 m-**™ -em
Castlegar Man
Wins Korea Award
SiTTAWAv (GP)ir-Gallantry in action and plain hard
nder trying conditions won awards- Wednesday for
31 Canadians in the Korean war.
;■..■■'    Among those receiving awards was a Castlegar youth,
Lieut. H. C. Pitts.
Citations accompanying the awards, including four
■Military Crosses and- three Military Medals, reflect: the
hitter stalemate fighting in
the pre-armistice months.
They referred to such operations
ss., mine-clearing, wire-laying! patrol work and artillery spotting in
the front line, and to efficient organization work and morale-build
ing behind the lines.
Besides the Military Crosses and
Medals, the, awards include one
Officer of the Order of the British
Empire (OBE). one Royal Red
Cross, 17 members of the Order
of the British Empire (MBE) and
five British Empffle Medals.
Canadians in Korea now have
Won 186 operational awards.
Highest honor goes to Lt.-Col.
Edward Amy, DSO, MC, Royal Canadian Armored Corps, of Kent-
Ville, N.S., and Edmonton. He wins
the- OBE for services, as general.
staff officer with 1st Commonwealth Division headquarters.-
Col. Amy, 35-year-old native of
Newcastle, N.B., won the Military
Cross while seridng with the Calgary Tank Regiment Jn Italy during-
the Second World War. He later
commanded the Canadian Grenadier Guards In Northwest Europe
at the age of 26 and won the Distinguished Service Order.
Lieut. (Nursing Sister) Josephine.
MacDonald of Meota, Sask., is
■warded the Roy^l Red Cross (2nd
class) tor outstanding work as-Sister
In ..charge of the. Canadian ward
at the Commonwealth General Hospital at Kure, Japan.   ,-:'■
One ol the Mllltarf Cross winners is Capt. John Edward de Hart,
I8,- ot Calgary. >_(t" artillery spotter
In the 81st Field Regiment, Capt.
de Hart remained at his exposed
observation' post under heavy fire
$>r 12 'days in-March to direct ift-
fantry support bombardment for a
Netherlands battalion.
7 Another Military Cross winner
It Lieut H. C. Pitts, 24, of Castlegar, B.C. Lieut IPtts' citation referred to a wiring operation.
Elder Son of Mr. and Mrs. Herb
spitts of Castlegar >nd formerly of
Nelson, Lieutenant Herbert C. Pitts
I now attending' Queen's University .at Kingston, Ontario. He re-t
cently came home on leave after
nearly a year's service with the
Process Patricia's -Light. Infantry
6-Korea: ' :\':-~. r\u-p\J-j: .'-•
, He was mentioned in despatches
from -the front in Kofceaifor -Mar.
.arittfcle-flership of Canadian in-
SsBttjyAieii .« buildlnir barbed wire
barricades within TS.yards of. Chin-.
Communist outpost positions,
ft was described et the time as
probably the most daring piece ol
defensive field work carried out at
Hiat time.
A Nelson High School graduate.
_I__T. H. C. PITTS
.'—Royal Canadian Naval photo.
Lieutenant Pitts won the Vander-
Smisson. Ridout award and books
as the best all-round cadet in Royal
Military College in Kingston since
it reopened as a tri-servlce training
centre in 1948. He graduated from
the .college in 1952. Previously, he
graduated from Canadian Services
College at HMCS Royal Roads and
won the Captain's Cup, awarded to
the outstanding senior term cadet'
in athletic ability and sportsmanship.
At Nelson he participated in
numerous extra-curricular activities. He was prime minister of the
student government for two years
and also Served as president of the
Junior High Students Council. An
officer in the school cadet corps,
he was also the first president of
Nelson Teen Town. He was an outstanding athlete, particularly in
basketball and baseball, and also
curled and played hockey.
He is the grandson of Mrs. H. H.
Pitts, Nelson Avenue.
Other awards:
MBE
. Mti-Q. E. Lawson, 35, CPC, Ed-
monton. ...      '•: > ,-."-.■. -'-
Maf T M,,Mes_to_eld, 8oV,HC.C;
i-odtelch, ..Ont^sniJ,Rivers, Man:
M4..:C.*;'C.MactteiU, .0, PPCLL
Victoria. .
MS.. Aaron Ho_inson, MC, 42,
KCHA; Hamilton and Shilo, Man.
RSM. W. T. Seed, 43, RCHA, Winnipeg.
SSM. E. J. Armer, 38, RCAC, Mac-
leod, Alta., and Calgary.
MAU MAU RE
REIGN OFT
Starving j3<_iclers
Strike grtapjtal
NArRQSlf Kenya (Reuters)- —
Mau Mali, raiders, said to be starving, arid ready to surrender ih their
mountain and forest lairs, have
struck back with a new campaign
of terror inside rJairobi, capital ot
British East Africa.    -
Army headquarters Wednesday
moved a battalion of British infantrymen into the capital from the
Rift valley, a Mau Mau trouble-centre where terrorists still wage sporadic attacks in between dodging
the security forces tracking them.
In one of these attacks Tuesday
near Nyeri, 50 miles north of Nairobi, Mau Mau raiders killed five
Africans-in an ambush, it was disclosed Wednesday.
About 20 terrorists opened lire at
close range on a truck, killing an
agricultural officer, two agricultural instructors, a chiefs messenger and a tribal policeman.
A police patrol chased the gang
and killed five ol the terrorists and
wounded six.
In Nairobi, a British spokesman
admitted that small bands of armed Mau Mau supporters are roaming the streets of this modern, spacious city of the plains, threatening
widespread disorder.
Mau Mau last week ordered Africans to boycott public transport,
threatening death to anyone found
uSing a bus. The boycott is being
observed and is still in force.
Another Mau Mau order to Africans in the city has been: "Stop
smoking European cigarets — they
are poisoned."
VaSa Qives
Collide, One     Mop Aid to
Heavily Damaged Indo-China
■ - D'ADID        /An. A ^ __*___ j.
LONDON (AP) - Two British
warships "attacking" NATO shipping in vast manoeuvres in the
jVorth Atlantic collided in inky
blackness early Wednesday near
Iceland. Thirty-two sailors were reported injured, none seriously.'
The two ships, the 8Q00-ton
cruiser Swiftsure and the'2610-ton
destroyed Diamond, were immedi-
lately withdrawn from the exercises and steamed to port to take
stock.
The collision occurred before
dawn 80 miles south ol Iceland,
where the Swiftsure and the Diamond had joined an "enemy striking fleet" assigned to attack Allied
shipping in Operation Mariner, the'
Western world's biggest sea exercises since the Second World War.
HEADS FOR ICELAND
The cruiser was reported heading
for Malerifl, Iceland. First reports
indicated that a .fire aboard her
after, the collision was quickly
brought under control. The reports
added, however, that she suffered
severe. damage on the starboard
Bide.. .
The Diamond, accompanied by
mother destroyed, steamed-for the
Clyde, in Scotland, with damages
forward.
Growing Population
Increasing
RCMP's Work
VANCOUVER (CP) - Canada's
(rowing population and the trend
towards greater urban populations
Is increasing the responsibilities of
Canadian police forces, RCMP Commissioner' L. H. Nicholson said: on
Tuesday night.
Population growth, new towns
and cities and frauds are adding
responsibilities to police forces,"
the head of Canada's lamed Moun-
iies told delegates at the 48th annual conference of the Chief Constables Association of Canada. The
four-day convention ends Friday.
Commissioner Nicholson urged
delegates to work toward "greater
unity in Canadian policing."
Turning to his own force, Commissioner Nicholson said the RCMP
"is going to pay more attention to
Ihe re-training of senior police ot-
icers."
PARIS (AP) — Assured of a
stronger French war ettort, the
United States came through Wednesday with a $385,000,000 increase
in its contributions to help orush
the Communists in Indo-China.
The two countries jointly announced plans to step up the campaign against the Red-led Vietminh and a foreign ministry
spokesman said France will never
negotiate lor. a settlement ol the
seven - year war without participation ol the United States.*
The formal announcement of the
extra aid ;. agreement climaxed
weeks ol French - American negotiations. The $385,000,000 will be
spent during the next 15 months
to buy guns, ammunition, planes
and other equipment for the French
and their Indio-Chinese allies.
The U.S. national security council recommended the arrangement
to back up an allocation of $400,
000,000 voted by Congress earlier
this year for defence of southeast
Asia's strategic gateway.
CIO STARTS LEGAL
ACTION IN FRUIT STRIKE
VANCOUVER (CP) - Legal action against the B. C. Labor relations Board has been started by
Local 580, Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union (CIO), in
connection with the 15-yeek-old
strike at the Slade and Stewart
vegetable and fruit warehouse.
Application for a Supreme Court
injunction restraining the board
from continuing a vote among the
warehouse employees on a recent
company oiler was made by R. J.
McMaster, solicitor lor the union.
The union says the vote circum
vents the Industrial Conciliation
and Arbitration Act and therefore
tl null and void.
w
"Sm^
WEATHER FORECAST
' KOOTENAY: Cloudy with show- i
ers Wednesday night and Thurs*
day. Cooler Thursday. Wind light
Wednesday  night  southerly  11
Thursday. Low-high Cranbrook and j
Crescent Valley1. 40 and 50. I
Vol. 52
N_%SQN,,B. C, CMADA-THUHSDAY..MQHN1NG.JpCTOBER \, 1953
No. 13S \
Pubs Under New Liquor Ad
(alder Urge*
Seat in Seriate
jyiC-d_fe*'(CP) - Canada's only
ih-iari member of a provincial legislature Wednesday said Indians
should he represented in the Senate.
Frank Calder, 'CCF-Atlin said
in. the legislature as a CCFer he
did not believe in the Senate but
seeing there was one a native representative should be represented
in it.
He asked that Premier Bennett
take the matter up with the federal
government   when   he makes his
trip to Ottawa late this year.
He said government handling of
native affairs contrasted unfavor
ably wjth the   way   It   handled
Doukhobor affairs.
"Governments approach the
Doukhobors with recommenda
tions ahd solutions to their problems and the DoukHbbors remain
silent In our case, we approach
the governments with recommen
datlons and solutions to our .own
problems and the governments re
main .silent,"
Two other members, L. H. Shant&
SC-North Okanagan and H. J.
Bruch, SC-Esquimalt, also spoke in
the throne speech debate.
Mr. Shantz said there was need
for further government assistance
in building roads in B.C. The province to "do everything for ourselves."
Mr. Bruch said "certain" trade
unionists, did not act in the best
interests of the movement by de
dining to attend Labor Minister
Lyle Wicks' conference with unions
in August.
He said he believed that "mis-
administration and misinterprets
tion" of the ICA Act was the cause
of much of the labor troubles In
the past.
ALBERT SCHROEER, 43, hugs his wife ahd his 12-year-old
daughter as he comes out from behind the Iron Curtain after nearly
10 years in Communist hands. The reunion takes place at Camp
Frledland, Germany, where nearly 600 Germans were repatriated.
ThS released men were the first of an undisclosed number of prisoners of war from World War II whom the 8ovlet Union haa prom-
Iscd to repatriate.—AP Wlrephot^.
9'Year*Qld Wants to End
Safecracking Career
WHITE PLAINfe, N.Y. (AP) -
A cute little boy of nine Wednesday took stock of himself and decided to give up a budding career
of safecracking and burglar.
"I want to go straight,"' the lad
told police here. "I want to get
on the smooth road."  /:   7
The hpjf, not.-pame* .'heeatise of
his. ^fbM^Ss -early;.'tys
Week' as .theyeader of'a' gang itt
small boys who* netted $1330' in 29
burglaries since last February.-
Detectives'said, the youngsters
learned the lingo of gangland from
television and acted at the station
like seasoned underworld thugs.
The blond nine-year-old cracked
a police department sate in a demonstration that had veteran cops
wide-eyed. *
"I listen to the tumblers tall In
place," the boy explained.
In questioning the boy, cops asked him:
"What were you taught in school
about boys who tell lies?"
'They go to Hell," replied the
little prisoner.
"Where do good boys go?"
"To Heaven."
"Well, where do you think you _
go?"
"I guess I'll go to Hell," said the
boy.
Detective Charles McKay said
the juvenile gangsters "dott't realize what they did."
"They're good kids," he. added.-
"The trouble is they didn't have
enough to keep their minds occupied or to expend their energy.
They'll grow up and be swell citizens.
"All these kids have TV sets.
When they came in here to the
police station they all knew their
rights—knew they didn't have to
talk and that they could demand
lawyers."
QQM-IER'S SAYS..,
Ruis Planes Fly
MADRID (Reuters) — Gen. Francisco Franco said Wednesday defence agreements signed between
the United States and Spain here
last Saturday were an important
victory for peace against the threat
of Communist aggression.
TRADE GAP TOO WIDE
MONTREAL (CP) — J a m e a
Thomson, deputy British high commissioner to Canada, says the
trade gap between Canada and
Britain is still too wide. In 195.
Canada sold $745,000,000 worth of
goods to the U.K. but purchased
only $355,000,000 in exchange, he
said in a speech to a rotary club
luncheon. Thomson said the trade
situation must be improved and it
was not unreasonable to ask Canada to help'.
.    NEW'"fY0lp (CP) j- Unidentified   planes,   almost   certainly
, Russian,' -frequently,  reconnoitre
-across the Arctic and some have
penetrated, deep into north cen-
. tral Canada,   Collier's   Magazine
. said In ah article published Wednesday.
Collier correspondent  William
- A. Ulman, who wrote the article
after a survey of. northern de-
. fences, said the   foreign   planes
come' oyer   "at   all  times and
. places," '
"Their mission Is apparently to
feel out our radar defences and
photograph our coasts and when
our Jets go out to-meet them they
run."      ; .
SEARCHERSCOMB
B. C. BUSHLAND
FOR HUNTER, TOT
Fear 4-Yecrtffo.d
Victims Foiil Pfay
PRINCE SEORGJE,' B.C. (CP) -
Two major searches were underway in the dense bushland ot central interior British'Columbia Wednesday, one seeking an inexperienced hunter, the other a youngster
police fear may have been the
victim of foul play.
While RCMP sought some due
to the whereabouts of four-year-
old Ronald Aspinall, who vanished
Irom his Prince George home last
Friday, a new search party was
organized to seek a Kamloops, B.C.,
business executive who has not
been seen, for 10 days.
Frederick Freeman ol Kamloops
'was. reported missing Wednesday
by his wile In-Kamloops. She said
he planned to make calls on theatres in this interior B.C. region
some 400 miles north of Vancouver
in connection with his film distribution business/Then he was "supposed to go hunting."
. Fears for his safety were expressed by experienced bushmen
when Mrs. Freeman told police her
husband had "little experience as
a hunter."
Meanwhile at Quesnel, B.C., 60
miles south of here, police reported
they were holding a transient for
investigation In the strangle-slay-
ing of 13-year-old Donna Lee Corbett of Quesnel.
Body of the young girl, missing
for a week, was found in woods
near Quesnel 10 days ago. She had
been strangled with her own shoe
laces.
Police said ihe transient waS being held on a minor charge pending the slaying investigation. They
declined to disclose his name.
Police said the man in custody
at Quesnel, had no connection with
ths; disappearance ot. the Aspinall
boy, who sjigappejired while en
Vbute to meet his father .coming
home from-work.       j .,   .
More thsra 300 men. have been
combing the dense bush around
Prince George seeking some trace
ol the youngster.
Hope Man Killed
In Truck Crash
PENTICTON, B.C. (CP)-An inquest Will be held Friday in Prince-
tan.irito jhe death'of Alfred Gil-
bertso'n, 28, of Hope, who was killed
tjredhesdajy' morning when the east-
bound. Public FreightWays tanker
truck he was driving crashed 11
iriiles west of Princeton. RCMP" to
Princeton said Gilbertson was -unable to check the speed of the
truck as he went down Whipsaw
Hill, and, the truck crashed through
a fence, spilling gasoline from the
tanker soaking the hillside. Timbers
from the broken fence were tossed
more,than 100 feet.
SOYT LAYS CHARGES
IN BUTTER FRAUD
OTTAWA (CP) — The federal
government has decided to launch
prosecutions against "several" Quebec dealers alleged to have produc-
ed and sold adulterated.butter, ;
health department official said
Wednesday.
The. decision to press prosecutions followed'the discovery during ;the summer months of thou-
Partial ideal Option
On Four Licence Types
By STEPHEN SCOTT
Canadian Press Staff Writer
'•VICTORIA (CI^-British Columbians will have cock- -
tail lounges under the hew Liquor Act introduced in tive
legislature Wednesday. ;  ,.' '\"\"...
What is termed "lounge licences" will be issued for.
the:Bale of all types of liquor, in hotels, non-profit cMm,„
holidSy -resorts and military messes. , - ■' •■ \
Beer and wine fey-the-glass will also be permitted!
with meals in dining thorns of hotels, restaurants; private'
clubs, summer resorts and on
BEVAN CHARGES
U.S. SPREADING
"EVIL" INFLUENCE
MARGATE, England (Reuters)—
Left-wing Socialist Aneurin Bevan
has charged the United States with
spreading an "evil" Influence
through Western Europe, prejudicing Western leadership toward
peace.
In his second broadside against:
U. S. foreign policy since the Labor
party opened its annual conference
here, he said Wednesday night American influence in Europe is being used "to re-create just the same
sort of malignant forces" that led
to the Second World War.
"Tp 'me there is something evil,
something portentous ol sinister
consequences in the lact that the
United States now is trying to
ground its civilization into Spanish
society," he said in a reference to
the recent U. S.-Spanish defence
pact.
. "The tame evil thing, is happening
in western Germany and Italy
trains; and ships.
Saloons were outlawed in 1817
when prohibition came in and the
present system of liquor distribution was established tn 1921. It
permitted sale of beer in hotel
parlors, liquor by the glass in private clubs, and bottle-sale through
government stores.
In a plebiscite held in 1052, the
electors voted for sale by the glass
2 to 1. Only tour of 48 electoral
districts voted against a change in
the law.
The present beer parlors will be
replaced' by public houses' for the
sale of malt liquors and light refreshments.. Night clubs and supr
per clubs will'be permitted to have
lounge licences.
Proprietory clubs —. operated lor
profit—will be abolished, but operators may be able to apply for
a licence, auch as will be permitted supper clubs.
PARTJAL LOCAL OPTION '■
A partial local option clause, far
less stiff than was expected, would
be used under the new bill.
The B.C. liquor control board
would designate certain licensing
districts, with the .approval ol the
cabinet, then would fix the time
that it would receive applications
for licenses and' give twp public
notices- five days apart designating
the boundaries ol the area and the
means of securing local-option.
The' tjltjr7eoims-V.oi.the, area sot
35 per cent ol the 'electors'•! then
could petition 'for-a -local «ptte
VOt*-ft_Vw0-l- W~ ,i- the electorate Wjahes one or aU of the four
classifications of licences.;
1. no reqttelt was received by
the cabinet within the specific
time, which would not be,less than
30 days, then the board would go
ahead and issue the licences
it is reported the government,
may use enforcement regulations,
similar to those in' eifeot in
Ontario.
A three-man liquor board will be,
given wide powers under the new
act.
M% APPROVAL    '
Fifty-five per cent ot the electorate would have to approve before a
licence would be granted.
Broadly, the new act follows the
recommendations of the Stevens inquiry commission which lijst year
held public sessions throughout the
province.
Minors wffl not be permitted in
licenced premises other than a dining room or dining lounge.
Present liquor stores operated by
the government will continue, to
function,, and public houses, as
now, will be .peumitted to sell beer
by the case.
Indians WiH stffl b,e barred from
liquor stores, but Will- be permitted
RUSSIA WARNS NO
MEET WITHOUT NEUTRALS
' By MEL SUFRIN
Oanadlan Press Staff Writer
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP)—
Russia indicated Wednesday there
will be no Korean peace conference unless ttie West agrees to consider Communist demands lor participation by so-called neutral nations.
(OabUL ____v___l
Kootenay Lake water level, Wed-
sin* of pounds ot adultered butter, nesday, 7,65 leet above zero.
Scientist Finds
"Qrave-Like Calm" % Miles Under Sea
2 MORE FIRES SET
MOSES. LAKE, Wash. (AP) -
Two minor fires,, both officially,
described as the work ol an arsonist, set this lire-bug jittery town
seething again Wednesday night
and police arrested three' more
persons lor questioning in connection with a series of blazes.
NEW YORK (AP) - "The
strike Is on" longshoreman union officials said today, heralding the start of walkout
' designed to i tie up Eaat coast
•hipping.
ISIJ-ND OF PONZA, Italy (AP)
—Two miles beneath the surface of
the sea there is a grave-like calm
and stygian .blackness broken only
by ghostly flickers of phosphorescence hinting at unknown forms of
life.
That was the word brought back
Wednesday by Prof. Augusta Pic-
card and his son, Jacques, from the
greatest depth living man has ever
reached.
"There was nothing else to see,"
the frail, 68-year-old professor said
when he returned to the surface
in" the steel divjng boat he calls
a bathyscafe. "Even our. powerful searchlight greyed away in, the
silent, unless darkness of the
abyss."
The wispy scientist, whs SO years
ago invaded tha stratosphere hy
flying up 10 miles in a balloon,
bobbed back to the rain-swept surface at the Tyrrenhian sea too excited and too tired to tell of his
experiences immediately.
He cupped his oil-stained hands,
and howled gleefully across 100
feet ot sea to correspondents in
an Italian corvette:   . ';
"Three thousand one hundred
and filtj- tpetersl"
That's 10,339 feet—only a bit under two miles.
Later, rested, Picoard talked
eagerly.-    ■ ;'
"We are so happy," he seW.
"So happy—and so tirsjd.,
"But that doesn't matter. lean'
tell you nothing now, scientifically.
Not until we can study the instruments and the results of this test."
Excited, Picoard told reporters
' *"
and. Kalian navy, officers:
; "At 3150 meters the blackness
ii.absolute. It Is'broken only occasionally by numerous tiny phosphorescent flickers'."-
■ Piccard may never try again—
almost certainly not this year, as
autumn storms already are roughening the depths of the Mediterranean. ,■*;.',
• His dramatic dive and -return to
the escorting Italian navy corvette
Tenace took 2-hours,, '12 minutes,
although the- 52-foot-long bathyscafe dropped like a plummet at a
yard a second into the sunless
depths:- .':» .
He and bis son remained on the
floor of the Tyrrhenian sea mare
minutes before signaling for the
haul back up.
made in a chill rain 18 miles south
of Fohza and 50 miles west ot
Naples at the edge of the Ponza
deep.
BREAKS RECORD
. Piccard- dive easily broke the
record set off- Tpulon by two
French naval officers Aug.'*li
They took a similar model bathyscafe down 5035 feet.
Piccard's diving boat is a stubby
craft, about 13 feet wide amidships.
It is lowered by cable, sinking with
the help of two steel balls held in
place magnetically. The Piccards
ride in a compartment, about six
feat in diameter, beneath the boat
Two small electric motors permit
navigation.
The araft Is raised by cutting the
magnetic field, which allows  the
to drink in public houses and din-''
ing lounges. i  ■' {
SEPARATE PUBS .
Public houses may be operated1
separately, from hotels. Under the
present law only hotels with a
specified number of, rooms are al-.
lowed to operate beer parlors. Tha!
Stevens report recommended sale,.
ol food in the public houses and
would also permit music. ' " ?
All hotels may apply lor one snail of-the four classes of licences,'
The liquor board will consider each
application on its merit   : "■
The use of signs displaying tha'
words bar, bar-room, saloon, tavern, wines, beer or liquors will, ba.
prohibited..        -, ■       ■''.■' ..-
The new act will become effee-.
tive when Royal assent is given taj
all bills at the end of the present;
session of the legislature, possibly
late this month. .- i ;
Some reports have said that cocktail lounges nlay be operating by,
Christmas in the larger cities.
Beer parlors and private clubs1
now operating will be permitted to'
remain in business until the end
of the year. Licences may ba
renewed for a further year to pro-si
vide for transition from the old td-'
the new act.       ,; '. ]■'
British Columbians spent $70,829,-'
537 last year lor liquor, the gov-'
ernment taking a net prollt of
£20,74-1,630.
.The new ; legisl'atiph': abolished
special .licences lor clubs. Clubs
■i»a^new.pplylDt;'aay''8n;e*-ol?_ia
four j classifications bl dicerices.
Hard-Hit by the ne*. act would
be clubs operating solely for profit
from liquor. The act specifies they.
must have as their object'definite
purposes of a social, athletic, recreational, fraternal, benevolent or
patriotic nature.;
They must be in operation for
three years and have -a' membership of at least 50 persons before
'obtaining a licence.      - - ■ -
■ tile, hoard may, however, re-issue licences to. dubs which meet
the new definitions although they
'may be in areas that have voted
against the sale of liquor.
No liquor licence would be It-
sued to an applicant who has an
agreement with any monufactur.
er for the tale of his liquor to exclusion of others, nor Will any
manufacturer . be granted a llo-
ence.
The legislation would take the
-market value away from a He/star
licence, .he Stevens commission
reported that some licences'. were
sola at ''phenomena! prices"
through the years.
Under the new legislation the
vender would have to pay a "monopoly" tax to the minister ot Un-
ance when he changes ht> BMMg.
Nelson Man Assistant
Communications Chief
the  descent  Wednesday   was steel balls to drop off.
LEONARD  HAMSON
MONTREAL (Special) —Leonard
B. Hamson ol Montreal, who joined the Canadian Pacific Telegraphs
40 years,ago at Nelson, and served
for many years in Vancouver was
today named assistant general manager ol Canadian Pacific Communications.
He first went to Vancouver
1017, was made oiliest operator there Nelson in 1088.
in 1939 and inspector in 1988 before his transfer to Montreal lor
special duties. He returned to Vancouver again in 1944 for two year's
as superintendent of communications in the B.C. district. He is a
native of Nelson.
