{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0405206":{"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":"2021-11-23","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1931-10-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405206\/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":" lotc>\nHarxlest Flat Race on Turf\nRun Off Today\n\u2014.Pa^e Seven\nthon Sail\nVWallMI  M\nTHE BBLfON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDIY  MORNING. OCTOBER 14.  IMI\nSharkey   and   Camera\n$53,000 on FiSht\n\u2014 Pa&e Seven\n. lit R CENTS A COFT NI\nSoli,\nBritish Political\nMen Speak\nTlw following highlights are taken from rpeerhes made today\nby political  leaders  ln  Great  Britain's  general  election  campaign:\nPrime Minister Raraisy MacDonald: \"Nationalization la the\nthing that la going to save our aoclety. Bat nationalization muat\nbe grown Into, not Jumped Into.\"\nRt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin, joint leader with Mr. MacDonald\nIn the fight for a natlonal government: \"Our task at home today\nla to maintain our democracy and to prove that democracy ran\nlire and  function.\"* *\nBt. Hon. A. V. Alexander, flrat lord of the admiralty In the\nLabor government: \"The country la being asked for a cheque to\ntha moat Indiscriminate and discreditable erew that ever entered\nthe  cabinet.''\nBt. HOn. Winston Churchill, chancellor of the exchequer In\nthe former Conservative government: \"I am aure neither Mr. Mac-\nDbnald nor Mr. Baldwin will contradict me when 1 aay the new\nhouae of commons should be absolutely free to set up a permanent\ngeneral tariff If It thinks lt a wise and useful contribution toward\naolrtng our difficulties.\"\nBt. Hon. Arthur Henderson, head of the Labor party: \"What\nthe Labor movement or the Labor party has done to deserve to be\nwhipped by the national government scorpions ls not easy to understand.\"\nBt, Hon. L. C. M. Amery, Conservative: \"Empire preference\nmeans  prosperity.\"\nBlr Oswald Mosley, leader of the \"New Party\": \"Parliament must\nchange from a paradise for professional windbags to a workshop\nfor men of action.\"\nSir Austen Chamberlain, first lord of the admiralty In the\nnational government: \"protection muH he afforded home Indust^rs\nand an Increase sought In mutual trade wtth the dominions.\"\nDre#s \"Disease Breaks Out\nOrganized \"Back to-Land\"\nMove Is Blaylock's Urge\nThen Give Farmer Fair\nReturn; Adjustment\nto Be Slow\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 13.\u2014After\nbriefly reviewing world economic conditions since |j\u00bbi3. leading to the present woaW-wlde\nunemployment, H. <i. Blaylock,\nvice-president and general manager of the Consolidated Mining\nanil smelting company, address-\nlnB the Trail board of trade\nat a ret-together dinner this\nevening, stated tbat the solution\nef the problem, tn his mind, lay\nIn getting m\u00ab-\u00ab people, who were\nadaptable, hack to tb* land,\nand   away   from   Industry.\nIndustry was overcrowded. lie\nwae hs favor of no m-eonslder-\ned back to the land movement\nbat an efficiently organized one\nthat   would    put   people   back\non   the   soil   under   murh   the\nsame conditions that existed in\nthe Eastern townships.    Having\nplaced f-eni there. It should be\nthe objective \u00a9' the country to\ngive   them   a   fair   return   for\ntheir products aided  by a system of  tariffs or other means.\nSuch   a   tariff   ahould   be  for  nro-\nteotlon and the farmer ahould have\nfurther protection from exploitation\nbr ttie  merchant  or a\u00aby one  else.\nCOOPERATION   NEEDED\nDuring the present period of readjustment it was tiie duty of everyone to cooperate. He felt the\nmanufacturers should come to earth\nand quickly. Such action would\natlmulate busines and be a tne tor\nIn relieving  the  situation.\nMr. Blaylock Instanced copper\n\u25a0a a case In point. Copper at\nthe refinery waa selling for one\nthird the cost of thc same\ncopper as cupper wire.. It Has\ntoo much of a spread and could\nnot oe sustained, while be felt\nthat tbe methods undertaken\nat present for the relief of unemployment were of quirk action,\nthey were not sound. They\ncould not, and should not be\ncarried on any longer than was\nnecessary.\nIn Introducing his subject, Mr.\nBlaylock stated that the topi- of\nunemployment should be divided under two or three heads.\n1 The cause; a the extent; 3 The\npossible kinds of relief unci their\naffects.    |\nHe took his audience back to\nI913-'14, when production got ahead\nof consumption. The war aaved the\naltuatlon, but about _9lfl the war\nhad an Ill-effect. Prices went wild.\nZinc waa selling at 45 cents a pound\nwhich le today selling at 2'A cents.\nand the zinc of that day was an\nInferior article. Higher wages and\nthe patriotic call fallowed the war\nwith a further reaction which, however, was delayed for some time\nby the necessities for the reconstruction of the war torn countries.\nJn 1930-*21, conditions became\nslack. He recalled that that waa\nthe worst period in Trail's existence. However, the years 1027-26-\n29 saw the results of the expenditures of war riches. It was a great\nproduction era. People, who with\nthe floating of war bonds had test-\nted the first rewards of sane Investment, took the stock Investment.\nTHE  BUBBLE  BREAKS\nAt first theae were made safely\nand sanely but as time wore on,\nthe Investors became careless. They\nwatched the market rather than\nthe merit of the etock. Paper prof-\nlts were made and squandered and\nthen the bubble broke, with thla\nthe spending was curtailed, and aa\napendlng waa curtailed, so the demand decreased until the world demands of today were far below thoae\n1913-14. He predicted that It would\nbe a long alow process to readjust\nmatters.\nIn concluding, Mr. Blaylock\nstated tbat whole world was In\ndifficulty and tt was the duty\nof every thinking man' to help\nsolve the situation. Those In\ncomfortable circumstances, to\nflrasp the situation, should put\nthemselves In the pace of the\nman or woman without work,\nunable to get work, and the\nhungry family.\nA man in this plight could\nnot help seeing red. He would\ngrasp at almost any suggested\nremedy. It was a time for careful study and great caution. He\ndid not feel that the situation\nwould be righted this year, next\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nIS DOWN\nExchange rates at the close\nyesterday  were  as  follows:\n\u25a0pound  sterling  in  Montreal\n4.3B',s.\nPound sterling ln New York\n838.\nC nadlan dollar at New Tork\n88   9-16.\nA net decrease of |4Q,4B7,0O0\nln gold stocks waa shown by\nyesterday's gold statement of\nthe Federal Reeerve bank of\nNew  Tork.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\n'   foreign bar ailver floaed  at\n39%  centa an ounce.\nBRUENING LAYS\nDOWN HIS PLAN\nOF GOVERNMENT\nReichstag:   Opens   With\nthe Police Out in\nFull Force\nFOREIGN POLICY\nREMAINS SAME\nBruening    Lays    Down\nPlans Amid Hisses of\nOpposition\nBERLIN, o<*. 13  (AP)\u2014Chancellor    Helnrlch    Bruening    laid\ndo*n hla program of government\ntoday at the opening session of\nthr    Reichstag.    In    which    the\nNationalists and National Socialist* disdained to participate and\nthe   communists   took   part   by\nshouting angrv Interruptions.\nTo  guard  Hga'ln. t  riots  similar   to\nthe window-smashing outbursts that\nmarked  the opening of  the  legislature   laat   fall,   polios   were   out   In\nforce.\nTbe National Socialist* iNasts)\nand the Nationalists, who have made\ncommon cause for the purpose of\nbringing about the downfall of the\nBruening government, were represent. :d at the Reichstag proceedings\nonly by observers. The main body of\nt-elr forces remained In lobbies snd\ncommittee rooms while the chancel-\nI lor, disregarding the hisses and\nshouts ol the communists, pledged\nhis government to this prcgram.\nNo let-up in the foreign policy of\ncone-lotion. .\nDefinite settlement of the question\ni of political debta, t_. eliminate the\nI uncertainty which \"alone contlnu-\ni ou\u00abIy halts Interna tlonal economic\n, and financial interchanges.\nEntered In International Race\naw, state TRACHOMA HAS HOLD\nM0*IND1AK mm\nCatholic Religion Rejected as the State Religion\nTO MEET  THE  CANADIAN  CHAMPION\nSHOOT UP TOWN\nAS LOOTING OF\nBANK IS ENDED\nIndiana Town Is Reminded of\nthe Days of the Notorious\nJames Gang\nLIZTON, Ind., Oct. 13. (AP) \u2014\nRemlnlaoent of the depredations of\nthe James boys, a gang of safe-\nblowers early today wrecked the Litton State bank, ahot up the town\nand escaped wtth approximately\n\u26664000 In currency* and negotiable\nsecurities.\nThe robbers, two automobile loads\nof them, obtained hammers, crow\nbars and tarpaulins from a nearby\nrailroad shed, broke their way into\nthe bank through a side window\ngnd then opened the front door.\nFor an hour and a half a aeries of\nnltro-glycerlne charges were aet off\nuntil tbe door on the time lock\nsafe \u25a0 finally gave way. crashing\nthrough a partition of the banking\nroom.\ntil N   FIGHT   C.OES   ON\nMeanwhile Marlon Bailey, 73-year-\nold president of the bank, who lives\nacross the street, engaged ln a gun\nfight with a bandit who was barricaded behind a pile of benches in\nfront of the bank building.\nResidents of this village of 300 Inhabitants, midway between Indianapolis and Crafordsvllle, were unable\nto communicate with authorities as\nthe robbers had severed the telephone lines. Rather than face the\ngunfire of the bandits, they remained in their homes while the\nwrecking of the bank was completed.\nDamage to the bank building probably v.'lli exceed J2000, It was esti-\nmated.\nPicking up their loot, the robbers,\nfiring indiscriminately to intimidate\nthe citizens, drove out of town,\noni^esWvan\"\nhearing done\nESTEVAN, Sask., Oct. 13.-Con-\npludlng this afternoon lis hearing of\ncomplaints of employees at Blenfalt\nMlnea, Ltd., and the reply of the\nmanagement, the Wylie royal commission probe Into the causes leading up to the 30-day strike tomorrow will turn its attention to the\nEastern Collieries, Ltd. Each of the\nFix deep aeam mines In the field\nwlll be treated tn the same man\nner, and indications are that the\ninvestigation will be wound up well\nwithin   30   daya.\njeer   or   perhaps   two  or   three\nyears  after tbat.    it  would   be\na slow process.   He did not feel\nthat   people   should   object   to\npaying   more   for   home   gfo\u00ab*\nproduce,    provided    the    higher\nprice waa to go to the farmer.\nState  marketing as baa been experimented   with   In   Russia   might\nprove to be a success, but be would\nnot hazard a prediction at the moment.\nThe speaker waa introduced by\nL. F. Tyson, president of tha board\nof trade, who welcomed the large\nattendanoe and a conalderabla number of visitors from out of towt\nMr. Tyaon reviewed briefly t\/\nwork or the board of trade and lu\nprojects.\nFishing schooner Oertrude A. TUebaud. pride of the Qiruccstjr^ Mass..\ntv:-i*hi_ig fleet,  and her aUttK\u00bb-Uwet>, Capt.  Ben Pihe, which will  meet\n%rmanv^ ^h.ni? ,tobUit\u00bb' the  Canadian  champion,  Bluenose.  in  tie  International  flahlng  schooner\nBREAKS CENTURIES\nOF   TRADITION\nIs Action of Spanish National Assembly in\nSession\nMADRID, Oct. 13 (AP)\u2014The\nSpanish national assembly, by a\ntote of :!67 to 41, tonight approved article 3 of the new republican constitution rejecting\nthe Catholic religion as the\nreligion   or   the   state.\nShortly    after   the   assembly's\ntote   was   made   known,   special\npolice   guards   charged   a   large\nmeeting of  labor  groups In  the\n1'uerta del  sol. In the center of\nMadrid,   who   were   beginning  a    '\ndemonstration and crying \"down\nwith  thr church!\"\nCafes   and  wjuslnesa   houses   lm-!\nmediately began  closing  their doors\nand    the   special   guards   dispersed\nother groups which were attempting\nto organize  anti-clerical  demonstrations outside the aae.mbly hall.\nThe action of the assembly today\nbreaks a tradition of centuries during which church authority haa\nbeen officially recognized in state\naffairs. It also carried out the prom'\nlees of republican leaders, made before the dethronement ot King Al\nfonao  XIII,  that  under  a  republic\nA NEW SORT OF\nAN ENDING FOR\nA BANK FAILURE\nTAMPA. Fla., Oct. 13.\u2014Here's\na new aort of atory about\nbank failures.\nTho bank of Tampa cloaed\nJanuary 19, md J. A. Griffin\nwaa   appointed   receiver.\nToday he filed hla final report, showing all depositors\nwere paid the full amount\nof their deposlta and eight\nper   cent   Interest   besides\nAfter all that waa done, a\nbalance of 18,906 were left\nand thla waa paid over t-j\nthe state treasury.\n100 Affected at Reservation West of\nCalgary\nSEVERAL ARE\nBLIND ALREADY\nMacDONALD HAS\nAPPLAUSE EVEN\nAMONG ENEMIES\nCarries Campaign to Seaham\nHarbor, Headquarters of\nHis Opposition\nof Qermany'a exchange.\nRestriction of imiorte end back-\nto-the-farm movement to Increase\nthe domestic food supply.\nConcentration of the state's organs\nof enforcement \"against all attempts\n. . . seeking  to  threaten  the state.\"!\nContinued    strict    economy.\nAn economic program to be worked J\nout  by an economic advtiwry  body.\nIn his discussion of tbe foreign\npolicy, which Is one c. the chief\npolnta of attack by the Nazi oppo-1\nsltion, the chancellor declared that!\n\"direct and open conversations, such\nas that at Chequers (with the Brit-!\niah statesmen), are to pave the way   Opinion      Is\nraces off Halifax. N.  3-, next   week.  Thc  Thebaud  has   beaten   the  Elsie\ntwice in trial runs in her offn waters.\nITALY DISLIKES\nCLAUSE AGAINST\nDUMPING GOODS\nTrail Motion Picture\nOperator to Testify\nat Combines Inquir>\n-. center,   and   with   one   retort   to   -\nchurch and state would be separated, young communist he silenced bee*\nfor a solidarity of nations.\"\n\"A possibility must be found,\" hei\ncontinued, \"to create clear and non-\neat relatlQna;.lpa and fe.Ungs be-\ntween neighbors.\"\nReflected    by\nNewspaper Which Says\nCanadian Law Unfair\nMinisters Willing: to\nDonate a Portion of\nSalaries to Jobless\nTORONTO, Ont., Oct, 13. (CP)\n\u2014Pastors under the Jurisdiction..,\nof Toronto West -presbytery of\nthe I'nlted Church of Canada\ntoday decided to donate a percentage of their salaries for relief  weA  In western  Canada.\nThe decision nas made at a\nmeeting of the presbytery held\nIn New Toronto. Pastors with a\n-alary of *3000 a year wlll subscribe 10 per cent of their salary for a period nr one year,\nwhile those with a salary of less\nthan MOM a jear ulll give 10\nper cent ot their salary for a\nperiod of six months.\nROME, Oct. 13. (CP cable)\u2014Dis-j\npleasure 1\" Italy at the decision of\nthe Canadian government to apply :\nanti-dumping tariff provisions;\nagainst Imports from countries whose i\ncurrency has depreciated on foreign ;\nexchange markets, today was re-1\nfleeted ln on editorial appearing in I\nGlorale   d'ltalla.\nIt lv..unfalr, tie newspaper sild,\nto appiy anti-dumping provisions\nagainst Italian imports, as the lira\n.till remains on the gold standard,,\nand any oscillation in its rate of \\\nexchange  wfll  be of short duration!\nReinforcing Ita argument with sta- -\ntistlcs. the newspaper said tii.it dur-\nlng the past three years tlie value j\nof Canadian goods Imported by Italy <\nhad been greatly in excess of the\nvalue pf Italian merchandise lm- j\nported   Into  Canada.\nVICTORIA, Oct. IS\u2014 Antone\nLaurlente, motion picture theater operator of Trail, mil be sent\nby the British Columbia government to Toronto to testify Ht\ntlie forthcoming prosecution ot\nlhe alleged Canadian motion plc-\nI tire   dlatrlbut Ion   combine.\nMr. l.;iiulei]|f'N evidence was\nfeatured In the report of Peler\nWhite, K. C, federal tn .estlgator,\nwho found th\u00bbt a combine rxlsls\ntu this country. In brief, .Mr.\nLaurlente charged In his e.l-\ndc nee to Mr. White that his\noperation* ;ii Trail had been\nhampered by thc alleged combine.\nCASE COMPLETE\nAGAINST CAPONE\nDefense\nDays'\nIs    Refused    Two\nAdjournment   in\nWhich to Prepare Case\ncompletely.\nVATICAN CITY, Oct. 13. <AP)\u2014\nVatican officials tonight expressed\ndisappointment, but not alarm, at\nthe action of the Spanish aaaembly\nln rejecting Catholicism aa the state\nreligion.\nNone of the church lesders would\nbe quoted but the general trend of\ntheir comment waa that the action\ncould have been expected under\npresent   conditions   in   Spain.\nThey voiced confidence that when\nthe situation tn Spain haa been\nclarified it will be found that the\nchurch's poaltlon. has not been seriously damaged.\nNORTH VANCOUVER TO\nVOTE ON BEER\nNORTH VANCOVVER. B. C.\nOct. 1.1\u2014A vote on beer-bj-the\nflaw will be taken here on\nOctober 22. word recehed from\nthe provincial secretary state*.\nThe date was set follow Ina presentation of I petition ?e*eral\nweeks ago.\nIn 1.21 a similar ballot was\ntaken for the whole electoral\ndistrict, but waa defeated by 20n\nvotes. On October ZZ, however,\nthc vote will be confined to\nthe city limits. Those who are\nregistered on the laat provln-\nch| voter*' list wlll be entitled\nto vote and polling wlll take\nplace between the hours or 8\na.m.  and  fi p.m.\nIt Is estimated that about\n_70o will he entt'led to vote on\nthe   measure.\nBandits Hand Back\nS2 and Tell Hotel\nCHICAGO. Oct. 18. (APi - The\ni United States government finished\n; presentation today of ttl mass of\nj evidence intended to miow that\nI \"Searfac\u00ab Al\" Capone, tbt world'a\nClerk to SllUt Up|m08t notorious RUiWi waa guilty\nr  ol   Income   tax   evasion.\n  The sudden  res!ins of  the  prose-\nVANCOUVEH,    B.   C.    Oct.    13\u2014   cuUon'a cue left  in  the  court  rce-\nfthen Charles Bctsworfh and Arthur ! ord results of three years of in vest)-\nTaylor held up Walter E. Wain,\nnight clerk at the Angelu* hotel.\nwith pistols, in the early morning\nhours of May 36, they found only\n$3 on the premises and handed it\nback to Wain with the injunction\nto  \"keep   your  mouth  shut.\"\nWain did not keep his mouth\nshut, and ae a result they were\nconvicted of robber}' with . iolence\nwhen they appeared In tlie assize\ncourt on Tuesday. Tlie Jury, which\nwas out 35 mlnutea, added a recommendation of mercy to Its finding. Mr. Justice Gregory remanded\nthe  accused   for sentence.\nWain picked Betsworth and Taylor from a line-up at the police\nstation a week after the hold-up.\ngatlon by scores of under-cover op-\neratlvea. WlwnWliB' skein of evidence Is knit together In tho final\nfour hours of argument the court\nwlll allot each side, the government\nhope* to convince the Jury of tradesmen, farmers and merchants that\nCapone  must  go  to prison.\nThe defence, professing surprise at\nthe conclusion of the prosecution's\ncase, asked an adjournment for two\ndays   to  prepare  itself.\nJud&i James H, Wilkerson declined\nto allow the delay and ordered defence attorneys Michael Ahern and\nAlbert Fink to be ready at 10 a. m.\ntomorrow. Capone's counsel have not\nsaid whether they would call witnesses  to  the stand.\nLEAGUE COUNCIL\nWRESTLES WITH\nORIENTAL MESS\nAdjourn Session Without Doing    Anything;    Hear\nHeated Arguments\nOENEVA, Oct. 13. _<AP>- The\nleague of nations council Ilstefttd\nfor fctur hours today while the Cliln-\nese and Japanese spokesmen * hurled charges pnd counter-chargea\nabout the Manchurlan conflict. The\ncouncil solemnly endoraed a declaration by Aristide Brland that the\nleague surely will act to th^ extent of Its power to bring peace\nto  the  far east.\nContinuing its efforts for conciliation through private conversations,\nthe council will not alt publicly\nagain until its next step \"to safeguard the peace of the nations\" has\nteen  determined.\nDr. Alfred Bre, China's emotional representative, and Kenklchi\nYoshizawH. dtmtnunltlre and calm\nspokesman fT .Taprfn, e.changed\na long, dignlfier. but Intense verbal\nbombardment across the council\ntable. Neither dislodged the other\nfrom his government's frequently\nreiterated   position.\nSEAHAM HARBOR. Durham, Eng.,\nOct. 3 (AP)\u2014Prime Minister Ramsay\nMacDonald earned his campaign for\nre-election to tie house of commons\ninto the stronghold of his opposition\namong  t-e  miners today\nThU evening he spoke ln halls,\npacked with miners, at seaham Har'\nbor \u00abnd Murton. In the afternoon he\naddressed an audience at Dawdon\nknown    locally    se   a   communistic\nPopulation of 600 at the\nReserve Are\nExposed\nCALGARY. Alts., Oct. l8.-~t._7 tba\nCanadian Press)\u2014Reports of an outbreak on Trachoma, dread aye disease waa received here tonight from\nthe Morley Indian reserve, 00 mllee\nwest of calgary. More than 100 Indians, resident at the reserve, were\nreported to have been affected la\nthe   past  few  days.\nEfforts to communicate with the\nIndian agent, who waa reported to\nhave informed Ottawa of the situation, were futile tonight.\nTh_ reserve hae a population ot\nabout 600, and wae tha Jumping\noff point in the gold mah which\ndeveloped -, week ago In the Big\nTimber creek area, M miles northwest of the reserve.\nThe disease causes blindness, and\nunconfirmed reports aald aeveral\not thoae afflicted were already blind.\nling that made tbe start of Mve\nmeeting   uncertain.\n\"I'm a communist and I'm against\nyou.\" the heckler shoubsd.\n\"Of course you're against me,\"\nthe prime minister retorted. \"A\ncommunist ls alway\u201e against the interests of the working classes.\"\nThe Seaham Harbor collier;*, scene\nof one of tonight's speeches, has\nbeen mined for 100 years. The men\nare Conservative in their tabor views.\nand Mr. MacDonald won their applause from Wie start.\nTYPHOON W>\nJAPAN LEAVING\nDEATH IN WAKE\nThirty Persons Known to Be\nDead and Hundreds More\nThought in Toll\nPARLIAMENT OF\nIRELAND FACES\nBfTTffiBATM\nGovernment May Find Position Such m to Make an\nElection Necessary\nNew Microscope Evolves\nROME. Oct. 13.-\u2014(AP)\u2014Invention\nof a microscope for observing and\nmeasuring the velocity of the infinitesimal electrons, was announced\ntoday by Prof. Robert A. Milllkan,\nAmerican wInner of the N&bel prlre.\nat thc meeting here cf 60 world\nfamoui   physlcbtv\nMOTORISTS OF THE FUTURE MAY FILL\nFUEL TANKS WITH AIR AND SPEED ON\nLOS ANOELES, Oct. 13 (AP)\u2014\nIf the plans of a Lot Angeles\ninventor are fulfilled, motorists\nof the futnre may fill tbelr\nfuel tanks with air Instead of\ngasoline.\nRoy 4. Meyers, who has experimented with air devices fpr two\ndecades, hu tested successfully\nan automobile tbat runs on compressed  air.\nThe machine travelled at SS miles\nan hour, but lt probably could out-\nspaed moat gasoline automobil * if\nthe (gear ratio were Increased. Meyers\naald. A tank with a capacity of 200\npounds ale  pressure drove  the  machine ISO miles.        '\nTm    fuel    consumption    averages\nabout 10 pounds for every 1.3 miles\ntravelled and leakage of air Is about\"\n10 per cent.\nTbe experimental automobile, yet\nundeveloped for practlo.l use, gives\nthe Impression to the driver of gliding over the . lghway. The only\nrtaifie 1$ the hias of air escaping from\nexhaust valves.\nTha automobile, demonstrated before n wspapermen and the backers\nof a company f-Tmed to finance the\nInvention,  h-s   an   unusual   appear\nance. The conventional In-line design of cylinders is abandoned for\nthe airplsne type \u2666_ 4 radial engine\nwith sfx cylinders and la mounted\nin an upright position on the front\nof a stand rd chassis. It haa no Ignition, carbueretor or cooling system.\nBy a alngle lever, the air throttle,\nthe driver -feeds air Into tbe cylinders, forcing the pistons up and\ndown. A device to recapture the\nspent air and compress it anew has\nbeen developed. The fuel t_nk is\nheated by a battery, expanding the\nair and doubling the power.\nIt is th. third automobl.e of thlei\ndesign that Meyers has built ln 10\nyears, prior to that he developed\nseveral air devices, Including an air\ncompressed   automobile   brake.\nEventually, he belUves, the engine\nwill be developed for alrpUnes, enabling them to fly great distances\nwith little fuel weight and eliminating the haz rd of tire In the event\nof a mishap.\nBut much work remains to be\ndone. Meyers said. \"It's still experimental,\" t-e aald. \"and I wish I\nknew myself when It can be pat Into\ngeneral mx \"\nDUBLIN. Irish .Pree State. Oct. 13.\n(AP)\u2014One of the most bitter parliamentary battles in Pree State history will be fought out ln the Dall\nElresnn  during  thc   next  few  days.\nPolitical observers declare it ta\nnot at all improbable that by the\nend of the week tlie government or\nPresident William T. Coagrave will\nfind its position untenable and will\ncarry the battle up thc oountry ln\na  Reneral  election.\nThe conflict wlll revolve upon the\npublic safeties bill which the government is introducing, when the\nDall convene* tomorrow as a result\nof disturbances during the last few\nmonths..\nWhile details of the measure have\nbeen kept wcret. it lf understood\nIt would confer extraordinary powers on the police to deal with emergencies and would provide for the\nestablishment of military courts for\nsummary trial of persons charged\nwith   sedition   or   outrages.\nIt is understood that the administration. In presenting the measure,\nIntends to offer what it considers\nproof of a conspiracy against the\ngovernment in Republican quarters,\nand of the growth of Communism.\nEDISWSITC\nUPJN CHAIR\nAged Inventor's Condition Is\nTermed as \"Unchanged\";\nEats  But  Little\nTOKIO, Oct. 13. (API\u2014Thirty were\nknown dead end hundreds more believed killed or drowned ln tha hugo\ntyphoon, accompanied by a torrential rain, that struck western .and\ncentral Japan last night, laying\nwaste property on Japan's Paelflc\ncoast and doing serious damage to\nshipping.\nThe toll taken by the typhoon\nwas undetermined today, due to disrupted   communications.\nOsaka reports said 30 bodies ware\nrecovered tn tbe Oga district of\nMlye prefecture, and that many persons  were missing.\nDispatches Indicated the worst\ndamage was done along the Choahi\nriver in Mlye prefecture. The river\nroee 20 feet ln a few hours, swollen\nby heavy rains, causing it to overflow its banks tn many places. Tha\ntown of Oga was flooded and first\nreport a said 200 persona were missing, Thla could not be confirmed,\nhowever.    *\"\nARTISTIC LINK\nFIRM BETWEEN\nTHE NATIONS\nTORONTO. Ont., Oct. 13. (CP) \u2014\nThe artistic link between the nations was both far-reaching and\nsolid, declared Sir Barry Jackson,\ndtrcctor of the Birmingham Repertory theater, England, addressing the\nWomen's Canadian elub here today.\nHe contrasted economic and political uncertainty lr. international relations with the development of\nliterary   and  artistic  conditlona.\nTlie theater had survived the rise\nand fall of governments and the rise\nand fall of nations for 2000 yeara.\nExplaining hla offering cf six British playa in Canada thts aeason, Sir\nBarry said he had selected some of\nEngland's older work wtth the Idea\nIt- might be acceptable to a new\ncountry which was Interested ln\nbuilding its own theater with the\nknowledge of past traditions and\nachievement*.\nTHE WEATHER\nWEST ORANOE, N. J\u201e Oct. 13.\u2014\n(AP>\u2014Thomas A. Edison roused\n.ufflciently to answer a question\nfrom Mrs. Edison, but his precarious condition was described last\ntoday  as unchanged.\nDr. Hubert S. Howe did not say\nwhat the question wki, but described the aged inventor as \"brighter.\"\nA 5 p. m. bulletin from Charles\nA.  Edison,  a  son,  said:\n\"Mr. Edison's condition remains\nunchanged. He was ln hts chair for\ntwo hours this afternoon and is\nnow  in  bed  sleeping.\"\nEarlier in the day Dr. Howe said\nthe period in which aix teospocn-\nfuls of stewed pears had been the\nlwr$ tor's only nourishment had increased to 08 bO'irs, mul Mr\nvm Skpartenentg 1 \"tr&tUi&tlj progressive somnolence.\"\nVICTORIA. B. C. Oct. 13.\u2014Synopsis of weather conditions:\nThe barometer has risen on the\ncoast, and fine weather continues\non the Pacific slope.\nLight frosts have occurred  ln  the\nprairie    provinces,    accompanied    by\nfine   weather.\nTSMKftATI RF,\nMin.   Max.\nNELSON        _... SS       ISO\nVictoria      ..     47       AS\nVancouver       60      62\nKamloops     40       64\n\u25a0ate.-an    Point      46       M\nPrince   Rupert     46       SS\nDawson.   Y.  T   26       SS\nSeattle   .     48       64\nPortland.  Ore  52       BS-\nSan    Pranclsco     52       66\nSpokane     , \u201e.,     36       64\nLoe   Angeles   -  62       62\nPenticton     36       64\nVernon     ,   SO       A8\nGrand    Porka    35      63\nKaslo      33       53\nCranbrook     _  30       56\nCalgar?      SO       68\nEdmonton      34        70\nSwift   Current     28       70\nPrince   Albert    _ 38       68\nQu'Appelle   30       66\nWinnipeg   40      66\nNanaimo 4fl        52\nForecast,    NeUon    and    vk LnM y\nPr-My   cloudy   vlth   light   frosts   a*.\nnight\n TTHE NBLSON DAttT NEW!, X1LSON. B. C. \u2014 WBDSESOAY MOBMNO, OCT-OBM M. !\u2022\u00bb\u25a0\nMANY FLOWERS\nAT FUNERAL OF\nH. L APPLEYARD\nNative of  Westmoreland  Is\nWidely  Esteemed  in\nCommunity\n1. Appleyard, for the past aix\na resident ee. Nelson, having\nhere   from   Ambleside,  West-\nEngland, died October  s\nshort  Illness.  At  flnt  on\nNelson he was associated\n\u201e wtth his brother, C. W.\nAppleyard, but for tbe past year had\nbeen   t  member  of   a   partnership\nfire Insurance and real estate business under the firm name of tbe\nB.  C. Agencies.\nMr. Appleyard made many friends\nduring big career In Nslson. Tbe-funeral service was held from fit.\nSaviour's pro-cathedral Monday, Ven.\nArchdeaoon Fred H oraham, tbe\nrector, conducting the servloe, many\nfloral takens testifying to the wide\ncircle of esteem.\nBe was bom ln Trout-deck, Westmoreland, In tlu yeu i\u00bb78, attended\nschool at Roseau, new rieetwood,\nLancashire, and before coming to\nNelson wee for St yean ln the Men-\ncfleeter As Liverpool District Bank,\nlimited.\nHe leaves hi, wife, his daughter\nAileen, and aon Dennis, two iS'lieer\nslaters wbo reside in lngland, and\nhie brother hen, C. W. Appleyard.\nThe  wstnees  of thle  summer   is\nattributed to the abnormal quantity\n.  of   rain   that   hag   fallen   between\nwt*h sf. A. Whitfield carrying on. the dhowen. \u2014Punch.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels\n1^.\nNELSON, B.C.\nSPECIAL WINTER RATES\nNOW IN EFFECT\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHUME\u2014 M. L. Faresoo, Procter;  J.  and  Mra.  Otn MeCowan,  Banff,   C\nX. McLeod, Edgewood;   D.  M. Ellen,   O.   Rogers,   T.   0.   Itofers,   Creaton;\nFARMVR WAI WW IN  firewood figures\nrrt-UHLA TT-U-AJ IN     IN l^e FRACAS IN\nPATH OF McHARDY\nCAR, WASHINGTON\nIs  Knocked   Down;   Passed\nAway ia lone Hospital\nLater\nWITNESSES STATE\nPEDESTRIAN AT FAULT\nStarted   Across   Road   and\nTurned Back in Path of\nApproaching Car\nMr. and Mrs. C. E. Mahon, Mr. and\nMn. L. B. Cook, H. E. Woodburg,\nH. A. Fowler, la. Holland, T. C. Porteous, J. Stott. C. O. Bennett, Vanoouver; Mrs. Jsmes Hunt, Procter;\nMr. -and Mn. t. R. Crsgo, J. I.\nTruedell, B. N. Sharp, Spokane; Ur.\nH. H. Bereon, Calgary; o. Mclnnes,\nWynndel; R. strachan. Penile* w.\nB. Hlrd, Seattle; B. Parioff, Winnipeg; W. a. Cole, Lethbrldge: T. A.\nBurns, P. c. White, Medicine Hat;\nW, D. D. Johnstone, Rosslsnd.\n s essve seeeeeessssss.\nWhere {he Gue& Is Kin&\ncOhe Savoy\nNEI_.-'S NSWOT AND FDJIST HOOT,\nMANY BOOMS WITH FIUVATX\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nssssssssssss ssssssi ss.f\u2014 ^mmatats\nSAVOf\u2014B. Tnvee, o. B. Treves.\nEdgewood; J. W. Twigg, Tnll; J.\nseukouskl Rosslsnd; A. Plllltlr, Ray\nHarvey, H. Priest, Pentloton; Miss\nMargaret snder, Revelstoke; E. Rue-\n\u25a0deka. Grand rorks; B. Perry, R. P.\nJscqueas. C M. Hutt, Calgary; R.\nBuerge, j. MlUer, Nakusp; Mr. and\nMn. J. Saven, Mln C. Barrlere,\ncreston; Miss w. Lane, Macleed; F.\nRaymond, Procter; Mr. and Mn. R\nV.  Nelly.   Reno Mine.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\n\u25a0et aad eold wtter In every room,\n(team heated.\nQUEENS\u2014Adopb Muller, Boswell;\nB. W. Carey, c. Carey, cocotts, Alberta; E. H. Frampton. Sanea; Miss\nJ. Cull, Nelson; Miss N. Skurato,\nMiss B. Skurato, onnd Forks; A.\nMcPherson,  Nelson.\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nJA8. E. MADDEN\nA   HOMELIKE   HOTEL\nIn  the HEART  ot the City\nNEW GRAND\nHOTEL\nr. L. KArAK, rnp.