t\nWOMEN'S CASHMERE HOSE\nLieht weight cashmere hose for fall wear. Showing new shades includ-\ninf S turftan. grain, caribbee and black. Sizes 9 to 10.    PAIR\n49\nCARRS MACKINAW JUMPERS\nKeep warm  in  light weight all\njumper. Colors blue, brown and\nButton or zipper front.\nEach\t\nwool\n$\n5.95\nMen's and Boys'\nUNDERWEAR\nSPECIALS\nMen's combinations,\nmedium weight  ...\nMen's Heavy Rib\ncombinations    \t\nMen's light weight\ncombinations    \t\nBoys' brush wool\ncombinations    \t\nBoys' rib\ncombinations    \t\nMen's wool shirts and\ndrawers   \t\n$09\n$1.95\n$1.00\n$1.50\n.00\nTURTLE NECK SWEATERS\nWe have the latest in boys* aweatets. Fine\nwool turtle neck pullovers that are *M it\\\nwarm, comfortable and snappy. Each*\">l-w\nCHILDREN'S HALF SOCKS\nA practical quality and dressy in appearance.\nFine ribbed cuffs, in heather mixtures only.\nSizes 6 to 8 years. 9Q<\nPAIR  *)*1\nCHILDREN'S WOOL\nHOSIERY\nNew Shipment Just Arrived\nFine soft all wool 1x1 rib hose, will stand\nlots of hard wear. Colors, fawndoe, stone-\nbeige, and barktan. Sizes 6 to 9. PAIR\n49\u00ab and 79\u00ab\nPURE SILK SCARVES\nA splendid assortment to choose from, showing new designs, styles and colors, ff 1 AA\nLADIES' HANDBAGS\nA wonderful selection of genuine leather\nhandbags. Richly lined, fitted with change\npurse and mirror. New styles. ffl AC\nHBC PURE FOOD\nSPECIALS\nI_\u00bb1*M\u00bbI_~49\nBUTTER\u2014Ruby Creek or      _A\u00a3\nHudionla; par lb ****>\nSHREDDED  WHEAT\u2014\nPer pkg. \t\nAUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE\nFLOUR\u2014Per pkg\t\n100\n160\nBUTTER\u2014Golden Meadow   JCl*\nFancy Creamery; per lb.        ******\nWOMEN'S CHAMOISETTE\nGLOVES\nFine quality chamoisette gloves in season's\ncorrect shades. Smart trimmed gauntlet in\nslip-on style. Sizes 6 to 7Vi. 7(K\nPAIR      \u2022*'\nl|totadtfA$ J\nm*-***\\l\nINCORPORATED  2?? MAY 1670.\nGRAPE NUT8-\n2 pkgi.   \u25a0\t\nKELLOGG'S CORN FLAKES-\n3 pkgi\t\nBONELE8S CHICKEN-\nAylmer, *\/-i; per tin\t\nNABOB  SHRIMP\u2014Wet or\nDry, 1a; per tin \t\nBLACK LABEL PINEAPPLE-\nSlleed, 2i; per tin\n4 Cakei  PALMOLIVE  SOAP\nTrial pkg. PRINCESS 80AP\nFLAKES\u2014The 6 for \t\nCANADA CORN 6TARCH-\nPer pkg. .\t\nORANGE  MARMALADE-\nNelion Brand; 40-oz. jar\nBAKER'S COCOA-\ni\/.-lb.   tin       \t\nVEGETABLE or TOMATO\nSOUP\u2014Aylmer; 2 Ins\nBLACK LABEL PINEAPPLE-\nCubei, 2i; per tin\t\n330\n250\n290\n190\n150\nand I\n190\n100\n320\n150\n150\n170\nBEE CEE TOMATOES-       _*tt\nNo. 2 large tin; 3 for  \u2022*-****\nCAULIFLOWER- 1(UJ\nPer lb * ZZ\nCELERY- 10(5\nPer bunch   r\nRED PICKLING CABBAGE-    JQaJ\nEach   ZZ1\nDAMSONS- 20(5\nPer baaket    \"  7\"\nPEARS\u2014 ISC\nPer baeket  **r\n PAOI POUR\n-THI NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON.  i.C-FRIOAY   MORNING. SEPT. 21.  1914\nVERA REDPATH\nKASLO BRIDE\nMarries J. T. Laurie;\nBoth of Nelson;\nto Reside Mere\nKASLO, B.C., Sept. 20.\u2014A wedding\nof special Interest to Nelsonltes was\nquietly solmenized here at two\no'clock Monday afternoon when Miss\nVera Blanche Redpath of Nelson,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. I. R. Red-\nTHAT \"LIKE THE\nDICKENS\" FEELING\nIS UVER\nWake Up Your Liver Bile.\nFeel Fit.   You Needn't use\nCalomel To Do It.\nIt's your liver, failing \u2022' pour out ths vital\ntwo pounds of bile, daily, into your bowell, that\nmiltM you (eel lo off-colour.\nLark of bile mesas poor digestion. Food itiyi\ntoo long in your bowell end deosys. Your\nSyttem ii poieoned. You go through the misery\net in, bloating, pain, heartburn. You hsv* a\ndark brown abominable taste in your mouth\nand bad breath. Your skin's unhealthy and\noftsn your head aches. Your whole system\nseems out of kilter.\nHow can you reasonably eipeet to clear up a\ncondition like this by merely taking nits, mineral water, oil, laxative canay or chawing gum.\nor roughage? Theu only move the bowels, and\nthat's nut enough. You must wake up your\nliver bile.\nAvoid calomel (mercury). Taks Carter's\nUttle Liver Pills. They're purely vegetable,\n\u25a0eotle, sure and safe. They'll maks you feel a\nhundred per oent better in a very short time.\nDon't waste your money on substitutes. Bs\ndefinite. Ask for Carter's by nam*\u2014and get\nthem! Look for tha name, Carter's, on tht rtd\nlabsL   J5c. at aU druggists. tt\npath of Vancouver, became the bride I\nof    Jamea    Thomborn    Laurie    of\nNelaon.\nThe ceremony  took place  in  St. i\nMark's Anglican  church, ,the  vicar.\nRav. e Pitt Griffiths, officiating.      I\nMr. and Mrs. Oeorge McGlnnls of I\nHowser   were   the   attendants    and\nwith Mlas Doretta Norrls and Robert\nJoy of Nelson were the  only wit-,\nnesses.\nThe bride was charming ln a gown\nof heavy white wool crepe with I\nwhite hat and matching accessories\nand carrying a bouquet of roaea and\nfern. Mrs. McGlnnls chose ft nut\nbrown  ensemble.\nFor her going away the bride wore\na  dark  brown  ensemble.\nImmediately after the ceremony\nthe couple left, by launch, to spend\na portion of their honeymoon at\nHowser, where thye will be the\nguests of the bride's brother-in-law\nsnd sister, Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge McGlnnls.\nMr. Laurie Is the C. P. R. freight\nagent ln Nelson where the newly\nwedded pair will make their future\nhome.\nR. C. Moulton of Gerrard was a\nvisitor ln town.\nMayor W. V. Papworth haa returned from a business visit to coaat\npoints.\nArchie Greenlaw of Lardo waa a\ncity visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. Noel Bacchus of\nBlrchdale were city visitors.\n8. S. Luffman of Howser li spending a few daya renewing acquaintanceships ln town.\nMiss Doretta Norrls of Nelaon was\nin town to attend the Laurie-Red-\npath wedding.\nChief of Police A. L. MacPhee has\nreturned from a business visit to\nKamloops.\nJames Anderson who spent a few\ndays In town has left for Creston en\nroute to his home ln Vancouver,\nRobert Joy of Nelson was In town\nto attend the Laurie-Red path wedding.\nTom Mien hM left to apend a\nfew days at the Joker mine.\nMr. and Mrs. George McGlnnls\nand (oung daughter Mary have left\nfor their home In Howser after being ln town to attend the marriage\nof Mrs. McGlnnls' sister, Mlas Vera\nRedpath and J. T. Laurie of Nelson.\nFALL HATS\nAll the chlcneti that denotes tht 1934 mode ll shown In our\nchoice selection of fill hats\u2014In chic C| mm to Ca Ag\nVelvets and serviceable Felts. Priced at 9-*-m*m*     \u25a0M'TO\nVELVET DRESSES\nFor that semi-formal occasion let us suggest one of our\ngorgeous long-sleeved velvets\u2014They do give you that well*\n(romrtappean-nee. $19.50   \u00b0 $25-00\n. WOOLENS\nSuit's and Dresses that are Ideal for street wear on these fall\ndays\u2014In all smart shades. Cm ne to Cl t QC\nPriced from .   ?7\u00ab5'5      9~*-*~~2>\nFALL SILKS\nA beautiful selection In all the new charming fall shades-\nSizes from 14 to 44 and moderately     &C.QC to $1*1.00\nSMART COATS\nA new shipment just In of luxuriously fur trimmed costs\u2014\nSmartly tailored  In all  the  new cloths\u2014In all  sizes from\n^nvom $15.00 * $59.50\nMILADY'S\nIFASHION SHOPPEI\nNELSON DISTRICT CARS\nHAVE JUST ARRIVED\nBeatty Bros. Manufacture the Lowest\nPriced Standard Washer in Canada\nONLY *\u00a79,9S\nBacked by the Beatty Guarantee\nIt does net coit ent eent te own * Beatty Washer because .in   12  months   i   Beitty will  pay  fer   itself   in\ntavinf ef  clothet  alone.\nTRADE  IN  YOUR OLD WASHER\nSmall Down Payment and\nEasy Terms\nBeatty Bros. Limited\nBarbell Wire and Starvation\nPoland's Order of the Day\nTyrannical Government Makes Travesty of\nAncient Polish Love of Freedom\nASK ORGANIZE\nB.C. TORIES\n306  Baker  St.\nPhone   91\nBy PIERRE VAN PAASSEN\nCentral Press Canadian\nCorrespondent\nWARSAW, Poland, Sept. 21.- At\nleast ten Polish gentlemen have assured me within the last 48 hours\nthat their country is the last great\nbulwark of European civilizations\nagainst Asiatic barbarism. Since I\nwas told the same thing at one\ntime or apother in and about the\nfollowing respective countriea: Hungary, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Rs-\nthonia. Latvia, Germany, Roumania\nand Finland, I can truthfully say\nthat I am growing somewhat used\nto the bulwark argument. Still with\nall those countries lined up, we\ncan say that on the whole we are\nwell protected. I say \"we\" because\nwithout Poland holding the fort, so\nI was given to understand In Warsaw, the wild and woolly hordes of\nGengis Khan or of Glem VorosMl-\noff, all one and the same to my informants, would even now be wash-\n| VICTORIA. Sept. 10 (CP).-Con-\nvontion of Britiah Columbia Con-\n' servatives, not later than November\ni this year, with the object of rebuilding Ihe provincial party and\nselecting a leader, is requested by\nthe Vlctlrla Conservative association's central executive and by the\nNanaimo Federal Conservative asso-\nciation.\nThese two association replied to a\nquestionnaire sent out by the British Columbia Conservative association, which Invited a vote by district\nassociations on the question of holding a convention this year.\ning their feet in the English chan\ntake them over to Britain, the Ui\nwhile waiting tor the ferry to\n^^^^^       ^_~^^^^^f\nted States and Canadf\nOFT' TOLD TALE\nAfter you hear this atory ten times\nIn succession, albeit with varying\ndegrees of eloquence, your heart\ncomes near bursting with gratitude\nto Poland for having Uken up the\nnoble and disinterested task of acting as the protector of civilization.\nwith Asiatic barbarism of course,\nRussia is meant. Barbarous or not\u2014\nthe question is not under consideration Just oow\u2014foreign observers\nhave frequently remarked thtt the\nPoles do not differ a great deal\nfrom the Russians. Whereas a traveller coming west from Moscow may\nthink that he has struck Europe at\nlast when he geta as far as Warsaw,\nthe European or Anglo-American\ngoing in the other direction feels\nhimself in the heart of the Slavic\nworld, long before he geta to the\nPolish capital. You do not need to\nstay long in Poland before you find\nthat the simplicity, the genial kindness, the depth of character, the\nways of life of the Polish people, in\nshort everything that characterizes\nthe vast aggregation of peoples inhabiting that area of the globe\nstretching from Vladivostok to\nKalisch and from Archangelsk to\nthe villages of Slovakia, do not atop\nshort at the political frontiers ot the\nPolish republic.\nTWINS WITH RUSSIANS\nTrue enough, at the Polish-Russian frontier there are heaps of\nbarbed-wire entanglements and\nmasses of soldiers on both side, but\nit is only the uniform that distinguishes the men. For the rest they\nlook like a legion of twin brothers.\nYet even brothers have been known\nto fire upon each other.\nThere is another legend about the\nLatin or French character ot Poles,\nwhich I heard put forward again\nand again. Some Poles cultiyate\nthat legend to the extent of calling\nWarsaw the Paris of eastern Europe, of course the Roumanians call\ntheir capital Bucharest by the same\nname and they really do their best\nto live up to their own notion of\nwhat French people are like, without ever having seen any. In Warsaw there is nothing French except\nCoty perfumes tnd military attaches. If there Is any non-Slavic\nculture exercising an influence in\nPoland, it is German.\nSLOW TO ACT\nWith the Russians the Poles share\na deep sense of hospitality, sympathy and interest for strangers and\nstrange things and a love pf discussion and argument. But like the\nRussians, the Poles suffer trom a\ntragic slowness. Both have that\nsame strange propensity to, be able\nto sit up all night and talk and talk\nand talk . . . They can k-ep it up\nnight after night! An enduring people! Ot course to the Russians and\nPoles themselves there are a lot of\ndivergencies in character, habit,\nways of life, etc., but Poles and\nRussians do not repel each other.\nIt's the shadows from the past, ert-\nfully activated and brought to life\nat times, which make the flame of\nPIERRE VAN PAASSEN\n3 HAVE CLOSE\nCALL ON UKE\nBoats Battered Near\nProcter in\nStorm\nPROCTER, Sept. 20-1. Fosheine\nand H. Hayes of Crescent Bay had a\nnarrow escape from drowning Wednesday when they got caught in\nthe wind storm while out on the\nmain lake in their launch.\nThe men managed to make shoft\nat Irving I celt and with the aid\nbefore their different imperial mas-1 \u00b1 \u00ab\u00ab l^LlTh^\/^fn^i!\nters and most of ty that immportal I \"P \u00b0\" \",e J*,\",'**,,*\",} ,n^ b^T ll\nphrase which the Polish patriots ***** heen badly buffeted about on\n\u25a0Sung into the face of czars and th* \u2122*\u00ab .whl<* **'*. *\u00b0 Pr\u00ab*\u00bb>**ln-\nkaisers: \"Noch 1st Polen nicht ver- \"nt a-***\"1* the sh\u00b0.i:clmc: , .\nloren!\" (And still Poland is not lost). ****?. v\"-\" bo'h exhausted and\nWe used to be greatly stirred. Andlwet through when they reached\n- -- *-     *       * - \u25a0       here, having had to work along the\ntrack the three miles from the creek\nto Procter, but were thankful that\nthey had managed to come through\nthe harrowing experience without\nserious mishap.\nnow? Now you learn that Poland\nforbids thousands of Ukranian children to speak their own language.\nNow you leam that Ruthenians\nwished they were subjects of Emperor Francis Joseph once more.\nNow you hear accounts of terror\nand hardship, about eastern and\nsouthern Poland, compared to which\nNazi Germany is a heavenly refuge.\n','This is the 74th time this year\nthat my paper is either seized or\nthat the censorship has cut out the\nmost Important article,\" the editor\nof a meek and mild labor paper told\nme. \"Last yean we were hit that way\nmore than 180 times,\" he added.\nAfter what I have heard and seen\nin Poland, I begin to believe liiat\nsuch sonorous titles as \"sentinel\"\nand \"bulwark\" of civilization arc!\nlike those medals at the front of\nwhich the boys said that they came\nup with the rations and were grabbed by the hungriest and most ruthless collectors ot \"plum and apple\"\ntins.\nA rowboat, which got caught in\nthe same manner was completely\ndemolished, the occupant, however,\nmanaging to make shore.\nThe storm which arose very suddenly and which lasted about two\nand a half hours was the worst\nwhich had been witnessed on the\nlake all season.\nFranklins Back\nat Wynndel\ninternational hatred flare up. Noth\n,ng is so easily brought back to\nlife\n__ jrejudioe.     ^^^^^^^^^^\n\"Be sure,\" said an American newspaperman to me, \"if you go to Warsaw, be sure to ask what the Poles\nwant, what they are up to. It will\nbe interesting to know. Be sure to\nask them now!\"      ^^^^^^^^~\nWell, I asked on? Pole, an official in the foreign office, that ques*\nlion and he said: \"Since Poland is\nto be reckoned among the great\npowers, Poland should have colonies, like all the other great powers.\"\nHe did not say where these colon*\nies were to eome from, but I could\nguess. Curious how many states\nwant to try their hand at \"civilizing\" those \"barbarous\" Russians,\nUkranians and Caucasians these\ndays.\nGREAT NEED IS FOOD\nA Polish clergyman told me that\nhe had just returned from the deathbed of one of his parishioners. The\nlast words of the dying man had\nbeen: \"When I get to heaven, Fath\ner, I'll ask God to give mt a bun\nand a glass ot milk. I once had a\nbun and a glass of milk when I\nwas a little boy ...\"\nFrom this it ought to be clear that\nall the Poles do not want the same\nthing. The one wants this, the other\nthat. But more Poles, I can assure\nyou, want\u2014and need\u2014a bun and a\nglass of milk thkn thore are Polo:\nwho want colonies. It really depends\non where you Ssk your questions.\nIn One of the literary cafes of Warsaw, the Mala Ziemianska, where\nPolish poets hobnob with sta'f of\nfieers, a vehement discussion was\nraging on the subject whether the\nprevalence of girls with long legs\non the other Side of (he Atlantic was\ndue to Irish nr to Hungarian influ\nence. Those fellows wanted me, of\nall people, to act as arbiter. In the\nHaym, that is the Hebrew Immigrant Protective association an official said: \"The Jews are dying like\nrats in Lodz snd Lemberg!\" \"What\nof?\" I asked. \"Of hunger,\" ht re*\nBUM.\n\"FREEDOM?\" IN NAME ONLY\nIt Is difficult to understand peo\nfile who while talking of their coun\nry beta\" a bulwark of freedom, open up concentration camps at the\nsame time. As toys we felt very\nmuch stirred by the Polish love of\nfreedom and their refusal to bow\nCAMP WORKERS\nHONOR PALS LOST\nIN FRASER RIVER\nREVELSTOKE, B.C., Sept. 20-\n(CP)\u2014Somewhere on the rushing\nColumbia river tonight there floated a tribute to the memory ot five\nyoung relief camp workers who\ncrashed to death August 26 while\ncrossing the river in a cable cage.\nAt an impressive memorial service conducted by Rev. C. R. McGillivray, with the loose ends of the\nbroken cable hanging above as a\nreminder of the tragedy, a floral\nwreath contrived by members of\nthe relief camp was placed around a\nwooden cross on a raft and set\nadrift in the stream.\n\u2014   B\nWYNNIMSL, B.C., Sept. JO\nFranklin has returned from Saskatchewan. He was accompanied by Mrs.\nFranklin and two children, who had\nbeen visiting relatives at Stone,\nSask.\nMlis Janet Mccrse Is a gueet of\nMr. and Mrs. B. Franklin.\nMrs. Junes McFarltnd and son\nBobby of Rossland are vlsltini the\nformer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.\nA. Davis.\nArnold Martel!, Jr., who Is employed by R. Stewsrt of Erickson, at\ntruck driving, was a visitor at his\nhome here.      ^^^^^^^^^^^\nE. Lyppe, of Trail, was a guest ot\nMr. and Mrs. L. A. Davla.\nMr. and Mrs. Crlell of Calgary\nare guests of their daughters, Mrs.\nE. Wall and Mrs. R. Elgin.\nMrs. Howard Slingsby, accidentally got a small quantity of lye In her\neye. and has been ln creston hospital for a few days, receiving me*\ndlcal  attention.\nHunting season opened on Saturday and several of the local hunters\nreport a good season for clue*; D.\nBennedettl bagged a wild goose.\nWarren Hook has returned to Spo-\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\u2014.Iwne after visiting his grandmother,\nOnly Roy Palmer of Winnipeg, ot Mrs. J. Orsdy.\nthe six men in the cage when the\t\ncable snapped, escaped. The bodies MANCHESTER. Eng. (CP)\u2014Canon\nof E. C. McDonald, Chatham. N.B.; W. T. Havard. elected Bishop of St.\nGeorge Bailey. Montreal; H. Davis. Asspli at the age of 4S. wss former-\nMontreal; A. W. Morrow. Vancou- ly well known si a Rugby footbsll\nver. and Joseph Wall, Fernview, player. He gained his blue at Ox-\nSask.. have not been recovered.       ford.\nWorks Prosper by the Work\nof the Jobless in Canada\nAirway Landings and Other Projects Are\nCompleted as Camps of Defence\nDepartment Grow Smaller\nBy  GARY  MOORE\nWrlten for the Canadian Prase\nOTTAWA, Sept. 20 (CP3\u2014Reflecting the improvement in employment\nthroughout the Dominion 6490 men\nhave left the camps operated by\nthe department of national defence\nduring the last six months.\nThe peak for the number of men\nIn the camps was 19,887 on February\n28. The number now cared for on\nthe various projects undertaken by\nthe department is 13,397.\nThese men are distributed from\nNova Scotia and New Brunswick\nto Brtish Columbia. Prince Edward\nIsland is the only province without\ncamps for the single homeless unemployed. The unemployment situation in the Island province was\nnever deemed critical, even in 1932\nwhich was the crucial year for the\nworkless in the other provinces.\nProjects now being completed by\nthe department ot national defence\nwere initiated in 1932 under the\ndrecton of Major Gen. A. G. L. Mc-\nnaughton, chief of staff, as a result\nof cooperation between Hon. W. A.\nGordon, minister ot labor, and Hon.\nD. M. Sutherland, minister of na*\ntional defence. At that time the\nproblem of the single unemployed\nman was a national problem, thousands were on the 'road\" travelling\nvia freight trains from one section\nof the country to the other, actuated\nby a forlorne hope that, possibly\nsomewhere else things might be\nbrighter, a chance for work might\ndevelop.\nThe province burdened with the\ncare of families on relief put the\nquestion of the single unemployed\nup to the federal government. The\nprogram of the department of national defence\u2014now in its third\nyear and noteworthy for the development of airway landing fields\nacross the Dominion\u2014was the result\nof conference between those mentioned above and W. M. Dickson,\ndeputy minister ot labor, and Harry\nHereford, Dominion commissioner\nof unemployment relief.\nIt is noteworthy that the civilian\nconservation corps in the United\nStates, a program analogous to the\nCanadian camps was started after\nthe Dominions project was well\nunder way and a proven success as\nthe best way to meet the unemployment crisis for the single unemployed man.\nThe camps in Canada, while supervised by the department of national defence, have followed the\npolicy of employing civilian superintendents and foremen. Nothing\nsmacking of military attitude or\nany degree of regimentation, it is\nclaimed, has occurred in the Canadian camps.\nCONSTRUCTING LANDING\nFIELDS\nThe term department of national\ndefence camps is probably a misnomer, but came into use because\nthe projects on which the men are\nemployed were designed and initiated by the department.\nThese projects total Itt and 45\nof them constitute airways landing\nfields across the Dominion from\ncoast to coast. At the present time\nthere are 1609 men and 112 engineers, superintendents and foremen\nemployed on 36 airways projects.\nThe other nine are planned but\nnot In operation or else have been\ncompleted.\nThe chain of airway landing fields\nacross the Dominion will be completed in 1935, it is expected. Canada\nwill then have its first continental\nair route, destined to play a large\npart in the travel of the next decade.\nAlthough the work of the single\nunemployed men in clearing areas\nin the most remote districts of Ontario, British Columbia and other\nof the provinces, levelling wooded j\nand rock strewn lands to the smooth\nsurface necessary for planes, is a\nwork of large importance to the\ncountry, it is a story that hss never\nbeen completely told. It is as intriguing to the imagination as the\nextension of the railways through\nthe Rockies to the Pacific coast.