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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" '\u2022 4'\n \u2014 : : :\t\nBenes,\nCzechs\nHero of\n. Dies\nCo-Founder and Former President\nOf Republic to Have State Funeral;\nVisited Canada in Wartime Exile\nPRAGUE,,Sept. 3 (CP)\u2014Dr, Edaard Benes, co-founder\nof the Czechoslovak republic and its President until last June,\ndied at 6:15 p.m. local time today at his country home at\nSezimovo Usti. * .     *'      \u25a0 j\ni;: 'r Last Monday it was revealed that Benes, suffering from\narterlosehlecosisr (hardening of'the arteries), had tdken a\nsudden turn for the vworse. Tuesday when he lost consciousness\nBenes was said fo be \"sinking fast.\" He never regained consciousness. He was 64.\nAs soon as the news of Benes' death reached President\nKlement Gottwald and the government a special, meeting of\nthe Cabinet was called. f\nThe Prime Minister, Antonin Zapotocky, paid tribute to the ex-President's work; surveying! the history\nof his service to Qzechoslovakia\nfrom the time of the First World\nWar.   '   -.'v, i .  \u25a0'    .  i   \\\nThe Cabinet decided that a state,\nfuneral should be held, in, Prague\nand President Gottwald. and members .of the Jtoblnet sent telegrams\nof sympathy to Mme..Benes and her\nfamily..    '\u25a0.-. v    '.,' ,-.\"...'\nIt is * understood that, whatever\nceremonies take place, in Prague the\nburial, will be outside the capital.\nDr. Benes some time ago expressed\na personal wish to be buried in the\nvillage,ceibetery at Lany near\"his\nteacher and predecessor, the late\nThomas Masaryk.\nCANADA'8 GUE8T    .\nBenes was well known to Canadians. During his long wartime exile he visited Canada in June, 1943\nand stayed at Government House as\nthe guest of the then GOvernor-Gen?\neral, the Earl of Athlone.\nHe addressed both Houses of the\nCanadian Parliament, attended an\nofficial' dinner given by the Canadian Government received the diplomatic corps, talked to members of\nthe Czech forces stationed in Ottawa and visited ap R. C. A F. flying\nschool. -.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nFORESAW WAR\n1 In announcing Benes visit to the\nCanadian House of Commons, Prime\nMinister Mackenzie King recalled\nhis prophesy of war made,in November, 1938, In which the .Czech\nPresident had said he believed war\nwas inevitable adding:\n, \"I do not know when it will Weak\nout, possibly.in a year, perhaps, ln\ntwo or three. T personally- -doubt\nwhether it Will .take more .than, a\nyear. The first to.suffer will be Poland ... .-France, will suffer horribly\n..\u2022.-j Hitler Will;attack all\u2014in the\nWest.and eVentjtussia\u2014and.in,the\nend Anierica,too,-will be in.lt\"'\nMr King said' of * Benes:\n''.'He? has-a career of public service-that has beep equalled.by vefy\n\u25a0 few tafen iht the.-yi-prld's 'history.\"\nBenes,whs devoted yepcato the\nliberation of his people, twice saw\n\u2014\u2014-\u2022his -tieloved**CweKd\u00ablov_Rla' bow1\nbefore Totalitarian rule. '\"\nPRESIDED AT FOUNDING\nWith* the hero liberator, Thomas\nMasaryk he presided at the found-\n\u2022'**,\u25a0   ing of the Czechoslovak* Republic,\n, -, .born* out of the chaos of the First\nWorld'. War. , 1\nTen years ago Benes fought bitterly* against the .pact bf Munich\nwhlch.gSve his country over to the\ndomination of Hitler. He resigned\nthe Presidency which he had assumed in 1635 after the,defeat of\nMasSrykahd went ihtoejile in-the\nDR. EDUARD BENE8\nUnited States Britain and Russia\nrather than, yield to the .Germans.\nHe returned from, his,ling exile in\n1945, heading the wobbly Coalition'\nGovernment worjclng through almost three yearS of the post-war era.\nExhausted. .from , his labor, . bis\nhealth impaired, Benes .watched .tho\ngathering storm late in 1947, The\nCommunists were .bracing ?their?\nselves for a bid for power. The blow\ncame early in 1948. '   '\nRESIGNED JUNE 7    ,*\u25a0'.\u25a0?\". ,..\u201e.,\nHis, last year of life wasdoubly\nsaddened by. the coup' through which\nCommunists seized power in his Republic aniby.the;death plungesoon\nafterward'Of Foreign1 Minister. Jan.\nMasaryto.The'Forelgn-Minlster-'Wsis\nthe son of Thomas Masaryk,-with\nWhom Benes, helped to form the\nCzechoslovak-Bepublic in-1JI18.\u2022. ,; \u25a0\nSick and disheartened, Benes, re\nsigned as President June \"I,, rater.\nthan .sigh.the, new constitution the\nCommunists drafted. Klement .Got.*-\nsigned as President June 7, .rather\nwald, tbe Communist he had ap-\n^itntirtr#^^A\n.presented? a charter to Charles\nUniversity. There he pronounced\n'.testament!.        * :.. ?;\\ ?'\u25a0\n\"There oiri be nb-peaee'orealiri\nIn this world until there Is full\nhonor and respect of oneIndlvldu\nal for another.\"\nThe old statesman, whose people honored him to a pointer rev'\nerence, faded from the scene after\n'.that    :...'. ,   '\u25a0'\u25a0 '\u25a0'\"\u25a0.'\nr Mrs.,Benes was with him when\ndeath Came, She had been.constant\nly at his side during his fatal illness.\nSee Possibility of Heavy line\nShipments From Peru to Trail\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Sept, S \u2014 A\nsecond shipment to this port of zinc\nconcentrates from Peru, due to arrive abdard SS. Joseph Hooker this\nevening, raises. the? possibility of\nheavy regular ore shipments here\nfrbm South America.\nThe 5600-toji cargo ls destined for\nConsolidated -Mining and Smelting\nCo, smelters at* Trail. After treatment the the zinc will be delivered\nto consignee in New York.\nOre shipments were formerly\nhandled through Tacoma. The American handlers say that if the ore\ncan be handled satisfactorily and\neconomically through the. Fort of\nVancouver, regular movements of\nabout 25,000 tons annually, of 'ore\nwill be shipped here.    ...\nOre shippers 'say the present high\nprices of metals makes the shipment\nover great distances economically\npossible    .\nThe balance of the 8200-ton cargo\nof concentrates aboard-ther Joseph\nHooker consists of copper bound for\nTacoma The first shipment of zinc\nconcentrates arrived here 'in July\naboard SS. Santa Flavia,\nvo.\n%\nBailn ite*\n)c\u00a3cn.\nWEATHER FORECAST    7\nKootenay; Clear Saturday except\nfor cloudiness and widely scatteredI\nshowers along the mountains in thb j\nafternoon. Winds Southwesterly 18,'r\nLittle.change in temperature with\nhigh at Crahbrook 72, Crescent Valley 74. Sunday outlook clear and\nwarmer. -.'-.\n5 CENTS A OOPV\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA\u2014SATURDAY MORNING. SEPT. \u00ab\u25a0 1948\nNUMBER 1H'\nimvM\nTERRORIZED BY\nOperation Saves\nChild's Eyesight\nKilling in Pen,.\nShootings Follow\nFatal Gun Duel\nVICTIM DYING\nKINGSTON, Jamaica, Sept 8\n(CP)-rFour' more shootings and\nanother reported killing were added\ntoday to a vicious crime wave here, i\nstriking terror into the hearts of I\nJamaicans' \u25a0 \u25a0 |\nOne*prisoner is reported to have\nkilled another in the General Penitentiary from which Ivan Martin,\nwho; shot and killed two persons\nWednesday, escaped in April.\nArmed burglars, meanwhile, entered the home of. Rev. H. B.\nSwaby bf: the Lucky1 Hill Church,\nand dangerously wounded the-Presbyterian r minister, his- Wife and\nmother. All three now are in hospital in serious condition. ft,\nLaborer Jonathan Thomas was\nwaylaid by two gunmen on his way\nto work. Tbe bandits demanded\nmoney and when he refused he was\nshot in the chest' Thomas is reported, in a \"dying condition\" in\nhospitaL..   ,\\\n.Ivan-Martin, who escaped while\nhe was surrounded by police. He\nserving a burglary term, shot 'his\nWay to freedom Wednesday after\nkilled .Police Captain \u2022 Lewis and\nlater killed Lucille Voung in her\nhome after,she,refused,to.give him\ninformation of an alleged informer.\nEDMONTON K.C.\nHEA0S   .'V\n.Wall ASSOCIATION \"\nMONiTREAi, Sept-3 (CP)\u2014Stanley Hardwood McCuaig,v K.C, of\nEdmonton today 'was elected .President of.the Canadian Bar Associa\ntlon*.\n,* Succeeding .John Tv Hackett K.C.,\nOf Montreal, Mr..McCuaig--wlll be\nchairmbn ?of?'tHe 1^49 \u25a0 convention of\nthe .Bar Association at Banff, Alta..\n''A-.native-oi'Bairisville} Ont; hia\nwas.called to the: Alberta Bar In\n1019 andrwas made'a Kin's Counsel\nin 1934, Tbe new President has 8-en\na rAbncher: of'; .the >. Alberta Lhw\nSociety, iiribe .raas.j-andris'r'ar-phSt\n{JreSldeht- 'of the'. '-Edmonton ?Bar.\nAssociation. :\u2022       :',. \u25a0;,.\nA. member ,of? the Canadian Bar.\nAssociation for- 28: .years, -Mr. Mfl*>\nCuaig expressed the belief in. ..\ntot*rvie,w. ;thaj^rt)jte^i*remel.Cq'uM\nAct; should be amended to provide'\nthit.the court shojild,hbld sittings\"\nih one. central, point\" in Western\nCanada .and one In r.thb, Maritimes\nand that its jurisdiction be\ntended..  *, \" ,-*r .\nHe said he foresees the day*hen\nthe-Supreme-Court \"will be. the\ncourt of last resort fbr Canada.'\nGALS RIDE MORE, KNOW\nHORSES BEST SAYS JOAN\n..' TORONTO* Sept. 3* (CP)\u2014T4lce it\nfrom. pte^ty* Joan, Plckard of Winnipeg? women are-better than men' at\njudging horses.\n\"Stace -more girls' than'boys: take\nriding lessons, it seems logical they\nshould be more competent to judge\nthe- classes ln which junior riders\ncompete,\" said Miss Plckard, here\nto represent Manitoba'! in thb in-\nnior horse judging competition at\nthe Canadian National Exhibition.\nFractures Bone\nHOWSER, B. C, Sept 8\u2014Slip-\nping on a (.wet log While at work\nloading his truck,-WiC. Johnston,\ntrucker; for the Harrison Lumber\nCamp near here, suffered a painful\nfracture of a bone in his left foot.\nThe injured man was brought to\nHowser where he received first aid\ntreatment'from the attendant at the\nDuncan Lake Lumber Co.\n(AR DRIVING\nLua ANUKU5S, Sept. 3 (AP), \u2014\nWith her eyesight completely re-?\nstored, 12-week-*old Irene McDer-\nfnot was to fly back to her Victoria,\nB.C., home tbday.\nThe child Was'operated upon here\ntwo weeks ago to save her, from a\npossible lifetime of blindness from\nglaucoma. Further surgery was required on one eye lasV'wbekr  ..;..:\nHer par'epts, rMr. '\u25a0\u25a0 and Mrs.. Martin\nMcDermot,' brought her here for the\ndelicate?, operation. with, the aid' of\na lens perfected by a Los Angeles\nsurgeon; Thbrchild is''shown!here\nin the?arrds of-her mother\nSALES MANAGEMENT\nCOURSE FOR U.B.C.\nVANCOUVER, Sept 3 (CP)-The\nUniversity\" of British, Columbia today announced plans for a course of\nsales management during the cqm-\nwj term. . jewish underground group, is vhn-\nProminent   Vancouver   business i5lling in hisl\nexecutives with specialized experl-     \u2022   -\nence  will  lecture   and   lead   discussions each Tuesday.\nIRGUN YIELDS TO\nULTIMATUM\nBy CARTER L. DAVIDSON\nJERUSALEM,   Sept' 3, (AP)\nIrgun Zvai Leumi, tough, turbulent\nThe course.ls offered In conjunction with the-Sales Executive Club\nof Vancouver? !,\nLIQUOR COMMISSIONERS\nTO MEET AT VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, Sept. 8 (CP)-Cana-\ndian Association. of Provincial\nLiquor Commissioners will hold its\nannual meeting in Victoria next\nweek, W. F. Kennedy, BC. Liquor\nCommissioner, reported today.\nQUICKIES\nBy Ken Reynolds\n\"Well then If Ifs your ability\nlet's see you Increase bur sales\nWITHOUT using a News Want\nAdl\"\nA Jerusalem member ot the 11\nyear-old Irgun High Command told\na reporter yesterday: \"Our separate\nexistence is ending.\"\nHe hinted, however, that another\nunderground movement might arise\nto \"free Jerusalem from , foreign\nrule.\" Until now, Irgun has kept an\nindependent unit' here to tight, for\nJewish sovereignty over the Holy\nCity. . .,.\nThe spokesman said:\n\"Under pressure by the (United\nStates) State Department, which\nwas guided by Britain's Foreign\nOffice, the Israeli. Government :h,as\ngiven the Jerusalem Irgun an u'lti\nmatum to join'the Army or bo\nliquidated. We have decided to give,\nin and avoid a useless civil war.\"'- .\nNegotiations to merge Irgun completely with the Israeli,Army and\ndissolve .it as a separate force have\nbeen going on for. two weeks.'A\nfinal pact is expected in. a 'few days.\nIrgun previously placed, its fighters under Israeli Army oath Inside\nthe Jewish1 state, but maintained a\nseparate identity here, to fight for\nJewish sovereignty over Jerusalem.\nSIGNAL BRINGS RESCUE\nNEW. !XORK, Sept, 3 (AP)-Mrs,\nEarl Smith, who knows little about\nradio communication? managed to\nflash a garbled distress signal last\nnight when her husband, fell overboard from their yacht in Long\nIsland Sound. She was picked up\nfrom the drifting craft. The United\nStates Coast Guard, was searching\nfor Smith today.'\nFOR GRADE XI\nOn Selective, Triaf-\nBasis at First;\n30iD. Only This Term\nPLAN EXTENSION\nVICTORIA, Sept. 8 (CP) - Grade\n11 students in British Columbia\nhigh schools are to receive courses\nin car driving _s part of a Government program to improve driving\nstandards and reduce accident and\ndamage toll on the highways.\nAttorney-General Gordon S. Wismer and Education Minister W. T.\nStralth said today 300 students in\nselected high schools of the province\nwill be. given'the course* during the.\ncoming- school term. -        \u2022'\u25a0\u201e.*'.'\".j\nIt will l}e given on an experimental basis, at first, and will be so\ndesigned ' to allow fbr extension\nfrom year.to year,.\n: The students will be given classroom '- instruction; oh-'.driving technique' and'responsibilities, also, an\nadequate;-, i period of! ,behlnd-the-\nwheel-'drivlilg tinder qualified' instructors. \u25a0'. \"* \u25a0\"'\u25a0' :   \u25a0, '\nA committee is being set? up of\nrepresentatives of the Dept. of Education and the Motor Vehicle Branch\nof ..the,-Attorney-General's -Department to work out,. details of the\nplan. \u25a0 ',-'.'\n6000 EARS OF\nCOftN IbR        \\\nCARAVAN FEAST\nMECIICINE'HAT, Alta, Sept.8 '\nCCP)-r*Ah'oyt 30 membera of; the _ nr,nn       n\nMedicine Hat Chamber of Com-XiiAm KlIlttnAItt\nmercerare oulllng cook books to- riUlll rillllUUIII\nday lB*?8Barch of succulent recipes      -. .>,+ .  .;      '. \u25a0\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNo Paper Monday\nThe Dally News will not\npublish Monday, Labor. Day.\niiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii\nCOLDWELL (AtlS\nFOR SPECIAL\nFALL SESSION\nDeclares Freight\nRates> Costs Need\nEarly'Attention       :\nDUE JANUARY\nMitchum Case\nfor roasted corn.\n\u2022 The reason, for this housewifely\nchore Is the visit Tuesday of the\nOn-to-Nelson Caravan which Will\nbe greeted .with a community\ncorn roast and street,dance., The\nChamber of Commerce Is preparing some 6000 ears of corn for\nthe' Affair? \u25a0\nTwo carloads of businessmen\nWilt Join the Motorcade as It pro-\n..cepds on Its trip rto \u25a0 Nelson'.'.to.\npublicize. \u2022. Southern Trahi-Can-\nada Highway route. .\nHEAVYDAMAqE\nAS HURRICANE\nHJAKfeS^Si^D\ny,\\i'.:\n\u25a0_ST. JOHN'S',.Nfld., Sept. 3 <CP)-\nThe South coast M this island* today\ncbtuited its worst damage, in history\nin the wake of a hurricane' that\npassed out to sea. ,,\ni Plrst reports\/from coastal.villages:\nestimated' damage at more than\n$400,000. An-Anglican. Church w<s\ndemblished, two vessels were.driveh\nashore and a store had its roof\nblown off.\nMany fishing, stages were, badly,\ndamaged and a considerable amount\nof gear was lost Allen's Island reported 150 quintals of fish, swept\narway.!       >. '   \/\nAs in Cape Breton, .where the\nstorm did great damage but did not\ncause serious injuries, no casualties\nwere reported in Newfoundland.\nAfter its swipe at Cape Breton,\nthe hurricane struck Newfoundland\nearly yesterday. A heavy rainstorm\n'accompanying 70 mile an hour\nwinds damaged crops an dthe breakwater at Lamaline was badly\nbreached by raging seas,;\nHATZIC DYKE BUILDING\nFIRST JOB\nVICTORIA, Sept 3 (CP) - Rebuilding of the Hatzic dyke gets\ntop priority of the Fraser Valley\nDyking Board, Premier Byron\nJohnson said today. i\nBar Association Planslegal\nSurvey; Names Councils, Chairmen\nBy DON HUNT   r   <\n- Canadian Press 8taff Writer\nMONTREAL, Sept. 3 (CP) \u2014 Tlie\nCanadian Bar Association, today.'-set\nup. an eight-man .conimittec to plan\ndetails.for.a-.legal survey throughout rCanada.        \u25a0.\nPoints to-be considered'are:\nNumber, of lawyers'in \u2022 each district;' Whether some  districts  are\nover-crowded   and   others   Bttivt\nsatisfactory legal representation?\nWhether professional services by\nlawyers are at standard or below.\n, Study of,fbes,charged.    .\nStudy r of present systems of legal\neducation. ,;i.,, ,-;\u25a0,' \u25a0'\u2022\"-\u25a0*.\n..Study df-ethics1 of Bar Associ-\natiWis.'-    . \u25a0\"- \u25a0;.' '.\u25a0'' \"*\u25a0'\nThe Association earmarked $50,-\n000 r for .'the survey?    '\nFollowing a report by D. Park\nJamieson of Sarnia, Ont., on the\nCivil Justice SeCtloi),' a .resolution\nwat\/ approved, providing that, the\nquestion of abolition of. appeals\nto?V*e PrlvylCouncll be given prb-\n'. vlnclal aub-cam'mlttees. for discussion. The sub-committees are\nto report back at. the mid-Winter\nmeeting.     \u25a0\u25a0:'.\"\nWalter S; Owen of Vancouver was\nelected Chairman of the Civil Justice Section and W. P. Grbgory,\nStratford,'Ont, reelected Secretary.\n,. 3. A .Campbell of Vancouver Was\nnamed Chairman of a committee to\ndeal with finances and collections\nto assist the Bar-in Britain.'* Many\nof England's libraries. and? records\nwere destroyed or ruined in the\n#ftz.-\nElected to .the various provincial\ncouncils wefe:\nmarty, Calgary; J. H. V. Mllvain;\nJ. J. Saucier; M. L. Lieberman, Edmonton; G. J.  Gryan, Edmonton;\nG. W; Auxier; J. M. Robinson, Edmonton..   \u25a0 r .':>.,-,\nBritish Columbia\u2014J. B. Clearl-\nhue; G. F. Curtis, Vancouver;. L,\nSt. M. Du Moulin; T.'E. H. Ellis;\n?W. H. M. Haldane;.'Leon J. Lad-\nner; W. 8, Owen, Vancouver; J.\nO. H, Hutchison; G. L. Murray;\nDouglas Brown, Vancouver; Ernest Bull; Mr, Justice A. M. Campbell, Vancouver;  G.  L. Cbusley;\nHarley M. Hughes.     .  '   r\n,,Manltbba-rT( W.,Laidlaw; CrV.\nMcArthur, :Winnipeg; \u25a0 ,W.  S.  Mc-\nEWen, Winnipeg! J; A. MacAulay,\nWinnipeg; R. B. Mclnnes; H..G..H.\nSmith; George E. Tritschler, Winnipeg.           :,,','\u2022.       \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0::\nOntario\u2014H. J. Donley, Kenora.\nSaskatchewan\u2014A. L. ..Hall, Re-\ngina; T. H. Jameson, Regina; L. R.\nJohnson, MooSe Jaw; G. S. Kennedy;\nH.'- Er McKeown; P. McLellan! Areola; Sol Saper, Yorkton; G. H.\nYule, Saskatoon; L. G. B. Batten;\nP. L. Bastedo. , \u25a0 ' '.*.,,\nNAME CHAIMEN      s\nChairmen of the various committees were: \u25a0\nFinance, T. D'Arcy Leonard, Toronto; Investments,1 P. P. Hutchinson,. Montreal; Membership, L; V.\nSutton, Toronto; Constitution, G.E.\nAikens, Toronto; Viscount Bennett\nScholarship,' Oi IJ,. Steer, Edmonton; Canadian Bar Review, Alastair\nMacdonald, Ottawa; Legal Problems on International Organization\nfor Maintenance, of Peace, John T.\nHackett, Montreal; Statutory Law\niuuuhb wcc. \u25a0 . Changes,   J.   V. , Hogg,   yictpria;\nAlberta\u2014M,E. Mbscoviteh, Leth-: Judge5'.\"Balarles,T. P. Brais, Moii-\nbridge; D. W. Clapperson, .'Calgary;\nR. V Feiierty, Cajgary; W. B, dp'\ntreal;, Restoration. of the- Laws of\nCourt,, James .Campbell. VSncbuver.\nHOLLYWOOD, Sept\" 8 (At) \u2014\nThe District Attorney's office, moved\ntoday' for' a, county Grantf-Jury in\nvestigation into the\" marijuana'\nsmoking case Involving 'Robert\nMitchum, handsome film hero, and\nattractive actress Lila Leeds.\n! pistrict Attorney.' William %\nSlrnpson^announced that.thechair-\nIrian el the ^liry\"* Criminal Complaints Committee .has promsed- he\nwill recommeiid an Inquiry by the\nentije .panel Tuesday When the\ngroup resumes sessions., :\n:*Th6' four-^Mltchum,?'8|; Miss\nLeeds,. 20; dancer .Vickie Evans, 25;\nand a real estate .man, Robin Ford,\n31\u2014were, arrested ,-wiien-'city and\nFMeMi^.|rbbtlcs;<f\u00ab*cers,raided a\nW-^ae^' canybh -rhohie*.oi%Wd&*pj\nthe?two'?g(rls All'iW 'free* taifler\n$lOOO:bbnd?eaciti : '\u25a0'.\n' llhe motion, picture,. Industry,\nthrough \u2022'.* a, spokesm'an, Producer\nDore SehsiiT, appealed -to thb, public\nnot to \"Indict thb' entire working\npersonnel of 32,000 well-dlsc^plirted\nahd clean-living \u25a0 Ame'rlcSh citizens'\"\nIn the.iridusta- becanse of the Mitchum case.  '\"   \">\u25a0':.\nSchary, former production chief\nat RKO studio, Mitchum's principal\nemployer,';sald in a; statement i that\n''implications' that a widespread ,br\nconsiderable use ot narcotics, exists\nIn the motion picture industry, aire\nshocking, capricious.and untrue.'