\nWeekly   or   Monthly  Rales,   etc\nsingle 16o up: Double gt.75 up\nWeekly or monthly ntes.\nHot end oold water ln all rooma\nPhone SOI       P. o. Boa lost\nFBER BUS MEETS EVERY TR4IX\nNEW ORAND\u2014Fred Toung, Trail;\nM. L.  Abert,  Nelson.\nMADDEN\u2014 H. Crow, Thak: H.\nHugh Spokane; w. King, Cranbrook;\nM. O. Williamson. J. Anderson, W.\nMadden, Greenwood: D. Moore,\n\u25a0belt.\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon Bt. none 5I.L\nfl. Wiulck\nFlit? Room* of Solid Comfort.\nHeadquarters for loners and\nMiners,\nAn s<ed farmer of Ttier, w*eh\u201e\nArthur UoUott. eo. unmarried, died\nTueeday tn the hospital at lone.\nWash., where he wu taken Sunday\nby 0. F. McHardy of Kelson after\nbelne knocked down by Mr. Me*\nHerdy'i car, in front of Which hs\nwalked. Mr. McHardy, who did sr-\nerythlnc poaslble for the injured\nnun. and arrsatsd for Mil panic-\nulsri of his progress to be sent him,\nwss adrlaed Tuesday that death had\nsupervened.\nMr. McHardy wm rsturnlnc home\nto Nelson from Spokane, where hs\nhad hsd a buslnsss conference with\nthe Bpoksne & Eastern Trust oompany, and waa driving at a moderate speed on the state highway.\none mile east of Tlfsr, about 3:45\np. m., when, st ths Intersection of\nths road to oolville, a \"secondary\nhlfhway,\" ths old man started to\ncrass from right to left. As hs st*\ntalned the middle of the wtds highway, Mr. MeHardy turned to the\nright to paaa behind him, hut at\nthat moment the old man turned\naround and started to retrace his\n\u2022tape, this putting him directly In\nthe course of the esr.\nPulling Instantly to the left, and\nat the same moment Jamming on\nhis brakes, Mr. McHardy apparently\nsafely cleared \u2022 Mr. Mollott, there\nbeing no blow perceptible, and he\n-topped tbe car within 30 feet snd\nlooked back, to speak to the man.\nTo his amazement the old man\nwas stretched on ths road unconscious, and ss It later turned out,\nwltb a broken leg, and suffering\nfrom concussion.\nAided by neighbors wbo fathered,\nMr. McHardy carried the uncon-\nscious man, wbo turned out to bs\nblind In the right eye, and to be\ncrippled from a leg fracture of\nsome years ago, to s store on tbe\ncorner, where he was laid on the\nfloor- Taking one of tbe neighbors,\nO. w. floott, with blm, Mr. McHardy then drove to lone to get s\ndoctor, and tn tbs doctor's sbaence\ntook back the doctor's *l\u00abter, who\nbandaged the Injured msn's head.\nafter whtch they wrapped him ln\na blanket snd Mr. McHardy took\nblm to tba lone  hospital.\nMr. McHardy waited at lone until the arrival of the doctor, the\nlatter stating he could not exactly\ndiagnose Mr. Mollott's Injuries, except the broken leg, until he took\nan X-Ray, for which purpose he\nwould hsve to wait for the power\nto oome on at 4 p. m. Arranging\nfor the doctor to mall him a full\nreport of the esse thst night, Mr.\nMcHardy came on home, expecting\nto reoelvs the latter Tuesday nlgbt.\nThe only mark on ths car to\nshow how tbe old man had been\nhtt was s small dent on the rear\nright mudguard, about the height\nof the knees, showing that the csr\nhad only barely hit him. Mr. McHardy in giving the facts hers yesterdsy, stated if tbe agsd farmer\nhad kept on ss he first started the\ncar would have passed him safely\non the right, and If he hsd come\nto a standstill In the middle of the\nhighway the csr sould hsve passed\nhim on either side. The old man\ngave no indication that he knew a\ncar was approaching, hts blind eye\nbeing toward the car se be turned\nto cross Its path.\nNeither st ths stars where the\nold nun was tsken nor at the lone\nhospital fmld Mr. McHardy gain\nInformatl'-T. of where hs should\nfile a report of tbe accident, and\nthere was no polios officer st lone\nto whom be could apply.\n.Accordingly on his arrival tn Nelson he filed a full report with\nChief of Police Thomas H. Long.\nQ. w. Scott and John Qlerhofer,\ntwo of Mr. Mollott's neighbors,\nwere eyewitnesses of tbe accident,\nMr. McHardy stated, both of them\nassuring him that lt wss unavoidable on his part snd that he was\nnot to blame.\nMr. Mollott waa farming at Tiger,\nacross tbe Pend OreUle river from\nthe highway.\nMrs. R. Hopp, Edgewood.\nGoes   to   the   Hospital\nLONDON. Oct. 18 (AP.-C T\nIB; Brsg Traction I11H; Brit Aran\nTob \u00a33 17s Od; Distillers \u00a32 10s;\nDunlop Rbr lde, Pord \u00a31 IBs M:\nGramaiphone \u00a3l 3s ed; Hud Bay \u00a3i\n5s; Hydro Elec 110%; Impl Cbem\n15s 7<4d:. Impl Tob ff ISs; Int\nHold & mv fl; Shell T_TQ3i\n6d; Vlckere 9s 7%d; Brit five pet\nwar loan \u00a3W 8s; Brit 4% pet war\nloan \u00a394 10s.\nTrail. B. C, Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. F. LEVESQUE, Prop.\nPODM0ROPF FAMILY\nA piece as (trewood, allegedly\nwielded br Qecrge Podmoroff, Doukhobor ol Terry's, ud tmpingeing on\ntbe contour ot sst., Podmoro-ff, rij-\nuree Id x charge of aeu-olt -ud\nby tbe wife against her buebend,\nwhich U nt tot heerlni ln provincial pel Ice court Wedneeday rooming. Hie alleged eeeeult occurred\nlwt Thunder.\nThe podmoroff couple ire funnier figures in provincial police court\ncircle, In Neleon, Mr. Podmoroff\net f.lrly regulir lntenrele bringing\nber hutbead up in oourt to .newer\ncharge, of eeeeult. In we of the\npeet mn Stipends Megutr.te\nJohn ceetmel hu found both elde,\nwere to Mune, end tn other, he\nhu regietered conviction, against\nthe husband.\nGROVE SEES THE\nPACIFIC FLYERS\nLAND, WHjATCHEE\nPangborn and Herndon Get\nGreat Welcome; Wenatchee Goea Wild\nW. t. Orove returned to Nslson the\nfirst at the week from Wenatchee\nwhere he wu one of the some SOO\npeople who saw Pangborn and Herndon lend tbelr plane after flying the\nPaclflo ocean from Japan.\n\"It wee a great eight and one I\nwill long remember.\" Mid Mr. Orove\nyesterday. \"The Pacific hoppers had\nflown over Wenatchee on their wsy\nto Spokane when they turned about,\ndumped .bout 100 gallon, of geso-\nline and then circled Wenatchee\nseven- times.\n\"It wae plainly seen tbat th. .hip\nwu the (lent red ell-metal Pacific\nmachln. u It ww minus an undercarriage. After circling Wenatchee.\nprobably to get a crowd out, the\nflyers dropped down to the field.\nIt wu ticklish landing without\nwheele, but the pelr came down\nand landed on tbe UH of the plane.\nLosing momentum tbe ship settled\non Ite belly, tilted forward and tben\nonto one wing. A wing ww damaged\nas wu the propellor.\"\n\"It wu a tired pair of aviators\nwho climbed out,\" wld Mr. Orove.\n\"and the flnt thing they wked for\nww a cigarette. They were ln their\nstocking feet.\n\"Wenatchee naturally went wild\nthet day.\" wld Mr. Drove.\nPRISON REMOVES\nCRIMINALS FROM\nDECENTSOCIETY\nNo Reform From Sentences\nPastor  Tells Trail\nRotarians\nTRAIL, B. C., Oct. 13\u2014The only\nuseful purpose served by Jails snd\npenl tanneries waa the remoTal ot\nthe criminal slement from deoent so-\nclety, according ti Bev. Uonard A\nMorrant, who addressed Trsll notary\nclub st Its meeting todsy.\nBev. Mr. Morrant spoke with the\nauthority of several years' experience\nas a warden at the former Kamloops\npenitentiary where there rutd been\nhoused ss many ss 143 prisoners st\none time.\nPrison life, he contended, did not\nreform.   He   could   not   recall   of\nsingle esse tn 'Ills experience where\na criminal htn reformed as a result\nof Incarceration and Jail experiences.\nHe recounted that many of the\nprisoners with whom he had come In\ncontact were addicted to the dope\nhabit and he stated there was considerable good In most of tbem If It\ncould be brought to the surface.\nRev. T. Montgomery of Banff and\nR. M. Hoyland were visitors st the\nmeeting.\nDOMINION PUBUC\nWORK LINES DP\nRELIEF PROGRAM\nKamloops Work Awtita Authorisation from Ottawa;\nNakusp, Salmon Arm\nSTART WHARF WORK\nUP ON  TROUT  LAKE\nRock Mattress on River Bank\nBelow Burton Will Be\nExtended This Fall\nThst tbe Dominion department of\npublic weeks wu preparing severs!\nsebemsa tn the southern Interior ln\nconnection with the unemployment\nrelief scheme, wee the statement of\nf. 1%. Donoaster. Dominion public\nworks engineer yesterday. While no\nwork bas been authorised as yst\nplans have been prepared, and are\nbeing submitted to Ottawa for consideration.\nAt Nakusp on the Arrow lakes\nplans hsve been formulated for construction of s 300-foot retaining wail\nat tbs upper approach to ths wharf\nthere and along tbe lakeshore. This\nscheme will give a new snd longer\napproach to tbe wharf by a 93-foot\nroad and will eliminate several\nbumps now encountered ln crossing\ntbe railway tracks.\nAnother large work being outlined\nand which awaits approval under the\nrelief scheme is for a large irrigation\nsystem in ths vicinity ot Salmon\nArm. This, If gone ahead wttb, will\nprovide irrigation for 3000 acres of\nland. About 300 farmers In this\ndistrict would benefit from the\nscheme.\nAt Kamloops the department Is\noutlining plans for a concrete steel\nretaining wall along the river bank\nfronting the city. Plans call for a\nfill behind this wall which would\nmake a fine esplanade. This relief\nmeasure awaits approval.\nMr. Doncaster stated that work on\ncompletion of tbe wharf et Oerrard\nwu about over and that crews had\nstarted upon a wharf at Trout teke.\nAnother crew will this week ke\nworking on tbe Upper Duncan river\nclearing it of snags. Jams and driftwood between Howser and Haley's\nLandlng.\nRepairs are being carried out on\nthe Eaat Arrow Park wharf on the\nArrow Lakes snd preparations sre In\nhand to do river bank protection\nwork below Burton. Bock mattress\nwill be built u sn extension to\nsimilar work completed lut year.\nProposed work wll cover 11,350 square\nfeet.\nSEEK A REVISION\nOF TARIFF SYSTEM\nNext Federal Election in New\nZealand WiU See Stand\nAgainst Labor\nBELIEVE HUNTING\nACCIDENT CAUSE\nOF MAN'S DEATH\nASHCBOIT, oet IS\u2014Believed to\n-ge the victim ot a hunting accident.\nButter McAbee, tbe eeecod MB <*\nMr. end Mre. M. L. McAbee at Alt-\ncroft, wa. found deed tsixr Bridge\nlake aatu-rdsy. Re had bwn en a\nhunting trip and the bedy wai\nfound or other hUBten.\nHe is believed to hew keen abet\nwhile elttlng on e lof. against Which\na gun wa. found leaning. The bene\nof  his left aim,  below  the elbow,\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nTO INVESTIGATE\nON RIVER FRONT\nHear Complaint.; Plan'Widen Part of Bowery; Split\non Road Matter\nnuiL, B. 0, Oct.  II\u2014widening\ns_stt_ed end Pert, of a bullet  \u2022* Bowery evenue wee again dleeiw-\n.ailtntwa   WSStS   Smiiw   vs sew \u2014,,,,-la   ._.(_.,\u00bb    BIm_   .\/*__-.\nwee \u2014.\ntire  found  in hia bod..\nLABOR LOOKING\nOUT FOR PEOPLE\nTOO OLDTO WORK\nConT*ntIonv Places   Demand\nThat   Wages   Must   Be\nRaided   to  Offset   Rule\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 18\u2014The Ameri-\ncen Federation of Labor ln convention here today turned Its attention\nto those hopeless thousanda who, at\nthe age of 46. find themselves\nthrown on the economic acrsphesp\nmarked \"too old to work.\"\nIn a manner so cuual thst tta\nsignificance escaped many In attendance, the Federation's 51st convention today laid down tbe demand\nthat lf industry continues Ita \"useless sfter 45\" policy, wages must be\nIncreased sufficiently to allow workmen to retire on their savings at\nthat age. The state organizations\ncommittee made the proposal in the\nform of instructions to state federations and local unions, it was adopted without debate.\nAn officii: 1 stand on unemployment Insuranoe. another vital subject affecting sll Industry, wss to be\nmade tomorrow when the resolutions\ncommittee reports.\n.HOSPITAL BOARD\nELECTS AUXILIARY\nHEAD A DIRECTOR\nHospital Scrubbing Campaign\nEnded; Hear Convention\nReport Thursday\ned by oouncil tonight. Bloeka adjoining block 9 ln which ownere have\n'petitioned for widening were not\nunanlmoui, lt wee pointed out.\nCouncil decided though no motion\nwee made, to go ahead wltb block\nnine and .how the property owner.\nIn adjoining block, what oould be\nfeme. A letter from Cltr Solicitor B\nS- Clegg wie filed.\nSewer eiteiuion on Reurvolr road\nand Bay avenue, as recommended by\nTrail board of health to tbe city\ncouncil were referred by tbe council\nto committee of tbe whole.\nWater   servloe   appllcatlona   of   P.\nDel  BuecMe and P. Trevuen were\nreferred by tbe oouncil to the city\nengineer',  department.\nSPLIT  DIFFERENCE\nW. P. Hud-tons complaint regarding tbe condition of tbe road leading to hla property, Beat Trail, wu\nreported to council by Alderman J.\nR. Anderson. The alderman recommended piecing the Oak street wall\nfive teet from the property Une,\n\"splitting the difference.\" City Solicitor It. J. Clegg stated th. only\nconsideration of the council ehould\nbe whether Ingres, to or egress from\nproperties would be affected. The\nsolicitor will look over tbe ground.\nTO INSPECT\nRIVERFRONT\nDeriding the statement the. the\nColumbia river bank wu u clean u\nBay avenue, A. McWblnnie wal_d\non the ctty council tonight. He\ne_ted the bank near the end cf\nthe smelter wall wu being used ln\nan unhealthful way. Mayor B. Leroee\nstated a gang of men wu to clean\nup the river bank. He made en engagement for the council to meet\nMr. McWbtnnle tomorrow and go\nover the ground. Alderman X. L.\nOroutage stated tbe river front generally wu not ln dirty ehape. Mayor\nLeroee asked for tbe oooperatlon of\nproperty owners.\nVANCOOVBR, Oot. l\u00bb-Orgen_ed\nlabor's endoieement of buge government project, hereafter wlll be dependent on luaraat-es that union\nstandards wlu ke maintained, tbe\nAmerican Federation of Labor, decided, in effect, bete today.\nBelief of unemployment la one of\nthe principal problems being dtseuw-\ned at the A. F. L's. ilat annual convention but tbe Federation doe. not\nwish to Issue blanket endorsement\nof projects on w-leh labor aay be\nemployed at swttms below union\nstandards.\nKaslo Ladies Pay\nVisit to Nakusp; Go\nby Automobile Route\nPlays Piano Beautifully;\nBonnington Ladies Aid\nCrippled Children\nIflOUGLA\n** HOTEL\ns\nReams and Bath\n_. U and A. ORO.TAOE.\nfrops.\nSteam Heated            Hot and Cold\nThroughout                      Weter\nBoi UM               Phone\n38\u00bb\nTRAIL, B.C.\nThs Royal Cats\n< LASS1C RESTAURANT\nRefinement   end   Dellceey   Prevail\nOPEN bAY AND NIGHT\nSpecial Dinner. 11:30 to S p.m.. ISe\nSpecial Sunday Chicken Dinner Mr\nspeelellilng In Chop Sney end Noodlr>\nPHONE   lg]\nSDQBWOOD, B. C, Oct. 13,\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. Otto Neiderman arrived\nSaturdsy to spend Thanksgiving\nwith Mr. Nelderraan's parents. Mr.\nand Mrs. Emu Neiderman, of the\nArrow Lake hotel.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Llttlewood of\n\"Cotswold\" ranch left for Vernon on\nSunday to spend a vacation In the\nOkanagan.\nMrs. R. Hopp who hu been 111 for\nthe last few days wu removed to\nthe Nakusp hospital on Saturday.\nSt. Agnes Anglican church wu\nprettily decorated on Sunday, the\noceulon being the harrest festival\nservices, which were held at 11 am.\nand 7:30 pm., both being well attended, cannon Thompeon officiating.\nDr. T. Tergman waa a visitor to\nEdgewood trom Nakusp on Saturday.\nMka. C. Pord, accompanied by her\nMn Bernard, is visiting frlenda In\nTnll and Rossland.\nUse The Nelson Daily\nNews Classified Ads\nThe Best Tonic\nand Nervine\nDr. Pierce's Prescription\nCHATHAM.  Ont.\n\u2014\"Dr. P l o r e s' s\nfavortts Prescription is ths bast\n\u201eonic and nervine\n'hat I have ever\n'alien;' aald Mrs.\n.mils Bussnel of\n2 Adelaide St.\nWhen I wu In\ni rundown, detail.'\ncstsd    s t s t s    of\nhealth, aome years sco, lt was Dr.\nPierces    Favorite    Ptwrlptlon    that\nreatored me to good health, and to\nlt  I   owe   my   splendid   health   of\ntoday.\nWrtte Dr.  Pierces Clinic, Buffalo,\nN. T., for free confidential  medical\nad flee.\nMlai Hla Desjardlns entertained\nmembers of the Welson Rotary club\nwith a piano ado on Monday afternoon. The young .ady received a\nwonderful hsnd for h\u00abr excellent\nplaying. The program waa ln charge\nof C- W. Tyler, chairman of the\ncrippled children'* committee. Mr.\nTyler outlined fully the coming drive\nfor the crippled children's fund snd\nurged sll Rotary members to get\nbehind the drive loo per cent\nA check of 910 was acknowledged\nfrom the Bonnlngton and South Blocan Women'a Institute toward this\nfund. Ths money was from the Institute's speclsi health fund and a\nletter read  oompllmented  the  club\n\u2022Tor crippled children in tlw district.\nW. Bamford, who Is leaving the city\nsoon, extended s p.rsonal donation\ntoward ths fund.\nMr. Tyler declared thst tbe crippled children's campaign wss being\norganized so that very tingle person\nln the district could contribute. In\nconjunction with the csnvass for\nfunds a tag dsy u being srrang.d\nand apeclal boxea for contributions\nwill be Installed In looal stores. Another concert is also being arranged.\nJ. A. Smith reported on activities\nof tbe club servloe committee. Howard Buah occupied the chair. The\npest meeting wlll be ln the handa ot\nthe vocational committee with A. B,\nOllker   la   charge.\nSTDNCT, K. S. W.. Oct. 13.\u2014(Canadian Press Csble via Reuters)\u2014 The\nnext federal election will seek\nunited front against the Labor party\nbrought about through an agreement by tbe national and country\nparties, the sll-for-Auatrslls league,\nand the producers' advisory councir\nto combine snd work out a programme of systematic revision, improvement in the arbitration system\nand tbe creation of new states, provisional on the holding of a referendum.\nPremier J. H- Scullln, speaking\ntodsy at Canberra, said the federal\ngovernment would meet power to\nbring about the unification of the\ncountry under a plan which would\ngive complete sovereign power to\nthe federal parliament. His plan,\nalso provide for the abolition of the\nstate parliaments and the transfer\nof authority In local affairs to the\nprovincial councils in local areas.\nTlie people, Premier Scullln ssld,\nwould be requested to give the central parliament, which would be\nthe only parliament, the right to\nchange the constitution as they\nshould   see  fit.\nTrail Council Takes No\nAction, Wood Sidewalk\nAt tbe monthly meeting of the\nboard of director, of Kootenay Lake\nOeneral noepltal. held Tuesday night,\nMrs. I- M. Varner, president of the\nnewly organised Kootensy Lake Oen\neral Hoepltal Women'a auxiliary, and\nthe auxiliary's nominee for membership on tho board, wu duly elected\na director.\nMrs. }\u25a0 T. Andrew, reported on the\nsucoeuful organization of the auxiliary, which le already functioning ae.\ntlvely, -with an enrolKd membership\nnow of ovar ISO.\nThe bulk of the evening was spent\non detailed discussion on the monthly report of the superintendent, Miss\nK. Ethel Orey.\nPLASTERING NEXT\nIt wu reported th.t tbe scrubbing\ncampilgn, carried out In the main\nbuilding, wu now completed, and\nthat pluterlng repairs would be\nundertaken next.\nAdjournment wu taken to Thursday evening, when the board will devote the whole evening to hearing\nthe report of Mlsa Oray on the recent convention of the Hospital association, and her recommendation,\narising   therefrom.\nTRAIL, B- C, Cact. 18.\u2014No action\nwu taken by the city couacll tonight when Alderman C. A. Newman\nsuggested that a wooden sidewalk\nbe built on Robson atreet, between\nSecond  and  Third avenuu.\nFallen Apples Get\nNelson Transient\nVagrancy Sentence\nSeven days In the Nelson I'll\nfor vagrancy waa the sentence\nImposed Tuesday by Stipendiary Magistrate John Cartmel of Kalman\nDebregzenl, a transient arrested by\nthe provincial police on tbe complaint of Mrs. Johnstone, of the\nNorth Shore, who reported him to\nhave taken two sacks of applea\nfrom  her ranch.\nMrs. Johnstone desired not to\nlay a charge of theft, and the provincial officer. 1-ald a charge of\nvagrancy.\nDebregzenl explained he picked\nup the apples on the ground, and\ncarried tbem away for the benefit\nof himself and other transients\nIn the \"-fl-angle*'.\nKASLO, B. C, Oct. IS\u2014Mis. Helen\nM. Sloan c-f Nelson wu week-end\nvisitor In the city.\nDr. and Mrs. M. R. Buted and\nMn. C. S. WlUlama of Trail motored\nto Kulo Saturday, coming by way\nof Neleon and returning home Sunday by wcy of Slocan point*.\nMlas I. G Walker of Victoria wu\na elty visitor during the week end.\nJ. 3. Skllllcorn wu a visitor tn\nNelson Saturday.\nDr. Leonard Cockle of Trail apent\nthe week end ln Kaalo on a hunting\ntrip.\nAlex: Thompson of TraU wu a\nvisitor ln town Saturday.\nA. 8. Manshrldge of Bonnlngton\napent the week end In the city.\nA. Jeffa df Nelaon wu a Sunday\nvisitor ln Kulo.\nH. Rodgers and Charlee o. Rodgers\nof Creeton motored to town Monday.\nMiss Marg\"t-!t Murpby of Neleon\nspent the week end and holldy ln\ntown with her parent., Mr. and Mrs.\nM. Murphy.\nMlu Eunice Goodenough of the\nMcLean school teaching staff ln\nRosslsnd, spent the put few day.\nln town with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs.  James  Goodenough.\nLut Tllesdsy, Oct. 0, Mra. John\nKeen, president of the Kaalo and\nDistrict Women's Institute, Mrs. Ron\naid Hewat. Mrs. J. J. Skllllcorn and\nMiss E. Murphy motored to Nakusp\nand returned. Mrs. Skllllcorn wu\nthe skillful driver ot Mrs. Hewat'a\ncar and made tbe trip over In less\nthan three and a half hours and th.\nreturn trip In about the aame\nlength of time. Th; party report\nthe road, ln good condition .nd\nmeeting with no mishaps had a\nmost enjoyable day. While ln Nakuap the ladles were the guests of\nthe N-'kusp Women's Institute at a\nsocial afternoon Mid views a splendid exhibition of hry\/lcraft, and\nwere delighted with the hospitality\nof the Nakusp ladles.\nLabor to Be Careful\nof Government JoM\nTRAIL COUNCIL\nURGES CLEANUP\nABOUTTHE CTTY\nPUn   Complet.   Survey   for\nSake of Health; Suggests\nIncinerator\nTBAIL, B. C, Oct. U.\u2014Suggu-\nHone to aid Medical Health Of.\nfleer Dr. F. 8. Baton were many end\nvaried at tonight's council meeting.\nMayor Bruno LeRoas stated a gen.\neral cleanup of the river-front wag\nln progress. He made an appoint,\nment for the oounoll to meet Mr.\nMcWhlnnle on the ground tomorrow\nat 4 o'clock.\nAlderman E. L. Oroulage declared\nthe river-front wu clean, except far\ntrade wute, old car bodies, end similar refuse.\nA tatter written by Dr. Baton ta\nSS business house. In the city stating that cupa, glassu and similar\nutensils must be sterilised after use\nwu read to tbe council.\nAppointment of Miss BUmm.l ta\nassist Dr. Eaton  in  his efforts  to\ntrace diphtheria carriers wu approved by tbe oouncil.\nWOULD  EXTEND  CITY\nThe extension of the city boundaries to take powble extewton of\nsewer eervlow wu suggested, and In\nthe event of this being Impossible\nIt wu decided to seek the cooperation of the provincial board of\naealth.\nIt wu suggmted that a complete\nsurvey of the olty be made to die-\ncover how many outside toilets were\nstill ln use. A thorough cleanup of\nthe Esplanade to Include moving\nbuildings, it necessary, wu prop-ied.\nAn office tn tbe city hall v.-ere\nDr. Eaton might give toxoid treatment to children of free sobool egs\nwu proposed. It wu lett to Mayor\nLeRose and Alderman Oroutege to\nappeal to the Consolidated to clean\nup shacks on lower Riverside avenue.\nA suggestion wu made that en\nIncinerator be built to replace the\nctty dump. Another suggestion ww\nthe provision of a public lavatory\nln the buslneu section.\nTHINK MANITOBA\nELECTION TO BE\nON IN NOVEMBER\nForecast Sure to Be Made\nFrom Government Caucus\nSlated Friday\nCorra Linn Worker\nInjured in a Fall\nSaskatchewan Premeir Has Faith in People\nof Southern Part of Province to Recover\na.ti\u00abr   twta   oouipaimenwa   ine   ciuo ,    , c     ,\non  the exoellent  work being done j ISBUes btatement      Baying\nMany Exaggerated Reports About Conditions\nFalling from the cofferdam at\nCorra Linn, now being completed\nby the Wut Kootenay Power *\nLight company, S. F. Porteous wu\nshaken up and bruised Tuesday evening, end wu brought to Kootenay\nLake   General  hospital.\nHe fell about 10 feet on to a\npile of rocks. No bones were broken,\nand a quick recovery Is expected.\nLighting of Riverside\nAvenue Discussed, Trail\nOansda hu 21 light airplane clubs\nwith a membership clou to nooo.\nOntario hu the largest number cf\nflying clubs with nine.\nEezema.Psorlasta\nAND   ALL   SKIN   DISEASES\nTAKE ODR REMEDIES\nWe believe ell Skin Dlsrues\nsna. from Toxle condition nf\nthe blood, eed recommend Internal remedies with ointment, and medicated soap\nBook on Skin and Blood Diseases with advice In plain\nenvelopes free by mall\nENGLISH HERBAL\nDISPENSARY LTD.\nEstablished SS  .ears\n1358 pevlo St., V.ncoaver, B.C.\nREOINA. astk.. Oct. 13 (CF) \u2014\nBU tilth and that ot tbe people, ln\nsouthern Sukatchewan, Premier Dr.\nJ. T. M. Anderson today tasued a\nstatement to the press for the purpose ot clarifying \"many exaggerated\nreport, prevalent throughout Canada\nrelative to conditions ln the southern\npart of the province of Saskatchewan.\"\nIn tbe statement. Dr. Anderson\nstresses the quick growth ot the district, the fine type of Canadian Inhabiting lt and the country's already demonstrated ability to recover\nfrom periods of agricultural and\neconomic depression. The statement\nfollows:\n\"16 view Qf the many exaggerated\nreports prevalent throughout Csnada\nrelative to conditions in the southern\npart of the province ot Bukatche-\nw-an, I feel lt my duty u prime minister to place before the people ot\nCanada the situation u It actually\nexist.. In the first pl*oe may I\npoint out ln the years ISM and 1808\na -very large section of the vut area\nknown u the Northwest Territories\nexperienced two .ucceaslv. welt, of\ndrought with its resultant hardship\namong the people of that, day. Succeeding these for . period of 3fi\nyeare or until the year 1990 there\nwere no serious crop failures ln\nwbat I* now th. province of Sukatchewan. During this time millions of\nbushels of grain were produced. The\npopulation Increased untll It reached\neight hundred thousand. Villages,\ntowns, and cities sprung up throughout this vut area which public men\nof 60 years ago prophesied would\nnever be an agricultural country-\nRural municipalities to the number\nof over SOO were organized under &\nsystem of looal sell government and\n5000 rural areu w_e formed Into\nschool district, wltb some ot the\nfinest school buildings to be found\nanywhere ln Csnada. AU thla. wu\naccomplished ln the brief period of\n35 years and la indicative of the\nindomitable courage and aplrtt of the\nearly western pioneers and their\nworthy successors.\n('HEAT SECTION\nAFFECTED\n\"In 1929 a great* section of the\nfinest wheat growing land ln the\nworld wu affected by drought to be\nfollowed by similar conditions ln the\nyear 1930 and 1931. In SI rural.municipalities of tbe south central area\nof ths province there have been no\ncrop, for three yeare and ln approximately 90 other municipalities none\nfor two years. The reeourcee ot our\n\u25a0people in these area, -have been very\nI rg:ly used up and it Me become\nneoeeury for the etete to seslet it.\npeople who have been so harshly af-\n-a'eeted by climatic condition, over\nwhich tbey obvloiwly hk\"v. \"ho control. These people are ts fine ty-fKs\nof Canadian and Brltlah eltlwns .,\ncan be found In any pert of the\nEmpire- They do not aak for. nor do\nthey went charity. They were prepared when conditions became normal to plsy ahUr part u they bave\ndone before ln laying .solidly the\nfoundation* for future progress ln\nthla new section est our Dominion,\" lives.\nWINNIFIO, Man., Oct. 18. (C\u00bb)\u2014\nAnnouncement of a general election\nIn Manitoba ln the latter pert of\nNovember ls expected, ln government\ncircles, to be made Friday at the\nlegislative building. Forecut Is certain to emanate from e government\ncaucus slated for Friday, and the\nannouncement Is expected te set\nthe balloting between November 80\nand the end of the month.\nPremier John Bracken la to make\na statement at the clow of the ell-\nday caucus, and though be hu re*\nfused to indicate Its probable nature, Information from Inner olrclee\nIndicates that the election announcement wtll be forthcoming. Write\nwould be Issued Immediately, It ie\nunderstood, permitting an election\nwithin 30 days.\nThe Progressive group heeded by\nPremier Bracken Includes as members In the 55-seat legislature. The\nremainder of tbe houu comprises\n15 Conservatives, firs Liberals, three\nLaborites and two Independents, and\none vacancy. Premier Bracken hu\nheaded the Manitoba government\nsince 1922.\nB.C. Ministers Go to\nWestern Conferenci\nVICTORIA, B. c., Oct. 13,\u2014Premier S. F. Tolmie, accompanied by\nHon. R. H. Pooley end Hon. J. W.\nJones, wtll leave tor Calgary ai\nthe week-end to attend tbe Calgary\nconference of wutern provinces, the\npremier Intimated today. The conference Is called to discuss taxation, legislation, guollne prloee and\nother matters.\nMore than 29.000 persons have\nseen this summer's Shakespearean\nperformances at Stratford, a reduction of only 4000 from lut year's\nrecord, despite the preeent hard\ntimes. Blr Berry Jackson plans to\ntake his Birmingham reperatory\nplayers on a tour of Canada  and\nTRAIL, B. G, Oct. 18.\u2014The city\ncouncil tonight referred to the fire,\nwater and light committee the\nquestion ot lighting lower Riverside\naarenue.\nThompson; seal, catch\n65 pounds salmon, balfot'r\nTRAIL,    B.    C,    Oct.    13\u2014Ralph| I.me'cities In the*Un\"lte-\"st\u00abt'-\"\nThajmpson returned to Trail with a   \u2014 .\u2014   -\ngrea\\ catch of fish after spending a|\nshort time at Balfour and hes crest-1\ned envy of many followers of the1\nsport. Accompanied by Frank 8eal|\nhe caught four salmon, weighing |\n20, 18, 14 and nine pound, each. A]\ncatoh of four trout, weighing five\npounds, brought the total poundage\nup to 64. The f|sh were all in splen-1\ndid condition, Mr. Thompson reported, end gave great sport on a\nlight rod.\nTBAIL   HUNTERS   OET   SACKS\nMUSHROOMS   INSTEAD   OF   OAME\nTRAIL, B. C Oct. 13\u2014They didn't\nget any big game, but they Nturned\nwith something that made up for\nall the lost steaks. Alec Brand.\nFrank Velltrtini and William Began\nmade a hunting trip In tbe boundary\noountry, around Orand Forks, over\nthe weekend. Tiny brought back ;\u201e mn\nfour racks of mushroom, and they\nare enjoying every one of them.\nBellae, crpltal of Brltlah Honduras,\nhu a plague of fllea and moeqult-\no!a adding to Its troubles following\nthe hurricane which destroyed most\nof  -Uie  city  snd  took a  thousand\nBecauae it does pesi\nti vely relieve the tal\ning almoK u seen s\napplied end effects\nhealthful healing of tb\nakin,Dr. Chess's Ointmer\nis a most aatiafsctory tree\nment for Eczema, Hemoi\n.holds or Piles snd el\nIrritations of the skin, fill\nJjjJi, veers of success.\nDr. Chase's\nOINTMENT\n S '\nRESERVOIR DAM\nIS COMPLETED\nAT CRANBROOK\nIs Partly Pined With Water;\nAllowing for Earth\nWork Settle\nFIVE BUILDING\nPERMITS ISSUED\nProvincial    Police    Account\nBefore Council; Salary\nCut Looms\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 13 \u2014\nAlderman Flowers acted as mayor\ntn the absence of Mayor Roberts\nat the meeting of the oouncil on\nThursday. A special meeting had\nbeen called a week before at which\nnewspaper reports aa to the proportion of costs for municipal undertakings  to  be  borne  by the  pro-\nAdorable Children!\nDont let them bo handicapped by\npoor health.\nBaby's Om Tablets are the perfect\nlaxative for children. They oro a safe\nand simple remedy for colds, simple\nfever, coated tongue, loss of appetite,\nconstipation, indigestion, etc.\nMothers, see that you hsve Baby's\nOwn Tablets in tho house always 1 25\ncento per package at any druggist's.\nBABY'S OWN TABLETS\n(Dr. WllllMim in\nUncial end I \u00a9der*. \u25a0owtuoent.\nwere dlecuseed. and, a Has ot poe-\nflbla work to ba undertaken, submitted by tba oity'e aoper_n*end-\nent, waa gout over, lo tha abaaaoa\nof a reply from tha provincial aec-\nretary to the council's wtra uklag\nfor definite information aa to the\nproportion of ooate to ba borne by\nthe government*, the natter waa\nhald ovar to enable tha superintendent, wbo li loine to Penile wtth\nthe mayor \u00bbnd Aldennsn Flowers the\nne_\u00bb day. to-ascertain from Parole\nofficials the particulars of their program and thalr arraofeneiit with\ntha governments.\nSeveral bylaws reoelved their\nreadings-\nA letter from th* automobile club\nof Britten Columbia asking tbe\ncouncil to endorse' a resolution to\nbe submitted to this' government\nasking that highway construction\nIn the province be placed In the\nhanda of a provincial highway commissioner,  waa  endorsed.