\nThe morale of the men engaged\nin this work has been extraordinary,\nthe supervising officials report.\nFully cognizant that their situation\ncame as a result ot the most severe\neconomic upheaval in history, and\nthat the situation was only temporary, tbe men have been exemplary\nin their conduct and work. Dismissal for infractions in camp rules\nhave been made only in isolated\nInstances. The men are encouraged\nto better their position at the earliest  opportunity   and   are  readily\ngranted leave of absence from (\nto look for a Job or to visit frl\u00ab\nor relatives.\nOther projects Initiated by tht\ndepartment besides the airways include reforestation, highway construction in British Columbia and\nAlberta, the restoration of historic\nsites and excavations for barrack\nsites and training camps.\nOTHER PROJECTS\nProject No. I Initiated by the department was the improvement tor\npark purposes of the historic fortifications at Halifax. Project 149 la\nthe Rock Creek airways landing\nfield in British Columbia, situated\nnear Midway, B.C., almost on tha\ninternational boundary. Every project has been initiated with tha\n(Continued on Page Five)\nWILSONS!\nOa* pad kills flies all day aad \u00ab\nday for 2 or S weeks, i pads la <\npacket.   No spraying, no stickles\nno bad odor.   Ask yonr\nGrocery or General Store.\n10 CENTS PER PACKET\nWHY PAY MORE?\nTHB WILSON FLY PAD CO., H-mIIm, (\nI   for Hie Lamp-\n9\nfor Ihe Current\nOUT of evary dollar spent for\nlighting, only about one-tenth\npart goes for lamps; the balance\ngoes for current.\nYou increase your bills for current\nwhen you use lamps that consume\nmore thsn their rated wattage.\nLaco Mazda Lamps are properly\nrated. Theyagive the maximum of\nlight for the power they consume.\nLoot for\nThis Signature\nA CANADIAN MADE PRODUCT\nSold by\nJ. F. Coates\n$ni\\w\\\\& Sag dmqnmg.\nINCORPORATCD Ind MAY 1670\n'    \u00a3:\"~7::,\"\u2122\nBETTER\nYOU\nPROVE\nOnly the finest, full-cream milk from selected dai\/ies goes into ST. CHARLES\nMILK\u2014it must pass the strictest tests in all the dairy industry for Color, Flavor,\nFreshness and Purity. ST. CHARLES MILK is evaporated to double richness****-\nsterilized\u2014and sealed in tins with all its natural goodness.\nServe coffee with ST. CHARLES MILK tomorrow morning. You\u2014and all tha\nfamily will want it every morning\u2014year round.\nYour grocer has Borden i ST. CHARLES MILK\n-in the tin mth the GOLD COW label.\n^*_f \u00a7 tm THE BORDIN COMPANY LIMITED\ntJQHU\/HA SOPewaliami .  W B.C\nSICHARLES MILK\nMade in British Columbia-Condensary, South Sumas |\n MORE ABOUT\nWORKS\n(Contlnutd From Ptge Pour)\ndel of building a permanent im-\n-trovement for the country at well\na caring for the tingle unemployed\nti the district.\nThe total cost ot the federal treat-\njrv alnce Inauguration of the pro-\npun in 1032 to April 1, 1934\u2014the\nitart of the present fiscal year\u2014waa\n15,122,000. Of this turn $292,884 was\nexpended In 1932 during the last\nwveral montha of the year, and $4,-\n829,116 in 1933 and the early months\npf 1934.\nThe department at the itart of\nthe current flacal year had utilized\n11,986,840 less than the amount ap*\nPTopriated for the program by or*\nOOALHtJItaT, Alta.\u2014Andrew Sher-\nret, often a prlae winner with his\nwheat, read about a man who picked\n7! tomatoes off one vine. Bherret\nwent out to his own garden and\nchecked over a alngle vine. When he\n3\u00abr:in-councll. In 1\u00a732 $518,000\" was reached SOO, he got tired counting.\n-THE  NELSON DAI\nappropriated and $6,590,840 in 1933.\nWhether or not the number of\nmen in the camps will continue to\ndiminish at the encouraging rate\nmaintained to far during 1934 depends on the general employment\nsttuatlon. In tne event that men\nwho left the camps for seasonal employment have to return they will\nbe reinstated by the department\nthla fall and winter. In any event\nthe completion of the airways across\nCanada will go forward; it Is a task\nto which the federal government\nil dedicated and the future travel\npicture of the country will remain\naa a monument to tliote \"unemployed\" Canadians who met a crisis\nin their lives by doing a constructive work.\nSociety\nHi\niW\nEnjoy the Best Tea\nSA1ADA\nTEA\n\"Fresh from the Gardens\"\nli\\h c>ne\n\\Tht North Wind doth blow, and we shall have snow,\nAnd what will the robin do then? Poor thing!\n'He'll fly to the barn to keep himself warm\nAnd hide his head under hit wing, poor thing'.\nThey're going to be\namart\u2014and the laat\nword in chic,\u2014these\ntporty wool togs for\nitreet and golf!\nThey're going to be\nravishing\u2014so right in\nin every way,\u2014these\nentrancing afternoon\ndresses of toft crepes\nwith glints of gold\nand ailver! They're\ngoing to be glamorous\n\u25a0\u2014icintillktlng, alluring confections of supple aatina\nand velveti, \u2014 these gorgeous\ngowns for cocktail time or evening. Backwarde or forwarda they\nreflect the mode of the moment.\nAt the D. A C. ART -HOPPE FASHION 8HOW In the Capitol\nThtater, Wedneaday afternoon\nand evening.\nThe answer to tvery\nhousewife's wail are the\nfood covers you can make\nyourself to keep the flies\nand wasps away from your\nfavorite dishes. Simply four\ndouble triangles of cello-\npliane, sewn together from\nbase to opea; and bound with\nbright bias tape. They'll\nttand up by themselves.. .\n<V\u2014*>\nIn this versatile season for\nclothes you must have something\nversatile in footwear, something\nyou can wear with comfort and\nwith confidence ln the morning,\nafternoon or evening. The newest of the new is crushed leather\nandANDREW'S early fall showing hat a gorgeous selection of\npumps and ties In aoft tones of\nblack and brown that harmonize\nand enhance any costume. Their\nprice it as right as their smartness and they 11 steer you safely\nthrough any Autumn occasion.\n\/ hope you are saving\nyour pennies for a corset\nbelt made of the new \"milk\nof rubber\" substance. They\nare slightly reducing and\nare no risk to your tummy\nmuscles. Pitted with hundreds of airholes, there is no\nchance of getting hot in\nthem, ln substance they are\nas thin as rubber gloves,\nbut, of course, like all good\nthings they are expensive.\nPyrex and your kitchen! Whenever the conversation switches to\nmeals and cooking, she's a proud\nand contented lady who can boast\nthat ahe cook! in Pyrex, the only\nkitchen ware that can be carried\nstraight from the oven to the table\nand still provide a setting of grace\nand atyle and beauty f-r the family or the office boss. Picture the\ngolden crispness of hot cheesy\ndishes, the brown deliciousness cf\nctsserole ,di:hes, the amber fragrance of tender pastry, all cooked to a turn on the bottom as well\nas on top because tun cook can tee\nthrough Pyrex. Stock up NOW at\nthe Saturday tale of the WOOD,\nVALLANCE HARDWARE COMPANY. You won't get another\nchance like this.\nxt fc\u00bb\n\u2022*\u00a3_\nThe secret desire of every woman is a knitted suit that fits like\nskin and Is warm as red\nflannels.      BLANCHE'S\nis the place to get it, for\nyou can be measured for\na \"Knit-to-Fit\" that will\nbe made to order, ln up-\nto-the-minute style and\nany of tho new colors\nsuch as guardsman blue,\naraby, town grey or rust glow.\nDrop in and see the samples.\n~A f>\n<\\\u2014r>\nAnd do you know about the\n\u25a0OSTON HAT WORKS at 505\nBaker ttreet? This is the\nplace to have that old\nhat you've always loved\ncleaned and blocked in\nthe latest fashion. They\ndo it beautifully and it\ncosts practically nothing at all.\nIt it alto a shoe thine parlor with\nprivate chain for ladies. A nice\nplace to have in town! *\nI} f>\nAnd to, until neat week, Adliu,\nLilly C4nnt\n\"Hera and Thara With Lilly\nAnne\" appears avary Friday In\nTha Nelton Dally Newt.\nThii column li conducted by\nMri. M. J. Vigneux. All newt ot \u2022\ntoclal nature, including receptions.\nprivate entertainments, peraona!\nItems, marriages, etc., will appear\nln thia column. Telephone Mrs.\nVlgneux at her borne, 619 Silica\nMlu Elisabeth Carrie, Blue* street\nleft yesterday to resume har studies\nat the University ot British Col-\numbl*t.\nJohn Avis of perry\nNelson yeaterday.\nBiding vlalted\nW. J. McConnell of Harrop spent\nyesterdsy ln town.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nWilfrid w. Rudkln of Kulo vlilted\nthe city yesterday.\ntat\nAmong shoppers ln town yesterday waa Mr. Hatfield. Revelstoke\ncontractor, who ta ln charge of construction on the Bayonne mine roadg\nY NEWS. NELSON.  B.C-FRIDAY  MORNINO. SEPT. 21. mt-\nTRUSTEES STRENGTHEN THE\nMACHINERY OF CONVENTION\n\\*%\nPAQE FIVE\nMrs.   Oeorge  Platt  of  Trail  tu\nIn the clt; yeaterday to attend the\ncloalng   exercises   of   the   Catholic\nWomen'a ltague convention.\niaa\nB. B. B. McDougall, M.E.. of Vancouver la ln Nelson and dlatrlct.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nAmong  outsiders   from  Trail  at-\nI tending tha Catholic Women't league\nconvention yesterday was Mrs. Com.\na. a  a\nMlaa Knauf of Harrcp vlilted the\ncity yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA. Bruce Grady, a former resident of Nelson now residing ln Cal-\ngary, Is a Nelson vlaltor.\ntea\nMr. and Mra. Btuckenbrook of\nLodl, Calif., and the latter'a mother.\nMrt.  McNeill  who  have  apent  the\n?att week In the city, left yesterday\nor home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. Oeorge Mara of Rowland,\nwho haa been the gueat of Mr. and\nMrs. Leslie Tralnor, Stanley atreet.\nwhile attending the Catholic Women'a league, leaves today for home.\na a .a\nWalter B. Jobnatone of SUevrton\nvlilted Neleon yesterday,\ntaa\nJoeeph Vlngo, aon of Mr. and Mra.\nStephen Vlngo. Stanley atreet, left\nyesterday for Vancouver where he\nwlll resume his studies at tht University of British Columbia.\naat\nA. Carlaon waa ln town from\nPerry Siding yeaterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrt. Oeorgi Bergeron of Trail waa\nIn Nelson yeaterday to attend thi\nCatholic Women'a league convention which ended last evening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss K. Brown of Trail waa ln\nthe city yeaterday to attend the\nclosing exercises of the catholic Women'a league.\nRevising Committee\nto Improve Wording Resolutions\nBRANCHES LOSE\nVOTING POWER\nBoard   of   Reference\nand Branches\nReport\nTHREE INCHES OF\nSNOW IN ALBERTA\nEDMONTON, Sept. 20 (CP). -\nThree inchet of snow covers the\nground at Great Bear lake, dog\nteams with aleighbells Jingling are\nheard daily and the mercury has\nformed an unpleasant habit of hovering around the 20 above zero mark,\naccording to word received by the\nEdmonton Journal from the far\nnorth.\nWorking machinery 6f the British\nColumbia School Trustees association waa strengthened at the convention that wound up its three-day\nsession! here Wednesday, when varioua changet were made on the\nrecommendation of the committee\non conatitution and bylaws.\nProbably the big change was provision of a revtaion committee, to\nrevise resolutions received from\nthe constituent school boards, before\nthey are printed ln the agenda.\nUnder past practice, the resolutions\ncome before the convention in their\noriginal wording, and a great deal\nof time ia lost ln stripping them\ndown to essentials, correcting errors\nof fact, and bringing out clearly\nthe objects aought. The revision\ncommittee will have the duty of\nrewriting the resolutions where necessary, while faithfully preserving\nthe intent of their originating\nboards.\nEX-PRESIDENT NO STATUS\nA change proposed by the Agasslz\nboard, of which a year's notice had\nbeen given, to constitute the Immediate paat prealdent \"a member of\nthe executive for the year following\nthe demission trom office,\" was not\nmade, the majority of the delegates\nbeing Influenced by the argument\nthat while normally the association\nwould wish to retain the retiring\npresident in the ranks of the executive so as to benefit by his knowledge and experience, there might\nbe the exception, and In any case\nit was in the power of the delegates\nto elect the retiring pretldent to\nthe executive.\nThii motion wai dealt with while\nthe annual elections were being\nheld. After defeating it, the delegates proceeded to place President\nCarr at the head of the poll for\nexecutive.\nIn all, the convention changed\neight articles of the constitution,\nbut the only one that was of more\nthan minor import was the one\nproviding more machinery for resolutions.\nIn connection with resolutions, H.\nH. Neelands, Vancouver, asked why\nthe resolutions committee\u2014on which\nhe had been acting\u2014was restricted\nin function compared with the typical resolutions committee. This\nquestion was answered by Hamilton\nLang, Vernon, a veteran of the association, who aaid that in earlier\ntimet a certain estimable delegate\nhad invariably been named chairman of the resolutions committee,\nand  had followed the  Invariable\nfiractice of reporting only the reso-\nutions with which he agreed, his\nreport  also  being  invariably   accepted,   until  delegatea  began  to\naak what was the use of boards\ntending in resolutions if they could\n. not come to debate. It waa in view\nI ot thia experience that the associa-\n| tion developed its present practice\not a reaolutiom committee with restricted powers.\nNO BRANCH VOTING\nA vital change was alto made in\nthe constitution for branch association!, when the clause giving the\nbranches the right of voting in the\nannual \/ convention, with voting\npower equivalent to the total votca\nof their constituent boards, was deleted. Thlt change leavea the\nbranches without votes in the convention.\n\"This rings down the curtain on\nthe small branches,\" wai the comment of Mrs. M. C. Chriitle of\nRoyston, who argued that without\nvoting power in the convention, the\nbranches would be unable to collect\ndues from their boards.\nTo eliminate duplication of voting power wai the object of the\nchange.\nBRANCHES REPORT\nReports of the branches were received from time to time throughout the duration of the convention,\nOkanagan branch, R. G. Wilton,\nPenticton,, reported, had three general meetings at Kelowna, and local\nmeetings at all centers, the August\nmeeting having 25 delegate!. A great\nincrease in interest he attributed\nto the tour made by President Carr.\nReporting for Fraser Valley\nbranch, Mrs. E. M. Dennis, Agassiz,\ngave detailed reports on large general meetings at Burnaby, Pitt\nMeadows and Malllardvllle, at\nwhich diicuiiiom were held on the\nHarper commission report, foreign\nlanguage schools, and other subjects,\nincluding proposed abolition of\nschool boards.\nA. E. McDonald. West Vancouver,\nreported on the Greater Vancouver-\nNew Weitminiter branch, which\nhad held three general meetings and\none executive meeting, and had\ndeveloped the resolution! which\ncame before the 'cenvention in the\nbranch's name.\nFour general meetings were held\nby the Comox Valley branch, Mrs.\nM. C. Christie, Royston, reported,\ntwo of the meetings being joint\nones with the Mid-Island branch.\nOne of the ideas developed by this\nbranch was that of financing district\nhealth nurses by holding sweep-\nBOARD OF REFERENCE\nA. G. Perry, North Vancouver\ncity, the association's representative\non the board of reference which\nhears appeals of teachers from dis-\njudge, who heada the board of reference, being paid for hi* aervioea\nwhile the two lay member! received nothing.\n\"Why ihould a dismistal be\nthrown out on a technicality if the\ncharge* are right?\" uked Clyde\nStewart, Surrey, who declared, \"Our\nwhole life ia bound up with technicalities!\"\nA wire received Wednetday from\nMrs. A. H. Rogera of Fort Saskatchewan, Alta., secretary-treaaurer of\nthe Alberta School Trustees association, read: \"Regret unable to\nsend delegate. Cordial good wishes\nfor a successful convention. This\nassociation sends greetings.\"\nIn lta final report, the credentials\ncommittee recorded aome 86 delegates preient, besides a large number of vUlton.\nScrutineer! for the election!, held\nWednesday forenoon were H. N.\nMacCorkindale and Harry Charlesworth, Vancouver, fraternal delegates, and S. C. Latorncll, Nelson,\nnonvoting delegate.\nThe closing minutes ot tha convention, late Wedneaday afternoon,\nsaw Retiring Pretident J. P. Can*\nlurrender the gavel to the president-elect, D. Chapman of Kelowna.\nA vote ot thanks waa extended to\nthe Nelaon fcchool board, Nelson\nboard of trade, Inspector P. H. Sheffield, and the press, for hospitality\nand service, Chairman E. P. Dawson of the school board replied on\nbehalf of the citizens of Nelion.\nTHOSE  ATTENDING\nDelegatea tnd visitors registered\nware: Mrt. T. A .Barnard, F. A.\nBusby, Lamont Roe!, J. W. Bhaw,\nNanalmo; E. J. Cronk; Mrt. J. P.\nLeemlng, Duncan; J. M. McKenzie,\nCourtenay; Mrs. Anne Carwlthen,\nComox Valley; Mrt, M. C. Chrlttle,\nRoyston; C. Motet. Sidney; W. C.\nMoreeby. K.C. victoria; T. H, Bar-\nbaree, B. Bowell. N. MacDonald, H.\nB. Burr, D. J. McGugan.'New Westminster; Clyde Stewart, w. H. Nlcol-\nson, Surrey; Mrs. Emma showier,\nThomaa Davison, Maple Ridge; J. P.\nCarr, W. Auburn, Matsqul; Thomas\nP. Burnley, Dewdney; Mrs. Edward\nMahon, Mra. A. Crump, B. H. Neelands, F. E. Buck, Jamea Blackwood, Mrt. Paul Bmlth, Harry\nCharleaworth, H. N. MacCorkindale,\nMlas Annie B. Jamieson, Vancouver;\nA O. Perry, North Vancouver; A. -.\nMcDonald. Weet Vancouver; a. Blair,\nJ. H. Bath, Richmond; Hannah Fraaer, Abbotaford; Mrt. E. M. Dennis,\nJames B. Altken, Agasala; \u00ab. F. Fer-\nsitfon, W. C. Fletcher. Mlaaion; P.\nY Porter. W- Wwrence, E. J. Bull,\nLangley; Oeorge W. Oreen, W. J.\nThompaon, James Swan, William\nMacNalr, Chilliwack; H. H. worthlngton, W. F. Brett, Armstrong;\nHamilton Lang, Vernon; H. P.\nCoombea, O. S. I\u00bbyton, Coldstream:\nD. Chapman, Mrs. 8. D. Treadgold,\nKelowna; R. 8. Wilton, Jamea P.\nOlbb, H. E. White, Bobert Lyon,\nPentlcton; R. W. Hughee. J. T.\nSimmons. Qrand Forks; H. Manning, S. E- Morse, Revelstoke; J. E.\nMiller. Robaon; J. A. Klllough,\nCastlegar; J. D. Teatman, Mri. J. D.\nYeatman, F. A. Ruaeel, South Slo-\ncan* Fred Cursons. Blocan Park;\nF. b. Edgar. Valllcan; WUUam Win.\nStanley crescent aVlley; Mrs. w.\nJean Shannon, Willow point; H.\nralrbank. W. B. Aehby, Harrop; D.\nBrattlr, Crawford Bay: Arthur Olta-\nter, Mrs. Owen Davldge, wynndel:\nJames Cook, Creston;  W. E. Coles,\nrc\nThey're Here Again I\nSHERBICLES\nSHERBICLES\nYour old favorite has just completed a short summer vacation\nbut now that delicious chocolate-\ncoated frozen milk on the convenient stick is back again.\nAt All Curlew Dealers\nmissals by school boards, made a ;   0   jj'tirneii   e  P. Dawson. Dr.\nreport, ln which he said boards very \u25a0 j^hn' gunj-.r, John Notman, Oeorge\nA Brown, Leslie Craufurd, Mrs. Elisabeth A. Roas, Q. E. Bparkes, Frank\nB Pearce, Mrs. John Notman, H. Mc-\nArthur, P. H. Sheffield, R. B. Morris,\nj. w. Clark, Nelson.\nPROGRESS MADE\nON HIGH STREET\noften Introduced new charges on\nappeal that were not given the\nteacher in the dismissal, the new\ncharges of courae having to be\nruled out. Frequently also, the\nboards failed to give the teacher a\ncopy of the new charges, this of\ncourse beirtj contrary to ideals of\njustice. He said the board of reference gave a board interpretation to\nthe expression. \"For cause,\" when\nused in dimissing a teacher. He said\nit was necessary to bear in mind\nthe teacher's legal rights, as he still\nhad access to the courts after the\nboard of reference. Only a imall\nproportion of dismissed teachers\nappealed, Mr. Perry pointed out,\nthe majority accepting the situation.\nMrs. Anne Carwithen, Comox Valley, objected to the assertion that\nboards didn't properly dismiss, quoting prescribed forms from the regulations of the council ot public instruction.\nJames Blackwood of Vancouver\ncould not see the justice in the i\nLaying of concrete on the High\nstreet corner. Just eaat of the High\nstreet bridge, la now well advanced.\nSeveral atrlpa have been completed\nand curbing haa commenced.\nIn paving the corner one of the\nworst lections ot the road will be\nremedied. In the past spring frosts\nhave caused heaving and the road\nhts been left exceedingly rough In\nthat particular spot. Prior to pouring concrete the grade waa towered\nand the bed rolled.\nMISS MACMASTER VOTED TO CHAIR OF\nVANCOUVER SUBDIVISION OF C.W.L\nSmart Fall Frocks\nThe Fall Queen Dresses Are Here\nNo wonder so many fashion-wise women are selecting their entire fall wardrobes from this glorious\ncollectiory There are styles for every occasion . . .\nthere are authentic fashions . . . there are sizes\nfor everyone . . . Satin and Crepe . . , Velvets . . .\nMetallized Fabrics.. . Select yours now!\nEACH ?35.00 TO 149.50\nWE WELCOME OUR OLD CHARGE\nACCOUNTS\nCHIEF RANGER\nVISITS A.O.F.\nRoss and Busby Are Guests of\nCourts at Social\nVictor Radio\nTable Model\nAn exquisite walnut veneered model which receives\nill principal thort wive\nttationt and all ttandard\nprograms.   Vernier precise\ntuning. $64.90\nPriced at *r***mV'mT**\nKOOTENAY\nMUSIC   HOUSE\nMrs.\nRaha! of Nelson Is Third\nVice-President\nMist A. Mttmaiter, Vancouver, waa\nnamed prealdent of the Vancouver\narchdlocete subdivision of the Catholic. Women'a league, which brought\nto a clot* a two-day annual convention Thursday evening.\nThe r.ew slate of officers includes\nMiss M. Devereux. Vancouver, first\nvice-president; Mrt. E, M. Hobson,\nTrail, second vice-president; Mrs. P.\nRahal. Nelson, third vlce-pretldent;\nMiss W. Langfleld, Vancouver, eec-\nI rotary: Mrs. M. J. Dclhaw, Vancou-\nI ver. treasure.\nWednesday evening'! tesslon was\ntaken up with the report of the national convention held ln Victoria\nIn June, given by the diocesan president. Mrs. J. Mochar. After the\nreport the question box waa opened and much Interesting discussion\ntook place.\nThursday morning reports of the\n19 district subdivisions were read\nby their respective delegatea. His\nExcellency Archbishop W. M. Duke\nwas present and warmly complimented the membera on the prog**fess\nmade thlt year.