.'.\n\u25a0Police investigators said the\nMitchum raid was a first step, in a\nclean-up of the narcotics traffic ln\nthe film colony.\nMrs. Dorothy Mitchum, theactor's\nwife who was i returning from the\nEast with their two sons, was located in Las Vegas, Nev., where she\ntohj reporters: \"I am.undecided\nwhat to do,\" :.*:?:\nShe said she read the first hews\nof. her.husband's arrest on, arriving\nin Las Vegas. She and the children,\nJimmle, seven, and Chris, five, left\nearly today'for Hollywood.\nOne of Mitchum's counsel, Jerry\nGlesler, prominent criminal lawyer,\nissued a statement that-''there are\na number Of unexplained facts and\npeculiar circumstances surrounding\nthe raid . . . his many friends have\nexpressed the opinion that when all\nthe facts are known he will be cleared: Therefore we'ask.thepubllc.to\nwithhold its'judgment.\"    .*\u25a0',?\u201e    \"\nVANCOUVER, Sept? 3 (CP)\nEmplpyees.-.of 40 trucking firms in-\nVahcouveri New Westminster and\nVictoria will get pay boosts averaging $23 a month, effective Sept\n18, it was announced here today.:\nUnion Warfare Looms\nCoasts\nOTTAWA, Sept 8 (CP) \u2014 HI.. J.\nColdwell, .C.C.F. leader, today\ncalled for a special session of\nParliament to deal with freight\nrates and \"other urgent matters.\"\nMr.   Coldwell   said   that\nAutumn   session   Is   \"absolutely\nnecessary\" In view of the fact that\nthe Justice  Department has advised   the   Government' that* a\nRoyal Commission to study freight\nrates cannot be appointed without\nthe authority of Parliament.\nHe.also,declared that the \"ever-\nincreasing cost of living\" adds to\nthe necessity for an- Autumn session.\n. Parliament' is not due to meet in\nregular session'until the new year,\npossibly in January.   \u2022 \u25a0 i \u25a0:. \u25a0\u25a0;\nMr,.Coldwell;said:   '\".'\n\"Jri view of the fact that the Government has received\" an opinion\nfrom'the Department'Of Justice- to\nthe effect thatno Royal Commlssioh\non freight rates can, be appointed\nwithout the authority of Parliament,\nit now is \u25a0 absolutely hfcbssary that\na Fall session- of Parliament be\ncalled In r order to deal with- this\nand* other urgent .matters.\n, ''Without- further   delay .Parlia-\nmbrit Should*be.'asked'.'to provide\nthe authority, so that all discriminations now existing in the freight-\nrate'' -structure *will be?',examined\nwith a view to their removal-\n\"A? Fall  session : of  Perliamehf\nsho-ild.al50.be caUed-'Upoii^to^de-lr!\"^\nw'fth.- the: 'lever^hereasirig\" corjt?:\/it v\nllVMg ahd the -lns|ste_tt.public'.'de-\nmaiid for- price* cohtrbls. \u2022 and; sufe\nsldies\" '-   '\n(A.F.L. to Attempt to Take Over All\nCanadian Ship Labor, Chase\nSeamen's Union Off Great Lakes\nBy JOHN LE3LAISIC '.'.   M\n-Ganadian Press Staff Writer '?'\" ?. |\n: .OTTAWA^' Sept. 3 (CP)\u2014Extension of tjie <3reat Lak^'j\nShiji) UniOn warfare to both copsts loomed todgy as ipart;of'\nthe new labor battle to smash Communism in'rCoriadicin unions.\nPitobabilityof afight on the'cbastS? wo$'Indicated Jri;\ndisclosure by the Seafarers' International: Union (A.F.L.), of:\nits Intention to try to take .over all sKip'lqbor in. Canadaas.d\nsetjuelto its absorption of J. A? (Pat) ;Sull,lvan's'Cariadlari\nLake Seamen's Union. * '\u2014r^-r*\u2014,\u2014:\u2014-Tr-\"\u2014\u25a0\u25a0*-\u25a0?\nThe 80,000-member S.I.P, which\ndropped a bombshell into Canadian\nlabor this week by moving into the\nGreat .Lakes-field, at present'has a\nsolid- hold on Canada's coastal\nshipping in the.Pacific in addition\nto thb, estimated- 3000 men it picked\nup from the C.LrS.U. on the Lakes.\nAlan Macdonald, Canadian District representative forHhe.SXU.- at\nMontreal,'told The Canadian Press\ntoday, its next move will be an attempt tb chase the Canadian Seamen's Union (T.L.C.) off the Lakes.\nThis line of action apparently\npointed to rah enlargement of the\nwarfare that, has raged on the Lakes\nfor months, between the CLrS.tJ.\nand the Canadian Seamen's r Union,\nalleged to be dominated by Communists.  *:? ;.'?.\u2022\nThe - former C.L.S.U., new the\nCanadian' division of the 8.I.U.,\nwill.: .have, the backing.. of 7 the\nAmerlcah, parent? union: In.f uhds,\npersonnel' and, moral support,\nMacdonald said..'  \u2022\u25a0   \u2022 *' .;*.*\n\"We're going to. send In organ\nIzers everywhere there are'shlps,\"\nhe said.: \"Our' aim Is to organize\nevery veuel lo the- oouirtry?7.v\\\nAt present Macdonald estimated,\nthe C.S.U. has somewhere the same\nmembership of the ,S;I.U. *.bn\/the\nLakes. Though the S.I.U. meii are\nentrenched in only four companies,\nthese have  among 'the biggest* of\nthe inland fleets, including the 55\nship Canada Steamship Line?.\nI On ;C^ni|da'S(AtIapttevCbSst;:.t3ie\nS.I.U. now'has no membership. The\nFIND MISSING\nPLANE\nr WINNIPEG, Sept 3 (CP) \u2014A\nmissing i pontoon - equipped... Norseman aircraft carrying a _tew,cff\nfour has-been found in the Kee-\nwatin, District of the North West\nTerritories, 80 miles West of Baker\nLake, R.C.A.F. officials announced\nhere tonight Baker Lake is 580\nmiles North bf Churchill, Man. All\naboard the plane were safe.\n: The plane, missing since yesterday, was sighted late today and two\nof the men,' FO. Arthur MacMillan\nof'Winnipeg and Fit Lieut N. A.\nKeehe, his cb-pilot Were evacuated.\nTiie other crew rnembers, Maj.\nLewis Lavallee of Quebec and Cpl.\nA.\" E. Lemonton, St Vital,. Man.,\nwill be picked up Saturday.       ,\nPriest Released\nWARSAW, Sept. 3 (AP)\u2014Polish\nSecurity Police released' Msgr.\nZygmunt Kaczynskl from prison\ntonlght'after retaining him.for 72\nhours. He Is the chief spokesman\nfor the Catholic hierarchy In Po-\n\\ land. \u2022\nAn '.official announcement said\nMsgr. - Kaczynskl, confidant and\nclose friend of August Cardinal\nHlond.S Primate of Poland, would\nbe kept under surveillance pending completion of a Security Police Investigation.,\nA Government j spokesman said\nMsgr. Kaczynskl was arrested In\nhis apartment behind All Saints'\nChurch In Warsaw .Tuesday and\naccused of \"anti-state activities.\"\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllUIIIIIII\nPAIR SET INTO ROCKIES IN SEARCH\nOF FABULOUS, LOST LEMON MINE -\n'    HIGH'RIVER; Alta, 8ept. 3\n' (CP)\u2014A new search Is under\nway for the long-lost, fabulous\nLemon Gold Mine, believed to\nbe located oyer.a,mountain pais\nseveral * \"pack horse\" days West\nofHIgh'RIver. . .' :\u25a0.\u2022\"; '\n? Since  Its reported  discovery,\n.In.1870 by two men knbyyn as\nLemon and Blackjack, stories of\n'Its riches have overshadowed,\ntale's, of mystery and r death\nwhloh,have,stalked those who\nHave attempted to;f|ndJt,..;?\nr Two veteranmlhers from Vel-\nlowknlfe In the North West.\nTerritories are the latest to try.\nto penetrate thi curtain which\nshadows the hidden mine's location. They are Albert Peterson\nand Jack Hunt   I\nThe   pair   left   High   River\nearlier'this? W\u00abek* and'hesided \u2022\nacross,the. British, Columbia bor-\n.der Into the Caha'dlah'RockTe'tV\nwith their exact destination a\nsecret.\nThey believe they have a clue\nthat will write the final line In\nthe 80-year-old history of .the .\n. legendary mine. The clue is a,\nsample of gold orb picked up\nsomewhere In the Rookies West .-\nof High River by Peterson while\ntrapping In British Columbia In\n1934. ':\"\". .,.':*\u25a0.*.\u25a0-f\"'. :\u25a0\u25a0:';-.\nThe sample was found on i\ntrlp from the headwaters of the\nHlghwood River over a mountain pass to the Elk River District of B.C. Legend has placed\nthe lost mine in the same area;\n, Peterson, who collects rock\nspecimens as a hobby; showed\nthe gold ore sample to his friend\nHunt at Yellowknlfe a few\nweeks ago. Hunt, ah experienced\nprospector, had the sample assayed and found it was almost\n10 times, as rich as ore frbm\nmany mines operating there.\nThe two men Immediately\ncame here and set out on their\ntrip Into British Columbia.\nThe Lemon Mine Is reported\nto have been found In 1870 by\nBlackjack and Lemon while\nreturning to Montana from a\nprospecting trip to the North\n\u2022Saskatchewan River,\nAccording to legend,' Lemon\nkilled his partner following an\nargument the,day the mine wat\ndiscovered, later became Insane\nand was never able again to\nfind-It.  ,.    .'.-,\u2022'.\nA Stoney Indian named Daniel Benhow, who, legend says, -\nwatched-Lemon and Blackjaek\nflna the?mlne, agreed to lead a\nparty to the location In-the\nearly 1900s but died mysterious- r\n5y the night before It was to:\nhave been reaches.        \u2022-.\/.\nC.S.U. ls in control there, both in\nthe coastal and deep-sea trades. ,It\nalso has \u25a0 a hand in directing the\nCanadian Fishermen's Uiiion in that\narea. .  \", - :\u2022' .   \u25a0 '\u25a0. vi?\nWELL DUG:IN,, iV\nOn the British Columbia .side, the.\nS.I.U. claims to be well dug-in ia\nthe coastal trade. It has made;,a\nlittle headway in organizing the.\ndeep-sea vessels oh the West .Coa*-!,\nBut for the most, part the bl'ii.V\nwater ships are tinder the CS.Ui ?\nTheS.LU.-C.L.S.U. amalgamation\nWas a part of the anti-Communist\ndrive, arrived,by .Frank HS11,1 foe m\nCommunism who. Is Canadian Vicb'f\nPresident of \u25a0.'.\u2022' the', JS.F.L..'-TXtB.-\nBrotherhood of Railway and Stealay\nship Clbrks.*\", \u25a0; \u25a0 \"'?\u25a0..,''',,?\u25a0,!#\u2022.;\n8PECIAL; MEET CALLED V, *,i^\nIn another move in' the' war';oif\nCongress Leftists, officers oj.'28,;W*\nthe Congress' International unions\nyesterday? -'bahded'! themselves tm\ngether \u2022 as an - anti-Communist bloc\nto. attempt a house-cleaning of Hedf\nin that organization at its OcWber\nconvention in'-: Victoria. . Hallr lis\nchairman\" of the gfout. &\nTodayt. -President rPercy  Bei_*>-\ngeugh of the T.L.C. called; a ip%\nelal meeting of that body's exeeriV \u25a0\ntlve herb'tbr.'iSept 10 to oSalwIW.?\n- Hall's part\"In'the-union.iiierg>i_r:\nwhlch.'he- declared, contrary ffl\nCongress   policy,'  and   with   .lib\nformation? of \"|the anti-Red' _rb*l&V\n..\" The   Preside-),   suggested \u25a0 dl-\u00bb\n} elpllnary-, actlbh'\/of  ebme 'kind\nmight bb taken. - * \u25a0'-'\u25a0 \u2022 ?.{  j\nUnableto Lure Reluctant^ehribers '? im\nInto Cabinet; Strike \"Fhreqts?Scare \"\nOff Interior Ministry Cdn^idates  \u2022     M\n.'     By ROBERT WILSON 777   .*.\u25a0' ']\u25a0\"'\n.   PARI8, Sept. 3 (AP)\u2014Rndlcal-'Boelallst Leader Andre Marie, wheat\nFrench Cabinet collapsed a week ago, may bb asked to form o new one,\nIt appeared tonight In any case, no candidate for tho.premiership will\nbe chosen until tomorrow.\u25a0\u2022\"\u25a0\u25a0*. .  :\u25a0..-.\u2022:.\u25a0: '\u25a0,\u25a0.\n'Premier-Designate Robert Schuman gave up trying to form a new\ngovernment today and the prospects grew that France would haye to\nhold new national, elections to work herself out of the current political\ndeadlock.' ..'*. i\" : \u25a0\nlUllllllllllllHllllllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllimillllllllllHIIIIII!,\nPARIS, Sept. 3 (AP)\u2014Premier-designate Robert Sehumjarir,\ntoday abandoned his attempts to form a new French Govern**\nment. .- :\u25a0   'fl\nThe leader of the middle-of-the-road Mouvement Republican Populdire had..labored since Monday night In jon \u25a0\neffort fo lure reluctant politicians into a government for whlth\nmany foresaw nothing' b_tt: a*~\nshort, troubled life.'\nSchuman announced his decision\nto President Vincbnt Aurlol after\nfutile negotiations with other party\nleaders on construction of a workable coalition. \"'\nDespite his endorsement by the\nNational Assembly Tuesday\u2014by the\nmargin, of 11 \u25a0votes\u2014Schuman was\nunable to draw, enough Parliamentary support to build a cabinet\nYesterday the Socialists, a strong\nfactor in the previous moderate\nGovernments, refused to enter a\nSchuman cabinet because they disagreed wjth his economic policies,\nparticularly, with regard to keeping\nWages down in a war on rising prices.\nPROBLEM GROWS\n\u2022 Schuman's \u2022 action threatened the\ncountry with- deeper political tumult. France has had no Government\nsince the-Radlcal Socialist (Censer-\nvativei Premier, Andre Marie, 'resigned barly 1 last Sa'turdby. Marie\nhimself had succeeded Schuman,\nwho, had quit as Premier when the\nSocialists refused to support him on\na military budget item.\n. Serious doubts were 'expressed\nthat anyone would be able to form\na Government, at the present time.\nThis presented France \u25a0 with the\nproblem of how to proceed with its\npresent legislature.\n...human blamedr'selflsh poll-\ntlcat bickering\" for hW failure.\n\"I attempted to Ignore the,old\npolitical formulas, but. I did not\nfind-the necessary co-operation,\"\nhe said.\n' The Interior Ministry post was\nbelieved   a  key  to  the  failure.\nOther parties were reported to\nhave rejected the post because the\nministry controls police and would\nbe responsible for order In the\nevent. of  serious   labor  trouble.\nEven now throughout France numerous token strikes are In progress, protesting the rising living\ncosts. Some circles even talked of\nfostered By ;the Communist-dominated Confederation Generals du\nTravail,' ','     .-39\nHOPE FOR ELECTIONS\nFollowers , of - Gen.  Charles D\u00bb\nGaulle expressed; hope   that  ths\nSchuman failure - will force new?.\nelections.   \u2022 \u25a0 . ' .        '.'      .\u25a0' %\nDe Gaulllsts appear certain that lf\nParliament Is forced to call new\nelections their Rightist. Reassemble-\nment du Peuple Francais (R.P.F.)\nwould win a near majority.\" Neither\nthe R. P.' F.'hor the Communist-\nhave taken part \u25a0 ih French third?\nforce middle-of-the-road , Governments;   \"       \u25a0' \u2022\" \" \u25a0\nFinal blow to Sehuman'e-effertjr-\n1 came with what lobby elrbles describe as an astute manoeuvre by\nDe Gaulle supporters.\nSchuman offered the key post\nof Minister of Interior, to Fran\"\ncols -Mitterand,  member of the\nDemocratic  and  Socialist Raits*''\ntance Union, a group largely supporting De Gaulle. -rjfi\nThe Union agreed to accept only\nIf the Government would agree\nto hold departmental council elections., A bill to postpone them le\npending? Schuman was believed\nto have refused..       i'\"',        $3\nDo   Gaulllsts   believe  that they\nwould have won a heavy majority\nin these council. elections\u2014similar\nto civic elections throughout France\n\u2014and ln so doing wouldbave beoff\nable to force general election.   \u25a0 .'.-.;\"\nThieves Raid\nOcean-Going Jeep\nMONTREAL, Sept. 3 (CP)-fie8\njamin, Carlin, who recently attempT\ned to cross the Atlantic.: in a coi\nverted Army Jeep, says thieves stb!\nphotographic materials valued-\n$200 from the seagoing vehicle. ,,\nThe seafarer and his wife are due\ndepart for Halifax during the\nto\nweekend, where they. will renew*\n  _  .   .  .. their attempt to cross the Atlahtie\nthe possibility of a general strike, I on a trip around the world.-*   (1\nA.\nMB\n 2.\u2014 NELSON DAILY NE^S, SATURDAY, SEPT.4, 1948\nLAST TIMES.TOI?AY-^SHOWS AT 2:00-7i00-9i00\nIWHaPHESHftS\nMICKIV\nMIAN. \u201e'\ntxntuw\nSet Schedule\nFor Caravan\nFrom Ihe Hal\nSunday Midnight, 12:01 a.m.\nSTARTS MONDAY AT 2:00 P.M.\n*MH*\n, wf cR  HV0VQV1 wi\nMiiMW WOMB\nI C. H. Knopb, Executive Secretary\ni ot the Northwest Pacific Trade\nj Association, Seattle, and H. 0.\n| Baker, President of the Standard\nOil Company of B.C.,'Vancouver,\nare to be guests at the On-to-Nelson\nCaravan, banquet Sept, 10, Caravan\nofficials announced at Nelson Friday.\nMeanwhile, a schedule has been\ncompleted, which shows the progress of the Caravan or Motorcade\nfrom Medicine. Hat, Alta,, on to\nNelson.       '\nThe cars leave the Hat at B a.m.,\narriving at Lethbridge at 10:18 a_n,\nfor a welcome cererpony and\n\"brunch,\" They are due at Macleod\nfor the' Indian ceremony at 12:30\npirn., then proceed West tb Coleman.\nCeremony and refreshments are\nscheduled lor 2:45 at Coleman.\nExact times for arrival at Fernie\nand Cranbrook have not ybt be.eh\nset '      '\nThe groups leave Cranbrook at\n9:30 a.m. Sept. \u00bb after a breakfast\nsponsored- by the Cranbrook and\nKimberley Boards of Trade. They\nate to be at Creston at 12 o'clock\nnoon for a ceremony and lunch,\nand leave there at 2:00 p.m., for\nKootenay Bay to start crossing\nKootenay Lake on the Anscomb.\nFind 'Tire Set\"\nHILLIERS, B. C, Sept. 3 (CP)\u2014\nOrigin of the fire which destroyed\nthe $22,000 public school here Aug.\n1 was today attributed to arson by\nR. J. Holllday, Assistant Fire Marshal\nThe announcement came after\nHolllday, who has been Investigating the blaze along with the attempted burning of a small church\nat nearby Coombs, discovered a\n\"fire-set\" under a leanto at tha rear\nof the Hilliers Community Hall.\nA bundle of eight matches bound\nby a piece of fleece to a slow-burning fuse, wss found near a bundle of\nsacks believed soaked in gasoline\nThe set failed to ignite.\nExplain Selective\nStatus of\nAmericans Abroad\nInformation concerning the selective service status of American citizens abroad has been received from\nthe American Consulate at Vancouver.\nIt follows:\n\"The only registration procedure\nwhich has until now been proclaimed under the provisions of the Act\nof June 24, 1040, applies to men ln\nthe age bracket 18 to 25, Inclusive,\nwho are in the Continental United\nStates, Alaska, Hawaii, Puerto Rico\nand the Virgin Islands. It Is, of\ncourse, certain that procedures will\nbe prescribed for the late registration of American men who enter the\nUnited States or any of the territories and possessions mentioned above\nsubsequent to the date prescribed\nfor the.initial registration. .\n' \"The President has not yet Issued\nMATERNITY CAMP\nAT KOOLAREE\nOVER WEEKEND\nFraternity Camp will be held at\nCamp Koolaree over the holiday\nweekend for campers who hav^ attended regular'Summer sessions In\nformer? years., il will be the ust\ncamp of the season.\nAbout -30 ex-eamper* front various Kootenay centres, principally\nNelson and Trail, will take advantage of the three-day session. Fred\nRobins of Trail will be Director.^\nFraternity Camp is held annually\nat Koolaree.-  *>;.'\u25a0\u2022\n*5'\"~ - ^&? *rfl\nj \u2014oi \u2022 motion plefur*\niVMtrvooii\n\u00bb-_\u25a0 r\n.mad. yoti wort to goto\nAnti-Semitism\n. M.Wood\n.'large gathering of Nelsonltes\nFriday filled the chapel of ThOmp\nson's funeral Home to pay last\ntribute1 to W. M. Wood, Mr. Wood,\nwho until a month ago was employed at a machinist by the C.P.R., had\nlived in Nelson 30 years.\nThe services, held under the\nuspibes of Nelsoh tbdge. No. 93\nA.M., were led by E. C611IH-I\nson, Acting Master. \"Abide With\nMe\" was sung by the congregation,\naccompanied by Mrs. W. A. Min-\nAlexander Spence\nretires as\nc.p.r. blacksmith\nAlexander Spence,* with Kootenay\nDivision, Canadian.Pacific Railway,\nsince 1031 as a. blacksmith iri the\nLocomotive Department, retired\nWednesday. His successor is E. A.\nLawrence of Calgary. \u2022-    ... ,    \u25a0\nMr. Spence. entered the C.P.R,\nservice in January, 1928, as a black%\nsmith at Revelstoke. He came here\nin April, 1931.,\nRotarians To\nSpend Weekend\nAt Coeur d'Alene\na proclamation, establishing procedures for registration of men ln\nother parts of the world. If, at some\nfuture date, the President issues\nsuch a proclamation, the Department will, of course, inform all Foreign Service offices in the premises\nand will Issue full Instruction as to\nthe procedures to be followed.\"\nHarrop Student\nWins B.A. Degree\nHARROP, B.C., Sept. 3\u2014Susan\nBerry, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nBerry of Harrop, who has-been\nstudying at U.B.C., Vancouver, has\nobtained the degree of Bachelor of\nArts.\nBy RICHARD TOMPKINS\nAMSTERDAM Sept. 3 (API- A\nreport te the World Cpuncll of\nChurches today,. condemned -anti-\nsemitism, it took no sides In the\nArab-Jewish Conflict in Palestine.\nA committee of tbe World.Council called upon Christianity to work\nfor \"order in Palestine\" and took\nthe view the Church ahould offer\nrelief tor victims of the warfare In\nthe Holy Land \"without discrimination.\"   ,??' ?   r .   .\nThe report pti the \"Christian approach to the Jews\" came before\nthe World Council for action today.\nThe report called upon aU Christian churches to make the Jewish\nquestion a concern of their own \"as\nwe share with them (Jews) the results of our too brief wrestling with\nit\"\n\"We must acknowledge ln all humility that too often we have failed\nto manifest Christian love towards\nour Jewish neighbors or even a resolute will for common social justice,\" the report continued.