 ___ . , .— _ r-
Norris Quits as
Mulligan Counsel
Personal Reasons, "Nothing To Dc
With Probe" Tells Tupper Commission
VANCOUVER (CP) — A surprise announcement
Thursday by Tom G. Norris of his withdrawal as counsel
for police chief Walter Mulligan caused royal commissioner ft. H. Tupper to adjourn his hearing into the Vancouver police department before it resumed after an
earlier adjournment.
  —— - — ■■ --
__ __,. _—■   •■■ ■. - . \ ■..-•.-'■<  ■■■..;■'■■   ' "■      '■   '   T"
Mr. Norris, who has battled
charges of corruption and maladministration against the police
chief since the hearings began
July 6. gave no details of his
reasons for withdrawing.
"My reasons are entirely personal," he told commissioner Tupper as Thursday's session was to
begin.
Mr. Norris emphasized his withdrawal had "nothing- to do with
the probe."
"It is proper that I should state
I have the utmost confidence in
the strength of my client's case
as it will be developed," he said.
Mr. Tupper then granted chief
Mulligan's request for an adjournment to Monday at 11 a.m. "to
give me an opportunity to seek
another counsel."
The development startled other
counsel, reporters and the gallery.
settling down in the city hall council chambers for another session
of the royal commission inquiry.
Commissioner Tupper adjourned
the hearing last Wednesday on the
request  of Mr.  Norris  w'ho  then
claimed "personal reasons.
The sessions had met intermittently at the downtown courthouse
but the hearing was moved to the
plush city council chambers to
make way for the fall assizes.
LEAVE TOGETHER
Chief Mulligan, on requested
leave for the duration of the inquire, left city hall soom after the
adjournment, linked arm - in - arm
with his former counsel.
Earlier, the chief told reporters
he had "no idea" whom he would
retain as counsel.
Before the stocky, shaggy-haired
lawyer left the council chamber,
gret at"' the withdrawal "as you
have been helpful to this inquiry."
Outside the council chamber, Mr.
Norris denied his withdrawal had
any connection with a rumor he
was being considered for an appointment as judge to the Supreme
Court of British Columbia.
"It is a very private matter and
any publicity might do me harm.
It has nothing to do with the evidence before the commission."
Left Cell So
He Could Try to
Prove Innocence
QUEBEC (CP) — Wilbert Coffin,
44-year-old convicted murderer,
left a letter is his cell before
breaking out of the Quebec jail
Tuesday, jail governor Gene La-
tourneau disclosed today.
Mr. Letourneau said Coffin, who
ls scheduled to be hanged Sept
23 for the murder of a young
American bear hunter, wrote that
he was sorry he had to break out
but that he wanted to try to prove
his innocence. He thanked the governor and the jail guards for their
kindness.
Coffin was talked into returning
' to the jail by his lawyer lass than
two hours after the breakhout. He
j wa^l transferred later in the day
to ubrdeaux jail in Montreal to
wait execution. ,
Coffin was convicted JaBt year
of the murder of Richard Lindsey,
17, of Hollidaysburg, Pa., whose
body was found in the GJaspe bush
near those of his father and a
friend.
$159 WORTH OF LUCK
PITTSBURG (AP) — Visitors to
the greater Pittsburg airport have
backed up their requests for favors
from lady luck by tossing $159.95
ln coins into the new $275,000 airport fountain pool. Workers, cleaning the central pool after the holiday rush, found 9,000 pennies along
with other coins ranging in size
from nickels to half-dollars.
PAYS FOR HOLDING
UP TRAFFIC
WINNIPEG  (CP)   — Abe- Hiebert today paid a $10 fine for driving too slowly.
RED SPY RING BROKEN Provincial'police court was told
KARLSRUHE, Germany (AP) — that Hiebert drove at a liesurely
The cracking of a full-fledged spy 20 miles an hour on No. 1 High
ring in the West German foreign hides behind him last Sunday,
ministry was disclosed today just
Chancellor   Konrad   Adenauer HONORED BY KENYA
took off for Moscow. |    NAIROBI   (Reuters)   —  Kenya
Unofficial reports said the min- j paid tribute today to the courage
Istry employees arrested were sus- of 10 jungle-wise Britons who dis-
pected of providing forged pass-igulsed themselves as tribal war-
ports for Red agents to infiltrate] riors and led small bands of loyal
strike Settlement
Appears Closer
KELOWNA (CP) — Hopes for
settlement of the fruit packers'
strike in the Okanagan valley
brightened Thursday night following announcement of a new
contract proposal by operators
Both union and Industry officials indicated settlement may be
reached within two days as a result of the new offer. Some 3000
workers in 28 packinghouses had
struck two weeks ago to back up
demands for wage increases.
An
Shortage of
Apple Pickers
Anticipated
KELOWNA, B,a (CP_»
acute' shortage ot "'ptefters is expected ■ in the Okanagan when
harvesting of the rich apple crop
gets under way Sept. 20.
The Unemployment Insurance
Commission office here has applied for 500 pickers from the
coast to alleviate  the  shortage.
Last year the office placed 1118
workers in orchards. This year the
need is estimated at 2000.
The apple crop is estimated at
6.500.000 boxes, almost 750,000
boxes more than last year.
0tti
PROVINCIAL
KOOTENAY; Mostly sunny to-
QTOlUfi 1&1& chahge in temperature.
...... Winds- Hght-.-Low-high  at Cranbrook and Crescent Valley 45 and
NELSON, B. C, CANADA—FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 9, 1955
No. 118
Sword Beareryv
Qockett Hat -'
EDMONTON (CP) _ Will-
lam Boston, official sword
bearer to Sir 8eymour-Howard, Lord Mayor of London,
stepped from a car here wearing his large ceremonial hat
The hat Is a beaver affair,
which explains what happened    next    The shout of one
youngster   rang   loud  and  clear
over the crowd:
"Lookl Davy Crockett!"
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir
Turks Tells NATO
Order Restored
By JOSEPH  E, DYNAN
PARIS (AP) — Members of the I
Atlantic Alliance including Greece
commissioner Tupper expressed re-1 agreed Thursday that vigorous ac
Intensive Search on
For Arson Suspect
ONTARIO PEACHES ara being thrown in garbage dumps
as unusual weather conditions have caused the late varieties to'
mature at the same time as the early. At St. Catharines, In this
one dump alone, an esimated 15,0Q() baskets were left to rot.
And, since they were discarded w.hile still firm, children raided
the   heap   Instead  of  raiding  farmers'  orchards.
—Central   Press Canadian.
tion by the Turkish governmen
has restored law and order to Istanbul and Izmir, scene of anti-
Greek- rioting.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization Council accepted the
assurances of Turkey's permanent
NATO representative, Mehmet Ali
Tiney, that his government is taking all necessary measures to
avoid a recurrence of violence.
The 15-member council had been
convened by Lord Ismay, NATO
secretary general, to hear reports
from both Greece and Turkey on
a situation which threatened to
mar the efficiency of NATO's
southeast Europe command, based
at Izmir. Stories from the scene
said Turkish mobs stoned the
homes of Greek officers serving
at Izmir,
Rioting which injured 300 and
caused $35,000,000 in property dam
age erupted in Istanbul and Izmir
Tuesday night with the news that
Greeks had dynamited a Turkish
consulate at Salonika. The Turkish government called'out troops
and clamped down martial law.
Russ-German Relations
Key to Peace-Adenauer
UN SUGGESTS
GAZA BARRIER
Demilitarized
Zone Mile Wide
Proposed
;    UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.   'AP)!    Fifteen-year-old Michael Nykor-
| — The UN Security Council ad-| ak told how his .cousins Tarus, 17,
' opted unanimously Thursday a resolution  calling for the effective
-seperation of Egyptian and Israeli forces on the Gaza front.
Barbed wire or some other barrier] est an(j bushland since Sunday.
Young Survivor Tells of Flight" of
Four Before Flames; Three Perished
WINNIPEG (CP) — Forest rangers and RCMP
Thursday stepped up their hunt for an arsonist suspected
of starting a forest fire in the Sandilands forest reserve
which took the lives of three youths.
A fourth boy described to reporters his flight of
terror in front of the advancing flames which overtook
his two cousins and a friend.
and John Nykorak, 18, and Mike,
Telinski, 20, became trapped in
the fire, which with a second
blaze, covered 24,000 acres of for-
By RICHARD KASISCHKE
MOSCOW (AP)—West German
I Chancellor Konrad Adenauer ar-
; rived here Thursday for momen-
j tous talks with Soviet leaders. He
'old   them   at  the   airport  "welfare and security in Europe and
in   the world largely  depend on
the normalization of relations between us."
That is the subject the Kremlin
invited Adenauer here to discuss.
It later agreed, at his insistence,
to add reunification of Germany
and release of German war prisoners to the agenda—but agreement on united Germany is not
expected and Adenauer made no
mention of it in his reply to the
welcome of Premier Nikolai Bulganin.
The   79-year-old  leader  of the
Bonn government—repeatedly denounced and castigated in the Soviet Union in the past—was welcomed to its capital with a great
show of cordiality.
Assembled to greet him at Molotov's Vnukova airport, decorated
with dozens of German and Soviet
flags, were a galaxy of Soviet
officials, lacking only Communist party boss Nikita Khrushchev.
Ambassadors from East and West
and a crowd of Russian sightseers
also were on hand.
As he stepped from the gleaming Superconstellation which
brought him from Bonn, a Soviet
Army guard in hew fed, gold and
blue uniforms-was drawn up for
him to inspect. A military band
played the Soviet and German
anthems.
has been suggested,
The council also agreed with a
proposal by Canadian Maj.-Gen.
E. L. M. Burns, UN truce supervisor in Palestine, to establish a
demilitarized zone more than half
a mile wide along the frontier.
Arkady A. Sobolev, Soviet delegate, voted with the other 10
council members.
Omar Loutfi. Egypt, and Abba
Eban, Israel, told the council their
governments agreed on resuming
discussions with Gen. Burns on
m e a s u res to prevent further
clashes. Loutfi further said Egypt
lon gago favored putting up barbed wire. Eban was silent on the
nature of the barrier.
More than 50 soldiers and civilians have been killed on both sides
of the Gaza line since a new burst
of violence Aug. 22 halted efforts
by Gen. Burns to achieve some
calm and order.
50 feet from us. I was ahead,
and Tarus and Mike who were
carrying John called to me to
come back ... I remember
they shouted all the time. I came
back to help but the flames
were on us ... so I ran away,"
Color TV Coming
TORONTO'(CP) — The basic
facilities needed to carry a color
television program across Canada
will be established by 1958, Thomas W. Eadie, president of the Bell
Telephone Company of Canada,
said-today. . .,,....._.,
, Mr. Eadie, addressing a Canadian National Exhibition directors'
luncheon, said:
"By 1958. we will have establish/-
ed the basic facilities needed to
carry simultaneously 3000 tele-
phone conversations and a television program in full color across
the breadth of the Dominion."
A picture sent from Halifax to
Vancouver would check in and out
of 160 "service stations" on the
way in 25/10O0ths of a second.
"The standard of transmission
must be such that the quality of
the  picture,  whether ,black  and
white or in  full  color, will  re-jto   most  others  he had   seen  in
main virtually unaffected by its: North    America    and    compared
Breeding Center
Impresses Russians
KEMPTVTC-LE, Ont. • (CP) —
Some champion breeding bulls
bellowed in their stalls Thursday
as they we'rS'Indpected byjtthe So;
viet farm delegation.       *
The Russians, much impressed,
said the bulls were among the
best they had seen ln their tour
of Canada and the United States.
The inspection was carried out
at the artificial insemination
centre under the direction of Dr.
R. G. Smiley, secretary-manager
of the- Eastern Ontario Cattle
Breeding Association.
Soviet livestock expert Yuri
Golubash, deputy minister of Russian state farms, said he liked the
unit "very much." It was superior
West Germany.
I natives  into   the  jungle   to  hunt
I down the Mau Mau cult.
REGINA (CP) — Three western farm organizations registered
strong opposition Wednesday to a
bid by shipping and shipbuilding
firms to have Canada's coasting
trade restricted to ships of Canadian  construction  and registry.
DCTLLAR UNCHANGED
NEW YORK (CP) — The Canadian dollar was unchanged at a
premium of 1% per cent in terms
of U.S. funds today. Pound sterling
1-32 higher at $2.78 17-32.
long journey.
I with the best seen in the U.S.
The Unnecessary Male . . .
Experimenters See Possibility of
Pre-Delermining Sex of Offspring
JOSEPH C. GREW (left), U.S. ambaiiador to Japan at the
time of Pearl Harbor, chats with Japanese Foreign Minister
Mamoru Shigcmitsu during a reception at the United Nations
building In New York. Shigemltsu told a luncheon gathering
that while hii country had no thought of recognizing Red China,
trade with the mainland it vital to the life of his 'Island country.
—Central Press Canadian,
By  ALTON   L.  BLAKESLEE
EAST LANSING, Mich. (API-
Consider a world without men,
where women are father and mother of children.
This is theoretically possible—
but most unlikely—based on experiments with a frog world where
females have been eliminated. The
males produce all the young tads.
This womanless world of frogs
and conceivably manless world
of human beings was described to
thS American Institute of Biological Sciences by Dr. Emil Witschi
and C. Y. Chang of the State Uni-
vefsity of Iowa.
They experimented with a common type of frog, often used in
pregnancy tests. They treated the
male embryo f»ogs with a female
sex hormone. The males all be-
carhe egg-producing females but
were  still genetically males.
When the eggs from these sex-
reversed frogs are fertilized by
sperm from their brothers, or from
other male frogs, all the young
tadpoles are of male constitution.
CAN BECOME •
FEMALES
But any desired percentage of
rhem can be induced to become
females by adding a tiny amount
of the female sex hormone to the
water in which they live. One
week of hormone treatment produces the change of apparent sex
for a lifetime.
At this poirjt, for procreation of
fite colony of frogs, the true genetic females no longer are necessary. Theoretically it might become   possible   to   do   this   same
determination of . sex at will in
stock animals, to be sure of producing male or female offspring.
If human sex were tampered
with like the frogs were, the human male might become unnecessary.
If human embryos could be
treated hormonally as were the
frogs, only gfrls would be produced. Some of them might also
be induced to" have some male
characteristics, to contribute the
male share of fertilization, but
they would not be changed into
men. Genetically they still would
be females.
Controlled Drugs
For Addicts
Best, Synod Told
EDMONTON (CP) — Giving
drugs under supervision and restriction aid requiring all/addicts
to report for treatment is the best
solution to the addict problem, the
Anglican synod was told Wednesday.
A. S. McMorran, city prosecutor for Vancouver, addressed the
synod as a member of the committee on social service work of
the diocese of New Westminster.
The resolution called for compulsory registration for persons
who want to obtain clinical services whether in an institution or
for private administration.
Illlllllllllllllllllllllllllitlllllllltllltlll
Sneak Thief Runs Into
Bat-Wielding Femme
FRANKFURT, Germany
(AP) — It probably will be a
long time before one German
goes sneaking about a women's dormitory again In the
dead of night.
In fact, the unknown German probably won't be able to
get about much for a bit,
thanks to the cuts and bruises
four American WACs and
their baseball bats Inflicted
on him.
Things had been missing
from their dormitory, and the
Intrepid quartette armed themselves with the bats and set
watch, two on and two off In
two-hour shifts.
With 4 a.m. came a creaky
door and the two summoned
the two off, A man stepped
out of the shadows and the
swinging began.
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
10 BURNED IN
FOREST BLAZE,
ONE MISSING
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—Ten
firefighters were burned in California and one was reported missing in Oregon Thursday as flames
ate through hundreds of thousands
of acres of Pacific coast timber
and brush lands.
Three new timber fires burst out
of control in northern California
and another roared four miles
ahead in Oregon Wednesday.
Cypriots Stage
Giant Rally
NICOSIA, Cyprus (Reuters) —
More than 20.000 Greek Cypriots
roared "We shall give our blood"
at a rally near here today protesting against the suspension of
London talks on the future of this
British-owned Mediterranean island.
The crowds gathered at dawn to"
hear a defiant sermon by Greek
Orthodox Archbishop Makarios.
'leader of a long campaign to put
Cyprus  under  a  Greek  flag.
The pledge to continue the campaign came as relations between
Greece and Turkey slumped to
their lowest pdint since the two
joined in the Atlantic pact.
FIRST SHIP SAILS
VANCOUVER (CP) — First Un_-
ion Steamships vessel to sail out
of Vancouver harbor since 350
seamen struck the company July
3 will leave here Saturday for
Bella Coola, B.C.
SAY PAPERS SEIZED
PARIS (AP) — Editors of the
French leftist weekly france Ob-
servateur reported Wednesday
night that their latest issue was
seized by authorities because it
contained an article protesting
against the sending of conscripts
to troubled French North Africa
Prisoner Silent 18 Years
McALESTER. Okla. (AP) —The
story of Oklahoma state penitentiary's "silent man"—a prisoner
who didn't talk for the last 18
years he was behind walls —was
disclosed Thursday.
It was told by reporters of the
Tulsa Tribune who were present
three years ago when the convict,
John A. Cane, broke his vow and
spoke for the first time since he
was imprisoned.
Cane had been known in the
penitentiary for the 18 years as
"the dummy" and other prisoners
spoke freely in his presence because they believed he was deaf
as well as unable to talk.
As a result, when Cane talked
before a parole board in 1952, pri*
authorities  decided   to   keep
thing with animals or conceivably j secret the fact that He had been
with  humans,  said  Drs.  Witschi i able to hear and talk all the time.
and Chang. They feared that if.other pris-
A more likely possibility it pre-1 oners learned  Cane's hoaring bad
been all right, they might kill him.
Cane is still in prison serving a
life term for murder.
The story was related in 1952 by
warden Jerome Waters at a parole
board hearing attended by Tribune reporter  Roger  Devlin.
The warden told how Cane had
vanished a few days after his
wife and three small children
disappeared from their home in
1934. Arrested and questioned, he
broke down, admitting killing his
family and burying their bodies.
He took officers to the graves but
from that moment on, he refused
to say another word.
It wasn't until he appeared before the parole board 18 years
later that he spoke -again.
Devlin described' Cane's appearand before, the board. The. chairman Mhed'Cantftf he-wmted to
talk.
"The man's jaw vozfeed, but no
Michael said John whose leg wasi T^EED BY BEAR
in a cast, went to the bush camp'    Michael   raced
in the reserve located midway between Winnipeg and the Ontario
boundary, on Sunday following his
release from hospital Saturday.
Michael and Tarus picked up
Telinski at Trentham, a Sandilands village, Monday morning
and headed for the lumber com-1
towards the
swamp as flaming brands dropped
around him. He tore off his heavy boots to make better time. He
waded up past his knees in the
swamp and skirted spruce and
tamarack stands and ran westwards to get help.
"I just got over a ridge when a
pany's camp where they were em-, black bear attacked me. I had to
ployed. ! go up a jack pine and was treed
FLAMES ADVANCE | for about five minutes. I screamed
On arrival at the camp the boys
started up a trail to help the firefighters. Suddenly the 50-mile-an-
hour winds reversed and the
flames began advancing towards
them.
The boys returned to camp,
packed their gear and started out
northwest to hit a trail. Mike was
driving an old model car and towing a pickup truck.
"We didn't get very far . . .M
■aid  Michael. "Flames closed  In
on us and It was to hot In the
car we had to get out."
The boys turned and headed
for a swamp about a half-mile
south.
"We couldn't go as fast as the
fire — It wat catching up about
Prosperity When PGE
Comes, Says Bonner
PEMBERTON, B.C. (CP) —
Attorney-General Robert Bonner
said here Wednesday the Pemberton valley would hit 'peak development once the Pacific Great Eastern railway's extention to North
Vancouver is completed to provide
transportation of produce to market.
Mr. Bonner, speaking at a Social Credit by-election rally for
candidate Don Robinson, said he
"realized Pemberton, like many
other places in B.C. has fbeen
waiting a long time for development.
Highways Minister Gaglardi
also spoke briefly and outlined
road projects for the Squamish,
Lillooet and Lytton areas.
Peter Flies Away
LONDON (Reuters) — Group
Capt Peter Townsend flew back,
to his post as air attache in Brussels today, leaving Britains none
the wiser about his rumored romance with Prinsess Margaret.
The 40-year-old flier spent most
of his three-day visit to England at
the Farnborough air display. He
did not see the 25-year-old princess.
at the bear until he left."
Nykorak said he ran another 13
miles until he reached an old
shack.
"I fell on the bed . . .My feet
were too sore for me to move."
Within minutes a stranger arrived. Michael told him about the
plight of his companions and the
man went to a nearby forest ranger's camp for help.
'A search was organized Monday
night and went on all day Tuesday without success.
FIND BURNED BODIES
"And then Wednesday morning
we found them ... in the bush
about a quarter of a mile from
the swamp . . . They were pretty bad ... all burned up."
Provincial foreater J. Q. Somen said evidence Indicated the
fire was deliberately sot A forest ranger, travelling In a vehicle equipped with a two-way
radio, received three reports of
leparate fires wtihin the same
area In the apaee of a few
minutes.
WILL STAGE OPERA
VENICE (Reuters) — The world
stage premiere of Russian composer S*ge Prokofieff's five-act
opera "Angel of Fire" will take
place here Sept. 14 during the 18th
Venice festival of contemporary
music. Prokofieff, who died in
Russia 2Vi years ago, composed the
musical score in 1927. The libretto,
written by himself, is based on a
Russian novel of 1907 about the
devil tempting a virgin.
...__..v- ___^
COMPROMISE SOLUTION to
an agreement with Moroccan
nationalists and the French appears to have been reached by
the new resident general,
Pierre-Georges Boyer de La-
tour, above. Observers say, however, that more violence may
break out at any moment with
a record worse than that of the
massacres of two weeks ago,
—Central Press Canadian.
sound came," the reporter recal- j
led. Finally there was a strained'
Whisper: "Yes, yes."
SWORE TO BE SILENT
Thursday Tribune reporter Nol-
en Bullock related froman interview with Cane the prisoner's
own story of his silence.
Cane, 61, explained: "I made up
my mind I'd never say another
word. I decided I'd play I couldn't hear. I felt my life was a living hell and I had sworn to myself never to open my lips again."
Asked how he could control
himself So well, Cane feplied:
"When a man makes up his
mind, he can do anything. It's Just
like if one wants to quit smoking
or chewing." %
When Cane returned to the
prison and talked t* other inmates, the word to them was that
he had undergone surgery to restore his speech and hearing.
And In This Corner ...
PLAINFIELD, N.J. (AP)—Mrs. Katie Williams, 40, has received
a police summons for speeding in a parking lot. police said she
drove Into a lot, hit a mattress, chest, cabinet, sofa and fireplace
stacked ln the rear of a furniture store and collided with two
parked cars.
SEATTLE (AP)—Mrs. Peggy Fraser of Juneau. Alaska, created
quite a stir Wednesday when she arrived at the Seattle-Tacoma
International Airport wearing a fur piece. '
Not often does a fur piece—even a skunk fur piece—cause any
excitement.   .
But this one was alive.