\nLuncheon waa terved In the Parish\nhall by the children of Mary and\nln the evening a banquet waa tendered the delegatea by the Nelaon subdivision, following which Archbishop\nW. M. Duke officiated at benediction.\nBANK OF ENGLAND\nPAYS 6 PER CENT\nIONDON. Sept. JO (CT-Htvea)\u2014\nThe Btnk of England today decltred a half-yearly dividend ot alx\nper cent. Including Income tax deductions.\nNet proflta for the period atood\nat. f\u00ab7\u00ab,81S Sept. 17, exclusive ot\nthe reserve fund payment.\nGEORGE, South Africa (CP)\u2014In\nthe course of a foreatatlon scheme\npupils of a boyt' training hostel here\nare planting 10,000 wattle (acacia)\ntreea.\nCAPE TOWN (CP)\u2014R. J. Crisp\nand Theo de Klerk, two of South\nAfrlca'a best known cricketers, have\nJoined the Gellnger Swiss expedition\nto equatorial Africa, and may not\nreturn   to  Cape  Town.\nLamont Rou, district chief ranger, and Ex-Mayor Pred Busby, both\nof Nanalmo, paid a fraternal vlalt\nto courta Royal and Ellen A.O.P.\nWednesday night.\nThey were Introduced to the courts\nby W. J. 3alleti, after whlchkboih\ngave addresses. A social evening\nfollowed.\nThose ln charge were Jack Maber,\nGordon Stephenton. T. Steneon, Mrs.\nJ. Joy. Mrs. W. Heaaell and Mrs.\nL.  Dunk.\nMr.   Ross   and   Mr.   Busby   were\ndelegates to the achool trustees convention and left for Nanalmo Thursday morning.\nLoses Claim Against\nSister's Estate\nVANCOUVER, Sept, 20 (CP).-A\n$4080 claim of Joseph Smith, rancher residing between Gibson'a Landing and Roberts Creek, against the\nestate of his titter, Miss Elizabeth\nSmith, who died August 14,1932, has\nbeen refused in supreme court by\nMr. Justice D. A. McDonald.\nSmith's claim waa for board and\nlodging for nearly 20 yean computed on a basis of $20 a month. He\nalleged his sister told him ahe had\nmade a will, leaving him half her\nestate and half to two nieces and,\non the understanding he was to receive half her estate, he boarded\nher free of charge.\nrf\nENOS\nFRUIT\nSALTi\nFOR RESTFUL\nSLEEP   Eno relieves\nindigestion\nHEATERS\nEnjoy Comfort in Your Homo With a\nMODERN FAWCETT HEATER\nFawcett'i Heaters are mad* in Different Model*\nand Sites\nA Sift and Model to Meet All\nHeating Condition*\nFOR MODERN, CORRECTLY DESIGNED HEATERS\nSEE THE FAWCETT LINE!\nHipperson Hardware\nCompany Limited\nLook for th* Red Hardware Stor*\nPHONE 497 BOX 414\n PAOI  UX\nTHE  NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON.  B.C\u2014FRIDAY  MORNINO. SEPT. 21.  1M4-\nSfclamt Batltj Jfotms\nEitabllihed April 22. 1902.\n\"Interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper\"\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished  every   morning  except   Sunday   by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED.\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelaon,   Britlih   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting all Department!\ni\nMember of the Audit Bureau of Circulations utd\nThe Canadian Press Leased Wire Newi Service.\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, 1934.\nTHE MAINE ELECTION\n\"As Maine goes, so goes the country\" has long been\nan axiom of United States politics. Inhabitants of the\nrock-ribbed state are supposed to be peculiarly representative of the great, silent, moderate vote throughout\nthe country, and its is this vote which usually settles\nnational issues.\nLast week Maine surprised practically everyone by\ngiving its Democratic \"new deal\" candidates a sweeping\nvictory. The Republican opposition expected that the\ndoctrine of rugged individualism, thought tb be deeply\nplanted in the down-east Yankee, and upon which the\nRepublican appeal had been built, would be reasserted.\nWhat happened is really more disconterting to the\nhigh command of the New Deal than it was to the Republicans. Of course it is a smashing victory for the\nNew Deal, whose adherents conclude that if their opponents could not stop them in Maine they cannot be\nstopped anywhere else.\nBut it is too big a victory. It encourages the idea\nthat the experimenters do not need to compromise or\nhedge; they can plow straight ahead, heedless of criticism.\nA formidable opposition Induces caution and moderation. It helps to guide and restrain the majority.\nAnd if the worst comes to the worst it can be blamed for\nobstructing good work.\nThe Main election sent _ chill down the spine of the\nNew Deal, for it revealed the great expectations of the\naverage voter, and emphasized the unchecked responsibility of the administration. If the next Congress has a\ntop-heavy and cocksure Democratic majority, it is going\nto be hard to handle, particularly when the administration starts economizing and trimming down its emergency budget.\nThe touch of ironic humor is visible in this coincidence: Mr. Herbert Hoover's second article on the imprudence of collectivism came out the same day the Maine\nelection results were published.\n\"IT ISN'T GOLF\"\nWherever the English have gone cricket has accompanied them, and wherever cricket has gone the saying,\ndescriptive of unsportsmanlike conduct, \"it isn't cricket,\"\nis used and understood. The field of its application is as\nbroad as human interest; the man who uses the phrase\nmay not know, or knowing, may not like, cricket, but\nnevertheless he will comprehend the significance of \"it\nisn't cricket.\" It is established in the vernacular of uncounted communities, and falls meaningfully from the\ntongues of men of the five races.\nA member of the Royal Mid-Surrey Golf Club has\nproposed in England that this ancient phrase be discarded, and that there be installed in its place the term \"it\nisn't golf.\" His argument is ingenious: in brief, it is\nthat the golfer, because some of his strokes are taken\nbeyond the view of others, has 'greater opportunity to\ncheat than has the cricketer, who plays as a member of a\nteam in the sight of spectators. Both are under obligation to be mannerly and considerate under irritating circumstances.\nThe innovation will not do. Let \"it isn't cricket\"\nstand; it has won general acceptance and deserves to be\npreserved. It belongs beside such phrases as \"the latch\nstring is out\"; latch strings are practibally unknown\nnowadays, yet that fine utterance of hospitality is understood by all. Who would change it for \"the key is\nunder the door mat\" or \"the key is behind the parlor\nblind\" or \"I'll leave the door unlocked\"? All of these locutions convey the idea of welcome; none of them has\nthe hearty, wholesome flavor of \"the latch string is out.\"\nIn uncounted homes ,in which electric grills and\nsteam heat have made the chimney superfluous, men\nwith never a trace of Scottish blood in their veins wish\ngood things to their fellow cavemen by saying \"lang\nmay your Ium r\u00abk\" Who would convert that into \"May\nthe fuses in your electric service systems and the valves\nof your radiators continue in good order for a considerable period\" or its equivalent? Even those who prefer an\neighty at golf to a century at cricket should see the unwisdom of this rash assault on an ancient of the vernacular. *\nAUNT HET\n\"There ain't nothln' that reforms a man like gettln' too old\nand rheumatic to enjoy sin any\nmore,\"\n30 YEARS AGO\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nBy J. B.C\nTHANK   YOU   NEW  YORK\nI am indebted to someone in New\nYork for the foUowlng. I did not\nprepare it. I just naturally cUpped\nit for it's somewhat amusing and\nI know you folks like to be amused.\nIt is all about the big yacht race.\nMore or lesa timely at that.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nWE ARE ON THE AIR\nBROADCASTING   AN   INTERNATIONAL YACHT RACE\n\"Wotta race! Wotta contest! Folkt\nboth yachta are fighting it out neck\nand neck; Something! wrong with\nthe Rainbow's buttons. .. .No, that\nwas my mistake... .Iri her battens,\nnot her buttons... .In juit a minute\nI will give you her batten order...\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA LITTLE JIBBERIST\n'The Rainbow, Roger tells me, ia\nbreaking her Genoa jib.... my, but\nthat's too bad! .... I hate to aee\nanything broken after all the trouble of getting it over from a place\nlike Genoa.\ne   e   *\nON THE TARBOARD SACK\n\"Herb Stone telle me the Endeavour is coming about... about half a\nmile. I ihould aay, from here . . .\nBoth boat! are on the garboard tack.\n... The Rainbow seems to be a better lacker than the British boat , .\nMaybe the Endeavour can't tack it\n* e   \u00bb\nUP IN THE AIR\n\"Stone teUs me both boata are\nputting out balloonera, folks . . .\nAnd why shouldn't they? A balloon-\ner's place is in a balloon, not on a\nyacht.\n* *  \u2022\nAH, HECK!\n\"They're going to jib now ....\nWhat? Oh! ... Going to jibe,\nI should have said ... A jib is one\nthing and a jibe il another ... A\ngoriUa could lick 'em both.\nitt\nCALL A CHAMBER MAID\n\"Roger says the Britisher ia having trouble now with her sheets ...\nToo ihort for the mattress or aomething like that It gets very cool\ntheie September afternoons and If\nthe sheets are not right life aboard\nan open boat is pretty uncomfortable. . . . What? . . . . Ii that io?\nStone tells me Sopwith is trying to\nblanket Vanderbilt. . . Well, that'i\nvery clubby of him, don't you think?\n, . . .Vanderbilt, they lay, catchei\ncold very eaiily.\naaa\nSTRUTTING ABOUT\n\"Oh\", Oh! Sopwith Is having trouble with his strut That'* odd for\na Britisher!... But everything'! all\nright with Vanderbilt.... Boy, can\nhe strut!\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nDO IT AGAIN\n\"What'i thii?\" . . . There'i a lot\nof excitement on both teami,.. in\nboth iheUs ... in both yachts now.\n.,. They're rounding a boy, Stone\nsayi.... I can't !ee the boy, but the\nlittle fellow Is out there lomewhere.\n. . . Roger sayi SopWith is luffing\nher up ... I didn't even know you\ncould bring girls on thote boats!\nA LOST LEAP\n\"Now they're getting out the parachute spinnaker.... Good heavens!\nI wonder who's going to jump?...\"\n20 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelton Dally Newi of Sapt\n21, 1914)\nBorn at Kootenay Lake Maternity hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Jot-\neph Brown, Nelson, Sept. 20, a\ndaughter.\nBorn at Kootenay Lake Maternity hospital to Mr. and Mrs. L. R.\nClubine of Salmo, Sept. 20, a ion.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nTrail smelter treated 18,058 tons\nof ore last week from Kootenay and\nBoundary mines. It was one of the\nbiggest weeks of the year to date.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From Nelton Dally Newt of Sept\n21, 1904(\nCol. J. C. Egan of the Nelson Dally\nNews staff has left for Seattle on\nvacation.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNelson school attendance is now\nabout 400, the highest in the city's\nhistory.\na   *   \u2022\nBom ln Nelson, Sept. 21, to Mr.\nand Mrs. C. Dunn, Front street, a\ndaughter.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nBorn at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, to Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert\nStanley, Sept. 21, a daughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nS. F. Tolmie. provincial veterinary inspector, it in Nelson on an of*\nficial tour.\n(From Nelion Dally Newa of Sept.\n21, 1924)\nNelson Shops team won the British Columbia championship in first\naid tests between C. P. R. shops in\nthe province. The team will now\nmeet Calgary. Members are: David Rees, J. Shardelow, F. Blakeman,\nH. Dennis Thain and H. E. Thain.\n* *   *\nYesterday saw the first snowfall\nof the year on the mountains surrounding Nelson. All day, the\nmountains, with the exception of\nMount Nelson across the lake, wore\na mantle of snow. It snowed most\nof the day on the higher levels,\nbut only rain Ml in the city.\n* \u00bb   *\nDr. H. H. MacKenzie, A. D. McLeod and W. M. Walker have left\nfor Spokane to spend a week. Dr.\nand Mrs. E. G. Smyth and Muriel\nand Ronald, form another party\nfrom here going to Spokane.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nCABINET RULE\nIn the final analysis the cabinet\nis always supreme and the country\nis run by the cabinet. The debates\nare interesting, and instructive, on\nparty lines, but (or the most part\nthey are futile because the ultimate\ndecisions are foregone conclusions.\nIn this time of economy, having got\nsuch a mandate from the people,\nthe province might as well trust itself to the tender (or otherwise)\nmercies of the cabinet and save\nmoney by not calling the legislature\ntogether at all. The results for the\nnext four years will be what the\ncabinet thinki they should be.\u2014St\nThomas Times\u2014Journal.\nOLD DIME NOVELS IN DEMAND\nThe old Dime Novels are beginning\nto bring big prlcea. Not all of them,\nof course. But First Editions of some\nof these books are In high demand\nand aell at from *1.S0 to ID each.\n\"The Shawnee Witch,\" from Monroe's Library, and \"The Swamp Rld-\nen,\" or \"The Blacksmith of Camden,\"\nfrom BesdlKs Dime aeries, are listed\nat $5 each. Theae books would today\nbe published at 12 or mora and are\nnot less artistic or distinguished for\nliterary quality, than many beat sellers.\u2014Hamilton Herald.\nWHAT  DO YOU THINK?\nAll letten to the editor must ba signed with the name of the\nwriter.   A nom da plume may be uaed tor publication if desired.\nTha letter appearing In thla department yetterdty undir tha\nheading: \"Taket Ittui With Sinclair'! Plana,\" waa from O. J.\nWlgen. Tha name waa Inadvertantly omitted yeaterday.\nProtests Court\nHouse Work on\nSunday, Rossland\nThe Editor,\nNelion Daily Newi:\nSir\u2014I am no advocate of Blue\nSunday laws, but at the aame time I ,.\nbelieve that an open Sunday would te^T.   *\\ i^.L'\" *\u201e\nattention to an article on Gipaiei.\nwritten by my friend and colleague,\nFrancli Hlndei Groome, of the editorial staff of Chamber's Encyclopaedia, an article which appeared in\nthat publication in 1890. Whether\nit hai been reprinted in tubsequent\neditions, under the editorship of a\nson of John Geddle of the Scotsman,\nI do not know.\nAt the time Groome wrote that\narticle, he wai probably the foremost British authority on the Glp-\nsies. His article is crowded with information, a great deal of it gathered from little known sources.\nGroome not only spoke Romany (the\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy EV. Shepard\n\"Tetetter ag T*\u00bbck\u00ab-\nA WORTHY FOE\nUnless playing for too high stakei,\nso that the financial end of the game\novershadows all else, the greatest\npleasure enjoyed by able playera ia I\nbeing pitted against worthy foet, to\nthat every deciding trick must ba\nwon through \u25a0kill, by matching\nwita. Not one player in one thousand would have defeated the game\ncontract, sitting in West's place, but\nwhen North went down a trick lw\nteemed to enjoy it quite as much\nas it he had won. He was a good\niport. Perhapi the next time North\nbe     national cX-nit\u25a0\u00ab 1. oulS '*'**\u25a0\u25a0* *\u00bb*\"' *\u25a0*>* \"\u00b0 had a thorough will put ovef a awift one ud defeat\ntnie atoe BlblTaavi V. Srt knowledge of the history of the West If he does, hil achievement\nMh wa, md'e for Skn^yet dl \"\u00ab*\u00bb\u00bb. In  fact   I believe that, '\n-  when an undergraduate at Oxford,\nPEDESTRIAN'S LUCK\n\u2014The Humorist, London.\nYOUTH RIDES HIGH IN THE SOVIET\nSADDLE\nState Reliei on Them Sayi Chamberlain In His Serlea \"Russia\u2014Without\nBenefit of Censor\"\nBy William Hinry Chamberlain\nFrom The Christian Science Monitor\nAnother factor that tends to break\nup the old-fashioned family in Rus-\n_r_ I   *.   mt...   ...   .........   _________\ngjght thinking men acknowledge\nthat a proper proportion of our\ntime ihould be held sacred to the\nLord, and Sunday ia the Lord's day.\nI wai therefore very lorry to lee\nmen working on the roof of the\ncov t houie at Rossland on Sunday\nlast. Whle services were being held\nin the church juat across the road. I\nwonder if thii ii by the order or\nwith the approval of the Minister\nof Public Works.\nJ. M. Kittnick.\nSept. 19, 1934,\nRossland, B.C.\nLiked Von Pdassen's\nGipsy Story\nThe Editor Nelion Daily Newi\nSir\u2014I dare aay othera of your\nreaders betides myself were Interested In Pierre van Paassen's account of the gathering of the Gipsies\nin Czecho-Slavakia. as reported in\nyour isiue of Thursday, September\n13.\nI would like to call your readers\nhe ran away from the university\nwith a band of Gipaiei.\nAnyway he married a Gipsy girl,\nand in 1898 published a novel dealing with English and Welsh Gipsy\nlife. It ii entitled Krlegiplel, and is\nin large part autobiographical.\nGroome also wrote a book In Gipsy\nTents, which I have never seen.\nHe waa a personal friend of the\npoet Swinburne and on intimate\nterms wth the poet and distinguished literary critic, Theodore Watts-\nDunton, the house mate of Swinburne. Groome'a intereit tn Gipsies\narose no doubt out of hil father's\nacquaintance with George Borrow,\nauthor of The Ginsies of Spain.\n(1840), Lavengro (1891), Romany\nRye (1857), Word-Book of the Engllah Gipsy Language (1874), and\nhimself almost a Gipiy in his roving, open-air-manner of life.\nGroome'i father, rector of Glemham\nln Suffolk, and archdeacon, wai a\nfriend of Fdward Fitzgerald, the\ntranslator of Omar Khayyam.\nJ. T. BEALBY\nNelion, B.C. Sept 19,1934.\nwill be greeted with the same cheerful spirit that acknowledged West'g I\nskill in this case.\n\u2666 K Q J 10 9 1\n\u25a0f 8 6\n\u2666 643\n4108\nThe eternal conflict of viewpoint\nand psychology between the older\nand the younger generation In Rua-\naia, which found iti highest artistic depiction in Turgenieff's famous\nnovel, \"Fathers and Som,\" Is more\nin evidence now than ever before.\nThe spiritual clash ia more natural\nand inevitable now, because a middle-aged, prerevolutionary generation and a young Soviet generation\nstand face-to-face, with loyalties,\ntastes and ideala that are often in\nsharp contrast.\nWhether a Soviet citizen takes an\noptimistic or a pessimistic view of\nhis own living conditions and his\ncountry's future often depends upon\nwhether he \u2022 under or over 30. Of\ncourse, lt would be a gross and exaggerated oversimplification to set\ndown all the Russians over 30 as\npessimists and all those under 30\nas optimists. There would be plenty\nof exceptions ln both campa.\nYet there is something distinct ve\nin the outlook of most of the young\npeole who have grown up entirely\nunder the Soviet regime, singing\nSoviet aongs, studying in Soviet\nschools, getting their training in the\nexpansive Soviet youth organization!. For every adult Communist\nthere are aeveral young people enrolled in a Communist organization.\nWhile there are about 2,700,000\nmembers and candidates\u2014applicants for admission on probration\u2014\nIn the Communist Party there are\nabout 4,900,000 Komsomols, mem-\nmemberi of the Union of Comtnun-\niit Youth, between the ages of 14\nand 23: there are almost 6,000,000\nYoung Pioneers, a body which enlists children above the age of eight,\nand there are about 2,000,000 Octob-\nrists, still younger children who are\nbeing formed in the Communist\nmold.\nAl the Soviet child graduates\nfrom the Young Pioneers into the\nUnion of Communist Youth and\npasses from elementary school to\na higher schoql or to work ln a factory or office he, or she. is put\nthrough a most inteniive propaganda training.\nHe ii taught hil two hlgheit duties are to build up Socialism in the\nSoviet Union and to help the workers of other countries, who are depicted as cruelly oppressed and\nlooking forward eagerly to the hour\nof victorioua revolution. Stories, pictures, cartoons, lectures hammer\ninto his fresh impressionable mind\nthe idea that reil Ion ' a fraud,\nconceived by capitalists for the\nsake of holding the workers in subjection. He is taught to look on the\nkulak, or the formerly well-to-do\npeasant who is opposed to collectivization, as a monster of human villainy, for whom extinction is too\ngood.\nThe Young Pioneer in his red\nkerchief, the Young Communist in\nhis khaki uniform and Sam Browne\nbelt are brought up to regard obedience to the orders which they receive from the Communiit Party as\ntheir first duty, a duty which comes\nfar ahead of any family ties or relations. Cases when children de\nnouncc their own parents are common and arc always mentioned with\napprobation in the Soviet press.\nRecently a Tartar schoolgirl named Oly Balikina reported to the authorities that her father and some\nother peasants were taking grain\nwhich belong to the collective farm\nfor their own use: an offense which\nunder the notorious law of Aug. 7,\nwould have exposed them to the infliction of the supreme penalty. 01-\nya was held up as a model of young\nSoviet virtue and, as a reward, was\ntransferred at state expense from\nher village to a model ichool in the\ncity of Kazin.\nYOUTH8 TAKE ACTIVE PART\nThe remolding of Russia's younger generation is by no means merely\na matter of propaganda. From an\nearly age the Soviet child is '-ain-\ned to act as well as to receive impressions. Young Pioneers In the\nvillages are told off to watch the\ncrops. In the towns t'.ey may be\nsent around to collect sacks which\nare needed for grain or for some\nother kind of social work.\nTo be a Young Communiit im-\npliei dutiei and hardship! ai well\nas advantages in such matters as obtaining admittance to higher schools\nand -securing desirable employment\nlater. Whenever there Is a lack of\nhands for a hard job of physical\nwork \u2014 unloading freightcars, for\ninstance, or cutting timber, or digging the Moscow subway\u2014numbers\nof Young Communists are mobilized\nand lent off with speeches, music\nand banneri to do the work.\nCommuniit leaden here emnloy\na psychological appeal not unlike\nthat of Tom Sawyer, when he Induced the other boya to na!**** hli back\nfence by assurlno thorn lt was an\nhonor and distinction to be allowed\nto do thii work.