{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412323":{"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":"2022-03-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1936-10-20","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412323\/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":" Hockey-Sponsored Revolt Over\nAmateurism Gains Force\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\n1\nPROVINCIAL\nUafrAftY\nNew York Americans' Franchise\nCancelled by N. H. L.\n\u2022\u2014Pa&e Seven\nVOLUME It\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 20, 1930\nNUMBER 15\u00ab\n|        \u2014\u2014\u25a0\nQUIT -HANDS OFF\"\nUrges Canada to Decide at\nOnce Her Part in Next War\nDELAYING TOO\nLONG FEARED\nBY BOURASSA\nAsks Adoption of \"a\nTrue National\nSpirit\"\nRECALLS S. AFRICA\nWAR ASSISTANCE\n\t\nPredicted Thousands\nWould Be Sent to\nEurope\nJudgment Is Reserved on\nVivian MacMillan Appeal\nHer Counsel Argues That Proof of Damage Is\nNot Necessary, but There Was Damage\nand Sufficient Proof Was Submitted\nMONTREAL, Oct. 10 (CP). -\nCanirJa  wai   urgtd   tonight   by\nHtnrl Bouraua to decldt Immt-\nildlatily what attitude tht would\nPadopt In the next war.\nf    \"We mutt not wait until the latt\nmoment,\" ht warned members of\ntht Young Men't Canadian elub,\n\"but wi mult decldt  new,  immediately, when wi ara to go to\nwar.\"\nThe veteran Journalist, for 25\nyears a member of the house o(\ncommons who described himself as\n\"only a political ghost now,\" advocated adoption of \"a true national\nspirit,\" so Canada might be welded\nInto a powerful dominion able to\n\"play a national part and contribute\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nBOMBAY RIOT\nBOMBAY, Oet 1\u00bb (AP)--Four\npersons wert killed and 30 Injured In renewed rtllgloui rioting\ntoday, bringing tht death toll\nto 68.\nFour ethtr persons died of Injuries received Sundiy.\nTroops patrolled tht streets at\nfears of an epidemic wtrt ex-\nprtittd because of garbagt collectors' rtfutal to work,\nTht riots ttarted Thunday whin\nconitruetlon of a Hindu place of\nworthlp wat ttarted near a Mot-\nItm mosque.\n(Continued on Page Ttn)\nHOLLICK-KENYON\nHOPS MOUNTAINS\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 10 (CP)-Air\nCommodore Herbert Hollick-Kenyon, flying a radio-equipped 10-\npassenger airplane, arrived at the\ncivic airport here shortly after noon\ntoday from Princeton, B. C, concluding a flight from Lethbridge,\nAlta, He was accompanied by Squadron Leader J. H. Tudhope of the\ncivil aviation branch, department ol\nnational defence; A. D. MacLean,\nsuperintendent of airways, Ottawa,\nand J. H. Robertson, Regina, inspector of airways.\nCONSOLIDATED ATTRAIL HAS A\nHIGHER OUTPUT AND IS GETTING\nBETTER MARKET PRICE FOR YEAR\nFinancial Post Estimates Gross Production\nValue, Aside From Fertilizers, Cadmium,\nCopper, Etc., at $20,295,000,9 Months\nIncreased production, plus a high-1 drought conditions, remains still vir-\ner market price for most of its prod- tually a potential market only,\nucts, will combine this year to n- g \u201e fa understood to have con-\ncrease earnings of Consolidated Min- \u2022*\"\"=\"*\"> *\u2022* \"\"\"\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u2122_ '\u00ab \u25a0\"-\u00bb- wis\nIng & Smelting Co., by a substan- slderably enlarged Its foreign martial figure over last year's earnings, ket for this by-product, production\nExclusive of copper, cadmium, of which first started In 1831. In ad-\nfertllizerj and certain other by- dition, Smelters incomes should be\nproducts, The Financial Post esti- augmented by the recent commence-\nmales, on the basis of official pro- ment of metallic sulphur production,\nduction figures, that gross produc- Looking farther ahead than this\ntion for the first 9 months of this year, the revenue from several out-\nyear would have a value of around side properties will In all probabll-\n$20,295,000 as compared with about ity soon make themselves felt In\n117,800,000 in the first 9 months of Smelters' Income and surplus ac-\n1935. count. Chief of these are the devel-\nThe third quarter production fig- opments at Buena Vista, now being\nurcs released by the company show prepared for production at 900 tons\nthat Smelters is currently producing per day; the Chibougama develop-\ngreater quantities of all metali, with ment and the development at Lake\nthe exception perhaps ot copper. Athabaska.\nLead continues to be the greatest Expenditures for 1938 remain an\nsource of revenue, with zinc, silver unknown factor, and it is impossible\nand gold following in order. While to arrive at a workable estimate ot\nthe volume of silver has increased, earnings per share. It appears obvi-\nlower prices result In a lower value, ous however, that the 1935 figure ot\nNot shown in the 9-month report is $6.81 per ihare, on the old itock\nproduction of the by-producti men- basis, will be passed this year, after\ntioned above. In this regard it ls allowing for the 5 for one split ln\ngenerally known that Consolidated the stock Instituted last spring.\nSmelten is meeting with consider- In the following tables, value ot\nable success in marketing its fer- output, which doei not, of coune\ntilizer against world competition. represent sales, estimated average\nWhile the Canadian west, because of prices for the year have been used:\n9 Months Production\n(Ended Sept. 30)\n 1938   1935\t\nVolume       Value Volume Value\n% *\nLead (tons)       134,429       9,947,748 120,848 7,492,452\nZinc (tons)        91,765       5,680,430 88,478 5,208,680\nCold (ou.)             49,757       1,750,950 46,448 1,827,53b\nSilver (ou.)     6,459,636       2,906,836 8,638,368 3,653,661\n20,294,962 17,982,331\nClam Captures\nMudhen on the\nKootenay flats\nOTTAWA, Oct 19 (CP)\u2014The supnme eourt of Canada todiy re-\nItrved Judgment In the appeal of Mill Vivian MacMillan againtt decisions ot tbe Alberta courts disallowing a $10,000 Jury award In her\naotlon for seduction againtt former Premier John Brownlee of Albtrta.\nEarlier Ntll Maelaan, counsel for Mill MacMillan contended hli\nclient's health wat ruined by 2 1-2 ytan of Improper relations with\nBrownlee. A. L. Smith, Brownlee's counsel, however, declared Mill\nMacMillan*! itory wat \"utterly unworthy of belief.\"\nDamage has never been the gilt ot an action for seduction but only\nthe basil on which the action was hung, Mr. Maclean argued as he pressed\nMiss   MacMlllan's   appeal   against t>\njudgments of the Alberta courts dis-'\nmissing her action agmst Brownlee.\nA8K AUTHORITY\nChief Justice Sir Lyman Duff said\nhe had never heard of such a prop,\nositlon and would like some auth\nority. Mr. Maclean then cited a\nnumber of cases going back 100\nyean in which damages were obtained for seduction where the in\nJury to the woman or her master\nwas slight, or in which damage was\npresumed from the mere act.\nMiss MacMillan won a Jury ver\ndiet for $10,000 at the trial of the ac\ntion but Justice Ives disregarded the\nverdict and dismissed the case on\nthe ground no damage had been\nproved. The Alberta court ot appeal\nupheld his finding.\nMr. Maclean's argument today wai\ntint that proof of damage waa not\nnecessary and second that in\ncase there was damage and that sufficient evidence of it had been produced before the Jury.\nJAPAN AIR PLANS\nSTIR UP GUESSES\nOF SIGNIFICANCE\nAir Lines Planned to\nFormer Colonies of\nGermany\nSERVE PACIFIC\nISLANDS GROUP\nVictor and Victim\nAs photographed in Nelson Daily\nNews studio after being brought in\nby J. A. Granstrom of Trail Sunday\nnight. Mr. Granstrom saw the mud-\nhen floundering in the water of\nKootenay Flats and obviously\ndrowning, and he waded out and\npulled out the bird to find the upper mandible of its bill clutched\nby the clam's closed shell, and the\nlower mandible broken off, either\nby the pressure of the shell or when\njerking about to get free. In view\nof its disablement Mr. Granstrom\nkilled the bird, and the clam also\nbecame a victim when he brought\nthe pair, still connected, to Nelion.\nThe mudhen or coot, distributed\nover the northern hemisphere, ii a\ndiving bird though having only flattened toes instead of a web, and\ngets its food on the bottom. This\nunlucky individual evidently poked\nits bill into the clam's inner works\nwhile the shell was open, with the\nresult that, caught in the vise, the\nbird could raise the clam, but could\nnot free itself or keep its head\nabove water\u2014Staff photo.\nCOURT MOURNING\nENDS TOMORROW\nLONDON, Oct 19 (CP Cable).-\nCourt mourning ends Wedneiday,\nOot 21. It hai bttn In effect for\nnine monthi since the death ef\nKing George V.\nMembers of tht royal family\nafttr that date probably will be\nseen at dances and thea'res. Tha\nblack-edged notepaptr uied at the\npalace and alto uted by Government and dominion offices alio\nwill be discarded.\nBelieve Poisoned\nHoney Given Bees\nCLOVERDALE, B.C, Oct. IS -\n(CP).\u2014Authorities of Surrey municipality today were investigating reported violations ot the Apiary act\nin the district at a result of a\nhoney war here.\nThe latest Incident in the war\nwai the finding of a broken honey\nJar on the Pacific highway surrounded by a large number of dead\nbeei.\nThe honey was believed to have\nbeen poisoned and thrown from a\npassing automobile.   '\nGeneva, Interested in\nProposal; Studies\nIt Closely\nO.SN-VA, Oct. 1\u00bb (AP)-Japan'i\nplan te ipread a nitwork of airlines te the far-flung Pacific It-\nlandt which formerly were German colonies created wide interest today.\nSpeculation wai itlrred because\nthe decision te operate planei to\ntht mandated Itlandi In the south\nPaelflo follows  Inauguration  of\nflight! between San Francisco and\nManila, In the Philippine Islands,\nby Pan American Airways.\nThe plan, announced.in Japan's\nannual report to the League of Nations, was itudted closely also because of the enormous area the\nislands cover. The mandated territory, comprising the Marianne, Caroline and Marshall groups, include\n1400 Islands, islets and reefs.\n(Continued en Page Ten)\nFARMER KILL!D\nShot Through Window\nof Alberta Home\nIs Fatal\nBYEMOORE, Alta., Oct. 19 (CP)\n\u2014Herman Ernest, lormer hired man,\nahd Mrs. George Pogmore were arretted here tonight and charged\nwith murder in connection with the\n\"window\" shooting ot George Pogmore while he lit ln his farm house\nlast, night. Byemoor is about 130\nmiles southeast of Edmonton.\nErnest was dismissed recently by\nPogmore. Reason for the dismissal\nwas not known.\nPogmore was killed almost instantly by a shot fired by a high-\npowered rifle through an open window as he eat playing cards with\nthree other men.\nIt was the third \"window\" slaying in Alberta ln three successive\nyears. In all cases farmhands were\nheld.\n'QUAKE DAMAGE\nIS $2,000,11110\nCANEVA Dl SAClLE, Italy, OcL\n11 (AP)r-Hundreda wert homeless tonight after week-end earthquakes caused an estimated damage of 20,000,000 lire ($2,000,000).\nAn official communique put the\ndtath toll at 18 at least.\nA cold, driving rain addtd to\nthe misery of thl homeless, many\nef whom pitched tents In the\nflelde,\nPrtmltr Mussolini decrted a\nspecial rescue fund, thl amount to\nbt announced later, and tint officials ef tht public works department te tht scene to start reconstruction work.\nTO PROBE DISPUTE\nOVER RAILWAYS'\nWAGE CUT\nOTTAWA, Oct 19 (CP). - Appointment of w. Sanford Evans of\nWinnipeg and Fred Bancroft of\nOakvllle, Ont, Memben of the conciliation board which will Investigate the dispute between Canadian\nrailway employee! and the railways\nover the 10 per cent wage cut. was\nannounced today by Hon. J. G.\nGardiner, acting minliter of labor.\nMr. Evans wai selected by the\ncompanies al their representative\nand Mr. Bancroft wai nominated by\nthe men. They will meet, as required by the act, and endeavor to\nagree on the nomination of a man\ntor chairman. Falling greement, the\nminliter of labor will make the appointment\nSelsonite Lands Beautiful Salmon\nIt didnt really take two men to hold up T. W. Ledingham's salmon\ntaken on the main Kootenay lake oft Pilot Bay, Sunday, but the salmon\ntipped the beams at 25 pounds at that. Above are shown \"Duke\" Harris\nand Mr, Ledlngham holding the prize fish. Mr. Harris and Jack Greenwood of Nelson were with the Nelsonite when he hauled In the beauty after\nabout three-quarters of an hour fight. A lecond strike broke Mr. Ledingham's rod and took his whole outfit.\u2014Staff photo.\nCRESTON PACKING SHEDS START\nWORK ON THE WINTER VARIETIES\nITALIANS KILL\nETHIOPIANS\n, AJjESSJ^ABA. QstJ_U_.Pa.-TA4\ncolumn of (00 Italian soldiers tonight tracked down Ethiopian\ntribesmen to kill in \"mass reprisal\"\nfor the killing ot 30 Fascist aviators\nlast July.\nThe Italian soldiers were flown in\ntransport planes to Lekemti, and\nimmediately killed many native irregulars. The Ethiopians scattered\nbefore the Italian machine guns and\nbombs. &\nTWO PROBES OF\nERIE TRAGEDY\nGovernment, Owners\nSeek Cause of\nSinking\nCLEVELAND, Oct. 19 (API-Canadian officials and representatives\nof the National Sand tc Materials,\nLimited, began today a preliminary\ninvestigatiort'of the tragic foundering on Lake Eerie of the Toronto-\nowned sandsucker, Sand Merchant,\nwith a loss of 19 lives.\nThe Sand Merchant rolled over\nin a gale west of Cleveland Saturday night and sank. At dawn Sunday only seven members of the all-\nCanadian crew, including Capt. Graham MacLellan, of Cape Tarmentine,\nN.B., remained clinging to the two\nupturned lifeboats from which they\nwere rescued by other ships.\nThe Canadian deputy minister of\nmarine, R. K, Smith, said at Ottawa\nhe has asked Capt. Henry W. King\nof Toronto, examiner ot masten and\nmates, to make a preliminary inquiry into the shipwreck. Mr. Smith\n\u25a0aid the inquiry would be held at a\npoint convenient for the summoning\nof the seven survivon as witnesses.\nAttorney Lee C. Hinslea, representing National Sand tc Materials\nLimited, conducted a preliminary investigation today and said \"we came\nto the conclusion that she sank due\nto heavy seas and shifting of the\nsand cargo to the.port side.\"\nMcCrindle Loses\nNew Barn by Fire\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct H. -\nDamage to the amount of approximately $1200 wai inflicted on the\nSroperty of M. McCrandle when a\narn recently completed was demolished by fire on Sunday afternoon. The fire wai firat noticed by\na neighbor, the barn being invisible\nfrom the home.    '\nOwing to the fact that there was\nno hydrant in the vicinity the brigade wai handicapped in fighting\nthe flames. The hones and cattle\nin the building were removed to\nsafety. Nine tons of hay was lost.\nIniurance had not yet been placed\non the bulling. The cause of the\nfire has not yet been determined.\nPrices Set on Winter\nApples Higher Than\n\u25a0-\u2022  in Five Years\n1\t\nCRESTON, 8.C., Oct. 18.-With\nthe Tree Fruit board announcing\nopening prices bn winter apples' all\nCreston packing sheds have commenced the pack on Delicious, Jonathan, etc., along with the Mcintosh\nReds which latter have had the right\nof way lor the past three weeks,\nWith the later varieties placed at\n20 per cent of the 1935 yield thc\nsheds will require about three weeks\nto complete operations for 1936.\nSatisfaction is expressed by grow\ners with the prices that have been\nset on the winters, which are higher than for the past five years, and\nequally satisfactory is the announcement of an advance on the price\nof Mcintosh. Notwithstanding the\nprice advance in the latter there\nis still a splendid demand and shipping house report that sales on\nwhat is termed the \"home market\"\n\u2014as far east as Regina, sask., are\nthe heaviest known for several seasons. So steady is the demand from\nthis quarter that orders for Macs,\nparticularly from eastern Canada,\nare being passed up.\nCROP QUALITY GOOD\nAnother feature to that variety is\nboth as to color, etc., and size, the\nthe splendid quality of the crop,\nquantity ot culls this season being\nnegligible. Helpful, too, is the fact,\nthat sizes up to 165 are in demand\non the domestic market which in\nother years was only up to 150's,\nwhile export sales are permitted up\nto 252 as compared with 216's in\npast seasons. Of the Macs it is stated\n80 per cent of the crop Is grading\nfancy.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nEXPORT COPPER\nPASSES 10\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19 (AP).\u2014Copper men heard today the export\nprice of the metal had crossed 10\ncents a pound for the first time\nsince April, 1931. A few sales were\nreported to have been made abroad\nat 10.02\". cents. Early quotations\nranged from 9.95 to 10.\nForeign demand was described as\nactive. Wide industrial Improvement\nand rearmament have combined to\nlift consumption in some countries\nto the highest on record.\nUnited States demand also was\nreported to have increased the last\nfew days as buyers moved to protect themselves against a possible\nprice boost. The domestic price has\nremained at W, cents, despite rising\nexport quotations.\nInformed Sources Declare\nSoviet to Act Within Day\nor Two; Attlee Is Alarmed\nLabor Leader Asks Premier Baldwin to Call\nParliament at Once to Discuss the\nSpanish Civil War Problems\nSENTENCED TO\nTIME IN JAIL\nFOR GUN TRAP\nMarticke of Nakusp\nPleads Guilty\nCharge\nAppearing before Judge W. A.\nNisbet Monday morning, Oswald\nMarticke elected speedy trial and\npleaded guilty to a charge of letting a spring gun in his cabin near\nNakusp. He was sentenced to tht\ndays he had already apent in Jail.\nMarticke was arrested in the\nOkanagan by provincial police and\nreturned to Nakusp, where he was\ncommitted for trial last week after\nexplaining it was not uncommon\nwhere he had previously lived to\nset gun traps ln cabins to protect\nthem from anyone breaking in.\nThe spring gun, fixed to a table\nand aimed- to fire about chest high\nat anyone entertaining the door,\nwas seen through a window by a\npasserby who notified police. The\npolice entered the cabin through\nthe window to avoid letting off the\ntrap.\t\nMARKETSAT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Preu\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Induitrial\nstocks lower.\nToronto Mines\u2014Higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat up 2 to 1%\ncents.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver lower; other\nmetals higher,\nNew York\u2014Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged,\nMontreal\u2014Silver lower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton lower; rubber\nhigher; coffee and sugar unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar 1-64\nhigher at 1.00 1-32.\n\" SOLITARY\" FOR\nNAUGHTY QUINT\nDr. Dafoe Tells How\nFamous Babies Are\nPunished\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Oct. 19 (CP).-\nDr. A. R. Dafoe, physician to the\nDionne quintuplets, said here today\nhe had found solitary confinement\nmore effective than physical punishment for shaping child behavior. \u25a0\nThe physician, who came here\nfrom Callander, Ont., to attend tonight's dinner in honor of Manager\nJoe McCarthy of the New York\nYankees, said ln an interview this\nmethod had been found effective in\nthe case of the famous five,\n\"We are taking rigorous slops to\nsee that the quints are not spoiled,\"\nhe said. \"If one of them misbehaves\nshe ls isolated from the othen.\n'This method has worked so effectively that now when one of the\nquints is led toward the door she\nimmediately ceases to misbehave.\"\nFour Dead in Fire\non Italian Liner\nBianco Acquitted\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19 (CP)-Joe\nBlanco, 20-year-old Italian fisherman, today was acquitted in assize\ncourt of a charge of manslaughter\nresulting from the death here on\nAugust 17 of Vittorla Guizzo, 50. \"I\ndidn't intend to kill him,\" Bianco\nsobbed in thc giving of evidence\ntoday.\nPALERMO, Italy, Oct. 10 (AP)-\nFour persons died today in a mystery blaze that swept the third class\nquartets of the Italian liner Vulcan-\nia.\nThree of the victims were stewards. The other was a musician who,\napparently crazed by heat and terror, leaped trom the vessel and\ndrowned.\nThc motonhlp reached Palermo\nthis afternoon with 1100 pasaengen\nafter being delayed three hours\nwhile the vesael hove to and officen\nand seamen confined the blaze to thc\nthird class quarters.\nThe cause of the blaze was said by\nofficers to be a mystery. A commission Inquiry was begun immediately to determine its origin.\nSAYS SITUATION'S\nGRAVITY HIGHER\nRebel Lines Press Ever\nNear to the\nCapital\nLONDON, Oct 19 (AP)-Leadera\nof the labor party tonight asked\nPrime Minister Baldwin to convene parliament immediately to discuss the Spanish non-intervention\nsituation.\n(In Moscow, informed aourcaa\nsaid Russia was determined to bolt\nthe non-intervention pact and would\ndo so ln a day or two. The Russians\nwere angered over the committe'a\ndelay in acting on Soviet suggestion!\nfor a Portuguese blockade to prevent foreign aid to the Spanish insurgents.)\nClement Attlee, Labor leader in\nthe house of commons, wrote Mr.\nBaldwin that \"although allegations\nhave not been proved definitely,\nthere is strong ground for belief the\npolicy of non-intervention (in*\nSpain) has been deliberately violated.\"\n(Russia and the Spanish Madrid\ngovernment, both have protested to\nthe committee that Germany, Italy\nand Portugal were aiding the Spanish insurgents in violation Of th-\nnon-intervention pact.)\n(Continued\nMAY INVESTIGATE\nMARINE CRASH\nAwait Word From the\nCapital Over B. C.,\nAccident\nVANCOUVER, OcL 19 (CP).-\nCaptain L. H. Lindsay, Canadian\ngovernment marine investigator for\nVancouver, tonight awaited word '\nfrom the department of marine at\nOttawa before launching an investigation into the fatal crash of a North\nVancouver ferry and a small gas\nboat, which claimed two lives on\nVancouver's fog-shrouded harbor\nlast night.\nC. F. Johnson, owner of the gat\nbeat Silver Seal, gave hit life In a\nvain attempt to lave hli wife,\nrushing Into the cabin to rescue\nher after teeing the Crash waa\ninevitable.   He wat trapped with\nMrt. Johnion In the tiny enclosure\nas tha heavy ferry caught the\nsmaller boat and rolled It over.\nHe wai dead whin taken from the\n\u2022battered hull and Mn. Johnion\ndied In hoipltal later.\nCaptain Lindiay, marine investigator, said tonight he expected to\nhear from the department of marine\ntomorrow.    He will then hold a\npreliminary inquiry into the accident and the evidence will be eent\nto Ottawa to decide whether a full\ncommission inquiry is necessary.\nMin. Max.\nNELSON     40 61\nVictoria   42 54\nNanaimo ...:  47 61\nVancouver   30 60\nKamloops   36 54\nPrince George  22 44\nEstevan Point   48 58\nPrince Rupert  34 52\nAtlin   30 34\nDawson   20 26\nSeattle  _  54 62\nPortland   50 62\nSan Francisco  52 58\nSpokane    46 66\nLoi Angelei _  56 66\nPenticton    38 \u2014\nVernon     32 \u00ab\u25a0_\nGrand Forks  - 34 60\nKaslo    38 -\nCranbrook   32 60\nCalgary   28 34\nEdmonton    -  20 34\nSwift Current  34 38\nPrince Albert   32 32\nSaskatoon     28 38\nQu'Appelle  28 40\nWinnipeg    28 40\nMorse Jaw  34 40\nForecast: Nelson and Vicinity \u2014\nModerate to fresh north and northeast winds, partly cloudy and cooler, frosts at night,    -\n ^^L^^-J\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014i ,-ij-n\n_.a-\u00ab^-:..   -     *\n : \u25a0   ;\nPAGE TWO-\n(ommunism and Fascism Challenge\nChurch Vitally Says Silverwood\n\u25a0\n1 Jnless Economics Put on a Christian Basis,\nThese Other Movements May Al ter Basis\nin Their Own Less Desirable Way\nAnalyzing communism and fascism ln a sermon at the Church of\nthe Redeemer Sunday evening. Rev.\nW. J. Silverwood found communism\nto be abhorrent because of its compulsion, while there could be no\nreconciliation of the church with\nfascist nationalism. To be superior\nto these two opposing movements,\nhe suggested the church would have\nto find an ethical and Christian\nbasil for all social and economic\nlife, and must be ready for the\nsacrifice and zeal Uiat marked the\ncommunist and the fascist.\nSeeing no good In pretending that\nthe church was not challenged by\nmodern ideas that swept through\nmen's minds both individually and\ncollectively like an epidemic, he said\nthere were roughly two movements\noccupying men's minds today. These\nmovements, communism and fascism, accused the church on two\ngrounds: fint, that lt had taught the\npeople to think ln terms of a future\neternal world, to the neglect of the\npreient world; and second, that It\nhad failed, and that these mover\nments, which trusted in the thing,\nof this world, were building more\nquickly by force.\nPURE COMMUNISM A RELIGION\nTaking up communism first, he\naaid it was no Use treating it as a\n-wicked doctrine. There must be\nsomething in it, for so many people\nto propagate IL\nObserving that atheism waa not\nof the essence of communism, he\nquoted various authorities who considered communism religious, Middleton Murray laying it was the one\nliving religion lp the western world\ntoday, Professor Laski calling it a\nnew religion, and H. G. Wood declaring Man to be the mightiest\nspiritual force In the modern world\nand to belong ba reality to the company of the Hebrew prophets.\nTlie basis . of communism, the\nspeaker aald, waa the community\nrather than the individual, it being\nheld that the Individual, every individual,  should live, work, and\nserve for the good of the whole\ncommunity. Ha must not aspire to\nindividual profit, individual ownership, or individual rewards. From\nbirth to death the Individual's whole\ntraining was that he was not to\nstruggle to get on, for Individual\npossession, but wai to aim at the\nwelfare of the whole community.\nALL DIFFERENCES WIPED OUT\nAll differences of class were dene\naway in Christ, according to Bishop\nWestcott; tha same waa claimed for\ncommunism by every disciple of\nMarx.\nCommunism was catholic in outlook, its keynote being \"Workers of\nthe World, unite.\" Its ultimate aim\nwas that all national barriers should\nbe broken down and that boundaries\nand tariffs, competition and wars,\nshould be no more. All exploitation\nof the weaker races must be taboo,\nand national patriotism must yield\nto a passionate love for all humanity. In this the church would recognize much that was contained in\nthe Lord's teaching. Christ died for\nall; His love for men embraced\nGreek, Jew, barbarian and Scythian. He was the Father of All, and\nHis spirit of universal love for all\nmen wu greater than a mere national spirit.\nUNA8HAMED CLAS8\nGOVERNMENT\nFirst of the objections to communism, Mr. Silverwood stated, was that\nit was a class government In getting rid of the classes altogether, it\nhad set up the moit rigorous and\nunashamed class government in the\nworld. It waa the aristocracy of the\nfactory worker that had been set\nup, and this exclusive interest ln\none class was a complete denial of\nthat belief in a common humanity\nwhich communism claimed to start.\nTrotzky declared that a revolutionary class that had conquered power\nwith arms was bound to and would\nsuppress, rifle ln hand, all attempts\nto tear power out of its hands.\nThis waa neither brotherhood nor\nChristianity, Mr. Silverwood point-\nNILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. I.C.-TUESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 20, 19M   \t\nBOLLOW the sun lo CidiromUl Enjoy a summer holiday this\nwinter. All ou Mini to Ciliforni. sre completely air-conditioned. You'll arrive at your dtsiinttion fnth and trim, ready\nto enjoy the white-sanded benches, delightful desert room and\ndie many other places you've always wished to Me.\nWith rail tests tt lc A MILE AND LESS, reduced Pullman\ncharge.) _\u00bbr food service for it and 10c, low priced dining\ncat metis and other Mvings\u2014we offer aa ete.emical, tile,\niWjtolUlili \"ll in fslilnrnii itin'i hard in hist\n'* -     - _,\u00bb\u2022\u25a0_\u2022\u00bb    Umusk    '\n1, . team VMCMVtr Raundtrip Roundtrlp\n'\u2022'   MN FRANCISCO   \u00ab2MS    \u2022IMS\n,____,_.__      US ANGELES..    IMS     4S.SS\nGood la coaches and chair cut. Alto la tourist iletplng ctn,\npint berth. lares in stuidtrd Pullmuis are low, too.\nSouthern Pacific\nFoe -ttalls, IH jour locsl asm tr wilta C. 0. ALTON, Cteatlea\nCan. Alt,474 Grant-Ilia It, Vantouvar, B.C.I at*). A. OMLANDY.\nQeaersf ?,sseo,e, Atect, ?0I Pacific Bulletin-, Pontine, Orajon.\n*\u25a0\u25a0-*-\nI Guide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Service\nGeo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c aad UP\nLunchet 40c to 60o Dinner 40e to 65c\nROTARY AND OVRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 717 NILSON, B.C.        422 VERNON ST.\nA. J. Wood, Winnipeg; J. H. Lewis,\nP. M. Wards, Medicine Hat; C. A.\nMowry, D. Hartin, Spokane; S, K.\nRaymer, P. G. Griffiths, Vancouver;\n1 C. 0. Rodgers, T. C. Rodgers, Crei\nton; Mn. M. L. Bruce and mother,\nMrs. B. E. Johnson, Mrs, D. Pierce,\nSandpolnt Idaho; H. M. Kirkpatrick, Montreal.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guett is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelton, B, C.\ned out, the exploitation of one class\nby another with the roles reverted,\nas tn Russia, merely aggravating and.\nnot removing a wrong.\nBASIS OF COMPULSION\nCompulsion was the fundamental\ncondtmnitlon of communism, according to Mr. Silverwood. Its ideals\nwere forced upon all, with or without their will. Men were compelled\nto live and work and die as though\nthey approved the ideals ol communism. It waa for them to obey,\nlUryfc or teinet Trotrty atlmittet!\nthia when he said: \"We were never\nconcerned with the Kantian priestly\nor vegetarian Quaker pjrttle about\nthe sacredness ot human life.\" Battle, murder, and sudden death were\nnot merely unfortunate Incidentals\nto the coming of communism.