His appointment follows t_b retirement of William D. Neil, general manager of Canadian Pacific
Communications after 48 years.
Mr Hamson, son of J. E. Hamson
and the late Mrs. Hamson of Nelson, started his career as a messenger boy in Nelson. After going
to .Vancouver, he was successively
traffic chief, automatic chief, wire
chief and finally chief operator. He
returned to Nejson as inspector, remaining in that position for live
years before being transferred to
Montreal in June, 1943. <
While in Montreal he was superintendent ot tariff and traffic far
Eastern lines and ih 1944 returned
to Vancouver to become superintendent.   In 1950, he.was appointed
Eastern   region   superintendent,
Montreal. .....''■      j>
IN SANDON
In his earlier years, he went to
Sandon from Nelson in 1916 as a
railroad operator and became an
operator in Vancouver in 1917. Air
ter service overseas with the Canadian Expeditionary Force, he returned to the company in 1919 at
agent at Nelson. His appointment as
traffic chief in Vancouver came hj
1926 and he became  inspector  at
^^^^^i^^
	
Mk&L ^MM
',<s'M&iA*ll'.'<r ■■'■-■--
__fi___S_sMfe-- .    .
 2 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 1, W53
i
LAST TIMES TONIOHT — Complete Shows 7:00-9:00
!*&.*»   TAYIOR
e/wem
STARTS FRfDAY
King Nek
off the beauty
thousand
NHfO
mi
STARLIGHT
DRIVE-IN
THEATRE
SHOWTNO TONWHT, HHBAY, SATURDAY
Shows Start 7tN and 0:10 p.m.
Saturday 7sK ond 9:30 p.m.
kl "» tmmemmsstmmaamamm
PHAmwviifMrj
I m_blWO_ra-CII(U_-___II
"SCAT mor aKri-___s «i_fi-VKhc_^C!HBTMJ--l[
A IsMOLaLMfirWTrONAl PICTURE
If MtLIS EAST. OF NELSON
MAfcCH START FOR HIGH SCHOOL..;.   ,
$2 Milium Received For School
Building; Studies Reap
REX
DRIVf-IN THEATRE
CRANBROOK, B.C..
Mwwlnfl Last Ttmw tonight
t tttem, Bafltnnlnj MS p.m.
T Milt East of Cranbrook
Spencer Colman
Dies Suddenly
Spencer C Colman, 65, died tad'
denly tn Kootenay Lake General
Hospital Wednesday. A resident of
Nelson since IBM, ha wai bom in
Cornwall. England, and came to
Canada In 1907.
He earn* to British Columbia in
1936, living- at Vancouver before
moving to Nelson. He represented
the Watkins Co. before his retirement and was also the proprietor
df a grocery store on Front Street
for two y«*rs.
Besides his wife, survivors include two sons, Ernest of Salmo and
Sennit of Nelson, three daughters,
Mrt. If. W. W.esick of Nelson, Mrs.
Joyce Gardner of Vancouver, and
Mrs. Sybil Stephlnson of Cumberland, and nine grandchildren.
mtwmtwsmmt
CASTLE
THEATRE
CASTLEGAR, B.C,
Showing  Last Timet Tonight
-Inter Regan, Ronald Reagan,
Doris Day, Steve Cochran
"STORM  WARNING"
Shows at 7:00 and 8:00 p.m.
FIRE CARE URGED
ON RAIL WORKERS
. MOffl-il-AL- Canadian Pacific
employees have been asked by n.
R. Ctttfhp, Vice-president, to 6b-
'.serva Fire Prevention Week, which
begins Sunday, Oct. 4; in a message to personnel, Mr. Crump declare.,: •
' "tltb waste. Is a national loss absolute and beyond recovery a lid
all efforts that prevent' such waste
are reproductive and therefore true
economy."
mm
FELT HATS
By Bllfmoro
CAVALIERi $£.99
Pr.erea.ed. . ....   _?
ROYAL $«f.80
BJLTMOREt   _.__    I
COUNTRY CLUB:    $'
Prided af	
10
Know tha Comfort af
Carter Leather*
Godfreys'
Phono — 270 — Box
A check tor over $2 million has
been received by the Board of
Trustees for school construction in
Nelson District No. 7, it) was announced by Chairman George Mermet.,    ..■"••  ''7    ■ ■'
Th* mon*-' represents .«* B«*-
ceeds from Ihe sale of debentures
authorized by school■,by-law. voted
last fall. The. Provincial government ia responsible for repayment
of halt this amount. Nelson School
District Nor 7 *ill rejsay over a X<-
year period as equivalent sum.
Over $800;0(ia of this sum is ear*
marks- for the new. District High
school, to be built lust outside' the
Nelson'city limits hi ffafrview on
what was formerly ths Balding
estate.
The remainder of the money will
go for th* purchase of the site for
the Nelson High school, additional
property and construction for the
Nelson Junior. High school, furniture and equipment tor district and'
city schools, reconstruction and
addition to existing school buildings, and other extraordinary requirements.
Although  the  money for the
new High school was voted last
year, Boar* offlcl.lt emphasise
the program was too large to rush
'. Into without considerable In.
vestlga-lanr and careful evaluatloir
of facts and circumstances.
One factor which the Board af
Trustees had to consider wat th«
uncertainty   of  the   government
.financing plan. The pew syltem
!  of financing school construction
ta mm lit effect and will result
lit • considerable saving tnreu|h>
reduced Interest rata*.
The plans for the new high school
were only recently completed aitft
submitted  to  the  Department  sit
Education fa Victoria for approval.
At the suggestion of th* Department erf Education, certain revisions
were.made in the plana which will
result in a money saving with no
reduction in facilities offered. These
changes at* being incorporated in
th*   drawings   which   should   bt
again ready shortly.
MARCH START
Tenders on the new high school
will be called for soon, probably in
December, with work scheduled 'to
start In Mare.. The architects tune
advised the Board that they would
I
■void a "penalty". jn bids submitted if Ut*? waltedvui^til• Spring
te start actual construction. The
"penalty' would be in t^e nature
of higher bids all arouncVif contractors expected to work^ta un-
eertrt* winter, weather.       7%
Tenders had been called on'W
Junior High School addition buv
were, returned when aU were considerably above the estimates of
th* Board of Trustees, ae department ot education, and the architects consulted. ,   .
Improvements to the Salmo
schools, which represent a targe
portion ef tbe money allotted, are
w__ under way. The Salmd Elementary school .will be completed
to ebout'two weeks. The contract
ftor tbe Salmo Junior-Senior High
School hat bees awarded and
work is under way.
Flans for the work on tbe Hume
School here been submitted to
'Victoria for Department of Education approval. It la anticipated the
contract wilt be tendered shortly
with ■ view to building thi? year.
Tbe eontoact for tbe addition to
(be Junior High wtll again be open
tor tender at that time.
Sons Given
Three Yean for
Parading In Nude
"When yoa Sera of fteedom parade in th* nude, you are fully aware
that in doing ao you ar* breaking
our lawa," Stipendiary Magistrate
William Evans told two Freedomites before sentencing 'them to
three-year prison terms.
The two mea, William W. Liver-,
enchenoff and William Daniel Cher-
noff, remained silent after tbe
cbargee wer* reed to them Individually. The two were arrested
September 8. They refused to plead
to the chargea of parading In the
nude in view of the public.
Tbe freedomites were aware of
breaking the law, "yet you persist
in your acts of defiance and refuse
to conform with our laws," Magistrate Ivans said.
Coast. Alex Borodula and Special
Constable Ralph Mcintosh said they
had warned the accused prior to
their arrest* that if they persisted
in parading about in the nude they
would be charged.
Staff Sgt. W. J. McKay of Trail
said that he saw tbe two men on
the afternoon of September S "entirely in the nude," walking from
the village in full view of the highway and entering a tent. "I entered
the tent and with some difficulty
arrested the accused and took them
to Nelson .all."
Duhamel Area
Seeks Water Plan
A commlttoa to investigate the
possibilities of forming a water improvement plan in tha Duhamel
Creek area on tha North Shore has
been set up.
If tha majority of property own
era In the area are interested in
seeking a better water system and
sign a petition to be circulated
shortly, a survey of the area may
be made by the Provincial Water
flights Branch engineers without
obligation.
The Water Rights Branch engin
eer will then present a plan or
plana of tha proposed distributing
System. If the majority of the property ownera are then In favor of
the scheme, the money, aside from
perhaps an initial assessment, may
be borrowed from the Provincial
Government under the Water
Rights Branch, repayable at moder
ate Interest over a number of
years.
- The individual tax or assessment
would then depend on the initial
cost and the number of people par
ticlpatlng.
Memberi of the Duhamel-Creek
Water Works Committee are H. W.
Aitchison, Ernest Reiliterer and
George Belyk.
PRIZES AWARDED
AT SENTINEL
INITIATION
SOUTH SLOCAN — Til* Mount
Sentinel Junior md Senior High
Schools' yearly initiation ef Grade
Seven and new members of the
school wa* held here. The 23 new
members were dressed to .apaeemit
what they would like to be in the
future. Each was asked to contribute « one minute skit in character.
Prizes were awarded to Shirley
Garrett and Eddie Stenoski fer toe
best costumes and to Florence
Bloodoff and Freddie Podivilnikoff
for best acting.
The Weather
Synopsis—Cool moist Pacific air
spread over B.C.
Wednesday
fol-
lowing tbe storm which struck the
/Mast Tuesday night Thia situation
gave frequent and heavy showers
along the coast
Wednesday, with
scattered showers
in the
Interior.
Little change is
occurring in
the
general    weather
situation
and
cloudy showery conditions wiH
pre-
vail over the porvince Thursdsy.
Min Max fre
NELSON   	
_   47.1
53
—
St John's 	
    38
41
.06
Halifax     	
..     38
!H
_
Montreal _
    43
80
_
Ottawa	
    43
78
—
Toronto	
    48
7.1
—
North Bay .....	
    48
88
—
Port Arthur 	
.....   38
84
—
Winnipeg    	
    41
82
—
Brandon   	
    32
80
—
The Pas ....
    40
90
.09
Saskatoon  	
.....   it
58
—
Prince Albert	
    10
50
_.
North Battleford
    29
56
—
Swift Current ...
    28
88
—
Medicine Hat ....
    38
77
_
Lethbridge 	
    36
75
—
Calgary _
.....   32
86
—
Edmonton	
.....   27
80
—
Kimberley	
    37
84
—
.Crescent Valley .
    43
48
.08
_.„   43
    33
51
39
10
Grand Forks	
Kamloops   _.
....   M
68
_
Pentlcton    :.„.
.....   48
61
.01
Vancouver	
    50
96
1.1.1
Victoria   ...	
_...   DO
58
.29
Prince Rupert ...
    42
55
.13
Prince George ....
    38
56
.24
Whitehorse   	
    29
32
—
Seattle	
   al
97
1.79
Portland	
    85
86
.83
San Francisco ....
„    83
68
—
Los Angeles	
._..   88
67
—
Spokane	
.....   48
71
_
    82
74
—.
New York	
    88
74
,
FINED FOR CROSSING
DOUBLE HIGHWAY LINI
William Perechudoff wai fined
110 and coats for crossing a double
line on the North Shore. He pleaded
guilty before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans In Provincial
Court here.
For driving without Insurance
while his licence wil restricted,
Rolf Reich of Trail wai fined 829
and costs by Magistrate Evans. Ha
pleaded guilty. .   "
PHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED
OOLDEN
UN ED
VACUUM
SEALED
CANS
Improved
JMWKTINIO
WBSTERN
CANADA^
BMPORATBD
M/LK
Rifle Slabs
Leonard McCabe of Trail on a
recent hunting trip injured himself serious in tbe throat with bis
own rifles without tiring a shot.
Mr. McCabe and a friend were
driving between Rossland and Trail
when the ear they were in bad a
flat tire, causing it to swerve suddenly.
Mr. McCabe was thrust forward
and Ws rifle, which had been
perched muzzle up between his
knees, penetrated hla throat.
He la currently In Rossland's
Mater Misericordiae Hospital where
be is said to be In "good" condition.
FIRE SEASON
CLOSES TODAY
Today marks the end of the fire
season tor forests in this area.
Throughout .the summer months
from May 1 until tbe end of September campers required a permit
to light fires anywhere in Nelson
forest district, due to hazards of
foreit fires.
Under normal conditions this law
expires on the first day of October.
With this area receiving much rain
of late there waa no' need to ex-i
tend the time limit any further, it
waa reported Wednesday by the
Forest Service, i
Two outstanding: scientists, an
engineer and, a geologist, have
been named to participate in the
Royal Commission into the Whatshan power project disaster.
C. W, Tysoe, Q.C., counsel for the
probe, announced he had appointed
Christopher E. Webb as his general
adviser tfa the enquiry, and i>r. D.
P. Kidd as his geological adviser.
P-tv»c hearings Into tbe landslides xithat damaged' the B.C.
Power Commission set-up begin
Oct. 5 at 10:30 a.m. in'Vancouver
Court Hous*. Mr. Justice Clyne is
the commissioner named by Premier Bennetl Nto conduct ihe
hearings. 'i.'
NOTED COiN8Ul.TA(4T
Mr. Webb is fohner district
engineer in charge of water resources investigation tor ttie Federal Government After retirement
he was employed by v toe governments of Afghanistan and Iran to
Delay Canada Re-Route Urged
Until Alternatives Surveyed
report on the problem of distribu- I1** 2&aS?_____SSi ""'i!.!!!
tion of the HelmlaQd River water
between those countries.
He now is consulting engineer
for Consolidated .Mining 8k Smelting and the Aluminum Company of
Canada. He is past president of the
Association of Professional Engineers ot B.C and of the American
Geophysical Union.
HIGH IN PROFESSION    .
Dr. Kidd was geologist tor the
geological survey of Canada from
1930. to 1935 and since that time
has been an independent consulting
geologist
He was president of tha Canadian
Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
last year, is vice-president and
general manager of Mastodon Zinc
Mines Ltd.; president and general
manager of Atwood Copper Mines
Ltd.; member of the Society ef
Economic Geologists and the American Institute of Mining Engineers.
He also Is chairman of tbe B.C.
Resources Conferences to be held
here next spring.
T0T8 DIE IN ICE-BOX
WINDSOR, Ont. (CP)—Two four-
year-old boys were found dead in
an ice-box Wednesday night, four
hours after frantic parents and
neighbors had begun searching tor
them.
About 85 per cent of the entire
area of Prince Edward Island  is
suited to agriculture.
Now Many Wear
FALSE TEETH
With More Comfort
FASTEETH, ss-pleasant ilk-litus (non-
acid) powder, Isolds false teeth snore lirml..
To eat -and talk tn more comfort ittst
isprinkle a little FASTEETH on yosjr.
plates. No gummy, Hooey, vests taste or,
recline. Checks "plate odor" (denture
breast). Get FASTEETH it any '4
store.
KASLO—A resolution requesting
the Provincial Government to postpone a final decision on the rerouting of the Trans-Canada highway across the Columbia River
basin pending complete surveys of
the three possible routes was passed by a joint Board of Trade meeting in Kaslo Sunday.
Those who passed the resolution
Included representatives from the
North Lardeau Chamber of Commerce, the Lardeau. Kaslo, and
Windermere Boards ot Twjde. and
the Nelson Chamber of Commerce.
The meeting alto decided to request tbe Associated Boards of
Trade and Chamber, of Commerce
of Southeastern British Columbia
to endorse the resolution and carry
it to the British Columbia Chamber of Commerce with the least
po.Slble delay.
Tbe meeting decided to distribute
copies ot the brie, on the three
routes submitted by Boyd C. Af1-
engineer, who recently. completed
-an intensive reconnaissance survey
of toe Jumbo Pass' route.
The copies will go to all MLA'?,
the British Columbia representatives in Ottawa, and especially to
tbe Hon. R;. H. Winters, Federal
minister of public works, who also
baa the job ol liaison between
provinces and tbe Federal government . with-respect to tho Titans-
Canada highway.    .  ' xv,
The resolution, passedXat Kaslo
Sunday referred to the heed for
urgency behind the selection of a
final route tor the Trans-Canada
across the Columbia basin. It pointed out, however, that this portion
of the route must be built perman
ently and economically and with
the best advantages from a commercial and .scenic aspect.
It advised locating the highway
where It would not be encumbered
SUTHERLAND
JEWELLERY
V,   "   '.,.. .    '-;  I/;. .. .
if ferries   or   abnormally   heavy READ THE CLASSIFIED OAIL
snowfall and where It would serve
best' the interests of national defence. In serving tbe latter causes!
it should not closely parallel the
railway through the mountains. I
Tbe route "embodying all these
features" as well aa other advantages would run from Mount Elsenhower junction on the east to Revelstoke on tbe wast and would travel via Jumbo Pass. The deserifiMl
route recommended Waa said to be
180 miles long, requiring only 44
miles of new construction.
=±=
Phone 839
TOWL,ERl
Fuel & Transfer   g
Nalaon, i.C
To all customer! who at
present have watches er
jewellery in tor repairs,
wilt you please call for
these before Saturday,
■Ott.3.
I
IRENE'S
MILLINERY & DRESS SHOP
Fall Hats
Arriving Doily
Pastels, Velvets, Velours and
; Fur Felts
With Matching Gloves and Handbags. -
Complete Lino of Hat Trimmings.
Hats Cleaned and Retfimmed at No Extra Charge.
...   COURTESY OF IRENE
At the Liberty
iCARIOAPi'SAU'l
Lethbridge No. 1 Gem, Lovely Cooking
For Winter Keeping
Every Sack Guaranteed On Delivery
1 Sacks or More ...___
*3
A
7
BUY NOW AND SAVE
Approximately 100 lbs.
$*J35
Per Sack      *3'35 Pe* Sack
25
WINE GRAPES
Alicantes, Corrlgan's, Muscats.
Approx. 28 Ib. box    	
$2.69
it Fresh Cranberries 2*7* it: Spinach
EatmOr; Lb. pkg  •fir ' Fresh; 	
ic Pink Florida Grapefruit     ") 31* ic Golden Com
N«w Crop, Juicy;  „ •*■ lb.. ■* ■ ChUllwaCk, COb: C<
ic Celery IC* -jr Tomatoes
Crisp, Green; Lb  *'tw 14-o«'.tubes  	
Chllllwaek, COb; Cello pkg.
2   IT
„•*■ lbs. •*■ *
 .35*
25'
BLUE BONNET MARGARINE 2 lbs. 7k
The Finest Royal Park Holland
BULBS »
s. All colon,
ii orders accepted. Doi. in pkg.
69c
Sliced Side Bacon      Fresh Hamburger
Ib. 59c 3 lbs. $1.00
Pork and Beei
Sausage - Ib. 39c
Lean Pot Roast
lb.43c
Lean Stew Beef      Lean Brisket Beef
lb. 45c lb. 21c
„■'-"., .'■■ ■'.. -.'/■' ■■".,,'
DON'T FORGET OUR
MALKIN'S SALE
Prices Effective THURS.-FRI.-SAT.
LIBERTY
FOOD STORE
^^^^^^^^____
'■'-■'     '  ■'...;'
 "i
'$£UWUWL
, For(Men
SMART STYlii
1     GOOD FITTING
HARD WEARING
See Them At       -
THE SHOE
CENTRE
653 Baker 8t.
Phone 895
PHONE 144 FOR "CLASSIFIED
14 Polio Cases in
CRANBROOK—-Fourteen cases of polio, all:reported
to be of a mild nature, were reported in the East Kobtenay
during September. All cases were jn from Kimberley and
"restdn..
The East Kootenay, Health Unit
reported only two,polio cases during the summer months.
Measles, with 64 cases, mostly in
Fernie was _ie leading communicable disease with. 52 cases of chip-
ken pox, largely in Kimberley, next
Infectious hepatitis, an inflama-
tion of the liver, now In epidemic I
stages in eastern Canada, showed
11 cases officially reported in the
district during summer.
NEW SHIPMENTS
ARRIVING DAILY
K'- i ^
NELSON HARDWARE CO.
"FRIENDLY   SERVICE"
Phone 21 446 Baker ?-
s-___---_----____B______________r
Births numbered 181 during the
two months, with Cranbrook leading at 57. Deaths totalled 88, IS in
Creston, ten ia Cranbrook, seven
each in Fernie and Kimberley ahd
one in Golden-Invermere.
Nursing sendees report 1061 injections in the immunizaiton, program, with 136 immunization aeries
completed and attendance totalling
388 infants and pre-school children
at clinics. • -■ 7
Unit sanitarian service commended all district swimming pool supervisors on the satisfactory conditions maintained at the various
community swimming pools which
were dosed daily with chlorine and
sampled weekly by the sanitarian.
Eight new district auto courts were
inspected for licence and seven approved, with further improvements
required of the eighth before licencing.
Mrs. Wayne Lacey, formerly Helen Byrt, haa transferred to Inver-
mere-Golden district, and Miss
Frances Hewgill has been transferred to Fernie. Miss Mary Caryll,
formerly of New Brunswick Public
Health, has succeeded Miss Marj-
orle Bannerman of Cranbrook district. Miss Shirley Main has transferred to South Okanagan unit.
Nakusp Folks Los*
Aldergrove Kin
John Brie George Allison of Aldergrove, B.C., died at Kilgard at
the age of 23.
He is survived by his wife and
infant son, John, and his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Allison, of
Hazelmere; two brothers, Bruce, of
Vancouver, and Robert of Prince
Rupert; one sister, Jane, of Hazel-
mere, and relatives from Nakusp to
England.
Funeral services were held Monday ip Hazelmere United Church
with Rev. R. M. Warne officiating.
Interment was In Hazelmere Cemetery.
m777:::t<77':i:7;77777^^
•     9   '■   ■'' '.,. -• --     *
•   * 4
Buy, Sell, trade tho Classified Way
-, CONSTRUCTION OF A| $15,000 CHURCH AT <£RAND FORKS is rapidly going
ahead. St. John's United Church ie loeated on *e stte of the old building whieh
was dismantled. The building is expected to be ready for use in December.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 1,1953 — 3
Closer Cooperation Needed Among
Ixgion Branches Zone Meet Told
IWA
Accepts
Awards
CftANBROOK — Ninety-eight
per cent of members of the Woodworkers Industrial Union of Canada, whioh claims certified bargaining rights for more than half the
organized lumber workers of Bast
Kootenay and. Nelson district, have
favored acceptance of the majority
award of the recent conciliation
board session regarding renewal of
their contract with the Southern
Interior Lumber Manufacturers' Association. Majority award were 12 _
cents increase, 40-hour week, three
paid statutory holidays and Sloan
Formula for union security.
International Woodworkers of
America, balloting on the majority
award of their separate conciliation
board hearing, at Kelowna ,are
overwhelmingly opposing acceptance of this separate award which
was an Increase of three cents, and
favors strike action.
Southern Interior Lumber Manufacturers, whose contract with both
unions expired August 31, has issued no statement on either award.
<gf>   Ihsph Pisl-ftltliiUij MivhihI
'*'     wit. liHrfir t.lifjiB.y RiIibii
<jg^   NO BUTTONS OR HVHU
<«*,    W.ISER LOCKS MIAN
^    QUALITY CONSTRUCTION
HMNI • S,MARI • SECURB
<^ ONEofWEBBt'SCOsMPUm
^ im.WR EVERY HOiWUSS
<jfo. WITH THE WtlH "KNOB
.. MAT DOSS THI JOB"
<*> DESiexn roi •»« dooii,
^ I0UI (OR OWE. sWIIUIIOHS
40% ON FUELt
NEXT WINTER^LSIl^i
All THESE and MORE
PHONE
1180
BURNS
Lumber Company
602 Boker St.    Nelson, B.C.
!S,9v/^lTiTie,?ri.dWorJc!
.../Wakes Ironinq Easier
-WER-MERE—Windermere District branch of She Canadian teg-
ion was host to a two-day Bast Kootenay Zone convention.
Dr. F. E. Coy, president of the
Windermere Distract Board of
Trade, welcomed delegates from
seven east Kootenay branches. Dr.
Coy, who for some years administered the act embodying the Veterans' Charter, said the document
was a "direct result ot the work
and deliberations, of World War I
veterans. All agree, he said, that it
was the best piece of legislation
produced by the government of
that day. World War II veterans are
well-dealt with, Dr. Coy maintained
but in case of individual difficulty
"the Canadian Legion acts."
Speaking on the "multiplicity of
organizations," Dr. Coy declared
that many of these lose sight pf the
fact that in unity there is strength,
and they neglect the interest which
should be shown by closer oo-oper-
ation among themselves in work for
the public welfare. There should be
an exchange of visitors between all
similar organizations, for the benefit of each.
The speaker, who attended a
meeting of civil defence organization in Cranbrook, bespoke Legion
support of that effort. "People are
tired of war and preparations for
war, and thus civil defence suffers.
It should be remembered, however,'
that it is also organized to deal
with all civil disaster, so we must
be prepared by getting behind the
movement, and by pushing it a-
long,"
The speaker stressed that more
thought should be given to vulnerable highways by endeavoring to
find safer and more usable routes
as alternatives to ones whioh might
be blocked by bombing.
Duncan MaoLonnan of Vancouver, secretary of the provincial
zone, was a guest. At She banquet,
he gave a number of interesting
facts concerning the operation of
the provincial office of the organization.
M. % Galcutt, zone chairman, issued a welcome to aU on behalf of
the East Kootenay zone council and
warned all members of the Legion
against "agatfay in regard tp the
__a_B_rtTOOD—R, p. Mahoneat,
Glen Woatherly and W. A. McA.-
thur were elected to attend a southern. Interior Associated Boards
of Trade meeting at Penticton when
Uie Greenwood-Board met here.