\naia and to give the younger generation a seme ot independence from\nan early age is the ayatem under\nwhich students in technical schools\nand universities are aupported, in\nthe main, not by their parents, but |\nby the state, ln one form or anoth-,\ner.\nInduitrial trusts w' '.ch are in\nneed 'of engineers and specialists\nsupport and control the educational institutions which are preparing\nstudents for their particular Indus*\ntry and pay stipends to the stud*\nCOD LIVER OIL MAY BE TAKEN\nIN LARGE QUANTITIES\nBY JAMES W BARTON. M.D.\nSometimes the question arises aa\nto the wladom of using cod liver oil\nin large amounts.\nAs the cool weather arrives and\nwith lt shorter days and len sunshine parents very wisely begin\ngiving their children cod liver oiL\nBefore there wai any knowledge\nent.   I r*4KrJ, (E mhMt Jh     1   \u00bb       \u00b0f VitaminS **\"*\u2022 \u00b0f \u2122 *-\u00bb*-\u25a0 Vita*\n\u00bb\u2122 ',\u2122t\u2122JS !n   Hh \u00b0h th,e tatter \u2022***<* ~ *<>***\u25a0<- in co* liveToll, par\nare contracted in advance fo. employment by the truit Parent! may\nhelp their children in the higher\nschools: but in Russian   a   much\nlarger proportion of studenta than\nin other countries are on their own\nresources.\nSTIMULUS TO EDUCATION\nOne ot the most indisputable achievement! of the Soviet regime during the last few yean haa been the\nexpansion of the country's educational system. According to official\nfiguree, the number of pupils in elementary schools between IO and\n1933  increased from  11,697,000  to\nents gave the cod liver oil to children to build up their bodies and to\nhelp resist \"colds.\"\nVitamin D is now known ai \"bottled lunshine,\"\nThere has been aome question at\nto Uie wisdom of giving large doses\nof vitamin D itself, but the latest\nopinion of medical science is that\ncod liver oil in the largest possible\ndoses is absolutely harmless.\nDr. J. Kloster, Norway, itudied\nthe effects on the health of drinking large quantities of cod liver oil\nover a long period ot time.\nHe waa stationed for two yean\n19,163,000; the number of student! *n the extreme north of Norway\nin middle schools from 2,493,000 to\n6.674,000; the number of universi'y\nstudenta from 207,000 to 491,000.\nMuch of the stimulus to this expansion came from the grandiose industrial projects of the Five-Year-\nPlan, which demanded a large number of new engineen and experts of\nall kinds and also a much larger\nforce of skilled worken.\nQuality is apt to lag appreciably\nbehind quantity in every field of\nSoviet life; and many of the new\nhigh schools and specialized institutes which have taken the placei\nof the old universities are not adequately equipped as regards teaching personnel, laboratory facilities,\netc. Crowded dormitories and meager, unappetizing fare in student dining rooms also do not make for the\nbest healh and efficiency of the\nstudents.\nBut, making allowance for all defects, the quantitative growth of\neducational facilities in the Soviet\nUnion will undoubtedly yield beneficial results, especially since it has\nbeen accompanied, in the elementary schools, by a thoroughgoing reform of former loose and slipshod\nmethods of teaching and study. Discipline in the lower Soviet schools,\nwhich was almost nonexistent a\nfew year! ago, is now pretty well\nrestored; and faddish teaching experiments have been discarded in\nfayor of a return to emphasis on the\ntraditional three Rs.\nAlong with propaganda and education the Soviet regime has given\nthe yoynger generation a considerable measure of opportunity. In\ngoing through a factory or an office one is often surprised at the\nnumber of young people in responsible posts. The openings which\nare created through the development of the huge country are numerous.\nLiving conditions, of course, are\noften hard and unsatisfactory. But\na Russian Young Communist, whose\nchildhood days were often spent in\na crowded workers' tenement or in\na rough peasant log cabin is not fastidious. Besides, has not his political\ninstructor assured him that most\nworkers in \"capitalist\" countries\nare unemployed and st)\nthat those who still have jobs are\nso exploited that their lot is far\nworse than that of the Soviet workers?\nSo the Soviet regime has succeeded fairly well in br..igin\" up a\nloyal new generation, saturated with\nCommunist ideas, feeling that it has\na stake in the new order, and ready\nto fight for it. The fact that in Italy and Germany also dictatorial\nregimes have won their greatest\nsupport among the youth would\nseem to Indicate that there is something fallacious in the old idea f *.t\nyouth is most devoted to individual\nliberty. It would rather seem that\nthe full implications of liberty, or\nof the denial of it, are more evident\nto mature minds, and that youth, at\nleast in some countries, rather enjoys the process of marching ln step,\nof being united by common ideas\nfrom which no dissent Is permitted.\nEVEN YOUTH DIVIDED\nIN VIEWS\nRussian youth is\nwhere no corn and only amall quantities of potatoes are cultivated.\nOn alx or aeven dayi of the week\nfiih li eaten at two or three meals.\nto which il added a pint of \"liver\nfat\" for adults in the busiest fishing\nseason.\nDuring the ilx winter monthi\nfrom one to one and a half of cod\nliver oil are consumed per day per\npenon.\nDr. Kloster waa atruck by the\ngood nutrition of the infants and\nyoung children ln hia district; this\nwas the more remarkable as the\nlives they led in dark rooms during\nthe long, dark winter were in many \"fvlf woulcl have come, as mort\nBidding   went:   South,    \u00ab-maD;\nWett, 1-heart; North, 2-spades, to I\nahow his powerful suit;  East, 3\u00bb]\nhearts, to disclose some itrength,\neven lf not much; South, 3-spades,\ndue chiefly to hli partner's jump I\ncall; West, 4-hearta,   became   hla\npartner had supported;   North, 4-\nspades, which West doubled.\nThe opening lead was the 2 of I\nheart!, enabUng West to mark 2 of\nthat suit Jn the declaring hand, 4 i\nin partner's. Dummy plaved low.\nWest finessed his 10, as the oddi ]\nwere 2 to 1 that East held the milling J. Players must consider theie I\nchances. West did not want to ei-\ntablish the Q in dummy, to allow the\ndeclarer later on to use for a discard I\nof a loser in diamonds. West then I\ntook his K of hearts.\nMost playen sitting Weat would]\nhave led the ace of hearts, allowing I\nNorth to ruff, then pull trumps. Had I\nWest done this the doubled contract I\nwould have been fulfilled\u2014East and I\nWest winning only 2 defensive!\ntricki in hearta and one ln trumps. [\nThe chance to win a diamond tricki\nrespects unhealthy.\nNow nothing is aa good for children and adults as fresh air and\nnatural sunshine, but some days\nchildren cannot go out because of\nthe weather\u2014wet or cold \u2014and\nthere are many dayi ln the year\nwhen the amount of sunshine Is\nvery small indeed.\nIt it therefore gratifying to know\nthat cod Uver oil can, to aome extent, take the place of lunshine,\nand that lf children and adulta like,\nor can endure, its taste, then during\nthe cold, wet or dark days of the\nwinter eeaaon, it ihould prove of\nreal value to health and In the prevention of colds and other ailments.\nBallistics Expert\nIs Important\nReaders of sleuth stories are not\nbeing hoodwinked when the ballistic expert is made to play an important part in the detection of fictitious crime. He does it ln real life.\nThe ballistic! bureau of the New\nYork police department which haa\njust rounded out iti fourth year, il\nfirmly established and recognized as\none of the most important adjuncts\nin the solution of crimes in which\nfirearmi figure.\nReferring to thii bureau, which\nwas started as an experiment, Assistant Chief Inspector John J. Sullivan, head of the detective division,\nsaid recently: \"I do not know what\nwe would do without it today. It la\na scientific laboratory in which\nslugs and firearms are made to talk\nout loud. The bureau has made\nmany concrete contributions which\nhave materially helped in the solution of crimes and the conviction of\nprisoners. Through its dally scientific routine it is continually piling up\nuseful information\u2014it ia a growing\nasset.\"\nThe bureau was started by Acting\nSergt. Henry F. J. Butts, a \"gun\nbug,\" who has spent practilly all of\nhis 30 yean of police service in the\ndetective division. He was one of\nthe five memben of the original\nhomicide squad and ii today recognized ai one of the outstanding ballistics authorities in the States. Sergeant Butt! has testified as an expert in more than 700 cases in which\nI firearms figured, within and without the state. The bureau annually\nmake: 100 examination! for the police of upstate cities and neighboring states.\nEACH BULLET\nTELLS OWN TALE\nThe men assigned to the bureau\ndo nothing but ballistic work, study\n\u00bbn^ov*Spi'nT'..,*-,MT _1S P\u00b0wd\"  markings,  microphotogra-\nutSlif.tm\\^r'innL \u2022%.**%* \u25a0***>\u25a0 *_\\* \u00a3\u25a0* -*-\\**\u00ab**\nhigh powered microscopes. No two\n\"guns,\" the police vernacular for a\nrevolver or pistol, when fired will\nengrave on the bullet like or identical characters. Consequently, under\nfavorable condition!, the markings\non the spent bullet are aa trustworthy as fingerprints.\nThe trustworthiness and reliability of spent bullets for identification\npurposes is dependent upon their\ncondition when recovered. If flat\ntened or badly battered from impact they are practically worthleas,\nbut the ballistic expert's work Is far\nfrom complete if he has a spent shell\nfound at the scene of a crime for\ncomparison with the suspected firearm.\nOTTAWA (CP).\u2014Canada'a exports\nof wallpaper la expanding, sayi a Dominion bureau of statistics report,\nJune shipments of 80,000 rolls being\ndistributed among IS countries. New\nNew Zealand waa the heaviest buyer.\nWest playera would have expected. I\nWest figured correctly. North'il\njump spade showed at least 6 strong!\ntrumps. He also held 2 hearts. Thai\nmajor suita accounted for 8 cardaT\nleaving only 9 cards in the minor!\nsuits. The ace of diamonds and the!\n4 solid clubs would take care of|\nthose, giving a sure game. West fig-,\nured the only way of defeating the I\ncontract wai to win a diamond trick, I\nafter remoylng dummy'i ace. Thiil\nremoval had to be made before los-1\ning the ace of spades. Weit led hia I\nK of diamonds, forcing the ace in I\ndummy. That ruined the contract j\nfor declarer. He had to lose a trump I\ntrick and a diamond trick, no matter I\nwhat he did.   It was a clever play. *\nNOT PECULIAR\nOntario's Hydro is a peculiar]\nthing. Beginning as a small expert-\nment some 24 yean ago, it has now j\ngrown into what, by common consent, is the most successful contemporary effort in public owner- I\nship and operation. To a great many, ,\n49 officials receiving over $9000 a\nyear may seem a strange thing. It is\nless strange In those who realize\nwhat Hydro is, what it hai been,\nwhat its administration means and\nentails.\u2014Ottawa Journal.\ncompact mais. I know of one caae\nwhen aome young men who were\nstudying secretly for the priesthood\nwere banished to a place in Central\nAala where, the general impression\nwas. they would be very likely to\n(\u2022onl'-act a malifnant form of malar-\ndoubts and criticisms, ending with\na fervent appeal not to mention his\nideal to hi! companions, for, aa he\naaid:\n\"Every Russian wants to cat, to\nlive and not to lit\"\n\"To lit\" ll a common Russian expression for being in prison.\nBut the dissentera among   the\nyouth are, I think, the minority;\nand they are certainly unorganized\nand unable to make their influence\not an absolutely felt\nTbe Soviet leaden have succeeded in organizing and disciplining the\nyounger generation, In giving lt a\nliberal double dose of education and\npropaganda. Perhaps the real test\nof the permanent efficacy of this\ngigantic  effort  at  remolding  the\nia. On another occasion, when I mind of a people will comewh^n\nmet a group of Russi-in vacation- and lf the education imparted to\nists on a walkinn trip, one young the young people mr' is them begin\nman walked with me for some dis-1 to doubt arid question the propa\nlance and poured out a stream of ganda.\nHOME INJURIES\ni SKIN TROUBLES\nQuickly Healed by Zam-Buk Ointment\nZam-Buk <\nI Soap.\nSAFETY - SERVICE\nSATISFACTION\nStorage \u2014 Cartage\nForwarding and Distributing\nPiano and Safe Moving a Specialty\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n723 Baker St. Phone 33\nCAMP SUPPLIES\nWe are headquarters for\nMINERS' AND CAMPERS' SUPPLIES\nTENTS, PACK SACKS, SLEEPING ROBES,\nTHERMOS BOTTLES, CAMP COTS, CAMP\nCHAIRS, DRINKING CUPS, PICNIC SETS,\nETC., ETC.\nPRICES RIGHT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality  Hardware\nNELSON, B. C.\n I tftf\nTwo Lucky \"Breaks\" Qive Rainbow First Victory\n . . _______________________________________________ - \u25a0    .   .. 1    L I       ~ \" \"  ' '     ' ' \" \"\"\" \u2014\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0    ' ... \u25a0 -I.\u2014ii. i  \u25a0\u25a0    .     .._\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0___-\u2014--\u00ab-- ii |\nCtANT PALLS IT -    , . r       _   ..'    I DUMMY FRACTICI\nTmrk nnd Field - Fishino - Motor Boatina - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football   | I \u2014__l\nBaseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse - Rowing - Golf - Lawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.\n|lrytn (Bitty) Orant taket \u25a0 tumblt during nttlontl chtmplenthlg match, |   PAGE SEVEN\nTHE  NELSON  DAILY  NIWI.  NELSON,  I.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINO, SEPT. 21. KM\nPAGE SEVEN\nB CANADIANS\nLEFT IN GOLF\nAT TORONTO\n^\"do Mackenzie Wins;\nMolly Gourlay Is\nOnly Britisher\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\ni>\nBT EDWIN B. JOHNSON\n* TORONTO OOLP AND COUNTRY\nMt, Toronto, Sept. 30 (CP)\u2014\nit long tnd rocky rosd that leads\ntht Canadian ladlea' open golf\n\u25a0wone. hu narrowed down to tht\nDuelling stretch drive for a tclnt-\nflatlng quartette that ttrodt boldly\nbdty into the teml-flntl brackets.\nT Tomorrow Canada will aend three\nhtr outstanding acea Into bat-\nMlaa Ida Mackenzie, defending\nBiamplon of Toronto, Mrt. Vera\nford of Vancouver, B. c.. and Mrs.\n0. \"Prater, Ottawa. They wtre\nHoed with but one Invader, Miss\nfolly Gourlay, member of the Brit-\nCurtls eup team-\nlln the semi-final round Mlsa Mar-\nItnt'e wlll figure In htr fourth\n\u25a0ccesslve International tussle, meei-\nlg Mlsa Gourlay. Tha lower Half\nt* Inge together Mrs. Ford and Mrs.\nviler In an east-west test of skill.\nlit waa a day of dlsappiontmen'.i\nr two other membera of the Brit-\n1 International squad, at Miss\niris chambers, tha team captain\n|>d former British open title-holder,\nled out of tha picture before tht\nflentleta preature of Miss Macken-\ni by a 3 and 1 decision. The other\nJctim waa tall, long-driving Diana\n(umpton. who waa unable to match\nbrilliance of Mra. Prater, who,\nAlexa Stirling, annexed both the\nnadian and United states crowns\n\u25a0me yetrt ago. The Ottawa atar\npred   her   victory   on   the   home\non* up.\n[Mlas  Gourlay  aaved  the  overseas\npntandara from a disastrous route\nconquering Mrs.  A.  B.  Darling\nMontreal 4 and I, the moat de-\niyi victory of the four,\nWinnipeg Puckers\nWill Tour Europe\nI WINNIPEG, Sept. JO (CP)-Win-\nlipeg Monirchs, 1931 champlona of\nTtanitoba'i senior hockeydom, will\nUl from Montreal in the last week\nIf November for Europe to partlci*\ntte in a series of exhibition games\nnd represent Canada in the world's\nhampionship   at   Switzerland,   it\nres learned here today.\nThe team's tchedule is similar in\nfclmost every respect to that of the\nSaskatoon   Quakers   last   winter,\npliose making the trip are: Albert\nland Tony Lemay, \"Spunk'' Duncan-\n\u25a0son, Romeo and Joe Rivers, Roy\nIHinkel,   Norman  Yellowlees,  Roy\nIMusgrove,  Cam Shewan and Vic\n\u25a0 Lindqulst Duncanaon, former left\nI winger  with  Winnipeg!,  Olympic\nI champior.l in 1932, is the only player\n1 not a member of the Monarcha. He\nplayed latt year with Grosvenor\nHouse Canadians ln London,\nwill be ln charge of the team.\nPACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE\nPortland\n^^^^^^  \u201e    \u00ab   14\nHollywood     -    19   9\nBryan   and   H.   Doerr,   Denamore\nand  Hsrahberger.\nSeattle       4   13  3\nMlaslona    0   10   0\nRadonlta, Kalllo. Vlncl and Bradbury; Johnson and Pltepatrlck.\nSan Pranclteo     0  4  1\nOakland     \u00bb 17   1\nHerrmann, Sheehan  end Woodall;\nMcEvoy and McMullen.\nLos Angeles    14   lf   I\nSacramento 3    7   1\nNelaon   and    Campbell:    Gregory,\nKltcholas and Stlkeld.\nBy AL DEMAREE\nThere it less lost motion in an\nunderhand throw from the tecond\nbaseman to first thad in an overhand throw,\" aatd Hughey Critz\nof the New York Giants when I\nasked him recently for some tips\nfor young keystone sackers. \"Quite\noften you only throw a fast man\nout by half a step,\" continued Crltz,\n\"and that is the difference between\na quick underhand throw and an\noverhand one. The motion of picking up the ball and throwing it underhand is almost simultaneous;\nwhile in the overhand throw, time\nit lott between scooping the ball\nup and then straightening up to\nmake the overhand throw. 1 would\nadvise all young second basemen to\npractice coming in fast for the ball\nand throwing to firat base underhand. There is very rarely what it\nknown as a bad hop unless the ball\nis deflected by a pebble in the infield. Play the ball; don't let the\nball play you.\"\nAnswers to yesterday's question:\nHant Wagner made a hundred home\nruna with the old time dead ball\nduring his Major league career.\nToday's question: ln what years\ndid one Federal league operate?\nAnswer tomorrow.\nAl Demaree has prepared an illustrated leaflet called \"Baseball\nSigns\" which he will gladly send\nto any reader requesting it. Address\nAl Demaree in care of this paper\nand be sure to enclose a self-ad-\ndressed stamped envelope.\nHUME UNAWARE\nSOFTBALL DATE\nWeather Favors Defender as\nEndeavor's Genoa Jib Fails\nChallenger Led by Mile ot the Half-Way\nMark But Is Beaten by Half Mile;\nSopwith Gets Today Off\nBy ANDREW  MIRKIL\n(Canadian Prut Staff Writer)\nNEWPORT, R.I., Sept. 20 (CP).\u2014Harold S. Vanderbilt,\nin his white and bronze Rainbow, came from behind to win\ntoday's race for the America's cup in decisive fashion.   He\nsailed the New  \u2022\u2014*\"   .-'\u25a0  \u25a0' 'i .  *' \u25a0\u25a0 j1;.\"*1\" *m '\u25a0\"'wt.-vgi\nYork Yacht\nclub's  defender\nm a g n ificently\nevery   inch   of\nthe way, whether a mile astern,\nis he was at the\nouter mark, or\na mile ahead as\nhe crossed the\nline at the finish.\nThe committee intended the\nrace to be a leeward and wind-\nward contest,\ninvolving a run\nbefore the wind\nof 15 miles and\na thresh to\nwindward of 15\nmiles to the\nlines. But the\nhigh gods who\ndispose of such\nthings ruled\ndifferently, and\nby hauling the\nwind a few\npoints to the\neastward  made\nthe affair a run       \t\nand a broad ~TOtOLF8.~VANl.-ERBiLT\nreach to the outer mark, and a close reach home. Had the\nwind held true, requiring a beat home, the yacht* could never\nhave finished within the time limit of b\\t* hours, in the light\nprevailing throughout\nGOLF FACTS\nNOT THEORIES\n\u2022y ALIX. MORRIION\nV j\/*\n*L\n1    ,m_^_^f\nBte\nv   V\n.'\/ONWCiS'\ntf       SARV\nVI       \u2022*\u00bb\nH^tiRau*\nA\/r\nm\nGIANTS AND\nCARDS WN\nBut St. Louis Moves\nUp by Taking a\nDouble\nHave Had No Letter From\nTrail; Open for a\nCame\nThe management of the Humt\nHotel men's Softball club stated Issr.\nsight that despite newsptper reports to the effect,, that the Trail\nMaple Leafs teem was expecting the\nNelson team to play ln Trail *\nSunday afternoon, they have\nreived no letter from Trail officials\nrequesting the Hume team to ploy\nthere on any given date.\nWhen dates suggested by locsl of-\nflcsls were unsatisfactory to Trail\nafter the Maple Leers challenge, the\nmanager of the Hume Hotel team\nwrote Trail asking them to let him\nknow what dates were suitable to\nTrail, but as yet no answer has\nbeen forthcoming.\nIn any event the local team will\nbe unable to pliy In Trail on Sun\nairs ^^^\nthe encounter,      \t\nBut tinea Rainbow wat deprived of a win lait Saturday, aftar\nleading    Endeavor   around    tha\ncourte, owing to tha expiration ef\ntha time limit, no one wlll be die-\nnoted te btgrudge Mr, Vanderbllt\nthlt break, at break It wat.\nNor for that matter will anyone\nbegrudge the New York Yacht\nchib's dashing skipper the further\nbreak accorded him when he caughe\nhis friendly rival.T. 0. M. Sopwlth,\nin hit blue-bodied beauty, Endeavor,\nwith  a   wind   worn   mis-shapen\nGenoa Jib, when a proper Genoa\nWould have clinched for him what\nno Briton has achieved in 83 years\nof racing*, a third win in America's\nCup series.\nSopwith has been trying out Endeavor against Genoa jibs since\nearly August. Following today's\non ! concluding lesson he asked for, as\n***' was his privilege, and received permission to lay up tomorrow in order\nthat a new Genoa, ordered previously, might be rushed to completion. Tonight in the United States\nloft of a famed British firm of sail\nmakers, operatives are work:ng fe*\n\u25a0erishly to supply Endeavor with\nher much needed Genoa.\nIt wlll probably be flown here tomorrow.\nHAILS TO LEAP\nSopwlth got the challenger awav\nI wish thtt I could travel around\nthe country doing driving contests\nagainst the atrong men, not only of\ngolf, but of other garnet as well.\nWhy?\nSimply to demonstrate that amall\nand rather delicate hands can twing\na club well enough to match the best\nboth for distance and accuracy. I've\nproved it on many occasions, yet\npeople uk, \"Are my hands large\nenough, strong enough to play good\ngolf?\"\nTha answer lt \u2014 It doetn't require\nlarge, strong hands to make the proper swing. Tha real power cornea\nirom the body, not the hands.\nPlayen with Urge handt generally rely upon them to put tha punch\ninto their twings with the result that\nthey aeldom hit t straight ahot.\nIt's the way you ute your hands,\nnot their size* that counts in golf.