\nRespecting communism, faultv\nosychology, Mr. SliYtrWbfld itated lt\nhad shown an amazing misunderstanding ot human nature. It declared that men ought to give of\ntheir best without hope of pertenal\nreward, and then proceeded by force\nto make men live as though they\nwere already converted to that view.\nIt made mockery of the representative institutions democratic people\nhad patiently built up. It exterminated experienced leaden of Industry,\nand then expected unskilled men,\nmerely because thty were communists, to nw great factories with success. It expected fo get the best out\nof men and women while denying\nthem any choice in their avocations.\nIt adopted many Christian Ideals\nwhile denying that they were Christians and while doing all possible to\ndestroy the Christian motive that\nInsoired them.\nCHRIST WOULD DISTINGUISH\nConsidering communism in relation to .Christ, the speaker felt the\nMaster would recognize aa Hia own\nand would therefore endorse many\nOf the theoretical Ideals ot pure\ncommunism. He taught that all mankind were children of one Father,\nanil the speaker thought He would\nfavor the removal of economic Inequalities and injustices. He would\nfavor the removal of national Jealousies, for He died not for one race\nbut tor ail races of men. Whci.\ncommunism attracted, it was when\nits ideals were drawn from the spirit\nand teaching of Jesus, no matter how\nstrenuously communism denied and\nreoudiated that teaching.\nBut Christ, he was certain, would\ndistinguish between the alms of\ncommunism and the methods by\nwhich communists sought to accomplish their aim. His method waa\ntoo ilow for the communist, but\nmote sure. Communism when all\nmen chose It was a different thing\nfrom communism forced upon a\npeople by a resolute minority with\nstarvation, exile, and rifles aa its\nweapons. The pure communistic\nideal, Mr. Silverwood said, waa the\nChristian idea) ot the perfect society. But lt could never be forced\nby methods of violence and by the\nsuppression of Individual liberty.\nFASCIST STATE\nCLAIMS WHOLE MAN\nN Coming to fascism, or more properly, totalitarianism, which meant\nthe right of the state to dominate,\ncontrol and direct the whole life\nof the community and ot its individual members, thia being the other\ngreat movement now occupying\nmen's minds, the speaker traced\nits name to the fasces, the bundle\not elm or birch from which an axe-\nhead projected fastened together\nby a red strap, and to the Romans\nan emblem of authority, representing power ovtr lift and limb, this\ndevice being figured on the United\nStates dime. Lowing the fasces was\nthe manner in which an Interior\nRoman magistrate saluted a superior one. The totalitarian slate, then,\nwaa to be defined as a state which\nlaid claim to man in the totality\not hia being, which declared iti\nown authority to be the source ot\nall authority, and which refused to\nrecognize the independnce in their\nown spheres, ot religion, culture,\neducation, and the family.\nThe totalitarian state advancing\nsuch claims declared Itself to be\nnot only a state but also a church.\nWhatever did not aerve the put-\npose of the state waa rejected once\nfor all. The motto of the fascist\nregime wu \"Nothing against the\nstate; nothing outside the state;\neverything for the state\". Under\nthat theory, there was no sphere of\nhuman life that was relatively independent of the state. The state\nwai supreme and absolute, and any\ninterpretation of Christianity that\nconflicted with the fascist state must\nbe rejected for good.\nCHURCH FIGHTS\nFOR EXISTENCE\nSo much in the totalitarian state\nwaa radically incompatible with the\nChristian' understanding of the\nmeaning and purpose of man's existence, the speaker said, that the\nchurch must Inevitably be involved\nin a life-and-death struggle for its\nexistence. The state might, for reasons given by Mussolini, come '\u25a0>\nan agreement with and accord privileges to the church, but between\nan Integral nationalism that sought\nto form Its citizens in accordance\nwith its own understanding of life,\nand those ultimate loyalty was to\nOod and His demands, there could\nbe no abiding reconciliation.\nIn Italy, as in Germany, if all the\nEvangelist Teds\nol Mission Work\nDiscusses Peoples of\nRemote Parts\nB.C. Coast\n. IL Chorlton, evangelist and world\ntraveller, completed a series of lectures on 'evangelistic work ln various parte ot the world, Monday\nevening. These lectures have been\ngiven every evening, with tbe exception ot Saturday ahd Sunday,\nsince last Tuesday, October 13, by\nMr. Chorlton at tht Bethel Tabernacle.\nHis first lecture dealt on missionary work, difficulties the missionaries have to overcome ln order to,\nspread the Gospel, and the peoples'\non the Islands and remote parts of\nthe British Columbian coast His\nother lectures, much along the same\nlints, concerned hia work among\nthe people of the South Sea Islands,\nIndia, Egypt and Palestine.\nAt preient Mr. Chorlton, accom-\npanied by Lockhart Smyth, another\nmember of tht Shantymen's Chris-\ntrlan association, la -vialtlng tht remote parte ot the province, especially the relief and mining camps,\nwhere there are no churches or\nother religious organizations, in an\nattempt to spread the Gospel to the\npeople of these out-of-the-way\nplaces.\nPlaid Woolens for Autumn\nresources ot the state were to be\nused to create a new type ot manhood, there could be no escape from\nthe question aa to how far the ntw\ntype of man waa to be a Christian\ntypcof man.\nAnd here Christians were brought\nfact to face with something deeper\nand more fundamental than forma\nof government, namely, that the\nreal menace to Christianity was the\nattempt to uie the supreme authority of the state and all the agencies\nat Its command, to Impose on the\nwhole community a philosophy of\nlite and a pattern of living that\nwas wholly or in Important respects contrary to the Christian understanding of the meaning and ends\nof human existence.\nIn this situation, the thought of\ndespairing of the world, and of\nwithdrawing from it, except to\npray and suffer for it, and of despising the earth, was surely a wrong\nand un-Chrlstinn attitude. On that\npoint, the communists and fascists\nwere more right Where Christian\npeople must differ from them was\nthat in seeking to establish a kingdom of well-being on earth, the\ninspiration and methods of Jesus\nmust be, followed, and those that\nwere contrary to all the laws ot\nrighteousness and love must be\navoided.\nFAIL IN PRACTICE\nWhere Christians failed, it seemed, was that after going to church\nto wonhip God, they did not wi'ii\ncharacteristic determination put Into\npractice that supreme goodness and\ndesire for the well-being of all\nmen about which they had prayed\nand preached so much. After worshipping One who aaid to them,\n\"Go and make My kingdom come,\nMy will dom on earth\", they picked\nup their papen and read of broken\nmen out of work, of national hatreds\nand injustices, of the apparent little\nregard for the canctity of human\nlife. But after getting God's inspiration trom their wonhip, were they\nas keen on abolishing those things\nas the communists were? \"If not,\nthe communists are better than we\nand deserve to win\", he argued.\nIf Christians could not put more\nof Christ's teaching to the fore, what\ndefence had they against the fascists\nand communists? The fact is, Christiana needed a good ahaklng up,\nand if they did not shake themselves, the communist or the fascist\nwould do the shaking for then-\nIt Christian people thought that\nworship and conversion, without a\ndetermined effort to build a fairer\nworld, was all that waa required\not them, then they were doomed.\nThey would have failed their King.\nWho taught them that the hallowing'!\nof a name waa to be followed by\nthe bridging in ot a kingdom.\nCHRISTIAN ECONOMICS\nMr. Silverwood expressed the conviction that lt Christianity was to be\nsuperior to communism or fascism,\nthe task before the church and the\nstate was to find an ethical and\nChristian basis for all social and\neconomic life, and ln the prosecution\nof this the church, at any rate, must\nbe ready for the sacrifice and determination which marked the com-\nunist and the fascist,\nLet the church mark it well. It's\njob was to find a Christian basis for\neconomics, and unless it could do\nthis properly through a democracy,\nthe communist and the fascist would\ndo it some day in their own way.\nAnd part of that way would be\nthrough a church fascist ln thought\nand practice, as against that church\nSMALL MILL IS\nNOWOPERATING\nORE HIU MINE\nCrew Increased to 25;\nHaul Lumber for\nBunkhouses\nBuy\nFINK'S fine\nFURNITURE\nOn ths Deferred\nPayment Plan.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON. B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\nm Vernon 81,\nH. WASSICK,\nPhone 867\nPrep.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Await* You\nJA5. E. MADDEN. Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and  Cold  Water\nIn the HEART of the City\n'Buy the Best'\nCROW'S NEST\nPASS COAL\nIt\nGives\nMORE HEAT\nPer\nTon\nMINED IN B. C. AT MICHEL AND COAL CREEK\nWest Transfer Co.\nPROMPT SERVICE Agents TELEPHONE 33\nBoth at home and abroad plaids in suits and coats ate worn for\nspectator sports. There are three-quarter length capes, seven-eights\nlength topcoats and fitted, hip-length jacket suits in plain fabrics com*\nbined with plaids. .A black cape lined with plaid, for instance, waa\nglimpsed at Belmont Park race track. The cape wai worn with a box-\npleated plaid skirt, black Jersey jumper belted in plaid, and a black felt\nberet.  These costumes are carefully planned from top to toe, you see.\nIncrease of tbe working crew from\nfive to 25 and Installation ot a 15-\nton mill mark progress of the Kootenay Ore HtU in tht Sheep Creek\ncamp, adjoining Sheep Creek Oold\nMines on the south, reports the\nSouth Kootenay Hews, describing\nthe mine as \"a property of which\nlittle is generally known yet which.\ngives every prospect of being a\nvaluable producer.\" The paper\nstates:\n\"righting Jot\" Gallo has been\non tbe job since development started at the mine and has a very\ncreditable record to show tor his\nefforts of the past months, Several\n-Moments have been msde ti the\nTrail smelter since tbe completion\not the road to the mine carry this\nSummer, and an appreciable return\nhaa been realized from these shipments.\nDuring the past year the operating crew has been Increased from\nfive to 25 and latest developments\nit property is the installation of a\nsmell mill with a capacity of 15\ntons per day. Hilling ore will be\ntreated ln this new plant and the\nconcentrates shipped to'the Trail\nsmelter. Other bodies of ore are of\nsuch grade as to allow shipment to\nthe IVail plant without necessitating treatment\nRecept reports are that a lead\not nod- grade ore haa been ope-<ed\nand prospects for the future of the\nmine are very encouraging,\n. TIM company's plant la right un\nto tht minute for the work ln hand.\nPower is supplied by a 72 h.p,...\ndiesel of British manufacture and\ntho moat modern obtainable. The\nengine is hocked up to a highspeed compressor. There are three\npneumatic alr-drllls, a steal sharpener, ollburnlng forge, ample machine-shop tools, thousands of feet\nof air-line, three ort ran and aeveral tons ot trsek; rails.\nLumber is being hauled this week\nand Will bt used for the ercct'in\nof the new bunk houses at tht\nproperty.\nCalaary Livestock\nCALGARY, Oct 19 (CP).-Recip-\nlenta during the week-end, entile\n1110; calves 245; hogs 3a: sheep 973.\nMonday, to noon: Cattle 265;\ncalves 11.\nCattle moderately active; medium\nto good butcher steers 3.85\u20144.00;\nheifers 3.00\u20143.50; good veal calves\n3.O0--3.25.\nNo hogi sales; selects 3.00; bacons\n7*1; butchers* 700.\nMIL MM IS\nWED AT (OUT\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19* (CP)-Mr.\nand Mrs. Arnold Wagner Calder .\nwho were married at St Saviour's\nchurch here Saturday evening by\nRev. Dr. S. Fee, today were in Victoria where they will spend their\nhoneymoon before going to Trail\nto live.\nThe bride, Dorothy Lilly Hornett,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard\nHornett, chose a white suede lace\ndress, fashioned In Catherine de\nMedici style, tor the ceremony. She\nwas given in marriage by her father.\nMrs. L. G. Hornett, her sister-in-law,\nwas matron of honor.\nThe groom, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nD. Calder ot Trail, was supported\nby L. G. Hornett, brother of the\nbride.\nGOLDS IN GEAR\nTORONTO, Oct. 10 (CP). - The\ngolds moved into the mining market\npicture in a substantial way todr.y\nand volume speeded up to 1,265,000\nshares, the best turnover in two\nweeks. An advance of two points\nwas recorded by the golds in the\nexchange index while the miscellaneous mines index gained a point\nto 159.70, the highest level reached\nin yeers.\nAside from Noranda's advance\nIH to a new h'gh, interest was concentrated in a half-dozen golds.\nO'Brien shot up to a new high at\n7.45 and closed 50 cents net higher\nat 7.25. Macrssa at $5 g?ined 30\ncents while Moneta pushed up 17\ncents at 1.72.\nMinor losses came out for the big\njolds. Pioneer moved Independently,\ngaining 15 centa.\nht *A\n'A\nSafe Speedy Mitt\nSCIATICA\nPoison awa n-ttlc erne*\n3Er3\u00a7\nn<*wm\nG0o and Jl at tall akuSSlttl\nBEARTHATPROTECTED TRAPPER IS\nFOUND HOLED UP WITH MACKINAW\nBURNS LAKE, B.C., Oct. 19 (CP)\n\u2014The bear that stood guard over\nInjured Arthur Gammon was tracked to his lair and was left to winter\nin the home he had shared with a\nmah.\nCarl Levy, trapper, went back\nover Gammon's two-week trail to\ninvestigate his story of being protected from coyotes by a yearling\nblack bear while he struggled to\nget to his cabin after breaking his\nleg Oct. 3. I\nLevy picked up the bear's tracks\nalong the trail Gammon had followed and they led back to the hollow\nunder a tree where the prospector\nfirst met the animal. The bear wai\nstill there, along with Gammon's\nmackinaw. Levy lett him. ,\nIn the meantime, Gammon ls resting ln hospital here, his leg successfully set but not fully remembering all his fortnight's sufferings.\nthat was, or ought to be, based upon\nthe life and teaching and example\nof Jesus.\nCould the church of Jesus Christ\nspeak on these living issues, and\nspeak now, was the question Mr.\nSilverwood left with his hearers.\nZinc Output Is\nUp in Dominion\nCanadian producers of zinc reported an output of 30,873,09Lpoundi\nin July; during June, 2*,!)!lil,l(M\npounds were produced and ln July,\n1935, the output was 27,658,014\npounds. Production during the\nseven months ending July aggregated 188,545,241 pounds as compared with 179,705,343 a year ago.\nQuotations for zinc on the London\nmarket averaged 3.04739 cents. Bssei\non this price the July output was\nworth $940,823.\nThe world output reached a total\nof 138,553 tons in July. .In June the\ntotal was 131,880 tons and in July\nlast year, 122,285. The United States\noutput advanced 606 tons in July to\n45,553 tons. The German production\nwas 253 tons higher at 12,711 tons\nand the Anglo-Australian output of\n12,719 tons rose 547 tons.\nCLOUDY WEATHER BUT\nLITTLE RAIN, NELSON\nAlthough Sunday night was\ncloudy and threatening, little rain\nfell ln Nelson. The total for both\nSunday night and early Monday\nmorning was only .02 of an inch.\nSunday's threatening clouds had\nentirely disappeared by Monday\nmorning and Nelsonites were greeted by a bright clear day. About 1\np.m. a wind, averaging in velocity\nat about seven miles par hour,\nsprang up making walking difficult\nand whipped the waters ot the lake\ninto whltecaps. However, when the\nsun set the wind died down and\nentirely disappeared.\nTemperatures for the day were\nregistered at a maximum of 61 ahd\na minimum of 40 degrees,\nVardeen Imports\nVancouver Boxer\nErnii Swartz, 127-pound featherweight boxer front Vancouver, haa\njoined the Nelson Sports club and\nwill box for lt and work out of Nelson, according to Jack Vardeen,\npromoter of the club.\nSwartz is now training at the club\nbetween 7:30 and 9 each evening\nfor a match Friday with Tim Paris,\nwhose battle with Babe Belanger on\nthe last club card was a wild and\nfan-pleasing affair from start to\nfinish. Winner of the Swartz-Parii\nno li slated to match gloves with\nBelanger later.\nThe new member of Vardeen's\nstable has met the best ln his weight\nin and around Vancouver, and has\ntwice invaded California for bouts\nin the Hollywood bowl and in the\nDreamland arena in San Franclico,\nMoAVOY IN HOT WATER\nPRESTON, England, Oct. 19 (AP).\n\u2014Jock McAvoy, the Britlih prizefighter who returned recently from\nAmerica, wai convicted today of\ndangerous driving, refusing to give\nhis name, and carrying a pistol\nwithout a licence. He was fined\n\u00a315 and will not be permitted to\ndrive a car for six months.\nU.S. DOLLAR STEADY\nMONTREAL, Oct 19 (CP)-Lead-\nIng currencies showed little change\non Montreal foreign exchanges to\nday. Pound stcrll, g eased 1-16 cent\nto $4.88 21-32 while the French\nfranc sold .01 cent lower to 4-15\ncents. The United States dollar held\nunchanged at 1-32 discount\nMONTREAL, Oct. 19 (CP).-But-\nter 23*Vi.\nWheat, No. 2 Nor. 1.201.; barley\nC.W. No. 3 .70; oats, No. l feed .4714:\nflour, spring wheat patents 7, seconds 660.\nFirst Call for\nOgden's!\nYou'll travel a long way before you'll\nfind as smooth a fine cut as Ogden's.\nThat's why this grand cigarette\ntobacco serves pleasure, and nothing\nelse but. When you roll a cigarette\nwith Ogden's and touch a light to\nit you're off on a non-stop run to\nfull smoking enjoyment.\nFirtt call for Ogden's\u2014then choose\n\"Chantcclcr\" or \"Vogue\" cigarette\npapers. That's the complete\nmenu fof satisfaction In -'rolling-\nyolir-own.\" And\u2014the Cellophane-\nwrapped Ogden's package has the\npurple easy-opening ribbon forqulck\nopenings.\nOGDEN'S\nFINE   CUT\nP\u00a3.\u2014Your Pipe Knows Ogdtn's Cut Plug.\nm,.C-_.-  \\\\^J^J.^i!^^J^^u^!Mi-im0iJs.*^.-..:k^li:...\n___ti^a_-_________<*k_____    '\n_____\n __-\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C,\nOur Promotion of Imported\nPullovers and Catdtgans\nContinues Today\nSELECT YOURS NOW! PURE WOOLS. AND SILK AND WOOL MIXTURES!\nA delightful selection in many patterns, lacy and plain tailored ribbing, cable stitch effects. Styles\nto suit everybody. Soft wool cardigans in three a gg   .\u25a0 \u00a3\u00ab\u2022%  Qt< _ ti*%   Off\nstyles\u2014fishtail waistband, standard coat style \u00ab7 \u25a0 .73   9\/.S7J  2tl\\d \" *%      '\nand youthful high button model. All trimmed      *_\u25a0_. -_-_\u00bb ^P\nwith smart accessories. Sizes 32 to 42 .... \u2014Second Floor HBC\nSpecial Selection of\nNEW FALL WOOL FELTS\nRoller felts and brim  styles.  Black,\nnavy, brown and rust. Sizes   ffl OQ\n22 to 24. EACH .I.LD\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nTAILORED WOOL\nFAILLE SKIRTS\nIn pleated styles. Each garment well\ntailored and a perfect fit. Black, navy,\nbrown and wine. Sizes (1 QC\n14 to 40. EACH \u00abp!,3J\n\u2014Second Floor H BC\nATTRACTIVE FRILLED CURTAINS\n$1.59\nBC       e-fc\nNew pastel plaids and smart high tones in fine fancy nets. These are Vk yards\nlong. Complete with vallance and ties. SET   \t\n\u2014Second Floor H\nV\nNEW ROUGH CREPE\nThese come in dress lengths and short ends at a big reduction. All the\nwanted fall shades in the group. 38 inches wide. CO-\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nYARD\nLINGERIE TAFFETA\nWashes well and wears well. Comes in dainty shades of maize, apricot,\neggshell and black. Also White and navy. 38 inches wide. OQ _\n\u2014Second Floor H BC\nYARD\nAll the New Models in the Latest Weaves and Colors\nCome in and inspect these fine clothes, plains, checks,, glen checks and neat aa j^   \u2014 _\nfancy weaves. Complete size range for regulars, tails and stouts. SUIT  *r_i     sP.*S\"\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nAit Outstanding Value in\nMen's\nA new selection of winter overcoats, in the newest styles and latest models  ft\nCrey and brown checks as well as the plain and fancy weaves. EACH  \u25bc\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\n15-95\nMen's Wool Windbreakers\nHere are our new zipper fronts, with polo collars in brown, grey and blue mixed\nshades. Sizes 36 to 44. EACH \t\n\u2014Main Floor H B C\n*A-\u00bb5\n4\n. MEN'S\nCOMBINATIONS\nSeveral well known makes are in this group\nof button fronts and no-button styles. Cood\nmedium weight in wool and cotton mixtures.\nSizes 36 to 44. PAIR\u2014\n$1-95\nMain Floor HBC\nH B C PURE FOOD SPECIALS\n1M Phones, 194 Free Delivery\nON SALE TODAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nCOFFEE- 1 Jli*\nHBC Special Blend Lb 3*>\nMARMALADE\u2014 4\nShirriffs Good Morning ..Lbs. ..\nCOMB HONEY- 1\nLinden  comb\nPASTRY FLOUR- 7\nB te K Lb.. ..\nROLLED OATS\u2014 8\nB tc K Quick Cooking Lbs.\nDATES- Z'\/\u00bb\nUnpitted Lbi...\nTUNA FLAKES- 2\nVs't  - -tini ...\nSOCKEYE 8ALMON- 2\nFancy %'s  cln\u00bb\t\nMATCHES- 1\nMaple Leal or Red Bird carton\nm\n32fJ\nw\n27fJ\n33*\n25(J\n2    lbl.    Fort\nGarry Tea\n$1.20\n1 tin Fort\nGarry Baking\nPowder 12 oz.\nilie\u2014 FREE\n4 cakes Sunlight Soap, new\nre *5<\n1 regular pkg.\nRlnso-FREE.\n2 pkg. Swansdown Cake Flour, 1 Swansdown cake tin, 1 <CQ\/t\n\u25a0ahopplng bag, 1 cook book, all for   **mr\nSHOPPING\nBAGS\nRoomy shopping bags of\nleatherette and of covert\ncloth. Suitable for needlework too. Dome fastening\nwith sturdy handles. CA_\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nEACH\nKID GLOVES\nSmart French kid with\nflat sewn seams. Neat-\nfitting at the wrist, with\nflared fancy cuff. Navy,\nblack and brown. A regular $2.50 value.  d\u00bb1 QC\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nPAIR\nFIBRE SCHOOL\nCASES\nImported cases of tough\nfibre board in blue or\nbrown. Heavy English\nchromium locks. 12-inch\nsize.\nEACH ...\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\n$1.00\nBAGGAGE\nSPECIAL\nAeropack by McBrine.\nCompletely fitted with\nthe famous McBrine\nhanger. You can carry\nenough changes for a\nlong trip. Standard 20-\ninch size. Black M QC\nonly. SPECIAL \u00abPI Vd\n\u2014Second Floer HBC\nntevtfiitil ditmiwttii.\n\u2022\u2022#.-:\u00abtF\nwmmtm\nm*\nINGO\u00abI\u00bbORAT60   2 W MAY ICTO.\n\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0r'.ys&tmmmmmmHmmmmm\nMEN'S WOOL\nTWEED PANTS\nMen's heavy all wool tweed pants that are wind\nand rain proof. Crey and brown heather mixtures. PAIR\u2014\n$\n3.95\n-Main Floer Hie\nWOMEN'S SMART\nSHOES\nBlack or brown kid or calf ties,\ncuban heels. Black butterfly\npattern pumps, black sandals,\nblack ties with spike heels anc'\nstub toes.\nPAIR\t\n$2.95\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nSTURDY WORK BOOTS\nPanco and leather soles. Black mennonite tanned uppers,\nbellows tongue and plain toe style. 00 CA\nPAIR <PJ,JU\nV  . \u25a0 ol-      -Main Fleer HiC\n[rews Are Working on Road\nin Vicinity of Salmo and Ymir\nGovernment Crew at\nYmir, Green Co.*\nat Salmo\nA. H. Green Co. Ltd., has a crew\nat work on a road reconstruction\ncontract at Salmo. A bulldozer is\nbeing used on the portion o( road\n'south ot the Salmo airport and a\ngas shovel is on the ground, according to the South Kootenay News.\nThe report slates:\n\"The work is a fairly extensive\nprogram and it will be some time\nbelore it is finished. The present\nhighway will be diverted in- several\nplaces, necessitating extensive till\nwork and rock cutting. A crew is\nexpected  to start work  near  the\n. bridge in the next Jew days.\n'The new highway which is being made 30 feet wide will be ol\nvery good grade with a minimum\nof corners, and when finished will\nhave a gravel surface.''\nBetween Salmo and Ymlr an extensive program is being carried out\n\u2022by the department of public works\n-with Sam Ball of Ymir in charge,\nthe South Kootenay News states in\nanother item reading in part as\nfollows:\n\"Considerable brush has been\nslashed from the side of the road,\nstarting about a mile south of Ymir\nand preparation is beinrt made for\nstraightening and widening the\nroad at this point. Quite a large\ncrew of men Is employed by the department on this job.\n\"A compressor is on the ground\nand will be used on the rock bluffs\nwhich project on to the road. These\nwill be blasted and the road made\nof standard width, doing away with\nthe dangerous  curves which now\nexist.\n\"The grader which made its appearance on the highway about a\nmonth ago is still on the job, working on the straight sections on the\nSalmo end. These portions have\nbeen widened and built up which\nshould improve their condition\ngreatly during the annual spring\nbreak-up.\"\nSports Day Aids\nFernie Hospital\n$710 Is Turned Over\nto Organization;\nNew Apparatus\nDRUMHELLER\nMERCURY\nGOAL\nOn* ef Ihe fineit coals on the\nmarket for heater, itove or\nfurnace.\nLUMP: Ton   f 10.50\nNUTt Ton       9.00\nFAIRVIEW\nFuel & Teaming\nPHONE 701\nfca-Mfa-^ liifallss-lliTlVri    i IM 1 1\nFERNIE, B.C.-A financial report on the Labor Day celebration\nwas placed before the Fernie Hospital board on Thursday evening,\nshowing net proceeds for the hospital of S710.O4. The total receipts\nof $1606.03 were made up of contributions amounting to $629, entry\nfees $100, midnight frolic $83, Labor Day danc* $173.40, admissions\nto grounds $206, hot dog and refreshment concessions $28.13, radio\ndrawing $207, donation Miss E.\nYoung $10, share of profits from\nroad show $45, proceeds of cake\ndonated by Mrs. Charles Edgar of\nWest Fernie $24.50.\nPrize money totalling $484 was\ndistributed to Blairmore Baseball\nclub, first prize, $100, Fernie Baseball club, second prize, $75; Coleman Football club, first prize, $100;\nMichel Football club, second prize,\n$75, Trail Softball club, first prize,\n$55; Fernie Junior Softball club,\nsecond prize, $25; track events $54.\nOperating expenses were $311.99.\nThis year's proceeds were just over\n$200 higher than last year's total\nof $508.90.\nThe hospital board confirmed the\nappointment of Miss Janet Brown\nas a permanent member of the\nnursing staff succeeding Miss Norton who resigned October 1.\nThe purchase of a new sterilizer\nfor the hospital was authorized and\nalso repairs to the floor of the\nlaundry  building.\nPriceless, Bot Purchased for $100\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n5:30 news, Vancouver, (B. C. Net);\n5:45 M.B.S. Exchange from\nChicago; 6:00 Friendly Enemies,\nWinnipeg; 6:30 Arabesque Patters\nin Melody, Montreal; 7:00 National\nSine Song, community singing; 7:30\nJoe de Couroey's orch., Toronto;\n7:45 Canadian Press news and\nweather; 8:00 C.R.C. time signal, Ottawa; Old Time Frolic, Saskatoon;\n8:30 Airs Gay, Airs Tendies,, Winnipeg; 9:00 Just Supposin', dr., Winnipeg 9:30 Organ Rhapsody by Allan\nCoron, Winnipeg; 10:00 Mews. Vancouver; 10; 15 Eric Gee and his Kolle-\nJeans, Vancouver.\nNBC\u2014KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ    KGW    KFI    KPO    KOMO\n590      620      640      680       920\n5:00 'Long About Sundown, dir.\nLouis Ford; 5:30 Crosscuts from Log\no' the Day; 6:00 Ben Bernie and All\nthe Lads; 6:30 Fred Astaire, Charles\nButterworth, Johnny Green's orch..\nguests; 7:30 Walter Kelsey, violinist;\nCalifornia Consumers' Conference,\nKGO 7:45 Roy Campbell's Royalists;\nThe Sports Forum; 8:00 Amos\n'n' Andy; 8:15 Lum and\nAbner; 8:30 Leo Reisman's orch.,\nartists; 9:00 Death Valley Days, drama; 9:30 Good Morning Tonight,\nvocal chorus; 10:00 news flashes,\nSam Hayes; 10:15 Eddie Fitzpatrick\njr. and orch.; 10:30 Griff Williams'\norch.; 11:00 Jan Garter's orch.; 11:30\nTom Brown's orch.\nStrange as it Seems; 8*00 Republican National committee; 8:15 Renfrew of the Mounted, drama; 8:30\nKen Murray, PhU Regan, Russ Morgan's orch.; 9:00 Fred Waring'!\nPennsylvanians; 9:30 Passing Parade; 10:00 Jimmy Dorsey's orch.;\n10:30 Larry Kent's orch.; 11:00 Phil\nHarris' orch.; 11:30 Jimmy Bittick's\norch.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 500 w\n5:10 news flashes; 5:15 Cariboo\nCowboys; 6:lt* News fbshti; 6.45\nRhythmic Moments; 7:00 Self Help,\n7:30 Ruby Jones; 7:45 Sonny Hudson; 8:00 Laddie Watl-is: 8:15 Bernard Braden; 8:30 Western Aces;\n9:00 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 9:30\nEric Gee's orch.; 10:00 Swing Trio;\n10:15 Len Chamberlain's orch.; 10:45\nSlumber Hour; 11:00 News flashes;\nother periods, records.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T.; 6:30\nGypsy Fortunes; 6:45 Peacock\nCourt; 7:00 Alta. Univ., CKUA; 7:30\nSlices of Life; 7:45 Se.'. of the Don;\n8:00 Rhythm Rhapsody; 8:45 True\nConfessions; 9:00 news; 9:15 The\nSedenader.\n\"JUNO,* BY REMBRANDT-BOUGHT FOR $100\nRediscovery of priceless Rembrandt masterpiece, worth between\n$150,000 and $200,000 and bought for $100 last June, has been disclosed\nby Dr. William R. Valentiner, director of the Detroit Institute of Arts.\nThe picture, shown above, is Rembrandt's conception of Juno, Roman\nmythology's queen of the gods and of heaven. Two Dutch dealers\npurchased it at a public auction In Bonn, Germany, for $100. They resold\nit to a private collector for a price reported to be between $150,000 and\n$200,000. Museums, collectors and dealers have been seeking the masterpiece since 1678.\u2014Central Press Canadian Photo.\nEGGS NEW FOOD TO THEM\nNOTTINGHAM, England (CP).-\nThe National Federation of Class\nTeachers' conference was told some\nCumberland children given eggs\nnever had them before and didn't\nknow how to eat them.\nPublic buildings in China are now\nbeing constructed of Chinese materials only by government order.\nCranbrook lady\nReturns From a\nTrip, Switzerland\nCRANBROOK, B.C.,-Among the\nCranbrook guests who attended the\nannual golf dance at Kimberley on\nFriday evening were Hon. F. M.\nand Mrs. MacPherson, Mrs. Hogarth,\nMrs. Forrest, Mr. and Mrs. J. Ironside, Mr. and Mrs. F. Scott, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Schell, Mrs. Selwyn, Mr. ahd\nMrs. R. E. Sang, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nV. Edwards, Mr. and Mrs. M. A.