Labor Day proved successful, a
report to the Board stated. Mr. McArthur, chairman of the committee,
expressed appreciation to all who
helped make the event a suocess.
The Board also donated a sum of
money toward the painting of Bt.
.hide's Anglican Church. A progress
report was given on the swimming
pool project.
wotM picture" declaring also that
the internal affairs of the organi-a-
Mon .should be strengthened by
every possible means. A'lso addressing the banquet gathering were
zone commander E. D. -jsatght and
public relations ofliser W. A. Burton, of Cranbrook, and Uie provincial president of ladies auxiliaries,
Miss. A, Erickson of Creston.
Mrs. Erickson gave some inter-*
estfeg figures on B. .. ladies' auxiliary contributions to public welfare. During the past year, overseas
parcels valued at $2237 had been
prepared and seat; layettes amounting to $692; donations to provincial
hospitals $4000; social service $4780;
scholarships $878; donations to outside branch work $tbW; assistance
to men's branches $22,279; hospital
visits 7000. Total raised for the Legion's work among ex-service men
and women, dependents, Korean
personnel and public welfare exceeded $131,000.
A banquet was prepared and
served in the Memorial Civic Centre at Invermere by the Evening
Circle of the Angliean Olui-rah. Deliberations of the East Kootenay
zone council were also held there,
while a concurrent conference of
East Kootenay zone auxiliaries was
held in ths Legion hall, under the
chairmanship of 1st vice-president,
Mrs. E. W. Beamish, of Bdgewater.
Both groups held a ceremony for
the fallen at the Cenotaph in the
Windermere district branch ground
at whioh Eev. A. A. Burnett, the
branch padre, officiated. Zone
chairman Calcutt gsjve the tribute
to the departed and a poppy wreath
Was deposited by branch president
E. J. Zihkan of Invermere, escorted
by Mr. CalouM and the zone commander.
■fee gavel formerly used by the
late J. F. Lurji, lor 12 years zone
president and four years zone commander, is to he named The James
F. Lunn Memorial Gavel, and will
become a travelling gavel within
the Bast Kootenay apne. A committee was set up in draw up negula-
tions gpvepnmg procedure for this
A oommKteg Mt also sat up to
ar-range an ipter-toan* bonspiel,
to be held during the coming whiten-
sjoippfimeotas? neaaW|Mons were
passe'd by the eotTM-i8<& to the
host branch for.ite ho^piity and
to the.provincis'l.opmmand for sending Mr. Macfiannan as its representative.
The Spring convention wiH be
held at Edgew__».
Do you wont to look
your best at aW times?
Then eall in and see
pur large selection of
smartly styled, reasonably priced Fall eoats.
Designs for flattery in
new, smart eoats of
elegant fabric and
high fashion, detailing.
CHOOSE YOUR
NEW COAT NOW!
k
Beautify
sg*_wiftiiji___»ii_J__i     -
a \me room
WITH
ONLY
1 GALLON
NELSON FARMERS'
SUPPLY LIMITED
524 Railway Sfc   Phone 174
GOLDEN PUBLISHER
W. FISH DIES
Wilbur Fish of Golden died Sept.
24 in a Vancouver hospital at the
age of 82. Mr. Fish had been publisher of "The Golden Star."
He is survived by his wife Minnie, two sons, Wilbur Arthur of
Golden and Stanley Thomas of Spil-
llmacheen, B.C.; one sister, Mrs.
Minnie Hayward of Leedale, Alberta, and three grandchildren.
Funeral services and burial were
held Monday evening in Golden.
GREENWOOD STORE SOLD
GREENWOOD-W. L, Harris of
Greenwood, owner of a mercantile
store has sold his premises to Mr.
and Mrs. Bell of Vancouver who
will take over in about one month.
(David, ThjAlUioiH.
For Your
PAINTING
PAPERHANGING
NEED8
Phone 792-X,
FASHIONS
Whife Cross
Uniforms
Poplin and Nylon Taffeta.
•   •"
Housecoats
Wool For
Warmth and Beauty
Plaids and Plain
JhA, Stote* of. Jjdmdbf. $mksi
i    ■   ii ■!■■■■     in ^__-_-w-_^-_«-_--w-^-»ww»-_--ipw*--
WHERE YOUR ©-OTI-HM* f (BOH FARTWBR
449 BAKE* ST. PHONf 8*4
BEEF LIVER
VEAL PATTIfS
SAUSAGI
WtONtRS
SIDE PORK
POT ROASTS
VEAL STEAK
(Shoulder But**
Lb
""U   $mV
Plaeo Your Order' Hem tee Your T_«nfciyWH|
tW^;
Poultrt] Specials
-fa Spring Fryers •*- - 60c
__49c
Grade "A"
* Fowl £
^ Round Steak a,. — 58c
:|r Rib Steak ^.— 65c
* Veal Cutlets IS1^ 70c
it: Oysters S« 60c
Free Delivery on Orders $3.00 and Over.
***i*amVtte».4.J.»i..,^'..,'.    . ■■■ ■ jt^~^lB*kem.
^^.iss^&m^^Mm^Mm^
 PIPPIPPIP
I^MMPPPIIInw**
, JI|l«.JRippiliip IN.
o#Q
».,lh,r....n a„hi a. ions •   !t ls * <!,>mnwvi>'«™ «wf«i« Plumber's     •    W UCD IslVJl IO    t
.  Estiiblishod April E3, 10Q3 u.m. ... .„_.. i...,, it.,„ .u.-.j (u„ ,_.„.__ ^    . •„,..... ■
Established April US, 190?
.''British Columbia's
jWosl fnteresdng Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday by tha
NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,
S613 Baker Street,   Nelson,   British Columbia.
Authorized as Seoond Class Mall,
Poet Ottilia Department, Ottawa.
MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND
THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.'
Thursday, October I, -953
Packaging Should Aid
Sales, Not Boost Prices
Packaging is one of Canada's fastest growing industries. The selling
powers of a practical and attractive
package are Indisputable. But let's
not gild the Illy.
Packaging, like dressing, can be
overdone, too, points out the Financial
Post. It's a simple matter to slap on a
welter of expensive and useless trimmings to try to Impress the consumer.
He will be Impressed, but not the way
the would-be seller will like.
The average'person wants to buy
reliable products In protective and attractive packages. He doesn't want to
pay for a package designer's flights of
fancy, He may buy gift soap wrapped
in gold foil, but not gold-wrapped
bread.
Good packaging should help to cut
selling costs, not Increase them.        «.
It is a comrnoppltce that the plumbpr's
home tap leaks, or to it is alleged, tht carpenter's baok fence need! repairing, tht writer
lags far behind In hit private,correspondence,
and generally that individual! adept enough
in their daily voeatloni fall down on the job
when, their sitllis are applied to their,perianal
affair*. Often enough, indeed, their skill it
mltfapplled.'      . /
There Is nn nlmont dimple example In tho
late Chief Justice Vinson of the U.S. Supreme
Court, whoie personal eitate hai juit been
probated, Although the.head of the highest
legal tribunal in his own country, fi man expert in hit profession and reipeoted for hla
acumen, ha failed to legvs behind t valid
will, He muffed what to him should have been
a bagatelle of work, leaving Indeed two testl-
monies of this nature but neither able to Itend
up in court. Like Homer, tht Chief justice
nodded.
The eitate was so imall that probably thla
mattered little, however, a factor introducing
another surprising feature ef Chief Justice
Vlnion'l personal affairs. After a lifetime of
public service embracing congren, govern,
ment office and the bench, so distinguished a
man left an estate amounting only to $1163.
Too many people are too fond of assuming
that public mert" automatically enrich themselves at public expense. Here is one notable
instance to belie such wrongful assumption.
—Viotorls Colonist.
Treatment of Criminals
Canada, with one-third the population of Engljmd, sends to prison three
times as many people as England each
year. One out of every 141 of the Canadian population will be lent to, penal
Institutions within the nextx twelv*
months. These astounding .acts are
among those brought out in articles
appearing in the Sept. IB, 1953, issue of
Canadian Welfare, a magazine published by the Canadian Welfare Council, Ottawa.
In reviewing the history ot Canadian penitentiaries, ono of the articles
describes the biutal treatment given to
prisoners in earlier times. Boys aa
young as eight years were held In pen-
itentiaries along with older, prisoners
and subjected to the same brutalities.
The case ls cited of a boy of ten who
was flogged 57 times In eight and a
half months. "The general principle
appeared   to   be   that   Incarceration
: mt__nt punishment 6i>ly, sni that if an
individual could be reformed H was
only by repressive and barbaric tech-
1 niques. Any officer who did not abide
by this rule was usually discharged
;  summarily, or, through a process of
:  false charges and discrimination, life
I  was made so miserable for him that he
;  soon left."
Canada has come a long way from
1 these earlier days, but there ls still
much to'be accomplished. There is still
! need for more probation, parole, and
open Institutions where "the harmful
effects of imprisonment can be minimized". Also needed is continuity of
treatment from the time the accused
is arrested until he is finally released
from supervision. . . . The poliee and
the courts should work with some
thought for the rehabilitation of the
accused person, and, while performing
their primary cjuties, do as little as
possible to jeopardize later treatment.
Another requirement is closer co-ordination among the actual treatment
services given by federal and provincial agencies.
Source of Saucers?
Canadian scientists are developing a new
fighter plane that is designed to do thlngi
no other-war plane has ever approaohed- But
all hopei are'not always fulfilled In plane design, as in other things, IO thl chief public
interest in this iproject. Is not the potential
increase ot America'a-warmaklng power so
much ai tha pew view It givei of the flying
■aucer reports,
Canada'! super-itnret Project Y haa
brought together top defence iclentisti of tha
dominion and the Unjted Statea. They're looking at blueprints' of a dlic-shnped fighter
plane supposedly able to attain 1300-mllo speed
after a vertical takeoff. Tht pilot sits In the
centre of a plastic bubble and the engine
whirls around him. Thl* contraption ii to
have remarkable maneuverability, to hover
or dart in any direction. It could land, ai it
takei off, vertically on any Hnd of flat aur-
fact.
If thlt plane is fully blueprinted, with en
operating model already developed, thtn it
murt bt preaumed th» Canadian experti know
It will work. If it will function, then It still
ia not Impossible to believe thet lomeone already hai developed and built something of
tht tami tort.
Tht trouble with tht flying saucer rumen,
many of which wert utterly ridlouloui, waa
that no aane person ever tould unequlvooally
brand tbt whole ldet ai an impossibility. Flying iiuear rumor-mongers had to bt listened
to, even when talking directly through the
crown of a hat.
Tho announcement from Canada opens up
the possibility that' either tha United Statea
or Canada, or both, actually have been operating things that looked like flying disks, planes
which eould change ipeed or direction at will.
In any case, we may know before long
whether the Idea Is practicable, and thtn tht
whole secret story may be revealed.
Inflation Over ?
The other day some 133,000 railway workers In the non-operating trades announced
that they would not leek an increase In wages"
when their contract expires around the tint
of December. They will esk for eertein fringe
benefits, but no higher per hour pay.
It would appear that the psychology of
Inflation no longer applies in Canada. Otherwise the rail worken would havt asked an
lncreoso ai a matter of course, juit to keep
up with the inflationary parade.
In U.S., where Government deficit financing hai been distinctly a big Inflationary
factor during the years since the end of the
war, it ls being said thtt even thli would not
be enough to inflate prices and wages at the
present time. There appears to be a general
feeling that the peak has been reached, flier*
will be a levelling-out even if it doesn't go
to the length of a recession.—Lethbridge
Herald.
Lon& Span
Just as a matter of information, one of the
longest single strand! of wire in the world ll
used for a telegraph In India over the river
Kitsnah.
It is more than 8000 feet In length, end la.
stretched between two hills, each of which ls
1300 feet high.
Optn ta any nadir. Ngmii if persons
liking quoitlom will net hi published.
There Is no ohaVgt fir thli iirvloe,
Quotient WILL NOT BB ANIWIIUD
•V MAIL, except where thorn Iscbvlom
nooooalty for prlvnoy.
Inquisitive, Nnkunn—Cnn you tell me how to
rtmoyt the permanent wrinkle left around
s scorch pr burn an nylon? Can you tell
mo how to remove mat from needles tnd
pins? Could you tell me how tn tell edible
mushrooms from poisonous onei?
Then li no way to remove thli mark on
nylon, we are told, To remove ruit on needlei
and plnvrub with very fine emery paper,
Referring to edible and poisonous mushrooms,
there is a great deal of risk at all times In
gathering such fungi. There have been uncounted cases of people who have eaten a
certain type of mushroom for years and then
suddenly-become seriously ill after eating
what appeared to be the same variety. If you
enjoy mushrooms it would be safer to buy
them, as those sold in stores ara all grown
from tested seeds.
Curious, Creston—Will you please tell ma how
I ean get rid of moles In my potato patch?
Moles can be trapped quite easily, or
gaued by the same method ai .that uied on
gophers, Most hardware stoves sell product!
for destroying all kinds of garden posts,
E, J. H„ BB 1—Would you please print sddreii
of Doll'i Hospital in Vancouver?
Coe'i Doll's Hospital ii no longer operating, but Mri, Francli Wise doei thla kind ot
work et home. Her addreii li 1103 West 10th,
Vancouver, b. c. |   .
Reader, Trail—Where can I take a nursei'
aide course?
The Vancouver General Hoipital has
classes for training nurses' aides. So alio hai
the Vocational Training School, Hastings and
Homer, Vancouver, where practical nurses
ara trained under the supervision of tht Van-
couver General Hospital.
•^gitAl.'. Mettio
-*»■-»•
"■Y JAMW K. NESBITr"
VfCTOWA^-Everybody said there was too mueh poll-
tics at leglilitj.vi neuioni.
So Ml<As have taken everybody's advice, and so far this
session are staying away from ippUtics, and so now everybody
says the sesulori's awmlyduH without, any politics—or not
mueh,.'anyway. '\. ".-■ .;.t-,••■■■,■ ■■■- —■   —
i Ancient Home built t road iys-
tcm stretching from northern Scots
luttd fo tht lijuphrates river In Alia
Minor.
Try and Stop Me
By BENNITT CKRF
At a gift shop, a imart looking woman
picked up a pair ef boudoir slippers and told
the clerk, "I might give these to my hostels
as a house present. Are they comfortable?"
"Very comfortable indeed!" he enured her.
"That'i teo bad," sighed the customer, "because I hatt her!"
* *     *
A novelty store owner on Broadway was
hoisted out of his seat by a swarthy, hard-
looking individual who shook a flit in hit face
and roared: "Them dice you sold me yesterday
wasn't loaded at all, They was legal, you
crookl"
* *     *
■ Ai iti a Brooklyn dally: "Wanted for
Coney Island cafe: pianist who oan alio open
clams," This entertainment business gets more
exacting every day- Any would-be Paderew-
skl had better start looming to Juggle and
hoof on the itdel
* *     *
A film eutlt came home from her flrit
trip to lurope, boasting that aha had seen
everything and everybody of note, The cor-
reipondent of a Turkish newi agency asked,
"Did you see the Dardanelles?" "No," admitted the babe, "but I had a letter of Introduction."
* *     t
How people may be lulled Into a sense ot
false security is the implication of a certain
experiment conducted in a laboratory at Cornell Unlvenlty. A live frog, thrown Into a
pot of boiling water, leaped put In e traction
of a second—tho instinct of self-preservation
coming Into play. Then, however, the same
frog was placed In a pan of cold water which
was heated very, very slowly. The frog made
not the slightest effort to jump—in fact, he.
relaxed so completely that he ultimately
boiled to death painlessly.
Yoyr Horoscope
Make any important'contact! you have In
mind as early in the days ahead as poasible,
and a measure of success end much happiness
will be realized and enjoyed. Born today, a
child may be ambitious, and, if not too critical, popularity ai well as success should be
realized.
Oh, .politics tree))! into fll the
talk to softie extant, but very polite
iprt of polltlci. Nobody really goes
after anybody else, like when an
election's juit around, the corner.
Social Creditors ire doing iome
mild-enough., crowing about their
great victory at the polls last June,
Mn, Lydla' (rd.ratherrchor-tHan-
hFir) Arsons hold aloft a miniature
broom, which she said her brother
had sent to her from Albert*. The
broom, ih« iBld iwaetly; denotes
the Social Credit iweepof J3. ft, an
almost clean sweep, and it'll be
even cleaner next time, Mr. Speaker! The broom ■ In Mrii Arions''
hands was green, and it was tied
with white ribbons, the •Social
Credit colon, "and Mrs. Arsmi intimated the white wai for purity
and sweetness, freshness and light
and goodness, and all that sort of
thing. Oppositionists .aald not a
word, but by the looks on some of
their faces, you could see Mrs, Ars.
ens was nauseating them.
Social Credit's Mr. Shelford,
from Omineca, said the road» in hii
riding are so fierce that he broke
four shock absorbers on his car In
a year. However, when he content-,
plated the: shock the Liberals got
In the election he didnlt feel so
badly about the broken ihock »b-
sorberi, Indeed, Mr, Shelford appeared to be in absolute political
rapture a! he contemplated the
shock the Liberals got, and he told
the Liberal leader not to worry.
Mr. Laing can havo a Job looking
after the cows, on the Shelford
farm, and he'll get mora then the
$3000 a year he gati ai an MLA.
CCT (The Smiling One) Nimsick li frustrated and bewildered
about all tha new-found polltenesr,
You see, Mr. Nimsick has beim in
the House since 1049, and every
lonlon from then until thli new
ago of politeness wai a rough and
tumble, knock 'em down, drag 'em
out hiirly burly. Mr. Nimsick liked
that, It was fun. He said he had
trained himself to play legislative
rugby, and now, Mr. Speaker, what
has happened Why, thli session's
nothing but a cricket match, Mr.
Speaker! Mr- Nimsick didn't know
what to make of It. So he proceeded
to.play some legislative rugby, but
lt didn't much arouie the cricket
fani.
Kemano Worker Diet
Prom Injuries
VANCOUVER (CP) - A workman at Kemano, Roger Hardy, died
in hospital hire Tuesday night from
injuries received In an underground
accident at the aluminum project.
Hirdy, who suffered head and
leg injuries tn a tunnel accident
Monday, was flown to'Vancoover
Tuesday In a B. C. Alrllntl piano
which bucked heavy winds on the
tour-hour flight
Tho worid-famoui British Museum 1n London celebrated ita IWOth
annlveniry In 1038.  '
Women claim 7
discrimination
DETROIT (AP)-tfhrta woman,-
claiming 10 represent 109, others,
filed a 93,000,000 suit against the
Ford Motop Co, and the United
Auto Worken '(CIO) Monday*
charging they wart discriminated
against because of their sex. Neither
Ford nor tht union hid any conifi.
ment. The women claimed they:
wert laid off In, INI st Ford's River
Rouge.plant and men hired to re-,
place them,
Nickel ii slloytdv.wltii: capper,
brais and bronze'to give greater resistance to wear and eorrofibn.
on.plnts and quarts of
"BedBan<i"Glo-Coat,
too—the original
Glo-Coat' that glvet
flooro the rich, mellow
lustre many prefer.
For the brightest floors yoo'vo ovtr hadl
Johnson's new Hard Close Glo-Coat means
new brightness, new hardness, nut beauty,.
now convenience. It's Canada'* fastest
selling polish booaueo lt ends scuffed-up floors!
AT YOUR DIAIIR'S H0W-.(i«m-« ocoto u,bii
It's good to have money and the things
money can buy; but it's good, too, to check
up once In awhile and make sure that you
haven't lost the things'that money can't buy.
—George Horace Lorimer. .
Theyll Do It EveryTime
By Jimmy Hatlo
<am_y.' ive sot eoco,news1
FOR y<3U~ HAD HV EVE OM tfll
FOR A LOUS TWE~XVE W_M!E>
rrWERWlU1»EBOAKD,MD ■
WE'VE DECIDED H5URE JUST THE
MAU TD TAKE OWRBE OF COR
E4ST FfAMCID -RANCH OFFICE-
H4RC«MF>T-._REAra=R«nMTy
THERE KKA <3C~e_TTEI*~Na
NO-DOMY TVMMK/ME.'
yooygEAWjEDir-
YES.INDEED
/wcnHER rmsAit.   .
OMHISWTO0-DOME&
SBERWlt-ASTRWlCIDIS'
THE UST STOP BEFORE A
/IK
E-E4ST       V«MT DIDKs*f
BUT *~Vl V&ocones&p/.
eomsfa beemY east r4Ncp_
D01NlaTOOeCODJBl_V_«CO_LCTiY
A JOB HERE«vW'4 MAKE -MOM-V IF
UKE COMFEITTIONI-) KUOX BEHIND IT
60 HE facKB OU'S AHD _u»VE>M(4y,
6CAT sWlWD-RLMP* B«S_4t
WU_-4HD-
WRSET7J
#m*
FCORCCeOAT-
ueeMsrAwsr
CHORD OU THIS
saUTFITS PIANO
FROM NOW OM~
_gpjR5ll
iiyfiT
jOM. ll-*, K1HQ tT-ATUBFJl IIV11 til HAT f- lrst-.W--l-Mlim.Tll gB-ELSBj
WnWNfi THE &JY
YVTW .4 FUTURE
BECOME .4 USEO-TD-VWS/
jmotAHOA TtPourm
'/arVAMeiNsms/te,
UOHOU/''
Today's Bible Thought
Some men have the grit to make
dreama come true. We ihould be
grateful for men with vision and
men with courage to realize them.
Behold this dreamer oometh.—Ge.
37:19.
GunL XsL
I don't care what the style is.
What I fix for the noon meal ls a
man-size dinner, and I don't want
anybody callin' it lunch.
MDtfOW'
WINLATON, England (CP)-Po-
lice are searching for the man who
took the first prize of a silver e.g.-
aret case and lighter at this Durham . community's gardening contest. He wasn't the winner.
.______________________■
■'■-,  , '■-.'■■':.■;■
,  '   •■•
a-
 MjM
•it Fays To Buy Quality"
'"'- ,-    the   ■'■■'
OPPORTUNITY
I    ,    OF A LIFETIME
We Are Introducing
More find More New Lines
Jn Our
GIGANTIC
SHOE SALE
Watch Our Windows
' For These Added Lines
See Them Now, While They
Last, at
R. ANDREW
& CO.
LEADERS IN FOOTFASHION
Established 1902
CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS
CROSSFRETTY
-• Upset
> Constipated
• Teething
Give Baby's Own Tablet*
; to quickly bring tho relief
that encourages .restful
somfort.  Thoroughly
dependable.    No
"aleepy". stuff — no
v4ullln_c effect, Vwd
by Mothers for over
60  year*.  Get  a
package today at your druggist
Nelson
Social
PHONE 144
TO TEXAS . .. Mrs. E. C. Johnson ot Bennington left today lor
Corpus Chrlsti, Texas, to visit her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. John Biard and was accompanied by her grandson Michael
who spent the summer at Bonning-
ton with his grandparents. Mr.
Johnson motored them to Spokane.
• *   *
TO VANCOUVER ... Mr.  and
Mrs. G. C. Roberts have left to
make their home in Vancouver and
have taken up residence at Suite
2, Havelock Apartments, 3437 Oak
Street, Vancouver, B.C.
SS       SI       .
TO NELSON ... Mr. and Mrs.
R. Wallace of fort Albernl have
taken up residence in Nelson.
• •   »
T NEW YORK... V. Peressini,
808 Front Street, has left for New
York to attend diesel school.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 1; 1953 — 531
Grand Chief
Visits Kimberley
KIMBERLEY — Kimberley Temple No. 27 presented a corsage to
the Grand Chief of the Pythian Sisters, Mrs. Vera Mesher, who paid
an official visit to the East Kootenay.
8H0WER FOR RECENT BRIDE
KIMBERLEY — Mrs. Christina
Udahl was honored at a shower
here. Hostess was Mrs. D. M. Mc-
Murdo.   . .
We Will Hove Fresh Dressed Turkeys and Roasting
Chicken for Thanksgiving. Place Your Order Early.
ir Fowl Fresh Dressed
 ;  43'
Choice. Lb.
ic Cottage Cheese
. Lb ....
28'
* Veal-Pork-Beef
Minced.
if Corned Beef
Choice-cuts.
Lb.
3 lbs.     U
55'
jr; Pot Roasts-Boneless
Round bone. /_. C«)
Lb   *TJ
if Lean Brisket
Lb. '
19*
WE SPECIALIZE IN IMPORTED CHEESE, SPICES
OLIVES, SAUCES AND DRESSINGS
Kaslo WI Hears
Advice on
Denial Decay ■
KASLO — An Interestin^reading
on prevention of dental decay was
read by Mrs. T. Allen at the Kaslo
and District Women's Institute
meeting at the home of Mrs, A.
Morton.
Donations were voted to the
Canadian National Institute of the
Blind, the Children's Solarium, the
Salvation Army and ihe Crippled
Children's Hospital, also to a recently bereaved family.
Plans were made to hold a quilting bee in the near future.
Mrs. M. Whittaker, who attended the A.C.W.W. conference held
in Toronto, read an excellent report,
for which Mrs. Whittaker was tendered, a vote of thanks.
Tea was served by the hostess.
LEATHER IS MOUNTING in satorial favor, going
right to the top—to the head, that is! Some of the
season's prettiest hats are fashioned of leather, soft
suede or dressy eapeskin. Sally Victor has done an
"autumn leaf" bonnet-in suede 1-aitte, the color a brilliant orange. There is a suggestion of more hat, of bulk
in the scalloped hrim, offset by a jaunty extended brim
at the back. This is an unusual style, perfect with dark
clothes and glossy furs.
Kimberley Scene of
Blythe-Udahl Vows
KIMBERLEY — The United Church here was the
scene of- a lovely wedding when Christina, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Blythe of Coleman, and Robert Edwin
Udahl of Prince George were united in matrimony. The
groom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Udahl of Birch
River, Manitoba. Rev. F. A,
McPhee officiated.
