{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0405994":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-12-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1934-10-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405994\/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":" -\n\t\n\t\nWheat Leads in Price Dt*ods\non Eastern Lists\n\u2014 Pa_e Seven\nlam ^aiiB\nArsenal and St. Johnstone\nHead Soccer Races\n\u2014\u2022Pa&e Nine\n0)\nVOLUMI St\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 15, 1934\nFIVI C1NTS A COPY\nNUMBER ISO\nTERRORISTS IDENTIFIED; FACE DEATH\nTWO CONFESS\nSHAREINTHE\nKILLING PLOT\n2 More Men and \"Gun\nGirl\" Yet Sought\nby Officials\nAMAZING STORY\nOF INTRIGUE\nSearch for Others Has\nExtended Over 8\nCountries\nBy A. ii. hue\n(Associated Prett fluff Writer).\nPARIS, Oct. 14 (API.\u2014Sentences\nof death appeared today to he\nthe unavoidable fate of two eon-\nfesied members of the Balkan terror band, I'stahl, three of whoae\nmembera (Including a beautiful\n\"gun-girl\") are MUght by police\nof eight countries for complicity\nIn the allying of King Alexander\nand Foreign Minister Louis Barthou.\nIvin Rajtich md -vonemer Pos-\nphecll, who police aald confuted a\nihare ln the plotting, were held\ntecurely   ln   JaU   at   Annecy  while\n(Continued on Ptgt Ttn)\nPLANTOAUOT\nPARTS OF LOAN\nIs Oversubscribed by\n$33,000,000; Victory\nBonds Preferred\nTrail Student Is\nOTTAWA, Oet 14 (CPl\u2014Over-\ntubterlptlon of the 19S4 Dominion\nrefunding loan by tlmott $33,-\n000,000 ntceultttlng t huvy telling down of tht lirger ctth tub-\n\u2022crlptloni wu announced today\nby Mlnlittr of Flntnct E. N.\nRhodu. Tht total aubicribed for\nthe $250,000,000 flotation Wll ilmott $283\u201e000.000\n.All ctth subscriptions were received   subject   to   allotment  and\nthey wiU be cut while holders of\nmaturing victory bonds re-investing\nin the new loan will receive the\nfull amount of their subscriptions.\n\"With   an   over-subscription   of\nabout $33,000,000,\" said Mr. Rhodes,\n\"the loan may be regarded as an\noutstanding success.\"\nAll cash subscriptions in amounts\nup to $25,000 in all four maturities\nare allotted in full. In the two year\n2 per cent bonds and the five-year\n244 per cent bonds, cash subscriptions in excess of $25,000 will be\nallotted only 50 per cent. In thc\neight-year 8 per cent bonds and the  to increased production of super-\n15-year 3 Mi per cent bonds, cash sub-\nBlame Hungary and Italy\nfor the Terrorists1 Action\nLEAHY BE\nScene Changes Rapidly in Spun; Founders\nof the Republic in Flight or Face Death\nAV   .f   B15CA-V       JJ    f.m.p.K\nm W'l**-*-mV,-n-**f ^^   J\n<!\nA scene during tht rtcent political rioting In Ma drld which wn repetted In mtny parti ef Spain, at\nihown on mip, during tht bitter fight to eitabllth Socltlltt republic. Then wat violence In ovtr 400 towna.\nBy  HARRY  LEVIN\nCentral   Preaa   Ctntdltn   Writer\nLONDON. Oct. 14 \u2014 Newi from\nSpain li ot revolution tnd bitter\nbloodshed. Behind the roar of gun!\nlies a atory of dramatic events,\nof rise aqd fell, of rapidly Chang-\nIng teen-el. Mnn the \"roles\" of the bloodiest devolution of 10)_. thlt\nchief \"actors\" change with start- aitounded tbt world by Itt \"gentle-\nling   suddenness.   The   founders  of I nesi\" lnd U now climaxed to the\nthe republic, who a few* montht\nago wtre the government, now trt\nbranded as traitors and flee for\ntheir lliet or, ciught, face a court-\nmtrtlil.\nWhat It thl atory behind romantic Spain's audden emergence from\nfeudal   monarchy   ln   the   famous\nmonar.\nrevo:\npretent    eruption    ot    deed    tnd\nwounded?\nPolitical commentator! tee In thl\npeninsula's unrest tnd misery, another example of the futility of\nauddenly imposing western democracy on t land in too ihort t time,\nparticularly when nt; pnvloui Me-\nlory-taw been one of oentury loot\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Ten)\n\u25a0VANCOUVER, Oct. 14 (CP).-A\nscholarship valued at $2000 awarded annually by the Consolidated\nMining Se Smelting company to a\nstudent from Trail, B.C., entering a\nCanadian university, was won this\nyear by Paul Trustell, now registered it the University of British Columbia.\nThe award* ordinarily stipulates\nthat the student must undertake\nstudies in science: but an exception\nwat made thit year for Trussell to\nenter the faculty of agriculture. Due\n\u2022 i miiitiii itn \u25a0 imu iimim ii <\nMURDERER \"BOUGHT\nTO TAKE LIFE\nOF HITLER?\nicriptions of $25,000. and up to\n$500,000 will receive an allotment\nof 70 per cent, and subscriptions\nover $500,000 an allotment of 50\nper cent\nphosphates and fertilizers at the\nTrail smelter, it wat conaldered that\nagricultural science comes within\nthe terms of the grant.\nThe scholarship gives the recipient four years of study.\nB.C. HAD BEST TOURIST SUMMER OF\nCANADIAN WEST; BETTER THAN 1929\niiiiiiiiiniiii nn miu Tourists Came From U. S. A\nsnd From Prairies in\nTHEY LIKELY SAY\n\"IT'S A DUCKY\nPLACE\"\nNEW YORK, Oct. 14 (API-\nUnemployed ducks htve tgain\nbecome a problem at the Bronx\nzoo.\nLee S. Crandall, curator of\nblrdt at the zoo, said tonight he\nhad counted 300 wild duck arrivals in the wild fowl pond\nwhere they plan to hibernate for\nthe winter. They live on the hos-\nSitality  of the  zoo  and \"eat\ntelr heads off.\"\n\"Before the winter's over we\nwill have 1000 of them here. We\ntrett them to well they tell\ntheir friendi,\" he said.\nIllllllllilllllllllllliliiiilllliniilillllillll\nCow It Mothtr\nof Triplets\nCHILLIWACK,   B.C.,   Oct   14\niCP). \u2014An eight-year-old gride\nihorlhorn cow owned by Councillor John L. Blthgite, Glbion\nroad, hit glvtn birth to three\nhealthy cilvei, two helfen tnd t\nbull. Tht tlrt wtl a Shorthorn\nbull.\nLarge Numbers\nMME. LUPESCU HAS\nNOT JILTED A KING\nWINNIPBO, Oct. 14 (OP). \u2014\nWhether tt ts because of the mow*\ntipped mountain! or the tun-bathed\nPacific coatt mty be debatable but\nIt aeemi certain thl palm for great*\nait tourist traffic In weatern can\nada thli season goet to Brltlth Co*\nlumbla.\nA check of records reveals the\nwestern-most provinoe the only one\nlikely to ihow Increased tourist fig\nurea over last year. Britlah Coluro\nbla enjoyed heavy land and water\ntraffic and only failed to Improve\non the 1920 level.\nAlberta's statistics fell slightly be*\nhind those of 1B33 while Manitoba\nalio filled to measure up the pre*\nvlout year'a mark, No figures are\navailable for Saskatchewan but It\nla understood that province experienced tbout the lime volume of\ntburlit   traffic.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nKIDNAPPERS PAID; NO\nSIGN OF MRS. STOLL\nASKED STEP IN\nBY THE CZECHS\nClaim Hungary and\nItqlians Knew Gangs\nWere in Countries\n' ****\nMINISTERS ACT\nTO SAVE SELVIS\nGuard of 35 for Benes\nin Paris; Gang Hoped\nDivide Yugoslavia\nPARIS, Oct. 14 (AP)\u2014Foreign\nministers of the Little Entente are\nto meet Thurtdiy it Belgrade, immediately after the burial of King\nAlexander, to consider stepe to\nwipe out the ging of Btlkan terrorists, lett they themselves be\nmarked for death, lt wat learned\ntoday.\nPersons dote to Foreign Mlnltter\nEdouard Benes of Crechoslovtkia,\nnow ln Parit, revelled the Entente\nia considering demanding a special\nsession of tht league ot nations to\nair charget Indirectly Involving\nHungtry and Italy.\nThese persons cltlmed terrorist\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nTOTAITACKED\nBY1_\nCriminally  Assaulted\nin Own Home While\nParents Absent\nBERLIN, Oct. 14 (AP).-The\nsensational claim that \"a murderer had been bought tor 60,-\n000 marks to kill hitler at the\nNurnberg party congreis' was\nmtde by Julius Strelcher, Ntzi\npublisher and militant anti-\nSemite, in an address, reports\nof which reached the capital today.\nStrelcher, publisher of \"The\nStorm,\" declared \"Other countries hope National Socialism\nwill toon kill itself,\" and added\nsuch a hope was realized \"ln\nthe matter of the death at Sarajevo and of King Alexander and\nBarthou at Marseille.\"\n\"In the first cate it was a\nJew,\" he nld. \"and this week\nthe photograph of the killer is\nhighly significant. Yest, also for\nDer Fuehrer was a murderer\nbought\"\nStreicher spoke at thc party\nmeeting in Nurnberg last week.\n\u25a0i 11 ia ii \u25a0 a ii ii i it tin in i it \u25a0 \u25a0 11 lei ri \u2022\u25a0\nMarkets at\na Glance\nToronto and Montreal: Industrial\nslocks barely iteady.\nToronto mines: Moderately lower.\nNew York: Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg: Wheat cloied 44 to 44\nlower.\nLondon: Bar illver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nNew York: Bar allver and other\nmetals unchanged\nNew York: Cotton lower; other\ncommodity markets closed.\nNew York: Canadian dollar up\nMS to 1.02 3-18.\nBritain's King and Queen Will Be Guarded by'\nAid of Wireless Following Assassinations\n9se\u00bb|sy S5|sy pueqsn)-)\nipsdex i\u00bbAj 44 |A\\_ punog\n:ojny  us  u|   uss;  psAS||sg\nBy DILLARO STOKES S 0\n(Auociited Pnu Staff Wrlttr)\nLOUISVILLE, Ky\u201e Oct 14 (AP)\n\u2014An trmy tlrplini clrclid vtlnly\novtr tht hlghwtyi leading out ef\nLouisville todty on the detperate\nchance that a vivid tale that a\ntruck-driver had recognized Mn.\nAlice Speed Stoll, apptrtntly\nbound, gigged ind with tytt\nttped, might be tht long tought\nclut to tht kldntpped  woman'!\nThe driver, Jaetet I. Scales, 26,\ndeclared hli truck collided about\ndawn with an automobile contain*\ning a man and woman. The man,\nScales said, leaped out, pistol in\none hand and flashlight ln the\nother and forced him to drive on.\nScales, a plasterer, said he had\nhelped construct the Stoll home\nsome five yetrt ago and had seen\nMrs. Stoll then. The woman in the\ncar, he said, seemed trying to push\nopen its door with her shoulder.\nThe assurance yesterday of Berry\nV. Stoll, broadcast to the kidnap*\nper. that no attempt was being made\nto trap him, and his plea that the\nvictim be released ln a safe, warm\nplace, remained unanswered today.\nStoll already had announced the\n$90,000 ransom had been paid ar\ndirected by the lone man who\nsnatched the young mttron from\nher home Wednesday afternoon.\nPassenger Flying\nBoats Will Span\nthe Pacific Ocean\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 14 (API-\nGiant passenger flying boats toon\nwill span the Pacific, linking California with the orient.\nAnnouncement ot early inauguration of a transpacific transport service wai made today by Pan American AlrWays, Inc., In correspondence\nwith Postmaster General Farley\nwho said his department was \"deep-\n( ly Interested\" in the project\nPan American has ordered six\nfly-boats capable of carrying 32\npassengers. One\u2014Ihe Brazilian Clipper\u2014already is flying between Miami and South American.\nVIENNA, Oct. 14 (AP)\u2014Reports\npublished abroad that Mme. Magda\nLupeicu, former associate of King\nCarol, had secretly married a friend\nof the king, brought a hearty laugh\ntonight from Frau Schwetz, Mme.\nLupescu't sitter, who livei in Vienna.\nBOSTON, Oct. 14 (AP)\u2014H. Walk-. protected by an elaborate shorter Tripp, assistant commissioner of wave wireless tystem, controlled by\nthe London metropolitan police, ln I Tripp from an automobile,\ncharge of that city's trttflc system,'\ntoday announced a revision in the\nmethod ot protecting Britain's king\ntnd queen, at a result of the assas*\nsination of King Alexander of Yugoslavia.\nTripp is tn North America studying traffic problems in various parts\nof Canada and the United Statet.,\nHenceforth, Tripp said. King\nGeorge and Queen Mary, on statt\nIn the past, the commissioner ex*\nplained, the king and queen, tra*\nVAXCOOTKR. Oct. 14 (CP).\u2014Polloe ara acourlng thl city tor t degenerate wbo lait evenlnt Invaded\nthe home of Mr. and Mri. Henry\nBlanchard, east Hastings itreet, tnd\ncriminally awulted their alx-year-\nold daughter. Police report the attack waa of the mott brutal nttun\ntnd thi child It ln a eerloui condition.\nMr. tnd Mn. Blanchard went out,\nleaving their three children asleep\nln the houu md believing they\nvera safe aa their grandfather lives\nIn a cottage at the rear of the\nBlanchard home.\nNeighbors heard the child screaming about nine p.m. but did not\ninvestigate. Two houn liter, the\ngrandfather, who had been asleep,\nhurd the little girl crying tnd, investigating, found the doon open\napd the child ln agony of pain nad\nfear. Sha told him ot the attack\nand, when the parent! arrived a\nfew mlnutee later, police were called.\nSeveral suspects wen picked up\nby pollot but etch wtt able to\nprove he had nothing to do with\nthe crime.\nTbe eldest of the three children\nwaa the one attacked. Bhe could\ntlve only a vague description of her\nassailant.\nCroats. Bastuawf,\nDa_tuf___, Mon-v\ntttttts-titt\nSkvtnu,\nRumanian,\nAlian_uu\nB_lgarian_! <5t\nASSASSINWftS\nTERRORIST OF\nBULGAR STATE\nAcitvities Known for\nSome Time; One\nof \"lmro\"Gang\nIMPORTANT AIDE\nHELD IN FRANCE\nKiller Known to Have\nTaken Many Lives\nin Macedonia\nAn asttsein's bullet again changes\nttt,** European tcene. With tl***\ntftithi of King Alextnder of Yujo>\ntlavig ahd French Foreign MlnBwr\nLouit Barthou, further complice-\nUont htve entered the situation\nwhich obterVert itate mty completely change the trend of eventt.\nUp to the moment of the murders.\nKing Alexander, richest king In all\nEurope, and the only roytl dictator,\nwat making overture! to France (or\nvice veraa) to form a new alliance\nagainst a common enemy, Italy.\nMeanwhile, however, Germany has\nalso been courting Yugoslavia, and\nthe possibility now exists that the\nBalkan nation, made up ot more\nthan five distinctly different nationalities will swing toward Germany,\nenemy of France, and none too\nfriendly toward Italy. In the event\nshe does, it may mean either the\nbreak-up of the Little Entente of\nYugoslavia, Roumania and Czecho-1\n\u2022lovakla, or the transferring of lta\nrelations from France to Germany.\nThe assassinations therefore checked an attempt on the part of France\nto further entrench henell as\nstrongest nation ln Europe. The\nmaps ahown above Illustrate the\nsituation as they now stand. Both\nYugoslavia and Italy seek control\nof Auttrla for rich Iron deposits.\nReporti indicate that troop! from\nboth natlont are being massed at\nborders in view of King Alexander* ttatemwr made befort Hit\ndeath, that assassins wert being\ntrained at Milan, Italy, for the express purpose of shooting him, although the actual murder was committed by a Croat,' one of the\nYugoslavian nationalities. The map\nat top thowt the positions ot thc\nvarious countrlet in the drama. The\nlower map shows how Yugoslavia\n\u25a0henelf Is divided Into many different nationalities, most oi whom\nare enemies. It it reported that the\nCroata, caused this people to start\ndeath of the king, hated by the\nrioting. It Is claimed they have had\nno tay ln the governing of the nation u a whole. Further uprisings\nfrom the down-trodden people are\nfeared. Only the iron hand of\nAlexander kept them in subjection\npreviously, obierven itate.\nBELGRADE, Oct. 14 (CP-H\u00abvlt)\n\u2014Yugoslavian police today Identified King Alexanders assassin M\nVlada (luerrulelf, a Bulgarian\nMacedonian Terrorist, and the\nmaster bnln behind the Marseille\nkilling as Eugene avternlk, bom\nIn Belgrade and chief aide of Dr.\nPavellch, leader of the Hitachi\neTrrorlst organization.\nVatemlk Is now tn the handa\nof the French police under tht\nname of Eton Kramer.\nOl ERRtlEFK\nOuerrnleff, whow adopted name\nwas Petrus Kalemen, wit killed\nby police tnd angry ipectatort\nafter shooting King Alexander and\nFrench Foreign Mlnllter Barthou\nat Marseille,\nHe  wtl   born   at   Kntenlra,   a\nvillage   In   Bulgarian   Macedonia,\npolice  declared.\nAN   \"IMRO\"   MEMBER\nWell known In Macedonian Terrorist circles, he wai a member of\nthe \"lmro'' (Inteuul Macedonian\nrevolutionary organisation) and\nictuillv served Iti leader, Ivan\nMlhallorr as chauffeur In 19.11.\nLater he wis implored aa courni\nbetween Petrlch, Mlchteloff'i head\nMINERS THREATEN TO\nSUICIDE IN TUNNELS\nOver Thousand Plan a Mass\nSuicide Unless Wages\nAre  Increased\nFind New Lake\nveiled to\ncalled for\nrigid schedule, which\ntheir appearance at a\ngiven point at a pre-arranged time.\nThus, he said, a maximum of police\nprotection wai assured.\nIn the future Tripp, from hit\ncar, will be in constant communication with not only wireless can in\nthe king's guard but With Lortdon\nvisits in or about London, will U< \"Hobbies\" stationed along the route.\nSASKATOON, Oct 14 (CP). -\nAdventure in the Rocky mountains,\nmarked by the discovery of an uncharted lake, wat related by A. S.\nSibbald, K.C, president of the Canadian Alpine club, Friday. Mr.\nSibbald and a party ot three other\nAlpiners searched the Rockies recently for a short route from Banff\nto Mount Assiniboine. the tcene of\nnext year's activity for the Alpine\nclub.\nDoe Sprouts Horns,\nis Shot for Buck\nVICTORIA. Oct. 14 (CP)-There\nmty be a moral ln thlt for women\nwho affect matcullne attire\u2014r Vancouver Island doe which sprouted\nhomt was thot in mistake for a\nbuck.\nWilliam Logan of Cumberland\nbrought down the animal and, following report to game officials, it\nwas tent to the director of Ahe\nprovincial museum, F. Ken-node,\nwho states it ii the third tuch doe\nhe has heard of In a period ot more\nthan 30 years.\nThe spikes were about eight\nInchet long tnd still ln the velvet\nThe tops curved forward to the\nforehead.\nThe animal wai thot between\nUnion Bay and Cumberland. It was\nin good condition, about two yeart\nold and weighed 120 pounds.\nMotorists Killed\nby Train Crash\nCHICAGO, Oct 14 (AP).-Flve\npicnic-bound motorists were killed\ntoday when a Baltimore It Ohio-\nChfcago Terminal railroad work\ntraip hit their car at a suburban\ncrossing, netr their hornet.\nThe deed:\nMrt. Ethel Patno, 33; Fred'Hochstadter. 38; Helen Hochstadter, 31,\nhis wife, and Jean Hochstadter, 11\nand Herbert Hochstadter, 13, their\nchildren.\nArthur Patno, 43, husand of Ethel\nwat injured\nPECS, Hungtry, Oct. 14 (AP)\u2014\nForty-four out et 1200 ttrlklng\neotl mlntn who for thrtt dtyi\nand three night* have betn entombed by thtlr own cholct 1000\nfttt undtrground, thritttnlng\nmm aulclde, wen brought to the\nturftct lit* todty In critical condition.\nTht othen rimilned below, tomt\nof them dying, ttlll thnatenlng\nto eut off tht air pumpt and luf-\nfocttt to death In tht coal pit\nunleu their wtgti trt Incretsed.\nOf those bnught te tht top\ntome were unooniclous, miny raving mad, and several it thi point\nof death. For mon thin 72 houn\nthty htd bten without food, wattr,\nlight or tletp.\nGOVERNMENT\nINTERFERES\nAlarmed at the critical turn\nwhich tht strike hu ttktn, tht\ngovernment took a hind In the\ntltuttlon. Premier Julius Oom-\npoet lint five trade unionists down\nto tht pit with tn ultlmttum to\ntht mtn: \"Comt up within 30\nmlnutei. If yeu refrain from law-\n(Contlnuid on Pigi Ttn)\nIS MISSING\nHANEY, B.C., Oct 14 (CP).-G.\nJohanneton, elderly Whonnock resident, hat been missing since he left\nhome last Tueidiy night and t\nthorough search ot the district by\nmore than 100 men hu so far proved\nfruitless.\nm    (Continued on Ptgt Ttn)\nNEW PARALYSIS\nCASE, NQSON\nPennington Child Hal\nParalysis; Blane,\nDiphtheria\nFollowing the tnnouncement Saturday that the ban on public gatherings had been lifted, another caie\nof poliomyelitis, tnd another can\nof diphtheria have broken out ln\nNelson and children's and young\npeople's gatherings are to be restricted. Schools, however, will remain open.\nOver the week-end a Pennington\nchild developed paralysis, another\nmember of the family having previously been under observation. Mr.\nBlane Is the diphtheria patient.\nAa no member of tbe Pennington family hu been In ichool for\nthree weeks, ind since the diseue\ndies out within the coming of cool*\nwtather, lt Is not considered necessary to close schools for the present.\nThe diphtheria patient la an adult\nand la Isolated.\nPrecautionary measures are being\ncarried on u previously.\nYoung people under 16 yeara of\nage wlll not be admitted to publlt\ngatherings.\nSaturday young people were rt*\nfused admittance to the theitre tnt\nSunday no Sunday school classti\nwen held.\nFrench Cabinet Reshuffled Following\nBurial of the Slain Minister Barthou\nHUEY LONC'S GUARD\nBOUNCES A CURSER\nBATOMROUGE,La..Oct. 14 (AP)\n\u2014A man giving the name of Willie\nW. Broustard of St. Gabriel, La.,\nwho police uid entered a hotel\ncoffee shop here early today and\ncuried Senator Huey P. Long at the\nlatter ut talking with friends, was\narrested after he engaged in a fist\nfight with Joe Messina, Long'a per-\nsonal attendant.\nBroussard was released on $10\nbond soon after his arrest and could\nnot be located for a statement. Senator Long declined to comment on\nthe incident.\nChina Slaps 10 Per Cent Tax on All of\nSilver Exported as Hits at U.S. Policy\nMinister of Justice Goes Out;\nLaval New Minister of\nForeign Affairs\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 14 (AP)-Chlna\nstruck back tonight againit the\nillver policy ot the United Statea\nwith a 10 per cent tax on all silver\nexports from Chlnt, effective October IS.\nH. H. Kung, nationalist government finance mlnllter, emerged\nfrom a 24-hour conference with Chinese and foreign adviiert to announce the action.\nThe nationalist government's decision followed receipt of the United\nStates reply to a recent note from\nChina pleading for Washington cooperation ln maintaining silver\nprice! and halting the drain of silver\nfrom China.\nThe United States' answer, offering a meuure ot cooperation but\npointing out that the United Statei\nsilver program was deemed mandatory by President Roosevelt, failed\nto satisfy the Chinese. Their diminished silver reserves were facing a huge new reduction during\nthe next 48 houn.\nConsignments aggregating $20,000,-\n000 in Chinese money were scheduled to depart from the United States\nand London during the next few\ndavj.\nA cheap United States dollar was\nconsidered probable once more.\nChinese exporters were jubilant,\nhoping for a revival of export trade.\nPARIS, Oct. 14 (AP).\u2014Having accorded her foreign minister, Louli\nBarthou, a martyr's funeral and\ncarried through a reshuffling of,\nthe cabinet, France was waiting\ntonight to see what would develop\nnext as a result of the assassination!\nat Marseille last week.\nAfter euloglilng Barthou in public as a man of peace yesterday.\nPremier Gaston Doumergue retired\ninto a special cabinet meeting to\nface a ministerial crlsii, with tht\nftte of his government depending\nupon his ability to make peace.\nHe made Pierre Laval, his minister of colonies, tuccetcor to Barthou at minister of foreign affaini\nplaced Panl Marchandeau, a former minister of finance, in tha\nchair vacated by Albert Sarraut\nwho resigned as head of the ministry of interior because of the ai-\nMssinatlons at Marseille, and replaced Laval aa colonial minister\nwith Louli Rollln, a former minister\nof marine.\nHenry Cheron, minister of jut-\ntlee, climaxed the shakeup by turning to Premier Doumergue and\ntendering his resignation. The premier accepted it, although he nad\npreviously remained steadfatt\nagainst opposition clamor for Cher-\non'! removal ai a reault of 'h\u00bb\nStavisky scandal and the closely\nlinked murder of Judge Prince.\nThe premier named Senator Henry Roy as a minister of jin'Jic.\n\u25a0:C\nMBMoMt___M\n -\u2014\u2014-\nPAGE TWO-\n-THI NELION DAILY NIWI. NELION. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 15. 19J4\nPRWFOLK\nGIVE THANKS\nDeloraine People\nAppreciate Cor\nof Goods\nThe followlni letter of thanki\nand ippreclitlon wu received br\nthe editor of Tha Ntlson Dall; Ntwa\nfrom Rev. H. R. C. Avlson. secre-\nttrj-treaaurer of thl Cltliena' lm-\nertency Committee of Deloraine and\nWinchester. Manitoba:\n\"Miy I UH rour columns 10 es-\npress ippreclitlon to tbe people of\nNelaon and district for i cu of\napples which arrlvad in Deloraine,\nMsnltoba and wen dlatrlbvMd yuterday.\n\"The applea arrived ln food ordu\n\u2014UO sack! of tham. Tbe car wu\nconsltnsd by Mn. t. J. I. rertusoa\nof It. Paul's ehurch. but I understand from him that many cltlaens\nand uveral firm lent uautanea ln\nStnerlni loading it  we would Uki\nthank them all.\n\"Thi people of this district an\nnot habitually ln the 'drled-out\narea.' Por 40 yaara the; have been\nIndependent snd havi usually bun\non the ilvlna end of charttlM. They\nlive ln fine houses ind hsve good\nfarm equipment, but four very thin\nyears and now a oomplete failure\not crop> and lerdena aa the result\nGuide for Travellers\nNelion, B. C, Hoteli\n\"Finest in th* Interior\"\nThe HUME HOTEL\nPHONI 717\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLuncheon 35c to 50c-Dinner 35c and 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nPree Bui Servlca Nation B.C. Oeorgt Benwell, Prop.\nHUME: O. L. Josdal, Kaslo; S. W.\nOlbb, R. MacDougal; R. S. Greenwood, 1. C. MacQueen, E. A. Taylor,\nS. C. Thorpe, R. R. Newport, W.\nSteioby, H. W. Hufet. W. C. Grieve,\nM. Koenlesheng, A. W. Bisson, Mr.\nand Mrs. A. W. Meon, D. W. Atkins,\nT. 0. Fraser, A, M. McCurrach, L.\nWarubrough, T. H. Burrows, Vancouver; C. A. Yule, R. S. Eraser, W.\nR. Lawrence, Pentlcton; C. Brow,\n{Cranbrook; W. E. Louden. D. J.\nPoguson, R. J. MacGowan, Toronto;\nT. A. Burns, R. M. Brough, H. M.\nCoursey. O. Sibley, Medicine Hat;\nW. J. Reilley. C. A. rrench, Ottawa;\nC. H. Hicks. Kamloops; M Brothers,\nG. A. Cummingi, Trail; M. Dingle,\nCalgary; Mr. and Mn. J. H. Hooker,\nGrand Forki; C. Brown, C. TV. Weir,\nR. A. MacDonald, New Weitminiter.\n^The Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kin_\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms Witb Private\nBaths or Showers.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nM BAKER ST. PHONE 18 NELSON, B.C\nSAVOY: John Dennis. Mn. D.\nMontpellter, M. Snowden, Albert\nCronie, Trail; Mr. and Mrs. J. It,\nReid, Salmo; Ben Morris, S. T. Pit-\ntendrlgh, Mr. and Mn. RobeH\nBruce. Grand Forks; J. A. Millar,\nNakuip; Newton W. Emmena, Seattle; Mr. and Mri. J. R. Bryan, Mr.\nand Mrs. B. N. Sharp, Charlea T.\nSharp, Bob Sharp, Spokane; G. W.\nHow, city; I. R. Malcolm, Vernon;\nMn. M. Bettle, Mn. E. F. Angrlgnon,\nNew Denver; J. E. Eaverman, B. H.\nMelvln, C. Wilson, N. R. G. Collier,\nC. Street, Reno mine; 0. Mohue,\nKamloopi; W. L. Fraier, P. G. Planta, Calgary; J. H. Leonberger, San\nFrancisco; Mrs. A. Greenlaw, Lardo;\nA. F. James, J. Nestman, L. A,\nWelmeb, W. G. Norrle Lowenthall,\nC. Chapman, Vancouver.\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Amite You\nJAS. e. madden\nCompletely   (modelled\nHet and Cold Watar\nta  the  HEABT of tbl Ctty\nNew Grand Hotal\nP.  U  KAMI, nop.\nWeakly and Monthly Rate!\nHet  and  Cold  Water\nSingle SOe up     Double $1_0 np\nlaoau f 10 a Month uie Op\nOccidental Hotel\nttl Vernon It. nana Sin.\na w-isicx\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Roomi\nMlnen' Head .uarten\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA.   LAPOINTE,   rwp.\nRoomi from Ho to VM\nMonthly 110 and up.\nSteam heated and hot and oold\nwater la avary room\nIM Baker St. Phone aa\nVancouver, B. C, Hotelt\n\"WLV       \"\u00ab\"\u25a0 VANflJUVH HflHI-      nmu\nRENOVATED DUllGFlll  HOtOl     ELEVATOR\nA. Peterson, lite of Colimin. Alta., Prop, MO SeymourSt. Vancouvir\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight and Passenger\nMAT WE HELP PLAN TOUR TRIP ?\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines Ltd. wtll gladly send you\nattractive pictorial booklet! and complete Information about low\nfares, frequent schedules and other travel features of Greyhound\naervlce throughout America . . . .from Coast to Coast, lsnd thii\ncoupon todiy\u2014there'i no obligation.\nPlease send ml Information on a trip\nPROM\nCITY\nTO\nCITY\nName   ...\nAddress\nCtty \t\n(PLEASE PRINT)\nProvince\nNELSON - TRAIL - ROSSLAND\nDlio~rZ7k    *R*IGHT UNI\nPhone\nNelson\n77\nJ.C. \"SCOTTY\" MUIR. PROP.\nPROMPT    EFFICIENT    SERVICE\nAT  ALL  TIME!\nLeaving Nelion\nat I a.m.\nPhoni\nTrail\n13 or 191\nFREIGHT TRUCKS f\nLEAVE NELION TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTraU\nPhone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. H. McIVOR, Prop.\nNelion\nPhone\n35\nHENDRICKS' KA1LO - NBLBON\nMOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE\nHAV1NO KASLO AND RETURN-MON,, WED, and tol\nLEAVES KASLO 6:45 A M       LEAVES NKKSON II A.M.\nNelion Depot\u2014Williams' Transfer, Phone 100 \u2014 Ksilo, Phone 31\nPROMPT   tPMClBMt   SERVICE\nFights for Custody of Daughter\nLECTURE PLEASES\nCRANBROOK FOLK\nRev. Dr W. J. Sipprell Civet\nIllustrated Talk on\n1      ]\u00bbP\u00abn\nStttl Hope\nMn. Gloria Morgan Vanderbllt, who ii fighting for the custody of her\ndaughter, Oloria II, Ts leaving New York court with her alater, Mrs. Benjamin Tham (left). The girl is now tn the custody of her aunt, Mn. Harry\nPayne Whitney.\npartly of drouiht, but chiefly of\ngrasshoppers, has reduoed tham to\npoverty. Miny of them have no\nmoney whatever and tney cannot\nborrow on firm security. Even had\nthere bein a fair price for tha\namall orop of 1033 they would not\nnow be ln such need. A! lt Is nearly Tt per oent will require help to\nget tbrough tha winter.\n\"Tour contribution waa a ver?\nfin* om, and its effect as s gesture of brotherllness wlll be very\ngreat, oould vou hive stood with\nme to witch the people oome wtth\nall klndi of conveyance! to get their\napplea you would hive felt amply\nrewarded. There wer* imllea born on\nfaces that have known too much\nworry In the past years. Men, women and children were deeply jrate-\nful for what you have done. Today\nwives are busy canning and making\nJelly from the few bruised ones so\nthat none of the applea will be\nwiated.\n\"Our warmeit thanki go to all\nwho contributed ln any way.\"\nDAVID COSGRIFF\nIS LAID AT REST\nROWLAND, B. O, Oct. 14\u2014The\nfuneral of David Cosgrift took place\nat Sacred Heart church Prlday morning, requiem high mess being celebrated by Bt. Rev. Monselgnor A. X.\nMclntyre. Interment waa In thi\nCatholic cemetery, the pallbearers\nb*lng William z. Coatello. Herbert\nL. Chrlatlan, Thomaa Supple. Michael Ounthy, Philip* Breen and w,\n0, Mara.\nMoney for 6 Per\nCent Mortgages\nli Increasing\nTORONTO. Oct. H (CP)-Mort-\ngage money la becoming plentiful at\nilk per oant ln eastern Canada, a\ndrop of a half to one per cent from\nthe ratea prevailing In recent years,\nthe Canadian Press learns from par.\nties representing Toronto holders of\nfunds.\nOne representative said: \"There Is\natlll eome uncertainty aa to moratorium legislation, wbloh la keeping fundi awa; from Investment ln\nmortgages, which would otherwise\nbe seeking this form of Investment.\nLoans were aald; to have been put\nthrough recently at rates as low al\n6\\ and 1% per cent but ln theee\ncaaea the security waa clam! as\nparticularly  good.\nBonds Steady\nNEW YORK, Oct. 14 (AP)-The\nbond market apparently wai not\ngreatly Influenced Saturday by the\nadministration's \"toning down\" cf\nInflationary talk and a iteady to\nfirm tone was exhibited throughout\nthe brief session.\nImprovement was shown by some\nHem of American St Foreign Power.\nSanta Pe, Columbus Oaa, trie, N.Y.\nCentral, Nickel Plate, National\nDairy, United Drug and Warner\nBros.\nOerman government obligations\nresponded moderately to the relch's\nagreement to pay part Interest to\nUnited States holden of the Young\nand Dawes plan Issues. Dawes 7s\nadvanced Itt points to 37 and Young\nplan 514s were tt up at 27%.\nEgg Market Is\nGood\nOTTAWA. Oct. 14 (CP)-A itrong\nfeeling was In evidence on egg\nmarkets In all sections of the Dominion during the past week, the\ndepartment of agriculture says In\na report today. Receipts of freih\neggi at many polnti in western\nCanada were practically nil and\nstorage stocks were being drawn\non. In British Columbia the market\nwai cleaned up on freih eggs by\nthe shipments to the Yukon on the\nlast sailings of the seaaon, and on\nVancouver laland* fresh receipts\nwere not equal to the demand.