\nBeale, Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Fergie,\nMr. and Mrs. E. S. Jones, Mr. and\nMrs. W. G. T. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.\nT. A. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Marshall\nMacPherson, Miss Grace Ryan, Miss\nMuriel Little, Miss Kathleen Dezall,\nMiss Grace Flett, Miss Elizabeth\nMacDonald, Miss Zoe Gibbons, Miss\nEthel Neily, Miss Yvonne Pichette,\nMiss Ruth McKowan, Miss Selina\nDixon, J. Boyd, P. N. Russell, G!\nHanna, J. Martin, G. F. White, M.\nReade, D. Turner, J. Munroe and\nT. Hogarth.\nMiss Bea Larbalaster of Kimberley spent the week-end in Cranbrook.\nMrs. Walkley, who has spent the\npast three months visiting in Switzerland has returned to her home.\nMrs. R. J. Edwards has returned\nfrom Winn:   \u25a0\u25a0-.\nJudge ar.. Mrs. Thompson are\nvisiting in Fernie.\nMrs. D. Kirkpatrick ot Invermere\nls the guest of her. parents Mr. and\nMrs. Lindberg.\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. Smith, who\nhave been visiting at Sunshine Bay,\nhave returned.\nMr, and Mrs. A. J. Parker of Vancouver are visiting friends in the\ncity.\nMiss Muriel and Miss Delia Bax-\nNBC\u2014 KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO    KJR    KEX    KECA    KGA\n790       970      1180      1430      1470\nPaul Martin's music; 5:30 Beaux\n.\\rts trio; 6:00 Yesterday's Music,\n'strumental; 6:30 Husbands and\nWives, open forum; 7:00 Hildegard,\n\"ersonallty singer; California State\nChamber of Commerce program\n(KGO) 7:30 Ted Fio-Rito's orch.;\n8:00 Paul Martel's orch.; 8:15 Calif.\nConsumers'   conference;   8:30   Log\ns Cabin Bar-Z Ranch, western stories.\n! The Westerners; 9:00 Political (KG-\n; O); Vest Pocket Varieties, artists,\nJack Meakin's orch.; 9:30 Jimmy\ni Dorsey's orch.; 10:00 Bernie Cummin's  orch.;   10:30  Jimmy  Grier's\nI orch.; 11:00 Paul .Carson, organist.\nSHORT WAV*? PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe following frequencies will be\nused GSF 15.14 mcs., 19.82 m.,\nand GSC, 9.68 mcs., 31.32 m.\n6:00  p.m.\u2014Big  Ben  B.B.C.  Empire  orchestra,  Kate Winter,  Soprano. 7:00 \"Foreign Affairs,\"    by\nSir Frederick Whyte, K.C.S.I., LL.D.\n7:15 Variety. 7:40 News and Announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nCBS\u2014DON  LEE  NETWORK\nKVI   KFRC   KOIN   KSL   KOL\n570      810       940     1130    1270\n5:00 Hamerstein Music hall; 5:30\nChapel moments (KOL); 6:30 Cara-\nFischer's orch. (KOL); 6:30 Caravan\nvan, Rupert Hughes m. c. Guest\nmusic dir. Benny Goodman; 7:30\nRoosevelt    progress    talk;    7:45\nSchenectady\u2014 2:35 p.m.\u2014Short\nWave Mall Bag. W2XAF, 31.4 m.,\n953 meg.\nLondon\u20143:55 \u2014\"Nelson Expects.\"\nA Play. GSP, 19.6 m., 15.31 meg.\nGSD, 25.5 m.,  11.75 meg., G.S.C.,\n31.3 m., 9.85 meg.\nBerlin\u2014 4:30 \u2014The Kaleidoscope\nof Opera. DJD, 25.4 m., 11.77 meg.\nCaracas\u20145:30 The Continentals.\nYV2RC, 51.7 m, 5.8 meg.\nParis 5:30 \"\u2014Knock\" (fragments)\n\u2014Jules Romains. TPA-2, 19.6 m.,\n15.24 meg.\nBerlin \u20148.15 \u2014Light Music. DJD,\n25.4 m\u00bb 11.77 meg.\nTokyo\u20149.00 \u2014\"Overseas Program.\" JVH, Nazaki, 20.5 m.. 14.6\nmeg.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C.-Oct. 19-\nMiss Lilias A. Jarvis is holidaying\nat Vancouver.\na    a    a\nMr. and Mrs. John Albo and Miss\nRva Gornello, who were guests\nhere of Mr. Albo's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Albo, have returned\nto their homc in Seattle.\na    a    a\nD. Thorpe, who was in Rossland\nfor some time, has returned to\nSheep Creek.\na    a    a\nMiss E. Sparks has returned to\nher home at Vancouver.\nMrs.  R.  D.  Mitchell   and  Miss\nHelen Mitchell have been  on  i\nholiday at Spokane.\n\u2022   .   9\nAlbert Albo and King Comme-\nsettl have returned from a pheasant\nhunting trip in the neighborhood of\nCascade. They report fair luck.\na   a    a s\nMiss Jennie McKay of Trail waa\na week-end visitor to Rossland.\nooo\nMrs. Earl Pettycoart haa returned\nhome from hospital.\nDOUBLE TOBACCO HARVEST\nCANBERRA (CP)\u2014Australia produced 6,106,000 pounds of tobacco\nin the past year, an increase of 100\nper cent compared with the previoue\n12 months, it is reported. '_\n8TOLE JEWELS FROM CAR\nLONDON  (CP).\u2014Jewelry worth\n$10,000 was stolen from a motorcar left by its woman owner unattended in Berkeley Square.\nter were tea hostesses at the golf\nj club on Saturday afternoon.\nConstable McLeod of the R.C.M.P.\nI has returned after spending his\n| vacation in Winnipeg.\nENTERTAINED GRADS\nI EDMONTON (CP) .-Percy Page\n- and members of his famous basket-\n; bailers were guests of the Edmon-\nI ton Women's Canadian club cele-\n1 brating its 25th anniversary.\nRATHER FLY THAN TALK\nLONDON (CP).\u2014Responding at a\nluncheon ln her honor, Mra. Beryl\nMarkham, first east-west transatlantic woman flier, said she would\nrather \"fly the Atlantic any day\nthan make a speech.\"\nThe dahlia was named after the\nSwedish botanist Dahl, who discovered the plant ln Mexico and\nbrought it to Europe.\n\"   .I*   *\nR. E. CRERAR, C.L.U.\nDISTRICT MANAGER\nNELSON, B.C.\nALL PROFITS FOR POLICYHOLDERS\n__-_M^ataaa\u00bba^ahSBtt\u00ab^\n-M-k-d-^-^'-A^.,.., miflraggft gm ,....\n Darncxg\nPAGE FOUR-\nROTARY CHIEF\nPAYS A VISIT\nTO LOCAL CLUB\nGovernor Mowry at\nBath Luncheon and\nAssembly\nGIVES TALK ON\nROTARY'S SCOPE\n' Explains Meaning of\nthe Four Rotary\nObjects\nNelson Rotarians Monday entertained the governor of district 1,\nCharles A, Mowry of Spokane, who\naddressed the full membership at\nthe weekly luncheon at noon, and\nin the evening at the home of President R. E. Potter, Gordon road.\nmet in conference the club's assembly, consisting of officers and heads\nof committees. The governor rose\nat 4 in lhe morning to make the\ntrip to Nelson by car, and Tuesday\nhe will put in a full day with the\nTrail Rotarians.\nHeartily welcomed at thc weekly\ngathering here, Governor Mowry,\nan old Yukoner and therefore acquainted with Canadian laws and\ngeography, said no one could know\nall about Rotary, and very few could\nknow much about it, because of its\ngreat extent and diversification. It\nwas not something static or stationary, but was evolving and changing constantly. It was not today the\nRotary that the Nelson club joined\nwhen it was instituted, nor the\nRotary he himself joined 20 years\nago.\nSERVICE ABOVE SELF\nWhile Rotary still had Its original\nbasis of friendship and fellowship,\nit at first also had a selfish obpect,.\nthat of doing business with the Rotary circle and thus financially\nbenefitting the members. When he\njoined it waa the custom of many\nclubs to make weekly check-ups of\nthis business, but that practice soon\ndied. The fine slogan. \"He Profits\nMost Who Serves Best\", wu still\njustly recognized, but because it\ncontained the word \"profit\", it had\nbeen shortened to the more compact, \"Service Above Self\". It was\nundoubtedly true, Mr. Mowry said,\nthat a good Rotarian derived an\nactual financial benefit, as did any\nman known for square dealing, but\nthe outstanding profit enjoyed was\n.from his knowledge of a good ser-\n\u25a0 vice well performed.\n, The more that the Rotary membership could do to realize the organization's ideals, the more valuable service it would perform. To\nput In practice the Golden Rule-\nthat was all that any religion had\ntiled to do. If Rotary could even\napproximate this objective, its existence was amply justified.\nHe emphasized the importance of\nthe Individual Rotarian in Rotary\nwork. Rotary could mean absolutely\nnothing as a world movement if its\nmembership did not try to act the\nGolden Rule. Its usefulness would\nalso be limited unless each club was\nan efficient unit.\nDISTRICT I\nSECOND LARGE8T\nTurning to district 1, formerly district 22, but renamed when the necessity arose of remaplng th continent in ah orderly manner, Governor Mowry said it embraced Oregon, Washington, the Idaho Panhandle, British Columbia, and Alaska, and With 73 clubs was the second largest ln the world of Rotary ln\nnumber of clu.s. When district 2,\nembracing California, was divided\ninto five in the early future ln accordance with its petition, district\n1 would be the largest, and lt in\nturn would probably h. e to be\ndivided, for when it contained 100\nor more clubs there would be more\nclubs than one governor could visit\nin his term of office. But for the\nreason that this district was International, and propagated a powerful international sentiment, he hoped its division would not occur very\nsoon. The district could boast some\nof the earliest dubs organized\nScalUi was No. 4, and Spokane, No.\n21. Every club he had visited on this\ntour increased Its membership this\nyear, snd the districts, would soon\nboast 4400 members.\nCOVERS THE WORLD\nRotary's world membership was\n77,000, and unless one looked at\nthe map he could hardly believe\nhow thoroughly Rotary permeated\nthe civilized world. A world map\nwith every country shaded that had\none or more Rotary clubs presented\na striking picture. In thc western\nhemisphere only four small countries ln South America were omitted. In Europe, only Russia and Turkey were excepted; in Asia. Arabia;\nand in Africa, only a little country\nor two. Rotary could claim lo be\nmore Inclusive than even the Postal\nUnion, and it was something of\nwhich every Rotarian could be\nproud.\nTo the service of international Rotary some of the biggest men in\ntheir various professions or lines of\nbusiness gave their time. One of the\noutstandnlg surgeons of the world\nwas ah international director. Some\nbig men had spent three months In\nattending the International; this\nwas true of the Australian delegates\nlast year. He urged every member to consider attending an international some time, if It was at all\nwithin reach, for it was a great experience.'\nThere would be a district conference at Spokane late next April or\ncsrly ln May, at which every club\ncast of thc mountains should be\nrepresented, since the convention\ncame to this area only about once\nin seven years.\nAnother convention  ot immense\ninterest wss the annual Pacific Rotary conference, embracing the Rotary districts bordering on the Pacific. The next one was the meet\nln New Zealand.\nThe last part of Governor Mowry.\naddress was on the four objects of\nRotary, condensed from the original\nsix.\nUNIT MUST BE EFFICIENT\nIn the democratic Rotary organization, elective in its nature, all\nofficers, from district to international, holding office just one year,\nthe individual club waa the unit,\nand the success ot Rotary depended\non the efficiency of the constituent clubs, he said.\nHence, the first objective was\nclub service. A Rotary club was\nlike a motorcar\u2014Its function was\nto take its membership somewhere.\nTo do its job, the car must be hitting on all cylinders, and the club\nmust have all Its committees working efficiently. The reason attendance was stressed was that a non-\nattending member was of no service\neither to the club or to himself. The\nindividual must be given work, and\nit was important for all committee\nmembers to have- work to do, and\ngain familiarity with it\u2014chairmen\nmust merely lead and not do it all\nthemselves.\nLIVE ROTARY IN VOCATION\nMr. Mowry said to him the second object, vocational service, was\nthe most important of all. The individual member had an obligation\nto live Rc\u00abry, and in his vocation\nhe had an opportunity to put the\nGolden Rule Into effect. Little chiseling practices should not be preserved merely because they had the\nsanction of custom. Everything\nshould square with thc Golden Rule.\nBusiness could be greatly advanced\nby being more ethical, and if business men did not attend to this for\nthemselves, someone else might do\nlt for them in a way they might\nnot like.\nCommunity service was the third\nprimary object of Rotary. He referred approvingly to the Nelson\nclub's discussion of crippled children's work in hand or to be taken\nup, and said it was crippled children's work that changed the Spokane club from a luncheon club to\na community club. Another expression of community service was in\ntaking an Interest in community\ngovernment. When only 60 per cent\nof the poeple exercised the franchise, there was certainly room for\nwork to be done. A club was not\ndoing the best service if all its members did not take an interest in\nseeing that good men were placed\nin public office, and it was slacking by the voters that made it possible for minorities to impose their\nwill. \t\nINTERNATIONAL GOOD WILL\nIn connection with international\nservice, the fourth object, he made\nreference to international acquaintance, and the splendid spirit that\nwas engendered by enlargement of\nthis acquaintance.\nFour times since he had become\ngovernor of district 1 he had been\na foreigner on these trips, and he\nwould experience the same condition a couple of times more. But\nhe did not feel a foreigner, for the\nboundary in this case was only an\nimaginary hne.\nSome terrible things were happening in some foreign countries,\nbut he did not believe the Rotarians\nin those countries believed in them,\nany more than the Rotarlans in\nCanada or the United States believed in some of the things that\nhappened on this continent. Peace,\nhe pointed out, was not made In\ndocuments, but only In the hearts\nof men.\nMr. Mowry's concluding remark\nwas that there was no limit to the\namount of good a man might do\nprovided he didn't care who got the\ncredit.\nDr. L. E. Borden, senior past president of the Nelson Rotary club,\nthanked Governor Mowry for his\nvisit, and declared all had benefitted from his talk. He referred to\nlhe good that came from thc intercity meetings held from tune to\ntime\nMrs. Quinstrom\nof Trail Passes\n      NILSON DAILY NIWS, NILSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. OOTOBIR 20, 1Mf\nI \u25a0 s ,   I   I     I    I\nTRAIL TO HAVE   !^^!_Vh\u00a3'&\u00a3,'\u00ab\u00bbCLUB HAS\nTWO JUVENILE *\u00bb \" \"* ~ \"\"\"* \u00bbaddv mum.\nHOCKEY SQUADS\nBuchanan and Young\nConservatives\nSponsors\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. ID\u2014Two teams\nwill be entered in the juvenile hockey league, it was decided at a meeting of the Trail Hockey Booster club\nat the Crown Point hotel Monday\nnight. Sponsors ot the teams are\nJames Buchanan and the Young\nConservative association.\nIntercity games with juvenile\nteams of Rossland are promised.\nMike Devlin and Dick Dimock will\nbe the coaches. It was decided to\nregister all players and to call a\nmeeting of all prospective material\nto discuss plans.\n\"Rusty\" O'Sullivan reported for\nthe membership committee that all\nwas running smoothly in this department. Fred Edmunds will be\nasked to be chairman of the club's\nhockey committee.\nJohn (Ice) Young will be chairman of the outside ice committee\nand M. Anderson will assist him.\nTAKE EVIDENCE\nTODAY ON AUTO\nDEATH SUNDAY\nJury Sees Body Perry;\nCar to Be Used as\nExhibit\nViewing the body, coroner's Jury\ninquiring into the death of Leon\nPerry of South Slocan, who was\nfatally injured Sunday night when\na car plunged off the road near\nLo-yer Bonnington, adjourned on\nMonday afternoon until 2 o'clock\ntoday.\nNick Braun, also of South Slocan, seriously injured In the accident, waa reported Monday to be\ndoing fairly well. Pete Rowchuk,\nthird passenger who jumped after\nthe car struck another driven by\nNorman McLeod a glancing blow\nwhile passing, was not hurt. Braun\nls in Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nDr. F. M.' Auld, deputy coroner,\nhad charge of the brief session of\nthe jury Monday. The jury consists\nof J. A. StDenis, A- H- Hughes, M-\nMellette, Peter Baragon, R. C. Johnston and W. Hufty.\nIt is understood the car In which\nPerry received his fatal Injuries has\nbeen brought to Nelson to serve as\nan exhibit.\nAsk Sacks and\nTransport lor\nRelief Apples\nFifth and Last Car Is\nBeing Assembled\nfor Prairie\nResident of Smelter\nCity for 26\nYears\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 19,-Death of j\nMrs. Alexandra Quinstrom, wife of!\nOtto Quinstrom, Oak street, or-)\ncurred at hen home Monday morning ln her 47th year.\nShe had been ill since last spring.\nIn May she underwent an operation\nat Rochester, N,Y., but failed to regain her health.\nBorn in Eggum. Norway, in 1889,\nMrs. Quinstrom came to Canada in\n1907, and after several years In Nelson came lo Trail, 26 years ago.\nBesides her husband sho Is. survived by a son, Roy, a daughter,\nAgnes, and one sister, Mrs. M. Carpenter. A brother, H. Jorgenson,\nresides In Vancouver, and her father, a sister and two brothers in\nNorway.\nFuneral services will be held from\nKnox United church. Wednesday, at\n2 p.m., with Rev. Dr. M. W. Lees\nofficiating. Burial will be in Knight;\nof Pythias cemetery.\nAt s meeting of the Nelson prairie\nrelief committee held Monday night\nshipment of four cars of cull apples\nto date was reported, wilh another\none partly assembled.\nAn endeavor to get this final one,\nwhich is being made up from the\nNelson and Robson districts, oft the\nlatter part of the week, will be\nmade.\nThe committee will go out Tuesday to find further supplies around\nNelson.\nDonations of sacks and of transportation for sacked apples are\nasked, intending donors being asked\nto ring up H. Fairbank, phone 202Y.\nOf the four cars shipped to Saskatchewan drought districts, two\nwere from the Harrop district, one\nfrcm Willow Point, and one from\nNelson.\nCABINET TQ CONFER WITH\nU. B. C. M.\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The customary\npre-sessional Interview between the\nUnion of British Columbia Municipalities and the provincial cabinet is\nscheduled for today at the legislative buildings. The routine of the\ninterview will be presentation of the\nresolutions passed a: the municipalities' convention at Vernon this\nfall.\nSON-IN-LAW OF IL\nDUCE IN CONFAB\nAT BERLIN\nROME, Oct. 18 (API-Premier\nMussolini's son-in-law and foreign\nminister, Count Galeazio Ciano, entrained for Berlin tonight for conferences with Chancellor Hitler and\nGermany's foreign minister Kons-\ntantln Van Neurath.\nThe subject of the scheduled conversations remained a carefully\nguarded secret.\nUie the Want Ada\u2014It Pays!\nVANCOUVER MAN MISSING\nVICTORIA, (CP'-Britlsh Columbia police were Investigating the disappearance of H. O. Mantle, 30, of\nVancouver, from the SS. Princess\nElizabeth. He was last seen at 1:55\na.m. Sunday morning during the\nnight rurt tfom Vancouver lo Victoria.\n8IX MONTHS, $200 FINE, ON\nOOPI CHARQI\nVANCOUVER, (CP)-Denls M\u00ab\"\nGee, 35-year-old telegraph-operator,\nconvicted of having 15 grains of morphine in his possession, was sentenced to six months In Oakalla\njail and fined $200 with the alternative of an additional 30 days by\nJudge Mcintosh In county court.\nRACE HORSE DESTROYED\nNEW YORK, (CP)-Oeorge D.\nWldener's Satlon, one of the finest\nsprinters and best weight-carriers of\nthe United States turf, was destroyed after breaking down In the New\nRochelle handicap at the opening of\nEmpire City's fall meeting.\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct1. W\u2014Mayor Bruno Lerose Informed the council Monday night that Alderman Camilla Laurlente, finance chairman, proposed\nto leave for the south in a short time with Mrs. Laurlente, who was ln ill\nhealth, and whose request for leave of absence would be made at thc next\ncouncil meeting,\nTRAIL BOWLING\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 19,-Motor Inn\ndefeated Bank of Montreal two out\nof three and Company Store beat\nCherry Pickers three straight in\nTrail Bowling league matches at the\nMemorial hall Monday night.\nTeams and scores were:\nBank of Montreal\u2014\nrl. Woodford  100   81   82-323\nJ. Boyce  ..121 172 147-440\nD. Godwin  186 126 136-398\nL. Marrs 143 154 143-440\nSpot            21   21   21- 63\nTotals  581 554 529 1664\nMotor Inn\u2014\nB. Lazareff..: 144 157 130\u2014431\nB. Balfour 107 159 125-391\nJ. Wallace  150 145 147-442\nF. Morrish   171 202 222-595\nTotals       572 663 624 1850\nCherry Pickers\u2014\nF. Graham 183 171 175\u2014529\nW. Morrlce     141 170 145-456\nG. Martlnelli 146 113 127-386\nG. Graham  167 171 190\u2014528\nTotals         637 625 637 1899\nCompany 8tore\u2014\nT. Alty  193 161 148-502\nF. Graham 162 169 160-491\nJ. Merlo 168 167 151-486\nA. Coverdale ......:   146 113 127-386\nSpot        64   64   64\u2014192\nTotals  733 674 650 2057\nSalvation Army\nAsks Clothing\nRotary Club Names\nRepresentatives on\nCommittee\nAdjutant D. Hammond of the Salvation Army addressed the Rotary\nclub briefly at Its Monday luncheon\non the need for clothing for local\nrelief, stating that those who were\nconcerned with relief had heavy responsibilities, and that there were\nmany and worthy appeals for cast-\noff clothing.\nHe asked assistance of the Rotary\nclub ln supplying, cars and In meeting incidental expenses.\nPresident R. E. Potter said it\nwould be a good thing if the Rotarlans, Gyros and Kinsmen would\nwork together on this, and he named\nJ. T. Andrews and A. G. Gelinas to\nact on a joint committee.\nThe drive is to start Wednesday.\n$50,085,361 ESTIMATED FOR YEAR\nAS VALUE OF B. C. MINERAL OUTPUT\nExceeds Last Year by\n$1,264,122; Gold\nand Lead Up\nVICTORIA, Oct. 19 (CP)-Britlsh\nColumbia this year will absorb losses amounting to $3,000,000 ln silver,\ncopper and zinc, and still exceed by\n(1,264,122 the value of its mining\nproduction last year, with $30,085,361\nas a conservative estimate for twelve\nmonths ending December 31 next,\nlhe British Columbia mines department disclosed today, in figures presented to Hon. G. S. Pearson. Gold\nand lead exceeded all expectations.\nProductions last year totalled $48,-\n821,239.\nGains for thc year Included $2.-\n188,570 additional expected from\nlead, $926,162 more from gold, $661,-\n283 additional from structural mate-\niials, $586,636 more expected from\ncoal, and $358,989 of an Increase in\nthe value of miscellaneous metals\nand minerals, according to the estimates of the department, prepare-\nby Dr. J. F. Walker, mineralogist,\nHighlights in production this year\nwere gold, estimated at $14,674,156\nin Canadian funds for the twelve\nmonths period. Lead will be close\nbehind, with an expected value of\n$12,974,590. Zinc is next with $7,646,-\n930: coal $5,635,500; silver dropped at\n\u00a34,186,393; structural materials $1,-\n900,000; copper $1,667,880; and miscellaneous metals and minerals $1,-\n400,000, at present expectations for\nlhe whole year.\nBOXLA PLAYERS\nGyro Bantam Tltlists\nGuests for Music\nand Magic\nGyro club of Nelson called In the\nGyro boxla team, bantam champions\nof Nelson, and gave themselves and\nthe youngsters a splendid evening\nat a dinner meeting at the Hume\nMonday night\u2014one of the happiest\nprograms the club has enjoyed in a\nlong time. The'evening was largely\nmusical, with Claude Knowles' \"ma-\nglcklng\" the highlight ot the entertainment and a grand ensemble\ninstrumental-vocal. It was P. I.\nPoulin's program.\nCharles Morris, Gyro president,\nwelcomed the boxla champions and\nstruck the keynote with the poem,\n\"The Man Who Ib Twelve Years\nOld\", by Maurice Smllley,\nMr. Poulin had the boys introduce\nthemselves, and then launched his\nprogram, which included songs to\ntheir own musical accompaniment\nby Delbert Smiley, guitar, and Elmer Dyke, bones, \"Hand Me Down\nMy Walking Cane\", \"Birmingham\nJail\" and \"Bury Me Out on the\nLone Prairie\"; piano solos by Harold Brown; xylophone solos by Jack\nAnnable; and concluded with Mr.\nKnowles' display of \"now you see\nit and now you don't\" sleight of\nhand that captivated the youngsters\nand gave the Gyros a treat.\nCONGRATULATE COACH\nMembers of the club and of thc\nteam extended congratulations to\nJohnny DeVoin, coach of the bantam champions, and regretted his\ninability to attend.\nSpeaking for the team Monty\nStrudwicke stated It consisted of\nboys under 14, most of whom had\nnever played before. Coach DeVoln\ninsisted, he said, on them passing\nthe ball, and the boys felt it was\nto his coaching they owed their\nrecord, 15 wins in 17 games. They\nlost one game to Trail and one to\nthe Fairview Athletic club of Nelson\nin the season. Monty thanked the\nGyros for their sponsorship and\nhoped it would be extended again\nnext year, and thanked Johnny for\nhis work.\nChairman Poulin climaxed the enthusiastic community singing of the\nevening with an ensemble musical\nand vocal number, \"Men of Gyro'\nin which Vic Owen and Mr. Brown\nshared the piano, Mr. Annabfe played the xylophone, Elmer Dyke the\nbones, Delbert Smiley the guitar,\nand President MOrrls the chimes.\nMr, Knowles shared the conducting\nbaton with Mr. poulin.\nTHREE HURT IN\n(OAST (RASH\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19 (CP).-A\ntaxi-driver, tentatively identified\nonly as a Mr. McCualg, was injured,\nirobably fatally, and two other un-\ndentifled persons were seriously\nhurt tonight1 when the car in which\nthey were riding crashed into a\nrailing on Granville street bridge.\nHospital attaches said McCualg\nhad little chance to recover and the\nother two were in a \"Serious\" con-\nI dition.\nPick Canadian Girls as Stars of Tomorrow\nMission Services   -\nConcluded at Trail\nCatholic Church\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. lt\u2014Concluding\nSunday night, a week's mission was\nheld at St. Francis Xavier church by\nRev. Father Healey, C.SS.R., who\nis well known throughout the continent aa a Roman Catholic missionary preacher.\nNELSON TO HEAR\nMUSICAL TREAT\nBY BOYS' BAND\nKitsilano Boys Have\nSplendid Leader\nin Delamont\nTO INTRODUCE\nBYLAW NUMBER\nHOUSES, TRAIL\nCouncil Will Do Work\nOut of General\nRevenue\nCITY NOT LIABLE\nINDIGENT CASEI\nNelson district is due for its biggest musical treat in years when\nthe Kitsilano Boys' band comes to\nthe civic centre auditorium Wednesday. And in appreciation, Nelson\nwill endeavor to make the visit enjoyable for the boys. They are to be\ngreeted at the train when they arrive and plans are being made by\nthe board ot trade to take them on\ncar tripa to points of Interest. A\nbanquet will be tendered in their\nhonor preceding the evening concert.\nTwo presentations are scheduled at\nthe auditorium, one in the afternoon\nand another ln the evening.\nIn addition tha local sponsors of\nthe tourers, the Nelson Boys' band\nand the Canadian Legion Bugle\nband, are hoping they will play tor\na noon street parade.\nThe success of a band is .closely\nlinked with the ability of its conductor, and certainly this is true\nof the Vancouver Kitsilano Boys'\nband and its conductor, Arthur W.\nDelamont, under whose direction\nthe band has developed into one of\nthe finest of its kind in the country.\nHe Was-bom in England, raised in\na musical atmosphere, and became\na proficient musician at an early age.\nAt 16 he came to Canada, and after\nspending some years in Moose Jaw\nbecame a professional musician in\nVancouver.\nEight years -ago he formed the\nKitsilano Boys' band. Since that time\nhe has formed aeveral more juvenile\nbands in Vancouver, one being a\ngirls' band, but the Kitsilano group\nis still hts favorite. He is wry fond\nof boys and knows how to obtain\nthe best from them. He has a dynamic personality and seems to live\nfor music. He puts a great deal of\nenergy and thought into his work-\nwhen the Kitsilano band held its\nfirst practice his heir was black,\nnow, after eight years of devoted\nservice, his hair is grey.\nTo watch him conduct is to understand the secret of his success, for by\nsheer force of personality he Inspires his youthful charges fo great-\nter efforts. Nelson citizens will have\nan opportunity to watch this talented conductor at work, and at the\nsame time to enjoy the music of\nCanada's leading juvenile band, at\ntwo full length concerts on Wednesday.\nve\u00bbl\nNorman Slader\nto Be Aviator\nLeaves for England to\nJoin the Royal\nAir Force\nNorman Slader, son of Alderman\nT. W. Slader, left by the early train\nTuesday for the east to embark from\nNew Vork for England, to take a\nflying course with the Royal Air\nForce.\nHe passed the physical examination here successfully, and before\nadmission will have to take a further one.\nHe will join for three years.\nNorman wss bom, raised and educated In Nelson. He Is 20 years of\nage.\nPostal Officer Is to\nVisit Trail Deal\nDelivery\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 19.\u2014Alderman\nJ. R. Anderson was given permission to Introduce the House Nuqi\u00bb\nbering bylaw at the next regular\nsession by the city council Monday\nnight. The cost, estimated at about\nS500, would come out ot general\n' revenue, It was stated.   City En-\n1 gineer S. S. McDiarmid was authorized to purchase the numbers required. The msyor hoped to see the\nnumbering started by the first of\nthe month.   He thought It would\nj take about six weeks to complete.\nA letter from Hon. J. C. Elliott,\n! postmaster-general, Ottawa, stated\nthat an officer ot the department\nwould be in Trail in the near future\n! to take up the matter of house-to-\nhouse mail delivery service.\nThe council decided to order a\nwreath for the annual Memorial\nDay service to be conducted by the\n| Canadian Legion, the wreath to ba\nordered from disabled veterans at\nVictoria.\n' Trail branch of the Canadian \"Legion was granted permission to holt)\na Poppy Day campaign November 11.\nWATER APPLICATIONS\nWater   service   applications   referred to the engineer and the firs*)\nwater and light committee were n\nceived from J. E. Bryan, Third avi\nnue; J. A. Buckna, Third avenue;\nSocieta Mutuoso Socorso Halo Can*\nadese, Rossland avenue.\nPermission   was   granted   Mrt.\nj Harry Eperson to have a one-Inch\nmeter placed ln the water line* to\nher apartment house on Spokane\n1 street.