The bride was lovely in a white
nylon net over satin dress with pep-
lum of chantilly lace and a nylon
lace bolero with bracelet length
sleeves and a peter pan collar. Her
shoulder length veil fell from a
coronet of pearls and orange blossoms. Her only jewellery' were
pearl earrings. She carried a bouquet of pink roses and carnations.
Mrs. Mary Vohrodsky, sister of
the bride who was matron of honor, wore a pink nylon net dress in
strapless style and a bolero jacket.
She carried a bouquet of gladioli
and fern. Miss Rose Bova, bridesmaid, wore a matching blue nylon
net dress and carried a bouquet of
gladioli and fern. Mrs. Vohrodsky
and Miss Bova wore chapel veils of
nylon net falling' from bridal caps
of pink and blue tulle.
Attending the groom was Mr.
Dave Hall. The usher was Vince
Vohradsky.
The church was'lovely decorated
with gladioli and mixed flowers and
Don't Miss
TODAY
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
Hume Hotel
Public Showings 10:30 to 5:30
SAMPLE ROOM G
Under the personal supervision of Mr. Dick Littler, Carpet Expert ef
Alexander Murray and Company Limited, Vancouver.
Featured Will Be a Complete Line of
t Wool and Cotton Carpetingi • Wall to Wall Carpeting
• Squares and Scatter Mats • Broadlooms
AU of these will be displayed in Plains, Patterns and Tone-on-Tones in a
number of qualities.
We at Freeman's cordially Invite you to see this famous line of
Beautiful Carpets
EVERYONE WELCOME
EVENING   APPOINTMENTS   FOR
PRIVATE 8HOWINGS
ARRANGED.
PLEASE PHONE 11..  '
 «. !	
WI Sale Proceeds
To Handicapped
SALMO — The Salmo Women's
Institute held a tea and apron and
bake sale Friday with all proceeds
going to the Kootenay Society for
Handicapped Children.
Mrs. C. Hearn was convener and
was assisted by Mrs. C. Scribner.
Mrs. Henry John waa in charge of
pouring tea while serviteurs were
Mrs. W. Hearn and Mrs. W. Taylor.
Two contests were under the
charge of Mrs. J. Hearn. A hamper
of groceries was won by Mrs. Peter
John and a bouquet ot artificial
flowers by Mrs. K. West.
FRUITVALE LA
PLANS DANCES
FHUITVALE — Plans for a teen
agers' dance Friday were completed at a meeting of the Ladies' Auxiliary, to the Canadian Legion. A
public dance will be held October
23. The floor in the new kifohen
will be covered and plans were
made with the Women's Institute
to hold a miscellaneous shower for
a family who lost most of their belongings in a recent fire.
Mrs. J. Start was organist and
Walter Vohradsky, nephew of the
bride, sang "Because."
The reception was held in the
KP Hall with 100 guests attending.
Mrs. A. A, Watkins and' Mrs. J.
Roskilly poured while Misses E.
Bell, P. Sovimen and G. Omen served. A dance was held after the reception.   . .
At a wedding dinner at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. V. Vohradsky, the
table was centred with a four-tier
wedding cake which was embedded
in pink tulle and rose buds. Silver
sconces, pink taper, carnations and
sweetpeas decorated the room.
For her going-away outfit, the
bride chose a teal blue suit and a
white velvet hat with navy feathers. She wore a sweetheart rose.
Their wedding trip will be spent
in Winnipeg and Birch River, Manitoba. They will reside in Prince
George. The bride, who was a former member of the Kimberley telephone staff haa joined {he Prince
George staff. • .
Travelling Basket
Returns $38 To WA
GREENWOOD — Three travelling baskets, circulated by the
United Church Women's Auxiliary
raised the sum of $38. One of the
baskets has been sent out a second
time. The devotional period of the
first meeting of the new season,
held in the church kindergarten
room, was conducted by Mrs. W. E.
McArthur and Mrs.- N. MacNab.
Several "hobo teas" were held during tho-summer months and all
have returned excellent proceeds.
The teas will be continued:
Many beautiful pieces of fancy-
work and sewing were submitted
to the work committee for tht annual Christmas bazaar. ,
Farwell Banquet
For Grand Chief
NAKUSP — Eighteen members
of the Lucenne Temple Pythian
Sisters of New Denver joined with
the Nakusp temple at a farewell
banquet for the visiting Grand
Chief, Mrs. Vera Mesher of Victoria.
This was her last official visit to
the Kootenay.
FYLINGDALES, England <CP)t
Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Bodkin of
Burlington, Ont., were guests when
Mary Staveley was married here
to Frank Molyneux. The Canadians
were foster-parents of the bride
during her four years.in Canada as
a wartime evacuee.
BY POPULAR REQUEST
We Are C(mtiiMtng Our
CHESTERFIELD SALE
And Have Added Some Beautiful ■,
BEDROOM SUITES
For Your Selection
Check These Prices and Compare the Values.
CHESTERFIELD SUITES
.   2 piece suite in popular, long wearing, tweed fabrics. Regular $189.50.
$1C___50
2 piece beautiful wool frieze suites. Regular $289.10.
$
195
00
They are just two examples of the savings offered on Chesterfield
Freeman's. You must set these values today.
BEDROOM SUITES
4 piece walnut bedroom suite, beautifully finished. Regular $111.00-
$17500
3 piece double dresser suite, light modern finish. Regular $279.10.
$10 COO
195
When you want value and quality be tmtt to vMt us. Easy terms arranged.
Greenwood Guide
Leaders Elected
GREENWOOD — Mrs. V. MeDon-
ald was named captain and Mrs.
E. E. Hamagishi, lieutenant, at a
Girl Guide Association meeting at
the home of Mrs. 15. Hendry, The
Association decided to sponsor a
camp scholarship. One girl in the
company, who in the opinion of
leaders, has fulfilled the necessary
work of the year would ba (legible
to attend.
South Slocan
SOUTH SLOCAN—Mrs. A. Lees
of Vancouver who has been spending the summer with her son-in-
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. D.
F. Davis, returned by -plane.
Hae Dempsey is visiting in Winnipeg, guest of his brother-in-law
and sister, Dr. and Mrs. G. C.
Stevens.
Mrs. H. H. JameB and Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas James were motorists
to Trail on Saturday wljere they
were the guests of Mr, and Mrs.
Don McAlpine.
The Woman's Auxiliary of St.
Matthew's Church resumed their
meetings for the season at the home
of Mrs. Y. D. Yeatman. Mrs. C- M.
Murray presided. Rev. Canon W. F.
Silverwood was'.present, and gave
the devotions. Delegates chosen for
the Deanery meeting to be held in
Grand Forks were Mrs. Y. Gilker
and Mrs. W. P. Rogers. Letters of,
thanks were read for gift parcels
from England and Indian schools.
The date of Christmas sale was arranged for November.
R UTCHERTERIA
SS3BC
Corned Beef
Boned and Rolled, Red Brand; Fer lb.
Beef Tongues
Mild Cured* Per lb	
35*
39*
65*
PRIME RIBS
OF BEEF
Rolled
Per Ib	
. WEINERS
First grade. Jt **bt
Per Ib.   *TA
LOIN
PORK CHOPS
And Roasts.
Per Ib.	
COTTAGI
ROLLS
Tenderized.   ■      MP Q t)
Per Ib.  OO
LAMB
STEW
Lean.
Per Ib.
25*
65'
BOLOGNA
First grade. 3 C«J
Per Ib 3_#
Shoulders of Choice Lamb
Half or Whole, Rolled on Request; Per lb.
36*
Wood Vallance
Hardware Co. Ltd.
693 Bnkcy St
Phono 1630
FRESH
CODFISH
Per Ib.
28'
GOOD
HAMBURGER
3    lbs. for     I
ROASTING
CHICKEN
Grade A.
Per Ib. .__.
59*
YEARLING
HENS
45*
Freshly dressed.
Per Ib. 	
SHOULDER
VEAL
Roasts and A'QE
steaks. Per Ib.     t*
PHONES 527-528
FREE DELIVERY
Phone 775
Tfie taXiorfag, fabrics and,
styling in these coats aall
for pries* much higher
than owe! We've every
tmart  silhouette  and
color in all the important
fabrics.
Choose your favorite today. Have a fine coat at
an unexpectedly modest
price!
0mL
Ladies'
Apparel
THE FASHION CENTRE
IN NELSON
535 Baker St.
 i ___
;
1
_______________________
.,
__.	
 ofcftS
6 -r NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, 6CT.1, "53
.. DANA McCLURE, 8, Pacolma, Calif., ll shown on a stretcher
I       after he wai found following six days of wandering In the High
'       Sierras. The boy wai found and reported In good condition after
i.       veteran forest rangera had all but given up hope. He hadn't eaten
alnee he wandered away frem the Lodgepole resort where he was
vacationing with hll parents, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar McCluro of
Pacolma.—AP Wlrephoto.
Two Piccardsr Father and Sonr
Beat All Deep-Sea Diving Tests
OJT PONZA ISLAND, Italy (AP)
Professor Auguste Piccard and his
ion Jacques rode their 52-foot diving box, Trieste, deeper into the
aea Wednesday than any living man
hu ever gone—to a depth of almost
two miles.
The Italian navy said the Swiss-
born scientist and his son touched
the bottom of the • Tyrrhenian Sea
In the record plunge, equal to 10,-
330 feet.
The navy gave the time of the
dive as two hours and 12 minutes.
ITie 3150-metre plunge would beat
the record of two French naval officers by 1600 metres.
Two Italian naval .corvettes were
itanding by as the father and son
Abbott To Attend
Canberra Meeting
OTTAWA (CP)—Finance Minister Abbott will attend a meeting
of Commonwealth finance ministers in Australia early next year,
Prime Minister St. Laurent announced Wednesday.
The announcement gave no details of what will be discussed at
the conference, to be held in Sydney Jan. 8-J5. It ls believed, however, that the dollar-sterling problem will be the major topic.
A finance department official said
Canada expects no new issues to
arise.
The United Kingdom's hopes of
achieving convertibility of the
pound sterling with dollars—blocked to date by her s_h5rtage of dollars—has been discussed at previous
conferences of Commonwealth finance ministers.
Without convertibility, Britain
has had to limit purchases in dollar countries—Including Canada —
to the amount of dollars available
for payment.
The Sydney conference will likely confer on how far the Commonwealth's sterling - area countries
have progressed on the road to the
goal of free currency exchange.
fa finer Salf
ANYWHERE-
dropped into the depths, culminating months of trials and frustrations
in their stubby diving boat.
It wai the second dive made by
the pair in the Tyrrhenian. Last
month the diving boat went down
to a depth of 3608 feet and then hit
bottom.
Piccard and his son rode in i
small windowed compartment sus.
pended beneath the boat. Dubbed
a "bathyscafe," this compartment
is 6.4 feet in diameter. A searchlight
mounted in the hull allowed them
to tee In the inky blackness of the
sea depths.
Originally, the 89-year-old Piccard, who first gained fame for his
balloon flights into the stratosphere, had said he planned to go
down only 3000 metres—9842 fet.
His awkward-looking craft was
lowered Into the water by cable.
Two steel weights, attached to the
hull by magnets, helped to pull
it down. To bring it back to the
surface, the magnet field was cut
off, dropping the weights.
The craft has two electric motors, driving propellors that move
lt about the floor of the sea. ,
Business Spotlight.. .
Opfimisls and Pessimists Agree
Recession Need Not Be Inevitable
By FORBE8 RHUDE
Canadian Pr,en Business Editor
Will there or won't there be a
recesalon?   That" is a favorite query
In s business   circles   aa   the   fall
season gets under way.
i  Replies run from forecasts of a
continuation of business at  about
current levels to predictions of a
real shakedown.
PESSIMISTS' OUTLOOK
Some degree of recession hai
been a common forecast since tha
end of the war, and the fact that
it hasn't come before this makes
recession forecasters believe more
strongly that the time has come
at last.
They see nothing ahead, barring
new International tensions, to give
stimulating ihots In the arm, such
as have been given intermittently
during the last few years.
They feel today's prosperous conditions can't continue upward indefinitely and that the only way
they can turn is down.
They feel Increased production
facilities will produce more goods
than people can buy and that, as
a result, factories will have to cur
tail   production,   thus  leading   to
lesened employment  and lessened
earnings for would-be buyers.
They'see increased competition
from countries largely out of the
markets lor a while—such os Germany and Japan—and the relatively high .production costs of Canadian goods tending to price, them
out of foreign markets.
OPTIMISTS UNSHAKEN
Other observers pooh-pooh these
tears, point to statistics which indicate that Canada and the United
States are enjoying the most pros-
perous year in their histories, and
that there is no visible reason to
look for a downturn.
Not even all recession-forecasters ara pessimists. Some tee a re:
adjustment of values as an essen
tial if wa are to consolidate the
ground gained In recent years,
They sea in existence a wider
distribution of goods to more people than has ever been accomplished before—accomplished amid
the perils of an inflationary period
and despite rising prices. This advance in the midst of inflation, they
say, has created weakenneases and
inefficiencies, and a period of consolidation ls needed to shake them
out.before we can go on to new
high levels.
HARDSHIP NOT EXPECTED
They do not anticipate that the
shaklng-out need be so rigorous as
to caiiso widespread hardship, but
thay do envisage that both buslneei
and individuals wilt have to be
more careful,
Factors difficult to assess may
play havoc with any predictions.
It is .difficult to assess,' for instance, the stimulating effect of
Increasing population in Canada
and the United States — and to
what extent it may outweigh recessive trends.
It la difficult, too, to assess the
dynamic effect of people's determination to have more and more
things, or the effect of auch welfare measures as family allowances, old age pensions and unemployment Insurance.
DANGERSIGNALS
Some see these as dangerously
Increasing production costs which
must be pasted on to the customer;
others as a distribution of buying
power which putt props under
business by keeping a certain
amount of money in circulation.
A further, question is whither
government fiscal or monetary
steps can alleviate, or actually pre
vent, any severe recession. Many
economists believe that what has
been learned in the last couple of
decades Is sufficient to make impossible any auch depression as
that of the 1930s.
Bicycle Race To Be
Annual Affair      '   .,
VANCPUV-R (CP) - The Van-
couvor-Pontlcton-Vancouver bioycte
race staged thli year in aid of the
British Umpire Games will become
ah annual affair, officials of the
Games Cycle Committee decided at
a meeting here Tueiday night.
.Committee Chairman Dave Matthews and Bob Carphln, president
of the Vancouver Bicycle Club, aald
the road race held last weekend
waa a success In every way. Both
said civic officials at Pentlcton had
Indicated full support of plans to
make the race an annual event, It
is expected the 19S4 race will be
timed to take place during the Pentlcton Peach Festival.
The raee this year was won by
Jim Davles of Vancouver.
ALL-CANADIAN
JET BUILT
/TORONTO (CP) — A. V. Roe
Canada Limited announced Tuesday it has spent $17,500,000 to become the first Canadian company
ever to build a complete aircraft
from air-frame to Jet engines — in
Ita own factories.
'Peg Polio Figures
Lets Than Reported
WINNIPEG (CP) — Provincial
health authorities reported 19 new
cases of polio yesterday and no
further deaths in the province's
waning epidemic. They aald the total for the year has been adjusted
to 1698. Seven cases previously
listed as polio were later diagnosed
as other illneases.
DEATHS
-   ■ -
Toronto — Mrs. Jean E.# Crockett
Domlniqn president of the Canadian
Ladies' Golf Union.
CLASSIFIED ADS OET RESULT*
_bv Train
• • •
and get all these extra comforts
• Delicious meals, served aboard train.
• Large, picture windows — comfortable
reclining seats.
• Boom to move around, stretch your legs,
. visit with friends.
• Wide choice of sleeping accommodations—berths, sections, roomettes, drawing rooms, compartments.
When yoa travel, jo by train —
CANADIAN NATIONAL
o Dependable, safe travel In all kinds of
weather.
• Air-conditioning. Convenient rest rooms.
• Free baggage checking to your destination (up to ISO lbs.).
• Drlve-yourself car service at major
ppints.
yoa SAVE on low-cosf round trip tenet!
CANADIAN PACIFIC
__________
:•'.»"«___• ■ :  I './■:• ■■.,-.
tt^-'      ■'■***
 p^pippppww?^
Qtm>
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 1,1953 — 7
Duke Pilots RAF Plane Io Germany
LUENENBERG,  Germany   (AP)
—Ths Duke ol Edinburgh Wednes-
Mrs. John Dralnle
Puts on Blue Bonnet
-FlndiJtBeitl
Take your cue from Mrs. John Drainio
—"Claire Murray" of radio fame, and
wife of tho veil-known actor. Compare
DelOT- Buns Bohnit Margarine
urtth any spread at any price. Like this
leading Canadian lady, you'll find
Deluxe Blue Bonnet's fresh, sweet
flavor always rates top hilling. You'll
love it* year-round nutritional value
and you'll love its economy. It's,so
handy to use, too. Each golden-yellow
quarter pound Is individually wrapped
in pun aluminum foil with an inner
8Arohment lining — keeps its delicious
avor in and ice-box odors outl Buy
Deluxe Blue Bonnet and Enjot all
three i— Flavor, Nutrition, Economy!
—-IM
day piloted an RAF aircraft from
London to Germany to make a brief
visit to the 8th Hussars.
The duke was at the control of
the twin-engined de Havilland
Dove passenger plane from the
takeoff in Britain, and landed it1
at the RAF base here.
The duke won his RAF wings
earlier this year, but this was believed to be the first time he has
been in control of an aircraft for
the duration of an .over-water
flight.
SELL ARMS PLANTS
TO PRIVATE FIRMS
OTTAWA (CP) — The federal
government is prepared to sell millions of dollars worth of arms
plants to private industry if buyers
agree to maintain the plants as part
of Canada's defence potential, a
production department official said
Wednesday.
The purchase by A. V. Roe Canada Ltd., of the Malton, Ont., jet
engine plant is an example, the official said. Avro has agreed to maintain the plant's defence production
characteristics for the next 10 years.
"We are not looking for buyers
who want to turn' the plents solely
into civilian production, nor are we
willing to sell for flresale prices,"
the official added.
He hinted, however, that there
have been overtures by other private companies to take over government plants. These overtures
may harHen into' negotiations- later.
(with bran to help keep you regular)
[hatted In Kellogg's radiant ovens)
(exetWve flavouring developed by W. K. Kellogg)
BRAN FLAKES
, ..-.- ;:.y-\y-'     .,.,... .-:■:.- ,;7--7- ■■;■. .yy,<' ■ -:yy '..■77"~ ■-•." "v 7 •';■", '-■■:■   ■■■'   ,:.',■■ ."'■■■'. ..-:,'■;'!'',7-    .---
Big meat value event at SAFEWAY!
■ E|
Check the pork volues being featured tt your neighborhood Safeway this week. Each item carefully selected fer
tenderness, flavor and Juicy goodness — and guaranteed to satisfy In every way.
LEG of PORK
ee.
lb. 65c
Choice.
Whole, half
or quartered.
LOIN ROAST
ce.
ib. 55c
Choice.
Average 4 lbs. and
under. Rib end..	
PORK CHOPS
ee.
ib. 59c
Choice.
Loin or
rib end.
SIDE BACON
lb.49c
Burns'.
Lean, piece.
Shoulder Roast
— Ib. 47c
Whole
or half.
SPARE RIBS
lb. 55c
Side. Lean
and meaty.
Blade Rib Roost
Red Brand, Blade Out;  Lb.
49*
Rump Roost of Beef &"&*?. c.u*'...., _b. 59*
Chuck Roast of Beef BUd, 0ut, M Brrod. _.„.- 450
Ground Beef Red Brsnd,B5% _«_; u>. 42*
Short Ribs of Beef-or Bt.mt, Hed Brind.  „,. 29*
Shoulder Veal RoastBMd. _».  Lb, 39*
Leg of Lamb Roast -*-._., „ Hsi_, .1*. 75*
Boiling Fowl (jrade "A", Head, snd Feet Off]  Lb. 45*
Roasting Chlcbn§Sd>-a*>M-c« , i*. 59*
Fresh CodPiece „ SUCedi ...„  i*. 29*;
TENDERIZED SMOKED
Burns' Shamrock.
Whole, half
or quartered.	
SMOKED TENDERIZED
lb. 69c Cottage Rolls
Whole
or half.
lb. 65c
CantwL JaiuL
Grapefruit Sections & 22*
Choice Apricots X^ 18*
Strawberries Sft^S, ^OL 29*
Choice Pwch«K"c« *!? 18*
Crushed Pineapple $%„. 32*
fanned. $iuat/L
Orange Juice g*wS
Lemon Juice fS^.
  41*
14*
Pineapple Juice J*****       1 4*
TOmatO Juice FanCy; so oz. can ..    I jr
Vegetable Juice ^o,Ccalfail;   16*
TJttAadlaneouL Hhmi
Mild Cheese ^;,..!hedd8ri 49*
Fresh Eggs.nrc'rton., doi, .'.  76*
Margarine ST'cS^-^for 67*
Orange Marmalade £T,8.; 67*
Peanut Butter ML 52*
Red Plum JamKr,..nP!r,; 62*
David's Biseuits To^r* 39*
Walnuts 8U«°V 39*
Pitted Dates JMipk, 44*
Seedless Raisins,,Tff- 45*
Raisin Bread fflfa, 19*
B.C. Sugar f0T'^! $1.07
Glace Cherries?'* pkg        29*
Prices Effective
Oct. I, 2, 3
Okanagan Mcintosh
APPLES
Tanay-sweet flavor makes our Mcintosh
Apples a treat far fresh eating.
Excellent tee fer pies.
Kitchen Kraft
ENRICHED FLOUR
10 Ib. paper bag
24 Ib. cotton sack.
49 Ib. cotton sack.
_.. 7,1c
$1.73
$3.45
Oet Year lie Coupon . '
At Your Neighborhood Safeway.
Approx. 40 lb. box
lb. 11c $385
Florida Sweet Pink
GRAPEFRUIT
Brimful of Juice.
A real breakfast treat.
2 lbs. 29c
mmmtemm
Bananas _olden Ripe;2.bs. 45*
Bartlett Pearsg* 2*. 29*
Field Tomatoes ^^25*
Brbceoli JSJf LbuWUou':. 24*
Spinach _„ ... C8ll0 m 20*
Holland BulbC.,«°g. 69*
•••-. ■ ...
Airway Coffee
For those who  Ilk* a mild tnd
mellow blend, sweet and flovory.
■16oz.
pkg.
96'
3 lb.
bag _
2.84
Delicious Tokay
irapei. Tengy
umbo flusters,
grapes. Tengy sweet.
2 lbs. 39c
■MHp* 2 lbs. 2Ic
¥   <___.
L   i  C H VFWFAV
yyE^;        ' '       _»I_P ■ M ■■    ■■■   W W WA _■ fefiS!
IfSC   NOB HILL
COFFEE
l»er thoss who prefer a sharp, fresh,
vigorous,, full flavored ooffss.
16 or. QQ#   2 1b.       | Q3
pkg.    >0    bog __.   I.VD
.1 __U-^ Jr
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
EDWARD'S COFFEE
An extra-rloh, full-bodied) fragrant
blend for those who want the very
btst In coffee .., Drip or regulars
16 oz. can I eU__.
,        CANADA SAFEWAY LIMITED
•     .
 7
Pp^T-^
SSN".
^S&S* BUYS -WHYS
fy>/C(yfVt/M    n,    WEEKLY    I N F O R'M A T I O N    5 E R V I C !
-MONTREAL, October 1st — Heigho for Autumn
appetitesi .' . . heigho, too, for the rich, melting
Smoothness   of   creamy   HEINZ   CREAM   OF
TOMATO SOUP You'll find that the best of
buying this soup with the thick country cream
already in it—is that all you have to do is to add
water. It's much better,' really, than using straight
tomato soup—and adding milk. Thai way,, you get
nil I'll minium  -  '!■•"   B 80UI> •om8'*'nf l^e Heins Cream of Tomato
Soup. But what a difference when you make sure of perfection and
buy the poiip'with tho cream already in it! Saves milk—and .gives
'jrour family a eoup which satisfies eager appetites on chilly days\
.'■--. '■'',.    ^——^—,.
■There Are Quiz Shows . . . and Quit Shows! For my listening I'll
'takeRoy Ward Dickson's "Turnabout" program aa
.tops in good fun .and- edge-of-ehair interest!   And
■', tile  Face-Elle people (the sponsors)   are  offering
$1,000.00 cash prize in an intriguing contest. Of -
■-j course it doesn't take any $1,000.00 prize to appreciate FACE-ELLE quality—but you may want to!
. save the box top to enter the contest and, ia the
..." meantime, enjoy the oomfort of Face-Elle's extra
" eofthess.  Though you pay no more for it, you'll
Snd that Face-Elle is a truly deluxe tissue unequalled for absorbing and
' practical strength as well as being so much softer. Try iti
< Psstl It's lirler Than Yost Think—Fall is here and winter won't be
far behind. Yes, time's a-flying, but it's still not too
Late to arrange a Coal Loan to ease the strain pt
paying for your winter warmth. So, if you've been
"putting ofi" coal-buying, don't wait another day to
see about a low-cost BANK'OF MONTREAL Coot
Loan. Talk it over with your husband and then pay
a call on the manager .of your nearest branch of "My
Sank"'. With his assistance, you can have all your
eoal delivered at once, without having to pay for it
■;jf-       -..,; ..'.- all at once. You can Bpread out your loan repayment
-  ever as many as seven easy instalments. That's what I call a' real help
to a busy budget!