Pan Amercian World Airways officials agreed to let Mrs.
Fraser aboard the Juneau flight when she assured them the skunk
was "deodorized, bathed and housebroken."
What's more, its name is Rosebud. "She probably will behave
better on this trip than some of your human cargo," quoth Mrs.
Fraser. *
But Rosebud wasn't forced to sit with the human passengers.
"* She had the cargo compartment — fill to herself.
DETROIT (AP)—It didn't do any qood-for suburban Highland
Park school pupils to bring teacher an apple when school started
Thursday.
Teacher already  had an apple.
The community's board of commerce presented antics to every
teacher—390 In all—with an apple-slzej) banner on each desk saying
"Welcome back." j  v..
 ^^^._^—_«——_^^—^^»__-.   .    .        . .      . | .■■••■ . •  '■   .• ■  I    "■-    •    ..■•  ■■'■:•  ■:■•■■:■ y       . ■      ■    ■ ■ !- .   ..-■'I;   ■■'.■'.' ■,..■
2—NELSON DAILY NEWSy FJtlD/^.SjSPT. 9, 1955
TOM!PHT, SATURDAY — Complete Shows at 7:00-9:00
IWJIi DANCING, nOMMICIKO MU«CU THAT DIZZIED MOMWOT1        TODAY
BRNMMQN
UI THE DE..UTY OF COLOR
m Cinemascope
GENE KELLY VAN JOHNSON
CYDCHAR1SSE Elaine STEWART
Civic
CASTLEGAR, B.C.
TONIGHT  and   SATURDAY
Gate*  Open 7:30 p.m.
Last Complete Show 8:00 p.m.
George  Montgomery
Helen Carter
"The   Pathfinder"
(TECHNICOLOR)
— PLU» -
Maria Wilson
Robert Cummlngt
in
"Marry Me Again"
m
AUTO VUE
DRIVE-IN
Tr*.., B.C.
TONIOHT Md 8ATURDAY
Approx. 7:36 p.m.
"Prince Valiant"
Jamet Maun - Janet Leigh
CINEMASCOPE
Regular Prloei — 2 Cartoont
The Weather
r                                 Min Max Pre
NELSON    '45 85 -
1st John'B ...... 53 BT —
> Montreal 40 88 —
'Winnipeg   ...______   44 84 —
Regina      40 SB —
Edmonton       48 68 —
Kimberley  ,    46 78 . .01
Crescent Valley ...    4S 81 —
STARLIGHT
Drive-In
TONIGHT and SATURDAY
Flrtt  Show 8:00   p.m.
Last  Complete   Show  9:30  p.m.
"WOMAN'S
WORLD"
(TECHNICOLOR)
Clifton Webb - June Allyton
DOOR  PRIZES TONIGHT
$5.00 Merchandise
$2.50 Merchandise
2 Passes to Starlight
Post Office al
Balfour to Stay
H. W. Herridge, MP for Kootenay West, to a telephone call from
Trail Thursday reported that the
.Ballour Port Office would continue ln operation.
Mr. Herridge received ward
from the Director of Postal Operation* of the decision.
However, rural mail delivery
service will be withdrawn within
a half mile radius of the post
office as the post office will serve
that area. Residents, who purchased mail boxes when it was
announced the post office would
be closed, will be allowed to return their boxes which have not
been used and will be granted
credit for them, Mr. Herridge said.
Closure oi the post office, which
was considered as long ago as
1953, waa protested by organizations in the area and the Associated Boards of Trade and Chamber of Commercfe of South Eastern B. C, who felt it would be a
blow to the expanding tourist
area. Nelson Daily 'News took a
leading part in the successful campaign.
Clamshell Ends First
Part of Bridge Work
The giant clamshell that has
been eating two and-a-half yard
holes out of the end of Nelson Avenue for the last week, finished tEe
Inst of the footing excavations for
the South approach to the West
Arm bridge Thursday. Nine holes
have been dug on the Lakeside
Park parking lot, and in the yards
of the houses which have been
evacuated alongside Nelson Avenue.
Gravel from the holes has been
dumped on the outer edge of the
parking lot to build up a road behind the city sub station. The
road will be extended about 150
feet into the water so company
boats can be serviced and to provide access, a construction firm
official said Thursday.
Pile driver leads and hammer,
shipped from Edmonton, were unloaded Thursday and will be attached to the clamshell the first
of the week. The clamshell, acting
as a pile driver, will begin driving
piles the end of the week.
Sod in "the "Nelson" portion of
the "Welcome to Nelson" sign
that was in the path of the South
approach,
out by workers arid piled nearby.
A pier will be constructed here
but there will be room to replace
the sod and keep the sign intact.
Poole Engineering Co. Ltd and
Raymond International Construction Company are co-contractors
for the sub-structure of the West
Arm bridge.
David Leslie
To Royal Roads
David S. Leslie, a petty officer
in the Nelson Hampton Gray, VC,
Sea Cadet. Corps, has been accepted as a naval cadet at Royal
Roads under the Regular -Officer
Training Progriyn.
Petty Officer Leslie Is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. R. O. Leslie. 203
Silica Street. He won a Navy
League scholarship in July which
he will be unable to use, but has
received a scholarship certificate
from the Navy League of Canada.
BLOW HARD, JULIETTE . . . radio star Billy O'Connor smile*
encouragement as hiB lovely lady of song blows out their first-
birthday candle. The cake was presented to the cast at rehearsal
of the Billy O'Connor Show. In celebration of their first year
on the air. The popular musical program Is beginning 11$ second
'season, with Billy's songs and piano styling*, Juliette's sweet
voice and the musical novelties of the TRIO. It Is heard Friday
mornings at 10:45 a.m, on
CKLN
Skilled
Technicians
ARE THE ONLY ONES
CAPABLE OF KEEPING YOUR
TV SET IN TOP PERFORMANCE.
This Service Is Available at
McLENNAN,
McFEELY
& PRIOR LTD.
(Nelson Branch)
476'Baker St.        Phone 1300
.   A. W. THIESSEN
who is leaving Nelson this
has been carefully cut j month to serve in the Vancouver
region for the Community Programs Branch. He was first consultant for West Kootenay Region
when the plan was introduced 18
months ago. His successor is Robert
Stangroom.
(hesl Gilts
Reach $19,483
The Community Chest has realized $19,483.08 to date in its 1955
drive for funds. The bulk of these
funds have been dispersed to the
20 charities the chest supports,
Fraser Tees is fund campaign
chairman and P. O. Bird assistant
Community Chest .secretary,
A number of persons wishing
to contribute to the Chest have
been missed and the executive
suggests they contact either Mr.
Tees, Mr. Bird or J. H. Coventry. I their wives will attend.
TURKEY SHOOT
DATES NAMED
- A visit to the offices of Kiwanis
International at Chicago was described by Dr, Joseph Vingo to
Nelson Kiwanis Club at the Hume
Thursday night. During his visit,
Dr. Vingo said he examined the
Nelson club's record in the extensive filing system.
Annual Turkey Shoot dates were
tentatively set for December 8, 9
and 10.
D. E. Hunter, chairman, reported
plans were completed for the
ladies' night program September
22, when Dr. Lee Cagle, division
lieutenant-governor, of Colville
will induct new members. A number of   Colville   Kiwanians   and
Hobby Collection
Section Popular
Hobby collection section, which
proved to be a stellar attraction
when it was inaugurated at last
year's West Kootenay Agricultural
and Industrial Exhibition, will
probably be bigger and better than
before,
Many different kinds of collections are being entered in this department of the ExhibitioA which
will be on next, Thursday, Friday
and Saturday.
There are children's as well as
adult's classes.
Convener and originator of the
hobby collection competition is
Mrs. R. H. Dill,' who spent last
week at the Pacific National Exhibition hobby show. Products of
Nelson hobbyists would be equally fine in workmanship, although
not  as  numerous,  she  estimated.
Black lo Attend
Fall AKM Meet
Minister of Municipalities Hon.
Wesley D. Black and his-deputy
minister E, Brown are expected to
attend the Fall meeting of the Association of Koootenay Municipalities to be held in Rossland Saturday.
Mayor Joseph Kary, Alderman
T. H. Boyrque, Alderman Stanley
and Secretary - Treaurer of AKM
Reeve C. W. Harper will attend
from Nelson.
\ny ■ Duck Lake Change
Protested by Group
Strong protest against any 1884. lt was explained at the meet-
.change in the 1950 Order of Ap-|ing. That order-in-council was ef-
proval issued by the International fected when William Baillie-Groh-
Joint Commission concerning man was attempting his Canal Flat
Duck Lake was voiced by Nelson project bt linking Kootenay and
Rod   and   Gun   Club   directors Columbia waterways, and its In-
Second Nelson
Day Next Week
Second Nelson Day to be sponsored by Nelson and District Retail
Merchants Association will be held
September 15, it was decided at a
meeting of the association in the
Chamber of Commerce . rooms
Thursday night.
It was also decided to hold the
annual meeting October 6, and A.
B. Gilker, president, was asked to
appoint a nominating committee,
More Freedomites
To School This Fall
E. Kootenay Man
I. Heric Dies
A resident of Wardner and
Yahk districts for TO years, John
Heric died at Mount St. Francis
Thursday at the age of 91 years.
Born in Sault Ste. Marie Oct.
12. 1863, he moved with his family to Manistique, Mich., where
he lived for a few years before
coming to B.C. He lived in Erickson three years before coming to
Mount St. Francis.
He ls survived by two daughters in the United States and a
grandniece at Erickson. His body
will be shipped to Cranbrook
where funeral services will be
held.
-t 1 ,	
MISSIONARY
SPEAKER HERE
More Freedomite children have, two to three weeks,
started school this Fall than ever:    At New  Denver welfare  home
before  and  officials  are optimis-,68 children are back    in    school
tic that the sect may be becoming They attend grades from one to I    _ . ,. . . ,
more tolerant toward education. ' seven or eight '    ReV Ca™a" Lyn"' dlstnct SUp
Response  to schol opening has.    Only  one   incident has  marredI "mle"dent    °<    the    Pentecostal
e~ar,a _-,f „„.,„_,*,,)  .,„„„~( | churches in B.C., will-be a speaker
at Bethel Tabernacle tonight,
Mr. Lynn's work has taken him
to remote parts of the province and
been "very good". School Inspec-;the scene of peaceful acceptance
tor A. Allen has said. Parents have j of 'the government's education po-j
been amicable and there have | ifcy that first went Into effect two1
been no demonstrations. Kresto- J years ago
va children are among those at-1 At Nelson Thursday afternoon
tending schools but Mr. Alleh has|seven ' Fredomite women from:
no exact figures on attendance asi Shoreacres stood on Baker Street]
yet. Many youths are known to'corners holding up placards probe stil lin the Okanagan picking'testing sending of Sons of Free-j
fruit and will return ro scnool in j dom children to the special gov-1
ernment school at New Denver j
as wards of the state.
"Kidnapping of Children Must!
Stop" the notices read. Asked if
the women, wearing traditional
Doukhobor costume, were representing any organization, one said-
"Our children."
The placards also announced a
meeting tonight in KP hall in
Trail at which Abraham Driedger
will speak. He is described as representing the Association of Silent Objectors to Doukhobor Persecution "whose stand is based on
the bock, "Public Philosophy by
Walter Lipmann." He held a similar meeting in Nelson in the
Spring which was poorly attend-'
ed.
The Nelson poster brigade said
Thursday night.
The protest will go to the International Joint Commission,
which has been holding hearings
at Creston and Bonners Ferry,
Idaho, on an application from the
Creston Reclamation Company
and the Duck Lake Dyking District that they be relieved of regulations requiring them to maintain the Duck Lake water elevation at 1748 feet above sea level.
A further protest will be made
to the B.C. Game Commission
against any reclamation of land
involved as a result of the application, and copies of this protest
will go to the West Kootenay Rod
and Gun Zone and Nelson Chamber of Commerce.
If the application is approved,
conservation Interests stand to
lose one-third of the present 5000
acres reserved for ducks, it is
claimed.
If levels are lowered to any
extent, the reduction will expose
land which can be used for agricultural purposes according to
an    archaic    order-in-council    of
Record Number
At St. Joseph's
St Joseph's school Thursday reported the largest enrolment in
its history.
In the elementary grades and
high school combined, there are
270 students, far exceeding last
year's total of 200.
There are 210 pupils in. the elementary grades this year, and 60
students in high school classes
where there were 40 at the "beginning of the 1954-55 year. Girls
slightly outnumber the boys 32
to 28 in the high school.
tention went by the boards when
the project was abandoned.
The Consolidated' Mining and
Smelting Company and the West
Kootenay Power and Light Company have opposed the application, which would reduce Duck
Lake in the storage season, because they would lose an additional 10,000 acre-feet of storage
water.
The Nelson Club directorate
contends that the drop would also
bare a strip'of land one mile wide
and three miles long of 1900 acres
which could be seized for agriculture.
"Our be$t. protection is that the
land remain covered by water,"
one director said.
The 1884 order-in-council stands
in the way of Duck Lake's unreclaimed portion being set aside
as a game management area, thus
securing it for waterfowl in perpetuity.
BONN (CP) - West Germany's
steel production reached 10,280,000
tons in the first half of 1955, nearly
25 per cent higher than the same
period last year. Pig-iron production in the same period climbed to
7,930,000 tons against 5,540,000 tons
a year ago.
Kicenburn . . ,
Western Monarch
Gait — Greenhilt
Canmore Brlquettei
PHONE 889
Coal
J9
TowleR
Fuel & Transfer
Conceit Series
For Nelson Talked
A means of establishing a Canadian artists concert series in Nelson and formation of a committee
to initiate the series is to be discussed at a meeting in Nelson
tonight Addressing the meeting
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. R
%ain Oliver will be George Zuk-
erman of Vancouver, president
of Overture Concerts/,
16 mm, Sound  Color Film
TfiE
KITIMAT
STORY
See . . .
— A   TEN-MILE   TUNNEL
— POWERHOUSE   IN  THE
HEART OF  A   MOUNTAIN
— POURING   ALUMINUM
— COASTAL   GOSPEL   BOAT
MISSION  WORK
— INDIAN   MISSION   WORK
TONIGHT —8:00 P.M.
Bethel Tabernacle
No Admission Charge
the Yukon and will tell'of missionary work done there. He has
also travelled on the mission boats
on the Coast and plans to tell of
the need of further mission work
among the Coast Indians as well
as in the northland.
He will also show a color sound
film, "The Kitimat Story."
$62 NETTED FOR
RESCUE FUND
HARROP — At the regular executive meeting of the Harrop and
District Community Centre held
ihis week at the home of vice-president Eric Smith, it was report
Lord Mayor Stops
At Castlegar
CASTLEGAR — Sir Seymour
Howard, Lord Mayor of London,
was among passengers aboard
Canadian Pacific Airlines flight
from Calgary to Vancouver
Thursday, whan the plane stopped at Ralph West airfield here.
Sir Seymour was returning
from Alberta's Golden Jubilee
celebrations and will leave Vah-
couver Friday for London via
CPA'i polar route.
Beautiful 3-Piece
DESSERT
SET
Consisting of Silver Crepm, Sugar and Tray.
• GLEAMING SILVER PLATED .
• LOVELY ORNATE DESIGN
$6.50 a Set'
i
On Display at
COLLINSON'S
JEWELLERY
NELSON'S DIAMOND HEADQUARTERS
EFFECTIVE TODAY and SATURDAY
IMPAIRED DRIVING -
A Nelson man, Howard Hilleslad
who was involved in an accident
on Falls Street Wednesday night,
ed that the dqor-to-door canvass was fined $125 for impaired driv-
that more women were standing
on Trail streets Friday.
St Saviour's Pro-Cathedral
SUNDAY   8CHOOL   OPENING   ON   SUNDAY
SEPT.  11th,  at  11:00  A.M.
Children Under 8 Years in Hall
Children Over 8 Years in Church
WE  WELCOME   NEW   MEMBERS
FAMILY   NIGHT   for   Children   and   Parents
Held  on 4th'Friday  Each   Month
for funds for the West Arm Life
Saving Association in Harrop and
Longbeach had to date netted
$62,25.
A corn roast originally planned
to take place this month had to
be cancelled owing to the poor
corn crop.
NOT TOO HOT — NOT TOO COOL
BUT JUST RIGHT
ROCKETGAS
Automatic Forced Air Heating!
Keeps temperature at your personal comfbrt level.
Warm,  circulating  air  in every  room.
Fresh, filtered air in Summer.
ROCKETGAS — The Modern Fuel
It'i  FAST,  CLEAN, SAFE,  ECONOMICAL.
Phone or Call  In Today for a
FREE    HEATING    SURVEY    AND   ESTIMATE
McKay & Stretton Ltd.
Your Home Planning Centre
532, BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C. PHONS 1W5
BCHIS Consulting
Services Available
To Trail Hospital
|    TRAII^Services of the BCHIS
i consulting   staff   will   be   made
j available   to   the   Trail   Tadanac
I Hospital, as the result of a closed |
\ meeting    held    with    Provincial
! Health and Welfare Minister Eric
Martin,   by   the   Hospital   Board
members  and   the  hospital  medical staff. It is believed that Mr,
Martin received a full understanding of the hospital problems as a
result of the meeting, and is generally concerned  about them.
ing in city court Thursday. He
pleaded guilty before Magistrate
William Brown. He also pleaded
guilty to tiriving without a driven' licence and was fined an additional $25.
Other vehicle involved in the
accident was owned by William
Khadikin of Taghum. Both vehicles were slightly damaged.
ART SALES HIGHER
LONDON (CP) - A total of
641 works valued at £29,165 was
sold from the royal academy's
summer exhibition of art. Last
year the  figure was 508  w6rks
There's
Everything
For The
CAMERA FAN
at
RAMSAY'S
CAMERA STORE
"Photography Is Our Business"
497 BAKER 8T.      PHONE 106
The Full Gospel Church
Presents
"THE STREET"
A 16 mm. sound film, in color, produced by the
Pacific Garden Mission.'
Thli ii a truly dynamic Evangelistic film and will be shown
In the Church, 812 STANLEY ST., on SAT., SEPT. 10.
8:00 P.M.
OFF REG. PRICE
ON ANY
* Refrigerator
* Freezer
CROSLEY OR SYLVANIA
• TV Set
IN OUR STORE
 PLUS ——
HIGHEST Trade-In
ALLOWANCES IN TOWN!
Coleman Electric
327 Baker
Phone 1752
 i"ii"^^
■■■■■p^^ipj
-J!1-.1.--!. ■■        ■       ■   -..A.,,,.,! -
3^Sl
' "«i'^ ■».<?*» wm/^,   , f-k.
Hf ' ?-■.*   )"«»""*
PRESENTING HERRIDGE ROSEBOWL to
Mn, J. 0. Harper, left, winner of the high
aggregate In the floral section of the recent
Nakusp flower show sponsored by the Women's
Institute, Ii H. W. Herridge, MP for Kootenay
West. Mri, E. Ferrle, Institute president, looks
on.—W. Flick photo,
LARGE STAFF
The dockyard at Plymouth, Ens-
land, employs 18,000 men.
Today  and   Saturday
Dana  Andrews  -  Jeanne  Craln
"Duel in the Jungle"
TECHNICOLOR
ALSO   —   Sterling   Hayden
"Crime Wave"
MON,  -  TUES. -  WED,
Glynis Johns
In  "MAD ABOUT  MEN"
Trail Phone 551
SPEEDWAY
SERVICE   A  GARAGE   LTD.
Sales and Service
Mercury - Lincoln - Meteor
Cedar and Farwell Sts. Trail
PHONE   834
BUYING A CAR?
See ut about low cost auto finance
CURRIER'S
ALL-RISK INSURANCE
AGENCIES
Trail, B.C.
Phone 1589
OIL HEAT
C. J. MILES
Plumbing,   Heating,   Sheet   Metal
Work
1274 Bay Ave.      Phone 30
4$    . Trail, B.C.
PARSLOW'S
GUNSMITHING
LOCKSMITHING
FISHING   SUPPLIES
1661 Bay Ave. Phone 1996
TRAIL, B.C.
TRAIL CYCLE and
HARDWARE LTD.
1703 Second Ave. Phone 828
TRAIL, B.C.
EEEZIU
brismmmmmmaam
Trail, B.C. — Now Showing
Stewart Granger • Grace Kelly
"GREEN FIRE"
Color - Cinemascope
Hillcrest Motors Ltd.
Trall'i Car Accessory House
Firestone Home and Auto Supply
Radiator Specialists
2795 Highway Drive — Glenmerry
PHONE 1555       ■
Alf's Auto Body Clinic
Trail's Auto  Body Service
1917 Fourth  Ave.    •    Phone  1721
TRAIL. B.C.
Illllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
HAZLEWOOD DRUGS LTD.
Prescriptions,
Stationery, Toiletries,   Books
943 Spokane St.    Phone 11
Trail, B.C.
IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllllllll
MITCHELL
TRANSFFR AND FUEL LTD,
Booker Furnaces Sales and Service
Trail, 1252 Bay Ave. Phone 52, 1321
Castlegar,  Box 568. Phone 3551
ROSE FURNISHING CO.
1319 BAY AVE.       TRAIL, B.C.
Dealers in Draperies. Slip Covers.
Upholstering.   Awnings,   Venetian
.Blinds and Furniture.
All-Custom Work or Factory Job
Attendance Records
Topple at Radium Pool
INVERMERE—Largest attendance on record was registered at
Radium Hot Springs swimming
pool over Labor Day weekend
with 2761 persons using the two
government operated pools Sunday. This was 300 more than the
previous record set last July.
Traffic in August through Kootenay Park gateway also broke
records, as did August attendance
in Hot Springs pools.
Fire-Swept Mill
Resumes Production
INVERMERE - Wilder Brothers Lumber Company Ltd. has
resumed limited production at its
planer mill at Radium Hot Springs.
Last week's disastrous fire, which
caused $7 5,00 0 damage to the
planer and its equipment, crippled
facilities at the mill to a large
extent but production was resumed
a week later on a limited scale.
Present operations are utilizing
a small planer and a new lerge
planer has been ordered to replace
the mill lost in the fire. Full scale
production is expected in about
a month. The company has replaced also a new fork lift vehicle,
used for moving lumber, which
was lost in the fire.
Tenders in for
Research Plant
TRAIL — The Penticton construction firm of Kenyon and
Company is the lowest of seven
bidders on construction of an addition to the Consolidated Mining
and Smelting Company research
building at Trail.
No contract has been awarded
for the construction as yet. The
seven tenders are being investigated.
The addition would be two
storeys with a basement and
would house mostly laboratories
with some offices.
The tenders submitted were:
Kenyon Construction, Penticton, $272,772; Poole 'Construction
Calgary, $275,421; Bennett and
White, Vancouver, $279,78; Narod
Construction, Vancouver, $282,350;
Stange Construction, Vancouver.
$282,790; Fame Brick Construction, Trail, $287,998; and Marwell
Construction, Vancouver, $291,579.
Rossland Fair Parade
Priie Winners Picked
' ROSSLAND — A talent contest Heigh, Wayne Grieve, John Holm,
featured the second day of Rossland's seventh annual fall fair
Thursday, Winners are to be selected by popular ballot and will
be announced Friday night. Cups
will also be awarded, to fair winners tonight.