\nVolume of exports from September 1 to dite was little more titan\nhalf of that in the corresponding\nperiod last year, being 13,384 cases\nagainst 2l,M\u00ab a year ago.\nIXPORT OP LEAD IN AUOUIT\nThe export of lead in August was\nlarger in volume but lower ln value than a year ago. The quantity\nwai 300,082 cwt. compared with\n247.382 and the value $56S,8TO compared with (385,840.\nNeither Utilities Nor\nHighway Commission\nContemplated in B. C.\nVICTORIA, Oot 14 (CP)-Laali-\nlatlon for the creation of a publlo\nutllltlei commission wlll not ba\nbrought down at th* naxt aeailon\nof th* Britlih Columbia leglalature\nPremier T. D. Pattullo itatad Saturday In aniwir to queatloni put\nto him ai th* reault of reoent\ncomments on th* subject.\nTh* prtmlir alio mentioned\nthat It It not probable that a highway oommiulon wlll be aet up In\nth* near futur*. In both Initancei\nIt wai noctaaary to *xercln great\ncar* In th* commlalona.\nJOHN SIBBALD OF\nGRAY CREEK DIES\nCRANBROOK, B.C. Oet. 14\u2014An\nllluitrated lectun of Japan glnn In\nthe United church hall by Rev. Dr.\nW. J. Sipprell B.A. D.D., wu on*\nof th* moat enjoyable entertainments staged In the church hall for\na long time. Adding keen observation to eitenalve travelling in ill\nparti of th* glob*. Dr. Sipprell\ntalked of hi* subject la an enter-\ntalnlng ind * Illuminating manner.\nHis remarks were admlraby supplemented by one of th* mo*t bwutlful oolleotloni of colored pictures\never mn In th* elty. showing thi\nscenic beauty of th* oountry as\nwell ss many phases ot llf* on the\nIsland\nPrior to showing the slldw. Dr.\nSipprell told something of llf* on\nth* charscterlatlo* and national\nhistory of the Japanese people,\nproving hlmeelf an ardent fan and\nadmirer of the rapidly rlalni nation. He atated that ln no oountry\nln hla travel, which Included the\nnations of lurope. Poleatlni, laypt\nand countries of the Orient, had he\ncom* across so affable and delight*\nful a people. Something of thetr\ngovernmental history was given and\nthe fact mentioned that Japan haa\nthe longest unbroken dynasty of the\nworld, dating back to 3000 B.C.\nSINCE  PERRY'S   EXPEDITION\nEvents sine* 1808. when the coun*\ntry wn forced by Commander Perry,\nat the point of guna, to open Its\nports to ths world, were briefly\ntraced and th* nationalist and Imperialistic tendencies of th* present\ngovernment outlined with considerable sympathy. The statement was\nmadt that at the next meeting of\nthe League of Nations Japan would\nappear before the body with a de*\nmtnd for naval parity with the\nUnited States and Oreat Britain.\nAlluding to the factors that make\nfor cheap manufacturing ln Japan\u2014\nthe cheap electric power, th* patriotic disposition of th* workers who\nwlll work for almoit nothing tf thty\nare told thty are advancing tbalr\ncountry ln world trad* and th*\nlow standard of living prevailing\nthen, th* apeaker, atated that no\ncountry oould compete with Japan\nand th* advantage of oomlng to\namicable trad* agmmentt with them\nwaa atressed.\nIn showing tht Illustrations, which\nwen surpaaelngly beautiful. Dr. sip-\nprall divided them into four headings\u2014the euatom* and habits ot tht\npeople, their rellglona. including\nbeautiful tempi*! and temple\ngrounds, their trad* and oommtrc*\nand thtlr aotnlo  wondera.\nMurray McFarlane aaalated th*\napeaker by operating th* lantern.\nRav. R. W. Hardy Introduced the\nspeaker, who Is on a tour of the\nInterior that wlll take him aa tar\nas Lethbridge In Alberts. During\nhla stay In tht elty, Dr. Sipprell\nwas the guett ot Mr. and Mn.\nHardy.\nDr. Haenteobal and w. M. Archibald, who bad bttn apendlng a few\ndayi lh Cranbrook hav* Mft for\nTrail by plan*.\nNative! of Peru catch fish by\npoisoning the water, so that the fish\nleap out, and can be iptared or\nnetted.\nORAY   CREEK.  B.C.,   Oct.   14.\nJohn Sibbald of Orey Cnek died\nsuddenly tt his horn* Prlday evening, age 77 yean. Mr. Sibbald cami\nto tht Koottnay! over 10 yeara ago\nftom Winnipeg when ht had betn\na resident for 40 yeara. He wa*\nborn   at   Owen   Sound.   Ont.\nHe Is survived by three tons and\none daughter, J. R. Sibbald, Bdmonton: WlUlam Sibbald, Winnipeg; Walter Sibbald, Peace Rlvtr,\nAlt*.: and Mn. T. O'Neill, Ony\nCreek.\nTht funeral wlll bt htld from\nhla homt to th* Oray Creek cem*\ntery.\nB.C. Wants Lower\nA.A.U. Taxations\nBranch Protests Old Debt;\nInterior Hdbp Croyyth\nCommended\nNANAIMO, B.C., Oct. U (CP)-\n\"Why ihould we have that old d-bt\nto the Dominion body hanging ever\nus continually?\" demanded Pat Jcf-\ntard at the annual meeting ot the\nBritish Columbia section ot the\nA.A.U. of Canada, in Nanalmo Saturday.\n\"We ahould have \u2022 a clean ilate\nwith the dlioolution of th* local\nboardi, that we might work out our\nown lalvation in thii provinoe,\nwithout being throttled by a debt\nnot contracted by the central board.\"\nJeffard pointed out that affiliation feel, card tax and delegates ex-\nflenses alnounted to $300, leaving\nIttle or nothing for the British Columbia lection to operate with.\nHli remarks caused a resolution\nto be paaied, in which the Dominion\nbody wlll be asked to wipe out this\nold debt. The parent body will also\nbe asked to consider the remoteness\nof British Columbia from tha annual\nmeeting, as well a! her small population, Tn a request tor reduction of\nannual fees.\nThe entire slate of officen wis reelected. Oordon Woollridge of Victoria ii president: Norman R. Porter\nof Vancouver, first vice-president;\nDan McKenile, New Westmlns'e*.\nsecond vlce-preildent; T. G. Fllmer\nVincouver. secretary; and J. Percy\nWatson. Victoria, treasurer.\nGrowth of basketball, especially\nln the Kootenay district wai commended by N. R. Porter.\nPAIN ACROSS KIDNEYS\nWHEN you <uf.\nfer from pains\nacrois the back,\nlumbago, due to\nkidney irritation,\nperhapi swelling\nof the anklei or\nwhtn you ar*\nbothered by; fre-\nquint arising at\nnight\u2014pains, anywhere\u2014 whtn you feel dull and heavy, fry\nDr. PUrce'i \"Anurle.\"  Mrs. Annie Leric tr\nIW W. Wi Ave., Vancouver B. 6 lawi\n\"Dr. Flaree'a Anuric Tablet* give quick relief\nfnxn backacka and Irregular action of tbt\nkldnevs. It aeemed no time at all befort\nthla medicine ngula'fd my kldneya and rid\nmi ot (kit mlian- In the amall of my back.\nThanki to 'Anuric' I had no further kidney\ncomplaint.\" Sold by drumliti everywhere.\nSand 10. far a trial ,.,. .1 Aaerla I*\nPr. riarea'i La-orator?, yon Erie, Oal,\nBANDITSWIPE\nOOT VILLAGE\n200 Attack Chinese\nTown; Nearly All\nCitizens Dead\nSHANOHAI, China, Oct 14 (CP)\nAs revenge for an \"lniult\" to a\nimall portion of th* gang, a group of\nbandit! numbering MO attacked the\nvillage of Lluchlakow, ln northern\nKiangiu province, recently, and,\nafter killing nearly all tha Inhabitant!, burned the village to the\nground.\nA small group ot tht bandit! numbering about 11 were retreating lo\ntheir mountain headquarters with\naeveral ciptivei whtn th* defence\nforce of Lluchlakow find upon\nthem. In the resulting confusion a\nfew  of the captive* managed to\nTh* bandit! retreated with their\nremaining captives, but returned\nthe next day, reinforced by other\ngangs, until they numbered 200\narmed men. In the attack on the\nvillage six were killed, and this so\nenraged the leader that he ordered\nhis men to use fire to drive the defending villagers out ot their fortified position!.\nThe flames spread over the entire\nvillage and a number of the panic-\nstricken villagers were drowned\nwhen they attempted to sack refuge\nln a small lake nearby. Othen were\nburned to death when they were\ncaught in their homei, and others\nwere ihot down by the bandits\nwhile trying to eacape.\nAgriculture in\nB. C. Better\nEx-Empress Zlta ot Austria, h\u00abr ion, Archduke Otto, and her daughter.\nPrlnc*!* Josephine, shown at the airport at Luxembourg waving a farewell to th* Orand Duchess of Luxembourg when the latter lett for a visit\nto London. Archduke Otto Is looked upon as the next emperor ot Austria, should a monarchy be reitored ln that country.\nAoto and Street Car\nFigure in Collision\nCarl Johnion to Appear on\nCommon Danger; Out\non $200 Bond\nCarl Johnson, whose ear figured In\na collision with a Nelson itrtet cat\non tht 500 block Baker street Saturday night, wlll appear In clt; polio* court Monday morning on a\nchars* of driving to the oommon\ndanger. He wu let out on a 1900\nbond.\nTh* crash occurred almoat at th*\nBaket-Jpaephlna atreet Intersection.\nand lt Is alleged thst Johnion did\nnot stop until ht wai waved down\nbr  Sergt. Robert Htrabaw, ln tht\nvicinity of th* Baksr-Ward itrut In-\nteraeotlon. or tlmott a block from\ntbt Ktnt.\nTht lift front and back tenders\nwtr* badly damaged on th* auto\nbut th* etreet car did not luffer\nmaterially.\nReaffirm Confidence\nin D. McLean by Vote\nAt a meeting of the delegate! to\nthe nominating convention of the\nKootenay Weit Liberal! held In\nGelinas hall on Friday evening, a\nvote of confidence In the proposed\ncandidate. D. D. McLean, was taken,\nthe result showing 100 att cent\nbacking for Mr. McLean from th*\nNelson Liberal aiaoclation.\nVICTORIA, Oct 14 (CP).-Brlt-\nlih Columbia is consolidating a\nthree-point gain ln agricultural production this year, Involving betterment! ln quality, volume, and value\nover lait year. Total produc\"on ll\nexpected to reach $42,000,(100 at a\nconservative estimate of $0,000,000\nbetter than ln th* seaaon pnvlous,\naccording to government figurei.\nColitis Upsets\nYour Stomach\nThouiands of sufferers think they\nhave Indigestion, when Colitis ts tht\nrial   cauae   ot   an   upset   itomach.\nRolltli la th* medical name tor\ninctlonal Irritation of tha lnteatlne* and oolon, due to Acidity, and\ncauses dull pains ln the sides,\nheavy feeling In abdomen, backache\ngas, heartburn, bloating, dlzalneta,\nbad breath, coated tongue, lack of\npep tnd eleeplea* night*. A doc-\ntori prescription, known as Dr. Nixon's Koladt Powders pouesaee tht\nneetsaary triple action of relailng\nsore, conutcted muacle* ln th* bowels, soothing and protecting Irritated mucous membranes and combating acidity, thtie giving quick\nresults, it Is not a laxative but acta\nto htlp naturt. Dr. Nixon's Kolid*\nla so successful that we offer lt under th* f\u00bblr-\u00bblay agreement to fls.\nyou up to your attlifactlon dr return empty paokig* and gtt your\nmonty back. At all drug ttort*!.\nI INKS\nALL\nMONEY\nSAYING\nEVENT\nALL NEW FALL MERCHANDISE \u2014 AN OPPORTUNITY TO BUY AND SAVE\nOne Week Only\u2014Commencing Oct. IS\nFall and Winter\nCOATS\nBuy now, and be money ahead.\nFor these prices cannot be duplicated.\nM9.50-$29.50\nFaU DRESSES\nThis collection embraces every\nsuccess for Fall-Wools, crepes,\nvelvets, Moires, satins. Sizes 14\nto 44. As low as\u2014\n$395\nA DEPOSIT HOLDS ANY CARMENT\nHATS\t\nA wonderful itlectlon of ntw Fall\nHaU In Pur* Wool Felt. All Cl oe\ncolors, all sizes \u2022*?**3'9\nGLOVES\nKayiir'i   Fall   Qlovn  ar*   Distinctly\nNew In Style and  Fabrics.       AM\nOn* prlo*  -**-**\u2022\nSCARVES\nTh* Scarf li io ntetnary to add that\ntouch of color thli Fall, *Qrl\nHOSIERY\nDRESS-CHIFFON by CORTICELLI and ORIENT.\nThli li a rial bargain.  Slu* IV, to 101\/,.   Prlctd at\n 1 HOSIERY\nm\nPur* Thrttd Silk, Full Ftshlontd, Cradle Foot, AQ-t\nSemi Service.  Slut 8''_ to 101\/,.   Priced at  1~V\nLINGERIE\nCript-di*Chlnt Dane* Sttl, Piach and\nWhlt*. Lice Trim,\nPrlctd at \t\n$1.00\nLINGERIE\nLok-Knit Ptntlea and Bloomtra. Tailored or Lac* Trim, CStt*\nPriced at   . \u201e  -~*~T\nLINGERIE\nGowni, Slips, V*st-Sloomtr Stta In\nWhltt, Pitch, Nil*. Small, $1.00\nMedium, Larg* *\u2022\"\"\nFOOTWEAR      Feature New Fall Shoes\nPatrons who already know our high quality, style, and fitting are cheering\nthis New Event.\nWidths AAAA's to E's. Sizes 3 to 9 in stock.\ni\nTh* nutiat of stitching, perfontloni and\n\u2022tylta, makt theae\nan attraotlv* valu*.\nBlack Kid,\nand Tlea.\nPumpi\n**\u00bb\n_M_^[\nA group of itrttt\nand afttrnoon ahoea\nIn Black, Brown,\nSuedt and Kid.\nStylta thlt art New.\n$3-95\nArch-Control hulth\nIho*. Th* patented\nconttructlon of th*\nInside of thlt thot\nmuret comfort ind\ntllmlntt** Foot Ft-\ntlgu*. Bltck and\nBrown.\nSLIPPERS-\nKid D'Orsays, Block Heel, in Blus, Creen, Mauve,\nRsd snd Black. Slzss 3\u20148. frl AA\n$4-95\nThrift Is the Keynote ta This Event.\nFink's Ltd. SEX\nA\n 1\n\u2014\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 15. 1934-\nCOSTUMES DESIGNED FOR CAMPUS OR FOR OFFICE\nThese Are for Daytime\nFor Afternoon and Evening\nLeft, two-plecs woolen frock; canter, twied ault showing ooat; second from lift, skirt and blouss: four, afternoon frock; right, avenlng drew\nDODD'S\nKIDNEY\n>% PILLS,\n^L KlDNl\nV 8U^CKAcHeButs\n'(X     *?DER TRO1-1^   ,,al\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AD.\nPower Line Work\nto Be Continued\nWith the receipt of all necessary\neasements, work will commence\nagain Monday on the city's new power line between the city's plant at\nBonnington and sub-station.\nDuring the past week while the\nquestion of easements wai being\ndealt with, only a small gang was\nretained to carry on clearing operation!.\nRAIN AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 14.-Trall citizens were warned of the approaching winter Thursday when chilly\nweather prevailed, a drizzling rain,\nfalling spasmodically.\nON TWE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION   NETWORK\nCKOV    MCJ    CHWK    CrCg    CJAT\n630        730        7808        880        910\nCKV    CKCK    CFCN    CRCV    CFQC\n960      1010       1080       1100       1230\n6:00 Ona Hour With Tou\n7:00 Toungbloods of Beaver Bend\n7:30 Deutsch'a Oypey Violin, CBS.\n7:15 News (ex. CRCV)\n8:00 Lakebead  Melody,  Perclval\nKing, organ:   Joe  Ross,  baritone, Fort William  (exc.\nCRCV)\n8:19 The Fusbys (exc. CRCV)\n8:30 News (B.C. Net.)\n8:80 Books and Things, Winnipeg\n(except B.C.)\n8:48 Helen Davla Sherry, soprano\n8:46 Agricultural Talk   (CRCV and\nCHWK)\n0:00 Evensong, Vancouver   (B.C,\nNet.)\n0:19 Beverly Fife, baritone .\n8:30 Al and Bill, piano duo\nY\nSMOKE\nPICOBAC\nYOU WILL\nENJOY IT\n0:48 Three Belles. Dixie Stewart\n10:00 Ray Tyldesley,   (sxoept CRCV)\n10:18 Marshall  sisters   (exc.  CRCV)\nUnsolved Mysteries in\nCanada\nFIFTH\u2014Baffling Exit of Ambrose Smal\nBy JOHN C SCOTT\nCanadian   Preaa   Staff   Writer\nCopyright, 1934, by The Canadian\nPress)\nTOHONTO, Oct 14 (CP)-When\nAmbrose J. Small, Toronte theatrical\nmagnate, stepped into tbe shadows\nin the evening ot Dec. 2,11)19, never\nto be seen or heard of again, the\ncase went down into Canadian police history as the most outstanding\nin its records of itrange disappearances.\nBig rewards were offered. Thirty-\nthousand circulars were despatched\nto police headquarters all over the\nworld. Toronto detectives travelled\n22,000 miles to and from far corners\nof the continent on false clue:. Not\na substantiated trace was ever found\nof Small's movements since he passed the nearest street corner after\nleaving the Grand Opera House that\nDecember evening 15 years ago.\nStarting in a small way Ambrose\nSmall had become the owner of a\nstring of theatres in Canada. On the\nday he dispappeared he completed\nthe sale ot all his theatre Interests\nto Trans-Canada Theatres, Limited,\nfor $1,750,000. He received a cheque\nfor a cool million in connection\nwith the sale and it was deposited\nin the bank. That same day ne had\nlunch with his wife and promised lo\nbe home for dinner In the cvenifig.\nSmall had some further buslnen\nwith his solicitor that afternoon and\nso tar as known lett the theatre\nabout 7 p.m. The last person identified as having seen him was the\nnewsboy on the corner from whom\nhe purchased his evening newspaper! as usual. 2\nProminent as he was the absence\nof the millionaire theatre man was\nnot made public for two weeks. He\nwas in the habit of leaving the city\ntor short periods without notice. His\nrelatives and business associates\nwere not much alarmed until Dec.\n16. Then the facts were given to\nthe police and the newspapers.\nFirit reward wu offered in January 1920\u2014the amount being aet at\nS900. Thia was shortly afterwards\nincreased to $5000. In the following\nJune a police circular, with the authorization of Mrs. Ambrose Small\nand the Capital Trust Company,\noffered 150,000 for information leading to the discovery of the missing\nman, if alive, or $15,000 foe the\nrecovery of his body.\nFollowing various rumors a large\nsection of Rosedale Ravine was\nexcavated, the waters ot Toronto\nBay thoroughly dragged and hundred! of bodies examined, without\ndiscovery of the slightest clue to\nSmall's whereabout!. Al late aa a\nyear after he was reported missing\na steam shovel and 35 men were put\nto work on a section ot the ravine.\nSomebody had recalled aeeing a\nparty of men carrying something\nfrom an automobile to a dump about\nthc time Small disappeared. Nothing\nwas found.\nPolice received hundreds of replies to the circulars. Information\nregarding the sighting of men of\nSmall's description came from as\nfar away as Japan. All these \"leads''\nled nowhere in the direction of his\nrecovery.\nThe name of Ambrose J. Small\nstill dominate! the list of Canada's\nwayfarers to thc Port of Missing\nMen.\nSUM HAS A\nBRIDGE PARTY\nMrs.  S.  Ketchum  Has High\nScore at Pythian Sisters'\nAffair\nN.B.C.KPO NETWORK\nKHQ  KOW   KFI   KPO   KOMO   KJB\n890  620  640  680  820  870\n6:00\n6:00\n6:30\n7:00\n7:30\n8:00\n8:15\n8:30\n9:00\n10:00\n10:15\n10:30\n11:00\n11:09\n11:30\n11:30\nString Time\nSinclair's Greater Minstrels\n(KPO, KFI)\nHouie Party\nContented Protram\nLopez' Orch.\nAmos  _' Andy\nGene and Qlenn\nGarden Concert\nShow; Rush Hughes, M.C.\nNews Flashes\nRed Davis, drama\nMarshall's Mavericks\nPress-Radio News\nTed Fio-Rito's Orch.\ndrier's Orch. (KOO to Net.)\nOrgan Concert   (KPO)\nCBS-DON   LEE   NETWORK\nKVI     KFRC      KOIN      KSL      KOL\n570        610 940        1130     1270\n6:00\n6:30\n7:00\n7:30\n7:48\n7:48\n8:00\n8:15\n8:30\n0:30\n9:30\n10:00\n10:18\n10:30\n11:00\n11:30\nRosa Ponselle. soprano;  Andre\nKoetelaneU,   Orchestra\nThe Big Show  (KSL)\nWayne King's Orch.\nDeutsch's Gypsy Violin KSL)\nMoon God   (DL)\nDoctors, Dollars, Disease (KSL)\nMyrt and Marge\nHuman Side of the Newa\nBlue Monday   Jamboree   (DL)\nHarold Grayson's Orch. (DL)\nGeorge Hall's Orch.\nBen Pollack's Oreb. (DL)\nJoe Sullivan, pianist  (DL)\nTo Be Announced\nBill Jergen's Orch. (DL)\nBen Pollack's Orch. (DL)\n\"It'i not often I venture to offer free\nadvice. I generally wait until I am\nuked. My wife has trained me tbat\nmuch.\n\"But when it comes to Picobac I'm apt\nto loosen up a bit, you understand. I\nmuit have told hundreds of people\nabout Picobac\u2014thousand! maybe. And\nthey've thanked me for it! I've never\nhad a word of complaint. Nothing but\nkind words and best wishes.\n\"Everybody that tries it once realize]\nthat Picobac ii aomething different,\nsomething better. Picobac is a select\nBurley, you understand\u2014the pick of\nCanada's Burley crop, and a particularly mild . . \u2022 cool . . . sweet smoke.\nYou'll enjoy it\n\"And don't forget, you get more tobacco\nfor your money.\n\u2014\"Good for making cigarettes, too.\"\nNEW SEAL-TIGHT POUCH 15*\nHANDY POCKET TIN 10*\nALSO IN Vz-POUND \"LOK-TOP\" TINS\nIT DOES TASTE GOOD IN A PIPE \"l\nCOO k CJOR\nVancouver\n6:16 Mac and His Guitar\n6:46 News Varletlea\n7*00 Financial\n7:19 Doc Savage Adventures\n7:30 Gultarmony Boys\n7:49 Tom Maclnnes, talk\n8:00 News\n8:15 Don  Flynn,  pianist\n8:30 Professor Mlrzar\n8:48 Studio Program\n6:00 Cariboo Cowboys\nOther Periods: Records\nKOO\n700 k\nOakland\n6:00 String Time\n6:30 Safety-First\n6:46 Air Adventures\n7:00 Organ  Symphony\n7:30 Comedy Stars\n7:45 Stanford University\n8:00 Cliff Ne-sarro\n6:16 College Daze\n8:30 NBC. Drama Hour\n9:00 Waits Time, Klasaen\n9:30 Press-Radio Newa\n9:35 Orch.\n10:00 Clef DweUers\n10:15 Doorways to Testerday\n10:45 Orch..\n11:30 Jimmy Orler's Orch.\n370.5 m\n7900 w\ntenor\n970 k KJR 309.1 m\nSeattle 5000 w\n6:00 News Reporter\n6:30 Song Bag\n6:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Fireside Phantasies\n7:15 Romance of Rhythm\n7:45 Highlight Hour\n8:15 Carefree Capers\n8:30 Musical Auction\n8:45 Mountaineers, ET\n9:00 Reflections   of   Romance\n9:15 Moments of Melody\n0:30 Purple Ray\n9:49 Chamber of Commerce\n11:00 Woodwind Ensemble\n11:30 Playing the Song Market\n11:49 Lotus Land\nKNX\n286.8  m\n50,000  w\n1050 k\nHolly* ood\n8:30 Tour Dinner Danoe\n8:45 Air Adventures\n7:00 Watanabe and Hon. Archie\n7:15 Concert trom Lucca's\n7:\"0 The  In-Lawa,  play\n7:49 King Cowboy\n8:00 Intimate Moods\n88:18 Electrical Transcriptions\n8:30 Pluto, E.T.\n8:45 World Revue, E.T.\n0:00 News Service\n9:16 Mary Kirk, songs\n9:30 Crockett*\n10:30 Pete Fontnlll'a Orch.\nSALMO, B.C., Oct. H.-Pythian\nSisters held a bridge party at their\nhall when four tables were ln play.\nMrs. S. Ketchnel had high score and\nMrs. Andy McLeod won consolation. Those present were; Mrs. U.\nCawley, Mrs. U. Gretchfield, Mrs.\nJ. Paynt, Mrs. G. Matthews, Mrs.\nN. Harrop, Mrs. A. McLeod,' Mrs.\nVilla Wilde. Mrs. A. Bremner, Mrs.\nJ. Leahy, Mrs. W. Miller, Mrs. G.\nBradley, Mrs. S. Ketchen, Mrs. J.\nFraser, Mrs. J. Hearn, Mrs. C. W.\nLlndow, Mrs. T. Llndstrom, Mrs. L.\nJohnston. Refreshments were served\nby Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Wilde.\nMrs. W. S. Ellis, Queen mine, wai\na Nelson visitor.\nMrs. A. Norcrois of Nelson has\nJoined Mr. Norcross at the Reno\nmill where they wlll reside.\nMr. and Mrs. James Donaldson\nwere Nelson shoppers.\nMr. and Mri. Vic Grundy and\nfarnily of Creiton have moved into\none of Beach Campbell's houses.\nMr. and Mrs. Mills were visitors of\nMm. Mills' sister and brother-in-\nlaw Mr- and Mrs. B. Feeney.\nSALMO 8CH00L REPORT\nFOR 8EPTEMBER\nDivision 1:\nPerfect attendance\u2014Bill Bartsoff.\nMary Bartsoff, Joyce Bremner, Reynold Bush, Elmer Haakonsen, Olga\nHaakonsen. Edward Hearn, Kathleen Hearn, David John, Merlin\nJohn, Mary Kubak, Eva Maud Leahy, Nettie Leahy, Carl Llndow,\nMaxlne Llndow, Naomi Llndstrom,\nShirley Llndstrom, Gladys MacDuffle, Russell MacDuffle, Alan McLeod, Lawrence McLeod, Mona Miller, Harry Murdock, Maudie Stewart, Percy Wilde.\nPercentage of attendance\u201498.24.\nHubert ft. Perkins, principal, is\nteacher.\nDivision 11:\nPerfect attendance\u2014 Nick Beru\nkoff, Gerald Hanien, Keith McLeod\nDonald Wilde, Lois Browne, Dorothy Hansen, Jacqueline Johnstone,\nBilly Bonderoff, June Talr, Doreen\nGibbons, Billy Gray, Howard\nHearne. Billy Kubak. Anita Perkins,\nEmma Shoustoff, Jack Trimble, Gordon Gibbons.\nTeacher is, Miss E. _. Burgess.\nGALLOWAY MAN\nVISITS JAFFRAY\nGALLOWAY, B.C., Oct. 12-John\nAnderson, contractor for M. Dumont.\non upper Sand creek, was a visitor\nto hit home at Jaffray.\nThomaa Oakley. C.P.R. agent at\nFernie, waa a vuitor here, a guest\nof A. Hutchinson.\nAlex Haaillnger, steam engineer\nat the mill-plant here, motored to\nBull River.\nThe new planer building of the\nDumont plant is rapidly being erected under the direction of Ed\nDoucette. It will be a model addition, 50 by 70 feet, with metal\nroof.\nA. Hutchimon motored to Eernie\nand Hosmer.\nA masquerade at Jaffray wai well\nattended. Every corner ot the Eaat\nKootenay was represented.\nA Thanksgiving diner was served\nby Mr. and Mrs. Dumont at their\nresidence.\n. Harold Holm of Wardner stopped\nhere en route to the Flathead, Montana, oilfields, where, with several\nothers from Wardner and Waldo,\nhe ii employed.\nBob Dempsey of the lower Sand\nCreek ranch area was a business\nvisitor to Galloway.\nFred Hutchinson of Hosmer is a\nhunter of big game, with V. A. Caldwell, as host at his lodge on Riverside Drive, Galloway.\nStanley Wilkinson motored to\nFernie with Axel Jensen who met\nHOD\n PAOI THREE\nSLOCAN FAMILY\nTO RESIDE HERE\nMr. and Mrs. T.  R. Mosher\nLeaves   Slocan   City\nAfter 20 Years\nSLOCAN CITY. B.C., Oct. 14.-\nMr, and Mrs. T. R. Mosher who sold\ntheir home here to Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Pagura of Trail have left to make\ntheir liome In Nelson. Mr. snd Mrs.\nMoiher ind young son, Alan will be\nmuch missed by their many friends\nhaving been residents here for nearly 20 years.\nW. E. Graham, city clerk, Mre.\nT. McNeish, Miss N. Watson, R.\nHanna, Miss Linda Reynolds and\nT. R. Reynold! were visitors to\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. R. J. Johnson and\nfamily visited at the Meteor mine.\nK. Popoff was a business visitor\nto Sandon.\nMiss Muriel Madden was a visitor with friends in the valley.\nwith an Injury to hii iplne while\nloading poles here.\nMrs. A. Huthinson of Hosmer,\naccompanied her husband and wn\nto their camp on upper Sand creek.\nOne mldwestern American farmer\nhas attached a radio to his cultivator.\n)\u00a3T}nut$iiS$*ii drmnmna^if\nlfig_rflflaT*\"-i an **\u2022*___ \u2014to*\n2 MORE DAYS OF THE\nDEPARTMENT\nMANAGERS' SALE\nMONDAY and TUESDAY\nSCORES OF VALUES IN ALL\nDEPARTMENTS\nSHOP BY THE RID SALE CARDS\nAND SAVE!\n*tC\u00abtC\u20actt\u00a3tcc\nBuys an Island\nBETTY CARSTAIRS\nFamous Britlih motor boit\nracer, Marion B. (Betty) Caritalrs,\nwho says she cinnot afford to\nlive any longer In England and\nso has purchased a Wait Indian\nlaland and wlll renounce civilisation to live among the natives.\nThe noted heiress, twice challenger for tha Harmiworth trophy with an Income estimated at\n15000 weekly, sayi high taxation\nand the cost of living In England\nmake the move Imperative, She\nnld shs hn purohaied Whale\nCay Island In tha Bahamas and\nwould sail Immediately. Mlsi Caritalrs Is 32 years of age.\nHelp Kidneys\n_ If Kidney Trouble or Bladder v7\u00abtk>\nQ    **~~~ makM you Butter from Oettlnf\nUp  NlRhtd,   Norvousopu,  DlizlnoM.\nRheumatism, Stlffnew, Burnings\nA Smarting. Itching or Acidity try tho\nw Doctor'* preii-erlptlon Cyetex (BIm-\ntei). Mint md your trouble la t dayi\nor money back,   only 75c at druKlflta-\nThe Grand Rush \u2014 Not a Gold Rush\nBut the Rush for Our\nIS GAINING MOMENTUM\nWe are meeting with more success and gaining new customers because we are finding that service combined with\nquality and price are the essential factors in our increased\nbusiness.\nWe have the largest assortment of cards in the Interior\n... no two samples are the same . . .our policy for years\nhas been to study the individual needs of our customers.\nWhen you place your order with us you can rest assured\nthat you will get the card you ordered and they will be delivered on the promised date.\nTHE PRICES OF OUR CARDS\nRANGE FROM $2.00 UP TO $4.00\nPrinted With Your Name and Address\nWRITE  US  FOR  SAMPLES  AND  LET   US   KNOW   WHAT   PRICE   YOU\nWANT TO PAY\u2014WE SEND BY RETURN MAIL.\nPHONE 144\nAND   OUR   LOCAL   REPRESENTATIVE WILL CALL\n(ftp m$*\\*tm lathj Um*.\n(tmwtmial frutting lepartinfitt\nS*\u00bb_a\u00bb_\u00bb*\u00bb_\u00bb\u00bb_\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbi\u00bbai\u00bb_\u00ab\u00bb\u00bbi\u00bb\u00bb*>\u00bbi\u00bb*\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbr\u00bb\u00bbs\u00bb***'\n-\n \"-\u25a0\u2014\u25a0\u2014\n\t\n\t\n\t\npaoirou* <\nELKSLOSE\nTOADANACS\nIke Robb Is Star in the\nSecond Half of\nGame\nLeague standing:\nr w i\nColomboe   - _....\u00bb...-  J * \u2022\nACanacs    -\u25a0- - J } J\nBuffaloes -  J J >\nElks       \u00bb \u2022 \u00bb\nTRAIL. B. C Oct. lt-Bitketball\nf.ins were surprised Saturday night\nwhan the Adansca, comprised of\nplayers from lsst year's Olsnts and\nwoIks. two taama wblcb flnlahad\nthe 1933 leegue In cellar poeltiona.\nhanded a 28-32 dttaat to tht Bice,\nttrong contenders of the previous\nseason, tn a gtme of the senior\nmen's division of the Trail city\nbitkebtall Itagut, at tht Memorial\nhill.\nTht btttle proved to be an iven\nttrugglt at half time, both teams\nhaving 12 potnta but ttt Robb of\ntht Adtnact wu \"on\" with long\nahott and foutid the basket flvt\ntlmea for 10 additional points, jack\nBarnu addtd four snd B. Oreen 2\nto total 18 tor tht latter period\nagalnat 10 points by the Uki. 4 by\nMIcoUoo and two by Art Morrla.\nRobb wu high mtn of the garni\nwith 11 polnta whlla Nlcolton of\ntbe Uks scored  14.\nThe teams were:\nAdtntc\u2014J. Barnu, I, o. Mason,\ntte Robb, IS, K. Pope, A, Bryant,\nJ, and B. Orttn. I.\nElks\u2014W. WUllama 2, L* Nlcolton.\n14, Bd Haley, 2, D. Hartley, 4, and\nArt Morris.\nAah Baillle raftned.\nSCHOOL SOCCER\nRESOMEDJRAIL\nAntartics Win One Came tn\"\nLose Another; Small\nScores\nTRAIL, B.C, Oct. 14.-SM11I. winners of the first half of tha schools'\nflnt division loccer league, were\nretarded two points when they lost\nto the Antarctics 0-3 at Butler park\nSaturday morning. Antarctics were\nvanquished by the Arctics to the\ntune of 2-1 ln a second game.\n8. Wilton, D. Long and D. Mlcbaely scored the three winning goals\ntor th* Antarctica against the\nSnails. Wilson figured ln the scoring in the tilt agalnit the Arctics,\nwith a lone goal. S. Buna and A.\nLayton were the Arctic goalgetters.\nIn an exhibition game, played\nbetween the two league games,\nEast Trail school shut out the Central ichool 1-0, George Varicvald\nbeing the lone hero.\nThe teams were:\nSnails\u2014A. Bilesky, R. Maze, S.\nLeyland, T. Ramsden, H. Dembicki,\nR. Finlay, P. Zuk, W. Rae, E. Erlckaon, J. Williams and D. Somervllle.\nArctici-R. Kendall, J. Bilesky,\nA. Layton, G. Ayres. G. Simpson, A.\nMcKenzie, S. McLeod, R. de Biaslo.\nP. Buna, M. Mawdsley and R. Dean.\".\nAntarctics\u2014S. Saprunoff, S. Wilson, S. Zuk, G. Long, D. Webster,\nN. Forte, M. Georgetti, D. Michaely,\nH. Fransen, H. Smith, F. Androsoff,\nW. Allardyce and L. Stanton.\nMrs. E. D. Barrow\nDies in England\nWas Well Know in Kootenays\nEspecially in the Arrow\nLakes District\nBPENCERVILLE, Ont., Oct. 14\u2014\n(OP)\u2014Relatives in Sptncervllle todty rtcttved a cablegram from London, England, announcing tht sudden detth there Saturday night of\nMrt. Edward D. Barrow, wlft of Edward D. Barrow, ML A., for cbllllwack, B. C Mrs. Barrow wu formerly Ralphla Stltt, a native of Spen-\neervllle.\nMr. and Mrt. Barrow htd vlilted\nSptncervllle on their way to England, where Mr. Barrow had gone on\nbualneu. Tht; had planned to sail\nfor homt Oct. 20.\nMrs. t. D. Barrow Is well known\nIn tht Kootenay district as ahe resided for a number ot ytan at Nakuap before marrying Mr. Barrow,\nSht wu in ardent women't Initltutt\nworker while ln the Kootenays and\ntook a keen Interest in politics. For\ntha put seven or eight yesrs she\nresided at Chilliwack with her husband.\nPROFIMOR   DIES\nLONDON. Oct 14 (CP Cable).\u2014\nProfessor Air Arthur Schuster, prominent in philosophies! and scientific\ncircles, dted today. He wu (3 years\n\u2022f age.\nTORONTO PROS\nBEAT BUFFALO\nMONTREAL. Oflt. 14 (CP).\u2014With\nCharlie Conacher leading thtlr of-\nfenalTt, Toronto's profeuional football team came from behind to de-\nteat the Tonawandu of Buffalo u\nproftulontl footbtll returned to tbe\nMontreal aporta picture today at\nthe stadium.\nTrailing by uven polnta midway\nthrough the third quarter, Toronto\nswung Into action btfort the latt\ncbangt ot tnti and twice Charlie\nConacher crotud tbt Buffalo team's\nline for touchdowns btfort tht end\nof the gamt.\nTht final tcort wu 10-T and the\nTlctory waa tht Toronto aquad't\nfourth of tht uaaon without a\ndefeat.\nSCHOOLGIRLS\nTAKECANUCKS\nTwo Novice Teams\nBattle Ends With\nLow Score\nLeague itandlng:\nP WL\nOrioles 2   2   0\nSchool!    2   1   1\nJimmlee 2  11\nCanucks    2   0   2\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 14- Schools\nhanded a 13-7 defeat to the Canucki.\nJn a fairly evenly contested game of\nthe Trail dty basketball league,\nladies' division, ln tha Memorial\nhall Saturday night. Majority of\nplayers on boih teams were initiated\ninto tha realms of hoopdom this\nyear and lt was practically a matter\nof good fortune when the ball sank\nthrough the basket.\nThe tint quarter wai a struggle\nfor possession of the ball the baskets receiving little attention. L.\nMolina of the Schools icored the\nlone basket for two points in this\nperiod.\nLorraine Thorndale starred in the\nsecond quarter, making two baskets\nand a penalty shot for five more\npoints for Schools. Jean Hood added\ntwo polnti to give Schools nine\npolnti at halt time against the Canucki' two, scored by Margaret Burton in the second quarter.