18 — NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 1, jjgfg
Nest freedom from breakfast tensions! ... all the
fuss and bother
•Of making coffee
the oW way baa
-been eb^nisialed...
by the amaring
mm INSTANT
: Chase*ban-
BORN CO-TEE
Scientists have
perfected tt new process for tapping the rich aromatio flavor of
- the roasted coffee bean—and now
full-bodied richly Savored coffee
is ready in an instant. Ita granules
dissolve like magic the moment
not water touches them.  I tell
yoa—we're only one of thousands
of families who   have  switched
overnight to Chase &. Sanborn's
Instant coffee —100% real coffee
^enjoymentI—with no brewing, or
'*.:,Jne'Bsy grounds. Breakfast's an
7 easier—happier meal nose!
.Top Secret tar Tailort is topi
for home sewers too
... the "finish" of
smart • detail, no-
w-ere more important than in skirts,
whioh, they tell
me, are smarter
than'ever this fall.'
So be sure to buy
LIG-HTNING
SLIDE FASTENERS, the 7" Style 805, to use in
skirts with fitted lines or rounded
fullness. Believe me, they're easy
to insert in any type! In every
Lightning package you'll, find clear
directions and plenty of pictures
to show you each step to take so
that it will look "professional".
You'll find, too, a wide range of
colors and sizes—£lus the dependable automatic lock—which locks
itself just where you want it—yet
elides at your touch .with silky
Smoothness. Safe 'n twe—every
time I
Applet ara at their
right now. And '
there's another
fruit that's always;
at its best .
SUNK.I8.T
LEMONS. They're
the finest, juiciest
lemons grown and
their tangy flavour
adds just the right touch of excitement to this apple dish ... Lemon
Baked Apples:
Core the apples end till each with
a tablespoons ol mincemeat or
raisins and the same of chopped
oranges. Then pour over this sauce
. . . Lemon Sauce—Cream' one-half
cup butter; gradually add one-half
cup sugar and one beaten egg.
Pour in three tablespoons water*,
three tablespoons fresh lemon
juice, and one tablespoon grated
lemon peel. Pour over apples and
bake at 350 deg. F. for about forty
minutes or umll apples are done.
jG-arnlsh irtth slices and wedges of
lemon.
Guthrie Trophy
To Powell River
Cadet Squadron
EDMONTON (CP) — Air Vice-
Marshal K. M. Guthrie announced
today that the No. 22 Powell River,
B.C., air cadet squadron had topped more than 100 western squadrons to win the Guthrie Air Cadet
Efficiency Trophy for 1952-53,    .
Winners of the four provincial
Guthrie Trophy Shields were: No.
177 TCA Winnipeg Bquadron, the
northwestern Ontar 1 o-Manitoba
shield; No. 30 Estevan squadron for
Saskatchewan; No. 107 High River
squadron for Alberta; and No. 135
Vancouver squadron for British Columbia,
The, Guthrie Efficiency Trophy,
for group efficiency of squadrons
west of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont,, was
won last year by the High River
squadron, with Powell River and
Estevan squadrons second and third
respectively.
Have   Ton   Heard   Tha   Goal
News? . . . specially for y-o-u, if
your feet have been bothering you
lately. The news is Phenylium,
the new medication in BLUE-JAY
Corn Plasters. Phenylium gets,
right down under your corn and
helps push it out from underneath
.... the firsb'really new medication
for corns and calluses in over
seventy years 1 In actual tests,
Phenylium went to work 33#>
faster and worked 35% more
surely than other leading remedies. Easy to see why folks with
problem feet say it's the best
news in years! I know you'll
agree!—ask for Blue-Jays with
Phenylium at your favourite drug
counter today.
Mather Lays New
Liner's Keel
GLASGOW, Scotland (By Cable)
—The keel plate of number 731 was
laid at the Fairfield Shipbuilding
and Engineering yards at Govan
Wednesday by W. A. Mather, of
Montreal, president of the Canadian
Pacific Railway. Number 731 denotes the new liner ordered by Canadian Pacific for thejr Atlantic
services. The 22,500-ton vessel was
ordered last November.
Before the ceremony, Mr. Mather, accompanied by C. E. Jefferson
of Montreal, vice-president of traffic for the CPR, A. C. MacDonald,
managing director of Canadian Pacific Steamships at Montreal, H. B.
Beaumont, of Montreal, steamship
passenger traffic manager, and Captain E. A. Shergold, general manager of Canadian Pacific Steamships
at Liverpool, toured the yard Inspecting models of accommodation
aboard the new vessel and some of
the work in progress on the ship.
Members of the party were later
entertained at a luncheon given by
directors of Fairfields, and ■ Mr.
Mather was presented with a carved
cigar box by Jackson Miller, chairman of the Fairfield company, as a
memento of the visit.
The new liner, which will cost
some $10,000,000 is expected to join
the Canadian Pacific's Empress
fleet in 1950. Her Canadian terminal
port will be Montreal. She will carry 150 first-class passengers and
900 tourist and will have a speed
of 22 knots.
8PRY, JOCULAS Osear' Ati-
man, who celebrated his 100th
birthday anniversary In Seattle,
shews where he's cutting, a new
tooth—the 6th In his fourth set
of teeth he hat harvested In a
century of living. His formula
for longevity? "Stay outdoors all
the time."—AP Wlrephoto.
(oast Board ol
tradelavors
Alternative Vole
' VANCOUVER (CP)-Vancouver
Board of Trade has launched a protest ' against the proposed 'elimination of B. C.'s alternative' voting
system."
In a letter to. Premier W. A. C,
Bennett, the board urged the government to deter action "until a
complete study of the report on
election procedures has been made
by a committee of the present
members of the Legislature."
"We reiterate our belief In the
system of alternative voting and
urge consideration of the; recommendations made, not only by the
Vancouver Board of Trade, but also
by the B. C. Chamber of Commerce
and by the Canadian Chamber of
Commerce." the Board told the
premier.
The Board also recommended
study be given to possible' elimination of the present absentee ballot
procedure, reduction of time be
tween issuance of a writ and the
election, and consideration ot
new method of setting up voters'
lists.
At Latt, Modern Science Hsu fist-ess Me The Perfect Ansuer to the
"Problem of tshe Yellow Wash" I Scientists have
proved that true whiteness is made up of all the
seven colours of the rainbow and if blue is missing,
white turns to dingy yellow. Ordinary washing can
make clothes clean, but even a washing machine
can't make them really white. That is the special
property of Blue. That's why washing needs that
last rinse with Blue to replace the missing blue ray's and restore
sparkling whiteness. What's more, Blue is kind to the finest fabrics,
It won't harm tshem in the least--and it costs just a few pennies a
month to use. So keep your white things truly white with Blue I
, Yes, for tho whitest wash, tne RECKITT'S BLUE.
More Steel men
To Join Strike
WINNIPEG (CP) — A spokesman
for the United Steelworkers of
America (CIO-CCL) said Tuesday
another 350 workers are to join
the 350 on strike at the'Winnipeg
plant of Dominion Bridge Company
early today.
MILK PRICE8 RISE
RECHNA (CP) — Milk prices
here will go up Thursday by one
cent to 20 cents a quart, conform
ing with the winter price set by an
order of the Saskatchewan milk
board in July, 1931. The price is
fixed by the board for six-month
periods beginning May 1 and Oct. 1.
Eight lakes abounding in white-
fish, dot the Qu'Appelle river, flowing 270 miles in Saskatchewan and
Manitoba!
Ottawa Citizen
Ceases to Issue
Morning Edition
OTTAWA (CP) — The Ottawa
Citizen, in a move to concentrate
on the evening newspaper field,
Wednesday announced it is merging its morning and evening editions. Effective Thursday it will
publish one paper, under the name
of The Evening Citizen.
The announcement appeared in
Wednesday's morning paper — the
final one after 102 years of publication under the "Citizen" banner.
The Citizen said it realizes its
move to consolidate efforts on an
afternoon newspaper will inconvenience "to a degree" some readers
who have relied on the morning
edition.
It added: g
''' To them we offer our apologies. Equally we believe that to
the majority of our readers our
ability to improve materially our
services will be ot more than offsetting value."
The 1953 Canadian Almanac lists
circulation ot the morning edition
at 12,499; the evening at 48.582,
The merger leaves Ottawa with
no morning papers of its own. It
reduces the number, of morning
papers in Canada to 18.
Mrs. Tilly Rolston,
Condition Unchanged
VANCOUVER (OP) —Hospital
authorities here said early Wednesday the condition bf Mrs; Tilly
Rolston, , B.C.'i Education minister who underwent an operation
In Vanoouver Saturday, was unchanged,
The nature of her Illness was
not revealed, but she was said
still to be "as well as could be
expected."
Name Earl Warren
U.S. Chief Justice
WASHINGTON (AP)—President
Elsenhower Wednesday named
Governor Earl Warren of California
to be chief justice of the United
States.
The president told his press conference the 62-year-old Warren, a
Republican, will be on the bench
of the high court when it opens
its fall session Monday.
The recess appointment of Warren as successor to the late Chief
Justice Fred Vinson is subject to
Senate confirmation when Congress
reconvenes In January. Vinson
cUfd of a heart attack Sept. 8.
The Nicolet River in Quebec was
named after the French explorer
Jean Nicolet.
U. S.-Spain Pact Rouses Laborites
MARGATE, England (CP)-The
Labor party's annual conference
here Tuesday announced it will
discuss an emergency resolution
condemning the military agreement
between the United States and
Spain.
The resolution, put forward by
the Amalgamated Engineering un
ion, expressed "deep concern" at
the agreement.
"We deplore, this agreement,
which we believe will cast grave
doubts on assurances that the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization Is not
an aggressive alliance," the resolution says, and condemns "military
support for France".
D. C. MURPHY. JR.       DR, R, A. GRAY       DR. D. C. MURPHY
Owner
HOURS: 8:30 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M
Dr. D.'C. MURPHY
and ASSOCIATES
Optometrists
PHONE MAIN 3537
LICENSED BY *
STATE EXAMINATION       spoKANE*!?. WaS?
43 Years In Spokane
Kilometre Figures
Admitted Wrong
LONDON (Reuters) — Mathema-
tiicans who pounced on an error in
figures submitted by, the Vickers
Aircraft Company for 'the world air
speed record were told Wednesday
that they had indeed spotted a mistake—the kilometre figures in the
published claim were wrong.
After' Lt.-Cmdr. Mike Lithgow
whizzed his Supermarine Swift
over the Libyan desert last week, it
was announced he had achieved a
speed of 737.7 miles or 1183 kilometres an hour. It was quickly pointed
out that 1183 kilometres is the equivalent of 735.1 miles.
Tuesday the Royal Aero Club,
whose officials timed the flight, announced that "due to an inexplicable error, the wrong kilometre figure was given to the world"— it
should have been 1188.
The latter figure was the One
given to the International Aeronautical Federation in submitting Lithgow. claim. The RAF spokesman
said: "The original 737.7 mph speed
Is quite correct."
PHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED
Kamloops Man
Missing in
Rugged Interior
PRINCE GEORGE, B. C. (CF>-
Another major search opened in
Prince George area Wednesday as I
RCMP started hunting for a Kam-!
loops business executive who has
not been seen for 10 days. i
Missing Is Frederick Freeman,
who went, into the area between 1
Prince George and Prince Rupert'
on a combined business and hunt-'
ing trip.
Search for Mr. Freeman opened I
as volunteers and other police continued their all-out search for four-1
year-old Ronald Aspinall, missing
from his Prince George home since
Friday.
Mr. Freeman was reported missing Wednesday by his wife in Kam-,
loops.
She said he planned to make calls
on theatres In the north-central
area in connection with his 3-D
film,distribution business. Then he
was "supposed to go hunting."
Mrs. Freeman told RCMP that
her husband "has had little experience as a hunter."
Says High Costs
Hold Back Mines
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP)—
Robert Campbell, president of
Camray Mines Ltd., Toronto, says
artificially high costs are keeping
Alaska mines undeveloped.
Campbell made the observation
after a "prospecting" trip for good
investment properties.
' "There are mineral deposits here
that, if they were in Canada, would
have drills down and 500 people
working them," he said. He blamed
high labor costs and government
cost-plus construction for what he
calls the artificially high price
structure.
Campbell said American capital
spent in Alaska might come by
way of Canada because Canadian
regulations on stocks and securities
are less restricted.
8COT WINS $210,000
ALLOA, Scotland (Reuters) —
John McLaren, 50, a Scots fireman,
learned Tuesday he can give up
the odd jobs he has been doing
to help the family income. The
equivalent of a seven-cent wager
in a weekly football pool competition brought him $210,000, tax-free,
too.
access, fried food, er soled btgrssdiMsti ere crliplir, tottissr ttfiMl
drained en Mltosty Blue Tovvsli.
Hand* ore dried quickly*, gently w!lh left obsosiscnl Milady
Withers cle-cm-up — Gluo.Tow.li arts Ideal IV dozens of
chores _» polishing fjlcn, sjrlndsswt, er sjstng wills eloansen,
pollihoi o( coop.
Household protocllon —. fer manicuring er prassKsfon agalntt
any damaging er mutiy household liquid.
f lac* a handy dispenser ef Milady Bluo Towels. In your Hlehen
today — you'll find Ihem at your grocer'*.
X0 2u64ti%Ut8t.j
DEPARTMENT pF
LANDS AND FORESTS
Forest Service
Examination for Sealer's Licence will be held at the following places on the following dates, starting at 8:00 a.m.
each morning.
PLACE
DATE 1953
logs Yd He SCALEb AT
Kimberley
October 6th
Fabro Building Supply mill
Michel
October 8th
Crowtneit Coal Co. mill
Galloway
October 9th
Galloway Lumber Co. mill
Fruitvale
October. 14th
Nelson Lumber Co, mill
Silverton
October 16th
Falrhurst mill
West Arrow Park
October 20th
Wost Arrow Park
Arrowhead
October 22nd
8artorle Mill -
Grand Forks
October 27th
Grand Porks Sawmill.
Rook Creek
October 29th
Zamora Forest Products
Golden
November 4th
Golden
cdnewater
November 5th
Edgewater .awmllls
ffKailo
November'13th
Kaslo
... Creston
November 17th
Creston 8awmllls
The'morning will be taken up scaling logs and the afternoon will be taken up with the written paper.
Candidates, are required to bring a pencil and if possible
i B.C. Scale Rule.
Examination fee Is Five Dollars ($5.00).
Candidates must submit application forms properly filled
out at the examination.
Applicants trying the examination for the second or third
time will be required to show their receipt for payment of the
$5.00 fee. '
Application forms and further information may be obtained
from the District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or Local Forest Service
Office.
H. B. Forse,
District   Forester.
'■■)
The Women't Flight Boot as advertised in yesterday's Bay Day ad wai Incorrectly illustrated. The item appeart below with the correct illustration.
SPECIAL PRICE!
Women's Flight Boots
Special price for ipecial boats fo wear over
thst foot. ... You'll marvel at their
extreme lightness and enjoy the easy walking comfort they bring you, to lay nothing
of the coxy warmth they bring na matter
how cold the weather gets. The outside (hell
7 is of a thick.rubber lined with a soft fleecy
pile lining. Sixes are 4 to 9 in colors of
black or brown.
BAY DAY.
SPECIAL
New Instant Coffee
Sparks Revolution
in Breakfast Habits
C/iangeover Comes Fail as
Women Abandon Coffee Pofs
and Messy Grounds for
Matchless Speed and Satisfaction of Chase & Sanborn's
Ne* "Instant"
You just can't deny it! When the
coffee pot disappears from innumerable breakfast tables across
the land, aome sort of revolution
has hit the Canadian breakfast
scene.
And it's happening! In a fast-
growing number of homes in every
community the breakfast coffee
isn't browed, perked, strained or
dripped any more—:
Coffee'e made—glorious, fragrant
and zestful—the moment hot
water hits a spoonful of wonderful new Instant Chase & Sanborn
Coffee!
Any woman would be glad to Bay
farewell to stained coffee pots and
sloppy grounds. But it has to be
an "instant" of exceptional merit
to change her allegiance. For
breakfast coffee, particularly.
New Process Perfected
If anybody could produce auch
an "instant", it would be Chase
ft Sanborn, with its unrivalled
$tackground of nearly 100 years
as the nation's leading coffee
house. Not until Chase & Sanborn scientists had devised a
revolutionary new process was it
possible to perfect thia delicious
new form of breakfast coffee.
This marvellous process extracts
the flavor, color, aroma, and all
the deepdown goodness of the
finest selected coffee beans. There
you have your morning coffee—
in rich, coffee-colored granules—
100% real coffee! Nothing whatever to do but add hot water and
enjoy its flavor and its heart-
otirring lift.
Big Sayings, Too
And with new Instant Chase &
Sanborn you not only economize
on time and work. You save
money—up to 4(ty a pound on
your coffee bills.'No wonder it's
being served in more and more
homes every day.
They're hot
jWfelkin'
Yes, this instant coffee
is a far cry from the
weak, disappointing coffee
substitutes. It's potent, full-
flavored, 100% real coffee!
But there .only one way to
prove it. Get a jar of New
Instant Chase & Sanborn.. Taste
that freshly ground coffee
flavor—so good you'll make
it your regular coffee!
|\b/!Jie Bawxrand /tana of
facriiV Ground Cbfee hsiarrflv!
i
■7     it ''A      '    '
 Yankee ^liibbeM
ers to
etieEs9-S
By JACK HAND
NEW YORK (APJ-The proud New York Yankees
battered Brooklyn's ace 20-gnmo winner and three relief
7 pitchers to beat the power-happy Dodgers at their own
same Wedneiday, 8-"5, in the opening game of their bid
for. a record fifth straight world baseball chflmpionuhlp.
Johnny Sain. « National Xesgue star with Boston in
'the 1848 series, choked off the Brooks after. Allie Reynolds
■.. crumpled under » blistering
early pace.
The Yanki startled a stadium
crow, of ,07,374 by bloating Carl
■ Eriklne for four rum in the first
inning. After the Dodgers finally
fought beck to tie in the seventh,
they again applied the pressure to
the ibaky Dodger pitching itaft,
Joe Collins,  benched tor Johnny
■ Mlzo  during a hltless '82 series,
•napped  the  tie with a 990.foot
home run smash In   the   Yankee
levonth,
Sain drove in two with a double
and Collins knocked in another
with a iinila in tha three-run
eighth inning that ruined Dodger
hopes,
It Was a day of frustration for
the Dodgers who never have won
S leriei. Reeling after tha flwrt-
inning blast, they finally managed
to knock out a fait-tlrlng Reynolds
in the sixth only to see the game
go out the window when their own
pitchers failed, Twelve Brooks
were stranded, only two short of
the series record,
Wams TAKH OVER   .
Jim Hughes, who alowed only
one run in four innings after taking over from Ersklne, was the
only affective Dodger pitcher, 'Af*
ter he went out for pinch-bitter
, Ooorgo Bhuba in tha sixth, manager Chuck Dressen couldn't find
a stepper.
. Billy Martin hit a three-run triple
with the bases loaded off Erskine
In the flrit and added a pair of
, singles to lead the Yankee attack.
Cellini and Yogi Berra provided
tea home run punch.
Junior Gilliam, OU Hodges and
Shuba ripped into Reynolds' pitches
for home rum before manager Casey Stengel brought in Sain. Curve
ball Johnny allowed only one more
run and five hits over the last
four and two thirds Innings to earn
tha victory.
From the time Gilliam, tha Rookie who chased Jackie Robinson
oft tecond ban, hit his homer into
the right field seats in the fifth,
■   the CordiiiI
COEUR D'ALENE
HOTEL
228 N.How,ird.it Trent Ave
JOHNNY SAIN
. • winning pitcher.
JOI COLLINB
.. . winning run a homer,
it was obvious that Reynolds would
ba lucky to go nine, '     .  .
Time after time he went to
three balls on the hitter. When he
finally was yanked after Hodges'
'iiait and Ihuba'i two-run pinch
. homer In the sixths he had threw"
.104 pltohoi. Moit pltoheri average
- about 120 or io fer a full game.
Although Reynolds failed in his
attempt to tie Red Ruffing's all
time mark of seven series victor
ies, he struck out six men,
The free-hitting game lasted
three hours and 10 minutes, only
nine minutes short ot the record
for a nlna-lnnlng game, and the'
gross receipts' of 5403,207.00 end the
net of $387,974.71 were highs, due
to the price increases, The old record was W78.778.73 at Cleveland,
Oct 10, 1948 In a game watched by
88,388 fans,
Neither manager would name
pitchers pait Thursday when two
lefthander! will battle. Vic-Raschl
la expected to be the Yankee
opener at Ebbets Field Friday and
Dressen might even come back
with Erskine 30-6 because he
worked only one inlng Wednesday.
Buy, Boll, Trade the Classified Way
SENIOR HOCKEY
Season Tickets
and Contract Tickets
New Tieltot Holders May Pick Up Tickets or Contracts
At the Civic Centre Office Oct. 2nd and Oct. 3rd
Next Trip-FLY
When you go by air you reach ypur destination
fatter and more conveniently. Flying time from
CASTLEGAR to     -
Vancouver 2 hrs. 28.05
San Francisco 63A hrs. 79.50
Toronto 9    hrs. 151.75
Honolulu       12    hrs. 196.05
Let the Canadian Pacific Airlines agent help
you plan your entire trip. He will gladly maka
all arrangement!, provide complete through
ticket aervloe ne matter where you want to ge.
Phone 204, Nolson, for Information and res
ervatlom.
AIRLINES
Inning by
FIRST1' (KflsiING
DODGERS — Gilliam waited out
a full'count then slashed a single
into oentreftold. Rooso filed to
Bauer- in. short right, Gilliam ran
baok to first lately. Snider went
out on a high chopper, Gilliam
reaching second, Robinson went
out on a pretty play by Rlauto
who came in ten for his tricky
bouncer.    ,
No runs, one hit, no errori,' one
left,        >
YANKEES — McDougald popped
to Gilliam behind tint base, Collins walked. Bauer'i liner'to.right-
centre rolled.for a triple, scoring
Collins, with the first run of the
game. Berra struck out, the first
of the gains.' Erskine walked
Mantle on tour: pitches, .Eriklne'a
eighth successive ball put Woodllng on and loaded the bases, Martin up next swung Bt n 1-1 pitch
and slammed s 400-foot triple to left
centra clearing the bases. Rltiuto,
eighth batter of tho Inning, rapped
a two^bouncor to Cox who threw to
Hodgei for the out,
Four runs, two hits, no errors,
one left
SECOND'INNING   .
DODGERS—Reynolds' third pitch
to Camptmolln hit him on the >'lgt)t
wrlit. Campenolla took hla base apparently uninjured. Hodgei filed to
short left. Ho had suffered through
21 hltless times at bat in the il)52-|
series, Furillo wai out on a called
third strike. Cox lined into left field
for a double, tending Campanella
to third, Wayne Belerdl, who went
Into hit tor Eriklne, went down
swinging,
No runs, one hit, no errori, two
elft.
YANKEES - Jim Hughes, a big
right-hander, took -the mount for
the Dodgers. Reynolds struck out.
McDougald bounced1 out. Collins
popped out,
No runs, no hits, no errori, none
left
THIRD INNING
DODGERS-~Gllli8m  struck  out.
Reese walked. Snider itruck out.
Robinson went out on a 10ft liner to
Martin.
No rum, no hit", no errors, one
left.
: YANKEE? — Bauer watched a
third strike break over the outside
corner. Berra itruck out, but had
to be thrown out when Campanella
dropped the third strike, Mantle
singled but was cut down attempting to steal.
No runs, one hit, no errors, none
left, .-,
',.,., FOURTH-INNING
DODGERS —Campanella popped
up ta Rizzuto', Hodges watched a
third called strike, Berra precipitated the first argument, ot the series when he dbjeeted to a called
ball on Furlllo, but umpire Grieve
shook him off quickly. . furlllo
walked, Cox filed to Bauer.
No runs, no hits, no errori, one
left.
YANKEES - Woodllng. filed to
Snider. Martin bunted a few feet
from the plate and beat Hughes'
hurried throw to first, The throw
bounded paet Hodges, enabling
Martin to reach second on the
pitcher.' error. When Furlllo's return throw bounced past third
baseman Billy Cox, Martin advanced to third on the right fielder's
error. Rizzuto lent a one-bouncec
to Reeie who threw him out, a>
Martin held third. Reynold! walked.
McDougeld rolled to Reese who
flipped to Gilliam, forcing Reynolds
at.iecond.
No nmi, ohe hit, two errori, two
left,
FIFTH INNING
DODGERS-Hughei took a third
called strike, It was Reynolds' sixth
strikeout. Gilliam homered into the
lower right field stands, hitting
Reynolds' first pitch. Reese' filed
to Bauer. Snider, rammed a hit over
Martin's head and then stretched lt
into a double. Robinson walked on
four pitches. Campanella filed to
Woodllng.
One run, two hits, no errors, two
left.
YANKEES-Colllns filed to Snider. Bauer lofted to Furillo, Berra
slammed a homer Into the lower
right-field stands. It was his fifth
world series home run. Gilliam
stopped Mantle's grass-cutter to retire the batter with a snap throw
to Hodges.
One run, one hit, no errors, none
left
SIXTH INNING
DODGERS — Hodges blasted a
long home run Into the lower left-
field stands to end his hit famine.
Furillo fifed to Bauer. Cox singled.
George Shuba, left-handed hitter,
batted for Hughes. Shuba lined a
pinch-hit home run • to the lower
right-field stands. It was only. the
third plnch-hlt homer In « world
series game. Reynolds was replaced
by righthander Johnny Sain. Shu-
ba's two-run homer, narrowed the
Yankee's lead to 0-4. Gilliam was
thrown out. Reese walked,
Snider singled, lending Reese to
third. Robinson was thrown out at
first. ■       . .