\nA letter from James Kerrigan and\ncompany asking for a five-year lease\non the ground occupied by his\nwarehouse and tanks, or for a price\nfor sale of same waa referred to\ntbe works committee to report back\nto the council.\nA letter from the secretary of tha\nresolution stating that their organisation was In favbr of a reduction of salaries of all city officials, waa held over for a full\nratepayers association, embodying a\nmeeting of the council.\nAlderman Flowers submitted a\nfull report of the convention of tho\nUnion of B. 0- Municipalities held\nln New Westminster, which he attended. Mr. Flowers stated that at\nthe oouncil there were speakers\nfrom Alberta, Washington .and Oregon, aa well aa members from tha\nprovincial government, including\nHon. Mr. Bruhn, Hon. Mr. Jones,\nHon. Mr. Hinchliffe and others. In\ndealing with the Important matter\nof highways Hon. Mr. Bruhn, minister of public works told the gathering that there were 24,000 mllea\nthe coat of cementing thera all\nwould b\u00ab out of the question. He\nsaid however, that a large percentage could he given a black\ntop dressing that would laat for\na  considerable   time.\nAlderman Collier oalled tbe at*\ntention of tbe council to the debris\non the property owned by Mab\nWaa aa a result. of the Chinatown\nftre, mentioning that the property\nwbuld probably revert to tbe city\nfor tax sale. Tbe matter waa referred to the works committee.\nCOURT OF REVISION\nOn motion of Alderman Scott and\nLittle it was decided that tbe court\nof Revision to hear complaints\nagainst    special     assessment     rolls\nMi\nPAIN\nScientific Teeth Correction\n(Without Pain by Our\nFamous Anesthetic\nWe eaa tsr-wssAiHr tnat, carrot, mater* ar \u00ab_-\nlpartner lumber sf nor Kevins teeth la a awn-\nMr tkat will aifoitsb yoa. On* nstteis see sa\n.Intel* aaa sentl*\u2014-** aw bs obn\u00bb_laa\u00ab eases ar\nharmful ftrnaa \" that j\u00ab sit aal sbUs \u2022*- tea deotal\n\u25a0 hair white tte wark pracressm. At aa time tartar\ntreatment ae too raffer pala er Aseemfart. Te\n\"how ron confidence In the ttorsMUtr aad totem- *\niibflltr af ear wort, we Issae a SO-rcar makes\u2014\u25a0* A\nmanatee aw     \"\n\\\/\nf     Note Our\nReasonable\nPrice*\nBryjewark JfjS\n$tar. Entire Month'. \\bM\nfla* BTttactioB*. ft.0a\n_-_Unt\u00ab. up from..... S1.90\nOro wn*   .....\" >\u25a0*\u25a0\u2022\u2022\nAll Work\nPerformed\n^  Without Pain   f\nCanadian Money\nTaken at Par\n___*_\u00a3*\ni eafeuteve* la\nCREDIT\n**)ttw',\npermeate.    All w\ndlatolr ani I\nDENTISTS\nRooms tH-l-r-M-ICIMI\ntmtett Floor Jsnlesea tUe.\nOW Owl Drug aim\nWUl sM  MversUe\nMlene Halli 1MI\nSpoksns.   Wash.\n,'Dr.ltnven fcuii'. It It Hurts Dont Pat,\nHeadquarters for\nWinter Fuel\nWe carry Gait, Imperial Lump, Kleenburn, Acme,\nDrumheller, Crow's Nest and Michel Coals. Also\nBriquettes, Petroleum Coke, and Wood of all kinds\nand lengths at all prices.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 33\ncovering local Improvement work\nfor 1911 ahould consist of tba whole\noouaeu end shall alt In tha council\nchamber on November It, at 740\nP. M.\nTbe finance committee presented\naccounts amounting te lll.MI.68,\nwhich were ordered paid.\nThe fire chiefs report cited lour\ncalls during tbe month A false\nalaon call to the Central ,achooi\nuoeuned en Sept. 8 wben tbe reflection ot refuse tires on the eaat\nwall of tha achool had oauaad someone to turn In the alarm. On Sept. 11\na fire In the upstetre of the houae\nnext tha IWla hotel waa caused\nbr a dgarrette. On Sept. 20 there\nwaa the residence of Mr. Ihulkna;\non Burwell avenue and on Sept.\n39 a ehlmmey fire at tha residence\nof D. Taylor. lire alarm stations\nln tba ctty had been tasted. Tbe\nusual inspections had bean' carried\nout and eame clean-up orders issued\nWalla ahd callings tn tbe upstairs\nof the fireball had been oalclmlned\nby tba firemen.\nDAM   COMPLETED\nThe worka committee reported the\nnew dam at tha elty reservoir completed aad tba reservoir filled to\nwithin 99 inches of Its capacity.\nTba earth work of the dam will\nnow ba allowed to settle and consolidate before any more water ls\nrun In, The preeent quantity ln tbe\nreservoir is approximately 13,000,000\ngallons.\nThe year's program of local improvement projecte la all completed.\nWater haa been eut off ahd fixtures drained at the playground\npark and cemetery. Caretakers' eervloee at the three parks terminated\non September 10. Tba tourist park\nkept open till October 1. the caretaker receiving any fee* in return\nfor hla services. The swimming pool\nhaa been cloeed and drained for tha\nseason. Repairs undertaken In the\nArena rink are nearing completion.\nNew concrete floors ln. tbe kitchen\nand passages of tba police station\nhave been Installed.\nPlve building permits were Issued\nduring the month, the estimated\nvalue being 9*30.\nThe light committee reported 38\neervloee Installed and 38 cut off.\nAlterations to atreet poles bad- been\ncarried on ln several places. Consumption for the month wae 87,240.\nsa against 80,730 laat month end\n91,040   ln   September   1030.\nThe police report showed no complaint* of a serious nature, 10\ncaaea having been dealt with. Of\ntheae the causes were: Intoxication,\neight. Aeesult, one. no licence, one.\nA sum of 909 waa collected In fines,\nseveral who reoelved sentence are\nserving time. Meals served: City\nprisoners, 819; provincial prisoners.\n179;  transients. 301. Total, 006.\nMayor Roberts having returned\nfrom the ooast, a special session of\nthe oouncil was hald Prlday evening.\nOn Mr. Kerrigan's request, tor a\nfive-year lease on the property on\nwhich his oil tanks are situated, it\nwas decided to grant a three-yeer\nlease at a rental of 93 per month\nsubject to aale. be to have the first\nopportunity to buy.\nDiscussing a request from M, Mai-\ngawa that he ba allowed to pur-\nohaee a half acre belonging to the\nelty on the eaat aide of the new\nmain highway, it waa shown tbe\nproperty In question oonstita of\ntwo acres, and the decision was that\nlt would bs unwise to divide the\nproperty. It was decided to sufc\ngest to him that he purchase the\nentire piece at a purchase prloe of\n9900.\nA request from tbe board of trade\nthat that body be allowed to use\ntbe council chambers for their meet\nInge wea granted.\nA request from J. V. Laurie that\nhe ba allowed to install waste paper\nand refuse containers on the streets,\nbe to keep these emptied, and to\nuse them as sdvertlslng mediums,\nwas discussed- The right to plaee\nthe containers was granted, the filling of tbe contract to be under\ntbe supervision of tbe city superintendent.\nAn account from the provincial\npolice for expenses Incurred in taking a patient to the Bssondele mental hospital was considered It was\ndecided to refer the charge to tbe\nrelief committee to see whether\ntheir funds would cover the account.\nrThe mayor wae Instructed to interview the telephone company .to\nsee whether a special rata oould be\nobtained for tbe substation at the\neast of tbe city. Palling to obtain\na rate, the telephone there will .be\ndiscontinued.\nTbe letter from the aecretary of\nthe Ratepayers' association embodying a. resolution favoring the cutting of all salaries of city officials\nwas left for decision at a future\nmeeting.\nHallowe'en Fun for\nTrail Kiddies Takes\nShape: Council Aids\nTRAIL. B C, Oct. 13-^Uktng full\nrights at Butler park, cloelng of\nstreets for a parade, assistance of\npolice and- tbe annual grant for 9100\ntoward the Trail Hallowe'en oelebrs<\ntion, J. A. MacKinnon waited on\ncity council tonight. His requests\nwere granted.\n\u00a3mptyjockeU\nwith\nEPISON\nMAZDA\nLAMPS\nT-NONT delay assy longec. O* a\nJL\/ carton or two of BdUon\nHasda Lamps today\u2014611 the empty\nsockets \u2014replace the blackened\nlamps. Vou wffl enjoy tha extra\ncomfort\u2014and thi freedom from\nfuture anaoyane*.\nMADE\nCANADA\nCANADIAN    GENERAL    ELECTRIC    CO.   LIMITED\nbV\n\u2014 WCDVEfDAT StrStVmttS. OCTOBER 14. lM_a\nTHE AIR TONIGHT\nwetn-mD-... oet. it\nstmneirt n_e\nMBC   PBO-BAMg\n\u2022J:00-*rofTWn\u2014KOO, KHQ. KOMO,\nKOW.  BT.  KSL,  KOA.    Mendelssohn' oiM  ciub;   ami*  muse,\nsporano; Phil Spltalny's bend;\nLew  White, or-fanlst.     'Trans.)\n\u25a03-J0\u2014Hout\u2014KOO. KH-Q, KOMO,\nKOW, KJ], KSL, KOA. Olive Palmer, aop-rano; Paul Oliver, tenor:\nTh, Revelers, Junes Melton, Lewis\nJames, tenors, Phil Dewey, barium,; Wilfred Olen, bass; orcheetra\ndlnoUon \u2014\"no Rape,.  (Trans.)\n7 :K>\u2014ProiTam\u2014KOO. KHQ, KOMO,\nBOW, KFI, Ka-U KOA. Sport,\nUrtsrvlew br Orantland Riot; all-\nstrl_g' orchestra direction Ousteve\nHae\u2014when.    (trane.)\n8:00\u2014Amoa _' Andy\u2014KOO, KHQ,\nKOMO. KOW. KSL. KOA. Black-\n(aoe Comedians\n8:18\u2014 Vermont Lumberjacks- KOO.\n_H<J. KOMO. KOW, KFI. IM\nMaxwell, Charles Marshall; Doric\nquartet, Ben Klaasen, Myron Wesley, tenon; Everett rcetaer, baritone; Harry Stanton, bass; Bmll J.\nPole*, pianist and director.\n8:30\u2014Ren-serous\u2014KOO. Coquettes,\nvocal trio; Alvlno Rey. banlolst\nsnd nlterist; Paul Caraon, ortan-\n1st; Rosa Peterson. lylophonlst.\n9.OO\u2014Piano Pictures\u2014KOO, KOA.\nPhyUda Ashley sod Aileen Fealy.\n9*00\u2014Rto-Tln-Tln Thriller \u2014 KHQ,\nKOMO, KOW, KPO, KFI. Dramatic\nsketch.\n9:18-Polltlcal Talk\u2014KOO.\n9:50\u2014John and Ned\u2014KOO. Bonis\nsnd dialogue.\n9:46\u2014Protram. KOO, KHQ,  KOMO,\nKOW, KFI, KSL.\n10:00\u2014New,   Plaehee\u2014KHQ,    KOMO,\nKOW, KPO, KFI    Sam Haye,.\n10:00\u2014National   Conoert  Orchestra\u2014\nKOD. KOA (KHQ 10:301 Dlrsctlon\nJoeepb Hornlk.\n11:60\u2014Lofner-Hsrrls danoe orcheetrs,\nKOO, KFI.\n12:00\u2014NBC  Orian Recital, KOO.\nCJO\u00ab _ VANCOUVER \u20141210 K\n247  m; Channel  121;  800  w\n6:30\u2014News  Flsshes.\n8:46\u2014Musical program\n7:46\u2014Trained Canaries program\ns.-OOStudlo  program  till   10:00.\n6:00\u2014Program.\n6:30\u2014Hour\n7:30\u2014_rocram.\n8:00\u2014Arno,   _' Andy        *\n8:16\u2014Vermont  Lumberjacks.\n6:30\u2014Daml-Taese  Revue.\n9:00\u2014Rln-Tln-Tln   ThrUl-sr.\n9:18\u2014Doric  Quartet.\n9:80\u2014NBC Drama Hour.\n10:16\u2014National   Concert   Orcheetrs.\n10:00\u2014News Flashes.\n11:00\u2014Laey ike at the Kike.\nIH  \u2014  TACOMA  \u2014  760  K\n6M:6 m.;     Channel 76;     1000 i\n10:00\u2014Danoe   orchestra.\n11 \u25a000\u2014T-ha White Wtaerd.\n11:16\u2014BUl Hogan's Dance orch.\nKNX   \u2014   HOLLYWOOD   \u2014   1060   K\n285.6 m-i    Channel 105;    500o w.\n6:00\u2014New,.\n6:16\u2014Tom and Wash.\n6:41\u2014Chaster Markst, organist.\n7:00\u2014 prank    Watanabe    and    the\nHonorable Archie.\n7:16\u2014Penn and Oas\n7:80\u2014Sherman    oaks    Sennaders;\nDrury Lane, tenor.\n8:00\u2014 Alrdales.\n8:30\u2014Orcheetra.\n9:0O\u2014Rev. ttSSsel Dunesn\n9:16\u2014Arlrona Wranglers.\n10:00\u2014Orchestra\n11*00\u2014New Inn. *\nKEX \u2014 PORTLAND \u2014 1160 K\n264] m.;     Channel 118;     5000 \u00ab\n8:00\u2014Damskl's Concert Ensemble.\n9.00\u2014Jean Kantrier,  baritone.\n9:15.\u2014Mar Sohl; Win. Lundberg.\n9:30\u2014vie Meyer's orchestra.\n10:30\u2014Moonlight Melodies.\n11 DO\u2014Vic Meyer's orchestra.\n11:46\u2014Allen Daniels.\n12 :!>\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2014Midnight Reveller\nKIL \u2014 SALT LAKE CITY \u2014 1130 K\n286.3 m.;     Channel  118;     6Mo w\n\u20228:60\u2014prtgrarn.\n\u00ab:\u2022*>\u2014HOur\n7:30\u2014Pro-gram\n6-00\u2014Amos 'n' Andy\n8:16\u2014<\u00bbttee-ft Music\n8:466\u20141-oenta TJaMcrlptlem\n9:16\u2014Answer  Ms_.\n9:30\u2014Murtc and Art program.\n10:00\u2014Dance MUslc\nINBV  \u2014   VANCOUVER   \u2014   1030   K\n291.1 m.;     Channel 108;    500 w.\n6:00\u2014Dinner. Hour.\n7:00\u2014Program from Montreal.\n7:80\u2014Medical talk.\n7:458\u2014Instrumental trio.\n6:30\u2014Weather  Forecart.\nKOMO   \u2014   SEATTLE   \u2014  1120  K\n328.9 m.;     Channel \u00bb-.     1000 w.\n6:00\u2014R-ogram.\n6:30\u2014Hour.\n7:30\u2014Progiam\n6.00\u2014Amoa 'n' Andy.\n8:15\u2014Vermont  Lumberjack,.\n8:30\u2014Rhythm Boys.\n8:46-- Melody   Man.\n9 oo\u2014Rln-Tln-Tln ThriUers\n9:18\u2014Fireside Hour.\n9:456\u2014Program.\n10-00\u2014News Flashes\n10:16\u2014Life safer.\n10:2O\u2014-Blend  Hour\n10:25\u2014O!obe \"Trotter\n11:30\u2014Dance orcheetra\n13*00\u2014organ Recital\nKJR \u2014  SEATTLE  \u2014  97o K\n3091 m.;     Channel 97;     trm w.\n6:00\u2014Northwest Trio.\n8 50\u2014Happy Duo.\n6 48\u2014Mabel Mohrman. pplane.\n7.-IXV\u2014Knlghta of No*\u00abs\n8:0O\u2014Damskl's concert Etuemble\n9:00\u2014Knights of ths Road.\n9:18\u2014Mar Sohl;   Win  Lundberg\n0:80\u2014Vic Meyer's orcbestrs.\n10:30\u2014Moonlight    Melodise:      Jsan\nKantnar. baritone; Mabel Mohrman, piano; Warren Wright, organist.\n11:00\u2014VI, Meyer's orch-sstra\n12:00\u2014Midnight Remoter,.\nKFRC \u2014 SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 619\n4*1 m.;     Channel 61;     160* w.\n6-00\u2014Sharnova Trio.\n6 is\u2014Edna   Fisher,    plsno    moods.\n6:80\u2014Dance Concert.\n6 456\u2014 Black  and Blu,\n7:00\u2014Vitality pe-rsonallt-s,\n7:16\u2014Concert.  Oorp.\n8:00\u2014The Street singer.\n8:16\u2014Arthur pryor-. Military \u00bb\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab_\n8:60\u2014Quarter Hour.\n8:456\u2014Walter  S. Baker\n9*00\u2014Tom  Oerun's orcheetra.\n9:50\u2014The Twrror Ship.\n10*00\u2014Program\n10:06\u2014Anun Weak', orcbestrs\n11-00\u2014Hal orayson's orchsstra\n13:00\u2014Vagabond of the Air.\nKPO \u2014 SAN FRANCISCO \u2014 6\u00ab1 K\n440.9 m.;     rhannel 68;    8000 w.\n6:0O\u2014Smltos.\n6;30\u2014Henry Thompson, tenor.\n6:466\u2014Henry Starr, tbe 16-4o Bo;\n7:0O\u2014Bob Klelr's Syncopators.\n7:466\u2014CecU and  Sally.\n8:00\u2014Boetontans of the Air.\n9-00\u2014Mn-Tln-Tln Thriller.\n9:16\u2014Auto Races Brmdcae*.\n10:18\u2014News Plaah-w.\n10 :J0\u2014program.\n10:86\u2014Horn, Towner,.\n11-00\u2014Norman's sen Frgnclscans.\nKOO  \u2014   OAKLAND   \u2014   79*   K\n378.5 m.;     Channel 71;     10,006 w.\n6:00\u2014Program,\n6:30\u2014Hour,\n7*30\u2014Program\n8:00\u2014Arno, 'n' Andy.\n8:18\u2014Vermont Lumberjscks.\n8:30\u2014Rendezvous.\n9:0O\u2014Piano Picture,.\n8:30\u2014John and Nad.\n9:466\u2014Program.\n10:00\u2014National Conoert ortaiwtra.\n11:00\u2014Lofner-Harrts Dane, orcheetrs\n12:00\u2014NBC  Organ  Recital.\nKOA   \u2014   SPOKANE   \u2014   1476   K\n204 m.:     Channel 147:     5000 w.\n6:30\u2014Happy Duo.\n6:455\u2014Piano Rambllngs.\n7 OO\u2014Kntghte oi Notes.\n8:00\u2014Damskl's concert Ensemble.\n9(0\u2014Knights of ths Road: FT.\n9:15\u2014M. sohl. w. Lundberg, ducts.\n9:30\u2014Vic Meyer's orchestra.\n10:30\u2014Moonlight.   Melodies:      Jean\nKantner. baritone; Mabel Mohrman, piano.\n11:00\u2014vie Meyer's orchestra.\nNickel, in the form of alloys used\nln the construction ot the New\nwoldorf hotel, New Tork, amounted\nto 141,800 pounds\n150 MEN WORK\nIN BOUNDARY'S\nRELIEF CAMPS\nORJWD PORKS. B. C, Oct IS-\nThere are now some 150 men ln tbe\nroed relief camps of the Grand\nForke dlttrlct, of which Cascade haa\n90, Boundary Falls 38, Hock Creek\n40 and Carmt 25. These numbers\nare being added to as camp preparations ere completed for the handling of mare men.\nDuring the put few weeks work\nhss been directed to the construction of campa et the different points\nand ln preparation of the camps a\ngood many factors have had to be\ntaken Into consideration. They have\nbeen built wttb s view to harlng\ncomfortable and sanitary quarters\n(luring the winter months, aa tt la\npresumed that these campa will\nquite likely continue for a year and\npossibly  more.\nThe wages naturally bring up a\ngood deal of comment. While there\nare tboee who take the view that\ntbe- ordinary laborer Is mighty lucky\nduring the present depressed times\nto have a nice steady Job, with comfortable quarters and good meals,\nthere are alao many who feel that\nthey would like to be pulling down\nthe foreman'a nay.\nJust when campa ware getting\nstarted shipments of all kinds ot\nmaterial began to arrive tn carload\nlota from Vaaeavrag. There wae a\nhowl, aad quit* properly eo, from\nlocal merchants, wttb Uw reeult that\nC. Bailey haa bean appointed purchasing agent for thla dlatrlct and\nwlll buy through looal stores. Thera\nle a great deal of organlalBf to ba\ndone ln thle department, nut aa\nsoon ea time la available lt la tbe\nintention to buy ail ranch products\nfrom farmers of the dlatrlct, such\nas vegetables, beef, butter, milk, etc.\nCommissaries are established at each\ncamp. W. 8. Jones ta ln charge\nat Cascade and Capt. Brew at Rock\nCreek.\nUr. Bailey le alao employment\nagent and has an office ln the government building. Those desiring\nInformation In oonnectlon with employment should see him.\u2014Orand\nForks Gazette.\nPhone Line Built\nup to Crow's Nest\nFERCTB. B. C. Oct. IJ\u2014The\nconstruction of the trans-Canada\ntelephone Hue wae completed aa far\nae crows Nest on Saturday from\nthe British Columbia aide. Building\nwill continue eastward through Alberta until tt meets the weet bound\nconstruction which ls coming up the\nCrows Reat paaa from the Alberta\naide.\nNELSON CLOCKS GO\nBACK ONE HOUR AT\nMIDNIGHT TONIGHT\nToday ta tha laat day under advanoed time ln Nelson under\nterms of tba plebiscite taken la\nspring, which wen rsoentty i\nad by the city council, and at mid-\nni\u00bbst tonight tbe docks will be Mt\nback ona hour, rerertlni to standard\ntime\nOeneral Sir  John  Mooaah.   noted\nAustralian engineer and soldier, died\nBRONCHITIS\ni_2-_u_ wa stop that __*_\u00ab.U.\na *^wy ovnfft ssd rapm\nrbokrxtmtx-s. When I t-ka _________\nI cm rt a good  -ghf, ____\u00a3.    My\n__d <w_i_n -Aop.\n~\u00ab U\nHo\nttt\nRAZ-MAH\n!\u2022>.\nIll\n\\\\ ^\nIJiTfi\nSPECIALS\nAbort lines that we are going\nto sell at less than wholesale\ncost. From one dozen to JItc\ndozen   tn   each   lot,\n$6*00\nCOMBINATIONS\nTiger   Brand,   Silk   and   Wool.\n$3.00\n$3.95\nCOMBINATIONS\nstanfield's Bed Label\n$a.47\nCOMBINATIONS\nTurnbuU's,  ill wool.\n$2.47\n$8.00\nCOMBINATIONS\nTurnhnirs   Cee*Tee.\n$4.00\n$2.95\nShirts, Drawers\nstanfield's Bed label.\n$1.47\n$1.75\nShirts, Drawers\nHear?'   ribbed  woolen.\n75c\n$2.25\nShirts, Drawers\nTurnbuU's   and   Stanfleld)\n$1.00\n$1.50\nShirts, Drawers\nC1_Udm_\\   Tiger   Brand\n75c\n750\nShirts, Drawers\nCnildren'*,   flew*.   Unefl\n25c\n75<5\nShirts, Drawers\nChildren _>,   woolen\n25c\nDRE^SHIRTS\nCellar attached or to mstrh\n\u20227c\nSCHMLSHOES\nBaal Values at\n$237\nwoiHto\nKhaki   and   Flannelette.\n67c\nSUCH BARGAIN! AI THEJE\nWEDNESDAY-THURSDAY SPECIALS\nFour Days-and This Sale Will\nBe History-Buy Before It Is Too\nLate\u2014Take Advantage of\nThese Great Savings\nOpen All Day Wednesday\nMB*8\n60<\nwSaV^xmV  * ST\u00ab*'\nac   ..'*\u00ab'  tn.     \"\"\u00bb   e        \"to\n\"of       ' only\n$35.00\nSUITS\nNow the final wallop. Starting Wednesday morning m% pla_-\u00ab all\nour regular $35.00, $37.50 and {27.50 auits on sale at 914.75\nThis means that every suit left' In our store goes at the on\u00ab\nprice   '. .:    814.75\nCONE GET 'EM EARLY\nCHOICE ANY SUIT IN STORE\nCharles Morris Ltd.\n1\n rasa room\n\u25a0m nuniiUH nwi. hclmm. sx e. - wtomebdat mom-tow, ii i mt* u. ifW\n.mm WOMAN'S PAGE\nTke Beauty Box\nby Helen Follett\nTha Latest Hat Enhance Feminine Charm\nMr Meert-lin tbs ski- ul refin-\ntag tbs pons, tr* _ pack am ot\nnil ami Mix two tsblsspoonlnls with\nat* wster, sooufh to (otm t thin\nputs; sdd ttte juice ot s lsmon.\navsor owsT ths skin snd cover with\nMre latrsrs ot cheesecloth, clip out\nspace tot tbs noss so thst bretthlng\nMil ne comfortable. LM down snd\nMink s ls-mlnute nsp. R*m<m> pack\nwltb tepid wstsr, nap on the met-\nsees   cream,   tsp   brla_j.\nWbsn sbaup-olnf niturtll* cud*\n'i\u00bblr rlass with warm wAtsr, rub in\nmatted soap, rinse, um soap ones\nmtdntt, sad glrs s Ilnal rlslnc. No\ncold wstsr; curl*>cues don't llks It.\nAttn tbs final rinelnt with tht\nspray, turn ths bot wster on In ths\nwash bowl aad ttsim tbs _sir. Dr*\nm It doasn't drip, thsn coax ln tbs\nwars  Haas  with  comb  snd  fingers.\nHis o-tal sbapsd finger nail ls\nsoppossd to bs tba proper osper, but\nttt not a* good for long, narrow\nMils. Mubb* nails nssd long ss-as,\nsomewhat pollitsd. Cutting thickens\nmass., aad seiaaon seldom form a\nales lias. Oas a flls, working from j\neither side toward ths center.\nVs tsp-turs tbs drssi nots _ lbs\nda*, tb. -feminine frame should bs\nslander but not flat prairie. __rs\nskoald ba a normal butt, but only a\nsuggestion of hips. A lonl* baok Is\nIT prims Importance, though tew\nwomen give s thought to that deta.ll\neg saatomlcsl perfection. Correct\nsatrlsft bids man* defects but slas.\nnatural gracs ta a beauty asset tbat\naas seldom area nowadays. Wben\nwomen wore trains, swung their\ndraperies ovar tbelr arms, wslkiag\nwas etna-Whim of sa art. Msbbe\nmbm day phy-alcij education win\nhsrs s ptrt in tht program of\ntctngtag up gals the ws* tbs*\nshould go.\nOU* hair demands a wsskly shampoo wltb s bland msltsd soap snd\nquantities of running water, Ths\nslightest smount ot soap scum lsft\nla tbs strands Increases olllness,\nVm x black comb snd nots If there\nare grey deposits. If there sre,\nfeUow ths shampoo with a lemon\nriaas, tha Juloe of two lemons being\nsufficient for a quart of water,\nMgbt-prowllng merry-go.rounders\nwta tumble Into bed at tha hour of\n(1) ThU black fslt model hat of\nParle Is of a new postUUoa brown\nfeatured with tugenle brim end twin\nMercury wings of pryatal sst st both\nsides of tbe brim. (3) Meek broad-\ntall cost ls a popular mods this fall\nseason. (8) Satin and rhlnestones\nare combined wltb spectacular afreet\nln tbls formal evening gown,   Circu-\nlsr fullness at the baok Interprets\nthe bustle theme In ths modern ke*.\ntion u thle ringtail leopard oost.\n(i) New visor turban ot black felt,\n(4) Smart wltb an unususl distlnc-\ntrlmmed wltb Peralan lamb, a Jaunty\nbow of which Is over tbs sre-dlppert\nvisor.\u2014Photos (9) snd (\u00ab) b* Mr.\nLyonds,\ndawn ate crsstlng beaut* troubles\nfor themselves. Restful sleep la\nnecessary for health snd good looks,\nand nobody can break health laws\nwithout making payment. Loss of\nBleep takes shimmer from tbs eyes,\ncauses the akin to lose Mae, pluoks\nrosea from young cheeks and does\nhavoc to the central nervous system.\nIf by chance you forget to bu*\noold cream, use tbe cream that\nthe milkman leaven. It la a delightful  cleanser  and  akin softener.\nPoses as Stranger\nWhen His Victim\nis Found Dead\ndk   ijp;\nBy Ruby M. Ayres\n\u2022\nFinger Print Betrays Him\n-ui mb running towards a\nwhich had crashed into a\ntn* in a park ia London. He told the\npates hs waa harrying to give aanst-\naaee to a maa ia the car who later waa\n\u25a0i to be dead.\nlie polo* ar-r-rted Hm ea gospiehn.\nThey took his(infer print* Hewaaa\nwell known automobile thief. Then\ntta police searched the car for finger\n. -a found mm ee tttt drmog\nwheel. Itcorreapom-bdwitht-hsthiefs.\nThe dead man had been a victim of\no-elcoi driving oo the part of the\ncrook, who was held without bail by a\noorone. s jury oa a charge of msa-\nala-ag-iar.\nUna an finger prints and to protect\nsociety aad to bring unit and coo-\nyiction to criminals.\nYour Danger Prints on Foods\nToo but ba mislead to lean that\n\u25a0roar finger prints aro just as dangerous\nto-feu\u2014 in another way. Not through\nerian becauae you are not a criminal\n\u2014hot through dine an genua\u2014many\n.toil of them.\nTear fingers pisk sp germs aU day\nhag from things which other hands\nhave touched. Theae other heads may\nhave checked a cough or a soeeie and\naa banana covered with germs. Than\nI yoa touch aome article of food\n' lagan leave oa it thaaa germs\njh eotsr^nir mouth and so attack\nJOT IjaHiin life Extension Iaatttote\nhaa shown that germs of 71 diseases\u2014\naame vary deadly\u2014may ba pssssd\n\u25a0maid to thia way\u2014among them,\nAh. aadeolda.\nTh\u00ab Pleasant Way to\nSafety\n*Han germs malt be removed from\nagar handa many tbem a day\u2014and\nalmna before meals. Germs are\n\u2022labbcrn thin^\u2014they team, heat and\narid\u2014bot one thing they cannot re-\n<\u00a3\u2014aad thai ii thl germicide to\nBabooySoap.\nLaboratory teeta proved it killed\neven virulent germs when other aeeps\nhad no effect on tbem. Think what a\nservice this ia to find ia a loap\u2014especially how important for chlldnn\nwho are even Snore thoughtless about\nwhat they touch thaa adults. Yet\nlifebuoy ia a pleasant I delightful\nsoap toon-\nBrings Beauty Aid\nWith two fine palm oils M ita ban,\nlifebuoy is alia a beauty map, ita\ncreamy, luxurious lather bring! health\naad beauty to the comple-doa aa well\naa lafety from germs. Why not take\nadvantage of both these important\nfactors? Millions sll over the world do,\nevery day. Too will note a refreshing\nscent of safsty\u2014oot a pnfmne-in\nINSTALMENT    SIXTEEN\n(Continued)\n\"Sometimes tw0 dsys can be an\neternity,\" be told her wltb unusual\neloquence. He did not heed when\nshe tried to interrupt him; he went\non rapidly:\n\"So much eeems to have happened\nsince. . . -since you snd I parted.\nYou know\u2014\" be stopped abruptly,\nonly to go on again with quiet deliberation. \"Ohlttenhsm's wife Ls\ndead\u2014Chlttenham Is free.\"\nJulie tried to speak, but hsr Una\nfelt too cold to frame sny words.\nShe aat staring befogs her at thc\n-radlng sunset with a sense of\nnumbed reality.\nChtttenham'a wife wu dead! Sadie deadl Sadie!. . . Sadie to have\ndied like a butterfly ahe had been,\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy LAURA A. KIBKMAN\nSquash\nCoffee\nlifebuoy, which vanishes eoon i\nFor freedom from body odoor trust\nto the refrtahmg Ufebooy bath. For\nprotection from senna\u2014a great service\n\u2014keep a cake of Ufebooy -always on\nthe wash basin. Teach the children to\nwaah regularly with Lifebmy. It ia\nthe HesJth Soap for all the fiafly. Get\na aupply from your dealer today.\nLavarBro\u2014enLlmi_l,T<nale\nLifebuoy\nL-I_-._-.l-.l-a      C_\u00ab._a *\n.Health Soap\nA Luxury Soap Plus a Garmleida\nTOMORROWS . IFM\nBreakfast\nBansns*\nOmjmI\nBoiled Bftt\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nCelery\nCheese Souffle\nLeftotpr Baked  Apples\nDoughnuts\nTea\nDinner\nFruit cocktilli\nCold Siloed Lamb\nPickles\nSweet Potatoes\nCole Slaw Salad\nChocolate Pudding\nGOOD  CHEESE  DI-T-ES\nReader frlenda have asked me for\n{some rood  cheese dishes.    Try  the\n! following\u2014\nI ObeeM Souffle: Stir three tablespoons of quick-cooking tapioca lato\non* oup of sweet milk which you\nhsvo scalded, then cook this mixture\nla the top of a double boiler till\nclear and thick, stirring often. Now\nadd om cup of grated American\ncheese and stir till It ls melted.\nCool, add three egg yolks well beat-\nan, and fold In the three egg whites\nstiffly whipped. Turn the mixture\ninto a buttered baking dish, stand\ntbe dish in a shallow pan containing a little warm water, and slip\nboth Into n moderate oven. Bake\nat about 350 degrees P., for 60 mln\nute*.    Serve hot.\nThe   next   recipe   also   rails   for\nquick-cooking   tapioca,   which   li\nj splendid thickening agent, aa well as\nbeing health-giving and nutritious.\nScalloped Cheese aad Olives: Brown\none small peeled and chopped onion\nIn one tablespoon of butter In i\nsaucepan, then add three, table,\nspoon* of quick-cboklng tapioca,\none-half teaspoon each o* *tlt and\nsugar aad one and one-half cupa of\nowned tomatoes, strained; ccok this\nmixture over boiling water IS minutes, or till tapioca Is olear. Then\n\u00a3ut a Layer of the tapioca mixture\ni tbe bottom of a buttered caas-\nerale or baking dlah, cover wtth\ngrated ebeeas, add aaot&ftr tapioca\nlayer, mora of the cheese, with a few\nchopped stuffed olives sprinkled\nover the cheese for added seasoning.\nFinish with a tapioca layer and\noover top wtth buttered crtnnbB,\nBake ln a moderate oven about 20\nmmutes* \u00bbt 350 degreee F. Serve\nMi\nafter   a,   few   short   hours   of   vain\nfluttering in tbe sunshine.\nLike a voice in a drea.m she heard\nSchofield  speaking again.\n\"We've searched for you everywhere\u2014Miss   Lennox\u2014\"\n\"Oh.\u2014Blm r\nBlm bed never failed her\u2014the\nonly friend wno bad not.\nHe went on without noticing the\ninterruption. \"We've searched ev\nerywhere\u2014Miss Lennox and Chltten\nham and t. It la pure chance that\nI came i.ei> today, something seemed to foroe me to oome. .. >\"\n\"Poor Lawrence!\" Julie whispered\nHe winced snd turned his lacs\naway.\nI've been a fool\u2014all my own\nfault. . . and yet. . . you never\ncared for me, Julie. . . I always\nknew that you never cared.\"\n\"I don't care for any one,\" she\naald harshly. \"I will never care for\nany one again. It hurts too much\n\u2014lt'a not worth the Uttle hsppl\nness one gets flung to them in re\nturn.\"\nThey were both silent for a mon'\nment, then she broke out feverishly;\n\"Why did you send my letter\nback to me? why wer* you so cruel?'\nHe told her unhesitatingly: \"A\nmn named Lombard eame to mo\nwith a lying story about you aad\n. . . .Ollea Chlttenham. He said\nthat you and he spent the night\ntogether oa the St. Bernard. .\nHe turned hla aad eyes to her.\n\"Forgive me, Julie\u2014I must have\nbeea mad to have believed it.\"\n\"Forgive tou? I don't under\nstand\u2014what  do  you  mean?\"\nThen suddenly she knew, and the\nblood rushed in a burning tide to\nber face.\n\"Tou thought that?\" she whispered.\n\"Yes.\"\nTbe last streak of sunset warmth\nhad faded, aad there waa a' chill\nwind blowing In froin the aaa.\nJulie shivered and rose to her feet\n\"It's cold.   I muat go.\"\n\"Let me oome with you. Julie\nNow I've found you\u2014don't send\nmo aw^y like this\u2014without *%y1ng\nyou forgive me.\"\n\"It cannot matter to you whether\nI forgive you or not\u2014\"\n\"It matter* everything ln tbe\nworld, Julie, lf there la anything I\ncan do for you\u2014anything, anything\n\u2014to make amends for tbe past. .\nJulie half smiled as she looked at\nhim. It mattered so little to bfr\nthat he bad been unjust; he bad\nnever had any real power to hurt\nher; forgiveness between them would\nbe an easy thing.\nShe touched his hand with sudden kindliness.\n\"Don't let us aay any more about\nlt, Lawrence. It's over and done\nwith.   We'll part friends, shall we?\"\n\"And you will come back with me\nto England?\" he asked eagerly.\nHer face grew oold,\n'Oome back to England. . . t\nnever want to go bsck again. . .. .\"\n\"But   Julle-^your   happiness. . . .\"\n\u2022be lsughed mirthlessly.\n\"There Is no happthees for me.\nThat's all finished. Don't look so\ntragic. Wa must all live our own\nUvea and work out our own salvation\u2014lf tbem is such a thing. I'm\nglad to bave seen you again\u2014tt\nhurts, tbe way you sent me about\nmy business. . . .\"\n\"I shall never forgive myself,\nJulie.\"\n\"Tou must; there isn't anything\nreally to forgive. I wasn't too kind\nto   you  either,  Lawrence\u2014\"\n\"Tou gave me the only happiness\nI bave ever known, and that la why\nI want to give you your happiness,\"\nSbe drew baok sharply.\n\"Why\u2014what do you mean?\"\nThat I want to take you back to\nChlttenham. He's a fine fellow, Julie, and vo'i nr^an \u25a0\u2022vrvthLn'R ln the\nworld   to   him.   There   waa  a   time\nVamps, Drudges\u2014and Ghandi\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority on Problems of Lovt and Marriage\nTbe otter day a popular woman.many fifty-fifty marrUges these lean\n.1.-__\u2022_!__ ___._        _\u2014<,*_._        _._-._..1*.        -..II?    ...        _____ .____ ______\ncolumnist wbo writes equally well\non politics or national debts, said\nto me; \"Them seems to be no halfway measures wltb our sex. women\nara all either vamps or drudges,\nparasites or providers, gold-diggers\nor\u2014<they pay tba rent.\"\nOf count I said, \"Bow oome?\" or\nwords to that effect, and sbe answered: \"It's been my experience\ntbat women either sacrifice tbem\nselves completely or art utterly selfish ahd demanding. Either1 they\ngive all, never count tht cost, -ask\nany returns; or everyone connected\nwith them must offer himself or herself aa a sacrifice on tbelr altars. Not\nalone hue-beads aad father.*, but such\nwomen sre equally ruthless with\nmaiden aunts, grandmothers, or casual friends.\"\n\"How about men?\" I asked.\n\"We are talking about women,\naren't we?