\nMORE ABOUT\nJAFSIE\n(Continued From Page Ont)\nthe \"break\" long awaited had\n:ome, General O'Ryan emerged from secret conferences\nwith Hoover and others at the\nGreenwich police station and\nissued thia terse statement:\nRECEIVED CASH\n\"We have in custody the\nman 'who received the ran-\nsom money. He is Bruno\nRiehard Hauptmann, of 1279\nEaat 222nd street, the Bronx.\nHe is an alien who came to\nthis country as a stowaway 11\nyears ago.\"\nAmong those at the police\nstation was the man of many\nmissions in the long hunk\u2014\n\"Jafsie,\" Dr. John A. F. Condon, aged welfare worker\ndrawn into the search by the\nnoted aviator after other intermediaries had failed.\n\"JAFSIE\" PAID IT\nIt was \"Jafsie\" who paid\nthe $50,000 to the supposed\nkidnappers \u2014 the night of\nApril 2, 1932, at a cemetery\nin the Bronx, a month after\nthe kidnapping.\nAfter the announcement of\ncuities, he ran into a toft tpot, j the arrest, General O'Ryan\n^^,.^^7..^I\u00abid Hauptmann was identi-\nand rapidly diminishing  the dis- fied positively as the recipient\n&fP\u00bb Tport0 \u00a3251* *\u2022 \u2122som \u2122w in-th\u00ab\nRainbow's   bow   and    ctme   ibout j Cemetery.\nThe  identification  was\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW   L\nNaw York 91   54\nSt. Louis  86   it\nChicago      81   81\nBoiton 71   70\nPel.\n.628\n.S70\n.504\nPitttburgh  88   71   .489\nBrooklyn \t\nPhiladelphia  __\nCincinnati  51\n. 86   77\n. 9.1   86\n91\n\"NEW YORK, Sept. 20 (AP)-Carl\nHubbell put on a one-man ahow\ntoday to life New York Giants to\na 4-3 victory in their final struggle\nwith the last-place Cincinnati Reds.\nThe victory, gained'In the ninth\nInning, enabled them to hold their\nlou to a halt game ln their race\nwith St. Louit Cardinali, who won\ntwice.\nHubbell not only pitched tteadily\nin a duel with Paul Derringer but\nsingled home the winning run in\nthe ninth after Johnny Verges had\nwalked and taken tecond on an\ninfield out.\nCincinnati   a   10  0\nNew York     4   10   2,\nDerringer and Lombard!; Hubbell\nand Danning.\ner. Betting hla famoua perforated\nspinnaker, he drew away rapidly\nIrom hie rival. The wind hauled\nthree-nutrtert of the wty down to\nthe other mark. He held to hla\nspinnaker at long as he could and\nfinally aet a ballooner on what became a broad reach to tha buoy.\nAt tha outer mark ht had established a lead of a full mile and\nseemed to have the race well In\nhand. But ha waa reckoning without\nthe borrowed Vanltle't ancient\nGenoa, immediately the challenger\nwas slowed down Irom alx to four\nknot*. Moreover, he began to drop\nrapidly to leeward of Rainbow, headed Jutt to weather of the flnlah\nline.\nTACK HELD TOO LONG\nThen to add  to Bopwlth'a dlffl\nday afternoon, but should the Tra'.l \\ to a magnificent start, todsy, a\nclub wish to play _n Nel6on, a j couple of boat-lengths ahead and to\nteam could probably be fielded, 'weather of vanderbllt. In the defend-\nto weather ot the defender. But\nhe had held hla port tack a trlflg\ntoo long.\nVanderbllt worked through hit lie\nand .having done ao, proceeded to\nbackwlnd him. Sopwlth did the only\nthing lett for him to do. He tacked\nagain to port, and having cleared\nhimself of Rainbow's backdraught,\ncame about again on tha atarboard\ntack.\nHe had made four tacks while\nVanderbllt   continued   to   hold   the\ncourse he had tet for himself st thi       ..    ,,., , , -. .    \u2014\nouter mark. ftueh tlmt ha had mice  SO identified by John PeiTOne,\n!\u00a3&& tt STS. uKS X:Bronx texi diver> \u00bbs ,he \u25a0***\nlett. In other worda ha had thrown\noverboard thl tlx-mlnutea advantage he had won at the turn and\n! was dropping aatern of the superbly\n. handled Rainbow, all because of an\noutworn Genoa jib and a aoft apot.\nIt was Rainbow's first wla of the\n' t erles against two (or Endeavour.\nmade by \"witnesses,\" O'Ryan\n3aid. This was taken to mean\nAat \"Jafsie\" had seen the\n>risoner and had made the\nidentification.\n:S IDENTICAL\nHauptmann, placed in the\nnrisoners' lineup latet\\ was al\nCARD* TAKI TWO\nBOSTON, Sept 20 (AP)- St.\nLouia Cardinals continued their\npennant drive with a double victory\nover Boiton Braves 4-1 and 1-0 today as the clubt closed out their\nseaaon't rivalry. The two triumphs\nleft them three and a half games behind the leading New York Giants.\nFirst game.\nSt. Louii   4    8  2\nBoston       13   0\nCarleton and Davis; Brandt and\nLAil**I   vnk'\n***r*m*Wi\nmm    \\ 1\ns\\Wt\\*,      m    i\nThou poor tickling dummlei oomi In again for thtlr annual butlngt.\nHogan.\nSecond game:\nSt. Louit,    1    T   0\nBotton ...'..    0    8   1\nWalker ind Delancey; Frankhouae\nand Spohrer.\nDODGERS WIN\nBROOKLYN. Sept. 20 (AP)*-\nContimiing their September puth.\nBrooklyn Dodgers defeated Pitttburgh 2-1 behind the tlve-hlt pitching ot Leslie Munns today. It wat\ntheir aixth atralght victory. Brooklyn tcored both runt ln the tint\noff Waile Hoyt.\nPittsburgh    ISO\nBrooklyn    2    8  0\nHoyt, Grimei \u00bbnd Padden; Munns\nIBe\nand Berrei.\nCHICAGO BEATEN\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 20 (AP)\n\u2014Rallying to score six runs in the\neighth inning, the Phillies came\nfrom behind to wipe out a lead\npiled up by Chicago in the early\nframes and went ahead to acore in\nultimate 9-7 victory over the Cubs\ntoday.\nChicago     7   14  0\nPhiladelphia  w   1   14  2\nWarneke, Birth and Hartnett.\nO'Farrell; Hansen, Colllnt, C. Davis\nand Wilton.\nCOLD CAPS PAYS\n$122.25\nVICTORIA, Sept 20 (CP>-Slipping through t gap at the head of\nthe stretch and then engaging in a\n\u2022driving finish to win narrowly ln\nthe tint race, A. J. Ellis' Gold Caps,\nwith Jockey Thorogood up, provided\nthe sensation of the race cud at\nthe Willows today. Tho mare paid\n$84.88 on a $2 nose bet and 9132.29\nacross the board.\nKEWCASTSLE  SIGNS  SMITH\nLONDON, Bept. 90 (CP cable) \u2014\nNewcastle United, demoted from the\nflrtt dlvltlon of tha English football league thla season and winners\nof only one atart in aeven ln the\nsecond division today signed on Jack\nSmith, center-forward from Huddersfield.\nSARAZEN SAYS JOE PRYKE, YOUNG\nEDMONTON GOLFER, GREAT PLAYER\nBut Canadian Thinks He'd\nMake a Fool of Himself\nin Big Time\nLOS ANGELES, Sept. 20 (CD-\nGene Saraien was Australia-bound\ntoday on a golfing tour, carrying a\nlot of new tangled clubs in his bag\nand an immense regard in hia bosom\nfor the game Joe Pryke shoots ini\nand around Edmonton. I\nBefore departing last night wilh\nMrs. Sarazen and Joe Klrkwood,\nthe atocky pro was asked it he had\nseen any promising young players\non his recent Jaunts.\n\"I aaw a great player Just the\nother day but he doesn't know it.\"\nGene answered enthusiastically. \"We\nwere playing at Calgary and a\nyoung pro named Joe Pryke came\ndown from Edmonton to play\nagalntt ui.\n\"Say. at the first hole he hit his\ndrive a mile, right down the middle\nof the fairway. I thought it might\nhave been an accident but he hit\nthem all the same way. He didn't\nmiss the middle of the fairway on\na single hole.\n\"I asked him why he didn't come\ndown to the states and win some\nmoney as well as a reputation. And\nwhat do you think ho aald:\n\"'Do you think I want hfnjake a\nfool of myself?'\"\nTho trip will run the golf mileage\nof the team ot Saraien and Klrkwood to approximately 100,000\nmiles for the year.\nCALGARY, Sept 20 (CP)\u2014Joe\nPryke, the young pro golfer Gene\nSarazen boosted so highly at Los\nAngeles today, retained his Alberta\nopen championship at Edmonton\nthis year, and set a new record tor\nthe event while doing it Playing\nagainst Sarazen and Klrkwood here\nSeptember 7, Pryke shot a 71, three\nstrokes better than the cardi the\nvisitors turned ln.\nPaired with Jack Cuthbert of Cal*\ngary, Pryke lott a bett ball match\nbut on the round he marked up 17\nstraight para. A remark one ot\nthe players made on the last green\nbrought a snicker from him Just\nas he was stroking a short putt and\nhe missed his final par.\nPryke rose from the caddy ranks\nof the Calgary Golf and Country\nclub where his father la a ground-\nkeeper. Four yean ago he moved\nto Edmonton where he la now pro at\nthe Prince Rupert club.\nSCOT LEADERS\nIL TRAVEL\nSt. Johnstone Goes\nFalkirk for\nSoccer\nto\nGLASGOW, Sept. 20 (CP -,*.\u201e)-\nAll leaden in the tint division ot\ntho Scottish Football league travel\naway from home Saturday and tome\nupsets may be looked for.\nThe Joint leaden, St. Johnttone\nand Clyde respectively go to Falkirk and Airdrieonlana but are expected to keep their \"lou\" column\nclean despite the change of venue.\nThe Rangers, cupholdert and\nleague champions who aro running\nonly halt a jame behind tho leaders.\ntravel to St. Mirren. Tho Saints\nhave won only two games to date.\nHamilton Academicals, holders ot\nfourth place, go to Dundee but\nMotherwell have a chance to make\namende when they entertain Kilmarnock at Fir Park.\nThird Lanark teem ln no danger\nof losing their lead over th* tecond\ntaction, to which they wore demoted thii teason. With a couple of\npolnti advantage they take on the\nlowly Edinburgh City outjit Saturday.\nTORONTO MAKES\n\u2022 IT TWO IN ROW\nTORONTO, Bept. JO (OP)\u2014Toronto Maple Leafs made lt two atralght\nover Rochester Wings hare tonight\nwhen they defeated tha Blrdt 5*4\nln th* ucond gama of tha international league'! final playoff aerlea to determine the team to enter\nthe Uttla world serlea. Aotton ttlll\nmove to Rochester tomorrow wher*\nthe next three gtmei. tf necessary,\nwill be played.\nRather a wild gama throughout,\ntha lead changed hands three timet\nto give the crowd of 10.000 apecta.\nton a great deal over which to enthuse. The Leafa acored tha winning\nrun tn the eighth.\nRochester       *   10  0\nToronto    I   11   0\nSmith. Xlelnke and Florence; luca* ind Having.\nHOME RUNS IN\nBiG TIME\nBy Th* Associated Prett\nHome runt yetterday: Foxx, Athletlca, 1, Hlgglna, Athletic* 1, Bonura, White Box 1, Averlll, Indiana I,\nOoelln, Tlgen 1, Burna, Brownt 1,\nHartnett, Cube 1, Moroe, Olanta 1.\nLombard!. Reds 1.\nThe leaders: Gehrig. Yankee! 46:\nFoxx, Athletlca 43; Ott, Olants 3S,\nTrosky. Indiana 39; colllnt, Cardinal 33.\nLeagua totals: American SM: National  827. ToUl  1290.\nLARSEN WINS\n220-YD. SWIM\nWALSALL. England, Bept. 30 (CP\ncable)\u2014Oeorg* Linen of Hamilton.\nOnt., tonight added the English\n330 yarda swimming title to the\n100 yard crown he won recently.\nand Incidentally aet a new Bngllih\nrecord for the distance. HI* 3:30 1-6\nwat a fifth of a aecond faster than\nDr. J. C. Sutton'a record.\nliqueur of the finest\nquality.\nThis advertisement it*, not published or displayed hy the Liquor Control Board or by tht\nGovernment nf British Columbia.\nBaselia Ss 3ig Six\n. (By thha Associated Pratt)\nCharley Gehringer joined Paul\nWaner on the exclusive list of major league batten who have made\n200 hiti for tho current season yesterday but hit average dropped\nalong with those of all the other\nBig six members ctcept Lou Gehrig. Gehringer made just one hit ln\nfive attempts, losing two points.\nGehrig hit one out ot three to maintain his .3.17 average and regain a\nfirst-place tie with Paul Waner, who\nlost one point with one hit In four\ntrlea as did John Moore and Heinie\nMtnush. Bill Terry didn't hit it all,\ndropping three points.\nThe standing:\nG AB R H .357\nP. Waner. pirts. 137 566 122 202 .387\nGehrig, Yanks 146 m 123 198 .367\nManush, Sens.. 134 634 89 193 .35.1\nGehringer, Tigs. 144 568 126 200 .352\nTerry, Giants . 144 570 106 198 .347\nJ. Moore, Phils. 122 458   70 156 .341\nHALIFAX BWINS\nLINDON. Sept. 30 (CP cable)\u2014\nHalifax defeated Dewtbury 2-0 this\nevening In a replay of their tla ln\nthe rugby league's Yorkshire cup\nsecond  round.\nwho, two days after \"Jafsie\"\nidvcrtised himself as the\nLindbergh negotiator, gave\nlim a dollar to deliver a note\nto the Condon home.\nHauptmann was in line\nwith other prisoners. Perrone\nwas led in.\n\"Pick out the man who\nhanded you that note,\" Perrone was told.\nWithout hesitation, the taxi\ndriver tapped Hauptmann on\nthe shoulder.\n\"This la the man.\" he said.\nWA* ON THE SPOT\nHauptmann had been closely\nwatched by police and federal agentr\nsince he paid for gasoline at a filling station several weeks ago with\na J10 gold certificate, Identified by\naerial numbers issued to all banks\nas one of those In the ransom payoff.\nThe filling station proprietor, remembering the gold certificates had\nbeen called in by the treasury, became suspicious and notified police.\nHauptmann, It was reported, was\ndriving an automobile Identified as\none stolen near Lakewood, N.J., the\nday befor* the blond, curly-haired\nLindbergh baby, Charles Augustus,\nJr., wai ttolen from hli crib from\nthe tecond floor nursery of the secluded Lindbergh home ln the Sour-\nland mountain dlitrlct near Hope-\n(Continued on  Pige Ten)\nOGDEHS'(M weUlhoISnwIxd WeU'\nDON'T THANK ME\nFOR THE ORDER\nI'M THANKING\nVOU POR THIS\nTOBACCO\nI'M ALWAYS GLAD TO HAVE\nONE GOOD FRIEND MEET\nANOTHER AND V0ULL FIND\nXiOGDEN'S* ,\njgMVOtlR PIPE'S BEST FfcL.\nOGDENS\nCUT PLUG\n PA8E tlOHT\n\u25a0THE  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS. NELSON,  B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINO. SEPT. 21. 1IM -\n;&! A CLASSIFIED SECTION - WHERE BUYER bSEIIER MEEI\nKING COBRA\nBy MARK (MANNING\nWho hu lived tor twenty-one years ln the country\nthat he so graphically describes.\nNglaott SaUij Npbib\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting te\nall Departments\n-I\nCHAPTER M\nCoughing thickly, the Hajl fell\nforward, his hands clawing madly\nat the knife transfixing his throat.\n\"Take him and bury him! He was\na traitor,\" muttered the Veiled man.\nFor almost a minute after he had\nfione the circle sat gazing dumb-\nounded at three inches of steel projecting from the back of the dead\nman's neck aa it glittered in the\nnow-risen moon.\n\"He did well,\" said Baba at last.\n\"We are his men. We hsve- said\nIt!\"\nIN THE ARENA\nThe Place of Fights adjoined the\nPalace of the Mirror, to which it\nwas connected by underground passages, with its tiers of grey stone\nseats rising one above the other\nin the manner of a Roman amphitheatre.\nThe tamasha (show) had been proclaimed by drum beat, and long\nbefore dawn a stream of eager men.\n\u25a0women, and children had been moving towards the two entrances of\nthe amphitheatre.\nThe morning was sultry, and a\nhare hung over the valley. From\nbehind the enclosing mountains to\nthe south a mass of livid cumulus\ncloud was rolling up, the snow-capped peaks showing tensely white\nagainst. It Now and again was to be\nheard the choking rumbling of thunder. ,\nThe older spectators shook their\nheads uneasily as their hard brown\neyes scanned those up-piled vaporous masses. There was a legend current among them that many centuries before, on another such day as\nthis, similar portents had heralded\nan earthquake in which a hundred\nthousand Hillmen had been buried\nunder the riven hills.\nThe stands were crowded and the\ncrowd was becoming impatient.\nSuddenly a clamorous uproar changed to a shout of applause, as the\ngigantic black bearded figure of\nThe Cobra entered. Ten minutes\nlater the pandemonium ended*\nThe Veiled Man had taken his\nsect.\n\u2022At the raising of his black gloved hand the great gates slowly open-\nend and a grim procession entered.\nAt its head were the three Britons\n\u2014unchained. Behind them clanked\neight manacled Hillmen, on either\nside of whom was a line of escorting guards. As Gray came out into\nthe nmlight a deep \"Aah!\" of satisfaction went up from ten thousand\nthroats. His splended physique and\nsi\" feel six of height, promised good\nspor'. He was holding one of Dana's\nhands, M'ho. bareheaded and still in\nHillman's dress, seemed almost diminutive beside him\u2014 tall though\nslip v*a~.\nIT'\" other arm was about the\nShoulders of a scarecrow bring with\na tp.ngled mass of grayish hair and\nbci'-d. who stumbled as he walked.\nWith his arms crated upon his\nbreast and his clmvlike hands hidden in his armpits.\n\"Can you see him. Gray?\" asked\nthe blind Galbraith hoarsely. \"Tell\nmp. can you see him?\"\nBut Colin was watching Diana's\nfere with anguished lntentness and\ndid not answer. Galbraith sank to\nIhe ground. Spectators thought he\nwas begging for mercy. But\t\n\"O just and merciful God, let him\ncome near to me!...\" meant nothing to them, and they lost interest\nin the scene when Gray lifted Galbraith to his feet and patted him\non the back.\nThe prisoners had now reached\nthe center of the arena and were\nofdered to halt. Evidently some orders were awaited.\nThe bank of leaden cloud had now\nspread upwards towards the sun.\nand a purplish gloom had succeeded\nthe bright sunlight of a few moments\nbeforp.\nA quick, short trembling of the\nearth brought a second's silence,\nand then increased Babel. But the\nexcitement soon subsided. Earthquakes are common happenings in\nYanistan.\nIt was then that, for the last\ntime but one, Diana and Colin heard\n\u2014as clearly as if it were being\nbroadcast upon the ether\u2014the voice\nof tha Swastika Sadliu. It seemed to\nbe quite close to them.\n\"Chela that was!\" it said. \"Challenge htm to wrestle! Afterwards,\npass through the door on the right\nof the gates! . . . .\"\nThen the bell-like tones fsded\naway.\nThe eyes of the lovers met.\n\"Will you Colin?\"\n\"Yes.\" said Gray tensely, \"if he'll\ncome down!\"\nGray turned to Limbu.\n\"I go to challenge the Khan!\" he\nsaid.\nLimbu\u2014who had managed to get\nhimself chosen as one of the escort\u2014thumbed the razor edge of\nhis kukri while he wore an ecstatic smile What a sahib he was! What\na sahib!\nA few yards from the wall Colin\nslopped and, folding his arms, looked\nup at the Cobra,\n\"I call upon all to witness.\" he\nshouted, \"that Alam Khan fears\nme! His heart is of glass. If what\nI say be untrue, then let him come\ndown and,wrestle wilh me! Ye, O\npeople shall decide which of us is\nthe better wrestler! But will he\ndare!\"\nAlam Khan leaped to his feet,\nlivid with fury, but the Veiled Man\nspoke in tones like a harsh trumpet blast.\n\"Lay no hand upon him! The Khan\nshall teach this kafir to respect our\npresence! Go down and wrestle with\nhim, Sirdar Alam,Khan! What thou\nleavest of him, the beasts shall finish!\"\nThe Cobra left his seat and strode\ninto the arena.\nQuickly Gray moved back to the\ncenter.\n\"If I fail, Limbu, you know what\nyou are to do,\" he shouted above\nthe roar of the voices.\nOnce more Limbu felt the edge of\nhis kukri, but there was no smile\non his face this time as he glanced\nat Diana Lindsay. \u25a0\nNow the two gigantic men moved\ntoward each other. But a few yards\nfrom Gray The Cobra bent down\nand drove the stabbing point of a\nlong knife into the floor of the\narena. He rubbed his great hands\nand forearms with send.\n\"Said I not,\" jeered Gray, \"that\nthou wert afraid? Thou needest a\nknife to give thee courage!\"\n\"I handle not the flesh of a dead\ndog!\" retorted Alam Khan furiously. \"I will cut' it off thee\u2014even\nthough the steel is good steel!\"\nAnd now they were at it. two\ngreat men stripped to the waist,\nfacing each other\u2014half crouching,\neyes watching eyes, their left legs\nthrust backwards, buttress-wise.\nTwo pairs of brown hands, with\ntensely curved fingers, felt the air\nwarily as they groped for a first\nhold\u2014like men in a dark room\ngropng for the knfe of an assassin.\nSave for this slow movement, the\ntwo adversaries might have been a\ngroup of bronze and marble statuary. Even the skin shadows cast\nby their bulging muscles moved not\nthe fraction of an inch.\nA si-uind like two whips being\ncracked. . . .\nGray's hands had smacked downwards on to The Cobra's huge wrists,\nlocking like steel bands.\nWith a savage grunt. The Cobra\ngave a violent upward movement\nwith his arms, striving to throw off\nColln's grip. And failed.\nGray's great muscles rippled and\ntightened as he tugged the Hill-\nman towards him with a short,\nquick pull. He was trying for a\ncross-leg throw, hoping that the\nman's great weight would date him\nin the fall.\nBut The Cobra, with three hundred and forty Frontier wrestling\nvictories to his credit, was too quck\nfor him. Forcing his hands outwards,\nhe drew Gray towards him instead\nand the soldier, to avoid his arms\nbeing wrenched from their sockets.\nwa3 compelled to loose his hold on\nhis opponent's wrists. *\nThen, with adull thud, the two\nmen's arms clamped themselves\nabout each others' bodies at waist\nlevel. Gray, hts head turned sideways to avoid being blinded by The\nCobra's great beard, drove his left\nshoulder had under his enemy's\narm pit.\nAnd there, for what seemed interminable, slow-ticking minutes, they\nstood\u2014locked, their skins shining\nwith starting Deads of perspiration.\nMONDAY\nThe awful vengeance of the blind\nGalbraith.\nHiss Spraggett\nHeads Forks Y.P.\nKin  Campb-sll  Is Vice-Pregi-\ndent;   Mtrjoric   Kidd\nS-Mrstary\nGRANP ?OBK8, B.C.. Vpt JO -\nSenior group of the TP_ of St\nJohn's United church held the annual nieettng st the home of Rev.\nM. \u00bb. Perley.\nMiss Florence Spraggett ret, elected president, Ken Campbell, rice\n\u25a0-resident, and Merjorle Kldd, eee-\nrttsry-tressurer.\nfteruMve members elected vere\nMr*. G li. Landon. Bernice Donald-\nson and William \"Edmund Eurer****\nIt -Tns decided to continue discussions after the Bunday eerrlces.\nMri* Klaus flcbeer of Trsll Is -rls-\nltlnt friends In the city\nMr snd Mrs. \u00ab. B Kldwell of\nLaurier. Wash. we\u2014 visitors In\nOrsnd Forks.\nMiss Jennie Marshsll, who hss\nbeen a guest ot Rev. and Mrs. M D.\nParley, returned to her home ln\nNew Westminster.\nMiss Ells Phillip*, visited st her\nhome In Neleon.\nChester Hutton his left for Vancouver.\nMrs. T. Wllllsmson left for Nelson\nto attend the convention of the\nCatholic Women's league.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Blever and rrnwe\ndaughter Oersldlne. of Spokane motored to Orand Forks end sre .n\u2014,tt\not   Mrs.   Nevers   mother,   Mrs.   t.\nI\nApraggct\nMiss Eleanor Ersklne of Rossland\nIs a guest, of Mrs. W. Eureby.