Selecting the winners in the
costume parade which preceded
the opening of the Golden City
Fall Fair was a difficult job for
the Parent-Teacher Association
members, who acted as judges.
Winners were the following, in
order of choice:
Best dressed boy, Charge Wat
kinsori, Michael Hocking, Maurice
Kay; best dressed girl, Bernice
Brown, Anita Holm, Carol Spa-
tarj, most original boy, Dennis
Matthews, Donald Brown, Gary
Sandulescu; most original girl,
Stephanie Jackson, Ann Keighley,
Linda Knudsgaard, comic boy,
Gary Seefeldt, Clark Evans, Michael Brown, comic girl, Patricia
Heaven, April Ericksson, Mary
Thalman.
Boys' pairs or groups, Bobby
Thompson, Rose Ann Barclay, Nan
Greene,   Tommy   Vaness,   Larry
Windermere Plans
Next Year's Fair
.INVERMERE — The Fall Fair
committee for the East Kootenay
Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition, having lifted the Fall
Fair to a spectacular comeback
this year, is not resting on its laurels.
" Convinced   that   the   successful
Victor Spilker, girls pairs, Diana
Scott, Beverley Flanagan, Jackie
Hook, Colleen Sandulescu, Colleen Dorey, Kathy Watkinson.
Best animal costume, Bobby Cavill, Mary Fleming, Louisa Fleming, best boys' decorated bike,
Leslie Sawyer, Alec Thompson,
best girls' decorated bike, Lynda
Hocking,' Mary Sdao, and best
decorated wagons, David Bisset
and Doug Barch, Merle Stearns,
Jeffrey Chambers and Carol Parsons,  Bruce  Manson.
Miss Jessie Lim
Heads Nursing Staff
INVERMERE — Appointment of
Miss Jessie Lim as superintendent
of nurses at the Lady Elizabeth
Bruce Memorial Hospital at Invermere has been confirmed. Miss
Lim has been acting superintendent since the resignation of Mrs.
Thomas Cookson, former superintendent.
Miss Rene Dansereau, Miss] nized hospital in the interior of the
Hospital's
Employees Take
Woes lo Gov't
CRANBROOK - Certified since
May 1 as bargaining agent for aH
St. Eugene Hospital employees
except the nursing staff, Local 180,
Cranbrook Hospital Employees'
Federal Union (TLC) has come to
agreement with the Cranbrook
district hospital board of management, and the Sisters of Providence of Charity who operate St.
Eugene Hospital but implementation of the contract terms is impossible under the hospital day-
rate freeze ordered some time ago
by the Hospital Insurance Commission.
Appeal by the local to the BCHIS
for reconsideration on the St.
Eugene day-rate for its 85-bed
operations was rejected and the
local is now seeking an interview
with the provincial cabinet
this matter. Business manager for
the local. William Black of Vancouver says St. Eugene Hospital
wage scale is lowest of any orga
Colette Heather and Miss Terese
La Chance, all of Montreal, who
joined the hospital staff in April,
1954, have left.
Miss A. Nicholl of Penticton has
joined the hospital staff, and Mrs.
E. A. Nelson of Wilmer has joined
the staff as a nurse aid. Mrs. Alfred
| Tegart, formerly on the staff of
the hospital, has returned to the
nursing staff temporarily.
GRASSMAN OF YEAR
KAMLOOPS   (CP)   —   William
Buiman has been named grassman
1955 lair should be a rehearsal for I of the year by G. A. Luyat, super-
a bigger and better event in 1956
and that the 1956 fair should be a
dress rehearsal ftr the widespread
David Thompson centennial celebrations in 1957 they have called
a meeting to start plan; rolling
for the 1956 exhibition. This post-
fair meeting will make an initial
lineup   of   committees   to   make
vising district agriculturist at
Kamloops. Mr. Bulman's ranch is
situated between Kelowna and
Winfield. The selection was announced at the green pastures
program tour in the Okanagan
Canadian manufacturers shipped
$4,424,442,000 worth of goods dur-
headway on next year's plans and! ing 'he first three months of 1955.
will analyze the 1955 fair to seek
improvements for the 1956 event.
Date set is Friday in the Lake
Windermere Memorial Community Centre and the meeting is open
to allcomers.
NELSON DAILY NfWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, 1935—3
TWO GIRLS SWIM
ARM AT PROCTER
PROCTER - Two girls caught
the long distance swimming fever and crossed the West Arm at
Sunshine Bay recently.
Ann Dosenberger, 11, swam
across then rowed the boat back
while Jacqueline Sewell of Rossland swam. The girls were accompanied by Ann Fletcher of Salmo
and Violet Smith in the rowboat
but were cautioned not to attempt
a similar feat without an adult
swimmer aboard. Several boys at
Procter have made the swim to
Balfour at various times but this
is believed to be the first girls'
try.
GREAT  DAY
The Coronation of Queen Victoria in 1838 drew 400,000 country
visitors to London.
province.
Agreement until now has been
between management and an uncertified employees association.
Local 180 was organized during the
winter and early spring and was
certified by the Labor Relations
Board as bargaining agent May 1.
Contract terms were Immediately
prepared by the union with reference to establishment of employm-1
ent categories, wage scale and increments and working conditions
relroactive to May 1 which were
found acceptable June 17 by the
board of management and Sisters.
However implementation is solidly
blocked by the budget freeze. Alternative to change in the day rate
which would permit meeting of
contract terms is reduction of the
number of beds the hospital offers
which would permit reduction of
the staff rom the present 80 em-
nloyees. Negotiating committee for
the union were its business agent,
BC Ready to Share
On Health Plan
LILLOOET, B. C.  (CP) — The
provincial government is ready to
share equally with the federal
government the cost of a national
health insurance plan. Premier
Bennett said at a by-election meet
here Wednesday night.
The Premier, speaking in support of Social Credit candidate
Donald F. Robinson in next Monday's vote, said the cost of the
plan,would be paid out of consolidated revenue and would not
mean an increase in provincial
taxes.
Mr. Bennett said B. C.'s proposal
will be put to the federal-provincial conference in Ottawa next
month.
11,005 FREE X-RAYS
VANCOUVER (CP) — B. C.
Tuberculosis Society set a record
of 11,005 free chest X-rays during
the 11-day PNE this year. It was
the largest number of X-rays given since the society started the
service at the Fair eight years ago.
No Sloan Objection
LILLOOET, B. C. (CP) — Premier Bennett told a Social Credit
by-election rally here Wednesday
night that Chief Justice Gordon
Sloan had no objection when the
government issued a forest management licence to B. C. Forest
Products Ltd., while the Sloan
commission on forestry was still
sitting.
Mr. Bennett was replying to
criticism by Liberal candidate
Gordon Gibson who said earlier
the Premier had insulted the chief
justice by allowing the licence to
be  Issued.
The Premier said the present
policy of forest management by
B. C. Forest Products is based on
Chief Justice Sloan's recommendation in 1947.
SENIOR CITIZENS HOME
MISSION CITY (CD—Taxpayers of Mission District will vote
Sept. 17 on a $51,000 by-law for
the erection of a senior citizen's
home. The home will be known as
Pleasant View. Total cost has been
estimated at $90,000 and a grant of
$30,000 has been promised by the
provincial government.
LOCAL AND
LONG DISTANCE
MOVING
• PADDED  VANS
• CAREFUL   PACKING
• EXPERT  CRATING
■ LARGE  STORAGE
FACILITIES
Twice Daily
Freight Service To
Castlegar, Trail
, Rossland
Local Pickup and Delivery
Service
United Trucking
& Storage Ltd.
Agents for Allied Van Llnei
"Canada's Master Movers"
NELSON   B.C.
PHONE  1106 OR  1471
"Hew CcuUm ^euf&U Cut (fau
.. S/Ued (frtrtwttiott!
MADE TO MEASURE
ALUMINUM
RIBBED OR ROOFING & SIDING
CORRUGATED
(reslon Fair
*lans Advanced
CRESTON - Plans are going
ahead tor the annual agricultural
Fall Fair to be held in Civic Centre
here September 23 and 24.
Indications are that the fair will
be as good as or better than previous fairs in this "breadbasket of
the Kootenays." a
Farmers, home-makers and
backyard gardeners will compete
for prizes in fruit, vegetables, flowers and pot plants, honey and
dairy products, canned fruit and
vegetables, needlework, home
cooking, hobbies and poultry.
Mr. Black, chairman of the local,
Mrs C. S. Wakaluk, vice-chairman
Mrs. Walter Barber and secretary-
treasure Mrs. John  Forter.
PHONE
593
For
Expert
Electrical
and
Mechanical
Installations
Industrial Wiring
Mines and Sawmills
Motor Rewinding
New and Used
Bennetts
Ltd.
324 Vernon St.
Phone 593
HEATING FOR HEALTH ... No. 2
For greater comfort and better health modernize your
heating system. Save money on every heating dollar
you spend and enjoy new comfort during the winter
months.
' Kootenay Plumbing and Heating
351   Baker  St. Co.   Ltd, Phone  666
Now you can order ribbed or corrugated aluminum sheets in the
exact lengths for roofs and side walls, at no exjra cost . . .
Col-Rol Made-to-Measure Roofing and Siding, is ^hipped to your
jobsite in custom lengths, 3 to 30 or more feet for faster, easier
application and lower handling costs. Col-Rol eliminates end
lapping, stops waste . . . costs no more per square than conventional aluminum sheets.
Made by Columbia Metal Rolling Mills Ltd., Vancouver,
and shipped direct from the factory within 48 hours.
ORDER YOUR COL-ROL SHEETS FROM
Now You Can Paint a Room For
Under $5.00
Sh&uvin, U/MamL
FLAT-TONE
Interior Paint
Regularly $2.40 a Quart
Limited Quantity Only in a
FULL RANGE OF COLORS
Quarts .
1.50
Gallons .
$
4.95
1  GALLON  COVERS APPROXIMATELY 600 8Q. FT.
1 coat will cover most Interior surfaces. Velvet finish.
Free of brush marks.
Nelson Farmers Supply Ltd.   | Columbia Trading Co.
524 RAILWAY ST.
PHONE 174
NELSON, B.C.
PHONE 1511
NELSON, B.C.
SCHRUMP'S SHOES
FOR THE FINEST IN
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Phone 2514 1447 Bay Ave.
TRAIL, B.C.
LOWEST   PRICED   SEWING
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UNION-PETERS
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«10 Bay Ave., Trail - Phone 2080
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Nriairti Daily Nwiia
Established April 22.   11)02
Interior British Columbia's Largest Daily Newspaper
Published every morning except Sunday and statutory
holidays by the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY
LIMITED, 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.
Authorized as Second Class Mall Post Office Department, Ottawa.
MEMBER   OB   THE CANADIAN   PKESS   AND
THE   AUDIT    BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS.
Friday, September 9, J 955
The Wealth of Words in Our Language
No language in history or in the     knows many others, but he rarely
present world is so rich in English.
Its vocabulary has borrowed freely
from every tongue and continues to
do so with every extension of human
thought. The vigorous progress of
ihe English-speaking races throughout the world constantly compels
new additions to its wealth of words,
while the long tradition of English
classic literature keeps older words
in use and understanding. These are
some of the reason why the ordinary
English dictionary contains at least*
150,000 words and the monumental
Oxford dictionary offers definitions
for 600,000 separate words and usages
of words.
There is an astounding contrast
between these available resources of
language and the amount of it which
serves the average man for his daily
needs. A telaphone system, which
deals almost exclusively in communications by the spoken word, has made
studies which show that a mere handful of words is enough to keep its
wires busy. There are 80,000,000 telephone conversations in the United
States every day, but 50 words account for 60 per cent of what is actually said in them. A trifling total of
700 words provides 95 per cent of all
telephone conversations.
This is interesting but not conclusive. Telephone talks are usually
—though not always—brief and to
the point. But the meagreness of the
average vocabulary is confirmed by
other evidence. Tests have shown
that the ordinary high school graduate or college freshman has only
about 1500 words at his tongue's end.
The full-blown business man can
muster and command about 5000. He
uses them.
The testimony of literature is to
the same effect, though it is obvious
that there are many words common
in writing which are rarely heard in
speech. Shakespeare wrote of many
themes, and all sorts and conditions
of men and reached the heights of
human reflection, speculation and
imagination, yet 20,000 words were
all he needed to* accomplish his infinite variety. The English Bible, the
unquestioned anchorage of good English, contains about 9000 different
words. The ordinary fiction writer
rarely uses more than 3000 of the
150,000 words which are at his elbow
in the dictionary.
The other side of- this story concerns a quality of the written or
spoken word which is to some degree
beyond the dictionary. The dictionary supplied definitions, but there
must also be considered a word's
connotations. These are as wide as
all the experience which is associated
with any given word. The simplest
of words may mean a thousand things
and usually does. This fact is the
basis of a remarkable statement
made and demonstrated some years
ago by Professor Lewis M. Terman
of Stanford University, to the effect
that ability to give adequate definitions of five out of a selected list of
100 words indicates a working vocabulary of 13,500 words.
But the fact remains tha£ most of
us are too niggardly with words, un-
appreciative of their variety and
subtle distinction and lacking in linguistic resourcefulness. It is not for
lack of words, of which there are
more than we shall ever need or
know.
? Questions?
ANSWERS
Open to any reader. Names of
penons aiking questions will not bo
published. 'There is no chargu for this
service. QUESTIONS WILL NOT BE
ANSWERED BY MAIL except where
there   lo obvious  necessity  for  privacy.
F. P., Nelson—Is there really a fish called
the sardine, or is the name applied to
all small fish packed for eating?
The young of the pilchard is the sardine,
but the name has been extended to other
varieties of small fish.
G. M„   Sirdar—Can  aptitude  tests be  obtained in Toronto?
At Central YMCA, Toronto.
Z. D., Slocan—I have been In Canada three
years and want to visit ill relatives in
Holland. Do I need a new passport,
. Apply for an extension of your passport
or for a new one at the Netherlands Consulate. 475 Howe Street, Vancouver^ B. C.
A. B. C, Deer Park, Wash^-Who is editor of
the   Saturday  Evening   Post,  and   how
long has he held the position?
The editor is Ben Hibbs. who has served
since 1942. His predecessor was W. W. Stout,
now retired.
Reader, Nakusp—How many workmen were
killed   during   the   construction  of   the
Grand Coulee dam?
Seventy-three  lost  their  lives working
on the huge structure.
Bettor. Kaslo—In the television show. "The
Lone Ranger", what is the name of Tonto's
horse? '
Scout.
Japan's Housewives Well Organized
Japan's approximately 20 million married women, now possessing the same legal
rights as do their husbands, are playing
major roles in the social and political realms
of that country, as a recent survey shows
rather markedly. Their strength was demonstrated recently when various groups of
housewives succeeded in preventing price
increases of certain consumer goods and
public utilities, including gas and electricity.
Japan now has about 30,000 organized
women's groups, and the aggregate membership is believed to be more than 10
million. Being so powerfully organized, the
housewives of Japan can be depended on
to have a strong voice in the affairs of their
homeland.
The following facts about Japanese
woljien and their varied activities are of
more than passing interest:
Women outnumber men in Japan by
1,500,000. As at October 1. last year, the
female population was 44,778.000, and that of
males 43.302,000. An interesting aspect of
these figures isUhat the greatest disparity
between men and women under 60 years is.
in the 30-34 year old bracket. The ratio in
this group is 123 women for every 100 men.
This indicates clearly the disastrous consequences of the war on the male population.
Ten per cent of the total households in
the country—or 1,700.000—are supported by
women. War widows are in hand to ease this
condition, since a majority of thfi widows
are under 30 years of age, with small chil
dren to support and without adequate means
of earning a proper livelihood. An obstacle
to the solution of the problem is the fact
that in rural areas the trend against remarriage is strong.
This year the government contemplates
establishing a training centre for industrial
home work and home-making centre for
widows. The women will be trained to become household workers in order to prepare then} for better job opportunities. At
present the widows have their own national
organization, with a membership of nearly
800,000.—Nanaimo Frfee Press.
From an
Oldtimer-'s
Notebook
 BY R. G. JOY	
Historian, Nelson and District
Oldtimers' Association
Blood for 180,000
Red Cross Blood Transfusion Service,
which has handled 351,000 pints ot blood
during the eight years it has been in operation in British Columbia, is now in its first
permanent quarters. In the middle of August
it moved from the temporary buildings at
Shaughnessy Hospital to the new Provincial
Health Building near the Vancouver General Hospital, where it has been given a
whole floor for operation of its laboratories
and services.
With a- staff of 57 under Dr. T. D. Stout,
medical director for the Red Cross, this
service tests, processes and issues all blood
collected in this province. It now serves
99 B. C. hospitals, scattered from Vancouver
Island to the Alberta border. Twelve technicians, four labpratory workers, six clerks
and two bottle washers look after the technical side of the operation, while five graduate nurses, 19 hospital aides, and nine drivers are responsible for the operation of the
blood donor clinic.
During the past eight years 2500 clinics,
held all over British Columbia, have collected blood from the voluntary donors.
Through this service, some 180,000 patients
have received this free gift from unknown
donors which has, in thousands of cases,
made the difference between life and death.
P?ess Comments
MORE TIME TO BE KILLED
Figures show fatalities on the highways
and in the water are far greattr during the
weekend days than during the working
week days. By the time we have reduced
the working week to four or possibly three
days we shall all be able to kill ourselves
off even more rapidly.—Brockville Recorder
and Times.
The Voice
Of Authority
(Stratford  Beacon-Hera Id)
From Nottingham, England, comes news
that the life of the baby-sitter is being
made easier by a business man with a voice
recorder.
When Louis Duchemin's baby-sitter had
trouble one night, he cut a record of his
own voice, admonishing his five children
for misbehaving,
Next time the sitter got into difficulties
she slmpiy turned on the-record-player, and
the children calmed down.
Mr. Duchemin has since been swamped
with requests from parents. He now records
parents' voices, at $2 for one minute, on
each side of the record.
FERMENT
Life would be pretty dull  around the
house if the family weren't waiting for at
least one member to outgrow some phase or
other.—Edmonton Journal.
Your Horoscope
A somewhat mixed grill may be in store
for you, but you should enjoy a modicum of
good fortune if you are not extravagant or
quarrelsome. Look for artistic, musical and
literary talents ln the child born today.
Like so many of our towns Cranbrook, the golden jubilee city of
1955, owes its success to mining!
and lumbering plus the enterprise
of its citizens such as Jake Fink
and others.
I remember standing on the corner of Josephine and Mill Streets
with, Mr. Gomer Jones and we
reminisced about Rossland, Mr.
Jones was an accountant ■ there
before going to a Cranbrook sawmill. He was accountant there also.
He spoke with pride of the Cranbrook vacinity and pictured to me
the long lines of teams and sleighs
fully loaded with logs going to the
sawmill. He said the long lines of
loaded logs seemed like an endless
chain moving over a level icy road
to the sawmill.
Later he was accountant at the
electric light plant.
(Incidentally, Jones' son is a
Nelson resident employed at the
post office here.)
A wholesale firm opposite where
the green houses are now on Front
Street in Nelson was operated by
John Cholditch who later retired
to Cranbrook. A Mr. Reid, who had
an departmental store in Nepawa,
Man., later he was in business in
Cranbrook. There was also old
man Simpson, a racy editor, also
Fred Smythe who write "Tales of
the Kootenay."
I have a letter on my files from
him telling me that I had the right
bunch for history of the Kootenays
giving me all kinjis of encourage
ment and advise. Mr. Fred Smythe
was at one time foreman of the
composing room of the Nelson
Daily News.
1957 will be Nelson's Diamond Jubilee. Then the bridge will be finished, also our new schools and new
hospital. Many will be the
marks; "Remember, Bill, when the
pessimists said this and that would
never happen ..." Nelson pioneer
prospectors were enterprising and
some with very small financial
backing went to Cranbrook and on
to the the St. Mary's country to
look for the wonderful promise of
rich deposits of gold, silver, lead
and copper.
Mr. Jack Nomen and Charles
Monroe (not Joe Monroe) undertook tfle trip by Roses Pass at
Crawford Bay.' I remember the
late George Gunn, who with Charles McKay footed it t6 Cranbrook
and spoke of there being a log
house and a few shacks there.
Two Nelson men also In that;
vicinity. Jess Hutchinson and
Mike O'Brien, located copper
claims. I remember these two men
when I was in my cabin on Cottonwood Creek telljng me of Captain Petty, a scout from England
to view the proporties in the St.
Mary's country.
Some^ prospectors crossed the St.
Mary's river on flimsy rafts of logs
and some met their death by
drowning.
We must not forget the story of
Indian Pete to whose memory a
monument was erected by Cominco for discovering the famous
deposit which afterward became
the St. Eugene Mine at Moyie and
selling it to the Consolidated.
Jim Cronin gave part of his
wealth to the St. Eugene Mission
near Cranbrook whose hospital
was a blessing to many. Angus
Davis in his memoirs tells of
Cronin's death on the trail while
developing a property in the far
north. '
^ennett Will
lull if He's
\oven Wrong
LILLOOET, B,'C. (CP)—Premier Bennett ln a by-election
speech here Wednesday night defended bis statement that the provincial government's net debt has
been reduced by $87,000,000 In the
past ZVi years.
Mr. Bennett was replying to an
editorial in the Vancouver Sun,
anct. for the second "time during
the current by-election campaign
promised to resign if anyone could
show his report on British Columbia's financial position was
inaccurate.
"The great Vancouver Sun's
bluff was called. That paper reported that it could not get a
chartered accountant who would
risk the government's displeasure
by making the examination," he
said.
"That is a slur on a great and
honored profession. But if they
couldn't get an accountant in B.C.,
why didn't they go to Alberta or
some other province, or the United
States, to get a chartered accountant?"
Mr. Bennett has reported that in
1952 during the Coalition premiership of Byron Johnson, the net
debt waa $192,000,000, and today it
stands at $125,000,000. The statement has been questioned repeatedly by opposition members.
NANAIMO CRIME
PICTURE DRAWS
McENNES PLAUDIT
NANAIMO, B. C. (CP) - Mr.
Justice H. W. Mclnnes lauded the
RCMP and residents of Nanaimo*
on the low rate of crime in this
city following one of the briefest
sessions of the fall assizes.
"It is highly commendable for
this prosperous and one of the
rapidly growing parts of British
Columbia to have only one case
on the docket. I congratulate both
the citizens and the police," said
the Supreme Court justice.
Guards to Fight
Idaho Fires
BOISE, Idaho (AP)—Gov. Robert E. Smylle declared a state of
emergency in Idaho Thursday because of forest fires throughout
the state.
The governor's office also announced certain north Idaho forest areas will be closed Friday.
The state of emergency will
facilitate calling out National
Guardsmen to help fight the fires.
The areas to be closed.are in
Priest Lake, Potlach and Clearwater forest districts.
Buy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way
]i Million UBC
Sponsion
VANCOUVER (CP) — Tenders
for construction of the new three-
building, $8,000,000 University of
B. C. project will be called in
early spring of next year. I
Each of the three jobs — a new j
arts building, additional resi- j
dences and a new medical sciences '
■building—will cost approximately j
$2,000,000 and will be undertaken'
simultaneously.