\" abe eald. \"In tbe aame\nfamily you'll find ont woman who\ndoes all her own work, makes her\nchildren's clothes, never goes any*\nwhere, or spends a cent-\u2014-saving\nseems to be her favorite in and outdoor sport. On the othtr band her\nsister, wiU be a matrlmonal thow-\ncjse. Her husband will consider it\nhis mission in life to bang her with\nJewels, smother her in furs and vel-\nvet-Hht 11 go back to his office nights\nto do these things, and the funniest\npart of lt la the poor slave gets a\nkick out of itl\"\nThen I protested, \"There art too\nwhen I hated him, but lately, now\nwe understand each other\u2014I can set\nwhy I never stood a cbaace when\nhe was concerned\u2014\"\n\"What do you mean? How dare\nyou say such things to mt?\"\n\"I dare say anything if it means\nyour happiness.\"\n\"My happiness is ao ooaoera of\nyours\u2014\" Sbe turned and began to\nwalk away from him. Htr htkrt\nwas beating fast and htr eyea burned with the tears which she dared\nnot ltt fall.\nin tht evening Schofield called at\nthe little hotel. He brought a large\nbunch of rotes and ht kissed her\nhanda as she took the flowers from\nhtm.\n\"Say you forgive me, Jullt?'\n\"Of course I forgivt you.\" But in\nher heart she know that if iht had\ncared for him. forgiveness would not\nhave been possible. \"Of oourae I\nforgive you,\" sbe said again with\nan effort: \"but ln return you must\nproralas me something, will you,\nLawrence?\"\n\"If I csn\u2014you know I will.\"\n\"Then promise me thst you wlll\nnot tell aay one ln London where I\nam.\"\nHt htiltaUd. and aht said again\nftharply:   \"Most   of   all   you   must\npromise mi not to teU Mr. Chltten\nham.\"\nschofield looked away from her.\n(To  Be   Continued)\nyeara  for   mt   to   agree   wltto   you\nI'U grant you tben art dmdgta and\ngold-diggers; but look at tbt thoui\nanda of women wbo go out dally sa\nbreadwinners, and look at tbs bus\nbands and wives wbo have Joint\nbank aooounts.\nMy friend laughed rather rudely I\nthought. \"Did you ever know ont\nof those joint bank aooounto to bo\na fifty-fifty arrangement? Some'\ntimes It's tbt wife wbo borrows from\nlt, sometimes it's the. husband. But\none or tbt otbtr it always slicing\noff mat joint\n\"In marriage, at In every otbtr relationship of life, there Is alwaya a'\ngiver and a taker. Tou remember\nUie proverb 'One loves aad tht\notbtr lt loved'\"\n\"Ttt, It eeemt to mt that tbt un\nselfish, generous partner almost al'\nway* gets more out of tbt redstton-\nihlp than tht vamp or bully who\ngrasps and demands.\" I reminded\nbar.\n\"Aren't you talking of non-resistance?\" sht asked. \"Ohandi stuff\u2014\nstrength of tht weak, submission\nwhich conquers in tbe long run?'\n\"Sure I am, and lt goea baok a\nlong time before Ohandi\u2014 you're for-\ngetting what, happened over 1900\nyears ago and what has oomt aa tbt\nresult of non-resistance,\"\n\"I Wat thinking of today's prob\nlems,\" the stdd.\n\"Ghandi sterna to me pretty muoh\ntoday's problem\u2014at least Bngland\nseems to think to\u2014and be it cloee\nto tbe core of that non-realstancs\nrevolution that happened 1900 years\nago when he says 'To me truth and\nnon-violence are faces of ths aame\ncoin. Whether mankind will con'\neclously follow the law of lovt I do\nnot know, but that need not perturb\nua. That law wlH work out Jutt as\ntht law of gravitation will work out\nwbtther we accept lt or not'\"\n\"But, my dear,\" she wtnt on \u201e\nsay, \"aren't we* talking about tht\ncontentions of married life\u2014that\nsomt of tht married are tbe tnatohers\nand others tbt snatched from? That\nsome give and some take\u2014and the\nelderly gentleman who baa come\nfrom India ls somewhat away from\nthe point\"\n\"Not if bt rtmlada us of a law\ntbat makes people living together\nhappier,\" I replied, \"aad Ohandi sees\nclearly wben bt sayt: 'Non-violence\nls infinitely more wonderful and\nsubtle than forces of Nature llks, for\nInstance, electricity. The man who\ngave ua the law of lovt waa a far\ngreater tcleatltt than any of our\nmodern scientists. The more I work\nout tht law of love, the more I feel\ndeUghtad with life and tbt scheme\nof this universe. It gives me peace\nand the meaning of the mysteries o_\nNature I bave no power to describe.\"'\nTbt woman columnist made no\ncomment.\nBoy Scouts WiB\nBuild CsUn for\nSahraa, Castlegar\n\u25a0_\u2022\u00ab\u2022*.\n\u00bbe mail,\nthem. 1*.\na_-n_OA_. B. O., Oet. l\u00bb--_t\ntbi Csstuear ooa-ounltj eluk Wa\non amtistatt a-Malaf. aa tttottlo\ntoeeter, pneeated w Un. umpard\nreallee. 11010 towirta tba tanSi.\nMr. RenaM Mane waa tke wln-\nmr.\nTIM tttri -mate vt arranUm ter\na  nl*at  bee  aa  thalr   ~\nheadquarters \u00abMa. Tats Met I\net tha lots ieed\u00bb, ao- ,\nmen ot ttm . l-ll\u2014IH I\nad to torn eat ead kelp them. \u2022_>.\nbora win uee tha 19 br 14 loot eaMn\n\u2022a a club room aad aspect to put\nla many hatwr eralad l_ lt *\u00bb-\nlne ttt* c-o-mlo* winter. Ther still\nuse tbe oosaaraatt? hall far ths\nrerular meetlnfs aad treat.\ntana Malsoa. German film actress,\nknown la prlrats lid la ,\nBeth, and Wllmer Andsrson. mewtxsr\nmil, banker, were married at _oB\u00bb-\nwood, California.\nExtraordinary Values\nIn Choice Quality MEATS\nFor Wednesday and Thursday\nMINCED LAMB PATTIES 20c\nBONELESS STEWING       *\u00ab__\nBEEF\u20142 lbs.  *'V\nFRESH GROUND HAM-   \u00abc\nBURGER\u20143 tbs. ***\nCHOICE BOILING BEEF *\u00a3*\n\u20143 lbs. **c ,\nFRESH HOG LIVER-      iff,\n31bs. .....*5C\nFINEST POT \\-\\gm and tAt*\nROASTS, lb. \"* ***\nBarns <c Co., .Limited-Phone 50\nWest Kootenay Butcher Co\u2014Phone s\nWednesday All-Day\nClock Specials\nEach Hour Adds Another Real Buy\ni\u00ab-_\u00bb%l\n2ND FLOOR\n10 o'clock and on, 10 coat*, regular up to    ei A nK\n** 186.00.   Each *. \u00bbIU.\u00bb0\nAnd 25 coata, regular -186.00 <3\u00bbi\u00a3 nc\nEach        *A0\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\nSome of these coats were carried over from laat year.\n1 o'clock, 60 smart hats just arrived. tO CA\nEach   -      w^etlV\n0 o'clock. Rayon Sliit Dresses. Values to        01 AE\nb 810.00. Each  eieOT\nQ o'clock. Travel Tweed Silk dresses. OD. Of.\nA o'clock. Ladies New Woolen Dresses. tQ 7Q\n'Values to 816.00. Each   00.10\nC o'clock. Children's Woolen Dresses to 14. *1 QK\n\u00b0 Values to 88.60. Now   \u00able\u00abW\nMAIN FLOOR\nEntire Week for Special Prices on Sweaters\nIO o'clock. Ladies' Heavy Fleece Bloomers.    CQ_.\nx* Cream and colors. Only  _ os;c\n1 o'clock. Children's Jersey suits. 2, S fi>l AQ\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022and 4.   Down to   *\u25a0*.\u00bb<\u00a7&\n9 o'clock. Children's Brush Wool coat and     \u00ab1 90\n*cap set*. Now OlettV\n9 o'clock. Heavy white or striped Flan- -Jl AA\n\"nelette. 32 inches and 29 inches. 6 yards *-uw\nA o'clock. Trim your old coat with new ffo AC\n'Fur Collar and Cuff sets. Values to $25. .. \u2022DO*\u00bb7U\nC o'clock. Flannels, 54 inches and 32 inches. All\ny colors. Regular to 82.25, also stripes CA-\nand a nice assortment of Tweeds   VOl*\nSamsdee Iros.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nEnvelopes\nMERCHANTS! Do you _*\u00bbat\nto save money on y6ur an*\nvelopes?\nIf so, consult thc Nelaon Daily\nJob Dept. on quantities of 5000\nor more.\nWe carry the largeet stock ef\nenvelopes between Calgary and\nVancouver, and can save you\ndollars and give immediate\ndelivery.,\nPHONE 144\nFor Service In Job Printing.\nNrlnDtt EatUj Nrma Sob Irpartmrnt\nBaker Street\nNelson, B, C.\n \u25a0TBI NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. C. \u2014 WIDNESBAV MORNING, OCTOBER 14, MM1   \u2022 \"\npant  ml\nEH-JAJETTKK\n$7 and $&\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaden in Footfashion\nNORSEMEN SEND\nELEVEN DOLURS\nTO HANSON FUND\nAlthough tbe fund for the buying\ni of an artificial limb for Morrla Han-\ni aon, Injured by a train near Tag-\n1 hum last February, wsa cloaed lsst\nj week, contributions an still coming\ntin. Yesterday E. I. L. Dewdney, lo-\nI cat  treasurer of  the  fund,  received\nthe sum of $11.05 from tbe League\n[of  Norsemen  Society   In  Trail.   The\ngrand total of the fund  is $377.05.\nI Trail \"Pickey Pom\"\nC.G.I.T. Group Led\nby Alice Goddard\nTRAIL, B. C. Oct. 13 \u2014\"Picks*\n[ Pom\" group of tbe C. o. I. T. elected\n1 Mies    Florence    Simpson    for    tbelr\ni president at the nnual meeting beld\nln Knox Usltd church ball. Their\nI slogan for tbe year will be \"Keep\nI Tour Sunny  Side .Up.\"\nMeetings will be held every Friday\nI a abort business session to be follow-\n| ad by sewing.\nOfficers elect-d to work with Miss\nSimpson were Mise Nellie Shields,\nsecretary; Miss Audrey Doubleday,\n; historian and treasurer; Miss Hilda\n' Harrington, sports; Miss Alice Ood-\n, dard, leader\n111111 t t 11:1111111:11111\nAnnouncement\nH. C. Dimock\nM.D.\n|     Physician and Surgeon\nhas  opened  an  office  in\nthe Medical Arts Building.\nPhone 204 Suite 101\nllllllMllllllllllllllll\nSociety\nThla column la conducted ky\nMrs. M. .. Vlgneui.. All MWI\nof a aoclal nature. Including receptions, artiste entertainments,\npersonal Item, marriages, etc.,\nwill appear tn this column. Telephone Mra. Vigneux at ber\nhome, 611 SUlea atreet.\nMrs. Fred H. Graham's circle of\nBt. Saviour's church met yeaterday\nafternoon at Mrs. Graham's home\non Ward atreet. when thoae preeent\nwere Mrs. P. SX. Morey, Mrs. W. L.\nAffleck, Mrs. P. p. Payne, Mrs. A. 8.\nHorswlll. Mrs. A. J. Cornish, Mrs.\nHarry B. Oore, Mrs. Stanley Bostock. Mrs. T. E. Maddock, Mrs. A. J.\nDunnett, Mrs. George Horstesd, Mrs.\nMabel Rockilffe, Mis. P. R. Prltchard.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlas    Dorothy    Slncl lar -Smith   of\nCreston has arrived to take up a\nbusiness course at the Nelson Bus\n_aess college.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. J. Grove, Terrace apartments, who haa been viiltlng ln\nSeattle for the past few weeka at\nthe home of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Davis,\nhas returned.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nMrs. P. Chapman of South Blocan\nwae a vlaltor to town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nH. E.  R,  Bedford of Trail  visited\ntn Nelson' during  tbe  week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. E. Patch of Vancouver, former residents of Nelson\nare city visitors.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. A. B. Morley of Blocan City\nwas a visitor to town over the week\nend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nP. S. Rouleau ot Kaslo wu a city\nvisitor  yetterday.\nMr. and Mrs. 6. A. Speers of Creston were Nelson visitors over the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nRobert   Yuill   of   Lockbart   beach,\nwho hu been ln town for several\ndsys, leaves this morning for Spokane. I\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. M. Robertson, mining man of\nCedar Point, a former resident of\nSllverton, wu in the city yesterdsy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. J. R. Hunter motored\nto La  Prance  creek  Monday,  where\nthey  were   guests   at  the   home  of\nMr. and Mrs. Tbomas Wall.\na   \u2022   \u25a0\nMrs. W. Bennett and eon Bob of\nSouth Blocan were among city shoppers yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRev. Clyde Harvey of Procter wu\nln   town   Monday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n| Captain James Pltzslmmons, M.P.P.\nfor Kulo-Slocan, of Nakusp, la a\n| city   visitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Rita Wall, who attends Bt.\nJoseph's academy, spent the weekend and Thanksgiving at the home\nof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomu\nWall, at La Prance creek.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nMlu Isobel Day spent the weekend at the home of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Day, at Appledale.\n\u2022 \u2022   $\nMiss Jessie Anderson, who attends\nNelson Bualneu College, bu returned from Trail, where* she spent\nthe week-end at tbe home of her\nparents Alderman and Mrs. J. R.\nAndtrson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. White of Paumore wu a city\nvisitor during  the  week-end.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Charles H. Stark,\n6111c: street, had u their week-end\nguen Mrs. J. Hodnett of Gray Creek.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. A. J. Cornish, Latimer street,\nrecently entertained at the tea hour\nln honor of Mrs. E. Perguson, who,\nwith her husband, leaves shortly\nfor California to spend the winter,\nand also for Mrs. E. K. Beeston of\nVictoria, who is In Nelaon visiting\nher   son   and   daughter-in-law,   Mr.\nFairway Cash & Carry\nCoffee Extra Special\nBRAID'S BIG FOUR. 1QG\nPer l-pound tin ******\nDOLLAR SODAS\u2014\nPer box \t\nPEANUT BUTTER-\nPer jar \t\nOLIVES\u2014Fancy Queens\u2014\n2 bottles \t\nBUTTER\u2014Fancy Creamery-\n2 pounds  .*.\t\n39c\n18c\n25c\n49c\nFancy Assorted Biscuits\nand free cruise around the world in connection. A chance with every package.\nPer 1-pound box  39c\nMEATITERIA SPECIALS\nCOTTAGE ROLLS-Whole- \\$c\nPer pound\t\nLAMB CHOPS-Very choice- 25c\nPer pound\t\nSIRLOIN STEAKS- 20C\nPer pound \t\nSHOULDER SPARE RIBS- Jgc\n3 pounds \t\ngTEWING LAMB:\n3 pounds 25c\nfor \t\nSHOULDER PORK\nCHOPS: Per   Ifc\npound \t\nCornish waa assisted by Mrs. Harry\nand Mra. Oordon Beeaton. Mn.\nB. Oore and Mra. Q. \u2022 Ood\nfny, while Mra. F. Ruseell S-ld aad\nMrs, B. W. Dawaon served. Thoee\ninvited vera Mra. W. J. Astley,\nMra Pred B. Oraham, Mrs. 0. V.\nOagnon, Mra. A. A. O WlUlams,\nMrs. E. Ferguson, Mrs. B. K. Beeaton, Mrs. Gordon Beeaton, Mra.\nWilliam Taylor, Ufa. J. D. Notman,\nMrs. p. O. Morey. Mrs. B. W. Dawson, Mrs. F. Russell Sadd. Mra. O.\nH Fraser, Mrs. G spencer Godfrey.\nMrs. Prank Paddon* Mrs. Harry B.\nOore, Mrs. A. O. Cuthbert, Mrv\nGerald Bees, Mra. W. T. Fotheringham and Mra.  L.  B. Choquette.\nj. Barnett of Vancouver, who ls\nthe gueat of hla son-in-law add\ndaughter, Commander and Mrs. Rowland Bourke of Crescent Bay, paid\na visit to tbe city yesterdsy.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Lillian Lenglols, who attends Nelaon Business College, has\nreturned from Kitchener, where she\nvisited her mother over the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nB. N. Share of Spokane, who has\nbeen In Kaalo on business, hu returned.\n\u00bb      -0 SJ\nMra. M. E. Emerson and daughter\nand son, MarJorie and Lance Emerson, of Sllverton, were visitors to\nNelson and dlatrlot during the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. A. Miller of Nakusp wu a rs-\noent visitor to town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Eccles motored to Rossland\nMonday to attend the Knights of\nColumbus   twentieth   anniversary.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mra. George Nixor Jr. of\nRoesland   spent   the    week-end    In\nNelson, gueeta at the home on Latimer street of Miss Emily Hamson.\n*        a, *  a\nMi and Mrs. Oordon of Nakusp\nwere  city  visitors  yeeterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Betty Wright, who spent the\nweek-end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mre. A. E. Wright, lh\nRoesland, hu returned to resume\nher studies at the Nelson Business\nCollege.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F. J. Stevens havs\nreturned from a week-end ln Spokane.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Oeorge Piatt of Corra Linn\npaid a visit to the city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W E. Marshal] of Sllverton\nwas a week-end vlaltor In town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT 3* Scanlan and his son Anthony wore ln Roesland Monday attending the Knlghta of Columbus\nlodge  twentieth  anniversary.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. C. E- Bush and Infant aon\nleft the Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital Monday for theu- home ln\nSalmo,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. E. E. Topllff of Rowland wu\na visitor to town during the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Colin P. McDougaU,\nStanley street, have u their house\nguest Mr McDougall's sister, Mrs.\nRobert Mcpherson  of  New  Denver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nM. J. Varseveld motored to Rowland Monday, where he went to attend the twentieth anniversary of\nthe Knlghta of Columbus lodge.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Harold H. Hlnltt and son\nPreddfe accompanied her parents,\nMr and Mrs. Fred L. Irwin, on\ntheir motor trip to Kelowna over\nthe  week-end.\ntee\nMrs. A. W, Anderson of Kulo Is\ntM house guest for a few days of\nMr. and Mrs. H. D. Dawaon, Stanley\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022  a\nMl is Annie Muraro and her brother Eugene have returned from a\nvlalt to Spokane.\nMiss Edna Benz hu been vlaltlng\nher aunt, Mrs. Nahl, for tbe put\nthree weeks. She left today for her\nnome  11   North Meld,   Minn.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. J. P. Martlndale and daughter Kitty were the week-end guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. Thomu German,\n713 Hoover street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Dorothy Bowman of Trail\nwu the week-end guest of Miss\nEnid Etter\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMonday morning at the Church\nof Mary Immaculate, at 9 o'clock.\nRev. J. C. McKenzle united ln r r-\nrlage Anne, second daughter of Mr.\nand Mra. Mathlas Kuntz, and Roy\n2. Heathman. The bride wu attended by Mrs. Plagel u matron of\nhonor, while her flower glrla were\nMary Medwlck and Anne Plagel. N.\nSellnger supported the groom. After\ntbe ceremony the wedding breakfast\nwas served at the home, of the\nbride's parenta on Roseihont. In\nthe evening Mr. and Mrs. Heathman\nentertained a number of friends at\nan enjoyable dance at the Women's\nInstitute hall. They have taken up\nresidence in the Medical Arts building.\n\u2022 \" a.  e\nH. Segrave Erickson. N. Brown.\nCarl Ramsden and Wilfred Lauritz\napent the week-end hunting ln\nSpokane.\nmm*\nMr. and Mrs. Walter Skinner, who\nwere recently married, have returned\nafter spending two weeks In Spokane, Seattle and Vancouver. On\ntheir return trip they were accompanied by Mr. skinner's mother.\nMrs. Arnold Stout, who haa been\nthe guest of her daughter, Mra.\nArnold Stout of Vancouver, for the\nlut  five  months.\nGEORGE MASSEY\nGOESTO COAST\nResident   of   Nelson    Since\n1903 Takes  Post  at\nOakalla\nSocial Events\nof TraU city I      aJMea&her 's^d\nOeorge Maasey, late guard ln Uie\nprovincial Jail, left lwt night for\nVanoouver where he will take up\nduties u guard at Oakalla. In\nleaving Nelaon Mr. Massey leaves his\nhome towq df th\u00ab PMt 38 yean.\nhaving come here ln 1903. For the\nput IS years h\u00ab bu been ffuard at\nthe.local prison. v\nMr. Maasey who served in Uie\nSouth .African war Joined the Grenadier Guards flrat In 1894. In 1915\nhe Joined the 103nd battalion here\nand served oversea* for four and a\nhalf yeara. Returning to Nelson be\nresumed his post at the Jail. He\nhu been an active member of the\nEagles lodge.\nMr. Maseey intends to move hla\nfamily to the cout u soon u he\nbecomes settled there.\nF. M. MacPherson Goes\nto Coast for Bucham\nFuneral Services\nCRANBROOK, B. C. .Oct. 13,-\nMayor -and Mre. T. M Roberts have\nreturned from a 10 day visit to\nVancouver and Victoria. They were\naccompanied by their eon, Oeorge.\nThe trip waa made by motor.\nAn excellent program of pianoforte numbers was broadcast over\nthe radio recently by Mlas Helen\nWorden. In Calgary. Miss Worden,\nwho wu playing In excellent form,\ntold the atory of the numbers played.\nA meeting of the membera of the\nWomen's Badminton club wu held\nFriday to make arrangements for\nthe seuon's play, whlcn commenced In the Parish hall on Tuesday,\nElection of officers for the coming year will be held shortly. Mrs.\nMills, lut year's president, wu ln\nthe chair,\nMrs- Hogarth and Mrs. Porrest\nwere tea hostesses at the golf club\no>n Saturday afternoon. Tournament\nplay in aeveral of the competitions\nla still   progressing.\nRoss Passcuzeo, Jack Wallace, Marshall . MacPherson and Alan MacPherson were Calgary visitors over\nthe Thanksgiving week-end.\nMiss Dorothy .McKowan bad a,\nher guest 1 over the Thanksgiving\nweek-end, mim May Powell of Edmonton, who ls a member of the\nhigh school staff at Coleman.\nJudge and Mrs. G. H. Thompson\nund Rev. and Mrs. P. V. Harrison\nleft un Monday for Nelaon. judge\nThompeon held court in Nelaon In\nthr* absence of judge Nesblt who\nls in the east, and both he and\nMr. Harrison will attend the dlstflct\nsynod meeting of the .Anglican\nchurch while in Nelson.\nMt. and Mrs. C. P. Marsh and\nparty spent the week-end In the\nWindermere valley, visiting the hot\nsprings while there.\nMrs. A. Slater of st. Catherine?,\nOnt., is the guest of Mrs. P. H\nDezall, Mrs. Slater wlll spend the\nwinter here and will probably make\nCranbrook her future home.\nMr. ahd Mrs. E. Home and family\nspent the .Thanksgiving week-end at\ntheir sumuer hore at Boswell, Suzanne Harlson accompanied them u\nthe guest of Shirley Home.\nMr and Mrs. A- A. MacKinnon\nleft on Monday for Calgary where\nthey will visit for a few cfsys.\nP. M. MacPherson, M. P- P, left\nTuesday for Vanoouver where he\nwlll attend the funeral of J. H\nBurhan of Oolden, the news of\nwhose death came to the city on\nMonday evening. Mr. Buchan was for\nmany years. Liberal member for\nthe oolden district a\"d was speaker\nof the house during most of the\nlast Liberal regime. Mr. MacPherson motored to Oolden. W. H. Clel-\nand of Invermere Joined and accompanied him to the coaat.\nM. T. Bheppherd of the topographical department of the federal\nmining department who hu been\nln the district during the summeh\nmonths making maps of the district, left on Tuesday by motor for\nOttawa where the winter will be\nspent. He wu accompanied by Mrs.\nSheppherd.\nMrs. J. A. Hamilton\nIs Honored by the\nAuxiliary at Yahk\nYAHK, B. C, Oct. 13.\u2014A number\nof the membera of the Anglican\nChurch Ladles' auxiliary met at the\nhome of Mrs. Hugh Mclnnls on Friday afternoon. Mrs. Jack Tipper,\npresident, presented Mrs. J. A. Hamilton, former eecre'-ary, with a lovely\npicture u a token of appreciation\nfor her trustworthy work.\nH- M. Parker, principal of the\npublic school, spent the holiday at\nhla home In Slocan City.\nMr. snd Mrs. Dan Hamilton left\non Thursday for Maple Creek, Bask..\nwhere tbey will attend Mr; Hamilton's father's funeral.\nAxel Erlckaon, who bu. been employed st Pernle ud other points\nreturned to bis home bare Saturday.\nMr. and Mra. J. H. Lelgbton, Mr.\nan Mrs. Hughes, Mlu A L. Mclnnls\nand Albert Bennet, aU of Klmberley.\nspent Sunday In town.\nMisses Lena Nedellc, Edith Nelson\nand Donalda Walker, who attend\nschool ln Nelson and Misses Haael\nMrCsrtney and June Hamilton of\nCranbrook spent the week-end In\ntown.\nElko Fisherman\nMakes Fine Catch\nELKO, B. C-. Oct. 13,\u2014Mr. and\nM-*. J. A. Angell and daughter,\nMarlon motored to Pernle on Friday and w*r_ the guests of Mr.\nsnd Mrs. T. Roberts for a short\ntime.\nMiss L. Paterson, teacher In Cranbrook Is the house guest over the\nweek-end of Mrs. M. Roo and Mrs.\nW. B- Beaudry.\nA. J. Carter, who hu been working out at the Western Pine Lumber company for the past few days\nreturned to his home here on Sunday. ,\nTony Bosslo, who wu fishing in\nthe Elk river near the power house\non Sunday caught a wonderfully big\ncatch of fish, all trout.\nGeorge Ross, and two daughters,\nEdith and Katherine. of Klmberley,\nspent Sunday In Elko on business,\nalso  visiting   relatives.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Grady and\nnephew, Gerald Eye, of Cranbrook\ncame to town on Sunday to be\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. A.\nGrady.\nMr. and Mrs. W- Kelly entertained\nat bridge on Saturday evening, their\nguests being Mr. and M\". Joe Chrla-\ntlano. After bridge the hostess served a dainty luncheon.\n' A. E. Ighara came in from Mountain ranch on Thursday and took\nW. Kelly and daughter, Jennie\nto Fefnie.\nRoystan Wilkinson of Roosvllle and\nbrother, Stanley of Galloway, arrived\nln town on Sunday to visit their\nmother   Mrs. w. Wilkinson.\nBib Todhunter, lLneman for the\nBut Kootenay power and Light\ncompany, who haa been stationed\nIn Pernle for some time, returned\nto hla home here on Sunday,\nMr. and Mrs. J. A- Grady and Mr.\nand Mrs. J. H. Grady and Gerald\nEye, tnotored out to Sheep Moun\ntain ranch Sunday to visit with\nMr. and Mrs. A. E   Ingham-\nBeavers form the Bowron Lake\ngame sanctuary, near Barkerville, are\n\u25a0being uaed by. tbe B- C. provincial\nlands $epaxt_n<nt to help restore\nlakes and streams in the lower\ncariboo. The first shipment of 11\nbeavers were taken to William's\nlake where they will be relejeed at\nselected spots. Beavers, 'in earlier\ndays, before tbey were trapped\nout. conserved the water supply\n1 *?y regulating the flr\u00bbw of streams\nI and dams Hullt at strategic pointe.\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 13-^lra. O. H\nBeLson and Mr. and Mra. A. H. Hopkins will attend the laatern ftter\nbanqiHt and meeting at Nelaon thla\nevening.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. L- Santor and daughter Louise\naccompanied by Mlu Mary DePerro\nof Nelson were the weekend guests\nof Mayor end Mrs. Bruno Lerose,\nNelson avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlu Jtwie Anderson left lut evening f_r Nelaon after being the\nweekend guest of her parenta, M;.\nand Mra. J. R. Anderaon.\nMra. H. C. H- Broadwood, Oreen\navenue entertained laat evening to\nhonor 01 her bouse guest, Mies Margaret Valentine of Nelson. Carda,\nmusic and dancing were features of\nthe evening. Miss Valentine and\nJohn Wood won prizes at cards, the\nguests were Miss Mona Shields, Mlu\nMargaret Sargeant, Mr. and Mrs. H\nC. H. Broadwood, Barry Ferris, Robert Shields, John Wood end Charles\nBenlngfleld.\nMembera of Eut Trail mission Women'a auxiliary entertained at 11\ntables of Wblst with Mrs. Elliot\nCrowe and Walter Wheat winning\nhigh honors, and Mrs. John Balnea\nand W. Burrows the conaolationa.\nMrs. J. H. Owen, assisted by Mrs.\nHamilton Currie, Mre. Walter Wheat\nMra. Alex Yates and Mrs. J. McLean served refreshments.\nWilliam Robertson, Archie Sleeth\nand Robert jest left Saturday morning to spend a few days in Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. Donnan were\nweekend visitors ln Nelson.\nH. K. Oray, J. P. Haylock, J. Cor-\nbould and Harry Hawkins motored\nvia Edgewood and district to Vernon\n<or the weekend. They returned last\nevening.\n. \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. J. Blnns of Kulo w_\u00ab the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Flngland\nlut week- Mra. Plngland entertained,\nat four tables of bridge in her honor. \u25a0\nMrs. Blnns hu left for Alabama, 1\nwhere she wlll spend the winter.\nMr. and Mre. O- H. Nelaon and 1\nf_mily were visitors tn Nelson Sun-,\nday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. J- Edluhd, Mrs. S. Hermt-\nston. Mrs. K. Anderson and Mra i\nJohn Backman were hostesses at a\nwhist party In the Orange hall Saturday evening, under the audioes'of\nUie L. O. B. A. Mrs. A. C. Brant\nand James Mclnnes won prizes for\nhigh score. Mre- Nellie Arthur and\nJames Irwin took aecond prizes and\nMrs. James Melvin and M. Schemclli\nwere awarded the' conoelatlons.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRobert Smith, who hu be.n visiting relatives In Clareaholm, Alta.,\nreturned home Friday evening.\nMra. Klenelng of Vancouver la the\ngueat of her son and daughter-in-law\nMr. and Mrs. Kenneth Klenzlng.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. &. Hermlston wu ln Nelson\nyesterday attending the funeral of\nlltUe Olive Stewert, only daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. J. Alex. Stewart of\nAnnable.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Plngland, Cyril Selby, B-jsJI\nHunt and Angus 01 iflInn motored\nthrough the Slocan valley during\nthe Weekend. They climbed tha\nmountains at Sllverton and after\ntwo days' holiday returned via Kaslo.\n\u2022 *    9\nArchibald Oimpbell Is spending a\nfew daya In Nelson  vlaltlng frlende.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. R. T. Ellison entertained Saturday for her aon Bobby on his\nfourth birthday. The table was beautifully decorated with favors and a\nbirthday oike with four candles.\nMrs. J. A. Downie and Miss Peggy\nMcWhlnnle assisted ln serving, The\nguests were Aim a. Rogers, Isabel McClure, Doris (lelrose, Plorence Moon,\nAudrey Mo.n, Isab.1 Roes, Phyllla\nDownie, Doreen Downie, Bobble\nVettch, Jlmmle McClure and Herbert Moon.\n\u2022 e   4\nMr. Lemlre and son Leo of McLeod,\nAlta., are the guests of Mr. L? ml re's\neon-ln-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMre. Thomas Gagne, Riverside avenue\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. W. C. MacKenzle were\nIn  Nakusp  during  the  weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022 . \u2022\nMr. and Mre- G. A- Burton snd\ndaughter Margaret were at their\nsummer cottage at Robson over toe\nweekend.\nMrs. B. A. Stlmmel and Mlw Harriet Stlmmel are visiting in Tucomi.\nWash, where Mlu Kathleen Stlmmel\nIs attending school.\nMr. and Mra. C. W, Oulllaume and\nfamily were at their summer home\nat Robson over the holiday.\nsee\nJohn Thompson. James Milligan\nand Oh*rles Glover were weekend\nvisitors in Spokane.\ns   e .s\nMr.   and   Mre.   Noble   Blnns   are\nspending a holiday at the cout.\n\"\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr.  and   Mre.  J.   9.   Wilson   and\n*ms   \"Kit\"   sod   All: n   spent   aw\nweekend  at Robson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. P. jordon and son\nspent the holiday at their summer\ncottage  at   Willow  Point.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Harry DeLespee and\ndaughter Deris* spent yesterday at\nCastlegar.\nMiss Bdlth Donnan, who wu visiting in Grand Fork* as the guest of\nMr. and Mre. Charles Bickerton lut\nweek, hu returned home.\nO. R. John of Corra Linn wis the\ngueat Of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Smith.\nColumbia avenue, over the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. Wagataff were\nguests of i-lstlves in Nakuap over\nthe weekend.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nMlu R Chandler, Mls3 E- Chandler and Mlafc B. Erickson of Cr*n-\nbrook have been spending 4 few\ndays In  Trail.\n\u2022 \u25a0 t   \u2022\nW W, Enutley and J MacPherson\napent the weekend visiting frlenda at\nR*v. E- A. Blberdorf returned yesterday from Vernon, where be hu\nbeen attending the Lutheran convention.\nwiiifWTTr-^HnB\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nSTORE NEWS\nALL DAY SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY. MONDAY HAVING  .\nBEEN A HOLIDAY THIS STORE WILL BE OPEN UNTIL 6\nO'CLOCK TODAY.\nFRILLED CURTAINS\n*twntiwi7twrirertm\nMADEIRA NAPKINS\nThese ever uneful napkins put up\nin one-half dozen to the box.\nTHE  BOX      fl.49\n54\" LINEN LUNCH\nCLOTHS\n1 Linen lunch cloths in good quality. Various striped borders,\nSPECIAL    WEDNESDAY,    EACH\nSIM.\nTEA TOWELS\nNew shipment of frilled curtains.\nThese are very attractive, complete\n\u2022with their valance and ties. Six different designs.\nCOMPLETE    WITH    VALANCE\nAND TIES. PAIR  .$1.00\nNEW CRETONNES\ngfifif\nIrish   imported  tea  towels\nextra heavy quality.\n3 FOR    Sl-00\nFLANNELETTE\nSHEETS\nThe largest size Flannelette sheets.\nTHE PAIR   S2.75\nDOUBLE BED SIZE, PAIR $2.25\nThese new cretonnes will add to\nthe appearance of any room. May be\nused for a variety of purposes.\nLight and dark tones. Thirty-six\ninches wide.\n3 YARDS FOR  f 1.00\nHORROCKS'\nFLANNELETTE\nThis    good   quality    Flannelette.\nWhite.\n3 YARDS FOR  ai.00\nFLANNELETTE\nGood qualitv Flannelette in colors.\nSky, Peach, Pink or Mauve.\n5 YARDS FOR   ?1.00\nrmsmtt*rwiwfimmm7swjr\\^\nMISS CASTLETON\nTAKES ROLE OF\nVENUS IN SOUTH\nDaughter of A. D. Dagleish\nStars in South; Is in\nMovies\nLoe Angeles takes a bow.\nOne of Its singers created a great\natlr In \"Tannhaeuser\" In Ban Francisco last Wednesday ntght. The\nsinger was Maxlne Castleton, in the\nrole  of  Venus.\nAndres de segurola, veteran of\ngreat opera companies, yesterday\nsent the following wire to Miss.\nCastletons teachers, Stgnor and\nMme. Otto Morando: ''Maxlne\nCastleton very remarkable for beau-\ntlful voice and Intelligent acting.\"\nMessages of congratulation, In similarly laudatory vein, cam* to the\nMorandos from other singers of the\ncompany. Comments from lay listeners in the northern city expressed thanks that Miss Caatleton'n\nbeauty is physical as  well  as  vocal.