\nMiss Louise McPherson Is spending\na short holldsy with relstlves ln\nVsncouver.\nRobert. Kldd has returned from\nCalgary.\nMrs. H. Llahtfoote has returned\nfrom a few deys visit with friends\nli- Eholt.\n\u2022* Mr snd Mrs. Woodhouse nnd\n|child_en lefi 'or canal tlats to visit\n] with Mrs. V.'oodhouse's slirter, Mrs.\niBaum.\nMrs F Gordon has returned from\nNelson. Bhe was accompanied by\nher young grand-daughter, Pat Cur-\nren.\nPASSMORE MEN\nGET WORK\nPASSMORE, BC. Sep* 30\u2014Members of a working party had a busy\nHme for s week when they built the\nroit house on \"The Plaoe\" for Mrs\nWhitman. It It much appreciated\nand already doing good -service, Thoee\nworking were Mr White, E. T. Coleman, W Beaton, o Soncey, F Bou-\ncey. F Soucey, F Moore, P. A. Bmlth,\nCyril Thornber\nMiss Hanna and Miss Iltlngsworth\nof the Sunday School van were visitors here.\nMrs. W. R. Perry and Miss B, Perry were visitors to Valllcan.\nHarry Saunders visited their rsnch\nand  enjoyed  some  good  fishing.\nTerry toung was a visitor here\nsnd returned home to Nakusp ac-\nrompnnlefl by Mrs Young who hsd\nbeen  a  visitor here.\nOen* Hlrd wss a business visitor\nhrrr.  i-;ulng  fire  permits.\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  S   .05\nBy carrier, per week     _5\nBy carrier, per year,   13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month, 60c;\nthree months, $1.80: six months.\n$3.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited states and Great Britain, one month. 75c: six months,\nH00; one year, $7.50.\nForeign countries, r'.her than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\niii-Miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiliilliil\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\n11c a line\nMinimum 2 llnet\n2 Unas, onca  $ -2\n3 llnet, onca     -13\n4 lines, onca     At\n2 llnet, 6 timet    JS\n3 llnet, 6 timet 1.32\n4 llnet,6tlmes  1.76\n2 lines, 1 month  2.86\n3 lines, 1 month  4-ffl\n4 lines, 1 month  6.72\nAll above lett 10% for prompt\npayment\niiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiii\nAdvertiser! who desire may\nhave replies addressed to a box\nat the Nelson Daily News and\nforwarded daily to their address. A charge of 10 cents is\nmade for this service. In this\ncase add four words (Box \t\nDaily News) to the count for\nthe number of words.\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISING\nThe Nelson Daily News endeavors to print only truthful classified advertising and will appreciate having its attention called\nto any advertising not conforming to the highest standards of\nhonesty.\nOut-of-town subscribers vho\nwish to answer advertisements\nin which only the telephone\nnumber of the advertiser is\ngiiren, may mail their replies to\nthe Nelson Daily News, and they\nwill ba communicated to the\nadvertiser.\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Ads bring\nquick results \u2014 try\none.\nPersonal\nEc-terns Itch Piles Ulcers. Try Oeo Lee's\nChina Reined; at Hudson's Ba; Co\n  '3903)\nHelp Wanted\nEXPERIENCED OIRL TO A8SI8T\nwith housework shd baby, sleep\nout. Apply statine references and\nsslary expected. Box 4143, Dally\nNewt.     (4148)\nOIRL FOR OENERAI, HOUSEWORK.\nBox 855, or phone 588R,        (41091\nSituations Wanted\nTOUNO MAN DESIREB WORK.\nKnowledge of stenography. Some\noffloe experience. Qualified First\nAid man. willing to do part time\nmsnual labor, will so anywhere.\nO, R, prampton, R.RJ.        (41101\nRoom and Board\nU.B.C. OIRL STUDENT. REFINED\nquiet home. Excellent, food. University district. Mrs. P, Aehwell,\n4126-16th Ave,, w. Vancouver,\n  (40M)\nFor Rent-Houses, Etc.\nFOUR POOM FURNISHED HOUSE.\nFall 8t. 838. Also furnished store\non corner Vernon tt HaU. Apply\nMrs. E. Godwin. Phone 604X.\n  (3979)\nUNFURNISHED   BUNGALOW,    FIVE\nrooma, redecorated, wired for electric   range,   furnace,  garage\nIn. Pf\nclose I\nPhone 20.\n(40.81\nFOR RENT, TWO AND FOUR\nroomed furnished apartmenta.\nPhone   69973, (4141)\nTHE PLOYER RANCH NEAR 9 MtLE\nCreek.   Pend  d'Orellle.  Low  rent.\nImmediate     possession.     App\ncastle,   prultvale.     (41!\nMODERN BUNGALOW, WITH GAR-\nage. Well located. Vacant Oct. 7th.\nPhone 876R or 678R3. (41481\nWILL FURNISHED SIX ROOMED\nhouse on Edgewood avenue, $35.00.\nChss. f. McHsrdy, (4088)\nNEW MODERN 5-ROOM BUNGA-\nlow. three blocks from school.\nPhone 777L3. (4079)\n7 ROOM HOUSE AND TWO FOUR\nroom houses close In. Apply D-\nMsgllo,   phone   808L. (3732)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms, piano, 524 Latimer St.\n(40991\nFURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING\nrooma tor rent. Annablt Block.\n , (3904)\nFURN.    OR    UNFURN.    APTS.    BY\nweek or montb. Medical Arts Bldg.\n (3903)\nFUR.     ROOMS.    STEAM     HEATED,\nshower, terms mod. Can. Legion.\n(3908)\nFURN   COTTAGE. 5  RM.  MODERN.\nV, mile from terry. Ph. 389R4.\n (4136)\nBMALL FURNISHED HOUSE. APPLY\n(4113)\nBMALL FURN\n420  Mill   St.\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful Modem\nFrlgldalre equipped suites   (3907)\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE\nfor rent, Stirling Hotel,      (3908)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nVANCOUVER, 8 ROOM HOUSE,\nfurnished, value 8800, exchange (or\namall home and acreage on lake.\nBox 4086. Dally Newt. (4096)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 SMALL    HOUSE    OR\nhousekeeping    roomt.   Close    ln.\nPhone  618T. (4136)\nLJ\nHOLD ON!\n0^0\nAre You Reading the\nCLASSIFIED\nPAGE\nDAILY?\nIf not\u2014Start Now!\nREAD THEM \u2014 USE THEM \u2014 IT PAYS\nFor Service Phone |ean Robertson at\n1 44\nOut of Town Readers\u2014Prompt Attention Given\nto Mail Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLargest in the Interior\nUSED MORE READ MORE\nFor Sale\nSTORE HXTURES FOR SALE. 4\ndrawer cash register, large safe,\ncounters, tsbles, adding machine.\nRemington typewriter, ofrice desk,\nstands, 24 drawer notion show\ncase.    Real    bsrgatne.    Box    629,\n_Nelson._B.__C. ._ (4097)\nDROP HEAD SINGERS FROM 815\nand up, terms S3 per month, singer sewing Machine company.\n I404B*\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo.,  Ltd. (3903)\nProperty for Sale\n28 ACRES. S CULTIVATED, 14 TIM-\nber. cood soil, water for irrigation 40 fruit trees, heavy crop,\nvegetables, lake frontage, & room\nhouse, 8 outbuildings, school 1\nmile, town 3 miles. S1860. H. E.\nDill.   608   Ward   St (4117)\nVERY PROMISING OOLD MINE FOR\nsale. Lots of ore. Might lease to\nresponsible men. Gx:_ camp. Box\n384, Nelson, B. C. (4101_>\nLAND. LARGE OR SMALL BLOCKS.\nPlenty water. Reasonable terms.\nH. B. Landis, Robson, B. C.\n(4138)\nCITY    HOMES.    BUILDING    LOTS,\nfarm property from 8800 to 85000\ntor sale. H. E. Dill, 808 Ward St.\n(4118)\nLive Stock Wanted\nYOUNG COW. EITHER FRESH OR\nto freshen shortly. State age and\nprice. Box 4142, Dally News.\n(4142)\nBROKEN HILL, Rhodesia ICP). \u2014\nGeologist* have confirmed an Important gold atrike and traced lt for\n30 mllea with various vsluee.\nPlants, Bulbs, Seeds\nH.   KITCHENER.   MOUNTAIN   BTA-\ntlon Gardens, Fall planting. Peonies In red, white and pink, 3 tor\n81. English Iris and Darwin Tullos.\n(4130)\nPLANT SALE\nTo   Nurterymen   tnd   Othtrt\nRequiring Pltntt In Quantities\n70 varieties of choice named Iris\u2014100, $10.00; 1000 MM\nFollowing prices for 100 plants:\nDielytra Spectabilis $12.00\nCampanula Carpatlca    tM\nPolyanthus (mixed) 3.00\nPrimula Julison   10.00\nTrollius    10.00\nSweet  William,  Pink  or\nScarlet    3.00\nIncarvella Delavayi,\n1 year    6.00\n2 years 10.00\nSage    5.00\nPeonies (mixed)   12.00\nAdiantum Petatum  10.00\nArtemesla Lactiflora     8,00\nGeum, Mr. Bradshaw    8.00\nPyrethum Daisys (mixed)   6.00\nAuriculas     6.00\nPyrethum\nSplria, Queen Alexandra. 10.00\nSpirit  (mixed)       tM\nAlpine Plants (mixed)  10.00\nPansies     1.60\nW. H. MAWER\nHardy Plant Gardens\nNELSON. B.C.     14043)\nLost and Found\nLOST-BLACK AHD WHITE\nlittle girl's pet. Phone 439L\n,ND WHITE PUPPY,\n(41641\nIt you find a rat or a dog. .\npocketbook. Jewelry or fur or\nanything else of value, telephone\nThe Dally News. A \"Found* Ad\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou.  we wlll collect from th*\nMiscellaneous for Sale\n100,000 feet good uted pipe;\nall tlset.\nLARGE STOCK PIPE .\nFITTINGS, VALVES, ETC.\nEnquiries   Solicited\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n220 E. 1st Ave., Vancouver, B.C.\n(3840)\nWESPEACO PEAT M06B _\nfor poultry houses. Pratt's Poultry\nRegulator to start hens Isylng\nagain. Cel-O-Glaea. The Brackman-\nKer Mllllne CO.. Lid. (4149)\nBusiness Opportunlt\nONE OF THE SUCCESSFUL ..\nmost profitable Oenersl *\u2022*\u2014*\ndlsins stores ln West Kootenii\nsltusted in the bett prult an\nAgricultural district, with taetU.\nprospects to double the preteij\nbusiness. Terms Caah or approve\nSecurities. Addres* Box 4181, f\nNeira\n(4\nA MODERN 18 CABIN, CABJI\ncamp for sale Built only thnf\nyears at a cost of 813,000. \u2014\nowner will now sacrifice at 88\nto be paid 14000 eaeh with\nbalance on arranged terms at *\nA aure propoeltlon for the rlgfl\nparty. For further particular* ai\nply Box 4140, Dally News. '4140J\nFOR TWO YOUNO MEN IN OC\npaying   taxi   tranafer   buslneai\nsedan  care\u2014i  truck with 2 g.__\ncontracts. Box 4132, Dally  News!\n (413X\nLivestock for Sale\nPIGS,  8 WEEKS OLD. 88 1ACH.\"\nO, Shlell, Needles, B. C.\nMiscellaneous Wante!\nGOOD CLEAN  RAGS WANTED--A\npi?  pally  News  Office. t'stl\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S. F. A- E.\nMunicipal and Commercial Audit*.\nP. O. Box 1191, Nelaon. B. C\n (3909)\nAssayers\nE. w. WIDDOWSON. established 1900.\n80S Josephine St.. Nelson, B 0\n(3910)\nORENVII.LE    H.    ORIMWOOD.    618\nBaker gl... Nelson. Box 726.  [3911)\nKOOTENAY    LABORATORIES\nAssayers at  Chemists\nBox   1343 Trail.   BC\n(3912)\nBoat Livery\nBEST PETERBOROUGH OUTBOARD\nmotor _ row boats for hire by day\n\u2014Frank Seal. Bilfour, B.C. (3913)\nChiropodists\nDr. Mildred Slmonds Foot Speclslist\n405 Fernweil Bldg. Spokane,  waah\n  (39141\nChiropractors\nE.   M.   WARREN,   D.C.   613   BAKER\nSi Office. Phone 115. (3915)\nElectrical\nJ.  F. COATES\u2014The  Electrlo store.\nSupplies and Installations.\nPbone 766.                 P. O. Box 118\n (39171\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERT80N   REALTY  CO..   LT\nReal estate, lneurance, rente,\nAberdeen* block, Btlter St. '3931\nINSURE WITH T. D. ROSLING, L\nRoyal Bank Bldg. Our Client!\ninterests comes first. (388,\nR. W DAWSON. Real Estata l3\nsurance Rentals Next Hlppertd\nHardware. Baker street.        ,3933\nC.   D.   BLACKWOOD.   Insurance   _\nevery description. Real Et- Pb 9l\na  E.   DILL.   AUTO AND  FIRE  IS.\nsurance. Real Estate. 608 Ward 81\n  (3934T\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATL\nrentals, Insurance, Annable blocl\n_____ <393f\nUFE. FIRE _! AUTOMOBILE IN6U.._\nance. P.E. Poulln. ph. 70.   (39411\nCHAS F MCHARDY. INSURANCE-T\nReal Estate\u2014Phone   135.      (39381\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all claaaea of Metal work. Latll\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Orindlnl\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene weldlnl\nPhone 593.\n824 Vernon street\n (392'|\nEngineers and Surveyors ]\nA H  GREEN CO, LTD.  816 WAI\nBt. Phone 264. Nelson. B.C. (393\nFlorists\nDAFFODILS. NARCISSUS ALL VAR-\nletles grown at Cralgend. now on\naale from 35c to 60c a dozen, at\nthe NELSON FLOWER SHOPPE\nPhone  233  or  289R3. 13918)\nJOHNSON'S OREENH0U8EB. Phone\n342 Cut flowera potted plants\nand  floral   designs, (3919)\nHide Dealers\nDEALERS IN HIDES, JP   MORGAN.\n301 Baker St.. Nelson. B.C. (3930)\nMusical Tuition\nVIOLIN     AND     THEORY     PUPILS.\nMary Heddle. Phone 3UR2. (3885)\nUSE   THE   CLASSIFIED    IDS.\nF.  8.  PETERS\nMining  Engineer\nExamlnstlon operstlon and manag\nment of mines snd mineral\npropertiea. Rossland, B.C.\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014NELSON\nENGINEER  AND  SURVEYOR\n393\nBoyd   C.   Affleck.   Box   487.   NelK-\nLands. Mineral Claims. Wsterwor\netc. Surveys, Plans and Estlmat,\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'B SASH FACTORY. HARi\nwood merchant, 317 Baker ttrei\n (398\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE BUY. SELL AND EXCHANf\nmost   anything.   The   AtH.   (388\nLadles Rubbers and children's echo\nRubbers. Mrs. Radclltfe's.    ,393*\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McMam\nWHSRS.\nARS\nYOU\nGOIM'.\nMAGGIE?\nI'M GOING Ocrse\/NTOWN TO\nDO SOME MARKETING AND\nI'M GOING TO DRIVE MV '\nCUTE UTTLE ROADSTER\nALL BY MYSELF-\nTHE GUMPS\nDO YOU SOLEMNLY SWEAR\n%\njMWftIM\n*TH6C6URT-\nTHBCASSOF\nD\u00abrn*o\u00abs\nvs-\nGUMP\nCONYiNUtS-\nTH\u00abATTOfti>\u00abV\nPOR THE\nPLAINTIFF\n'IPYINfr TO\nPROVITHAT\nBIMAAAM\nALL THB\nADVAMCEC-\nTMATHELED\nWILLIE ON\nANO THEN\nDECEIVED HBJ-\nHISNEXT\n-A\/ITNISS IS\nTHETEUIPH0N6\nOPBUTOft-\n. KNowrr\nSOUNDS BAD-\nBUT DON'T\nWORRY-\n' EXPRTED\nTHW-\nTHiN YOU SWEAR THAT\nMR. 6t)MF> SHOWERBD\nMISS DE STROSS -MTH\nUNWANTED ATTENTIONS\nTHAT HE TBLBPHONiD\nHE* ALAAOST EVERY HOUR\nTHAT HE SENT CANDY\nAND POWERS gvg^y\ni i\nYlSSlft.\nAND YOU\nSHOULD HAVE\nHEARD THR\nTHINGS HE\nSAID OW THE\nPHOKJE-\n>0**____=a\n'mtU\nMB'\nMJME,\nMID\n_ KROUS\nOBJECTIONS\nPROM\nLAWYER\nSKIMP\nATOftNEV\nWILLIAM'S\nCONCLUDE.,\nWITH THI\nWITNESS\nAND\nTURNS HEft\nOVER TO\nTHE\n06PENSB\nFOR\nCROSS-\nEXAM1NATION.\nOF COURSE MR. GUMP\n^SfSSS.,^1*5 OSSTROSSWITH\nWITH HER-BUT TELL MB.HOVU\nDID YOU KNOW THEY WeKe\nUNWANTED > Dift <um -Zt*~\nHANG UP ON HIM?\n.*\u2022>*,\u25a0> SHE EVER SEND BACK\nAW\\?1HIS Pl-OWERS\nOR CANDY?\n 1040\n-THI NELSON  DAILY NEWS.  NELSON.  B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINO. SEPT. 21.  1W4-\nPAOI  NINE\nORLD LOOKS TO CANADA FOR\nWHEAT SUPPLIESTHISYEAR\nobson Says Market\nMost Promising\nin Years\n\u25a0LLS CANADIANS\n>URCHASE HOMES\nlys Is Way to Escape\nPenalty of New\nInflation\nBy ROGER W. BABSON\nlABSON PARK, Mass.. Sept. 20.\ntl* eyes of all Canada, during\nnext few weeks, will be focused\ncrop activity: and. in particular.\nthe course of wheat\u2014pricei and\nports. Constituting ,iearly one-\nrd of the Dominion's total ex-\nte, providing a livelihood for\nut one-quarter of the total popu-\non, and having a direct b ring\nthe finance of the federal gov-\nment through its ownership o? a\n|e carry-over, wheat affecta near-\nmry aspect of the country's\n\u25a0perity.\nNADA BENEFITS FROM\nRLD WHEAT 8HORTAGE\n.though early estimates of Do-\nilon wheat outpvt ran high. July\nAugust were disastrous for\nly western areas. The same dli-\nts that have been so hard hit in\nvlous droughts are suffering and\nnera find their situation acute in\nje sections. Unofficial estimate!\nthe wheat harvest are now rang-\nfrou only 258.000.000 bushels to\n,000,000 bushels. Normally con-\nMrs in the Dominic use about\n000,000 bushels per year. Hence,\nwheat supply available for ex-\nt this year, including the carry-\nr, will be about 357,000,000 bush-\n-sllghtly less than ' ot yeer.\nianada occupies a strategic posl-\nn In tha world crop market at\nwent Your country and Argon-\na aro the only two with \u2022 aur-\nn of wheat available for export.\nla estimated that the European\nrvest. outside of Russia, wlll ba\n.000.000 bushels loss than last\nir. Thus, Canada wlll probably\nMrt about 280,000,000 bushels\nI season. Thli ll thl moit prom-\ntg outlook In yean, especially\nM Canada's export quota under\nworld wheat agreement before\nfireaent abnormal conditions\noped was limited to 260,000,-\nbushels. Last year's export\nires totalled 195,000,000 bushels.\nIM INCOME RISING\n[ready Canada is benefiting from\nihort crop! south of the bor(\" r.\nonly is the United States out of\nrunning as an exporter of wheat\nother gains, but she is being\nltd to import for her own con-\nption. Within the Dast few weeks\nr 1,000.000 bushels of \"Durum\"\nsat have crossed the border to\nit the shortage in thia variety,\nprice of \"Durum\" ii high enough\nmake shipments profitable for\nlada ln spite of the tariff bar-\na. Moreover, there is a shortage\need In the statei and millions of\ni\u2014 worth of hay, oats, and other\nSer must be brought in from\nlada.\nAccordingly, what ordinarily\nould have baen a poor crop yoar\ntha annals of tho Dominion la\nIng translated Into surprisingly\nltd returna. A favorabla roduc-\non of carry-over totals ia In\nght, which wlll bring further ad-\ninces In prices during the next\n)\u00abr, Currant prlcea around 85\ninta par bushel ara only slightly\nelow thl high for tho yeir. Thli\nomparei with a scant 70 cents latt\nleptembor and 39 cents at the de-\niresslon low In December of 1932.\nIn the basis of tho price rise, tho\n:otal farm Income ahould ba oon-\nilderably hlohar thli yaar.\nANADIAN FARMER CHIEF\nAINER IN 1(34\nDairy producta\u2014output and ex-\norts\u2014have been luitalned at favor-\nble levels to date. Although prices\nlave not reached unusually high\nevels the trend Is definitely upward. Over the past year quotations\nOr all farm product! have advanced\n3 per cent and are now the highest\nilnce 1931. Moreover, this increase\nn farm Income means an increase\nn farmen' purchasing power since\nhe articles he has to b- have advanced only 7 per cent. Thus, the\nlarmer has been the chief gainer in\nhe past year. In the states the in-\nleased rost of manufacturing tinier the NRA has offset to a large\nextent the Increase in purchasing\npower as a result of the drought\ntnd government efforts.\nNaturally the drought Is hard on\nthe farmers whose crops 1. vo been\nmined. Drought conditions have become chronic in large areas of the\nprairies. Bad harvests for the past\nsix years ln southern Saskatchewan.\nManitoba, and Alberta have worked\nhardships. The government has\nplant to move about 45,000 families\nout of ths stricken areas into the\nnorth. For those remaining, steps\nwill be taken to refertilisc the land,\nand ln the meantime, feed will be\ntransported by the railways at two-\nthirds the normal rate. Further help\nfor tilt fanner has been assured in\nrecent months through passage of\nthe Natural Products Marketing act,\nthe Farmers' Creditors Arrangement\nact tnd the amendment to the Canadian Farm Loan act. These three\nact! may be called Canada's \"New\nDeal\" legislation.\nWHAT ABOUT INFLATION?\nTo help finance Its varioua re\nlief measures, the government la\ntaking advantage of Iti power\nconferred by l\u00bbt session's amen-\nmint to tho Dominion Notes act\nby Issuing lOmo $20,000,000 of currency against 25 pet oent gold support. Immediately whisperings of\nInflation aro being heard. In every\nrcader'a mind then Is probably\nthe question: \"How can I protect\nmyself agalnit poulble Inflation?\"\nAlthough Canada'! proposal of\nnot! Issuance It io fir very moderate, I may well anawer thit quutlon aa I have for my readers In\ntho states\u2014\"Buy a amall home\nwith land enough for a good vegetable garden, and raise a family\nOf iplrltuilly-mlnded, hiilthy, Industrious, and Intelligent children.\"\nStudies of the course of radical\ninflation in European countries\nahow beyond doubt that ownen of\nhomes and small farms weathered\nthe upheaval most successfully. Of\ncourse, common stocks would rapidly appreciate in price but there\nis something instinctive ln humanity\nwhich forces men to turn to land,\nbuildings, and other retl property\nin times of violent financial storm.\nHence, look around a bit for an attractive form or home. They are the\n\"cyclone cellar!\" of an inflationary\nperiod! Canada'! excellent position\nIn the world wheat markets this\nyear will prevent widespread agitation for radical inflation because\nhistory shows that farm sections\nrather than Industrial areas are usually the promotcn of unsound\nmoney.\n(Copyright,   1934.   Publishers\nFinancial Bureau).\n$453,425 PAID\nBY WHEAT POOL\nCALGARY, Sept. so (CP)\u2014Tho Alberta treasury was $435,425 today,\nrepresenting the third annual payment from the Alberta wheat poftl\non Its 1929 crop over-payment guarantee.\nThe payment was made from central head' quarters here and announced today by R. D. Purdy,\nman&eer.\nThe guarantee on the 1939 crop\nwas In excess of $5,000,000, lt wu\nreported when the agreement wu\nreached between the government and\nthe pool.\nMarket and Mining News\nMetal Markets\nNEW TORX, Sept. M (API\u2014Copper quiet; electrolytic epot and future, blue eagle 000.\nTin steady: spot snd nearby 61.60\nto 61.00: future 61.60.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead stesdy: apot New Tork 910;\nSast fit, i\/nils 3.55.\nZlno dull: Eaat St. i\/mla spot\nand future 4.00.\nAluminum 20.00 to 38.30.\nAntimony, spot 0.00.\nBar sliver steady, unchanged at\n491-3.\nAt London\u2014Copper, atandard spot\n\u00a327 12s td: future \u00a397 17s id: electrolytic, spot [30 los:  future tai.\nTin, apot 1260 12a Od; future\n\u00a3228 ts.\nLoad, apot no 10s; future \u00a310\n12s 6d.\nZlne. spot {12 10s; future \u00a312\n12s \u00abd.\nBsr   silver   firm,   1-is   higher   st\nB.C COAL OUTPUT\nUP 10 PER CENT\nVICTORIA, Sept. 30 (AP)\u2014Coal\nproduction In British Columbia for\nAugust showed an increase of 10,000\ntons over the corresponding month\nof lut year, the department of\nmines announced today, the figured\nbeing 133,486 tons at compared with\n110.639 tons a year ago.\nThe output for Vancouver island\nwu 45.911 tons, 10,000 tons less\nthan August, 1933. Nlcola-Prlhceton\nproduced 10,803 tons, which wu an\nincrease of 1700 tons over the same\nmonth a year ago, while Kast Kootensy, with 66,573 tons, showed an\nIncrease of more than 20.000 tons\nover August a year ago.\nMichel produced 1295 tons of\ncoke.\nNEW COMPANY IS\nINCORPORATED\nPROFIT-TAKERS\nCUT NX RALLY\nNEW TOBK, Sept. 20 (AP)\u2014Bo-\ncovery ln stocks closed down today\nln a market lacking ln speculative\nappeal.\nAfter two days of advanoe, tho\ntemptation was atrong for traders\nto accept profits unttl the .'hare list\nshowed mora convincing evidence ot\na definite nversil of the recent\ndownlrend. Final prlcea were Irregularly higher. Turnover dropped\nto 489,900 shsres.