University officials hope the
project will be completed by September, 1057.
The three constructions are the [
larger part of a $10,000,000. three-
year building program authorized |
by Attorney-General Robert Bonner May 18.
Meanwhile,   the   new   wing  on
the administration building is expected to be finished Sept. 19, in [ This advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Li-
time for the fall semester. quor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia
■*■
It's Been Said
Music moves us. and we know not why;
we feel the tears, but cannot trace their
source. Is lt the language of some other
state, born of its memory? For what can
wake.the soul's strong instinct of another
world like music?—Letitia Elizabeth Lan-
don.
j TheyH Do It Every Time "
By Jimmy Hatlo
Mam up to her hips■prbmrims
dimmer-does papa 6ata&y take the
MoiV ITfe TIAie FOR BED AHD THE SAFETY-
PIN DRILL-WHOteMAKlMG IT IMPOSSIBLE
FOR THE WD TO ST/./STILL? YE4H /
w
Today's Bible
Thought
The mind of the flesh is death,
but the mind of the Spirit is life
and  peace.—Rom. 8:6,
We  share  our  physical   nature
with the beasts. We should glorify
the higher spiritual  nature.
dutit 2(sL
SMALLER  PROPORTION
CARDIFF, Wales (CP) — Since
1901 the proportion, of Welsh-
speaking persons in Wales has
dropped from 49.9 per cent to 28.9
per cent. In 1931 there were 98.000
persons who spoke Welsh compared with 41,000 in 1951.
you taut 6M&tm
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On your visits to
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To better serve our
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Bring the children to
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they're welcome, too!
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YELLOW INDIVIDUAL
Money   ain't   everything.    The
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SQUASH
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Recipes...
Cooks Often Neglect
Vegetable Marrow
By MARGARET CARR
Vegetable marrow is a great
favorite on European tables but is
often overlooked by Canadian
homemaker^. This vegetable must
be used when young as it develops a stringy coarseness as it matures. Too often this juicy vege-
table is cooked in a quantity of
water and when served is waterlogged and unappetizing. Being of
such delicate texture, vegetable
marrow requires special attention in cooking but good results
warrant a little extra care.
Summer   squash    such as Cym-
R. Andrew & Co.
Leaders in Footfashion
Established 1902
Nelson Social
A shower for Miss Phyllis Cannell, who is to be married Saturday to W. Merth of Kelowna, was
held this week at the home of Mr,
end Mrs. B. Hoskins, Sixth Street.
A number of friends and neighbors gathered for the occasion and
presented a pair of brass vases
and a planter to Die bride-elect.
Mr. and Mrs. K. F. Lane of
Portland Oregon, on their first
trip to Nelson and district, are Ihe
guests of Mrs. Lane's brother .ind
sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. H. A.
Pearson of  Sunshine Bay,
Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Walgren, 301
Carbonate Street, have left for a
two-week stay in Vancouver. They
are accompanied by their daugh-
PHONE 1844
ter,   Pat,   who   will   attend   Vancouver Normal School.
How   Christian   Science   Heals
"HOW
A CHILD
WAS HEALED"
CKLN,  1240  kc,  Frl., 6:15  p.m.
Mrs. R. H. Dill has just returned from a week at Vancouver
whore she attended the Pacific
National Exhibition.
Mrs. Joseph Holland. 316 Second Street, is on a motor tour of
Lake  Louise,   Banff  and   Calgary.
I She will also visit her son and
naughter-in-lnw. Mr. and Mrs. W.
1 Holland of Claresholm. and her
son Clifford of Lethbridge Accompanying her from Chapman
Camp is Mr. Holland's sister. Mrs,
Gilpin.
Dave Wade has returned to Nelson after a visit  to England,
James Stout and son Jimmy,
who have been the guests of Mr.
'Stout's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
Stout, 808 Stanley Street, have returned to Edmonton. While in
Nelson they took part in the Caledonian games Labor Day.
CONFIDENTIALLY YOURS
" :-N —by Byrne Hope Sanders'
MONTREAL, September 8th —One for each day
of the week! . . . I'm thinking of the seven
wonderful flavors created hy. ROYAL INSTANT
for their puddings and pie fillings 1 They have the
freshest flavors—the new Banana Cream and the
new Strawberry Cream taste as if you've just
prepared the fruit I All of tlie seven puddings are
super-homogenized— creamy and smooth — light
"\ on   can   make  them   for  puddings   or   pie   fillings   in   a
^ -      without cooking! So order all seven — and servo (hem often
to your lurky family — Banana Cream, Strawberry Cream, Chocolate,
Butterscotrh, Vanilla, Cat arne! and Coconut Cream! Each one's delirious!
I've Made Sandteichet — for mv
The IS'eic Adventure . , . you and
your baby meet
when Ihe little
oue first, starts
on Eolid food ...
is made truly en-
jovable when vou
serve AYLM'LR
Strained Bartlett,
Pears. It's i m-
portant for babv
to bkc the first, taste of solid food
— fo have something light- and
easy to digest —yet nourishing.
Aylmor Strained Bartlett Pears
give tiio perfect an=wrr lo all these
nerds. Tliry are the only .-trained
pears for babies sold in Canada
which have nothing added except
a little sugar for sweetening. And
of course these fully ripe pears
wxf- extra finely sfmined. 1 can
recommend them highly . . . and
I know your doctor will do the
same.
I wo child ren for
many years. Anci
one of the things
which I know is
most important —
i 3 having them
jrc.'h and tempting
nt, noon! Tint's
why, like thousands of n 1 li r r
mother?, I seal
thorn with "SCOTCH" CELLULOSE TAPE. It keeps out ihe
air— keeps the package neat —
and the you nepers happy! . . ,
And, of course, there are scores of
other uses for '"Scoldi"' Cellulose
Tape —for mending broken crayons; school-books; pasting pictures
in I lie youngsters' scrap books and
albums. It's wonderful how many
uses this practical little home need
has. Vou'il find it in the gay plaid
dispenser at stores everywhere,
/( Means So Much Tn A Child . . . with bu=y school days ahead, to
keep hnalthy and full of life. Very important, \~ to
keep tho bowels moving regularly. And tlie bist
way to do that is lo use tho laxative clinically
Ppimrd for rluldien —("ASTORIA . . . It gently
coaxes, never force? . . . because it contains a mild
vegetable regulator.. .So don't uso a harsh adult's
laxative — but got Castoria! A lartro bottle 4">c...
or tlie economy family size 75c. Irregularity ran
cause so many troubles —keep your child free of
them!
Summer Wax Lnrely — but most pf us find it had
our hair. Maybe too much sun — or wind —or dust!
So now that September's come — lot's make up our
minds to uso WOO DRURY COOOAXUT OIL
SHAMPOO —because it.'s the natural ad shampoo,
Woodbury is gentle on the hair and scalp — washes
your hair to shining loveliness— vol does vol wash
out the natural oils which give your hair life and
body. Your hair's so easy to manage, (oo — even
right, niter a Woodbury Shampoo! You can discover
Woodburv for yourself rich) now — at it special bargain
gizo is only 59c— for a short time longer!
Procter Notes
PROCTER—It is most opportune that Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
Brady of Procter own the hotel
here for over the holiday they
held a family reunion with their
two sons of Calgary and their
daughter of Procter. Also present
were five other friends and their
families. They entertained Mrs.
Brady's mother. Mrs. Bertha Laycock of Salt Coat. Sask., Mr. and
Mrs. William Brady and Douglas
and Debbie, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Brady and Brian, Mr. and Mrs
O. Bedard and four sons, Mr. and
Mrs, D. Walsh and five children
of Balfour. Mr. and Mrs. Orson
Basaraba of Vancouver, formerly
of Prairie River, Sask., where
they were once neighbors of the
Brady's, as well mas Mr, Hersbak
of Prairie River, who was also
present.
Mrs.  N.  Turik  and little sons.
Gary  and  Rickie, have  returned
lo   Robson    after   ^pending   two
weeks with Mrs. Turik's parents
Mr.   and   Mrs.   N.   Shwarok   of
Procter.
Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Garner have
I returned from a sketching trip to
I Trail, where tiicy were guests of
' Mr. and Mrs. E. Crispin.
!     Miss  Clarie   Ogden   has  left  to
| attend Normal School at Vancou-
; ver and Miss Joan Ferguson  will
I take her Normal School training
1 at Calgary.
j Mr. and Mrs. John Persello and
Fred visited Spokane where they
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Persello.
Of wide interest In the Sunshine Bay area, where she lived
for many years, is the visit of
Mrs. Doris Apple ton. who left
here four years ago to settle in
Eastern Canada. During her stay
when she will visit old friends,
she will be a guest of Mr. and
Mrs. William Donaldson, her onetime  neighbor at  Sunshine Bay.
ling, Crookneck, Banada, Zuccin-
ni and,patty pans are used when
quite small, before the seeds have
developed or the skin toughened.
They are cooked without peeling
nnd the centre portion is not removed.
STUF.FED VEGETABLE
MARROW
small vegetable marrow
cups soft stale breadcrumbs
tablespoon chopped onion
tablespoons chopped parsley
cup chopped cooked meat
Vi teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper.
2     tablespoons butter.
Cut    marrow    in   half  lengthwise  and   remove    seeds.    Place
halves  on  greased   baking  sheet
Mix bread crumbs, onion, parsley
meat, salt and  pepper    and    fill
marrow halves. Dot top with but
ter. Bake in a moderate oven (350
deg. F) for 1 hour.
VEGETABLE MARROW
CASSEROLE
4    cups sliced vegetable marrow
Vi cup sliced onion
6     medium tomatoes, sliced
1 teaspoon salt
Dash of pepper *
2 tablespoons butter
Peel marrow, remove seeds and
cut in H-inch slices. Arrange ve
gctables in alternate layers in ;
greased casserole, sprinkling eac!
layer with salt and pepper. Dot
with butter. Bake in a moderate
,oven '350 deg, F.) 45 migutes.
SCALLOPED SQUASH WITH
PEPPERS
3 cups sliced summer squash
1 cup sliced green pepper
Vi cup sliced onion
Salt
Pepper
Vz cup fine dry bread crumbs
2 tablespoons butter*
Arrange vegetables in layers in
greased casserole, sprinkling
each layer with salt, pepper and
bread crumbs. Dot top with butter. Cover and bake in a moderate oven (350 deg. F.) about 35
minutes. Remove cover'and bake
10 minutes longer or until crumbs
are brown and squash tender.
■SfbS0}
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, 1955—5
DOUBLE-RING CEREMONY In Trinity United Church*
united In marriage the former Margaret Georgina McLeod,
daughter of Mrs. Georgina McLeod, and Lincoln Cyril Vital, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Vital. Rev, A. R, T. Dixon officiated, and
attendants were Mr. and Mrs, Paul Argatoff. Telegrams were read
at the reception from the groom's parents In Trinidad, British
West Indies, and from the bride's uncle and aunt from Barbados,
B.W.l. Nelson will be their home,—Photo by Vogue Studio,
MR. SQUIRREL
SAYS:
aujcL bahqainAtn
Lister Notes
LISTER—Mrs^ C. Lapointe has
left for Vancouver to visit her
daughter, Mrs. E. Lon|[,
Howard Siebert and Jim Bruce
were in Spokane a few days visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. Edgar.
A succesful picnic was held at
Deer Lodge hall on Labor Day
with Mr. and Mrs. R. Anderson
and Mrs. Millner in charge. Tlie
softball game featuring Lister vs
Wynndel was won by the home
team. Due to the extreme hot
weather, a record sale of pop
was. made. The festivities were
topped off by an old-time dance,
Olive Sherstobetoff will be
home for two weeks from Calgary,
AFTER A HONEYMOON In Spokane, Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Earl Saunby, above, will make their home in Trail. The bride
Is the former Katherine Strudwick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,
Strucfwick of Vancouver, and the groom Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. G. E. Saunby of Balfour. The wedding took place In Coeur
d'Alene, Idaho.—Renwick photo.
Plymouth is the home port
for|
some of Britain';
ships.
greatest fighting
Your
W-edding
Deserves complete professional coverage, both
formal and candid.
We'll   be   pleased  to  explain
our complete Wedding Service.
VOGUE
STUDIO
HELMUTH MAYRHOFER
Photographer
460 Ward St,       Ph, 1552
When Your Doctor Orders
Medicinal Treatment For You
Bring Your
Prescription
(Or Have  It Phoned)
For Friendly, Prompt Service at
Moderate Prices to
NELSON
PHARMACY
"YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH"
433 JOSEPHINE^T.       NELSON       PHONE 1203
FREE DELIVERY
It Is Your Privilege To Choose Your Druggist.
Make Your Choice NELSON  PHARMACY.
Silverton Notes
SILVERTON—Miss Janle Blackburn of Toronto is the guest of
her uncle and aunt. Mr. and Mrs.
J. Steele and John.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fridell have
returned from their vacation, having visited Mr. Fridell's brother,
A. Fridell. of Kando, and his
sister, Mrs. H. Hegesberg of Minot.
North Dakota. It is 50 years since
Mr. Fridell saw his sister and 48
.■ears since he saw his brother,
Mrs. R. Avison, her son Andy.
.md Miss Carol Le Page have reamed after spending a few days
in Vancouver. They were accompanied by Mrs. W. S. Nelson and
her daughter Francis, who graduated from Vocational Training
School,
everyone will love is this "Xn-Cook"' Peanut.
Butter Fudge made with CROWN BRAND CORN
SYRCP. It's fo pimple Ihe youngsters ran mix it
up themselves!
"NO-COOK" PEANUT  BUTTER FUDGE
1 cup peanut bulter
1 cup CROWN BRAND Corn Syrup
ll4 cups skim milk powder
1 !* cups icing sugar
'•" \ -?• MIX tnijrlhrr (with spoon) peanut butler nnri CROWN
BRAND Corn Syrup in a tatzt bowl. ADD dry ingredients <V1 s\ once. MIX with hands, using a _tne.i(i_ng mr.tion until
thoroughly blended. SCRAPE off any dry ingrcdienls clinging trf the howl
and knead into Ihe fudge. CONTINUE In knead until smooth PLACE nn
board, roll or pat to \7 inch lliickncss; allow to set 5 minutes. CUT into
snunres with sharp knlfo. YIELD: 2 pounds.
NOTE: If desired. \3 cup cocoa may hn added with   the dry  ingredients.
TASTE BEST WHEN THEY
ARE MADE WITH
PACIFIC MILK
Pacific Evaporated Milk has the
rich creaminess ... the fresh,
sweet flavor that really counts
in cooking. When a recipe calls
for milk, use Pacific Milk and
taste the wonderful difference.
The only evaporated milk processed in B.C.
L.    l^^uumHcid
FROM CRADLE
TO COLLEGE
Let the Experts at
LYON'S
Protect Your
Children's Feet.
Well-Known   Brands
SAVAGE  -  PACKARD
SKIPALONG
LA   PARISETTE
CORRECTLY FITTED
CORRECTLY PRICED
411  BAKER ST.
PHONE 1114
FREEMAN S
639 BAKER
PHONE 115
CHARGE IT
at
596   BAKER   ST.
FAIR PRICES
Fall Fair time, Winter,
Spring or Summer, our
prices are the fairest you'll
find and the quality of
workmanship the best obtainable!
Empire Cleaners
321  Baker St.       Phone 288
HIGHEST   QUALITY  —
LOWEST   PRICES
The low standard nf living in
outlying villages is a major problem in Iraq.
tummy
a
Science M
finds new
freshener
laxative for children
A child's constipation often upsets
tummy, too. That's why modern mothers
give new Children's Own Tablets—the
new laxative discovery that settles upset
tummies—while it. gently relieves bowels
overnight. Children feel wonderful next
day!Ot this new, nood-tasting "Tummy-
Freshener" luxative for your child. See
the difference in his happiness! At all drug
counters. ^L
 ■Pffmf"?:' .     —'—"~: :—' rr-.— : -?--—, ■■ - '-,■..■*':
•■■'-'- i :■;'(.■
—--       ,.__,.._■. j .....      ..     , ■  ,    .       ,     - .     . - _jfi r- ■ — r— -|
6—NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, 1955
Robson Woman Wins
Fruitvale Fair Honors
FRUITVALE—Grand aggregate
winner in competitive classes at
the Fruitvale Fall Fair was a Robson women, Mrs. J. S. Scott. Second place went to Mrs. Bayley
Dovey, and Mrs. Donat Morissette
came  third.
The PTA Cup was awarded to
Carol Paterson for the second
year. Here are the results;
VEGETABLES
Beans, wax, Mrs. Donat Mpris-
sette, Roger Larson, beans, green,
Alex Webster, Mrs. Bayley Dovey;
beans, pole, Alex Webster; beets,
globe, Roger Larson, W. S. Harrison, Beaver Falls; cabbage, ^conl-
cal, W. Harrison, Beaver Falls;
Mrs. B. Dovey; caggabe, flat or
- ballhead, Alex Webster, W. Harri-
sofi, Beaver Falls; celery, Mrs. P.
Berukoff, Alex Webster; cauliflower, Mrs. P. Berukoff, carrots,
short, Mrs. Berukoff, Roger Larson; carrots, intermediate, Mrs.
George Todd, Roger Larson; carrots, long, W. S. Harrison, Beaver
Falls, Mrs. P. Berukoff; corn, Mrs.
G. Todd, Roger Larson, citron, W.
Harrison, Beaver Falls, cucumber,
two grown in garden, W. Harrison.
Mrs. P. Berukoff; cucumbers, for
pickling, Mrs. D. Morissette, Mrs.
Berukoff; lettuce, head, Alex
Webster, W. Harrison onions, yellow or brown, Alex Webster, W.
Harrison, parsnips, W. Harrison;
peas, Mrs. D. Morissette, Mrs. B.
Dovey, Rpger Larson, pumpkin,
pie, Alex Webster, W. Harrison,
squish, green hubbard, W. Harrison, aquash, any other variety,
Alex Webster, Roger Larson; vegetable marrow, Alex Webjsr,
Mrs. B. Povey; tomatoes, ripe. Mrs.
George Todd, Alex Webster; tomatoes, green, Mrs. George Todd,
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson; W. S.
Harrison; radishes, Mrs. P. Berukoff; rhubarb, Alex Webster, Mrs.
J. S. Scott, Robson. Roger Larson,
best display of field, farm, orchard and garden produce, Alex
Webster sr., W. Harrison, Roger
Larson, Mrs. P. Berukoff.
High aggregate in this section,
Alex Webster, W. S. Harrison.
■FIELD   PRODUCE
Potatoes, white, Roger Larson.
Alex Webster; potatoes, netted
gems, Alex Webster. Mrs, F. M,
Peitzsche, potatoes, any other variety, Roger Larson, W. Harrison.
potatoes any early potato, Alex
Webster, Roger Larson, potatoes.
lat« variety, Alex Webster, Roger
Larson, largest pumpkin. W. Har
rison, largest  potato,  Roger  Larson.
High aggregate tn this section,
Roger Larson, Alex Webster,
FRUIT8
Apples, delicious, W. S, Harrison,
Beaver Falls; Mrs. J. S, Scott,
Robson; apples, transparant, W. S.
Harrison. Beaver Falls; Fred Dann,
Beaver Falls; apples, wealthy,
Alex Webster; apples, Macintosh,
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson; apples,'
Gravensteins, Mrs. Ed Stephen-j
son. Reaver Falls; apples, any fall
or winter variety, W.i S, Harrison,
Beaver Falls; Mrs. F. M. Peitzsche;]
apple collection, Mrs. J. S. Scott, |
Robson; Alex Webster; Mrs. F. M.j
Peitzsche; apples, Wagner, Mrs. J.
S. Scott, Robson; crabapples. red.!
W. S. Harrison, Beaver Falls; Fredj
Dann, Beaver Falls. i
Pears, Bartlett, Mrs. J. S. Scott,:
Robson; pears, Flemish Beauty,!
Fred Dann, Beaver Falls; W. S.
Harrison, Beaver Falls; pears, any
other variety, Mrs. J. S. Scott.
Robson; Alex Webster; plums, blue
or red, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson;
Mrs. Bayley Dovey; W. S. Harrison, Beaver Falls; plums, yelfow,
F. W. Dann, Beaver Falls; peaches,
Mrs. J. S. Scott. Robson: Mrs. E.
Stephenson, Beaver Falls; raspberries, Alex Webster; Mrs. P.
Berukoff; strawberries. Mrs. Bay-
ley Dovey; blackberries, Alex
Webster; W. S. Harrison, Beaver
Falls; collection of fruits, Mrs. J.
S.  Scott, Robson;  Alex  Webster.
High aggregate, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
Robson; W. S. Harrison, Beaver
Falls.
FLOWERS
Asters, four blooms, Mrs. C. H.
Paterson; Mrs. C. Veysey; Mrs. M.
MacKenzie; carnations, Mrs. Veysey; Mrs. Bayley Dovey; dahlias,
pompoms, Mrs. C. Veysey; dahlias,
any other variety, Mrs, Charles
Veysey; Mrs. P. Berukoff; gladioli,
collection. W. S. Harrison, Beaver
Falls; gladioli, vase or basket, Mrs.
C. Veysey; Mrs. J, Sadler; gladioli,
one spike, Mrs. C. Veysey; Mrs.
Bayley Dovey; nasturtiums, plain.
Mrs. Bayley Dovey; Mrs. T. R.
Anderson; nasturtiums, double,
Mrs- T R. Anderson; Mrs. J. Sad
ler; Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson; petunias, single. Mrs. C- Veysey; Mrs.
H. Godin; petunias, single,' ruffled.
Mrs. J. Sadler, Mrs. C. Veysey, Mrs.
H. Godin; petunias, double ruffle.
Mrs. C H. Paterson, Mrs. C. Veysey; phlox, Mrs, Ed. Stephenson.
Beaver Falls, Mrs. C. Versey; snap-
TSat"
New Playtex*
LIGHT "WEIGHT GIRDLE
of FABRIC^/
uAiiiazLngnew girdle material f
dragons, Mrs. Bayley Dovey, Mrs.
J. Sadler; stocks, Mrs. C. Versey,
Mrs. Bayley Dovey; sweet peas,
Mrs. C. Veysey, Mrs. W. Veitch,
Mrs. Bayley Dovey; marigold,
African, Mrs_ Bayley Dovey; zinnias, Mrs. Bayley Dovey, Mrs. T.
R. Anderson.
Collection of perlennial blooms,
Mrs. C. Veysey; collection of cut
flowers, Mrs. B. Dovey, Mrs. T. R.
Anderson, Mrs. J. Sadler; best
potted plant, Mrs. J. Sadler, Mrs.
Bayley Dovey; best potted fern,
Mrs. Fred Cullen; roses, Mrs. J. S.
Scott, Robson, Mrs. F. W. Stringer;
french marigolds, Mrs. B. Dovey,
Mrs. C. H. Paterson. Mrs. C. Veysey; pansies, Mrs. B. Dovey, Mrs.
C. Veysey.
Following open to professional
and amateurs: collection of cut
flowers, Alex Webster, Mrs.* F. W.