Three runs, lour hits, no errors,
two left   -
>   COMNsIT!
MECHANICAL
REPAIRS
By   Faotory Trained
Mechanic!
SUPERIOR
MOTORS
Vour. Dodge be Soto Dealer
Oppoalto Post Office
on Vernon Street
Budget Plan available on all
Salei and Service
',,.,.- t)1h H9D0II
... breaki world series Jinx with
homer In ilxth,. He also had two
•Inglas to his credits His homer
wai flnt hit Ih H trips te plate
In world lorloi play,
YANKSES-Glom Labine, a righthander, came In to pitch for Brooklyn, Woodllng tingled into right
centre, Martin bounced to Gilliam,
whose throw to Reese forced Woodllng at second. On an attempted hit.
and-run play, Rljt.uto iwung and
mined, Campanula's throw to Gilliam nipped tha sliding Martin, Labine slapped down Rlztuto'a hot
shot back to the box and threw
him out.
No rum, one hit, no orror.s none
left,
SEVENTH INNING
DODGERS-Cnmnimolla dropped
a Texai league tingle into short left,
Hodgei whlitled a single into con-
trefleld, Campanella racing to third.
Furlllo lined a single 'through
centre, scoring Campanella with
tha tying run as Hodgei stopped at
aecond. Berra pounced on Cox's
bunt and caught Hodgei at third.
Labine. hitting for himself alio
dropped a bunt In front of the plate
and Furillo was out at third, Berra
to McDougald. Berra caught Gilliam's,foul.
One run, three hltl, no errors,
two left.
YANKEES—Sain looked at three
called strikes. McDougald filed to
centrefleld. Collins cracked a home
run to put the Yankees ahead again
0-5. Bauer singled. Berra singled,
Bauer stopping at second. Ben Wade,
a big righthander, replaced Labine.
Mantle'struck oiit, u..- •      '.''..
One run, three hltl, no errori, two
left
EIGHTH INNING
DODGERS - Reese filed to left
centre, Snider bounced out, Robinson filed.to deep left centre. It
was the first inning that the Dodgers went out in order.
No runs, no hit, no errors, none
left
YANKEES - Woodllng bounced
out Martin singled, With Rizzuto at
bat, Martin atole second. .Rizzuto
walked. Sain doubled and both Martin and Rizzuto scored. McDougald
lined to Furlllo. Collins singled,
scoring Sain, Ba>ier fanned,
Three runs, three hits, no errors,
one lef.t
NINTH INNING
DODGERS—Campanella lined to
McDougald, Hodges singled, Furillo fouled to Berra, McDougald
whIpMH out Cox. i
No (TOM, one hit, no errors, one
left \
Soccer Results
LONDON (Reuters) — Soccer results in the United Kingdom Wednesday:    <•    .   .     .
ENOLISH LEAQUE
pivlilon III, Southern
Aldershot 2, Newport C 0.
Bournemouth 2, Ipswich T 3.
Bristol C 3, Norwich C I.
Crystal P 0, Queen's P R 3.
Gillingham 1, Leyton 0 2.
Reading 2, Northampton T 0,
Southend U 1, Torquay V. 0,
Swindon T 2, Exeter C 4.
Dlvltlen Ml, Northern
Bradford I!, Chester 0.
Wrexham 0, Bradford C L
Other Matohoi
Everton 6, Army 2.
Manchester U 2, Hibernian 2.
Vernon Upsets
Srampeders 5-3
VERNON, B.C.' (CP) — Vernon
Canadian! of the Okanagan Senior
Hockey League upiet Calgary
Stampeders of the Weitern Hockey
League 5-3 Tuesday night after ex
plodlng for three goals In the third
period.
In Calgary's only other exhibition game this season, they turned
top.tablet on the New York Rangers' of the National Hockey League
3-2,   ...,-.-
Several types of orchids are
among the wild flowers, fern and
shrubs found in the Yukon.
Word hat been received th|t th*
Vancouver'Canucks of the Poolftc
Const League -will piny an exhibition mme.ln Trail on rrlday.'evsnv
ins ageinit tho Smoke Eaten. /
It was alto announced earlier on
Wednesday they would play against
the Nolson Maple Leafs On Satur-J
day night but a- telegram received
by the Nelson executive late'Wednesday: stated that, they would be
unable to fulfill their ' planned
engagement with the Willie
Schilsldt-cOached- crew,.' h-' ,' 7?
• Included In the Vancouver lineup will fie old reliable Les Hickev,
the  veteran  winger,  and  Andy
Bgihgsts), - * young tallow who
scored many an important goal for
tho Canucks last winter,
Alio oii Jisnd will |>e "Terrible".
Ivin Irwin who last naion played
with the Victoria .Ceugari. ftwln
only a few deyi ago, playing against
tha New York Hangart, proved
lslmseil a tough character by tussling with big Allan . Stanley, the
Ranger defenceman.. According to
reports out of Vancduver Irwin
was the undisputed victor in a
fight sold to have been a dllly.
Two youngsters try,nS to make a
place on the team, Mel Houghton
and Art Stone will also ba soon In
action. ■
."i^T'.-TsT'' rT--'Y '>'.'
boy-oampaneLla
.,. wit a itnndout for the Dodg-
en behind th* plate. Twice he
threw out runtien trying to steal
legends -
Dodgers Not
Downhearted
DODOHR  DRIIIIhla ROOM
•y WILL GRIM8LBY
NEW YORK (AP) - Brooklyn
manager Charlie Dressen tald a
cloie call at third base In' the
savonUl Inning decided the tint
World Serlei game In favor of the
Now York Yankeai, but ho refused to" "alibi."
"All I'm going to lay it that It
was close," ho laid In th* draulng
room afterwards. "I'm not going to
cry like the Yankees did Inst year,"
Th* situation wat thlt:
The game wat tied ' 1-5 with
Brooklyn at bat and none out at
the top of the seventh, Gil Hodges
was on second and Carl Furlllo on
first' Third baseman Billy Cox
bmite-~and Yogi Berra scooped up
the ball and rifled it to the Yankee
third baseman, Gil McDougald.
Art Gore, National Leagu* umpire at third, threw his handt up
quickly on. tha clot* play. Drosson
went into a dance oi rage at third
bate but made no official protest,
Instead of having the bases full
with none out the Dodgers hed
men on second and first with one
out.
The beaten Dodgers were solemn
but not downhearted aa they
trooped Into their dressing quarters
YANKS DRE88INQ ROOM
By TED 8MIT8
NEW YORK AP)-Hank Bauer,
whose triple in the first inning
of the World Series Wednesday
started things going for the
Yankees against the Dodgers,
blamed himself for letting George
Shuba score a pinch-hit homer in
the ilxth.
"That homer wai about a toot
over me," said Bauer. "I think if
I had got back in time and turned I
might have got it."
In the end lt didn't matter, and
the .Yankees tripped from the field
sweating and happy.
Actually, Bauer made a tremendous Jump in an effort to cut down
Shuba's homer Into the standi,
but .he missed, and Shuba went
Into, the record hooka ai only the
third man In 30 years of World
Series play to hit' a pinch hit home
run. The other two ara both
Yankees on the present team —
Yogi Berra and Johnny Mlze.
"I thought the boys played pretty
good," said manager Casey Stengel, with magnificent under-state-
ment. "They played good ball, and
we did, too."   ■
Stengel,, aiming to win his fifth
straight world championship, — a
feat no manoger has ever accomplished — had'no crltlclam of his
pitching ace, Allie Reynolds, who
left the game in the sixth right
after Shuba's two-run homer made
the score 5-4 In New York's favor.
"He just ran out of gas, that's
all," said the gravel-voiced Caaey.
Johnny Sain took his place and
wound up ai the hero of the game
with a two-run double in the eighth
that put victory beyond reach ot]
the Dodgers.
NEW YORK (AP) - Wllllem F.
Bill Talbert, one of the finest
doubles players ever developed in
United States tennis and one of
the game's outstanding strategists,
was chosen • Wednesday as non-
playing captain of the U.S. Davis
Cup team which will play In Aui-
trails in December.
Hockey Season Tickets
LAST DAY
Fpr Mist Year's Ticket Holders
To Pick Up Their Tickets or Contracts
School Boys
5-0 In Soccer
Settlmo Zanon with aome top-
notch goaltondlng gave tha Senior
High School boys a shutout victory
in their first soccer match of the
year.
The High boys, while holding
Notre Dame College scoreless, proceeded to rap home flv* unanswered marken,
The gamoj played at tha Junior
High School grounds, proved to be
s little puzzling to several of th*
College ladt for they had novor
played b*fo>e.
High School got away to a 8-0
lead in the first halt at their practice tiisiani during physical education .periods at school proved useful.- '
Rleherd Caunt shared tha spotlight with Zanon by counting two
of th* flv* goals,icored. Other scorns wero Mike Amsden. Bilj Phillips and Bill Parker.
Oood footwork and posslng were
almost impossjble due to the
ground! being slippery because of
rain.
It is expected that high ichool
hout* competition will get undor
way vary shortly with all four
houses, A, B, C ind D, taking part.
Two. Sheep Near
Natal-Michel
NATAL-*** tint party tn ft.
Nntnl-Mlohol district to return after
a successful hunting trip in the
South Fork vicinity in tho South
Country waa that of Mlko (Splko)
Mlhnlynuk, Bennett (Cogor) Kom-
enac of Natal, and Frank Moglelka,
George,, Watson, of Fernie. T_ey
bagged two rams,, fint sheep taken
thia season, since Sept. 15.
Bull moos* toason opens Oct 1,
Strikes and Spares
In the Men's Commercial League
Monday evening, Bill Day topped
all tingle icoret with a 278, while
Joe Slkorikl with hla 711 captured
the aggrdgoto honors, *
Tha team honors went' to the
hard-driving Humei, when thay
had a 1038 tingle and a .078 aggregate.
Bowling in th* SOO'i wore Bill
Say. US, Al Malnman 667, Al Craig
680, Doug HaU 608, Johnny Blanoy,
618, Herb Miller 638. Lea Rood 603,
Gerry Corbett 602, and Don Wylle
832.
Dot Lyone end Dot Waterer led
the bowlers in the Ladies' Seqior
Leagu* Tueiday evening, with
Lyont taking th* singles with a
276 and Waterer tha aggregate with
a 681..
A single of 901 and an aggregate
ot 2846 was good enough for top
team honors for tha Irvine crew.'
Bowlers scoring singles of 229 or
better were Lena Koehle, 248; Elizabeth Korblh, 228; Betty Maloney,
280; Alpha McGinn, 233; Lorno
Spelrs, 280, and Dot'Waterer, with
both e 266 and a 220.
Tha Waterer team moved into undisputed possession of Tlrst place In
the league standing with 15 points.
Maloney with 13 holds second place,
followed by Morris with 12, Speln
nine, Porteous and Lyons eight,
Iceton and Jarrett, seven, Gentles,
Irvine and Story, five, and Koehle
two.,
World's largest mammal il the
blue whale, which may weigh ai
much aa 118 toni,
NEJJON DAILY NBWS, THUMDAY, OCT. 1,19*3 — 9
Of Hawks in NHL
ly CECIL 8MITM
Canadian Press 8taff Writer
PEMBROKE, Ont, (CP) - A
trickle of new blood mixed with
veterans from last season gives
Chicago Black Hawks hop* of a
winning tearti In the coming National Hockey League campaign.
Coach Sid Abel, himself a star
centreman with .Detroit Red Wlngi
for 13 years, said he will have
possibly five new players In uniform al he watched hii charges go
through a lengthy drill at the
Memorial Centre here, training
camp for the Hawki.
TwO of the new playeri, coine
from junior ranki, while the other
three played senior hockey last
winter in the Western Canada
.League.
Tho juniors ara Ken Wharram,
10-yoar-old centre who starred with
Gait juniors last year, and Murray
Coitollo, lB-y»ar-old rlghtwinger
with Toronto's.St. Michael's In the
1083.69 season.
•WILL IN PRACTICE
They arrived with a number of
other juniors for try-outi and were
held over for further training.'High
in hit praise, Abel said "both have
been going 'at a fait clip and it's
quite possible they will be with
ut whan we open th* icuson in
Montreal Oct. 8."
The three other new playeri ar*
centra Larry Wilson, 23; right
winger Lou jankowski, 22, and
defanc»m*n Larry Ziedol, 35. All
played with Edmonton last itaion.
Abel laid Ziedtl, a big, solid, hardhitting fellow who played with Chi-
coutlml in the. Quebec Hockey
League before going to Edmonton,
would definitely itay with the
Hawks.
The Chicago regulars orrlvod In
camp .Sept. 13 and worltod out
twin a day for the tint week, thee
switched to one two-hour practice
each day.
Asked if he had any predictions
on how his team would finish tbe
lengthy 70-gnmo schedule ahead,
Abol smllod and tald;
"Not at present Training has
been going great and the fellows
ar* rounding into shap* nic*]y but
I'll,wait to see them in real action
befor* making any predictions.
"We've suffered only one casualty In training so far, Doe Coutur*
tuff*r*d a pulled groin but It isn't
nrious." . 'i.
Th* Hawks finished last year in
fourth spot
PETE CONACHHR SHINES
Abel specifically mentioned Pate
Conacher, a ion ot Charlio Con-
acher, ai shining in practice
"Conaeher  started out great  at
(•: . - y. ;\.i.t■)■■■!> .:.;«» -
tha first of last season, then dipped off toward the. finish.and "wa
wer* a little disappointed. But (His
year he has. been going WelHjJn
practice and I think he is sSe-
glnnlng to hit hit ttr.de again.".- | -
In an Inter-squad game; Conacher scored three goals as -ihe
Whites defeated the Blacks 8-6."  -
Al Rollins, formerly of Torohto
Maple Leafs, will be goalie for
the Hawks again this season. Henry
Red Bassen of Calgary has also
been working In the nets In practice but will go to Chatham before
the season starts.
Last year's players who ir*
back in camp are defenceman Bill
Gadsby, Gus Mortson, Al Dows-
bury end lee Fogolln, and forwards Gut Bodnar, George Gee,
Bill Motlenko, Jim McFadden, Vic-
Lynn, Fred Huoul, Jimmy Petera,
Couture and Conacher. '.
LONDON <lt*ut»rs> — Results of
Rugby League games played In tht
United Kingdom Saturday:
YORKSHIRE CUP
Semi-final
Huddersfleld 10, Bradford N 11.
LANCASHIRE CUP       »
It Helens 17, Warrington 10. *
This advertisement ie not published
or diiplayod by Tho Liquor Control
Board or by tho Government et
British Columbia.
Wood Vallance Hdwre. Co. Ltd,
593 Baltor St. phono 1530
ll WILSON
GENERAL MERCHANT   .        SILVERTON, B.C.
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THUD* - WE SBJWEST SCENERY IN 1ME
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___—...■
10— NELSO^DAILY NEWS, THURSQAY, OCT. 1,1953
P^<P
V
in
:
■1
i
I PERSON TO-PERSON WANT AM
i    /W QUICK RESULTS I
■:    ■
Phone 144
Deadline tor Classified Ads—5 p.m.
Phone 144
BIRTHS
NASH—To Mr. arid Mrs. J.-K.
Nosh, 4921 54th St. Red Deer, Alta.,
Sept. 26, a daughter. •">'..
PRINGLE—To Mr.'/ind-Mrs. J. -•
Pringle of Princeton, Sept. 29, a
daughter. Mrs. Pringle Is the former
Noreen Towriss.
INKSTER—To Mr. and: Mrs. Ian
Macdonald Inkster (nee Wlnnifred
Chandler) at St. Vincent's.Hospital,
Vancouver, Sept.- 27, a son, Roderick Ian;
NESBITT—To Mr. arid Mrs. Wil-
ford Nesbitt, New Denver, at Slocan
Community Hospital, New Denver,
Sept. 27, a daughter.
GORDONt-To Mr. and Mrs. Ken
Gordon, Silverton, at the- Slocan
Community Hospital, Nevi Denver,
Sept. 26. a son.: ■■"■
HELP WANTED—FEMALE
LOCAL' REAL ESTATE AND- IN-
surance office requires stenographer, October first or sooner.
Must have shorthand. Experience
not essential but preferred. Please
state qualifications' in application.
Box 26, Nelson, B.C.
WANTED —DEPENDABLE HIGH
school girl to mind children evenings, in exchange-or room and
board, in respectable home. Box
6344, Daily News.
HOUSEKEEPER WANTED IMME-
diately, 612 Carbonate Street.
AGENT8 WANTED
WATKINS.DEALER URGENTLY
required for Nelson to serve and
sell many satisfied customers who
are now waiting for the Watkins
Dealer. Applicant must have car-
Credit can be arranged. For full
information write or wire The
J. R. Watkins Co., 1010 Albernl
Street, Vancouver.
if you arJs m_-_-_,M> in
earning $300,or more per month,
handling Health arid Accident
and Income Protection Insurance,
write Transportation Insurance
Co., 6280 Dunbar Street, Vancouver, B:C. Experienced salesmen
preferred, but others considered.
SITUATIONS WANTED
PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS
ETC.. FOR SALE
HOUSE FOR SALE — TW& BED-
rooms, combination living room
and dining room, fireplace, large
kitchen and den. Hot water heat,
full basement. Upstairs can easily
be converted to suite for revenue.
Excellent home. Good garden and
fruit trees/ Two blocks from bus
route. For price and terms, Box
5100, Daily News.
FOR SALE—MODERN 7-ROO-4ED
house. 3 bedrooms; 1 1-3 acres on
highwspr with beautifully landscaped garden and trees. Automatic furnace, fireplace, electric
hot water heater, electric stove.
Next to shopping -centre and
school. Down payment to be arranged.. Box -16,, Kinnaird, or
Phone 3S02, Castlegar,
FOR SALE—50 ACRES. 40 ACRES
in. good timber. 6-roomed log.
house, lots of water, piped, on
main road 2 miles south of Slocan
City. Ill health reason for. selling.
Apply to Mrs. J. Boudien, Slocan
City, B.C.
FOR QUICK SALE—3-BEDROOM
house near bus and schools. For
particulars write Box 1407, Nelson Daily News..
?6R gALf. - 1-4 ROOM HOUSE,
fully modern; 1-3 rooin house,
fully modern. Apply Wm. A
Henke. Procter.
FOR SALE—NEW 5-ROOM HOME
on Vt acre upland, 1 mile from
Nelson, on Ymir Road, Phone
476-R-l or apply 60 Ymir Road.
3-ROOM    HOUSE    FOR    QUICK
sale. Apply 45 inside Ymir Road.
MACHINERY
MARRIED WOMAN WANTS PEft-
manent work. Clerking experience. Phone 678-L-l.
DRESSMAKER ALTERATTONS A
specialty. Phone 1678-L.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND
FARM SUPPLIES, ETC
BUY YOtm BAA. CHICKS 3B5
year from the Appleby Poultry
Farm, Mission City, B.C. We have
over 7000 extremely healthy and
properly conditioned Breeders on
our own firm. Our baby chicks
are produce) only .from our own
stock in Whit* Leghorns, White
Rocks, New Hampshire* and
Crosses. Catalogue on request.
itRbM FAMOUS E6<- LA-W-.
strains R.O.P. Sired Neew Hamp
pullets, vaccinated against Newcastle, and. bronchitis. 10 wks. old
$1.20, 12 wks. old $i.J0, any
quantities. Kromhoff Farms, R.R,
No. S, New Westminster, B.G.
Phone Newton d0-L-3.
Ramp Body and
Fender Works
DEALERS FOR
BRADEN and TULSA
TRUCK WINCHES
FOR EVERY APPLICATION
3 to 30 Tons Capacity
Nelson, B.C.
phone 196 — 556 Josephine St.
PRICES ON APPLICATION
NATIONAL MACE-NIB- GO,
LIMITED
DISTRIBUTORS FOR: fHHOU-,
SAWMILL, LOGGING ADO
CONTRACTORS' EQUHT-EN-
Enquiries invited.     ;'
Granville Island, Vancouver 1, B.C
WANTED- MISCELLANEOUS
WANmED - CLEAN COTTON
rags.'Must be 12 indies square
or more. Daily News.
PUBLIC NOTICES
BRITISH  COLUMBIA  INTERIOR
VEGETABLE MARKETING
BOARD ,
NOTICE TO REGISTERED
OWNERS IN DISTRICT NO. 11
Nelson-Trail
The ANNUAL MEETING of the
REGISTERED OWNERS for the
purpose of electing one (1) dele-'
gate to represent them during the
coming season will be. held in the
WOMEN'S INSTITUTE ROOM,
CIVIC CENTRE, NELSON, B.C., on
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 27TH, 1053,
at 8:00 p.m.
ALL REGISTERED OWNERS are
urged to attend this meeting at
which a Member of. the Board will
be present, The B.C. Interior'Vege-
table Scheme requires thai all owners register with the Board arid
defines -jin Owner as any person
registered in the books of any Land
Registry Office as the owner in
fee-simple of any land within the
area, or as, the holder of the last
agreement to, purchase any land
within the area, arid includes the
holder of an agreement to purchase
land from the Director of Soldier
Settlement (or his predecessor, the
Soldier Settlement Board) or Director, Veterans Land Act, and who
in'any such case grows or causes
to be .grown for sale upon such
land,, comprising one-quarter of an
acre or more, any regulated product, and any holder of a lease, of
land in the area, of which land
not less than three acres is used
for growing any regulated product
for sale and which lease is for a
ts-rm of three years or more.
ALL OWNERS are required to
register with the Board. Those persons not registered may obtain the
necessary forms by writing to the
Secretary, B.C. Interior Vegetable
Marketing Board, 1476 Water
Street, Kelowna, B.C., and in the
case' of a lessee, should produce
evidence as to his lease.
NOTE: Any owner who has not
registered can at the time of the
meeting file with the Chairman a
statutory declaration showing that
he is qualified to be so registered.
By Order of the Board.
E. Poole,
Secretary.'
Dated at Kelowna, B.C.,
This 1st day of October, 1053.
WA_W__>-4raraTY-THREE INCH
wide bunk bed Spring. Phi 708-L.
PETS, CANARIES, BEES. ETC.
I SMALL PET MONKEY IN CAGE,
1 pair of guinea pigs, 1 male; 1
female Pekinese dogs; also hamsters for sale. Box 232, Cranbrook.
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Slender
f___r.s
CMiaene
spring—
9. Ponder
lO.Islan.
<WX)
12. Sea eastc
13. An easily
fusible
metal
M. Increase ki
any way
16. International
language
17. Sainte
(abbr.*
18. Perishes
20. At home
21. Juice of
_.«•*
».D*s-
eharged
a gun
M.A
Japanese
Mquor
23. Cry
of
8. A plunge
forward
-.The
tut
teas*/
5. Young hog
6.Chum         ■ ttshowed
1. Help mercy
8. Free from 36. Hue*
living germs 26. Half
0. Large ' an ism
Iwdics of 17. Disembark
water 29. One of the
M. Pressed
_a auu Uin
Lirj-iH'-.u-! aiiis
SIDE   @____[_]   BE
nsaa aaaaai
so.-1
teilwstot. Aatwn
13. Small eat
15. Kind of
34._I.1M
name
38. Poems
38. Small
drink
Great Lakes   SO. Chinese
98. Tapestry
33. An oily
fruit
pagoda
St. Tavern
44. Behold!
f,
x-
sr
r*
ar-
1
r*
w
TT
p
<y
%
II
ii
1
13
t4
1ST
%
%
IS.
>i
%
18
20
f<
%
%
-i
%
it
-V
.4
35
it
^
37
_5
1
-■»
%
i
%
SO
t^
-i
3i
%
33
sr
.4.
i
I
37
38
39
to
4
i
4_
+-
i
&!
%
fi.
%
*
1.. Cavity
14. Water
vapor
17. Bellowed
softly, Sn
a coto
28. A shade
of red
29. Consume
30. Close to
31. Wh.
through
effort.
33. Exclamation
38. Sun. god
37. Pierced
with holes
in many
places
39. Whole
■42. Vex
43. Goddess af
the moon
ti. Washes
45. Receptacles
46. Foreboding
DAILY mtfJOq/EtyiE-ntrt'e how to wofktt:
AXYDLBAAXR '
IsLONOFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used
for the three Vs, X for the two O's, ete.  Single letters, apos-
trophies,'the length and formation of tho words are aB hints.
' Each day the code tetters are different   7. ,
A Cryptogram quotation
ZSMW    LtSG    DSX    NO L W F RC S E M W D C
IA    ORAM    LVM    BIWM,    D8M    tllZLVF
ewKire   di   fmldb—.mzkoo.."■-'
yesterday's Cryptoquote: BREAKER' OF, GOD'S OWN
,     PEACE,.YOU SHALL IN TURN YOURSELF BE BROaEN—
SEAMAN.   -;•■"■■
RENTALS
FULLY MODERN 5-ROOM HOUSE-,
in Ymir. Including electric sfova
and oil floor furnace. Rent $50.00
per month. Apply E. P. Hauke-
dahl or Noble Gould, Ymir, B.C.
WANTED — NELSON BUSINESS
man urgently needs two or three
bedrpom furnished house or apt
close in by Oct 1st Best refer-
ence. Phone 1364-Y.
FOR RENT—1 4-ROOM HOUSE,
unfurnished; 1 2-room cabin, furnished. 6 miles on Nelson-Trail
highway. Apply 015-A Hall fy
after 6 p.m.
WANTED, TILL UlUt, 2 &R 3-
bedroom house, on the North
Shore. R. E. Jackson, Starlight
Drive-in. '
HOUSEKEEPING    ROOMS    *Oit
rent, Winter rates. General heat,'
electric stoves. North Shore Motel
— Phone 1684.
FOR RENT—ROOM WITF-SaTS;
Private entrance, breakfast and
lunch. Phone 718-Y.--
FOR RENT —UPPER bUPUfcjJT
Apply 106 Park St., in front of
hospital.