\nVICTOBIA, sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Abeo\nMines Ltd., N.P.I,, with a capital\not gl ,600,000 divided Into 3,000,000\naharea and head office In Vanoouver,\nwaa incorporated during the week.\nTha company haa taken over a\ngroup of 12 clalma on Herbert Arm,\nnear clacquot, known aa the Mary\nMcQullton group, from tbe Waverley\nTanlger Mlnea, Ltd., the latter company receiving i.200,ooo sharea ln\nthe new enterprise.\nSubscribers of tbe Abco ara named\naa Elmore Meredith, barrister;\nThomaa 8. Dixon, merchant, Oeorge\nM. Madden, lumberman and Ruasell R. Walker, broker all of Vancouver.\nIncorporations   Included:\nWestern Nickel corporation, Ltd.,\n8100,000, Vancouver.\nPOUND LOWER\nSecurities Rally\nNEW TORK. Sept. 20 (At)\u2014O. S.\ngovernment securities led another\nrally In the bond market today and\ntrading expanded appreciably. Ralls\ngained ona to three polnta.\nThe foreign list held firm.\nDominion Live Stock\nWINNIPEG, Sept 20 (CP).-Re-\nceipts: Cattle 690; calves 229; hogs\n(20; sheep 120.\nSteers, up to 1050 lbs. good and\nchoice $3 to $4.90.\nSteers, over 1090 lbs. good and\nchoice $3 to $4.29.\nHeifers, good tnd choice $2.75 to\n$3.50.\nFed calves, good \u00bbnd choice $4.50\nto $5.50.\nCows, good, $1.75 to $2.\nMilkers and springers $10 to $35.\nVeal calves, good and choice $3\nto $4.90.\nHogs: Select bacon $1 per head\npremium; bacon $7.29; butchers $1\nper head discount; heavy $6.79; extra heavy $5.50; sows, No. 1 $5.50.\nLambs: Good handyweight $4.50\nto $4.75; good heavies $3.50 to $3.75.\nSheep: Good heavies. $1.25; good\nhandyweight $1.50 to $1.75.\nEASTERN SALES\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014The\npound continued to decline on Montreal currency exchanges today. The\nUnited states dollar and Prench\nfranc remained unchanged. Sterling\nwaa off one cent at K.84-H while\nthe United States dollar and French\nfranc were quoted at three per cent\ndiscount and 6.48 centa respectively.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014British snd foreign exchange In relation\nto the Canadian dollar aa compiled\nby tho Roysl sank of Canada, closed\ntoday as follows:\nArgentina, peao      .2SB8\nAustralia   pound       8.8547\nAustrls. schilling - I8S3\nBelgium,  balga   , 2309\nChina, Hong Kon_ dollars  3867\nDenmark, krone      -2166\nFrance,   franc    0848\nGermany,   reichsmark       .3830\nOreat Britain, pound  4.8439\nHolland,   florin\nHungary,  pengo\nIndia, rupee \t\nItaly,   lire   \t\nJapan, yen\n\" llano\n.2928\n.3682\n.0843\n_001\nNew Zealand, pound  3.8702\nNorway,   krone       -438\nPoland,  alotl   - 1868\nSouth Afrles. pound  48367\nSweden,   krone       2500\nSwitzerland,   franc    3208\nUnited   Stataa,   dollar,   3   per   cent\ndiscount.\nTORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP) .-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Toronto\nstock exchange industrial section:\n350 Abitibi: 834 Braxilian; 450 Brew\n& Dist; 222 CPR; 373 Ford; 1647\nNickel; 260 M. Harris; 230 Walkers.\nMONTREAL, Sept 20 (CP). -\nSalea of 100 or more ihares on the\nMontreal stock exchange today: 1695\nBraz; 1020 CPR: 195 Cockshutt; 420\nDom Bridge; 600 Nickel; 330 Nat\nBrew; 411 Shawinlgan.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 20 (AP).-\nWheat, No. 1 nor., 1.15-A to 1.19V\u00ab.\nNo. 1 red durum 1.13V* to L14V4:\nold Sept 1.14; new Sept. 1.13*4; Dec.\nl.liy*; May 1.09%.\nCorn*. No. S yellow 77 to 77'\/*,.\nOata, No. 3 white 55-H. to 96%.\nFlax: No. 1, 1.87 to 1.96.\nFlour unchanged. Shipments 11,-\n767. Pure bran 21.50 to 22.00. Standing middlings 21.50 to 22.01.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (AP).\u2014Closing quotations: Brazilian Traction\n$1U4; Canadian Pacific T!3%; International Nickel $24**; Brit Amer\nTob \u00a36 *\/sd; Courtaulds 47a 4V*\u00bbd;\nDistillers 87s 6d; Hudson Bay 24s 3d;\nImperial Tobacco 129s: Mining Trust\nLtd. 2s 4-Ad; Rand Mines \u00a37; Rho-\ndeaian Anglo Am lis 6d; Rhokana\nCorp. \u00a34*A; Crowna \u00a312%; Springs\n\u00a37H; East Geduld \u00a38%; Rio Tlntos\n\u00a315**4; Vickers 9s 7ttd.\nBonds\u2014Canadian 4 per cer.t loan\n1953-58. \u00a3109'*; British IV, per cent\nConsols 111H: British 8*4 per cent\nwar loaia \u00a3105**i; British funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a3116***..\nCalgary Live Stock\nCALOART, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Recelpte\nyesterday. 467 cattle. 64 calves, 268\nhogs and 394 aheep and lambs.\nThe bulk of today's receipts were\non through billing. Lett overs were\ncleaned up at ateady prlcee. Hogs\nwere 10 cents stronger than on Tuesday, aelecta aelllng at 67.75, bacons\nat 17.26 and butchers at 16.76 otf\ntrucks. Good lambs aold at 14.60.\nCattls, common to medium butcher steers 11.60-12.60. Common to medium butcher heifers gl.50-t2.26.\nGood butoher cows (1.50 to 11.65.\nMedium oows 11.25 to 11.40. Oood\n.veal calves 62.60 to 83.00. Common\n! cslves 61.76 to 62.00.\nDow Jones Averages\n30  Industrials     89.35 up .01\n20 Rails    34.71  up .44\n20 Utilities  19.21 up .05\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nfcU\nRoyal\nlochnagar\nOLD SCOTCH WHISKY\nJ ^^*~   **An Extraordinary Whisky Value '*\n20 Va oz. bottle - $3eT5\nDISTILLED*,.MATURED & DOTTLED IN SCOTLAND,\nA   P Consolidated\nAmsl   oil   \t\nBeaver Silver \t\nBradlan Mlnea\nBraiorne Gold\nBridge R Con\nB R X Oold\t\nCariboo Oold Q ..\nC I, E Corp \t\nCoast   Breweries   ..\nCom  Oil\t\nGold Belt\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the-Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n.08'.\n:SJ\n2.60\n14.60\n.10U\n.72\n1.28\n.70\n9.26\n.03\n.27\nHome  Oil         ~1\nInt  Coal 19',i\nMcDounal    Begur    ..     .02'\u00ab\nMcLeod   Oil         30\nMercury Oil ..   . \u25a0..     .11*\/,\nMerldlin   Mlnlg   ... .     .12\nModel   Oil         .B\nMornlni*:   Star    16\nNat  Silver         .03\nNicola Mlnea      MVi\nOkalta Oils      .06\nPioneer Oold   11.26\nPremier  Oold       1.31\nPremier   Border    00**_\nQuatelno           \u2014\nReno Oold      85\nTaylor  Bridge    33\nVanalta 11\nWayside - 09 li\n(1KB\n03'i\nAnaconda 101 \t\nAssociated Oil ...\nBayvlew     .091*\nB C Silver       \u2014\nB C Nickel     .79\nBig Missouri       _2\nCsn Rsnd       10\nCongress Gold ..\nCrows Nest Oil .\nDslhousle Mines\nDalhouale   Olla\nDentonia\t\nDevenlsh    \t\nHlghwood   Saroea\nRanchmen'a    \t\nPacalta    _\t\nSunshine        8.10\nGlacier   Creek\n.04'i\n.03(4\n.25 >J\n.41\nUVi\n.04\n.10\n.08\n.06'a\n2.70\n15.00\n.11\n.74\n1.35\n.75\n9.76\n.05\n.30\n.00\n.14\n.34\nM'i\n.tali\n.21\n.16\n.03 li\n.36\n.06\n12.00\n1.35\n.01\n.03\n.88\n.34\n.12\n.10\n.04\n.04\n.03\n1.05\n.73\n.33\n.14\n.35\n.00\n.03\n21\n11\n\u25a003 %\n.17\n.55\n.05 Vt\n.05\nDictator   \t\nDunwell\t\nEaslcreet\t\nPalrvlew    \t\nPabvsn    \t\nFreehold  Oil  \t\nOeo  Copper  \t\nGolconda\nOold  Mountsln\nOeo   River\nOrandvlew   \t\norange       \t\nOrull Wlhksne .\nHalda  oold   ....\nHediey  Amal   \t\nHercules Cons .\nHome Gold ....\nIndian Mines ...\nIndependence ...\nKoot Belle\n.0511\n.19\n.10\n.l7Vi\n.0014\n.07'i\n.30\n.26\nBl\nJAM\n.26 V i\n.07\n.05\n.31\n.03 \\\n.IS\",\n.OUi\n.01\nM\nKoot   Florence         .01\nLakevlew     01 '.'\u2022\nMar   Jon   Oil    08'i\nMerland   OH         -l'i\nMill  City  Oil   10\nMlnto  Gold    21\nMorton  Wolaey       .01\nNoble   Plve      .07\nNorgold    23\nPavilion          .47\nPend  Orellle     .66\nPorter Idaho  08U\nReward          .04\nRoyallte   Oil     13.60\nRufus   Argents * 01\nRutli   Hope\nSalmon Oold ..\nSllvercrest    \t\nSilverado    \t\nSilversmith ......\nSnowflake   \t\nTsylor Wind ...\nUnited Empire\nUnited Empire\n.021,\n.01 i\n.04\n.09\n.01\nJ)7\n.30\n.30\nUnited Oil    0411\nVldette Oold     1.70\nViking  Oold   07V4\nWaterloo        09V?\nWeverley   Teng    01\nWellington    Oltt\nWhitewater         .06\n.06\n20\n30\noou\n.30\n.02\n.37\n.08\n.07'i\n.33\n.03'i\n.14\n.63\n.01\",\n.01\u00ab\nm\n.07',',\n_r>\n.49\n.58\n.08 V4\n.05\n1400\n.01 Vi\n.03\n.25\n.02\n\u202209-V4\n\u25a0OlVi\n.40\n.32\n.32\n.05\n1.76\n.09 Vi\n.10\n.01 Vi\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria     \t\nAlgoma\t\nAmltv   \t\nAshley  Gold   \t\nBtrry Hollinger \t\nBaae Metals     \t\nBear  Exploration   _.\nBig Missouri \t\nBoblo  -. \t\nBrsdlan   \t\nBraiorne\t\nBridge  R  Exploration\nBrownlee    _ -\nCan Klrkland  \t\nCan Mslsrtle   _ ,\nCariboo Oold Quarta ...\nCaatle   Tretheway   \t\nCentral Manitoba \t\nCentral  Patricia _ _\nChlbougamou\t\nClerlcy   \t\nCoast Copper\nCobslt Contact  _\t\nColumarlo    .....\u00bb*.\t\nconarlum   \t\nCons M * 8 \t\nDome \t\nEldorado \t\nFalconbrldga    -\t\nGod's Lake  _\t\nGran-da   . \t\nHollinger    ....\nHowey    -\t\nHudson Bay -.\nInternational  Nickel ....\nKlrkland   Lake\t\nLake Maron   _\t\nLittle  Long   Lac    \t\nLake Bhore    67*0\n.02\n.06\n.01 Vi\ntt\nml--\n.87\nH\n.32\n.46\n2.70\n14.75\n~2Vi\nI\n1.30\ntS\n.Ml*\n1.13\n.13\n\u202203 V4\n9*0\n-3%\n\u202228 V?\n1.45\n180.60\n42.16\n2.33\n3.80\n2.16\n.50\n21.00\n1.25\n13.65\n23.75\n.73\n\u25a005 Vi\n6.60\nMclntyre -    44.60\norp\t\n.all  _.\t\nMcVlttie Grahamme\nMcwatters   Gold\nMacassa \t\nMaple Leaf\nMining Corj\nMoffatt Hall\nNlplaslng   \t\nNoranda\t\nParkhlll   \t\nPaymaster    -\t\nPend  Orellle   \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier   Oold\t\nReno Gold       \t\nSakooae     -\t\nSan Antonio   -\nSherrltt Gordon \t\n.49\n.40\n1.79\nXI\n1*5\n\u202204V4\n2.55\n40.00\n\u25a0S3\n.23 Vi\n.63\n11.75\n1.31\n.88\n.43\n8.50\n.54\nSlacoe        2.67\nSmelters   oold          th\nSouth Tlbiemont        .1114\nStadacona     33Vi\nSt.   Anthony          .60\nSudbury   Basin        1.42\nsylvanlte        2.85\nTeck  Hughes      4.40\nTowagemac 38\nVentures    -       -97\nWalte  Amulet   80\nWsvslde       .09%\nWhite   *agle    17Vi\nWright Hargeavea -     9.40\nOILS\nAcme    19\nMax   -       -91\nJTP Consolidated  09\nAssociated Oil         *13 ,\nBrit Amer Oil  - -...   13.87V4\nBaltae   Oil -        04\nCalmont        W'\/,\nChemical   Research         148\nDalhouale  OU          -25\nHome OU\nHomestead O snd Q \u2014 17'\nImperial   Oil             14.87'\ninternational pet*     28.12\nMerland ba\"-..''~-\"~~ZZ_~      '.22\nNordon   \t\nOil  Selections  \t\nOlga     -\t\nRoyallte OU  \t\nSarnla\nwalnwrlght     -\t\nBeatty  Broa  A  \u2014\t\nBell  Telephone   \t\nBrazilian\t\nBrewers and Dlstlllera\nCan Bread \t\nOan   Cement   \t\nCan car and Foundry\nCan Indus Alcohol\t\nCanada Dredge \t\nCan psc Railway \t\nCons   Bakeries  \t\nDistillers Seagrama \t\nDominion Storea \t\nFord of Canada A \t\nOoodyear   Tire    -\nImperial   Tobacco   \t\nMsssey   Harris   \t\nPage   Hersey    ...\nStandard Paving \t\nSteel of Canada \t\n.07\nftt\n13.75\n3*\n.     8\n. 118'A\n* a*\n.70\n2\n5*4\n: 2?1'\n: T4\n124\n10%\n3-Vi\n68\n75\n34\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAlegheny    114\nAl   Chemical     121\nAm Can    97%\nAm For Pow ... eii\nAm Ma It Fdy 13S\nAm smelt tt Re 34\",\nAm  Telephone IU\nAm Tobacco  .... 75\nAnaconda     ll_i\nAtchison     4944\nAuburn Mo  ..... 26V4\nBaldwin    7H\nBait   It   Ohio 15\".\nBendlx Av    12\nBeth   Steel     28Vi\nCanada Dry   1411\nCan Pacific  .   . 13V4\nCerro de Paaco 3714\nChes tt Ohio .... 43'i\nChrysler      32(*i\nCom & South lis\nOon  Gaa  N  T 36 li\ngorn   Prod       ... 61\nWright Pfd \u2014\nDupont     97\nElec   Pow   _**   Ll 4\nEast Kodak    95\nVie      UVi\nFord   English   .. \u2014\nFord  of  Can   . \u2014\nFirst  Na  Stores 61\nFreeport Tex ..... 24*4\nOen  Elec     18!i\nOen Foods   29>4\nOen   Motors   ... 28',\nOold Dust    1714\nGoodrich  94\u00ab\nOrsnby     6VS\nOrt North Pfd 14 >4\nOrt West Sugar 2814\nHowe sound .. 8\nIH\n12011\n97\n6\n33*i\n109 Vi\n74\nIl'i\n48 Vi\n24\n7>4\nwi\n27*14\n14Vi\n13 Vi\n36',\n41 '4\n31%\nl'i\n95%\n86\n3%\nlOVi\n29\n28'.\nj5\n28\n7V4\nCopper       Stt\n24%\ni\u00ab\n46Vi\n19\nI7\u00bbi\n27 Vi\nIf Si\nin\nMont ward      25%\nIns\nInt   Nickel\nInt Tel & Tel\nJewel    Tea    ..  .\nKenn Copper\t\nKresge  8  S\nKroeggrr * Toll\nLehn & Fink ..\nMilwaukee Pfd\nNash    Motors\nNat Dairy Prod\nN  Y Oentral ..\nPae Gaa __ Elec\nPack   Motora   ..\npenn  R  R  \t\nPhilips  Pete   ....\nPure oil \t\nRadio  Corp  \t\nRadio  Keith Or\nRem   Rand   \t\nRock Island \t\nShell Union \t\nSafeway  tSores\n8 Csl Edison ..\nsouth   pacific\nStan   Oil   ot   Cal\nStan OU of N J\nStewart   Warner\nStudebaker  \t\nTex Corp\t\nTex Gulf BUl 38\nUn Carbide     42\nUn Pscltlo     99\nUn OU ot Cal\nU  S   Pipe* ...\nU S ff.ubber ..\n\"   S  s*\u00abel  -\nSteel   .\nElectrlo\n.worth\nyellow Truck\n13%\nHli\n91 Vi\n14%\n8%\n22 Vi\n15V4\nTVS\n6V4\n2Vi\n18\n21?\n46\n11%\n17%\n33%\n43%\n6%\n3\n23\n16\n18>i\nIf,\n32\n18 >i\n_\u00bbY.\n18Vi\n17 Vi\n27\n13Vi\n3%\n24 Vi\n13%\n16\n20%\n14%\n3%\n31%\n15%\nJ%\n7%\n*6%\nn\n17%\n321\n42%\n3%\n33\n34%\n3%\n24%\n9%\n46%\n19\n17%\n27%\n13%\n3\n34%\n13%\nItt't\n30%\n14%\n3%\n22%\n16%\n7%\n.5%\n3Vi\n18',\n15\n40\n11%\n17%\n33%\n43%\n5%\n8\n33\n34%\n41%\n99\n16\n18%\n15%\n31%\n16\n30%\n47%\n3%\nDOMINION TO\nCHANGE LOANS\nWill Be Done at the\nProper Time, Says\nPlunkett\nVICTORIA, Sept. 20 (CP).\u2014\"The\nDominion government will reconstruct the whole loan system of the\ncountry, without repudiation, and\nat the proper time,\" in the opinion\nof D. B. Plunkett, M.P., Victoria. He\ncxpresed his views in an address\nlast night to ward one Conservatives.\n\"We are coming out of this depression naturally and honorably,\"\niie said. \"Do you know of any other\nnation of 10,000,000 people which\nhas done as well?\"\nUnder Prime Minister R. B. Bennett, the Conservative party had\npreserved the integrity of Canadian\ninstitutions in most trying times\nand had done nothing requiring\napology, he said. Stimulation of\nEmpire trade and correction of unfavorable trade balances were leading to steadily improving returns,\nshowing that recovery was on the\nway.\nINDUSTRIALS HIT\nBAR GOLD DOWN\nMONTREAL, Sept. 30 (CP)-Bar\ngold In London down three oents\nto 984.13 an ounce ln Canadian\nfunds; 140a 9d ln British funds.\nTba fixed 135 Waahlngton price\namounted to 933116 In Canadian.\nTEXTILE INDUSTRY\nWILL BE PROBED\nStevens Committee Already\nHas Spade Work Done\non Gathering Data\nTORONTO, Sept. 30 (CP)\u2014Profit-\ntaking on Wednesday's advance' unsettled the Industrial section of the\nToronto exchange today and the\nUst closed with 21 gains and 18\nrecessions-\nConsolidated Smelters advanced\n.V, at 130',. utilities were firm,\nMontreal power adding *% and united Fuel Pfd \\,. Braslllan, Bell Telephone and C. P. R. eased fractions.\nWestons common added % to its\nprevious price. Canada Malting dropped li!i to _*\\'i and Walkers common %,\nOTTAWA. Sept. 30 (CP)\u2014The textile Industry will be Investigated\nthoroughly by the 8teven\u00bb price\nspreads and mass buying commission, lt was stated ln official sources\nhere today. Accountants and other\nexperts have been gathering data\non conditions in the textile business\nfor two months or more as part\nof the spade work which Is under\nway preliminary to the first sitting\nof the Inquiry as a commission 11\nwaa added.\nMNES ARE NICKED\nBYPROFIT-TAKING\nPRICES IIP\nAT WINNIPEG\nExport Demand Helps;\nHedging Cuts in\non Gains\nWINNIPEG,  Sept.  \u00bb   (CSP)\u2014*Uo*J\nCanadian export aalea and -wlda gatne\nat Liverpool today ran Winnipeg\ngrain exchange wheat futures up\nfor net gains of *%\u2022'\/, cent.\nTop levels wera not maintained\nbut the close waa firm with October wheat at 83Vt, December at\n8:1', and Msy at 87% centa. Maximum gains were about 114 oanta, but\na light selling flurry near tha cloaa\npared the advance.\nHedging pressure accounted tor\nmost ot the aelllng orders. Trading\nreached only moderate volume.\nTORONTO. Sept. SO (CP)\u2014Mining\nshares wilted under profit t.iklng\non the Toronto exchange today. The\nturnover was close to 900,000 shares.\nTeck Hughes In sales of 50.000\nsharea eased 35 cents to 4.45; Dome\nlost 80; Braiorne 55; Hollinger 30;\nand Mclntyre so cents.\nGod's Lake lost 0 cents snd Canadian Malartic. 4. B. R. X. gained\n4 and Little Long Lac 29.\nCHICAGO GRAIN\nPRICES HIGHER\nExport of Canadian Wheat Is\nStrengthening Feature\nMontreal Unsteady\nMONTREAL, Sept. 90 (CP)\u2014Issues on the Montnal atock exchange\npursued an Irregular courae ln today's session.\nHoUlnger finished at 90.80, off 80\ncents, Nickel eased '\/, at 94, Brazilian waa ig, lower at 10%. Canadian industrial Alcohol \"B\" gained\na full point at 98. Bell Telephone\nappeared at 11814 tip 2'A Canadian\ncar rose lit to 13'\/,.\nLowes of a point wera auffered\nby Bank of commerce at 184 and\nRoyal Bank at 162.\nSalea 0849, bonda 818,800.\nCastings Ready for\nYankee Girl Mill\nWork oontlnuee to progresa on the\nconstruction of the Tankee Olrl\nmill. Tha building Is well ahead and\nthe Iron castings for the mineral\naepsratlon plnat have been completed by the Nelson Iron Works\nand are now ready for ahipment.\nEGGS AND SPUDS\nDOWN\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Sept, 90 \u2014 Mining\nsharea aold on the Vanoouver atock\nexchange today:\nListed: Beaver S 8300; Bradlan\n910: Braiorne, 100; B R Con SSOO;\nB R Ex 98,800; Cariboo 400; Meridian 14.500; Nicola 10,500; Pioneer\n900; premier aold 9350; Reno 600;\nSally 100; Taylor B 8100; Vanalta\n2000; Wayside 4500,\nCurb\u2014Bayvlew 1000; B C Nlcktl\n1500; B C Silver loo; Big MJas 1300;\nCongress 600: Dentonia 600; Dictator\n1500; Dunwell 800: olacler Creek\n2000; Orange 3900; Hediey Amal 900;\nHercules 6500; Koot B 100; Mlnto\n5500; Morton 9000; Nobla Five 9900;\nNorgold 6100; Pend O 500; Porter\nIdaho 3000; Salmon 9300; Reward\n3000; Taylor w 1150; united Empire\n13,700; vldette 860; Viking 10O0:\nwaverley 9000: Whit* Eagla 1000;\nSnowflake 10,000.\nMONTRBAL. Sept. 90 (CP)-Esgs\nand potatoes declined on the Montreal produce and dairy market today.\nEgga, graded A-large, 98; A-medlum. 98; B. atock, 91: C. 19 1-9.\nCheeae, Ontario colored\". 10H;\nQuebecs, 9 1-9.\nButter, No. l fresh. 19H.       ,\nPotatoes, New Quebecs. 45: old\nstock, 98 par 80-pound sack.\nDyking Company\nIs Incorporated\nNotice of incorporation of the\nCreston Dyking Co., Ltd., which has\njust recently commenced work on\nthe reclaiming of land on the Creston flats, appears in the last issue of\nthe British Columbia Gazette.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK, Sept. 10 (API\u2014Sterling exchange heavy at \u00bb409% for\n60-day bllla, and at 84.99% for demand; Canadian dollars SVs per\ncent premium: frano 6.67',i cents:\nlire 8.6814 cents; Uruguay 81.90\ncents.\nOats Advance 30\nCents, Two Weeks\nRolled oata waa marked up SO\ncents per 80-pound sack during the\npast week on the wholesale market.\nA 10-cent advance was recorded the\nprevious week.\nMACS MOVE\nVERNON, B.C., Sept. 20 (CP).\u2014\nMcintosh Reds are moving In good\nvolume from the Okanagan and\nhigher prlcea ara. under consideration, state members of the tree\nfruit board.\nCHICAGO, Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Broader\nbuying power went hand In hand\nwith higher prices for grains today\nas a result largely of rlght-sbout-\nfaco action of European marketa.\nHeavy export of Canadian wheat\nand unfavorable weather condltlona\nalso was a strengthening influence.\nwheat cloeed firm, *,', to l\u00bbi\nhigher: corn, IVi to Hi up: oats,\ni\\ to l'\/\u00ab advanced and provisions\nunchanged to 5 centa higher.\nRENO OFF TWO\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 90 (CP) \u2014\nBridge River Exploration advanced\n714 to 79 on the Vancuover atock\nexchange today and Bradlan gained\n10 at 9.60 but the rest of the mines\nwere weak. Pioneer Gold led the decline with a loss ot 35 at 11.95 and\npremier waso ft 10 at 1.91.\nReno wss off 2 at 85, Sunshine\ndropped IS to 8.10 and loeaea of\nfractions to a oent were marked\nagainst Meridian, Wayalde and\nOrange. Norgold loat IV, at 98.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG. Sept. 90 (OP)\u2014Grain\nquotations*.\nOpen High Low Cloae\nWheat:\nOct    89% 8311 8914 83',\nDec    83 83% 89% fell\nMay    ....   87'i 88% 8714 87%\nOata:\nOct    48 48% 48 4614\nDec    44% 46% 44% 44%\nMay        46 46% 46 46',\nBarley:\nOct    87 68 87 , 8714\nLee    87% 58% 6\u00abH fl%\nMay    68% 60% 68% 69%\nOct.\"!  146 147S4 148 146%\nDec  147% \\49<4 149% 148\nMSy   155% 156% 184% 185\nRye:\n& 77. U   \u00a3  H   Sh\nMay        69        70%     68\u00ab     89%\nCash prices:\nWheat: No. 1 hard 84%; HO. 1\nnor. 82%: No. 1 nor. 70; Ho. Inoj.\n76\u00bbj; No. 4 nor. 74; Ho. I tt: He. (.\n65',(,; feed 91V,: durum 83%: Ho. 1\nA.R.W. 77%; track 82H.\nCOMMUNITY\nWELFARE\n\u2666\u2022\u2022\nis his iidensL\nThe manager of the Imperial Bank of aoa(UBMnd!to-osirco\u00bb\nmoahr is aa interested u yon are in the prosperous grow* of jsjr\ncommunity. Back of hia community building endeavours are the\ncombined reaonicea and experience of evety Branch of the Bank, u\nIMPERIAL BANK OF (fllfflM\nHEflDOrfKX\nTORONTO\nNELSON       .       .       .       W. R. GRUBBE, Manager\nBranches at Revelatoke; Cranbrook, Fernie.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell Telephone   118\nBndllan        10%\nB  C  power  A   -  26%\nB C power B   a\nBuilding Producta   91\nCan Car _ Foundry  5:\nCanada  Cement  .,  6\nCan  Cement  Pfd  38\nCan Oenerai Electric   160\nCan  cvpsum     4%\nCan lnd Al A_  \u2022\nCan md Al B  7%\nCan   Psc  Railway  ,18\nCan Steamers    1%\nCockshutt   Plow     6%\nCons M *  S  130%\nDominion Bridge   30\nDominion Textile  -  80\nOen  Steel  Wares  ..._  S1\nHamilton Bridge  4\nint Nickel      93\nMassey Harrla  \u00a7\nMontreal Power   32\nNotional  Brewing \u2014  * }7V\nNational  steel  Car    12*\nPower Corporation   _.- t)\nQuebec   Power  16\nShawlnlgan    \u2014 _ 18%\nSteel  of  Canada  34\nC1RBS\nBrew <t Dist \u201e \u2014 - .TO\nBrit Amar Oil     18%\nCanuck Dollar Up\nNEW TORK. Sept. 20 (CP)\u2014Sterl-\ning weakened on foreign exchsngea\ntoday   to   closif at  |4.99!i.   oft   1%\nCan  celaneae    14%\nCanada Dredge H  31\nCan Vlckers  1%\nCan  Wineries    .. *  8%\nCosgravc  Breweries  8\nDistillers  Seagram     14'i\nDominion Tar  9%\nHome  Oil        80\nImperial   Oil      U%\nImperial  Tobscco  Can    101\u00ab\nInternational Nickel  28Vj\nMcColl  Prontenac   13%\nNoranda ~  891.