Stringer; best display of dahlias,
Alex Webster; roses, Alex Webster; collections of petunias, Alex
Webster; basket or bowl of cut
flowers, Mrs. Bayley Dovey; collection of marigolds, Alex Webster;
table decoration piece, Mrs. Bayley
Dovey; Mrs. T. R. Anderson.
H. W. Herridge Trophy for high
aggregate in this section was won
by Mrs. C. Versey. with Mrs. Bay-
ley Dovey, runnerup.
HOME CANNING
Apricot jam, Mrs. Donat Morissette. Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson;
black currant jam, Mrs. Bayley
Dovey, Mrs. C. H. Paterson; raspberry jam, Mrs. B. Dovey, Mrs.
Ed Stephenson. Beaver Fails, Mrs.
Donat Morissette; strawberry jam,
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson, Mrs. Arthur Wright, Mrs. Plamondon,
Trail; rhubarb jam, Mrs. Bayley
Dovey, Mrs. Donat Morissette;
collection of jams, Mrs. Bayley
Dovey, Mrs. Donat Morissette;
black currant jelly, Mrs. Bayley
Dovey. Mrs. George Todd, Mrs
C."H. Paterson; red currant jelly
Mrs. Plimondon, Trail, Mrs. Db-
nat Morissette, Mrs. Bayley Dovey; crabapple jelly. Mrs. Donat
Morissette, Mrs. Arthur Wright;
grape jelly, Mrs. C. H. Paterson;
collection of jellies, Mrs. Walter
Veitch, Mrs. Donat Morissette,
Mrs. Bayley Dovey; rhubarb marmalade, Mrs. Ed Stephenson.
Beaver Falls, Mrs. J. S. Scott. Robson; marmalade. Mrs. Bayley
Dovey. Mrs. W. J. Bell; applesauce, Mrs. Bayley Dovey, Mrs.
Plamondon. Trail.
Canned cherries, Mrs Ed Stephenson, Beaver Falls. Mrs. Do-'
nat Morissette. Mrs. Bayley Dov-:
j ey; canned apricots, Mrs. P. Berk-,
off, Mrs. Ed Stephenson, Beaver,
Falls, Mrs. C H. Paterson; canned !
raspberries, Mrs. W. J. Bell. Mrs. j
P. Berukoff, Mrs. Donat Morissette; canned red plums, Mrs. P. >
Berkoff, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson; i
canned strawberries. Mrs. Bayley
Dovey, Mrs. Plamondon. Trail, i
Mrs. Donat Morissette; canned
peaches, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson, j
Mrs. Ed Stephenson, Beaver Falls.
Canned beets. Mrs. J. S. Scott,'
Robson. Mrs. W. J. Bell; canned
wax beans. Mrs. George Todd,
Mrs. J. S. Scott. Robson; canned j
green beans, Mrs. Donat Morissette, Mrs. J. S. Scott. Robson;
canned peas. Mrs. Donat Morissette, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson;
canned cauliflower. Mrs. P. Berukoff, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson;
canned corn cut from cob. Mrs.
Donat Morissette; canned corn of
cob, Mrs. Donat Morissette; canned greens. Mrs. J. S. Scott. Robson. Mrs. Donat Morissette; canned tomatoes, Mrs. P. Berukoff,
Mrs. Donat Morissette.
Sweet mixed pickles, Mrs. Arthur Wright, Mrs. W. J. Bell; sour
pickles. Mrs. Donat Morissette;
pickled onions, Mrs. Donat Morissette, Mrs. Arthur Wright; green
tomato pickles, Mrs. Arthur
Wright.   Mrs.   Donat   Morissette;
dill plcklas, MrV Donat Morissette,
Mrs. Roger Larson; pickled beets,
Mrs. Arthur Wright, Mrs. Bayley
Dovey! Mrs. Donat Morissette;
mustard pickles, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
Robson; Mrs. P. Berukoff.
Winner of silver tray is Mrs.
Donat Morissette, high aggregate,
with Mrs. Bayley Dovey and Mrs
J. S. Scott, Robson, tying for second place.
BAKING-
Angel cake, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
Robson, Mrs. Donat. Morissette;
chocolate layer cake, Mrs. J. S.
Scott, Robson, Mrs. Arthur
Wright; chiffon cake. Mrs. J. S.
Scott, Robson, Mrs. T. R. Anderson; fruit-cake,' dark, Mrs. J. S.
Scott, Robson, Mrs. George Todd;
fruit-cake, light, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
Robson, Mrs. Stan Jefferson; jelly
roll, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson, Mrs.
Arthur Wright; date and nut loaf,
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson, Mrs. F.
M. Peitzsche;' gingerbread, Mrs.
T. R. Anderson, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
Robson; shortbread, Mrs. T. ■ R.
Anderson, Mrs. Arthur Wright;
rolled oatmeal cookies, Mrs. J. S,
Scott, Robson, Mrs. Donat Morissette; gingersnaps, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
Robson, Miss Carol Moon; drop
cookies. Mrs. W, J. Bell, Mrs, Arthur Wright; rolled white cookies
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson, Mrs. Arthur Wright, Mrs. F. M. Peitzsche
Jam tarts, Mrs. Arthur Wright.
Mrs. F. M. Peitzsche; mincemeat
tarts, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson;
apple pie, Mrs. J. Sadler, Mrs. J.
S. Scott, Robson; lemon pie, Mrs.
Rozella Webster. Mrs. J. Sadler;
raisin pie,  Mrs.  I. M. Peitzsche,
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson; bran
muffins, ^Irs. Arthur Wright, Mrs.
F. M. Peitzsche; candy, Mrs. J. S.
Scott, Kobson, Mrs. F. M. Peitzsche; 'matrimonial cake, Mrs. F.
M. Peitzsche, Miss Carol Moon;
macaroons, "Mrs. Stan Jefferson,
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson; cupcakes,
Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson, Mrs,
Arthur Wright; best packed lunch
kit, Miss Gail Paterson.,
. Special spice cake, Mrs. J. S.
Scott, Robson, Mrs. Roger Larson;
flour special for white bread —
Mrs. Donat Morissette, Mrs. Arthur Wright, Mrs. F. M. Peitzsche;
special light cake, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
Robson; Mrs. Arthur Wright.
Yeast specials: white bread, Miss
Fay Moller, Mrs. Donat Morissette, Mrs. F. W. Stringer; brown
breHd, Mrs. Arthur Wright, Miss
Margaret Green; Mrs. W. J. Bell
milk rolls, Mrs. W. J. Bell, Mrs.
Rozella Webster; cinnamon rolls,
Mrs. Donat Morissette, Mrs. Arthur Wright; flour special for
white bread, Mrs. Donat Morissette. Mrs. Roger Larson. i
Winner of 88 pounds flour for
high aggregate, Mrs. J. S. Scott. I
Robson, winner of 49 pounds of
flour, Mrs. Arthur Wright; winner
of 24 pounds flour, Mrs. F. M.
Peitzsche.
ARTS AND CRAFTS
Firsts, Mrs. Rozella Webster and
Mrs. Niels Moller. Seconds, Mrs.
Fred Cullen and Mrs. M. E. Krause
Trail; thirds, Mrs. C. H. Paterson,
and Mrs.  John Newton.
Organizations displays: Aggregates, St. Paul's WA, St Rita's
CWL, Montrose-Beaver Falls WA;
arrangement,  Montrose -  Beaver
Falls WA, St. Paul's WA, Legion
WA.
NEEDLEWORK
Child's blouse, Mrs. Walter
Veitch, lady's cotton dress, Mrs.
J. Sadler, Mrs. W. J. Bell; play-
suit or sunsuit, Mrs. LaRoque,
Mrs. Alan John; article from flour
or sugar sack, Mrs. Niels Moller,
Mrs. P. Berukoff, cotton apron,
Mrs. F. Halifax, Mrs. Walter
Veitch.
Best of these, and winner of
china cup donated . by Vancouver firm. Mrs. LaRoque.
Knitted sweater, plain, Mrs. R.
Hepburn, Mrs. J. Sadler; knitted
sweater, fancy stitch, Mrs. R.
Hepburn; best sweater, Mrs. R.
Hepburn; second best sweater,
Mrs. R. Hepburn; knitted socks,
plain, Mrs. R. Hepburn, Mrs. Alex
Webster, sr., knitted socks, fancy,
Mrs. R. Hepburn, Mrs. Alex Webster, sr,, baby's knitted sweater
set, Mrs. F. Halifax, Mrs. Alan
John, knitted baby shawl, Mrs.1
M. MacKenzie, Mrs. J. S. Scott,
i Robson; knitted mitts, Mrs. W, J.
! Bell, Mrs. R. Hepburn; knitted
.gloves, Mrs. R. Hepburn; child's
knitted dress, Mrs. Alan John; any
other knitted article, Mrs. Alan
John, Mrs. J. S. Scott, Robson;
baby crochet set, Mrs. J. Sadler,
Mrs. S. Pollock.
Crocheted centrepiece, Mrs. J.
S Scott, Robson, Mrs. Spencer Davis, Montrose; article with crochet
edge, Mrs. W. J. Bell, crocheted
tablecloth, Mrs. Spencer Davis,
Montrose, Mrs. Alex Webster, sr.
any other crocheted article, Mrs.
B. E. Johnson, Penticton, tatting.
Mrs. F. Halifax; embroidered luncheon cloth, Mrs. Audrey Melvin,
Penticton; Mrs. T. Halifax; embroidered l^ureau scarf or buffet
set, Mrs. H. Godin; embroidered
pillow cases, colored, Mrs. Stan
Jefferson, Mrs. H. Godin; embroidered pillow cases, white, Mrs. F.
Cullen, Mrs. Stan Jefferson; cut-
work, Mrs. F. Cullen; article in
crosstitch only, Mrs. Stan Jefferson, Mrs. F. Halifax; rag rug, Mrs.
R. Hepburn, any other rug, Mrs.
Bayley Dovey; quilt, Mrs. R. Hepburn, Mrs. Ed Stephfenson. Beaver
Falls; novelty, Mrs. J. Sadler, Mrs.
W. Veitch; stuffed toy, Mrs. La
Roche; best article made by lady
over 70, special hampers, Mrs. B.
Sinclair, Rossland; Mrs. R. Hepburn.
Winner of teapot for best em
broidered article, Mrs. Stan Jefferson; best rug in fair, winnei
of donation, Mrs. Bayley pdvey,
EGGS AND HONEY
Dozen grade A large eggs. Mrs
Stat* Jefferson; W. S. Harrison,
Beaver Falls; honey, Mrs. J. S.
Scott, Robson; best dairy butter,
Mrs. George Todd, Mrs. P. Beru-
Continued on Page 10
•    St^.ams V.O.
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SPORTS
Firemen Whip Cubs
To Tie Best'of'Three
Nelson's Bage Ruth League baseball finals were tied up Thursday
evening when Firemen whipped
Kootenay Cubs 11-6, and the deciding game will be played this evening. The series has been changed
from best of five to best of three.
Cubs had taken the first game
Tuesday, 15*10.
Firemen's catcher Wayne Farenholtz was the big hitter Thursday
with a home run and a double to
round out a perfect day at bat
Gordon Wood held the Cub to five
hits, allowed two walks and struck
out six after he took over from
Berrjie Monteleone, who pitched
to four batters, walking three.
For Cubs, Gordon Jeffs gave up
six hits, walked seven batters and
struck out one before he was relieved in the fifth by Lloyd Atwell.
who gave up two hits, walked one
and struck out three. Barrv Waters
bashed out a homer for KCs, who
also staged a nice fielding double
play, Wah to Hancock to Atwell.
Tuesday night, KCs got six of
seven homers. They went to Lloyd
Atwell, two; Barry Waters, two;
Lloyd Atwell and Gordon Jeffs.
Wood speared one for the Firemen.
Pitchers Wilson, Blakeman and
Baseball Sta
lid
ngs
By The
Canadian
Press
AMERICAN
LEAGUE
W
L
Pet.
GBL
Cleveland
85
54
S12
New York .
,.   84
54
.608
Vt
Chicago    .
82
56
.594
2*1
Boston
80
57
.584
4
Detroit     .
71
08
.511
14
Kansas City
56
81
.409
28
Washington
.    48
86
.358
34'4
Baltimore
42
02
.313
40 Vi
NATIONAL
LEAGUE
Brooklyn
82
46
.667
Milwaukee
76
64
.543
17
New York
73
66
.525
19 V;
Philadelphia
..   72
69
.511
21 Vi
Cincinnati
68
75
.476
26 Vi
Chicago
67
75
.472
27
St. Louis  ...
.    57
81
.413
35
Pittsburgh   .
..    55
84
.306
37 Vi
Young allowed KCS 11 hits, walked seven and struck out nine, while
for KCs, Don McLean pitched a
good game until the sixth, when
Firemen piled up eight runs to cut
KCs 12-0 lead- to 12-10. Joe Portlance finished the sixth inning and
finished out the game for KCs.
Dodgers Cinch Series Berth
Earliest in League History
By The Associated Press
Brooklyn Dodgers ran off with the pennant on the
earliest date in National League history Thursday while
i the raging American League battle to decide who will
imeet the Brooks in the world series saw Cleveland and
New York pull away from'
Fights
By The Associated PresB
Cyracuse, N.Y.—Carmen Basilio,
150%, Canastota, N.Y., outpointed
Gil Turner, 151, Philadelphia, 10.
Havana — Ciro   Moracen,   125.
Cuba, outpointed Lauro Salas, 128,
Mexico 10.
BRITISH RUGBY
LONDON  (Reuters)  —    Rugby
results:
RUGBY UNION
Aberavon   14   Bledyn   Williams
team 6
Chelternham 6 Civil 14
Neath 3 West Wales 11
Pontypool 3 Swansea 0
RUGBY  LEAGUE
Lancashire Cup, Second Round
Widnes 9 Swinton 3
RUGBY  LEAGUE
Barrow 30 Salford 13
Golfer Wright to
Represent B.C
VANCOUVER (CP) — Bill
Wright, assistant professional at
Capilano Gold and Country Club
here, shot a 72 Thursday to win
the right to represent British Columbia in the assistant pro tournament at Winnipeg this month,
Wright and Vic Smith of Vancouver Golf and Country Club,
Burquitlam, B.C., tied for top
after a 36-hole elimination tournament with five other assistants.
Wright's 72 was four strokes better
than Smith's 76.
Chicago and Boston.
The Dodgers snapped up the
flag with a 10-2 romp at Milwaukee bettering their own
league standard set in 1953 when
they won on Sept. 12.
In the red-hot AL chase, Cleveland retained its half-game edge
over New York by outlasting Baltimore 5-3 jn 10 innings while the
Yankees clubbed Kansas City 13-0.
The White Sox tumbled 2tt games
behind the Tribe with a 5-4 loss
at Washington and the fourth
place Red Sox slipped four games
back once more as Detroit snapped their winning streak at six
with a ninth-Inning rally that
won 5-4.
Karl Spooner, relieving rookie
Roger Craig, won his seventh as
he struck out nine and no-hit the
Braves over the final 5 2-3 innings
for the Dodgers. The 24-year-old
southpaw retired the first 13 men
he faced, fanning three of the first
four, before giving up two successive walks with two out in the
eighth. Karl'ended it by fanning
pinch-hitter Del Rice in the ninth.
PELT FIVE HURLERS
The Dodgers, who battered five
pitchers for 11 hits, scored four
in the first on a hit batsman, three
walks and a pair of singles off
starter Bob Buhl and reliefer Phil
Paine. They got four more in the
fifth and two In the sixth while
dropping Milwaukee out of tKe
pennant picture—17 games behind
in second.
Jackie Robinson, who homered
with one on, and Gil Hodges each
drove in three runs.
Only one of Cleveland's runs
was earned at Baltimore — but
that was Larry Doby's 26th home
run and third in two days to lead
off the 10th and break a 3-3 tie.
The Orioles, after booting the
Tribe into a 3-2 lead, had tied it
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• MENS OR
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or SKIRT $14
In the ninth, scoring as the Indians tried for a double play and
missed.
Doby had three of Cleveland's
nine hits as the Tribe, off and
running with two in the first,
wound up their '55 play with the
Orioles with a 19-3 mark.
YANKS  ON   RAMPAGE
Bob Turley and Yogi Berra
racked up the As as the Yanks
had their biggest spree in a week.
Turley, the fast-balling righthander, gained his fifth shutout
and 15th victory with a five-
hitter. Berra chipped in a pair
of three-run homers.
Berra's two blasts highlighted
a pair of six-run New York innings. Tha Yanks packed it away
with just nine hits, while the As
chipped in four errors for six
unearned" runs.
Washington, giving the White
Sox a tough time in the stretch
after an early-season pushover
role, closed in with Mickey Vernon's two-run homer in the sixth,
then scrambled into the lead and
chased Virgil Trucks with two
more in the seventh. Three singles
and Ernie Oravetz's sacrifice fly
wrapped it up.
Trucks hadn't lost to the Senators since 1953 and it was only
the fifth 1955 victory for Wash,
ington against the Sox. Half of
Chicago's runs were unearned
coming home, ironically, on errors
by Oravetz, who then turned hero
C08TLY WILD PITCH
Detroit, trailing 4-1 going into
the ninth, scored the winning run
as Ellis Kinder, Boston's relief
ace, misfired with a wild pitch.
Kinder, who had stopped the
Tigers cold in the ninth Wednea
day, relieved starter Wiltard
Nixon after Charlie Maxwell cut
it to 4-2 and a walk and double
put runners on second and third
with none out.
Kinder got the pinch-hitting
Ray Boone, but Jack Phillips followed with a two-run bloop single
that tied it. Harv Kuenn doubled
?nd Bill Tuttle walked intention-
illy to load 'em up. Then came
he wild pitch with Al Kaline at
bat.
In   the   only   other   day   game,
Mladelphia beat Cincinnati 6-4
•> Wally Post hammered i pair
■)i home* runs.
Doubles by Bobby Hofman and
Wayne Terwilliger were the big
lows as New York Giant6 scored
"ive runs in the sixth inning for
. 6-2 decision over St. Louis Cardinals in the lone night game.
Seixas, Rosewall
Move fo Semis
Mllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllli
NOREDFISH
MAY BE CAUGHT
Game department authorities at Nelson Thursday issued a firm warning that
Kokanee (redfish) are protected by law.
The annual migration of the
fish, silver early in the year
but bright red at this time of
year, is taking place to their
spawning grounds.
Creeks where the runs are
particularly heavy are in the
Lardeau, West Arm and the
Arrow Lakes areas.
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, 1955—7
FOREST HILLS; N.Y. (AP) -
Ken Rosewall of Australia and
defending champion Vic Seixas of
Philadelphia gained the semi-final
round of the United States tennis
championship Thursday. Rosewall.
topseeded on the foreign list, defeated Hamilton Richardson of
Baton Rouge, La., 6-4, 9-7, 2-6, 6-3,
while Seixas battered Bernard
Bartzen of San Angelo, Tex., 6-3,
6-1, 13-11.
Thus another fateful meeting between Rosewall and Seixas was
set up for Saturday. The 20-year-.
old Aussie Davis Cupper holds a! TUNA IGNORE
fantastic  mastery   over   the   32-|vAn Aklf^l CDC
year-old American. Rosewall hasj ' *"  AINULtRj
beaten him in 10 of their 12 net;    WEDGEPORT, N.S. (CP)
duels   including   the   Davis   Cup1 can you make a fish bite?
challenge round last month. I    That's  the  question  40   of   the
The other half of the draw cat-1 world's top anglers were asking
■ches up today. Wimbledon cham-lafter returning empty - handed
pion Tony Trabert, top - seeded,' Thursday, the second day of the
plays Herble Fram of Beverly! 12th international tuna tourna
Hills, Calif. Lew Hoad, the other j ment.
half of Australia's Davis Cup duo,.     The UnitMl states leam 56emed
THOMAS'THIRD
ATTEMPT AT LAKE
SWIM FAILS
PENTICTON, B.C. (CP) - Long
distance swimmer Bert Thomas of
Tacoma, Wash., making his third
attempt to cross Lake Okanagan
from Kelowna to Penticton, was
pulled from the water Thursday
afternoon after covering about 12
miles.
The 29-year-old logger, only person to successfully swim the 18.3-
mile Strait of Juan de Fuca, entered the lake at 1 a.m. Thursday
in his attempt to cover the 32-
mile distance. No one has yet
completed the crossing.
illlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllltll
-How
meets Sam Giammalva, the power-
hitting boy from Houston, Tex.
Trabert and Hoad are favored.
The women's division also completed two of its semi-final rungs.
Doris Hart, the defending champion from Coral Gables, Fla., profited from two questionable line
calls to 3Ubdue Mrs. Nancy Kiner,
wife of the Cleveland baseball
player, 6-4. 6-4. Mrs. Dorothy Head
Knode of Forest Hills eliminated
Shirley Fry of St. Petersburg, Fla.,
9-7, 8-6.
Waterfront Rac$
Subs For Lake Swim
By WILF GRU80N
Canadian Press Staff Writer
TORONTO (CP) — More than
''.ft swimmers were ready Thursday
night to plunge into Lake Ontario
at 1 a.m.. Friday for the start of
the Canadian National Exhibition's 32-mile marathon swim.      ! New York
The waterfront race, substituted
| for the cross-lake swim after two
days' unfavorable weather forced
the CNE to abandon its original
plans, will be held over a 10-lap
course inside and outside the
breakwater.
The exact number of entries remained in doubt as official* work-
through the day making last-minute arrangements. Most of tha 36
entries for the cross-lake swim
assured officials they will attempt
the waterfront race.
Estimates vary from 16 to 21
hours on how long it will take the
early finishers to complete the 32
miles, the same distance as the
cancelled cross-lake swim. It is
expected It will be early evening
before the winner crosses the
finish line to collect first prize
money of $15,000.
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BASEBALL SCORES
*   By The Canadian Presi
AMERICAN   LEAGUE
New York .   006 100 08x—13    9   0
Kansas City 000 000 000— 0   5   4
Ceccarelli. Herbert (4), Harrington (4), Boyer (8) and W. Shantz;
Turley and Berra. L—Ceccarelli.
HRs: N.Y., Berra (2).
Chicago . . 200 020 000—4 8 2
Washington    010 002 20x—5 10   2
Trucks, Martin (7), Byrd (7).
and Lollar; Stobbs, Abernathy <6),
Ramos (8) and Courtney. W—
Abernathy, L—Martin. HR: Washington. Vernon.
Detroit 000 100 004—6   6   1
Boston        201 100 000—I   7   2
Aber, Birrer (3), Gromek (5)
and House; Nixon, Kinder (0) and
White. W —Gromek; L —Kinder.
HR: Detroit, Maxwell.
Cleveland 200 001 000 2—S 9* 1
Baltimore     100 001 001 0—3   9   2
Houtteman, Maglie (31, Mossi
(8), Narleskl (8) and Naragon,
Hegan (6); Palica, Dorish (8).
Gray (10). Zuverink (10) and
Smith, Gastall (7). W—Narleski;
L—Gray. HR: Cleveland, Doby.