\nA SIN\n\"We call upon all the churches\nwe represent to denounce antl-semi-\ntlsm, no matter what its origin, as\nabsolutely irreconcilable with the\nprofession and practice of-the Christian faith. Antl-semitlsm Is a sin\nagainst God and man.\"\nThe committee * recommended\namong other things that member\nchurches of the \u2022 World Courieil\nshould-\"seek to recover the univer\nsality of our Lord's commission by\nIncluding the Jewish people ln their\nevangelistic! work.\"  \u2022;.\nFruitvale Auxiliary\nTo Entertain\nVititing Bishop\nFRUITVALE, B. C, Sept 8 \u2014\nFinal arrangements were made at\nthe regular meeting of the St, John's\nWomen's Auxiliary to entertain Rt,\nRev. t. P. Clark, Anglican Bishop\nof Kootenay, when he visits the\nparish on Sept. 19, which will be\nln the term bf a social afternoon. A\nhall cleanup bee is to be held.   .\nRefreshments were served. Those\npresent were- Mrs, George? Ross,\nMrs. H. C. bbvis, Mrs? W. H. God-\ndard, Mrs. Jack Startup, Mrs. Mel\nSadler, Mrs. Fred Young, Mr?. El-\nburn Olson, Mrs. F. M. Barrett and\nMrs. D. Shorting. *\nMembers ot Nelson Rotary Club\nthis weekend sre motoring to Cour\nwhere they.will be\ne Cour d'Alene Rotary Club.    -    '\nA number of Rotarians left Nel\nson bt the organ.\n. Members of the Eastern star,\nalong with the Canadian Legion,\nNelson Branch, th* Legibh Wdmen'S, .,\u201e,      ,\u201e ,\nAuxiliary   and  membera   __  tta.&Alene, Wash,\nMachinist Union attended. , \u00ab\u2022\u2022, \u00ab\u00ab?\u2022!* \u00b0* \u00ab\u25a0\u00bb Cour !\u00bb\nLodge men formed open ranks at\nthe chapbl doors, through which the\ncasket was carried to the hearse. At\nthe graveside S. J. Newell, President\nof the Canadian Legion, read the\nburial service.\nPallbearers were C. Barrett, J.\nDraper, Peter Thorn, W. Armstrong,\nJ. McClelland and C. D. Pearson.\nInterment was in Nelson Memorial\nPark..\nThe Weather\n. Synopsis \u2014 Showery' unsettled\nweather has been general over British Columbia with isolated thunderstorm activity being reported over\nSouth Eastern Vancouver? Island.\nGradually clearing conditions are\nexpectbd over most of the province\nas the district comes under the In*-\nfluence of an extensive area ot high\npressure. With the development of\nmore settled conditions over the\nprovince there appears to be every\nprospect of a fine weekend.\nNelson  ......'    BT    7\u00bb\nMontreal     01    79\nToronto\/....     BB\nNorth Bay     48\nPort Arthur          B2\nKenora    ....! 84\nWinnlpej- ...; .?.\u201e.    81\nBrandon _..:     BB\nThe Pas 81\nRegina .\n80\n76\n77\n84\n91.\n89\n83\n.02\n.01\n74\n84\n74'' ,\u00ab-\n!gll\nSaskatoon\nPrince Albert    ' 80\nNorth Battleford .... B8\nSwift Current  .?.., 88(\nMedicine Hat ,...,  BB\nLethbridge   \u201e.  58 \u2022\nCalgary ..._.:.. 48\nEdmonton ..' ._..-..? 41\nKamloops .._.....,. 81\nPenticton \u2022 '.. 49\nVancouver  83\nVictoria.. ?.......  51,\nCranbrook   58\nCrescent Valley  S3\nKaslo      *  56\nPrince Rupert   49\nPrince George   43\nGrand Forks  S3\nSeattle  B4\nPortland -.....'...-.-..\u25a0.  51\nSpokane   49*\n.Chicago.....:.....,......,.....' 64\nSan Francisco ?  62\nLos Angeles ...!  65\nNew York   64\nWhitehorse-  38    47 . ,.80\nCalgary Priest\nGives Mission Here\nRev. John O'Rlelly of Calgary IS\nvisiting Nelson. He Is to give ajrtls-\nslon at the Catholic Church.ln Fair-\nview for a week.\nGarden Party Nets\n$20 for Hospital\nCom'\n-Tha direction of wind over water\ncan be determined by studying the\nshapes of the waves and the shadows they cast\nG.H.JONG\nChinese Herb Specialist\nEstablished 29 years In\nCanada\n- Herbal Remedies for\nI        all ailments\n.817A\u20141st St East, CALGARY, Alta.'\nWins Maitlond Trophy\nVANCOUVER, Sept 3 (CP) -\nNamed by club trustees the. most\nvaluable man on his team, Salmon-\nbellie's Ike Hildebrand, top intercity league scorer, is boxla's Malt\nland Trophy winner for 1948.-\n1 The cup was donated by the now\ndeceased R. L. Maltland, former\nBritish Columbia Attorney-General.\nPhone  144 for  Classified  Service,\nn=\nB'&K\nDAIRY\nMASH\nPuts the\nCASH\nIn Your Pocket\nRRACKMAMER MILLING Co.\nROSSLAND - NELSON\nWWW*\nBOSWELL, B.C., Sept. 3\u2014A garden tea was held at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Eric Bainbrldge, in\naid of Creston Valley Hospital and\nunder the auspices of the local\nHospital Auxiliary. Mrt, Eric Bain1-\nbridge, Mrs. Norman Bslnbrldge'and\nMrs. E. Whitney were joint hostesses. \u201e\nThe lawn and garden made an\nIdeal setting for the prettily decorated tea tables.\nMrs. George Stevenson of Des\ntiny Bay won the contest.\nA guessing competition was.won\nby Mrs. J. Borysowlch of Trail. .\nMrs. W. L. Hepher, President ef\nthe local Auxiliary presented the\nprizes and Secretary Mrs. A? Mackie\nannounced the total intake as $20,\nget quick results with a \"Want Ad\".\nGraphic Art Exhibition, Firsf of\nlis Kind in Nelson, Opens al Library\n88\n87\n64\n66\n87\n71\n53\n59\n70\n69\n73\n89\n82\n78\n101\nTr\n.13\n.0.7\nLODGES HOLD\nJOINT SERVICES\nNEW DENVER, B.C. Sept. S-THe\nanual joint memorial services of 'the\nNew Denver- Knights of Pythias\nLodge No. 22 and Lucerne Temple\nNo. 17 New Denver Was held ln\nthe Knights of Pythias Castle Hall\nfollowed by the decoration services\nat the local cemetery in the evening. >\nMembers marched In a body from\nthe Knights of pyth|as Castle Hall\nto the Turner Memorial United\nChurch where the service was conducted by Adam Johnson. Mrs. Les\nR? Campbell was organist and Mrs.\nGeorge Graham of Silverton soloist:\nThe choir sang an anthem. Vases of\nmany beautiful flowers decorated\nthe church.     :\nKiwanis, Rotary\nFastball Grudge\nTussle Nears\nson Friday afternoon and the remainder of the party will drive\ndown today. About 40 are expected\nto make the trip; '\u25a0:'. .:, \u25a0\nEntertainment at Cour d'Alene\nwill Include golf, picnics and boating.   \"\ninter-club visits between the Nelson and Washington Rotarians have\nbeen conducted for several years.\nCour d'Alene paid Nelson an annual\nvisit last Summer,\nAnnual Tennis\nTourney in Trail\nFollowing are the draws for' the\nannual Labor Day. Tennis Tournament being played in Trail and\nTadanac over the weekend, engaging players from Rossland, Warfleld,\nNelson, Trail and Tadanac'\nSATURDAY\nMEN'S 8INGLE8\n2 p.m\u2014Otto' Olsen vs D. Yerex;\nH. f. B. Dudney vs E, Haley; L.\nEvans vs D. Graham.\nLADIE8' DOUBLES\n3 p.m.-Mrs. E. Halliwell and Mrs.\nM. Millican vs Miss Busby and Miss\nHewitt -,\"\".''\nMIXEp. DOUBLES\nN. Rhodes ahd Miss C. McLennan\nvs G. M. Anderson and Mrs. J. V.\nRogers; B. Rennison and Miss N.\nTiedje vs D. B. Smith and Mrs. D.\nB. Smith. ''\u25a0-.\" -\u25a0'\u25a0*;\nMEN'S'SINGLES '\n4 p.m.\u2014S. E. McKinnon  vs D.\nWilson.  \u25a0 \u2022'.*'.'\/'\nMEN'S DOUGLES \"'\nD. Yerex and D. Graham vs H. F.\nB. Dudney and T. Ommonney.\nMiXEO OpUBL'ES   *\nShutek ahd Biter vs M. Wilde and\nfi. Tjirex. \"' , \u25a0\/\u25a0 ?.* ..'\u25a0',\nMIXED DOUBLES\n5 p.m^-W. O. Williams and Mrs.\nP. Halliwell vs S. Rothman and Mrs,\nR. BroWn.\nMEN'8 SINGLES\nW. H. Johnson vs G. M. Anderson\nIt. Brown vs. V. Rhodes.\nNelson players will hot draw until\n10 a.m. Sunday.  ',     ''?\nv Veterans and junior events will\nbe drawn later.\nThe date for the Klwanls-Rotary\nsoftball tussle, brewing since early\nSummer. Is nesring with the clubs\nstill in heat of controversy.\nIt has been, rumored that the\nRotarians have held a practise but\nnothing official has been learned.\nThat the Rotarians,has little talent\nto climb the hill was suggested but\nthe fielding staff, quoting the same\nsource, is strong enough to recruit\nsomething resembling a team.!\nOnly silence has been Issuing\nfrem the Kiwanis camp tor.the past\nweek. The Kiwanians,' somewhat\nthe younger Club, have several\nmembers who have been away from\nSpotting circles for 10 or is years\nand are obviously banking on their\ntender years to see them through\nta victory.\nAmong other things, slated to\nhumiliate the losers will be a round\ntrip Ah the recreation grounda track\nat.the handles ot a wheelbarrow,\nthe' vanquished club president to\nsupply the' horsepower. W. A. Hendricks, Kiwanis President said the\n\"barrow had better.be rigged up\ncomfortably as he's used to \"solid\ncomfort\" when he rides.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIII1IIIII\"'IU-Ill!ll!ll\nWomen's White 3-Pieee\nSummer Play Suit\nRegular $13.00\nSalt $5.95\n8 ONLY\nWool Suits\nRegular $30.00\nSale $1495\nFINK'S\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nllillllllllllllllillllllliiliillillliiliilllllil\n\u00b1AST*SECOND PLAY\nWINS FOR STAMPS\nWINNIPEG, Sept 3 (CP) - A\nlast-play 35-yard forward pass Friday night gave -Calgary Stampeders\na 10-5 victory over Winnipeg Blue\nBombers here. The win was Calgary's third straight league victory\nand leaves them atop the Western\nConference. standings.\nThe crowd of more than 5000 was\nstarting to leave the park .when\nStamps took the ball with? 12 -sec-.\ndnds remaining and Bombers apparently headed for a 5-4 victory.\nKeith Spaith tossed a 40-ysrder incomplete and theh wound up his\nslingshot arm for the game-winner.\nIf was- anti-climax for the victory-\nhungry Bombers who were snowed\nunder by Stampeders 30-0 victory\nat Calgary last (week.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia  010 000 00O-1 7 1\nBoston 000 800 OOx\u2014S 8 1\nLeonard and Semenick; Sain and\nMasl.\nPhiladelphia   010 000 000-1 7 1\nBoston  \u25a0'\u2022\u2022, 000 880 00 -3 3 1\nLeonard and Semlnlek; Sain 'and\nMasi. \u25a0''\nNew York '\u201e'. 300 020 002- 7 12  0\nBrooklyn  000 800 002\u2014 5  8  1\nHartung, Poat Koslo (8) and\nCooper; Hatten, Behrman (1), Branca (81. Casey (9) and Campanella.\nNew York  022 020 00-78 8 1\nBrooklyn  010 002 00-3 8 1\n(Called end eighth\u2014darkness)\nHansen and Westrum; Ersklne,\nHatten (3), Minner (8) and Ed-\nChicago \u201e; 000 351 010-10 17 0\nPittsburgh, ...... 000 100 000- 1  8 0\n- Meyer and Walker; Queen, Single,\nton (4), Lombard! (5) and Kluttz,\nAMERICAN LEAQUE\nWashington OlOrOOO 001-2   8 0\nNfew York ?... 801 000-20X-8 10:1\n- Thompson,-Harris (8)'and Evans;\nLopat and'Houk\nWashington .: 000 0*0 020 2 8 1\nNew York .r........ 020 030 00 -3 70\nWynn and Early, Evans (2), Sheet\nand Niarhos.   '       '\nCleveland  ...iMft 220 020--7 13 0\nSt Louis ., 000 000 000\u20140  8 0\nLemon and Hegan; W. Kennedy,\nBiscan ..(8) and Moss..  '.\nDetroit _  000 010 103\u20148   8 0\nChicago 00a 002 000\u20142 10 0\nHutchinson and Swift; Wight,\nJudson (9) ahd Robinson.\nBoston 100 000 100\u20142 8 0\nPhiladelphia    000 000 OOO-O 4 1\nDobson and Tebbetts;.Schelb.Snd\nRosar. -    \u25a0-. \u2022'\u2022   \u2022 <.-\u2022. ,\nCleveland  000 000 210-3 10 0\nSt. Louis   102 100 00 \u20144   9 0\nZoldak, Gromek (3), Black (8)\nKUeman (7) and Hegan; Ostrowskl\nand Moss.' \\\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nRochester 11, Buffalo 8\nNewark 4, Syracuse 8\nBaltimore 5, Jersey City'i_S|\nMontreal 4, Toronto 14\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis 9, Kansas City 1\nLocal Swimmers\nQualify for\nCertificates\n'AAAA '     .   ;\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\nSwimming classes at the Lakeside\nPark were capped Friday by qualification tests tor junior and Intermediate swimmers under the direction bf a certified .Instructor.\nAll of the applicants for the\njunior lind intermediate classifications passed their'tests. The pupils\nhad been training for the inspection for the two Summer months\nand breezed through \"me compulsory list of water trials with flying\ncolors. They were coached by Miss\nKitty Wilson, Instructress.\nBight swimmers qualified for the\njunior certificate and pin.' They\nwere Mary Kay Clark, Shellah McPhail, Barbara Williams, Loretta\nSutherland, Dona Spence, Joan Hancock, Ann r Hancock, Snd Gary\nFoxall.\nIntermediate applicants to pass\nthe tests were Sheila Paterson and\nJune Sutherland. Successful applicants will receive the Intermediate crest, pin and certificate.\nBand Organization\nMeeting To Be\nCalled Next Week\nA general meeting to organize a\ncity band will be called next week,\na gathering of musically Interested\ncitizens decided at. a parley at the\nArmories Hall Friday.night.\nDuring a roupd table confab Friday night formation and acquiring\nof Interest of a band group were\ndiscussed. \"In order to make the\nband a success we must find tile\npublic . reaction to support- and\nsound out the possibility of it functioning,\" said E? G. Hopper, Organizer, after the meeting, J\nFLOOD RELIEF        j\nDANCE EARNS $226\nFRUITVALE, B. 'fc\u201e Sept. 3 -'\nFruitvale Community Flood Relief\nDance Committee statement on the\nFlood Relief Dance held July 9, revealed that $226.53 was turned over\nto the TraU Flood fund. '  .\nAll organizations aided ln this effort.    Z ,\u25a0 .,*.. .. .,..\"\u2022 ... -\nPHILLIPS\nMILK  OF MAGNESIA\nTABLETS\nKootenay Residents To Enter Info\nVariety of Pastimes Over Weekend\nFirst, of Its kind to be brought\nto Nelion, in Interesting exhibition of graphic works by Alberta\nartists opened at Nelson Munl-\n. olpal Library Friday. Tha collection will remain here until about\nSept 25,\nSponsored by the Calgary\nbranch of the Federation of Canadian Artists, It Is being shewn\nIn Nelson under the auspices of\nthe Nelson Art Club. Nearly a\nscore of artists, principally of\nCalgary and Edmonton, are represented In some 46 works.\nKeynote of the exhibition is variety. There is variety in the type of\nwork (lino-Cuts, carbon pencil and\npen and ink sketches, lithographs,\nengravings ahd silk screen prints\nare included), subject-matter, style\nand degrees of perfection,\nAlthough some of the works are\ntrifling, a few fine examples ln the\nvarious graphic mediums are noteworthy. In this group are \"Uncle\nArch,\" Carbon pencil study of an\nelderly man. by a Bowness artist\nwhose versatility is apparent ln an\nultra-modern crayon work entitled\n\"Ukulele,\" \"Edmonton, A1 b a r t a\nFarm\" and \"Northern Lights,\" silk\nscreen prints, the odd pen and ink\ndrawing ahd others.\nMore than half the exhibits are\ntor sale.\nExhibits are: \"\n\"Violinist,\" \"Railwayman,\" \"Woman add Stove\" and \"Man and Bottle\" by Maxwell Bates of Calgary;\n\"Halifax\" and \"Bookplite\" by Mrs.\nD.*P. Barhouse of Edmonton; \"Elevators: South Edmonton\" by Mrs. F.\nA. Richards of Edmonton; \"Plsnt\nForm\" by Winona Y. Brantoh of\nCalgary; \"Cabaret\" by 'Kathleen\nKetcham of Calgary; \"Parliament\nview, Edmonton\" by Mrs. G. F.\nChappelle ot Edmonton.\n\"Roosters,\" \"Fishing Village, Steveston-, B.C.,\" \"Head of Youth\" and\n\"Still .Lite\" by Cliff Robinson of\nCalgsry; \"Sweet Peas,'' \"N6rthent\nLights' .'and \"Edmonton, 1947\" bf\nGeorge Weber of Edmonton; six\nstudies of jungle life, entitled \"Memories' of the Far East\" and heraldic\nehgravlngs by Herbert Earle; \"Ed-\nmontoni Alberta Farm\" by Mits. R.\nHaley of Edmonton..\n..\"The -Old. Fire Hall, South Edmonton\" by Nona Hodgson of Edmonton, now of Victoria;. \"Old. Arctic Ice House, Edmpntoh\" by Mrs.\nS. | Hunter, of Edmonton: \"Lithography,\" \"The 'City,\" \"Christmas\nShopping\" ahd \"Broadway at 125th\nStreet'? by W.'F, ttwln 6f Calgary;\n\"Bal\u00abr-and \"Centre Street BJrldge\"\nbyMiss K. Martin of Ca)gary.' :\n\"H.Urtda Playing,\" \"Ant-lope Zoo\nStudy,\" pi)go ends for school reader\n\"Young Explorers,\" and illustrs-\ntions for \"Gay Dogt and Dark\nHorses\" by Illingworth H. Kerr of\nCalgary; \"Back r Lane\" and \"City\nGrowth!'\u2022 by Margaret Mllligan of\nCSlgary;.\"Uncle Arth.\" \"Solitaire,\"\n\"Ukulele\" and \"Buildings\" by J.\nMcL: Nicoll of fewness, Alta.:\n\u2022.\"Drawing\" by Marlon. Nlcjll of\nBowness. .Alta.;..\"Ducks, BeaviT\nLake,\" \"The Deer,\" \"Two Indian;\n\"Church,) Midnapore\" and \"Ducks\"\nhy Isabel StadoJbauer ef,Calgary.\nLabor Day weekend will bring\nout crowds of Kootenay sports fans\nand picnickers, that is, if the weather doesn't put a crimp ln the whole\nthing.\nMany holiday goers will converge\non District centers staging Labor\nDay programs, others will embark\non fishing and hiking trips, and\nsome will swim and laze on beaches.\nMotor trips to United States will\nbe the order of the day for some,\nalthough others will stay home for\na day of leisure.\nTrail itself will be the scene o{ a\ngiant three-day' celebration beginning Saturday. Weekend sports will\ninclude a swimming regatta, baseball and track ahd field events. In\nthe Arrow Lakes area, Edgewood\nls sponsoring a Labor Day whirl.\nMany East Kootenay residents\nWill head for Fernie, where Golden Jubilee celebrations are to be\ncombined with  Labor Day celebrations. In the West  Kootenay,\nFrultvale's Fall Fair and Livestock\nShow Is expected to draw hundreds In the Trail, Fruitvale, 8almo\nand Nelson areas.\nTo tha North, Howser has a big\nLabor Day program lined up, aa\nhave a number of other District\ncenters, Dances are to be staged\nIn almost every town.\nThere will be no letter carrier\nservice in Nelson Monday, However,\nNelson Post Office wckets will be\nopen frbm 8 a. m. to noon and the\nlobiy\/intll 6 p. m.\nFORMER ATHLETIC\nSTAR DIES\nVANCOUVER, Sept 3 (CP) \u2014\nHarold (Dutch) Eckhardt, 65, one\nOf British Columbia's all-round\nsport figures,. died here Thursday.\nEckhardt was one-time B.C.-pole-\nvault champion, a member of the\nex-Normals basketball team when\nthey wprr the provincial chempiont\nship, a baseball player and a football star.\nTo Organize Life Membership Group\nFor Greater Canadian Sports Interest\nMONTREAL, Sept. S (CP) -\nGeorge C. Machum, President of\nthe Amateur Athletic Union of\n. Canada, s<\\ld today a membership\ngroup will be organized known as\nthe Honorary Life Membership\nAssociation ef the A.A.U. of C.\nThe move Is In connection with\nthe Union's plans te create greater\nInterest and participation In sports\nIn-Canada.        ,\nAlj the same time he released a\ncopy of a letter sent te all Federal\naid Pbvinclal Cabihet ministers\nasking their \"blessing on our effort.\" \u25a0'.*'; '-\n'The A.A.U.of C. head saia \"w4\nwill build up our finances beyond\nany extent previously thought -of.\"\n. At the sports hedy's annual meeting in London, Ont, in November\n\"we Will organize for the British\nEntire Games in New Zealand irt\n1950 and hope to institute an Snnual\ncampaign for funds that Will make\nthe task of participating in the Empire arid1 Olympic Games much\neasier.\" \".-\u25a0 U-\n- The letter te cabinet mem)>srs\nacross Canada said In part:\n\u2022 \"The   recent   Olympic   Games\n' has- focunsed our attention and\nthat of all citizens of Canada en\ntne matter of athletic development 'In this country, and has\ndemonstrated clearly that there\nIs a lack of organfted effort\n\"The Amateur Athletic Union of\nCanada has long realised the necessity for greater participation in\nsport \"ahd recreation- by our youth,\nand feels It haa a-distinct responsibility In the battle to raise the\nstandard of physical fitness In this\nDominion ...\"\nBRfflTHFflSY\nrm\nASTHMA\nAND HAY FEVER\n0RCATHCA9VOF CANAD*   t TD\nVANCOUVER    B C\n\u2014_*\nCUNARD WHITE STAR\n..;;,\u201e,...,,..',.,\nPASSENGER SAILINGS CANADA TO EUROPE\nTO LIVERPOOL\n1\nASCANIA\nSept  \u2022-..\u25a0,-.\n\u00ab\u2022;:?..rfrom Montreal\nASCANIA\nOct    8\n.:. :. ,\"    Montreal\nASCANIA\nNov.    5\n\"    Montreal\nASCANIA*\nDec.    .1\n\"     Halifax\n8AMARfA\nDec.  10\n\u00bb     Halifax\ni* Calls at Greenock\nTO SOUTHAMPTON\/ '!:}.\n' '    '       '    . '!',... \u25a0\u25a0'\nAQUITANIA\n8ept 18\n.     from Halifax\nAQUITANIA\n? Oct.    7\n.,   \"  \"    Halifax\nAQUITANIA\noet 28\n\"    Halifax\nAQUITANIA\nNov. 18\n\"     Halifax\nAQUITANIA\nDec. tr9 .; \u2022*?'.\nPao.' '30 ' '* ,*,\n\"     Halifax\nAQUITANIA\n\"    flall'ax\nTO LONDON\nSAMARIA\nOet   2\nfrom Quebeo\nSCYTHIA\nOot.   18\n\"    Quebeo\nSAMARIA''\nNov.   8\n\"    Quebeo\nSCYTHIA\nNov. 20\n.    \"    Quebee\nSCYTHIA    .:-.-\nDec 24\n' \u25a0*\u25a0 . Halifax\nRATES OF PASSAGE\nSCYTHIA, SAMARIA \u2014 Flat rato $176.\nASCANIA \u2014 Tourist   $140. 1st Class from $210.\nAQUITANIA .     \u2014 Tourist   $180. 1st Class from $220.\nREGULAR SAILINGS PROM NEW YORK\nQueen Elizabeth Mourontanla Queen Mary\nParthla Brltannlo Media\n'. Apply to your local ogont Or to\nCUNARD DONALDSON LIMITED\nGeneral Agents\n828 West Pender St., Vancouver, B.C.'