\nPage   Hersey     68\nBANKS\nCanadlenne\nCommerce\nDominion\nImperial    .\nMontresl\nNova  Scotia\n195\n. 155\n185\n174\n199\n. 246\nRoyal    _  182%\nToronto\nMIHlEU-ANEOrS\nDominion stores\nFord Canada A\nOoodyear Tire ..\nLaura Secord ...\nLoblaw Groceries\nWest Can plour\nWalker\n203%\n15%\n19%\n   ,lj%\nBiiMrtw\" 77m\u2014TTTiTTLm   7%\noents.\nThere waa no explanation for the\ndrop.\nThe Canadian dollar Improved.\nThe final rate waa 3% per cent\npremium, up 1-32. The French franc\nclosed unchanged at 6.68 centa.\nPHONE 144\nWE DO\nPRINTING\nfor Mining Companies\nOur Commercial Printing Department is the most modern\nand best e<}uipped plant in the Interior of British Columbia,\nand we are able to take care of any kind of work entrusted\nto us. We print and manufacture.\nLoose Leaf Systems, Synoptics, Special Ruled Forms,\nPayroll Forms, Mining Prospectus, Stock Certificates,\nRequisition Forms, Checks, Voucher Checks, Mill Reports Forms, Assay Forms, Etc., Etc.\nWE GIVE PROMPT AND CAREFUL\nSERVICE TO ALL MAIL ORDERS\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTERS\n Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nPHONE 144\n \u2022AGE TIN\n> THE NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON,  B.C\u2014FRIDAY  MORNINO.  SEPT. 81.  1M4\nSPECIAL\n2  Colgate's  Tooth   Paste,\nregular 25e size.\nI   Colgate's  Tooth   Brush,\nregular 50c type.\nALL  THREE Cttt)\nFOR     ww\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nMONEY\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Found 4.84',i; U.S.\ndollar .97 1-32; franc 6.47*!i.\nAt New York: Pound 5.00-A; Canadian dollar 1.03\"\u00ab; franc 8.88.\nAt Paris: Pound 74.75 fr; Canadian\ndollar 15.43 fr; U.S. dollar 14.97*% fr.\nIn gold: Pound 12s ld; Canadian\ndollar 60.54 cents; U.S. dollar 58.72\ncents.\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST\u2014OPTICIAN\nSuite 203, Medical Arts Building\nSMYTHE'S\nGRIPPE CAPSULES\nFOR 8EVERE COLDS\nSmythe1! Pharmacy\nPrescription! Our Speciality\nPHONE 1\nMORE ABOUT\nJAFSIE\n(Continued From Pagi Savin)\nwell the night of March 1, 1932.\nWith O'Ryan and Hoover, behind\nclosed doors, were Frank Fay, Hoo*\nvera New York chief, and H. Nor\nman Schwarzkopf, chief of the New\nJersey state police, who has participated in the search from the itart\nAttorney General Homer Cummlngs\nln Waahlngton disclosed that Hoover had Informed him of Haupt-\nmann'i arrest.\nO'Ryan laid:\n'We have the ranaom money,\nfound on the premises of this man,\nand we will allow it to be photographed.\"\n\"How much of the money have\nyou recovered from Hauptmann?\"\n\"$13,750 ln $10 and $20 bills,\" laid\nO'Ryan.\n\"How many people have you ln\ncuitody?\"\n\"One at the moment.\"\n\"What is hil nationality?\"\n\"German.\"\nIt wai recalled by newipaper\nmen that the writer of the raniom\nnotes sent to the Lindbergh was\nthought to be of German extradition, from the peculiarities of his\nwriting).\n\"Where wu the money found?\"\n\"In Hauptmann'i home.\"\n\"Can you tell ua tho detalli of\nthe trip-up?\"\n\"I will give you the detail! later\ntoday or tomorrow at police headquarters.\"\n\"Do you believe Hauptmann kidnapped the Lindbergh baby?\"\n\"I have no comment at this time,\"\nO'Ryan answered.\nO'Ryan then said no charge, as\nyet, had been booked againit Hauptmann and that questioning of him\nhad not been finished.\nThe commission also would not\n\"When You Think of Groceries\u2014Think of th* Star\"\nI PEANUT BUTTER, Planters', 24 oz. |ar .... jar 35?\nBUTTER, Maidevale  \u2022\u2022 \u25a0\u00bb\u2022 *\u2022*'*\nCHEESE, Best Ontario lb. 23c\nIELLO, all flavors   4 >?*\u25a0*-\u25a0 JJ*\nI SPAGHETTI, Libby's, tall tin tin 10*\nSALT, Regal or Iodized 10e\nTOMATO SOUP, Campbell's 3 tins 25<*\nPORK AND BEANS, Libby's, tall tins 3 for 25*?\nI TOILET TISSUE, Purex 3 for 25c\nCORNED BEEF, Libby's, Is 2 tins 25<? I\nPURITY FLOUR 24 lb. sack 79-f \u25a0\nP & G SOAP 3 bars 10c\n****** OLD DUTCH CLEANSER   2 for 19<\nI MARMALADE, Grapefruit or Orange, 32 oz. jar 35?\nI GARDEN PEAS 2 tint 25c\nSALAD DRESSING, Kraft's, 12 oz. jar jar l~e*\nMAYQNNAISE, Dutch Maid 8 oz. 18f\nTEA, Best Quality bulk lb. 45c\nCOFFEE, Empress, glass jar    jar 45\u00a3\nFresh Fruits\nCONCORD GRAPES basket 69*\nTOKAY GRAPES   .'..   lb. 19<\nELBERTA PEACHES   basket 25*\nORANGES, good size'  doz. 39*\nSTRAWBERRIES     basket 15*\nFresh Vegetables\nLETTUCE, large heads head 10*\nCELERY bunch 10*\nFIELD TOMATOES  basket 15*\nOKANAGAN ONIONS 10 Ibs. 25*.\nlay whether Dr. Condon had leen\nHauptmann.\nIn making the announcement of\nHauptmann'i arrest, the commissioner said:\nThe atory al related by the detec-\ntlvea who have been engaged on\ntha caaa for mora than IV, years\nmight beat be told ln chronological\nfashion.\nFIRST NOTB FOUND\n\"Within two daya after the payment of the ransom money ln Bt.\nRaymond's cemetery a \u00bb30 gold certificate wai discovered In the East\nRlnr Savings bank, on Amsterdam\nsvenue and Mth itreet.\n\"However, despite untiring effort!\non the psrt of tba Investigators, wa\nwere unable to dlaoover a alngle\ntangible lead aa to tha Identity of\nthe passer of tha ranaom money,\nand for mora than two years not\none bill of the 120 denomination\nappeared again.\n\"Meanwhile, aome 15000 ln 15 and\n110 bllla were paaaed to amall storekeepers at varioua locations throughout tha city.\nANOTHER > WEEKS AGO\n\"The amall denomination! of theie\nbllla and their common uae made\nthem practically useless to us, yet\nentailed an individual Investigation\nfor each specified bill. Despite the\ndisheartening fact of the seeming\nfailure, our men refused to be disheartened. Three weeks ago fio and\n$30 gold certificates appeared In\nthe Torkvllle and Tordham eectlons\nof the city.\n\"Storekeepers, garage owners and\nall merehanta, particularly us stations, were asked to cooperate and\nrequested to Identify, aa near as\npossible, the owner, with each $10\nand $30 gold certificates passed on\nto them.\n\"It waa suggested, wherever possible, to mark either a atreet address or automobile licenee number\non the bllla of the one paaslng the\nbill.\nTRACED TO SHOE STORE\n\"In connection with this wa traced a 130 gold certificate to a shoe\nstore In Fordham and from that\nmerchant we secured a description\nof the man who passed lt.\n\"Subsequently, one of the ransom\nbill; bearing an automobile lioense\nnumber wsa discovered in the corn\nExchange bank at Park avenue and\n139th atreet. From there the bill\nwaa traced to a gaa station ln\nthe vicinity of tha bank.\n\"The operator of the gaa itatlon\ndescribed the customer who passed\nthe $30 gold certificate tn an almost\nIdentical fashion aa the one described hy the Fordham ahoe atore\nproprietor.\nHAUPTMANN TAKEN\nTUESDAY\n\"Securing the name and address\nof the owner of tbe automobile\nbearing tbe license number appearing on the bill, the investigators\nkept tba premises under aurveilance.\nBecauae of the importance of the\ncaaa and the danger ln the least\npossible allp-up, tha men acted with\ncaution and at 0 a.m. Tuesdsy morning. Bruno Richard Hauptmann was\nseen to leave his reaidence ln the\nautomobile bearing the lioense which\nappeared on the bill, and atarted\ntoward Torkvllle, with tha detectives\nfollowing.\nWhen hla car reached Tremont\nand Park avenue, the detectives halted Hauptmann'a car, directed him\nto get out and. searching him, found\nanother $30 gold certificate Identified aa part of the Lindbergh ransom.\n\"He waa Immediately taken back\nI\nX STAR GROCERY X\nFrea Delivery to All Parti of the City\nPHONE YOUR ORDERS\nFREIGHT PREPAID ON ALL ORDERS OVER $10.00\nPYREX\nSALE\nSATURDAY\nSEPTEMBER   22nd.\nOur entire stock of this wonderful sparkling transparent ovenware will go on sale for\nONE DAY ONLY\nAT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES\nBUY NOW AND SAVE MONEY\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd*\nEXTRA SPECIAL\nFOR THIS WEEK\nBLUE STREAK\nRAZOR BLADES\nl blades for 15c\n20 pkgs. of 5 blade! for $1.89\nA blue steel tempered blade to\nfit Gillette Razors.\nFLEURY'S   PHARMACY\nPHONE 25\nMedical Arts Bldg.\nMORE ABOUT\nLLOYD GEORGE\nContinued From Page One)\n\"When they first realized it was\nimpending they made hysterical efforts to fend lt off. When it became\na fact they accepted the prospect of\nserving under my leadership with\nbitter reluctance. Aa to some of\nthem, there wai no time when they\nwould not have welcomed my reilg-\nnatlon.\"\nDISTRUSTED CHURCHILL\nHe alao declared that tory leaden\nwith the exception of Balfour and\nCurzon opposed Winston Churchill's\ninclusion in the war cabinet, much\naa he himself would have welcomed\nit. Andrew Bonar Law, the Canadian, \"had a profound distrust of\nChurchill and when I advanced the\nargument that Churchill would be\nmore dangerous as a critic than as\na member of the government. Law\nreplied, 'I would rather have him\nagainst ui every time.\"\nADMIRALTY DELUSIONS\nOf the admiralty, he note! the\n\"surprising delusions under which\nadmiralty experts labored when discussing proposals to adopt the convoy system in countering the submarine menace.\" He referred to the\ndragging out of the \"old bogey\" of\na German landing in Britain ai an\nexcuse for increased estimates, as\n\"a sorry exhibition of nervous impotence to be made by lord high\nadmirals of the biggest navy ln the\nworld.\"\nComparing the British effort with\nthe American, he says:\n\"The British Empire, with a small\nregular army, when war was declared, contrived in six months to\nsend 500,000 men to the battlefields\neast and west. Most of these at the\ndeclaration of war had^either received no military training at all,\nor only training of the most elementary character.\nNO WEAPONS FOR U.S.A.\n\"In six months and a bit, the\nfirst American division occupied\ntrenchea in a quiet lector of the\nline Twelve months after American\nentry into the war there wai only\nthat one diviiional unit confronting\nthe enemy.\"\nFurther, he writes: \"Had it not\nbeen for the diiaster of March, 1918\n(the last German advance) nobody\ncan tell what President Wilsons\nnotion was as to the time his huge\narmy ihould itart fighting. He certainly could not have intended it\nto take anv oart in the actual struggle in 1918, for he had not provided\nthe  necessary   weapons.\"\t\nto hli house and whlla questioned\nthere admitted paaslng the $10 anil\n$30 gold certificates found by the\npolice. He denied, however, all knowledge of the Lindbergh money.\n\"Meanwhile a aearch of the place\nwaa instituted and a pair of shoes\n[located and Identified by the J^rd-\nham shoe store proprietor was foul\u2014L\nHIDDEN UNDER FLOOR\n\"Today, ln continuation of tha\naearch of the houae, Detectives John\nMurphy, Prank Quln and James\nPetroslnl, of the New Tork police\ndepartment, Sergeant Wallace of tha\nNew Jersey atate police, and Special\nAgent Turo of the department of\njustice found, after a diligent search\nof the entire premises, $18,750 hid.\nden under the floor of the garage\nand ln the sash of the door.\n\"From the many conflicting stories\nHauptmann haa told detectives, we\nlearned that he Is 85 years old, horn\nln Saxony, Oermany, and, after\nserving ln the German army, stowed\naway on the ateamshlp Waahlngton.\narriving ln the United Statei at\nNew  York  ln   1933.\n\"He explains the presence of the\nmoney as a result of careful saving,\nand the gold certificates aa fore-\nBight, with word of the supposed\nInflation shortly after President\nRoosevelt took office.\"\nPocket size editions of gold and\nsilver valises are the last word in\nevening bags.\nTaka ANY Taxi. For two or mora passengers from C.N.R, G.N.\nand Union ahlpa ws wlll pay full fare. For single pasiengers we\nwlll credit your account with 25 centa. We pay taxi for one\nperson or mora from tha C.P.R. boata and tralna. You pay\ndriver and preient taxi receipt at hotel counter.\nPHONE SEY. 40*4\nANGELUS HOTEL\nLLOYD A. MANLY, Mgr., and P. A. DERYK, Ass't. Mgr.\nHELEN MANLY. Manageress\n780 Dunsmuir Street, Cor. Howe St., Vancouver, B.C.\nRATES-Hoom without bath, $1.25 per day. Toilet only, $1.50\nShowen with toilet $2.00.    Tub Bath, $2.00 to $2.50\nMORE ABOUT\nMEISNER\n(Continued From Page Ona)\nThe other man sought li Albert\nPegram.\nDENIES KNOWLEDGE\n\"I didn't have tha flnt thing to\ndo with this kidnapping; I don't\nknow who pulled the anatch and\nI don't know the first thing of\nthe details,'' uld Melsner. \"I want\nto get myself out from undar thii\nIndictment\nHOME IN CINCINNATI\n\"I waa at my home In Cincinnati\nduring the whole time. I've got\nall kinds of witnesses\u2014all tha witnesses In thi world. I can even\nbring up policemen to prove  I\nwaa In Cincinnati.\"\nMelsner aald he wai \"willing to\nbring my witnesses to Detroit and\nthey (the Canadian authorities and\nthe Labatt family) can bring theirs\nover, too, and we'll go to bat here.\nIf I can't satisfy these people that\nI didn't have anything to do with\nthli kidnapping, 111 go to Canada\nunder arreit without an extradition fight.\"\nFEELS SURE OF\nSQUARE DEAL\nMeimer declared he waa aurren-\ndering to Hoffman because he felt\naure of a square deal. Hoffman announced that Melsner would be\nheld ln Detroit Officials and others\nanxioui to identify the kidnappers\nwill be invited to Detroit\nCANADIAN POLICE SILENT\nTORONTO, Sept. 20 (CP)-Con-\n\\ fronted with newa that a man they\nhave long sought for the kidnapping of John S. Labatt London, Ont,\nbrewer, is behind cell bars at Detroit Ontario authorities tonight\nsaid nothing. Whether they planned\nto make an immediate attempt to\nidentify David Meisner, who surrendered to Detroit police, could\nnot be learned.\nOf all Ontario officials who have\nbeen active in direction of the\naearch for Labatt's abductors, Inspector John Miller of the Ontario\nprovincial police was tha only one\nwho would talk to newspaper men.\n\"I was expecting that,\" he remarked\nwhen the Canadian Pren told him\nof Meisner's surrender and statement he could establish an alibi.\nDespite the official veil of silence,\nit was believed police would take\nstep! shortly to Identify Meisner\nwith the probability Labatt would\nbe taken to the Michigan city to\nview the suspect. Labatt was laid\nto have identified Meimer and Albert Pegram, former Detroit bootlegger, from picture! as two of his\nabductors.\nSEARCH NORTH ONTARIO\nWhile Meisner was en route from\nCincinnati to Detroit to surrender,\ntwo police officials were searching\nnorthern Ontario in the area near\nTimmingi. They sought Meisner\nand Pegram, believed to have taken\nrefuge In lumber campa. The officers were Inspector Hamer Gardner\nof the Ontario provincial police\nand Chief of Detectives Fred Frahm\nof Detroit police force.\nTwo citizen!, however, reported\nthey had seen Pegram or a man\nclosely resembling the suspect,\nwithin the last two days. One citizen said he had aeen Pegram on the\nstreet and the other, an insurance\nbroker, laid the suspect had attempted to sell him some persian\nrugs, claiming he was a sailor out\nof funds.\nyrom Elmira, Ont, about 10 miles\nnorth of Kitchener, came reports\nthat Pegram waa believed to have\nappeared in that district.\nMORE ABOUT\nTonight\nTonight\nFREE MOVIE\nTALKIES\nThe CHRYSLER CORPORATION of CANADA is presenting\nin talking motion pictures, the actual production and performance of the LATEST CHRYSLER MOTOR CARS.\nAlso showing \"Century of Progress with Plymouth.\" \"Three\na Minute\" takes you on a trip through the factory.\n\"Plymouth Built for First Place\" shows you Barney Oldfield\nIn action. \"Fashioned by Function\"\u2014this film explains how\nand why the new De Soto and Chrysler Airflow Cars are\nso designed. The Dodge Cars and Trucks are very completely\nshown in the film \"Built to Take It.\"\nThis entertainment will be presented FREE to the publie\nby PEEBLES MOTORS LTD (Chrysler-Plymouth Dealers)\nand ERIC'S MOTOR SERVICE, (Dodge-DeSoto dealer).\nIt i$ respectfully requested that children under sixteen be\naccompanied by their parents.\nHUME HOTEL SILVER ROOM\nTonight\u2014Friday     Time 8:00 P.M.\nTwo Hours of Unusual Entertainment\nContinued From Paga One)\nnational disaster since tht 1923\nearthquake had atruck Japan, add\ning that more than 190 ichool houses\nhad collapsed In Osaka alone.\nThe storm, typical of those which\nfrequently are the scourge of the\nempire during the autumnal equinox, tore through the industrial\nheart of the nation, causing death\nand devastation and paralyzing industry and communication!.\nSince all wires were down lt was\nlittle known how weitern regions\nfared, but severe damage was caused at Osaka.\nTroops were called out to aid in\nrelief work.\nThe weather bureau predicted\nTokyo probably would escape the\nfull fury of the storm, which wap\nmoving in the direction of Niigafcf.\nThe full force of the blow struck\nOsaska.\nDistrict Has 201\nLicenced Hunters\nFrom the number of hunting licences issued to date, with the seas*\non just opened, a substantial quan*\ntity of game should be brought\ndown this season. During a big rush\nthat has been in progress since tho\nmiddle of last week 161 ordinary\nfire arm licenses have been sold at\nthe provincial courthouse at Nelson,\nmaking the total for the season 201.\nResident hunters have taken out\nnine big game licenses. Non-residents have taken out one big game-\nlicense and three extra general\nlicenses.\nARE FAVORITES\nLONDON, Sept. 20 (CP cable) .-\nFint call-over of betting odds for\nthe Cesarewitch stakes, great\nautumn handicap to be run on October 17 at turf headquarters, today\nestablished Swift and True and Solar Boy aa Joint choices, very lukewarm favorites at long odds of 20\ntol.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nFor HIOH CLASS SHOE REPAIRING, go to WATSON'S. (4016)\nReserve Friday, October 16, Hoi-\npltal Hallowe'en masquerade dance.\n(4156)\nCome to Pythian Blatere' dance at\nSalmo prlday, Sept. Jlst. (4144)\nI'oed  Electric  Wasders,  Overhauled, Bargain Prices, Standard Electric.\n(4152)\nThere wlll be a meeting of the\nschool board In City hall at a\no'clock. (4157)\nTODAT AT PRESBYTERIAN\nrHLRCII PARLORS. TEA AND\nBAKE  SALE 3  TO C. (4155)\nTonight\u2014Eagles' hall, C.C.P. dance\nRefreshments. Melody Makers orchestra. Admission 35c. (4153)\nTYPEWRITER PAPER. THE BEST.\nPHONE 197. NELSON TYPEWRITER\nAGENCY.  H.   FITZPATRICK.   (3974)\nCome to the women's Liberal auxiliary military whlat drive, Oellnas\nhall, prlday. 31st at 8 p.m. Drawing\nat end of period. Good prizes each\nnight. Admission 35c. (4131)\nCHURCH   OF   THE   REDEEMER\nFAIRVIEW\nHarvest  THANKSGIVING  Service!\nTONIOHT  AT  8.00 P.M.\nPREACHER.    ARCHDEACON    f.    11-\nGRAHAM. (4146)\nFree\u2014tonight at 8 p.m. Motion\nplcturea of New world Speed recorda by latest Chrysler cars, presented to the publie by Pceples\nMotors Ltd., and Srlc'a Motor service at the Hume Hotel silver Room.\n14150)\nKODAK\nTHE SCHOOLCHILDREN\nA Treasure for all Tomorrows!\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelon'i Dispensing Chemliti\nFALL UNDERWEAR\nNow with the daya and nights a littlfc-\ncolder you will be thinking of Fall\nunderwear. Our stock of Ceetee, Stanfield's and Hatchway No-Button is\nnow complete.\nHatchway\nNo-Button\nStanfield's,\nall weights\nCeetee,\npure wool .\n$2.00 to $4.00\n$1.50 to $6.00\n$425 to $8.75\nmory'S Ltd.\nMORE ABOUT\n(Contlnaed From Pige One)\ndemanding $50,000, pinned to thi\nwindow llll.\nTWI8TS OF FATE\nThui opened \u2022 great myitory of\nmodern times. It reached the peak\nof   sensationalism,   replete   with\nmany bizarre twists of fate.\nFive days later, two New York\nunderworld   character! \u2014 Salvatore\nSpitale and Irving Blti\u2014were authorized   by   Colonel  Lindbergh   to\nnegotiate. Nothing came their way.\nThen, March 8, in the Bronx Home\nNewi,  thii  advertisement  in  the\npersonal column:\n\"I accept Money Is ready, you\nknow they won't let me deliver\nwithout getting the package. Pleaae\nmake it rome Mrt of C.O.D. transaction. Come, You know you can trust.\n\"Jafsie.\"\nThe ilgner: Dr. John Condon, ajed\nwelfare worker, noted edu-stional-\nlst\nFIRST BREAK\nThii wai the fint major break.\nDays went by before the \"transaction\" wai arranged. '\nFrantic days, with the Lindberghs\npublicly appealing to the abductors\nto watch their son's health. Prayers\nwere offered in churchei.\nThe, the night of April 2, St. Raymond's cemetery in the Bronx.\nAa the noted aviator aat in an\nlutomoblla nearby, \"Jafale\"\nransom to unknown interim*\"\nNOT IN BOAT        _\\\nApril 3: Lindbergh, \"J\u00abi\nHenry Breckenrldge, flyert att\nney, flew to Martha's Vineyal\nlooking for boat on which baby r\nsupposed to have been left by i\nduclon. ^^^^\nThey found nothing.       _____\nOn April 9, banka ware iikedl\nwatch for the aerial numben on f\nLindbergh raniom bills.\nFor   another   month,   over\nworld, the search continued. Sn\neverywhere were watched. Knol\nhangouts  of  criminals  a.,d  dil\nsearched. Fruitleii, everywhere.1\nFinally May 12: In the woodi f\na few miles from the LlndbaJ\nhome, Baby Lindbergh wu toi\n\u2014dead. ^_^\nRelentlessly,   to   thii   day,\naearch hai gone on for his killen\nNOTICE\nE. SUTCLIFFE\nhas opened hli\nBARBER SHOP\nat  BAKER  and  HALL  Sti.J\n2 doon from the corner,\nWlll be glad to lee hli old\nfriendi and customer!.\nFIRST CHOICI\nTIRES\nVoted into first place and\nbought ln greatest numbers every year for\neighteen years!\nFor nearly two decades\nit has been possible to\nsay that more people ride\non Goodyear Tires than\non any other kind.\nThe only sensible reason is that Goodyearsj\ngive greater mileage and]\nall-round service.\ngood\/vear\nPLUS .. t\n12  months\nguarantee\nagainst\ndefects and\nroad hazards\nFIRST\nCLASS\nSERVICE AT\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO., LTD.\nAuthorized Goodyear Dealers\nPHONE 35 VERNON ST.\nStarts\n1:30\nMICKEY MOUSE FAIRY TALES\nSILLY SYMPHONY\nKiddies Stage Show!\nREGULAR SHOW FOLLOWS\n1:30\nllll\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_09_21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0404934","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}