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Philadelphia 211 101 000-« 13 2
I Cincinnati      101 000 200—4   8   0
Negray. Miller (3) and Sam-
inick; Gross. Black (1), Freeman
(7), Fowler (9) and Burgess. Landrith (9). W—Miller; I_-^".ror».
HR: Cincinnati, Poft (2).
000 015 000—6 14  .0
St. Louis   001 100 000—2   7   1
McCall and Katt; Haddix, Gettel
(6), Wright (7), Lapalme (8) and
Saml. L — Haddix. HHs: N.Y.,
Gardner; St. L., Grammas.
PAY ONLY 10% DOWN
on Budget Terms - as low as
6.50 monthly
BRITISH  SOCCER
LONDON TReutersl — Results
of soccer games played in Britain
Thursday:
ENGLISH LEAGUE
Division II
Swansea Town 5 Bury S
Division Ml (Southern)
Leyton O 6 Cblchester U 0
Newport C 1 Southampton 0
Northampton T 3 Aldershot 2
SCOTTI8H   LEAGUE
Cup Play-off, Second Leg
Morton 0 Dumbarton 1
IRISH  ULSTER CUP
Cliftonville 3 Coleraine 4
the least worried of the seven com
peting. They hold a 508-point lead
on the basis of a 585-pound fish
caught Wednesday.
Venezuela is the only other team
to boat a fish. Theirs was a 277-
pounder good for 377 point. The
United States has 885 points, collecting a point-a-pound and an ad
ditional 300 bonus points, 200 for
having the largest fish on the day
and splitting another 200 with
Venezuela for the most fish.
Argentina did boat a bluefin, but
theirs was disqualified when bitten by a shark just as it was
pulled into the boat.
Trail Signs
Gerry Penner
TRAIL — Trail Smoke Eaters
have announced the signing of
Gerry Penner for a second term.
Gerry is a local product who
came through the TAA organization to a berth on the Junior Smokies. After playing junior here for
two years Gerry moved on to the
prairies to join Medicine Hat Tigers for the 53-54 season. Here he
was third in team scoring.
The next season Gerry was back
in Trail in Smoke Eater livery
where he compiled a "not-so-bad'
record for a rookie of 14 goals
and 10 assists to finish seventh In
team scoring. Penner should come
up a few notches this year and
add strength to a front line that
was as good as most last season.
Injury May Sideline
Sam Etcheverry
MONTREAL (CP) — The possibility arose Thursday that Sam
Etcheverry will be among the missing when Montreal Alouettes are
hosts to Toronto Argos Saturday
and that Joe Zaleski will take
over at quarterback.
Etcheverry suffered
horse injury in Monday's Big Four
game at Ottawa and hasn't worked
out regularly.
There was the further possibility
that halfback Chuck Hunsinger
will miss his third game because
of a groin injury.
Coach Douglas Walker classed
both players as doubtful. But Hunsinger is believed about get for
return to duty.
The absence of Etoheverry
would mean Zeleski would leave
his scout status and return aa a
player. Etcheverry would have to
be placed on the disabled list
Shock lo Smokies
TRAIL — The announcement by
New Westminster Royals that they
had purchased Bobby. Kromm of
the Western International Hockey
League Trail Smoke Eaters came
as a surprise to Trail club officials.
Club president Glen Mason said
the announcement was the first he
knew about it.
Smoke Eater officials said
Kromm had already signed a con
tract for the 1955-56 season with
the Smokies.
Grid Fans Queue
Up for Tickets
VANCOUVER (CP) — Vancouver football fans lined up in »
. . , block-long queue Thursday to ob
_j;~ w.,.,1. kin standing room admission tic
kets to Saturday's western inter
provincial Football Union game
here between Edmonton Eskimos and B. C Lkm».
Lions official!, who Wednesday
hung up "sold out" signs for En*
pire Stadium's 25,600 seats, 'i'hurfl
day put 5000 standing room tickets on sale at $1 each.
Officials said the standing-room
tickets were moving fast and pre
dieted the Saturday night game
between the first-place Eskimos
and the Lions, tied with Regina
for second place, would draw more
than 30,000 fans.
Kromm Seeks
Royals Berth
NEW WESTMINSTER (CP) -
Bobby Kromm, fiery right winger
with Trail Smoke Eaters for the
last few years, will report tp the
New Westminster Royals training
camp here Sept. 14.
Ken McKenzie, owner of the
Western Hockey League Royals,
said he has purchased Kromm for
the coming season.
Kromm scored 29 goals last
year for the Smokies, who finished last in the Western International Hockey League.
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Wiginton Motors Ltd.
281 Baker St. Phone 121
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Captain Morgan De Luxe Rum is available in limited supply, at a premium.price,
This advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the
Government of British Columbia
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fWfTO""    ' W''-'*i?*Sf tfUfPSBV.!..'; ■- V ■'.'■ .■'•' ■    '..■■'■    •■.',.. ■;   •.'••■' ' .    ..■■Nl'i^H-,'
D
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A
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D
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ffiBT WEU.*|
CARDS
*_aiMH	
' ££/T /TaP 7WE MASKEP MAN, .
[ STACEY tVOULP HAVE GOTTEN AWAY ywTHHIS PLAN/).
COME ON, SIM. WBlL PICK
UP LEFTY OH -WE WAY TO
— r ~Jail!
IF THERE'S OIL ON YOUR RANCH,
/ SUPPOSE YOU'LL CHANGS VOU?.
M/NP ABOUT SELLING.
L.OOK--ALLTHE KIDS .
IN THE NEIGHBORHOOD^
ARE OUT THERE PLAVING-
" JOIN THEM AND GET IN ;
,y~-*—TTHEGAME
ACH! MV PAINT WAS MOTHINS
BUT TROUBLE, WAMA. WHEN
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JUST CECIOEO TO LEAVE OUT
IHSREDIENTTHATMAKE5
NOVI.OON'T SET
EXCITED/ HE ONLY
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Money—HB WAS
aome to
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ANO MY DRESS
SUIT'S MtSSIW','
HE MUST HAVE
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•'I'M SORRyN
(I CALLED M3UR
^JBROTHEff
STOCK QUOTATION
The Dally Newa doee not hold Itself reaponeible in the
of an error in the following Hats..
sfS
IIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
North Cab	
J0
Oslsko  	
.50
Quotation    Data   from    the
Canadian   atook   markets  are
compiled and published by the
Pardee 	
Pend Oreille  _	
1.25
35.00
aubicrlbers. The Hats are added  to  or  revised  constantly.
Stocks In which there la par-
Preston E. D	
7.15
3.80
2.45
28.00
the requeit of readers.
Rayrock   	
1.90
2.10
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
1.54
9.25
TORONTO STOCKS
Stadacona   	
Steep Rock 	
.33
14.15
Silver Miller 	
.98
MINES
6.80
.10
1.56
3.00
Tombill	
.38
Torbrit	
1.25
1.85
.39
Atlin RuK  IB
Aunor         2.30
Barpat       1.03
United Keno   	
8.10
1.14
Ventures 	
39.00
Baska Uranium  33Vi
Van Roi 	
.07 Vt
Vicour 	
.29
2.80
Bibis Yukon 11
Waite Amulet   	
16.50
Brilund  ..:      1.75
Wright Hargreaves 	
2.05
Yankee Canuck 	
.32
,13Vi
.64
Buff Can      16
Yelloknife B 	
2.42
Anglo Can	
B. A. Oil 	
5.85
Campbell C       15.25
.3iy.
16.75
Cdn Atlantic 	
6.50
Central Patricia  95
.70
Chimo         1.79
2.40
Coast Copper 92
Chemical Research  	
4.80
Coin Lake  ,      .13
Commonwealth Pete 	
.14
Federated Pete  	
5.70
1.25
Liberal Pete 	
2.95
Conwest      6.40
.32
.63
Cons.  Discovery        4.00
Nat. Pete 	
1.76
Cons Howe       4.60
Okalta    	
1.90
Detta M    43
.11%
Donalda    42
.92
Dyno            1.02
Royalite   	
.15%
Triad	
6.00
1.60
YankC	
Abitibi           	
.32
Falconbridge     29.00
36%
Faraday           2.04
Algoma Steel 	
85
Aluminium                 	
American Tel it Tel	
108V4
Geco                  11.75
178%
24V4
18V4
63
7
Golden Manitou      3.70
Can. Cement 	
37Mi
76%
Canadian Canners 	
Canadian Celanese 	
36V4
Harricana     22
20%
Headway       1.12
11V4
24%
Homer Y. K 18
Can Oil.                    	
23%
Hudson Bay     69.50
Canadian Pacific Rly   	
34%
Cons. Mining & Smelt ....
Dist.  Seagram
33%
Tnt. Nickel     84.50
43%
Dom. Bridge                	
Dom Steel & Coal B  >.
28%
.Toliet Oue '8
19%
Dom. Stores  	
37%
Dom. Textiles 	
7%
77%
24
Kristina    IR
Fanny Farmer 	
25%
Ford A            	
143
Great Lakes 	
43%
Gypsum Lime 	
Hiram Walker 	
60
Leitch        B4
78
Imperial Oil 	
41%
Little Long Lac      1.50
Imp. Tobacco	
12%
Int. Nickel 	
Int. Pete 	
84%
25%
Loblaw B   	
44%
Macfie Exploration         1R3A
89%
45%
Malartic G. F      2.10
18%
38%
Nat. Steel Car 	
3-1%
71
Powell River 	
56%
63
Russ. Industries	
16%
71
o .7'.
Simnsons A 	
17%
Southam       	
47
Standard Paving 	
Steel of Canada 	
St".
United Steel      	
VoriaM        '*
Weston George 	
121
Normetals         7.90     W'nnrce? Gas         	
15%
TELEVISION FOR TODAY
KXLY-TV - Channel 4
KHQ-TV - Channel
a
11:00— Sign On
9:40—Monochrome Test Pattern
11:15—Secret Storm -
9:40—Color  Test -Program
11:30—Houseparty
9:55—Bible Reading
11:45—Armchair Adventure
10:00—Dig Dong- School
12:00—Big Payoff
10:30—Parents Time
12:30—Bob Crosby
10:45—World at Home
12:45—Bob Crosby
11:00—Home
1:00—Welcome Traveller
12:00—Tenn. Ernie Ford
1:30—TBA
12:30—Feather Your Nest
1:45—Musical Interlude
1:00—Penal Code
2:00—On Your Account
2:00—Elaine Gray Kitchen
2:30—Valiant  Lady
3:00—Ted   Mack's  Matinee
2:45—Brighter   Day
3:30—It Pays To Be Married
3:00—Variety Hour
4:00—Q's Kaleidoscope
3:30—Search for Tomorrow
4:15—Lady Fair
3:45—Guiding Light
4:45—Modern  Romances
4:00—Love of Life
5:00—Pinky   Lee
4:15—TBA
5:30—Bar  6  Roundup
4:30—Garry Moore
6:00—Cartoon Carnival
4:45—Garry Moore
6:30—Wild Bill Hickok
5:00—What's Cookin'
7:00^Cavalcade of Sports
5:30—Strike It Rich
7:40—Newspaper of the Air
6:00—Antics With Andrew
7:45—News Caravan
6:30— Doug Edwards
8:00—Midwestern  Hayride
6:45—Sports on  Parade
8:30—Life of Riley
7:00—Green  Thumb
9:00—Big Story
7:15—News
9:30—Star Stage
7:25— Weather Vane
10:00—The Star and the Story
7:30—Smilin" Ed
10:30—Make the Connection
8:00—The Birth of a New World
11:00— Curtain Time
8:30—Topper
11:30— Firelight Playhouse
9:00—Lucky Sport Time
9.30—Ray , Milland  Show
10:00—Undercurrent
10:30—Science Fiction Theatre
11:00—Patti Page
11:15—TBA
11:30— Story Theatre
12:00—Safeco News
12:05—Texas Rasslin'
KREM TV — Channel 2
3:45^Test Pattern
8:15—Find a Hobby
4:00—One Frightened Night
8:30—The Hunter
5:10—Health and Happiness Club
9:00—Square Dance Party
5:15—Fatal Hour
9:30—China Smith
6:30—Shadow stumpers
10:00—Orient Express
6:55—Newsbeat Spokane
10:30—The Vise
7:00—Western Movietime
11:00—Behind Locked Doors
7:55— What's the Weather
10:45—World at Home
8:00—Bill Corum
(ProgramB aubject to change by stations without notice.)
TELEVISION SERVICE
READ AND USE
8:30 a.m  to 6 p.m.—Phone 1300
Evenings—Phone 1033 R
The Nelson News
Dally Except Sunday!
and Holidays
Mc & Me
WANT ADS
Vancouver Stocks
MINES
Canadian Anaco
Charter
Chamberlain ...
nda 	
.20
1.82
.38
74
Del Rio     	
1.70
!l2
Gas Exp 	
.88
3.45
Home      	
10.00
Cariboo Gold	
Giant Mascot	
.78
.78
7.80
.24
.60
Okalta Com    	
1.85
Pacific Pete
Peace River Ga
Rovali'e   	
11.75
Grandview     	
s 	
9.50
15.25
Highland Bell   	
United  	
1.00
Jackson Basin
.44
Vanalta	
.19
Kootenay Base Metals ....
.02%
Vantor 	
.90
National Ex           	
1.09
Vulcan    	
.40
Pac Eastern Gold 	
.13
Yankee Princess 	
.08
Pend Oreille 	
4.90
2.15
Pioneer Gold 	
1.90
B C Forests 	
13.75
Quatsino	
.17%
B C Power 	
33.50
Reeves MacDonald	
2.25
B C Telephone 	
49.00
Rexspar
.50
Inland Nat Gas 	
3.25
Rlx-Athabaska Uran
1.20
Lucky Lager          	
5.20
Sheep Creek      	
1.35
MacM St Bloedel B
43.00
Sherritt Gordon   	
9.35
.23
Mid Western   	
Powell River	
4.80
Silback Premier 	
56.00
Silver  Standard   	
Sunshine  Lardeau  	
.52
.35
Trans Mtn
Western Plywoc
39.00
ds 	
21.50
Taylor                        	
.27
Westminster Paper 	
27.50
Western Exploration
.60
BANKS
Yale   	
Altex      	
.62
.27
B.  Montreal   	
51.00
FUNDS
Anglo  Canadian   	
5.70
.33
16.25'
Lever      	
8.06
A P Consolidated
Calgary & Edmonton    	
5.85
Bal. Mu. . .
5.23
ON THE AIR
CKLN PROGRAMS
1240 ON THE DIAL
(Pacific Daylight Time)
FRIDAY,
SEPTEMBER 9, 1955
■
:630—Wake-Up  Time
1:30—Radio Features
7:00—News
1:45—Matinee
7:05—Wake-Up Time
2:00—Pacific News
7:10—Farm   Fare
2:15—Classic Corner
7:15—Chapel in the Sky
2:30—Trans-Canada Matine*
7:35—March  of Truth
3:30—Sacred Heart
7:40—Wake-Up Time
3:45—B.C. Roundup
7:45—Rise 'n Shine
4:30—Music Picture Lady
8:00—News
4:45—As a Matter of Fact
8:10—Sports News
5:00—Folk Song Time
8:15—Musicale
5:25—Musicale
8:45—Serenade
5:30—Spotlight Star
8:55—Homemaker Harmon
es
5:35—Today in History
10:00—News
5:40—Sports News
10:05—Homemaker  Harmonies
6:45—Interlude
10:15—The Happy Gang
5:50—News
10:30—Story Parade
6:00—Rawhide
10:45—Billy O'Connor Show
6:15—Christian Science Program
11:00—News
6:30—Cavalcade  of  Melody
11:05—Call One-Nine
7:00—News and  Roundup
12:00—Novelty  Time
7:30—Concert Hall
12:05—Prairie News
8:'30—Point-Counterpoint
12:10—Sportsmen's Corner
9:00— Sojigs of My People
12:15—Sports News
9:30—Sports Page
12:20—News
10:00—News
12:30—Farm Broadcast
10:15—By Invitation
12:55—Here's Our Story
10:30—Curtain Melodies
1:00—CKLN   Reports
11:00—NEWS Night Cap
1:15—Hollywood Calling
CB(
: PROGRAMS
(Mountain Standard Time)
SATURDAY, SEPT. 10, 1955
7:00—News and Weather
3:00—News
7:15—Musical   Minutes
3:10—Weekend Listening
7:30— News
3:15—Speaker's Choice
7:35—Musical   Minutes
3:30—Sports College
7:40—Morning Devotions
3:45—This   Week
7:55—Musical March Past
4:00—Bill McAuley Sextet
8:00—News
4:15—Roving   Reporter
8:10—Bill Good
4:30—Rhythm Pals
8:15— Stu   Davis
5:00—Now I Ask You
8:30—Closed Circuit
5:30—Carl Tapscott Chorui
9:00—BBC News
6:00—News
9:15—Maxine Ware show
6:05—Western Sports Review
9:30—Stamp Club
6:30—Prairie Schooner
9:45—Calling All Children
7:00—Meet   Lorraine
10:00—Post Mark U.K.
7:30—Music From Montreal
10:30—World Church News
8:00—Serenade  for  Strings
10:45—News and Weather
8:30—On the Scene
11:00—Opera With Boyd Neel1
8:35—Focus
12:30—A Touch of Grease f
aint
10:00—News
1:00—Music  Diary
10:15—Invitation
1:30—Shakespeare in the Cinema
10:30—Dixieland Jazz
2:00—Ballet Club
•
DAILY CROSSWORDI
ACROSS
1. Map of a
town site
(U.S.)
6. Exclamation
9. Faithful
10. Examine      '
account
books
12. Valuable
sea mammal
13. Fad
14. Astern
15. A pilgrim
who  has
returned
from the
Holy   Land
16. Virginia
(abbr.)
17. • Le
Gallienne
19. Names
I abbr.)
20. Found in
tall buildings
25. Killed
26. A red-
flowered
tree
-(Pac. Is.)
29. Drowziest
31. Credit
(abbr.)
33. Skin tumor
34. Exclamation
35. Plunder
39. Bird's beak
40. Nimble
41. Girl's name
43. Birthplace
of Columbus
44. Artist's
stand
45. Prophet
46. Having
eyes
DOWN
1. A trap.
2. One of a
people
related
to the
Lithuanians
8. Grow old
4. Thrice
(mus.)
8. Rodent
(So. Am.)
6. Toss
7. Kind of
cheese
8. Shrivel
5. Molded
masses of
bread
11. Gull-like
hird
15. Caress
17. Wicked
18. Weathercock
If Inlnlv^BoTnTi i
21. Baby.
Ionian
water
god
(poss.)
22. Leather
flask
for oil
23. Check
24. Feminine '
pronoun     Satartaf • Aaiwet
27. Conducted,
as to a seat
28. Moorish
MHIiJB   UHHHEB
aa     HHEIH
HHHsaa Eisaa
HDKIfl   HUHUEH
fcJUUU      UU
tfPfaBUU   lia'iiV
l__H3i__l=_a   IeJSUU
fiEOH   HHBH
drum
30. Female
sheep
31. A steep,
37. Century
plant
(U. S.)
38. Equipment
39. Organ of
smell
rugged rock 41, Charge for
32. Storms professional
36. Any climb- services
ing plant 42. Place
%
i.
J
X
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f
fa
7
T"
%
9
t
to
II
n
^A
it
IT-
%
%
15
io
^A
n
1*
YA
%
i4
20
21
ii
13
w
%
^
15
VA
its
27
IS
^A
%
29
3°
31
Jl
%
%
%
34
%
M
3S
3fc
37
38
n
%
3,
40
l
*i
11
43
^A
AA
%
45"
f/<
4*
%
9-9
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE—Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR'
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-
trophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*.
Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
PIQ'SJ     JDNJJZKLRMP    VIMKWJ,
YLZ     K     WGKLO    KW    ILMP    SKRGW
Wl     SJWQSL     WGJ     NICVMKCJLW —
R K M U J S W.
Yesterday's Cryptoqliote: THE HOLLOW OAK OUR PAL*'
ACE IE. OUR HERITAGE THE SEA — CUNNINGHAM.
r»i-»-ihut.il hv Kin* Features Syndicate
 smmm^^^^mm^^m^m^m^mmm^^m^m^^m^^m^-^f
SliPP^iPPiSi^^PiiPWSBi
"■■;;w-; '-)-!:::■■-;■■■■■■ ;;■
flw
 ■■:..',    "A,     . .
_^__^
v,:t,.;!;,-m-t:;-. ■        .'-■;,
	
3?>^3
SMALL INVESTMENT - LARGE RETURNS
That's the Want Ad Story - PHONE 1844
MACHINERY
BIRTHS
CAZAKOFF — To Mr. and Mrs.
John Cazakoff of Blewett, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept.
2, a son.
YONEMURA—To Mr. and Mrs.
Kazuma Yonemura of Passmore,
at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Sept. 7, a daughter.
REIMER—To Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Reimer of Appledale, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital,
Sept. 7, a son.
FITZPATRICK — To Mr. and
Mrs. Vincent Fitzpatrick of Nel-
Bon, at Kootenay Lake General
Hospital, Sept. 8. a son.
HELP WANTED
THE CORPORATION OF~THE~
DISTRICT OF GLENMORE
APPLICATIONS ARE INVITED
for the position of WORKING
SUPERINTENDENT FOR THE
PUBLIC WORKS OF THE
MUNICIPALITY OF GLENMORE. Apply in own handwriting with full particulars of ex-
perienqej age, references, and
salary expected to J. H. HAYES.
Municipal Clerk, RR 1, Kelowna, B. C. Envelope to be
marked "SUPERINTENDENT
APPLICATION". AU applications will be opened by the
Council on September 27th, 1955.
Employee Gov't, approved superannuation scheme in effect.
^THE CORPORATION OF~THE~
CITY OF KASLO
Sealed tenders will be received
up to 5 p.m. on Monday, September 19th, for painting roof
and outside of Hatchery Building, re-roofing Pavilion, and
some painting .in City Office.
Specifications may be obtained
from City Hall. Lowest or any
tender not necessarily accepted.
Alf. Watson, City Clerk.
BE THE FIRST TO SHOW OUR
anniversary specials, right in
your own locality. No investment necessary, better than average earning paid weekly. Apply
at once to People's Credit Jewellers Ltd., 973 Eldorado St.,
Trail or Phone 1669 for appointment In Nelson, please contact
Mason at 1367.
WE NEED A YOUNG MAN TO
train as a salesman. Some typing
ability preferred. Good future
with well established Nelson
firm. Apply in confidence to
Box 2933, Nelson Daily News.
Our staff has been informed of
this ad
THE CORPORATION OF THE
CITY OF KASLO
Wanted for Kaslo City Board of
Works a handyman able to drive
Cat when necessary. Apply by 5
p.m. Wednesday, September 14.
giving experience and wages
expected. Alf Watson, City Clerk
WANTED — LOGGING CON
tractor with own equipment,
able produce 30 M ft. per day.
3 months work in good timber.
Roads in now. Apply Box 300,
Creston, B. C.
ATTENTION: -HELP WANTED -
Wanted reliable man to drive
taxi, full time. Phone Smitty's
Taxi in Rossland, 90 or 5.