\nT**--\n ^ipim^ipppiii^^iipi\nyofcS>\nSPORTS\nN. York Swimmer Wins\nWorld Event, $5000\nBy JACK GRAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO, Sept 3 (CP) -\nStephen Woznlak, 33, of Buffalo,\nN.Y., today outlasted a field of\n64 to win the men's world professional swimming championship\n\u2022nd $8000 first money In the Canadian National Exhibition's annual 10-mlle swim. His time was\n4-29:18. j\n, Second place money of $2500\nwas taken by Ben Gaze) of Toronto, who won the race last year\nwhen Woznlak was third.\nJerry Kerschner, 23-year-old\n(Wimmer from Columbus, Ohio, who\nled until nearly the eighth mile,\nheld on to take third-place money\nof $1000. He seemed exhausted from\nthe gruelling race through choppy\nLake Ontario as he climbed tip the\nfinish ladder.\nFourth prize of $750 went to Bob\nPirie of Toronto, finishing his first\nprofessional race.\nSeventeen-year-old Cliff Lums-\nden of suburban New Toronto swam\nup, touched the finishing ladder to\ntake fifth place and swam away\nagain. He had dropped his swim\ntrunks off on the last halt mile.\nHandlers ln his boat tossed him the\ntrunks and'he headed back to the\nladder. He won $500 and' Immediately presented the check to his\nmother. y\nTne final money-winner, Jacques\nAmyot of Quebec City, took Sixth\nprize of $250 by climbing up the\nladder -5:16:55 hours after the start\nof the, race,        ';;,   , \u25a0   f.i?,\nFinishing times of the four after\n.Woznlak, were: Gazel, 4:34:29; Kerschner, 4:36:07; Pirie 4)41:35; Lums-\nden 4:57:16.\nI Besides the $5000, Woznlak won\n$150 in lap prizes tor leading during\nthe last* three miles. Kerschner\npicked up an extra $350 for leading\nat the end ot each of.the first seven\nlaps of the race, swum inside the\nbreakwater on the C.N.E. waterfront \u2022\nWoznlak staged a great driving\nfinish to come .from third place ln\nthe early going.\n. Gianni Gambl ot Ravenna, Italy,\nwho recently conquered the Eng-\n|lish Channel, Was among tlve swimmers taken out ot the. water before\nthe three-mile mark. The 40-y.ear-\nold Italian, flown here for the race,\nsaid he found the pace too fast\n| Among those taken out about the\nsame time was Lloyd Knight of\nLethbridge, Alta.\nCanada's Mopes High\nFor Open Qolf Xftle\nTORONTO, Sept\" 8; (CP) - A i\nstrong contingent of United States\nprofessionals will contest the Canadian open golf championship at\nVancouver's Shaughnessy Heights\nClub Sept 22-25, the Royal Canadian Golf Association announced\ntoday,  '.:\nThe R.C.G.A. issued a list ot 27\nAmericans who have f'l-d- tr.iir;es\nin the $10,000 72-hole medal play\nclassic, won last, year by Bobby\nLocke of South Africa, Locke will\nnot be on hand to defend his title.\nHe is returning home after a strenuous round- of tournament play in\nthe U.S. ;'-\u25a0?.\nDespite the strength of the U.S.\nshotmaklng brigade, some golf\nexperts look eh this as Canada's\nyear and figure the Dominion has\nIts best chance to keep the title\nat heme since 1941 when Bob\nGray of Toronto placed ascend.\nThe last time a Canadian won was\nIn 1914 when Karl Keffer of the\nRoyal Ottawa Club came home\n\/ In front\nThe chief Canadian hopes are\nStan Lepnar-d and Fred ' Wood,\nboth 'Vancouver pros, who have\nthe advantage of playing a fam\niliar course,\n. Other Canadians with a chance ot\ncopping tophonors include Henry\nMartell of Edmonton,' foraner Canadian amateur champion who\nturned pro this year, Gray, Stan\nHome of Montreal and Dick Borth-\nwlck. of Hamilton.\nTwo of the Americans\u2014Ed Fur-\ngol and .Ellsworth Vines \u2014 have\nplayed in every Canadian open\nsince they turned pro. Vines, once\na tennis, star, made, his strongest\nbid in the open two years ago at\nMontreal Beaconsfleld.\nOther Canadian' entries: Skip\nAlexander,- Ky Laffoon, Ralph\nBlomquist,' Lawson Little, George\nBolesta, Ray Mangrum, Dave Douglas, Cary Middlecoff, Eric Monti,\nMarty Furgol, Bill Nary, Fred Hass,\nJr., Ed Oliver, Boh Hamilton, Johnny Palmer, E. J. Harrison, George\nSchoux, Fred Hawkins, Al Smith,\nClayton Feafner, Jimmy Thompson;\nJim Turnesa, Gene Webb, Herman\nKelser and Ted Nelst\n, Other Canada pros entered Include: Jules and Rudolph' Huot of\nMontreal, BUI Kerr of Montreal,\nGordon Brydson and Willie Lamb\nof Toronto.,\nBraves Back on Top;\nDiMag Slams 3 Homers\nBy STEVE ROBERT80N\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nLike a housewife trying to get along Ih the faoe ef high prices, the\n\u25a0Boston  Braves Friday made, the most of what they were oblo to\ncollect\nIn Boston's case It was a measly three hits which they managed to\npry off, Dutch Leonard of Philadelphia, but the Braves put them together for a 3-1 victory oyer the Phils.\nThe National League leaders were handcuffed by the veteran\nrighthander who set them down In order In all Innings except their\nthree-run fourth\u2014when Jeff Heath came up. with his.17th home run\u2014\n' and the eighth. 4\u2014 ' .. .   '.. ., '\u2014\t\nOn the Boston mound, Johnny\nBain' doled out seven hits while\nchllking up his 17th victory. The\nonly score he allowed was Eddie\nMiller's 13th .four-bagger.\nMeanwhile, the fifth-place New\nYork Giants gave Boston a break\nwhen they swept a doubleheader\nfrom the second-place Brooklyn\nDidgers, 7-5 and 7:3. The losses lett\nthe Brooks IVi games out of first\nplace.   ;*,..;\u25a0\n' Manager1 Leo Durocher, leading\nthe Giants to their third win in as\nmany starts ln Brooklyn since he\ntook  over  the  New York  reins,\nSambled with two secondary start-\nlg pitchers and got  away  with\nboth.\n. Clint Hartung, who started r the\nepener, failed to get past the fourth\ninning but Andy (Swede) Hanson, a\nseldom-used righthander, went the\nroute ln the nightcap to register his\nthird victory of the season.\nHanson had allowed eight hits in\neight Innings when the.game was\ntailed on account of darkness.\nIn the only other National League\n? tontcst, the lowly Chicago Cubs\n'went oh a hitting Spree to overwhelm the Plttsbi--;h Pirates 10-1.\nRuss Meyer; allowing only five\nhits, picked up his 10th wtar Mel\nQueen.the first of three Pirate pitchers, was tagged with the defeat\n\u2022OX TIGHTEN FIRST     ,\nBoston Red Sox hung ontb first\nplace in the American League with\na 2-0 victory over Philadelphia.\nJoe   Dobson   set   the   Athletics\n1 down with four hits as he hung up\nhis  15th  victory. Birdie i Tebbetts\naccounted  for  the second  Boston\nrun with a homer-In the Seventh.\nTebbetts' circuit blast was the\nonly earned run oft Carl Schelb\nwho went the distance tor Philadelphia.\nAt New York, Jolting Joe DiMagglo went on a batting rampage as\nhe blasted three home runs and\ndrove In seven tallies as the Yankees took a doubleheader from Washington, 6-2 and 5-2,\nDiMagglo hit his 30th and 31st\nhomers and drove in four runs in\nthe first game. He connected with\ntwo oh in the first Inning and again\nwith the bases empty in the third\noff starting and losing pitcher Forest Thompson. Lefty Ed Lopat limited the Senators to six hits in posting his 15th victory.\n-In-the- nightcap;* tHe New York\noutfielder poled his 32nd round-\ntripper with two aboard in the fifth\ninning. Frank Shea went the distance for the Yanks.\nAnother twin bill saw Cleveland\nand St Louis split\nBob Lemon pitched the Indians to\na 7-0 victory in the first game but\nthe Browns came back to win the\nsecond game of the twi-nlght bill\n4-3.\nLemon allowed six hits \u2014 all\nsingles-\u2014as he posted his 19th victory. Manager Lou Boudreau, Eddie\nRobinson and Ken Keltner each\nbacked him up'with home runs.\nThe Browns kayoed starter Sam\nZoldak early In the second game\nwith a two-run uprising and went\non to win.\nAt Chicago, Vic Wertz's pinch\nsingle sparked a three-run ninth-\ninning rally for Detroit as the\nTigers defeated the White Sox 5-2,\nBrowns' Rally One Short as Procter\nTakes Over Semi-Finals Opener\nWeekend Golf Draws\n84 Entries; StonW>\nTownshend Favorites\nA bumper crop of golfers will contest the Ken MoBrlde Memorial\nand the Kootenay Breweries trophies en the greens of Nelson Golf\nond Country Club thlt weekend.     \u25a0 ''\",'\nThe men's'Ken McBride Memorial Trophy, boasting 88 entries, Is\nfavored to be a tots iipAetween Roy Stone and Harry Donaldson of\nTrail. Donaldson It pretent holder of the silverware, but Roy Stone In\nhit qualifying lepra matched Donaldson stroke for ttroke to-hang up\na trim 89. Other low qualifying scores were reglttered by W. 8. Ross\nand R. Nesbltt both 71, while Carl Carlton qualified Jutt ono point\nMp.  * \"\"' \" ' '\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4,194B \u2014>|\ngoi\nthe running for the Kootenay Breweries Trophy. Mrs. B. Townshend,\nwinner of many a golfing tussle ln\nthe Kootenays? qualified with 88\nlast week while Mrs. W. Fergle was\nfour strokes up.     \/,-\nQualifying scores and draws follow: ''\nKEN  McBRIDE MEMORIAL\nQualifying scores\u2014Roy Stone\nIvor   Price   78,\nVlckers 79, F. E. Broughton Jr. 79,\nT, R, Wilson 79.\nStan Angus 79, B. Townshend 80,\nW. Anderson 80, E. Aldous 80, Ted\nMolyneux 81, James Wright 81, Art\nParker 81, Dr. W. Fergle 81, F.\nBlackwell 82, Trevor Jones 82, Alec\nBy CLIVE FLEMING (Issuing two free passes to load the]$j\u00a33. Mumv1S_MI4?J W\nThree  Infield tingles, a triple bases. Mikkleson popped up to the ^^ M L M. M?Bridto 85\nahd a homer netted 8am' Brown't pitcher and the runner at first wasiBUuln \"' u * Mcunae \u00bb\u25a0\nfastballers six runt In the seventh caught  off the  base  for  a  twin\nInning, but wat one counter thort killing,  leaving  second  and! third\nat Brown't fought desperately to occupied.\npull the opening game of the I Gibs McMullin! was then gifted\nsemi-finals out of the fire. That with a three bagger, the tight\ntriumph put Procter one game up fielder lying prostrate when the ball\nIn.the first tet of playofft for the sailed over him after he lost his\nright to play the Puoksters, who footing on the grass. McMullln pro.\ngot a bye Into the finals.- The ceeded home on a wild delivery by\nNelsonltes came through  In the Jack Brown, adding three runs to\n142,  Mrs. J.  Harrop  136,  Miss  N.\nSimpson 148,\nSUNDAY;,\"\nSecond Flight\n8:20\u2014Stan Angus, Eric Aldous;\n8:25, H. Lakes, A. Fife; 8:30, Bruce\nLatremouille, Pr. W. Fergie; 8:35,\nTrevor Jones, L. M. McBride; 8:40,\nF. Blackwell, J. W. Butling; 8:43, A.\n,. -     t\u00bb-   -,j      <\u2022\u201e iir-ia t\u00bb ui M- 'arker, James Wright; 8:50, M.\nHarry Donaldson 69, W. S. Ross 71,iBarb       ffed MolyIjgaux; 8;B5> w,\nIR. Nesbltt 71, Carl Cwlson W A. Anderso.*,-8. Townshend.\nDonaldson 73, C, Splat 75, W. Duck-|Ch,m ,\u201e\u201e\u2022,\u201e,    p|| w\nworth  75, James Allan. 76, _Mlke    9 a;m., H Donaldson, G. Splatt;\nVerzuh 77, John  -ner 78,  G. W. 9.05(   w_   Duckworth,   c.   Carlson;\nWheatley  78, Jvor  Price  78,  W. 8;19 L Prlce c. Wheatley; 9:15, J\nProcter's credit, the score Jumping\nto 9-3. Bill Brady singled to open\nclutches twice to make the con\ntest a contest but they let Procter\nget too far ahead. -'?-,\nWith two gone inthe top of thetlnued home, shoving the count to\nup the bottom of \"the fifth and con-151' \u00ab'\u201e,\u00b0\"u\n10-!\n. Mel Mikkleson mt for the circuit\nin the sixth to score what was to\nbe   the   winning   run.   McMullin\nfirst inning, Bill Brown drew j a\nbase on balls and proceeded around\nhome while pitcher Gibs McMullin\nwas having control trouble for,ah,\nunearned   run   to'   send   Brpwn'a followed   up   with   a\u00bb safety,   but\nahead one to nothing. Jack Brown,[ couldn't get past the keystone sack,\nwho got the pitching chore for the\nlocals,   and   he   too   had   control\ntrouble, walking three and allowing a single, three runs.\nAfter Jie reached first on anerror\nSegcott reached first on a fielder's\nchoice, and moved to third on\nGordon Brady's hit through the Infield. Segcott scored. on a passed\nbali to put Procter ahead 4-3. >\nWith Jimmy Heuston on first on\nA. B. McRone 85, W. Penman 85,\nL. A. McPhail 86, A. H. Allan 86,\nT. S. Shorthouse 86, W. Kapak 87,\nR. L. HorswiU 87, F. Field 87, J.\nYoung 88, R. L. McBride 88, L.\nRonlf 88, A. Sllverwood 89, R.\nEvans 91, H. Peacock 93, W. Bush\n93, Frank Broughton Sr. 94,- E.\nGraham (94, Jack Molyneaux 94, R.\nMain 95.\nDr. P. Kumagal 96, J. Ar Stewart\n97, W, J. Waters 98, H. E. Patterson\n97, W. Bunyan 99, G. K. Burns 99,\n100, F. .Aydon 101, J.\nGreer 101, G. Gelinas 101, D. Hood\n102, N, Tattrle 102, O. Harper 107,\nT. Mansell 109.\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES\nTROPHY\nQualifying scores\u2014Mrs. B. Townshend 86, Mrs. W. Fergie 90, Mrs.\nWith ohe gone in the top of the S'TiC'os rut., r dBftSKMSS oi\nseventh Jack Brown homered into ^\u201eLak\u00aba \"=' \"\u00bb V\"m\u00a3 tL%\nright Held.-Bob Wright, Stan D.on- ife **\u25a0&\u00bb\u00abrrop 98, Miss Jessie\n0\u00a3\u2122. \u201enj mil n*.n,I-n \u201e;ni,\u201ej \u201e_IGentles 98, Mrs. M. E. Allen 104,\nMeld sate\u2122 to Tore Wright|Mrs' J' Youn* 106' Mre' F' Field \u00bb\u00ab\u2022\nby the Frpcfe catcher, Sam Brown 'leaving first an dsecond occupied.!\u21225' *' ,PeS\"e*L n^fe-,5'\ntripled into the right field pasture Beresford, filed out to second tor \u2122'\u00abc\u00bb\u00bb 1,1\u201e5'\"\"' JJ;oPatteprrs,0\" l3\ndriving in Beresford. Ted Swales the second out of the inning. TomlMi<l\u00bb H' Sl0an 118' *\"* D* Mm \"0,\nconnected for a single driving in Mableson waited out a walk to load\nBrown to knot the score at 3-3. In;the bags. Sam Brown then drove\nthe bottom of the second Denny the  ball Into  left field,  but  the\nplayer fielding the ball Juggled it-'l\nallowing Brown to go to second, |\nscoring three to make the score\n11-9. Ted Swales tripled in right\nfield, inches from the foul line to\ndrive in Brown; closing the gap to\nan error. Bill Brady banged out a 11-10. With the potential tying run\nround   tripperinto 'straightaway\t\nMiss J. Wright 135, Miss E. Hamson\nTier, W.-S, Ross; 9:20, R. Nesbltt\nT...B. Wilson; 9:25, J. Allan, W.\nVlckers; 9:30, F. Broughton, ir., A,\nDonaldson; 9:35, M. Verzuh, Roy\nStorte. '\u2022 \u25a0 , '\n4th Flight   \u2022\n9:45, W. Penman, H. Peacock; 9:50,\nA. Silverwood, W. Bush; 9:55, W.\nKapak, A. Macrone; 10:00, L. Rohlf,\nR. Evans;? 10:05,, J. Young, F.\nBroughton, Sr.; 10:10; R. L. Horswill,\nF. Field; 10:15, T. S. Shorthouse, L.\nMcPhail; 10:20, A. Allan, R. L. McBride. , , '\n6th Flight\n10:30, W. J. Waters, Dr. P. Kumagal; 10:35, E. Graham, J. Stewart;\n10:40, Robert Mam, J. Molyneaux;\n10:45, H. E. Patterson, W. Bunyan.\n8th Flight\" .\n10:50, D. Hood, J. Greer;'l0:55, N.\nTattrle, M. W. Nelson; 11:00, G. K.\nBurns, F. Aydon; 11:05, T. Mansell,\nO. Harper; Bye, George Gelinas.\nKOOTENAY BREWERIE8\nTROPHY\nChampionship Flight\u2014Ladlet\n11:10, Mrs. B. Townshend, Mrs. M.\nHarrop; 11:15, Mrs. M. E. Allan,\nMrs. H. Laky; 11:20, Mrs. L. Bradley, Miss Jessie Gentles; 11:25, Mrs.\nJack Young, Mrs. W. Fergie.\n2nd Flight\u2014Ladlet     ' \/\nSaturday 2 p.m., Mrs. Hr E. Patterson, Mrs. F. Field; 2:05, .Miss P..\nDewdhey, Miss E. Hamson.',\nSunday 11:30 a.m., Miss H. Sloan,\nMiss J. Wright; 11:35, Miss Norma\nSimpson, Mrs. I. Price;' 11:40, Miss\nJ. Harrop, Mrs. D. Burgess.\nFruitvale, Nelson\nTo Battle Bye    :\nBerth Sunday\nTigers will be out with their best\nfoot forward when they meet the\nFruitvale Cubs here Sunday In a\ngame which will determine a bye\nbetween tbe Rosslanders and the\nLakesiders in the semi-final chase.\nA win would leave, the Tigers\nhalf a game In front ot Rossland\n{and would see the Nelsonltes on\nthe fence while the Golden City\nboys and the Frultvalers battled it\nout for a chance? at the West Kootenay championship\nWith the bye in the balance the\nTigers will muster all their available strength to produce a win\nSunday. On the mbund will be Jack\nMathers of Grand Forks with Fred\nTownsend ln the bull pen.\nThe homebrews, however, will be\nwithout the services of Ron Nash,\nwho sustained a broken finger,\nwhen he attempted to grab a fly\nball prior to the Nelson-Frullvale\nmatch last Sunday. Although Nash\nis a valuable man to lose, the Tiger\nmanagement was confident of a\nwin with the classy Mathers and\nTownsend teamed up to climb the\nhilt\nIt la expected that \"Fuzzy\" Grieve\nwill go the stretch for the Cubs.\nGrieve had a shaky time at the\nstart of the season but has developed '*\u25a0 into one of the smoothest\nchuckers ln the loop, '\nFights\ncentre putting the visitors ahead\n6-3. Denny Segcott doubled in short\ncentre to open up the last of thai\nfourth. Jack Brown followed up by i called on account-of, darkness.\nWATERBURY, Conn.\u2014Willie Pep,\n129, Hartford, Conn., stopped Johnny bell, 133, Brooklyn (8\u2014non-title)\nPHILADELPHIA-Eddie Giosa,\n\u25a0137, Philadelphia, outpointed Patsy\non third  with \"two  away, rKelthi'rSdinwSW^Sair'Ontl'i\nStalnton grounded to first, for the\nsecond time he grounded out in the\nsame frame. The game was-then\nSaskatoon Nabs\nFastball lead\nQUEEN'S HALL\n4305 Granville St., Vancouver, B.C.\nBoarding ond Day School for Girls\nGRADES I -XII\nHeadmlstrttt:\nIsabel A. Bodle, B.A.\nBiyvlew 6110\nSASKATOON, Sept 8 (CP) -\nSaskatoon Merchants took a one-\ngame lead in their best-of-flve series with Vancouver Narrows tor the\nWestern Canada Senior Men's Fastball Championship, winning 4-3 in\na.ninth-inning rally.\nIn one ot tbe closest-played games\nseen here this year,. Vancouver\nmoved ahead 2-0 in tbe fourth inning, only to have Saskatoon score\nthree runs in the seventh. Narows\n| got a single in the top half ot the\nninth to tie the score but Merchants\n' came' back in their half with the\nwinning'tally. *\n| It was veteran hurler Joe Thompson who provided tbe margin of\n.victory. After turning ln a tight\npitching Job he came to bat. for\nSaskatoon in the ninth with two\n'men out and two on bases. He hit\nsharply to score Art Demke and end\n' the game.\n' Phone  144 for Claitlfled  Service,\nBetter Golf\nFor A Bang'Up\nLabor Day Week-End\nBe sure tofcH^ck your tackle box?\nfor the most important items . . '.ii\nA-good selection of those time test- ?\ned, popular. Gibbs' Quality Lures,\nthere is'a Gibb Lure for every type\nof -fishing.\nQUALITY TACKLE \\\nMade In Vancouver, B.C, by\nGIBBS TOOL AND STAMPING WORKS\n7?\" '.-^b\u2014X\niWlthbut j seeing the flight of the\nball and observing only the player,\nwhen his hands are hip-high in the\nfollow through, as pictured, you car\ntell with amazing accuracy what\nhappened'on the shot'Now, look at\nthe player pictured.again. His left\nside, is virtually a straight Une. His\nweight ts forward. His forward hip\nand shoulder pivot are virtually\ncompleted, his hands are hip-high,\nhis shoulder rotation ls excellent\nand note this\u2014although his hands\nare hip-high in the follow-through,\nhe is still\u2014get that\u2014still looking at\nthe spot, where the ball was. \"X\"\nmarks the spot. I would say without\nhesitation, that.this player's shot\nwith wood\u2014I say wood, because bf\nthe width of his open stance\u2014has\ntravelled 225 yards straight down\nthe fairway. If I had seen his shot, I\nwould expect to see bis ball hook\nfaintly just at the far end of the\nflight .'then roll, due to Its over-\nspin, tor nice, additional straight-\nline yardage.. Golf form tells the\nstory If you have good golf form,\nas this player has, you can't help\nbut play well .And enjoy the 19th\nhole celebration.\"',\nWESTERN CANADA\nHOCKEY TO\nOPEN OCT. 13\nOALGARY, Sept .3 (CP) - The\nWestern Canada Senior Amateur\nHockey League will swing into\naction on two fronts Oct 13, League\nPresident D. P. McDonald announced today. -?''i\\M    I \u25a0'.... '\u25a0 ,\nTeams will play a total of 120\ngames during- the regular season\nwith the final game scheduled at\nthe home of the Allan Cup champions, Edmonton Flyers,' March 3. i<\nTIES FOR RENO\nGOLF LEAD\nRENO, Nev\u201e Sept 3 (AP) \u2014\nTournament favorite Ben Hogan\ncarded a five-under-par 67 today to\ntie for the early lead in the, .first\nround of the 72-hole 325,000 Reno\nOpen Golf Tournament\nHogan hooked, up nines of 33-34\nto move into* a tie with Frank\nToronto, Sacramento amateur, Toronto earlier had toured the par\n38\u201472 Washoe County Club\ncourse in 34-33\u201487. i\nFeel Error in\nUte the \"Claitlfled'' and uve.\nBy  GAYLE  TALBOT\nNEW YORK, Sept. 3 (AP)-There\nwas an undercurrent of uneasiness\nin the United States camp today as\nthe American and the Australian\ntennis stars hit their final practice\nlicks at Forest Hills in preparation\nfor the Davis Cup challenge round\nstarting Friday.