\n| Alderman John Young teported\nthat the use ot Wesley hall for market each Friday had been obtained\nfor $5 a day. This action was indorsed by thc council. Thc hall will\nbe used each Friday following October 23 until the end of April.\nI   Replying regarding a letter tha\ncity received from the Rossland-\nTrail clinic with respect to\nservices given a Trail Indii\nI Solicitor R. J. Clegg told\n! it was not liable for this\nsimilar one.\nE. J. Thompson, A:\ngranted permission to\nthe Trail water main la\nwith a pipe line trom a r\nhouse,  provided no  dai\ndone to the city main,\nFEW NEW VOTER8\n\"It looks like nobody Is lntereste!\nin registering on the voters' list,\"\ncommented Mayor Bruno Lerose.\n\"We have a large number of young\npeople who have become 21 years\not age since the last civic election.\nWhen election time comes they\nwonder why they are not on the\nvoters' list.\"\nCity Clerk W. E. B. Monypenny I\nadmitted that there were many el-1\nIglble voters who had not registered\nthis year but pointed out that the\nregistrations had been reduced considerably as those who signed last\nyear would automatically have their\nnames on the 1937 list.\nIn accordance with the Local Improvement act City Engineer S. S,\nMcDiarmid was officially appointed\nengineer to supervise work as outlined by the Sewer Extension bylaw\nwhich provides for extension of\nsewer lines in East Trail to service\nthe area recently brought within\nthe city limits.\nThe Annie McKenzle Basement\nbylaw was finally adopted.\nBinding a child's head to make it\ngrow long, sugar-loaf shape was\ndone ln regions of France within the\npast 100 years.\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column Is in charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of Trail, All\nevents of a social nature of Interest In Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad to have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home ln TraiL\nCECELIA   PARKER\nHollywood photographers should know Hollywood's stars better than anybody and their-prognostications should be more accurate than the average. Every year, filmdom's cameramen, who\n\"shoot\" the stars from every angle dozens of\ntimes a month, pick out stars they believe are\nheaded for the top.   This year Iwo Canadian girls\nROSINA   LAWRENCE\nwere among the first' 10 to be so selected. They\nare Cecelia Parker (left), native of Fort William,\nOnt.. and Rosina Lawrence (right), who, as a girl\nIn Westboro. Ont, danced to overcome a disability\ncaused by illness ln her childhood. Both actresses\nhave been some years ln the movie capital\u2014Central\nPress Canadian Photo.\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 18\u2014At a lovely\nwedding ceremony Monday morning at St. Francis Xavier church,\nRev, T, P. Freney united In marriage\nJennie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas Moore of Wetaikawln, Alta.,\nand John Alfred LePage, son of\nMr. and Mrs. U. LePage of Trai).\nMiss Lena LePage was bride's attendant, John Rysen supporting the\ngroom. White satin fashioned the\nmodel gown worn* by the bride,\nwith which was worn white accessories and long veil. She carried a\nbouquet of red roses. The bridesmaid wore a tunic gown of pastel\nblue satin, accessories ln blending\nshade and carried a bouquet of\nwhite carnations. Following the\nceremony a breakfast was held at\nthe Crown l>o!nt hotel. Mr. and\nMrs. LePage are leaving later on a\nwtddlng trip. Upon its conclusion\nresidence will be taken up in Trail.\n.   .  .\nMr. and Mrs. H. D. Anderson haVe\nas their guest Mrs. Anderson's mother, Mrs. George Jordan of Belle-\nvUe, Alta.\na    a    a\nIn honor of Gordon Nairn of Toronto, secretary of the Life Underwriters' association of Canada, in\nsurance men of Nelson and Trail\ngathered at the grill room ot the\nCrown Point hotel Monday noon at\na luncheon. Attending from Nelson\nwere Robert Crerar, Rots Fleming,\nA. P. J. Hodson, Mr. Hickman, Mr.\nPayne and Mr. Hogarth. Trail was'\nrepresented by S. Welliver, James\nSkinner, Ken Thomas, William\nThomson, Bert Bennett, William\nBowers and T. F, Cumming.\na a a\nMiss Eileen Baillie and Mrs. J.\nSmith have returned to the city\nfrom a short holiday spent at Spokane.\na    a    a\nMrs. C. DoLallay. of Victoria,\nwho is visiting in Trail, motored\nSunday to the Pend d'Orellle district. \u2022     \u25a0\na    a    a\nWilliam Harper is a business visitor to the coast.\na    a    a\nH. D. Anderson has returned lo\nthe city from Goldfields, Alta.,\nwhere he has been working during\nthe past five months.\na   a   a\nMr. and Mn. Tick Hall motored to\nthe Pend d'Orellle Sundsv.\n\t\n_m,-i'.l.\\iSO__-_________W__________________WBl9S'ii \\ il1lli9,&^ibOh.mS Ti.i' ;,M' ~i ii'i'\u2022\u2022\n.............................................................................I\n KASLO PICKERS\nFAST COMPARED\nWITH NELSON'S\nKootenaian Points to\nNine Who Filled\n90 Sacks\n->\u2014T\nFrock Is Velveteen\nKaslo district orchards yielded\nheavily ln the drive for fruit and\nvegetables for prairie unfortunates,\nand the Kaslo Kootenalan points\nwith pride to the efforts of nine of\nthe pickers who filled 90 sacks.\nDescribing the drive, and comparing the efforts of the nine with the\nefforts of 11 at Nelson who picked\n67 sacks, the Kootenalan says:\n\"The week-end saw several sore\nbacks and muscles\u2014but very few\n8ore beads\u2014following a strenuous\nattack on the apple trees of the district for the purpose of filling the\nprairie relief ear. All through last\nweek, each evening saw groups ot\nthe school children usefully employed at the work, and at the weekend their efforts were supplemented\nby those of some ot the older people.\n\"Nor was the city the only scene\nof activity. Shutty Bench residents\ncaught the \"apple bug'.' and worked\nsteadily, singly and in groups, until\nTuesday evening. In spite of its\nsmaller population, Mirror Lake\nwas not to be outdone, and inviting\nsome of the city people to lend a\nhand, made a telling attack on the\ntrees of the local ranches.\n\"And talking of Mirror Lake pickers reminds us that our sister city of\nNelson haa not so much to crow\nabout when it advertises its 11 pickers who filled 67 sacks. On Saturday nine of our own pickers, working at \"Skipper\" Campbell's ranch,\nturned In 90 sackful. (Nelson papers\nplease copy). And we know they\nwere full because we handled most\nof'era.\n\"At tha time of writing it is estimate, that lt tons of apples and a\nton of vegetables are in the car ...\n, \"Tha carload ls as nice a one aB\ncould be wished from Kaslo, or any\nother place, and reflects great credit\non those who inspired our local\ndrive, and on those who contributed\nin many ways to bringing the effort\nto a successful conclusion.\"\nIn the same Issue, under the heading \"Long Years Ago\", the Kootenalan publishes the following item\nfrom its files of 25 years ago:\n'It ls altogether likely that this\n\u25a0year will see the tirst shipment of a\naolid carload of apples from Kaslo.\"\nPRESERVES MILK\nBHRLIN (CP).\u2014A German chem-\ni patented a method of pre-\n_j milk and other dairy pro-\n| in a fresh state over a long\n(by the application of oxygen\nStrolled refrigeration.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 20,\nDaytime Formal\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column Is conducted by Mrs. M. A. Vigneux. All news of a\nsocial nature Including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nItems, marriages, etc.. will appear in thia column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at bar home, lit Silica atreet\nMiss Hal Norris left\nfor the coast.\nyesterday i Beach were shoppers to the city\nyesterday. _,\nJ. W. Hearn of Salmo wu a visitor to town yesterday.\n! Mrs. John Waldie, and Mrs, Wil-\nI Ham Waldie spent Monday shopping\nin Nelaon from Robson.\nJ. B. Gray, B. Townshend and Dan\nStack have returned from a few    Mrt D. Bogera from South 8loe\u00abn\ndayi) at Kimberley attending the  waJ \u25a0\u201e Nelson at the week-end.\nclosing session of the golf club.       t .  o  .\n\u00ab_._\u201e,.  ' Wa   en. ..\u201e,,'   rW% I Is-ithwaitt haa )>er mother\nFrank Putnam, M.P.P. of Creston ^ w Hulbwt of Coleman. Alta..\nvisited town yesterday. : * gg ^\nMr. and Mrs. J. Burns art epend-     \u201e\u201e B 1   S(nlth 0, t^iUM*\ning a few days at Atoswortb. | spwt Mpn4,y vlsltlnK friends In\nMrs. David Hartin of Spokane. Nd,on*         ,  \u00bb \u00bb,\nwho is a city falter, entertained L     mi      j^,,,    wturned\nfor a few friends at Grenfell s cafe ^ Kailo, left yesterday to visit\nyesterday at luncheon. ,gg*j at Bonnington.\nVery Rev. A. K Mclntyre of Rossland was in the city yesterday, a\nguest of Very Rev. J. C, McKenzie,\nV.F.\na   a   a\nMiss Eileen Rahal, Josephine\nstreet, spent Sunday in Trail.\nMrs. J. S. Gooch ol Crawford Bay\nwas among shoppers to Nelson yesterday. She was accompanied by\nMrs. Hlncks also of Crawford Bay.\n9    9     9\nPat Fowler of the Reno mine\nhaa left for Vancouver Island where\nhe has accepted a position.\nMrs. Harry Olson of Ymlr visited\ntown Saturday.  >  ^ j   u[u ^ \u2014| ^ \u201e\u201e,\u201e.\nAlex Sutherland was in town from day in town from Balfour.\nGrand Forka yesterday.\nDISMISSED AT FERNIE\nB. C\u2014Alex Sinitar, ap-\nre Judge Thompson Prion a charge of living\nIs of prostitution. The\ndismissed.\nd of autogiro can be\ngarage, driven along\nto the nearest suitable\n:e-off and then started\nrens\nCold*\nThere ls a 'new note ln velveteens this year. The fabric has been\ngiven a new softness of texture and\n\"bloom.\" For the tea dance this\nblack velveteen princess dress In\nstreet length is Ideal. Jet buttons\nfastening down the front from neck . WJTX \u2122 3\"? \u00ab1STJTb__J\nto hem and Venetian lace collar and m,iMtd \u00ab\"' W' C' MoU,y <* Bon\ncuffs, are smart details.\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Craufurd,\nStanley street, visited at the home\nof their son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs, Robert Waldie at Robson Sunday.\na   a    a\nMiss Tina McLean, Latimer street,\nhas returned from a tew days at\nSpokane.\nMiss Nellie Aly win of New Denver, who was a guest of Miss\nAlice McDougall, Kerr apartments,\nhas left for Vancouver where she\nis taking a course.'\na    \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Sidney W. Ellis and daughter were shoppers to Nelson Mon-\ndsy from the Reno mine.\nMiss McGauley\nTalks Europe,\nSoroptimisls\nGives Impressions of\nCountries She\nVisited\n... Best treated\nwithout'losing.\"\nsx.. VJScRS\nThat soroptimlsm was highly esteemed in Aberdeen, Scotland, was\nthe trend of the opening remarks ot\nMiss Belle McGauley, guest speaker\nat the October dinner of the Nelson\nSoroptimist club in the silver ballroom of the Hume hotel. The first\nintimation she had had that soroptimlsm had gained a foothold In this\ndistrict was through a copy of the\nNelson Daily News sent her while\nabroad which contained an account\nof the formation of a club in Trail.\nMiss McGauley stated that when\nasked to speak she had been told\n\"just to ramble\" about her trip\nabroad. There was.such a variety\nof interesting countries that It was\nhard to choose where to ramble.\nThere was Pompeii with its restoration of the civilization of 2400\nyears ago; Berlin with its Olympic\ngames; London with its historical\ninterest; Italy with its art; Spain\nwith its political problems. There\nwas Ireland with its lovely Killar-\nney, where Tennyson had written\nhis \"Princess\". Nothing could compare with the green of Ireland, for\nno green In the world was like it.\nThere was southern France with its\nbeautiful rolling hills. Such beauty\ncould not be described\u2014it had to be\nexperienced.\nThere were the Swiss mountains\ntowering, not ruggedly like the Canadian peaks but rising smoothly,\nA100% WHOLE WHEAT\nAU THE\nILL THE\nALL THE\nILL THE\nEREKTI\n\u2022R0TEIHS I\nMINERALS I\nVITAMINS I\nILL THE RRIRI\n\u20ac)jULcwu6 at -tfaf\nMade In Canada by The Quaker Oats Company\nWe Are Exclusive Agents for tht\nWell Known Line of\nSpalding Sporting Goods\nand Can Confidently\nRecommend Their\nBADMINTON\nRACQUETS\nfor STURDINESS and BALANCE\nSPALDING'B ARROW, each $3.60\n8PALDINQ'8 8PECIAL, etch IM0\n8PALDINQ'8 CARLETON, each .. $6.90\nspai DING'S KROBAT, each .... W_*S\nAll fitted with calfskin grip and\nand Humldex-strung.\n|  RACQUET COVERS ond PRESSES\nHIPPERSON\nHARDWARE CO., LIMITED\nPHONE 497 The Friendly Store BOX 414\nMrs. T. S. Chandler and daughter\nShoppers in town at the week-end'of Kaslo were in  the  city  yesterday.\nn ngton. ,   ,  , Among visitors to Nelaon yester-\nMtt.  Harlow left  Saturday  for  by was Mrs. William Milburn of\nSetae. s,lmo' ,   ,   ,\nAmong visitors to the city yester-     Dan Stack left last night tor Sud-\nday was Oscar B. Appleton of Sun- \"ury, Ont., where he has accepted\nshine Bay. a position.     ^   (   <\nMrs. W. Whitele'y of South Slocan IJ Among  city   visitors  yesterday\nvisited town Saturday. j *\"\u00bb\u00bb Ymlr w,\" ,Mr,!- A- BurK\"\u00bb-\n'   Steve McKay of Salmo was in\nthe city Monday.\nLieutenant Lucy Williams of the\nSalvation Army at Brandon, Man.,\narrived in Nelson Monday, being\ncalled by the illness of her father,\nFred Wllllaim   (  < , chapmsn Cgmp ^ ,penallvJ u\nMrs. W. L. Billings of Kaslo vis- *>\u00bb '**___ \u2022*\u00bb*\u2022 Alice McDougall,\nlied the cily Saturday. ,Kert -P-rtments.\nMrs. G. A. Srnitl* and daughter,\nBarbara  Ann,  have   returned  to\nMrs. David Hartin and Mrs. S. P.\nNed Rhodes ot Trail ia vialtlng\nPhi5\u00b0ps7f SpotanTtoeve\"tod_y\"tor his mother, Mrs. G. C. Rhodes, here.\ntheir home after a few days in     -\u25a0_._. x, ,-\nNeboni i   Robert Andrews, Nelson avenue,\nHarry Henderson of Trail was a\nweek-end visitor ta the city.\na    a    a\nAmong visitors to Nelson yesterday waa Mrs. J. H. T. Worsfold from\nCedar Point\ni has returned from a hunting trip\nat the Kootenay Flats.\n*   *  *\nVisitors in town included Mrs.\nW. Clough of Slocan City.\nooo\n\\ Mrs. Powell ot Corra Lynn was\namong shoppers to Nelson yesterdsy.\nMr. and Mrs. Henri Qagnon, Carbonate street, have as their guests\nMr. and Mrs. Leo Gagnon of Montreal, Mrs. Joseph DuMont ot Bridesvllle, and Mrs, Moise Bourgeois,\nwho are here to attend the Installs- Har\u00b0y. Medical arts,\ntion ceremonies of His Excellency,\nBishop Martin Johnson, Thursday\nand Friday.\nMrs. L. M. Quance of Robson was\nin tbe city Monday, visiting her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Mc-\nMrs. J. Downie of Perry Siding\nvisited the city at the week-end.\nJ. R. Pyper ot Kamloops waa a\nNelson visitor over the week-end.\na    \u00bb    a\nBuster Tattrie of New Denver was\nin Nelson over the week-end.\na    a    a\nMrs. Harlow and daughter, Doris,\nof Nakusp were shoppers to Nelson\nMonday.\na    a    a\n  Mrs. S. G. Price of Trail and\nthe   latter's   mother,   Mrs.   Moise Mr. and Mrs. Fred Herman ot Trail\nBourgeois, spent Sunday at Bon- were visitors at the home of Mr.\nulngton where they were guests ot \u00bb\u00bbd Mrs. George Horstead, Robson\nMr. and Mrs.  George Helbecque, street.\nSr,\n\u00bb  a   . I   Major and Mrs. Cowans of Shutty\nA. Dixon of Victoria was a Nelson Bench, Kaslo were visitors in town\nMr. and Mrs. I. G. Nelson, Hume\nhotel, have returned trom Spokabe,\nwhere they spent the week-end.\n9     9     9\nWalter Duckworth has returned\nfrom his vacation at Vancouver,\nLangley Prairie and Seattle.\na    a   *\nMr. and Mrs. Norbert 0. Choquette, Stanley street, accompanied\nby Mr. and Mrs. Henri Gagnon and\nvisitor en route to Cranbrook.\na   _   a\nMrs. T. Brennilson ot Balfour was\na visitor to the city.\n\u2022   a   *\nJ. H. Donaldson of Salmo was in\ntown yesterday.\n! at the week-end.\n9      9      9\nMr. Calvert, merchant of Kaslo\nwaa in the city Monday.\n*  .  .\nSunday afternoon at St Saviour's\npro cathedral, Ven. Archdeacon\nFred H. Graham christened the\nbaby daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nS. G. Price of Trail, Yvonne Patricia.\nC. S. Squires of West Robson and\nhis daughter, Mm. Duncan Carter,\nwere among shoppers to Nelson\nMonday, \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 i   Mrs. C. A. Larson, Mrs. A. Larson\nRobert Carlson was a week-end. and Miss Marie Larson motored to\nvisitor to Spokane. j Ymlr Sunday and visited Mrs. Lar-\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 son's uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Chanter of Long' Edward Daly.\nwith vivid green blending into the\ndazzling whiteness of the summits,\nand dotted With Swiss houses. These\nhouses sheltered not only the members ot the family, but cows and\ngoats as well, the cowsheds being\npart of the houses.\nCanada, Miss McGauley said, was\nfurther away from Europe than Europe from Canada. In Europe the\nwar cloud was ever present and\nmemories ot the last war were distinctly retained. Canadians should\nbe thankful they lived ln Canada,\nshe asserted.\nScotland wu magnificent but inclined to be cold and damp. Rain\nfell sometimes trom the middle of\nSeptember to December. The schools\nwere good but not ao tar advaliced\nas at home. Hiking was popular\nthere, as ln most parts ot Europe.\nA professor had asked her what\nCanadians did ta the evenings and\nwas surprised to learn that many\nwere spent indoors. Evenings In\nEurope were spent ln strolling, eating and drinking in open-air cafes,\nand listening to good music. On\nthe continent good music was heard\neverywhere and listened to with\nappreciation.\nMiss McGauley enjoyed her sojourn in Spain.   Prices were very\nreasonable, $5 equalling about seven.\nFood was plentiful and the dinners\nconsisting of many courses, some ot\nthese courses a meal In themselves.\nSpain was a country of contrasts,\npoverty and riches, mud huts and\npriceless churches such as the Seville cathedral.\nSt. Peters in Rome with its $60,000\ndome was most impressive, as was\nthe Vatican with its art treasures\nand Slstine chapel decorated by\nMichael Angelo and Rafael.\nROJne had been greatly Improved,\n1938\nThe street-length formal dress has\nbeen accepted gladly by the fashion\nwise.\nHelen Broderick, screen player,\nwears one made ot royal blue velvet\nin a shirtwaist model with a flared\nskirt. Over this she wears a hip-\nlength silver fox cape,\nHer modified tarn o'shanter hat\nis of velvet in the same shade as the\ndress, and is covered by a silvery\nveil with chenille dots.\nRECIPI8\nMENUS\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nMrs.\nMary\nMorton\nHousekeeping\nMenu Hint\nSauerbraten Mashed Potatoes\nButtered-Carrots\nCabbage-Green Pepper Salad\nApple Pie Tea or Coffee\nA pot roast requires long, slow\ncooking, Inez S. Willson, home\neconomist, points out It is\ndredged with flour, browned ta hot\nlard, a small amount ot liquid added, covered tightly and allowed to\ncook slowly until done. More\nliquid, a little at a time, Is added\nwhen necessary, thus allowing the\nmeat to brown each time the liquid\ncooks away. Variety in pot roasts\nls gained by using different seasonings and flavors. This old-fashioned sauerbraten is still a widespread favorite. In case it is inconvenient to let the meat stand in\nvinegar solution, a delicious spiced\npot roast may be made by tirst\nbrowning the meat and then cooking it In the spiced vinegar solution.\nToday's  Recipes\nSauerbraten.\u2014Four pounds beet\nchuck, rump or heel or round; one\nonion, sliced; threo bay leaves, one\nteaspoon peppercorns, vinegar and\nwater, one-fourth cup sugar, salt\nand pepper. Sprinkle the meat with\nsalt and pepper and rub in thoroughly. Place with onion slices,\nbay leaves and peppercorns in\na deep earthern dish. Heat diluted\nvinegar (equal parts water and\nvinegar if vinegar is is very\nstrong). Add sugar and pour over\nmeat Let is stand ta a cool place\nsix or eight days. Then remove\nfrom vinegar solution and cook as\na pot roast, using the spiced vine-\ngor as a liquid. It should be cooked\nslowly for about three hours.\nPLANKING ON\nFERRY SCOW\nDecking About Done\non New Craft Under\nWay at the Park\nGone trom tbe Lakeside park Is\nthe noise, laughter and shouts of\nhappy bathers and ln their stead is\nthe noise of hammers and saws in\nthe hands of the dozen or so workmen employed in building the provincial government's new ferry.\nThe new ferry, which is to replace the one now operating between the north shore and the city,\nis being constructed by employees\nof the A. H. Green company. Work\nls progressing fairly rapidly, the\nframework of the barge or scow ls\ncompleted, the planking of the bottom is about finished and there remains but little of the deck to be\ncompleted. The steel columns for\nthe counterweight apparatus used in\nlowering and raising the aprons are\nln place.\nOwing to the uncertainty of future weather conditions, no approximate date for the completion of the\nbsrge can be set.\nCrerar President\nUnderwriters\nWhen One Room Is Home\nWhen planning a home ta one\nroom select your furniture for its\nutility aa well as its beauty, says\nLurelle Guild. In July Pictorial\nReview he describes a room that\ncan easily be copied, and that\nmeets every requirement of.comfortable living without looking\ncrowded or \"bedroomy\" , Each\npiece of furniture has an Important role; a comfortable sofa that\nbecomes a bed at night Two easy\nchairs for an evening when friends\ndrop in to chat- A table for bridge\nor a hospitable snack that also can\nbe used as a console against the\nwall. Four straight chairs for\nbridge\u2014two of them also flank the\ntable to complete the console\ngroup. One is also used at the\ncombination desk, bookcase and\nbureau that la far cheaper than\nthree separate pieces and ls a\nspace-saver, too, as the secretary\ndrawers become a bureau with\nroom compartments. Small projecting partitions, easily erected,\nform a delightful alcove and contain shallow decorative shelves.\nShelves with Jar*\n'Tiring of various sized boxes of\nstaples en the pantry shelves, I\nput the contents Into quart glass\nJars, labelling each, putting spices\ninto smaller Jars. My husband\nbuilt me small portable shelves\nwith two steps to elevate the jars\nat the back, so now I can see all\njars and labels at a glance and\nalso have more room. On the right\nside of the first shelf my husband\nplaced nails on which I hang measuring cups and spoons. This makes\ncooking a real pleasure, enables\nme to see when supplies are getting\nlow and presents a neat shelf appearance.\"\u2014This housewife's ingenuity may help someone else\nwith her shelf problem.\nRAM FIVE\nThree Involved\nBreaking Show\nWindow Fined\nSmashing et a show window Saturday night at Fletcher's Men's\nWear, Baker street store, cost the\nthree involved 165 in police court\nMonday. Trig Anderson, recently of\nCnmbeume, who suffered head and\narm cuts whan he went through the\nwindow, was fined $29, as waa Avrid\nHolm of Salmo, who was alleged to\nhave pushed him through the window. A woman contributed $15.\nThe three appeared before Police\nMagistrate William Brown Monday\nmorning, pleading guilty to charges\nol causing a disturbance.\nfor campus wear sturdy culottes\nin clan plaid woolen are being\nshown. They are cute tricks worn\nwith dull green woolen shirts.\n*\" COLDEN RECIPE\nGOLDEN 8YRUPPII\n2 cups Rogers' Gold-    1 tablespoon\n3 eggs      (en Syrup       melted butter\n1 lemon 1 dash of nutmeg\nAdd the syrup, lemon juice, grated\nrind, nutmeg and melted butter fo the\nthree well beaten eggs. Bake ln baked\npastry shell until done.\ntr\nIW*n\nCOtDEN\nSYHUP\nNelson Association Is\nReorganized; Plan\nActive Year\nNelson Underwriters association\nat a reorganization meeting elected\nR. E. Crerar president; C. G. Hogarth vice-president; John J. Payne\nsecretary-treasurer; and A. R. Hodson executive member.\nThe meeting was reported as one\nof the most enthusiastic held by the\nassociation in some time, a representative gathering of life underwriters being present and laying\nplans for an active year.\nVote of thanks was extended to\nJ. R. Fleming, retiring president.\nMiss McGauley said, under the regime of Mussolini. The littered\nneighborhoods ot its many points of\ninterest had been cleaned up and\nmade attractive so now tourists saw\nthe Coliseum, the palaces and the\nCatacombs In ideal settings. Mussolini had mapped out a 10-year program for Abyssinia which was ex-\n-pected to do much for that country.\nMiss McGauley was warmly\nthanked by Mrs. Webb Foster for\nher address.\nSalada Orange Pekoe Blend\ngives greatest satisfaction\ntm a * mm\n-^^'.hii^fa'-M^iW-irife'ij\n.-^afr-a-^-w-a-*-,-. \u25a0-\u25a0 ^iiifttiiii-siftili^^\n_____=.:\n1\nChristmas Cards\nORDER EARLY\nWe invite you to come and see our exclusive line of Christmas cards . . . Etchings, snow scenes, exquisite colorings and modernistic designs. . . from the leading Canadian and English manufacturers. Out-of-town customers write for our\nsamples. You will be pleased with our display of cards.\nTWO DOZEN CARDS\nPRINTED WITH YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS FOR\n$1.75, $2.00, $2.50, $2.75, $3.25 Up to $4.50\nPHONE 144\nAND HAVE OUR LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE CAUL PERSONALLY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCommercial Printing Dept.\nBAKER STREET NELSON, \u2022\u2022 C.\n__________\nmm\n r\nOarocu-^.'\nPAGE 8IX-\nJWamv laihj Nma   ,\nEstablished April. 22, 1901\nBritith Columbia's Mott. Inttretting iVewipopc-\nALL THE NIWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPubltkhed every morning except 8unday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson.   British Columbia.\nPhone let. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian    Press   Leased    Wire   News   Service.\nTUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1936.\nAUTO ACCIDENTS MODERN\nWORLD'S PESTILENCE\nAnother automobile fatality has occurred on the\nhighway near Nelson. Another family has been left\nfatherless. Automobile accidents in the Dominion are\nmounting steadily. Motorists must use care on our highways.\nThe plague and pestilences that harried the world's\npopulations in other centuries have disappeared before\nthe advance of medical science and sanitation. Unfor-\ntunately in the first third of this century their places\nhave been taken by a new form of mortality\u2014death on\nthe highway. There is even less reason for this than there\nwas for the old diseases which once decimated cities.\nWhen nations were faced with typhoid fever and diphtheria scourges, scientists and municipal authorities\njoined hands to drive them out and so determined was the\ncampaign that today the number of cases and deaths from\neither cause is negligible.\nWhy cannot the same forces, aided by public opinion,\nput an end to the terrible death toll from automobile accidents?\nProbably the first step toward making motorists use\ncommon sense and good judgment in their driving is to\nbring to them the realization that through the least careless action they may kill themselves or one or more of their\nfellow-men. Each year in Canada, according to W. G.\n\u2022Robertson, general manager of the Ontario Motor league,\nthe ratio of auto fatalities to motors on the road is one in\n1000. In other words, one motorist in every thousand\nwill be responsible for a death. This is a fact all may\nponder.\nLet each driver as he starts his car in the morning\nsay to himself \"Lam not going to be the one executioner\nin the thousand.\" Then let him use care in his driving\nthat day and he will not be.\nProbably he will have to use the greatest judgment in\npassing cars going in the same direction as his own, for\nthe evil of \"cutting in\" is responsible for many of the\naccidents. The reason for this is that drivers cannot accurately estimate the speed of cara. They misjudge the\ndistance between two cars going in opposite directions and\nthe result is collision, injury, and often death.\nThat motorists are poor judges of speeds and distances\nhas been proven where tests were made. It was found\nfrom those who took the test that error frequently arises\nin judging the point at which two objects meet. Here\nis where the driver can exercise common sense by refusing\nto take a chance.\nOccupational accidents, drownings, accidents in the\nhome, all levy their toll of death, but the greatest single\nagent of all is the automobile. Out of 100,000 deaths\nthrough accident in the U.S. last year, 37,000 were due to\naccidents on the highways.\nTo a young woman who was taking her examination for a driver's licence was put thc question \"When is\nit improper to pass another car?'' She gave the usual\nanswer \"On a hill and on a curve,\" and then she added\n\"When there is not room to pass.\" This addition brought\na laugh from the examiner. \"If there's not room to pass,\"\nhe said, \"you can't pass.\"\nAs a matter of fact, however, there was no reason to\nlaugh at the young woman's answer. The failure to\nrecognize that one car can only pass another when there\nis room to do so has been the cause of numberless tragedies.\nIt doesn't do to chance there being room enough. There\nmust actually be room to pass or disaster is inevitable.\nDon't pass on a curve.\nDon't pass on a hill.\nBeware, especially, a combination of hill and curve.\nBut, above all things, do not attempt to pass the car\nahead unless absolutely sure that there is room to pass.\nBETWEEN\nNELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 20. 18W\n\u2014\u00bb\nJB.C\nSee Him Smiling ?\nEighteen were burned when balloons carrying political advertising, exploded and burned amid a crowd\nat a San Francisco football game. The game itself ended\nin a general free-for-all on the grounds. All of which must\nprove you can't mix political gas with football down in\nthe U.S.A. These are not the only political balloons ex-\nnected to explode down there before the big election.