SAWYER AND MILLWRIGHT,
150,000 capacity. $2 per hour. 9-
hr. day. Full Smith Lumber Co.
Topliff Apt, Rossland, B. C.
WANTED-EXPERIENCED DRI-
ver for logging truck. Box 100.
Fruitvale or phone Fruitvale
3421.
TWO AUTO-BODY AND FEND.
er men wanted. Top wages and
good working conditions. Beath
Body Shop, Williams Lake, B.C.
WANTED - FULL TIME MES-
senger with bike, day work. Apply CP. Telegraph
WANTED FIRST CLASS TRUCK
mechanic. Top wages and benefits. Apply Box 8974 Daily News.
HELP  WANTED—FEMALE
EMPLOYMENT - LARGE
Local Industry requires female
invoicing clerk — Typing essential, Shorthand not necessary — Permanent position
pleasant working conditions and
good salary prospects. M.S. A
caverage and 5-day week. Apply
to   National   Employment   Ser-
WOULD LIKE LADY PARTNER
in tailoring and dress making
business established in Nelson
B. C. Write Box 8946, Daily
News.
STENOGRAPHER SALES CLERK
permanent position. Applicant
must be capable and reliable
Phone 83.
SITUATIONS  WANTED
OPERATING MILLWRIGHT, SIX
years experience in mechanics
and mill work. Excellent techni
cal background in engineering
and drafting. Single. Apply to
Box 8941. Nelson News.
PUBLIC NOTICES
SEALED TENDERS addressed
to the undersigned, c/o Graham,
Provenzano and Graham, Cranbrook, B. C„ and marked as to1
content will be received up to 3:00
(M.S.T.) on the 30th day of September. 1955, for a new 24-bed
Hospital and Nurses Residence
at Invermere for the Windermere
District Hospital Association.
Plans, specifications and tender
documents will be available on deposit of $50 at the office of Paul
D. Smith, Architect, Canadian Legion Building, Trail, B. C, on
September 10. 1955. Deposits will
be forfeited if the plans and specifications are not returned in good
condition on or before the seventh
day following the submission of
the bids. Each tender must be accompanied by a certified cheque
as specified in the Form of Tender.
The lowest or any tender will
not necessarily be accepted.
MRS. E. MADSON,
President.
The Windermere District Hospital
Association. Invermere. B. C.
"AUCTION  SALE
TIMBER SALE X67744
There will be offered for sale
at Public Auction, at 10:30 a.m.
local time on October 3, 1955, in
the office of the Forest Ranger,
Edgewood. B.C., the License X67744
to cut 621,000 cubic feet of Lodgepole Pine. Spruce, Balsam, Fir,
Larch, White Pine and Ced,ar situated on part of Lot 4792, on Bruer
Creek, Osoyoos Division of Yale
Land District.
Five (5) years will be allowed
for removal of timber.
Provided anyone unable to attend the auction in person may
submit a sealed tender, to be opened at the hour of auction and treated as one bid.
Further particulars may be
obtained from the Deputy Minister
of Forest, Victoria. B.C., or the
the Forest Ranger, Edgewood, B.C.
District Forester, Nelson, B.C., or
Gazette August 25th. 1955.
RENTALS
HOUSEKEEP'ING OR SLEEPING
ROOMS, fully furnished. Day.
week, or monthly rates. 171 Baker.
LARGE    SELF   CONTAINED
"suite, ground floor, furn. or unfurnished. Apply Box 8947 Daily
Newi;.
FOR RENT: NEWLY MODERN-
ized large office space, convenient entrance, good parking facilities. Call 77 for details,
ROOMS FOR RENT, KITCHEN
privileges. 576 Baker St., Apt. B.
after 4:00 p.m.
TO RENT—BED-SITTING ROOM
kMchen privileges, business lady.
central. Phone 1267-X.
FOR RENT—2-BEDROOM SUITE
Call 520 Carbonate Street, after
5:00  p.m,
2 FURN. HOUSEKEEPING
rooms, one or two working girls.
Phone 1084-R.       •
WANTED - 2 OR 3 BEDROOM
house. References. Wired 'for electric range. Phone 1761-L-3.
URGENTLY WANTED - 3 BED-
room house Oct. 1st. Ph. 862-L.
3 ROOMS, BATH, PRIVATE EN-
trance.  Adults.  719 Stanley  St.
BEDROOM.FOR RENT—923 VER-
non Street".
FOR RENT - HOUSEKEEPING
room. Phone 1564-X.
2-ROOM   FURN.   APT.  HEATeB
Apply 406 Richards.
FURNISHED     HOUSEKEEPING
room for rent. Phone 586-X.
LIVESTOCK, POULTRY
AND FARM SUPPLIES, ETC
FOR SALE AT CRAWFORD BAY
—50 Toulouse Geese for breeding. Wil] sell 1 gander and 2
females for $20. H. Harrop.
Prone 1278.
ONE ABERDEEN ANGUS BULL
with   papers.   Morton   Brothers.
.   Box 136, Nakusp. B .C.
TWO LOGGING HORSES FOR
sale. Bill Arishenkoff, Shore
acres. B.C.
AUTOMOTIVE,
MOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES
Drop in at
REUBEN BUERGE -
MOTORS LTD.
Today and Deal With
Confidence With the Largest
Car Dealer in the Interior of
British Columbia.
1953 Austin Sedan
1952 Hillman
1952 Austin Sedan
1952 Morris
1951 AUSTIN -
1950 Austin
• •    •
1955 Pontiac Sedan
1955 Ford Customline
Sedan
1954 Ford Sedan
8000 Miles
1954 Pontiac, Low Mileage
195-f Plymouth Sedan
1953 Ford Sedan
1953 Chevrolet Belair Sdn
1953 Pontiac Powerglide
1952 Pontiac Sedan
1951 Meteor Sedan
1950 Chevrolet Sedan
1948 Monarch Sedan
1947  Pontiac Sedan
SPECIAL
1947 Mercury Sedan
$195
1955 Chevrolet Pickup
1955  Ford Ranch Wagon
1954 Austin 3-Ton
Low mileage, good tires.
1954  Ford Sedan Delivery
1952 Chevrolet Sedan Dlry
1952 Fargo Express
1951 Austin Pickup
1951  Willy's Jeep
1951   Chevrolet Pickup
1950  International   Pickup
• *    •
PROPERTY, HOUSES,
FARMS, ECT. FOR SALE
FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS
BUERGE
Motors Ltd.
Phone 1135 and 1843    •
803 Baker St.       Nelson, B.C
1955 FORD SEDAN FOR SALE,
just driven from Ontario. Beautiful two-tone, automatic and
white wails. $400 less than Nelson price. H. Herbison, Phone
1832-L.      .
CADILLAC. 1952, TAKE '49 OR
'50 Pontiac, Chevrolet, Ford,
in   trade.   Buyer   assume   pay-
' ments $2263. Box 8938, Nelson
News.
1947 MERCURY. FIVE PASS
coupe. Radio, heater. 5 new tires
$325. Phone 1363-L-4 or Box 382
Nelson.
41 PONTIAC, A-l CONDITION.
Radio and heater, new tires
Phone  1564-X after 5:00  p.m.
WANTED-'41  CHEV, MUST BE
A-l. Phone 1450-L.
FOR SALE—1952 G.M.C.  HALF-
lon pickup  Phone 1055.
FOR SALE—COW. JUST FRESH-
ened. Apply Pete Cheveldave,
Slocan Park.
PERSONAL
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS
Box 368   Ph   161-L3 or 366-R
EXPERIENCED STENOGRAPH-
er. bookkeeper desires part time
position. Phone  1711-R.
FOR   ALL   ODD   JOBS   PHONE
256-R.	
WANTED-WORK   AS   TYPIST
or sales-clerk. Phone 1244-L.
GERMAN GIRL WANTS HOUSf-
work. Phone 1094-Y.
LADY    WANTS    HOUSEWORK
75c per hour. Phone 932-Y.
ROOM AND BOARD
GOOD HOME OFFERED HIGH
school girl for light services
Write Box 8919, Nelson News.
WILL BOARD AND CARE FOR
child in own home. 2 to 5 yrs.
Annlv 1406 Hall  Mines Rd.
BOARD  AND  ROOM  OR ROOM
62_: Victoria Street.
Nplamt Daily Nma
Classified Advertising Rates
Per line. 1 time .20
2 consecutive times .35
3 consecutive times     - .45
4, 5 and 6 consecutive
times BO
28 consecutive times $! 82
Non-consecutive insertions      20
a line per time.
Box numbers   11 extra
PUBLIC . (LEGAL)     NOTICES
TENDERS,   etc —20c   per   line
first insertion 16c per line each
subsequent insertion
ALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%
FOR PROMPT PAYMENT
Subscription  Rates:
(Not More Than Listed Here)
By carrier, per-week
In advance - .30
By carrier per year $15.60
Mai]  In Canada outside  Nelson
One mmth _ $ 100
Three months _     , $ 2 75
Six months          $ 5.50
One  year       _ $10 00
By Mail to United Kingdom
or the United States
One, month ■     $ 1 25
Three monlhs $ 3 T*
Six   months $ 7 50
One   ve,ii $1^10
Where extra portage Is required
above   rates   plus   postage,
FOR SALE—LADIES"' CCM BIKE
excellent condition. Phone 635-X
BUSINESS AND
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
ASSAYERS AND MIN?
REPRESENTATIVES
To Sell
OWNER TRANSFERRED
Recently constructed mbdern
ranch-style house; 1296 square
feet; fully insulated. Three
bedrooms, Heatalator fireplace, colored bathroom fixatures, inlaid hardwood kitchen
cupboards, hardwood floors
except in kitchen and bathroom, oil furnace, perimeter
heating. Attached garage 14
by 20 feet with overhead steel
door. Full-sized 8-foot basement with plumbing and
heating laid out for rumpus
room. Ideal location on Nelson Avenue in Fairview district. Flat corner lot completely landscaped. Ready for
immediate occupancy. — Full
price
$20,500
OPEN TO OFFERS
N.H.A.   Mortgage   $8000
Payments $77.00 Monthly
Including City Taxes.
To View Property Please
Phone 68—or Evenings, 397-X
Herb Peacock
REAL ESTATE
532 Ward St.        Nelson, B.C.
EXCLUSIVE
LISTING
Fairview
ONE AND-A-HALF STOREY,
TWO-BEDROOM •
HOUSE
Full basement, oil floor furnace. Well located on Third
Street. Very good §Qffl()
value  at «kwww
Some Terms.
Agencies LtcL
Phone 135 or Eves., 1065-X
SMALL DAIRY IN CONJUNC-
tion with mink farm. Can be
bought with or without stock.
14 acres of land, cows, on irrigated pasture. Freezing plant.
Good opportunity for anyone interested. Breeding stock can be
had at pelt prices. Beach frontage. 3 miles west of Castlegar
ferry. G. S. Hett, Robson, B. C
BUILDER SPECIAL GOOD
grade lumber (Immediate delivery! all dressed 1x6, 1x8. 1x10,
boards, also 2x4, 2x6, random
lenghts all goes for $50.00 per
thousand, also have beaded paneling 3 species, Spruce Larch
Cedar. Build that extra room
now. Special at $50.00 per thousand. Orders should be 200 B. M
or more F. O. B. Nelson. Also
dressed low grade lumber 2x4,
2x6, 1x6, 1x8, 1x10, boards $30.00
per tousand. Free delivery for
orders 4000 B. M. or more. Phone
S Kudra- 1702-R.
9 CU. FT. FRIGIDAIRE REFERI-
gerator, 2 single beds with
spring-filled mattresses, 100 ft
plastic hose, 1 only lawn sprinkler, 2 garden shovels, bathroom
scales, bedroom rug 4' x 6', 1
only Duncan Fyfe style console
table, 1 kitchen table. Phone
1653 days, 632-Y-2 evenings.
DEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF
used equipment, mill, mine and
logging supplies; new and used
wire rope, pipe and fittings,
chain steel plate and shapes
Atlas Iron &' Metals Ltd.. 250
Prior St., Vancouver. B.C Ph
PAcific 6357
BUGGY, WAGON, HARNESS,
Winchester 30 U. S. rifle, plows,
2000 ft hog-sheep wire fencing
26", sink, pipe stock idies, hammock, lawn mower, Coleman
camp stove. John Bjerknes, Mirror Lake, B. C.
COMBINATION COAL ANDGAS
range; gas water heater, copper
i  coils;    electric    plate;    electric
toaster; adjustable barrel pump;
pair men's loafers \0Vt. Phone
1267-X. %
WELDING WIRE
AVAILABLE  FROM
NELSON STOCK
Lincoln Electrodes
Lincoln 200 amp.-300 amp.1
Welding Units
Fire Extinguishers
Available   _.rom   Nelson   Stock
Carbon Dioxide Snow Type
In 3-Lb., 5-Lb.. 10-Lb., 15-Lb. Sizes
Carbon Tetrachloride
In 1-Quart and Larger Pressure
All Contractors
Supplies
Cemftnt Mixers, Porter Cable
Electric Saws, etc.
Roller Chain Drives
Morse Brand
Chains,. Sprockets, Pulleys,
Belts, Etc.
WE INVITE
DEALER INQUIRIES
THE
Equipment & Supply
Co., Ltd.
Phone 1590 P.O. Box 61
520 LAKE ST.
2 DOUBLE BEDS, McCLARY
range, with water jacket, chesterfield, bassinett, boys and girls
skates, doll buggy, hockey and
Scout clothes, kifchen table and
chairs and etc. Phone 1617-L.
FOR SALE - AUTOMATIC
washer, Singer elect, sewing machine. Bo|h in new condition,
cheap for cash. Contact Fred
Townsend.   Madden  Hotel.
NORGE REFRIGERATOR AND
slightly used Easy Splndry
Automatic Washer. Just like
new. Best offer. Apply Star
Auto Service, Phone 1648.
SHIP US YOUR SCRAP MET-
als. copper, brass, lead, aluminum Highest prices, prompt payment. Active Trading, 935 E.
Cordova, Vancouver
CUTLER'S NEW AND [iSED
furniture, basement 301 Baker
St Phone 47 "We buy used fur
niture."
BOMBER HOISTS. 1500 LBS CA-
pacity, $45, while 'they last. Ac-
tive Trading Co., 935 E. Cordova.
Vancouver
FOR SALE — NEW : STEVENS
model 820 B. 12 gauge repeatirig
shotgun cheap. Phone 1329-Y.
FOR SALE'- McCLARY COOK-
stove, good condition. Price $35.
Phone 486-Y.
CATERPILLAR'
No. 11 Motor Grader
Tandem Drive
Complete With Cob
Excellent Condition
See
H.   "Fritz"   Farenholtz,
C. Ross or Alex McDonald
M
WELDING & EQUIPMENT
CO., LTD.
614 Railway St.        Nelson, B.C.
PHONE 1402
DIESEL
Mipe Locomotives
Any size, any capacity. Ideal
for mine operation. Designed
primarily for underground in
naked flame mines.
SEALERS, QTS. it   V4-GAL.   Ph.
281.
FOR SALE ON THE NORTH
Shore opposite ferry—Well located loC 75x200. Greenwood
subdivision. Wonderful value at
$1,000 Apply P E Poulin. Real
Estate Agent, Nelson. B   C
HOUSE IN KINNAIRD. 4 ROOMS
and bath, full basement, large
lot, lawn, fruit trees and garden. Fenced and large garage.
Full price $6,000 — $3,000 will
handle. 2739 Castlegar.
FOR SALE—AT MIRROR LAKE.
5-room house, full basement, 25
acres, 60 fruit trees, all fenced.
Twin Bay 700 acres. Kootenay
Bay 600 acres. John Bjerknes,
Mirror Lake, B. C.
FOR SALE — NEW 5 ROOM
house one block from bus stop.
Modern kitchen and cupboards.
On a large lot. Apply 1914 Kootenay St.
REVENUE PROPERTY.- CON-
sisting of three suites. *2000 will
handle, bal.. $40.00 per month
and interest Apply Box 10858.
Nelson  Daily  News
E   W   WIDDOWSON & CQ
Assayers 301 Josephine St   Nelson
H    S    ELMES   ROSSLAND   BC
Assayer   Ch'emrsl. Mine Rep
ENGINEERS'AND SURVEYORS
G   W   BAERG
British Columbia Land Surveyor
373 Baker St      Nelson     Ph. 1118
and Box 34. Frutvale, B.C
Successor to the late A   L   Purdy
BOYD C   AFFLECK  MEIC
BC Land Surveyor P Eng iCivili
218 Gore St    Nelson    Phone 1238
S   V   SHAYLER.   PC.  BOX  255
Kimberley. Phone 54
B C   Land Surveyor   Engineer
MACHINISTS
BENNETTS LIMITED
Machine   Shop.   Acetylene   and
electric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 593   324 Vernon St
TIMBER CRUISER
EUGENE H  HIRD
Slocan City  B C Timber cruising
mineral claim inspection
Anywhere In B C
LOST AND FOUND
PART LABRADOR DOG, GREY-
white in muzzel. North Shore
Phono  471-X-l.
LOSi:~GHEY~AND "BLUIS^BUI>
Kie. Phone 968-L.
FOR SALE: COMPLETELY FUR-
nished 3 room dwelling located
at Tye, B. C. Bargain at $600.
Apply P. E. Poulin real Estate,
Nelson, B. C.
FOR SALE — BUILDING IN
Sheep Creek 40 x 40. Bargain
Tom Jadro, 1368 McQuarrie,
Trail, B. C.
3 LOTS ON NELSON HIGHWAX
In town of Salmo. Mrs. Mary
Vereachagin, 1848 Vaness St..
Vancouver. B.C
FOR SALE, THREE BEDROOM
house, with any amount of lots
up to eight. Low down payments.
Phone 6R7-L-1. ,
CLEARED LEVEL BUILDING
lot, 55x100. 1424 Stanley Street
Phone 983-Y
FOR SALE-1 CLEARED LOT.
North Shore. 300 ft from ferry
Phone. 1684.
rnune.ioo*
FOR SALE   GREEN   LIGHT
garage and light plant Box 48
Slocan City
5-ROOMED HOUSE, WIRED FOR
range. Near Central School.
Terms. Phone 876-X.
FARM, GARDEN AND
NURSERY
PEACH PLUMS 3C A LB. PICK
your own. Bring containers. G
A. Sicotte, Sunshine Bay.
PETS, CANARIES, BEES,
TWO . MONTHS  - OLD   MALE
pups for sale. Part Cocker, part
Setter, $5   Silver Bay  Lodee. 3
Buy. Sell.Trade the Classified Way |    miles"south of Kaslo. Ph. 47-T.
I
FOR  SALE   —   CHESTERFIELD
suite. Phone 1855-R.
FOR SALE—WINE DAVENPORT
good condition. Phone 1467-Y.
COLEMAN OIL HEATER, BAR-
rel and pump. Ph. 343-Y.
EASY     WASHING     MACHINE-.
Call 1666-X or 416 Sixth St.
FOR SALE — PIANO, MASON-
Risch. Phone 379-1, Castlegar.
WANTED MISCELLANEOUS
WE BUY COW HIDES. SHEEP
pelts, horse hair (mane and tail!
old batteries, copper, brass, aluminum, radiators, beer and pop
bottles. Phone 1807 days, 882-Y
evenings. Warehouse 415H Latimer St., City. Independent
Trader.
WANTED TO BUY: CARS AND
trucks for wrecking. Buyers of
scrap iron, batteries, brass, aluminum, copper. Used parts for
cars and trucks for sale.
Western Auto Wrecking, Box
132. Granite Road, Nelson, B.C.
PHONE 189-R-4.
HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR
scrap m^tal, brass, copper and
aluminum. Old batteries $1.50 ea.
Apply Charlie Symmonds, Box
182. Granite Rd. or ph  378-X-2.
WANTED TO BUY - SAW LOGS
and cedar poles on Kootenay
Lake or rail. Kootenay Products. Box 450.  Nelson
WANTED TO BUY - TIMBER
and bush land in vicinity of
Kootenay Lake. Apply Box 2736
Nelson Daily News ,
SECOND   HAND   CHAIN   SAW.
P. O. Box 416, Nelson.
BUSINESS OPORTUNITIES
BUSINESS FOR SALE —VICIN-
ity of Fruitvale. Partly-built service station, garage, store, house,
cabin and campsite. Operating
now. Will sell, cash or terms or
consider trade on house, property, etc. Reply, Box 10613, Nelson Daily News.
ONE CHANCE IN A THOUSAND
to buy a'good revenue producing-
businoss, large place centrally
located in a good payroll city
Apply to Box 8871 Daily News
FOR SALE: NICELY DECORAT-
ed dining room business. Low
rent. Small cash payment* on
equipment. Maldon Cafe, Salmo, B.C.
SLOCAN DRESS SHOP LADIES
& Childrens wear. Apply Box 48
Sltican City.
BOTH WAYS »
Teeth should be brushed vertic
ally as well as horizontally.     r
MACHINE SHOP
Phone 593     Nelson, B.C.
1 Quarter*
Shovel
Available   6000   complete
with 40 ft. crane boom.
PHONE
DIETRICH
HUME HOTEL
SPECIAL " ON USED FARM
EQUIPMENT - 1953 Ferguson
Tractor, International 45-T hay
Baler, International No. 64 Engine Drive 6' combine, International Farmall Cub Tractor with
hydraulic and 12" plow, cultivator, levelling blade and 4' tandem disc. All equipment in good
running order and will demonstrate in the field to your satis
faction. Apply Grand -Forks Cooperative Growers' Exchange
Grand Forks, B.C.
ONE ALLIS CHALMERS COM-
bine, No. 40; one new Holland
wire tie baler, No. 80. Morton
Brothers, Boy 136, Nakusp, B. C.
CLASSIFIED DISPLAY
Nelson
Concrete Ltd.
$13.50 cu. yd.
PHONE 871
Delivered in Nelson
SAVE TIME - SAVE MONEY
"Do   It   the   Easy   Way"
READ  THE  CLAoSIFIED  DAILV
PHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED!
NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, 1955—9
eptember- Shower of-
BARGAINS S
v
at
1955 Monarch-
Hard Top
$400 Off
Equipped at
$3345
1955 Ford
Sedan Delivery
$300 Off
Only .2200  Miles.
$2295
1954 Chevrolet   .
Sedan
Radio, Heater. Seat Covers.
$2095
1953 Plymouth
Sedan,
$1595
1953 Ford Tudor
$1595
. MANY, MANY MORE
1954 Anglia
Lovely   Condition.   Full   Price
$1095
1953 Austin
Somerset
$1195 -'
1952 Austin     7'
Somerset Y
$895
1954 Ford ]/2-Ton
Pickup
$1595
1947 Ford Vi-Tonr
Pickup
$345
'36 Olds	
$7<
'37 Plymouth _
39 Pnntinr
 $50"
$12V:
'41 Poftiac
$ivb
Mel Buerge Motors
608 VERNON
Ltd.