\nThe feeling appeared to have\ngrown, overnight that the United\nStates Selection Committee made a\ngrievous error, in choosing Ted\nSchroeder to play two of the singles\nmatches instead ot Billy Talbert,\nwho currently is much the hottest\ntennis player in the United States,\n\"Oh, well,\" commented one member of the American squad, \"it probably means that r 11 .'get to make\na sice trip to Australia to try to\nwin the cup back.\"\"?.''\nSchroeder, who.hasn't won a good\ngrass court tournament this year,\nfaces Adrian Quist, the veteran Australian team captain? in the second of Saturday's two singles\nmatches, and the whole outcome\nof the three-day series may well\nhinge upon r the form displayed by\nthe coast star.\n- Frankie Parker opens the proceedings at 1 p.m. C.D.T. In a game\nwith Billy Sidwell, a hard-hitting\nnewcomer to the -Aussie team,'\nThough the formal announcement\nwill not be made until Saturday afternoon, Talbert a?nd Gardnar Mulloy-are. certain to represent \u2022 the\nUnited States in the {one doubles\nmatch Sunday. They won the United States doubles crown recently.\nThe Aussie due Is not quite so\ncertain, though Talbert and Mulloy\nfeel certain they will find themselves pitted , against Quist and\nColin Long. Quist said today he\ndidn't expect to make up his mind\nuntil, after the singles.\nLABOR DAY SPORTS\nAT HOWSER\nHOWSER, B. Ci Sept 3-Owlng j\nto the fact that the bridge near Gerrard bas been. condemned it has [\nbeen decided to hold the Labor Day\nsports at Howser, instead of Gerrard\nas was firSt planned. The sports day\nis .being sponsored by ,the Lardeau\nValley Board of Trade, and plans\nare underway to make this event on\na'par. with the twd'very successful\nsports events already 'Sponsored by\nthis group this year.  *, V\nThe committee in charge ls. busy\ncompleting a list of events tb bo fun\noff during the day, and it is felt\nthat the program will be sufficiently varied to ensure a full day's enjoyment for everyone. Races, ball\ngames, junior log-bucking and nail\ndriving are.among the many events\nplanned. *\u2022\nCASTS 183 FEET\nFORT WORTH, Tex., Sept 3\n(AP)\u2014Dick Miller of San, Diego.\nCalif., captured the trout fly distance event with a long cast of 183\nfeet and ih average caBt of 176 2-3\nfeet in the National Angling and\nCasting Tournament-here yesterday.\n\u25a0   .V ,.r .?.';?;'    ,.. '-,.\nFlamingoes Sale,\n'Gator Nabbed\nGloats Hialeah\nBy HUQH FULLERTON, Jr.!\nNEW YORK, Sept. 3 (AP)-Dumb\nDan Morgan, who has few good\nwords for education higher' than\n\"learnin\" the. moves,\" currently is\nwondering why more college athletes don't try professional boxing.\n\"They ain't all rich, and if they\nwanta make money they can make\nit in boxing even faster than in\nhighjacking, and that used to be\nthe best racket in the world.\" Dan\nprobably has the explanation in his\ntale of the time when he and Jack\nBritton tried to make a boxer out\nof Dan Morgan, Jr., now a movie\ntheatre manager . . .\"We went to\ntell his mother,\" Mdrgan Sr. explains, and \"she threw me and Britton and the kid, aU of us, right out\nof the house.\"\nGETTING CHEWSY\nThe Hialeah Park Publicity Dept.\nGleefully reports that the big alligator which invaded the Infield\nLake In search of flamingo outlets\nhas. been trapped after successfully\nevading the Seminole .'gator catchers who were on display last Winter ,. . From now on the only bite\nput on the horse races will come\nfrom the mutuel dept\nCLEANING THE CUFF '\nThe Ike Williams-Jesse Flores\nbout Sept. 23 will be the 13th lightweight title bout staged by the 20th\nCentury Sporting Club and the first\noutdoors In New York since Lou\nAmbers and Hank Armstrong battled nine years ago. BIU Terry, who\nonce didn't like newspaper men\nmuch, is giving golf writers a grand\nwelcome at .the current amateur\nchampionship irt\" Memphis.\nENDS IN DRAW\nHASTINGS, England, Sept. 3\n(Reuters)\u2014A cricket match between\nthe Australians and the South of\nEngland ended In a draw here today. The Australians dismissed\nSouth of England tor 208 in their\nfirst innings in reply to their own\nfirst-Innings score of S22 for seven\nWickets declared.\nTurnesa, Billows\nTo Contest Goli\nMEMPHIS, Tenn., Sept 3 (AP)-1\nTWO New Yorkers\u2014icy Willie Turnesa and rollicking Ray Billows\u2014\nwill meet Saturday tor the amateur\ngolf championship of the United\nStates. .  ,,.-. \u25a0\u25a0.\nThis pair of 34-year-old cam'\npalgners grooved their shots over\nMemphis Country Club's fairways\nin the 36-hole semi-finals today tb\nsnuff out the \"dark horse\" challenge of two youngsters.?\nTurnesa, the wee strokemsster\nfrom Elmstord. N.Y., who won the\ntitle ln 1938, trounced Gene Dahl\nbender of Atlanta, Ga., 8 and 6.\nBillows rfrom Poughkeepsie, N.Y..\nbroke .the heart of.the oil country\nby expelling wiry<\u00abCharlle Coe ofj\nOklahoma City, 8 (ind 5.\nThe victors tee off Saturday for[\nthe crown won last year by Robert\n(Skee) Riegel of Monterey, park,\nCalif. Riegel was ushered to the\nsidelines by Dahlbender WedneS'\nday morning\nSoftball Title\n\u25a0v.\nTRAIL, B. C, Sept. 3 \u2014 TraU Co.\nlombo Giants, West Kootenay senior men's softball champions, will\nmeet Kimberley in a three out of\nfive series tor. the Kootenay title\nin the East Kootenay City beginning\nSept. 11 and 12. Remaining games\nwill be1 played here.\nColombos won the West Kootenay\ntitle by taking a best of three series\nIn straight games. They defeated\nCastlegar Cubs 3-2 Wednesday night\non the Cubs' diamond and took the\nopening game here Tuesday 6-1.\nJack Dalzell, President ol the\nCastlegar team*; presented the Gil'\nbert Rowling Memorial Trophy to\nColombo Captain Fritz Pagnan.\nBETTERS WORLD RECORD\nSTOCKHOLM, Sept 3 (Reuters)\n\u2014Herbert McKehley of , Jamaica\nbettered the world record for 300\nmetres when* he covered the distance here today In 32.4 seconds.\nThe old mark was 33.2 seconds.\nFERRY BOAT\nRENTAL\n\u2022 ROWBOATS\n\u2022 INBOARDS\n\u2022 OUTBOARDS\nNORTH SHORE\nFERRY LANDING\nLatiest'\nEM*\" ' \"\u25a0\nICKER\na*-*\ni K\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINE8\nAmal Larder  .._......_\nAnglo-Huronlan ......__.___\nArmistice  \u2014. \u25a0\u201e\u201e',\t\nAilbella* ..\u201e _______\nAumaque  \u2014.'\nAunor            i\t\n8.78-\n.\u00bb\n.15-\n.22\n3.45\nBase Metals Mining .....\t\n.44\nBfvcourt   .-,      \t\n36..\n.OiVs\n7.38 \u00ab\nBroulto.  .....\u00bb_.\u201e_:\t\n.32\nBuffalo.Ankerite  . -\n1.79 .1\nBufadlson           ..r ...\nUS i\n.08*'\n1.53..\nCentral Patricia \t\n1.40-i.\n-.08 H?\nCochenour             \t\n2.12  \u2022\n:*r.?08\nConsolidated M St S\t\n117'8- -\nConwest\t\n1 \u2022\"*,:\u2022\nDelnite \u25a0:. ..     -\nfi   '.\n.57\n'   .af\nnrii ;\u25a0\u25a0>\n\u25a0-.Ifi-i\n,6'r\n.19'..,\n1.4!): \u25a0\n2,TO,-r\nElder .-..\u201e--\n.36.'\nEldona '   ..... . . -..:\t\n1.10\nFalconbrldge Nickel\t\n4.60   .\n2.05\n8.58, r\n*\u00abJ- \u25a0\nGold Eafle '    ...\n.03iA\nGolden Arrow'  !...__\n.08.\n2.65\nHard Rock Gold .\t\nXti '.\nm\nHarrlcana    ..._....\nHolllnger-\t\n*.__\u2022 --\u25a0\n10.89 ?..\nHudson Bay M & S ...\n81.00\n36.78\nInt Uranium .\t\n\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nJack Walte .*. -\n'.\u00ab\u25a0!?-'\n.Toilet Quebeo ._.\n.sr v\nKerr-Addisnh:r ...:.._\n14.80*\nKlrkland Lake *\u25a0_;\t\n!?\u00ab\u25a0\"',\n8.19\nLake Shore Mines ........_.._\n11.78 .\nB 85\n,0jp\nUnman'Lake .....     ,,?\u201e,\u201e\u25a0\nLittle Long Lac       \"'\u25a0\n1.06'\n\"*.p:\nMacassa -:..... \t\n!\u00bb.\u2022'\n.70\nMacLeod Cockshutt _\n4.1* \u25a0?'\nMadaen Red Lake\t\n2.63\nMalartic Gold F      \u2014\n1.88\nMclntyre-Porcuplne\t\n88.78\nMcKenzie Red Lake \u201e,.,..\u2014,.\nAt j,\n. *.t4',.J\n\u00bb.\u00bb-,\u00ab\nNew Bidlamaqyt' .....\t\n.OS'.\n49.W\n2.90   ,\nOmnitrans Exploration ,\t\nM::\n\u25a0ss*\n.7?\nPickle Crow Gold    \t\n:l*V\nPowell Rouyn Gold \u2014\nMv\nPreston East Dome .--_\u2014\n1.8S\nQueenston !!..: \t\n.53'\n14.75\nSan Antonlb Gold \u2014\n3.60  .\n.80\nSherritt Gordon .-..._\n2.\u00ab*?r?\n.87,\n1.98\n\u2022SO\nia\nSladen Malartic . \t\nStadacona  ........\nSteep Rock\t\nTaku Rive* Gold Mlnea .....      .....\nTeck-Hughes Gold \u2014    2.73.\nUpper Canada, ,\t\nSpringer Sturgeon ..\nVentures  .\nWalte Amulet  \t\nWright Hargfeavea\nOILS\nBrit Amer r-\u2014-\nBrit Dom  '.\nImperial\n1.64\"\n1.40\n0.A0 \u25a0'\u25a0\n9.M\n2.76. '\n22.88..\n..25\n_...,_.._    _    17.30\nInt Petroleum:.. _    13.65,\nMid Continent ?...\u2014-.      .07?\nRoyalite    ,....'.... ,.    18.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltlbl Power1\nBell Telephbhe\t\nBrazilian Traction \t\nBrewers & Distillers .\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B \t\nB C Pulp ...'\u25a0\t\nBurns & Co Class A .\nBurns & Co Class B .\nCan Brew .....\nCan Celanese  -\nCan Clement\nCan' Ind Alcohol\nCan Malting\n_ 17.78\n... 171.00\n... 19.88\n... 13.25\n... 27.00\ni. 3.00\n... 115.0ft\n._ 30,00\n_. \u2022 20.00\n_ 21.18\n._ 83.00\n21.80\n12.7S\n49.00.\nCan Pacific Sly 71137.77 18|s\nCoast Copper\nCockshutt Plow .\nCons Paper\ntoo\n1655\n20.45\n18.45\n11.89\n23J5\n17.30\n19.48\n15$j\n26lS\n17.49\n18.49\n8638\n30 J5\n22.25\n13.89\n73.69\n87.00\n44.60'\n15.50\n \u201e_        22.80\nSteel of Canada -  79.80\nUnited Steel            7.50\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBayonne\nBralorne\nCanusa\nDistillers. Seagrams\nDom Textile,\t\nFord of Canada A ....\nGatineau  .;.(,.... -\nGen Steelwares \u25a0...!.\u2014\nGypsum Lime\t\nHiram Walker\t\nImperial Oil ...:....i\u2014\nImperial Tobacco _\nInt Nickel ...i,...^\u2014\nLoblaw A   \u2014\u2014\nMassey Harris\t\nMcColl Front\t\nMoore, Corp  \u25a0\u2014\nPage Hershey.\t\nPowell River ______\nPower Corp ....\u2014.......\nShawinigan\nCariboo Gold .\nGrandvlew\nHedley Mascot \t\nHighland BeU \t\nKoot Bell    \t\nPac East Gold \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPioneer Gold      2.85 i\nQuatslno _      .08J4\nReeves MacDonald      1.90--\n-os*!\n'ft\n1.30\nJO,\n.42\n.60-,\n.18 \"\n.07*\n4.2\nSheep Creek\nSilver Ridge\nSurf Inlet \t\nUtica1 ........\n01 iii\nAnadonda\n1.25\n.17\n.Itt*\n,iV*\\-\nAnglo Can     2.78\nA P Con  21\nCal & Ed      5.80\nCalmont    50\nCommonwealth  56!\nDalhousie j       M\nEast Leduc       ?34!\nFoothills       3.03]\ni Globe\t\nHome      8.951\ni Mercury        r. .-.        ,-lfij\n! National Pete _ _     . .23r\n'Okalta Com      1.43\nPacific Pete    -   1.49\nlonAo\":\nGil*\nThis advertisement is hot published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nRoyalite\nSouthwest Pete \t\nVanalta\t\nVUlcan\nWest Leduc    -.\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries \t\nUNLI8TED MINES\nBrooklyn St     ..;.....\nCentral Zeballos \t\nCuyuni   \t\nVananda    \t\nWest Exploration \t\nWhitewater   _. \u00bb\n18.35;'\n'.23'%\n.22;'*!\n-90J|\n3.20,;\nim\n.Olrt'\n'\u25a0Mi\n.35*\n.60?\n.02%\n \u25a0 \u25a0. i        \u25a0\u25a0* -\u25a0*.\u25a0\u25a0\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's.\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning, except Sunday by the\nr-NEWS   PUBLISHING   (SOMPANY,   LIMITED.\n268 Baker St., Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\n7        Post Office Department Ottawa.\nI MEMBER OF THE-CANADIAN PRESS AND\n7'THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION&\n;   SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1948\n:   Seeking Christian Unity\nI The First International Assembly of the\nrWorld Council of Churches, in Amsterdam,\nHolland, is the beginning of a great hope and\nian important sign of the times. Representing about 150 Protestant and Orthodox denominational groups from 42 countries, it is\nthe fruition of many years of patient effort\n|to bring back into some measure of unity\nJhe Christian churches of the world. It is\nunfortunate that the Roman, Catholic\nChurch still finds itself unable to cooperate\nin such a desirable move, but it has sent\nipfficial observers.\nThe relationship of the denominations in\nthe World Council of Churches is not by any\nmeans an organic union. It is an affiliation\nWith a new body, which will, become not\nbnly a means of expression for common attitudes and aspirations, but a point of contact for many diverse, traditions, points out\nthe Toronto Globe and Mail. What the\n\"world needs is mutual understanding, and\npie World Council of Churches is intended\nto provide leadership for the attainment of\n\u25a0this essential goal.\nThe assembly is not the first ecumenical,\nbr world-wide meeting of the Christian\nchurches. Apart from the great church councils of Europe, centuries ago; there have\nbeen a number iri recent years, dealing with\nmissions, theological questions and common\nWements of church polity. In considerable\ndegree the W\u00b0rtd Council is a merger of\nthese earlier movements. It was first\nplanned in 1938, but the war prevented the\n|inal constitution of the body at an earlier\npate. Many of its prospective functions were\nset in motion, however, and much help for\ndevastated churches, the distribution of food\nand clothing for hurigry people, and other\n{services, were performed in its name.\nIt would be a pity if any were to envis-\nJBge the World Council of Churches as a new\ninstrument against something. Its value and\nImportance are to be judged solely as it is\n|or the religious principles on which it is\nfounded. As.it promotes undei'stouduift, as ii\nexpresses common hopes and ideal-, of men,\nas it turns thought and action, towanl unity,\nso it will serve the waitln? millions. It has\ncenturies of custom,'the separation of geographical and linguistic barriers, the sinful\npride of sect and nationality, to overcome.\nThe work will be slow, but every,hope is'\npeld that it will be steady.     - . .\nPress Comment\nCHURCHILL HONEY\nThe seedtpf arnew Industry lias been planted -it\nChurchill mi tlie shores of Hudson B iy this Suunnrr.\nMrs. Eva Beckett of Fort William, whose husband\nIs employed at Churchill during the Summer, this\nyear took North with her a colony of bees from The\nFas to see how they -would do ln Northern latitudes,\nThc experiment was suggested by the Thunder Bay.\nNaturalists Club and the Thunder l}ay Beekeepers\n^Association. The honey harvest Is based on the\nflower of a heath, plant that ls a distant relative of\nScotland's heathei*. r .The; bees, according to latest\nreports wero mak;ng themselves at home sipping\nnectar far and wide. It the honey is good and production up to \u2022 spoliations, we ran look for a new\nand exotic dish lo come out n( ihe Arctic\u2014Saskatoon\nStar-tPhoenlx. -,    ,        , ' '\n\u25a0? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons asking\nquestlona will net be published.. There li no\neh.r.o for this service. Questions WILL NOT BB\nANSWERED BY MAIL except when there Is\nobvious necessity for privacy.     ^ , \u2022 -\nJ. H. D\u201e Port Crawford\u2014Please print a recipe or\nformula for home made lye.\nLye\u2014Hickory ashes are the. best for making\ncommon washing soap soft (when it is not desirable\nto use the potash lye), but those trom sound beech,\nmaple, or almost any kind of hard wood, except oak,\nwill answer well. A common barrel Set upon an Inclined platform makes a very good leach, but one\nmade of boards set ln a trough ln a V shape.Is to ba\npreferred, for the strength of the ashes is better obtained, and lt may be taken to pieces when not ln\nuse, and laid up. First In the bottom of the leach put\na few sticks; over them spread a,piece of carpet or\nwoolen cloth, put a few inches ol ashes and from\nfour to eight quarts of lime; fill with moistened\nashes, and tamp down well, tamping firmest'in the\ncentre. It is difficult to obtain the full strength of\nashes in a barrel without removing them after a ,\nday's leaching, and mixing them up and replacing.\nThe top should first be thrown off and new ashes\nadded to make up the proper quantity. Use boiling\nwater for second leaching. This lye should be sufficiently strong to float a potato.\nMrs. M. C, Nelson\u2014Please give me a recipe for\nbread and butter pickles.\nFour quarts of unpared cucumber slices one-\neighth Inch thick, six tablespoons of salt one and\none-halt quarts of vinegar, one tablespoon celery\nSeed, one half teaspoon curry powder, four cups ot\ngranulated sugar. Use medium-sized cucumbers, Slice\nand sprinkle'with salt Cover with cold water and\nallow to stand overnight Drain off brine and wash\nslices In several waters. Bring remaining1 Ingredients to boiling point and add cucumber slices. Heat\nfour minutes, stirring constantly, being careful not\nto let mixture boll. Pour Into hot sterilized jars and\nseal. liakes five pints.\n3. S\u201e Nelson\u2014Is lt possible to make a preserve\nknown as tomato marmalade? If so, have you a\nrecipe?\nTomato Marmalade\u2014Seven pounds bf ripe tomatoes, eight pounds of loaf sugar, six lemons, one\npint of water. Blanch and skin'the tomatoes and.\ncut them In halves. Remove the rinds and all the\nwhite pith of the lemons, and slice the fruit thinly.\nBoll the sugar and water to a thin syrup, add the\nprepared tomatoes and lemons, and bring to boiling\npoint Stir and skim frequently,'and continue to boil\n,gently until the marmalade - quickly Jellies when\ntested on a cold plate. Four into pots or glasses, and\nstore In a cool, dry place. Require* about one and\none-quarter hours.\nLETTERS TO THE\n\/  EDITOR '\nLotters may be- published over a nom de\nplume, but the actual name of the writer must\nbe given to the Editor as evidence of good faith.\nAnonymous letters go In the waste paper basket\nAsks for Information\nOn Storage Application  >\nTo'tho Kdltor:\nSir- T note thut tin- West Kuuli-nay Power &\nLight  Company   arid  the   Consolidated  Mining &\nSmelting Coinpnuy an   applying for permission to\niinii  the jlootenay Lake level and I should like to ?\nendorse the opinion otMr..McEwen, Chairman of,\nthe Waterways Committee,'that \"residents along the !,i\n^lake shouldtaker interest'In the hearings as decisions\nhanded down by the Commission would be binding -.\nrrprice they were made\"?It is?unfortunate that the\n\u25a0hearings will nptrbe held in Nelson as I am sure**\nthey would be well attended by lake-shore residents.\nInvestigations and hydraulic surveys have.been .'.\ngoing on for over two years with a notable lack ot,\npublicity. Their brief is undoubtedly well prepared.\nOther interested parties would be hard put to investigate all pertinent angles and prepare their case\nas efficiently, by Sept. 14. 7\nAt any rate Mr. Editor, let us have-a little\npublicity regarding the matter as soon as possible.\nWill the additional two foot level be above the high\nwater mark or.'the low watej- level, or some''other ,'\naverage? Just how will the new level affect our,\nbeaches?. ,'\nThe hundreds of property owners along Kootenay Lake-should have the facts presented to them*\"\nbefore these \"Binding Decisions\" are made by the\nInternational Joint Commission.\n'.-;.,.,'    '- *      \"One of the little fellows.\"\"\nWHAT IS A LIBERAL?\" '\nAll departments of the Federal Government are\n'spending more money than they were a year ago,\nfigures supplied by the Dominion Bureau of Statistics show. This will come as a surprise to .no one\nwho recalls last year's surplus of $700,000,000? and\nsees a billion surplus in thc offing next Spring. Increased spending is the inevitable result of having\nItoo much money to spend.\nThe Ottawa Journal, notlnj; thai tlie Liberal\nconvention in Ottawa \"sought a defiuim-i* of Liberal\nism, suggested: \u2022 r\n\"It might consldei tlie definition' perfectly applicable to the present Government, that a Liberal fs\na person who ir, liberal with other people's mon. ; '\n- Sydney Post-Record\".\n(Editor's nut-.: The Companies' are permitted at\nrpresentrto store-water up to six feet above zero\u2014\n1739.32 feet above sea level at the main lake gauge.\nThe additional'six feet would bring, the level up\nto 1745.32 feet If permitted to use another two feet\nof storage, which Incidentally was used by special\npermission for about two years during the war,\nthe level would be raised' up to eight feet above\nzero or 1747.32. Durjng high water this year the\nlevel reached 1780.78 feet or 21.-18 feet above zero\nand ,13.48 feet above the level which would be reached If tlii Companies used the full eight-foot\nstorage. Those figures .make it apparent that any\neffect, if any, on Kootenay Lake properties will be \u2022\ntrifling).