\nLittle change was made in the\ntally at three-quarter time. L. Grlp-\npich of Schools added one point on\na penalty shot and D. Williams of\nthe Canucki sank one ln the basket\nfor two points, the icore being 10-4\nfor Schools at the end Of that period.\nThe game wai balanced to three\npoints each In the last quarter, each\nsquid adding that count to end the\ngame 13-7.\nTeams were:\nSchools\u2014H. Mawdsley, L. Grlplch\n1, L. Thorndale 6, L. Molina 2, C.\nAlmquiit, J. Hood 4, H. Weir, O.\nChristante and Lena Mollne.\nCanucks\u2014A. Reynoldi, M. Burton\n2, M. Somervllle 2, D. Williams 3.\nW. Kendall, M. McLeod, A. Tether,\nP. Andrews and M. Negus.\nAsh Baillie refereed.\nINFLATION IS ON\nSAYS Oi. SENATOR\nWASHINOTON, Oct. 14 (AP) \u2014\nSenator David schall, Minnesota Republican, aucrttd today that \"despite censorship and denials from\nthe white House. Inflation of cur-\ncrency la no* underway.\"\nTht Mlnuota senator uld \"at\nleast 1150.000,000 In new greenbacks\nhave ltft the United Statu government printing preuu and are\nfinding thtlr wty Into circulation.\n\"Campaign doles to farmers, In\nan effort to capture their votes at\nthe coming election, are utilizing\na vast sum,\" he uld. \u2022 \u2022 \"As soon\nu election is over prices wlll skyrocket snd the farmer who thinks\nht la getting a big price for his\noorn and hois from the government\nwill soon find the money he receives worth only the paper It Is\nprinted on.\"\nDEANS COLLECT\nA COOL $5000\nCHICAGO, Oct. 14 (AP).\u2014The\nfamous pitching Deans, Dlaey and\nPaul, collected another 15000 today\nfor pitching, two Innings each for\npitching two Inning each for the\nChicago Mills, a semi-pro cluo,\nagainst Kansas City Monarch!, before 20,000 fans.\nMrs. Chanter to\nGo to England\nLONOBEACH. B.C.. Oct. 14.\u2014Mrs\nP. H. Wolferstin-Chantar or Longbeach leaves on Mondty night ior\nMontreal and will will on Oct ID\non the C.P.R. \"Dueheu of Atholl\"\nfor England.\nMrs. Chanter Is leaving soont-r\nthan she hsd planned on account\nof the illness of her father.\nNELSON TAKES\nJUNIOR RUGBY\nBlank Trail Squad by\n11-0; Trail Boys\nFumble Badly\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 14-The del-\npicable word \"fumbling\" teemed\nto be the outstanding feature ot the\nTrail junior ruggeri when they\nwere defeated by the Nelion Invader! 11-0 ln the opening game of\nthe Weit Kootenay Junior Rugby\nleague played at Butler park, Sunday.\nThroughout the entire game, Trail\nbarely exceeded five downi, fumbling being superb. Hardly a pasi\nwas completed preventing playi being brought into action.\nJohnny Jarret and Alfonio Smith\nwere the only two boyi that worked proficiently with their inap, G.\nBalfour, but their work wu of no\navail.\nThe NVson iquad fumbled con-\nilderably too. but their weight was\ngreater and Trail found it difficult\nto buck their line.\nTrail boys began to harmonlie in\nthe last quarter but failed to attain\nresults.\nNelson was by far the outstanding\nteam in the day's play.\nThe visitor! itarted otf on the\nroad to victory in the first quarter\nwhen Norman McLeod kicked over\nthe bar for three points, after the\nball was mapped about 30 yarda\nfrom the Trail goal line.\nJimmie Wolte, of Trail, rouged\nbehind his own goal line ln the lecond quarter when he wu pounced\non by Brooks and Bishop.\nThe eventful touchdown of the\nday was made by Bishop. Wolfe\nkicked from behind the Trail line\nbut the ball hit the cross-bar.\nBishop recovering for the five\npoints.\nJust before halt time Sam Martin\nrouged to Hank Stewart for another point.\nThe visitors gained their eleventh\npoint when McLeod made a deadline kick.\nIn the second quitter Buchanan\nand Basso cime to blows, Buchanan being lent to the bench for five\nminute! ard Basso retiring for the\nremainder of the itruggle.\nTpfllTiB wert!\nNelson\u2014Stan Honwlll, map; J.\nProudfoot and F. Kraft, insides;\nHank Su-wart and G. Stirzaker,\nmiddles: Bishop and Monroe, ends;\nAl Hawkins and Sld Horswill, line\nhalves; McLeod and Kirby, half\nbacks and Buchanan, quarter,\nBrooks, Jones and Lindsay were\nalternate!.\nTrail \u2014 G. Balfour, imp; Jim\nDonaughy, George Coupland, Rom\nMatthewi, Al Smith, Taring Orlando, ends; Skinny Smith, Chief\nGeorgetti, Fat Morro, middles; Jim\nZlnlo, Clon Hill, Mike Zerownay,\nEric Taylor, inildei; Sam Martin,\nJim Wolfe, flying wlnga; Andy\nWalker, Shorti Chriitante and Andy\nWalker, quarters; G. Scott, Corky\nKerr, full backa; O. Basso, Adam\nBrown, John Jarrett, Marcus Smith\nand Art Kelly, halt backs.\nLloyd Hallam refereed.\nAlberta Tar Sands\nMay Mean New Oil\nEDMONTON, Oct. 14 (CP). \u2014\nCanada tonight was waiting for the\ncompletion at Toronto of tests on\nMcMurray, Alta.. tar landi which,\nif luccessful, will mean, ln the.\nlanguage of in economic survey\nissued by the Alberta government,\n\"the complete independence of the\nBritish Empire for oil.\"\nThe survey was issued Saturday\nby the publicity branch of the Alberta government, and Howard\nStutchbury, Alberta trade commissioner, tonight confirmed the tests\nare being made at Toronto and\nthere is every indication of success.\nThree Fined for\nParking Riverside\nTRAIL, B.C.. Oct. 13\u2014 Appearing\nbefore Police Magistrate R. E..Plew-\nman of Rossland in Trail city police\ncourt Saturday morning, Carl Ball-\nlie and Ed. Grendrod were each\nfined $10 and cost! of $2.50 and\nEarl Johni'V was fined $5 as the\noutcome of charges of fighting on\nRossland avenue near the Colombo\nhall on the night ot October 9 shortly after midnight.\nThe three charg.d, elected summary trial, Baillle pleading guilty,\nthe other two pleading self defence.\nMAY FORCE EXPLORER* TO\nQUIT   COCOS   HID   HUNT\n-THI NEUON DAILY NIWI, NIUON. I.C-MONDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 15. 1984-\nYelvet and Tulle\nDOMINION AFFAIRS IN HAPPY\nSTATE-REVENUES ARE AHEAD\nPANAMA, Oct. 14 (AP). \u2014 Dispatch from San Jow, capital of\nCoata Rica, to the Star Herald stated a detachment of 100 soldiers\nand police hava embarked for Cocos\nWand to forfce a party of Ingllsh-\nmen to abandon their search for\npirate   treasure  there.\nCHRISTMAS SAILINGS *\nto EUROPE and the\nOLD COUNTRY\nCPEND Otriu-nii or tltt New Year Holidays with the old\n*\u2022 folks Take sdventa.e ol reduced lares to make that long-\npromised trip. ^Splendid accommodation* arc available lo sll\ndaiies. Each tailing scheduled in December will land you in\ntha Old Country in ample time for Christina) er New Year.\nFROM SAINT JOHN AND HALIFAX\n'Dae. I Dueheu ol York for Glasgow, Belfast or Liverpool.\n*Dac tl Duchesi ol Richmond lor Havre and Southampton.\n'Dec. 14 Duchess ol Atholl lor Glasgow, Belfast or Liverpool.\n'Dm. tt Montrose lor Glasgow,  Belfast or Liverpool.\n\u2022till h\u2014 Hilifii dir loUo*-*-****\ntt lwtw Mjor-Mtwi t,-i, mm mttt mm. **\u2022* wt, ttm ,\nN.  J.   LOWES\nCity Tid-a Age*       JWien, B.C.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nSapphire blue velvet tnd se*\nqulned tulle ara eomblMd to\nfashion this luxurious evening\ngown.\nThe front of the gown Is out\nsquare with tht stqulntd tulle\nfashioning an Intriguing cowl\nback and falling on to the slight,\ngraceful train.\nSequins trt very Important is\ntrimming tnd uttd In a differ-\nent manner thia aaaaon. They are\nworked In more supple fash len,\nmort like ftbrlct, with drapes and\nsoftly full sleeves.\nJUNIOR COLLEGE\nIS NEW SCHEME\nWoyld Span Yawning Cap\nBetween High School and\nthe University\nWINNIPEG, Oct. IB (CP). - A\n\"junior college\" to span the sometimes-yawning gap between htgh\nschool and university is a scheme\njust now entertaining many of Canada's educationalists. Several university presidents view the plan ln\nfavorable light while as many find\nin it Uttle merit.\nGathered here last week-end for\nthe installation of Sidney Smith ts\npresident of the University of Mai-****\nltobt, three presidents, deans and\nother administrative officers of Canadian universities held an Informal\ndiscussion on the \"junior college\"\nidea.\nIt was variously described as a\n\"finishing school for thost who\nnever Intended to enter university\"\nand a place where hopeful teachers\n\"resuscitated the apparently\ndrowned.\"\nThe principal function of the college would be to instruct and experience high school graduates who\nwere too immature to tae'le the\nuniversity course. It would also\nround otf the high school education with a cultural and intellectual\ntraining for students who were not\nentering the universities.\nDr. W. C. Murray, president of\nthe University of Saskatchewan,\nand Dr. R C. Wallace, head of the\nUniversity of Alberta, both favored the experiment.\nNELSON HAS A\nSUNNY WEE-END\nFriday's wet apell waa short lived\nand, clearing tip Saturday, the\nweather waa bright and gunny over\nthe week-end. Nelsonltes took advantage of the two bright days ln\nvarious lines of outdoor recreation,\nhunting, hiking, golfing and boating.\nSaturday's temperature* ranged between 43 and AS degrees, the rain\nfall of .03 Inch occurring early ln\nthe morning. Sunday the temperatures varied between 34 and 64\ndegrees.\nESCORT CHECK\nPASSER, COAST\nCharged with purchasing a car\nunder false pretense by offering a\nbogus check. J. Dolby, who was arrested at Castlegar by provincial\npolice lut week, leaves today under escort for New Westminster.\nThe coast constable, car owner and\nfriend, arrived in Nelson Sunday\nnight in connection with the case.\nThev are C. Brown, C. W. Muir and\nR. A. McDonald.\nNo Dates, No Tint\non Finger Noils, No\nCrossed Legs Either\n\u25a0 ILLIVILLI, Ont., Set. l'i\n(CP). \u2014 Peterborough normal\nsohool girls wlll not \"go Hollywood\" If tht dean's authority pre.\nvalla. Thty ire not permitted to\nmike datat ovtr tht phont! thty\nconnot tint thtlr finger mils md\nthay mutt not weir tletvaltti\ndresets.\nAnd that's not all\u2014The aet of\ncrossing the legs Is quite a serious matter at tht sohool. Glrla\nmust not cross their lags it the\nknees In tht dun's presence.\nOna girl with tlnttd mils ind \u2022\nlittle too much mtke-up wit or-\ndared from the classroom to waah\nher hands ind face.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, 8. C, OM. 14\u2014CtntMl\ncircle of tbe Trail subdivision, Women's cathoUc leagus, waa entertained yesterday afternoon by Mrs.\nCatherine Butorac, cedar avenue,\nRiverside circle met at tbt homt ot\nHrs. w. J. Sullivan, Bty ivenue,\nBut Trail circle at the home of Mrs.\nA. Psrnum, MllUgan HIU circle at\nthe home of Mrs. Dominic Dalolse.\nRoeeland avtnue, and Nelson avenue\ncircle at the home of Mrs. w. Oerard.\n...\nMrs. Leslie Whlton wu hoeteu\nat the tea hour Friday.\n....\nMembers of tht Women's auxiliary\nto St. Andrews church met Friday\nafternoon at tha Anglican parish\nhall to complete arrangement* for\na supper which wlll bt held at an\nearly date. Mrs. Thomas Jenkins\npresided.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nMrs. R. W. Oordon, Rlvertldt\napartments, wu hnttu thla week\ntt a charming tta, honoring her\nmother Mrs. Stlnson of Vancouver,\nwho Is her guest,\n...\nMrs. F* W. Jtckson wu hosteu\nFriday afternoon to membera of\nCircle No. 1 of the Women's u-\nsoclatlon ot Knoi Unlttd church.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nHostess to elrolt No. \u00bb ttl Mn.\nWUUam Barchsrd, Hanna Bench am\nCircle No. 8 wu entertained by Mrt,\nJ. W. Dwyer.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nIsabel Collins and Edward Collins\nan patients In tht Trall-Tadanac\nhospital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. K O. McTeer. Victoria strelt,\nleft Trail Wednesday tor Hillcrest,\nAlta.. called there by tht serious\nIllness of her mother.\nMiss Shirley COagra-ie hss been removed to her homt from tht hoipital.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nMrs. T. F. Cullen and MM. O.\nHowe were hostesses Friday afternoon to members of the Ladles' aid\ntt a meeting held In the church\nhall.\nELASOFF TAKEN\nON THEFT COUNT\nFind Missing Tools onHis\nProperty tt Shoreacres\nJohn Elasoff. Shoreacrea Doukhobor, waa arrested Saturday night\ncharged with the removal <of government road tools. Corporal Hal-\ncrowe of the provincial police force\nmade the arrest, and with t search\nwarrant, made a further Investigation of Elasoff's property, that disclosed taps and dies,-bit aeta and\nother valuable tools.\nFIRST OF A.CT.\nLUNCHEONS HELD\nNelson Associated Canadian Travellers held their first monthly luncheon meeting since the summer\nInterval waa declared last June, at\nthe Hume hotel Saturday.\nD.--pita a small attendanoe, the\nmeeting was an Interesting one as\nthe members, led by c. F. McHardy.\npartook In a discussion of the relief\nwork problem. Motions by Mr. McHardy were tabled until the next\nmeeting.\nActivities of the new Vancouver\nclub were described by Jack Warke,\na member of the coast organization\nand a visitor at the local meeting.\nRhodes to-Have Much\nHappier Task Lining\nUp His Budget\nOTTAWA. Oct. 14 (CPl \u2014 Outstanding events of the week ln government circles were reduction ol\ntbt lnterut rates on savings accounu froh 3% to two per oent,\noversubscription by aome 133.000.000\nof the 1834 refunding lotn ot \u00bb3S0,-\n000.000 which hu a maximum yield\nof 3.81 par cent, and tht announcement yesterday that revenues for\nthe first six montha of the fiscal\nyear were 130.000,000 greater than\nfor the ume period lut year, all\nof which combined to glvt en encouraging picture of Canadian economic conditions.\nHAPPIER TASK\nIndications were Finance Mlnlstei\nB. N. Rhodes would have a much\nhappier tuk when he present* the\nbudget next winter than he hu experienced since ht took office. A\ncontinuation of these condltlona for\nanother alx months would ensure\nsubstantial surplus on ordinary account and cut deeply into tht deficit which hu been shown annually\non euch extraordinary treuury drains\nu unemployment relief and railway\ndeficiu.\nWhile the government hn no\npower to bring about bank lnterut\nrata reduction! by legislative action\nIt can uu its good offices to bring\nabout such changes and the reductions which will become effective oft\nNov. 1 tre the tecond Mr. Rhodu\nhas been privileged to announce In\nthe lut two years. On M\u00bby 1, IMS.\ntht rate wu reduced from thru\nto 3Vt ver cent.\nRENPONCE EXCELLENT\nThe bank rate reduction came tod\nlata to assist the government ln\nIU 1934 refunding -responsibilities\nbut such assistance was not needed.\nTht reeponse of the people to convert their 6'i per cent maturities\nInto bonds of a much lower earning\npower was such u to bring great\nsatisfaction to finance department\nofficials, while the amount of new\nmoney offered at that rtt* was\nequally gratifying.\nPrime Minister R. B. Bennett,\nwhen he returns to Canada this\nweek-end after six weeKi abroad,\nwlll (lnd Dominion affairs in a\ncomparatively happy stata under the\ntemporary stewardship of Rt. Hon.\nSir oeorge perley. Relief agreementa\nremain to be concluded with Bu-\nkatchewan, British Columbia, Ontario and Quebec. Thoae with the\nother five provinces havo been completed In his absence, snd progress\nhu been made with tht remaining\nfour.\nSPEED liP CONFERENCE\nIt la anticipated one of the flrat\nadministrative acta of tht prlmt\nminister wUI be to apoed up tr.\nrangemenU for the Dominion-Provincial conference on constitutional\namendmenU. Several of the provinces have been slow to Indicate\ntheir feelings with respect to thU\nproject but it Is believed tht premiers have already dlscusaed tbt matter with their colleagues and prepared' their plans ot action.\nResumption of the Investigation\nof evllt In Industry and buslneu,\ncarried on last spring by t parliamentary committee headed by Hon.\nH. H. Stevens, minister of trsde and\ncommerce,' now elevatad to the status of a royal commlulon, has been\nannounced for Oct. 39. Maritime\nflahlng industry will be the first\nindustry to receive attention.\nC.  C. F. CANDIDATE\nPACIFIC COAST\nFOOTBALL\nOonaga 13, W. S. C. I.\nWashington lt, Oregon 9.\nSUnford 30, Northwestern 0.\nU. C. L. A. It. Montana 0.\nCalifornia 7, college of Pacific I.\nLoyola freshmen 14, D. C. L. A.\nIrishmen 0.\nStanford Froah 43, San Jom State\nFroeh  e.\nBrigham Toung V. 9, Utah 48.\nColorado Agg\/> 3, Dtnver U. 0.\nColorado Mlnea 0. Western Stat* S\nIntermountain Union 0, Montana\nMlnu 83.\nCOMETS BEAT\nHIGH SCHOOL\nEuerby of Forks Piles\nUp Score of 22\nPoints Rapidly\nLeague standing:\nP WL\nAcei  2  2  0\nCometi 2   1   1\nHigh School  2   1   1\nRovers  \u201e 2  0   2\nMELVILLE. Sast., Oct. 14 (CP).\u2014\nL. Swltur, of Rokeby, wu chosen\nCooperative Commonwealth Federation candidate ln the Federal constituency of Melville for the next\ngeneral election at a nominating\nconvention  here  Saturday.\nMR.  JUSTICE  ACTON  RESIGNS\nLONDON, Oct. 14 (CP Cable) .-\nHon. Mr. Justice Acton hu resign\ntd as Judge of the King's bench\ndivision of tht high court of Jus.\ntlee, a position he held since 1930\nFlashes From the Wires\nBOSTON\u2014Boston Bruin Cubs will\noperate in Canadian American\nleague.\nWHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS -\nGeorge Lott, Davis cup star, wins\nWalter Mortland challenge bowl\npermanently by beating Berkley\nBell. He will return the bowl for\nperpetual competition.\nREGINA\u2014Buzz Boll, starry winger of the Toronto Maple Leafs of\nthe National Hockey league and\nMaitland (Red) Conn, forward with\nthe New York Americans, lett Regina bound for the training camps\nof their respective team!.\nOTTAWA\u2014The majority of the\nplayers from whom Eddie Gerard\nwill shape the St. Louis National\nHockey league team reported for\ntwo workouts.\nZGREB, Yugoslavia\u2014Submerging\nIts former political feelings against\nthe country's king, this hotbed of\nCroatia's independence bowed its\nhead as the body of the slain Alexander arrived from split on its return to native soil.\nWASHINGTON-Police wait for\nthe time vault of bank of open to\ncheck the serial number on a $20\ngold certificate on the possibility it\nmight be one of the Lindbergh ransom bills.\nMADRID\u2014Francisco Largo Cabal-\nlero, said to have been the mastermind leading Insurrectionist forces\nIn the broken revolutionary general\nstrike, was arrested.\nSAN FRANCISCO-Although a\nmajority of the justices of the stste\nsupreme court were described by\nChief Justice William M. Waste as\nbelieving David A. Lamson guilty,\nthe high tribunal granted the Stanford university press executive a\nnew trial on charges of bludgeoning his attractive wife to death In\na campus cottage.\nST. JOHNS. Que. \u2014 Proposed\namendments to the British North\nAmerica act would be fought tooth\ntne* nail by the Liberals, Hon. Fer-\nnand Rinfret. former secretary of\nstate and ex-mayor of Montreal,\ntold a political rally of Liberals.\nTORONTO\u2014Tom Ewan. former\nsecretary of the Workers Unity\nleague and one of the eight Com\nmunists sent to Kingston peniten*\ntiary, was publicly welcomed to\nToronto\nBUENOS AIRES-More than 1\n000,000 persons jamming Palermo\npark and nearby streets today heard\na greeting and benediction from\nPope Pius, speaking by wireless\nfrom the Vatican, on the last day\nof the Eucharistic congress.\nSAN FRANCISCO- Lucius A.\nParmalee, whose 14-year career ss\nan alleged .\"Santa Clause\" forger,\nended in his capture by a bank\nteller's wife, must stand trial hero\nbefore extradition to Canada is\nconsidered, authorities said today.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Appointment of\nMayor D. J. O'Donohoe as general\nmanager of Canadian Industrial Alcohol company, Ltd., announced.\nYORKTON, Sask.-Williom Wye,\n84-yeai-old resident here, was dragged to his death when a horse he\nwas driving was startled by the\nshouts of a group of high school\nchildren in a truck and ran away.\nWASHINGTON-Establlshment of\na federal system of espionage on\nfederal taxpayers to report directly\nto Treasury Secretary Henry Mor-\ngentliau was uld to be imminent\nin a statement issued by American\nFirst, Irv.\nNEW YORK-Great Britain's policy of letting the pound seek its\n\"natural level'' described as the\n\"most constructive force in thc\nworld today' by Professor F. A.\nPearson, monetary adviser to thc\nUnited Slates government.\nNEW YORK - Bruno Richard\nHauptmann, the German carpenter accused of killing thc infant son\nof Col. Charles A. Lindbergh, will\nappear in Bronx supreme Court Monday to fight extradition to New\nJersey.\nOTTAWA- Wilh the halfway\nmark in the fiscal year 1934-35\npassed, revenues of the Dominion\ngovernment are far ahead of last\nyear. The department of national\nrevenue collected $20,000,000 more\nin the first half of the present year\nthan it did ln the same period a\nyear ago. Except for income tax\nand excise tax receipts, all forms\nof revenue were higher in the month\not September.\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 13\u2014Opening up\nwith a burst ot speed the High\nSchool novices ran up a small\nmargin at the beginning of the tilt,\nonly to arouse the fighting instinct\nof the experienced Comets and to be\nbeaten 20-48 in an intermediate\ngame of the Trail city basketball\nleague at the Memorial hall Saturday night.\nChucx Wyatt, buay bee of the\nHigh School, snatched the ball at\nthe tlpoff to score the first two\npoints. Bishop of thc Cometi sank\na penalty shot for one point, Sneaky\nLewis, who worked splendidly witn\nWyatt throughout the game, adding\ntwo for High School. Smith found\nthe basket to give Cometa three\npoints. Lewis was accurate in a\npenalty shot making the score 5-2\nfor High School after the first 10\nminutes. This was the last time of\nthc game High School led for Albert\nEuerby started clicking off the baskets and with points made by his\nteammates ran up a score of 26-12\nln favor of the Comets.\nEuerby who came to Trail with a\nsplendid Grand Forks basketball\nrepuation, proved himself in this\ngame, scoring 22 points. Cometa fed\nhim continuously with the ball and\nhis shots went true every time.\nHigh School only ran up eight\npoints in the second half against 22\nby the Comets.\nChuck Wyatt and C. Lewis of the\nHigh School each chalked up seven\npoints.\nTeams were:\nComets\u2014L. Evans 4, P. Smith 8,\nA. MacPhail 2, A. Bremner 4, A.\nBishop 6. R. Temple 2, A. Euerby 22.\nHigh School-Pat Haley 2,1. King-\nwell, S. Demblkl, C. Wyatt 7, K.\nWeir 2, C. Lewis 7, C. Graham and\nP. Thatcher 2.\nAsh Baillle refereed.\nSTIU FORTIFY\nSINGAPORE BASE\nSINGAPORE, Oct 14 (AP). -\nSingapore and the British naval\nbase at Stlctar assume a new importance with the re-opening of the\nnaval talks in London this week.\nThts base was the subject of comment by Baron Wakatsuki, Japan's\nformer foreign minister, when he\nsaid at the end of the Londt conference in 1930: \"I don't like to see\nBritain arming against Japan .\"^\nBritain's new Gibraltar of 'the\norient may be vulnerable now\u2014\nwhile construction is going on\u2014\nbut once completed admiralty and\narmy authorities say Singapore will\nbe u impregnable as tne historic\nrock at the gateway of the Mediterranean.\nMeanwhile. British military authorities are spending an additional\n$7,500,000 on fortifications and the\nroyal air force base is growing up\nrapidly along\u00abide the naval base.\nGRAIN STEALING AND\nPOTATO DIGGING NEW\nRACKETS IN ONTARIO\nENUMERATION\nBEGINS TODAY!\nHouse to House\nCanvass to\nBe Made\nThroughout the Dominion tela}\nwork wlll start on the preptrttlei\nof voters' lists under tbe new prt\nctdnre thtt does twty with 'tk\nswearing In of voters on rlectloi\nday. H. P. Ramsden tf Nettoi\nIs enumerator for Kootenay West\nI niter the new plan tbt Hats wll\nbe revised annually Just M la don\nby the British Columbia govern\nment.\nThlt year'i lltt ll tht first tl\npreliminary list. It will be posU\nln prominent placea for tht scrutti\nof the publlo tnd wtll be revla\non Nov. II, 14 tnd 18.\nA house to house canvtst tl\nbt madt by enumerators tnd lit\nthert will be t court of revision\nwhich further names miy be add!\nIn the preparation and paasage\nthis legislation every precaution w\ntaken to guard agalnat politic\ndiscrimination, and to this end tl\nElection act provides that repreaen\natlves of all parties muit be presa:\nat tht court of revision. At a furth\nprecaution against tht possibility\nunfairness, each political party repr\natnttd at tbt previoui election w\nbe supplied with t copy of the I\nao thtt It ean bt examined by\ncommittee with the closest scrutli\nOnly British subjects. Canadli\nor naturalized Canadlana with\nyear's residence In the Domini\nand three months' residence ln\nriding In which they register\neligible to vote ln Dominion ele\ntlons.\nOWEN SOUND. Ont, Oct. 14 (CP)\n\u2014An epidemic of grain stealing and\npotato digging which has baffled\nthe police for some time is thought\nto have been ended with the arrest\nof William Stout, Roy Girdler and\nHarvey Gibbons by Ontario provincial police. All three pleaded\nguilty in police court to this offence\nas well as one of breaking and entering by Girdler and Gibbons, and\nthey were remanded for sentence\nuntil October 19.\nThree Men Fined\nFighting in Trail\nTRAIL, B. 0H Oct. 14\u2014J\"or parking on Riverside avenue longer than\nthe regulation 10 minutes, Stanley\nMcKay, A. E. MacDonald and Jamas\nHardlngton were each fined |2 by\nPollot Magls'-ateR. E. Plewman of\nRoasland ln Tr\/Hoty police court\nSaturday morning.     x*\nBRAZILIAN, C.P.R.,\nNICKEL DECLIN\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14 (CP1-8\ncurities on thc Montreal stock e\nchange declined during SaturdaJ\ntwo-hour session.\nCanadian   Industrial   Alcohol\nlost *, at S*,.\nAlso on the downside were C.P.\nat 12 Vt. and Brazilian Traction\n11%, both down Vt. Nickel eased\nat 24'\/i. McColl-Frontenac, Canal\nCement common and preferred, ai\nSt. Lawrence Paper preferred we\noff tractions.\nBank of Montreal was strong wi\na four-point rise at 201. Steel\nCanada established a new htgh f\nthe year at 38% for a gain of Vt.\nSales 8872; bonds $12,250.\nKAPAK AND KRAFT\nSHOOT BIG BUC\nPete Kapak tnd Andy Kraft hi\na successful week-end hunting :\nthe Pass creek country, bagging\n360-pound, three-point buck. T\ntwo hunters shot the detr wi\nback and hid a big Job bring!\nlt out.\n\"Are Sin, Disease\nand Death Real?\"\nSermon Subje<\n\"ARE BIN, DISEASE, ArTf DEA1\nREAL?\" was the aublect of the La\nson-Sermon which was read ln Ft!\nChurch of Christ, Scientist, on Su:\nday, October 14th.\nThe Oolden Text was: \"The Lot\nla our Judge, the Lord Is our In\ngiver, the Lord Is our king; he Wl\nsave us\" (Isaiah 33: 32).\nAmong the citations whleh con\nprised the Lesson-Sermon was tt\nfollowing trom the Bible: \"He salt\nto the sick of the pair . I say unt\nthee, Arise, and take up thy bt<\nand go thy way Into thine houn\nAnd Immediately he aroie, took u\nthe bed. and went forth betn\nthem all\" (Mark 3:10, II, 13).\nThe Lesion-Sermon tlao Include\nthe following passage from th\nChristian Science textbook, \"Sclent\nand Health with Key to the Scrli\nHires\" by Mary Baker Eddy: \"Sick\nnets, sin and detth. being lnhai\nmonlous. do not originate In Oot\nnor belong to His government. H!\nlaw. rightly understood, destroj\nthem. Jesus furnished proofs <\nthew statement\"  (p. 472).\nHow Pin Smashers\nStand at Trai\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 14,-Standin\nof thc eight teams in the Trail clt\n10-pin bowling league, includin\nlast games played Friday night, tol\nlows:\nP W LPt\nLauriente's Grocery .88    11\n54 Taxi    12   8    4   1\nKootenay Hotel        .06    61\nTrail Meat Market    .9831\nCity Bakery     8   4    5\nUnion Hotel     8   3    6\nTrail Times     9  2    7\nSafeway     12   2   10\nFor Monday, October 15, th\ngame scheduled is Kootenay Hot<\nvs. Trail Times.\nHEALTH SELDOM COMES BY CHANCE\nTO PERSONS OVER THIRTY\nGood health cannot be taken for granted any more than a good\nIncome can. So for persons over thirty it is just as smart and business-like to plan to enjoy good health as it Is to plan to enjoy a good\nincome. And it's just as much a matter of plain common sense to\ncheck up on yourself.\nIn health, your shorter-mines are, at first, likely to be those\nannoying, not-exactly-well feelings. At such times, lt your blood\nwere tested, It would most likely he fouutl \"low in count\". Thia\nmeans a shortage of red corpuscle* and the corpuscles themselves\nahort of haemoglobin. Make up this double shortage, and you'll\ncome up to normal health again. Neglect it and serious result!\nmsy follow.\nObserving, In bis practice, the lmt\u00bbrtance of keeping the vitality\nof the blood up to normil, I Csnsdisn authority originated \u2022 blood-\nbuilding preparation which his been helping rundown people btck\nto health for nearly hslf t century. This preparation. no-k known\nthe world over is Dr. Wllllsms' Pink Pills, definitely Increases thi\nblood \"Count\" in the mtjority of caw, thereby restoring vitillty,\nsteadying nerves, Imparting atrength tnd toning up the whole system. So thl person over thirty who finds good health slipping, la\nwell advised to take at leut a 30-day treatment of this excellent\nremedy. Thi element of chance haa been practically eliminated in\nt treatment, because tests recently made hy an authority In a\n-' 40 people, proved conclusively by individual Mood ' count\nWilliams' Pink Pills certainly Improvi thi hetlth by\n[ the blood. Full sise box 80c.\n .\n\" \"    \t\nCANADA'S TOURIST REVEHUE\nUP BY $50,000,000 IN 1934\nTHI NILION DAILY NlVVt. NILH&I.C.-MONDAY MORNINO. OCTOBIR 11 1M4-\nRatt Heads Son and Bride on\nHoneymoon\nSuch Is Belief of the\nDirector of New\nTravel Bureau\nEXPECT TOTAL TO\nBE $150,000,000\nAdvance When Drop\nWas Expected in\nSome Quarters\nHALIFAX, N.8., Oct. It-Canadian tourist revenues wlll range\nfrom (30,000,000 to 190,000,000 more\nthli year than they did In 19S3 when\nthey approximated $117,000,000, declared D. Leo Dolan, director of the\nCanadian Travel Bureau, recently\norganized in Ottawa by the Dominion Oovernment. Mr. Dolan enpresi-\ned hii confident belief that the national income from visitors to this\ncountry would mount by those figures to at least $150,000,000 for the\npresent 12-month period.\nOVERCAME OBSTACLE\nThe opinion had been  held  In\nsome quarters, when the Senate\nInquiry Into the Tourist industry\nwas undertaken last winter, that\n1934 would aee a decline in travel\nto thii country ai a result of the\nchange ln the liquor lawi south of\nthe border and the holding over of\nthe World's Fair In Chicago. In\nspite of the passing of prohibition\nand the counter-attraction ln the\nMid-weit, however, movement of\nUnited States visitors Into this country hu shown a sharp advance during the lummer months. It ll anticipated that this Increase will be\nmaintained during the fall when\nhunters, comprising one of the most\nprofitable branches of the tourist\nindustry, visit Canada.\nDUE TO EFFORT*\nThe increase forecast by Mr. Dolan and in which Nova Scotia generously ihares, wai attributed by\nhim to the efforti being put forth to\nstimulate the trade.\nInquiries totalling 039 have already been received from projective tourists in 28 statei of the U.\nS. A., ln direct reiponie to recent tourlit newspaper advertising,\nhe declared.\nMr. Dolan Is on a tour, speaking\nin the Interest of better organization in \"selling Canada\" to the tourist and obtaining more of this lucrative buiiness for the Dominion. He\nstates that when three advertise-\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy MRS. MARV MORTON\nMenus, Recipei ind Hinti\nMENU HINT\nBREAKFAST\nOrange Juice Cereal\nMilk Toast Coffee\n_^H        LUNCHEON\nBaked Beans Baked Apples\nWhole Wheat Bread and Butter\nI   Milk\nDINNER\nNoodle Ring Filled with Lobster\nBran Muffins      Buttered Turnips\nCrisp Vegetable Salad\nCheese and Crackers\nSalted Nuts Coffee\nTODAY'S RECIPEI\nMilk Toast \u2014 Six slices bread,\ntoasted, two cups milk, two tablespoons butter, one-half teaspoon\naalt, pepper. Butter toast and arrange ln aoup plates. Heat milk,\nseason and pour over buttered toait.\nServe at once.\nBran Muffini\u2014 Two tableipoom\nshortening, one-fourth cup sugar,\none egg, one cup flour, one-half teaspoon soda, one-fourth teaspoon\nsalt, one teaapoon baking powder.