\nThis is the genial oil dealer, bus\ndepot manager and generally all\naround good sport who lives ln Nakusp. It Is William G. Hakeman,\nwho somehow or other, gets the\nname of James. He was a recent pll\ngrim to Vimy Ridge and remembered many of his friends with postal\ncards and small souvenir bottles.\nI got a postal car but James didn't\nbring me a bottle. He is well known\nup and down the Arrow Lakes\ncountry and throughout the Slocan. Of late he has been doing a\nlittle travelling because of his Masonic office.\u2014Staff photo.\na   a    a\nONE FOR AFTER DINNER\nSPEAKERS\nRastus: \"Say, Sambo, what time in\nyour life does yo' think yo' was\nscared de wust?\"\nSambo: \"Once when ah was call\nin' on a hen-house an' de farmer\ncome in an' caught me. Boy, wuz\nah scared!\"\nRastus: \"How are yo' shuah dat\nwuz de worstest yo' evah been\nscared?\"\nSambo: \"Cause de farmer grab me\nby de shoulder an' say; 'White boy,\nwhat yo' doin' heat*?'\"\na    a    a\nRISING  BELL\nThs alarm clock rings,\nI leap from bed\nWith glad thoughts of\nThe work ahead,\nI smile at all,\nNo matter who\u2014\nAt lust that's what\nIn dreams I doi\na    a    a\nHEALTH INSURANCE\nMain trouble today in Nelson-\nEmployees of various firms attempting lo figure and fill out instructions\non the forms sent out by the B.C.\nhealth commission. Remember, if\nyou cannot read, mark your name\nwith an \"x\".\noo,\nWHaVT A LINEI\nA few anxious moments for Art\nWallace Monday\u2014attempting to untangle newly washed clothes from a\nnew clothes line\u2014and getting instructions not to rip or tear anything. Art was using a garden rake\nto gocd advantage.\nMORL INDUSTRY\nA carload of ore from the Slocan\nstanding at the sampling works on\nthe waterfront and a worker busting\nore by hand for sampling purposes,\n<-   *   \u2022\nA BOY 8COUT ACT\nI Don 3ush working hard on the\n[ drive to get funds forV. Koski, so the\n| Injured man may get to Mayo's\nclinic.\nHOOP '-R UP\nBob Paterson and George Wallach\ndrumming up some interest ln a\nproposed basketball association.\n*    a    a\nTHE IN-TURN\nI Aid. Jeffs and Jack Long in conversation\u2014and I'll wager they were\ndiscussing the coming curling season, fees and numerous other affairs\ni-oncernintj the roarln' game.\nDIRECT TO CONSUMER\nThe country lawyer had always\nhad a great dislike of doctors. One\n! morning he was seen hurrying along\n| the street, with a look of despair on\nhis face, and an acquaintance asked\nhim whether anything was wrong.\ni \"I'm afraid there ls,\" said the\nlawyer.   \"My wife is very ill, and I\n| am hurrying to fetch the undertaker.\"\ni \"The undertaker!\" exclaimed the\nother. \"You mean the doctor, don't\nyou?\"\n\"Certainly not,\" was the reply. \"I\nnever could abide these middlemen.\"\nVERSE\nLIFE\nLife's Morn-^when Hope is born-\nThe time\nTo Smile, pluck flowers\nIn idle hours,\nTo dare and do,\nIdeals pursue,\nClose youth's delights.\nAnd seek new heights\nTo climb.\nt,\nLite's noon\u2014here all too soon\u2014\nThe hour\nWhen burdens press.\nToll's in excess,\nThe blossoms fair\nFound here and there,\nMaturer yeara\nImpeerl with tears\u2014\nEarth'i dbwer.\nLife's night\u2014grope for the light-\nSo near\u2014\nOf that bright Day\nWhich lasts always;\nHere\u2014fall asleep,\nThere-^-harveit reap.\nWhen dawni that morn,\nKnowledge ls born,\nAll's clear.\nBy Daisy McLeod Wright\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy \u00a3 V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.O.\n*-\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelion Dally Newi Files\nOctober 20,  1928\nWEST HAD A PROBLEM\nAn opening bid ot two states\nthat game going values are held.\nIt orders partner to keep bidding\nalive until at least game is bid. In\nthe case shown below, East made\nan opening bid ot 2-Clubs, upon\nsomewhat skimp strength, then\nshowed his shorter spades, obliging\nWest to choose between the black\nsuits.\n\u2666 QJ\nfKtSts\n*\u00bb8T1\nitt\n4)8(1\nt A 10 7 4\n2\n\u2666 JO 8 t 3\n*10 6\nN.\nIS   '\"\u25a0\ns.\n4AK9S\n<\nSJNone\n\u2666 AQ\na\\AQJ8\n72\n\u2666 J 10 7 _\nf QJ8\n\u2666 KJ5\nAK54\nBidding went: East, 2-Clubs, fourth\nhand; West, 2-Hearts, to show at\nleast one quick trick; East, 2-Spades;\nWest, 3-Hearts, as he did not at all\n-like either of partner's calls; East,\n3-Spades, to hold bidding down\nwhere West could bid 3-No-Trumps;\nEast 4-Clubs. West now had an excellent picture of partner's holdings,\nbut he either had to bid 4-Spades or\nshift to 5-Clubs. He decided to bid\n4-Spades, ending the auctiih. \u2022\nThe opening lead was the Q of\nhearts. Dummy's Ace won. Declarer\nlet go his dangerous Q ot diamonds.\nHe could not see how he ever again\nI could enter dummy, and he did not\n| want to try. The 10 of clubs was led\nand allowed to ride, losing to South's\nIK. Of course the J of hearts was\nI led, obliging declarer to ruff, and\nI so reducing his trumps to the number held by South. It looked bad\nj for East.\nI Declarer led off his Ace and K\nI of spades, picking up the Q' at his\nj right. Then the Ace and Q of clubs\nwon tricks. South ruffed a lead of\nthe next club, but declarer had the\njump on defenders, as he still held\ntwo trumps while South was re-\n| duced to a single winner in spades.\nI South led his last heart. Declarer\nruffed. The next lead of clubs took\nout South's last trump. South led\nI back a diamond, and declarer was\ni in with his Ace, with the last three\n| tricks good in his own hand, just\nj giving him his- contract.\nWhat would have happened if\nWest had bid 5-Clubs?\nI On the opening heart lead declarer could have let go his Q of\n| diamonds, just as he did when he\nplayed Ihe deal at spades. Two\nrounds of wining spades would have\n, followed. Then both dummy and\nNorth would have been out of that\nI suit. Dummy would have ruffed a\nlow spade with the 10 of clubs, to\n| prevent losing that trick, unless\nI North could overruff with the K.\nThe 6 of clubs would have been led\nfrom dummy, and the 9 finessed\ni South's K would have won the first\nj defensive trick, with a single spade\ntrick coming to South, whenever he\nchose to take it, but East would\nhave been able to make 5-Clubs,\nas readily as to make 4-Spades.\nNEURALGIAS TROUBLE POLK\nPAST MIDDLE AGE\nOne ot the devclish things about\ngetting old is that there is pain associates with it We are prepared |\nfor a sort of breaking down process,\na gradual diminution of our senses\nand tbe development of such things\nas varicose veins. These degeneration! steal up on us and limit our\npowers, but they don't make us\nacutely uncomfortable. Why\nshouldn't such things as our nerves\njust die quietly, too, Instead ot\npuffing up and writhing around like i\na brand new young person's nerves,\nwith neuralgia?\nI don't know why it ts, but lt ls\ntrue. Old age is par excellence the\ntime for neuralgia, tic douloureau,\nfacial neuralgia\u2014all names for the\nsame Infernal things\u2014it seldom occurs before 60,.and when it does\ncome along lt makes life miserable\nfor a while. Fortunately, it can be\nhelped quite effectively\u2014if not by\nsuch simple methods as heat, or\ntrlchlorethylene, then by injection\nof the nerve, or, as a last resort,\nremoval of the Oassenian ganglion.\nThen there is another condition\nof later life\u2014which is also a form\n,of neuralgia\u2014shingles or herpes\n| zoster. That gives quite a lot of\ntrouble for a time, but can be relieved, and there is one ray of hope\nabout it which I am always glad to\nI be able to give to the many people\n; who write me about It: lt does not\nreturn after the first attack.\nGRATEFUL TO PHYSICIAN\nEvery elderly person ln the world\nshould be grateful to a St. Louis\nphysician, whose work In the last\nfew years has illuminated the cause\nof one group of neuralgias that can\nnearly drive a person craiy., This\n| work also explains why these neuralgias occur in people past middle\nlife, because it is caused by loss\nof the back teeth, either on one side\nor both sides.\nThere may be several forms of\nthe neuralgias that result from overbite of the jaw due to loss of molars.\nOne Is like plain facial neuralgia\nand may be mistaken for that.\nOne Is burning tongue, It is curious how this agonizing condition has\nbeen neglected. One textbook says:\n\"Burning sensations are common in\narteriosclerosis of the arteries of the\ntongue\"\u2014in other words, in the condition of old age\u2014and the implication is that nothing could be done\nabout it. When it is explained on\nthe basis of \"overbite\" of the jaw\ndue to loss of molar teeth, however,\nwe have automatically a way to relieve It by repositioning the jaw.\nPartial deafness and Impairment\nof hearing, with a feeling as If the\nears had been stopped up, and head\nnoises and.dizziness,\ni 'sieadache'ln the top and back of\nthe head and around the ears, with\nburning sensations in the throat.\nIt ls easy to understand, with a\nRood picture of the point of the jaw\nbefore you, how these symptoms\ncould come about from the loss of\nthe molar teeth. The lower is brought\nup against no resistance and overrides the regular space between the\nteeth. There are a number of structures in that region which are immediately affected. One is the Eustachian tube going from the middle\noar to the throat, the normal function of which is to leave an air space\nin the ear to facilitate hearing.\nOverbite of the jaw will close this,\nleading lo thc ear symptoms described above.\nThere are also a number of nerves\nwhich run close to lhe joint and may\nbe impinged by overriding. One of\nthese is closely connected to the\nlingual nerve to the tongue, and by\nrrflex action causes the symptoms\nof burning tongue.\nQUESTIONS FROM  READERS\nA. C: \"I understand that liver i:\nRood for only one kind of anemia\nHow can you tell which kind ot\n''nemia a person- has?\"\nAnswer: The diagnoses of the different kinds of,anemia are easy, but\nrequire the technical knowledge of\nthe physician. The procedure is first\nto estimate the amount of coloring\nmatter in the blood\u2014the haemoglobin. Then to count the number of\nred blood cells and white blood\ncells under the microscope. And then\nto examine a stained smear of the\nblood under the microscope. With\nthis data all In hand the conclusions\nare simply made.\nI. T. Helm of Trail arrived in\ntown yesterday and la a guest at\nthe New Grand hotel.\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nA. McDonald of Ymlr Is a guest\nat the Queen's.\na * a -\nWord was received that work on\nthe new ore crushing plant to be\nconstructed near the mill at Moyie\nis well under way. It ls estimated\nthat the new building and machinery will cost about $200,000 and with of the first instant is just another\nthia new addition the Moyie mill proof ot that gentleman's mental\nwill be able to handle ore from alertness and profound strategy. I\nKimberley as well as that from the. am tempted to say unmatched cun-\nSt. Eugene mine. Ining \u2014 as a contrpversialist. Why\na   a  a ! does he say, \"No government has\nMrs. Charles Wstts has returned {& \u2122\u2122} c\u2122n\u00bb &?\u00bb'_*!*?\nfrom a two weeks' vacation spent \")es\u00ab victims of our greed and stu-\nwith-her brother, I*. J. Kennedy, pldity.\" I am appalled at the thought\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letters to the editor must be signed with the name of the\nwriter. A nom dt plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines in typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nOne Salvation Is\nto Purge Self of\nSocialism Poison\nTo the Editor,\nNelson Dally News:\n* Sir\u2014The communication of Mr.\nJ. C. Harris appearing in your issue\nof solving the unemployment question by the wholesale murder ot\nthe unemployed. Behind this remark ls the unjust insinuation that\nthose whose greed and stupidity\nhave brought about unemployment\nwould like to complete their work\nby wholesale massacre. I deny that\nunemployment ln Canada is thc\nresult of greed and stupidity on thc\npart of any one person, persons.\nWith this week, receipt, of mt3\u00a3^\u00a3ftg%$\u00a3\nr.f^^^T^.r^,bo-wing   by   government,   and\nKamloops.\nooo\nMrs. J. O. Bunyan returned from\na short visit to Nelway.\na   a   a\nA. O. Larson, who has been fn\ntown the last few days attending\nto some business matters, will leave\nthis morning by motor for the\nLucky Jim mine at Zincton.\nyear to date come to 452,693 tons.\nmunicipalities extending over a pe-\nST HH*,*-1L^Wte,!! Ulod ofTwo dec-des. This pr\nthe Trail smelter lt has handled\ndebt contracting was accompanied\naXl^MKi.*_\".__!\"\" 'nd * \"CU- expenditure on public\nconcentrates within a year.\na   9   9\nTod Morgan of Seattle successfully defended his junior lightweight title in San Francisco last\nnight when he easily defeated\nJohnny Dundee of New York in a\n10-round  battle.\na    a    a\nMr. and Mrs. R. E. Horton and\ndaughter, Carmen, have returned\nfrom a motor trip to Spokane.\nI   20 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dally Newi FM\nOctober 20, 1916\nworks of doubtful utility, for example miles of unnecessary railway\nwere laid down. Wages for all kinds\nof labor soared to unprecedented\nheights. Farmers, business men, professional men, even clergymen, forsook their proper callings to earn\nthe higher remuneration to be had\nln a carefree irresponsible , life,\nwhere some one else wrote a monthly cheque that covered all the contingencies of existence. In addition\nto this hundreds of thousands of\nforeigners flocked to Canada to\nshare in the garnering of the golden\nharvest of borrowed money. And\nnow when the Inevitable has happened Mr. Harris has to insinuate\nthat it is all due to our greed and\nstupidity and, perha; -., we would be\nwell-advised to asphixiate these\npoor victims. Personally I deny the\nthe three score and ten limit I\nworked for wages and am still\nearning my bread by the sweat ot\nmy brow. In spite of my rejection\not C.CF. propoganda, I heartily\napprove of Carlyle'i words: \"Die\nSache der armen in Gottes and\nTeufels Naman\" (The cause of the \u2022\npoor in Heaven's Name and).\nIn conclusion, may I point out to\nMr. Harris that the railway muddle\nin Canada\u2014the problem of over-\neducation\u2014of the over-crowding of\nthe professions\u2014ot the too great\ntendency to commercialism, these,\nare all due to the prevalence of certain socialistic ideas and tendencies\ninherent in the social, economic, and\nintellectual life of the country. If\nthc government of the country had\nleft the transportation question entirely to private enterprise we would\nhave had no annual deficit of $70,-\n000,000 on government-owned (socialistic) railways. Had the governments confined their activities ln\nthe educational line to free public\nschools and made the higher Institutions self-supporting we would\nnot today witness the over-crowding\nof the professions and the overmanning of every line of commercial life. Socialistic ideas and tendencies will also be found responsible, in a large measure, for our huge\nburden of debt and taxation. Our\nsalvation lies in purging both our\nminds and our economic life of the\npoison of socialism.\nCRYSTAL GAZER '\nTrail, B.C., Oct. 5, 1936.\nFollowing  Wednesday's  advance\nbetween the Biaches and La Maisonette the French every day are drawing their line closer to the town of, Sgroi'dtherTreed'or stupidity\nFeronne. ,   ,   , I and I protest against the insinuation\nr-. t__ ,,    . _._       s__ \u25a0    ,       that I have ever thought of murder\nDr. Isabella Arthur, city, is stay- >s    remotc ^.,ibUityi\ning at the Hume. \u201e ,' _   , .    , \u201e\nBut the  greatest  proof of  Mr.\nHarris' profound strategy as a controversialist Is found in the adept\nway in which he tries to draw a\nherring across the trail ln a series\nDr. H. W. Willson of the Beatrice \\ \u00b0\u00ab questions which he asks me to\nanswer. And here again I must repudiate what seems an unjust insinuation. I i not opposed to laws\nthat have been wisely enacted for\nthe protection of the worker. I am\nnot in favor of unrestricted oriental\nImmigration. Nor am I opposed to\nthe greatest possible measure of\nfree trade so long as it does not expose our own artisans to competition\nfrom workers in countries where a\nSafecrackers in Kelsey, Alta., near Edmonton, got\naway with $130 in cash and $500 in cheques over the\nweek-end. There is no mention in the story about how\nmuch of Premier Aberhart's script was missing.\nBRISTOL, England (CP) - Following a delicate operation, Aubrey\nTurle is writing poetry and lyrics\non his typwritcr, having recoverd\nhis sight after 30 years in darkness.\nMASS IN REOPENED ABBEY\nCLITHEROE, England, (CP) \u2014\nHigh mass was celebrated for the\nfirst time in 400 years at Sawley\nAbbey, a ruins purchased by J. B.\nFattorini   of   Bradford.\nCAN   TEACH   LOVE\nJOHANNESBURG (CP)-A. S.\nNeill. an educaional expert, wants\nto see love classes in schools, his\nopinion being majority of unhappy\nmarriages were due to sheer ignorance in the art Df loving.\nFRANKFORT, Ky. (CP).-Out of\n12 counties voting on the liquor\nquestion since passage of the 1936\nlocal option law. 11 have voted dry.\n| SCARED PUPILS TRY AGAIN\nI PWLLHELLI, Wales (CP)-Chil-\n. dren badly frightened during their\narithmetic entrance examinations by\nvivid lightning are to be allowed to\n1 take their papers for another trial.\nT. O. Gordon of Ymlr arrived ih\ntown yesterday and ls at the Nelson\nHouse.\nmine is in town on business.\na    a    a\nG. P. Mulcahy of Spokane, who\nhas been examining mining property\nin the Lardeau district, returned to\nNelson yesterday.\na    a    a\nDuring September the Rambler-\nCariboo mines shipped over 160\ntons of silver-lead concentrates and\nores and the profits were estimated ' J^'. 7tand_Vd\"77 living\" prevails\".\nat $8000. ,   ,   , 11 could answer Mr. Harris' ques-\n,\u201e.\u201e._,   ,\u201e   tions at greater length but I deem\nOwing to ill health, Pte. E. W. it wou*d be unprofitable. Mr. Harris\nKing, who went overseas with the t0 have nad . two.fold -j,.\npioneer regiment returned to the .\u00a3t ,_ a8klng them. (1) To cover\ncity last night and ls a guest at the up hls discomI--ur(. over Niagara\nHume- falls;  (2) To disparage me as an\n_.\u201e,**' J enemy of the working man.\nE. J. vanderwater, accountant at , . ,. M    u.\u201ei.   (u_, *\u201e.\nthe Nelson branch of the Royal M\u00bb-*:> W1 Mr\u201e S,\" !l,\u2122 h n.\nBank of Canada, has received the \u00b0ver M -*ears f al\"e aPProactun\u00ab\nposition of manager of the Douglas    ,\u25a0 _  \u2014 \u00ab\nr.treet bank of that company in Vic-' i AIIMT  WFT i\ntoria.   He will leave Nelson next' I       ^ Htl^     j\nJ. F. Kllby, Canadian PacifiSi\nrailway engineer, has been trans-!\nferred from Nelson to Revelstoke. |\n0      0      0\nMrs. Sinclair and daughter, Miss\nT,ouie, will leave on the Great Northern for Spokane..\nooo\nW. A. Mather, assistant general\nuperlntendent of the C.P.R. for the\niritish Columbia division, ls visiting\nin the city. He is going to Trail,     j\n30\" YEARS\" AGO\nFrom Nelson Dallv News Files I\nOctober 20, 1906\nN. D. Dharhu, representative ot\nthe Indian government, who has\nbeen examining the mines and mining methods used in the Ainsworth\ndistrict, returned to Nelson yesterday.\na    a    a\nPHOENIX\u2014Th. city hall was on\nfire today. Damage estimated at\nabout $300 was done before the fire\ncould be brought under control.\nOOO\nN. Cavanaugh. who has been\nlooking over mining property in\nthe Lardeau area, arrived in town\nlast night.\na    a    a\nP. S. Couldrey of Rossland arrived in town yesterday and is\nregistered at the Strathcona.\na    a    a ,\nI    The old Montezuma mill in Kaslo\nWhere Is Unchanged\nChange for Relief?\nTHE EDITOR:\ni    Sir:\nSince the present government\ntook office, (and a lot of unchanged\nchange), relief has been cut at\nleast 50 per cent; so that presuming $200,825 per month as the\nfederal contribution since then, the\nunchanged change ought to be\nquite a sum to date; will someone\ngood at figures tell us about how\nmuch? Of course there are various\ndrags, by various individuals to\nsubtract, we will likely hear about\nthat later, (very likely). The var-\n; ious \"projects\" or public works\ni program, is an added source of\n\"revenue\" for the unchanged\nchange account, since if a man\nmakes $50 on a project, he is off\nrelief until, ordinarily his relief\nequals $50; in other words the\nprovincial government \"makes\" 150\non the federal account per man,\nmore or less. I might be all wrong\non this, but I am open to correction,\nbecause Premier Pattullo some\ntime ago had a \"Work and Wages'^\nprogram and it seems to many t\nthat he still has most of the I\nor rather the government.,\nhas lt?\nHope   you   don't  mind\nquisitiveness,   Mr.   Editor,.\nI have a lot more questlo-)\nand possibly, I can\nFrail\nWil\nFOR\nMINING\nUnsanded Cottoi\npanels are sultal\nall mining andi\ncamD buildineij fhey\nare   strong,   'vater-\nproof  lleht and very\neasv to handle.\nWood, Vallance\nH irdware Co., Ltd.\nDistrict Distributors\n!\u25a0_\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0      \u25a0   I   \u25a0\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nA Man's\nGood\nI don't know anything that's\nmore strain than keeping your\n.nouth shut when you see another |\nwoman makin' a mess o' trainin' |\niier baby.\"\nhas been reopened. This is a result\nof the reopening of the old Montezuma mine near here, which has\nbeen Inactive for years, and of the\nencouraging finds of ore made.\na    a    a\nI\nLast week the Bachelor mine new\nSlocan shipped over 22 tons of ore\nto the Canadian smelter at Trail.\na    a    *\nL. B. Avery of Ymir is at tho\nQueen's.\na     a    a\nT. G. Procter returned from a\nvisit in thc East Kootenays yesterday.\nView\nNot long ago a man wrote\nand apologized for doing\nit. He said that in camp\ncooking he finds Pacific\nMilk has some quality\nabout it which gives food\na desirable flavor and richness.\nHe asked what this quality\nis. It is just quality, we\nwrote, pure, fresh, rich milk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated  and   Packed   In   Fraser\nValley\nTILUE THE TOILER\n\u25a0y Rust Weitover\nr\nTom Lcdingham has brought home a 25-pound salmon\nhooked on the main Kootenay lake. Fishing yarns will\nkeep Mr. Ledingham occupied until the curling season\nstarts again.\nCalifornia is having beautiful weather. Six-inches\nof snow and over 4 inches of rain in 14 hours are reported\nfrom a section of the sunny state.\nPolice broke up a lettuce strike in California. Many\nheads were no doubt damaged in the encounter.\nBombproof underground theaters are contemplated in\nEngland. War possibilities must be certain.\nTlLLiE is\nOOT\nQAMClMd\nWITH ONE\n\u20223FMIST6R\nSIMPKIMS'\nCUSTWWS\nBECAUSE\nSHI\neSOT AN\nENGAGEMENT\nRING TO\nSTALL\nHlAA OFF\nANOVNHO IS THIS LUCky\nF ELt-OV. YOU S\u00abt* \"THAT\nVCUl-B __Mt_t>_J_a>TD?\nOF COURSE, H\u00ab I*\ny30iM6 AND HAND\n80MB\u2014 (* H\nNO\/HEISM'T\nVJEAL-THV,\nAMD HE ISN'T\nHANDSOMH,\nBUT HE'S\nNICE AND\nHB L0S\/E3\nft fA Mg,gr\nOH, HE VOENT OOT I\nOF THE PLACE INA   I\nHUFF\u2014SA\/, VOHaT*?\nVJBONtS \\AllTH HIM,'\nNO\"rt-HN6_\n(   (SUESS\nIT'S WITH\nME\nBa---_________t_____.\nH a-B ...,   .     *\n,^^:'.MAlL.k.:'t,dmi.StMLmt..^:^^Ld.^\n\t\n |94q\nTOUCH INVADERS\nItalian and Hungarian amateur boxers who have ring dates\nIn New York and Detroit line up for pictures.\n,,PAO- SEVEN-\nNew York Americans'Franchise\nCancelled; N.H.L. Will Run Team\nColder to Direct, \"Red\" Dutton Will Stay as\nP Manager; Officials Failed to Pay\nTheir Indebtedness to League\nWi     By GEORGE MAGUIRE\n-Canadian Press Staff Writer)\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19 (CP).-Dras-\nI tic action, long expected in connection with the affairs of the New\nVork American Hockey club, incorporated, was taken today when\ngovernors of the National hockey\nleague declared forfeit the club's\nfranchise.\nThe Americans had been operated\nalnce 1924-25 by William (\"Big Bill\")\nDwyer.\nAn official statement of the governors, issued tonight following a\n.day-long meeting, said failure of\n-American officials to comply with a\njtorrnal demand for payment of the\nSlub's Indebtedness to the league\n\u00abas the motive for declaring forfeit\nthe franchise.\nOfficials said the Americans would\noperate as usual during the 1936-57\nseason at Madison Square Garden\nwith Manager Mervin (\"Red\") Dutton at the helm and President Frank\nCalder of the N.H.L. supervising\n\/business affairs.\nJbusln\nIt was the expectation of league\nofficers that pew owners would take\nover the franchise in the near future. No one but a New Yorker\nwould be permitted, however, to\nsecure the operating rights and the\nteam would have to be operated in\nNew York.\nThe franchise and club, lock,\nstock and barrel, was brought here\nfrom Hamilton, Ont., more than a\ndecade ago when the professional\nice sport was introduced in Manhattan.\nThe statement Issued by the N.H.L.\ngovernors follows:\n\"Following failure of the New\nYork American Hockey club, incorporated, to comply with a formal\ndemand of the National hockey\nleague fer payments of its indebtedness to the league the governors of\nthe league today declared forfeit\nthe franchise of the Americans. Arrangements have been made to operate the team during the 1936-37\nseason with Mervin Dutton retained\nas manager.\"\nHockey-Sponsored\nA.A.U. Gathers\nRevolt Against\nForce Across Land\n\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\nRowing - tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing - Wrestling\nfan\nLacrosse - Golf - Track- Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 26, 1936\n-PAGE  SEVEN\nPlanning to Prick Him Again ....  by Walt. Ball\n \u25a0   ' ,        i   .   I s)   |.      I ....... . , ,\nJacked Up by Lacrosse Body, C.A.H.A. Will\nPress Next Month for New Set-up of\nAmateur Definitions in Sport\nBy ELMER DULMAGE\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer),\nTOHONTO, Oct. 19 (CP).\u2014Ramp-\n\\tsst discontent, organ-led at last and\ntapparently equal to the task of at\n, least jolting the  existing  set-up,\nI flared across the amateur sanctums\nof the country today, gathering up\ni -force for the annual meeting of the\nAmateur Athletic Union of Canada\nf in Regina next month.\nIt was a huge Joke a few years\nI ago when the affiliated federations\nand associations prepared their pre-\nconvention TNT packages. Such was\n'the authority and power of thc\nA. A. U. in those days.\nREVOLT IN AIR\nBut revolt is in the air now and\nthe Regina meeting will provide the\nmost serious test of A. A. U. stability and authority yet conducted. A\n.month before the delegates assem-\nfwe, it seems unlikely such widely\n' separated viewpoints  as those of\nQui A- A. U. and the Canadian Am-\nHockey  association  can be\nbrought together.\nThe powerful C. A. H. A., strong-\nof the A- A. U.'s allied sport-\nntrolling organizations, will lead\n> determined opposition to the old\nfttyle of things. If the hockey asso-\n\u25a0 elation fails to convince the convention, then the C. A. H. A. in all\nprobability will sever its relations\n-and operate independently.\nHOCKEY DEMAND8\nIt demands that hockey players\nhave the right to: 1\u2014Use their ability as athletes to. get employment;\n2\u2014accept payment for time lost\nfrom work while competing; 3\u2014\nPlay as teams against professionals.\nA fourth demand Is that professionals in one sport be regarded\nas amateurs in others for which\nthey receive no pay.\nMr. Fry, who retires this year\nas head of the A. A. U. of C, will\ntell the convention adoption of this\nprogram would isolate' Canada in\nthe amateur world. The country\nwould be unable to send teams to\nthe Olympic and British Empire\ngames. In other words, Canadian\namateurs would have no status\nabroad.\nThe C. A. H, A. knew this when\nIt decided last April to adopt th.\nfour-point alteration. So did th.\nCanadian Amateur Lacrosse association   when   It  supported  th.\nhockey platform th. other day in\nToronto. So It stems Mr. Fry's\nwarning has failed as a deterrent\nTwo branches of Canadian Am\nateur Basketball  association, British Columbia  and   Ontario,  have\npassed resolutions  ln  which they\nclaim that basketball players need\nnot obtain amateur  cards during\nprovincial schedules, but only when\nthey engage in interprovincial play.\nHazel Fans 259\nBaiters in 210\nInnings on Duty\nToronto Stars Mound\nStar Bats .677 in\n29 Games\nAdding 10 strikeouts to her record ln only four innings duty on\nthe mound against Kaslo Saturday afternoon, Hazel Spiers finished\nthe 1936 season with a record of 269\nstrikeouts in 28 games, comprising\n210 1-3 innings duty on the mound.\nWhile this is slightly below her\nlast season's total, the local speed-\nball artist, who has suffered from\ns\\ sore arm since pitching two nine-\nInning games against New Denver\nand the Trail reps on the week-end\nof Sept. 12 and 13, did not serve as\nmuch time on the pitching mound\nthis season as last, and was not used\nmuch  against  the  weaker  clubs\nwhen she might have had opportunities to hang up big strikeout\nrecords. Last season Hazel Spiers\nwas credited with 272 strikeouts, ln\n32 games and 249 innings.\nAll teams looked alike to the\nlocal speedball artist. In eight games\nand 62 2-3 innings against the Gelinas Red Sox she collected an even\n80 strikeouts. In three games and\n26 2-3 innings against the Standard\nCafe Aces, Hazel fanned 35 batters.\nIn one game and nine innings,\nagainst the Trinity Young Peoples'\nclub, 16 batters swung fruitlessly\nat a third strike or had the fatal\n\"strike three'' called on them.\nAgainst Kaslo, ln four innings, 10\nbatters fanned. New Denver batlers\nfanned 12 times In one game of nine\ninnings. In three games and 17 2-3\ninnings against the Pirates, Hazel\nfaned 25 batters. In three games and\n27 innings, 29 Trail Jimmies li.