TWO LIGHT HOWEK-a_?a?l_
rooms, furnished. Apply 140 Baker
Street. Phone 401-L.
FOR RENT—FURNISHED I_Otft.fi
in Falrview. $85.00 per month.
Phone 1277-L.
ROOM WITH _iit_AKFASf ANS
' lunch, for one or two sharing.- —
Phone 718-Y.
FOR RENT—FUtLY _TJRNIS____j'
modern 3-room house. Winter
rates. Phone 421-R.
Rboivi, aiNT-tAt, Vott J.WSB
nessman, in nice home. All conveniences. Phone 45T-R altar 3.
ROOM AND BOARD FOR Business lady or man. Phone 474-X. .
FOR RENT—LIGHT HOU_EKEEpT
ing room. Phone 405-L.
FOR RENT—1 SLEEPING ROOMS
close in. Phone 247-Y.
GARAGE FOft ttENT FOft Js-OIt-
ing furniture or car. Ph. 742-Y.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIBS
FOR SALE OR TRADE—PROFIT-
able business covering the Kqo-
tenays. Approx. $10,000 would include stock and equipment
"Would accept lumber In trade.
Box 5189, Daily News,
FOR SALE - FIVE-FOOT COM-
mercial deep freeze, six-foot
double decker dairy case, cash
register, scales, 1051 GMC half-
ton truck; all in A-l condition.
Phone 1549-L, Trail.
FOR SALE—PETE'S GARAGE
and Grocery Store, with 4-room-
ed house and outbuildings. Write
or phone Pete's Garage, Pass-
more, B.C.
FOR RENT—A STORE SPACE, 32
x 34 feet;, large warehouse adjoining. Good location. Optional
Willi or without grocery stock and
fixtures. Phone 1549-L, Trail.
FOR RENT—TWO-ROOM APAR4-
ment. Apply 723 Silica Street.
WANTED — ttARAG* JTOR Walter storage. Box 6474, Daily Nei
FOR RENT - i-ltobM
ished suite. 711 Carbonate St.
HOUSEKEEPING   RtfOM   t&t
rent.
Phone 386-Y.
PERSONAL
MICRdNIC HEARING A_0_.-
Write PO Boy 3». NdsiM.'B.€.
surance Co. D. L Ken.'Agent.;
Depot Clean rooms and ra-ssta-
able rates. Vancouver. B.C
.OUR s_\Ssv__.M. hiABiJS it^<_X_Nl0-4
Nova Kelp ean help supply tt.
Avoid and relieve deficiency disorders like Anaemia, Constipation, Piles, Nerves, by starting ta
take Nova Kelp Tablets todas.
Three  economical  sizes,   at  as
ROOM ANO BOARD
■■■r.» "j:    e-
, FOR 1 OR %
ROOM AND BOAffl
sharing- Rhone 69
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS ... m <** im
(Pacific Standard TtmeS
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1, T99J
MM.
7:00—News
7:05—Warren's Wigwam
7:15—Sports News
7:20—Warren's Wigwam.
7:30-rNew»
7:35—Warren . Wigwam
8:00—News
8:10—Sports News
8:15—Breakfast Glut
8:45—Serenade   -
8:55—Sport News
9:00—Morning Devotions
9:15—Sillette's World Series
12:20—News
12:30—Farm Broadcast
12:55—Sports News
1:00—Man In the Kitchen
1:15—Hollywood Galling
1:30—Fairview Shopping Gui<ie
2:00—Liberty Special
2:15—Clean-up Time
2:30—Homemaker Harmonies
3:15—Sacred Heart
3:30—Riders of the Purple Sage
3:45—CBC Parade of Hits
4:15—As. Tunes Go By-
4:30—Hudson's Bay -topees*
4:45—Taking to Teens        '
4:55—Report From Parli.
5:00—Daily Report Urom
5:05—Pacific News
5:15—Int. Commentacy
5:20—Behind (he News
5:25—Spotlight on a Star
5:45—Sports News-
5:50—Newf
6:00-Kit Parade
6:30—Cavalcade ef Meiedy
7:00—News
f.lS-^tewe Roundup
7:30—This Is My Sfoiy
8:00—Don't Destroy
8:15—Jefferonian Heritaga
8:45—This 'n That
9:0—Vancouver Concert Q«
9:30—Winnipeg Drama
10:00—News
10:15—Midweek Review
10:30—Sports Roundup
10:45—Starlight Ballroom'
11:00—Around the Town
12:00—NEWS Night Cap   •
■H
,w«
CBC PROGRAMS
(Mountain Standard Time)
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1953
.7:00—Fisherman's   Broadcast   and
1:00—Afternoon Concert
Marine Weather
2:30—Trans-Canada Matrass
7:15—Musical Minutes
3:15—Brave Voyage
3:30—Frograme Resume
3:45—B.C. Roundup
,7:35—Musical Minutes   -
4:15-rA Trip to the Moon
7:407-Morning Devotions
4:30—Sleepytime Storyteller
7:55—Musical March Fast
4:45—Music for Children
8:00—News
5:00—Musical Program
8:10—Here's Bill Good
5:25—International Commentary
8:15—Breakfast  Club
5:30—UN Today
8:45--A_ything Goes
5:45—News and Weathsir
0:00—BBC News
5:55—Have You Heard?
9:15—Aunt Lucy
6:00—Bill Goou Sports
0:30—Laura Limited
6:15—Ragtime Trio
9:45—Famous Voices
6:30—Ballad Time
10:00—Morning Visit
7:00—News .
10:15—Hi
7:15—NewS Roundup
10:45—Musical Kitchen
7:30—Waltzes
11:00—Kate Altken
8:00—Bob McMullln Show
11:15—Kindergarten of the Air
8:30—Official Opening New
11:30—A Man and His Magic
Winnipeg Studios
1215-News
st:00—International Concert
12:25- -Showeaes
10:00—News
12:30—Farm  Broadcast
10:15—Academic Freedom
12:55—Behind the News
10:30—Sports Page
________
:■■■'■■     ■   -     .    -       ....      ,-   -  -,_■_.■ ;"
 '   .-.-I   ■,-.'.:■ ,■■-■■--<    .   ■ . ■-.-J
J PERSONlO-PERSON WANT AE
1    ,W QUICK RfSULIS f •
Phone 144
«r»f*
Deadline for Classified Ads- -S p.m.
Phono 144
INSTRUCTION
PO  YOU JlAVf SBCTOITY? -
Learn  railway  telegraphy nqw,
I want to talk to io mm iMO,
who are interested in training as
Railroad Telegraph Operators flnd
Station Agents. We train you
in your home, Does not Interfere
' with your present Job. It sincere,
smbltious, and in good health,
write NOW to: Columbia Business Institute, Box (341, Daily
News.
AUTOMOTIVE
MOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES
i   Used Car
Lot
Opening
600 BLOCK VERNON ST.
JUST BELOW THE NEW
k CEMENT y/ALL
1952 Chevrolet Coupe
195-Austin Somerset
1948 Plymouth Sedan
1947 Dodge Sedan
1947 Ford Coupe
OPENING
SPECIALS!
1952 Austin Somerset
Only ».«5.0O     '
1950 Austin Devon
Only $875.00
1949 Ford Pickup
Only 1750.00
ALSO
1946 Pontlac Sedon
1950 Austin Devon
1937 Plymouth Sedan
1936 Chrysler Sedan
1937 Ford Fordor
1934 Ford Fordor
COMMERCIALS
1952 Studebaker Pickup
1950 Ford Pickup
-V949^Ford Pickup
1949 Thames Panel
1 Panel
I CASH, TERMS AND TRADES
Joe Lsngan, Manager
EMPIRE
MOTORCYCLES, ^BICYCLES
'   (Continued)
tt% MtMi fWt NC.RTON t*A
therbed" nominator Corns in and
see this famous motorcycle, the
holsler of th,. Isle ot Man Tl at
Kootenai1 Motorcycle gales and
Servloe, Box 350. Castlegar; phone
2801. "Tho Shop ol Friendly Bar
vice*      :.-.    ■■ ■"-,,   -•    --'
$70.06 bdW And easV _>a¥.
ment. will get you a IMS Anglla
car, EJione 525-K-3 mornings and
_ evenings.      . "' 7
•si   df_tvt,«&.' 'iidlai  Dii_V-i(V
truck. Good condition. No reason-
able otter refused. Phone 147B.-ft>
FOit sALfc-'-ik. Mtb''q._>A_'.
senger   coupe,   flood   condition.
$950.00. Box 6497, Pally News.   '
SIB? otttk 'TAke$ i_.i tbtai
sedan, Oood motor, tires, Phone
floa-x
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
600 Block Vernon Street
Nelson, B.C.
IMMEDIATE
"DELIVERY
NEW AUSTINS
CREAM, GREY, FAWN
, 1953 Packard Clipper     *
1953 Austin Convertible
1952 Austin Somerset
1952 Chevrolet 6-Passenger
1951 Studebaker Sedan
1951 Monarch Coupe
1950 Standard Vanguard
1950 Mercury Fordor
• 1950 Chevrolet Deluxe
Sedan
1951.Austin Devon
195Q Austin Devon
1949 Austin Devon
1949 Mercury Coupe
1948 Dodge Sedan
COMMERCIALS
1951 Mercury Pickup .
1949 Austin Panel
1951 Austin Pickup
TERMS and TRADES
MJSTIN SERVICE and SALES
EMPIRE
MOTORS
803 Boker St.   Phone 1135
NELSON, B. C.
fOR SALE - DRIVING SCHOOL
ear; completely equipped with
officially approved dual controls,
clutch, brake, gas ind steering
wheel. 1949 Plymouth Special De-
Luxe sedon; spotlessly clean, excellent condition. An outstanding
opportunity for a school teacher
to develop a good paying after-
hours business. Phone, write or
wire Broadway Driving School
Ltd., 2608 W. Broadway, Vancouver 8.
(Continued in Next Column)
DEALERS _N ALL TYPES OF
used equipment, mill, mine end
logging supplies; new end used
-wire rope, pipe end fittings;
chain, steel plate end shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior
St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.
K4W B&OSB ArTJS'ftOeK
feathers for sale. Only breast and
body feathers with natural down
contents. No wing or tail. Goose,
12.00 per lb. Duck *1.86 per lb.
P. S. Gross,' PWeher Creek,
Alberta
Wtt. sA_j_-i-.-t.-_.' ____•-
cleaning automatic stoker. 25";
capacity 350 lbs. per hour. Burns
slack coal and enly used 6 mths.
Reason for selling:' we have installed Oil. Price; $300.00. Douglas
Hotel, Trail. B.C.
Fba those who WteM a i. Md
used washing machine, gasoline
or electric, at a better than reasonable price' (they must go),- as
low i>'.$11.00, call In to lattery's
Jtadio.or phone 1903
JtWlkJOMACHINE
SINGER CAN REPAIR YOWR
present Machine et reasonable
cost For frit estimate. Phone 41
SINGER SEWING CENTRE
Mil *AP«. ST - NBl>f.0.SHt
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY
AJ|-AV8R» AND MINE
E, W. WIDDOW80N Ss CO.; AS-
sayers, SOl'Josephipe St., Nelson.
Assarer, Chemist, Mine Rep.
jjijjigjg Arj'i, BU^fcV6H.
h. k. _6a», Sfg m. i.. .73
Baker St., Nelson, Phone lllB.
BC  Lands Surveyor.
s. v:."s«AVt_a; M'sok m
Kimberley. Phone 64.
B.C, Land Surveyor. Engineer,
_u*u (iVf&kTiwmSh-
Nelson, B.C, Surveyor, Engineer.
~ sVIAPHINISTS   ^
Of
Strike
Bck.NETTS UMITHD. '
Machine Shop. Acetylene end
electric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 803. 834 Vernon St.
ELECTRld HOT WATER RADIA-
tor, 12 coils, 1000 watt, good make,
nearly new, $25.00. Also strawberry cultivator and . harness,
cheap, Chanter, R.R. No. 1.
FOR SALE - lib BASS PIANO
accordian. 7 tones -treble, 4 bass.
Will trade for smaller accordian.
Phone 1737-R evenings.
FOR SALB-M MODEL PHIL-
lips combination, In good condition; $360.00 cash. For details
phono 1120.
ftPH. - FITTINGS - itfeBs -'
Special low prices Active Trad
Ing Co. 933 E Cordova St. Vancouver
BBAVEBWOOD LATHE WITH
all accessories, including motor.
Phone 922-L.
McCLARY ESCORT OH, BURN-
ing range with coal grates. Price,
$73.00. Phone 1478-R.
TOR SALE - CHILD'S FIGURE
skates, size 1. Used one season.
Phone 964-L.
FOR SALE—NORGE OIL HEAT-
er. Apply 720 Latimer St., or
phone 580-L.
FOR SAJLE—1 PR. GIRIIS' WHITE
figure skates, size 2; 1 pr. child's
white skates, size 8. Phone 1739-R.
FOR SALE—MEDIUM SIZE Mc-
Clary oil heater; used one year.
$80.00. Phone 570-Y.
FOR SALE —. CUSTOM RADIO,
for 1948 Plymouth or Dodge. —
Phone 1253-Y.
GIRLS' WHITE FIGURE SKATESi
size 13; high chair, crib mattress,
badminton racquet. Ph. 777-L-l.
CRESS WART REMOVER —
Leaves, no scars. Your druggist
sells CRESS.
ITALIAN PRUNES, 8c A POUND.
Also enamelled coal and wood
range, $40. Phone 1627-R-l.
BARTLETT PEARS. $1.30. ALSO
Labrador puppies. Phone 462-L-2.
North Shore.
FOR SALE—USED  WINDOW. -
Phone 012-X.
USED VACUUM, $15.00. PHONE
48-R before 10 a.m-, after 5 p.m.
FOR SALE—rpSTGIRLS' WHITE
skates; size 6; $5.00. Ph. 161-X-l.
BOYS' C.C.M. SKATES FOR SALE.
Size 11, Perfect shape. Ph. 1338-L.
FOR SALE—GIRL'S WHITE FIG-
ure skates. Size I. Phone 1011-Y.
FOR SALE — WILLIS UPRIGHT
grand piano. Phone 577-X-4.
.Maim la% Npoib
Classified Advertising Rates:
15c per line first Insertion end
non-cansecutlvt Insertions
lie line per consecutive insertion after first Insertion
48c line for 6 consecutive insertions
$1.96 line tor month >M consecutive Insertions)   Box numbers   lie  extra   Covers  any
number of insertions
PUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,
TENDERS, etc.—20c per line,
first Insertion. 18c per  line
each subsequent Insertion
ALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS
10* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
Subscription Rates:
(Not More Than Listed Here)
By carrier, per week,
bi edvanco .60
By carrier, per yoat $15.6(1
United States, United Kingdom;
One month        $ 1,38
Three months          1.7$
Six months       7,M
One year                 16.00 -
Mall In Canada, outside Nelson:
One month lib
Th.ee months    .       2.75
Six months 550
One year 10 0(>
Whsiro ax-trn poitaqt li required,
above rates plui. postage.
TORONTO STOCKS
.   (Closing Prices)
MINE* '
Acedia-Uranium  14
Akaitcho .       65 .
American Y K  _..: 23
Armistice    17
Atlas Y K        ;i8'/4
Aumeque  11
Aunor      2.10
Bagamae .;    ' .14
Base Metals  „ _.     .14
Bevcourt   35V.
BobJo 33
Bralorne ..<-...     3.05
Brewis R L t.      .10
Centre! Patricia  „ 84
Central Pore  16
Centremeque  10
Chesterville   - -      .43
Chimo G     1-15 -
Cochenour      1.00
Deta R L  19
Dome       16.15
Donalda       .46
Duvay      29
East Melartic ...-.     l.ft
East Sullivan  :.     4.30
Eastern Metals   1.40
-    " .29
,56
14.25
4.95
8.00
.88
.17
1.75
.a
.13
.23
.10
11.85
.23 V.
TORONTO (CP? it- C. H, Millard,
national director ot the United
Steelworkers of America (CIO
J CCL), said Wednesday a strike at
the Winnipeg plant of the Dominion.
Bridge Company will spread to the
company's 10 plants across the]
country "within a few days" unless
some basis ;of settlement is reached
on the union's-wage demands.
Some 700 workers struck Tuesday end Wednesday at the Winnipeg plants of the company and ita
subsidiary, the ' Manitoba Bridge
Company. >
Mr. Millard said workers at the
Toronto and Sault Ste. Marie,. Ont,
plants' have already voted to give
the Union executive authority to
strike'.' A final strike vote. of the
1300.workers at the Lachine, Que.
headquarters plant is scheduled for
next Tuesday.
NEAR SHOWDOWN
The Lachine workers already
have turned down's company of-
fer of a seven-cent hourly increase.
The union'director said the steel-
workers' have been trying to bargain with the individual plants but
the company refutes-to allow
branch managers to negotiate and
Insists that all bargaining be done
at the head office:
The   union supports  a  minority
wclHetloh board recommending
a three-step wage Increase from
$1.22 to $1.43V_ en hour, but on
Tuesday it offered the Winnipeg
management a three-step hike of
from 16 to 18 cents.
The company made no counterproposal, but said it Was willing
to alter its stand if the union would
submit an offer which was "quite
realistic."
Estella
Eureka _.
Falconbrfdge 	
Frobisher	
Giant Yel  „
God's Lake 	
Goldcrest .....
Golden Manitou
Hardrock 	
Harricana   .-.	
Hasage .:	
Heath-	
Holllnger   	
Homer Y K
Hudson Bay     37.88
Inspiration         1.58
Int Nickel
Kerr Addison
Labrador     -	
Lake Dufault ..
Lakeshore 	
Lamaque  _
Leitch
Lexindin  	
Macassa 	
MacDonald   	
MacLeod Cock	
Madsen R L  ..'	
Malartie G F	
McMarmac   ,
Moneta
New'Bidlamaque
New Calumet <	
New Lund     	
New Larder U	
New Mylamaque
Normetal 	
O'Leary	
Osisko 	
Pamour   ...	
Paymaster  	
Pickle Crop  ..
Pioneer
37.35
18.30
6.75
.67
5.35
4.1S
.65 Vi
.15%
1.50
.38
1.39
1.60
1.40
10.00
.46
.13
.60
•19 V.
1.57
.32
3.60
.20
.37
.75
.39
1.20
1.56
Placer Develop     8.33
Powell 'Rouyii 80
Preston E D   ,     2.40
Quebec Lab  13
Quebec Man
Quemont .....
Radiore   	
Roche L L
San Antonio	
Sherritt Gordon
Sigma M	
Silvermiller   	
Starratt Olsen ....
Steeloy	
Steep Rock   	
Sudbury Cont ....
Surf Inlet	
Sylvanite
15.75
.50
.1014
1.88
4.10
6.50
.70
.14
.10
5.90
.22
.13V4
1.10
Teek Hughes     1.90
Thompson-Lund  .16
Trans Cont Res  .34
Union Mining 16V4
United Keno   6.25
Upper Canada  1.08
Ventures  14.25
Violamac      —  2.40
Waite Amulet    985
OIL8
B A Oil  '. 18.88
Calmont   1.00
Central Leduc   1.55
Chemical Research   1.12
Del Rio  1.27
Federated P«te   3.20
Kroy
Mid Cont 	
Nat Pete 	
Pac Pete  _.„
United Oils    	
INDUSTRIALS
AbitlW ...	
Algoma Steel......
Aluminum 	
Argus  .-.	
Atlas St    	
Bathurst Power ..
Beattie Bros     ....
Bell Telephone ...
Brazilian
Can Breweries ....
Can Celahese 	
Can Dredge  	
Can Oil	
Can Pac Rly  „.
Coekshutt
Cons M St S 	
Dlst Seagram    ....
Dom Foundries ..
1.10
.14
1.80
7.25
.56
... 1-W
... 31V4
... 43H
.- lift
... m
-   40
...     7V4'
...   351.
..  ion
12%
2S\%
«H4
...   12
...   22-%
...   10
...   22V4
..    231.
...   13%
NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 1,19SS —11
and Liquor laws
FIREMEN FIGHT BLAZE which nearly destroyed a square
block of motion picture tits at the Columbia Plotures Corp., Bur-
bank, Calif., ranch. 8ets rased Included replicas ef e four-stony
apartment building, a bank and e medieval galleon. Unofficial
" the dr '- "" '-'-■*" -'--—    - '
estimates placed
damage In the neighborhood "of $700,666.
 -  .     .    .. —AP Wlrephoto,
New Zealand's Underground Sleam
May Feed Electric Power Planh
Market Trends
NEW YORK (AP) - The prices
declined with proceedings enlivened by a buying flurry In Hayden
Chemical.        Vl' ■'
Canadian stocks were lower. International Nickel fell, Dome Mines
slipped and Canadian Pacific eased.
Distillers Seagram was unchanged.
TORONTO (CP) — Gold* gained
slightly and other groups dropped
toward the close of trading.    -
Industrials were (he principal
losers. Base metals and western oils
each lost about a halt point and
golds gained e half.
MONTREAL (CP) — Trading
Was narrow, mixed and quiet during afternoon dealings.
Lake of the Woods fell while
Canada Steamship Lines gained' a
point. Other changes were small.
LONDON (Reuters) — London
showed strength and all sections of
British government stocks gained
fractions. The decline In irredeemable issues was halted.
Calgary Livestock
CALGARY (CP) — Trade was
fair on receipts of 1500 cattle and
calves and 900 carryovers on the
Calgary livestock market Wednesday.
Good light butcher steers and
heifers held steady, while heavy
.steers held steady at a discount
of one dollar or more.
Hogs at $32.50 for A grade
showed e drop of 50; sows, live,
held at 17.50;   good lambs 17.75.
Good butcher steers 18-18.50, odd
choice up to 19.50; common to
medium 10-17.50; good butcher heifers 16-17; common to medium 10-
•15.75; good butfher heifers 16-17;
common to medium 10.15.75; good
cows 9-10; common to medium
7.50-8.50; canners and cutters 5-
7.25; good bulls 9.50-11; common
to medium. 8.50-9.25; good stocker
and feeder steers 15-16.50; common
to medium 10.14.75; good to choice
veal calves 16-17.50; common to
medium 10.15.50.
METAL PRICES
NEW YORK (CP) — Spot prices;
Lead, N.Y., .13VS.
Zinc, East St. Louis, .10.
Tin, N.Y., .83V.	
Dom Steel Ss Coal B  11
Dom Stores .  15V4
Dom Magnesium  -  11VS
Eddy Paper ,  22
Famous Players  18
Fanny Farmer  21
Ford A  61V4
Gatlneau-.    ■  21V4
Gen Steel Wares  .' 101
Goodyear          98
Great Lakes      18
Gypsum Lime _ ' 33
Imperial Oil   .; 28 Vi
Imp Tobacco   10%
Int Metals   30
Int Nickel ;   37%
Int Pete        19VS
Leura Secord  18VS
Loblaw A  _  39
Loblaw B   -   42
Massey Harris     7%
McColl Frontenac    24V.
Mont Loco    _.._  13
Moore Corp     24
Nat Steel Car    25Vi
Page Hershey  _  67
Powell River     23%
Russ Indsutries    17 VS
Shawinlgan      _.  37
Sicks Brew  24VS
Simpsons A        13
Steel of Canada  29
Standard Paving    18
Union Gas of Can   28
United Corp A          27
Western Grocers A   34%
Weston '.George      31
Winnipeg Gas       6%
By J. C. GRAHAM
Canadian Press Correspondent
AUCKLAND, N.Z. (CP) — The
natural safety valve of the geyser
country, which for centuries gave
Maoris a- constant hot water supply
majj help change the economic
future, of New Zealand.
Th;e- government's spectacular
gamble in spending big sums In
digging into the ground to find
natural steam for electricity will
pay.oft, says Works Minister Stanley Goosman.
For more than three years engineers have been boring for
steam, producing dozens of man-
made geysers which dwarf the age-
old natural ones of the thermal
region in the' centre of North
island.
Now, Mr. Goosman says, the
Wairakei area, where drilling has
been going on, has been shown to
have the highest geothermal steam
pressure in the. world. The investigation period is over, he says, and
New Zealand can press ahead with
development'.
LIMITED SUPPLY
New Zealand is not well supplied
with coal for power plants, and
though a big hydro-electric program 'a In progress lt is likely that
before many years have passed all
available sites for dams on North
island will be developed.
It was this prospect thst prompted the government to take a
gamble on being able to use the
steam of the thermal areas for
electricity.
Large numbers of tourists visit
the region of geysers, blowholes,
boiling lakes, steaming cliffs and
bubbling mud pools in the. centre
of the island every year, but until
now little economic use has been
made of the vest steam power
trapped deep below the ground.
Lengthy investigations by geo-
physicists, volcanologists, drilling
engineers and other experts led to
the choice of Wairakei as the most
promising area for geotherma!
tests. Dozens of shallow bores, were
first put down to examine the
strata below the earth, the quality
of steam produced and the shape
of underground steam caverns.'!
Pressure and • output tests were
made and the effect noted of drilling several bores in close proximity.
HUGE STEAM AREA
The steam was not as "dry" at
that et Lardarello, In Italy, where
electricity Is successfully produced,
hut it waa more free from impurities end ways were found of extracting excess moisture. In addition there were soon indications
that an infinitely greater area of
steam was available for development than at the Italian plant. I
'Prolonged running tests weft
most promising. The steam pressure from some of the bores actually Increased after lengthy operation.
This prompted the drilling ol
larger and deeper bores, with spectacular results. Until they are silenced they give off steam with an
ear-plittlng roar that drowns all
other sound for hundreds of yards,
and they hurl jets of steam at great
pressure far higher into the air
than the best shots from natural
geysers.