\nCream ihortening and lugar together, add the egg. Mix and lift flour,\nsoda, salt and baking p wder. To\nthe creamed mixture add the bran,\nthen the milk, alternately with the\nlifted dry Ingredient!. Pour Into\ngreased muffin tins and bake in a\nmoderate oven (375 degrees F.) for\n20 minutes. It sweet milk is uied\ninstead of wur milk, omit the one-\nhilf teaspoon soda and uie three\nteaspoons baking powder. Raisins\nor dates may be added to the muffins if desired.\nBaked Beans\u2014One quart beans,\none-fourth pound salt pork or one-\nfourth pound corned beef, boiling\nwater, one and one-half teaspoons\nsalt, one teaspoon mustard, one-\nhalf cup molasses. Soak the beam in\ncold water over night. Drain, cover\nwith fresh water and cook until\nsoft. Drain and place in an earthen\nbean pot. Burry the meat In the\nbeans. Mix sslt. mustard and molasses and add one-fourth cup ot\nboiling water. Pour over the beans\nand add enough boiling water to\ncover. Cover and bake in a moderate oven eight hours.\nNoodle Ring Filled With Lobster\n\u2014One package noodles, two Ublespoona, butter, four eggs, three-\nfourths cup milk, salt and pepper\nand melted butter. When noodles\nhave drained thoroughly mix with\nthe egg and milk. Pour into a well-\nbuttered ring mold and cook ln a\npan of hot water ln a moderate\noven (375 degree! Fl thirty to forty-\nfive minutes. The ring ll thoroughly\ncooked lf a knife put Into it comei\nout clem. Loosen the edge of the\nmold with a knife and turn out on\na hot platter. Fill the center with\ncreamed lobster and mushrooms.\nmenu, depleting the various attraction! offend by Canada, were run\nin twenty-eight newspapera ln the\nUnited Stattet, from Massachusetts\nto California, the result was amazing. Enquiries were received on 1473\ndifferent Items in which the tourist\nwu intereited.\n\"We expect to Me more big game\nhunters come to Canada this year\nthan ever before,\" stated Mr. Dolan,\ndeclaring further that the big game\nhunter spends more money than\nany other clau of tourist\nFollowing efforts in the Senate,\nand the resulting enquiry, tremendous publicity wu given to the\nvalue of the tourist industry to Canada, said Mr. Dolan. The effort was\ngenerously received ln the United\nStatei, the pren ot thlt country\nseeming anxious to assist in Increasing tourist travel of Americans to\nthe Dominion. He expects that the\ntourists will be worth 30 to 50 million dollar! more to Canada this\nyear than lut, as a ruult of efforts\nbeing put forth to increase this traffic. Mr. Dolan made tt clear that the\nFederal Tourist bureau dou not\nwish to supplant any other organization now engaged In promoting this\nindustry, but rather to co-operate\nwith them in every way possible,\nto the mutual benefit of all concerned.\nSPLENDID MOVE\n. \"It is a satisfaction to me to lee\nan efficient Advisory Council already appointed in Nova Scotia,\nwhich is a splendid move, bringing\nin many business and professional\nmen, making for a practically perfect organization\" he continued, stating further that the success in Maine\nwu due largely to private individuals co-operating with the State organization. \"Every aectlon of Canada muit be organized, md not until\nthat organization ii complete, can\nwe hope to 'put it over' In the respective sections of thc Dominion\"\nhe declared.\nDr. Manion, mother tirclesi worker on behalf of promoting tour-\niit trade, haa called a conference at\nOttawa, to be held November 6,\nwhich will be reordented by all the\ntourlit organization! of Canada. Dr.\nManlon is anxious to get the views\nof those intereited ln the tourlit industry, and from this conference is\nexpected to obtain efficient leadership for the organization, to carry\non future work.\nKASLOITES BACK\nFROM CRESTON\n^SOCIETY\nw_L\n\u2022 PAOI PIVI\n>y   honeymooners   art   Mr. the   Canadian   National  Railways,\nand Mrs. Stewart   1. Hungerford, His wife is the   former   Dorothy\nseen here In B<\/nuda. Mr. Hunger- Brown, daughter of Mr. md Mrs.\nford Is the ion of the president of Arthur Brown, Montreal.\nHa\nand\nSBURG\nN BRAND\nCORN SYRUP\n(Jj^pure, wholesome;\nand economical table\nSyrup. Children love\nits delicious flavor.\nCanada Starch Salea Co., Limited\nKASLO. B.C., Oct. 14\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. B. r. Palmar md F. S. Rouleau\nhave returned from a visit to Cres\nton.\nB. Knliht Harris and J. K. Harris\not Armstrong are apendlng a few\ndays ln tbe city and district.\nCapt. C. 8. Leary, M.P.P.. was a\nclt; vUltor Thuradiy, leaving ln the\nafternoon to visit Alntworth and\nNelson prior to returning to hli\nbome In Nakuip.\nMr. and Mrs. 3. It. Tlnkeu bave\ntaken up their new reaidence ln the\napartment over Mrs. Wilson's store.\nDr. ud Uri. D. J. Barclay and\nthe latter's mother, Mrs. J. Kirk,\nwere Nelson visitors Wednesday.\nMembers ot the Kaslo volunteer\nfire brigade held a meeting Thursday ln tbe council chamber of the\ncity hall. Chief E. H. Latham preelded. Routlnt builneu wu quickly\nput through. There was a good attendanoe.\nMrs. C. F. Caldwell, a former Kulo\nresident, hu arrived In the city\nfrom Chicago and is the guest of\nher aon and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Charlei Caldwell, Jr.\nA. G. Pentland and L. Telfer of\nKlmberley arrived ln the elty Wedneaday and left Thursday by launch\nto vlalt Poplar.\nJ. E. Miller of Carml ll a visitor\nIn   town.\nWlUlam Myers hu returned from\n-  vlilt to Spoksne.\nMrs.. A. Ryan ot Retaliack wu a\nThursday visitor ln the city.\nA. Joadal of Johnson's Landing Is\na vlaltor In town.\nR. E. Oreen wu a vlaltor ln Lardo\nThursday.\nMrs. J. J. Skllllcorn bu Joined\nher huaband at Hall Cruk where\nhe la placer mining. Mrs. Skllllcorn\nexpects to be away several weeks.\nMr. and Mrs. Charlu Caldwell, Jr.,\nhave taken up residence In the R.\nSkllllcorn cottage on A avenue.\nPaul  Bratlng  hu  returned  from\nvisit   to   Vsncouver   and   other\ncosst points. ^^^^~\nP. Campbell of Nelnn wu a city\nvisitor Thursday.\nMr.   md  Mrs.  0.  Rasmuswn   of\nShutty Bench wera city visitors on\nThursday  and  Friday.\nRalph  Carson  came  ln  from   Ocr-\nANE il a \"nameless\" lamp. It will blacken quickly \u2014\n\" give lets light and cause eyestrain. But the lamp\nmarked EDISON MAZDA will guard the eyesight of your family.\nLAMPS\nrard Thursday and lett Friday tor\na short vlalt In Nelson.\nCapt. and Mn. 0. A. Wut of\nShutty Bench apent Friday In town.\nW. M. Cmlff and A. Jonea of\nRetaliack visited here Thursday.\nThe board of directors of the\nKaalo and District Fifteen Hundred\nclub held a meeting Thursday afternoon ln the offloe of the secretary.\nD. P. Kane. Pruldent E. H. Latham\nwu ln the chair. Routine buslnew\nonly wu before the meeting.\nRalph Oarland hu returned to\nTrail after a short visit with hts\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. T. Garland. \u2022\nMiss May Grayling hu returned\nto her school teichlng duties ln\nTmlr after a short visit at her home\nhere.\nMr. and Mrs. E. M. Bandllmds\nhave returned from a holldsy motor\ntrip through the Okanagan and\nprairie  districts.\nH. Olegerlch ts still confined to\nhis home recovering from Injuries\nhe received ln a recent auto accident when hla car went over the\nbank near Boswell while he and\nhis daughter, Mlu Elizabeth Olegerlch, were en route to Cranbrook.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 14.\u2014Mrs.\nWlUlam T. Trembath and Mrs.\nFranklin N. Ellis entertained members ot the Rouland Review No. t\nud their friends at a charmingly\narranged social evening at the home\not Mrs. Trembath Friday. Cards\nwere played, honors at bridge going to Mrs. T. White md the consolation to Mri. John Cox, while at\nwhttt tbe first prlu went to Mrs.\nR. Ackeriinan and the consolation\nto Mrs. James Porter. Delicious re\nfreahments were urved. The follow\nIng were preunt: Mrs. Edward Ter-\nalck, Mrs. M. M. Butorac, Mrs. Robert Anderson. Mn. Oeorge F. Beet,\nMrs. C. Corbett, Mrs. Henry Singer.\nMrs. S. Jewell, Mrs. M. Mlchaely,\nMrs. Fred Morrish, Mrs. E. Palmer,\nMrs Percy Palmer, Mrs. John Cox.\nMrs. Jessie Rutherford, Mrs. Kenneth\nMartin, Mrs. D. F. Mclntyre, Mrs.\nJ. A. Henderson, Mrs. Joseph Dupperon, Mrs. John Trlggs, Mrs. Harvey Lynn, Mrs. C. J. Mllee, Mrs.\nW. D. Willson, Mrs. T. White. Mrs.\nF. R. Bray, Miss Jciyiie Henderson,\nMrs. F. N. Ellis, Mn. William Cunningham, Mrs. W. A. Turner, Mrs.\nEdgar Jamieson, Mrs. E. Atkinson,\nMrs. W. F. McNeill, Miss Ruth Fern-\nstrom. Mrs. WUUam Coulter, Mrs. J.\nMcCullough, Mn. Bull Ltttley. Mn.\np. R. McDonald. Mn. M. A. Yorke,\nMrs. Alex R. Fltt. Mn. Rlddlngton,\nMrs. Oeorge E. Brown, Mn. WUUam\nBlRckwell, Mra. James Porter, Mn.\nPrank Stevenson, Mrs. Eldred Jewell.\nMrs. Harry A. Bathle, Mrs. James\nA. Wright, Mrs. A. c. Rtdgen. Mra.\nKsmblck, Mn. Buchanan, Mrs. W. T.\nTrembath and Mrs. Howard Ferguson.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMiss  Peggy  McCulloch   Is   111   at\nher home here.\n.   .   .\nWlUlam H. Red and R. O. Boyle\nhave   lett   on   a   hunting   trip   to\nKelowna.\na  a ,s\nMrs. W. A. Robertson of Nelson\nIs a guest of ber daubhter, Mrs.\nW.   J.   Ternan.\nMlis  Jeanne  Reld  !\u25a0 Ul  at her\nhome.\n.   .   .\nJohn French hu returned from\nviiltlng friendi In Lethbrlgde.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlis Florence Hartford Is visiting\nst Nakusp.\nill\nMrs. John Harry has returned from\nvisiting ln Burke, Idaho.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. Desbrltsery la holidaying at his\nhome In Vancouver.\nFALLS OVER BANK\nIN AVOIDING CAR\nMr. Kinghan Suffers Cuts on\nHead Saturday Night; in\nDazed Condition\nThli column is conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux All newi of I\nsocial nature, including recepUons,\nprivate entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, ate, will appear\nIn thla column. Telephone Mra\nVlgneux at her home, Sit Silica\nMn. James Joy was hosteu at a\ncourt whllt drive to the memben\nof St. Saviour'! Mothsri club and\nfriendi in her homa when the first\npriie wu won by Mn. Erickion,\nucond by Mn, O. K. Ashby. Mrs\nQ. A. King received the consolation. The hosteu wai wilted in\nserving by Mrs. Phillips and Mrs.\nGeorge Joy.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Oscinon of Erie\nvisited Nelson on the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. Kathleen Morris, who has\nipent the put year and a half at\nthe home of her ions ln Vancouver\nand Everett, Wash., hu arrived In\nNelson and is a guut at the home\nof her son md daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack Morris, Fairvie.v.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. L. Jackson, mining man ot\nYmlr, visited town during the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nMr. and Mn. O. H. Nelson of Trail\nwere recent visitors In Nelson.\ni  .  \u2022\nAmong Saturday shoppen wu\nMrs. J. A. Ragotte of Alnsworth.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. md Mrs. M. J. Vaneveld.\nKootenay itreet. have had u their\nweek-end guut their daughter, Mlis\nJosephine Vaneveld, who teaches\nat Winlaw.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Llndstrom of Ymlr visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRobert Ealea of the staff of the\nBank of Montreal, hu returned\nfrom Alnsworth where he spent a\nweek at Silver Ledge Inn.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA. Carlson of Perry Siding wis a\nrecent shopper in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn.   B.  F.  Whiteside.  Vlctorls\nstreet, ipent Saturdiv ln Trail,\ni*   \u2022   \u2022\nEugene Nideiu wai in Spoksne\nover the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nA. B. Fleener, pioneer Miident of\nKaslo, recently visited Nelion.\n\u2022 #   \u2022\nMr and Mrs. Arthur J. Choquette.\nJosephine street, spent the weekend in Spokane, guuts at the home\nof Mr. and Mn. Joseph Choquette.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nMn. M. Scally visited her renhew\nnnd niece, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Plsaplo\nin Trail Saturday. ,\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nH. _. Mlard. M.E., of Ferntt IS\na Nelion visitor.\nCanadian Armada Reached\nEngland Just 20 Years Ago\n30 Transatlantic Liners Steamed Into\nPlymouth With Canada's First\nContingent for World War\nWritten for The Cansdlan Preu\nBY CAPTAIN W.W. MURRAY, M.C.\nThe largest armada that had ever\ncrossed the Atlantic up to that time,\nthe grut fleet of transport! conveying Canada'i Fint Contingent of\nloldiers, iiutening to the aid\u00b0of the\nMotherland,  reached  English\nsoil\n' Mr. Klngbam, father of Mra. J.\nDiy, of Granite Road, suffered cuts\nto the head md a shaking up when\nhe fell down the bank on the Granite road near the Muraro home\nSaturday night when he stepped to\nthe side to let a car pau. Merlin\nLiversidge picked him up later In\na dazed condition. He wu driving\nhome with Fred Dewey when they\nsaw a man staggering along the\nmiddle of the road and he turned\nsharply to the side to avoid hitting\nhim.\nHe offered him a ride and, Mr.\nKlngham, still dazed from thl fall,\nstated he had fallen down the\nSilica street steps that lead directly\non to Fall! itrut.\nMr. Klngham wu reported to\nbe feeling quite normal again Sunday.\nPatenaude Suggests\nNew National Flag\nDesign Symbolic of  Nation's\nOrigin and Place Among\nNations, He States\nA. O. Gellnai and son Elmer ment\nthe week-end in Spokane, where\nthey attended the rugby game. They\nwere gueiti of Mr. and Mri. Max\nEltenborough.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMn. Hugh Ross. Annable block.\nleft yesterday morning for Gray\nCreek, where she went to attend\nthe funeral of J. Sibbald. whose\nfuneral takes nlace this afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. McGuire of Slocan City viiited\nNelson Saturday.\n^^___ \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nPercy Bennett of Procter ipent\nyeiterday ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nAmong shoppers ln town Saturday\nwas Mn. H. E. Cooper of Balfour\nand three children.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. H. Klngtttt of the Canadian\nPacific Expreu left yesterday to\nvisit in Elko and Edmonton.\n\u2022 e    \u2022\nMn. G. W. Ward of Valllcan visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. J. Vivian, Baker\nstreet, has as their guest Mrs. Edward Daly of Ymir.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nMrs. Gordon Redgrave of Trail\nwu in town Saturday.\n20 years ago yesterday.\nFor two monthi mighty forcu\nhad been locked ln a death grapple\nin France and Belgium. Frustrated\nin their first onrush which had been\naimed at encircling the armies of\nGreat Britain and France east md\nnorth-east of Paris, the Oermans,\nforced to an ignominious retreat\nfollowing the Battle of the Marne\nwhich ended Sept. 9,1914, had made\na stubborn itand on the Aisne.\nBitter but Inconclusive fighting\nhad ensued and, completely altering\nhis strategic plans, the enemy continued to extend his right flank ln\nan effort to reach the North Su.\nand. if possible, secure possession\not the French towns on tbe English\nChannel. Germany's moves were\nmet and checked at every turn by\nthe left flank ot the Allied Army,\nwhich wu the British Expeditionary force. Later ln the month these\nmovement! culminated )n thc long-\ndrawn out and bloody engagement\nknown u the Flnt Battle ot Ypres.\nThii wai the period during which\nthe SO trans-Atlantic liners conveying Canada'i initial contribution to\nthe Allied cause arrived ln England.\nAppropriately enough the port selected for their disembarkation was\nthat from which in the brave days\nof Elizabeth Sir Francis Drake had\nsilled to combat md overwhelm\nanother Armada more thm 300\nyean before\u2014Plymouth.\nThe enthusiasm with which the\nCanadians were greeted as the\ngreat convoy steamed slowly and\nmajestically up Plymouth Sound\nwu but the reflection ot the enthusiasm which hailed the arrival\nof the Canadians all over the United\nKingdom. The hills that encircle\nthis great harbor were thronged\nwith thousands of cheering citizens;\nthe ships in port were gay with\nbunting; the youngsters aboard the\nancient type training-ships crowded the decks and the yards to salute\nthe convoy, from overseas. To this\nwelcome the Canadians made like\nresponse.\nDisembarkation of such a large\nforce occupied  several  dayi, but\nu rapidly as the linen disgorged\nbattalions and batteries the troops\nwere whisked off to their camps on\nSalisbury Plains. There they were\ndistributed at first on West Down\nNorth and West Down South.\nThe men of Canada's Fint Contingent refL *t with little degree of\npleasure on tho exacting conditions\nof camp-life on the Plains. An unfortunate coincidence dictated they\nshould be there during one ot the\nwettest and coldest winters in their\nhistory. Accommodations were inadequate. The privations were a\nsevere tut, but the Canadians emerged from them with high commendation. In the monthi that followed they entered with spirit into\nthe training which wu to tranr-\nform them into a combat division\nunequalled in the history of the\nGreat War. ^^^\u2122\nCANADIAN WOMAN\nCAUGHT FORGER\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 14 (CP)-\nMrs. Charles W. Wilson, who effected the capture ot Lucius Albert\nPirmalee. so-called \"Santa Claus\nforger,\" at Sauialita, Cal.. on Friday,\nii a Canadian woman. She came to\nPort Kelli, B.C., from Calgary\nwhere ihe wai bom, and went to\nSan Franciico. There ihe married\nCharlei Wilson two yean ago. Before her marriage ihe wis Miss\nNorah Lawrence.\nWilson wu employed In the Victory Square branch of the Bank of\nCommerce in Vancouver from 1018\nto 1922. when he wu transferred to\nSm Francisco. He Joined the bank\nIn the old country in 1910, eoming\nto Canada shortly afterward. He\nwent overseas as a machine gunner,\nlost a leg at Vimy Ridge and later\nspent some time In hospital in Toronto before rejoining the bank. A\nbrother, Frmk, is a teller in the\nmain branch of the bank here.\nMn. Wilson effected the capture\nof Parmalee in Sausalito, Cal., Friday, when she flung her arms around\nhis neck to hold htm, after her husband had pointed him out. Parmalee\nhad long been sought by Canadian\nand United States police on forgery\nchargu. ^^^^^^\nJ. O. Patenaude, Nelion builneu\nman hid lujgeited a deilgn for a\nnew national flag for tha Dominion of Canada and hai om\nto ihow what it would look like.\nFriday It wai hanging in the\nbuilneu office of the Nelion Dilly\nNewi.\nThe design, states Mr. Patenaude,\nis symbolic of the nation's origin\nand place among the nations of the\nworld.\nThe Fleur de-lls indicates that\nCanada wu first settled by the\nFrench and Is, therefore, a tribute\nto the French Canadians. The red\ncross of St. George is symbolic of\nEngland. The upper left hand blue\nfield typifies both the rising and\nletting sun; rising on the Atlantic\nand setting in the Pacific ocean.\nThe nine mn'i rays point to the\nnine golden stars, whlcn symbolize\nthe nine Canadian provices, while\nthe golden sun and stars both suggest that gold ii found throughout the Canadian Dominion, from\nit! eastern to iti wutern shores. The\nfields are azure blue, which suggest\na northern sky; the entire color\nscheme Is both pleasing and symbolic ot purity* besides the colors red,\nwhite and blue are the national colors ot Great Britain, France and\nNorth America.\nThis design, he statei, is recommended for Its simplicity, since the\nflag may be made by the manufacturer without printing and exclusively through stlching its various\nparti together. To attach any other\nemblems in the fields of the flag\nwould not only mar iti limpllcity\nmd beauty, but alao increase the expense of manufacture, he concludes\nMr. and Mrs. M. Downie of South\nSlocan spent Saturday in Nelson.\n* *   *\nMrs. H. Forsberg. Granite road,\nhas returned from spending a week\nat New Denver where she was a\n[uest of her daughter, Miss Blanche\n.'orsbcrg, matron ot the Slocan Community hospital.\nC. P. Perry of the Reno mine visited Nelson Saturday.\nWilliam Greenwood of Slocan City\nand his brother spent Saturday in\ntown.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. G. O. Stratton, Terrace apartments, have as their\nguests Mr. and Mn. P. G. McLean\nof Vancouver. Mr. McLean is inspector of C.P.R. telegraphs.\n^^B *   \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Elsie Truseott. who teaches\nat Alnsworth, spent the week-end\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. W. M. Vance. Rosemont. have had as their .wests M:.\nand Mrs. S. V. Prycc of Calgary.\n* *   \u2022\nMn. F. H. Chanter of Longbeach\nwai in the city Saturday and leaves\nthis morning via the C.P.R. for a\ntrip to England.\nDonald McKenile of Toronto\nspent the week-end in town.\n|. a   I\nRecent viilton ln the city included Mri. J. SeweU of Sunshine\nBay.\ne   \u2022   \u2022\nD. D. McLean motored to Trail\nSaturday.\nSOBBYGETS\n\"PUNISHED\nJ0HMIWMT COCONUT P\u00ab!\n1WI\u00bbWHISHi WIU I OON'T.\ntttt \u00ab SBU BlAMl-\nacocoww      v _V\/\nIMAM    _^ >_\u2022**\u00a3\/\nCANADIAN    GENERAL   ELECTRIC    CO.\n1*44\nLimited\nDEALERS  IN   CANADIAN   GENERAL ELECTRIC HOME APPLIANCES\nPhone 838\nSTANDARD ELECTRIC\n515 Baker St.\nA Yorkshire laborer hu died leaving a fortune only \u00a31 short ot\n\u00a31200. A plasterer of the same\ncounty has died leaving \u00a31876. The\nOld Country Is not so bad for tba\nworkman after all.\nMore than half a million pounds-\nSSI 1,853 to be precise\u2014wu collected\nlut Poppy Day, according to the 1933\nreport Just Issued. Over 35.000.000\npoppies of various types were made\nfor the occasion.\nLft\u2014\nCanmore Briquettes\nTHE GUARANTIED FUEL\nCUT FUEL COSTS\nSootiest, smokeless and clean with 14,000 B.T.U.'s\nptr pound. MORE HEAT PHI DOLLAR!\n- Try thtm and bt satisfied.\nSOLD ONLY IY THI\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPHONE 33     ^^^^^\u2122\nJOHN\/\nHHtH-VKMUW\nJOWf-TOVOSt\nROOM SIR,'\nWtll. TOUtU.W Kl IT VDIM HM-\nMqtM'tfRToecaimiTitt\nWitt \u00ab>T TOM TAUGHT THAT\nWtl|TVS.'TMt\u00ab*JTMWtY\/\ntoowt\nSUPPOSE MOU\nCDKftSUMO\ncanD'j\u00bbPCP.'\nBRIBED?\nWHAT\nOVA MUM\nMIKPC\nWtU-\nIHAVENT\nutuautW\n[coconut pie\nVIT-Stt?\nHW-CVBOl\/\nTHISISSWU\nPIl\/lOKWHltl\nIWT tw mow,\nYOU VtLL-\nUNDtttraNor\nMV MOUTHS\nT00FU.L   j\nTYElt    1\nWHAT a miracle-worker it\nCoconut 1 Coconut can make\nthe humblest cake so lovely, so\nglamorous, that all table chatter\nwill come to a little hush of sheer\npleasure at the sight of HI\nBut the coconut you use must\nlook creamy, moist, tender\u2014\nmust taste deliriously full-flavoured and fresh, That is why\nBaker brings Baker's Southern\nStyle Coconut to you. it comes tit\na tint Here is the most modern\nof packaging to bring you as luscious, creamy-moist coconut as\nwhen it was shredded. Ask your\ngrocerfor Baker's Southern Style\nCoconut today and serve your\nfamily a \"party\" cake.\nBaker's Premium Shred Coconut ia the finest form of sugar-\ncured, shredded coconut in\ntriple-sealed cartons. The improved Premium Shred package\nis waxed and ^^^^^^\nglassine-\nwrapped keeping coconut\nmeaty and\ntender.\nBatter's Coconut\nts Made in\nCanada.\nAta-M\nBAKERS COCONUT\n  '\u2014\t\nPACE SIX-\nJfalamt Batty Krtua\nEtUbllthed AprU 21 1903.\n\"Interior of British Columbia'* Family Newspaper\"\nALL THI NIWS WHILI IT IS NIWS\nPubllihed   every   mornlni  except   Sunday   by\ntha NIWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n310  Baker   Street.  Nelaon,  Brltlth  Columbia.\nPhont IK Private Exchange Connecting all Department!\nMember of tba Audit Bureau of Clrculttloni and\nTbt Canadian Preu Letted Wire Newt Service.\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1934.\nU.\nS. DETECTIVE WORK DESERVES\nCOMMENDATION\nAt a Ume when American administration of justice\nis under universal criticism, in the States and abroad, it\nmay be fair to draw attention to some of the excellent\nwork done by American police and detective authorities.\nThe Lindbergh kidnapping case furnishes several examples worth noting.\nAt the time of the crime, R. C. Farrar, expert on\nquestioned documents, was able, by observation and deduction, to assure the authorities that one of the men involved was a \"methodical German carpenter.\" His reasons were that a methodical character was indicated by\nthe fact that perforations in the three notes received\nwere in exactly the same geometrical relationship; that\nthe nationality was indicated by the language forms\nused, and that the occupation was indicated by the fact\nthat the perforation had been done with a rough-edged\ninstrument like a carpenter's file. Confirmation of the\nguess at the occupation was furnished by the fact that\nthe ladder used was of a special kind, made by one skilled\nin carpentry work. The man now in custody, and faced\nwith an increasing mass of circumstantial evidence, is\na \"methodical German carpenter.\"\nAnother excellent piece of constructive detective\nwijrk was done by the artists engaged by the department.\nAs each description of the wanted man came in an artist\nconstructed a sketch embodying the features described.\nWhen enough of these sketches had been accumulated\na composite picture was made representing the artist's\nfinal guess at the appearance of the subject. This sketch,\nbased entirely on a series of word descriptions from\nvarious sources, has been found to correspond closely\nwith the actual photograph of the man now held.\nIt may be added that, as stated in a radio broadcast\non a recent evening, in 27 cases of kidnapping that\nhave occurred since the Lindbergh tragedy, two men\nhave committed suicide with the police hot on their trail,\ntwo have been executed, and 11 have been sentenced to\nlife imprisonment. This, when the difficulty of apprehending criminals in the States is considered, would\nseem to constitute a pretty fair police achievement, and\nit should be noted when police methods in the States are\nunder critical review.\nA SILENT BOMBER\nNow comes the announcement that Britain's royal\nair force is fitting silencers to its latest night bomber\u2014\nthe cheering sort of news to interest civilians everywhere,\nsayB the Manchester Guardian, which asks what it means.\nChiefly, it says, it means that defence against air attack,\nalready largely powerless, is on its way to becoming entirely so.\nThe ordinary individual will want to know how it\nis possible to defend oneself against an airplane which\none can neither see nor hear. Such a consummation may\nnot be a prospect of today or tomorrow; it is certainly\ncoming, for the trend of silent flight is irresistible. Commercial aviation demands it for the comfort of its passengers. The general public will also demand it shortly\nwith the extension of the air routes and the growing\namount of flying that is done over crowded districts.\nMilitary aviation is thus benefiting by all the research\ncarried out for civil purposes besides doing plenty of its\nown.\nThere are two chief sources of aircraft noise; the\nexhaust and the propellor. The first, experts point out,\nis being reduced by the design of silencers which are not\ntoo heavy and which do not reduce greatly the output of\npower from the engine. It is this equipment which is\nbeing fitted to the new R.A.F. bombers. The engineers\nare curtailing the noise of the propellor by reducing the\nspeed at which the propellor-tip revolves, by using three\nor four blades instead of two, and by a general study of\npropeller design. Now it is on the bomber's noise that\nall defence against it chiefly relies. Each searchlight\nused in Britain's home defence today has a \"sound locator,\" without which it is largely blind. This machine\nreceives the sound of the enemy's engines, plots his approximate position and course, and gives warning both\nto the searchlights and to the anti-aircraft guns. It is\nsaid that the sound locators can hear hardly anything at\nall of machines fitted with the new silencers when they\nfly above 10,000 feet. Modern bombing may be done at\n15,000 feet high.    '\nHere we get one more macabre assurance for the\nwars of the future\u2014assuming the world has not learned\nits lesson and is intent on committing suicide.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n  Dtlly\n16, 1124)\nA. F. Sandberg of Lumberton and\nMiss I. L. Johnson of Cranbrook\nwere married by Rev. F. R. G.\nDredge at the Presbyterian manse\nyesterday afternoon.\n*   \u2022   e\nMiss Miry Scanlan, who leave!\ntomorrow for Vancouver to reside,\nwu presented with a handsome\nclub bag by Manager W. S. King\non behalf of the staff ot the Hudson's Bay company, where she had\nbeen employed for about 10 years.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. S. Horswill has been called\nto Winnipeg by the serious illness\nof her brother, John A. Partington.\nMrs. Honwlll had been planning\nto go to Selkirk, Man., to attend\nthe golden wedding anniversary\nof her parents.\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nBy J. B. C\nHERE'S A LAUGH\nPenons suffering from melancholia ihould be cheered up after\nreading a recently published work,\n\"Latest Howlers.\" Here are a few\nsamples taken from it:\n\"A census taker is a person who\ngoei from house to houie increasing\nthe population.\n\"A catacomb it the thing on top\nof the rooster's head.\n\"Skim milk comes from a young\ncow in the summer, and condenseu\nmilk from an old cow in the winter\n\"Hansom was the name of a famous good-looking cab driver.\n\"The Pilgrim Fathers left the\nDutch people on account of their\nlanguage.\n\"Napoleon escaped from Melba,\n\"Edgar Wallace waa chosen King\nof Scotland by Edward the First.\n'The Merry Monarch wat Old\nKing Cole.\n\"A republic ii a place where nobody can do anything in private.\n\"Lloyd George is tne prime mixture of England.\n\"The Yellow Peril is a racing car.\n\"The three parts of the human eye\nare the pupil, the beam, and thc\nmote.\n\"Bigotry is en obstinate attachment to more than one wife.\"\nAmong some gems of definitions\nare these:\n\"Hone-power is the distance one\nhone can carry a pound of water\nin an hour.\n\"An equilateral triangle is one\nthat looks the same whichever end\nyou stand it on.\n\"A tripod is an extinct animal with\nfour legs and a trunk buried in\nthe ice.'T\n* \u00ab   \u2022\nyes, you Could be\nhanged for it\nA young lawyer, boarding a full\ntram, stood next to a young lady\nwho was holding on,to a strap. As\nthe car started to lurch, he caught\nat the strap, closing his hand fiimly\non that of the maiden, who sniilins-\nly remarked: \"Evidently we hang\ntogether.\"\n\"Capital punishment,\" remarked\nthe lawyer.\nt  *. a\nPROBABLY 80\nFrom Regina comes news of a\nman who hasn't said a word to his\nwife for three years. He's probably\njust waiting for her stop talking.\nEDUCATIONAL ITEM\n\"If Minnie, in Indian, meani water,\nwhat doei Minnesota mean?\"\n\"Soda water, of course, you poor\ngoof!\"\n\u2022 *   *\nOH, YEAH1\nNews item sayi a questionnaire\nsubmitted to girl students at Northwestern university in Illinois revealed that only one of WO wished\nto marry. Nevertheless, a nervous\nbachelor with a good income would\nbe well-advised not to propone to\nany of the other 399.\n\u00bb   *   \u2022\nA DIRTY STORY\nBath tub falls injure 120,000 Americans each year, says a government\nreport. That beats rugby football,\nwhich many regard as another dirty\ngame.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. B.C--MONDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 15. US4\nMORE SCREEN FLICKERS\nBy OERALD S. REES\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nHOW  CAN  SOUTH   GO  GAME?\nSouth Is the declarer. The contract is three no trumps. The opening lead is the eight of spades. How\ncan game be won against any subsequent defence by East and West?\n\u2666 AS\ntan\n\u2666 J94\n44111\n\u2666 KJ108\n7\nVQ82\n\u2666 Q5\n\u2666 1071\nw.