\nLooking, Backward\n2B YEAR8 AOO\nFrom The Dally News of Sept. 4, 1923\nMrs. A. Nellin and daughter Thelma have left\n^or a vacation at the Coast.\nThe water sports held at Lakeside Park yesterday were an Interesting event. There was keen competition ln all races. Francis West, 6 years old, swam\nthe lake in nine minutes. She captured first prize\niln three contests.\nMrs. Jack Miller left yesterday for Tacoma\n\u25a0where she will spend several months with her\n'piother. -    .       .\n40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally,News of Sept. 4, 1808\nGeorge: C. Egtf has returned from Fernie, where\n;he spent three '.weeks on a business trip.       .,  ,\nFernie \"is 'rising- from the ashes of. its fire, and\nconstruction work Is .making remarkable progress.\n|The buildings being constructed are all fireproof.   '\nWants Reports on\nCity Office Friction\nTo the Editor:     ; -\n8ife*-frt view of the highly controversial meeting\nof the (Slty- Council last Monday, relative to this\ntransformer question, and also other matters, It\nwould teem highly desirable to bring everything\nont into the open and have the reports bearing on\nthese matters and turned in by the City Clerk and\nCity Engineer, published ln full. The taxpayers\nand citizens of Nelson would then be better able\nto judge at first hand as to the situation.\nA. W. DAVIS, Nelson, B.C.\nA ceremony for the laying of the cornerstone\nof the new Nelson Public School will take place\non Labpr Day.\nE. E. Chipman? Gold Conjraissloner, came down;\nfrom Kaslo yesterday.\n,     A rifle competition of teams from the 102nd\n- Regiment of Rifles will take place Monday. Captain i\nPartington will lead Company B, and Captain Carrie\nwill lead Company C...\u25a0 ? i \u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0'\u25a0\"'\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 22e line, 27c line black face type; larger type rates en\nrequest Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment -\nCANTERBURY, England (CP)\u2014' WOLD NEWTON, Lincolnshire,\nThe freedom of Canterbury was England (CP)\u2014A granite cross\nconferred on the Buffs, the Royal R.A.F. memorial, dedicated here re-\nEast Kent Regiment, which has been cently, is visible only from the air.\nassociated with the city since 1782.   In the manufacture of rayon.\n\u25a0RB1!\u00bbI\nGift wrapping at reasonable rates. I   Large Gladiolus blooms at the\nALICE'8 WONDERLAND, PH. 1204 market Mrs. Becker's stall.\nPLAYMOR   TONITEI   RHYTHM\nKINGS, NINE PIECE ORCH.\n8 m.m.. movie flinis at WAIT'S.\nFast service,ori Processing.\nHip Waders for Fishermen, Hunters, JAqC BOYCE MEN'S SIfOP.\nPhone 81 for prompt service on\nyour washing machine. K. Skilton.\nGIGANTIC LABOR DAY DANCE\nPLAYMOR MONDAY NIGHT.\nDon't wait until after the fire.\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency.\nPHONE 1177 AND 1T78\nFAIRWAY FOR FRE8H MEATS\nNOTICE\nNo meeting for Rotarians Monday,\nSept. 6. i\nSUTHERLAND'S\nFor Watch Repairs.   ( .\n481 Baker- Street, Nelson\nOld and- new floors Sanded and\nfinished, modern equipment, promit\nservice? Fotherby's Floor Sandlnil\nR.R.-NO. 1, Nelson. Ph. 462-L-4.\nFire Brick, like new, Tie. Building Brick, clean, very good condition, 3V4o. Located CM. & S. Scrap\nYard, TralL Enquire A. W, Krocher.\nWe have a full new line of 'House\not Stone\" samples and Fall styles\nfor ladles and gentlemen,\nTICKNER TAILORS'\nTftaAicuL WlaMUL\nBY REQUEST\nThe outfit smart scholars have\nbeen asking fori Pattern 0023 has\nthe neatest, sweetest suspender\nskirf, wide waistband. Cute johnny'\ncollared blouse\u2014make several!\nThis pattern gives perfect fit, ls\neasy to use. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step,\nPattern 8023 comes in girls' sizes\n6, 8, 10, 12, 14. Size 10 jumper, 2\".\nyards 38-in,; blouse, V\/t yards 35-in.\nChildren's blazers, sizes 2 (o 6\u2014\n$3.85. Sizes 8 to 14\u2014 $5.55.\nThe CHILDREN'S SHOP\u2014652 Baker\nFREE DANCE AT PROCTER\nHOTEL. Saturday Sept 4th. 10 to\n12 sharp.\nDUNCAN PHYFE CHAIRS\nSPECIAL $9.85 EACH\nAT GREENWOOD'S\nOld papers, 1So bundle, Lay In\nyour supply now, and cheat Old\nMan Winter. Nelson Dally News. .\nMRS. J. A. FRASER\nwill resume pianoforte lessons Sept.\n7th. Class full for this term, no\nadditional pupils accepted.\nLABOR DAY DANCE\nNelson Golf and Country Club\nSATURDAY, SEPT. 4\ni Everybody Welcome\n38\" tissue ginghams in'assorted\nchecks, yard \u2014 $1.29.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nS X_v>y*.e. VV UaiXvu\nDOUBLE FEATURE\nr Make your* guests really welcome\nwith these special linens! Make\nyour needlework really interesting\nwith embroidery and crochet.\n' 'For towels, cases, scarfs! Pattern\n905; transfer of 6' motifs about\n814x12 inches; crochet, directions.\nLaura Wheeler's new,.'improved\npattern makes needlework so simple, with its charts, photos, concise\ndirections,  r  ?;\u25a0\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nvfor each pattern to Nelson. Dally\nNews,\u25a0, Pattern - Dept, 266 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, B. C, Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME\nand ADDRE88.\n(hwLKst\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nPRE- HOLIDAY M ID- N I T E\nFROLIC, PLAYMOR SUNDAY\nNIGHT.\nATTENTION\nB.C. Provincial Government Employees Association meet- ln Canadian Legion Hall Tuesday Sept '7\nat 8 p.m. Films. Refreshments.\nNEL80N FLYING CLUB\ni invites you to their\nBIG LABOR DAY* DANCE\nin'the Civic Centre\nThis coming Monday\nThe regular meeting ot the Board\nof Trustees of Slocan School District No. 8 will be held Thursday\nSept. 9th, 7:30 p.m, D.S.T. at Slocan\nCity.\nJust arrived, DOmo cream separators Made ln Sweden, ideal size tor\none or two cows. HIPPERSON'S.\nDANCE\nERNIE DE FOE'S ORCHESTRA\nTONIGHT EAGLES  HALL\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for -reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTING\nAlterations, New Installations\nR..C. Catton Phone 388   .\nAlways fresh films of any size at\nVALENTINE'S. And, don't forget,\nexpert developing service, too!    j r\nHume School Students \u2014 Enrolment of all pupils at 9 a.m, Tuesday,\nSept. 7.\nOur tire department can provide\nyou  with   a   complete   specialized\ntire service.\nCUTHBERT  MOTORS  LIMITED\nLAST DAY \"TODAY\nSummer Clearance Sale all -Sadies\nSummer shoes clearing at Half Price\nTHE BOOTERY\nJU8T RECEIVED A FULL LINE\nOF WE8TCLOX CLOCK8 AND\nWATCHES.\nGREENWOOD'8. HDWE.\nRUBBER DOOR MATS \u2014 Also\nRubber 8talr Treads\u2014from BOo to\n\u00a32.50. BURNS LUMBER & COAL\nCO.\nBASEBALL SUNDAY\nFRUITVALE va NELSON\nAT 2:30\nLost\u2014Vicinity Hume School, tabby cat White throat apd white feet\nChild's pet Phone 912X or 324 Nelson Ave.\n\"ARMOUR COAT'\nTHE,NEW  WATERPROOF  CEMENT COATING IN FIVE APPEALING COLORS. SEE  IT AT\nGREENWOOD'S\nFor the finest In coal and wood\nranges see Spencer line first, with\nthe guaranteed .roller grates. Full\nwhite enamel, with high shelf or\ncloset reservoir or waterfront\n'    \u25a0    HIPPERSON'S\nPUBLIC ADDRESS\n\"FIGHT FOR  FREEDOM\"\nto discuss the securing Fundamental\nLiberties of Worship, Speech, Press\nand Assembly. Sunday evening at\n7:30 p.m., Eagle Block* Seats free.\nAll welcome.\nBOYS AND GIRLS\nAGE8 13-161 HERE'8 AN OP\nPORtUNITY TO MAKE MONEY\nOVER THE HOLIDAY WEEKEND.\nBE AT THE NELSON GOLF CLUB\nTO CADDY FOR THE TOURNA\nMENT. REPORT AT THE CLUB\nHOU8E THI8 AFTERNOON' AT\n2:30. .     -\nTHE TIMBERS\nOn the North Shore\nat Willow Point\nOPEN LABOR DAY\nLuncheons -r Teas \u2014 Dinners\n. Open .\nISO o'clock, Wednesdays, Sundays\n3:00 o'clock other week days\nPrivate, parties by arrangement\nOUR SPECIALTY\nSOUTHERN FRIED.CHICKEN\n'S      FUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late John\nN. Anderson will be held from the\nThompson Funeral Home Tuesday,\nSept 7 at 2 p.ifl. Rev. T. J. S.\nFerguson will officiate and interment will rbe, iri .Nelson Manorial\nPark. '   .\nIf you need a typewriter, whether\nIn a standard office machine or\nportable, see the Royal. If you don't,\nwe both lose. D. W. McDERBY, \"The\nTypewriter and Adding Machine\nMan,\" 536 Ward Street, Nelson, B.C. changed at $4.03%,\nCARD OF THANK8\nWewould like to take this means\nof thanking the many friends of\nthe late W. M. Wood for the floral\ntributes and expressions of sympathy extended to us.\n.'.'. * .    ,      \u2022  Mrs. Buelah Wood\njnd family.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 3 (CP) - The\nCanadian dollar was unchanged at\na discount of 7% per cent In midday foreign exchange dealings today. The pound sterling was un'\nNelson -Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C. MUIR\nPhonos:    Nelson 77;  Rossland 171;  Troll 1001\nConnections for:\nSALMO \u2014  KASLO \u2014  CRESTON  \u2014  NAKUSP\n_. complete travel Information;   soe   your'  local?\nv Greyhound agent\nWESTERN    CANADIAN\nGREYHOUND\nLINES    LIMITED\nMy English friend says it's no'\nwonder we don't like tea while the*\nEnglish prefer it to coffee. She says\nthey can't make coffee, and we don't\nknow how to make tea.\n__^___1M-M\n\"Lots of celebrities eat here. They\nlay it's a free lunch for them.\"\nNOW\nis the\nlime\nto Send in Those Pictures\nfor the\n1949\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nof\nDAILY NEWS\nBlock and White Prints Are Best \u2014 Negatives Not Required\n ,'....\" \"\u25a0......    I\n-P !  '   , 1. I\nimu\n!|t Pays te Buy'Qualify\"\nSmooth\nQreen Calf\nPumps\nVa\" Platform\nHigh Cuban. Heel\nMQ.95\nBlaek Calf\nHigh Cuban Heel\n$Q.SS\nR. ANDREW\n&CO*\n'Leaders In Footfashlon\nEstablished 1904\nj Mrs, Violet Sadler and son\nhave left for their home in New\nMexico after visiting Mrs. Sadler's\nmother, Mrs. Myrtle Johnson ot\nNelson.      .   ,V?\n\u2022 Alex Allan:of Toronto, who\nhas spent a holiday of nearly two\nweeks here with his mother, MTs.\nWilfred Allan, Kerr Apartments,\nhas left for California whence. he\nwill return toToroiito.\nj Miss Jean Underwood has returned from a holiday spent in Vancouver where she was the guest of\nMrs. J. Irvine and Mr. and'Mrs. S.\nOSborne.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs! D. Underwood,\nKokanee Avenue, have returned\nfrom a trip spent ln the United\nStates. ''...''\nj The wedding of Miss Irene\nLiness and Clifford G. Playdon tobk\nplace in St. Paul's United Church\nWednesday. In Friday's paper, It\nwas\" described as St, Paul's Presbyterian Church.\nimfn\u00ab*rif\u00abfmmn\nGLOVES\nFabric \u2022 Suede \u2022 Kid\n1.95 to 4.95\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\niff-\"*_^>_*\u00bb-i\nJOTENAY   fAI-l-EV   UaiRV\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nllllliiiliiiiiiiiiiilliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nEW FALL STYLES\nIn\nuits - Coats - Hats\niADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nBEAUTY BOUND\n,t one ot our superb perman-\nt waves make you lovely to\n9k at \u2014 .your hair easy to\nenage.\nACTON'S    -\nBEAUTY PARLOUR\nNelson Social\nPHONE SOCIAL NEWS TO 1 ti\n\u2022 Mrs. E. W. Hughes, Mrs. L.\nHawkins and Mrs. G. McLellan, all\not Penticton, have been guests at\nthe home pt Mrs. R. H. Wilks, S07\nCedar Street They attended the\nGolden Jubilee celebration here last\nweek of Kootenay Lodge No, 558,\nBrotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Johnstone,\nN. Parrot, and H. Replegger who\nare here from Spokane for a few\ndays are guests of Mr. and. Mrs. K.\nGrenfell.\n\u2022 Telford Oliver has' left the\nstaff of Radio Station CKLN to go\nto Lethbridge and then to Calgary.\n'.' \u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Blakeman\nand party have returned from a\nfishing trip to Whatshan Lakes.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Picket of Milton, Ont.. have been visiting Mr. and\nMrs. Willis, Josephine Street. Mrs.\nPicket is Mis. Willis' sister. Also\nguest at the Willis home was Mrs.\nD. R. Leydes of,Calgary.\nViscount to Seek\nSport in Manitoba\nOTTAWA, Sept 3 (CP)-Viscount Alexander will travel by aircraft, canoe and railway gas-car\nduring a two-week tour of Manitoba starting Sunday.\nVisits to the military establishment at Fort Churchill and the mining community of Flin Flon will\nhighlight the visit. The Governor-\nGeneral's plans also call for trout\nfishing at Lake Altlkameg and duck\nand goose hunting East of Fort\nChurchill.\nViscount Alexander will arrive in\nWinnipeg by Dakota aircraft at 3\nS.m.   CDT Sunday and leave * an\nour later for The Pas.\nBEARINGS EASE FALSE\nLIMBS USE\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept. 3 (API-\nGreater ease and comfort for users\nof artificial limbs through wider\nuse of ball bearings was predicted\nlast night\nOfficials said as many as 20 ball\nbearings now are used in artificial\nlegs and arms, and the steel balls\nare finding new applications In the\nmanufacture of elbow and knee devices.   ,,\nMILFORD, Conn., Sept. 3 (AP)\u2014\nWilliam Dorance,* 41, Highway Department official, was severely Injured yesterday when caught in the\nmechanism of Washington Bridge\nnear here. He was inspecting the\nmechanism chamber of the bridge\nwhen* the span was being lowered.\nHis body was caught between a\ncounterweight and a bridge pier.\nCranbrook To\nGreet Caravan\nIn Street Dance\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept. 3 -\nNot quite certain whether it ls for\na Cavalcade or a Caravan, Cranbrook nevertheless intends to dance\nin the street the evening of Wednesday, September 8.\nActually the celebration is for the\nsnowballing last lap of the Brandon-\nto-Nelson auto caravan intent on\nImpressing the Federal Government\nof need for primary designation of\nthe Southern highway across the\nWestern provinces because of-their\nindustries and population.\nNelson's successful publicity job\non its Golden Jubilee Cavalcade last\nyear is probably responsible for\nCranbrook's determination that\nSeptember 8's visitors will be a\ncavalcade. The caravan, which w'\"\namount to several hundred autolsts\nand passengers who joined at centres between Brandon and Nelson,\nwill have Nelson for its objective\nwhere it will meet a caravan from\nVancouver via Penticton.\nThe event should make Cranbrook\npeople and visitors aware of each\nother since a hillbilly band is planned for dancing, and the Girls' Bugle Band and the Kimberley Pipe\nBand for parade purposes.\nThe rBrandon-to-Nelson Caravan\nwas originally scheduled for June\nto demonstrate its all-weather qualities and had started when the pro-\nvince's floods terminated all high\nway traffic on the scheduled dates\nonly closure of the designated high\nway lor many years.\nAt least three Cranbrook repres\nentatives, Board ot Trade President\nPaul Storey, Secretary Murray Mac\nFarlane and Ray Lynch will accompany the Caravan to its Nelson destination oh September'9 with breakfast here and luncheon in Creston\nfor the party prior to its late after\nnoon arrival\n#t. daufaur'a pra-(Eatljri.raI\n. Rev. T. L. LEADBEATER, B.A., I,Th. M.Kd.      .\nludll i m\u2014Foly Communion\n9:30 a.m?\u2014Willow Point\u2014Hoi-,  munion\n\"\u25a0 '11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n'   \"The Price of Privilege\"\n-   *-7:30 p.m.- Even Song        * -? ,\u00ab,\n\"C'nri: nan Community oi . atheistic\nCommunism?\"\ng>t f mi yitattrt aHyurrl?\nMinister: Rev, A. L. Anderson, B.A., B.D., S.T.M.\nDirector of Music: Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, B.A., A.R.C.T.\n11:00 a.m.-LABOUR SUNDAY SERVICE\n\"The Opportunity and Responsibility of Organized Labour\"\n(The Sacrament of Baptism will be administered)     .,\n7:30 p.m,\u2014\"THE ESACPE FROM GOD\"\n\u00aertntt|| Itattri. (tfptrrfj\nrrrWJosephlne and Silica -\u00bb\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.\nREV. GORDON G. McL. BOOTHROYD, B.A., B.D, Minister\nMrs. C. W. Tyler, Choir Leader and Organist.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"THE APPLE OF DISCORD\" '\n\u25a0   Solo by Mrs. Bain Oliver\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"MY YEAR AS GIDEON SECRETARY\" i    \\ I\nBy Mr. R. H. Coleridge of Toronto formerly of Nelsoh.andr\npopular radio speaker. Solo by Mrs. Vincent Prior.\nNext Sunday, Sept. 12, 9:45 a.m, Sunday School opens,\nTuesday, Sept. 7, 8:00 p.m. Junior and Senior Friendly Club\nln the Church Parlour.\nTHREATS STOP\nTAIKSBY\nWALLACE MAN\nSenatorial Candidate\nStoned; Financiers\nLinked in Race War\nPLANE SPATTERED\nMT, VERNON, 111., Sept. 3 (API-\nCurtis MacDougall of the Progres\nsive Party said \"threats ot violence'\nhad forced him to cancel scheduled\ntalks last night in two Southern Illinois coal-mining towns.\nMacDougall, party candidate for\nUnited States Senator, earlier said\nhe was stoned and he and his 14-\nmember campaign party driven out\nof West Frankfort, 111, anothermln-\ning town, Wednesday night\nMacDougall said he cancelled\nplana tor last night's rallies ln Zieg-\nler and Herrln after two members\nof his party had told him police ln\nthe towns had refused to \"guarantee\nus any protection.\"\nMacDougall, a professor of journalism* at Northwestern University,\ntold a reporter: \"I certainly am hoi\ngoing to risk the safety of the people with me unless city authorities\nwill promise protection.\"\nSHREVEPORT, La, Sept. 3 (AP)\n\u2014Henry Wallace headed into Arkansas, today, sent on his way with a\nparting shot of two eggs which\nstruck his plane Ss it left here last\nmidnight\nThe Progressive Party's Presl\ndential candidate, safely in the plane\nbefore the eggs struck, took with\nhim conflicting memories of his\ntour of yesterday through Mississippi and Louisiana.\nHis appearances t in Mississippi,\nbirthplace of .the \"States' Rights\"\nDemocrat revolt, were without incident But in Louisiana, tomatoes\nwere hurled in Monroe and his car\nwas spattered with eggs in Shreve-\nport   *\nWallace's campaign manager, C.\nB. -Baldwin, said in New York that\n\"powers in Southern,political life\"\nhave organized the disturbances\nwhich have punctuated Wallace's\nSouthern tour?\nIn the radio address here Wallace said he is hated by some for\nhis \"idea of human freedom\" because \"it 'means equality for Negroes.\"\nAsking \"who gains from making\nrace prejudice a flaming sword,''\nWallace asiertedi\n\"The answer does not lie In the\nSouth. There Is a long ohaln that\nlinks unknown hoodlums In a\nNorth Carolina or Alabama mill\ntown with men In cutaway and\nfinely-tailored business suits \u2014\nmen who are found In the great\nfinancial centres of, New York and\nBoston\u2014men who make a dollar-\nand-eentt profits by setting race\nagainit - race In the far-away\n8outh.\" -\nBargains In the \"Clasilfled\" todayl\nValuation Anmj\n513 Victoria Street    *    .\nAdjutant rail Mt  Frank Pierce\nSUNDAY:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Mui ting.     -\n2:30 p.rb.\u2014Sunday School\n7:30 p m.\u2014Salvation Meeting.\nTHURSDAY:\ni 8:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer and R raise\nMeeting.\n3:00 p.m.\u2014\"W omen's Ho me\nLeague Meeting.\"   - ;\nYOU  ARE INVlTKD\n3ftrat iapttHt GUjitrrlj\nStanley Street\n\u25a0' :   JOHN M. DAYKIN, B.A, Pastor      '       .\nMorning;Worship 11:00 a.m.\u2014PATTERNS FOR INDUSTRY, i\nEvening Service 7:30 p.m.\u2014WORKING TOGETHER FOR GOD.\n\"All things work together for good to them thaV love God.\"\n,i '\u25a0'. , :\u2014Romans 8:28.\nJfrat'CMptrrM-\nQUjrtat \u00a7>rfe ntiat\nA Branch of The Mother Church\nTho    First   Church    ut   Christ\n\u25a0 Sclentlr.t In Boston, Masl\nSi tit'.ry   School- 9.45   . .m.\nSunday Service\u201411:00 ,u,i, ,\nSUBJECT:\n\"MAN\"-\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\ni,j   \u25a0.' 8 p.m. r ..\n'    Reading Room open daily 3*5\nExcept Wednesday r \u25a0\u25a0 ',-< rf\nAll Cordially Welcome    '\nSt iloljtt'a\nSartljmut\nStanley and Silica Sts.\nREV. S. MAIER, Pastor\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Divine  Service\nVSeek first God's Kingdom\"\nLUTHERAN HOUR, CJAT, Trail\n8:30 a.m.\nSrtljpl \u00aeabernarii\u00bb\nREV. L M. PRESLEY, Pastor\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Devotional Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic Service\nTUESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Christ's Ambassadors \u00bb '\n1 Three i of every  fbtitt Mexicans    Japanrhad a pre-war fishing fleet\n(fork on1 the land.    