-i.l-\nters fanned. In 16 innings and two\ngames against the Trail Ideal Bakery\nBronks, Hazel collected 18 strikeouts; and in six games for 38 2-3 innings, Trail rep team batters fanned\n34 times.\nWON 17 L08T 7\nIn the 28 games Hazel Spiers appeared on the mound, si*,*: was credited with 17 victories against seven\nlosses, and five of the reverses were\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\n.Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia,\nNelson Huntsman\nBrings Back Ducks\nOld Country Football Standings\nUp to and including garnet of\nSaturday, October 17.\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nSeveral huntsmen of Nelson,\namong them Dr. Ray Shaw and\nMurray Clark, are on a pheasant\nshooting trip in the Okanagan where\nthe pheasant season opened last\nweek. Above is a bag of duck\ntaken by Dr. Shaw on a recent hunting expedition.\u2014Staff Photo.\nPortsmouth 11\nDerby County. 11\nBrentford 11\nEverton  10\nPreston N Ind 10\nHuddersfield T 11\nGrimsby Town 11\nMld-brough 10\nManchester C, 11\nStoke City ..... 11\nBirmingham..- 11\nChelsea  11\nCharlton Ath .. 11\nSunderland .... 10\nArsenal  10\nWest Brom Al 10\nLiverpool  11\nShef Wednesd ll\nBolton Wands.. 10\nMan Unit 10\nWolverh Wan.. 11\nLeeds Un  11\n3 16 11 16\n129 22 13\n3 20 19 18\n0 20 18 12\n2 12 11 12\n4 18 )5 12\n0 24 22 12\n3 19 22 11\n5 21 16 11\n3 20 17 11\n3 21 21 11\n3 21 21 11\n5 15 16 11\n2 21 21 10\nSouthport _.... 11\nYork City 10\nNew  Brighton 11 3\nCarlisle United 10 4\nCrew Alex 11 1\nRother United 10 3\nl Barrow  10 3\nTranmere Rov 11 2\nPort Vale 11 3\nAccrington St.. 10 2\nDarlington  10 1\nRochdale _. 11 2\nGateshead  10 0\nSCOTTISH LEAQUE\nFirst Division\n4 18 20 12\n4 16 19 10\n4 11 12 10\n1 18 22 9\n7 14 22 9\n2 21 23 8\n2 16 19 >\n4 18 24 8\n2 14 22 8\n2 8 13 6\n4 15 23 6\n2 11 27 6\n4 11 24 4\nWest Femle Is\nBeaten at Soccer\nPossession of Title\nShield Still Up\nin the Air\nby one-run margins, and one game\nwas lost by two runs.\nHazel Spiers is also one of the top\nnotch batters in the district, collecting 85 hits this season in 112 official\ntimes at bat, for a .677 batting average. Included in the hits were 12\ndoubles, 5 three-base hits, and 14\nhome runs for 155 total bases.\nFrom a fielding standpoint, Hazel\nSpiers has been credited with 33\nput-outs and 73 assists against 10\nerrors, for a .906 fielding average;'\nalso scoring 82 runs.\nMarylebone Wins\nBut loses Men\nPERTH, Australia, Oct. 19 (CP\nCable). \u2014 The touring Marylebone\ncricket club team defeated West\nAustralia by an innings and 180\nruns, but the victory proved costly,\ntwo of England's players receiving\ninjuries that will keep them out of\nthe game for some time. Against\nthe visiting team's total of 469 runs\nfor four wickets, declared, the Aus-\nsies made 142 and 147.\nBANKRUPT, BLAME8 HOPPERS\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP)-Say-\ning grasshoppers ate all the wheat\nln his district, and his business relied on the farmers, a bankrupt\nmotorcar dealer declared in court\nhis assets were negligible.\nAberdeen  14 10   1\nRangers  12 7  0\nCeltic  13 8\n4 13 13 10 j Motherwell .... 13 8\n2 20 25 10 Hearta  13 7\n4 17 18 101 Kilmarnock .... 13 7\n5 18 19  9 i Partick Thistle 12 6\n4 11 15  ll Third Lanark.. 13 6\n2 17 21   81 Dundee  13 6\n1 16 19   7: Falkirk ...\u25a0 13 6\n1 13 22  7 St. MIITen 13 5\n.    , Hamilton Acad 13 6\nSeeond Division St Johnstone _ 13 5\nArbroath 13 5\nQueens Park _.. 14 3\nHibernians ...... 13 2\nClyde _ 13 4\nDunfcrm Ath ..13 3   8\nAlbion Rovers 13 2   8\nQueen of Sth.. 13 1 16\nSecond Division\nMorton 11 7  2   2 33 14 16\nSt. Bernards.... 11\nCowdenbeath.. 11\nRaith Rovers .. 11\nAyr United ... 11\nDumbarton...... 11\nAlrdrleonlans.. 11\nForfar Ath ....- 11\nEast Fife 11\nAlloa    11\nEast Stirling .. 11\nKing's Park .... 11\nBrechin City .. 11\nLeith Athletic. 11 3\nDundee United 11 2\nMontrose  11 2\nStenhousemuir 11 2\nEdinburgh Cit 11 1\n4 20 11 16\n3 17 16 15\n2 16 12 )4\n5 24 16 13\n4 20 14 13\n3 16 14 13\n3 15 15 13\n0 17 13 12\n4 13 12 12\n5 IS 20 11\n2 13 11 10\n2 21 16 10\n4 18 16 10\n2 14 16 10\n2 13 21 10\n1 19 16 9\n3 17 19 9\n3 10 13 9\n2 16 1(1 8\n4 18 21 8\n3 7 20\n111 28\nBury  11\nBlackpool  11\nFulham  11\nPlymouth Arg.. 11\nAston Villa..:... 11\nSheffield Unit. 11\nBarnsley - - 11\nNewcastle Un.. 11\nCoventry City 11\nNottingham Ft 11\nSwaniea Town 10\nTot Hotspurs .. 11\nNorwich City.. 11\nBurnley U\nSouthampton .. 11\nChesterfield .... 40\nWest Ham Un 11\n\"Slack Rovers.. 10\nLeicester City.. 11\nBradford City.. 11\nDoncaster Rov 10\nBradford  ~ 11\nThird Division (Southern Ssetlon)\nLuton Town .... 11   8  2   128 12 17\nCardiff City .... 11   7\nBournemouth ..11   7\nSwindon Town 11   5\nWatford  11   5\nMllwall  \"   '\nReading    11   6\nSouthend Unit 11 4\nQueens P Rang 11 5\nBright & H Al 11 5\nCrystal Palace 11 4\nNotts County.. 11 4\nClapton Orient 11 4\nBristol Rovers 11 5\nNorthampton Til   4\nWalsall 11   4\nGllllngham  11   4\nTorquay Unit.. 11 3\nExeter City .... 11  3\nAldershot   11   2\nBristol City 11  2\nNewport Count 11  0\n2 20 12 10\n1 17 10 15\n3 26 15 13\n3 25 16 13\n3 38 15 23\n8 26 9 19\n3 27 15 19\n1 33 21 17\n2 31 23 18\n2 28 20 16\n3 33*18 15\n3 21 15 15\n5 17 18 15\n0 33 29 12\n2 25 27 12\n0 32 36 12\n1 19 22 11\n1 18 27 11\n4 15 27 10\n5 21 32 9\n1 21 38 9\n229 38 8\n3 19 31 7\n2 18 43 4\n2 31 15 16\n1 32 21 15\n1 24 21 15\n2 27 17 14\n2 18 17 14\n3 25 IS 13\n3 26 30 13\n4 26 14 12\n2 14 14 12\n1 18 19 11\n1 25 27 11\n4 20 21 10\n1 15 24 7\n2 17 32 6\n2 15 36 8\n1 16 22 5\n0 11 30 2\nIRISH LEAGUE\n3 20 13 IS Derry City 11   9 1 1 27 15 19\ni 19 H 13 Linfield .  11   8 1 2 34 13 18\nBelfast Celtic ..11   7 1 3 31   7 17\nArds   11   6 4 1 27 27 13\nDistillery  11   5 4 2 21 15 12\nUme  11   6 5 0 22 18 12\nNcwry Town.... 11   5 4 2 25 23 1!\nGlentoran  11   3 5 1 25 30 11\nPortadown  11   3.8 2 13 21\nCliftpnvllle , 11   3 6 2 20 28\nBangor 113 6 2 18 29\nCdleralne  11' 2 7.2  9 28\nOlenavon  11  2 8 1 20 27\nBallymena Un IL 2 8 1 11 32\n4 20 14 12\n2 16 14 12\n1 16 13 ll\n3 21 18 11\ni 17 17 ll\n3 14 14 11\n1 14 11 11\n2 16 16 10\n2 IS 19 10\n2  6 16 10\n2 15 19 6\nt 14 22  8\n3 14 24 7\n3 12 22 7\n3 11 38   3\nFERNIE, B.C.-4-A's defeated\nWest Fernie soccerites 1-0 on Sunday in a game which the ambition\nof the teams seemed to be to see\nwhich could kick the ball out of\nbounds most often and farthest.\nEarly in the first hall W. Paton of\nWest Fernie and Ross of the 4-A's\nwere put out of the game for fighting so that both sides played ont\nman short. The tirst half wu scoreless and lt waa not until the last\n15 minutes of play that J. Corrigan\nput in the winning goal for the\n4-A's.\nPlayers for 4-A's; Tymchuk,\nBenlskey, Cunliffe, Ross, D. Parsons, H. Parsons, Jakubiec, E. Corrigan, Perkins, J. Corrigan, Ash-\nmore,\nFor. West Fernie: Ewanuick, Mc-\nNay, Luke, Bax, Fleming, Serek,\nGirou, Peterson, Coates, W. Paton,\nA. Paton.\nReferee Joseph Riley, linesmen,\nT. Payne and W. Fleming.\nPOSSESSION  OF\nSHIELD IN DOUBT\nIn spite of today's victory by the\n4-A's, possession of the Aldridge\nshield is still up in the air. Last\nSunday West Fernie put the ball\nthrough the goal but as it* hit the\nreferee and was kicked ln on the\nrebound the goal wu not allowed\nand the final score wu declared\nto be 0-0. West Fernie protested\nthe decision and during the week\nthe referee's ruling was reversed\nand the game awarded to West\nFernie. On that basis the games are\nnow 1-1 and a play-off will probably take place next Sunday.\nThe 4-A's however have appealed\nthe award of last week's game to\ntheir opponents. If their appeal ls\nallowed and the referee's decision\nfinally upheld no play-o\u00ab will be\nnecessary and the shield will go\nto the 4-A's.\nThird Division (Northern Section)\nChester 11\nMansfield Tn .. 10\nLincoln City _ 11\nHull City  10\nStockport C _ 11\nHalifax Town. 11\nHartlepools U.. 10\nOldham Athlet 11\nWrt.hem _.\u201e ii\n1 38 8 19\n1 26 14 IS\n3 24 12 15\n4 16 11 14\n4 21 13 14\n2 13 11 14\n3 12 8 13\n2 23 18 12\n4 20 16 12\n________\nMARANVILLE SIGNS\nMONTREAL, Oct. 16 (CP) .-Walter (\"Rabbit\") Msranville, veteran\nmajor league shortstop and second\nbaseman, became manager today of\nMontreal Royals in the International\nbaseball league. Details of the one-\nyear contract wera not announced.\nMaranvllle succeeds Harry Smythe,\nRoyals' pitcher who replaced Frank\nShaughnessy after the latter resigned during the summer.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy Canadian Press\nBluenose, Captain Angus Walter's\nbig salt banker from Lunenberg,\nN.S., retained her throne u queen\nof the North Atlantic fishing fleets\nby defeating the American challenger, Gertrude L. Thebaud of Gloucester; Mass., ln the aecond straight\nrace. That was five years ago today. It was the laat of the International series. Bluenose had been\nchampion since 1921.\nA chameleon's darting tongue can\nbe extended longer than the animal's\nwhole body.\nACTION AT LONCWOOD\nA glimpse of tha main court at Longwood, Chestnut Hills, Mass.\nduring tha men. doubles championship.\nDANNY STACK PACKS HIS GOLF\nCLUBS, SKATES GO TO SUDBURY\nSpeediest Puck Chaser\nFar West; District\nGolf Leader\nDanny Stack, hockey player,\nspeed skater and golfer who in two\nyeara residence ln the Kootenays\nhss made his mark in both hockey\nand golf in a way matched by few\nother newcomers, has packed his\ngolf clubs and skates and ls on his\nway to conquer new fields, Bound\nfor Sudbury. Ont, he was scheduled\nto leave Nelson aboard the east-\nbound train early this morning.\nPacking his belongings Monday\nafternoon, Danny hadn't much to\nsay except that he was \"sorry to be\nleaving Nelson and all the friends\nI've made, here,\" but he had a new\njob In the offing and he hoped to\nplay hockey and golf in Sudbury.\nT can certainly wish the Nelson\nhockey club the best of luck this\nson,\" he added, \"because I'll be\nplaying tor another club. I've sure\nhad some fine times in the Kootenays,\" Danny added, \"and the\nhockey club and golf club have\nbeen responsible.\"\nHERE FOR HOCKEY\nStack came to Nelson ln the fall\nof 1934 to play hockey with the Nelson Maple Leafs, and in that field\nestablished himself as one of the\nfastest men on the steel blades in\nthe game hi the far west He came\nof a sports-loving and sporta-excel-\nllng family, his father having been\na champion speed skater, semi-pro\nball pitcher and Junior hockey\ncoach; his mother a champion lawn\nbowler; his brother, Frank, another\nchampion speed skater and a Canadian Olympic point-gatherer.\nLeaving the speed skating field to\nhis brother after he had ruled junior\nand juvenile field, ln western Canada, Danny turned his abilities to\nhockey and golf, and in the latter\ncompiled a splendid record. He won\nthe Kildonan championship at Winnipeg for three years; the Winnipeg\nmunicipal tournament three times;\nand was runner-up ln city and district and Manitoba championships.\nHe was a member of the Manitoba\ngolf team in 1932 and 1933 and was a\nmember Of the Manitoba Interclub\ntitle team of 1933 and 1934.\nKOOTENAY TITLI8T\nIn his tirst season in West Kootenay Danny won the West Kootenay\nopen in Trail and the Labor Day\nopen at Nelson, besides making his\nmark In less important tournaments\nand establishing a new course record for the Nelson Golf and Country\nclub course.\nThis year he went to Kimberley\nand in setting a new record for that\ncourse won the East Kootenay open.\nHe added to his Nelson string the\nclub championship and the T. R.\nDANNY 8TACK\n\u2014Photo by Geo. A. Meeres.\nWilson handicap title trophy. Travelling to Vancouver for the Pacific\nNorthwest Golf association championships, he won his way to the\nquarter-finals.\nDanny isn't superstitious\u2014but he\nplays his best golf in his old clothes\nand with a wishbone hidden away\nin his golf paraphernalia somewhere.\nLarry Gains and\nJack London Fail\nto Put Up a Fight\nLONDON, Oct 19 (CP Cable).-A\nheavyweight boxing bout ln Earls-\ncourt stadium tonight between\nLarry Gains, former Toronto negro,\nand Jack London of England, was\nhalted in the eighth round and declared \"no contest\". The referee had\nwarned the contestants earlier tor\nnot mixing sufficiently.\nHUBBELL VOTED\nMOSTVALUABLE\nDizzy Dean Is Rated\nSecond by Writers\nCLEVELAND, Oct. 19 (AP). -\nCarl Hubbell, sensational left-handed pitcher whose baffling \"screw\nball\" won 26 campaign victories and\nthe 1986 pennant for New York\nGiants wu unanimously chosen today u the year's most valuable National league player by a committee\nrepresenting the Baseball Writers'\nAssociation of America.\nHubbell, who won the Same recognition in 1933, received 60 votes\nwith six of the eight committeemen\nnaming the lanky southpaw as their\nfirst choice. Two members of the\ncommittee, composed of one writer\nfrom each city ln the circuit did\nnot vote.\nEach ot the six cut 10 votes for\nfirst place, nine for second, and\nso on.\nJerome (Dizsy) Dean, ace of the\nSt. Louis Cardinals' pitching staff.\nwu given second place with 63\nvotes. He wu listed second by five\ncommitteemen and third by the\nsixth.\nBilly Herman, Chicago Cubs second basemen who turned in a .335\nbatting average for the season's\nwork, wu third with 37 points.\nJoe \"Ducky\" Medwlck, Cardinal\noutfielder and his club's top flight\nsticker, was fourth.\nCharles \"Gabby\" Hartnett, Chicago Cubs, catcher, who was named\n\"most valuable player\" in 1935, was\n13th on the 1936 list with six votes.\nRANGERS START\nAT WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 19 (CP).-New\nYork Rangers of the National\nhockey league skated into training\nhere today but took no chances of\nstraining muscles possibly loosened\nduring the summer lay-off. Manager Lester Patrick hung out the \"no\nscrimmaging\" sign.\nAll members of the Ranger camp\nexcept the veteran defenceman,\nChing Johnson, were present for the\nopening and Patrick said the big\nfellow would be along in a day or\ntwo. Johnson wanders into camp a\nfew days late every season, the manager said.\nDiesel Opportunities\nNever tit-lure haa any field -tared eucb\nopportunttlee to tha mcrhanically Inriincrl\nyoung man aa doee the Diaaal. Diuel Mies\nhava increeaed several hundred percent\nduring the peat three years and Disss! Is\nnow fully aaubliahed sta the moat economical prime mover tn existence. Railroads.\nBmeee, Trudse, Tractors, Utility end Industrial Planta, Marine, Aviation, etc., tre\nall turning to Dieeel power\nNaturally, Una mammoth Industry requlrea\ncompetent mechanic* end operators. We\nhave been succcaalully tralnlnt men in\nDieeel lor five years and tha number o\nour graduates now established In Dieeel\nwork is ample proof of our training methods.\nThis school Is equipped with the. largest\nassembly of Dieeel Gngtnee In Cenade for\ntraining purpoeae and our training ia\nendorsed by tha Dieeel Industry\nWrite for tree and Interesting publication\n\"Diesel News\" snd pertlriilara ef our\nDay, Night end Home Study Couisee.\nHemphill Diesel Engineering\nSchools Limited\nlSSS Oranvllle St. Vancouver, B.C.\nIt's the Talk of thc Town!\nJACK VARDEEN'S\n\"Little Madison\nSquare Garden\"\nFights\nI  Every Frl. nlte at the N.S.C. _\n520 Vernon St, jj\n360 rush seats\nI  40c adults            25c children I\n -_-_____\u2014\n\u25a0    ':\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nPAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NIWS, NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 20, 1IM\nLET THE CLASSIFIEDS WORK FDR YOU\/\nMAJOR WATTS IS : NrUon MB \u00ab\u00ab\u00bba\nFERNIE SPEAKER\nStudents  Hold  First\nLiterary Meet; Will\nDebate in U.S.A.\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014Friday afternoon\nproved to be an unusual time at\nSmtral school. During the afternoon\ne school, in two sections, first the\nSenior and Junior High schools and\nlater the elementary school, was addressed by Major W. H. Watts, a\nblind veteran, on behalf of the blind\ncitizens of British Columbia. Major\nWatts,, Introduced by Principal A. L.\nMcPhee, played on the piano in the\nschool auditorium while the pupils I\nwere essembling and then played\nthe accompaniment lo 0 Canada be-1\nfore commencing his address. Major I\nWatts Is giving his services to the j\nCanadian National Institute for the\nBlind in a campaign to increase\npublic interest in the needs of those\nwho have lost their sight. He said,\nln his address, that Canada treat::\nher blind as well as any country in\nthe world and that experts have\nbeen sent from England to study\nthe phase of Canada's system of concession stands. Ho made a plea thai\nthe young people of today perpetuate and enlarge the work of thei:-\nfathers.\nIn British Columbia, he sti'.tl, there\nare 490 blind: in Canada 5000 blind\nand another 2000 going blind.\nAmong the, need? of those who live\nin a world of darkness he placed\noccupation first, something to do\nnot only to pa?s the time but to\nmake them feel that they have some\ncontact with the world at large. The\nspeaker enumerated many activities\nIn which the blind have shown\nthemselves capable of reallv efficient,\nwork. After occupation he placed j\neducation and described the method j\nln which the library of 25,000 volumes in Braille, for the blind, is kept\nIn circulation.\nIn thc High school section Major\nWatts put the pupils through a drill\nIn the method of using the Braille\nmachine and bad them typing the I\nletters on their knees as he called\nout the fingers to be used for each\nletter.\nThe Major's present trip is preliminary to a financial drive to be\nmade later. In discussing this he explained that since the depression\nstarted the' number of I lind in Canada has doubled while their Incomes\nhave been halved. While his work is\nfor the blind he did not overlook\nother sufferers and made a plea for\nconsideration of all shut-ins and\nthose whose Uves are marked by\npain. At the conclusion he received |\na wonderful ovation from the assembled pupils and then returning\nto the piano he played for the singing of God Save the King.\nAfter the regular school sessions\nthe High schools reassembled for\nthe first literary meeting of the\npresent school term. The penior high\nacted as hosts to the juniors, to initiate them Into the procedure of\nliterary meetings r.nd to introduce\nthem to the whole extra-curricular\nhigh school organization. Major\nWatts was also present, this time as\na guest, and assisted at the piano.\nFrances King, chairman of the Literary committee presided, Egerton\nKing, president of the Student\nCouncil, explained the organization\nand operation of the Council and\nthen called on the chairmen of the\ndifferent committees to describe the\nwork of their respective groups, Bernice Boese, social, Frances King,\nliterary and Otto Rigets, athletic.\nThii part of the program was for the\nbenefit of the Junior high pupils\nwho will soon commence building\nup their own activities distinct from\nthose of the Senior school.\nOther numbers on the program included a chorus Home on the Range,\ngrades 7 and 8; violin duet, Minuet\nin G, by Gordon Barrett and Joe\nBlanco,  accompanied  by  Kathleen\nMember ol the Canadian Daily\nNewspaper Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall   Departments\nSubscription Ratal\nSingle copy \u2014__ $   .08\nBy carrier per week       .25\nBy carrier per year _____   18.00\nBy mail ln Canada, to subscribers living outalde regular\ncarrier areas per month 60c;\nthree months $1.80, six months,\n$3.00. one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c, six months,\n$4.00, one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. S. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nIlea Line\nMinimum 2 Lines\nJ linea, onet \u2014 ..'...I \u2022_-\n3 lines! one*    -tt\n4 linea. one* _______.-  .44\n2 Ilnes. 6 times    _\u00bb\n3 lines t times ____. 132\n4 linea. \u00ab timea VH\n2 lines. 1 month -JS\n3 Ilnes. 1 month  *-\u00bb\n4 Unes. 1 month  _  5.72\nAll above lees 10% for prompt\npayment\nMARTIN-To Mr. and Mrs. Donald H. Martin (nee Bather Flynn),\n1701 College Lane, Calgary, at the\nHoly Cross hospital October 10, a\nson, Douglas Robert,\t\n\u00abS\u00bb**\u00ab\u00bb''**^-$$3\u00bb**-'>''-'\u00ab**^^\nFIOWER5 AT HER FEET\nBy   MARIE   BUZARD\n-COri JUUKT; ROUSED If CC-ISAL PSESS AMOCIAnO*- *\ntSSSfSffSSftMSSSSSSSStSSfSSSSSSSSSSSSSSM--\n*m*+s+*^**ele>&c&c&i&ceVV5S\nAlix Carey, who came to New\nYork to find work in an advertising agency following her parents' death, has made a close\nfriend of Kathleen Crosby whom\nshe met in a swimming pool.\nKathleen, who is well to do, has\ninvited Alix to a party and Introduced her to Kim Preston, her\nsecond cousin. While Kim admires\nAlix, her thoughts wander to\nJohn Sayre, young executive of\nher agency. Alix submits a slogan\nin a $500 contest conducted\namong employees of the agency.\n(NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY)\nCHAPTER 4\nPaul Kenneliy was a junior executive in the Sayre Advertising\nAgency and, as such, he enjoyed\nthe sem-privacy of an office with\na grilled iron gate in place of a\nwall with a door.\nAlix Carey, from her position at\nthe desk in back of him, gazed\nover her shoulder to where he was\nbent over a scribbling pad. Her\neye traveled down the wide corridor lined with similar \"offices\"\nand a smile turned up the corners\nof her mouth.\nA chance visitor might have\nthought it a most extraordinary\norganization. There wasn't one head\nthat wasn't bent over a typewriter\nor a scribbling pad.\nAlthough she could not see Into\nthe enclosed offices of the senior\nexecutives, she guessed that the\nsame performance was being repeated. All trying to find that\nprecious little phrase to win a pot\nof gold.\nHer own contribution was neatly\nsealed in her purse. It had seemed\nHarbinson; chorus, Camptown Races, Boys' Glee Club; dramatized\npoem. The Wreck of the Julie Plante,\nby grade 10.\nA debate on the question, Resolved that co-education should be abolished, was well fought out by\nDonald McLean and James Fawley\non the affirmative and Belinda Arc-\nuri and William Mitchell on the\nnegative sides. Judgment was given\nin favor of the negative.\nCommunity singing was led by\nAlex Stewart of grade 9. Principal\nMcPhee officially welcomed the pupils of grades 7, 8 and 9 to their\nnew status and explained some of\nthe differences they found between\nelementary and high school ways ol\nfunctioning.\nThe next literary event of the\nHigh School wiU be a debate with\nthe Kalispell high school, at Kalispell, Montana, October 23 on tht\nquestion, Resolved, that the Cabinet\nform of government (British) Is\nsuperior to the Constitutional form,\n(U. S.) This will be the first time\nlocal debaters have gone to other\nfields to try for honors ln debate.\nStar of the Air\nlike such a bright idea the night\nbefore, but now, eyeing the copy\ndepartment speculatively, she felt\nlt to be a poor effort. She knew\nhow the copy writers slaved and\nconferred and wrote and tore up\nthe countless phrases that later\nflowed out smoothly onto paper\nand the ether waves. That was\nthe work of the copy staff, that\nexalted group of young college people who talked about \"merchandising\" and \"trends\" and \"upward\nsweeps\" and \"depression lows\" and\nwere as utterly removed from the\nsecretarial group as though an Impregnable wall separated them.\nSometimes Alix shook her head\nsadly over all that effort and sometimes she wondered if copy writers\nwere just born copy writers. She\nhad seen them come in diffidently,\nknew that they had applications as\nembarassing and impossible to fUl\nout as her own. But once they\nwere employed (why and with\nwhat qualities she had yet to find\nout, she thought) they stepped\neasily into that upper-bracketed,\nhigher-salaried and exclusive\ngroup.\nYet Alix gazed at them enviously.\nWhen a girl was a copy writer,\nshe was \"a business woman\", not\na secretary. She had friends who\nhad interesting work. She made\nenough money to live nicely. She\ncould have a frock or a hat every\nweek if she wanted. She had a\nfuture that meant something and\ncounted.\n\"I think I've got It!\" Paul Ken-\nnelly said feverishly and folded a\nsmall slip of paper Into an envelope. While he licked the flap he\ngazed adoringly on the photograph\nof the girl and two babies on his\ndesk.\n\"She's only got a million dollars,\" Alix said under her breath.\n\"And he's thinking of what that\n$500 prize would do!\"\nAloud she said, as the telephone\nrang: \"I've got it ... Mr. Ken-\nneUy's office . . .oh, hello, Kathleen\"\u2014a pleasant surge of feeling\ncame over her; she hadn't expected\nto hear from the other girl because\nKathleen had been casual two days\nbefore. \" . . .it's a grand night\nfor swimming and not usually\ncrowded on Thursday. I'll meet\nyou at the pool at quarter of six.\"\nImpulsively, on her way out, she\ndropped the envelope from her bag\nInto the box marked \"Entries for\nSlogan Contest\". Then she forgot\nabout it.\nKathleen waved to her from the\npool.\n\"We tried to get you at the office\nafter the concert,\" she said. \"We\nwere so full of music, Ned took us\nup to his house to hear records.\"\nAUx turned over lazily on her\nBIRTHS\nPERSONAL\nMENI GET VIGOR AT ONCEI NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster Invlgorators and other\nstimulants One daae peps up organs, glands. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds few cents paid\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co\n(2884)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1\nOrder direct and be sure of beet.\nPacked plain Free catalogue National Importers, 812-Centre St..\nCalgary, Alta, (2885)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nWILL PAY, CASH FOR CHOICE\ndairy cow not over six years old.\nBox 3084, Dally News.        (3084)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nAYRSHIRE COW JUST FRESHEN-\ned. First calf. Woodside Ranch,\nFruitvale, B.C. (3073)\nback to enjoy the happy \"included\nfeeling Kathleen's words gave her.\n\"I was working at home,\" she\nsaid. \"TeU me about the concert.\"\nKathleen caught her breath and\nplunged her arm forward.\n\"No, not that way, Kathleen.\nBreathe easily, slowly, let your\nlungs fill with air and don't think\nabout It.\" Alex demonstrated.\n\"You're wonderful,\" Kathleen\nsaid after she had tried it. \"You\nwere right about that Instructor\npaying to much attention to my\nbreathing. What did you ask me?\"\n\"TeU me about last night.\"\n\"Oh, it was the usual thing. Another modern program that would\nhave come off more brilliantly if\nthere hadn't been the usual classic\nnumber during Intermission which\nthrew the whole thing off as to\ngeneral effect.\"\nAlix made a mental note to read\nsomething- about music- She\nwanted to know what these new\nfriends were talking about. She\ndidn't know about modern music\nbut Dora had taught her a love\nfor all music. Alix didn't know a\nclassic could \"throw the whole thing\noff\".\nWhen Kathleen said things like\nthat, Alix wondered what there\nwas about herself that caused Kathleen to offer her her friendship;\nshe felt she had nothing interesting\nto offer the \"other girl.\nKathleen had a background that\nwas filled with interesting things\nto talk about. She had her committee work for her pet charities-\ncommittee work that was done at\nluncheons, at teas and led to big\nparties, dances and fairs. Her\ncompanions were girls like herself\nwho had interest in common, homes\nlike Kathleen's on Park avenue.\nThey had country clubs, talked\nglibly of sports and were to \u2022 be\nfound at polo games, golf tournaments, yacht races.\nBut Kathleen liked people for\nwhat was In them and not their\nphysical backgrounds, She knew\nthat Alix was Interesting and she\nwanted to know more about her,\nwhat she wanted, what ahe was\ngoing to do with her life. A girl\nin her own set who was as lovely\nas Alix would have found someone-\nin motion pictures to give her a\nscreen test, would have exploited\nher beauty by posing.\n\"Didn't you ever want to go In\nthe movies?\" she asked Alix when\nthey had finished dinner and were\ntalking on the terrace. '\n\"No,\" Alix said after a while.\n\"I never wanted to be an actress.\nIt seVms like a fantastic sort of\nife to me and I want something\nFOR SALE\n25,000 TT. Itt IN. GALVANIZED\nPipe, also large stock Black pipe\nand fittings, all sizes. Write Swartz\nPipe Yard. 220 East, lit. Ave.,\nVancouver, B.C. (2881)\nPIPE AND FrmNGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St*. Vancouver, B.C.\n(2888)\nFOR SALE-MODERN OAK DIN-\nlng room suite. Good condition.\nApply 713 Nelson Ave. or PK 744Y.\n(3152)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS,\nsugar sacks, Unert. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C.\nLOTS OF BALED HAY. J. P. BELL,\nPark Siding, P.O. Fruitvale.\n(3114)\nKITCHEN RANGE tc HEATER. 724\nMU1' St or phone 224. (3151)\nHEATERS, NEW AND SECOND-\nhand. $2.73 up. The Ark.      (2973)\nBABY CARRIAGE, FIRST CLASS\ncondition. Phone 256L. (3093)\nFOR  SALE - FIVE  DESIRABLE\nhomes.  C. F. McHardy.      (3075)\nCORRESPONDENCE SCHOOLS\nLEARN ELECTRICITY AT HOME\nWrite for particulars Maple Leaf\nHome Study Electrical Course, published by\u2014\nHEMPHILL DIESEL\nENGINEERING SCHOOLS LTD.\n1365 Granville St., Vancouver, B.C.\n(3138)\nPOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nUNTIL   APRIL   1,   COTTAGE,   4\nrooms and bath, completely furnished. Behensen Sc 3th St., Fair-\n_yiew. (3081)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.   Annable Block.\n(2890)\nFURN. HOUSE. APPLY BOX 3135.\nDaily News, or 310 Observatory St.\n(3135)\n7 ROOM HOUSE.\nD. Maglio.\nPHONE 808L.\n(3092)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (2891)\nMODERN\n(3076)\nFOR  RENT - THREE\nhomes. C. F. McHardy.