\n\u00a510 7 4\n\u2666 K SS\n+ KJ96\nMil\n<?AK\u00ab\n\u2666 A 10 8 71\n\u2666 A4\nWin the fint trick with the Q of\nspades. Dummy's ace will win a\nsecond spado trick. Two spade\ntricks, two heart tricks and one\nclub trick are only five. Four\nadded tricks are required to fulfil\nthe contract. The one possible way\nto win those four tricks appears to\nlie in diamonds. Provided West\nhas either the K or Q of diamonds,\nbut not both, also provided West's\nsingle honor is once guarded, so\nthat he cannot afford to pass his\nfirst chance to win a diamond trick,\nthe other high diamond honor can\nbe picked up, giving game. If East\nholds both missing honors game\nalso can be won, by giving East a\nsingle diamond trick, then coming\nthrough his other honor and picking it up. I could see no other certain way ot making game.\nLead a low diamond. Unless West\nwins with his Q the ace can pick\nhim up. He saw that it would be\nunsafe to pass the trick, and won\nwith his Q. Then West led his seven\nof spades. Dummy won with the\nace. Thc J of diamonds was led\nthrough East's K. He refused to\ncover, it gave mc a bad moment,\nuntil I saw West drop the five, and\nknew that East's K would drop thc\nnext round. The next diamond lead\nnicked up East's K. West let go his\nlowest club. The sixth and seventh\ntricks were run off in diamonds.\nWest let go two more clubs. Dummy discarded a club and a heart.\nEast echoed in clubs.\nAt the eighth trick T led the ace\nof hearts. All followed suit. I led\nthe ace of clubs. As expected, West\nshowed out, by discarding the ten\nof spades, to prevent my picking up\nhis Q of hearts, lf he let go a card\nof that suit.\nAt the tenth trick I led my last\nspade, giving' West the tenth and\neleventh tricks. Dummy let ro its\nlast two clubs. East followed suit\non the first spade trick, then let go\nthe J ot clubs on the second. I dis-\nLooking back over his periodic at*\ntendance! at tbe Movies at a self\nappointed critic, the writer find!\nthat a dominant impression remains\nthat there is reaUy too much talking\nby the audible shadows of the screen\nspinning their idle fables for the\nmillions who attend a picture show\nat least once a week. Surely the\nessence ot a film in action and the\nfunction of the dialogue should be\nto make the story comprehensible,\nand not to be the all-in-all, and the\nend-all of the entertainment. European films, one gathers, have learned the art of reticence in this respect: Dialogue is a secondary matter,\nand the quality of the acting and its\neffect on the audience are enhanced\nthereby. Many of the talkies apart\nfrom their excessive vociferations\nare too noisy, and wme of the\nsinging too can be classed in this\ncategory instead of a musical in a\nfilm, a little singing can easily be\ntoo much, especially ot the atandard \"movie\" quality. A person goes\nto the cinema with a different frame\nof mind that he takes to a concert\nhall. He wants speed, variety and\nmovement: and it is the nature of\na song to demand tedious concentration upon the singer, and an endeavor to concentrate on the average screen warblers invites a mental\naberration. There is too much extraneous noise about many films\nthat leads to distraction. A recent\nhistoric film with the sophisticated\nEmpress of Russia providing a stellar role (a good Box-office movietone, but poor history) was marred\nby the incessant clanging of bells.\nIncidentally also, it was an awful\nhodge-podge of sets, full of gargoyles, confused episodes and actions so vague and fleeting that one\nhardly knew or cared what happened. It is worthy of record that this\none of the few films (another was\nthe \"Henry VIII\" saga) where none\nof the performers was compelled to\ndally with a modernistic telephone-\nit must have demanded a great restraint on the part of the production\npersonnel; nearly every film seems\nto demand an inordinate amount of\n\"dialling,\" and no number ever\nseems to be priorly engaged with\nfilmic telephone calls.\nTHE KING'S ENGLISH\nSome day, the movie moguls of\nCelluloldia will realize that all English people of the so-called \"lower\nclasses\" do not speak a mixture of\nCockney and Tyneside, and that it\nis not necessary to portray the interior of an English country mansion of the also so-called \"upper\nclasses\" as covering not less than\nthree-quarten of an acre with embellishment! that make it resemble\nan annexe of the Paris Louvre. Still,\nthe writer admits that he does envy\nthe owner of a De Mille's idea of a\nmillionaire's bathroom. One thinks\nthat the British films would be more\npopular in Canada if the notable\nOxford accent could be modified;\nthere would not be so many blank\nlooks of despair settling on the faces\nof those who have planked down\ntheir loose change for an evening's\nentertainment. It is mainly as artificial as the rest of the illusion of\nthe silver sheet.\nMONKEY TALK\nNoisy talkies seems to be quite\nin the vogue, A more recent offering was punctuated throughout with\nharsh jungle noises, the gibbering of\ntoo-human apes and the lusty yodelling of a Tarzan, the originator of\nthe near-Nudist cult, who apparently has now set up a domestic menage\nin the tree tops of darkest Africa,\nthough I dare swear-that his leaf-\nwrapped penthouse is but a cocoa-\nnut's throw from the Hollywood\nboulevards. Pity the mechanics in\nthe projection booth having to absorb all this noise for hours on end.\nVOICE CRYING IN\nWILDERNESSS\nAnd not all the noise emanates\nfrom the voice-box at the back of\nthe purposely perforated screen, and\nwe are confronted with the contrast\nbetween the marvel of our scientific\nachievements, and the childishness\nof an old Nelson custom!\nWe can talk across continents and\noceans, telegraph pictures and listen\noverseas to Big Ben striking the\nhours in \"dear old Lunnon\"\u2014we\nhave noiseless typewriters (though\nI have not) and painless dentistry\n(painless to the dentist), liners have\nswimming baths and criminals are\ntracked down by wireless; hair is\nelectrically waved, and crops are\nripened by electricity, and yet\u2014\nand yet we have not solved the comparatively simple problem of providing movie patrons with noiseless\ncellophane, or rustleless paper bags.\nTill that happy day arrives, presumably one must stoically endure the\nCAN PLANES WIN\nNEXT WAR?\nA German military scientist, Capt.\nA. D. Gandenberger von Moisy,\nwriting in the weekly technical\njournal, Die Umschau, expresses\nconsiderable doubt whether either\nplanes or mechanized forces have\nin themselves a sufficiently decisive \"punch\" to win a war. In this\nhe takes issue with a recent book\npublished by an Italian officer, Lt.-\nCol. Rocco Morretta, who thinks\nthat the decision of future fighting\nlies In the cogs of machines, not\nin the hands ot men.\nThe airplane can hit hard, admits\nCapt. von Moisy; but it has practically no holding power at all. With\nit you may (if you are lucky) knock\nyour enemy down, but you cannot\nkeep him down. And, at best, he believes, the attacking powen of\nbombing aircraft have been much\nexagerated. Their ammunition, he\nsays, is bankruptingly expensive,\nand they are none too sure of hitting\nthe mark with it, especially when\nthe defenders' anti-aircraft guns are\ncompelling them to fly at great\nheights. They are also exposed to\nwasp-like onsets from the defenders' faster and more agile combat\nplanes.\nARORED LAND CRAFT\nMUST KEEP MOVING\nSomething of the same weakness\nin holding power is the inevitable\npenalty of the mobility and high-\nhitting power of mechanized forces,\nin Capt. von Molsy's opinion.\nArmored land craft will not have\nso easy a time breaking through a\ndefending line in future combats as\nthey had at Cambrai and after, during the Great War. They are vulnerable to the lightest of artillery\nshells, and even to some of t_te\ncandy munchers' annoying tactics\nin the darkened\u2014but by no means\n\u2014noiseless auditorium. All such\npaper crushen should be branded as\npuolic enemy No. 2, there being already too many claimants for the\nhonor of Number One.\n\"BELIEVE IT OR NOTI\"\nThis critic, in very critical mood\nyou will observe, has already cast\nfriendly animal adverslons on the\n\"Ballyhoo\" previews of Hollywood\nmovie-tones, and regret! being unable to report any growth in the\ndesirable grace of modesty. Still\nthe same adjectival barrage of superlatives, mostly inapposite\u2014for the\nlatter releases, and the hapless fans\nare deluged with the terrific\n\"blurbs\" which mean nothing anu\ncan safely be discounted 99-100ths\nper cent.\nThough British fllmi record considerable improvement over the\nearlier mediocre offerings, the rank\nand file of English films still lack\nthe subtlety ot direction and the\nsuperb photography which characterizes the output of the main studios on the gold coast of California,\nwhere tonight, even as on all other\nnights, lights gleam over the landscape in every one of those stuccoed palaces, oaronlal castles and\nMexican haciendas that the stars\ncall \"home.\" The glitter of the Hollywood merry-go-round is rather\nsymbolic. .Everything about the\nmovies seems so hara, so poiishea,\nso brilliant, that it blinds one to\nthe fact that the art of the camera\nis essentially artificial, and because\nof its patent artificiality, it only\naffects us superficially, wnich perhaps, in the main, is just as well.\nAfter all, there is but Uttle magnetism about the silver sheet. In many\nways, however, old country films\nhave something that Hoilywoou\nlacki. Perhaps because it is that\nEngland has always been stage-\nminded ever since the time of Shakespeare, and has carried the atmosphere to the talkies, and thus causeu\nthe illusion to become something\nless of an illusion.\nSElING 8TARS\nA noteworthy difference between\nBritain and America is the \"modus\noperandi\" of casting characters for\n-screen presentations. The latter have\na great box-office respect for the\n\"star\" lystem, and the movie magnates pin their faith on the magic of\na single name In the stellar role,\nwhereas Elstree and other London\nstudios believe \"the play's the\nthing,\" and do not concentrate on\nindividual personalities as the main\nattraction for the fickle favors of\nMovietonia. One is not greatly intrigued with the Hollywood system\nof grooming their stars;they seem\nto be poured Into a mould of Hollywood pattern, given a superficial\npolish with oodles of asinine publicity and generally spoiled for good\nand all. One gains the Impression\nthat the groomed star has been\nmade over into a puppet, drilled to\na mode, and clothed with a fantastic personality, to the order of the\nKings of the Kleigs. British film\nplayers have not been given the\nglamorous personalities in the public mind like the American stars\nwho are endlessly press-agented for\nthe greater glory of the box office.\nMr. and Mrs. Public have been made\n\"star\" conscious and drilled to look\nfor personality rather than talent\nin choosing their screen favorites.\nAt least, two dollar luminaries are\nborn because of strong personal\ncharacteristics to every one that\nrises through ability. That Is one\ndifference between the screen and\nthe stage where just the reverse is\ntrue.\nBETWEEN FLICKERS\nSitting in the dim-lit auditorium,\none has time to marvel yet again\nat the marvelous invention ot the\n\"talkies,\" and yet one takes it all\nvery much for granted, hurling our\ncriticisms far and wide just because\nthey lack perfection. Remember\nonce again that the silhouettes on\nthe screen are but shadows, and\nthat every sound passing through\nthe silver sheet emanates from a\nboxlike aperture behln\/ the,screen.\nJust a box, and what a box! With\ngadgets Impulsed by an electric\ncurrent operating in conjunction\nwith another boxlike apparatus\u2014\nchockful of mystery\u2014away up yonder in the projection booth. This in\nturn is actuated by the ma^ic ^yc\u2014\nthe photo-electric cell\u2014within the\nblack box that is the projector tsslf.\nIt is all very wonderful, nnd it\ncauses my unsophisticated better\nhalf to marvel at the Inventive\ngenius of mankind, and its latent\npossibilities for developing further\nmagical processes to free itself from\nthe mythical limitations of time\nand space.\nAUNT HET\n\"In my time it took girls longer to get ready for a ride, but\nwe couldn't finish our faces after wc started.\"\ncarded my last club. Then West\nhad to lead from his Q-S of hearts,\nup to dummy J-9 and my A-6 of\nhearts, for the twelfth and thirteenth tricks. He led the eight. I\nput up dummy's J. It won. My ace\nof hearts won the last trick, giving\nua four odd. Wc lost only a single\ndiamond trick and Iwo spade tricks.\nnewer large-calibre machine-^un\nbullets. Their limited range of vision\nmakes them especially liable to\npitfalls and traps. If they operate in\nnumbers, they are easily \"spotted\"\nby obesrvation aircraft\nAnd if they do succeed in breaking or slipping through the defence\nlines, he asks what then? They must\nkeep moving incessantly, for as long\nas within range of an enemy gun a\ntank that stops is a tank destroyed.\nBut the movement burns up fuel,\nand once they have cut themselves\noff from their base of supplies, the\nfuel cannot be replaced.\nDuring the excavation of part ot\nNero's Golden House in Rome, a\ncomplete system of drain-tee was\ndiscovered, which Prof. Terenzo,\nwho is in charge, put into working\norder by merely clearing the pipes\nof earth and rubbish. Perhaps the\nRoman plumbers in ancient days\nwere so well equipped and did their\nwork so completely that they did\nnot have to go back for their tools.\nThe job in Nero's house was permanent.\u2014Montreal Gazette.\nKEEP THE BIBLE\nON THE TOP\n(Written after hearing ai. address in which the incident recorded in the first verses wai told\nby Rev. A. L. Geggie, Toronto, at\nthe annual meeting of the Canadian Bible society in Weitminiter\nchurch, in Winnipeg, on March\n23, 1900.)\nDeep the glow of dawning manhood\nIn tne keen, courageous eyei,\nLife, item life ii now Before him,\n_oyuood's home behind him lies.\nAt he mingles in the traffic,\nlakes hii umamiliar way,\nFind! nil unfamiliar waging\nIn the city gaunt anu grey.\nOf a trunk the proud posieiaor;\nttever ownea a irunk oefore,\nNeed you wonder that he haatens\nIti interior to explore.\n'Twaa a mother'i handi that\npacked it,\nAnd her neart at once ia hid\nAna revealea in what is covered\nBy that unpoetic lid\nWhen he lifts it Tell me wherefore\nIs his soul so deeply stii.ed,\nIor the moment features twitching,\nFor the moment vision blurred.\nTears are weak and unheroic?\nMay, tnere'i power in every drop\nPrompted by thai sacred objec*.\u2014\nIt's the Bible on tbe top.\nOh, amid life's strange confusion\nMoment know tne neeu of grace,\nStill to keep the Bible upmost\nAnd let nothing take its place.\nChange the scene. The solemn night\nclouds\nOn a far-olf city rest-\nWinnipeg, tne world attracting,\nGateway of the golden west\nThere within a spacious temple,\n'Neath the brignt electric blaze,\nAn impassioneu cultured preacher\nAn enlightened audience sways.\n\"What'! hil theme?\" The Bible\ntravels\nO'er the rugged roads of time.\nHe, the specialist selected\nTo commend ita coune sublime.\nMaster Theme. Thy slave's a genus\nToiling till his hearers see\nThat the only utter freedom\nIs to be enthralled by thee\u2014\nSee thee bounding o'er the ocean,\nTravening the desert sands,\nSpeaking peace to troubled ages,\nBringing dawn to darkened lands,\nSee thee curing every madneis\nThat afflict! the sons of man;\nWhere volcanic vice wrought ruin\nRaising virtue's flowers again\u2014\nSee the serried ranks of error\nIn thy march asunder riven,\nSee thy mighty reinforcement!\nRiding .own the rending heaven.\nTill they lee the Word incarnate\nOn the white advancing steed\nForth to universal conquest\nAll celestial forces lead.\nAh, the preacher's eagle vision,\nClear wtth revelation's flame,\nAnd the lad's, with filial feeling\nEntwhile blinded, are the same.\nIn a world where books unnumbered\nClamor for the place supreme,\nWhere the shadow seems the substance.\nAnd the real so like a dream-\nWhere the trunk gets so disordered,\nAnd the mind so like the trunk-\nRaiment upmost, and the Bible\nOut of sight and memory sunk-\nJust to treat its softest whisper\nAs a mandate from the throne,\nIs to learn the richest aecret\nThat to mortals can be known.\nPrecious Book, that find! the ilnner,\nLift! him, never lets him drop-*-\nIn the last confusion brings him\nOut unruffled on the top.\nNew Setting for\nCelebrated Venus\nIt is E. V. Luca!, one of the most\ndelightful of cicerones, who, on a\nsingle page of his \"Wanderer in\nParis,\" sums up, in a few words, the\npoignant appeal of the Venus of\nMilo (says the New York Sun).\nLeaving to others all rhapsodizing\nover that prized treasure of the\nLouvre, Lucas contents himself\nwith a simple record of an impression \"You see,\" he says, \"the Venus\nof Milo before you all the way along\nher corridor: she stands quietly and\nglimmering beckoning at the very\nend of it, alone, before her dark\nred background. Why the Venus of\nMilo is so radiantly satisfying, so\nalmost terribly beautiful, I cannot\nexplain; but there it is. It ia cold\nbeauty, but it is magical, too; it\ndominates, controls. And with it\nthere is peace.\"\nSPLENDID ISOLATION IS\nCURATOR'8 PLAN\nIf the plans of Marcel Aubcrt,\nthe Louvre's curator of sculpture,\ncarry through, the Venus of Milo\nwill no longer have her corridor,\nalong which on the near approach\nto the goddess the statuette ot Euripides, a Psyche, the busts of the\nyouthful Hercules and of Perseus,\nKing of Macedonia, end the Venus\nof Falerona have had a place. The\nVenus of Milo, declares M. Aubert,\nis to be put by herself in a great\nroom to which there will be a long\npasageway. Possibly it is the intention to have the entrance to the\ngreat room accomplished without\na previous view of the statue.\nIt is recalled by Lucas that Napoleon, to whom the Louvre was a\nspecial object of attention, never\nsaw the Venus of Milo, for it was\nfive years after the Emperor was\nsent to St. Helena that the statue\nwas found by a peasant amid ruins\non one of the islands of the Cy-\nclades. The French Government acquired it for 6,000 francs. Now only\na little more than a century after\nIts discovery, the whole world has\nan Interest as to how and just where\nit is to be seen.\nENGLAND HAS NEW SYSTEM FOR\nHOSPITAL BENEFITS\nWage earners get adequate hospital cart wben they need it and at\nthe same time the hospitals keep\nthemselves out of the red, by a new\nsystem of community contributions\ndevised In England. The scheme,\nknown as the contributory funds\nplan, was described before the Philadelphia meeting of the American\nHospital association by its author,\nSydney Lamb, general secretary of\nthe Meraeyside Hospital council,\nLiverpool.\nWhile American schemes of this\nnature are based on insurance, the\nEnglish plan has a more humanitarian or socialized basis, Mr. Lamb\npointed out. The contributors make\ntheir payments not only with the\nidea of financing possible hospital\nbills of their own, but also of assisting their fellow wage earners with\nthis problem.\nContributions by the wage-earner\nto the contributory funds vary from\na penny to two pence in every pound\nof weekly wages paid\u2014roughly from\ntwo to four cents in every five dollars, plus about two cents additional\neach week; and employen add about\na third as much more to the fund.\nEmployen assess and collect thc\nsums from their empoyee, and a\ncommittee distributes the money\namong the voluntary or private hospitals of the community. Some nf\nthe money also goes to publicly sup\nported hospitals, since these institutions also give free care to membera\not the contributory fundi.\nINCOME RESTRICTIONS\nON FUND ELIGIBLES\nContributon are entitled to fret\nhospital service In any of the institution! receiving support from tha\nfunds. Only under special circumstances, however, can contrlbuon\nreceive free service trom the hotpital clinic or out-patient department\nAt the request of the Britlih Medical\nassociation, only persons with incomes within certain limit! are admitted to free hoipital privilegeg\nthrough organized Contributory\nFunds.\nIn addition to hospital service in\nthe institution, some ot the money\nfrom the funds is used to provide\nambulance service, after-care for\nconvalescent patients, aid in tha\nhome if the mother or housewife it\nUl, extra nourishment, crutches ind\nsurgical supplies. Contributory\nFunds do not accept responsibility\nfor financing cases of tuberculosis,\nmental disease; infectious diseases,\nsenility and chronic incurable Illness, since these have for yean been *\ncared tor by public fundi ln itate\nand municipal hospitals.\nA movement to have Contributory\nFunds also pay something to physicians attending contributon In hospitals as well as to the hospital!\nthemselves is afoot.\nEXERCISE AND HEART AILMENTS\nBY JAMES W. BARTON, M.D.\nOne of the unfortunate things\nthat frequently happens during a\nroutine examination for insurance or\nother purpose is the finding of a\nheart murmur or some other defect in the heart.\nNow one would think that it is\nreally a fortunate thing to happen\nbecause the patient thus finds out\nabout it in time and learns what is\nrequired of him if he is to live safely.\nBut a large percentage of these\npatients immediately begin to worry about themselves whereas before\nthe examination they were light-\nhearted, jovial, in excellent health,\nafter learning about the heart condition they become heavy hearted,\ngloomy, and their general health\nbegins to fail.\nNow insurance examiners know\ntheir work or they wouldn't be insurance examiners, but unfortunately many of them haven't the\ntime to talk over the matter with the\npatient and others do not realize\nUie depressing effect their announcement of the heart condition is going\nto have upon the patient, because\nthey do not know the patient personally.\nThe war taught us that hearts with\nmurmurs, hearts that beat rapidly,\neven some hearts with lrregularl- '\nties did not teem to affect the work- j\ning or fighting ability of the told-\niera.\nThe thought then ll that every\npatient who is told that he hai a\nheart condition ihould ask the ex-\namining physician just how much\nwork he can do, and also what kind\nland to what extent he can engage\nin sports.\nIt is this being deprived entirely\nof the opportunity to work or play\nthat does more harm to the patient's\ngeneral health than can be done\nby the heart condition.\nNow it must be admitted that\nwork or exercise puts more work\non the heart, but the bloodvessels,\nto be kept in good \"elastic' condition,\nneed to have a \"little\" extra work\nfiut on them than they receive when\nhe individual simply walks or sits\naround. In fact the heart muscle\nitself ii all the stronger for a little\nextra regular exercise.\nBy a UtUe regular exerdie pttlenti with heart defect! estsblish\na reserve strength for the heart and\nbloodvessels, which is useful when\na sudden increased demand on the\nheart arises.\n30 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Daily Newi of Oct\n15, 1904)\nBusiness property in Nelson is\nbringing $300 a front foot and ln\nVancouver $800. The Daily News\npointed to these facts as indications\nthat Nelson and Vancouver were\nforging ahead, and were \"destined\nto be places of considerable magnitude.\"\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nD. J. Robertaon, well-known furniture dealer, has returned from\nan extended trip through eastern\nCanada, and found business conditions good on the whole, but a little slow in the furniture line. In\nWinnipeg he found a boom wilh\npeople completely wrapped up ln\nthe wheat crop, buying and selling\nreal estate, putting up buildings and\nin \"speculation of all kinds.\"\n20 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Dally Newi of Oct.\n15, 1914)\nTin A. D. Emory and A. C.\nEmory who have been visiting eastern Canada returned last evening\naccompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nEmory.\n\u2022 .   i\nW. H. Burgeii of Kailo II a Nelson visitor.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nThe Shut Down, Shut Out and\nShut Up fractional mining claims\non Toad mountain have been transferred to the Consolidated Mining\n& Smelting Co., Ltd, by P. W.\nRacey, W. M. Archibald and Dan\nMatheson, respectively. S. G. Blaylock has transferred to the Consolidated company the Starlight and\nVictoria fractional claims, alio on\nToad mountain.\n'-:*>*.\nINCREA8ED EXPORT OF NICKEL\nThe export of nickel in*August\nwas of the value of $2,469,040 compared with $2,015,000 in August 1933.\nThe export of nckel In ore, marts\nor speiss was: United Kingdom $818,-\n795, United States $485,849, Norway\n$138,654; fine nickel, United States\n$822,400, United Kingdom $99,219.\nItaly $49,623, Japan $46,943; nickel\noxide. United Kingdom $5580, United States $1925.\n'^'^'wWW-.^^Wf-^^'.^^^^'^.^^^^.^^^^W^^S^'^^-.^S^^^'-^^'^^SfJj*^^\nNot-\nBoasting\nJust passing on to you the things our subscribers are telling us every day.\nThe Nelson Daily News is a good paper.\nIt is \"Newsy\". It gives its readers a\nbrief but colorful account of the daily\nhappenings abroad and at home, and\nit gives them this news quickly.\nHow many times our subscribers have told\nus not to stop sending their paper, or how\nmany times they have said that their day\nwould be utterly ruined if they did not get\nthe News, we could not begin to estimate.\nWe think that such tokens of their esteem\njustify our slogan \"The Interior's Home\nNewspaper\".\n.\u2022fX&tt*&if&tt**tt&&\nVWvW   \u25a0\/    '     - *\n^^^^_^^_^_^_^^_^^_^k^_^^_^_\nWHAT?\nAbout that furnace of yours, does it\nneed repairing before the cold weath-\ner? Get our Expert to look It over\nHeaters at All Prices\nNelson Hardware Co*\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson, B.C.\n \t\n\"GOODIY, BABE\"\n\" Track and Field - Fishing - Motor Boating - Boxing - Wrestling - Swimming - Football\nA small Washington bey\nBaseball - Softball - Tennis - Lacrosse - Rowing - Golf - uawn Bowling - Rugby, Etc.\nt.j PAOI SEVEN\n- THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-MONDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 15. 1934 <\n-PAGE SEVEN\nARSENAL BACK\nATTHETOPOF\nENGLISH LOOP\nScores 3-0 Win Over\nManchester; Still\nEven on Points\nLONDON. Oct. 14 'CP cablel-\nPhe Arsenal is back in its accua-\nomed place at the top of the first\nUvlslon of Ihe English Football\neegue, following the Gunners' 3-0\n'Ictory Saturday over Manchester\naty.\nA record crowd of 70,000 Jammed\nhe Highbury grounds to see the\nteetlng between the league cham-\nJons arm the cup winners. The re-\nUlt boosted the Arsenal to top place\nin goal averages, although the city\nI still on even terms ln the matter\nt points.\nSunderland absorbed a 2-1 tlefoat\nrom the Spurs et Sunderland, and\nlow finds itself bracketed with\nitoke City and Everton for third\nilace. Next, tied for fourth, come\nhe two newcomers from the second\nlivision. Grimsby Town and Pres-\non North End, who won and tied\n\u2022espectively on Saturday.\nBolton Wanderers had no dlffi-\nulty beating Portvale 3-1 to extend\nheir lead over the second division\n* four points over Blackpool, which\nisplaced Brentford from second\nlace.\nThe southern section of the third\nlivision finds Charlton Athletic\nlone at the top, a game ahead of\nleventry City as a result of Satur-\nay's matches, while in the northern\nlanmere Rovers and Halifax Town\nrent into a deadlock a point ahead\nif Darlington, erstwhile leading\nleven.\nThe result at Highbury was Man-\nhester's heaviest defeat of the sea-\njn, the first game in which they\nsve not scored. They put up a good\nIght most of the time but in the\nut half hour they were overrun\ny the tricky Arsenal outfit.\nIERBY BEATEN 41\nGrimsby Town pulled a surprise\nrhen they beat Derby right on their\nwn grounds by 4-1. Bastall and\nHover made it 2-0 before Duncan\nould score for Derby. After that\nllpver scored twice.\nAnother surprise was the 2-1 de-\ntat administered by Chelsea to the\nnce-mighty Huddersfield eleven,\nrho in strong contrast to last season\nre now scraping along the bottom\nf the first division table.\nAlthough Bangnall pulled the hat\npick he was unable to save Burm-\nagham from a 5-4 defeat at Liver-\nool.\nOne of the best games of the day\nras that at Aston Villa, where the\n'ilia and Everton battled to a 2-all\nraw. Dixie Dean scored the Ever-\non and Astley for the Villa in the\nIrst half, and In the second Waring\nor the Villa and Cunliffe for Ever-\non, the equalizer coming just be-\nore the end after Dean had missed\npenalty shot by firing straight at\nhe goalie.\nAt Upton Park West Ham beat\nNewcastle 3-2 in a fast and clover\nnatch. Thc Newcastle forwards were\nnastered in the closing stages.\nIn the London \"derby\" in which\nJharleton beat Queen's Park Rangtn 3-0, the winners had thc cleverer\ntttack and defence, especially in\nlobling and Harris who met vigor-\njus attacks with resource.\nBuddy and His Big little Brother-\nMax Baer\nIRISH SOCCER\nBELFAST. Oct. 14 (CP Cable).-\nIrish Soccer league results Saturday   were   as  follows:\nCeltic B, Coleralne 1.\nLame 2. Olenavon 3.\nPortadown 0, Bsllymena J.\nDerry   1,  Llnfleld  3.\nArds 8,  Newry 2.\nDistillery 0, Bangor 0.\nCliftonville S, Olentoran 3.\nPAMPEIR WINS\nPARIS, Oct. 14 (AP).-The Aga\nKhan's Pampeir won the Grand\nCriterium stake at Longchamp today by a half length from l.arcel\nBoussac's Corrida over the 1600-\nmeter distance. Pierre Wertheimer's\nMesa finished third. The winner,\npaying 17.50 francs to five in thc\nmulucls, took the major part of\nthe purse of 150,000 francs, equivalent to 39900.\nCoached for his first profeielonal fight at Oakland, Calif,, Buddy ;\nsr, younger but bigger brother of Max Baer, world's heavyweight I\nimpion, It shown preparing for the bout, with Max In hli corner. >\nBaer, .\nchampion, Is shown preparing\nBuddy's first opponent was Max Brown.\n1QMAS TRIM\nU. B. C. 120\nIN RUGBY TILT\nU. of Alberta and the\nRoughriders Also\n, Hold Lead\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 14 (CP)-Van-\ncouver Meralomas, University of\nAlberta and Regina Roughriders tonight still lead their provincial\nsenior rugby leagues as dates for the\nplaydowns were announced. Winnipegs are Manitoba's lone entrants\nand were Idle Saturday.\nIn week-end games, Meralomas\nbuilt their wins to five straight by\nhanding University of British Columbia a 12-0 defeat at Vancouver\nin the British Columbia big four\nleague. At North Vancouver, Vancouver Athletic club and the North\nShore squad played to a 2-2 tie.\nUniversity of Saskatchewan and\nSaskatoon Hilltops played to a 3-3\ntie in Saskatchewan in a game that\ndid not affect the leadership of the\nRegina Roughriders in the Saskatchewan league. In Alberta, University of Alberta welcomed Lethbridge\nBulldogs to Edmonton and then\nhando.'- them a 13-5 defeat. University of North Dakota freshmen handed University of Manitoba a 31-0\ndefeat in an exhibition game here.\nAnnouncement of the western\nplaydown dates in both senior and\nJunior divisions was made here by\nrugby heads. Winners of the Manitoba championship will travel to\nthe home of the Saskatchewan champions in the first semi-final November 3 and on the same date the Alberta champions will travel to the\nhome of thc British Columbia champions.\nThe western championship will\nbe played November 12 with Ihe\nwinner of the Manitoba-Saskatchewan tilt travelling to the home of\nthe Alberta-British Columbia winners.\nThe junior playdowns were subject to change if British Columbia\nenters a junior aspirant to western\ntitular honors. As arranged now,\nthe Saskatchewan junior champions\nwill travel to the home of the Alberta junior champions in the semifinal, with the winner going lo the\nhome of the Manitoba champions\nNovember 12 for the title fight.\nThe annual meeting of the Western Canada Rugby union will be\nheld the same day as the western\nsenior final at thc city where the\nchampionship game is played.\nGOLF FACTS\nNOT THEORIES\nBy ALEX. MORRICON\n__aj\nFlaying around a course In the\nCleveland district reoently with tha\nclub professional and a pupil of\nmine I had difficulty In letting the\nlatter to keep hla chin back on\nswings. He had all aorta of excuses\nfor this fault, stance, etc.