AMbV of more than 360,000 vessels, i '   .\n7 '3ttrat\nJprpabijtpnan\n(Pjurrlj\nKootenay and Victoria Streets\nRev. A. Stewart Minister\nPhone 1382-L.\n11:00 A.M.\u2014\"THE    SPIRIT    OF\nALERTNESS.\"\n\"Prospects Look Favorable\"\nOn Workers Position\nWidespread Economic Insecurity,\nC.C.L. President States; Bengough\n, Concerned Over Communism \"Smear\"\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\nC-hadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Sept. 3 (CP)\u2014Leaders of Canada's'two big\nlabor congresses,-in- Labor;.Day messages, disagreed today on\nthe position of Canada's workers.\nPercy Bengough, President of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada, said Canadians are \"indeed fortunate\" by\ncomparison with conditions in other countries and \"the prospects for the next few years'\nPreparing for\nBlockade End\n$250 Million From\nTourists Is Estimate\nBy The Canadian Press\n. Figures released in OttSWa estimate that the number of. tourists\nvisiting Canada this year may exceed 25,000,000, ahd that by season's\nclose they will have spent $250,000,-\n000, the greater .part of it United\nStates dollars?\" to help meet Canada's ordinary rtrade- deficit of, do!-,\nlars,'\nGETTING AHEAD OF DAD\nSALT LAKE CITY, Sept. 3 \u2014\n(AP) \u2014 A Pocatello, Idaho, youth\nenlisted in the United States Navy\nyesterday with this comment:\n\"Dad says. he'll draft me in a\nlittle while anyway, so.I thought I'd\nbeat him to the draw and enlist.\" -\nThe youth is Samuel Allen Dunn,\n18.\n\u2022'*>, His* father; Samuel, E Dunn,?:is\nchairman of the Draft Board in FO'\ncatello.\nalso look favorable.'\nOrganised labor ln Canada, he\nsaid, \"has every right to celebrate\nthis Labor Day as a successful milestone.\"\nBut A. R. Mosher, President of the\nCanadian Congress of Labor, said\n\"poverty and distress ... are still\nprevalent throughout the Dominion\"\nand \"there is still widespread ecO'\nnor\/ilc insecurity.\" '\nLabor Minister Mitchell, ln his\nmessage, took the view- that labor\nconditions are good,\n\"We have enjoyed another year\nof high employment, high wages\nand sound family security,\" he said.\n\"The country has,had the benefit, I\nthink, generally; of wise labor leadership, and I see no reason why this\nvery satisfactory condition cannot\ncontinue-in the future.\"\n' The Labor Minister warned labor\nand management against engaging\nin a race between wages and prices.\nHe said labor was coming, more\nand more to realize that \"the road to\nsocial security does not lie ln the\ndirection of a continuous competition between wage rates and the\nprice of commodities.\n\"What we  need,  and what we\nmust conscientiously strive to obtain,  Is greater  stability in both\nwages and prices. With this condi\ntlon, labor  and  management will\nfind themselves  much  better oft\nthan when participating ln a race in\nwhich there is no final goal.\",\nMr. Mitchell noted Canada had\nenjoyed a high level of Industrial\npeace In the last year and he expressed the hope this would con\ntlnue.\nHe made a plea for co-operation\nof all parties In the operation of\nthe   new   Federal   Labor   Code,\n. which went Into effect Sept, 1,\n\"However, If after a fair trial It\nIs found that changes seem desirable, then I want to hear from\nboth sides and also the Provincial\nGovernments, Suggestions resulting will be most carefully considered.\"\nCODE \"LIMITED\"\nMr. Bengough agreed that the\ncode covers most of the main points\nsought by the. Trades and Labor\nC6ngress, and. he said it could bS.'ex-\npected to provide better machinery\nfor settlement of industrial disputes\nthan any Canada has had previously.   '  .    \u25a0:\u2022':\nHowever, he said, the code was\n\"limited\" to the extent that Dominion authority was restricted from\nentering Provincial jurisdiction.\nHe expressed concern over what\nhe called \"the intensive campaign\nbeing conducted by.some In an effort to smear the labor movement\nwith Communism.\" This was probably the most important? of labor's\ndomestic problems.? . .v\n\"Unquestionably, the International situation and the happenings in\nthe many countries that have been\ntaken over by .Communists and the\nsemblance of freedoms that have\nbeen lost demand all to be on their\nguard.\n\"However, one cannot Justify the\nmanner in which big business now\nIs endeavoring to exploit the natural feSr of our people in order to\n\"FISHERMAN\" CAUGHT\nSAULTE.STE. MARIE, Ont; Sept.\n3 (CP) \u2022- Here's a fish story in\nwhich it Wasn't the fish that tried\nto get away. William Renner, an\nAmerican, tourist, tried to land his\nfish the easy way and was ffned\n$100 and costs for stealing nine trout\nfrom the gill nets ot commercial\nfishermen at Agawa Bay. He was\nordered to pay for the fish.\nMRS. DEWEY, MRS. TRUMAN\nARE NEW MOTHERS\nFARGO,' N.D., Sept. 3 (AP)-Mrs.\nDewey and Mrs. Truman are patients on the same floor ln St. Luke's\nHospital here. But nary a' politician\nhas called on either of them.\nThey are Mrs. Floyd Dewey of\nAverill, Minn., and Mrs. Ralph Truman of Fargo. A son waa born' to\nthe,'Dewey's Sunday and Mrs Truman ls the mother ot a daughter\nborn Tuesday. ,\nWAITRESSES QUARANTINED\nAFTER POLIO DEAf H \u2022\nVANCOUVER, Sept 3UCS-). \u2014\nWaitresses at Mallbu Club^Prinfcess\nLouisa Inlet, have been put in quarantine for 14 days as a result of a\npolio death Diane Harris 17-year-old\nwaitress died.pt the disease Monday.\nDEVONPOST, Devonshire, Eng.,\n(CP)\u2014The battleship H.M.S. Valiant (31,520 tons) built ln 1914, left\nhere for the Clyde to be broken up.\n(Stljurrl) of\ntljp Urirrmrr'\n'\u25a0',.\"  ,     (Anglican)\nFAIRVIEW\nREV. W. J, SILVERWOOD,\nA.K.C B.Sc,lVlcar\n8:00 a.m.-7-Holy Chipmwilon\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning IPrayer.\n3:30 p.m.\u2014South Slocan,\n>' 7:3J), p.ij),\u2014Evening, Prayer  ,\nEuattijfltral\niliiiaum (EuMttan!\nHJALMER O. PETERSON\n.  ' .Pastor'\nSUNDAY:\n10:00\u2014Sunday School and   \u25a0\nBible Class.   | \u00bb': \u25a0'.-\n11:00\u2014Morning Service. \u25a0, I\n7:30\u2014Evening Service, j l. \u25a0\n. Mr. R. H. Coldrldge, formerly\nassociated with our Church; now\ntravelling , In interests of the\nGideon work, will, teach Bible\nClass and speak,at the 11:00 service.\nTUESDAY:      (\n7:30\u2014Mid-week Service.\nFRIDAY:\n\u25a0'7,*30-;Hi\u00ab,eague. -   <\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4,1948\u2014 5\nadvance their own cause and fact!\nitate their exploitation of-the people.\ni. \"The Labor movement does not\nheed  warnings  of the   evils  of\nCommunism from those hostile to\norganized   labor. We  understand\nCommunism better than they. In\nall countries In which  dictatorships have been established, the\nfirst to be destroyed have been\nour brothers and  sisters. In the\ntrade unions.. \u25a0.\n\"What   Is   needed   today ... la\nclear thinking. Canadian labor must\nnot be stampeded by those desiring\nto bring in repressive legislation in\nthe foolish belief that any group of\ncitizens can protect their own freedom by destroying the freedoms of\nothers,\n\"Organized. labor desires peace\nand harmony' both on the' job and\noff it. They want to see Canada\nprosper and are willing to work to\nmake lt that way.\"\nPresident Mosher of the C.C.L.\nsaid, that while there are still \"serious divisions in the ranks of organized labor in Canada, labor is growing more and more unanimous regarding the kind of social,\" order it\nwants to see established,  -\n\"There is general agreement\" he\nsaid, \"that the resources, the machinery and the manpower of the\nnation and the world must be utiliz.\ncd effIcently, with a view to prpvld\nIng the highest possible standard of\nliving throughout the world. ...\n\"So far as the C.C.L. is concerned,\nit is confident that its objective at\na good life for the workers and\npeople of Canada, and ultimately of\nthe whole world, is not unattainable\nFIND VICE RING\nHELD YOUTH\nQUEBEC, Sept. 3 (CP) - A vice\nring which police Bald was the \"most\nrepugnant in police files\" has been\nexposed here, lnunlclpal police\nmade known last night\nThey said the case had been turn-, ,of Victoria, and three children.\ned over to the office of Premier\nMaurice Duplessis in his capacity as\nAttorney-General\nThe discolsure followed InvestlgS'\ntlon of almost two months and came\nafter the arrest and conviction of a\n10-year-old country boy on a vagrancy charge; He was sentenced to\neight* days in jail but police said he\nmade declarations which enabled\nthem to crack the vice ring wide\nopen.\nAuthorities said several additional\narrests could be expected shortly.\nThe youth and two unidentified\nwomen, so police said, made statements under oath naming two men\nand a woman as ring lesders.\nPolice aald the youth told them\nRe had been kept ln an alleged\nbrothel on downtown Sous-le-Cap\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nHOLDS UP WALL\"\nFORHOUR\nTIL MATE FREED   <\n; BICKERSHAW, Lancashire, England, Sept. 3 (CP)\u2014Forty-year-old\nJohn Sllcock was awarded the British Empire medal for holding up a\ncolliery wall with his back and\nshoulders while other miners worked to'free a man trapped by a fall\nof stone at Maypole Colliery. Sllcock held up the wai] for more than\nan hour.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllinii\nTourist Bureau\nBalks at\nJRed Area Requests\nOTTAWA, Sept 3 (CP)-AlIve to\nthe latest wrinkle in Communist\ntechnique, the Federal Tourist Bureau, is clamping down on replies\nto requests for maps and information-from  Russian-dominated, EU'\niipt.': ' .\nAn official of the Federal Tourist Agency, officially the Canadian\nTravel Bureau, said half a dozen\nrecent requests from the Red-led\narea for the Bureau's \"excellent\"\nroad map of Canada are being held\nup along with all other kindred requests from those parts\n, He said they would ba held up\npending investigation.\nThe tourist official said the Bu\nreau published nothing outside ot\nthe map that would be of use to\nany spy. \"But,\" he chuckled, \"It's a\nhelluva good map.\" '\nTELEVISION SPREAD\nMAKES NEW BBC\nSPACE NECESSARY\n.LONDON, Sept. 3 (CP) - The\nBBC Is lpoking for a new home for\nits television programs, now beamed\nfrom a former exhibition building\nCalled Alexandra Palace ln North\nLondon. Television is growing so\nfast in Britain\u20144786 riew sets were\nsold in the London area in June\u2014\nthat the BBC wants a permanent\ntransmission headquarters with\nmore space than Alexandra Palace\nprovides.\nBARE HOSPITAL\nCOLLECTIONS\nRACKET IN B. C.\nFalse Agents Rake?\nIn Insurance Dues\nBy Visiting Homes\nWARNING ISSUED\nVICTORIA, Sept. 3 (CP) \u2014 A\n'racket\" in the collection of Government hospital insurance premiums has been disclosed by officials\nof the hospital service.'\nOfficials issued a warning that\npremium payments should be made\nonly to local offices of the service\nor by mail.\nThe warning' came after reports\nthat persons have been going from\ndoor to door both ln Victoria and\nVancouver and making collections\nclaiming to be acting as agents for\nthe Government\nThe Hospital Insurance Service\nhas no agents authorized to go out\nand make collections,\" Department\nofficials said.\n\"Apparently some persons have\nobtained a supply of Government\nforms and have been misrepresenting themselves in order to work, a\nracket\"     ',,,,) .,\nVANCOUVER, Sept 3 (CP) -\nExistence of a reported \"racket\" in\ncollection ot Government hospital\nplan premiums was discounted by\npolice here today.\nThey were commenting on a\nwarning issued by officials ot the\nscheme in Victoria, saying that\nbogus collectors in Victoria and\nVancouver were soliciting \"premiums\" from unwary householders.\nPolice here have had only one\ncomplaint\nAn1 elderly '\"collector\" attempted\nto sign up Mrs. Robert Bemlster,\nbut asked-for; np money. .   .\nOfficials warned, however, that\nforms for collecting the premiums\nare easily 'obtainable should\nracketeers try the scheme.        .\nBy GEORGE BRIA\nBERLIN, Sept. a (AP)-Qerman\nreports today tald tha Russians\nare making technleal arrangement- for lifting the 72-day-old\nblockade of Berlin.\nThe British-licensed German\nPreii Service said the Director of\nGerman railways In.the Soviet\nzone had been summoned by Russian transport authorities to be\ngiven Instructions for these arrangements. Thla report could not\nbe confirmed In any official\nquarter.\n' An American transport official\naald there' hat been no Indication\nfrom the Russians as to when they\nIntend to reopen the rail lifeline\nto Berlin from Helmstedt and the\nEatt-West canal system. The\ntrains were stopped by the Russians June 24 because of \"technical difficulties.\" Canal traffic\nwas stopped a short time later,\n\"It It unlikely,\" the American\nofficial tald, \"that they will do\nto (reopen the lines) untll they\nare satisfied with the results of\ndltcuuloni here and' In Moscow\n.\/\n\u00abe\u00abnfe\u00ab\u00abf_nvve*nfteiv\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nThe Home ot Furniture Values'\nPHONE 115 \u2014 NELSON, B.C.\nWhite Wool\nBlankets\nGUARANTEED 100%\nPURE WOOL\nSize 72 x 90\nPair $16.95\nOPEN 'TIL 9 P,M. 8ATURDAY\nWWWWOTWVWVVWVWWWWW\nTwo Perish in\nCoast (rash\nALERT, BAY, B.C., Sept 3 (CP)\n\u2014The pilot and passenger ol a Bel-\nlanca aircraft bound from Vancouver to Alert Bay were killed today\nwhen the plane.crashed.near here.\nThe dead are: Walter'' Brilland,\npilot, of Vancouver, and Ken Weaver, Inspector of Fisheries here.\n.The aircraft crashed Into trees 25\nor 30 yards from shore at Carr Bay,\njuat outside Growler Cover, about 4\np.m. and burned. The bodies were\nbrought here.\nWeaver, a former Mounted Policeman, went overseas late in 1941 with\nthe Air Force and attained the rank\nof Flight Lieutenant as an air gunner.\nHe was widely known In the\nProvince and la survived by hla\nwidow, the former Sheila Donnelly,\nmoral acts.\nBURNS WORKERS GETS\nPAY HIKE\nCALGARY, Sept 3 (CP) - New\nworking agreements covering the\nseven Burns packing plants were\ncompleted last night, granting 9.6\nper cent wage boosts to members of\nthe United Packing House Workers\nof America (C.I.O.).\nPlants in Vancouver, Edmonton,\nCalgary, Prince Albert, Sask., Re.\nglna, Winnipeg and Kitchener, Ont.\nare affected.\nThe Union had asked a 19 per\ncent boost across the board.\nit. can to promote progfess in that\ndirection.\n\"Tha workers whom it represents\nfeel keenly the maladjustments of\nmodern, Industrial society, and they\nare not only endeavoring to under,\nstand the nature of the problems to\nvolved in. building a better world,\nbut are taking practical measures\nfor the realization of their ideals,\nCONCERNED WITH T\nCOST OF LIVING :\n\"Theyhave been deeply concerned, injasrtn' montha with the drastic increase in the cost ot living and\n1iave strongly urged the reimposition of price controls and the re-\nduction ol prices to reasonable lev\nels.\n\"They have been forced to de\nmand higher wage rates ln the endeavor  to   maintain   their  living\nstandards,  but  they   realize  that\nevery increase In wages has been\nused as a^n excuse to increase prices\n... and that their .wage increases\nleft them .in many cases no better\noM than they were before.\"\nMr. Mosher tald failure of gov.\nernment and Induttry to protect\nthe worker* had convinced them\nthey should not leave political af\nfain to professional politicians, or\nInduttry to Industrialists concern\ned   only   with   making   profits.\nThere   mutt  be   more   economic\nplanning, and the financial system\nmutt be \"reformed.\"\nThe lack of housing has become\na national scandal, and there is still\nwidespread economic insecurity.'\nThe plane was chartered by the\nQueen Charlotte Airlines from an\nEdmonton Company.\nTo Push Drive for\nCommission Probing\nOf Freight Rates\nEDMONTON, Sept. 8 (CP)-Ed-\nmohton's Chamber ,ot Commerce\nWill continue to urge appointment\not a Royal Commission to investi?\ngate the freight rate structure,\nFrancis G. Wlnspear, Chamber\nPresident said today.\nHe was commenting on a Justice\nDepartment ruling announced in\nOttawa yesterday that the Cabinet\ncould not legally create a Royal\nCommission to Investigate freight\nrates.\nAlberta Government officials said\nthey \"will withhold comment.\"\nJ. J. Frawley, Alberta's special\ncounsel on freight rates, said:   .\n\"The premiers of seven provinces,\nof which Alberta is one, are still\nawaiting a reply from the Dominion Government respecting the\nrepresentations made last July 20.\nThe burden of these representations\nwas the appointment of a Royal\nCommission.''\nISRAELI MINISTER TO\nMOSCOW A WOMAN\n.MOSCOW, Sept .3 (AP). t Mrs.\nGolda Myerson, former Milwaukee\nschool teacher, arrived In Moscow\ntonight as Israeli's First Minister to\nthe Soviet Union.       .      ,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllll\nFor School! For College!\nFor Career!\nROYAL\nPORTABLE\nHelpe  you  get better market,\nHelpa make your work lighter!\nAnd you can pay for it aa you\nuse it, on convenient payment\nterms.\nLook at Boyal'a exdutltie featuresl\nFINGER-FLOW KEYS,\n\"MAGIC\" MAHGIN, SPEED\nSPACER, \"TOUCH CONTROL\", RAPID RIBBON\nCHANGER \u2014 plua lots of\nothers!\nCome ln and see the beautiful,\nsturdy how Royal Portable!\nD.W.McDERBY\nTHE TYPWRITER MAN\nNelton, B.C.,\nPartridge's News Stand\nTrail\nV. Mawten\nCretton\nThe Townsman\nCranbrook\nIIIIIIII1I1IIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIH,\nNEW HAT\nARRIVALS\nLatest - Smartest\nand Newest\nin Town\nFor Finest\nFALL FASHIONS\nGABARDINE and\nLIGHTWEIGHT\nWool Suits\nAND YOUR NEW\nWinter Coat\nMila|y's EasKidn Slipppe\nH^iiatMdtu^iiJailit\n \u25a0'v        :\t\nTODAY'S News Pictures I Jtel\nPossible Soviet Atomic Centre\nT.'-'wy;-'!\n\u25a0Above la a general view ef the city of Ulan-\nUde In the Buryat-Mongolian autonomous republic,\nwhich persistent reports place at the centre of Russian atomlo research and activities. Picture shows a\ngroup of vocational school students overlooking\napartment houses which have been built for the\nworkers In the city's locomotive plant\n\u2014Central Prett Canadian.\nMete West Sued By Two Writers ForilOQ,000\nActress Mae Wert (left) It sued In Los Angeles\nfor $100,000 by writers Michael Kane and Mrs.\nDonya Corlelgh Kane (right) who allege she failed\nto pay them for material they.reportedly finished\nSlain\nfor the-play, \"Katharine Was Great\" Ih a similar\nsuit filed In New York Mist West declares she Invented the itory \"from her own head.\"\n-\u25a0'.-,:\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-,. \u2014Central Prest  Canadian.\nIt'*; R Bay For Them\nDistrict Attorney M. Ralph\nBrown of Albuquerque, N. M.,\ntayt that Franklin Letter Lindmuth, 18, of Harrlsburg, Pa., hat\nelgned a statement that he wit-\nnetted the slaying, July 26, of\nLucille Ramirez (above), a 29-\nyear-old Modetto, Calif., nurte,\nbut did not commit the crime.\nLindmuth hat been returned to\nAlbuquerque to face a murder\ncharge. \u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nLike thousands of others throughout the nation, this group of 26-\nyear-olds (right) register for the peacetime draft at Wathlngton\nIrving High 8chool In New York In the first itep In the country'!\nplan to build up Its armed forces, Reglttrart fill out the draft cards\nfor the registrant., \u2022' \u25a0'\u25a0 _ap Wlrephoto.\n\u25a0;.....SUTTOJT COLFFIELD, Warwick-1   WEEDON, Northampton England\n'\u00abH!rei England (CP)\u2014Surrounding (CP)\u2014\"Effrontery of non-church-\nr Innkeepers have been asked to help goers ln demanding church facilities\nsearch for a missing $800 pedigree ,&r weddings, christenings and fun-\n: Alsatian, Lalsh Peter of Norn. Fran      ,   .        \u25a0,,-\u2022\u201e, .    ,.   \u201e   .  -\nRiego, Chairman of the British Al- eraIs Is condemned by the Rev. L.\naatian Association, who is leading'Lewis.  Attendance,  he says,  does\nthe search, said: \"Peter likes a daily inot justify his parish's existence.\ndrink of beer. We hope he may call \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014  .\nta a pub somewhere in quest of one.'Phone  144 for  Classified  Service; I which operates near Duncan, B. C.\nLONDON (CP)-The Kingsley\nFairbridge Memorial CbmmUtee,\nwith Viscount Devonport as Chairman, .has been.formed to raise funds\nfor a memorial at Umtall, Southern\nRhodesia,\" tor ther founder of > tie\nFairbridge Farm  Schools;   one' of\nSATURDAY, SEPT. 4,1948\nCKLN\n1240 ON THI,. DIAL\n7:00\u2014O Canada\n7:02\u2014News Summary *\n7:07\u2014Sunrise Serenade\n8:00-**CBC Newa\n8:15-Pick of the Hits\n8:30\u2014Morning Concert\n8:00\u2014BBC New.?