\n2 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE FOR\nrent. Stirling Hotel. (3144)\nHELP WANTED\nWANT GIRL FOR GENERAL\nhousework. P.O. Box 555, or phone\n583R. (3153)\nWOMAN, MORNINGS ONLY, FOR\ncleaning and plain cooking. Box\n3148, Dally News. (3148)\nFARM HAND AND MILKER. BOX\n3100, Dally News. (3100)\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nv \u2022 ..     < 1\nAssayer.\nIniurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer.\nSampling agents at Trail and Tacoma smelters, 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B.C. (2933)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 618\nBaker street Nelson. B.C   P.O.\nBox No. 276. Representing Shippers interest at Trail, B.C.   (2934)\nAutomobile Radiator .Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nfor expert repairs\nPhone 686 604'.. Baker St.\n(2936)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson.\n(2936)\nfi. M. WARREN, D.C, Gilker Blk..\nNelson, B.C. P.O. Box 872.   (2937)\n(2937)\nElectrical\nTHE TECHNOLOGICAL INSTITU-\ntion of Great Britain, with offices\nin Toronto, offers you at reduced\nfees, guaranteed courses in mechanical, civU, electrical, diesel,\nalso aeronautical engineering, refrigeration and air-conditioning.\nWrite for Information, C. G. Kerr,\nBox 854, Nelson, B.C. (3150)\nFARM LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FUR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept ot Natural\nResources. C.P.R.* Calgary. Alia\n(2892)\nFOR SALE OR LEASE, 160 ACRES,\n3 miles Nelson, buildings, hay,\npasture, wood, fruit. Foster, Ymir\nRoad. (3080)\nsoUd tn my life, something that\njust doesn't belong to you when\nyou're young. I don't mean that I\nwant stolid things but something\nthat I've earned, something that\nwill be there When I'm old.\"\n'To most girls, that means marriage,\" Kathleen said. \"Have you\nthought of that?\"\n\"Oh, yes, I've thought of It but\nyou can't just make up your mind\nthat marriage ls the right thing\nand go ahead and get married.\nYou can't go out and shop for a\nhusband the way you can for a\nhat You have to wait and then,\nwhen he comes along, you know\nbut you can't do anything about it\nunless he knows that he feels the\nsame way.\"\nKathleen rested her chin ln her\nhand thoughtfully. 'Yes, you have\nto  wait\"  she  said   slowly.   \"But\nHOUSES FOR SALE\n6 ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE 1121\nFront Street. (3096)\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST BY SLOCAN STAGE ON\nOctober 9 one suitcaBe between\nNelson and Slocan City. Finder\nplease return. Reward $60-   (3063)\nNEW AND REBUILT MOTORS\nGenerators, etc.. in all sizes.\nIMMEDIATE  DELIVERY.  WRITt\npROSSMAN gLECTRlCAL\n\u2022MACHINERY   nO,   T TD.\n61 Alexander St    Vancouver. B. C.\n(2938)\nTo Finders\nIf yeu find a cat or dog, a poc-\nketbook. jewelry or fur or anything else of value telephone\nThe Dally Newa. A \"Found\"\nAd will be Inserted without cost\nto you We wUl coUect from the\nowner.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nMARRIED COUPLE WOULD LIKE\npositions. Woman good cook, man\nall round worker. Box 3147, News.\n(3147)\nWANTED TO RENT\n4 OR 5-ROOMED HOUSE WITH\nplace for cow and hens. Box 3070,\nDally News. (3070)\nwaiting isn't so bard when you\nfeel sure that what you want is\ncoming to you. Sometimes men\nare quite sure even though they\nare reluctant to admit it. They\nwant their freedom as long as they\ncan have it\"\n\"You couldn't ever have been in\nlove,\" Kathleen said simply. \"For\nI imagine, Alix, you could have any\nman you want.\"\nJ. F. COATES, The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installation!\nPhone 766. P.O. Box 1065\n(2939)\nEngineeri and Surveyor!\nE. L. WARBURTON. AGENT. N\u00abL-\nson, B.C. Ph. 53. Res. 239   P.O\nBox 668. Oils, etc., Mine Machinery and Equipment Steam Coals.\n(2940)\nH. D. DAWSON Nelson. B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(2941)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(2942)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays tc etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29. (2943)\nDIRK de JONG.\nFront   St.,   Nelson,   B.C.   Sprays,\nWreaths and Floral displays.\nPrompt Service Given (2770)\nFuneral Directort\n(To Be Continued)\nCOAL\nMcGillivray creek\nFURNACE LUMP COAL\n\"The Ideal Coal for the Home Furnace\"\nMORE HEAT PER DOLLAR\n\u2022JIO Per Ton\nWILLIAMS TRANSFER\nPHONE 106\n609 WARD ST.\n(3146)\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nOpen day and night Lady attendant.\nModern Ambulance Service\n(2944)\nIniurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\nBaker St. (2945)\nR. W. DAWSON, RlaTEstat*. Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. (2946)\nC D. BLACKWOODInsurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99\n(2947)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward St\n(2948)\n3. E. ANNABLE, HEAL ISTA1 B\nRentals, Iniurance. Annable SI I\n(294sf\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INStM\nance, P. E, PouUn. Ph, 70.    (2MB\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. lYsTJfHHCB\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (2931)\nInvestmcnti\nLIVING PROTECTION\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nF.A.STUART. BOX 389\n(2991)\nMachinist!\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor aU Classes of Metal Work. Lath*\nWork, DriUing, Boring and Grinding.  Motor  Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n\u00ab933)\nr_t.nl.\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVIST-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfuU informaUon sent free. .Tha\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Ottawa.'\n(2935)\nPhotography\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PRINT-\ned, any size, 25c, Reprlnta,' eight\nfor 25c Deckled edge printa. Valuable coupon. \"Better prints a*\nlower cost\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS.\nWilkie, Sask.. (2956)*\nSanitariums\nCHRONIC DISEASES MIND AND\nbody. Dr. Aldrlch, Spokane, B>\n4504 Frederick. (2957);\nSash Factory\n7\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTOR?.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker at\n(2958)\nSecond Hand Storei\nWE  BUY.  SELL Ic  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store. -\n(29591\nTaxidermist\nP. W. RISSLING, TAXIDERMIST.\nGame heads, birds, rugs. Work\nguaranteed. Sport Shop, Nel\"*\nson.  The Merc, Trail.        (2977),\nWatch Repairing\nijvrii\/t\nH. H. SUTHERLAND      i  \u25a0\nx  Watchmaker and Jeweller \u2022\nRutledge block, Baker St., Nelson.;\n\"When. Sutherland   repairs   your\nwatch it is on time aU the time.\"   V\n(2960)-\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE.'Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St,\n(296JV\nWigi and Toupeei\nLADIES' AND GENTLEMEN'S wiga\nand toupees, etc. Free Illustrated1\nCatalogue. Over 20 yeara in B.C. I\nWe buy cut hair. Hanson Hair\nGoods Co. P.O. Box 601, Vancouver, B.C. (2962)\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT-READING\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS j\nUSE THE CLASSIFIED ADS\u2014THEY CET RESULTS)\n\u2022RINGING UP FATHER\n\u25a0r Geo. McMtnua\nMARY DIETRICK\nAlready featured on two network programs ls pretty Mary Dletrlck,\nan attractive soprano newcomer to thc airwaves.\n\u2022*-'\u25a0*-\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0* '  -\u25a0-    - _ri.isiii-s-.ssto\n IS CHANGED; NO\nDROP IN ONIONS\nInterior Vegetable\nIndustry States\nReport False\nChange ln the price of lettuce, No.\nDnly, as authorized by the B.C.\nerior Vegetable Marketing board,\nIve Saturday, makes the quo-\nons: Crates, $2.50; flats, $1.35;\nflats, 85 cents.\nfclrcular issued by E. Poole, manner of the Interior Vegetable Mar-\nketing Agency limited, in announcing the price change, also states:\nDiscounts to wholesalers in Kam-\nloons and Nelson:\nWhen making sales of regulated\nproducts to wholesalers in Kamloops and Nelson, sub-agents may\nallow a discount of 7 per cent from\nthe f.o.b. price.\nOnions:\nReports have been clrcuMed\n[lately that this agency is about to\n[drop the price of onions.\nSub-agents will please note that\nthere is no truth in this report and\nare advised to so inform their brokers immediately in order that the\n'harmful results of the report may be\nundone as quickly as possible.\nLead Production\n11.7 Per Cant Up\nOver Lost Year\nLead production in Canada during\nJuly advanced to 32,324,511 pounds\nfrom th\u00ab June total ot 28,523,448 and\nthe July, 1935, total of 29,289,276\npounds. Output during the firat\nseven months totalled 213,115,950\npounds, or 11.7 par cent abort last\nyear. Quotations for lead on the\nLondon market In July averaged\n3.5584 cents per pound ln Canadllh\nfunds: valued at this price the Canadian output was worth $1,150,235.\nRefined lead production ln the\nUnited States ln July was at approximately the same level aa In June\nand amounted to 36,863 tons. The\nMexican output rose 8.3 per cent to\n20,173 and the German pro-iuct'on\n3.3 per cent to 13,338 tons. On the\nother hand, the Australian output\nwas 5.7 per cent lower at 16,416 tons.\nCHICAGO SLIPS\nN-L80N DAILY NEWS, NELION. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO. OCTOBER 20, ltst\n. .-'   _\u25a0    '    \u25a0    \u25a0 \u25a0     I \u25a0       \u2022,        \u25a0 \u2014J    _1 -     \u25a0 .   '     '     v    \u25a0\n-PAGE NINE\nMarket and Mining News\nCanadian Mines\nPay More lo US.\nThan lo Britain\nCHICAOO, OcL 19 (AP)-Setbacks ot around two cents a bushel\nat Winnipeg did much to weaken\nthe Chicago wheat market today,\nFrom a top of $1.16% cents, December wheat contracts here suffered a tall to 11.15V.,\nChicago wheat futures closed %-\nIV, cents lower, corn %-l% down,\noats %*% off, aad rye at Vi decline to V, advance.\nFive Times as Much;\nBritish Investors\nAre Lagging\nCanadian mlnet pay five times\nmora In dividends to United States\ninvestors than to British investors,\nthe Spokesman-Review asserts in\ncommenting on figure's released by\nthe Dominion bureau ot statistics.\nThe Spokesman says:\nTha bureau's latest completed figures ot the division ot the payments\nof div'dends are for 1934, when $17,-\n480,000 was said to United States\ninve-tors. British Investors received\nS3.21S.000 and Canadian Investors\n$26,584,000, while Investors from\nother countries took up the balance\nof WM.OOfc\n\"What evidence we have indicates\nthat there has not been a substantial\nmovement of new British capital in\nNew Yein May Mean\nAddition Reserves\nYankee Girl Mine\nCANADA'S DOLLAR\nJUMPS AT N.Y.\nNEW YORK, Oct 19 (AP)-De-\n,,      cllne ot most foreign currencies in\nOpening of a new tatemietHate relation to $_t Unlttd Sik^_, M,\nvein, tha first 100 feet of which .'^ m ionlm, tochange dealings to-\nshowed better than average values ^ w\u201e attributed to oommerclal\nacross two and a half feet, may mean opertUon \u201e_& , further adjustment\nImportant additions to ore reserves t0 the tripartite stabilization agree-\nof the Ymir Yankee Girl mine, coast mont-\nTu^a-TreX' that prep.rn.tory' J\u00bb*2\u00a3*^ ?\u00a3&\u00a3\nwork for mining on the 1300-fool ^^^Sfar^__l*S_^\nlevel is about complete, and it is ex- 2_____R^__-__f*_f_-__fttt i_2Ti,\nC.N.R.EMPLOYEES\nMEET CHAIRMAN\nConferences Held; to\nHave Luncheon\nToday\nback to normal.\nOILS TO FORE AT\nVANCOUVER\nMONTREAL, Oct. l\u00a3-Ofticers ot\ntha Canadian National railways and\nrepresentatives ot the employees\nfrom all sections ot the nations, system lp Canada and the United States\n*____  ._-.- \u201e\u201e   -  \u25a0   j are gathering In Montreal today for\ntrend, the Canadian dollar gained conferences with the meBagetaent\nMclNTOSH WELL OVER HALF OF\nINTERIOR APPLE SHIPMENTS UP\nTO OCTOBER 10 BOARD REPORTS\nThe  French  franc  was  likewise\ndown .00 5-16 of a cent and the\nSwiss franc sagged .10% of a cent\nRunning counter to the general\nNelson, Creston Grand Forks Districts Have\nMarketed 120,032 Boxes of Apples of\nWhich Macs Comprised 74,001\nNelson district had marketed 11,093 boxes ot apples, Creston district\n86,945 boxes and Grand Forks district 21,994 boxes at October 10, according to an analysis ot crop movement at that date by the British Columbia\ntree fruit board as set out in a circular Issued over the signature of G. W.\nA. Barrat. The total tor the three districts was 120,032 boxes, with\nMcintosh comprising over half at 74,001.\nFigures for each of the three districts follow:\nNELSON AND DISTRICT\n30 industrials\n\u2022ails\t\n20 utilities .....\n40 bonds \t\nDow-Jones Avmrao\u00abs\nHigh       Low\n _  178.44      176.86\n _     60.21       59.53\n34.91\n36.43\nClose Change\n177.4_-otf il\n,59.65-Off JO\n35.04-off .05\n105.50-off   .07\nVANCOUVER, Oct 19 (CP).-Qil\nissues held the center of interest on\nthe Vancouver stock exchange today, closing with gains ranging from\nfractions to 13 cents. Trading was\nfr-lrly active with sales totalling\n313.328 shares..\nVulcsn Oil was up IS at 75, Home\nat 1.08 and Calmont ad-\n-tained 8\ncents.  Cslgary te Edmonton at 1,45,\nyea-s,\" the bureau reports.\nU. 8. INVESTMENTS\nINCREASE\nOn the other hand, both United\nStates and Canadian investment\"*   ... _,._,__,     _.\nhave Increased, ao that dividend it 18-nd Anacon-ia at 6 firmed on*\nnayments will run proportlon.telyi\u2122l. \u00ab*W' ^psr Ex at 10\n.. i     T.J .__ .\u25a0_._\u201e ,mm sou     \\ Merknd at 10%, Mercury pt 11% and\nA.P. Consolidated at 17 and Southwest Petroleum at 20 were each up\ntwo. Model at 28, British Dominion\n1-64 cent to finish the day at $1.00\n1-32.\nSMELTER STOCK\nHITS NEW HIGH\nCookers ...\nDuchess  .\nWealthy .\nMcintosh\nJonathan\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nhither than the figures for 1934,\nGold production in Canada set a\nnew high -record in August, and for\nthe eight-month period increased\n\u00bb\"iM-tair*b!l st 9 gpined fractions\nPioneer Gold was fairly active\n\"losing up 20 cents rt 750.   Sheep\nCreek was ud 2 at 90 while Reno\nMONTREAL, Oct. 19 (CP) -Silver futures closed easier today, 45 to 65 before. Production ln August, ac\n' 14.9 per cent over the total a year i we\u2122 *\"\u25a0\u00bb \"\" \u2022 \u00bb> ~ -\t\n\u00aba___\u201e_u__ s\u201e  _\u201e\u201e,_i   ,\u201e. -t 1.29 and Cfriboo Gold Quart* et\n; points off. Sales 10 October contracts.\nOct\nOpen\n44.00\nHigh\n44.00\nLow\n43.90\nClose\n43.60\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nlAlsted Bid\n\u25a0 P Cons     17\n'Amalgamated  09\nBig Missouri 50\nBralorne          8.40\nBrew te Dist     _ 80\nBrit Dominion 18\nBridge River _...\nBRXGold\nCsriboo Gold Q\nC le E Corp\nConst Breweries\nCommon Oil \t\nBaitonla\nGold Bel    t       -\nHargal Oil  IS*\nHome OU      106\nInter Coal _..      -20\nIsland Mount     L15\nJKoot Belle 80\nMak Siccar   02%\n.11\n1.85\n1.45\n.12\nAsk\n.17V.\n.10\n.52\n8.55\n.20\n.OCA\n.12\n1.87\n1.48\n14.50\n.09\n.13\n.16\n.14\n1.10\n.22\n1.20\n.85\n.03\n.10%\n.25\n.27\n.29\n.02%\n7.50\n.00%\n.01\n1.30\nMV,\n.10\n.03 V,\n.92\nFederal Gold\nFreehold Oil ..\nM;Dougal Seg Ex      .10\nMtLeod Oil (New)      .02\nJfinto Gold        -M\nModel Oil -28\nMorning Star G ....      .02%\nPioneer Gold     7.30\nPrem Border ...      -00%\nQuatsino Copper ..      .01%\nKsho Gold L29\nSteves MacDonald      .05\n\u25a0felly Mines           -08\nSalmon Gold        ,09\nSheep Creek      .00\n. Spooner Oil 12\n! Taylor Bridge          .07 -\nI Vanalta Limited 06 .08\n(\u2022Vidette Gold      1.32        1.40\n' Wayside Gold ..?....      .09 .09%\nCURB8\nAlexandria Gold ..      \u2014 -05\nAnaconda Oil        .06 .08%\nBaltac Oil              -03        -04*\nBayview Mining....      \u2014 WI*\nBeaver Silver 01%      .02\nB C Nickel ..     -      .36 .37\nCanadian Rand       .04%      .05\nCalmont Oil         .22%     33\nCapital Estate     8.10       8.15\nCap Est Warr     3.23 -\nCongress Gold 09 .09%\nCork Province .....      \u2014        ,00%\nCrows Nest Oils...      .10 -\n.Dalhousie Oils        .67 .70\nDevenish Oils    .03%      .04\nDictator Gold        .02%      .03\nDunwell Mining 03 .03%\nEast Crest Oil 07 .10\nFairview Amal ....      .08%\nfawn Mining       .65\n.04\nx>:%\nGeo Copper      18\nGlacier Creek \t\nGolconda Lead\t\nGold Mountain\t\nGeo Enterprise\t\nGeo River\nGrand Oro\nGrandview Mines\nGrange Mines   \t\nGruU Wihksne ....\nHaida GoM     \t\nHedley Amal\t\nHedley Start\nHighwood Sarcee\nHome Gold\nIndian Mines\t\nInter Gold    \t\nKootenay Flo\t\nKoolenay King       ff.-Vt\nMadison Oil       .02%\nMar Jon Oil _      .16\nMercury Oil  11%\nMeridian Min        .-\nMerland Oil  _      .18\nMill City        10%\nMorton Wolsey       .00%\nM\".rmot Metals      .00%\nNicola Mines l!%\nNoble Five _      .02%\nNordon   12\nOkalta        .28%\n.01\n.0.'%\n.11\nJOSH\n.01%\n.07\n.02%\n.02\n.12\n.17%\n.11\n.03\n.01%\n.00%\nPacc'.ta\nPend Oreille\t\nPilot Gold\nPorter Idaho \t\nQuesnelle Q \t\nRanchmen's\t\nReliance       \t\nRelief Arlington\nRewerd Mining ..\nRoyalite\t\nRufus Argenta ....\nSilvercrest\nSilverado Con\t\nSilversmith\nSouthwest Pet ....\nStandard Silver ..\nTaylor Windfall..\nU D L\n.06\n.82\nMVt\n.10\n.37\n.03\n,39\n.03%\n30.00\n.01\n.02\n.01\n.20\n.38\n.60\nUnited Empire       .01%\nUnited Oil\nViking Gold\t\nVulcan Oil     \t\nWaterloo Mines .\nWaverley Tang...\nI Wellington\t\n*.0C%  Wesko M\n.70    ' Ymir Ysnk Girl.\n.07%\n.01%\n.75\n.01%\n.00%\n.00%\n.25\n.41\n.04%\n.09%\n.25\n.10%\n.13\n.03\n.01%\n.03\n.02%\n.01%\n.19%\n.03\n.12\n.03%\n.02\n.08\n.00%\n.02%\n.19\n.12%\n.02\n.22\nw%\n.00%\n.13\n.02%\n.14\n.31\n.03%\n.90\n.04%\n.05\n.11\n.41\n.03%\n.40\nAS\n30.50\n.01%\n.04\n.03\n.01%\n.25\n.42\n.15\n.02%\n.08\n.80\n.00%\n.01\n.26\n.47\ncording to the bureau, was 328,697\nounces and in July 319,505 ounces.\nThe output tn August lut year\namounted to 295,896 ounces.\nWINNIPEG OFF\n1.85 both added a cent. Premier\n\u25a0^ropned 8 at 3.04. Brrlome was\n\u25a0'own 3 at 8.40 and Nicola eased a\nfraction at 12%.\nB\u00bbse metals were quiet B. C\nNickel w-s off 1% at 37 and Golconda lost % at 9%.\nLONDON, OcL 19 (AP)-Closlng;\nBrazilian $16%; Int Nickel \u00a363%;\nCarreras Ord \"A\" \u00a39%; Central\nMining \u00a325; Courtaulds 57s; Crown\nI Mines \u00a315%; De Beers \u00a311%; Dis\nTORONTO, OcL 19 (CP).-Theblg\ninterlisted group dragged today on\nthe Toronto industrial share market\nneutralizing a moderately buoyant\ntone in the domestic listings.\nBrazilian Traction, Ford A, C.P.R,,\nInternational Nickel and the distillery stocks closed, with fractional\nlosses and the index had a setback\nof about halt a point trom Saturday's close.\nConsolidated Smelters pressed forward again to a new high at 68 and\nclosed at 66% for a gain of %. Other\ntraders in heavy volume were Abitibi Common, up % to 3%, Canada\nCement Common, up % to 10%,\nGypsum, up % to 14 and International Petroleum,, up % to 36%.\nPROFITS TAKEN\nAT MONTREAL\nTheir  meetings  will be presided\nover by S. J. Hungerford. The new\nchairman of the board and officers\nand employees representatives will Wagoner\nhave an opportunity also ot meet- Banana _\ning all other memberi ot the new Spy \u2014\nboard ot directors. ', Grimes\t\nThe conference with tha officers E. Sundries\nopened ln the board room at C.N.R.; Spltzenberg\nheadquarters this morning when Mr.; Delicious ._.\nHungerford  presented  the ob]ec-1 Romes\ntives of the management and the\nplans ot the administration. Methods\nof further increasing (eneral efficiency will be brought forward\nby the heads of the various departments ot tbe railway and by the\nregional officers and field forces.\nThis general conference continued\nthroughout the day. Tomorrow the\nofficers will be engaged In a series\not departmental conferences, following which the officers ot each\ndepartment will have an opportunity ot meeting the board ot directors.\nStayman ...\nL. Sundries\nNewton\t\nwnnnPEG, Oct. it (CP)-vmeat\nwas offered for sale' in volume on\nthe Winnipeg grain exchange today,\nand with tew buyers in the market\nearly and late price tumbles in futures wu the result     ...\nValues closed 2-1% cents lower, at tillers 110s 9d; East Geduld \u00a39%;, j\u201e\u2122~ il'.\"' \"'\nvirtually the day's low points, Oc- Ford Ltd. S5s; Hudson Bay 32s 7%d;  \u00a3_\"\"    \u201e\u2122     jl*_\n...._.,  _^_   ....... \u201e\u201e ,,_,   \u201e\u201e M.  Minjn_l rspers  were   late\nMONTREAL, Oct. 19 (CP)-Ute\nprofit taking sent stock market\nprices into retreat late today after\na brisk drive carried more than a\ntober and November at $1.12%, De- Metals Box Ltd. 82s 6d;\ncamber $1.07%-$1.10% and May Trust Ltd. 4s Od; Rand Mines \u00a38%;\n$1.10%-%, Rhodeslan Anglo Am 24s 3d; Rho-\nA lack of foreign demand for kana Corp \u00a310%; Ex-Dividend\nwheat prompted weary holders to Springs 40s.\ndump the wheat they had purchased Bonds\u2014British 2% per cent Const last week's high prices. Forces, sols \u00a385%; British 3% per cent war\nstop-loss selling accelerated the re- loan \u00a3108%; British funding 4s\ncession.                                        ' \"\u25a0\u00bb-\n'1960-90 \u00a3117%.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nAss'd Breweries        9%\nBell Telephone    151\nBrazilian .          16\nB C Power A  _    34%\nBruck Silk     8%\nBuild Prod  .!   49    :\nCanada Bronze _   43%\nCan Car Fdy    10%\nCanada Cement    10%\nCan Cement Pfd   94\nCan Celanese   28%\nCan Ind Al A _     7%\nCan Ind Al B     6\nCan Pac Rail   13%\nCanada Steamers     1%\nCockshutt   _     8%\nCon M te S            66%\nDominion Bridge    49\n110\n72\n10%\n5%\n5%\n7%\n22%\n62%\n4%\nOgilvie\t\nPower Corp\nQuebec\nDominion Glass\nDominion Text\nDryden Paper\nGn St Wares .\nChas Gurd .\nHamilton Br\nImperial Oil ..\nInt Nickel .\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColI Frontenac    14%\nMontreal  Power      83%\nNat Steel Car _ ' 26%\nNat Brewing  \u201e  41\n  232\n - 17\n,___.   20\nShawinigan   24%\nSherwln Wms  _  21%\nSouth Can Power  12\nSteel of Can  70%\nCURBS\nB C Packing _  12%\nBrew & Dist        %\nB A Oil   23%\nCan Dredge  45%\nCan Malting  34%\nCan Wineries     2%\nhigh territory,\nfavorites with\ngains of a point or so.\nBrisk bidding drove Noranda to\n66%, up a point. Smelters held a\n% gain at 66%. National Steel Car\njumped 1% to 26%.\nAt one time up to a new top of 95,\nCanada Cement Preferred closed\ntwo points higher at 94 while the\ncommon held a point gain.\nSteady selling brought fractional\nlosses for Montreal Power, Brazilian\nB. C. Power, Canada Northern Power and Southern Canada Power. Canadian Hydro-Electric firmed a\npoint.\nNEWYORKSHAKY\nCookers\nDuchess\nWe-lthy\nMcintosh\nJonathan\nWagener\n,_   _ Banana\nThe chMraian and dlrectorswtll'Spy \t\nalso meet the Canadian Nationali Grimes\nemployees who act u representatives of the organization groups of\nthe workers on the system.\nEmployees' representatives, officers of the railway and members ot\nthe board wilt meet at luncheon In\nthe Windsor hotel at noon tomorrow.\nIt will be a family gathering at\nwhich employees and management\ncooperation will ba stressed by the\nspeakers.\nCookers -\nWealthy _\nMcintosh .\nJonathan\nWegener\nBanana _\nSpy\nI, Sundries.\nSpltzenberg\nDelicious \u2014\nRoipes \u2014\nStayman\nL.. Sundries.\nWlnesap\nNewton ,\nDom Stores ....\nFord Can A ....\nIntl Petrol\nMitchell Robt\nPrice Bros    ....\nPage Hersey .\nBANKS\nCanada\n11\n24%\n36%\n12\n1\u00bb\n97%\n58\nCanadien  140\nCommerce  - 162\nDominion 201\nImperial  201\nMontreal     204\nNova Scotia    285\nRoyal  184%\nToronto  _ 223\nToronto Stock Quotations\nI       Quotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAllied Chemical 235\nAmerican Can.. 126\nAmer For.Pow    7%\nAm Mach le F.  23%\nAm Smel tc Rf  93\nAm Telephone.. 180%\n. 101%\n47%\n84%\n3-'.*,\n5%\n6%\n25%\n31%\nAm Tobacco\nAnaconda \t\nAtchison  .\nAubum Motora\nAviation Corp....\nBaldwin   ...\"\t\nBait it Ohio ....\nBendx Aviation\nBeth Steel     76\nCanada Dry .... 14%\nCanadian Paclf 13%\nCerro de Pasco 60%\nChes tt Ohio ....  .76%\nChrysler  130%\nCon Gas NY...   45%\nCorn Prods    73\nC Wright pfd....    6%\nDupont   168\nEast Kodak  176\nEl Pow & Lt...   15%\nErie       17%\nFord English .... 8%\nFord of Canada 24%\nFirst Nat Stores\nFreeport Texas\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral Foods..\nGeneral Motors\nGold Dust\t\nGoodrich  _____\nGranby \t\nGreat North ofd\nGreat West Sug\nHowe Sound    34%\nHudson Motors..   21%\n\u25a0 Inter Nickel   62%\nInter Tel tc Tel 13%\nJewel Tea    87%\n52%\n26 %\n48%\n41%\n73%\n14%\n26*\n3%\n46%\n36\nLow\n235\n124\n7\n23\n91s',\n179%\n101%\n46%\n83%\n3\",\n5\n\u00ab%\u25a0\n24%\n31%\n74%\n18%\n13%\n69%\n75%\n128%\n44%\n71%\n6%\n167\n175%\n14%\n17\n8%\n24%\n51%\n25%\n48%\n40%\n72%\n14*>\u00ab\n24%\n3%\n45%\n36\n53%\n20%\n62%\n12%\n87%\nClose Kresge S S\n235     Kroegger Groc.  23\n125     Mack Truck    47%\n7     Milwaukee pfd..    2\n23     Mont Ward    57%\n92     Nash Motors ....   19%\n179% Nat Dairy Prod   26\n101%  N Power tc Lt.   12%\n47% NY Central    46%\n83% Pacific Gas As El .38%\n3\"', I Packard Motors  13\n5%'PennRR    45\n6% Phillips Pete ... 45%\n24% Pure Oil   11%\n31% Radio Corp     11%\n75% Radio Keith Or    8%\n19% I Rem Rand     28%\n13%'Safeway Stores  39\n59% Shell Union\t\n76% 1S Cal Edison ....\n128% South Psciflc \u201e\n45% I Stan Oil of Cal\n72%' Stan Oil of Ind\n6% \u25a0 Stan Oil of N J\n167%\n176\n14%\n17%\nStewart Wamer\nStudebnker ......\nTexas Corn   44%\nTexu Gulf Sul   36%\n25%\n32%\n46%\n38%\n39%\n65%\n21%\n15%\n8% j Tlmken Roller.. 61%\n24% i Underwood T .. 83%\n51% Union Carbide.. 100%\n26 , Union Oil Cal... 22%\n49 {United Aircraft 25%\n40% United Biscuit . 28%\n73% Union Pacific... 1-5%\n14% U S Pine    56%\n25% U S Rubber __  37%\n% . U S Steel :...   79%\n45% Vanadium Steel   24%\n36     Warner Bros ...   14%\n54%  West Electric .. 138\n21% I Western Union.   86%\n62% Woolworth     \u00ab\u00ab\n12% I Writ-ley     69\n87%'Yellow Truck...   19%\n27%\n22%\n47\n2\n57%\n18%\n23%\n12\n48%\n37%\n12%\n44%\n44%\n17%\n10%\n8\n22%\n37%\n24%\n31%\n46\nSIS\n64%\n21%\n15%\n42%\n36\n67%\n82\n99%\n22%\n24%\n27%\n145%\n55%\n37%\n78%\n24\n14%\nl.W.\n88%\n61%\n69\n19\n27%\n22%\n47%\n2\n57%\n18%\n26\n12\n48%\n37%\n12%\n44%\n43%\n18\n10%\n8%\n23\n38\n23%\n31%\n46\nBan-field ....  -\u2022\nBarry HoUinger.\nBase Metals\t\nBig Missouri .._\nBobjo\n1.20\n.05\n.30\n.51\n36%\n850\n10.12\nBralorne -\t\nBut Ankerite \t\nCan Malartic      1.40\nCariboo Oold . ' \u00b0\"\nCastle Treth ...\nCentral Man _.\nCentral Pat\nChibougamou ....\nCout Copper \u2014\nConarium \u00ab...\nCons M te S \u2014-\nDome \u2022\nDom Explor ...\u2014\nEldorado -\nFalconbridge \u2014\nGod's Lake\t\nGold Belt -\nCranada  \u2014\nHardrock \t\nHolllnger\t\nHowey  ...  -\nHudson Bay\n1.85\n  no\n     .21\n_    3.80\n    1.67\n    3.85-\n ,   1.75\n 67.00\n 52.62\n _    MV,\n    1.85\n,_  10.87\n 77\n  15%\n     .31%\n    2.62\n 13.62\nSan Antonio \u2014\nSheep Creek \u2014\nSherr Gordon \u2014\nSiscoe     \t\nSmelter 0 \t\nStadacona \t\nSt. Anthony\t\nSud Basin    \t\nSullivan \t\nTeck Hughes .....\nTobum\t\nTowagamac\t\nTredawell  \t\nVentures\nWinnipeg Grain\nOpen High\nLow Close\nWheat:\nOct ...\n114      114%\n112%  112%\nNov.    ,\n114%   114%\n112%   112%\n111%   111%\n109%   110%\nMay\n112%   112%\n110%   110%\nOats:\nOct \t\n44%* 44%\n43%   43%\nNov.\n44%    44%\n43%    43%\nDec.\n44%    44%\n43%    43%\nMay . \u201e\nBarley\n45%    45%\n44%    44%\nOct\t\n60        60%\n59%    59%\nNov.\n60%    (0%\n59%    59%\nDec.\n59%    59%\n56      58\nMay   ..\n59%    59%\n57%    58\nFlax:\nOct ....\n161      161%\n160%   161%\nDec . \u201e\n161%   162\n161%   161%\nMay\t\nRye:\nOct\n165%   165%\n163%   164%\n71%    71%\n70%    70%\nNov.\n71%    71%\n70%    70%\nNov... .-\n71%    71%\n70%    70%\nDec,\n69%    69%\n68%    68%\nMay\t\n70%    70%\n68%    69%\nCash wheat: No. 1 hard 114%; No.\n1 Nor. and track 112V\n; No. 2 Nor.\n111: No\nS Nor. 107%\n; No. 4 Nor\n105%! Nos.5 wheal and 1 AJtW\nGrimes .__...\n__ sundries\nSpltzenberg\nDelicious\t\nRomes .\nIi. Sundries.\nWlnesap ......\nNewton ___\ntlmate  Do. Ship.  Ex. Ship,  Tot. Ship.\nUnsold\n1,023\n1,023\n\u2014\n1,023\n. \u2014\n40\n40\n\u2014\n40\n\u2014\n3,200\n2,098\n\u2014\n2,098\n1,102\n8,917\n1,168\n2,192\n3,360\n5,557\n11,800\n80\n692\n772\n11,026\n10,060\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n10,000\n1,000\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n1,000\n11,000\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n11,000\n700\n132\n\u2014\n132\n568\n10,855\n3,449\n116\n3,565\n7,290\n1,600\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n1,600\n.,000\n103\n\u2014\n103\n1,897\n3,000\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n3,000\n300\n\u2014.\n\u2014\n\u2014\n300\n1,200\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n1,200\n3,100\n\u2014\n\u2014\n-\"\n8,100\n69,733\n8,093\n8,000\n11,093\n58,642\nIISTON\nAND DISTRICT\n4,938\n4,938\n\u2014\n4,938\n\u2014\n1,228\n1,228\n\u2014\n1,228\n\u2014\n23,645\n21,009\n1,512\n22,521\n1,124\n88.142\n37,075\n17,388\n54,463\n33,879\n10,150\n70\n756\n826\n9,314\n2,600\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n2,600\n800\n379\n\u2014\n379\n421\n3,000\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n3,000\n1,000\n117\n__\n117\n883\n5,900\n961\n1,512\n2,473\n3,427\n600\n\u2014\n__\n\u2014\n600\n18,500\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n16,500\n2,200\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n2,200\n650\n\u2014\n-_\n\u2014\n650\n3,000\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n3,000\n700\n\u2014\n_\n\u2014\n700\n100\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n100\n165,153\n65,777\n31,168\n86,945\n78,200\nRAND CORKS DISTRICT\n747\n747\n\u00ab_\u00bb'\n747\nIM\n3,060\n2,808\n\u2014\n2,806\n244\n32,548\n12,398\n2,780\n16,178\n16,370\n2,253\n74\n\u2014\n74\n2,179\n582\n82\n__\n82\n500\n25\n20\n\u2014.