\nThe professional, an excellent\ngolfer and atudent of the game,\nkept his chin back consistently and\nhis shots were long and to the Una.\nTo Impress my pupil as to the\nimportance' of keeping his chin\nback I aaked the professional to\nchange hla stance and manner of\nplacing the club to the ball, ln fact\nexaggerate these things. But tha\ndifferent and perhaps awkward\nstance didn't cause hint to look up\nduring  his swing.\nHe knew that regardless of how\nhe stood or swung the club he must\nkeep his chin back.\nThink about the chin ln all your\ngolf shots, for tt Is the brains of\nthe  awing.\nRUGBY LEAGUE\nLONDON, Oct. 14 (CP cable)-\nRugby league matches Saturday resulted as follows:\nBarrow 4, Liverpool Stanley 17.\nBramley 10, Hull 7.\nBroughton 12, Castleford 7.\nDewsbury 0, Batley 6.\nFeatherstone 6, Wakefield Trinity 35.\nHalifax 39, Bradford Northern 2.\nHull-Kingston 33, Rochdale Hornets 16.\nHunslet 15, St. Helen's 0.\nOldham 4, Salford 10.\nSt. Helen's Recs 19. Leeds 10.\nSwinton 17, Keighley 4.\nWldness 22. Leigh 0.\nWigan 13, Warrington 5.\nYork 7. Huddersfield 5.\nAmateur county championship:\nYorkshire 0, Cumberland 14, at\nKeighley.\nSoccer Results From\nEngland and Scotland\nLONDON. Oct. 14 (AP). \u2014 Soccer\ngames played ln tbe British Isles today  resulted  as  follows:\nENOLISH  LEAOL'C\nFirst  Division\nArsenal 3, Manchester City 0.\nAston Villa 2. Everton 2.\nBlackburn   Rovers  3,  Mlddlesbor-\nough 9.\nChelsea 2. Huddersfield 1.\nDerby county 1, Grimsby Town 4.\nLeeds United 0, Sheffield Wednesday 0.\nLeicester   City   0.   Preston   North\nSnd 0.\nLiverpool 5, Birmingham 4.\nPortsmouth 0. Stoke City 1.\nSunderland    1,   Tottenham   Hotspurs 2.\nWolverhampton Wanderers 8, West\nBromwlch Albion 2.\nSeoond Division\nBsrnsley  1. Southampton  1.\nBlackpool 2. Norwich Ctty 1.\nBradford City 3. Brentford 0.\nBury a. Plymouth Argyle 1.\nHull City 2, Bradford 0.\nManchester  United   4,   Oldham\nAthletic   0.\nNotts Forest 1. Fulham 1. \\\nPort Vale 1, Bolton Wanderen ~.\nSheffield  United  3,  Notts  county O. )\nSwansea Town 2. Burnley 0.\nWest   Ham   United   I,   Newcastle\nUnited 2.\nThird Division, Northern Section\nCarlisle United 0, Barrow 0.\nCrewe Alexander 3. Tork City 2.\nDonraster Rovers 3. Chester 0.\n(lateshesd 1. Accrlngton Stanley I.\nHsrtlepools United 2, New' Brigh\nton 2.\nLincoln City 2. Chesterfield 0.\nRochdale 1, Mansfield Town 0.\nStockport 1, Halifax Town 3.\nStockport County 3, Darlington 0\nTranraare Rovers 4. Walsall o.\nWrexham 0, Rotherham United 1\nThird Division, southern Section\nAldershot 0, Luton Town 1.\n1    Bristol City 3. Ollllniham 1.\nCardiff City 0. Brlgton 0.\nCrystal Palace 3, Coventry City 1.\nExeter City 9. Reading 3.\nMlllwall 1, Clapton Orient 1.\nNewport   County   1.   Northampton\nTown 3.\nSwindon Town 5, Southend United 0.\nTorquay United 1, Bristol Rovers 2\nWstford 3. Bournemouth 1.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nAberdeen 1. St. Mlrren 0.\nAlbion Rovers 9. Hibernians 0.\nClyde 0, Celtic 3.\nHamilton Acads 3, Dunfermline 0\nHearta 3 Motherwell 1.\nKUmarnoc, 3. Dundee 0.\nQueen's Park-Patrick, unplayed.\nQueen of South 1 Alrdrleonlana 1\nRsngers-Falklrk, unplayed.\nSt. Johnstone 4, Ayr United 0.\nSecond   Division\nCowdenbeath 2. Brechin City 2.\nDumbarton  0,  Alloa 0.\nDundee United 0 Third Lanark 2.\nBast Fife 1, Arbroath 9.\nLeigh 2. Cdlnmirgh 1\nForfar Athletic 0, King's Park 8.\nMontrose 3, Ralth Rovers 3.\nMorton 8. St. Bernard's 4.\nStenhousemulr 3, East Stirling 9.\nHES TO PITCH\nGAME FOR US\nRube Walberg Who Is\nto Pitch for the\nKootenay Team\nSTELLA WALSH\nBEATS OWN MARK\nOSAKA, Japan, Oct. 14 (AP)\nStella Walsh of Poland, competing\nin a track meet between Polish and\nJapanese girls teams ln Koshien\nstadium here today, won the 200\nmeters event in 23.8 seconds, bettering her own world record mark of\n24.1 seconds.\nOTTAWA LOSES\nTO ARGOS12-1\nMontreal Holds Tigers\nto Draw; Queen's,\nToronto U. Win\nRUBE WALBERG\nMeet the chucker for the Kootenay All-Stars, Mr. Rube Walberg.\nHe will be on the mound here October 22 at the Recreation park\nwhen the Amerloan league aoes\nstop   here  for  thalr   exhibition\ngame. The big leaguers are coming here under the auspices of\ntha  Nelson Gyro club, and the\nGyros ara being aided by other\naervlce clubs In the district.\nGreat preparations are being made\nto handle the crowd that will be\ncoming,   and  seating   accommodations will be provided. The city\ncouncil has agreed to fix up the playing field.\nThis will be the first time a big\nleague squad has visited Nelson and\nit will make history. In the spring\nthe Detroit Red Wings and the\nToronto Maple Leafs played at Trail\nfor the first big league hockey to be\nseen in these parts. This will complete thc picture.\nThe tetm has been meeting various Canadian teams on its way west.\nIncluded In the group will be Roger\nCramer, \"Pinky\" Higgins and Morris\nof the Athletics; Red Kress, Heinle\nManush, Al Thomas, of the Senators; \"Red\" Hopkins, Ted Lyons, of\nthe White Sox; Dick Porter, Red\nSox. Campbell Is the cleanup hitter.\nAnd let it be remembered that\nHeinle Manush has a life-time batting average of about .335.\nLuke Seweil. Senator catcher, will\ndo the receiving for Rube Walberg.\nAs V. of T. and McGill Open Intereolle glate Football Season\nThe senior Intercollegiate football season started wilh MrGill visiting! shows a scene from the MeGill-Varsily game, Isblster of Toronto kicking\nToronto nnd Queen's Inking on Western University, A large crowd turned out from behind his own goal line. He was the game's Individual star,\nmt ln beautiful sunny weather for the game at Toronto. The stave photo \u2022\nTORONTO, Oct. 14 (CP).-One\nof the closest struggles for supremacy in years, with Ottawa's pre-sea-\naon favorites down and almost out\nat the one-third mark, had developed today in the interprovinclal football union. Montreal and Hamilton\nTigers were tied for the lead with\nToronto Argonauts, 1933 title-holders, a single point behind in the\nstanding.\nWhile Montreal was holding the\nTigers to an 8-8 deadlock Saturday\nat Hamilton, largely by virtue of\nHuck Welsh's two pinch-hit field\ngoals, the Argos were beating Ottawa 12-1 before a crowd of 10,000\nat Toronto. It was Ottawa's second\nstraight defeat and the Scullers'\nfirst win.\nQueen's and University of Toronto, who had to play off for the\nintercollegiate title last fall, were\nstill unbeaten in this year's race.\nQueen's scored their second straight\nvictory Saturday, beating McGill\n5-4 at Montreal. The championship\nblue team drubbed University of\nWestern Ontario Mustangs 34-1 at\nLondon.\nSt. Michael's college and Sarnia\nImperials led the way in the O. R.\nF. U. with their second straight\ntriumphs. The Irish college squawd\ndowned Balmy Beach 15-4 while\nImperials amassed a 43-0 count on\nthe Hamilton Cubs.\nRUGBY UNION\nLONDON, Oct. 14 (CP cable)-\nRugby union mat.-hes played Saturday resulted as follows:\nBlackheath 23. Newport 3.\nGuy's Hospital 21. Old Blues 14.\nLondon Scottish 17, Rosslyn Park\n16.\nOld Alleynians 16, Coventry 3.\nBristol 9. Bath 3.\nBridgewater and Albion 0, Leicester 0.\nCambridge University 26, Old\nLeysians 0.\nCross Keys 5, Abertillery 8.\nDevonport Services 16, Exeter 3.\nGloucester 0, Cardiff 3.\nLlanelly 9, Aberavon 8.\nMoselley 9, Nuneaton 0.\nNeath 14, Pontypool 3.\nPlymouth 6. R.N.E. College 3.\nSwansea 12, Richmond 7.\nPortsmouth Services 14, Harlequins 16.\nEdinburgh Wanderers 3, Watson-\nlans 8.\nEdinburgh Institution 0, Glasgow\nAcademicals 27.\nLondon Welsh 8, London Irish 3.\nCounty championship:\nLeicestershire 19, North Midland\n5, at Leicester.\nWarwickshire 16, East Midlands 8,\nat Coventry.\nMISS McDOUGALL\nWINS\nPORTLAND. Ore.. Oct. 14 <AP).-\nMlas Marian McDougall. of Port*\nland, won tha annual women'*\nweatern pro tolf champlonahlp on\nthe Portland Oolf club courae here\nSaturday afternoon by defeating\nMra. Ouy Blegfl of Spokane, Wash,\n0   and   7.\nDizzy Whoops It Vp!\nSinging a song of victory together, Manager Frankie Friich and\nhis great righthander \"Oluy\" Dean, celebrata In the clubhouse, following tha dlny one's 11-0 shutout of the Detroit Tlgera In tha laat world\nseries game, which gava St. Louis the championship, Dlzsy upheld the\nhonor of the Dean family\u2014He and hla brother Paul won enough games\nto take the series slnglehsnded. \"Me and Paul, that's all,\" was Dean's\npra-serles battlecry\u2014and they again made good.\nBANTAMS WILL\nSETTLETITLE\nTournament Is Set for\nMontreal Beginning\nOctober 24\nMONTREAL, Oct 14 (CP). -\nMontreal, the center recently for\nthe game cotks of the firht world,\nthe bantamweights, will be the\nscene of tbe world's bantamweight\nchampionship tournament, lt was\nannounced tonight.\nPromoter Armand Vincent stated\nthe National Boxing association, thc\nCanadian Boxing federation and the\nMontreal athletic commission, had\nofficially sanctioned the tournament\nwhich will open October 24, with\nmeets on that night, on November 9\nand again on November 24.\nFighters who have agreed to ap-\nSear to claim the crown left vacant\ny the suspension of Panama Al\nBrown, New York, are Sixto Escobar, Porto Rico, ranked first by the\nN.B.A.; Joe Ti'eken, Tokio, now\ncampaigning on the United States\nPacific coast; Pete Sanstol, Oslo,\nNorway; Lew Salica, the little New\nYorkers; Eugene Haut, veteran\nFrenchman; Frankie Martin; Montreal, claimant to the Canadian\ntitle; Lefty Gwynn, Toronto, former\nCanadian Olympic leather flinger,\nand Nat Listin, Pittsburgh, who has\nhad 19 wins wtth no losses; Midget\nWolgast, New York, flyweight champion of the world, and Babe Trls-\ncaro, Cleveland, Ohio.\nIIP ACTIVITIES\nMrs. McBride's Team\nTakes Auld Lang\nSyne Tourney\nAn Auld Lang Syne tournament\nin which 40 members participated,\nwrote a happy finis to golfing activities of the Nelson Golf and Country club Sunday, as far as competitive play is concerned. After 18\nholes of play, teams captained by\nMrs. Harold Lakes and Mrs. R. L.\nMcBride tied 14-14. Miss Connie\nSmith and Mrs. W. V. P. Clery played two extra holes to break the tie,\nMiss Smith winning for Mrs. McBride's team which was banqueted\n^>y the losers.\nAn afternoon of fun on the links\nunder ideal weather conditions was\nbrought to a close with a banquet\nin the club house ln the evening.\nGiving a point for the first and\nsecond rounds and a point for match,\nresults with Mrs. Lakes' golfers\nmentioned first were:\nMrs. H. Lakes and W. V. P. Clery\nMrs. R. L. McBride and L. S. Brad-\nltjy 0.\nMrs. B. Townshend and F. Schroeder 1, Mrs. L. S. Bradley and B.\nTownshend 2.\nMiss Cameron and. T. R. Wilson 0,\nMrs. G. W. Davis and J. D. Kerr 3,\nMrs. L. McPhail and R. L. McBride 0, Miss C. Smith and A. E.\nWalters 2.\nMrs. MacKay and Clyde Graves 0,\nMrs. R. Pollard and A. Lambert 3.\nMiss Burridge and A. E. Murphy\n3, Mrs. W. W. Ferguson and J. G.\nBunyan 0.\nMrs. H. Rosling and Wilfred Allan 3, Mrs. J. D. Kerr and W. W.\nFerguson 0.\nMrs. W. V. P. Clery and Don lire\n3, Mrs. Taylor and Guy W. Davis 0.\nMiss Jerome and C. H. Stark 1,\nMrs.   A.   E.   Murphy   and   R.   J.\nBourque 2.\nMrs. F. F. Payne and A. Balrd 0.\nMrs. A. Baird and L. McPhail 2.\nHere's a Strong\nNine-Letter Taam\nThe great majority of the tans\nseehi to think the strongest mythical major league teams contain\nplayers who have five, six and aeven letters in their names.\nFrank Salinas of Hebronvllle,\nTexas, however, comes to bat with\na nine-leiler team.\nLindstrom, cf; Whitehead, as;\nGelringer, 2b; Comorosky, rf;\nGreenberg, lb; Stainback, lf; Salz-\ngaver, 3b; Sukeforth, c; Schumak-\ner, p.\nNot a bad aggregation, eh?\nAnd Fred Ehne ot Howard, S.D.,\nsays his \"R\" team will challenge\nany other team in the alphabet.\nRothrock, lf; Rice, lb; Rogell, ss;\nRuth, rt; Roettger, cf; Ryan, 2b;\nRolfe, 3b; Richards, c; Rowe, p.\nSend in your alphabetical teams,\nfans!\nAnswer to yesterday's question:\nThe world series of 1918 between\nBoston Red Sox and Chicago Cubs\ndrew the smallest gate in modern\nbaseball.\nToday's question: What football\nplayer in history scored greatest\nnumber of points in one season?\nAnswer tomorrow.\n1VEST0T0P\nOF SCOTTISH\nBeat Ayr United 4-0\nas Rangers l.dle in\nLeague Play\nGLASGOW, Oct 14 (CP cable)-\nThe championship race in the Scottish Football league was a scramble\ntoday following ascension of St.\nJohnstone to the leading position,\nat the expense of Glasgow Rangers\nwho were engaged in the Glasgow\ncup final.\nWhile Rangers were forced to\nleave league affairs alone, Incidentally losing their city cup to Partick\nby a 1-0 count, St. Johnstone had an\neasy victory over Ayr United to get\na one-point margin over the champions. The score wu 4-0, with\nDickie, Stewart, Mason and Ferguson doing the sharpshooting.\nHamilton and Hearts, both going\nstrong Just now, won their matches\nand marched into a tie for third\nposition, only a point back ot Rangers. Clyde, suffering lta first defeat\nof the season, waa left ln fifth place,\nanother point back but still three\npoints ahead of the luckless Motherwell outfit\nClyde slipped when Celtic beat\nthem 1-0. McGrory wai back on\nthe lineup and the old Internationalist's appearance had a ateady influence. McGrory, Buchan and De-\nlaney were the scorers.\nThe victory of the Celts came on\ntop of the announcement that Jimmy McMenemy had been appointed\ncoach to the club. The former International starts his duties Monday.\nHEARTS WIN 2-1\nHearts kept up the good work\nwith a 2-1 victory over Motherwell.\nThey acored first agalnit the Fir\nPackers but MacFayden equaliied.\nand Munro icored the winning goal\nfor Hearta.\nHamilton Academicals kept in\nstep by easily trimming the recruits\nfrom the second division, Dunfermline. The count was 8-0, although\nHamilton were not up to their iisual\nform. Harrison, twice, and Wilson\ndid the scoring.\nAberdeen had a narrow win over\nSt. Mirren by the only goal scored,\na counter from Armstrong. The\nlosers put up unexpectedly stout\nresistance.\nAlbion Roven, newcomers from\nthe lecond division, were always\nmasters of the Hibi, whom they\ngeat 2-0 on goala trom Lyon,and\nAndenon.\nQueen of South and Alrdrie staged\na hard battle at Dumfries and the\n1-1 draw was a fair result Cumming\nscored tint for the homesters, and\nMooney equalised for Alrdrie,\nTwenty-seven thousand persons\nturned out at Hampden Park to see\nRangers defend the Glasgow City\ncup against Partick. They were unsuccessful, Partlck winning the trophy for the tint time by the score\nof 1-0.\nThistles had the edge In the first\nhalf and Rangen in the lecond, the\nonly goal of the game being a rather\nlucky shot from Miller early in the\nsecond half that cannonaded into\nthe net off Simpson.\nPATRICK HEADS\nFOR CALGARY\nVANCOUVER, Oct 14 (CP). -\nGuy Patrick, owner of the Vancouver Lions in the Northwest Professional Hockey league, left here today en route to Calgary and Wlnni-\nThe Vancouver hockey mogul will\nattend a meeting ot hockey interests at Calgary tomorrow night\nwhen the question of Calgary Tigers\nentering the league thli year is expected to be settled.\nAt Winnipeg Guy expects to pick\nup some of the hockey talent attending lie New York Rangen'\ntraining camp established there by\nhis brother, Lester, Ranger manager.\nPreside tt Gordon Leltch of Portland; Patrick; Hugh Caldwell, Seattle club owner; Duke Keats, Edmonton; and Babhy Rowe, Portland, met here yesterday but no\ndecision was reached concerning tho\ncomposition of the league this season. The meeting was adjourned until Guy Patrick reports on the prairie situation following the Calgary\nmeeting.\nHURRAH\nHURRAH\nBADMINTON Tonight\nAnd  ii  Nelion'g  Little  Sport  Shop  prepared?\nCome in and we\u2014We will do the rett. Already we\nhave mailed racquets to Calgary, Trail,  Kimberley,\nLethbridge, etc. There muit be a reaion.\nBADMINTON RACQUETS $3.50 up\nAnd wlll thay knock your aye out for baauty and balance ....\nEvery racquet strung to exact precision by a stringer who playi\nthe game himself and knows exactly what you want\nWe uie tht world'i bett iheep gut\u2014\nGAUTHIER'S BOW BRAND RESTRINCS\nExtra $4.00 No. 1  $3.00\nSuper $3.50 Ne. 2 $2.50\nSpecial\u2014All broken strings repaired free of charge\nNelf on Sport Shop\nC. M. Sharp, prop.\nP.O. Box 57\n PAOI EIQHT-\nTHE NEUON DAILY NEWS. NEUON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 18. 1984 '\nClASSIFIED SECTION -WHERE BUYER ^EllER MEET\ntmyVlmm-mr*^r'W&A'l^^\nJgHMgTMiigYlilliltllltlHIIMllllllUllMI^^\nSOMEONE\nTO LOVE\nby VERNIE CONNELLY\nI\n-:iiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimiHiiiiiimimiiiiiii'5\nINSTALMENT  13\nControlling herself, June sped\n.back to the phone. \"Give me the\nhouse physician,\" the said as camly\nas possible. Then, when he answered\n\"A man haa taken poison ln 2820.\nCome at once and say nothing\nabout it\u2014these are Mr. Linder's orders.\"\nShe hung up a minute, and turned to view the slumped figure in\nthe chair across the room. Stifling\na gasping tob, she lifted the receiver again, and asked for the\nmanager.\nThe door-bell rang and June ran\nto admit the doctor. When Mr. Linder, the manager, arrived, he took\nin the situation at a glance. \"Did\nlt, eh? Well, let this teach you a\nlesson \"\n\"Can you keep me out of it? Please\n' \"i'l'l 'see. It he dead?\"\n\"No,\" answered the doctor, who\nwts working over Hart \"lf we can\nget him to a hospital he has a\nchance.\"\nLinder waa at the phone. \"Send\nO'Brien to the twenty-eighth floor\nwith a past key,\" he ordered. Then\nhe telephoned to t private hospital\nlor an ambulance. O'Brien was in\nthe corridor by that time, and they\nunlocked a vacant room across from\nJune's quarters, and carried Hart\nin there to await the arrival of the\nambulance.\nJune explained hurriedly, but\ntersely, what had happened.\n\"You've got a good head on you,\nyoung woman,\" Linder told her,\n''and you have a way of handling\npeople that's uncany* in such n\nyoungster. You needn't worry. It was\na swinish trick of him to do it in\nyour apartment.\"\n' \"He was drunk. I'm positive he\nnever Intended to do that\u2014to embarrass me. Look in his pockets snd\nsee if you can find his wife's telephone number? I'm going to call\nand tell her what's happened.\"\nThe ambulance arrived, and they\ncarried the unconsicious men away.\nShe put in a call for San Francisco.\nThey had found Mrs. Hart's address\nand telephone number, along with\na suicide note in Hart's pocket\nThe phone rang about midnight\n\"Ready with San Francisco,\" announced the operator. \"Go ahead.\"\n\"Mrs. Hart\u2014Lucy Hart?\" she asked. Receiving an affirmative answer, she related her story as tactfully as possible.\nShe received a startled, hurt cry\nin reply, then, the query, \"Will he\u2014\nIs hr going to die?\"\n\"There is a chance that he will\nlive.\"\n*'ll (4\"i the first plane. Try to\nkeep him until 1 get there.\"\n'Ill meet you at the airport if\nyon il wire me the time of your arrival\u2014June Varick, thc Gilmove hotel. That's all right I work for the\nhole1.\" June lied hastily. She couldn't have the girt being jealous in\naddition to all the rest. Maybe this\nwas going to turn out all right after\nall. Evidently Mrs. Hart cored for\nher husband, or she wouldn't he\nrushing to New York by airplane.\nJune went to bed, too excited to\nsleep, her ranging thoughts finally settling on an Italian steamer,\ncarrying farther and farther away\nfrom her the person she loved best\nln all the world.\nNext afternoon, June went to see\nHart at the hospital. He was not going to die. June thought good news\nmight aid his recovery.\n'Your wife will be here tomorrow\nmorning,\" June told him the moment the nurse cleared the threshold. \"I am going to meet her at the\nairport and I'll bring her directly\nto you\"\n\"Don't tease me like that for\nGod's sake. I'm sorry tor what I\ndid last night I didn't mean to; I\nswear I'd have cut my heart out\nbefore I'd have been such a snide.\nI didn't know what I was doing,\non my word!\"\n\"You don't have to tell me. 1\nknow It. But I'm not pulling a ghastly joke on you for revenge\u2014you\nought to know that. I called your\nwife long distance last night, and\nshe is flying to New York. Here is\nthe wire I received from her just\nbetore I left the hotel.\"\nHe was overcome with emotion,\nthe sudden swift joy that penetrated\nhis mind as he read the brief message. June went out quickly and\ncalled the nurse. There was no need\nfor her to stay longer.\nShe received a wireless from\nBruce, of no Import, other than the\nsignificant \"love' preceding his signature of \"David\". Since Kay's disappearance no word ot love had\npassed between them. Anxiety and\nfear had crowded the personal from\n1h*ir 'ne,*.. excen* for that betraying\ngood-by the night he n\\\\mt. He\nmust love her as she did Mm! knt\nthey couldn't be kept apart in thi*.\ncruel manner!\nJenks called for her the next\nmorning and drove her to the airport to meet Luey Hart. She was\nsure of the girl's identity almost at\nonce. None of the other passengers\nwould do, that was certain. She was\nfragile, flowerlike. Her great haunting brown eyes were set in a pale,\npointed little face. And her wide\nfweet mouth was red and inviting,\nparted oyer the tiniest teeth June\nhad ever seen in an adult. No wonder Hartley had tried to commit\nfilicide when he thought he had\nlost her.\nBut how could a girl who looked\nlike that, be so unforgiving? These\nswift impressions raced through\nJune's mind.\n\"You are Mrs. Hart?\" she asked,\nunnecessarily.\nThe girl looked too frightened to\nspeak. \"Yes,\" she managed, fear\nkeeping back the question on her\nlips.\n\"I'm June Varick. Don't be scared.\nYour husband Is going to get well.\nHe knows you are coming, and I\nam going to take you to him as soon\nas possible.\nIt wasn't the wind that made the\ngirl bend and sway against June.\nJenks was running, and lifting the\nslight figure, carried her to the car.\n\"JenkD we will slop at the Bill-\nmore fcr breakfast,\" June said. She\nthought Lucy Hart needed food.\nAnyone as thin as that must. And\nshe'd have time to gain her composure before going on to see her\nhusband.\nOver the breakfast table, June\ndrew her out, as she did everyone,\nwithout meaning to do so. Her overflowing sympathy and interest in\npeople struck a responsive chord.\nIt -was A story briefly told. A\nstory of absorbing love and hurt\npride. \"When I discovered what\nHartley had actually done,\" she\nexplained, \"I thought 1 had failed\nhim in some way\u2014that he didn't\nreally love me after all. And my\nsole thought was to let him free\nand find someone he could care\nabout enough to be true to. It wasn't\nthis woman, of course\u2014she was\nmerely a symbol of his dissatisfaction. Alter that I got so thin and\nsick with worry that I wouldn't let\nhim see me to talk things over, for\n1 knew he'd Insist on coming bark\nout of pity for me.\" Tears gushed\nfrom the serious big eyes.\n\"III were you, I'd not be crying.\nIt will upset him. Suppose we go to\nthe dressing room now and lix you\nup a bit.\"\nJune waited outside in the car\nwhile Lucy Hart went in to see her\nhusband. The girl came out a hall\nhour later, her tace radiant.\n\"It was beautilul, beautiful,\" she\nrepeated softly. \"And he told me\nabout, you too. I think you are wonderful; you can't possibly realize\nwhat you've done.\n\"I've done very little. I'm afraid.\nBut. I'm mighty glad it is all fixed\nup now and you'll certainly live\nhappily from now on.\"\n\"Yes, indeed, and I'm never going to let him come to New York\nalone Bgain. It was horribly selfish of me. But I never thought of\nit that way before. Where are you\ntaking me now?\"\n\"The Gilmore. That it where I\nstay, and your husband was there,\ntoo.\"\nAl. the hotel, they went ln it a\ncross street entrance. Passing the\nmanager's door, which stood partly open, June saw that Mr. Linder was at his desk. On an impulse,\nshe said, \"Come in here a minute,\"\nand they entered the office.\n\"Pardon me, Mr. Linder.\" Jne\nsaid, \"but I brought you another\nguest This Is Mrs. Hart She has\njust arrived from the coast but has\nalready seen her husband. He is fine\nthis morning.\n\"That's great. I'm glad to hear lt.\nMrs. Hart. Sit down won't you? We\ndid some swift work here the other night to save your husband\u2014you're indebted to Miss Varick, there\n\"I appreciate that fact, and I've\ntried tn thank her. but she won't\neven listen. Maybe I'll find a way.\"\n'Tlease!\" begged June, embarrassed. \"How about putting Mrs. Hart\nin her husband's suite, Mr. Linder?\"\n\"Yes, it is just as he left it 1 hope\nyou will be happy here. Mrs. Hart.\nWe are at your service. If you'll let\nme know, personally, anything I\ncan do \"\nHow very gracious and kind,\nthought June!\nIn the lobby, a man approached\nher. She vaguely recognized him\u2014\nsomething about Kay!\n\"I'm from Police Headquarters.\nMiss Varick. We've found a girl in\nBrooklyn who's suffering from amnesia. She may be Miss Bishop.\nThere's a definite resemblance. See-\nas you know her so well, and her\nbrother isn't here, we'd like you\nto come along and see if you can\nidentify her. . . .\"\n\"Isn't It possible to tell from photographs?\"\n\"Not for a stranger. This girl's\nhair has been Bhlngled and there is\na scar across the left cheek, still\nred. That's enough to alter anybody's\nappearance. Where is Mr. Bishop''\nWe've been trying to locate him.\nThe newspapers aay he sailed on the\nRex, but wireless reports don't confirm lt\"\n\"If he wanted you to know where\nhe is. he'd let you know. His lawyer is handling details of the investigation in his absence.\"\n\"Workin' independent, is he\u2014a\nquiet, little clue of his own? Well,\ncan you come along to Brooklyn\nnow?\"\n\"Yes, I'll go. Will you wait a few\nminutes?\"\nMrs. Hart had registered, and stood\nwaiting for June. \"I have to go out\nfor a wljile,\" June said. \"Why don't\nyou hop into bed and get a good\nsleep before you go back to the\nhospital? Then well have dinner\ntogether tonight. . . .\"\n\"That's fine\u2014I mean our having\ndinner together. And. oh yes, I must\nget some milk sent up. Hartley\nmade me promise to drink a quart\nevery day.\"\nTlonrt. Th**t'*< what you nsed. I'll\nsee you ttttt!*\n(To Be Continued!\nA travelling exhibit of regional\ntypes of wine is being organized in\nPadova. Italy, to acquaint Italians in\ndifferent parta of the country with\nwines produced in other sections.\nThe exhibit will be transported\nabout the country in automobiles.\nWomen in Hungary are boycotting\njazz, Greatest, enemy of traditional\nHungarian Gypsy music. They have\nagreed to attend no gathering and\nto enter no restaurant where the\nmusic Is no provided by Gypsies.\nArthur Wolfe, one of London's\noldest cabbies, who drives one ol the\nonly three or four hansoms left In\nthe streets, and who has driven his\nquaint two-wheeler for 50 years\nwithout a single mishap, has just\nhad his first accident. His cab was\noverturned in a collision in Knights-\nbridge, but he and his equally famous \\old mare, Black ie, were unhurt.\nThc last telegram to be sent under thc Morse system has just been\ndispatched from the Central Telegraph Office of the G.P.O. It was a\nsimple domestic message to a Sid-\ncup address\u2014a not very imposing\nend for thc 70 years' reign of dot-\nand-dash. All messages arc now sept\nby teleprinter.     ,\nMember of tht Ctntdlan Dally\nNewspapers Ataociation\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchmgt connecting to\ntil Depirtments\nSubscription Rates\nSingh copy _._. %  .05\nBy carrier, per week     2t\nBy carrier, per year,   13.00\nBy mail ln Cantda, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month, 80c;\nthree months. $1.80; six months.\n$3.00; one year, $6.00.\nUnited 'tales tnd Grett Britain, one month, 75c; lix months,\n$4*00; ont year, $7.50.\nForeign countries, \u25a0 '.her than\nU.S., same as above plut any\nextru postage,\niiitliiiiittilliiitiiilitiiiiiillliiliilllll\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\nlie a lint\nMinimum 2 llnu\n2 llms, onct  $ SO.\n% lints, onet    .33\n4 llnet, onot  \u2022..*\u2022   -44\n2 lines, 6 times    .88\n3 lints, 8 tlmu  1.32\n4 lines, 8 timet  1.78\n2 lines, 1 month  2.88\n3 lines, 1 month  429\n4 lines, 1 month   6.72\nAll ibove lm 10% for prompt\nptymtnt\niiiiiiiiiiiillllilllllllllllllllillllllllllt\nAdvertisers who desire may\nhave replies addressed to a box\nat the Nelaon Daily News and\nforwarded dally to their address. A charge ot 10 centi la\nmade for this service. In this\ncase add four words (Box \t\nDaily News) to the count for\nthe number ot wordt.\nTRUTH IN ADVERTISINGS\nThe Nelson Dally Newt endeavors to print only truthful claisi-\nlied advertising and will appreciate having Its attention called\nto any advertising not conlorm-\nIng tu the highest standards of\nhonesty.\nOut-ol-town lubscrlben .vho\nwish to answer advertisements\nin which only the telephone\nnumber of the advertiser is\ngiven, may mail their replies to\nthe Nelson Daily News, and they\nwill be communicated to the\nadvertiser.\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Ads bring\nquick results \u2014 try\none.\nBirths\nDWTER\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. A. O.\nDwyer, at the Trall-Tadansc hospl-\ntal on October 11, a daughter.\nLEGAL\nLAND  KEG18IBY   ACT\n(Section i\u00ab0)\nIn the matter of Lot! 4 and S of\nDistrict   Lot   2S48,   Group   1,\nPltn 788, Kooteniy\nDistrict\nproof having been filed ln my\noffice of the loss of certificate of\nTitle No. 1898.1-A to the above mentioned lands In the names of Andrew Jackson Lsyson snd John\nFranklin bayson snd besrlnc date\n27th April, 1914. I HEREBY OIV8\nNOTICE of my Intention st the expiration of one calendar month\nfrom the first publication herof to\nIssue In the names of the said Andrew Jackson Layeon and John\nFranklin Uytton s provisions! Certificate of Title In lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person havlna sny\nInformation with references to such\nlost Certificate of Title Is requested\nto communicate with the undersigned.\nDsted st Neleon, B. O., this 37th\ndsy of July. 1934.\nst.  i. THORBURN.\nDeputy Registrar.\nDate ot first publication, oet.\n15th, 1984. '44741\nPersonal\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENTOR.\nList of wanted Inventions snd full\nformation sent free. The Ramsay\nCompany, world Patent Attorneys\n273 Bank Street, Ottawa, Canada.\n(43581\nGENTLEMEN. SAVE baVf BUY YOUR\nSanitary requirements by msll\nStamp brings catalogue, sanl-\nTex Compsny 700 Dunsmuir street.\nVincouver, B, c. (4288)\nEcsemt Itch Piles Ulcers. Tr; Oeo Leea\nChina Remedy at Hudson's Bay Co\n (4277)\nHelp Wanted\n(Female)\nMAKE MONEY COPYING NAME*\nsddrasees for msll order firms, experience unnecesBiry. No csnvt\u00bbas-\nlni\u2014Write united Advertising 1114\nDeKalb avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y.\n t4397)\nEXPERIENCED COOK FOR FAMILY\nof four. Apply Queens Hottl.*\n (4428)\nRon Spur Notes\nROSS SPUR. B.C., Oct. 14,-T. R.\nSwtnson was a visitor to Trail.\nMiss Agnes Swanson of Trail was\nvisitor at the home of her parents\nMr. and Mrs. A. A. Swanson.\nMrs. T. Barkley is a patient in\nthe Trall-Tadanac hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Trembley\nwere visitors to Trail.\nT. Tremblay, Armand Viau, and\nL. Gurlmit and Alvin Shaw went\nto Ymir.\nMiss Sally Doerksen of Nelson is\nvisiting for a few weeks here.\nU. Le Page and R. Guenard of\nNelson were visitors here.\nThe production and trade in nuts\nand dried fruit has become one of\nthe biggest industries in Italy. Climatic conditions are particularly\nfavorable for almonds, walnuts, filberts, pistachio nuts, chestnuts, arid\npine-seeds. The dried-fruit industry, more especially the production ol dried tigs, also is of considerable importance both for domestic\nconsumption and export.\nIf YOU want a larger credit balance in your bank book\nUSE THE\nFOR SALE\nColumn on the CLASSIFIED page of the Nelson Daily\nNews. Sell some of those odds and ends that you don't\nneed in your attic or store-room.