\nThe young artist's success ls the\nmor* remarkable In view of the difficulties that she faced. Th* rol*\nof Venus In th* Paris version of\n\"Tannhaeuser,\" th* one used this\n.season by the San Pranclsco \u00abnd\nLos Angeles opera*, ls cruclntly difficult, and ordinarily so ungrateful\nthat its protagonist get* scant, .nolle*. Moreover, Mtss Cnstl*ton's sang\nin competition with th* thre* principals who were chosen for last,\nsummer's festival production In the\nWagnerian sanctum, Bayreuth:\nMaria Mueller, Prledrlch Schorr and\nGotthelf Plator. Above all. It was\nthe soprano's operatic debut, and\nessentially a stressful time for the\nnerves.   \u2014(Los   Angeles   Times)\nMiss Cat tl* ton Is thc daughter\nof A. D. Dalglelsll of thc West\nKootway Power and Light Co.\nMiss Castleton in th* famous plc-s\nture by the four Mnrx Brothers,\ntakes a solo psrt and is accompanied  by Harpo Marx.\nWynndel Man Sends\nMoney for Morris\nHanson  Leg  Fund\nThe fund of Morris Han-pon which\nwu closed last, week was enriched\nto the ext.nt of $1 over the week\nend when Lewis T Abbott of Wynndel mailed $1. Thc fund which was\nfor purchasing an artificial leg for\nMorris Hanson now totala (266.\nTrail News of the Day\nTBAU, HOUSBJ AND LOTS. IN-\nsura-ace. Notary. J, v. Anfier-\n\u2022on   Trill. (TOM)\nPlumbing - Heating\nPbone 189 for prompt and e-c-\nperienc*. work on jonr plumb*\nlng   an.   baatlni   reqnlraolenta\nNELSON -PLUMBING\nt   HEATING    CO.\nGEO. BRANT\nMrs. L. Bond and\nS. Ball, Are Bridge\nWinners at Ymir\nYMIR, B. C-. Oct. 13.\u2014The Ymir\nladles' guild entertained at a bridge\nparty in their hall on Saturday\nevening. Tlie guests wer* Mr. aud\nMrs. W. Clirk, Mr. and Mrs, S. A.\nCurwen, Mr. and Mrs. E- Daly, Mr,\na nd Mrs. H. Stevens, Mrs. Ca rl\nNystrom. Mrs. Clarence Mcls-aac, Mrs.\nLeall* Bomd, Mrs. Wendell Shrum,\nMrs. W. B Mclsaac, Samuel Ball.\nRichard Jones, At hoi Mclsaac and\nMr, orleve of Trail. Honors for\nhigh sccre were awarded to Mrs.\nLeslie Bond and Samuel BaU. Low\nscore  prizes  went  to  Mrs.  Clarence\n[ Mclsaac and H. Stevens. Refreshments were served by members ot\nth* guild assisted by Mrs. S- A.\nCurwen and Mrs. N. Peterson.\nMrs. W. B. Mclsaac bad as her\nguests Saturday, her son, At-hol M\u00ab-\nisajw. of Trail and Mr. Orleve of\nTrail.\nMr. nnd Mrs. W. Clark htd ai\ntheir guests on Sunday, Mr. and\nMrs. B  Clark and family of Trail.\nE. Daly. Jr. and Clarence Mclsaac returned from their camp an\nthe   Prnd   d'Orellle   on   Sunday.\nMr and Mrs. J. H. Duck and\nfa-mllv nf Nelson wer* the gueete of\nMr. aticl Mrs. W. dark on Sundsy.\nMrs. H. Stevens had aa her tta\nhour guest* on Saturday Mrs- Clarence Mclsaac. Mrs. E. Emllson and\nMrs. W. B   Mdsaa*.\nWatch Tor\nThe New Package with\nthe RED SPOT label\nHEATERS\nFawcctt's Heaters Are Built for Hard, Efficient\nService.   Made in Various Styles and Sizes.\nJubliec Circulators in 14- and 16-inch sizes.\nViking, bricklined heaters, 12- 11- and 16-inches\nSupreme bricklined heaters 14- and 16-inches.\nFairy Oak heaters 12- and 14-inches.\nGlobe Hall Heaters.\nLaundry Heaters\nB. C. Champ Heaters\nAirtight Sheetiron Heaters.\nOpen Front Heaters\nCoal Hods, Fire Shovels, Stove Pipe, etc\nHHperson Hardware\nCompany, L'.mltcd\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497 Box 414\n pagi ta\nSip Plaint latly Netw.\nPubltabed every morning except Sunday by Newa Publlahlng Company, Limited,  Neleon. \u25a0   0\nMember ef Oa ned Ian frees leased wm news ooreloe.\nAdvertising rate card, end A B. c staw-mente of clroulettaa\nnailed on request, or may be esen at the offloe of any edvertlalns\nagency reoognleed by (Da Oanaallan Dally Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\n>y mall (oountry), per month -\t\nSet sm^gj^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nWt mta  (city), per yee. .\u2014\nOutelde Canada, per month\ntmt sfm\\W^^\nDelivered, par week\n_\u00bb  JO\n- t.00\n_ 18.00\n_     .78\n- MO\n- M\n-1800\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation.\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1981\nDoing Good Work\nGood work is being done by the gangs of men who\n\u2022re engaged in this district on relief work on the\nhighways.\nOnly here and there ls there any indication of\nloafing or of a desire to evade doing a fair day's work.\nThis is a very satisfatcory situation and proves,\nwhat all those who have been in touch with the unemployed have known to be true, that the great majority\nof men who are out of work are not loafers but men\nwho desire only the opportunity to get a job.\nThe Late Jack Buckham\nThere will be very general regret in British Columbia\n\u2022t the death of John A. Buckham, for many years a\nresident of Golden, since 1916 a member of the provincial legislature for Columbia riding and for four years\nor so Speaker of the legislature under the Oliver and\nMcLean administrations.\nMr. Buckham was a man who was liked and respected by all who knew him. While not a power in\ndebate he made a good Speaker, and possessed a\nfaculty of making friends at the parliament buildings\nwhich assisted torn tn giving good service to his constituents, t\nand Hoard\nin NELSON\n<\u00ab\nJ. B. C.)\nCanada's Trade With the Orient\nAn outstanding feature of Canadian trade with China\nand Japan during the past decade is the rapid increase\nin Canada's exports to those countries. On the other\nhand, imports from Japan since the immediate poet-war\nyears have slightly decreased and they now total approximately $9,300,000. From China, Canadian imports have increased although they are still not large,\nbeing at present about half the amount of thoee from\nJapan. Alternatively, Canada's exports to Japan have\ngone up from a total of about $6,000,000 to $42,000,000\nin the last nine years, while exports to China have\nnearly quadrupled in the same period, rising from\n$6,700,000 in 1920 to $24,200,000 in 1929.\nCanada's relations with China and Japan go down\ndeeply into past ages. It was the search for a shorter\nroute to China that first attracted the discoverer to the\nwestern coast of Canada. Almost immediately afterwards there sprang up the trade in sea-otter, of which\nthe great market in the 17th century was Canton.\nToday Canada has, on the Pacific coast, the nearest\nports of the continent facing China and Japan, and\nthey have become the basis of a trade so rapidly expanding in volume, and of such undoubted potentialities for the future, as to merit the moet careful study\nand appraisement.\nA recent report by the Department of Trade and\nCommerce, Ottawa, gives an interesting account of\nthe development of the Dominion's trade with the\nOrient. Figures are presented from year to year as far\nback as 1912, while side by side are given corresponding figures for the United States, with whose operations\nin this field comparison is most easily made. It is seen\nthat while Canada as yet does only a small part of the\ntrade of North America with the Orient, yet, relatively\nspeaking, the Dominion's progress in recent years has\nbeen rapid. The republic's trade with China was 50\ntimes that of Canada 10 years ago, but today it is perhaps not more than 15 or 20 times; while with Japan,\nUnited States trade of 23 times in 1919 and 1920 is now\none of 12 times. The trade of the United States with\nthe Orient, in fact, was considerably greater in 1920\nthan in 1930, price declines, of course, being discounted\nin a comparison of this kind.\nRussia Once Again\nGeorge Bernard Shaw's outbursts about Russia and\nhis assaults upon those who disagree with him serve\nat least one good purpose.   They make us think.\nThe main weakness in discussions of the Rusnian\nsituation, its Red Terror, its communistic experiments,\nits Five-Year plan, has been that those who disapprove\nof communism and realise that communism cannot\nsucceed have been unable to find anything good in what\nhas been happening in Russia, whereas the real truth is\nthat the Russians, if only a little better off at the\npresent time than under the old regime, have at least\nlearned a great deal and are in better position to progress in the future than they would have been if the\nrevolution had not occurred.\nThe weakness in the arguments of those who have\nsympathies with communism is that they have beeri\nunable to see anything that is not good about the\nMarxian experiments and theoriest whereas the truth is\nthat while the Russians are in a sense in an advanced\nposition as compared with that of pre-revolutionary\ndays, they would have made very much more progress\nif it had been possible for a non-communistic administration to govern their affairs.\nThe net of the situation is that the Russians have\nmade,more progress than they would have made if the\nold bureaucratic government had remained in power,\nbut much less than they might have made under a modern and democratic capitalistic administration\u2014to um\nthe word \"capitalistic\" in the sense that it is used by\nopponents of our system of government in Canada, or\nthat of the United States or of Great Britain.\nFor example, the Five-Year plan ia not going to\nsucceed in the sense that the communists hoped that it\nwould succeed, but to call it a total failure would indicate a blindners to facts. It has not succeeded as well\nat a more democratic plan might have succeeded, but\nit has at least taught the Russian something of the\nbenefits of machinery, and something of the value of\nself-reliance\u2014paradoxical as that might appear.\nProbably ne boxing battle for eome\ntime bee earned a much interest\namong tbe fans se tbe Sharkey-\nCarnere bout ef Monday night. Tbls\nparticularly evident by the num-\nof red-hot fans who invaded this\neditorial sanctum that evening. How\ntbe boys got a paper out Is a marvel. We bad lumbermer, cooks,\ngentlemen ef leisure, mining men.\npolicemen, buetneesmen snd doctors\nte visitors and tbey all wanted to\nknow lf we oould mt make the mechanical printer work faster.\n.   .   .\nDa ttet tbem boxing (ue wanted\ntlw newt ef the bout before Camera\nhad time te cram his big paws Into\nthe small boxing gloves. We offered\nto turn the office over to these fellows and let them get the edition\nout but It looked as though the\npleat might be wrecked eo we oar\nrted on. And tbe weird gueeeee that\nthree feUows made wae comical. But\nwe enjoyed It although Bharkey did\nnot kayo the little Italian.\n. - e   e\nIt le not often that this column\nhands out compliments. It ls generally the other way. So I have been\ntold. However, Idge-rood and Kaslo\ndistricts deeerve every praise for thetr\ngenerous spirit. These two centers\nsn shipping out care ot fruit and\nvegetables for tbe needy In Saskatchewan. That Is tbt spirit which\nputs uie Kootenays on the meg). It\nts tee bad that other centers have\nnot done likewise for there will be\nhundreds and hundred, of apples\nunpicked ln thle district this fall.\nWork of the women's Institute In\nthis connection It Indeed praiseworthy.\n\u2022 s    \u2022\nTuesday afternoon I noticed Dr.\nL. (. Borden, M. P. P., haU Howard\nBush snd T. R Wilson, who were\npaaslng in >n automobile. And the\ndoctor rushed to catch up.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nSeeing so many local men rolling\ntheir own and boaatlng about new\nfangled cigarette making machines I\nneve Invested ln one. They ssy a\nfeUow win out down greatly on his\ncigarette consumption. That remains\nto be seen ea fer aa I am concerned.\nHowever, lf the boss of the house-\nconsents to roll my cigarettes I see\nno reason why I should not continue\n\"rolling my own\". But will she do\nthat little thing?\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHere, a lot of truth. I grabbed lt\nfrom someone else's column down\neast:\nSCANDAL    POWER\nOf old, when any author tried\nTo write a book that would abide\nAnd make a wide appeal,\nHe spent his time ln deepest thought\nUntil he found s tangled plot\nTo mske the story real.\nIn these most unexciting days\nThere is a veritable crate\nFor biographic blah,\nAnd any person, black or white,\nOan be a literary light,\nWho learns the formula.\nAccording to the simple plan,\nJust pick out any famous man,\nUnknown to crime or sin,\nThen write a most enticing book\nTo prove he was a secret crook\u2014\nAnd  wstch  the gold roll  In I\n\u2022 aa    t\nNo doubt you heard about that\ntwo weeks old babe In the New England states, who had to h:ve a\nhair cut. Perhapt he wlll soon be a\ncunning little shaver.\n\u2022 \u2022    s\nWhat's that? Smoke coming over\nthe mountain? Must be a fire somewhere? I'm away. Must have something stout that ln the paper tomorrow. That'a all tonight.\nWhat Oo Yoa\nThinh?\nCongratulates Nelson\non Aiding Unfortunate\nMan in Time of Trouble\n\u00bb__\u25a0 NH.SOII BAH,- J.-W-. MBJKW, m. C - WIBMWAT MOBJCWG. OCMW M. JIM\u2014\u25a0\nAuction ond\nContract Bridge\nTHE VALUE OF A\nKING LEAD\nThe effect of the depression on the optician's teet card.\nThat Body of Yours\nBy JAMBS   W.  BUXOM\nVALUE OF-HEAT AT   <\nMASSAGE\nIt wtt my prmiege for tome\nyetrt to supervise the trelnlng of\nathletlce for national and International competition. One of the\nthings I Insisted on wss a hot\nabower or tub bath after prao-\ntlce or competition and then a\nrub down or mattege by a train-\nWhat the Press\nSays\nMRMS SURPLUS IS DUE TO\nHOSPITALS\nNow that the supply ot trained\nnurses ln Canada has passed the\nsaturation point, attention ls being\nforussed on the Indefensible system\nthst hsi created lt, The hospitals\nare under lire In many quarters,\nand they in turn art attempting to\nJustify themselves on the ground\nthat they are the victims of haphazard flnsnclng. Comparatively few\ninstitutions of healing In the Dominion are heavily endowed. The\nothers must trust for their income\nto a parsimonious scale of government and municipal aid and the un-\ncertainty of patient payment. It ls\nto be hoped that the present discussion will lead to a more satisfactory system of hospital financing\nand more equitable treatment of the\nnursing profession.\nThe crux of the graduate nurse\nproblem In this oountry Is exposed\nby the Victoria Times, which demands\nchange of hospital practice concerning nurses. \"Canadian hospitals,\"\nit pointe out, \"have depended for\ntheir nursing service* on girl probationers, who give their eervloee in\nexchange for tbelr training. For\nyeara the hospitals have been turning out under this system graduate\nnurses in large numbers. The excess\nnumbers of these nurses not\nquired ln Canada have crossed the\nline to the south, where they have\nbeen readily absorbed in the growing\ncities of the United States. Now,\nhowever, the United States field for\nnurses has become _0 overcrowded\nthat regulations are being passed debarring foreign nurses. Many ara\nbeing forced to return to Canada,\nonly to add to the surplus already\nhere- With the opportunities for\nreward ln the nursing field so much\ndlmliii '.ied for their graduates, hospitals are now faced with the question as to the degree of exploitation on their part In obtaining\ncheap labor from undergraduates.\nwho are later to be thrown on an\novercrowded market.\" \u2014 Calgary\nHerald.\nlater half of tha laat decade undermined the moral ond spiritual fibre\nof the people to a marked extent.\nThe lure of easy money drove\nthoughts of thrift and Industry out\nof fashion.\nThe long depression haa made the\nolder generations return to sasne living and thinking, but a section of\nthe new generation, lacking in moral\nand mental stamina, continues to believe ' that an easy living is still\npossible, and that armed assault on\nsociety ls the quickest way to get\nIt.\u2014Calgary  Herald.\nDEPORTATION OF REDS\nCANNOT   START   TOO   SOON\nCONTRAST    IN    VALVES        ^H...\nILLUSTRATED,   STREET   ACCIDENT\nResult* such as the deplorable\nevents at Estevan are invltod when a\nconsiderable body of men resort to\nviolent defiance of the law to secure\nredress of grievances whether real or\nimaginary. To men who are inflamed\nby a sense of injustice, the process\nof Investigation and redress may\nseem slow. They may be Irritated\nInto taking the law Into their own\nhands. In doing so they must realise\nthat they have against them all the\nforces of organized government. If\nanarchy is to be avoided, the law,\nhowev\u00abr imperfect It may appear ln\nite workings, must assert ltt supremacy.\nThe Inquiry into the cause which\nprecipitated the atrlke tn the Western mines Is already under way. If\nthe grievances of the men are found\nto have a substantial foundation, t\nremedy of the condltlona la ae im'\nportent as the task which confronts\nthc federal and provincial governments In the relief of unemployment\nBut the disorder of Tuesday must\nhe followed by another Investigation\nto determine to what extent It was\nfomented by enemies of the social\nsystem which exist* in Canada. If\naliens and Immigrant* have Incited\nthe strikers to violence, they have\nearned the price of their deportation.\nThe return of such active agents of\ndisturbance to the lands whence\nthey came ls a first step toward\nending red methods In Canada. In\nthe west the danger of seditious\npropaganda is undoubtedly greater\nthan ln the older provinces of the\nDominion. The blanket powers given\nthe federal government at the last\nsession of parliament are abundantly\nample to rid this country of the unwelcome element.\u2014Toronto Telegram\nTo the Editor of the Nelson Dally\nNews-\nSir; n gives the writer, wbo has\nbeen a part time resident of the\nEast and West Kootenay for the\nlast three years, great pleasure to\ncongratulate tbe citizens of Nelson\nand district for the splendid spirit\nof hslpfullness displayed on behalf\nof Mr. Morris Hanson, handicapped\nln the industrial world through misfortune.\nThis ts the spirit which Is putting Nelson on the map and deservedly so. Vour mayor, J. P. Morgan\nand his able assistants, typify the\nspirit of progress and humane dealing, which ls a tremendous asset\nto the district and might well be\ncopied by other plaoes, some ai\nwhose administrators are mostly\nconcerned In bringing grist to their\nown individual mills.\nTour city council ln their dealings with the public appear to have\nno axes to grind, no favorite sons,\nbut resolutely are endeavouring to\nkeep Nelson where she is\u2014the\nQueen City of the interior. Let Nelson flourish!\nBRUTUS\nYahk, B- Oa, Oct.  13-\nWlth the above band at Contract\nBridge having a count of 17\nwtth four suits stopped, would bid\ntwo No Trumps, and North would\nbid three. At Auction Bridge, South\nwould bid one No Trump, which\nwould be followed by three passes.\nWeet led the deuoe of Spa<\nwhloh Eaat won with the King and\nreturned the Jack. South, with a\nfourchette, covered; and West reading correctly South'* holding from\nhis play of tbe Nine on the flnt\ntrick, held up so far as to make\ntwo more .Spade tricks If Bast\nshould obtain the lead again. If\nWest won the second triok and led\nagain, clearing the suit, he oould\nnot expect to make his thirteenth\nSped* a* his bend had no dependable entry.\nWinning the s\u00abcond trick Declarer\ncashed five Clubs and thrse Hearts;\nhaving made his game, he conceding the remaining tricks to his\nadverserles. Did Declarer really have\na sure end easy game. Or oould the\nadversaries have saved lt?\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nEast should have led hts King of\nDiamond* before he returned a\nSpade after winning the first trick\nwith the King. This, a* lt happened,\nwould have given his partner, West,\nmorst valuable Information concerning the Diamond suit and resulted\nln saving of game. With the King ol\nDiamonds led to trick 2 and the\nJack of Spades to trick 8, Weat\nwould take the second Spade and\nlead hts Queen and another Diamond.\nThen, although South would block\nthe winning of a fourth Diamond by\nEast, the adverserles would take\ntwo spade* and three Diamonds and\nsave   game.\nOFFICIAL SYSTEM POINTER\nNO.  87\nWhe uartner has bid an original one No Trump, there are\nmany types of hand-, with which\nhe should be overcalled by a\nmi it-bid; but the strength re*\nquired for raising the No Trump\nIs our question today. Partner should be raised to two No\nTrumps when the combined\nhands contain a count of 88.\nTherefore, Third Hand should\nraise Dealer with 9; Fourth\nHand should raise Second Hand\nwith io. Bids by Third and\nFourth Handa should be raised\nwith 8 and 7 respectively, in\nall oases with the minimum\ncount guaranteed, this equals\n28.\nWhen the combined count\nequals 83 the raise to two No\nTrumps should be made; but\nwhen It equals 84, partner's\none No Trump should be raised\nto three.\nThere lent any question but that\nthis hot water and massage quickly\nremove fatigue product* manufactured In tbe body by the exercise,\nand brine fresh pure blood to the\npart\nDr. Harold wolfson, Chicago,\ngives the reaulta ot experiments in\nthe use of heat, massage, and various type* of electrical stimulation\non the flow of blood to or through\na part Theae experiments show\nthat heat produce* an Increased\nsupply to the part Dy actively opening up the small blood vessels. Thle\nIncrease continue* for a considerable time gradually Increasing up\nto a certain point, maintaining\nthe Increased flow for another per\nlod of time, ana men gradually\ndecreases even if tbe heat ls stlU\nbeing applied.\nMassage causes at first a .great\nincrease of blood by forcing the\nused blood out e_ ihe part, and\nmors completely emptying the small\nblood  vessels.\nOne of the world's greatest sprinters of a few yeara oack, had never\nbothered to have a rub or a mts\nsage after hla hot abower; dldnt\nsee the need of it. He wae ln<\nduced to submit to the massage and\nsaid he never realized what he\nwas missing; he felt eo light and\nairy'I ^^~\nAnd when you realise that heat\nIn tbe form of a bot shower,\na hot tub, or \u2022 nested cabinet\nbath, brings tbe blood In greater\nvolume  to  the  part  carrylg  away\nTwenty Years Ago\n(rrom lbe Daily New., Oet. 14,1911)\nAt the customs house the value ot\nore shipp.d out of the port ot Nelion Ior the laet week was 132,693\nJamee A. Macdonald |oee up to\nthe Kas'.o quarrle today.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nO. A. Hunter. J. A. Ollker, Al\nTreglllue, W. Paris and Dr. Hall leave\ntoday Jor a week'a shooting up the\nlake.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nCity Engineer McCulloch nturned\nlast night from a holiday trip to\nthe east.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nA. J. Kelly and family.moved from\nAlnsworth yesterday to make tbelr\nhome In Nelaon. Their furniture was\nbrought to the city on the steamer\nmammSSet,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nCurling enthualaate are planning\nto erect a curling rink here this\nwinter.\n\u2022 .   .\nTbe later level taken at the various wharves on the West Aim, Is\nabout eight Inches above low water\nlevel.\nthe waste et fatigue -producte   j ou I\ncan   readily   inirteeefiiil   why   beet\nand maaaafe by getttng rid of tbe i\nfatigue producte la a abort time prevent   theae   athlete,   from   becoming  stale.\nNow you rata not be en athlete,\nbut It le wen to remember that |\nany and aU forma of ann\nhousework, garden watt, walking 1\ngolf, anything ln tact-ma!\nfatigue producte asd If theee do\nnot get tmt of tne eyetem \/ou\nare going to feel 'tiled' all the\ntime. A good night', aleep usually\ngives the eyetem a oB-enSt to get\nrid of theee producte before you\nstart work or exercise tbe next\nday.\nHowever It le worth knowing I\nthat a good bot oath and maa-1\nsage will actually seve hours of I\ntime in getting rid ot theee fatigue |\nproducts. ^^^^\nTen Teort Ago\n(From Tbe Daily News, Oet. 14,1911)\nThe Preebyterian manse waa the\nscene of a bafceeale and musical eve*\nnlng yeeterday. Mesdames W. See-\nman, J. Stobo, I. Puke and r. R.\nJeffs, pound tea while Meedamee Ba\nA. Peebles L Whlmeter, T. Winlaw,\nC. F. Hunted, A. Carrie and B. McLean, served. ^^^^\n\u2022 -!   \u2022\nTM special prim from the Bot-i\nwell fair have been won ea follows:!\nA. Beeden moet pointe In plate I\napples; O. A. Weet, meet polnta In I\nau plate applet; Mn. A. Hepher, I\nmoet pointe ln the home oooklng |\nclaas. ^^^^\nt  \u2022  e\nThe Oanadlan dollar made a frao-l\ntlonal gain on the Kew Tork market I\nyeaterday   when   lt   wae   quoted   atl\nai.ea. M^\nThe -world'a series which\nyeeterday, eet a new attendance!\nrecord for futun eonteste to shoot I\nat. The total paid attendance fori\nthe eight games which wen re-1\nquired to produce worlds serlet]\nreached I900J33.\nThirty Years Ago\n(From Ths Tribune, Oet. 14, ISM) I\nMrs. H- Dunk of Kelowne Is visit-1\nlng Mrs. E- V. Monroe of Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJustice Clement, who 1*111 preside!\nat the sitting of the assises arrived!\nin the city laat night.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 ^H^^\nMrs.  J. O.  Bunyan  haa left for]\nCalifornia, where she wtll spend the|\nwinter. |\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nO. B. Wilson of Marblebead, man*\naging director of the Canadian Mar-1\nblehead company, ls ln Nelson onl\nbusiness, Twenty-five men are work-1\nlng at the quarrle and more wlll be I\nput on within the next month or|\ntwo.\n\"So   your   husband   tried   to   get\na   government   post?   Whst   is   he\ndoing now?\"\n\u2022  \"Nothing, he got the post.\"\nSymptom*\nSwell patient\u2014Don't you think\nI hav* traumatic neurosis, doctor?\nFashionable Medico\u2014Not yet, but\n111 give you a list of the symptoms and you can go home and\nstart working on them. \u2014Boeton\nTranscript.\nAn ancient violin, valued at 135,\n000, was dropp.d by a young student\nof music ln a New York street and\nwas smashed under the wheels of a\ntruck. The destruction of this remarkable Instrument apparently created quite a commotion. Several\nmen accompanied the youth to a police station to corroborate his story\nof the devastating truck which had\nproceeded on its way. The news of\nthe accident was telegraphed all\nover   the  continent.\nYet if Instead of smashing this bit\nof wood and catgut ths truck had\ncrushed the warm, pulsating life\nout of a Uttle child's body, It Is safe\nto say the newa would never have\nbeen put on the telegraph wires. It\nwould not have made the front page\nof any of the New York papers. It\nmight not even have been worth an\nobscure paragraph.\nUnfortujtely the violent death of\na child in a street accident has long\nceased to be news of Importance,\neven within the scope Of local happenings. Outside the circle of the\nbereaved family such an accident\nno longer shocks the public mind as\nonce  lt would.\nOf course, violins made in 1091\nare rare. On the other hand there\nseems always to be an abundance of\nchildren. StlU it ls a little ruffling to\none's self-esteem to realise that\nhuman life evokes less widespread\nconcern thsn an Inanimate object\nwhich Is the work of man's hands.\n\u2014Toronto Telegram.\nTHE   LATE   WHALE\nTOLD IN RIME\nAUNT MET\n\"I didn't know her husband\nwu a writer until I saw her\nwelkin' Up-tee and scared lookln*\nwftsa a door summed.\"\nYOUTH COMMITS BULK OF CRIME\nFive men were sentenced at the\ncriminal assises here lsst Friday to\nprison terms ranging from six months\nto ten years. The youngest of the\nquintette is 19 and tbe oldest 36.\nTwo are 22 and the other 31.\nTbe prevalance of crime among\nthe youth of today has attracted the\nattention of criminologists all over\nthe world. Three-fourths of the\nmen who commit serious serious\ncrime are under 25 years of ag*.\nTbey are the men who constitute\nths gunmen ln the large American\ncities. Tbey comprise the main element in modern gangster warfare.\nOlder men may break tbe law but\nas a olass they keep well clear of\nmajor criminality. Tbey are mature\nenough to recognise the possibility\nof receiving a long term tn prison,\nth* Lash or the noose. The rashness\nof youth does not watt to count\ntbe cost.\nExpert investigators attribute the\nwave of youthful criminality in the\npresent era to lack of discipline ln\nthe home and the school and the\nbreaking down of moral standards\nss the result of the great war. It\nIs probably true that the wave of\nextravagance arid gambling which\nswept over thla  contlnsnt  ln  U_a\nThe figure* indicate that soon the\ngenial whale wlll be extinct save ln\nstory books-\nLast year 3.500,000 barrel* of\nsperm oil was produoed as a result\nof the whaling Industry. In 1936\nbut 700,000 were taken by various\nexpeditions In tbe colder oceans and\nIn 1900 the trade got but 30,000\nbarrels. No prophet is needed to\nforesee the near future wben tbe\nsea* will be drained of whale oil.\nOood news come* that Norwegian\nwhaling companies have declared a\nmoratorium in whale hunting for a\nyear. Indeed, we can survive because\nwe have 1,800,000 barrels ln store\nAnd this oversupply Is selling at\nridiculously low prices.\nAt the beginning of lest season\nthe business promised *130 a ton\nfor tbis oil- It actually brought but\n$65 and 170 a ton. Instead of the\nwhale swallowing Jonah these days,\nJonah is In imminent danger of\nswallowing the whale.\nSo overproduction ls being discovered ln the most unsuspected\nplaces. Too much cotton, too much\nwheat, too much oil, too much fruit\nand too much of almost everything\nIs now being matched by too much\nwbale oil.\nWith the new styles coming tn for\nwomen there may be a new market\nfor whalebone\u2014and no whalest\nIn our shortelghtendness we have\nbeen destroying life prodigally. Xt\nis of grave concern both on the Pacific a* weU. as on the Atlantic\noceans. If Industry cannot see beyond\nit* nose, other agencies win have to\nget perspective for It. Crtfee-ups may\nbe all right In Hollywood; but they\nare killing In the Alaskan waters.\u2014\nLos  Angeles Times.\nTHE PUBLIC APPETITE\nHow dear to my heart are the old\nmovie thrillers,\nThe old allent thrillers that came\nIn two reels\nAnd    harbored   no   gangsters\u2014Just\nvillainous killers,\nOood   natured   compared   to   our\npreeent day reels.\nI lon\u00ab for tbe sight of a girl ln a\npickle;\nI  pine  for tbe hero arriving in\ntime.\nI used to see both of theae thlng-\nf or a nickel\u2014\nFive Indian pennies, one-balf of a\ndime.\nFor only s nickel\nFor ode measly nickel,\nFor one red-hot nickel,\nOne half of a dime.\nLeisurely\nDuring his holiday at Blackpool, I\nMr, Edgar Wallace was reported as]\nsaying that he had started to writs]\na novel at 7 o'clock In the morn*\nlng, and had hoped to finish tt|\nthat night. When he ls on a holiday, he takes his time. \u2014Punch.\nI'm   weary   of  sound  adoptions  of\ngirl  shows;\nWould   I   see   another?   I   answer\nyou, nix!\nI'm fed up wltb war films, eooiety's\nwhirl  shows\nAnd movies that feature a bootlegger's tricks.\nSo strange your epics; esch one only\nnvtures\nA   pain   ln   my   forehead.   Desist\nbeing cruel.\nI want to go back to the days wben\nwe searchers,\nFor  simple  amusement  were   fed\nsimple gruel.\nFor nightly amusement.\nFor merely amusement.\nFor simple amusement\nFeed me simple gruel!\n\u2014-Warden La Roe\nPEDESTRIAN  RIGHTS\nIt msy bs news to those motorists\nwho have made little or no atudy of\ntbe traffic laws that pedestrians\nbave the right of ways at street\ncrossings, but tbe fact bu long\nbeen known and recognised by careful drivers, wbo, u a rule, do not\nhonk for persons afoot to get out of\ntbelr wsy, but courteously w*tt for\nthem to do so.\nIn many States, including California, the right* of pedestrians ever\nmotor-vehicle drivers have been upheld in court decisions, one of the\nlat\u00ab*t of these being that of Justice\nPlummer of the Appellate oourt at\nSacramento In a case ln which\nLos Angeles women wu run down\nby s car driven by another woman.\nThe Judge maintained that pedestrians cannot see hand signals on a\nright turn and that vehicle drivers\nmust yield to tbem. A similar decision sgslnst another to. Angeles\ndri.er his bMn mads lr tba State\n20 C\u00a3<n&\nsaid THE ADVERTISER\nAUTUMN\nWhen   autumn  fling,   her   banners\nwide upon October air,\nAll nature seema to thank ltt Ood\nfor making life to fair*.\nThe hills go robed ln amethyst, the\ntrees are dressed In fin;\nThe very air seems thrilling with a\npassionless desire.\nOne somehow feels that Ood on high\nmust love this aeaeon beet;\nHe  holds  lt tt a mother holde  a\nbabe cloee to her breast.\nThe  pressure  of His  hand   on  all\nnatun like a prayer\u2014\nWhen   autumn  flings   her  banners\nwide upon October air.\n\u2014Margant E. Sengeter\nMoney  isn't everything.  Tou bet\nnot. All the net an bills.\nSupreme court ln e somewhat elml-\nlar   cate.