The two latest bores, which are
down-to over 3000 feet, havo such
pressure that they cannot be played until special super-strength
valves have been manufastured
abroad to control them.
BUILD TEST STATION
The government will build a power station in the area. It will have
only a small output compared with
stations eventually planned, but
will be used to examine the problems of practical operation.
Mr. Goosman says geothermal
steam cah be made available to pro-.
duce power at only $6 to $S a kilowatt outlay on construction, compared with $100 a kilowatt needed
to build dams for hydrb-eleelrie
power.     ' *'   -.      .,".. ,    ...
No. ohe yet knows.the full extent of the steam belt which runs
at least half way across North island, he says, and it is still Impossible to guess what the Ultimate .development will be.
If electricity can be produce-
cheaply in sufficiently large quantities, a whole 'battery of large power stations may be built in the
termal region.
B-A Oil Reports
Increased Returns
TORONTO (CP) - British American Oil Co., Ltd., said in ita quarterly report to shareholders Wednesday that sales of all. products
for the first nine months of this
year were up nearly seven per cent
over the same period last year.
Earnings to date also are improved, chiefly due .to Increased
profits from production in the, U.S.,
following opening in August of the
Platte Pipe line which provides
transportation for Rocky mountain
crudes to central and mM-western
refineries.'
Trapped Men Saved
In Burning House
VANCOUVER (CP) — Firemen
rescued a roominghouse and club
operator trapped on a second-storey
ledge after he end a tenant were
burned In an early morning Granville street roominghouse fire today.
Rescued end taken to Vancouver
General Hospital was, Martin L.
inghouse. Williams is described as
Williams, 55, operator of the room-
being in "fairly good" condition
after suffering severe burns to his
hands and face.      > ■
The tenant. Dean McOowon, 81-
year-old CPR porter, escaped with
minor facial burns and ehlnged hair
as he fled te safety down the rear
etalre.
Williams was rescued by firemen
as he perched precariously on a
ledge In driving rain.
Vancouver Stocks
By STEWART TI-t-Y
MELBOURNE (Reuters) t- Australia's chronic shortage of hotel
rooms and her stringent liquor control laws are being subjected to
critical scrutiny as the country prepares for e rtyal.iour.* few months
from now tnd the 1956 Olympic
games here.
Architects and building Officials
assert .the country's hotel accommodations are' SO to ''30";yeArs "Behind the times while critics add
that her liquor laws are even more
out-dated,
- During the royal tour, the Shortage, of hotel space will be felt directly in every state capital while
the pinch during the 1988 OlylsV
plod win b* felt most directly, in
Melbourne where the games are to
be held.
But in every state capital right
through every year, the preveilfni;
scarcity ot hotel IfoorisS puts e damp-;
er on the plans of thousands who, |
for business or other reasons, would
be biv the move;
Gf.T COLD SHOULDER ,',
Th« cold shoulder given by ho-
tels to people travelling from one
state te another, or from country
districts, into the capitals Of their
own states, Is a pointer to.what conditions will be like during the royal
tour.
Aggravation ot the hotel problem
will arise from Australians crowding Into state capitals to make sure
of seeing the Queen and her hue-
!>and.
The Olympic games are tn a different category. They will be concentrated in and around Melbourne
Itself end the organisers hope that
ih addition to trainers- and other
accompanying visiting competitors,
many oversea! visitors will be attracted to Australia- by the games,
The influx of thdusands of Australians from other states li taken
tor rented; aa la their ability to
dig in somewhere without '©Metal
sponsoring. But there ia no indication ot any concerted attempted to
provide accommodations for eny
considerable number of non-competing visitors to the games,
BUILDING IN ARREARS      ■
The general building program ta
Australia Is ab far in arrears that it
is now generally accepted that
nothing could be done in time materially to increase hotel aoeom-
modatlon. -   77
Many of thorn planning td «ome
for the gomes .will -have to etay
away, or face: irflprpvljo'd billeting
in suburban homes.. '
But,.crltles say, « nothing can.be
done to ptlt up more hotels, time
would not appear an obstacle to altering the country's liquor laws,
Under these; hotel bars close at 6
p.m. in New South Wa.es ahd Victoria. In tha other states they close
at 10 p.m. Night club laws are
only slightly more lenient No liquor la sold oa Sundays.
Most hotels also elose their dining facilities early.
Some of the state premiere and
government officials ot the Australian states saw for the first tinw
(Closing Prices)
MINES
Beaver Lodge ... ___,_
Bralorne ...'. ™_—^__
Canusa  .'..___.___._„
Cariboo Gold . . „
Estella 	
Giant Mascot .
Highland Bell 	
Pac Eastern Gold ..
Pend Oreille	
Pioneer Gold 	
Premier Border 	
Quatsino   ,	
Sheep Creek _
Sliver'Ridge	
Silver Standard ....
Utica 	
Vananda  	
Van Roi 	
Western Ex 	
Western Tungsten
OILS
Anglo Can
A P Con ..: 	
Cal & Ed	
Calmont  	
Can Anaconda _.
Home „.
Mercury 	
National Pete 	
Okalta Com 	
Pac Pete 	
Vanalta „.
INDUSTRIALS
Capital Estates .,.,.,
Int Brew B .
.75
8.06
.03 Vt
1.00
.29
.46
.34
-1Q
8.75
1.33
.06 Vt
.21
.50
.12
.73
.01
.01V4
.04
.88
1.45
_..4.70...
.38 Vt
8.50
1.00
.14
6.55
.10
1.70
1.55
7.23,
'    .30   .
-1.50   '
4.00
Local SALES & SERVICE Doalor      ; I
Central Truck & Equipment
702 Front Street
Nelson, B. C.
-'LV
when they went to London for'ihe
poronatloft what really good hotels
and Service were like and howSne
liquor laWs of other..countries differ from those here. '■
The Critics hope that this.experience will persuade* theih to femoVe
such restrictions as, the early olds-.
ing of bars, ease laws regulating
the sale of liquor with meals ahd
remove the stipulations which make
it necseBary for night-club patrons ■
to buy their liquor lh advance as a
means of by-passing the restrictions.
Winnipeg Grain     H
WINNIPEG   (CP)   —   Winning
grain cash prices: ,     ...
oats,. No. 1 feed, 87%. ''
Barley, No. 1 feed, 99%.       +q
NEW LOW
PllCES
ROOPING SHINGLES ,j
SIDING SHINGLES ?
ROLLED ROOFING !
GLIDDEN PAINT A
MAJONlTi
•       • "* - - .
tints;
CAMPC6TS
MATTRESSES
BLANKETS
SHEETS
PILLOW CASH
PILLOWS
SLEEPING BAGS
PHONE 18
Phona 792-Y Evenings
Nelson
r'/!
Company Ltd.
"If It's Machinery You Need,
Consult Us first"        ii
214 Hall St.     Nelion, B.C.
FOR OVIg HALF A CENTURY.
on a trip?
- ' 7 -■$.
Then leave some of your wontoe
Our 8>cm_1ng-by Attorney, one?
Investment Management servlcee
are available at very llttlo cost.
THI  ' *"■■
ROYAL TRUST
.  . ■ COMPAinrc..:.'.       :    ^
426 WEST PBNDER ST., VANCOUVER   •   sVlA. 141)
' OMROI O. VAU, AANAMt ,
WlWtssrssossOlVsn
MomsSmmt SwvfM.
LOOK AT'THi I   ^
Caterpillar Model D-6 Tractor
5R Series, equipped with teTourneau Model 3K6 Dozer and
Bear Power: Control Unifc1-'.- <t3_^Crt
As ie, f-o.b. Nelson  .'        «p3-£._>V
READY TO GO LOGGINO.I
International Model TD-9 Tractor
Equipped with Smith . Bulldozer and Caroo Logging Winch.
This mechjrie is -in. very good condition and ready to go to
work. Carries a S0-day wjuranty. Clt£^Ef\
F.o.b. Nelson ..;.;.'.s.-.;:..r..,',-.:.....r..;',J..\,.-.  «pO__DU
JUST LIKE  A  NEW MACHINE I
Caterpillar Model D-2 Wide Gauge Tractor
9U Series, with Caterpillar ZA Dozer, Hysler Winch and Guards.
Excellent unit, operated only 1780, hours. Carries d?_?__'fl/Y
a 80-day warranty. F;o:b..Cranbrook'  »p03Uv
ELECTRIC  SAW  ARRANGEMENT!
Caterpillar Model RD-4 Tractor
4G Series, with Reer Power Take-Off and Atkins Electric Saw
Arrangement, 5 H.P. Head, 39-inch Cutter Bar,   (t *1 "T C A
• 100 feet of cable. As is, f.o.b. Cranbrook     <4>__ / J\J
GOOD  TRACTOR)  GOOD  PRICEI
Caterpillar Model D-4 Tractor
ST Series, ecraipped with .lie Plants Choate Hydraulic Dozer
end Hyster winch. (tAICrt
As is, f.o.b. Cranbrook ';  <^t__3U
SMALL  CONTRACTOR OR  MINER I
Buhl 210 CFM Compressor
On Four Steel Wheels. This unit is mechanically good and is
an Ideal machine for a small contractor or C'.rtftfl
miner. As is, f.o.b   Nelson .-:.:'.        s|^ljUU
FARM   IMPLEMENT  BARGAINS I
John Deere No. 5 Mower  -. „  . .$220.00
John Deere 9-Ft. Wlndrower .625.00
Cookshutt Mower. Goodcondltlon       .. 125.00
Frolt si Wood Hay Rake-s--footi''    75:00
FINNING TRACTOR
& EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.
CRANBROOK—Phone 61     * NELSON—Phone *-30
"■:-:   ■'	
mm^
•in--   ■- ;	
^■yy
	
 —
stems'
12 — NELSON 'DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1953
Shades of
r
MR. J. BAGNALL, keeper of books, accounts .due and
"   accounts post due, reminds.you to pay your account-
or face the MUSIC
Accounts Mailed Today Are Payable
Oct. 20th or
Beware of Bagnall
:<^:y\y"'Mytli''-.f'-.:
News of the Day
RATES: 30e line, .400 lino black face type; larger type rates on
request Minimum two lines. 10% discount tor prompt payment'
Richard Lino Knives, 90c.
BURNS LUMBER. COMPANY.
Nky Paying
Off Says Mayor
. OMy poUey in providing water
Services' to residents outside Nelson's boundaries is justified, Mayor
sTj-seph Kary told City Council
Monday night.
i,"We're guarding tot the future
. jiy putting in laf ger pipes and reserving, the right' to. conneof to
them in the future," the mayor said.
'■Householders pay the cost ol the
ditch digging and the water connection and revenue comes in from
the service provided."
? The .explanation was made during
discussion ol a successful application lor water services by lour resi-
To-Nite
AT EAGLE HALL
Sponsored by the Ragle*
Trail Orchestra
Modem
and
Western Swing
AutHtflSIOfrC 7 St
MAC. COFFEE AND MILK BAR
QUALITY ALL THE WAY.
The -Twilight Club will meet
at 8:00 pjjn. 7' "'
L.A. to F.O.E. public whist drive
tonight, 8 p.m., Eagles Hall.
Regular General Meeting kelson.
Legion tonight at 8 sharp.   .
Hunting and Fishing Licence-
Jack Boyce Men's Shop.
See our, selection of men's, women's and boys skates and-boot..
»Jack Boyce.
Our big Fall1 Sale starts? today.
Be sure to take advantage of our
many bargains.—, HIPPERSON'S.
REGISTRATION FOR NOTRE
DAME COLLEGE EXTENSION
COUR8ES 8:00 P.M.  TONIGHT.
Monthly meeting ol Evening
Branch ol W.A., Willow Point, to-
night.
dents in the Kokanee Avenue and
Ninth and Tenth Street areas. The
applicants were E. Kraft, Herbert
Miller, Walter Anderson and
George Clerihew.
The city main would have to be
extended 600 leet, J. A. Maber, water works superintendent, reported.
Cost ol the project would be about
$2200, he said, but about $1200 leet
ol pipe was in stock, and this
would reduce actual cash outlay.
Aid. W. S. Smith wondered it it
was right to Spend money on outside work when there were mains
still to be taken care ol in the city.
He felt the city should come first.
"We gradually get the money
back," Mr. Maber said. He told how
the city had obtained $340 lor new
services on a line that had been extended to Eighth Street a lew
years ago. Requests were coming
in steadily.
In the past, Mayor Hary said,
smaller mains bad been installed
ahd new services could not be connected. Now, installations with
larger mains meant new customers
could easily be given water service
and hew revenue Mined.
Aid. Arthur fester said he felt
the area might b* the first to want
to oome into the olty, "and we
would be duty bound to put in services at oomplete cost to the city."
New   Jackets,   Station   Wagon
Coats, etc.,' lor girls' and boys. *
EBERLE_ JUNlpR SHOP.    ,
If BUTTERFIELD cant fix, -t
throw it away. Watch work prompt*
ly done -find fully  guaranteed  at
reasonable prices
final Goll Club Dance Sat., Oct.
3rd, 9:30 till 1:30. Dance to Benny
and Lefty and their pulsating
rhythm.
Trade your old tires at
8UPERI0R  MOT0R8
Tire Department
Good selection ol used Bedroom
Suites and used Washing Machines
now in stock. , .   \
We buy and sell new and used
lurnlture.
HOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGE
,   .     .13 Hall St.7
ATTENTION CANADIAN LEGION
AND LADIES' AUXILIARY MEMBERS—Members are' requested to
meet at the Canadian Legion Fri:
day, at 1:45 p.m.,. for the purpose
ol attending the luneral ol our late
Comrade, Alexander McLennan.
. FUNERAL NOTICE
McLENNAN — Funeral services
lor the late Alexander S. McLennan
will be heia from the Thbropsoh
Funeral Home Friday at 2 p.ni. Interment will be In the Returned
Soldiers' Plot, Nelson Memorial
Park.   .    .....
Application Needed
For Extra Service
Restoration of water service to
lots adjoining property ol Dr. A. K.
Gibbons in the 600 /Block on Gore
Street wll) follow application tax
service if the regular monthly
water rate is paid for the service.
This was decided by City Council Monday night when a letter
from Dr. Gibbons said that "in spite
of verbal protests" to the water department and city engineer, the
"existing water sendee" had not
been replaced during alterations
to the water, mains .,<
J. A. Maber, water worlj stiper-
intendent, explained to council'that
each property owner was entitled
to one water connection and as
there Was not a house on the two
lots.there had been no need to
install a service. No other property
■ih Nelson, had two services.
He explained that there had been
an old service for the two. lots
lor garden purposes, but this had
not been connected when services
were renewed ih the block.
Mid-Summer Bonspiel Date Set,
Commllfees Begin Organization
MORE HOUSES
REGINA (CP)—Residential construction has become one of Regina. biggest industries this yean
Value ol 1958 home building permits eurrently sweeeds $10,000,000.
"217"
Tablet-
Quick ReHef of
HEADACHES  -  NEURALGIA
RHBt-M-ATie PAIN and GOLD8
City Drug
COMPANY
"NeJson>6 Modern Pharmacy"
PHONE 34
This Week:
KOOTENAY STATIONERS
& SPORT SHOP
49S WARD STREET
PHOiNE 362
Are Featuring.a H Price Counter
Look for She !»_-Price 8igti, whleh means that you ean purchase anything you desire on this counter for [_ the ticketed
items sueh as: Bone China Cups and Saucers, Fancy Stationery,
Ornaments, Serviettes, Seabrlght Frozen Food Containers,
are Juet a few auch Items on this counter.
s
Holland Bulbs for Fall plahtlng.
Large assortment. Select yours
now. — MAC'8 FLOWER SHOP,
Phone 910.
TIME TO PLANT YOUR SPRING
FLOWERING   BULBS.
BEST 8ELECTION AT
COVENTRY8'   FLOWER   8HOP.
N e Is o n Commercial Training
School, 701 Front St Enrol Thurs.,
Oct. i. Between 7 and 9 for Mon.
and Thurs. Evening classes.
6-piece bedroom suite, including
spring and spring-filled mattress,
priced at $199.50. — See this at
Sterling's now. -,
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
CLA88E8   IN   HIGHLAND
DANCING
commencing October 3rd.
For information and enrolment
Phone 609-L.
TRAIL  RHYTHM  8WING8TER8,
PLAYMOR FRIDAY. FEATURING
ERNIE'PINCHBECK ON THE
HAMMOND SQLOVOX.
Golfers' Auld Lang Syne mixed
tournament and dinner Sunday,
Oct. 4th. Tee off irom 1 p.m. Dinner
at 5, followed by presentation ol
the year's prizes.
In closing out business, otter
practically new, very latest model
Remington Electric Adding Machine. Bight column, direct subtraction, etc., etc. Real bargain. Box
8154, Daily News.
7 WE HAVE GILLETTE ROCKET
RAZORS, WITH WORLD 8ERIE8
RECORD BOOKS, AS ADVERTISED ON YOUR WORLD SERIES
BROADCAST"
WOOD VALLANGE HARDWARE
'I
Reformed Sons of Freedom
Doukhobors have wired Attorney
General Robert Bonner requesting a meeting between Hie Gov
ernment and their committee.
The freedom-tie committee is
headed by John J. Perepelkin
'who has just returned feom
Burnaby where he attended
trials of Freedomites,. charged
with nudism'in a public place:
The telegram, despatched from
Nelson Monday, sought a meeting to discuss matters concerning
the Freedomites generally and
tha welfare of the children of
Sons in prison, now being housed
in the Newuenver Sanatorium.
Sterling's
Fall
Furniture
$19950   Special
8 PIECE BEDROOM ENSEMBLE
A smart modern bedroom suite in Limed Oak will add beauty to your bedroom. Constructed to give you years of comfort. Consists of m large double
dresser, chiffonier, a full size standard bed plus a sturdy all steel slat spring.
Quality spring filled mattress, pair of large feather pillows and a bedroom rug.
Reg. price $229.50.
Only
$
50
STERLING Home Furnishers
441 Baker St.
Phon* S53
LONDON (CP)—When a black
cat walked into a public house- in
Battersea and gave birth to kittens
patrons gaVe it a; tot of whisky before -nlmal welfare inspectors collected the family.    .
Nelson's 1954. Mid-Summer Bonspiel will definitely be staged from
July 12 to 17, the 'spiel committee
decided Tuesday evening.
. This date was suggested at the
final meeting ot the 1953 committee
because ol the possibility ol causing accommodation congestion the
week earlier which will mark the
July 4th celebrations In United
States.
7This7 year's committee agreed
unanimously with the date. With
this settled the entry, forms lor
the 10th Summer 'spiel are to be
sent out In .the near tuttire.
Walter Wait was Authorized to
select crests lor the rink heading
for Vancouver to enter a 'spiel there
next month; The crests will be designed to'. draw patrons from the
Coast to the Summer 'spiel. Making the trip will be.Walt Wait and
Dr. Norman S; Jehnejbhn. Play
lng with them at Uie Coast will be
former Nelsonites Lou Chase and
Harold Holmberg. • '
•It was decided ; that when
presidents of both the women's and
the men's curling clubs were elected
STAR SPECIALS AT THE STAR
Grocery Department
Nabob Deluxe Tea Bag Special
1 Pkt. of 60 Tea Bogs for 69c
1 Pkt. of 60 Tea Bags Absolutely Free
>■ 120 Tea Bags For Only 69c
Malkin . Best. Choice.
Sieve 5. 15'ox. tins ...
GREEN    BEANS Choice" "is"©'-, tins
TOMATOES^"-
PORK & BEANS
Malkln's Best. Choice,
oz. tins'	
Molkin's Best.
lSTo*. tins .	
SPAGHETTI
With cheese and tomato sauce.
Catelli's. 15 oz. tins	
• MUSHROOM SOUP cogens.
PEANUT BUTTER BSV-...
APRICOTS R0,i_r°9"-
2 for 29c
2 for 35c
2 for 57c
2 for 29c
2 for 31c
2 tins 37c
... •   45c
c.
oz. tins .
BLENDED JUICE..*;
FROZEN BlfrflBv.
FROZEN GREEN BEANS ST"-1-'
oz. pkt.
oz. tin
FROZEN ORANGE JUICE .'_"'"''"""""'
RINSO
Detergent.
Giant pkt.
RINSO & pk.
2for45c
2 for 35c
 27c
31c
26c
76c
66c
DELIVERY SERVICE
Two (lcliver.es a day, morning and afternoon to all parts of town. All meat orders
delivered free. Free delivery on all grocery orders $3.00 or over. C.O.D. orders given
prompt attention.     , ',•.'•'
PRODUCE DEPARTMENT
The Best Buy of the Year
VETERAN FREESTONE
PEACHES
16 Ib. case
3 lb. baskets
Concord Grapes < $!■*»
Okanagan; Large,' f-lb. basket        ''
Prune Plums *|-4».
Local; 14-lb. oase ,.       .1
Grapefruit _>      7*7*
Florida; Pink'Flesh;  •*■ for tern. I.
Maglio Plums _}<V
Large Variety 3-H>. basket   WW
Apples 3      2Q*
GraVensteine;    •■' lbs. eWoW
Apples 2     25*
■Mcintosh Red, Foy. Wrapped; •*■ lbs. 'twaff-'-
Corn on the Cob CC*
$1.79
19'
Local, Bantam; Dos.
Sweet Potatoes
Lb.  	
Hubbard Squash ft
Large; Lb  I
Turnips C      *»*_*
Good Cookers;    gr- lbs. mmtw
Spinach J      JQ*
Fresh, Local;    „ -■ lbs. mm*
Broccoli 77*
Local; Lb  ate I
Tomatoes
California Field, Seona; 16 oz. tube
New Carrots 3
Local; a* bch
29'
25*
Fricassee Fowl
Grade A!   Lb.
Frying Chicken
B.B.B.;   , ......Lb.
Pot Roast Beef
Round-Bone, Blue -Brand;  Lb.
Oven Roast Beef
Standing Rib, Blue Brand; lib.
MEAT DEPARTMENT
SIRLOIN ...
T,BONE   „.   n    , IL   ASC
Blue Brand Beef LD.   M £»
Boneless Veal Roast
CLUB
tasty Veal Patties
Homade Sausage.
..Lb.
...Lb.
...Lb.
55*
39'
39*
488 BAKER ST. H. A. D. Greenwood
they, would be asked to sit in with
the Bonspiel Committee as members..' -;   '
Many suggestions that had been
received by the committee were
gone'oyer and given to the various directors to look into. Each
director was given one man for his
committee from the Nelson Junior
Chamber of Commerce. Chairman
Roy Mann said that the, directors
now could find, themselves suitable men for their committees and
he felt that in.this way each director . would be able to ■ choose
men he knew would do a good job.
... The next meeting of the committee is expected to be held on or
near October 13. This meeting will
be with the Civic Centre Commissioners.
Art Club Plans
Puppet Show
The Nelson Art Club will stage
a puppet show sometime before
Christmas, it was decided at a
meeting at Civic Centre Tuesday
night.
Model pupets "were shown by
Mrs. M. L. Guilbeault, which she
made from powdered asbestos,
flour and water. The club will
start .making them at their next
meeting which will be on Tues-
'day.        *   .
Mrs. Pat Barnes will be in charge
of the painting of scenery for the
Little Theatre production to be held
in November. Mrs. Guilbeault
volunteered to help Mrs. Barnes.
Attending the meeting' Were H.
Meredith, president; .Mrs. D. Jorgenson, secretary, and nine other
members.
J. A. C. LAUGHTON
OPTOMETRIST
'.   VISUAL TRAsNlNO
Medical Arts Buildings
Suite 206 Phone 141
Ladies • *.
Here's Your Chance
Daks
SKIRTS
$1195
We are discontinuing
*■ handling Daks' Skirts.
Regular $25.00,values
in new Fall shades and
models.
London tailored.
Emory's Ltd.
THE .MAN'S STORE
Phone 31 Box 100
Buy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way
FLEURY'S   Pharmacy
603 Baker St
Med. Arte Blk.
PHONE»
Accurately
Compounded
Prescriptions
Phone 25
w
IGINTQN
MOTORS LTD.
PONTIAC - BUICK
G.M.C. TRUCKS
Body and Paint Work • Specialty
HAVE YOUR FURNITURE
EXPERTLY RECOVERED
7 at the
Nelson Upholstery
409 Hall Street
Phone 148
THOMPSON
FUNERAL HOME
"Distinctive Funeral Service"
AMBULANCE SERVICE
915 Kootenay St        Phone 381
Haigh
Tru-Art
Beauty
Salon
Phone 327
676 Baker St
RADIATORS
CLEANED A REPAIRED
RECORINQ
Jim's Radiator Shop
616 FRONT 8T.
_
PHONE M
Have Hie Job Done Right
VIC GRAVES
MASTER PLUMBER
PHONE 81S
CAMPBELL, SHANKLAND
& IMRIE
Chartered Accountants
Auditors
878 Baker St Phone 288
For All Vour Baking Needs' fry
ELLISON'S
VITAMIN B FLOUR
The flavor la right On Sale al
Your Grocers, or Phone 238.
ELLISON MILLING
& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.
* Star Grocery *
fHdNE10-''i||||
Good News
for
District
Motorists
THE NELSON TRANSFER CO. LTD.
has installed retreading equipment
which will enable them to retread tires
in the famous
Goodyear
Suburbanite Tread
This js the first and only genuin.e Goodyear suburbanite mold in this district
and the Nelson Transfer Co. Ltd. is
pleased to provide this additional service
to Nelson and district motorists.
DRIVE IN TODAY AND LET US RETREAD YOUR TIRES IN THE GOODYEAR SUBURBANITE TREAD.
NELSON TRANSFER
COMPANY  LIMITED
W-4__-37'     <-
LOCATED AT 323 VERNON ST.
i^m