\nFor Service Phone Jean Robertson at\n144\n'lut of Town Readers\u2014Prompt Attention Given\nto Mail Orders\nNelson Daily News\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nLargest in the'Interior\nUSED MORE READ MORE\nMining Properties\nSIX 18) CROWN -RANTED CLAIMS.\n18 Inches ore In open cut, two\ntett ore ln tunnel. 400 sacks ore\nln sacks Alto have several good\nclalma not' crown granted. Seven\nmllee truck road to bott landing\nat Argents, four miles truck road\nto rtllwi7. Norman McLeod. Howser. B. C. (4844)\nFor Sale\nBusiness Opportunity\nEarn $500 to $35 Weekly\ngrowing mushrooms. Our famous\n\"Jumbo\" spawn prepared under\nDominion patented process. We\nwill buy your mushrooms. Send\n5c; for complete proposition and\nilluttrtttd booklet. North American Spawn company, 421 Somerset Bldg., Winnipeg.\n(4387)\nA MODERN 18 CABIN. CABIN\ncamp for ssla. BuUt only three\nyeart at a* 'cost' of 112.000 The\nowner will no* aacriflct at $9000\nto be paid 14000 cash with the\nbalance on arranged terms st 6\"*-.\nA sun proposition for the right\nparty. For'further particulars ap-\nply Bos 42>7, Dilly News.     (4287)\nSMALL HUNCH, MAKE IDEAL\nflshina boat 180: No U pome\nseparator lis; one light delivery\nwagon with bobs for same 148.\nCharles Holt. Balfour. B  C. (4488)\nFOR \u00bbS ALE - BARRELS, KS08\nsugar sacks, liners. McDontld Jam\nCo..   Ltd. (4288)\nBLACK LOAM, MANURE, 000*6\nloadi. Phone 137. E- C. \"Sam\"\nSmith. (4418)\nLIVING  ROOM  RUO  AND CHILD'S\ncrib  Phone 124X. (4440)\nPoultry ond Eggs\nPOR  SALE\u2014ONE  YEAR OLD HIM\n50c  each.   Leghorn   strain.   Apply\n^lWJjgtll^.___laku\u00bbp,_B__t____44__l)\nMiscellaneous\nFOR MOVING JOBS AND GENERAL\ntransfer work, phone 187. E. C\n\"Sam\" Bmlth. Moderate rates.\n(4417)\nMiscellaneous Wantec\nGOOD CLEAN RAOS WANTED\u2014AP-\nplv  pally  Newa  Office. 1888B\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS f. HUNTER. S. t. A. E\nMunicipal and Commercial Audita\nP. O. Mr, 1191. Nelion. B. O\nI 14288'\nLost and Found\nTo Finders\nIt you find a cat or a dog a\npocketbook. lewelry or fur or\nanything alee ol value, telephone\nThe DaUV News A \"Found\" Ad\nwlll be Inserted without coet to\nvou wi wlll collect from thi\nowner.\nFor Sale or Exchange\nWANT GOOD EWES TOR FIVE\nAyrshire cows, fresh In Nov.. Jsn.,\nMarch. 2 cows fresh wjth cslves.\n2 three-vear hellers fresh In April:\nsome young heifers. All from\nTrail (5. M. it 8. rum. Apply\nTh;**,   MUlur.   Burton. 14338)\nFOR OOOD MOWER WILL TRADE\nheavy team wagon, power drag\nsaw. Mre. Shutty, Ksslo, B. C.\n (4488)\nLive Stock Wanted\n8 T. B. TESTED PURE-BRED AYR-\nshlro cows. a. B. Fleener, Kaslo.\n(4458)\nALUMINUM EXPORTS, AUCUST\nExports of aluminium ln August\namounted to 16,387 cwt., valued at\n$.66,590 compared with 5043 cwt., at\n$102,498 a year ago. The chief purchaser was Japan with 13,228 cwt,\nat $201,856.\nFor Rent-Houses, Etc.\nNEW BUNGALOW, 5 ROOMS. WHITE\nPlumbing, fireplace, furnace heated. Oarage, C. W. Appleyard.\n(4381)\n3 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE, CLOSE\nIn,. suitable for couple, private\nhome, 413 cedar St. 14428)\nSIX ROOM HOUSE\u2014REMODELLED.\n12)2 Water street. Apply Box 4408\n_Nelson_ Dally   News. (4488)\nROOMFOR RENT. BOARD OPTION-\nal. Private Home. Bos 4388. Dally\nNews. 14388)\nSIX ROOM HOUSE WITH BASE\nment and garage at 818 Mill St.\nApply 411  Silica Bt, (4386)\nROOM     COTTAOE,    FAIRVIEW.\nBlock from car-line, Phone 744L.\n(4475)\nFURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING\nrooma for rent. Annable Block.\n(4261)\n8    RM.    NEW   BUNGALOW   FULLY\nmodern. Good location. Ph. 777L2,\n (4471).\nFURN.    OR    UNPURN.    APTS.    BY\nweek or month. Medical Arts Bldg.\n  (4282)\nfSE\nROOMS.    STEAM    HEATED.\nshower, termi mod. Can. Legion.\n14383)\nTWO ROOM FURM8HED SUITE\nfor rent, Stirling Hotel.     -4266)\nSIX ROOM UNFURNISHED HOUSE.\n814  alien, Bt*. Phone 815L,   14438)\nTERRACE APTS. Betutltul Modern\nFrlgldalre equipped sultea,   (4284)\n3 ROOM SUITE 112. PER MONTH.\nBillon   Rooms. (4188)\nAmy ert\nt W. WIDDOWSON. established 1900.\n305 Josephine St.. Nelson. B O.\n(4289)\n\u2014-sftmnui h. flftwwoot)\n818 Bsker g,',. Nelson. Bos 726.\nCustom and control assays, chemical insliwe. Representative at\nTrail for BBIppere' lntefests, .4443'\nKOOTENAY    LABORATORIES\nAuayeri it Chemlsta\nBoa  1342 Trt\". BO\n(4291\nChiropodists\nDr. Mildred slmorfds Foot Specialist\n405 Firnwell Bldg. Spokane, wish\ni4292)\nChiropractor!\nE. M. WARREN. D. C. BOX 872.\n'Good results, Lsdy sttendsnt by\nappointment. Phone 115.      (4261)\nElectrical\nJ.  F.  COATJS-Thi  Electric  store.\nSupplies' and installations.\nPhone 788. P. O. Box 118\n(4293)\nEngineers and Surveyor!\nA  H   OREEN CO.. LTD.   519 WARD\nBt. Phone 284. Nelton. B.C. (4106)\nF,  S.   PETERS'\nMining Engineer\nExamination operation and management of mines snd mineral\nproperties.  Roasland. BC.\n4307)\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014NELSON\nENGINEER  AND  SURVEYOR\n14308)\nBoyd C. Affleck. Fruitvale. B. C-\nLands. Mineral Claims. Waterworks\netc. Surveys. * Plana and -Estimates.\n 1__ (4309)\nHair Goods\nLadles' wigs, switches, trsnsforma-\ntlons, gentlemen's* wigs and .ou-\npees. Write for . free . Illustrated\ncatalog. Hanson Co., Vancouver,\n.   .     , (4256) I\nFlorists\nBEAUTIFUL MUMS POR YOUR TSi\ntable or the dinner psrty. This H\ntheir season.\nNELSON   FLOWER  SHOPPE.\nPhone 233 or 289R8.\nmm\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSES. Phoni\n342 cut flowers potted planti\nand floral designs, I4298J\nInsurance and Real Eitato\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTE\nRea. estate, Insurance, rental\nAberdeen block, Baker St.  (4297\nMONEY    SAVED    ON    INSURANT\npremiums   Is   money   earned.   _\nT. D. Rosling. 3 Royal Bank Bid!\n14398\nR, w DAWSON, Real Estate In\nsurance Rental! Next Hlppersoi\nHardware, Baker atreet.        (4299\nC.   D    BLACKWOOD    Insurance\nevery description. Real Est Ph '\n< 4300\nH. E. DILL.  AUTO AND FIRE insurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward 81\n(4301\n].    t.    ANNABLE.    REAL    ESTATi\nrentals, lnsursncs,  Annabla block\n(4302\nUPE. FIRE ft AUTOMOBILE INSUR\nance. P. T,   Poulln, Ph. 70. (4303\nCHAS   F   MCHARDY.   INSURANCB-\nReal Estate\u2014Phone 136. (4304\nMachinists\nBENNETT8 LIMITED\nFor all claacea of Metal work. Lathi\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene Welding\nPhone 693.\n324 Vernon Street\n  (4308;\nMusical Tuition\nVIOUN     AND     THEORY     PUPIL8\nMan Heddle, Phone 3UH2, 14296\nSash  Factory\nLAWSONS SASH  FACTORY. HARD\nwood merchant. 217 Baker atreet\nSecond Hand Stores\nWOOD AND COAL HEATERS CHEAP\nMrs. Radcllffe's. (4318\nUSE   TBE   CLASSIFIED   4DS.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nMAGGIE- KIM t CO\nTO THE PRIZEFIGHT TO-NIGHT?\nOINTY WAMT4\nTO TAKE ME-\nt^.\u2014\nPOSITIVELY     \u2022\nNOT- I CAN'T\nUNDERSTAND\nHOW YOU\nCAM LOOK AT\nTHOSE\nDISGUSTING\nEXHlStTIONti-\ntryttr.\\r.\ninc. Gfeu Bri'jin nfh*\"\u00bb \u2014\u2014xt\nEVERYBODY\nGOES-MACGIE-\nI NEVER GIT\nA CHANCETO\n00 ANYTHIN'\n1 LIKE TO OO-\nI WOULDN'T\nBE OUT LONG\nT\nYOU'LL OE\nOUT FORTH^\nCOUNT OF\nTEN IF YOU\nEVEN\nMENTION\nPRIZE \u2022\nFIGHTING\nAGAIN-\nyou heard\nwhati said\nNO!\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Westover\nTHE GUMPS\nIN THE HANDS OF THE JURY\nTWC TWO LAVA\/fKB\nHAVE P1MISHEB\nTHEK CLOSING\nARGUMENTS\nTOTKEOOaV-\nTHE EVIDENCE\nHAS BEEN\nREVIEWED-\nAND THE CAM\n\u25a0_OESWTO>T\u00ab\nLAST STA&E-\nTOOAYTHB\n\u2022J-D-&S DELIVERS\nHISWSTRUCTICNS\nTOTHEOURYMEH\nBEFORE THEV\nRETIRE TO\nCONSIDER-WE*\nVERDICT-\nS _\n______\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0If \\OU* ARE INSTRUCTED 8t TWE COURT\n[THAT IP YOU BELIEVE FRCMTHE\n\\ JWIDEMCE THAT THE _\u00bbEFENDA^ IT\n^ffe'AlJIP.1,5^A5'^TH6P'\u00bbAINTlKT BV-I\n,VVWJ>RESS OR INFERRED CONTRACT\n'IN ARRIVING AT A VERDICT IM THIS CASE A\n, Haa ARE TO CONSIDER THAT MERE l\nAFFECTtONAMD ATTEMTIVEKl^SS DO MOT\nCONSTITUTE A PROMISE TO MARKV.BUT\n\"rOUARB ALSO TO WE INTOCOHttfeRATiW\nTWEVNOUNDBD AMD LACERATED FttUMM1\nOF TH\u00a3JJLAINTIFF, AMD THE UOSS OF\nwrAM was*\nhe twelve\n?D CITIZENS AND TRUE\n*.. i. ttP ^* sJu13^ ROOM-\nJ*i^_iBI* WAMOS N(_NrJ RESTS\nTHB FATE OF < IQtOOO.OOO.\u2014\n\u25a0\n_\n \u2014\n\t\n\t\n\t\n-THE NILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 19. 1934 \u2022\nRICES SAG\nAT NEW YORK\ntenial of Inflation\nRumor Causes\na Slump\n\u25a0y FREDERICK GARDNER\nKelated Prttt Financial Writer\nV YORK, Oct. 14 (AP)-Stocks\nstaples sagged Saturday as\n\u25a0hlngton threw a few dippers-\nof cold water on the recently\nWed inflationary psychology.\n\u00a5*rnight hews that President\nlevelt had \"laughted off\" con-\niing reports that further defla-\n! of the dollar or some other in-\nlonary steps was In progress,\nlied with dcnlala by other ad-\nktrative spokesmen that any\nI  thing  was  contemplated   at\ntime, seemingly brought a\nige of heart to some Wall -itreet\nators and moderate realizing in\nstock! and commodities was\nrule throughout the brief ses-\n\u25a0oponenti of the advance, liow-\n, were encouraged by the fact\nactivity in equities dwindled\neciably on the decline, and\na were not nearly as heavy as\nit have been expected under\nlircumstances.\nere was a turnover of only 412,-\nihares for the short session, and\nStandard Statistics company\nlie for 90 selected issues w.is\nut eight-tenths of a point at 72.2.\nthe face of the realizing move-\n; resistance was shown by a\nper of stocks. Auburn, for in-\nle, was moderate)y active at an\nDee of more than a point. Other\nn, however, including General\nChrysler, eased,\nnong losers of fractions to\nnd a point were American Tels-\nie. U.S. Steel, Bethlehem, Stan-\nOUs of California and New Jer-\nDu Pont, Case, McLellan Stores\nnon and preferred, Montgomery\n4, Sears Roebuck, U.S. Smelting,\nt> de Pasco, American Smelting,\na Fe, Union Pacific, Southern\ntic, N.Y. Central and Industrial\nMarket and Mining News\nEXPORTS AND\nIMPORTS UP\nGains Shown for Year\nto Date in\nCanada\nOTTAWA, Oct. H (CP)-rncreases\nln both exports and Imports ln the\nmonth of September this year oompared with latt year and substantial\ngalna In the same figures tor tbt\nfirst six months of the present fiscal rear are shown in a statement\nIssued today by the department of\nnational revenue.\nTotal exports from Canada last\nmonth were valued at 158,135.136\ncompared with M7.784JI04 ln September, 1833. import* for domestic\nconsumption totalled S41.931.303\ncompared with S38.69S.41S In the\naame month a year ago.\nThe principal products exported\nduring the months were valued aa\nfollows with figures tor the same\nmonth a year ago ln brackets: Wheat\nS15.322.987. (S14.918.816l; wheat\nflour. 11,452.148 (\u2022369.320): fish, 12.-\n326,178 (SI.904.798); meats, 11.216.-\n375 .11.257,115); cheese, 1799.390,\n(SI.497,006); planks and boards, S2,-\n404.460, (12,040.364); wood pulp, S2,-\n123,673, (S2.372.807); newsprint. |6,-\n669.041, (96,012.258); automobiles\nand parts, 81.560,360, (Sl.034,864):\ncopper, partly manufactured, 81.-\n823.897, Sl.815.572); nickel unmanufactured,  Sl.933,045   iS2.626.797h\nFor the first tlx months of tht\nfiscal year, April to September, the\ntotal exporta were valued at 8317,-\n032,543 compared with S264.408.829\ntor the same period ln 1983 while\nthe total Imports for consumption\nmoved up from sa09.146.65S ln the\nfirst six months of 1933 to S363.-\n470.294 ln th* tsme period thli\nyear.\nDow Jones Averages.\n30 industrials     94.40 off .60\n20 rails      36.39 off .42\n20 utilites  20.21 off .17\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nISIS OF ALLOTMENT OF BANK OF\nCANADA SHARES IS ANNOUNCED\n[TAWA, OcL 14.\u2014The eagerly\nlted atatement ln regard to the\nI of allotment for Bank of Can-\naharei has been announced by\nE. N. Rhodes, minister of\nnee. Considerable work has yet\n\u2022 done ln connection with al-\nlents and the final details can-\nbe completed until further in-\n(atlon is lecured in certain\ni.\n(O more than 15 shares will be\ntted to any one applicant,\" said\nRhodes. While some ilight\nagei may still have to be made\nS result of further analysis of\nthe applications, Mr. Rhodes stated\nthat the following would represent\nthe general plan of allotment, with\nshares applied for mentioned first,\nand shares allotted, second:\n1 share for\n1 for 1; 2 for 2; 3 for 3; 4 for 4;\n5 for 5; 6 for 6; 7 for 7; 8 for 7,\n9 for 7; 10 for 7; 11 for 8; 12 for 8;\n13 for 6; 14 for 9; 15 for 10; Iff for\n10; 17 for 10; 18 for 10; 20 for 10;\n21 for 10; 22 for 10; 23 for 10; 24 for\n10; 25 for 10; 26 for 11; 28 for ll;\n30 for 11; 32 for 12; 34 for 12; 34 for\n12; 35 for 12; 36 for 13; 40 for 13; 42\nfor 14; 45 for 14; 48 for 15; 50 for IB.\n12 B.C. FIRMS EMPLOY 1482\nMORE THAN DID IN LAST APRIL\nCTORIA, 0<St. 14 (OP)-An In-\nof 1489 ln the number of\nOna employed by 332 firms re-\n_, It ihown for the month\nluguat ovtr the month ot April,\nlgures announced by Adam Bell.\n(man of the Industrial relations\nKl. The Increase In wagea Is\nMl.\nIt reporting firm* had 12.065\niloyees receiving 8895,383 In\nea In April and 13.S47 employ-\nrecelvlna 81.996,628 ln August.\nA proportion of the wage Increase\nIs due to enforcement of hours of\nwork and minimum wage regulations. The average Increase ln wages\nwas six dollar per month per employee.\nApproximately 80,574 employees In\nlumbering, mercantile, barberlng,\ntaxl-drivlng, and construction calling are Included under male minimum wage orders; while 17,895 women are under female minimum\nwage orders.\n[BEAT EXPORTS\nIN BIG INCREASE\nsited Kingdom Took Nearly\nTwo-Thirds During August September\nHTAWA. Oct. 14 (CP)\u2014Total ea-\nof wheat for tht two months\nltd September amounted to 32.-\n.034 buahela valued at 828.191.389\nipared with 28,319321 bushels at\n,875.329 In tht corresponding per-\nlaat year, the Dominion bureau\natatlstlcs reported yesterday.\nthe total export for the two\nUth period the United Kingdom\n\" 20.604,621 bushels valued at\n,626,068 against  15.925,702 bush-\nat Sl2.ooo.386 ltst year. The\nlted States received 3,340.498\nIhels In the two months ending\nitember valued at S3.122.378 as\nbut 110 bushels at 6112 ln the\nresponding period laet year.\nCanadian Dollar\nHigher\nnSW YORK, Oct. 14 (CP)-Fluc-\nitlons were confined to narrow\nportions in Saturday's foreign\n\u25a0hange markets despite heaviness\nstocks and staples. The Canadian\nIar extended its premium from\nto 2 3-16 per cent,\nttrllng closed at $4.92V\u00ab, off *>,i\n1 The French franc, closing at\ncents, was off .00% cent.\nEaster\ntwSales\n[ONTREAL, Oct. 14 (CP)-Sales\nIO0 or more shares on the Monti stock exchange Saturday: 1035\nallien; 100 BC Power A; 340 Can\na; 150 Do pfd; 720 Ind Al A; 300\nB; 488 CPR; 212 D Bridge; 235\n9. C B; 368 Int Nickel; 1623 McC\nlit; 814 Mtl Power; 2055 Nat\nw; 1015 Stl Corp; 15) Shawgn;\nSteel Can; 140 Wabasso.\nORONTO, Oct 14 (CP) .-Sales\n100 or more shares on thi Tor-\n0 stock exchange, Industrial sec-\ni, Saturday; 1654 Brazil; 150 Br\nDls; 345 C Bread; 125 C Cem;\nC lnd Ale; 445 CPR; 845 C Baks;\nC Smelt; 915 F Farm; 160 Gyp\nU! 370 I Nickel; 100 1. Secord;\nLoblaw A; 200 Oo B; 195 M Har-\n325 Steel Can; 240 H Walker\n',385 Wesfbn G; 150 Zlm Knit;\nDist C See: 200 Imp Tob; 619 BA\n! 410 Imp Oil; 875 filter Pete; 265\nPet   Or,\nPOUND AND U. S.\nDOLLAR DOWN\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14 (CP).\u2014The\npound sterling declined 23-32 of a\ncent to $4.81 % on Montreal foreign\nexchange! Saturday. The United\nStates dollar wai also lower, easing 7-16 of 1 per cent at 2-16 per\ncent discount. The French franc\ngained .01 of a cent at 6.51 cents.\nSTEEL PRODUCTS\nSALES INCREASE\nOTTAWA, Oct. 14 (CP)\u2014Factory\nsales of pig Iron, steel and rolled\nproducts were valued at S18.492.549\nln 1933 compared with S18.197.826 In\n1933 the Dominion bureau of statistics  reports.\nBesides eastern production, there\nwere also four operating planti ln\nManitoba, one in Albtrta and three\ntn British Columbia.\nAverage number of employeee ln\nthe primary Iron and steel planti\nwae 5200 ln 1033 compared with\n4847 ln  1932.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Oct. 14 (APl.-Ster-\nllng exchange steady at $4.91H for\n60-day bills and at $4.92Vi for demand.\nCanadian dollar 2 3-16 per cent\npremium.\nFrancs 6.64ft cents.\nLire 8.63 ft centt\nUruguay 81.53 cents.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG,   Oct.   13\nquotation!:\nOpen\nWheat\nOct.\nDec.   .\nMsy\nOats:\nOct\t\nDec.   ...\nMty   ..\nBarley\nOct. ...\nMay\nrlt*\nHigh\n81'!\n86',\n(CP)\u2014oraln\nLow   Cloat\n79ft     79ft\n80 80ft\n84ft      84ft\n42ft      42 ft     42ft      42ft\nii m \\\\l n\n88\n63\n88ft\n53 ft\n561,\n62%\n55 ft\nlax\nOct.\nDec.\nMav\nRye:\nOct.\nDec.\nMay\nCash wheat.\nNo. 1 hard 83ft: No. 1 nor. soft;\nNo. 2 nor. 76ft; No. 3 nor. 74ft;\nNn. 4 nor. 70%; No, 8 wheat 68ft;\nNo. 6, 9S\\; feed 62ft; durum 94ft;\nNo.  1  A.R.W. 74ft;  track 79ft.\n138ft\n144\n68ft\n51\" 1\n139\",\n144ft\n69 ft\n59 ft\n136ft\n143\n68ft\n59\n6.1\n137ft\n149ft\n6814\n59 ft\n63 ft\nt.lHltl) Bid\nA P Con _      SM\nAmal   oil         Mft\nB c Picker!   14-0\nBearer  Silver        M\nBradlan     3.25\nBraiorne   Gold    _.     \u2014\nBridge R Con       .08ft*\nB B X Gold             39\nCariboo Oold Q     1.23\nC   At   t  Oorp    71\noCaat  Brewerlea    10.28\nGold   Belt         .38\nHome Oil   78\nInt   Coal           .24\nMcDougal  Segur  03\nMcLeod   Oil 84ft\nMercury  oil    13\nMeridian    1J\nModel Oil  18\nMorning   Star    15ft\nNational   Silver         .04\nNicola 28\nOkalta    Oils     04ft\nPioneer Gold     11.90\npremier   Oold    1.33\nPremier   Border    00ft\nQuatalno          \u2014\nReno   Oold        .98\nSally   Mines    34\nTaylor Bridge  29ft\nVanalta    11\nWn'slde        .07ft\nCURBS\nAlexandria   Gold   ....     .01U\nAnaconda Oil        30(1\nBayvlew      .02\nBluebird        .01\nB C Nickel  70\nBlR Missouri   37\nBrew _. Dist _      .85\nButte IXL      \u2014\nCan   Rand      \u2014\ncalmont Oil         M\nCongree*   Oold    _     .08\nCongress Gold        .25\nCrows Nest Oils       .0S',j\nDalhousle Oil  -     .28\nDentonia         -A0\nDUnv\/el     -0\nEastcrest    _ 11\nFreehold Oil        .07\nAia\n.11\nOeo   copper\nOolconda Lead\nOold  Mountain\n\u2022 ii\nao\n83\n.17\n18.00\nOeo Biter\t\n...      .01ft\n\u202209 ft\n...      Mi\n_\n3.40\nOrandvlew   \t\n....   tl*\n.02\n14.00\n...     .28\n-7\n.09\nOrull wlhksn* ...\n...     .05ft\n.08 ft\n.87\nHalda  Oold   \t\n\"     '\u00a7?\n.10\n1.27\nHediey Amil\nHercules  Cona\n-8\n.75\n....     .04ft\n.08\n10.50\n...     .01ft\n.40\nIndependence    .....\n....     .01 ~\n.03\n.85\nKoot   Belle\n....     A*\n.49\n.35\ngoot   Florenc*   .\n..   .00%\nh\n\u2014\nLakevlew     \t\n 01\n39\nLowery    ...    \t\nMar oJn Oil \t\n...     .12\n.15\n.13ft\n 10ft\n.11\n.13\nMerland  OU   ......\n...     30\n\u2014\n.20\nMcGillivray  Coal\n 12\n\u2014\n.16ft\nMill  City    \t\nMlnto   Oold     \t\n...     .13\n.18\n.05\n.19ft\n.01'J\n\u25a0\u00b08ft\n...     -lft\n.20\n.30\nMorton   Wolsey   .\n-lft\n\u202208ft\n06\nNoble plv*   \u201e\n12 00\nNorgold   \t\n.24\n.48\n,01ft\n.02 V.\nPend  Orelll*  \t\n....     -1\nPorter   Idaho   \t\n....     .09\n.09%\n\u25a004 ft\n.95\nRawsrd   Mlnea   ...\n_\nRoyallte   Oil   \t\n... 12.80\n13.60\n\u202230ft\nRufus Argenta  ...\n...     tl\n\u202201ft\n.13\nSalmon Gold \t\n...     .14\n\u20221?\n.09\nSllvercrest     \t\n...      .02\n03 ft\nSilverado   Con   ...\n...     .04\n.06\n.03\nSilversmith\t\n..     .09\nSilt\n\u202203 ft\nSnowflake    \t\n...      .01\n.02%\nTaylor Wind  \t\n...     _1\n.23\nUnited   Empire   .\n...     .26\n-8\n.72\nUnited Oil   \t\n...     .04\n.05\n\u202287 ft\nVldette Oold \t\n...     .06ft\n.07\n...     .12\n.08\nWaterloo\t\n...     .08\n\u202208ft\n.12\nWaverlev   Tang    .\nWhite   Ragle   \t\n...     .01%\n.02\n.07\n-1\n.07\nWhitewater    \t\n...     .08%\n.05 ft\nm\nHlghwood Bare* .\n...      .18\n.16\n\u2014\nPacalta   \t\n...     .04%\n.05%\n\u2014\n...     M\n_\nji\nPilot   .  _\n...      07ft\n.08%\n.22\nGlacier Creek  .\nSunahin*     \t\n...     -5\n.06\n.14\n...   9.50\n1000\nM\nUtlca    _\t\n\u2014\n.12\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria      _  .03\nAlgoma   -  .04ft\nAmity    _ _  .01%\nAshley Oold  _ -  .88\nBankfltld     M\nBarry   HoUlngw  .10\nBase Metala      \u2014 .78\nBear  Exploration  .    .27\nBla  Missouri  31\nBoblo    _  :.. .43\nBradlan    -  245\nBraiorne     _ _  14.00\nBrett Trethtway  _  .03\nBridge R Exploration .- _ il\nBrownlee .         -  j03ft\nBuf Can  OOld  .03ft\nBunker   HIU    *.  .08\nCan Klrkland   .05ft\nCan  Malartlc  .62\nCariboo Gold Quartz  1.30\nCaetle TretfUway 74\nCentral Manitoba  .08ft\nCentral   Patricia _ 107\nChlbougamou 10\nClertcy  .03\nCoaat Copper  _  8.00\nCobalt contact  .03%\nColumsrlo 30\nConarlum     ~  . 1.48\nCons H.ttS -J.  188.00\nDomt ,  41.00\nDom Exploration 11\nEldorado      ..-. ,..._ - 3.37\nFalconbrldgt     _  8.60\nGod's Ukt  3.28\nGranada  _..._..._.. .51,\nHardrock        .77\nHoUlnger _  II.30\nHowey   _ ~  .1.11\nHudion Bay  1285\nIntemattSnirNickel .:..  3425\nKlrkland   Uke    \u2014 -70.,\nLak* Maron  -  ,.04%\nUttle Long Uc  6.40\nLike   Shor*  57.75\nMcLeod   Cockshutt    45\nMclntyra   _         46.00\nMcWatteri   Gold  ..47ft\nMacaws    :.:  2,82\nMalroblc   .02%\nMining COrp  Ut\n\u2014itt H*U \u2022\u25a0\u25a0* -  \u00ab\nMoffatt Hi\nNlplaslng\nNoranda\nParkhlll\nPaymaster\n\u202203 ft\n265\n88.25\n \u201e  -0\nPend   Orellle      43\nPioneer Gold   -  12.00\nPremier   Gold     1.84\nReno  Gold    _  .80\nSakoose   :..- .33\nSan Antonio   \u2014-  6.30\nSherrltt Oordon\t\n*}\nSlscoe   ....    _\t\n2.7j\nSmelten Gold  _\t\n.25\nSouth  Tlblemont   - \u2014.\n.03%\n\u202230\u00ab\nStsdacona     -\t\n.46\nSudbury Basin  \t\nSylvanlte    _\t\n136\n378\nTecit Hughe*  \t\n4.1S\n3*\n3k\nVenture*      \t\n93\nWajte Amultt  _ _\t\n\u25a0\nWayside   .\t\n.08\nWhite Eagle \t\n.30\nWright Hergreavn \t\n9.20\nOILS\n-0\nAJax  \t\nJL\n1400\nA P Con   \t\nAsaOeiated  \t\nB A Oil  .\nBaltae\t\n\u202204ft\nCalmont\t\n.06\nC and E Oorp  _\t\n\u202274\n140\nDtlhoutU     _ __\n.30\nHome  Oil   \t\n.76\nHomestead 0 and G .......\nImperial  Oil\t\nInternational pit* -. .\n.19\n15.69ft\n29.75\nNordon    \t\n_\n.06\nOil  sel*ctlon*    \t\n.08\n.19\nRoyallti    _ \u2014\nSarnia\t\n12.75\n\u2022W\nWalnwrlght    ,._ \u201e\n.95\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bro* A - \u2014\nBeauharnola    _\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBraalllan\t\nBrewers and Dlitlllen\nCan Bread  \u2014\nCan Cement   _\t\n8an Car and Foundry .\nan Indus Alcohol A ...\nCan   Dredge\t\nCan Pae Railway \t\nCons   Bakeries   \t\nDlstllerst   Seagrams   \t\nDominion  stores \t\nFord of  Canada A \t\nOoodyear   Tire\nHiram   Walker\n...    7\n      5\n.70\n2%\n7ft\nimperial   Tobaooo\nLoblaw   A    - -\nMaaaey Harrla\t\nStandard Paving\t\nSteel 01 Canada  -.\n.... 10\n....   15\n:::: U\n.... 129\n....   26\niM\n....     4\n90\n....   88%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAllegheny   \t\nAl chemical \t\nAm Can \t\nAm For Pow\t\nAm Ma & Fdy\nAm Smelt it nt\nAm  Telephone\nAm Tobacco ....\nAnaconda   \t\nAtchison   \t\nAuburn Mo \t\nBaldwin    \t\nBait & Ohio \t\nBendlx   At   *\t\nBeth Steel\t\nCanada Dry \t\nCan Paclflo \t\nCerro de Pasco\nghee \u201e Ohio ....\nhrysler     \t\nCom 81 South\nCon  Gaa N T\nCorn  Prod  \t\nC  Wright Pfd\nDupont\t\nEast Kodak ... .\nElec Pow it Ll\n\u00bble \t\nFord Eng \t\nFord of Can ....\nFlrat Na storei\nFreeport Tex\t\nGen Electric \u00ab...\nOen   Foods   \t\nOen Motors \t\nGold  Duit \t\nGoodrich  \t\nGrt North Pfd\nGrt West Sugar\nHowe Sound \t\nHudaon  Mo  \t\nint   Nickel   \t\nint Tel \u2022* Tel\nJewtl Te*  \t\nlft\n26ft\n_i\n28ft\n48\n103ft\n13ft\nKenn  Copptr\nKreage S \u00a7  18\nKroegger \u201e Toll 28ft\nMack Truck   36ft\nMilwaukee  pfd 8ft\nMont Ward     99ft\nNash Motor*    -. 14%\nNa D*iry Prod 16 ft\n*t Central .... 33ft\nc Gaa at Deo 14\n'ack Motora ... 8%\nPenn R R   94\nPhillips Pete .... 14ft\nPure   Oil  6%\nRadio  corp    .... 6ft\nRadio Keith Or \u2022 2ft\nRem Rand ....._\/ 9\nRock island .707. 3ft\nSafeway Stores 44ft\n8 Louis tt B t 67\nShell union   6ft\n8  Cal   Edison\nSouth   Paclflo\nStsn Oil or cal\nStan OU of N J\nStewart   Warner\nStudebaktr  1 tj,\nTex   Corp     32        31**\nTex   Gulf   Sul 37%     87*\nTlmkenn Roller* 30       29 li\nUnder Type   48%    \u2014\nUn Carbide    46ft     441i\nUn Oil 07 Cal 14ft     14\nUnited   Air   ..\nUnited Bla ....\nUn   pacljlo   ..\nU S Pipe   \t\nU s Rubber\nU   8   Steel   ..\nVan steel   n*\nWest  Electric   .. 32 jl\nWoolworth     5011\n42 ft\n6ft\na*\n10IH  ioi*V\nWrlgley        67\nYellow Truck\n3ft\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBell Telephone   120%\nBnalllan   ..*.  11%\nB C Power A  .-.-._...-  27ft\nB C power B     6ft\nBuilding   products  21ft\nCan Csr tt Foundry   6\nCan Cement Pfd  4*\nCan Gen Electric  150\nCan   Gypsum    \u201e  6ft\nCan ind Al A   8%\nSan Ind Al B   7\nP R  -  13%\nCockahutt Plow  6\n80ns M &  S   _ -  1S8\nomlnlon Bridge    33\nDom Olati  94\nDominion  Textile  79\nOen StMl  warea _  8ft\nHamilton Brldg*  -.  4ft\nint Nickel _  24\nMiasey   Harrla  3%\nMontreal  Power  81ft\nNat   Brewing  28ft\nNat   Steel   Car  14ft\npower   Corporation  9ft\nPrice   Bros      2ft\nQuebec    Power    :..'\u25a0..', 15ft\nShawlnlgsn  18\nSteel of Canada  38%\nWinnipeg Electric  I\nCURBS\nBrew   it  Dlst 85\nB   A   Oil  14\nCanada Dredge  21ft\nCan   Malting    _ _.... 37\nCan  vlcken  jft\nCan Wlnerlet ._ _ _... 6ft\nCosgrave  Brew  a\nDlatlllen    8\u00ab*grem  14%\nDom Engineer  _. 31\nDominion Tar ._,.__.....,  2ft\nHome   OU     .71\nImperial   OU  15%\nImperial   Tob   Can  11%\nint  Petrol  29%\nMcColl  Frontenac    13ft\nNoranda   _ \u201e  16.15\nPage Hersey  _ \u201e  7lft\nBANKS\nCanadlenn* _  198\nCommerce   i69ft\nDominion  17$\nImperial    _  180\nMontreal _  19*\nNova Scotia -  280\nRoyal     168%\nToronto      210\nMISCELLANEOUS\nCan   Gypsum          5ft\nCan Dndge   \u201e _.....    91ft\nDom Ston*    16ft\nFord Can A  -    22ft\nOoodyear Tire   137\nUufa   Secord   \u2014    87\nLoblaw Groceries    it\nWeat Can Flour     6\nWalker Brew      ,     7ft\nSELLING HITS\nWHEAT PRICES\nFutures Dip on the\nWinnipeg Grain\nMarket\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 14 (CP)-Swept\nby liberal selling, wheat futures\nprices dipped lower in the short\nSaturday session ot the Winnipeg\ngrain exchange. The close waa ft\nto ft cent under the previoui finish, October at 70ft, December 70\nto 80ft and May 84% cents.\nExport sales of Canadian wheat ot\n250.000 bushels failed to item tho\ndecline and little encouragement\nwai given by the action of outside\nmarkets. Liverpool sustained declines of ftd and sharp setbacks\nwere marked up at Chicago.\nThe new Australian wheat crop\nwas estimated at 124.000,000 bushels,\ncompared to previoui estimates of\n112.000,000 bushels.\nCoarse grains futures were firm\nln routine operations while cash\ngralm continued steady.\nLOSSES REE IN\nTORONTO MINES\nWright Hargreaves Loses 20;\nTeck Hughes  Is Off\nEight\nTORONTO, Oct. 14 (CPl-Minlng\nitocki turned heavy ln Saturday's\nihort market of the Toronto exchange and moderate losses were\ngeneral at the close. Votume was\nunder a half million shares.\nWrlght-Hargreaves lost 20 cents,\nTeck-Hughes 8 and Hollinger 20,\nwhile Dome gained 25, Bralorn* 10\nand Pioneer 5. Noranda had a price\ndecline of 50 cents to 38.-5\nVolume was distinctly heavy in\nseveral golds including Centnl Patrick Slscoe, God'l Lake, Macassa\nand Sylvanlte and these were all\ndown a to 8 cents each. Read Authler\nlost 8 on small turnover, Howey 2\nand Bradian 25 and penny Issues\nclosing a cent or two lower included\nBobjo, Lamaque Contact, Manitoba\nit Eastern, Maple Leaf, McMilland\nand Mlnto.\nWhite Eagle loit 2 cents to 19ft\nand Bear wai off a pont and Castle ft.\nAcme lost lft. Homestead 2, Olga\n2 while Dalhousle gained 11 cents.\nFEWGlSl\"\nCOAST MARKET\nGeneral List Down as Some\nColds and Oils Advance\nLittle\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 14 (CP). -\nWith a few small gains ln the gold\nand oil Issues the only exceptions,\nprices slumped on the Vancouver\nstock exchange Saturday on light\ntrading.\nCariboo Gold was off 10 at 1.22,\nBradian lost 15 at 2.25 and Vidette\nat 1.50 waa down 3. B.R.X. was 2ft\ncents lower at 36 and Nicola lost\n2 cents. Taylor Bridge gained 2\ncents and Premier Gold and Reno\neach firmed a cent\nBeaver Silver wai activ* and\ncloied unchanged at 9, Porter Idaho\nloit a cent and Noble Five wai\ndown ft cent B,C. Nickel firmed\na cent.\nDalhousle Oil advanced 4% to 28\nand Calgary 8c Edmonton and Home\nOil were each a cent stronger.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Oct 14 (API-\nNo. 1 northern 111% to 115%. No. 1\nred durum 115ft to 116ft, Dec. 106ft,\nMay 105.\nCorn, No. 8 yellow 75 ft to 76.\nOats, No. 3 white 54ft to 55ft,\nFlax, No. 1 185 to 191.\nFlour unchanged. Shipment! 89,-\n599. Pure bran 22.00 to 22.50.\nExchanges\n, MONTRKAL, Oct. 14 (CP)\u2014Britlah and foreign exchange In relation\nto the Canadian dollar aa compiled\nby the Royal Bank of Canada, closed\nSaturday at follows:\nArgentina,  paso    _    .3576\nAustralia,   pound   -  8.8352\nAustria,   tchllllng    187!**\nBelgium,  belga    .2306\nghlna, Hong Kong dollars  4113\neechoslovakla. crown 041a\nDenmark, kron*    .3156\nFranee, franc    .0651\nOermany. rtlchsmark  3982\nOreat Britain, pound  4.816(i\nHungary, pengo  2B4B\nIndia, ruoee     .3648\nItaly, llr*  0847\nJapan, yen  3835\nNew   Zealand,   pound    3.8506\nNorway, krone  2434\nPolantl,  plotl   1884\nSouth Africa, pound   4.81U\nSpain,   peseta    J350\nSweden, kron*          ....   _I487\nSwitzerland, franc      .3324\nUnited States, dollar, 3-16 per oent\ndiscount.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER. Oct. 14- Mining\nshares sold on the Vancouver itock\nexchange Saturday.\nListed\u2014Bradlan 540, Beaver Sll\n13,700. BHX 1000, Cariboo 000, Gold\nB 1000. Mak Siccar 1000, Morning\nStar 1500, Nit Sil 2000. Nicola 2500.\nPioneer 5, Prem G 4400. Rend 2800.\nSally 200, Taylor B 7100, Vanalta\n2500, Wayside 3000. '   r\nCurb-Alexandria 1000, BC Nickel\n3100, Big Miss 1750, Congress 700,\nDentonia 2400, Dictator 5200, Dunwell 1000, George Copper 100, Fair-\nview A 4400, Georgia River 1500,\nGolconda 300, Grange 200, Grull W\n500. Glacier Cr 1000, Herculei C\n1000, Home 500, Lakevlew 5000,\nMinto 1000, Porter Idaho 4000. Silversmith lMO. Snowflake 10OO, Vldette 1000, Viking 500, Waterloo\n500, Salmon 300, Whitewater '2500.\nA German sclentlit concludes thit\nwrought iron was first produced\nfrom hematite in Armenia about\n1400 B.C.\nENDIVES AND\nQUINCE ON LIST\nSquash Also Added to\nDisplay on Local\nMarket\nSquash, quince tnd endive; appeared on th* market Saturday on\nVernon street to enlarge the already numerous varieties of vegetable and fruit on dliplay each\nweekend. Squash told at 3 centt per\npound, quince at 4 pounds for 26\ncenU and endives at 6 and 10 centt\np.r head. Chryshsntbemuma aold at\ntwo bunches for 35 cents.\nThe bunches of green -onlont wert\nmade larger tnd sold at 6 cents\nper bunch Instead of two bunches\nfor 6 centt.\nThe market was well attended.\nPrlcea were;\nVEUKrAKlXS\nTomatoes,  4  pounds   _ 35\nPotatoes, 13 lbs  ......_..    .25\nBeets,   7   Iba     .25\nRadishes, 3 bunches \u00ab____.   .10\nParsley,   bunch       M\nLettuce, 3 heada   ...........   .10\nMint, bunch ... _    tt\nGarlic, lb  .16\nCabbage, lb     .03\nRed cabbage, lb  03\nCarrots,   7   lbs.     \u2014...    .25\nParsnips,  7 lbs..     .36\nSage,    bunch .05\nVegetable marrow, tach .. JO to   JO\nOreen peppers, lb.      ,05\nRed peppers, lb.   _ 10\nCckiiy, head  ...................    .06\nCorn, doren  _   .15\nEndives, head    05 and .10\nSquash,   lb.    .._..     .08\nQuince, 4 lbs.  .  36\nFtU ITS\nWashington plums, 6 lbs. .26\nSugar plums, 6 lbs     .25\nDamsons, baaket - -....   JO\nGripes, lb    .10\nurLu\nAlexander!, box   .75\nApples, 8 lbi    3&\nrfoovci\nEggs, gradt A largt, 1 dozen ....... .40\nEggs, gradt A medium ..._.... .35\nCream,   pint       to\nButtermilk,  quart  .10\nButtermilk, gallon   30\nButter,   tb.    ._  _8\nCream cheese, lb  31 and _6\nCurda,   lb.  -0\nOoat   cheese,   lb  JS\nPrim*  cheeee,  lb  .35\nHonty.   4-lb.   tin    78\nHonty. t-lb. tin .......  1.85\nMEATS\nPork, lb. .18 to JB\nBeef,  lb  .05   to .17\nVeal,  lb    .08  to .18\nSpring lamb, lb  .18 to JO\nLlvtr, baby beef. lb. 10\nUver, calf, lb - J8\nHead   cheeae,   lb ._.  10\nOxtail      .18\nBacon,   lb  J8\nBacon,  horn*  cured,  lb.    JO\nCorned be*f, 3 IM.  J5\npork Sauaage. lb    J5\nCierllc  sausage,  lb  JO\nBtet dripping, lb   JO*\nSpring chicken, lb \u201e  JO\nFowl,   lb   JO\nFryers, lb \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014, J8\nFLOWEBINO   PUNTS\nSnapdragons,  bunch    ..\u2014 .10\nChrysanthemum!, 3 bunchet \u2014 .25\nButter and Eggs\nAdvance\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14 (CP).-But-\nter and egg price! moved upwird\non the Montreal produce and dairy\nmarket last week.\nFresh No. 1 butter in carloti or\nless finished the week at 20 to 20V.\ncents a pound.\nGraded shipments ot fresh eggs\nIn carloti or leu were 33 centi a\ndozen for A-large.\nNo. 1 Ontario white cheeie closed\nlower at 9% centa a pound.\nNew Quegec potatoes were quoted\net 35 to 40 centa per 80-pound\nbag.\n15-Cent Drop in\nBar Gold\nMONTREAL, Oct 14 (CP).-Bar\ngold ln London down 15 cent! at\n$34.37 an ounce In Canadian fundi;\n142s 8-Ad in Britlih funds; The\nfixed $35 Washington price amounted to $3..28 in Canadian.\nINDUSTRIALS AT\nTORONTO MIXED\nTrading Is Around 11,000\nShares With Cains and'\nLosses Even\nTQR.ONT0, Oct. 14 (CP)-The industrial board ot the Toronto stock\nexchange broke even on losses and\ngains Saturday. Volume was around\n11,000 shares and up considerably\nfrom the turnover of other Saturday\nsessions ln recent weeks.\nTrading in oils fell off with Imperial and International Pete lagging V. to V\u00ab and McColl preferred\nVt. British American Oil and Super-\ntest issues moved up under fair\ndemand.\nDiitlllery iisuei gave ground moderately, Alcohol A and Distillers\nSeagrams loilng Vt to 4k each and\nWalkera common % to 26.\nTrade wu small In the other In-\nterlisted leaden with exception of\nBrazilian which, under profit-taking,\neased V4 to 11%. Nickel sagged -li,\nC.P.R. V\u00ab and Ford A H. In foods.\nConsolidated Bakeries dropped ft\nto 10. Both Loblaw stock! stepped\nup narrowly and Laura Secord\ngained nearly two points to 58.\nCanadian General Electric pre-\nferred\u2014B.C. Power B, Simpsons A.\nSteel of Canada, Imperial Bank und\nBank of Montreal, Goodyear common and Montreal Power were\nhigher.\n.1113\n-PAOI NINE\n3 CENT DROP\nI\nAll Futures Below $1\na Bushel at\nTimes\nBy JOHN P. BOUGHAN\nAuoclated Pren Market (dltor\nCHICAGO. Oct. 14 (AP)-Virtual\ndisappearance ot Inflation talk u a\nmarket factor went hand ln hand\nwith tumbles of grain values Saturday including a orop of three centa\ntor wheat\nAll Chicago wheat future! fall at\ntime! below $1 a bushel. Bulli contended, nevertheless, the break in\nvalues wai only a fraction after an\nadvance which had carried wheat\nup 8 centi from laat week1! low.\nWith rallies In progress at the lut\nwheat closed uniettled IH to 2%\nunder Thursday's finish, May $1.00\\4\nto $1.00%, corn 1 to U4 down, December new % to ti, oats % to 1*4\noff and provisions varying trom 2\ncents decline to a rise of 15 cents.\nCorn and oats suffered losses\nchiefly owing to sympathy with\nwheat. Provisions averaged lower,\nresponsive to downturns of hog\nvalues and of gralm.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Oct. 14 (CP)-Bar\nsilver steady and unchanged at\n53-S4, Saturday. Other metali nominally unchanged.\nAt London\u2014Bar illver quiet, 1-18\nlower at 24%d.\nGOLD\nOPTION AVAILABLE ON 50 ACRES\nNear Goodenough Mine, Ymir district.\nApply BOX A.A., NILSON DAILY NIWS\nThe Gold Coin Syndicate\nReglitered undir tha Securltlee Act of Britlih Columbia\nOFFERS\nA Wmited Numbtr of Units at $50.00 Each\nContract let for sinking shaft on Syndicate's Horsefly\nProperty. Vein at ten-foot depth has widened to\neleven feet, nine inches, with average values across\nfull width of 0.3 oz. of gold per ton. Individual assays up to 10.02 oz. of gold and concentrates up to\n179.34 oz. of gold per ton.\nSYNDICATE MANACIRS AND\nTRUSTEES OF THE SYNDICATE\nAndy G. Larson, M.E. George A. Clothier, MX\nDr. T. R. Whaley, M.D. Gilbert G. Haskatnp, Investor\nEdwin A. Aim, Iniurance and Real Estate Broker\nFred C. Myers, Managing Director, Fred C. Myers Ltd,\nWholesale Hardware.\nThis property has recently been examined and very favorably\nreported on by two engineers. Reports and assay certificates on\nfile for inspection. We recommend immediate purchase of Gold\nCoin Units.  Write for full particulars.\nALM & CO., LIMITED\n34 Fairfield Building Vancouver, B. C.\nPRINTING\nFOR\n-MINES-\nAssay Forms\nTime Cards\nPayroll Forms\nInvoice Forms\nSynoptics\nSpecial Forms\nStock Certificates\n.Mining Prospectus\nRuled Forms\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nRequisitions\n\u2014OFFICE-\nLoose Leaf Forms\nSynoptics\nLedgers, (Any SizeV\nLedger Sheets\nStatements\nBillheads\nShipping Tags\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nRuled Forms\nVoucher Checks\nPamphlets\nWe Can Give You Immediate Service . . .let Us Know\nYour Printing Requirements. . . We Will Submit Prices\nand Samples.\nTELEPHONE 144\ntamprrial printing B?$rartttt*nt\n.\t\n -\u2014--\u2014\n------\n__-_-__\n\t\nPAOI TEN-\nFall Bulbs\nNow Ready\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nBella Coola River\nIs Going Down; No\nDistress for People\nVICTORIA, Oct 14 (CP).\u2014Water\nln the Bella Coola river continues\nto subside and there is no acute\ndistress at HagenSorg, the settlement of 250 people which was struck\nhardest, according to advises to the\nBritish Columbia government\nFloods last week carried out four\nmiles of road and provincial police\nare taking in food for a few marooned families.\nHagensborg is Inland from the\nmainland coast, about 250 miles\nnorth of here.\nGait Coal\nLUMP       $ 10.50\nSTOVE       ?9.00\nPHONE 53\nBURNS\nCoal 6c Cartage\nDON'T DELAY\nNow it the time to hava\nyour\nWINTER\nCOAT\nDYED\n**.\nH. K. FOOT\nDyer and Cleaner\nFairview      Nelion, B.C.\nBERT WALTON\nHEADS F AC.\nClub Will Board Rink\nat Fairview; Had\nGood Year\nBert Walton wu chosen pruldent of tha Falrvlew Athletic club\nat tha annual meeting of the orgs*\nniistlon Friday night. About 30\nattended.\nThe club decided to put a wall\naround the rink thla yur on the\nsite of the Falrvlew Tennli club\ncourts and by this venture It Is\nbelieved that numerous games can\nbe played down there this year.\nPlans were also discussed for a\nbanquet for active members.\nIn revlewinc the activities of the\nclub during the past year it was\nshown that a successful seuon had\nbeen enjoyed in most sports and the\nfinancial  standing was also  good.\nThe  various   aggregations  of  the\nclub, it was stated, held the Nelson\nrugby championship, the Nelson \"intermediate  baseball championship,\nthe Nelson basketball championship\nand the Juveniles still hold the Nelson juvenile hockey cud. having won\nit two years ago and there being no\ncompetition last year.\nWhist drives and dances are planned for this coming winter.\nUniforms were bought last spring\nand enough were secured to outfit\nboth the baseball team and the\nhockey team. Hockey teams are\nplanned for the winter and there\nwill be two or three basketball\nteams fielded if leagues are^tarted.\nOther officials elected were Alderman Ross Fleming, honorary\npresident; Alex Ioanin, first vice-\npresident; T. Bishop, second vice-\npresident; Bud Cooper, third vice-\npresident; Jack Houston, secretary-\ntreasurer.\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST\u2014OPTIOIAN\nSuits SOS, Medical Arts Bulldluc\nSEE'\nVIC GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\nFor Modern Plumbing\nOpp. City Hall       Phone 815\nAT MODERATE PRICES\nREX JARVIS\nElectrical Contractor and\nEngineer\nRepalra and Suppllea\nFor Service Phone 844\n502 Josephine Street\nRETAIL LUMBER\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS     '\nW. W. Powell Co. Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley St.\nNOTICE\nLiberal Nominating\nConvention\nof the\nWEST KOOTENAY RIDING\n.  Will Be Held in\nGELINAS'HALL\nNELSON, B.C.\nWEDNESDAY, OCT. 17th, 8 P.M.\nAll Delegatei Urgently Asked to be Preient with\nCredentiali\nMRS. HUGH ROSS\nChairman Convention Committee\nFraser Makes Itself\na New Channel\nVICTORIA, Oct. 14 (CP)\u2014The Canadian hydro-graphic surrey completed a survey ot the Fraaer river\nlust tlve yeara ago. tbe river baa\nmade lteelt a new channel, approximately 1300 feet north of the\npassage charted at thst time, B. D.\nPartzeau. chief ot tha hydrographlo\nsurvey on the pacific coast reports.\nThis wu revealed In a resurvey of\nthe river completed recently.\nMORE ABOUT\nTWO CONFESS\n(Continued From Page One)\nFrench authorities were pushing\nsteps to bring them to trial tor\ncomplicity ln Alexander's assassination.\nAn investigation magistrate at\nMarseille conferred with the local\nstate prosecuting attorney where\nthe prisoners are held and drew up\nwarrants charging them wtth com\npllctty ln the crime. These are to\nhe sent to Annecy.\nMl'ST  DIE  ANYWAY\nPosphecll will be executed ln any\ncase, authorities believed, slnoe he\nwas under sentence of death In\nYugoslavia for killing a newspaper\neditor and two policemen, and his\nextradition was considered a simple\nmatter. It was doubted If Rajtich\nwould come under the extradition\ntreaty.\nPolice now believe there were five\nmen and one woman ln the terrorist band that crossed Europe to\nkill Alexander. These were the dead\nPetrus Kaleman, who accomplished\nthe assassination; two two prisoners\nat Annecy; a man named Malney,\nor Chalney. who escaped from Fon-\ntalnebleau police and fled Into the\nforest; Egon Kramer, or Kvaternlk,\nwho Is believed to be the mysterious\n'\"doctor\" who gave the band Instructions at Lausanne; and the\ntall, pretty, 24-year-old \"gun girl\",\nwho registered at various hotels as\nMarie VJoudroch, a Czechoslovaks.\nTraced down through minute clues\nobtained at the scene of the assassination, those In custody told an\namazing story of intrigue.\nThe man spoken of as \"the doc<\ntor\" was believed to have been ln\ncharge of the gang's operations In\nFrance.\nMORE ABOUT\nASSASSIN\n(Continued From Paga One)\nquarters, and Ustachl revolutionary\ngroups abroad.\nVaternik was born at Belgrade\nMarch 39. 1010. tinder the nsme of\nEgon Kramer he was tbe leader ot\nthe group of Terrorists that met at\nLousanne to plot the assassination\nof King Alexander, police aald.\nHe stayed ln the Reglna hotel ln\nParis and also visited Ala En Provence, near Marseille. His passport\ndescribed him as a Journalist born\non Marcb 39, 1911, at Jemeavar,\nRumania.\nKILLED MANV\nIt was said the Macedonian bad\nbeen using the name Kalemen aa\nan alias, and has assassinated numbers of those who hava opposed\nMacedonian independence.\nHe was said to have slain Hadll\nInov, Bulgarian Agrarian leader, IA\n1931. In 1930. according to the legation, Tschernoccmska killed Ivan\nTomalavskl, one cf the leadera ot\nthe Protegerov, a aectlon of the\nMacedonian revolutionary organization ln Vienna.\nLater be escaped prison and became a trusted bodyguard and\nchauffeur of Mlhalloff, who recently\nescaped from Bulgaria to Turkey\nby fleeing under cover across the\nborder with his wife.\nIn 1933. according to Bulgarians,\nTschernocemskz waa engaged as a\ncourier ot secret messages from\nMacedonian revolutionary organizations to various revolutionaries In\nHungary.\nAt the end of 1932 he waa supposed to have lived ln Budapest,\nwhere he acted as a Liaison officer\nbetween Macedonian revolutionaries\nand Croat Emigre Terrorists, He had\nrecently acted as Instructor ot Croat\nTerrorists at tbe military camp ln\nHungary where, according to Yugoslavs, Croats were trained In the\nuse of bombs and rifles.\nThe Identification, lt waa said,\nwaa made by means of photographs\nobtained from the French police\nby two former Yugoslav Macedonians\nnow living on their native soil, wltb\nwhom Tschernocemskz had formerly associated.\nPolice at Sofia, Bulgaria, were\nsaid to have confirmed the Identification ln collaboration with Belgrade\nauthorities.\nColony Scheme to\nAid 300 Families\nMONTREAL, Oct. 14 (CP)\u2014At a\ncost of $210,000 to be shared in equal\nparts by the Dominion and Quebec\ngovernments and the city ot Montreal, 300 Montreal families will be\nsent within a month or so to colonization areas, probably in Temiska-\nming or Abitibi. Hon. Irenee Vaut-\nrin, Quebec minister of colonization,\nannounced here today.\nBASEBALL\nBASEBALL\nTHE TOURING\nMAJOR LEAGUE ALL-STARS\nvs.\nKOOTENAY LEAGUE ALL-STARS\nUNOER THE AUSPICES OF THE NELSON OYRO CLUB\nMONDAY, OCT. 22nd\u20142 P.M.\nOne of the Greatest Sporting Events Ever to Be Shown in This District\nj*\nWith ttars of many ef th* great American league teams and the famous comedian\ncoach, AL SCHACHT\nWHOSE COMIC ANTICS ARE WELL WORTH THE PRICE OF ADMISSION THEMSELVES\nARRANGE NOW TO BE IN NELSON IFOR THIS EVENT\nTickets from Members of the Cyro,  Rotary or Kinsmen Clubs\nADULTS-SI.10 CHILDREN-55e\n- THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 15.1M4-\nThousands Seek New Homes as Copper Industry Falls\nThe failure of the world's deepest\ncopper mines to come back threatens to write a new version ot \"Acadia\" into the history of North America. The great copper country of\nMichigan, which in the heydey of\nits production led the United States,\nfaces at last a momentous decision\nand thousands ot families In Its\nstricken ranges may be forced by\na wholesale migration into new\ncenters of productivity as the state's\nonly hope for permanent solution\nof its staggering $150,000,000 emergency welfare problem. Only two\nmajor companies operate today. At\nleast a half dozen well-known\nmines, which shut down four years\nago due to overproduction and underconsumption, show no promise\nof reopening. One of the biggest,\nthe Mohawk, will never come back,\ngeologists say. Twelve thousand\nmen were employed in two counties during the good years. Only\n2,000 are employed today. Copper\nsold for 18 cents per pound in 1929.\nToday current quotations hover\naround nine cents. They have hit\nfive cents.\nMORE ABOUT\nSPAIN'SFLARE\nI\n{Continued From Page One)\nautocratic feudalism,\nKINO FLEER\nOn April 14. 1931, black-moustach-\nfd, debonair Alfonso XIII, took one\nlook at the menacing crowds overflowing the Madrid streets and fled\nthe country. For the first time ln\nmore than 450 years, a reigning\nSpanish Hapeburg had stepped-down\nvoluntarily from hts throne.\nSpain has long been a proverb\namong nations for Its extremism.\nDuring the middle ages, its monarcha were the most powerful la\nthe world, tti masses among the\nmost ignorant and oppressed. And\nduring the paaslng centuries, tta\nrulers made Uttle attempt to bring\nthe nation out of oppressive darkness, to make its citizenry conscious of modern western thought,\nAfter the Spanish-American wax\nof 1898, a band of liberals and republicans began to preach the doctrine of modernism, but at first\nmade Uttle progress,\nFIRST RUMBLINGS\nThe first rumblings of revolt\ncame ln 1921, when 10,000 Spanish\nsoldiers were massacred tn a battle\nwith Abd-el Krlm during the Riff\nwarfare. Ant!-Imperialists denounced\nthe feudal monarchy for \"seeking to\nmaintain an empire in Morocco by\nshedding Spanish peasant blood.\"\nTo bulwark his trembling throne.\nAlfanso turned to oenerai Prlmo\nDe Rivera, who became dictator in\n1923. For six years, De Rivera censored the press, sought to bring the\nMoroccan conflict to a face-saving\nclose, maintain the monarchy, and\nkeep down the growing vigor of\nllbpralism and republicanism.\nBut the growing dissatisfaction ot\nthe army gave Alfonso an excuse to\noust De Rivera, and premier Ber-\nenguer. another soldier, took up the\nHapsburg cudgels in 1930, this time\nannouncing that the \"constitution\"\nwould be restored, and elections to\nthe national parliament or Cortes\nwould be held.\nThe depression circling the world,\nhowever, reached Spain, and with\nthe fall of the peseta, hard times\nhit the Industrial centres. Workme*\nand republicans declared general\nstrikes, which were put down with\nbloodshed. Concentration camps were\nerected for thousands of political\noffenders.\nThe days of Alfonso, nevertheless\nwere numbered.\nREPUBLICANS WIN\nIn two hours on AprU 14, 1931,\nAlfonso wavered between ordering\nmartial law throughout Spain, or\ncrushing the wtll of the nation which\nhad elected elected a majority of\n\"republican\" delegates. He sailed foi\nFrance at midnight, white millions\nof Spaniards sang songs and danced\nin the streets.\nUp sprang nation-makers Uke\nManuel Azana, provisional president\nOf the embryo republic, and Nlceto\nAlcala Zamora. who aided the transition from a feudal monarchy overnight.\nThetr constitution was Utopian\nLand laws were to give each peasant a share of the vast estates\npossessed by the deposed nobles and\nclergy with ultimate socialization.\nDisestablishment of the church. Autonomy for nationalist areas like\nCatalonia, with Its seaport. Barcelona. Autnomy for the Basque\nprovinces, too. Denunciation of any\nImperialistic war. Compulsory collective bargaining for labor, and repeal of harsh laws against workers.\nSuffrage for both sexes.\nIt went too far and not enough.\nAnd the Socialists, who had forged\nthe modern republic out of the decadent monarchy, found themselves\nopposed by the conservative, clerical, monarchist and middle-anarchists and syndicalists sought to\nset up t, completely proletariat regime.\nThe lines were,quickly drawn, in\n1932 a monarchist putsch, led by\nmany or the guardla civil policemen\nand regular soldiers was quickly\nput down through a general strike\nand the loyal republican forces.\nBut President Azana hfttl alienated\nthe conservatives and clericals. TJn\nder the guidance of Jose OU Robles,\nthey gained power. Ironically enough,\nAzana had adopted the democratic\nidea of 'giving women the ballot.\nThey, tn sympathy with the clericals, promptly voted the Socialists\nand left parties into oblivion.\nSCUTTLES   CON8THTUTION\nOil Robles bided his time. An old\ncentre party leader terming himself\n\"radical,\" Alejandro Lerroux, formed a ministry, an began to repeal\nmost of the \"radical\" legislation\nand to scuttle the socialist part of\nthe constitution. Liberties disappeared.\nSucceeding ministries wrestled\nwith the Catalonia question, Legislation to permit peasants to own\nthe land after ia years of paying\nrent brought matters to a crisis.\nCatalans threatened to secede, lf\nMadrid   objected.   Conservatives  and\nclericals denounced the soft glove\ntreatment of the \"rebels.\" Labor\nand Socialists declared the formation\not a' reactionary government would\nresult ln a general strike and possible revolution.\nWith the aid of OU Robles and\nPresident Zamora, Lerroux, again\npremier, called their bluff. And with\nthe news' that he had assumed power, thousands of workers, republicans\nsyndicalists and autonomists, unlocked caches of guns and sought\nto \"save\" their republic, now fast\ndisappearing.\nAzana had fled Spain. Col. Company's, president of the Catalan\nautonomist state, was arrested, faced a court-martial. Thousands ot\nother republicans and leftists were\nImprisoned.\nThe pendulum has swung back\nagain.\nMORE ABOUT\nBC. TOURISTS\n(Continued From Page One)\nAided, perhaps, by the lure of aea\nserpents and prolific hens, British\nColumbia took to Itself 99,910 automobiles carrying 186.485 passengers\nfrdm United States between Jan. 1\nand Sept. 30. Last year's figures\nfor tbe same period were S3,039\nand  178,363.\nCent-a-mlle excursions brought\nabout 20,000 visitors from prairies.\nCoastal ships have carried more than\n100.000 excursionists, highest since\n1929, and 24 salllnis to Alaska\nwere booked almost to capacity.\nRailways report combined tourist\ntraffic on rails and steamships about\n80 per cent higher than last year.\nAlberta's national parks received\n157.307 persons between April 1 and\nSept. 30, against 177.274 ln the same\nperiod last year. Total entry figures\nwere not aballable.\nIn Manitoba, records for the first\nsix months of the year only are\navailable. They show 11.423 cars\ncame from the United statu, carrying 37.748 passengers, as against\n13,338 cars and 41,384 passengers ln\n1933. From eastern Canada during\nthe first six months of this year\ncame 1365 cars with 4398 passengers\nwhile 1108 entered last year with\n4181  passengers.\nNo figures are available on cars\nentering Manitoba from western\nprovinces but officials declare there\nhas been a great Increase owing to\nImprovement of roads and travelling\nfacilities.\nRailways have not statistics of\ntourist traffic Into Manitoba but\nexpress the belief lt has been of a\nlarger volume this year.\nREINDEER RACES\nON ICE HIS PLAN\nEDMONTON, Oct. 14 (CP). \u2014\nSpeedy reindeer with Lapland Jockeys guiding them'over the ley surfaces of National Hockey league\narenas In eastern Canada Is the\ndream of Louis P. Hovlg, once of\nNorway, but he may have to delay\nhis Invasion of the east for a while.\nPlans for staging reindeer races\nln the National league ice palaces\nat Toronto, Montreal and Chicago,\nwith the fans paying 50 cents a\nhead to see the novel sport, had\nbeen completed by Hovlg, who claims\nto own 50.000 reindeer in Norway,\nready for transport to Canada. He\nadvertised in the Edmonton newspapers for financial backers ready\nto Invest ln his racing venture who\nwould be willing to make 60 to 1\non  their Investments.\nCharged with false pretences, Hovlg was arralnged In court here Friday and remanded for trial. He\nwas released on ball of $500.\nOne prospective Investor, Mrs. 8.\nC. Weder, of VUnn, Alta.. testified\nHovig told her he had 100 reindeer\nIn training at Quebec and required\n$500 to purchase feed for them\u2014\nreindeer moss.\nSecond Fire Hits\nChinese Section\nNear Chilliwack\nCHILLIWACK, B.C., Oct. 14 (CP).\n\u2014Chilliwack Chinese today surveyed the ruins of the second major\nfire that has brought disaster to\nthe settlement within the past few\nweeks.\nThe large house, garage and warehouses of Chong Duck on Wellington avenue were levelled \">iday\nnight in a spectacular blaze. Firefighters employed all available hose\nbut were unable to cope with the\nflames. ,\nPractically the entire Chinese settlement on Yale road about a mile\nwest of the city, was wiped out by\nfire in the early morning hours of\nAugust 27.\nMORE ABOUT\nTHELEAGUE\n(Continued From Page One)\nactivities were aimed at \"the destruction of three startes carved by\nthe treaty of Versailles, with the\nfull knowledge of Hungarian and\nItalian officials.\"\nTWO IN ITALY\nTwo terrorist camps are maintained on Italian soil, according to\nYugoslav officials, with the full\nknowledge of authorities there, In\naddition to one ln Hungaria, formerly known as Janvaruszta, from\nwhence came the assassins of Barthou and King Alexander.\nForeign Minister Benes and Foreign Minister Nicholas Tiiulescu of\nRumania, both of whom were said\nto be marked for death by the terrorists, are going to Belgrade for\nKing Alexander's funeral. There\nthey will meet Bogoljub Yevtitch,\nforeign minister of Yugoslavia, and\ndecide what to do.\nBENES UNDER GUARD\nBenes, heavily guarded, marched\nSaturday in Barthou's funeral procession. Thirty detectives are accompanying him constantly while\nhe moves about Paris.\nThe Croat terrorist band \"Us-\nt*fehi,\" whose program, according\nto Yugoslavian officials calls for a\ndivision of the Yugoslav kingdom,\nis said by them to be i>aid by \"interests desiring the revision ot the\nVersailles treaty.\"\nThe gang, lt is asserted, Is not\nwholly Croat. Its members also are\ndrawn from other nationalities.\nYugoslavia's report to the league\nof nations last June, Yugoslav officials say, contains sufficient \"original documents to prove the responsibilities of Hungary and Ital^.\nCollapse of the entire Franco-\nItalian and Entente-Italian conciliation movement so strenuously fostered by Barthou was seen in authoritative quarters as a likely aftermath if the Entente insists upon\nairing what It claims to be document- Indicating \"Italian rcsponsi*\nbility.\"\nPLAN BASKETBALL\nMEETING IN NELSON\nMORE ABOUT\nMINERS\n(Continued From Page Ona)\nlaasnaas and violence we wlll negotiate with yeu.\"\nInfuriated by the government's\nwords, the miners kept all five emissaries as hostages, men with pickaxes threatening to kill them it\nthey attempted to escape.\nThoroughly disturbed by this incident, the minister of the Interior\nwas hurrying plans to rescue the\nunionists, who it was feared might\nbe killed If the mine owners failed\nto grant the workers' demands.\nDRAMATIC SCENES\nOutside the mines there were dramatic scenes aa miners' wives battled with police ln a vain attempt\nto enter the workings and )oin their\nhusbands. The miners, adamant,\nthreatened again to wreck the air\nand water pumps to drown and\nsuffocate themselves in their black\nprison.\nThe Danube Steam Navigation\ncompany, owners of the mines, in\nwhich British interests are heavily\ninvested, have refused to negotiate\nwith the men unless they come to\nthe surface.\nMiner's wages amount to about li\nweekly. They demand J3.50\u2014about\n58 centa a day.\nPART TIME WORK\nThe strike was based mainly on\nthe fact that mine owners have been\nable to give only part time employment to 4500 miners in Pecs, paying\nthem on the basis of only a few\nhours of work daily. The miners\ndemanded the number of their working hours be increased so they can\nearn more money.\nPecs Is in southwestern Hungary,\nnot far from the Yugoslav border,\nand about 175 miles southwest of\nBudapest, in a rich mining area*\nLittle trouble has been \u00abp\u00ablen\u00ab^\npreviously with Hungarian mtae\nlabor Recent rumblings, of wnlcn\nhe Pecs incident is the most serious,\nta bfamed on general economc con-\nrt*,, -. .han anything else.\nToo Late to Classify\nlea St. . ,\nUW_C___0MHO.\u201e'\u00ab*&-_?.\nS^'phoSrysi1-   zmm\n*\u25a0-_\u2022\u2022-\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab  chapter  I.O.D-.  luj**-\nNelaon -ticMlntan ilub_-.f ^mh$S\nsLsw. aw* swss\napplications. *******\n\"Plans are under way for the annual \\meetlng of the Kootenay Amateur Basketball association on October 20,\" writes D. W. Foubister\nof Kimberley to the sports editor.\n\"As the meeting of this organization\nwas held in East Kootenay at Klmberley last year, every effort is\nbeing made to have the meeting for\nthis year in the West Kootenay.\nRepresentatives from various centers will be attending the meeting\nof the Kootenay and Boundary\nSchools Athletic association In Nelson on October 20, so it is deemed\nwise to have the meeting of the\nbasketball association on the same\nday and at the same place. All basketball clubs in the various centers\nare to take this as an invitation to\nattend the meeting.\n\"Although this association was\nfirst organized last year, it has had\ngood success in the promotion of\norganized basketball In thta part of\nBritish Columbia. Last year Trail,\nFernie, Natal-Michel, Cranbrook,\nCreston and Kimberley all became\naffiliated and participated in a playoff series in three divisions, namely,\nsenior men B, intermediate A men\nand senior ladies B. Other basketball clubs like Invermere, Nakusp.\nRossland, New Denver, Wynndel\nwrote in support of the scheme but\nfound it impossible to join last\nyear. It is hoped that these clubs\nwill be able to affiliate with the\nassociation this year, and will make\nevery effort to have at least one\ndelegate present at the meeting. The\nobject of the association is to have a\ncentral body which will look after\nthe Interests ot the Kootenay in\ndealing with the interior of British\nColumbia bodies, lt will also help\nin arrangements between clubs In\nthe Kootenays.\n\"As it is difficult to assemble dole-\ngates of the different centers of the\nKootenays frequently, many important matters are on the agenda,\nelection of officers, constitution,\nplayoff arrangements, referee boards\nand other matters. Any suggestions\nor criticism from clubs will be discussed.\"\nNelson sport officials and players\nstated Sunday that the possibility of\nNelson entering any teams was\nslight. There is only one floor available and that but once a week. Further for thee basketball teams to\nuse It, each player would. ,*avo to\npay a sum of $2.\nNEWS OHHE DAK\nOet   Anderson's  elder   for  ijUwe\nroeTt at Stt\u00ab^roc\u00aby__      \u00bb\u00ab\u2122'\nOraduawTn-raes meeting tontaht\n8 pm\"-lection of of\"\"\"*       \u2022**'*'\nHOLLAND  BILB8   HAVSARRIVED AT  GM-KLLE'S. PONE \"^\nDon't forget Pythian Slateis H>1-\nlow'en Masquerade on a*****-\"^-\n. meetln-r of the South Slocan\nand Dlftrlct'-lbersl *>^***\u00b0\\?\"1\nbe held at Crescent Valley onJkJon-\nSay, Oct. 15th at M0 VM. import-\ntmt business '\u2022\u2022**'\nPor rent-Small house unfurnlsh-\n\u2022me    annual   meeting   of   Ymir\nwaterworks Co., Ltd.. will be held In\nSo.: office Ymir, on Tueaday. Oct.\n16th. at 7.30 p.m. wm. Clark, Bec.^\nA free LECTURE on CHRISTIAN\nSCIENCE by Rev. Irving C. T.\nThomlinson, C.S.B of Boston,.Mass\nMember of The Board of Lectureship of The First Church of Christ\nScientist, in Boston Mass.. will \u00ab\neiven In TRINITY UNireu\nCHURCH TOMORROW EVENING\nat 8 O'CLOCK. THE PUBLIC IS\nCORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND. 'Wl-\nSmythe's\nU-Need-a Gargle\nAs a Preventive Agalntt\n(term Diseases\nPHONE 1\nPrescriptions Our Specialty\nHEALTH\nBULLETIN\nSubsequent to the Issuing of the\nBulletin published In the Dally\nNews of Saturday morning another case of Poliomyelitis was\ndiscovered.\nOn this account restrictions\nwere at once reimposed to prevent young people under eighteen years attending public gatherings. But no further limitations are Imposed for the pretent.\nInasmuch as no members ef\nthis family have been In school\nfor three weeks, and since this\ndisease usually dies out with 'he\ncoming of cool weather It Is not\nconsidered necessary to close the\nschools for the preaent. Special\nduty nurses are In attendance\nand careful supervision Is is-\nlured.\nA further case of diphtheria\nhas occurred. The patient Is an\nadult and Is Isolated. Cintacts\nara under close observation. No\nother oases have been reported.\nThe situation Is being carefully\nwatched and will be dealt with\nas may be necessary. Report all\nsigns of illness to your doctor at\nonce.\n(Signed) E. Q. SkMMONDS,\nMedical Officer of Health.\nThe Guaranteed\nFORSYTH\nSHIRT\nThis Season\nWe Emphasize\nFORSYTH\nSee the greatest varlet\n... the highest qualit\nand most attractive dil\nplay of new Fall Shirt!\nNeckwear and Pajami\nin Town.\nIn style and price the\u00ab\ngarments are designed t\nsatisfy .the most exactin\nrequirements of ever\nwell-dressed man.\nSHIRTS\n$1.75 to $3.50\nPAJAMAS\n$2.00 to $5.00\nTIES\n$1.00 to $2.00\n\u00a3MORY'<\nLimited\nTRY A CLASSIFIED AB\nTODAY snd TUESDAY\nThey'll Slay You\nWith Laughter!\n... and not a Jury In I\ncountry  would  convict  thi\nYou'll Creep! You'll Cm\nYou'll Laugh! You'll Hot\n\u25a0   i\u25a0 \u25a0\nBMBOA\n\u25a0\"tipt-  *\u00bb\nEDNA MAY OLIVEI\nJAMES GLEASOI\nBruce Cabot, Gertnid\nMichael, Regit Too me'\n-AND-\n\"Apple Annie\" of\n\"LADY FOR A DAY\"\nNow Brings You t\nPowerful Screen\nTriumph\nYOU 1*1\nCANT m\nBUY \\f>\nEVERYTHING\nMAY ROBSON\n. . , whose quaint nott\nmoisten your eyes one i\nment . . . and convulse ]\nwith laughter the next\nWith\n|EAN PARKER\nLEWIS STONE\n2 GRAND SHOW\nYou'll Love Them Bot1\nComplete Shows\n2,  7,  8:30\nMONDAY AND TUESDAY, OCT. 22ND AND 23RD-\nThis theater being reserved for the Nelion Little\nTheater's production\u2014\n\"GOODBYE AGAIN-\nRESERVED SEAT PLAN NOW OPEN AT BOX OFFICI\n_\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_10_15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0405994","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"}]}}