\nSeen though they could tee euch\na signal, many nonmotorlstt might\nnot understand It end lf e horn\nalgnal wen given It might be misinterpreted, -while in the case of e\nwholly cr pertly deal pedestrian the\nelgnel -would be uaelese.\nMarked courtesy It shown to pedestrians by many local motorists\nat crossings, but others plow through\nlines of people afoot with Uttle\nregard for human life. But it la\nnot a mere matter of courtesy that\nehould rule tbe action of the driver\nat a crosenlg\u2014It ls the fset that\nthe-law aays the pedestrian hat the\nright of way.-Loa Asgelee TUMI.\nHere is one of the numberless>\nways The News satisfies the\nwants of its advertisers and readers in the columns of its classified section. Run a want-ad today. Choose the column that suits\nyour own needs. Then for quick\nresults, at a trifling cost, try a\nwant-ad.\nCall 144 or 143\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nWANT-ADS\nAl-iminum Ware\nNow is the time to purchase your stock\nof Kitchen Utensils at a Low Price.\nSPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK\nSteamer and Sauce Pan \u2014 $1.09\nUtility Water Kettle     $1.39\n8-Quart Water Kettle and Insert $1.75\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nNelson Hardware Co..\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson B. C.\n trakS HH_OK DAILY NEWS, KELSON. \u00bbC- WEDNESDAY MOU-alKO. OClOBaB 14. 1M1\u00bbW\"\nTttsi mmaM\nFRIENDSHIP AND BLUE VISION ARE\nFAVORITES TO WIN CESAREWITCH\nRace  la  Greatest  Teat  of\nHorse Over Flat; la\n21-4 Miles\nNO HORSE HAS\nWON EVENT TWICE\nField Promises 26 Starters;\nBlue Vision May Be a\nFavorite\nNEWMABKET, Enfland, Oct.\n18.\u2014(Canadian Press Cable)\u2014\nTea Cesarewl-teh stakes, greatest\ntest of tbe stemlna of a horse\nover tbe tint, will be ron over\nthe Ji.-mlle course on New\nMarket's broad heath tomorrow\nefternoon.\nThe field promises to number\nt\u00bb Hotter..   No horse has ever\nsucceeded In winning the cesere-\nwlteb   twice,   but   Arctic   star,\nwinner In int, Is folnt to attempt this feat tomorrow, burdened   with   the   second   hlih-\nest welfht of 117 pounds.\nA. K. ICacomher, with Oletta, to\noe ridden by the champion  Jockey\nOordon Richards. wlU be seekln- his\nthird   victory   In   the   oesar-ewltch.\nThe   Age   Khan   la   also   seeding   a\nthird   victory,   having   the   highly-\nfancied   Khorsheed   ready   to   start\nwith slrett riding.\nThe only women-owner represented ls Lady Zla wernher, who wlll\nrun sandals with Dines up. Lady\nZla ls owner of the famous Black\nJack, winner of last yesr'e Cam-\nbaidge-shlre and Important handicaps this year.\nJOINT FAVORITES\nPrlendshln and Blue vision are\nJoint favorites at seven to two\nagainst Tonight, but probtbly Blue\nVision, tbe gams Uttle mare owned\nby Montague Bvans and carrying\nSteve Donahue, 103 pounds, will\nbe the most papular starter. Friend-\nshin ls owned by Sir Aba Bailey.\nThird ln tonight's betting was\nthe Aga Khan's Khorsheed at nine\nto one. The Aga Khan's stable\nstarted the New Msrket meetlnc\ntoday with two winners. Sandals\nwas backed at 10o to seven and\nSon at Mint at 18 to one.\nBackers hoping to finish the\nseason wtth a spectacular \"double\"\nln ths cesarewltch and the shorter\ne \u25a0 --*,-mm which wlU he run\na fortnight hence, strongly support\nFriendship and the only entrant\ntrom France, \"Hie Chateau. The\ncourse at the moment la fast, favoring Friendship, but the weather ls\nthreatening and rain Is probable before tbe start of the race, scheduled  for  3  p.m.\nFrom the Hit of probable starters\npublished last night old Orkney,\ntap weight, and Insurance are withdrawn. Arctic star and Jugo are\nboth selected by Trainer Nightingale\nbut only one of these will start,\nand will be ridden by Bearya For\nthe other three horses who were\nwithout jockeys last night, Sibbrltt\nhas been chosen for Trie Chateau.\nField for Caooa and Robertson for\nBritish Sailor. Dowdall bas the\nmount on Stolen Flame ln place of\nJockey E   Quick.\nThe complete betting odds at\nthe Beaufort club's call-over tonight:\nFriendship and Blue Vision IS\nto 839; Khorsheed nine te one;\nSandals 100 to seven: Son of Mint\n18 to one; Notice Board 100 to six;\nNoble Star, Prince Paradise. Truncheon, Trie chateau 30 to 1: Summer Princes, Advances, 25 to one:\nChelmarsh, Ballmurphy. 40 to one:\nStolen Flame, Joyous Greeting. Jugo-\nOletta British Sailor and Leonldas\n11, 80 to t, 8; Arctic star, Leonnrd.\nCacoa. Bsllscanlon, SU-wbeeler, Timber, 88 to one; Earnblll 100 to\none.\nTimmins, Ont., snd district wsa\nvisited by the first snow of the\nseseon. Before noon Tbunday, all\ntrices of tbe snow had disappeared\nBATTERIES\n0\u00a3 First\nImportance ...\n\"To get anything like real\nsatlafactlon out of your car,\nyou must bave a good storage battery on the Job. We\nsell and recommend the\nCoyle Battery -because It\ngives the full measure of\ntrouble-free servloe and the\nmanufacturer Is right here\nIn Vancouver to back up\nthe quality of his product.\nGive us a oall today.\"\nNelson Transfer1\nCm Ltd.\nVemon St, Phone 38\nBABE WANTS BUT\nTWO YEARS MORE\nOF ACTIVE PLAY\nKANSAS CITY. Oct. 18.\u2014\n(API\u2014Babe Ruth wants at\nleast two more years ln baaeball aa a player to round out\nau even 30.\n\"Asd then,\" he aald here\ntoday, putting his hand on\nihe shoulder of Charles (Dabby) Street, manager of the\nworld champion St. Loula\nCards, \"I'll probably try to\ndo like Oabby la doing. Ill be\ntelling other players how it\nought to be done.\"\nThe New York Tank slugger\nwas here to play an exhibition\ngame tonight which was cancelled because of rain. He attended a luncheon given ln\nhonor of street.\nODD FELLOWS AND\nEAGLES WINNERS\nTake Carpet Bowling Content\nFrom Sons of England\nand Foresters\nThe Odd Fellows defeated the Sons\nof England 6*2 and the Eagles defeated tbe Foresters 8-0, ln two\ncarpet bowling contests at the Memorial   hall   Tuesday   night.\nThe results were;\nOdd Fellows vs. Bona ot England,\nwith the Odd Fellows' skips mentioned first:\nW. T. Choate. 11, beat H. Stlrzaker, 6; R. Renwlck, 13, beat J.\nWood, 9; J. Perasso, 10, beat C.\nWard, 5; fourth game defaulted to\nJ. Bailees.\nEagles ts. Foresters, with the\nEagles'   skips   mentioned  flrat:\nH. Stangherlln, 13, defeated E. C.\nCherry, 10; W. Scott, 13, beat T.\nBate, 9; A- Mabaasa. 8, beat O. B\nAbbott, 6; A. Smith, 9, Beat O.\nRelgate, 6.\nJUVENILE  SOCCER\nTEAMS TMJ AT 3-3\n^.>\u00a3\u00bb*_6*n*\nBy   AL  DEMAREE\n\"Lefty\" Orove, the first major\nleague left bander in the history of\nmodern baseball to win 80 games In\none season, is undoubtedly the most\nvaluable player In the American\nLeague ln 1981. A pitcher who can\nstep oxtt and win almoat every time\nhe starts, gives his team a certain\nmorale that keeps them ln tha race\nand wins pennants.\nNext to Grove, I would name Babe\nRuth and Lou Gehrig of tbe Yankees. Earl Webb of the Red Sox, Wes\nFerrell, Morgan and Averlll of Cleveland, Cronln and Rloe of the Senators and Al Slmmona of the A's,\nPat Caraway, the long, tall southpaw of the Chicago White Sox. wins\ntbe title of the season's biggest bust\nwithout a struggle. Pat loat about\nas many gamea aa Oroves won. But\npat must have something besides a\nglove and a prayer or Donle Bush\nwould not keep starting him.\nIn a second juvenile soccer contest at tbe Recreation grounds on\nTuesday afternoon, the Wildcats and\nthe Warriors tied 8-3, Win Oughtred\nscored all three of the goals for the\nWfldcats and Stan WUson scored two\nof the Warriors' three, Bud Cheno-\nweth accounting for the third. The\ngame waa refereed  by Jack  Bishop.\nTO GOLF IN DUBS\nDUFFERS CONTEST\nSupper at  the  Club  House\nIs  at  Stake  on\nOctober 21\nThe men bring their golfing activities to an offlcal close for the\nseasop in a Dubs and Duffers foursome contest on the Nelaon Oolf\nand Country Club links on Wednesday, October 31. Tho losing team,\nwill pay for a supper to be served\nat the club  house.\nA Dubs and Duffers contest was\nstaged by the ladles about two weeks\nago, ending the season as far as\nthev were concerned.\nThe match committee requests\nthat ill men wbo are Intending to\ntake part in the play band in tbelr\nnames sa soon as possible.\nDR. JACK WRIGHT\nTAKES POSITION\nFIRST OF WEEK\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct. 13.\u2014Dr.\nA. K. Haywood, superintendent of\nVancouver Oeneral hospital, has returned from Toronto, where be attended the annual meeting of the\nAmerican Hospital association. Dr.\nHaywood says that Jack Wright of\nMontreal, noted Canadian tennis\nplayer, will report for duty aa his\nsecond assistant, at the hospital\nnext Monday.\nPassengers In railway coaches\nshould have uo fear of hot cinders whsn tbey open windows of\nrallwe ys coaches if s new patent\ncinder deflector, now belnr. tried on\nthe London division of the Canadian\nNational Railways proves effective.\nThe cinder deflector was Invented\nby  a Montreal  man.\nAwarded the eoreted certificate cf purity, merit and\nSiality by the Institute of\nygiene, London.\nRhum Negri ta\nREP.\nQUART\nVs, met, .1 T i. ar itmm feaas t_a !_\u00ab-. Ctr.  hH Smut\n0__r tSwpmrtmmt, Hated*. B. C.\nFamed tbe world\nover ae \"OW Nick\nRum\"\n\"This advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nGrove First Southpaw\nto Win 30 Games\nNICK WILLIAMS\nNO LONGER TO\nMANAGE SEALS\nTenders   Resignation   Three\nDays After Winning Coast\nChampionship\nWorld Series Nero Puts Cards on Top\nGERMANS SWAMP\nENGLAND 13-0\nIN ICE HOCKEY\nLONDON, Oct. 13. (CP)\u2014Germany\ntonight swamped Bngland In the\nsecond of a aeries ot Ice hockey\nmatches, winning by a soore of 18\nto 0. The Germans scored two goals\nin the first period, four in the\nseoond, end seven In the third.\nTbe Oerman team astounded the\ncrowd by completely outskatlag the\nEnglish team which lisd defeated\nthem last night. The skating of the\nvisitors waa  a revelation.\nThe standing tn matches is now\none victory apiece. The next game\nwlll decide the winner of the series.\nSAN FRANCISCO. Calif. Oct. 13.-\n(AP)\u2014 Nick .WlUlams, manager of\ntbe Ban prancieoo Seals for the\nlast six years, resigned today, thrse\ndays after he had piloted ths Pacific coast league club to the 1931\nchamplooahlp.\nTbe resignation surprised owners\nof the seals, who said they had no\nsuccessor In mind and probably\nwould not name one for some time\nto come\nWilliam's resignation was tendered without comment, to take effect\nimmediately. He haa been associated with ths Seals for the psst\nten years, having served four years\naa a soout.\nExpressing regret at William's decision, Secretary Oeorge A. Putnam said:\n\"WlUlams Is one of the best developers of young talent In the business. His abUlty In this direction\nIs chiefly responsible for our club\nleading the league tn the development and sale of young players\nduring the last ten years, in the\ntime he has been assoclsted with\nthe Seals be haa established a remarkable record.\"\nHoop Schedules Are\nDrawn  Up in Trail\nTRAIL, B- C, Oct. 13\u2014Basketball\nschedule for the season hss been\ndrawn up. Three games wtll be played two nights of each week until December 3. Schedule of play for this\nweek  Is:\nWednesday\u2014Shemrocke vs Cardinals. 7-6.\nComlnlcos vs wood Butchers, 8-9.\nTimes vs Diakonlas. 8-10.\nSaturday\u2014 High school vs Canucks  7-8.\nFalcons vs Rovers,  8-0.\nColombos va Wood Butchers, 9-10.\nSchedule to the end of the season\nwtll  be  announced  tbls  week.\nSHAUGHNESSY SIGtfS\nTO MANAGE THE\nROYALS\nMONTREAL. Que., Oct. 13.\u2014Frank\nShaughnessy. coach of the McOIll\nsenior footbaU team and a former\nmajor league ball player, today\nsigned a one-year contract as business manager or the Montreal Roy-\nals of the International Baseball\nleague.\n. ^\t\nBritish Unemployment\nDecreases 33,252\nLONDON, Oct. 13. (AP)\u2014Unemployment ln Oreat Britain for the\nweek of October S decreased by 33,-\n282 from the previous week. The\ntotal was 3,791,630, which was 615.-\n339 more than at the same time a\nyear ago.\nINTERESTING TALE TOLD OF\nEARLY DAYS WHEN MARTIN\nSTARTED HIS BALL CAREER\nHad   Confidence  in   Ability\nas Baseball Player Right\nFrom Start\nCRYSTAL HPRINOS, Miss., Oct. 18.\n\u2014He was born In Temple, Oklahoma,\nand raised in that state, but Pepper\nMartin, dominating figure of the\nworld series, served his baseball apprenticeship on the sand lot* of\nCrystal Springs back ln the days of\nthe old Tomato league.\nMoving to copllah county with his\nfather snd mother while a lad in\nhis early teens, Martin hsd the requisite frequently found In the\ngreat\u2014he was a poor boy, forced to\ngo to work. Martin seversd his connection with the local high school\nand chose that which he loved\nbeet for an occupation\u2014baseball.\nCrystal Springs had baseball fever,\nfollowing    au    unusually   profitable\nvegetable season, and money flowed\nUke  water,\nHE   TELLS   'EM\nBarefoot, hatlees and with a wide\ngrin on his face, Martin sat In the\noffice of Roecoe Miles, manager of\nthe Crystal Sprlnga club, wiggled\nhis big toe and told Miles he knew\nhe could play outfield because he\ncould \"catch 'em Uke Trts Speaker,\"\nand had sn \"arm aa great aa Horns-\nby's,\" and could \"run the tracks\nequally as well as Cobb.\"\nMiles, slightly bewildered at suoh\na front, looked the lanky lad over\nand said rather caustically, \"And I\nguess you hit 'em like Ruth\"\nNot ln the least abashed, Martin\nreplied: \"Ruth hlta 'em pretty far,\"\nand with a shake of his head added.\nBut I hit *em pretty fsr myself,\nMr. Miles.\"\nMartin got the Job.\nOLD \"BRONX CHEER\"\nIn lils first appearance in sv Crystal Springs uniform, Martin came to\nbat amid Jeers of tbe stands. The\nkid socked the first pitch far and\nwide into center field, a clean\ndouble. Like a rocket hs broke for\nfirst, rounded the bag and continued for seoond. Midway down the\ns Une be stumbled and fell, and\nbefore be recovered tbe ball had\nbeen retrieved and be was tagged\nout. The fans went wild at such\nawkwardness, yelling to take him\nout.\nTwo innings later the local dugout waa in an uproar. Tt wu Pepper's time at bat again and he was\nmissing. From around the grand\nstand he appeared, running with a\nbat ln one hand and his shoes ln\ntiie other, yelling at Manager Miles,\n'I couldn't, run with them durn\nspikes on my feet.\" He rattled the\nbooers wtth a screaming double a\nminute later and by a great run\nand a marvelous slide stretched the\nbit into a triple.\nThus, from the beginning. Pepper\nMartin was doing spectacular things\non a baseball diamond. No one here\nremembers him by any other name.\nEven his relatives refer to him as\n\"Pepper.\"\nAt Crystal Springs he did Just\nabout everything a small ball player\ncould do. He bunted with two men\ndown, a runner on third and won\nball games. He hit them over and\nunder the defence and scaled the\nwalls to make Impossible catches.\nHis confidence, or rather his appreciation of his ability is expressed\nIn a hit of repartee credited to\nDizzy Dean In New Orleans recently,\nbut whtch bad Its origin here. Manager Miles told Martin he would\nprobably get an offer from New\nYork tor him, to which pepper replied, \"Well, lf they offer you money\nand a player, it better be Babe\nRuth,\"\nFiles Suit\nFULTON, Mo.. Oct. 13. (AF) \u2014\nPaul Derringer, young pitcher of the\nworld champion 8t. Louis Cardinals,\nflled suit In QaUaway county circuit court here today for I38M\ndamage* from a man who gave hie\nname as 8. C. Smith, Kansas City,\nae the result of an automobile accident yesterday near bare in whlcb\nDerringer wae Injured.\nThe Red Bird pitcher charged the\naccident resulted when Smith attempted to pass a car on a hill and\ncollided with tbe Derringer machine.\nDerringer suffered a scalp wound,\ncut over the left eye and nn Injured nose.\nPKPPER MARTIN  AND HIS  ftfrOHTY  BAT\nNot in the world series' history hss any one player\ndominated the classic or caught the popular fancy ae\nhas the slugging outfielder of the St. Louis Cardinals,\nwbo  Is  shown  above  ln  two   batting   poses.  Hla ex\nploits have been amazing and but for him the Athletics In all probability would now be world's champions again.\nSharkey Rejuvenates the Fight Racket in\nHis Terrific Pummeling of Primo Camera\nBoth   Fighters   Get   About\n$26,767 Apiece Out of\nthe Battle\nNEW YORK, N. Y., Oct 13.\u2014\n(AP>\u2014Jack Sharkey, man of\nmoods, given to gusty display*\nof rage and lack of control that\nhave ruined many a heavyweight\nspectacle, finally haa paid part\nof his debt to boxing.\nThere was new life, new Interest In the heavyweight, division,\nthe barometer by which tbe success of the game as a whole ls\nmeasured, and tt was due to\nbut one reason \u2014 the saUor's\n\u25a0spectacular thumping or Primo\nCamera, the ogre man. In the\nbiting winds that swept Ebbets\nfield last night.\nAlthough a complete accounting\nwaa stlU lacking jimmy Johnston,\nthe most versatile promoter since\nthe late 'Tex Rickard, said toda\nthat 26,900 persons paid from $3.or.\nto $18.00 to see the first thorough\ntesting of the Italian giant.\nThe   gross   receipts   were   $128,.0!\nand   with   government   taxes   sub\ntracted,   |107,070   was   left  for   the\nfighter,   and   the   management.\nThe warriors split 883,838 evenly,\nabout  838,767 each.\nPLANS ANOTHER BOLT\nJohnson moves into the garden\nthe 18th of thia month to take\ncomplete charge of boxing. As\nsoon as he is settled he plans to\nmatch Sharkey and Camera for a\nreturn battle indoors this winter.\nHe also plans another Sharkey-\nTommy Loughran go and a bout\nbetween Camera and Paulino TJz-\ncundun.\nNot nlnce the wild-eyed sailor\nsmashed down the black menace.\nOld Harry Wills, Just five years ago\nto the night, and immediate catapulted, himself tn the front ranks of\nthe heavyweights has Ebbets field\nseen a battle to equal Sharkey's\nlatest  contest.\nSharkey's victory was every bit as\nimportant as his defeat of the big\nnegro. A rank in and outer, hailed\nas a great fighter If he only would.\nSharkey went Into the ring wtth the\nvast Venetian on sufferance aa a\nheavyweight contender for the last\ntime.     He   came   out   rejuvenated.\nhailed  again  as a great boxer and\na merciless, destructive puncher.\nMeanwhile, camera has answered\nhla critics ln fair fashion. He is\nsomething other than a huge circus\nfreak, possessed of the largest body\nIn modem fight history. He ls\nfaster than most fighters half hie\nsize, he has been perfectly schooled lb defense. He has unlimited\ncourage, tremendous strength and\nstamina.\nBut It seems conclusive now that\nPrimo Camera never will be a\npuncher, despite his size.\n\"Big Train\" to Remain\nCARPET BOWLERS'\nSEASON SCHEDUL\nFollowing  ve   tbe   dates eet\ntbe    carpet    bowlers'    toumta\nmatches;\nOctober A\u2014Clan McLeary *\u00bb. s\nof England, Foresters vs. Odd 1\nlows.\nOctober . IJ\u2014Odd Fellows Ts t\not England,  Poreeters vs. Elgin\nOctober ao\u2014Ss.li. vs. Clan McLeary, Bona ot lngland vt Tot.\nesters,\nOctober a?\u2014Odd Fellows vs. Oaa\nMcLeary; Eagles vt. Sons ol Eng-\nland.\nNovember 3\u2014Foresters vs. Clsn\nMcLeary;  Odd Fellows vs. Eagles.\nNovember 10\u2014Clan McLeary vs.\nSons of England; Foresters vs. Odd\nFellows.\nNovember 17\u2014Sons of England vs.\nOdd  Fellows;   Foresters  vs. Eagles.\nNovember 24\u2014Eagles vs. Clsn Mc*\nLeary; Foresters vs. Sons of -fog-\nland.\nDecember 1\u2014Odd Fellows vs. Clan\nMcLeary; Esgles vs. Bona of England.\nDecember   t\u2014Foresters    ss.    Cla\u00ab\nMcLeary;  Odd  Fellows vs. Sons\nEngland.\nDecember 16\u2014Sons of England va.\nClsn McLeary; Foresters vs. Odd\nFellows.\nDecember as\u2014Sons of England vs.\nOdd Fellows;  Foresters vs. Eagle-\nDecember aft\u2014Eagles vs. Clan McLeary; Foresters vs. Sons of England.\n100 to Nine Shot\nWins Oaks Stake\nNEWMARKET, England, Oct. 1*1\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Count John McCormack's fa-\nlorne, st loo to 9 today won tb*\nNew   Market   Oaks   at   ona   and\nthree-quarter miles, by five lengthe\nfrom Lord Olaney's Evening Glory.\nSeven horses ran. Tho purse \"\"\n\u00bb1,W0.\nWASHINOTON, Oct. 13.\u2014iAP>\u2014\nAgain the \"Big Train\" wlll lea.\nthe Washington Senators ln thalr\ndrive neat year for the American\nleague   flag.\nPresident Clark Griffith of the\nSenators announced today that Walter Johnson, his former hurler and\nfor the laat three years manager,\nwould remain as pilot next year.\nErnie Arthur Beaten\nCLEVELAND, Ohio, Oct. 13 (API-\nRobin Reed, Oregon, retained the\nCanadian welterweight title he won\nlast week from Ernie Arthurs by\ntoppling Arthurs again tonight ln 30\nminutes and 25 seconds with a\nbody slam.\nScots ttlhisty\nIf DISTILLED <*.\nBLENDED ami   I\n1    BOTTLED in   If\nUL SCOTLAND J|\nThi. advertisement is not published or displayed by tbe Liqoof\nControl Board or by the Govern,\nment of British Columbia.\nEarl Jelllcoe   f <v\nc.c.t., o.st, g.c.v.o\u201e d.c.l, lid..\nli for lit.\n70 for tie.\nin flat tins\n\u00b0f fifty end\none hundred.\nCJke RECORD\nSPEAKS >r ITSELF\nIn opening the ConasBan National txnibtttem nt Toronto en Frisky,\nAltgltstSS, Earl Jelllcoe soldi \" Over a period of 52 years, the* population\nof Canada hat increased hy 6,000,000; ths* revenue of the Government\nfrom' f22.OO0.0OO to 1400,000,000 and the value of Iter trade from\n1169,000,000 to |2,<M0,OOO,O00. fn the eeme Ume, her manufactures\nliaie increased ten-fold end har crop acreage three-fold. Thla\nremarkable retard encourmgm a footing efoptimism for tha future.''\nEarl Jelllcoe also made the following referencet\n\"Canada's record growth constitutes an\nachievement of world importance and stands aa\na challenge to future progress. This phenomenal\ngrowth is' the direct result of that splendid\ncourage and determination which the people of\nCanada showed so strikingly from 1914-1918\".\nThe record for public favour which is held by\nTurret Cigarettes is the natural outcome of\nquality consistently maintained throughout the\nyears. After all, nothing can replace good, honest\ntobacco; grown and ripened right out in the field\nunder nature's own sunlight\u2014nothing artificial\nabout that\u2014and the high quality is \"inbred\".\nQuality and Mildntsi\nurret\nCIGARETTES\nManufactured hy\nI mparial Tobacco Company\nof Canada, Limited\n_____   \u25a0    __________\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C. \u2014 WEDNESDAY WMWW0, OCTOBH 14. .tftl\"\nj&& 5_a_ Wa nt Ad Pa__e,\nChurchy] Is the Fastest-Working Ocean\nGrain Terminal in the World Tests Show\nHans Blade to Lead Three\nVessels at a Time Instead\nof One as This Year\nCHUB-CHILL, Man. Oct. 13\u2014Tow\nertng like a great white guardian\n\u2022Mr tbe destinies of Churchill's\naaeoent townsite. the newly-built\n-government elevator at the northern\neea-port of the prairies stands as a\nchallenge to the business men of\ntbe weet. If the 3.600,000-busheI\ngrain-handling plant ls ever pressed\nts capacity, ths ambitious project\nfor a trade route across Hudson\n\u25a0say wlll be    a success.\nFar the moet lmpoelng atructure\naat tbe Canada-owned harbor la the\nelectrically-operated elevator set 600\ntttt beck trom the 1,854-foot dock,\nand fed by four spurt from the Hud-\neon Bay railway, which rolls over\nmhre (ban MO muss of muskeg\ncountry nortbeaat ot Tbe Pas, Manitoba. Tested tuceeefully thit tall,\nthe elevator tt the fattett-worklng\nocean grain terminal ln tbe world.\nFour hundred cars\u2014about 600,000\nbuabele ot grain\u2014can be dumped ln\na dey ot 18 hours lf tbe elevator's\nreceiving machinery Is operated to\ncapacity. Thla quantity of grain\u2014\ntwo large-size oceen cargoes\u2014could\neasily be loaded In e da; wit hthe\nelevator's conveyor .pouts working at\ntbelr 60,000-bushel per-hour capacity.\nCleaning and drying apparatus to\noare for all klnda of grain la Included ln the plent which towers\nmore tben 300 feet against tbe grey\nOf tbe northern sky. The ultramodern machinery Is looked upon as\nmoat appropriate alnce tough and\ndamp grain la meet frequent In the\nnorthern \"perk area*\" et tbe prairies\nproximate to the Hudson Bay rail\nUM.\nAdapted te tbt probable development of livestock shipment by the\nBay la tbe grinder equipment installed tn the elevator. Through\nthle meant, lt will be possible to\npeovlde food Mr oattle en route\noveraeee frcm tbe prairie ttocklanda.\nIntricate weighing apparatus to tab-\ni\u2014ate Incoming and outgoing quantities ot grain wtth great rapidity\noperated perfectly ln thle fall's\nteat.\nThough only one boat could be\nloaded et a time this fall, three\nveseelj wlU be eble to take their\nfill ot grain almultaneously when\nthe conveyor-gallery is extended\n1 too feet along the dock before the\nand of next season. The conveyors.\nnow built to a length of 336 feet.\nla fed by a cross-gallery carrying\nlain on a system of belt- from the\nslevetor, more than a city block\ndistant.\nDesigned by c. D. Howe ond cornoy who were consulting engineers\nIn the construction of the world's\nfastest pool elevator No. seven at\nPort Arthur, Ont.. the Churchill\nplant ls built on thc east shore of\nthe Churchill river. It. In directly\nalongside the province's stretch of\ntownsite land, snd across the river\nfrom the two-century old ruins of\n\u00bb*>rt Prince of Wales.\nimposim; stih rn be\natlong the shore the elevator extends 650 feet, an lmpoelng structure amidst the bustle of a score of\nlocomotives tnd ysrd englnee, the\nstruggling activity ot dredges or the\nbusy haste of a doeen craft on the\nbroad river. The storage section of\nthe elevator Is 115 feet high, extending into the lofty main section ot\nthe workhouse, almost twice as high.\nDesigned to handle not only elevator-operation but suxlalary services\nconnected with t*jc townslto-nght.-\nlng, power, tte.,\u2014the 3800 horsepower high-pressure steam plant lt\na valuable asset to the north country settlements. If necessary, lt may\nbe enlarged to a capacity of 5000\nhorse-power. At thc distant end of\n\u00bb 1000-mile railway rlgeagglng Into\nthe north from Winnipeg, Churchill's\nelevator Is the central figure in a\ndevelopment of grain-shipping facilities not even approached in any\nfrontier settlement In tny land\nWorth of '5 It the same latitude it\nBergen, Norway, the new port le the\narenue of tn experiment ranking\nwtth the greatest in Canada's pioneer\nhistory.\nINDEX TO CLASSIFIED ADS\nAOENTs WANTED\nAI10MOB1IES FOB HIBE\nAblOMBOBIUS WANTED\nAUTOMOBILES FOB SALE\nBIRTHS\nBEES\nBOATS, LAI NCHES, FOB\n(121\n1411\nHi,\n(101\n(II\n(55l\nNI   14-a,\nBOATS. LAUNCHES, FOB SALE (44)\nBOATS. LAlNt'HES, WANTED (451\nBLBi.NLSs OPPORTUNITIES (Ml\nCANARIES  FOB SALE (I)\nCANARIES   FOR   SALE (I)\nCATS AND DOUS WANTED (-0)\n1IKESSMAK1NO (I)\nFARM AND DAIUV   PRODI ( f. (\u2022,\u00bb)\nt.AKM   PROPERTY  FOB SALE (361\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE (37)\nMIR  SALE  OR  BENT 111)\nI'IKNISHED ROOMS FOBBENT (1.1,\nIIHNISHED ROOMS WANTED (Id*\nal KMTIHK FOB SALE 1461\nHELP   WANTED (10)\nHOUSES FOB RENT (21l\nHOUSES  WANTED (SOI\nIN  MEMORIAM (41\nINSURANCE (33)\nINVESTMENTS (4\u00bbl\nLITEBABY                                   \u2022    (61\nLIVESTOCR  FOB SALE (13)\n-IV-STOCK  WANTED (34)\nLOST  AND  FOUND (HII\nMACHINERY (56)\nMARRIAGES (*>\nMINING.  TIMBER.  LUMBEB (36)\nMISCELLANEOUS <!!\u00bb\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED (26)\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS (54)\nNOTICES (81\nNURSERY  PRODUCTS (47)\nNURSING (141\nPERSONAL <5)\nPLANTS (5\u00bbj\nPOULTRY   AND  EGGS (2\u00abj\nPROPEBTY   WANTED (>5)\nPROPERTY   FOB   SALE J4>\nBABBITS   FOB  SALE l '\u25a0\u25a0l\nRANCHES FOR BENT 461\nBOOM  AND BOARD <J7I\nBOOMS TO BENT (J\u00bb>\nROOMS WANTED CIS)\nSCHOOLS                ___ CJ2)\nSITUATIONS  WANTED (11)\nSTOBIS TO RENT (jl)\nI'EACUERS  WANTED (Ul\nGRAND MISTRESS\nVISITS ROSSLAND\nORANGESOCIEH\nMr*.  N.   Armstrong   Makes\nPresentation; Banquet\nIs  Held\nWANT   AND   CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne inaeruoa iu oente a line\nSix laeeruona 60 cenu a Una\nOn. month 11410 a Una\nMinimum two tinea\n_o  extra  charge  It  charged.\nBirth   notices   free   of  charge\nDeaths,    marriages    and    cards    ol\ntbanka.  SO cente  per  line\nPunerai  flowen   15 cenu per  line\nMews   of   tb.   Day   items   io   cents\nper Una.\nNO   EN'IRA   COST   IF  CHARGED\nU_(_A_ NOTICES\nLEGAL NOTICES\u2014Continued.\nDATED thle 36th dey ot September,   IWl.\nHARBI  WAM_p.l.c.nt\n(7606)\n\"Gomnment  i.muor  Act\"\nNotice of Application for B*-rr\nLicence\nNOTICE Is hereby given that on\nthe 38th day of October next the\nundersigned Intends to apply to\nthe Uquor Control _Joat_i [or a\nlicence in respect to the premises\nbeing part of tbe building known\nas the Hume Hotel situated st Nelson upon lands described as Lots\nFour (4). Five <\u00bb., and Six (6).\nBlock Nine <0i, subdivision Ninety-\nfive (8fi), according to the Official\nPlan of the City of Nelson, Province of British Columbia, Nelson\nLand Registration District, In the\nProvlnoe of British Columbia, for\nthe aale of beer by ine glass or by\nthe open bottle for consumption on\nthe   premises.\nDATED thst 38th day of September.   1031.\nGEORGE BENWELL,\nApplicant.\n(7487)\n\"Government   Liquor  Act\"\nNotice of  Application  for Beer\n  License\nNOTICE is hereby <lven that on\nthe 29th day of October next the\nundersigned Intends to ti>piy to the\nLiquor Control Board for a license\nln respect to the ore.m lse\u00bb being\npart of the building known as the\nSherbrooke Hotel situated at Nelson upon lands described as Lots\nFive (&) and Six <6), Block Ninety-\none (91) Subdivision Ninety-five\n(98), according to the Official Plan\nof the city of Nelson, Province o!\nBritish Columbia, Nelson Land Registration District, In the Province\nof British Columbia, lor .he eale\nof beer by the glaw or by the open\nbottle tor consumption on the\npremises.\nDATED this Jfith dav ot Septem-\nber.   1931.\nHARRY DUNK,\nApplicant,\n(7613)\nRO68LAND. B. C, Oct. 13,\u2014\nMrs.-1. Burt of Nanaimo, moat worshipful grand mistress of the\nL. O. B- A. for British Columbia,\npaid lvr official vlalt to Oolden\nCity lodge, No. 786. Saturday evening. The orange degree was conferred upon three candidates, this\nmaking seven which have been initiated into tbe order during thc\npast month. The grand mistress\ncongratulated the lodge, on the manner ln which thc work was put on,\nand offered some helpful suggestions. Mrs. Burt told .of the work\nof the orphanage in New Westminster, and asked the Roesland members' to cooperate with the directors In this activity. Eighty-nine\nchildren are now sheltered in the\nhnmc and of this number, only 38\nare given any support whatever by\nfriends or guardians. The children\nrange in agft from two to 18 years,\nand those of school age compare\nfavorably in scholarship with any\ncomlnR from private homes In the\ncity.\nMra. N. Armstrong, worthy mist-\nress, preented Hrs. Burt with a\npretty piece of china, and other\nmembers voiced appreciation of the\ncounsel given by the grand mistre-is.\nA banquet wti served, Mr. and Mn-.\nJ. Doughty, Mrs. W- Houston and\nwin. E- Rowlings, members of l_e*t\nWe Forget lodg*) No. 476, of Trail,\naccompanied the grand mistress.\nColonel Johnstone\nVisits Slocan City\nSLOCAN CITY. B. C. Oct. 13.-\nColonel g. Johnstone and eon, O. C.\nJohnstone of Vancouver, supt. of\nthe Soldiers* Settlement Board\nwho were motoring through tbe district on official btislnesa were the\nguests while ln town of Mr. and\nand Mrs. W. A. Blackbourne, brother-in-law snd slater of the colonel.\nMr. and Mrs. K popoff and their\ndaughter, Mrs. Ash Balllle of Trail,\nwere on a motor trip during the\nweek to Edgewood and Vernon snd\nother   Okanagan   points.\nMr. and Mrs. T R- Mosher and\nlittle son, Allan F. Mosher. were\nvisitors   to   Nelson   on   Tuesday.\nMiss Christina Morrison left a few\ndays ago on an extended visit to\nVancouver.\nP. H Sheffield of Nelson, public\nschool Inspector peld an official\nTtslt to the schools here on Wednesday.\nCreston Family\nVisits in Salmo\nOver Thanksgiving\n\"Government   Liquor  Act*\nNot!re of Application for Beer\nLicence\netOTIOl li here? given that on\nths 36th day of October next the\nundarslgud Intends to apply to\ntbe Liquor Control Board for a\nllosnoe In respect to tne premise*\nbeing part of the building known\nss the Occidental Hotel situated at\nNelson upon lands described as Lots\nTwenty-one (21>. Twenty-two (23),\nTwenty-three (23), and Twenty-four\n(34), in Block sixty-eight 168), according to the Official Plan of the\nCity of Nelson Province of British\nColumbia, Nelson Land Registration\nDistrict, in *he province of Br'tlsh\nColumbia, for the sale or beer by\nthe glass or by the open bottle\nfor   consumption   on   the   premises.