\n20\n5\n380\n1\n__\n1\n329\n820\n__\n_\n\u2022k\u2014\n.820\n2,124\n1,962\n\u2014\n1,952\n172\n15\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\u2014\n18\n.    5,080\n100\n\u2014\n100\n4,980\n330\n20\n__\n20\n310\n.    1,670\n\u2014\n__\n\u2014\n1,670\n600\nmm-\n_*\n\u00ab_-\nw>\n14\n14\n__\n14\n0,088        18,214 3,780       21,994       28,094\nUNITED KINGDOM IS CANADA'S\nBEST CUSTOMER, FIGURES SHOW\n.-   _ 1.75\n     .63\n __ 1.87\n...... 4.40\n     .07%\n     .63\n _    .19\n........ 5.45 '\n  2.99\n  5.75\n  3.->5\n....._    .79\n     Xt\n _ 155\nWaite Amulet  1.76\nWayside -    .09%\nWhite Eagle\t\nWrieht Hargreaves\nOILS\nAJax     \t\nB. A. Oil\t\nC. 6t E. Corp\t\nChem Research .\nNEW YORK, 0-t 19 UP).-Buy-\ning in the oils lubricated an early\n-dvancc ln today's stock market but\nlater selling in other departments\nbrought a generally shaky close.\nMost business news wu cheering\nto recovery proponents, although\nday-to-day traders seemed inclined\nto step out ot some ot their commitments on the theory the recent\nlengthy advance called for a corrective reaction.      '\nThe Associated Preu average of\n60 stocks was off _2 est a points at\n71.5. Transfers totalled 1,888,130\nshares against 2,050,600 last Friday.\nOf 944 issues changing hands 427\ndeclined, 334 advanced and 163 were\nunchanged.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Oct 116 (AP)-Cop-\nper quiet; electrolytic spot and future- 9.75;-:export liXUVk:\nTin' firmer; spot and * nearby\n45.12%; future 44.85.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.60\n70 Eut St. Louis 4.46-50.\nJ25S fS! KaSt * UUi> ,POt mAI WiK\"mHaidrsLMoVHedley Amal\nvZZuZ:\u2122Vns,\u00a3\u00a3\\o\u00a3V MM Oreille 500, Quesnelle Q 400,\nPennsylvania 20.50; Buffalo 19.30; Al- Rul   Arg m Rdl,nw m -Jnlt(,d\nUnited States Buys the\n\u2022    Next Largest\nAmount\n102%; No. e 94%; teed 12%; No. 1\nGarnet 107%; No. 2 Garnet 106%'\nNo. 1 Durum 130%; No. 4 special\n99%; No. 5 soeclal 93%; No. 6 special\n89%; screenings $10 per ton.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Oct 19 (CP) -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today;\nListed: Big Miss 40, Bralorne te,\nBr Con 6000, B R X 2800, Cariboo\n1150, Koot Belle 600, Mak Siccar\n1000, Morning Star 1000, Minto 1000,\nPioneer 2375, Premier Bord 10,000,\nPremier Gold 1310, Reno 250, Sally\n1000, Sheep Creek 5300, Taylor Br\n2000, Vidette 150.\n' Curb: B C Nickel 2260, Can Rand\n. 4000, Cap Est 150, Congress 16,600,\nI Fawn 400, Fairview '6067, Federal\n. 1500, Geo River 1000, Golconda 2000,\nGrange 2000; Old Moubt 1000, Grull\n36% Inter Nickel\n89% J M Con.\n66%\n21%\n15%\n44\n36%\n67%\n82\n100\n22%\n25\n26%\n14.1%\n55%\n37%\n79%\n24\n14%\n152%\n88%\n62\n. 30.00\n. 62.25\n19%\nKlrkland L \u2014 -\nLake Maron  -\t\nLakeshore \u2014\nLittle Long Lac.....\nMacassa \t\nMaple Leal\t\nMalrtblc\t\nMcLeod Cockshutt .\nMclntyre -\nMcK R L Gold\t\nMcVlttle Or    ..\u2014\nMcWatter Gold ...\nMining Corp \t\nNipissing\t\nNoranda  \u2014-\nParkhill     \t\nPaymrster  _\nPend Oreille\t\nPlekel Crow \u2014\nPioneer ...  \t\nPremier Gold\t\nReno _\t\n.50\n. .64\n, .10%\n.55.00\n, 6.20\n. 5.00\n. it\n. .03%\n. 4.16\n.29.50\n. 1.80\n. .10%\n. 1.26\n. 2.24\n. 244\n.6900\n. .26\n. 1.10\n. .84\n. 8.45\n.. 7.35\n\u201e 3.08\n..   1.31\n.03%\n 41%\n 23.-0\n    1.45\n._ _   1.05\nDalhousie 67\nHone     1.05\nImperial 22 50\nInter Pete 36.87\nMerland 15\nNordon  12%\nRoyalite  30.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros 11\nBell Telephone    11%\nBrazilian     ....    _    16\nBrew tc Dist        %\nCan Bread      6%\nCen C-r tc Fdy     10\nCan Cement      10%\nabama 15.50.\nAluminum 19.00-22.00.\nBar silver quiet and unchanged\nat 44%.. -   ,\nAt London\u2014Closing:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a341 8s 2d;\nfuture \u00a341 13s 9d; electrolytic, spot,\nbid \u00a345 10s: asked \u00a346.\nTin, spot \u00a3202 10s; future \u00a3200 5s,\nLead, spot \u00a318 10s; future \u00a318\n8s 9<L\nEmp 6000, Waverley 10,000, Wesko\n1900, Ymir Y Girl 550,\nEastern Sain\nTORONTO, Oct-16.-(CP).-Sales\not 100 or more shares on tha Toronto  stock  exchange,-industrial\nsection, today: 8265' Atttlbir 1500\ntiZ     :_a ..\/.\u00bb. .a . .      m.. I Bsas-lian; 1235 Br Sc Dist; 400 Brew\nZinc, spot \u00a314 17s 6d; future.\u00a315 corp; 176 Bldg Prod|_385 Can Bread;\nOTTAWA, Oct 19 (CP)-The Dominion bureau ot statistics today\nreported the United Kingdom wu\nCanada's best customer in September, increasing by more than 45 per\ncent its purchases from thia country ln comparison with those of\nSeptember, 1935.\nThe spurt in British buying dropped the United States into second\nplace among this nation's customers, reversing the positions they\nheld in September a year before.\nThe United Kingdom's purchases\not Canadian goods were worth $37,-\n164,971, an Increase of $11,627,649\nwhile those ot the United States at\n(35,120,686 were $3,482,600 lower\nthan in September a year before,\na decrease of nine per cant\nExports to the British Empire aa\nwhole showed a gain of 37 per\ncent ot $11,988,014 j at $44,202,183\nwhile those to foreign countries\nwere slightly-lower at $44,691,994\ncompared with $45,044,444,       .   \".\nThe nation's total exports were\nworth - $88,894,179 compared with\n$77,258,615 up-15 per cent.\nM01*r_tJ__Vt, Oct 16 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London up ona cent at $34.78\nan ounce In Canadian funds; 142s\n4%d in British funds. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $34.69\nin Canadian.\nOutput of Silver\nin Canada Is Up\nThe Canadian production ot silver\nin July was higher than both the\nprevious month and the same month\nlast year. Production amounted to\n1,795,927 ounces as compared with\n1,-356,683 in June and 1,183.821) in\nJuly last year. An advance of 14.1\nper cent wu shown in the first\nseven months as compared with the\nsame period of 1933. The totals\nwere 10,242,306 ounces and 8,978,460.\nSilver quotationa on the New York\nmarket in July averaged 44.79475\ncents per ounce in Canadian funds,\nat which price the production in\nthe latest month was worth $804,481.\nTotal world production during\nJuly fell to 19,872,000 fine ounces\nfrom 21,364,000 In the previous\nmonth. Three of the four principal\nsilver producing countries recorded\ndecreases. Production follows, with\n'June, figures in brackets: Mexico\n6,457,000 (7,157,000) fine ounces,\nUnited States 4.616,000 (5,293.00),\nCanada  1,796,000   (1,657,000), Peru\n1,392,000, iijsto\/m..\nExchanges\nMONTRIAL, bct.\".19iCP)4-Brit-\nish and foreign  exchange closed\neasier today,     ,'',.',,\nArgentina,, peso ...-..___-....< 2783\nAustralia, pound 3.9022\nIndia, rupee ....:...._...\u2014;-....-..__  .8700\nJapan, yen ....   .!.......'....._,  .2858\nNew Zealand, pound  8.5338\nCan Dred.c\nCan Malting\nC. P. R.\nCons Smelters ..  ....\nDom Brid\u00abe \t\nDom stores     ......\nDist Seagrams    ..._..  _\nFord Canada A  \u25a0\t\nGoodyear Tire\t\nHiram Walker      4W<-\nLoblaw A     21%\nMassey Harris -\t\nSteel of Canada\t\n46%\n84%\nIV,\n6.',i\n49\n11\n21%\n24%\n84\n3s 9d.\nBar silver euler1, 1-16 lower to\n19%d.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal \u2014 Pound 4.88 21-32;\nUS dir .99 31-32; franc 4.63.\nAt New York-Pound 4.98%; Cdn\ndir 1.00 1-32; franc 4.65%.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 104.96 fr; US dir\n21.49 fr; Cdn dir 21.49 fr.\nIn gold\u2014Pound lis lid; US dir\n59.41 cents; Cdn dir 59.43 cents.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19 (CP).-Ster\nlinf? exchange easy at S4.87% for 60-\ndc.v bills and at $4.88% for demand.\nCanadian dollars 1-32 premium,\nFr-nce \".65% cents.\nItaly 5.26% cents.\nUru'-iry 80.00 cents,\nDividends\nQuebec Power comoany, 26 cents,\n4% i prvable Noven*ber 16 to sharehold-\n70    ' era on record October 27.\nCan Cem; 480 Can Ind Al; 200\nCan Oil; 1222 C P R; 265 Cockshutt;\n1298 Con Smelt; 1205 D C Seag; 633\nDom Stores; 457 Ford A; 300 Imp\nTob; 1591 Nickel; 220 M Harris; 925\nUnited Stl; 760 H Walker.\nMONTREAL, Oct. )9 (CP) .-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Montreal stock exchange today. 905 Bra-\nzlllan; 375 B C Pow; 295 Build Prod;\n5933 Can Cem; 885 Cdn Car; 875\nAlcohol A: 880 C P R; 2730 Smelters;\n395 Dom Bridge; 1030 Imp Tob; 998\nNickel; 1028 Lake Wds; 145 Mnssey:\n1466 N Brew; 1250 N SU Car; 6290\nSteel C P; 2560 Shawinlgan.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Oet 19 (CP) \u2014\nVancouver wheat and cash- prlcu:\nStraight Tought\nNo. 1 hard .111%      H\u00bb%\nNo. 1 nor.....: .._._ 110%\nNo. 2 nor. 109\nNo. 8 nor. - 103%\nNo. 4.      104%\nNo. 5 wheat 100%\nNo. 6 wheat   92\nFeed    86\n108%\n107\n102%\n101%\n97%\nThe\n\u25a0 P7\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL-BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertilixers\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OP\nTadanac Brand Metals\nCOLD SILVER\nLEAD\nILBCTROLYTIC\nZINC CADMIUM\nBISMUTH\n.-  . ._. .\n PARE TEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO, OCTOBER 20, 1*M\nBULBS\nCrocus, per 100 .. $3.00\nDaffodils, double,\nper doxen  50^\nBlue Scilla, dozen .. 50**;\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\n(ANADA TALKS\nTO SCOTLAND\nOTTAWA, Oct. 19 (CP)-A speech\ndelivered in Ottawa to an audience\nln Edinburgh was a contribution\nmade today to the campaign In progress to stimulate in United Kingdom purchases of Canadian goods.\nDefence Minister MacKenzie was\nthe speaker, his hearers an assembly\nof Scottish business men gathered\nat a luncheon presided over by Lord\nProvost L. S. Gumley of Edinburgh.\nThe transmission medium was telephone and beam wireless.\nMOHAWK\nCrow's Nest Pass\nCOAL\nHOTTEST .,. BRIGHTEST\nBEST COAL\nProduced in This\nDistrict\nLump $9.50 per Ton\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nAROUND WORLD\nINlo'\/iDAYS\nReporter Does 24,720\nMiles by Air\nNEW YORK, Oct. 19 (AP).-H. R.\nEkins, reporter for the New Yprk\nWorld-Telegram, arrived here today\ncompleting a trip around the world\nin about 18*A days\u2014the second fastest time ever recorded for the\ncircuit.\nHe made the trip entirely by aircraft, except for automobile trips to\nand from airports. *\nElklns' time\u2014officially announced\naa 18 days, 14 hours and 56 minutes-\nhas been bettered only by the late\nWiley Post on a solo flight in 1933.\nHe flew a shorter course to the north\nIn seven days, 18 hours, 49 minutes.\nElkins' distance for the entire trip\nwas estimated at 24,720 miles.\nMORE ABOUT\nJAPAN AIRPLANS\n(Continued From Page One)\nEmulates Our\nAncestors\nThey stretch out about 1300 miles\nfrom north to south and about 2700\nmiles from east to west.\nExperts declare such a system\nwould necessitate extensive construction of airdromes and bases.\nThe Japanese asserted the undertaking was \"to promote efficiency of administration and assist industrial and social activities\nof the inhabitants.\"\nThe report described existing communications with the islands, by\nsubsidized steamship service, as\n\"unsatisfactory\". The Marianne Islands, nearest of the Mandates are\n1600 miles from Japan.\nThe airlines, the report maintained, would be used to convey official documents and-air mail and\nmake scientific studies to benefit\nfishermen, and would provide a\nsubstitute in the event steamship\nservice was disrupted \"through accidents\" or other causes.\nAUCTION SALE\nWednesday, Oct. 21st, Eagle Block, 2 P.M.\nFavored with instructions from Finks Ltd., 1 will offer the following new and second hand goods: Chair Seats, Steel Door Mats,\nLinoleum, Linoleum Rugs. Kitchen Cabinet, Curtain Panels, Bridge\nLamps and Shades, Mirrors, Pictures, Walnut Dinette Suite, Wardrobe green-Dinette Suite. ChildsCrib Chesterfield Suite, all the foregoing new goods, second hand goods are Blinds, Racks, Basket,\nCounter, Tables and Chairs, Perambulator, Side Boards, Cider Press,\netc., etc.\nTerms: CASH. G. HORSTEAD,\nGood on View Morning of Sale. Auctioneer.\nA Cordial Invitation\nIs Extended to the\nCITIZENS OF NELSON AND DISTRICT\nto Attend the\nPublic Reception\nfor the Most Reverend\nMartin Michael Johnson, D.D.\nFirst Bishop of the Newly Created Diocese of Nelson\n. CIVIC CENTRE\nAUDITORIUM\nFriday, Oct. 23 rd\n8:00 P.M,\n%m\n. \u2666. does your\nhome have it?\nSimplicity and greater\nconvenience come with\ncorrect equipment . . .\nwith the little things that\nmake the work center of\nthe home so much more\npleasant!\nThis equipment is not expensive when you select\nit at Wood Vallance.\nAnd you're always sure to\nfind just the gadgets you\nneed in the housewares\nsection of this complete\nstore! Come in and learn\nhow reasonably you can\nown an efficiently simple\nkitchen.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nNelson, B. C.\nIan Currie wasn't walking up this\nfamily cherry tree when snapped,\nthough he looked like it, but was\nmerely hanging restfully. The picture was taken In H. H. Currie's\nback yard in Nelson.\u2014Staff Photo.\nOAKLAND IS IN,\nSPOKANE IS OUT\nOAKLAND, Calif., Oct. 19 (API-\nOakland entered the Poclfic coast\nprofessional ice hockey league today.\nDick Munder, secretary of the\nnewly:formed Oakland club, an\nnounced that agreements had been\nreached with Don Allen jr., attorney for the Oakland ice arena, for\nexercise of the fourth franchise in\nthe coast circuit, first held by Spokane. \/\nThe other clubs in the league are\nVancouver, B.C., Seattle and port-\nland.\nREFUSE PASS ON\nDEAL LAWS\nNEW\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 19 (API-\nSustaining government requests, the\nsupreme court refused today to pass\non disputes challenging the constitutionality of three new deal laws.\nLegislation involved was the 1933\nsecurities act requiring registration\nof stocks before public sale and provisions of the national industrial\nrecovery act and the J935 emergency\nrelief-measure authorizing government loans and grants for publicly-\nowned electric plants.\nBig Companies Go\nInto Alaska Field\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, Oct. 19\n(AP).-The big talk today in \"Unci,\nSam's attic\" was about the. entrance\nof two major United States mining\ncompanies into the vast Interior gold\nfields.\nAmerican Smelting tc Refining\ncompany secured control of 50 gold\nquartz claims near Fairbanks and\nthe United States Smelting, Refin-\ninf tc Mining company purchased\nIhe famous Big Eldorado creek, one\nof the largest placer gold creeks in\nthe world.\nThe companies announced plans\nto begin winter operations immediately.\nThe new wool coat has an entirely different silhouette. It swings\nout to a tremendous hem, and its\nshoulders are widened enough to\nemphasize the nipped waistline.\nOIL FROM COAL IS\nMANCHUPLAN\n'   '\u2014r\u2014\nMUKDEN, Manchoukuo, Oct. 19\n(AP).\u2014Manchoukuo, long on coal\nbut short on oil, is to have two\n'liquefaction of coal\" plants in operation next year.\nThe South Manchuria railway,\nspearhead of Japanese advances on\nthe Asiatic mainland, has begun\nerection ot a plant in Fushun, adjacent to the world-famous open-cut\nmines. The railroad, owned in part\nby the Japanese government\nlaunched its project after long experimentation and a study of the\nwork done by the Japanese navy.\nSoft coal is used. It ls broken\ndown by the so-called \"low temperature process\" into its components,\nyielding to the ton: three-quarters\nof a ton of semi-coke, 25 gallons of\ntar, 2.5 gallons of light oil, a small\namount of ammonia and other products. The tar and oil are refined\ninto gasoline.\nSLAYER'S NAME\nGIVEN POLICE\nTrail's Veteran\nStation Agent\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19 (CP). \u2014\nThe Vancouver police criminal investigation department today announced two Chinese and one white\nman had given them the name of\nthe alleged slayer of Quon Quan,\nChinese police informer who was\nshot down here Thursday night.\nWhereabouts of the man, whose\nname was withheld by police was\nnot known, however, and no warrant had been issued for his arrest\nThe search had extended to cities\noutside Vancouver and Saturday\nDetective E. Morris was sent to Victoria in connection with the case,\nPREMIER KING AT\nCANADA CLUB\nLONDON, Oct. 19 (CP Cable) -\nPrime Minister MacKenzie King to\nnir;ht attended a dinner at the Canada club in honor of Sir Percy Vincent, Lord Mayor of London. Sir\nCampbell Stuart, a native of Mon\ntreal, presided.\nAfter repeated calls for a speech,\nMr. King expressed the privilege of\njoining in the tribute to the lord\nmayor, who recently returned from\na visit to Canada.\nThe toast to the lord mayor was\nsupported by Hon. Vincent Massey,\nCanadian high commissioner to the\nUnited Kingdom. Other sneakers\nincluded Mayor G. G. McGeer of\nVancouver.\nMORE ABOUT\n(reslon Packing\n(Continued From Page One)\nThe export demand at f.o.b. Cres\nton prices still continues good. This\nweek H. Healey of a well known\nold country distributing firm, has\nbeen here and is immensely pleased\nwith the Mcintosh he has been able\nto secure at Creston. He has no\nhesitation in saying they are much\nsuperior to the purchases he had\nmade in the Okanagan this season.\nTrucking situation is well in hand,\nwith fewer in operation since effective control measures were applied\nlate in September. In connection\nwith this style of transport local\npacking sheds have made considerable use of it for transport as far\nas Medicine Hat, for less than carload lots, or for shipments the railroad would, not accept due to rather\nstrict classification regulations enforced by the railways.\nMORE ABOUT\nVivian MacMillan\n(Continued From Page One)\nJames E. Carter as he looked ono\nmorning on the station platform at\nTrail. He became C.P.R. agent at\nTrail in 1915, and has held down\nthat position for 21 years. Needless\nto say his Job is much more onerous\nthan when he took it.\u2014Staff Photo.\nMORE ABOUT\n(ANADA IN WAR\n(Continued From Page One)\nour share to solution of interna\ntional problems.\"\nDescribing himself as \"free for\nyears from any party affiliation\"\nthe Independent Liberal expressed\nsupport of the stand by Premier\nKing before the League of Nations.\n\"These, of course, are not his\nwords,\" said Mr. Bourassa of the\nprime minister, \"but he made quite\nclear to the league that Canada was\nnot prepared to go to war at the\nbeck and call of anyone. That is\nquite right. But again I tell you, we\nmust not wait until the last moment\nto make our decision as to when\nwe are going to go to war.\"\nIn his youth when Canada was\nsending \"hundreds of men to South\nAfrica to despoil those two Dt*.tch\nrepublics, and all units of the British Empire were called together to\nsatisfy a few profiteers and the\npolitical aspirations of Joseph\nChamberlain and Cecil Rhodes,\" Mr.\nBourassa said he could not help\npicturing the time when the Dominion would be sending \"thousands\nand thousands of men to unite\nagainst France, or Russia or Germany.\"\nMomentarily the speaker hesitated, stroking his white, pointed beard.\n\". . . and that prediction came\ntrue, very true.\"\nPETROL TANKS\nEXPLODE\nQUEBEC, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014(Tuesday)\u2014Three petrol tanks of the\nImperial Oil Company Limited\nexploded early today In the west\nend of Quebec City. Police and\nfiremen raced to the scene and\npolice said they were checking a\nreport one man had been killed.\nThe Musical Treat of the Season\n7\nTHE FAMOUS VANCOUVER\nKITSILANO BOYS' BAND\nat\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nWednesday, October 21st,\nTwo Performances Two Performances\n2:30 AND 8 P.M. Doors Open 2 and 7:30 2:30 ANO 8 P.M.\nAdmission 75c Children (16 and under) 25c\nSPONSORED BY THE NELSON BOYS' BAND AND THE BUCLE BAND\n=\n:\ni i\nThe MacMillan case la based on\nan Alberta statute which gives a\nwoman the right to sue ln her own\nright for seduction, thus modifying\nthe old common law under which\nthe woman's employer or father\nalone could sue on the ground ot\nloss oi the woman's services through\nillness. Passing of the statute, Mr.\nMaclean argued, created a new kind\nof action and proof of loss of service\nor ability to serve was no longer\nnecessary.\nDAMAGE PROVED\"\nMr. Maclean said if proof ot damage' was necessary there was ample\nevidence on which the jury could\nfind damage. The girl was under\nthe influence of Brownlee for 2 1-2\nyears, according to her evidence, and\nduring that time she was continually taking drugs, supplied by him\nThis evidence declared her health\nwas undermined by their association, by the use of drugs, worry\nowing to the necessity of secrecy and\nloss of sleep through being kept out\nat night.\nMr. Smith said there was no satisfactory evidence to.convince, reasonable men that the girl had been\nseduced by Mr. Brownlee. As a last\nresort, he said, he would contend\nthat on the girl's own evidence she\nhad not consented on the night the\njury found she was seduced. Consent was a necessary element. Without consent it was rape.\nN.H.L RULES ARE\n(HANGED\nPenalty for Lingering\nin Defence Area Is\nEliminated\nCalgary jobless\nto Get Relief\nCALGARY, Oct. 19 (CP).-AU\nsingle Jobless men registered in Calgary will be given relief until jobs\nare made available for them under\nthe federal farm relief scheme,\nMayor Andrew Davison announced\ntoday.\nThe mayor said that he had been\nInformed to this effect by C W.\nEady, provincial relief supervisor,\nminister in charge of relief, calling\nattention to the Calgary situation,\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST - PAIR    HORN - RIMMED\nglasses. Kindly phone 88SR. (3161)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n_-_._>_,_._._-._, _._-rnnn-*~-\"~*-*-\nArrew Shirts, In their new fall\npatterns, at JACK BOYCE'S. (3026)\nBadminton racquets restrung. Holland's, opp. Telephone Office. (2987)\nBasketball   meeting,   city   hall.\nWednesday, 7:30 pjn. (3143)\nLittle  Theatre meeting  tonight,\nTuesday, 7 p.m. Urgent business.\n(3154)\nBancroft and Bentley Badminton\nRacquets, $2.60 to $16. THE SPORT\nSHOP. (3132)\nBUGLE BAND\nSpecial Practice Tonight, 7:15\n(3160)\nRebekahs Willi meet at I.O.O.F,\nhall Tuesday, October 20, at 3 p.m,\nto form a district association. (3157)\nRamsden's new shipments of\nLadies' Exclusive Coats are outstanding. (3156)\nNothing nicer than a slice of CHOQUETTE BROS.' Raisin bread with\nyour tea. Phone 258. (2858)\nMon. and Tues. nights free badminton for players and prospective\nplayers. If you have no racquet just\nbring your shoes. (3139)\nATTENTION   ALL   CURLERS.\nGeneral meeting of Nelson curlers iu\ncity hall Tuesday, Oct. 20,8 p.m. Full\nattendance requested. (3123)\nCall 144 for Christmas Cards.\nNelson Dally News.\nSmart, distinctive, exclusive and\ninexpensive are the Nelson Daily\nNews Christmas Cards . . . Phone\n144 for samples or call personally.\n(3155)\nNEW YORK. Oct 18 (AP).-At\nthe N.H.L. meeting today tbe rule\nby which a player suffers a penalty\nfor lingering In the opposing team's\ndefence zone after the play haa been\ntransferred trom that zone .was\neliminated.\nIn an effort to speed up the game\nit was.decided henceforth inten-\ntial offsides would call for a face-\noff 10 feet from the aide of tbe\noffending team's goal-line. This is\nexpected to eliminate the numerous stops caused by deliberately\npassing the puck over a blue line\nto a teammate so that lines can be\nchanged.\nOwing to criticism levelled at\nscorers in some quarters for their\ngenerosity In issuing assists a rule\nwas adopted limiting to two the\nassists on any goal scored. There\nwere occasions last season ln New\nYork when four assists were given\non a single marker.\nIn an effort to arouse more interest in the penalty shot the shooting\ndistance was shortened to 36 feet\ninstead of 38, rule-makers believing\ngoalkeepers have too much advantage at the longer range.\nMORE ABOUT\nSOVIET TO QUIT\n(Continued From Page Ona)\n\"While It is true that the committee had initiated an investigation into these allegations,\" Attlee\nwrote, \"we fear a delay, not wholly\nunavoidable, will enable the policy\nof non-intervention to be still further abused in order tr aid those\nwho are in a rebellion against the\nelected government of Spain.\n\"In view of the increasing gravity\nof the situation, we would ask you\nto consider the immediate summoning of parliament in order that the\nfull position may be made public\nand the house of commons given the\nopportunity to consider how best to\ndeal with it.\"\nA Russian spokesman, commenting on this development, called\nthe non-intervention committee a\n\"farce\" although he declined to\ndisclose whether his government\nwould withdraw from the body.\nREBELS PRESS ON\nTALAVERA, Spain, Oct. 19 (CP)\n\u2014Fascist insurgents tonight hammered spokes of steel down into\nhighroads leading into the hub-\nMadrid.\nOne motorized column rolled\nnortheast from Illcscas, forcing tbe\nretreating government militia back\non Torrejon de la Calzada, only 16\nmiles from the capital.\nAnother fork of the Fascist advance marched speedily up the converging road from Maqueda. Tonight the advance units of this column were in El Alamo, only four\nmiles from the Immediate objective,\nNavalcarnero.\nFascist leaders everywhere were\njubilant, and General Emilio Mola,\nln a broadcast, said his troops would\nbe in Madrid \"within a few days\",\n\"TAXI-CAB ARMY\"\nMADRID, Oct. 19 (AP)-The sorely-pressed government defenders of\nMadrid tonight mobilized a \"taxi-\ncab army\" similar to that employed\nby the French in the first battle\nof the Marne.\nAt the front, the routed government militia fell back on Torrejon de la Calzada, only 16 miles from\nMadrid.\nEvery available man or boy who\ncould aim a rifle was pressed into\nservice as the government utilized\nall resources at its command In an\neffort to stem the Fascist advances.\nThree thousand taxis were lined\nup with drivers assigned to each\nin the event lt is necesasry to augment the lorries and double-decked\nbusses now being used for troop\ntransport.\nCARDOFTHANK8\nWe wish to thank all the people of\nYmir for patronizing our business\nin Ymir.\nMr. and Mrs. W. O. Miller.\n(3149)\nCARDOFTHANK8\nI wish to thank our many friends\nand relatives for their kind expressions of sympathy and beautiful\nfloral offerings, and especially Ven.\nArchdeacon Graham for his consoling words, on the loss of my dear\nwife; and also the Misses Marjorie,\nJosephine and Vivian Landry, who\nnursed her in her nrotracted illness.\nW. B. Bamford.\n(3158)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nThe body of Mrs. Mary A. Mack,\nmother of William Mack, will rest\nin parlors of the Davis Funeral Service until 2 p.m. Wednesday, when\nservices will be held, Rev. W. J.\nSilverwood officiating. (3159)\nWednesday evening, special\ncoach will run, after Kitsilano\nBoys band (about 11 p.m.) to\nCastlegar. If five or more passengers for Trail, will go through.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhon* 800\nNelson  Depot \u2014 205  Baker St.\n(2842i\nStevens Urges a\nCommerce Court\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19 (CP)-A\nchallenge to establish a court of\ncommerce to crush price cutting,\nsecret rebates, mass buying, and\nother unethical practices, was issued today by Hon. H. H. Stevens,\nM.P., for ootenay East in a speech\nbefore the Vancouver board of\ntrade.\nThe former minister of trade and\ncommerce explained that it is quite\npossible for Canadian boards of\ntrade to establish courts of commerce as they are empowered to do\nso under the board of trade act.\nSUEDE\nLEATHER\nJACKETS\n$10.95\nDark green and brown\nsuede jackets. Silk lined.\n' Raglan sleeves with -zipper front. The ideal gar-\nment for sports wear.\nEMORY'S\n*^    Limited\n30 MORE JAILED\nATVANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 19 (CP). \u2014\nAbout 30 more unemployed single\nmen were arrested here today when\nthey appeared on downtown streets\nselling paper flowers.\nTwenty-eight were taken Into custody Saturday. They had been arrested previously and released on\ntheir own recognisance when they\npromised to refrain from their flow*\ner selling campaign.\nEighty-four appeared ln police\ncourt today on similar charges and\nwere remanded to Friday.\nAltogether 271 arrests have been,\nmade since nearly 300 men stormed\nHamilton hall relief depot here last\nTuesday.\nThree Hoop Games at\nTrail Wednesday\nTRAIL, B.C., OcL 19,-Ott to it\npromising start Saturday night, play,\nln city basketball league continues;\nWednesday with a triple bill offered at Memorial hall.\nPats and Bon Tons, intermediate\ndivision teams, meet in the opener, with Buddies and Orioles, girls'\nteams taking the floor for the Second game. Meakin and Colombos\nsupply the nightcap, tangling at V\no'clock.\nCalgary Has Heavy\nFall of Snow\nCalgary, Oct 19 (CP)\u2014Southern\nAlberta, after many days of Indian\nsummer sunshine, was in the snow-\nbelt today. Shortly before noon,\nafter a morning ot light rain, a\nheavy fall of snow started. It soon\ncovered roof-tops and lawns, but,\nwith mild temperatures, melted on\nthe pavements.\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone (55     510 Kootenav Si\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg.\nCOATS\nFOR BOYS AND CIRLS\nAges 2 to 10\nMannish guard modela for\nboys and smart pleated backs\nwith half belts for girls. Some\nwith hats to match.\nTWEEDS, FLECKS.\nCHINCHILLAS and\nPLAIN MATERIALS\n$5.50 to $7.75\nGODFREYS*\nLIMITED\n318 BAKER       PHONE 270\nCAPITOL\nTVWCn\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nComplete Shows\n2:00-7-00-9:17\nz\u00bbm%&i^tscm&ssiSMmi&!\u00bbmsM\nt6GQ$$3&_.\nComing Wednesday and Thursday\nW. C.Fields       j        'Three on\n\"POPPY\" \u00bb a Trail\"\n\u00abj*#\u00ab*mi\u00bb>\u00abs*5s:\ni ii ia ______i_ti_i____\\_k__i_ M it-J-SsJ-\n\t\n\t\n_\n , _____________\n\u2022-<\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_1936_10_20","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0412323","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"}]}}