PHONE1744
B
EACON'S
ETTER
UYS   ,
Ml Oltl USED CAJStTOtta
6 MONTHS Oft
 3>W
m '.! BtttlHO t. lilt UMWES SU tt
UWM>
turn • w mm suiauiiM uiutt
• MERCURY      * LINCOLN       * METEOR
"Safe Buy" Used Cars
1953 MONARCH SEDAN
Radio;   Loaded   With   Extras.
1951 MONARCH
SPORT SEDAN
Radio   and   Overdrive.
1953 METEOR FORDOR
1952 METEOR FORDOR
951 PLYMOUTH SEDAN
1950 FORD SEDAN     -3
1949 PONTIAC SEDAN 3
ENGLISH UNIT SPECIALS
1953-ZEPHYR SEDAN
1953 AUSTIN SOMERSET
1952 AUSTIN DEVON
1951 VANGUARD SEDAN
All One-Owner Beauties
T
A
1953 FORD PICKUP
1953 PONTIAC SEDAN
DELIVERY
EVERY UNIT A BARGAIN
1951 FORD PICKUP
1949 FORD PICKUP
New Meteors $2300 and up       ' "
Beacon Motors- *
701 Bdker St. Nelson, BC.;
Phones 578-579 3
Evenings, 1039-X. tor Sales Appointments
=s
QUARE'DEAL:
USED CARS
1952 StudebakerSedan
1951 StudebakerCoupe
1950 Studebaker Coupe
1950 Ford Sedan
1950 Chevrolet 2 Door Sedan
1950 Austin Sedan
1949 Austin Sedan
1950 Hillman Sedan
1941 Plymouth Sedan
1940 Pontiac Sedan
5
1950 Studebaker 1/2-Ton Pickup
1946 International Vi-Ton Pickup
1950 Austin Panel
STUDEBAKER-HILLMAN DEALER
Good Selection in New Units.
DEFOE SERVICE
LTD.
21.1 BAKER ST.
PHONE 1234
 ■■■■  ■■   ■■■■■■       ,■■'.■■—yr-.;■■■■ ■ • ———^^—t—^———.————.—— 1—-r-.—r—r—:—...    ■. {<.   .:   ■    ■ i,   .. . .. j.     ■ '.   < ..
0—NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 9, 1955
I
THE WEATHER IS ALWAYS
A SAFE TOPIC OF CONVERSATION.
BUT
When  you  don't  feel  like talking,
Your best, bet is a nice quiet corner and
A GOOD BOOK
For Books of All Types and Prices It's MANN'S.
THE SILVER CHALICE by Costain  $2.20
THE WHITE AND GOLD by Costain $5.00
THE GREEN YEARS by Cronin _  $2.00
WHEN THE GRASS WAS FREE by Hagell. .. $3.25
DICTIONARIES        >_,  50£ to $9.00
CHILDREN'S and JUVENILE BOOKS 20* to $3.50
' BIBLES, HYMN  BOOKS, ETC.
AND HUNDREDS OF OTHERS.
MANN
DRUGS LTD.
|LAG FAVORED
_§|_DMONTON (CP)—A new flag
wa$ approved by the "parliament"
t&.the Anglican Church of Canada
before it was prorogued today.
';The general synod authorized as
tfoe official colors the red cross of
SL George set on a white field
with a green maple leaf in each
oi the quarters.
rjjThe vote in favor, a bare majority, came today afte» the de-
_Hgn was discussed -for more than
an hour in Wednesday night ses-
glons. As a compromise, permission was given for use of the
$iurch crest set in the middle of
the crest. The crest of individal
dioceses or the crest of the general synod also may be used on
special occasions.
fcHONE   1844   FOR   CLASSIFIED
C
CHECK ARTISTS
NET $2000
VANCOUVER (CP)—A cheque
counterfeiting ring was reported
by police today to have duped
beer parlors here out of almost
$2000 since it started operating
here during the Labor Day weekend.
Detectives said the ring had
printed phony cheques and cashed
14 of them, averaging $125 each.
HORACE  BRAHAM  DEAD
NEW YORK (CP) - Horace
Braham, 61, stage and screen
actor, who served in the Canadian
Army in the First World War,
died Wednesday. A native of London, England, he had to leave the
cast of "Witness for the Prosecution" in May because of illness.
■SATURDAY
It It With  Much Pride and Pleasure That We Bring Back
— And Personally Recommend —
To  Our  Many Patrons and  Friends
Canada's GENE
DLOUHY
And His Orchestra
PERSONALITY - ENTERTAINMENT
FABULOUS DANCE MUSIC
A  Band  That  Is  Refreshingly  Different
DANCE
9 to 1 — Adm. $1.00 Plus Tax
■PLAYMORi
Fruilvale Fair
Continued  From  Page 6.
koff; cottage cheese, Mrs. P. Berukoff.
CHILDREN'S  CLA88E8
Aget 14, 15, 16 yean:
Light cake, David John, Karen
Moller; cookies, drop, Carol Paterson, "David John; bran muffins,
Carol Moon; soap or clay model,
Carol Moon, Doreen Mauchlin,
Carol Paterson; cross-stitch, Carol
Paterson; machine-m8de garment,
Carol Paterson, Doreen Mauchlin;^
apron, Carol Moon, Carol Paterson; embroidery, Carol Paterson,
Doreen Mauchlin; crochetwork,
Doreen Mauchlin; knitted article,
Doreen Mauchlin, Carol Paterson;
beets, Carol Paterson; bouquet of
rrtarigolds, Carol Paterson; bouquet of pansies, Wendy Scott, Robson.
Finger painting, Carol Paterson
Doreen Mauchlin; plastercine or
plaster of Paris model, Carol Pat
erson; toy, Doreen Mauchlin,
Carol Paterson; drawing, Carol
Paterson, Doreen Mauchlin; scene
in water color, Doreen Mauchlin,
Carol Paterson;. piece of homemade furniture, David John; poster* advertising fair, Carol Paterson; wild flowers, pressed and
mounted, Carol Paterson; candy,
David John, Doreen Mauchlin;
carrots, Carol Paterson; raisin pie,
Carol Paterson; baking powder
biscuits, Carol Moon.
High   aggregate   in   this  group,
Carol Paterson, Doreen Mauchlin,
David John.
Ages 11, 12, 13:
Toy, Elaine John; hobbies.
Elaine John, Bonnie Campbell,
Wendy Scott, Robson; drawing,
Elaine John; wild flowers, pressed and mounted, Elaine John.
Bonnie Campbell; apple pie, Bonnie Campbell, Elaine John; raisin
pie, Bonnie Campbell, Elaine
John; baking powder biscuits.
Bonnie Campbell, Heleri Gteen;
light cake, Norma Stringer, Helen
Green; drop cookies, Bonnie
Campbell, Norma Stringer; rolled
cookies, Bonnie Campbell, Helen
Green; bran muffins, Bonnie
Campbell; potted plant, Norma
Stringer.
Water color scene, Bonnie
Campbell, Elaine John; soap or
clay model, Fay Moller, Norma
Stringer; cross-stitch, Elaine John;
machine - made garment, Elaine
John: apron, Joan Knowler, Helen
Green; crochetwork, Bonnie
Campbell, Wendy Scott, Robson;
knitted article, Fay Moller; bouquet of marigolds, Norma Stringer, Wendy Scott, Robson.
High aggregate, Bonnie  Camp-:
bell. Elaine John.
Ages 8, 9, 10:
Plastercine model. Teddy Gates,
Trail; drawing, Teddy Gates.
Trail; raisin pie, Darlene Wright;
light cake, Darlene Wright; rolled
cookies, Donald John; drop
cookies, Darlene Wright," Donald
John; bran muffins, Darlene
Wright; beets, Ronnie Stringer;
candy, Donald John; fretwork,
Ronnie Stringer; any other article
not specified. Donald Burt; doll
furniture, Ronnie Stringer,
High aggregate. Darlene Wright,
Ronnie Stringer, Donald John.
Seven and under:
Wild flowers bouquet, Janet
John; sample of writing, Janet
John; sample of printing, Ja-rist
John. Alan Burt; cupcakes, Lynda
Townsend; cookies, drop, Janet
John.
High aggregate. Janet John.
Lynda Townsend, Alan Burt.
READY TO LAUNCH a career
aa a skin diver, Todd Ratllff, 2,
is weighted down \*(th equipment at side of pool In Holly,
wood, Fla. 8on of the Rev, Dale
H. Ratllff of North Miami, Fla.,
Todd already has learned to
swim. Diving will come later,
—AP Wirephoto.
OPPOSITION TO
OTTAWA SITE FOR
SEE EXPLAINED
EDMONTON (CP.-Chancellor
H. C. Farthing of Calgary itreaspi
Wednesday in Anglican Synod debate that hfi had not opposed the
placing of a fixed primatlal see
near Ottawa because' of any 111
feeling toward French-Canadians.
The chancellor was referring, to
remarks made by another speaker
following his speech' Monday at
the synod.
He said, "I certainly had not
safti that they or any others were
'discourteous'. I have many friends
among French-speaking Canadians, for whom I have the highest
regard."
He said he opposed the Ottawa
site because Roman Catholics out-
nufber Anglicans by five to one.
The primate would naturally and
quite justly be'In a secondary position to the local Roman Catholic
prelate."
Dr. R. E. Wodehouse. lay delegate from Ottawa, apologized in
the house for remarks made opposing the chancellor's stand.
Sawlog Scale Way Up Last Month
The sawlog scale in Nelson' Forest District last month continued
to go ahead ln leaps and bounds
over the scale for last year.
A total of 42,587,419 feet board
measure were seated last month,
fir being the big leader, compared
with 28,936,338 fbm in August,
1954.
The total brought scale total for
Che year to 260,282,996 fbm, far
exceeding the scale for the first
DUBETOLESOLEIL
TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. (CP) —
Fernand Gagnon, advertising and
promotion manager of Le Nouvel-
liste, has been appointed general
manager.
An announcement by the daily
newspaper said Raymond Dube,
general manager since 1953, will
take an "important editorial post"
with Le Soleil. Quebec daily.
Sylvio Carle will succeed Mr.
Ga,gnon ai advertising manager.
CARGO DOWN
VANCOUVER (CP> — Lumber
and general cargo shipments from
Vancouver harbor were less iy
August than the same month a
year ago but the Merchants' Exchange here1 says grain shipped
from Vancouver, Victoria and New
Westminster totalled 7,488,438 bushels—2,216,326 more than in August, 1954.
GOV'T DEPOSITS UP
OTTAWA (CP) — Government
of Canada deposits increased $5,-
543.000 to $65,032,000 during the
week ended- Sept. 7, the Bank of
Canada reported Thursday in its
weekly financial statement.
Chartered bank deposits decreased $9,909,000 to $528,811,000
while notes in circulation increased $12,103,000 to $1,666,015,000.
DRUG RINGS
TUSSLE
VANCOUVER (CP)-Three new
drug rings are staging an undercover battle for control of the lucrative narcotics trade here, a top
police officer said today.
Rex Cray, head of the city police drug detail, said three new
businesses were supplying addicts
with capsules of heroin at $5 each
—"a drop of a dollar or two" over
previous rates.
In an interview, Det. Cray said
the major drug ring had been
smashed in a joint city police-
RCMP roundup four weeks ago,
when 32 persons were arrested.
TAPPMI
ELECTRIC    AND   GAS    RANGES
Only Tappan
Electric Ranges
Gives You All Thoie Top
Performance  Features:
• DIVIDED TOP
• CONVEK-HEAT OVEN
• SPEED-FLEX COOKING
UNITS
• SAFETY-SPIN SWITCHES
• EASY ACCESS STORAGE
SPACE
• TAP-O-MATIC BACK
PANEL
MODEL   EW—85
24-INCH  (Ai Illustrated)
Only
$369.95
At Your MARSHALL-WELLS STORE
Hipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.
395 BAKER ST.
PHONE 497
MINOR   DAMAGE
Joseph Vlahovich of Nelson was
fined $40 in city court Wednesday
when he pleaded guilty to driving
without due care and attention.
He was involved in an accident
with a car owned by V. Doyle of
Nelson September 4. There was
minor damage to both vehicles.
He appeared before Magistrate
William Brown.
PUBLISHERS  8WITCHED
SYRACUSE, N. Y. (AP)—Richard H. Amberg. publisher of the
Syracuse Post-Standard, has been
named publisher of the St. Louis
Globe-Democrat, succeeding E.
Lansing Ray, who died Aug. 30.
Stephen Rogers, editor of the Long
Island Star-Journal, has been
named publisher of the Post-
Standard.
SEASIDE GIFT
LONDON (CP) — The crew of
HMS Crane,. Royal Navy frigate
"adopted" by the Bethnal Green
district, sent the borough £15 to
provide a seaside holiday for two
or three orphans,
folk village disclosed that he had
been bitten by dogs 37 times in 34
years.
DIVIDENDS
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
Canadian Bronze Co. Ltd., common 31 cents, pfd. $1.25, Nov. 1,
record Oct. 11.    '
Dominion Foundries and Steel
Ltd.. pfd. $1.12% Oct. 15, record
Sept. 22.
Canadian General Electric Co.
Ltd., common $1, Oct. 1, record
Sept.  15.
Canadian Oil Companies Ltd. 8
per cent pfd. $2.
Canadian Oil Companies Ltd. 8
per cent pfd. $2. S per cent pfd.
1,25, pfd. 4 per cent $1, Oct. 3,
record Sept. 15; common 15 cents
Nov. record Oct. 3.
Hiram Walker—Gooderham and
Worts Ltd., 75 cents plus $1.00 extra Oct. 15, record Sept. 23.
LONG PROJECT   ■
UPPER CLATFORD, England
(CP) — This Hampshire village
now has opened its memorial hall
to King Edward VII, 45 years after the monarch's death. The original fund was started in Queen
Victoria's time and the trust fund
could only be used by retaining
the original name of the hall.
Market Trends
* TORONTO — Made an unspectacular but fairly wide advance
paced by industrials. Volume totalled 5,212,000 shares, slightly ahead
of Wednesday. Golds and western
oils closed at their best of the day,
Papers, steels and manufacturers
were industrial bright spots.
eight months of 1954 of 159,027,670.
Here are the figures:
Sawlogs
Fir   	
Cedar ..
Spruce ..
Lodgepole
Pine .. ..
Hemlock
Balsam ..
White
Pine   	
Yellow
Pine   	
Larch ....
Birch . ...
Cot'nw'd
1954
8,952,645
1,846,444
4,241,811
586,821
2,384,009
•   294.972
1,942,979
714,585
7,911,851
12,621
47,600
1955
14,059,630
1,867,623
8,607,381
860,889
4,081,671
43^837
1.9-13,810
1,394,764
9,333,814
MONTREAL — Industrials
gathered fractional strenght in
moderately active dealings, the
session closing with a firmer undertone.
There were a handful of strong
spots and several new peaks were
established.
TOTAL .. 28,936,338 42,567,419
Total to end of
August . 159,027,670 260,282,996
MINOR   PRODUCTS:
Poles and piles, lineal feet, 261,-
156, 369,205; mine timbers, lineal
feet, 160.820, 48,830; mine props,
cords, 185, 278; hewn ties, pieces,
2261, 3402; cordwood 61, 186; fence
posts, cords, 978, 1032.
NEW YORK — For the second
session In a row, the market made
irregularly higher progress. Two-
day period of hesitancy followed a
vigorous rise Tuesday when the
market hit a record high level,
thus ending a reaction-recovery
cycle that began last July 25.
CHICAGO — Generally but
rather slow. Wheat and rye scored
gains running to about a cent.
WINNIPEG — Further export
buying of flax indicated more
overseas sales and parcel lots were
reported sold to the Continent.
Elevator hedging was on a lighter
scale and prices were generally
firm. Only routine dealings in oats
and barley and prices.
LONDON — A more confident
air but business showed no marked
expansion. Government issues
showed losses of up to % in the
absence of support. Selective
buying in leading industrials.
Steels and engineerings were firm
and aircrafts continued to make
headway. Dollar stocks were irregular.
TENDERS ACCEPTED FOR
TREASURY BILLS
OTTAWA (CP) — The Bank of
Canada announced Thursday that
tenders have been accepted for
$55,000,000 of government of Canada treasury bills. Average price
and average yield of the accepted
bids:
$40,000,000 maturing Dec. 9, 1955-
average price $99,573; average
yield 1.72 per cent.
-$15,000,000 maturing June 8,
1956—average price $98,530; average yield' 1,99 per cent.
News of the Day
RATES: 30c line..40c line black faco type; larger type rates on
request.  Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment
Whist Tonight Sacred Heart Hall        Fuller Brush Representative
Hall Mines Road at 8 p. m. Don E. Sargent - Phone 1335
Clear, sheet plastic, several
thicknesses. T. H. Waters &, Co.,
Ltd. Ph. 156, 101 Hall St., Nelson.
Cancelled tonight. Rev. Roberts'
meeting at First Baptist.
Best materials only used on your
shoes at TONY'S SHOE REPAIRS.
Pythian Sister meeting tonight
8 p.m., IOOF Hall.
White T-Shirts and navy blue
Shorts for gynv Tot-n-Teen Shop.
Check
Dandruff
With
Seborin
A new and positive
way to care for your
scalp.
ON SALE
AT
Fleury's
Pharmacy
FREE DELIVERY
PHONE 25  -
EAGLES SOCIAL  MEMBERSHIP
CLUB MEET8 TONIGHT
Plastic Drapes 54" x 84" in floral patterns.
STERLING HOME FURNISHERS
fi
Johnson's electric Floor Polishers for rent by the day. Phone 497
HIPPERSON'S
Classes in Highland Dancing
commencing Sept. 17th. For information and enrolment Phone
609-L.
Perma Bronze Oil Filter Elements for all makes of cars now
in stock.
NELSON HARDWARE CO.
Guaranteed Radio and
Television   Service
McKay St Stretton Ltd.
532 Baker St. Phone 1555
Half price Sale of Fabrics —
cottons, rayons, and prints. All
great values.
TAYLOR'8   DRY  GOODS
Chimneys cleaned and topped.
Furnaces, stoves vacuum cleaned.
Pounder's Chimney Service
Phone 1541-L-.
Now in stock! The new Simoniz
Body Sheen. ^Cleans and polishes
your car in one operation.
HIPPERSON'S
We stock a complete line of
general office supplies .and stationery supplies.
KOOTENAV   STATIONERS
i.   SPORTS   SHOP
Fall
Jackets■
We have a full  range of
Melton Jackets in
• PRO STYLE
• CAMPUS COATS
• REVERSIBUS
Be ready when Fall weather
comes in a Jacket from
UMORY'Q
LTD.   ^
'THE MAN'S STORE"
P
Civil Service
Commissioner
Bland Retires _
OTTAWA (CP) — One of. the
men- who helped introduce a system of choosing federal employees
for their capabilities instead of
their political stripe retired Tuesday.
He is Charles H. Bland, a member of the civil service commission
for 46 year and its chairman since
1935. Mr. Bland retired at the ag-e
of 69 after the government extended his term of office four
yearsJ beyond the normal retirement age of 65.
A native of Pembroke. Ont., Mr.
Bland joined the commission in
1909.
Pott Hope Cadets
Best in Canada
OTTAWA (CP) — The air cadet squadron at Trinity College
School, Port Hope, Ont., has won
the RCAF Association trophy this
year as the best cadet squadron
in Canada.
' Air Cadet League headquarters said Wednesday the Port
Hope group scored 1,988 points
out of a possible 2,000 to take
the trophy from last year's winner, No. 266 Squadron of Kimberley, B.C.
No. 103 of North Vancouver,
was the best squadron in western
Canada. Other district awards
went to: No. 177 TCA Squadron at
Winnipeg; No. 17 at Yorkton,
Sask.; No. 187 at High River, Alta.
and No. 135 at Vancouver.
Have the Job Done Right
VIC GRAVES
LIMITED
MASTER  PLUMBER
PHONE 815
J. A. C. LAUGHTON
OPTOMETRIST
VISUAL   TRAINING
„   Medical  Arts  Building
Suite 206 Phone 141
RADIATORS
CLEANED and   REPAIRED
RE-CORING
Jim's Radiator Shop
516 Front 8t
Phono 63
A8k Your Grocer for
Ellison's
U-BAKE BREAD MIX
Make,  Delicious  Bread  the
Easy and Quick Way
ELLISON MILLING
& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.
KEEP YOURSELF IN
GOOD HEALTH
Rexall
Super-Plenamins
.      Plus Vitamin   B12
Prices: $2.69 • $4.79 - $7.96
At Your Rexall Pharmacy
City Drug
Box 460 Phone J4
U
■ I ■ ■ ■
FOR FINE QUALITY
Rummage Sale by Junior Hospital Aux. Ladies, Capitol Theatre.
Sat., Sept. 10th, 10 a.m. Proceeds
to help furnish present and new
Hospital.
For your Tupperware parties:
In Nelson, Kinnaird, Castlegar
and Arrow Lakes area, contact
"Tupperware Dealer" Joan M.
Cochran, Nakusp, B. C.
Beautiful new fall Hats that
must be seen to be appreciated. A
small deposit will hold your
choice. Adrian Millinery, 259
Baker Street.
SPECIAL
2 pair of Breeding Budgies and
breeding equipment.
PHONE 910
MAC'8 FLOWER 8HOP
3  top  wool  brands  for  Indian
sweaters,   your   choice   of   Mary
Maxim, Polar yarn or Sportsman
All your knitting needs at
EBERLE'S ON  BAKER  STREET
Beautiful, solid walnut dining
room suite by Gibbard, $175.00:
also one dining room table with
four chairs, $25.00.
WE   BUY   AND   SELL   NEW
AND U8ED FURNITURE
HOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE
On Sale Now—Last year's carryover of snowsuits, winter jackets,
winter . coats — all first quality
merchandise at clearance prices.
EBERLE'8
Do it with Lewyt, the world's
only vacuum cleaner on big
wheels. Special offer $99.05, at
Jeffery Radio and Appliances,
Phona 1302.
HAIGH
TRU-ART
Beauty   Salon
. Phone  327
«r*»        676  Baker 8troet
CAMPBELL,  SHANKLAND
& CO.
Chartered Accountants
Auditors
19S3 CHEVROLET BEL AIR SEDAN
Two tone, conditionaire.
1953 FORD SEDAN
Conditionaire, seat covers, two tone.
1952 CHEVROLET SEDAN
Conditionaire, seat covers.
1951 CHEVROLET SEDAN
Seat covets. Conditionaire.
1951 STUDEBAKER SEDAN
Heater. Good Condition.
1951 CHEVROLET DELUXE SEDAN
Radio, Conditionaire, Good Rubber.
1948 PONTIAC SEDAN
1947 DODGE COACH
English Cars
1953 AUSTIN SEDAN
1952 AUSTIN SEDAN
1951 VANGUARD STATION WAGON
1950 AUSTIN SEDAN
Trucks
1951 G.M.C. Vz TON PICKUP
1950 CHEVROLET Vt TON PICKUP
1950 G.M.C. '/* TON PICKUP
1949 MERCURY Vi TON PICKUP
1949 DODGE Vi TON PANEL
SPECIAL
1949 DODGE Vi TON PANEL
Runs good. Only  _
*475
NELSON TRANSFER
COMPANY  LIMITED
LOCATED AT 323 VERNON STREET