\n\"Government Liquor Act*\nNotice  \u2022( Application for Iteer\nLicence\nNOTICB '\u00bb nereby given that on\nthe 34th day o( October next the\nundersigned intends to i.pply to the\nLiquor Control Board for a licence\nl n respect to .he pi cmtses bt i ng\nmrt of the building known as tne\nNew Grand Hotel situated at Nelson upon lands described as Lot\nFive tt) and the East Half (^) of\nLot Four (4). Block Two (2). according to tbe Official Plin of the\nCity of Nelson Province of British\nColumbia, Nelson Land Registration\nDistrict, ln the pro vines of British\nColumbia, for the sale of oeer by\ntbe glaas or by the open bottle lor\nconsumption  on  the   premises.\nDATED this 34th day ol September,  1931.\nPETER  KAPAK,\nApplicant.\n17440)\n\"Government  Liquor  Act\"\nNotice of Application  (or Beer\nLlcenc*\nNotice Is hereby given that on\nthe 28th day of October .>ext the\nundersigned intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for a licence\nIn resp-ct to the premises being\npart of the building known as the\nQueen's Hotel situated at Nelson\nupon lands described as Lot Eltven\n(ll). Block Two (2), Subdivision\nNinety-five i95), according to the\nOfficial Plan of the Ctty of Nelson\nin the Province of British Cclumbla,\nfor the sale of Beer by the gla.ss\nor by the open oottie ior consumption   on   the   premises.\nDATED this 28th day of September,    1931.\nADOLPH   LAPOINTE.\nAD plies nt\n(7500)\n\"(\u25a0oiernment Liquor Act\"\nNotice of Application for\nBeer   Lier nae\nNOTICE 18 HEREBY OIVEN that\non the 13th day of November next\nthe undersigned Intends to apply\nto the Liquor Control Board for\na license In respect of the premises being part of the building\nknown as the Madden Hotel situated at Nelson upon lands described as Lots one in and two (2),\nBlock five (S), City of Nelson, fi-l-\nson Land Registration District, ln\nthe province ol British Columbia,\nfor tho sale of beer by the glass\nor bv the open bottle for consumption   on   the   premises.\nDATED this 12th day of October,\nA-   D-   1931.\nMARGARET MADDEN,\nApplicant.\n(7777)\nUGAL  NOTICE\n(Continued)\nenay Hotel situated at Nelson upon\nlands described as that part of Lot\n4 which Uee to the east of a line\nwhich equally divides the northerly\nand BoutherlT boundaries of said\nLot and that part of Lot 6 which lies\nto the west oi the line which equally divides the nortneriy and southerly boundaries of said Lot in Block\n1. City of Nelson. Nelson Lsnd Registration District, in the Province of\nBritish Columbia, for the sale of\nbeer by the glass or by the open\nbottle for consumption on tbe premises.\nDATED  this seventh  day  of  October, 1931. \t\nF- M-  BARNETT,\nApplicant,\nt (7687)\nUllUHaS\n(11\nPEARCE\u2014To   Mr.   and   Mrs.   7.   B.\nPearce, Observatory street, at the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\non  October  12, a son.\nENVALL\u2014 To Mr. ana Mrs. E. O.\nEn vail. Baker Stret., October 11,\na daughter.\n< A V.KIM   H)K   SAUi\n______\nOERMAN    ROLLERS\u2014SINOERS    \u00bb5\nMrs. John Grieve, Frultvale, B. C\n(7776)\n.11AJIU,SB  WANTED\nJUZ\nFULLY QUALIFIED TEACHER WITH\nwide experience would undertake\ncharge of backward child or teach\nchildren without school privileges\nIn any camp or district needing\nthe same. Terms very reasonable to agreeable home. Box 800.\nNelson.   B.   C. (7436)\nEXPERIENCED JANITOR\u2014B. <.. LI-\ncense and references. \u2022 Married, no\nfamily) wants position. Could take\ncharge. Wrtte Janitor, Box 948\nTrail. (7708)\n. LK.M.-lH.l) ROOMS FOItitfcM   (l,H\nCOMFORTABLE  FURNISHED  ROOM\n|10  per  month.    819  Victoria.\n(7791)\n..no.)   AM>   BOARD\n_________\nBOARDERS WANTED\u2014 618 CAR-\nbonate St., Washing, board and\nroom included. Per week $9.00;\nPer month, i man in room $35;\ntwo ln room  830 each. (7730)\nBOARD AND ROOM.    GOOD HOME\nDown  town.    Phone  361Y.   (7773>\n\"Government Liquor Act\"\nNotice of Application for\nBeer   License\nNOTICE is hereby given that on\nthe 8th day of November next the\nundersigned Intends to apply to the\nLiquor Control Board for a license\nin respect to the premises being part\nof the building known as the Koot-\nUUO.MS   IO   KENT\n<li\u00bb\nTHREE    UNFURNISHED    HOUSE-\nkceping  rooms  with   bath   $16  a\nmonth.     Box   7782,   Nelson   News.\n(7782)\nCOMFORTABLE   ROOM\u2014HOT   AND\nctild water for rent by tbe month.\nSavoy  Hotel,  Nelson. (7543)\nTERRACE APTS.. FURNISHED OR\nunfurnished suites. Apply P. E.\nPoulin, (7677)\nfMUUNAL\nja\nBALON-BSS, BALD SPOTS, FALLING\nHair? New method, sure results;\nwrits  today   for  guarantee.    Free\nSartlculsrs,    Home    Remedy    Co..\nox   1608,  Chicago, IU,  U.  g.  A\n(7810)\nUOlittLS   WANTfcD\n(W)\nWANTED     TO     RENT\u2014CABIN     IN\ncity or Fairvlew.    Bo* 7744.    Dally\nNews. trm)\nHO LtiL-.  1QE BENT\nJ*>\nBUNGALOW 1 MILE FROM FERRY\non North Shore. 3 Bedrooms,\nlarge bright living roams, hardwood floors, fireplace, full basement,   garage.     Lake   frontage   3\nacres of land In garden and orchard.\nApply F. A. Whitfield, B. C.\nAgencies.   Phone 167. (7734)\nHOUSE   FOR   RENT\u2014   3   ROOMED,\nlight and water.   Phone 870R1.\nMIHCELLANLULS  FO_i BALE      (37)\nIJJIIIIIIHIIIIIIMnilllNtllllHINIIIIimiK\n| Steam Coal j\nPresh csr ot\nS    CORBIN    WASHED    STEAM    S\nCOAL\nS  lust solved.  Let us till your =\nS bin   before   the   bad   -weather \u2014\n_| hits us.\nPHONE   ioe\nI Williawi'sTransfcr |\nWard   St. Nelson     E\n(7790) 5\nMlliiliiiiiii illll'iiiii'ii'|-;;'.*niiii<\n50,000    FEET    1    -fCH    USED\n' black pipe, good condition\n6 cents per foot. Larue stock of\nother alzea. Enquiries solicited.\nSwartz Pipe Yarn 220 East 1st.\nAve.,  Vancouver,  B. C.        (7576)\nPOR SALE\u2014POR A LITTLE MORE\nthan expressage. Pedigreed Homer\nracing pigeons. Have either flown\n300 to ROO miles or sts from\nstock with record. Box 7.63,\nDally News. (7563)\nOOOD   SEALSKIN   COAT   SIZE   30\nwould   suit   tailor   or   dressmaker,\nor   would   trade   for   mu-alcal   Instruction.   Box   7778   Dally   News\n(7776)\nFOR SALE-CIRCULATOR HEATER\ngood as new csst (45.00 wlll sell\nfor 830.00. Robertson Realty Com.\npany Ltd.. 411 Ward Street.\n(7753)\nUVMIOC1   FOE   HAU tU>\nDARK NORTHERif QUEBEC MINK,\nlike we sold last yesr which topped tbe list In competlon. Normin-\nIque Ranch, Cowansvllle, Que.\n(7711)\nONE  LOGGING   HORSE-  WBIOHT\n1700 lbs.; 0 yee\/s old.. Apply    '\nPhone 398Y\n'00 lbs.; 9 yevs old.. Apply Jim\nTedesco, Nelson.    Phone 398Y.\n(7738)\nYORKSHIRE PIGS.   7  WEEKS  OLD\n$6  esch.    McGsuley,   Castlegar,\n(7788)\nfULLTUt   AM)   toot\n(Ml\n6 BARRED ROCK PU_LETS. THREE\nCockerels, hatch*, ln AprU; English Bulldog; Apples and Peara.\nall cheap for cash. Apply lOOe\nCsrbonsts. (7787)\n\u25a0HJ\u00bbIMS\u00bb\u00bb uppomi,Miir.s     ,m.\nLEARN A TRADE PATTERN DRAPT-\ning and Dressmaking at the\nAcademy. Victoria Bldg, Josephine   St. (7\u00abii)\n-all.XICAL   IN\u00bbTm*MENTS\n(54)\nORTHOPHONIC  VICTROLA IN PIRST\nclass condition with 100 latest records. Wlll sell cheap. Bargain I\nApply Box 7706 Dally News. (7706)\nPIANO POR 8ALE\u2014KARN UPRIGHT\nnew 18 months ago.   Mrs. H. M\nWhlmster, Box 533, Nelaon, B. c.\n  (7737)\nAtitoMoim-s ro. .___       mjt\nyjiiMiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiMiiimiMi\nG.M.C.\n\u00a7   CANADIAN   MADE   TRUCKS    j\nPrices Bsducsd\nS Model T17A. 1-Ton .....\u00bbM0*0 _\n= Model T17B, 1-Ton _. .85.00 i\nS Model T33A, IVi-Ton 1100.00 \u25a0\nI Model TUB. 1H-Ton 1190.00 3\nPrioss   P.O.B    Vancouvsr\nNslson  Desists:\n| Nelson Transfer   j\nCo., Ltd.\n=  GENERAL MOTORS TRUCKS   I\nTllHIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIh. .-''\u201e_,\nCHRISTIE TRUCK AND CAR PARTS\n1630 west 1st Ave. Vanoouver,\nB. C. Largest reliable wrecklug\ncompany. Power plants, Welters\nsnd   psrts. (7509)\n1936    STAR    4    TOURING,    OOOD\nshape, new rubber, sell or trade-\nfor motorcycle. Phone Alec. Green\nst 43. (7788)\nWANTED TO TRADE 1927 CHEV.\nSedan good condition for Radio,\nBox 7739 Daily News. (7739)\nSTORKS   TO   RENT\n(51)\nPOR   RENT\u2014   SMALL   STORE   A\nJoining club Cigar Store.   (76!\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAccountants\nCHAS.     P.    HUNTER,     S.FJNT.AC.\nMunicipal snd Comme-rial Audits\nP.   O.   Box   1191.     Nelson.   B.   C\n.7513)\nL.   A.   READ\nPublic  Accountant\nSuccessor  to W.  H.  Falding, CA\nBay Avenue, TralL B. c.\n17579)\nAssayers\nE. W. Wlddowson, Box A1103 Nelson\nB.   C.   Standard   western   charges.\n(7M0)\nChiropractors\nDR.  -RAY. GILKER BLK.. NEI_ON\n(7581)\nDR. MITTUN, X-RAY, CRANBP.OOK\n(7582)\nUSED CAR PARTS FOR ALL\nmakes, Including Willis Knight\nfour. Orandview Auto Wreckers,\n2088 Commercial Drive. Van. (7596)\nTWO-EOOM SUITE, BATH. ELEC-\ntrlc heat and cook stove. Phone\n635Y. (7754)\nFOR SALE\u2014S225 BARONA, VICTOR\nOrthophonlc Phonograph. A-l condition.    Snap.    Phone   369L3.\n(7758)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS. KEGS. BUR-\nlap eacks. white sugar sacks. McDonald   Jam   Co. (7398)\nDR.   MACM1LLAN   GRAD.   PAI.MF.R\nSchool, Aber. Blk., Nelaon. Th. 312\n(7883'\nDressmaking nnd Designing\nDRESSMAKING.       DESIGNING\nPlower making.  Academy of  Useful  Arts;   No.  4.    Write Msry  e\nRogers,  Box  352.   Roesland.  B.  C.\n(75S7)\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe Ark\u2014  dealers  in sscond  nand\ngoods.   Phone 634. (7693)\nEngineers\nH.   D.   DAWSON.   B.C.L.S.\n13A. KW.C. Blk. Nelson.\nRoom\n>76M)\nC    .MOORE\u2014Grlflln    Blk.,    Nelson.\nEngineer  snd  Surveyor.  Box  654.\n(7586)\nFlorists\nOrlCGelle's Greenhouses, Nelson. Cut\nFlowers and floral designs.  (7568)\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. full\nline cut flowers st all times. Floral\ndesigns.     Phone   333. (7589)\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES\u2014Phone\n342. Cut Flowers. Potted Plants\nsnd  Floral  Designs. (7590)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate, Insurance. Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware, Baker St. (7591)\nTransfer\nWILLIAM'S TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE, COAL AND WOOD\nPhone  108 (7693)\nATKINSON   TRANSFER.     Coal   snd\nWood.     Long   distance   hauling.\n(78(41\nWood Factory\nLswson's  wood  Factory, 317  Baker\nSt.    We please our customers.\n\u2022<7596)\nTHE GUMPS-SH- MUM'S  THE WORD\nm for Kitchens\nWhere Ranges are seen,\nFetch a good price\nOn  your old  cooking-machine.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nWANT ADS\n\u2122\u00ab\u00a9\u00bb>e 143 or 144\nSALMO, B- C. Oct. 13\u2014Among\nSsturdsy' shoppers to Nelson were\nMr. and Mrs, Henry psysnt, Mr. snd\nMrs. E. Nord, J. F- Donaldson, and\nRobert MlUburn.\nMrs. Oliver smith left by molor\nSunday afternoon for Colvllle. Washington, where she will be the guest\nof her brother and sister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Stanley Brutchfleld, lor\ns few daya.\nE. Relsterfr and T. Price motored\nout from Nelson Sunday to spend\ntbe day.\nMrs. W. Miller and Mrs. A- Bremner had as.their guests on Sundsy Mr. and Mrs. Frit-sen and\nchildren. Irene, Harold and Uonarrt.\nwho motored over from TraJl lor\nthe day.\nMr. and Mrs. Harvey McLaren snd\ndaughter, Ethel of creston, motored\ndown to spend the week-end snd\nThsnksglvlng with Mrs. McLarens\nmother, Mrs. M. McCsslln. The McLarens sre former residents ot Salmo. Mr. McLaren formerly serving on\nthe police force here tor aeven\nysars-\nMra. Chester \u00ab. Buah and son\nhave left the Kootenay Lake oeneral hoepltal at Nelson for their home\nhere. ,.\nMr. snd Mrs. M, C Donaldson aJid\nfamily motored over to Trs\" on\nSunday to spend the dsy.\nMrs. Palmer and aon, Louis are\nvisiting for a few daya from Creston\nThey arc the houae guesta ot Mrs\nW  .Miller.\nProcter People on\nHunting Expedition\nPROCTER. B. C. Oct 13.\u2014Re?.\nO Kinney held harvest festival service In ths United church Sunday evening. The Junior choir wok\npart Ul ths service.\nMrs. J. p\u00bby la visiting here, the\nguest of MJ   snd Mrs. W   A   Wsrd\nC. McLesn ot Nslson spent Uie\nweek-end Mrs\nMr and Mrs. A- Johnston snd Mr.\nsnd Mrs. E Brsshe srs spending\na couple of' dsys out hunting snd\nfishing.\nG. MacLean spent the week-end\nwith  his fsmily hsre.\nMiss L rslmer who has been\npacking spples at Longbeach hss\nreturned to her home here.\n \u25a0\u25a0TH NBUON WILT NBWS, NELSON. B. C. \u2014 WBMCE8DAT MORNING, OCTOBER 14, Mil'\nMarket aad Mining News\nNEW YORK SECURITY MARKET DOES\nBACKTRACKING; IS EXPECTED TREND\nTrading Dullest  Sine* September 28; Rail Stocks\nReact Easily\nliX\nNEW TOH. M. Y\u201e Ort. 13--\n<AT>\u2014The aeearltr msxrtet, w\nmme backtracking teday.\nA veronal at tread In stocks\nWM  probably le hem exepected\ntiter tlte roeeat mark not. bat\nweakness |\u201e tnt, eeeXt not be\nexplained entlreljr ty tbe firmer\ntehdencleo Ip ww.\nTbe reaction in stoeko ranged trom\n1 to I potato IB an Inatanate.\nTrading ww tbe dullest alnoe September it, transactions totalling on-\nIT \\Wt,\\m stixrm.\n\u25a0 Rell etoeke reacted oeallr.   aouthern pacific,  union  Pacific and  At-\nehltoo were tttt ar asora. Fenneyl-\nvenie, Baltimore end Ohio. Rock la-\nlend. Missouri pacific preferred. Mew\nHaven and Hew Tork Central loat 3\nto 4 and LoulerlUe and Nashville 7.\nAmerican Telephone, which opened   a   point   higher,   dipped   toar\notnte.    Consolidated   Oaa  of  New\n'oik wae down 4H. closing et the\nbottom,   north America eified 3tt-\n! Industrials and BpeelalUea returned\ni numeroua loaeea of 9 to I polnta\nI or  mm.\ni V. 8. STEEL SUPS\nV. S. Steel ellpped below M. and\nf finished ih  down.   American Oan,\n< Oeneral   Electric,   Oeneral   Motora,\nAllied Chemical, Oaee, standard OU\nof   tsam   Jereey.   National   Biscuit,\nLoews and woolworth, amooi others, attracted Mirers only alter sharp\nconeaoatou   had   been   made.\nBankers'    acceptance   rates   were\n' adraneed   twice,   bringing  the   aelr\nrate Ior 90-day bills to lty-    Call\n. money, ae had been Indicated last\n! Friday, renewed at I per oent lor\nthe flret time since AprU 7.\n\u2022terllni exchange, which sppeers\nto be flndliu a Meel around 03.90,\nwta off Sf, oente net at 68.88.\nTtte bond market declined widely\ntoday. Selling waa heavy through-\noot tbe list.\nSales on tbe atock exchange aggregated 819.883.000. Weaknees waa\nmoet pronounced among the railroad laauee. New Lew levele were\nnumeroua la all groups.\nCHICAGO WOTAT\nTORNSOPWARD\nWar Reports From the Far\nEast Added Strength\nto Trading\nCHICAGO,   ort.   IS   (BT   John   P\n' Boughan,   Associated   Prose   market\neditor)\u2014War doude In the far east\ngave me wheat market an upward\ntrend   today,   with   reports   current\nthat Russia might eventu ily be In-\n\u00abolv*d.   A   sharp   decrease   of   the\namount of wheat afloat for importing   oountriee   wae   an' additional\nbuUleh factor, and ao too, wes 9,434,-\n\u2022 000 bushels decreased In tbe United\n' States wheat visible supply total.\nWheat cloe.'d  firm,  unchanged  to\n> \\, cent advance, corn V, So % ott.\noata unchanged to H up, and provisions unchanged to _ rise of five\noents.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR\nCLOSES LOWER\nNBW TORK, Oct. II (CP)\u2014\nTbe Canadian dollar dropped\nback I 7-16 oente to dose at\nH \u2022-!\u2022 oa local foreign ex-\nchanges today after the weekend   holiday.\nThe dollar rounded the 10\nmark laat Friday aad cloeed on\nSaturday at 81. The opening\nquotation today ww WH, and\nthroughout the day the die\nxmnt rate Increased fraotloa-\nilly. Tbe discount nte oa Ca.\noadian funds ww 10 per osnt\nat noon, 10H to 11 per oent\nat 1 o'clock, and final dealings\npieced  tbe  rate  at  It  7-l\u00ab.\nThe pound sterling closed\n\u25a0i'A oents net off at ttM tor\ncable transfers. The opening\nat HW ww IH oente lower\nthaa Ita previous clow of\nHJ0H. At boob the pound\nreached 13 89'i but receded\nat the clow to 13.18.\nNIW TOW, Oot \u00bb~ Copper\nsteady; eleotrolyuo. spot and future 1.\nTla steed*; spot ud nearby 39.13;\nfuture 9860.\nmn quiet; Na. I tap. eastern\nPennsylvania 1140 to 1660; Buffalo\n15 to 18; Alabama 11 to is.\nLead ateedr; apot Hew Tom 4;\nlut Bt. Louie 141.\nElne ateady*. East St. loula spot\nand future 140.\nAntimony 840.\nQulckeliver  76  to 60.\nPorelgn  bar ailver JO*.\nAt London:\nstandard oopper, apot tM lie 6d;\nfuture \u00a338; eleetrolytlc, spot Ul\n10s; future 141 lOe.\n71a, apot (IN la M; future\nllll ie.\nLead, apot 111 18a; future 111\n11a Id.\nline, apot ill; futun tu 10a.\nMONTREAL LIST\nTRADES NARROWLY\nBrazilian Traction and Inter\nnational Nickel Ease\nFractionally\nMONTREAL, Que.. Oct. 18\u2014(Br\nthe Canadian Pr-pes) -Trading rt-\nstrtctlona were lifted on the Montreal etock exchange today on all\nlaauea at 13 or lees. Trading continued to hold within aa extremely narrow price range.\nThe cheap issues, which trading\n-eccntly hw been almoat entirely\nfor oash, showed an easier 'endenc.\nw eoon w the \"pegged1' level ww\nremoved. Dryden Paper Asbesto-\npreferred aad Measey-Herrts dipped\nto new levela for tbe year or longer\non email salee.\nIB the more expensive eectlon of\ntbe list Brasilisn Traction and International Nickel eeeed fractionally\nwhile Canadian Pacific ww slightly\nfirmer.\nGain of V, ln Oaaadlan Pacific\nto 18H ww the only advance marked up. stocks ehowtng lossw Included Brazilian off V, at OH; Nickel, off H et OH; Canadian Industrial Alcohol, off % at IH; Abitlbi,\noff H at IH: B, c Packera, off\nH at 1: Dryden, ott one at 2 and\nM-ueey-Harrts,  off   H   at  IH-\nThe bond market showed fair activity 138,848 worth being sold, the\nprices remaining almoat constant.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\n-PU-\nWINNIPEO,   Man..   Oot.   M.\nturee quotations:\nOpen   High   Low Close\nWheat:\n55H    88       68 H    88H\nTORONTO STOCKS\n' Abana           .03\nArno        M\nI AJax        1-10\n1 Amulet    11\n.Amity           01\nB A OU        110\nBaw   Metals         1.00\nBldgood           41\nBarry   Holllnger    10Vi\nBig Missouri          .00',\n. Calmont     08\nChemical Research        316\nDome    ,      9.60\nFalconbridge    -      49\nHowey            48\nHolllnger        646\nHudson  Bay         340\nInternational   Nickel         846\nKeelly            43\nKirkland Lake   61\nLake   Shore       2640\nMacassa             41'.\nOoodflsh      03%\nMandy           48\nMalartto          48\nMclntyre       1846\nMining   orp         1.41\nMurphy            48\nNew  Imperial  OU       10.60\nNlpteelBf         l.ia\nNoraada       13.30\nOld CoIobt  -        40H\nManitoba Basin           .01\u00bb.,\nFend  OreUle    81\nPremier Gold         ,474\nSherrlt Oordon    81\nstadacona    01\nSlscoe          41\nTech   Hughes         646\nVlpond  \u201e         40\nVenturw            43\nWright  Hergreevee         146\nWalte   Ackermaa         140\nLogan & Bryan\nGRAIN,\nSTOCKS, BONOS, COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNew York, Monireel and Van-\ncouver Stock  Exchanges, Chicago Board of Trade, Winnipeg\nGrain  Exchange, and -ether\ntrading exchanges.\nPRIVATE   WIRE\nOITICE8:\nVancouver,  Spokane,  (cattle\n6SH 56V, 66H 68\n58'\/, 65% 54% 58\n68H    69'\/,    68H    68H\n30\n30'a-i 39%\n30H 307',\n33 32'*,\n31H MH\n33 H S3',,\n30%    39%\n393',\n20%\n39%\n30%    30%\n31%\n31%\n33!'<\n31%\n31%\n33'\nMH    03%    01%    02%\nOct.\nNov.\t\nDec.   \t\nMay    _.\nOata:\nOot.    ....\nDeo\t\nMot    ....\nBarley;\nOct\t\nDec.   .\t\nMay    ....\nFlax:\nOot.    \t\nDec.    .._\nMay    \t\nRye:\nOct\t\nDec\t\nMay        38%   38%\nCash Prices:\nWheat: No. 1 Hard, 80; No. 1 Nor..\n69; No. 3 Nor., 63%; No. 3 Nor., 48;\nNo 4, 45; No. 5, 43%; No. 8, 36%;\nFeeii, 37%; Track, 58%; No. 1 Durum, 73%.\nEGG MARKETS\nN\n03%   93%\n99     100%    98'. 98%\n34%    34%    34% 34H\n15%    35%    36% 36%\n\u25a08% 38%\nOTTAWA, Oct. 13-Fresh egg Prlwe\ncontinue to work firmer under declining receipts and storage eggs\nsre moving Into consumption more\nfreely. The preliminary report of the\nbureau of statistics places the quantity of eggs In c__ storage on thc\n1st of October at 13,610,994 dozen.\nas compared to 15403,847 doien on\nOctober 1, 1930.\nToronto: Extras 88 to 39. firsts\n33, seconds 19 delivered. Dealers\nare quoting produo_*s and country\nshippers for ungraded eggs extras 36,\nUrate 31, second. 16 to 17 delivered\nMontreal: The market Is firmer\non fresh egga under a good demand\nand Toronto eggs are Jobbing to\nwholesalers on spot at extraa 40,\nflats 30, seconds 19. A car of\nwestern eggs containing cnlj a small\npercentage of extru hae sold at\nextras 86, firsts 30, seconds 19.\nWinnipeg: Shorter supplies and\nthe market la unsettled. Dealers heie\nare quoting producers and oountry\nshippers for eggs extras 31 to 25,\nfirsts 17 to 33, seconds 11 to 13.\nEdmonton: Dealers arc quoting\nproducers and country shippers for\neggs extras 20 to 21, firsts 17 to 18.\nCalgary: The market ls firmer\nunder shorter supplies with dealera\nthere quoting producers and country\nshippers extras 22, firsts 20, seconds  10.\nVancouver: Wholesale dealers are\nnow quoting producers for eg?j at\nthe farm extras 30 to 31, firsts 27\nto 28, pullet extras 10 to 21.\nMETAL MARKETS\nPAPER-USING\nINDUSTRIES ARE\nACTM^CANADA\nRepresent     Investment     ol\n?177,00O,0O0;   44,000\nEmployed\nInduatrlw which ii\u00bb paper aad\npaper board w tbelr chief raw material form an Important part of\ntha Industrial system of Canada.\nPrinting and tha allied graphic arts,\nthe manufacture of paper boxes,\npaper bate, atatlonery. composition\nroofing and similar products provide an Important domeetic market\nfor the products of the pulp and\npaper induetry which is Caaada'a\nmoet Important manufacturing Industry.\nThe paper-using industries represent the Invwtment ot wer 1177,-\n000,000 and give employment to over\n44,000 people with a total peyroU of\nover 888400,000. The principal raw\nmaterial uaed tt newsprint paper of\nwhloh over 193400 tone were purchased at a ooat of over 118400,000.\nOther Important Items are 41,000\ntone of book and writing paper and\n143 tone of paper board. Tbe total\nooat of all raw materials exoeeded\n\u202281,000,000 aad tbe gross value of\nproduction ww almost 8188400,000.\nThe principal separate Items of income wen: Advertising, 849,000,000:\nJob printing, 841,000400; subscription\naad sales of publications, 116,000400\naad lithographing 811,000400. Tlu\nprincipal products manufactured\nwere: Paper bone, 616,000,000; envelop* 88,000,000 and roofing paper\nabout 83400400.\nNEW YdRK STOCKS\nAllegheny   \t\nAUled Chemical\nAmerican Caa -\nAmer For Power\nAm Ma _ Fdy\nAm Smelt At Re\nAmer Telephone\nAmerlc   Tobacco\nCalgary Oyro club members put\nF. o. Burr tn tbe presidential chalr\nfor the next year, succeeding Dr.\nA. E. Shore.\nAtchlaon   _ \t\nBaldwin  _\t\nBait * Ohio -\nBendix   Aviation\nBeth Steel\t\nCanadian Paclf\nCerro de Pacso\nChas _ Ohio .\nChrysler   _\t\nCom It South...\nDon Ow N T\nCorn Products ..\nC Wright pfd .\nDupont \t\nEastman Kodak\nEl   Power   _   Lt\nErie\t\nFord English ....\nFord of Canada\nFirst Nat Stores\nPreeport Texw.\nGen. Electric ....\nGeneral Motors.\nGeneral Foods ..\nGold   Dust\t\nGranby  \t\nOreat North pfd\nOreat W Sugar\nHowe Sound ....\nHudson Motors..\nIna Copper ....\nInternet Nickel\nInter Tel A Tel\nKelly spring ...\nKenn Copper ....\nKresge S B \t\nKroegg It Toll..\nMeok Truck ....\nMilwaukee pfd..\nNun Motor* ...\nNat Dairy Prod\nN Power St Lt\nNew Tork Centr\nPaclf Gas _ El\nPackard    Motora\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Pete ...\nRadio Corpora\nRadio  Keith  Or\nRem Rand \t\nRock Island ....\nSafeway Stores..\nS Louis As S F\nSheU Union OU\nSinclair COB ....\nSouth Calif Ed\nSouth Pacific _\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan OU of lad\nStaa OU of N J\nStewart   Warner\nStudebaker \t\nT*xw Corpora.\nTaxw Oulf Bul\nUnion Carbide ..\nUnion Oil Calif\nUnion Pacific-\nUnited Aircraft\nU 8 Pipe - Pdy\nU S Rubber ....\nU  S  Steel   \t\nWest Electric ....\nWlllya Overland\nYellow Truck ....\n4H\n80\nMH\nit**\nMVt\n34%\n188%\n80%\n16\n117\n\u2022%\n88\n18%\n39%\nIS\n14%\n31\n14%\n6\n73%\n48%\n41%\n113\n31%\n14%\n4 .  '   4%\n78%     76%\n\u20221\n18%\nII\n13%\n30%     30%\n\u20228        38\n133\n86\n138%\n88\n14%     14%\nUl       113\n\u00bb%\n86\n18\n36%\n14\n14%\n39%\n18%\n\u2022%\n86\n16\n31\n14\n14 '\n30 !i\n13%\n4%\n__.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelt\ning Co., of Canada, Ltd.\nTRAIL-BRITISH COLUMBIA\nManafaetoren of\nELEPHANT\nBrand\nCHEMICAL   FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium   Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia1\nTriple Superphosphate\nSOLD BV NATIONAL FRUIT CO.. NELSON\nand   Refiners   ef\ncert   aad   Refiner\nTADANAC\nBrand\nELECTRJUTTIC\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\n47%\n18\n31%\n38%\n38%\n31%\n7%\n38%\n7%\n14%\n10%\n4%\n9\n17%\n1%\n18%\n33%\n7%\n19%\nI\n31\n38%\n81%\n88\n84\n36%\n6%\n11%\n1%\n4%\n37%\n80%\nIt\n4%\n7\n34%\n66%\n33%\n11%\n7H\n11\nHH\n36H\n84%\n16%\n117%\n16\n7H\n70%\n48%\n3%\n6%\n67%     67%\n44        44\n3\n68        68\n107% 107%\n30% 20%\n18 V, 18%\n7H\nHH\n47% 47%\n17% 17%\n39% 39%\n36% 36'.;.\n36% 86 V,\n30% M%\nVet 7%\n37\n7%\n14%\n10%\n4%\nIH\n16'.\n1%\n13',      13%\n37\nIts\n1\u00bb%\n4%\n1%\n16\n131%\n7\n18%\n*w\n\u00bb\n36\n66%\n34\n6\n31%\n7\n18 %\n6\n19\n36\n16%\n68%\n34\n6\n83%     33%\n6%       6%\n13%\nI\n4%\n\u20228%\n47\n10\n12%\n8\n4 4\nHH\n47\nII\n4\".\n\u2022H\n34\n6%\n34\n63%\n30%     30%\n11%\n30%     80%\n7\n11%\n11\n7\n11%\nMH\n34% 34%\nMH 88%\n14% 18%\n114% 114%\n14H 14%\nASSOCIATED HAS\nQUIT SHIPPERS\nCOUNCIL BODY\nResent Defeat of Motion to\nOpen Bulk Apple\nPrices\nMcGUIRE SUGGESTS\nSHIPPERS DISBAND\nCommittee   Named   at  Ver\nnom to Prepare Statement\nfor the Press\nVJItNQN. B. 0., Oct. 19.\u2014\"Accept\nthe reelnuttton of the Awociited\nGrowers from the Shippers* Council,\neffective thle morning,\" ttld X. J.\nCbambere, president and |\u00abn\u00abr\u00bbl-\nmenefer, u he roee from hi* Met\na, the meeting of the Shippers'\nCouncil in the Vernon board of\ntrade room on Thursday morning\nlast. Mr. chambers said they had\nf carefully considered tbt situation and they would co-operate with\nlarger shippers to stabilise the deal.\nTheir warehouses contained 76.000\nboxes of large size Mclntoeh apples\nand undsr tbt conditions they pre-\nfarted to meet competition and to\nmarket their own crop rather than\nhold them off while others crept\nIn end stole the market from them.\nSarlltr la the meeting, W- Chambers mored that all bulk In all varieties and large slas Mcintosh apple\nprloes, be open, untll October 1ft-\nThe motion which wae debated at\ngreat length wu seconded by R. 1.\nStaples, manager of Sales Service.\nMr. Staples declared tae did not\nknow whether be bad the support\"\nof the members of Sales Servloe In\nsuch a motion, but he felt lt to\nbe ln the best interest, of the deal.\nWhen the motion was finally put\nto the meeting, only the mover and\nseconder voted for It. Following this\ndeclaration. Mr. Chambers tendered\ntbe resignation of the Associated\nGrowers.\nCOMMITTEE IS NAMED\nThe thunderbolt caused no little\ndismay but before the meeting adjourned a committee of Messrs. Xt.\nW. McDonald, Armstrong, Joseph\nMontague and m V. MoOulre, Vernon, was appointed with a view ot\nmeeting the Associated and maintaining prices.\nFollowing the meeting, Mr. Chambers declared that the Associated ls\nworking closely with the Sales Servloe, so there Is a measure of stability, these two agencies controlling a\nvery large proportion of the tonnage, a\nWOULD DISBAND\nBaying thst tbe action of the\nCrown Fruit oompany had done\ndamage, that bootlegging growers\nbed done even mora, but that the\naction of the Associated Growers\nwas the crowning blow of all, Major\nM. V. McGulre, Vernon, suggested\nthat the Shippers' Councti disband.\nThe action by the Assoclattd, he\nsaid, resulted in first setting a price\nof (39 a ton on bulk shipments and\nwithin two days arter they failed\nto Impose their will on the council, tbey had broken the price to\n.130 end maybe to tn. There ls\nno stability In the deal and no good\npurpose Is served in carrying on the\nCouncti.\nThis suggestion wu made after\ntbe Major bad moved and tbe\nCouncil agreed to tbe eipulslon of\nthe Crown Fruit.\nMajor McGulre's suggestion wan\nmade at the meeting of the Council\nIn Vernon, et noon on Wedneeday.\nHe did not press his suggestion for\ndisbanding.\nLater he moved a resolution that\ncommittee of the Council prepare\nand Issue a statement to the press\ncovering all phases of the activities\nby the Council and dealing particularly with the causes which brought\nabout the preeent situation.\nThe committee named consisted of\nMessrs. R. ' W. MacDonald. Joseph\nMontague and Major McGulre.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW TORK. Oct. 14-Sterling ex-\nchange irregular at $3.88 for cables.\nCanadian dollars 11 7-16 per cent\ndiscount.\nFrancs 3.M cents.\nLire A.17 cents.\nUruguay 33.50 centa.\nMarks 23 cents.\nKronen 33-80 cents.\nDies From Fumigating Gas in Apartment\nEntarlsi as spartment house\nwhich ml belnf fumigated hy hydrocyanic acid fas. Miss Pearl Wltl-\nuk, Toronto, eted 18. dlad almoat\nImmediately. Her body waa not dla-\noovared untll fumHators opened ths\nhouse ln tha e-nnlnf. (1) fNd\nSmith (left) aad Joe Bills weerint*\n\u25a0ss mask, the two man In .ban* of\nfumigating tba house. (1) Stairway\nwhere tin's body waa found. Bowl\nat lower lett contains tha deadly\nfluid whloh fives off tba gaa. (\u2022)\nHiss Pearl Wltluk, the vlotlm. Mlas\nwitluk, lt ta said, oould not road\nvary well aad so did not understand\ndanger signs pooted by guards.\nBRITISH MARKET\nBECOMJSLOADED\nApples   From   Canada   ami\nUnited States Causing\nGlnt; Fruit Rollins\nPlan Construction of 30 Million Dollar\nGas Pipeline From Wyoming to Vancouver\nPORTLAND, Ore., Oct. Vt\u2014 .\nl\\H\u2014tS. t. Lamb, rapraaentlnt,\nha said, the International UtU-\nItles corporation, snnounosd today he hu asked tha Oregon\nslate highway commission far\npermission to lay a 20-Inch pipe\nline from a point near Weiier,\nIdaho, paraUel to tha eld Oregon\ntrail to Portland.\nLamb aald the company plans\nto   constrict   this   natural   gas\npipe line from Wyoming hi Vancouver,   British   Columbia,  at  a\ncoat of \u00bb*w.i)0O,0flo. The Oregon\nunit,  ha  aald.  wUl ooat  trom\neight to 10 million dollars.\nJ.  St.   De-wrs,   attorney   for   the\nhighway commission, announced today ba la Inreetlgstlng tha matter.\nDevers said Lamb expressed  hope\nthe   permit   from   tha   commission\nwould ba granted early enough to\npermit the company to lay tbe Una\nInto Tba Mies tbls winter. Lamb\nsaid the project would give employment thla winter and apring to\nseveral   thousand   man.\nLamb's announcement aald Harry\nM. Forest of New York has underwritten the 130,000,000 bond Issue\nand that within a month tha money\nwin be available tor the final survey work whloh wlll precede construction. Lamb aald piallmlnary\nsurveys have  been  oompletad.\nThc company's piallmlnary plana,\nIta repreetntatlve auld, calls for the\nUne.to ba built from ttie fiuburst\nfields ln Montana and tha Casper\nflalda In Wyoming to Pocstello,\nIdaho, and thence through to Pay.\nstte to welaer and down tha old\nOregon trail.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank ot Commerce   ltt\nDominion Bank  203!.\nBank of Toronto    213\nBell  Telephone     Ill\nBraaUlan T L and Power .... it,\nOan Cement   *',*\nCan  Ind  Alcohol     I'.i\nOan   Power  60\nHlUcrest CoIUera  M\nCan Cement Pfd  07\nLake ot the Woods   S'.j\nMontreal Power    3>\nShawinigan      38\nWinnipeg JUUway    8'i\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nPRICKBOSTED\nTrading   in   Early   Part   of\nSession Is Spirited; Export Trade Strong\nWINNIJBO, Oct. 13 (CP)\u2014Spirited\nesrly trading boosted price slightly\non the Winnipeg grsln eirtunge todsy, snd despite spasmodic persistent\nselling sll months held within cloee\nproximity of t_i\u00ab session's high marks,\nOctober at the close was up % at\nMH; Nov. H *t BA; Dec H at 66,\nand May  u *t MH  to 58\",.\nTraders were encouraged by rs-\nporte of gresiter export sale* of Canadian wheat and a broadening of\nspeculative Interest.\nAgain there was fairly good demand for top grade cash wheats and\nofferings were not overly plentiful\nDomestic .lour business was reported Improved but exports were\ndull.\nKASLO GROWERS PROVIDE FRUIT\nAND VEGETABLES FOR THOSE IN\nNEED, SASKATCHEWAN DISTRICTS\nCarload of Fruit and Vegetables Gathered by\nInstitute\n7   \u25a0\n67%\n46*4\nIS*\n7Vi\nM\n3.4\n6\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL.  Oct.   18\u2014Efgs  higher\nand cheese lower while butter prloes\nheld unchanged today.\nPresh Ontario or prune eggs, in\nculots, were from a oent to three\noente higher. Extras gained two to\nthree cents at 30 cent* and firsts\nwere up three eeBts at 31 eents\nwhile seconds advanoed a ont at\n19   cents   a   doeen.\nCheese, Ontario. UH to la\nCheese, Quebec, \\1\\_ to U%.\nButter,  No.   1  finest,  19*4  to 90.\nEggs, fr.sh extras In cartons. 40.\nEggs, fresh firsts tn cartons 96.\ntggi, storage firsts in cartons 30.\nEggs, storage seconds in cartons 34.\nKASLO, B. C., Oct. 1\u00bb\u2014Msyor F.\nE. Archer, City Cleric Papworth, A:\nL. MacPhee and A. McQueen last\nweek started out to gather s carload\nof apples for ths prairies but eventually turned the work over to the\nKaslo and District Women's Institute.\nThe ladles held a special meeting\nWednesday evening with the result\nthat the school children have slnoe\nbeen busy picking applea on the Mc\nKenzle ranch, Mr. McKenele kindly\ngiving generously of his fruit. ThU\nwith the oooperatlon of Mr. Fraser\nand' Mr. Robson of the teaching\nstaff, who attended the meeting of\nthe   Institute.\nRev. c. C. Raven took a delega\ntion' tb Shutty Bench Thursday . nd\nthere the ladles hsd a donation or a\nhalf ton of vegetables. A wire sent\nto the r.Ue. commission of Aeskaf\nchewan at Reglna as to tho disposal\nof the supplies Instructed shipment\nof the car to Big Beaver. The Saskatchewan relief oommisaion wlll\npey tbe freight the ear will likely\nl*av<> Kaslo the end of the week.\nCanadian Cold Storages Hold More Butter,\nFewer Eggs and Less Cheese Than in 1930\nOTTAWA. Ont., Oct- IS*\u2014 (By\nthe Canadian Press)\u2014Th* reld\nstorages of Canada held somewhat more butter on October i\nthis year than on the sam\u00ab\ndate a year ago. There were\nfewer eggs and pinch lew cheese.\nA much smaller supply of poultry was noted.\nThs report issued teday by ths\nDominion bureau of statistics showed 40,406.361 lbs. of creamery butter and 414,388 lbs. of dilry butter\nIn storage the first of this month\nand a year ago 37,775,788 lbs. and\n\u202260,409   lbs.  respectively.\nOnly 31.M5.496 lbs. of cheese was\nIn   storage   on   Oct.   l   whereas\nyear  ago the  total   wae   81.360,400\nlbs.  and  tbe  five  year  average\nthat date was 33.727,659 lbe.\nTbe figures for eggs held the\nfirst of this month were 13,010.994\ndoosns eold storage, 801,096 dceens\nfresh snd 6584.737 lbe. rossn. A\nyear ago the totals were 13,303.647\ndoeen. 1,391.339 doeen and 4.130.-\n607 lbs., respectively.\nPoultry ln storage this month\ntotal 1,993460 lbs. and a year ago\n3,897,636   lbs.\nTORONTO MINES\nPRICES ARE UP\nGold   Issues   Score   Gains;\nSales Account for Action\nin 53 Issues\nTORONTO, Ont., Oct. IS.\u2014(By\ntbe Canadian Pr-SM) \u2014Steady to\nhigher price action and dull trading marked tbe poet-holiday eei-\nilon today on the etendard stock\nand mining exchange. Salea account for action In 63 laauee with\na turnover of 180.183 sharee.\nNoranda lost 20 cents ta #19.41.\nbut International Nickel roae 10\ncents lo aO.75 and Hudson Bay\ngained a like amount to *33t.\nOold Issues scored gains. Lake\nShore advanced 45 centa to 136-0\nand Dome at $9.80 gained io cento.\nMclntyre l<*t 35 cents to \u00bb1B.3S.\nBritish American OU wae up 10\ncuts to \u00bb910 and International\nretroleum d-^wn as centa to 110.38.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nBig   Missouri\t\nOeorge Ent .._\u2014......\nGeorgia  River\t\n\u25a0Oolconda   _.\t\nOrandview  \t\nInt C * O \t\nKootenay norsnoe .....\nMorton  Wolleey   -\nLorne Oold  \t\nNoble Five \t\nPremier     \t\nPend  Oreille  __-..--\nPioneer     ____\u2014.\nPorter  Idaho  \t\nRufus  Argenta, \u2014\t\nReno  - \u2014\nRuth Hope  \t\nSnowflake   -\t\nOILS\nA P Conaolld-ted \t\nC and E Lands \t\nCommonwealth \t\nDalhousle\t\nEastcrest   _ \t\nPabyan     \u00bb\t\nIllinois Alta. \t\nMercury  \t\nMcLeod  \t\nMayland    -\t\nRoyallte   \t\nBid\n.10\n.01\n.03\n.17\n.04 !i\n,    .08\n.    .00',i\n.   .01'4\nAek\n.11\n.tlSte,\n\u25a0It's\n.05\n.10\n.00\na >4*      .06\n.45\n.82\n2.30\n.04\n.IS\n-01!i\n.50\nM\n138\n.08\n\u20220114\n.05\n.01H\n.08\n.29\n.08\n.13\n.08\n.00 Vt\n10.80\n.08\nXI\n.13\n5.30\nValue for Duty on\nFerromanganese Is\nFixed at $55 a Ton\nFRUIT LOCALS\nIN KOOTENAYS\n\u00abETJ2,978_2\nQuarter  MiUm   Distributed\nby the Associated\nGrower*\nVERHON. >. e. t>\u00ab. \u00ab.\u2014The .U.\naoclatsd Orowen dutrlbuted atett\nthan a quarter at a million dollars\nto -member locals laat week, covering\npaymont* on soft fruits, pears, ap-\nThe Mr-menu won as follows:\nOrawt Tarxs, tSMAS: XslMin,\n0109100; Kelowna. 053.744.90: Ken.\nmeos, 030M.70; J. \u00bb. Kln_born, Sorrento. 0980.95: NaramaU, 00333.81,\nOliver, $5707.10: Pentlcton, 080.747.80;\nSalmon Arm. O09O-.10; Shuowef,\n037.10; Summerleod, W.488.77; ver-\nnon, 080,808.30; Westbank, 080U.0J;\nWtofloW. 09787.14, Kootenay l-ooolo.\n02078.03\nThoee figures thow that UM locals\not ths Associated ln eummsrland,\nNaramata. Pentlcton. Oliver, Kaleden\nond Keremeoo reaelvod approximately\n1135,000, or abou? half of tho iranl\ntotal.\nVICTORIA, 8. 0., Oet. n.\u2014from\nInformation received from our markets representative In London, both\nAmerican and Canadian apples oro\nbeing forced on tho Brltlah markets\nto auch oa eitent u Se threaten\na gldt, ssys tho market now* letter,\ndepartment of agriculture. Vlotoria.\nShippers should retllie that any\nmarket muat bo ontemaUcaUj fed\nor otherwise tha price Is aura to\nbreak. British Columbia shippers\nshould consider tho advisability of\nstoring their apples to market when\nthis rush lo over ond with the\nprospect of hotter prices ot thot\ntime.\nviNNtrao-Slnee lwt report 49\ncsrs have arrived from Brltlah Columbia. 36 boxed applea, eight bulk\napplea, seven onions and ona poors.\nSeven arrived from Ontario; four\nmixed fruits, two grapes and one\nbulk apples. Heavy trading In hulk\napplea continues mostly ln Macintosh\nRods at *40 per ton to tho retail\ndealers. Fancy Macintosh aro selling\nwholesale from \u00bbi_0 to 03.36 per\nboi; 0 grade, 01.76 to 03.00. Wealth;\napples, Household, 00 centa and\nfancy at 0160, Snow and Winter\nBanana apples at 83.00 per box. Ontario grapes at 88 oents per basket.\nCsllfornla Impoter grapoo 8460 par\ncase. Flemish Beauty pears 0360;\nD'Anlou and Bartlett st 09.95. On-\n_rlo plums, 88 oents per bseket..\nBritish Columbia onions, 81.75 por\nsack. Manitoba onions at 6360 per\nsack. British Columbia tomatoes In\nlugs at 01.80. Manitoba lettuce season over and orders are being placed\nfor California shipments. Ontario\nbulk apples selling at two cento per\npound.\nSEATTLE\u2014The lettuce market ls\nfirm with local crop cleaned up and\nmoderate supplies from California at\n03.95 to 83.50 per crate. Light truck\ndeliveries of lettuce from Bpoksne\non the market at 89-60 to 69.76.\nPasco lettuee deal expected to open\nesrly next week. Season, seoond\ncar of eastern cranberries received\nyesterday: half barrel, 86.75; quarter\nbarrel, 03.00; western third barrel.\n64.36. The apple market Is quiet,\nlocal demand trading dull with\nheavy receipts. Open boxed apples\nsre Belling from 76 cents to 01.00\nand ars restricting the sale of\ngraded stock. Extra fancy Jonathans, 01.36; fancy, 81.00 and C\ngrade, 50 to 76 cente. Grape market\nfirmer, Seedless. 6300 to 63.16; Tokays, 01.78  to 01.88.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nLOSE A FRACTION\nList of Issues Open far Free\nTrading Is Extended;\nOils Ar* Doll\nTOBONTO, Ont., Oct. 13\u2014IBy the\nCanadian Proas)-mot-uel looses\npredominated on tho Toronto ttock\nexchange today. The Hat of issues\nopen for free trading waa extended\nwtth removal or tho \"pegged\"' minimum ptoo reetrictlon tram aU lo-\nsuoo with a market price of 66 or\nunder on both the main board and\ncurb. All of tho day's five now\nlows wen ln this list af cheaper\nlssuoe.   Sales totalled 10,866 shares.\nAmong Issues effected by tho now\nstork exchange ruling won Abitlbi\ncommon. Alberto Faolflo Oraln, B\nC. Peckers, Canada Power, oanadlan\nInduetttal alcohol A and B, ooek-\nohutt Blow, oeneral Stool wares\nand  MsseoyHerrls.\nBeU Telephone was off V\u00ab. BraaUlan wae off \", to 9S- C, F. \u00ab\u2022\nwas off t* to 16H- -Wool of Canada wae oft \"\u00ab and Pord wao dawn\ni- to 19. Alberta paclflo Oraln\nwat off m to a new low of 3t-i.\nInternational Nickel loot tt to \u00bb'.-\nOlio won dull and recorded fractionally.\nCANADA BONDS\nwuonipbu, Oot. l\u00bb\u2014auotetiona em\nVictory Bonds for 81060 on oo follows:\nBonds\u2014Dominion of Canada,\nWar loon:\n1-937.  6 par ooat.  10616 to  10,-a,\nVictory loon:\n1089, SV, per osnt. 10166 to 100.11.\n1034, 5',_ per cent. 100.18 to lMJf.\n1087, 5V4 per cent, 10618 to lM.ie.\nWer loan renewal:\n1983, 8tt por cent, 10066 ta 101.16.\nRefunding  lean:\n194S,   6  per  oent,  101.16  to   101B6.\n1040.  su,   per oent. 96.16 to 08.71.\n1944,   4'..   POT   ooat,   0666   to  mS.1t.\nIMS. m por ooat, 96.18 to 98.18.\nconversion  loan:\n1986,  4%   per  osnt,  94.18  to  06.11.\n1957,   4'.   per  eent,   04.18   to  9548.\n1988, 4'4   per cent, 96.16 to 9-U6.\n1959.  4'4   per  cent,  9660  to  98.76.\nW. M. WALKER\nSTOCKS   :   I  BONDS\nFIRE,  AUTOMOBILE  AND\nPLATE OLASS INSURANCE\nPhone 80        Aberdeen Block\nNelson\nthe old country for\nOTTAWA. Oct. 13 (CP)\u2014Value for \\\nduty Impceed upon Importations of;\nferromangane._e has been fixed st\n955 e ton, It wss announced In al\nbulletin Issued by the department\nof national revenue hero today.\nFerromanganese shipped on eon- j\nslgament. without sale prior to shipment, so as to evsde the psyment ot\nspecial duty, wlll be subject to this\nspecial duty sa lf the goods had\nbeen eold prior to shipment, the\nbulletin aays.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nYOUctts go homo for Christmas\nNOW, even tf tho money you have\noot aside io less than you thought\nnecessary. Fares on the luxurious\nCanadian  Pacific  steamships are\nspecially reduced, yet tho comfort,\nservice and cuisine is the oame as before. Living costs are\nlower than they have been for years. You can go now for\nmuch less money.\nShips sail  regularly snd frequently esch  wssla.    _aat - minute\n\u25a0pedal sailings to m*. rem to the Old Country for Chrlstr.uu srs I\nFrom Saint John:\nMontclare\nDuchess of Bedford \u2022\nMontrose - - \u2022\nDuchess of Richmond\n'.\nDecember 5\nDecember lt\nDecember 12\nDecember IS\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct. 13\u2014Flour unchanged, tn carload lota, family potent* 4.40 to 460 a barrel ln 96-lb.\ncotton  sscsk.\nShipments 64454 Bran 10 to 1060.\nWhe:t: No. 1 northern 684 to\n89',J; No. 1 Red Durum 49\u00ab4 to\n56V  Dec. 831.;  May 61',\nCora: No. 3 yellow 36 to 384.\nOats:   No.   3   white   33   to   39.\nnsx: No. 1.  137\".  to  133',.\nFor Kares in detail. Passport infoi'mu!\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A., Nelson\n<\\ rite\nCanadian Pacific\nSteamships\n \"\u2022JIB NELSO* DAILY rttSTt. NStSON. B. C. - WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 14. \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb!\u25a0\nNyal Emulsion of\nCOD LIVER OIL\ntke   finest   building  tonic\nfor  adults  or  children.\n50* and Sl.OO\nNana, Rutherford\nDrug Co.'\nKootenayPlumblng\ndc Heating Co., Ltd.\n\u25a0t Old Grill ftock,\nBaker  St.\nREPAIRS\ntry Experienced Workmen\nSTANLEY JEMSON\nPhone 666 *\nHunter Electric\nand Plum1*'*?\n2 BATH SPECIALS\nA beautiful shower complete with nickel plate\nfittings and duck curtain  f 15.00\nHand spray and massage\nthat fits on the bath faucets     f_._5\nPhone  530  for  Electrical\nor Plumbing work.\nmainiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiniiiiiiiiii\nLoD.CAFE\nkelson's rmra eocipped\nRESTAURANT\nSpmM Mali \u2022mr au et\nucMdlml; low prion.\nCall  nd  puUIn of our\nBat-ante, and Hunda-f Dinner,\nBem-mba- Thinksrtvlnf Bar.\nwhan wa will ttm. mm freih\nTurkey Dlmwr with ewetj.\nthlng nloe and fresh with It\nL.D. Cafe, Ltd.\niiiniiiiuiHiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii\t\nPhon*\nTAXI\nTha Best of Serrlce\n.Careful,  courteous\nDttvsn\nNelson Tranfer Co., Ltd.\n35\nELECTRICAL\nWORK\nCan   at   lm  tn  electrical\nwart that raa mar mu la\nroar horn..   K-a-aonabU ratm.\nSltUfactton  (OirantMd.\nPHONE I\nL. B. Electric\nFOUNDERS' DAY\nIS CELEBRATED\nBY LOCAL GYROS\nWives and Lady Friends Attend  Luncheon;  Three\nSpeakers Entertain\nHOLD DANCE AND\nA BRIDGE PARTY\nE. Ia. Buchanan, Chairman;\nMrs. Ferguson and A. C.\nEmory, Prize Winners\nROSE\nBeauty Parlor\nK.W.C. Block Ward at.\nPhone SIT lor Appointment!\n Pownitalra\t\nGLASSES\nJ.A.C. Laughton, IU).\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIAN\n\u2022suite 20S-208, Medical Arts Bldt.\nCITY DRUG CO.\n\\'elson's Dispensing Chemists\nPhone 24 Box 1082\nAlways at, your service\nProclamation\nAs the Citizens, by a large majority, expressed the desire for daylight saving but\nwith a return to\nStandard Time\nat midnight, October 14th, it is the wish of\nthe Mayor and Aldermen that the Citizen's\nof Nelson turn back their clocks one hour\nat that time.\nThe City offices, all the City works, and the\nSchools will operate on Standard time, commencing midnight, Wednesday, October 14.\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nDon't Put Off\nREMODELING\nOr REPAIR...\nTODAY, you can build a\nporch, or a handsome\ngarage for a very reasonable price. Nobody can\nmake promises for a\nmonth from today, or r\nyear. So if you want tr\nremodel or repair, do i\nnow.\nEstimates Furnished\nUpon Request\nFOR SALE\u2014Door and Frame for Vault. A bargain.\nA* H* GREEN ltd.\n(Successors to John Burns & Son)\nPLANT KcM \"\u25a0   OFFICES KWiA,&w-\n-nrl sates offt^\nSundsy nlgbt being the meeting\nnlgbt nearest pounder's dsy, which\nis October 14, the Nelson Gyro* entertained their wives snd lady friends\ntn the Canadian Legion. Three Interesting speeches end Oyro songs\nwere entertainment for the guests\nand members. The first talk wss\ngiven by President Jack Morris on\nthe origin and the growth of Oyro.\nJohn Cartmel gave a humorous talon \"aMdenc-s of Prtendly Services,\"\nand R. D. Barnes gave an outline\nand  history of  the  local club.\nX. La Buchanan, chairman at the\nentertainment committee, was chairman for the evening, and at the\nclose of the meeting conducted the\nOyro pledge and gave a reading on\nthe objects of the International organisation.\nMr. Morrla outlined the movement\nof Oyro -from Ite organisation in\nCleveland In 1912, to Ite present\nposition.\nNOT    SERVICE    (II 11\n\"Quite often tho Oyro club ls\nreferred to as a service club, and\nwe are also sometimes criticized for\nnot doing service work ln our community. We are not a service club\nIn the same tense of the word as\nthe Rotarians, Klwanls or Lions are.\nWe are organized for friendship\npurposes, but naturally we do take\nan active part in the community,\nbeing  good   citizens,\"   he  said.\n\"When those few notable founders\nof Oyro ln sesrnhlng for a slogsn\nhit upon the idea of friendship n*\nthe chief cornerstone of the organisation, tbey chose the one theme\nwith the most universal appeal and\nbound up ln It are potential possibilities for the unlimited growth\nsnd world wide service. It Is something tbat Is understood the world\nover, from the north pol* to the\nsmith, from Cleveland, the btrth-\nplsce of Oyro, eastward, snd on\neastward until the circle of the\nglobe   ig   complete.\n\"If the Oyro International does\nnot become within the nexf few\nyeara the greatest business man1\norganization in the world, It will\nnot be because It does not have a\nsufficiently sound and worthwhile\nobject, but because its membership\nhaa failed to catch the real meaning\nof its watchword,'' declared the\nspeaker.\nJ. B. GRAY\nCAUSE   MERRIMENT\nAlderman J. B. Gray caused a\nround of merriment when he criticised the members who did not bring\ntheir wives or friends to the meeting, and, it was at his proposal that\neach member had to stand and give\nan excuse for not doing so. Mr. Oray\nwas \"proud and glad\" about several\nthings during the meeting, Including\nthe fact that he was one of the ones\nwho had brought hla wlf. to the\nmeeting.\nCharles Morris said that his wife\nwas attending another banquet and\nMrs. C. H. Hamilton was looking after   her   baby,   j,   a.   Ferguson   said\ntbat hla w'..e wes not looking after\nher baby at the Ume ol the meeting\nbut that sbe bed been ell afternoon.\nA. D. McLeod forgot to bell Mrs.\nMcLeod far enough ahead to keep\nthe date open. Dave Wade said tbat\nes be left the house hia wife wae\nbidding five no trump at a bridge\ngame and her partner wsa holding\nan toe. so he beat lt. Many other\nexcuses  were given.\nIn a humorous takeoff on the\nvarious members of the club wtth a\ntouch of the *eriou\u00bb here and there,\nMr. Cartmel gave an address on\n'.Evidences of  Friendly  Services.\"\nHe pointed out tbat knowing his\ndislike for public speaking, and still\nasking him to do* so, wu e friendly\n\u25a0ervioe given him by E. L. luchanan.\nchairman of the entertainment. The\nflrat evidence of a kindly service\nand the most Important waa wben he\nwas chosen president of tbe club,\nhe said. This was followed by sending him to the International conference  at Madison, Wis.\nOne of the kindest services of the\nclub was to allow \"Dick\" Barnes\nto run for mayor and to .hold office\nfor three years. The servloes had\ncontinued on and on until the services of thoe. In charge had placed\nhim in the responsible position of\nmanager of the Kootenay Breweries.\nONE   CUFF   LINK\n\"I remember one time the club\nwas stuck for a prise and J. B. Gray\ngenerously volunteered to bring the\nprise. \"J. B,'* turned up with one\ncuff link. Now that was a kindly\nservice, to himself and to the club,\nfor the winner had to purchase the\nother link from Mr. Gray.\" stated\nMr. Cartmel, Mr. arty also came ln\nfor more \"acte of eervlee\" as described by tlie speaker.\nT. Crannage came ln for his\nfriendly service when he reminded\nMr. Cartmel recently that he was\nlosing  his  hair.\nElmer Horton wa_ doing his bit\nwhen he saw that the match blocks\nwere well distributed on the city\nroads. He was doing two servloes,\nsupplying free fuel for the needy,\nand slowing up the speed artists.\nD. D. Townsend, Oordon Bennett.\nDr. H. H. MacKenrte. Dr. J. A. C.\nLaughton, Dr. O. A. c. Walley, J. A.\nFerguson and R. D- Barnes all came\nIn for a share of the \"friendly\nsen'Ices.\"\nA   MONEY  SAVER\nIt was a friendly sen ice to the\nmembers that the club was formed\nat sll, he said. When a friend was\nin tlv hoepltal the club sent one\nbouquet of flowers, and when he\ndied the club sent a wreath, thus\nsaving the expense of esch one of\ntihe members on such an occasion.\nThe club wsfl going from good to\nbetter, and was multiplying friendly\nservice,  he said.\nMr. Barnes outlined the organlza*\ntion or the local club, giving its\nhistory up until the present time,\nwith Ke various activities lt took\npart In,\nBKIIm.i;   PARTY\nAt the close of the meeting the\ngathering retired to the Women's\nInstitute rooms on Victoria street\nto play bridge.\nMra. C. H. Ferguson was the winner of the ladles' first and A. C.\nEmory of the gentlemen's first.\nA light lun\/.i and a dance followed\nthe cards.\nMany Cariboo People\n' Miss Thanksgiving\nQt E. NEL. B. C, Oct. II (CP)\n\u2014Turkey* got a break here ever\nthe weekend because there were\na lot of people In the Cariboo\nwho didn't know Monday wu\nThanksgiving. And at leut one\nschool remained open becease\nits trustee'\" were not notified\nthat Oct. 12 was a holiday.\nCalendars show Nov. tue\nred letter day and this wes\ntaken by many to be Thanksgiving   Day.\nMONTREAL CURB\nTRADING LIGHT\nMONTREAL, Oct. 13\u2014Trading was\nlight on the Montreal curb market\ntodAy, with small losses predominating at the close. Imperial Oil, whloh\nwas active loader, managed to hold\nunchanged, but losses were suVsined\nby Dominion Stores at 17H. \\nter-\nnatlonal Petroleum 10'i and Hiram\nWalker at t%. British American OU\nheld steady at 9.\nAmong the mines, small gains\nwere shown by Moss and Slscoe, the\nactive features, while Noranda closed\n48 cents lower  at 113.30.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nWINinPia, Oct. 18\u2014 Reoetpti:\nCattle 304S; calv. 380; hofa 1900;\nsheep 686.\nSteera. up  to 1060 lbt: Good and\ncholcaj   14.60   to $6.10.\nSteers, over 1060 lbs: Oood .at\nchoirs ,4,60 to 19.60.\nHeller,: Oood snd cbolet M to $6.\nFed calves: Good snd choice $9.60\nto  18.90.\nCows: Oood 82.79 to 88-6.\nCanners and cutters 8-90 to 81.25\nBulls: Good  8190 to 81.7*\nStock r and feeder steers: Good\n83  to 84.\nStock cows and heifers: Good 82.50\nto  83.29\nMilkers and sprinters: 838 to 875.\nVeal calves: Oood snd choice 85\nto  88.90.\nHogs: Select bacon 81 per head\npremium baoon 84.76: butchers 81\nper head discount; llj'its and feeders 84-5. *l\nLambs: Good hsndywelght 85.90;\ngood heavU'i 84.\nSheep: Oood heavies 83 to 82.50;\ngood handywelght 83.\nActivity on the\nVancouver Exchange\nIs Greatly Limited\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 13\u2014The long\nholiday weekend had a decided effect\non trading on the Vancouver stock\nexchange todsy. Activity was limited\nto a half doaen Issues, with softness\nshowing In two stocks, both mines.\nPsles volume dropped to flhe lowr.it\npoint ln more than a month. Only\n8370 share, changed hands during\nthe  day.\nCottonbelt. after jelling at 38\ncenta, closed off 3 at 28 centa bid\nOrandview waa off fractionally at\n4'i cents. Other issues in both\nmines and oila remained unchanged.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n****** m*\"- tonight at 8 o'clock.\ncltv   tlmc-   17793;\nWomen's institute Baby Clinic .at\nHospital today 3:80. (7780)\nFirst   Nelson   Cubs  wlll   meet   at\nBaptist  Church   tonight 6:30  sharp\n(77S4)\nRummage   sale   Saturday   October\n17th       Mistress    William    Stewart\ncircle of St. Pauls United Church.\n(7788)\n' Clan McLeary whist Drive and\nDance\u2014Odd Fellows Hall. Friday\nevenlni carda 8:19. Admission 39c,\nIn aid of Children's night.       (7782)\nBUZZ LOCAI_I-\nFor Rent\u2014Furnished  suite.  \"Electric refrigeration.   Kerr Apts. (7656)\nOne nicely furnished suite, also a\nsmall suite for rent. Annable block.\n(7689)\nCARD OF THANKS\nTh-a parents, grand parents, and\nAunts, and Uncles of Olive Llta\nStewart wlah to thank their friends\nfo> sympathy and kindness shown\nduring their sad bereavement and\nfor the beautiful floral offerings.\n(7705)\nTHEY ALL SAY\n*lt Exceeded Expectation!1\nThe Furnacette will heat the farthest corner of\nWi eight-room house\u2014it saves fuel\u2014it keeps the\nchildren free from contact with a hot surface\u2014it\nbrightens the living room with its attractive enameled\ncabinet\u2014burns coal, coke or wood.\nSEE US ABOUT TOUR\nHEATING PROBLEMS\nWood Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON, B.C. - Retail\n5%\nDiscount\ntor Cash\nYou Can\nSAVE THE\nINTEREST\n5%\nfor Cash\nDiscount\nAs an inducement to buy a Used Car now we\nare offering any Used Car in our stock at one-\nthird down and no interest or finance charges\nif the balance is paid in 12 monthly payments.\n1931 CHEVROLET SPORT SEDAN ^Ogl.OO\n1929 CHEVROLET SEDAN   545.00\n1928 BUICK SEDAN ,  790.00\n1930 AUSTIN COUPE  365*00\n1928 DODGE 6 SEDAN   650.00\n1927 CHEVROLET SEDAN   345*00\n1928 CHRYSLER SEDAN ..,  445.00\n1928 CHEVROLET SEDAN   450*00\nThis offer expires Oct. 31st*\nBuy Now.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nPHONE 35 NELSON, B. C.\nJUDGE TO RENDER\nJUDGMENT TODAY\nIN WASSICK CASE\nDefense Claims Liquor Seized Waa Property of a\nRoomer\nWASSICK DENIES\nASKED FOR BREAK\nEight   Witnesses   Heard   on\nRetrial of Liquor\nCharge\nEight -ltne_*\u00bb. wo for the crown\nand six for the defend nt, testified\nbefore Judte a. H. Thompson of\nCrtnbroo- ln county oourt st Nelaon\nTuesday on the -re-trial of the charge\nagainst Harry Wasslct. proprietor of\nthe Occidental ' hotel, Nelson, of\nharlng had liquor -for sale, snd at\nthe end of the afternoon, after hear- ]\nlng the addressee of counsel, hla!\nhonor reeerwd Judgment to Wednesday morning at 10:30 o'clock. The\ncase wu appealed to the county\ncourt from the Judgment of Magis-\ntrjte William Brown, wMch found\nWa_!cK guilty  and  fined  him 1300.\nOwnership of the beer and hard\nUquor seized by the ctty police ln\nroom 36 of the Occid-ntal In a raid\non the night of September 12 was\nthe chief bone of contention, c. B.\noarland. acting for the crown, asking\nWs honor to Infer that lt belonged\nto W.'Mick, while B. O. Matthew,\ndefence counsel, put six witnesses on\nthe stand, including the defendant,\nto prove that the guest-room ln\nquestion was rented, and had been\nrented since the end of June, by\nEnoch Peterson, a timber worker,\nsome of them also testifying to\nPeterson having liquor there.\nSTRESS   LAID   ON   IfE\nThe large cakes ol ele thst was\nroollng a number of bottlee of brer\nin a Urge kettle In room 36, seemed\nsignificant to the crown, but the defence contended supplying cf ice to\na roomer for hla own use was not\nan unusual service by a hotrl. Besides tbls beer, there was a carton\nof two dozen beer, and ln a suite ae\nbelonging to Peterson a part bottle\nof Scotch whiskey and a part bottie\nof gin.\nSergt. Alex. Stawart, one of tbe\nfour city officers conducting thc\nraid, waa the only witness called by\nthe crown ln putting ln lt\u00ab esse,\nthough It also cMled ex-Conatable\nJ. K. H. McDonald to rebut certain\nevidence by Waasick.\nCONTRADICTIONS\nThe question of credibility of rival\nwitnesses arose in connection with a\nstatement by Sergt. Stewart that\nWhen wasaick came to him at the\ntime of the raid he hald tr> Was-\nsick, \"Well, Harry, I've got you\nagain,\" to which tta Occidental\nproprietor replied, '\"Por Ood's sake\ngive me a break. I can't pay any\nmore fines.\"\nWaasick denied those remarks\ntestifying that he said only, \"Por\nOod's sake   what's  the  trouble?\"\nThere was also flat contradiction\nbetween Waeelck and the sergeant aa\nto whether the hotelman went direct\nto room 36 to look for the sergeant.\nWasaick claimed he met Sergt. Stewart In tlie hall and accompanied\nhim Into the room. Ex-Constab-\nMcDonald, the rebuttal witness, supported Sergt. Stewart to the extent\nof testifying he did not seo Waasick\nand the sergeant together at any\ntime. He denied directing Waasick\nwhere to look for the sergeant.\nJudge Thompson personally quizzed\nMcDonald at great length on the occurrences In the hall, and expressed\nIncredulity at McDonald', statement\nthat after he Informed Waselck there\nwaa a raid and that the sergeant\nhad a search warrant, he went In\none direction ond the hotelman ln\nanother. Hla honor suggested that\nthe natural course would be for the\nproprietor, ln such circumstances, to\nfollow the officer.\nPETERSON   ANGI.B      .,\nEvidence reepectlng Peterson's oc-\ncupstton of the room was given by\nMrs. Minnie H\u00bbnes, chambermaid\nWho said ahe Tiad known him for\nnine yeara: Harry Wright, who said\nhe had drinks on his birthday ln\nPettrson's room, Peterson treating\nhim: Ira Tombough, who testified\nto lending Peterson tit. (his explaining   Peterson's   ability   to   buy\n\u00a3l0,' JS\"_ \"tln8 \" th\" >\u2122\u00b0\u00a3\nren\u00ab kitchen: T. c. Anderson, a\nroomer who had drinks with Peter-\neon; and Dennis Haz:l who alao\ndrank with  him.\nMr. Waasick testified he had been\nfined  for Infractions of f-e  Uquor\nn\u00bb *,1 - U',', a\"lea\" \u00ab\u2122\u2122\u00abrated\nfive such alleged occurrences, the\nwitness   Jecalllng    thr_    of    them\nLZ^If \"Ure \"Mut th\u00ab oW*\u2122-\nPeterson.  It was stated, dim-ppear-\neffort . ?\u201e*_ .\"l\" the \"\"\"a \"\u00bb\nMforts 0f the defence to locatr-  him\nfor the pur-paw of putting  him on I\nine   stand   being   unsuccessful\nCOINSEI,   SIM   fp\nIn his summing up. Mr. Mmtiew '\nTrlti, ,' . *'.** \"\u00b0 doubt \u2022\u2022 l\u00b0 ^\nchief   facta   in   the   case,   Peterson's\n___-*_ \u00b0' th' \"quor '*\"* clearl,\nproven, and the chlet emphasis of\nthe crown being on certain alleged\nm.nor  discrepance,   ,n   evidence.\nxwHin ?*\", '\" (\u00b0r th\" <-rown \u00bb\"\u25a0\u00bb-\n-.\u00bb?- ' \",\"\"\" \u00bb\u00b0\u00ab\u00ab'ng In boot,\nlegging usually tried to frame up a\nPlausible   situation   that   would   ac-\n_ZL'\u00b0r h. .havln* \"t>UOT \u00ab\u25a0 the\npremise,, .nd that Peterson's alleged\nownership of Uquor would fit in u\nBEL\" . ?\" \"\"\"\"T \u00ab \u00ab\u00ab> u\u00bb\n_,??\u201e \u00b0 a.\"1* \"\"*\"\"* H\u00ab Pointed\nout the inherent difficulty of prcv-\n\u25a0ai these ua ,\u201e the usual way, on\ncourt to draw  Inferences as to the\nIZZ,\"\"wh,ch 11,*,'or \u2122 \u00ab \u00a3\nFall Hats\nAU the styles that\ngood dressers like to\nwear are here\u2014and the\nnew low prices will\nmore than salisfy you.\nWaldorf    fS.OO\nBelmont        6.60\nBorsalino        8.00\nTress      7.50\nNelson\nBusiness College\nDAY OR EVENING CLASSES\nIndividual    Tuition\u2014Commence\nany time.\nP. O. Box tl Phone 603\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nopp. city Hall Pkont sits\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER,\nJEWELER\nid Graduate Optician\n413  HALL  STREET\nSaskatchewan Man\nIs First Entrant\nin Grain Exhibit\nCHICAGO, OM. 13\u2014First Canadian entrant In the i\u00bb31 In-\nterniiilniMi grain and hay show\nJt Chicago Is James A. Paur, of\nlingham, Saskatchewan. Distinction for having sent In the first\n\"\u25a0try from Canada to thla com.\nWItlve crops' display went to\ntne same Saskatchewan grower\nlast   year.\nThe International grain and\nnay show Is a department of the\nInternational live stock exposition, which wlU he held at the\nChicago Mock yards, Nov. 21\nto  Dee.  s\nPaur win he an exhibitor In\nthe oats and rye c'a-aa of Ihe\nIB3I show.\nPHONE T\n77\nFreight Scbedut\nDally to tsote\nand Trail, lt an\nTrail   PMM    It\nELKS T. T. * r. LTD.\nMALT EXTRACT WITH COD\nUVER   OIL\nSPECIALLY    PALATABLE,\nDIGESTIVE   and   NUTRITIOUS\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription  Specialist\nPHONE   1\nShop with   ua by  mall.\nPhon*\nTAXI and\nTRANSFER\n44   Dally   Freight   KetiedaM\n*  *    lo   Trail   and   Roaalanl*\nLeaves   Nelaon   10   a.n\nTrail Depot\u2014Dominion Garage\nRoaaland   Depot\u2014L.   D.   Caft\n(ON. CUMMINS\nLT    STANDARD CAFE    ^S\u201e\nNELSON'S POPULAR RESTAURANT\nTHE   BEST   FOR   LESS       SPECIAL 81NDAY DINNERS 50c\nllll.II   CLASS  MEALS  35c\nSODA   FOUNTAIN  SERVICE\nGreenhill Bellevue\nThe Crow's Nest Pass steam coals that give mor*\ncomplete combustion, less ash, no clinkers and even\nburning. Every feature an actual money saver. Phone\n53 today for your winter supply.\nGait Coal and Wood in all lengths.\nBurns Coal & Cartage Co.\nA GREAT WORK\nCONVERTING\nBROKEN LIVES\nINTO\nUSEFUL CITIZENS\nTHE ROTARY CLUB OF NELSON\nWill on SATURDAY  OCTOBER 24th,  Solicit  Your\nHelp in Their Campaign for Funds to Enable Them\nto Carry on Their\nCrippled Children Work\nSPECIAL\nSUNDAY EVENING CONCERT\nCAPITOL THEATRE\n9:15 SUNDAY,  OCTOBER  18th        9:15\nSilver Collection in Aid of Above\nNow\nShowing\nTwo Shows\nNightly\n7:30\u20149:30\nMatinee -\n2:30\nROARING DRAMA FROM REX BEACH'S\nGREAT DRAMA \"BIG BROTHER\"\nTOGETHER--MIGHTY STARS OF\n\"CIMARON\" and \"SKIPPY\"\nRICHARD DIX        1\nWITH\nJackie Cooper       2\nSensational Star of \"Skippy\"\nAND\nMARION SHILLING 3\nIN\nfcfc\nYoung Donovan's Kid\n11\nCOMEDY\nBILLY BEVAN\nln\n\"FROZEN   FACES\"\nMUSICAL\nBETTY COMPTON\nWith   JACK   WHITE\nln\n\"THE LB-ACY\"\nON THE STAGE\nPARKER COMEDY COMPANY .\n\"IT CAN'T \"BE DONE\"\nAn Amusing Comedy With Songs and Dances\nNEXT    ATTRACTION\u2014CLARK    CaAHLE,    MADflE    EVANS,    ERNEST\nTORKENCE,   LEW   CODY,   In   \"SPORTING   BLOOD\"\nNOTE: Time Changes Thursday: Shows Start\nMATINEE 2 o'Clock, EVENING 7 and 9\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_1931_10_14","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0405206","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"}]}}