\n8:15\u2014Records at Random\n8:30\u2014Musical Program\n10:00\u2014Train Time\n10:01\u2014Bandstand      .,-'.\u25a0\u00bb\n10:15^-Off the Shelf.\n10:30\u2014Concert Favourites\n11:00\u2014On the Teen Beat   -\n11:30\u2014Saddle Serenade\n11:45\u2014Songs from Hawaii\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014Press News      ,\n12:30\u2014Music for Saturday\n1:00\u2014Memo From Lake Success\n1:30\u2014Musical Program       i '\n2:00\u2014Popular crfhestras\n3:00\u2014Old Favourites I\n3:30\u2014NBC Symphony Orchestra\n4:29r-Traln Time -\n4:30\u2014Here's. to. Romance\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n5:15-r01d Chlsholm Trail\n5:30\u2014Peerless News.\n5:45\u2014Sport College\n6:00-*National News Summary\n6:10\u2014The MarsonS\n6:30r-Time tor Sing\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Music\n7.-00\u2014Serenata ,\n7:30\u2014To be announced        *\n8:00\u2014Bob Morrison Talk\n8:15-rMuslc Well Known and Lov-\ned for the Older Folks\n9:00\u2014Songs of Our Time\n9:15\u2014Carmen Cavellaro \"'-.\n9:30\u2014Chamber Music\n10:00-CBC News    '\n10:1B^-Fishj Flesh and Fowl\n10:30\u2014El Paseo Orchestra\n11:00\u2014Reo?uest Program\n12:00\u2014God Save  the  King\ns ' CJ AT\n\u25a0 ,610 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Peerless. News\n7:10\u2014Breakfast for Two\n7:35\u2014Fun at Breakfast '\n8:00\u2014CBC Newt  ,\n0:15\u2014Five Min. of Fine Music\n8:20\u2014Musical Program\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n8:15\u2014Records at Random\n8:30\u2014Musical Program\n10:00\u2014Saturday Review\n10:45\u2014Press News  ,\n11:00\u2014On the Teen Beat      ;\n11:30\u2014Saddle Serenade\n11:45t-CBC News\u2014Weather\n12:00\u2014Musical Program\n12:30\u2014Greg McCutchler\n1:00\u2014Memo from Lake Succesi\n1:30\u2014Musical Program\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club\n2:45\u2014Canadian Derby\n3:00--Piano Classic*,\n3:15-CBC N\u00abwa\n3:25\u2014Program Resume\n3:3.0\u2014Jazz .Jamboree .;'.;   .\n3:45\u2014Jazz Jamboree\n4:00\u2014Miscellaneous Melodies\n4:30\u2014Here's to Romance\n5:00\u2014People Ask   \u2022   .  \u25a0    .\n5:15\u2014Musical Program\n5:30\u2014SportS This Week\n5:45\u2014Sports College\n6-0O--CBC NewS\n6:10\u2014The Malsons   '\n6:30\u2014Serenade in Rhythm\n7:00\u2014Serenata' .   .\n7:30\u2014To be announced\n8:00\u2014This Week   ','\n8*15\u2014Piano Pops   '.-\u25a0-.\n8:30\u2014Barnyard Jamboreo    u\n9:00\u2014Pacific Piaridfdrte\n9:30\u2014Chamber Music\n10:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014News Analyst\n10:30\u2014El'Paso and Orchestra',\n11:00\u2014Request Programmo\n11:30\u2014Peerless News\nSunday, sept. 5,1948\nCKLN\n8:55\u2014O Canada\n9:00\u2014BBC News and .Commentary\n8:15\u2014Songs and Singers\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbour\n9:59-D.O.T.S.\n10:00\u2014Train Time\n10:01\u2014B. C. Gardiner '    '-\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014Music in Worship v..   ...\n11:00\u2014CBC News Bulletin\n11:03\u2014Capital, Reports\n11:30\u2014Chapel by the Side of\nRoad   .\n11:45T-Press News  \u2022\n12:00\u2014Hollywood Bowl Symphony\nl:30H2hurch of the Air\n2:00\u2014Music '-in Nature,.  ,\n2:30\u2014News Report'    \u25a0'',,'\n2:33--John Fisher, Reports\n2:45\u2014Weekend Review\n3:00\u2014Old -Favorites-\n3:30\u2014Weather ',*\u25a0*...\n3:35-MusicaI, Program\n3:45\u2014The Red Feather Man\n4:00\u2014Peerless Newt\n4:l!H-Movie Critic\n4:30\u2014Concert Recordings\n5:00\u2014Robert Shaw. Chorale    -\n5:30\u2014Ici L'On Chante       t-.\n6:00\u2014CBC News\n6:10\u2014Old Songs\n6:30\u2014Music fbr Sunday\n7:00\u2014Open Air Theatre\n7:30-r-Little Symphonies\n8:00\u2014British Authors\n8:15-The World's Greatest Ballads\n8:30\u2014Music by Erh Wild\n9:00\u2014Classics for Tpday\n9:30\u2014Vesper Hpur\n10:00-CBC News\n10:15\u2014Canadian Short i'toriet\n10:30-Prelude to Mldhlgrt '\n11:00\u2014God Save the King\nCJAT\n8:00\u2014Press News\n8:15\u2014Melodic Moods '\n8:30\u2014Lutheran Hour\n9:00\u2014BBC News and Commentary\n8:15\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n8:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n10:00\u2014Gospel Half Hour\n10:30\u2014Musical Program\n10:45\u2014Press Newa\n11:00\u2014Knox United Church Service\n12:00\u2014Hollywood Bowl Symphony\n1:30\u2014Church of the Air\n2:00\u2014Music In Nature-' .\n2:30\u2014CBC News\u2014Charles Grant\n2:45-GICn Shortliffe\n3:00\u2014Al'anandMe\n3:30\u2014Musical Program\n4:00\u2014Songs From the Movies\n4:15\u2014CBC Movie Critic\n4:30\u2014Concert Recordings\n5:00\u2014Charlie McCarthy\n5:00\u2014Ici L'On Chahte\n6:00-CBC News\t\n6:10\u2014By The Fireside\n6:30\u2014Album of Familiar Musle\n7:00\u2014Open Air Theatre       .\n7:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n8,'00\u2014Even Tide\n8:30\u2014Music by Eric Wilde\n9:00\u2014Summertime\n,8:30\u2014Song Recital\n9:45\u2014Cathedral Hour\n10:00-CBC News '\ntO: 15\u2014Sports Cavalcade    '\n10:30\u2014Prelude to Midnight\n11:!\u00bb\u2014Peerless News\nHEY\/THERE'S ASHORTER^Y&Pl\nway Downtown i V^sVifiS.\nTHAN THIS\/ r^(V%B\u00a3&2St,\n\u25a0**~\u2014^-^V^ypgETry bap.'\ngfeSffL^I\nu^\n..........ISlwrfr-.\u00abjfaj\n^^\n'MQ]\nrVXE THE SHORTER WAY )\nOR.fU. REFORT'^Wp^\u2014^.\n;^^^^^^OKAY, PAI_.')\nm\nMi\n51 \\ MiwkQXbxk:\n?a?a^??s^s?\n|               ^^~~^~--^_     v^Vr^A-:i'ii''iV:-V\n \u25a0\u2122\"\n;(CXo}\nItASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS \u25a0-;:\u25a0\nBNNISON - To Mr. and'Mrs.\nles E.Dertnison, New Denver,, at\ntbria, B.C., Aug. 30, a daughter.\nDenlson Is Assistant District En-\nier. Public Works Department,\nNew Denver.   \u25a0\nHELP\\WANTfeO__\n\"HELP WANTED\nbung man for electrjpal ap-\niahces, washing machines,\nidlos, etc., selling, Splen-\nctopportunlty for advdnee-\n.nt. if adapted to .store\nprk. '  , \u201e\u2022; .\ntate age, education and ex-\nsrience In first letter tp\nox 9923  Nelson  Daily\news.\nSTENOGRAPHER\nWANTED\nGood wages.  Ideal\nworking conditions.\n'eebles Motors Ltd.\n<V CLERK REQUIRED - AP-\nUcatlons will be received up to\naturdoy September 11th. for tho\nosition of City Clerk of Arm-\nrong. Applicants should state\nte, marital status, war service\nf any), salary required and full\nirtlculars of qualifications for\nie position, to George W. Game,\n:ayor. Armstrong, B.C.\nST CLASS MECHANIC WANT-\nI by old established garage in\nest Kootenay (Ford preferred).\nop wages. Apply Box 9825 Dally\n4wb.\nrjHTED - YOUNG MAN OR\nmple to drive car to Moose Jaw.\n[Ust be good driver. Free trans-\nirtation. Phone 888-L-3.   .\nLET \u2014 CONTRACT CUT, SKID\nId haul a million feet logs\nimped ln boom'-. at Kaslo by\nec. 1. S. P. Pond Nelson.\nNTED-BOOKKEEPER FAM\niar with lumber calculating. Ap*\ny P.O. Box 219 Nelson, B.C.\nL*NTED - LOGGING TRUCK\n\u00bbulers, contract work. Apply\nMeier Lumber Co., Nelson, B.C.\nNTED - WOMAN FOR GEN-\nal housework, sleep in. Apply\ni\u00bbC-8813 Dally News.\n.NTED\u2014ELDERLY WOMAN TO\n\u2022ok after house and invalid, Ap-\nly to 524 Houstop St\nPERSONAL\nSfcWING   IN   YOUR   HOME   OR\n\u25a0mine. Ph. 584-R-l.. -,  . .\nto* vHicr-b   Paid   for   HW-\ntibues Phone |03_ wt 040 Baker St\nWAWAWESA  MUTUAL* FIRE IN\nsurance Co D L Kerr, Agent\nCHARLES WORM1NUTON. COlff\n\u2022 merclal Photographer Kimberley.\nWomen and men's portraiture.\nSL-tooH TWLBte Aftri BfrMcE\ntive. 2 weeks' supply $1: 12 weeks\nS3 at Fleury's, Argyle and Mann\nDrug Stores.\n10 CEil'l-SI BIRTH CONTROL IN-\nformation and catalogue ot hygienic supplies. Write Western\nDistributors, 61-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.\nLAWOO'S FURS, 306 GRANVILLE\nSt., Vancouver Invite you to seno\nyour furs In tor storage. Rales\n$2.00 p\u00bbr $100 for the season. Cl\"ar\nand glaze $5.00. Expert repairs ,md\nremodelling. Choose your new lui\ncoat from our complete stock.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n*i+********,**+*?*f^*+.+**\nWindows,. Sash\nand Frames\nMADE TO ORDER\nPHONE 1335 FOR\nQUOTATION, OR WRITE\n.   PATERSON\nMillwork Co. Ltd\nNelson, B. C, .\nporSale- chesterfield\nsuite, bedroom Suite, 2 bedsteads,\nsprings, Beauty Rest mattress,\ndresser, chest of drawers, G.E.\nwashing machine, table, vacuum\ncleaner, curling rocks, electric\nwater heater, lawn mower, rocker,\ngarden tools, mirrors, plastic bath\nroom curtains, wagon, bed lamp,\nwater hose, linoleum, crib, high\nchair. All like new. Phone 434-R-2.'\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUG SUN.\ndries: 24 samples, $1,00. or 19 De'\nluxe assorted,. $1.00. mailed ln\nplain, sealed wrapper Fjnest\nquality, tested, guaranteed. Bargain Catalogue free. Western Distributors, Dept RN, 81-144 West\nHastings St., Vah couver, B C.\nLADM3!.'* DELAYED MENSTRUA-\ntlon? Why worry? Smart women\nsay new, improved, triple-strength\nDelays Pills give prompt effective\nrelief for overdue, painful or Irregular period. (Regular $5.00)\nOur price, $3.00, postpaid via-Air\nMail ln plain, sealed wrapper\n(C.O.D. lf you, prefer). Women\nshould keep a box on hand at all\ntimes. Order yours right now!\nWestern Distributors, Dept ACN,\n61-144 West Hastings St, Vancouver, B.C. ,\n$20 to $1000 Loans\nFor Married Couples\nWITHOUT ENDORSERS\nQuick, friendly, fuss-free service. Easy repayment terms:\nLife insurance included at no\nextra cost Reduced rates, f\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LTD.,\nEst'd. 1930\nSuite 1, 360 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone 1099\n1 TEAM HORSES, WEIGHT. 1700\nlbs. each. Double set, of work\nharness. Massey Harris' mower, S\nft cut Massey. Harris 12x16 disk\nharrow, Cockshutt 12 inch walking plow, Cockshutt steel wheel\nfarm truck, All equipment one\nyear old. T. Dubois, {farrop.\nFOR SALE - COMPLETE SET OF\nmatched Campbell golf clubs with\nleather bag. One R.C.A. Victor\nportable radio. Both articles practically - new. Apply Room 18,\nRoyal Hotel,\nONE 1948 RCA VICTOR SEVEN-\ntube radio and gramophone combination table model with 20\nlatest song records. For quick\nsale $140, Phone 638-X.\nFOR SALE - 12 INCH SLAB\nwood, $13 per cord, delivered,. 2\nor more cords, $12 per cord.\nHalleran and Carlson, R.R. No. 1.\nPhone 608-Y-2.\nBROWN HARRIS TWEED COAT.\nSize 16, 1 pair of \"Stone Markln\"\nfurs, like new. Apply Box 9483\nDaily News.'\nRCA' Vic To ft sh6R*-Long\nwave rsdlo. Ivory plastic case, and\nnearly new RCA Victor record\nplayer? Phone 851-R, 213 Victoria\nSTANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS, 4\nreceipts to page with. duplicate\nsheets. Nelson Dally News Print-\ning Dept,\n. ***m   *\" *\u25a0'tf n\nfor Sale - two sectional\ncabins,  almost new,  10xl2.#Box\n9938 Dally News.\nPlt-B - HWIMSS - *tfeSs.'sttS.\ncial low prices, Active Trading\nCo.. 916  Powell  St.,  Vancouver\nNTED  \u2014  EXPERIENCED\naitress. Apply Box 8090 Daily\nIWS.'\nINTEI3 \u2014 TRUCK DRIVER FOR\nleal coal deliveries. Queen City\nTptbrs-Ltd.\njjNS WANTED.,\n ,\u2014DY   WILL   CARE\n.  ildren any hour of day or\nehing. Phone 1009-L.\nLOST AHD FOUND\nLOST IN LADIES DRESSING,\nroom, Lakeside Park, ladles' west-\nfield wrist watch. Finder please\nreturn to 1023 Elwyn St Valued as\nkeepsake. Reward\n3 DOUBLE SLIDING DOORS.\nBall bearing slides. Door size 2\nft 4 in. x 7 ft Phone 370-L.\nBEATTY ELECTRIC .WASHING\nmachine for sale, in good shape.\n614 Vernon St.\nLOST -:-.SMALL RED SIDE GATE\nfor truck. Phone Towler Fuel &\n-Transfer. '        >\n> JOB M^tt. PH. 496-ft. CAS-\nmten cert furnace services.\njOOl AND INSTRUCTION\nTL SERVICE EXAMINATIONS;\nrepare now for Fall examina-\n6ns. -Write M.C.C. Civil Service\nihool, 301 Enderton Bldg., Win-\npeg, Man?\t\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSMALL GRpCERY AND CON-\nfectionery business lor sale in\nTrail. Also 5 room modern home,\nfull basement and furnace. Not\nsold separately. Cash buyers only.\nWrite Box 9063 Daily News.\ni ROOM AND BOARD\nNTED - BOARD AND ROOM?\nr gentleman. Box 9039 Dally\n*ws. .   .\nfS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nB SALE - PART BOSTON\null pup. Phone 889-R-3.\t\nelamt l_uhj Statu\nlasslflcd Advertising Rates:\n8c per line first insertion and\non-consecutivo insertions.\nle line per consecutive inser-\nion after first insertion. *\n8c line for 8 consecutive inser-\nlons.\n1.56 line per month (26 con-\necutive Insertions). Box num-\n>ers lie extra. Covers any num-\nof Insertions.\ntlBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES,\nTENDERS, ETC.-20C per line,\nrst Insertion, 16c per line each\nsubsequent Insertion.\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy  ?..?..:; $   .03\nBy carrier, per week,\nto advance   .?...\u201e.?...?.___.      .29\nBy carrier, per year ......... 13.00?\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOhe month   _.._____. $ 1.00\nThree months     2.00\nSix months __.\u2014__r    4.30\nOne year ...r _..._'     8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne year  \u201e $12.00\nSix months      6.00\nabove rates plus postage\nThree months      3.00\nOhe month  . \/   1.00\nWhere extra postage ta required.\nBOWLING ALLEY \u2014 6 ALLEYS,\ncomplete and a going concern. Located ln a live wire community\nwith no competition. Some terms.\nD. W. Blackett P.O. Box 318\nCranbrook, B.C.\nWANT TO BUY FIR AND LARCH\npiling, 35 ft to 60'felt long. S? P.\nPond.\nWANTED -. 1 HORSE HAY MOW-\ner. Apply \"Pete S. Kinakin, Brilliant .\nFOR SALE\u2014SECOND-HAND BUS-\niness, best offer before Sept. 10th.\nMust sell due to illness. 1147 Bay\nAve.. Trail, B.C.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAVER3 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.  W.   WIDDOWSON  &  CO. AS\nsayers, 301 Josephine St, Nelson,\nH. S. 'ELMES,* ROSSLAND, R C,\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Represnt\nW. G. THOMPSON & CO. - AS-\nsayers it Metallurgists. All work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pen-\n. der St., W. Vancouver, B.C i\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. colin mclaren, d.c, chiro-\npractic X-Rray, Splnography,\nStrand theatre Bdg. Trail. Ph. 328\nDIAMOND   DRILLERS\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCo.. Ltd, Drilling and Bit Ser-\nvice. Box 508, Rossland. Ph. 420,\nENGINEERS AND  SURVEYORS\nHAGGEN   AND   CURRJE,   B. C\nLand Surveyors, Mining and Civil\nEngineers.    Rossland,    Kelowna,\nGrand Forks.     \\\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY AGENCIES LTD. IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 133.\n\u2014\" MACHINISTS\nMhNriTTs limiTBd\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 593   * 324 Vernon St\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\nSpecic'.lsts ln -nine and mill work.\nMachine work, light and heavy,\n708 Vernon St, Nelson. Phone 98\nCLASS DISPLAY\nOpen for Gas\nand Oil Sales.\nSUNDAY \u20148 A.M. to 8 P.M-.\nMONDAY (Labor Day) \u2014 8 A.M. to 8 P,.M.\n1; \u2022,   ,'AuSQ7EMERGENCY GAS SALES ALL WEEK\n,*    \\n ENDING SATURDAY,,.SEPT.' 11th,\ns*.-Motors\n\\J0t*i\u00a3s1j***f4i-**t^tt*pffH^\na - \u25a0 l '\" ' ,?:?^l...::.,        AL',:...:    ^\nJACK BOYCE'S GUN EXCHANGE,\nGuns Jor sale and exchange.    ;\nELECTRIC RANGE FOR SALE.\nPhone 1259-R     *\nFOR SALE - ENTERPRISE OIL\nburning stove. New. Ph. 1318-R.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US VOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron  Any quantity. Top prices\npaid,  Active Trading   Company,\n916 Powell St, Vancouver, B.C\nMACHINERY\n' Sawmill \u2022\nEqtrfpment\n\"Little Giant\" Portable Sawmills with 3 sites ln carriages,\n\"Little Giant\" Edgers for 2 and\n3 saw arrangement and the\n\"Little Giant\" Improved 4 sided\nball bearing Planer complete\nwith heads, knives, belts and\nshavings exhauster.     ,'i\n..\",'\u25a0    IN STOCK      \u25a0'\u201e\u2022\nAND READY TO SHIP    ;\nWe'carry a complete line of\nDodge Steel Split Pulleys, Steel\nBelt Lacing, Ball Bearings,\nSaws and Power Units both\nGasoline and Diesel Truck\nWinches,,Boomers, Power Take-\noffs and Steel Cable.\nYour Inquiries will receive\nprompt attention.-\nMachinery\nDepot Ltd.\n1028-39 Tenth Ave. West\nCalgary, Alberta.\n.\u00bb\u00bb^+*\nSystematic  .\nServicing:- *\nIn the early years there was\ncompartively few effdrts at systematized servicing. Conditions\nhava changed however. Developments garnered Irom every day\nnecessities and simple observations will not answer now, The\nworld has become quite, technical\nand complex. The acquisition, development and application of new\nknowledge is necessary for continuous growth. Groups of trained\nand well - educated men are\nbrought together, properly housed\nand furnished with adequate\nequipment, and set to work on\nthe major and' minor problems\nalike.\nMen bf Initiative are spught. and\nthey work tirelessly in a definite\nplace on all problems untll they\nsucceed. Your garage mechanic is\nnow a highly trained and skilled\ntechnician capable of servicing\narty type of automobile that may\nbe brought to him. The tools and\nskill he has at his command now\nmeans that he can practically rebuild your car no matter how bad\nit has been smashed. When you\nconsider the time and money he\nhas spent in train'ng, ybu will realize that his Rrices are very\nreasonable.     ;;\u00bb\nWe make an honest endeavor to\nkeep yqurscost of repairs downl\nPeebles-Motors\nLtd.\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOR*\nJan. Nelson, B.C\nFOR SALE' OR TRADE - FOR\nboxwood1 or lumber, Log planer,\nSawmill, edger four-sided lumber\n-.plaiter.. We wilt also buy for cash,\nboxwood and lumber. Interested\nwrite to Canadian Machine Industries Inc. Ltd., 201 Wallace\nBldg., Edmonton, Alta. , ' . .\n(Continued In Next Column)\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nFuU of  r   ,\n21. An Old\nTestament\nDOWN patriarch    .\n1. Conducts     22. Verbal\n2.Coln 24.Lightsout\n(Swed.) signal   \u201e\n8.Rlv.r(Afr.) 27. Affirmative\n4. Shouts reply\n5. To happen   29. Soak up\ne.Constella-    80. Natives\nHon - of Korea\n7. An adherent 31. Abounding\nof Hinduism     In stones\n8. Change       88. Bind\n11. Portion       SB. Ferry,\n13. Coin (Jap.)       boat\nU-JBU1 QQHH\nISIH131- HUHH\nHUllUH   fJUUBBI\naa orjirj buhu\nanii) EU-iuuaa\ntlEIBU   l__-D\nQSQUS   EUIBHU\nanauuuo ana,\nUfflHUl   HfflG)   at.\nuacua iJuutiH\n_._)_.[_ raauLi\nQamS   UUHFi\n16. Speck\n18. Beast of\nburden\n(var.)\n36. Vexes\n37. Conform\nYesterday's Answer\n88. Muse of\npoetry\n42. Cabbage\nsalad\n45. Born\n46. Place\n48. Recline .;\n62. Has debts\nl.Fu)\nbones .   .\nB.A sunk '   K\nfence\n0. Onooftho\nGreat Lakes\n10. External\nseed\ncovering-\n11. Outside\nof anut\n12. Gasps for\nbreath\n14. Exclamation\n15. Old times\n!7.iBlver\n(Eng.)\n18. Topaz hum-\nnilng-blrd\n20, A temporary\nstay\n23. Tranquility\n25. High, craggy\nhill\n26. Literary\ncomposition\n28. Liesln\nthe.sun\n32. A cherished\nanimal\n34. Plunder\n35. Wooden\n.golf club\n39. For\n40.-Help\n41. Bitter vetch\n43. Half an em\n44. Family\ngroups\n47. Soothe\n48. Fencing\nsword\nE0. Thin tin\nplate\nBl. Let lt stand\n(print.)\nDAILY CRYPIOQUOTE\u2014Here's how fo work it:\n4XYDLB AAXR\ny ll L O NOP E L LO W   '\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A if used\n, for the three L's, X for thp two O's, etc.  Single letters, apos-\n* trophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each\nday the code letters are different.     v ..'...\n,: A Cryptogram Quotation    . '\n2XR'',;jtYJQC    YO    UFUSYCYXJ,   G0    OTT,\n-    UXA    ^QR%F'UH (ZM    ARUc'q\/'IGOC    V R\nclz'aarx  ax'pR-r-Q^tu'pRl \"\"I'i't-AV-      .\nYesterday's Cryptoquotel  ' EV^tl^d',VlfHl6l.' IS   UN-\nK..OWN IS TAKEN FOR MAGfilWCENT-yTACITUS.\n\u2022*lBtrlbuin- by King Features Syndicate, Inc.       .\nMACHINERY\n(Continued)\nThe following used mining machinery for sale:\n1 48 - Inch p'elton water wheel\nwith shaft apd pulley..\n1 tugger hoist.   '\u25a0  .   \u25a0       .\u25a0;\n3 machine air hoses.'\n2 machine water hoses.     '\n2 machine pressure water tanks,\n2 10 cu, it. roller bearing ore\ncars. \u2022     ,\n2 RSI Ingersbl Rand stoopers.'\n1 wet plugger.\n2 dry pluggers.'\nSeveral sets stooper and plugger\nsteel. .-..   \u25a0\nApproximately 700 feet 3 and 4\nInch pipe,     \u2022\nApproximately 3500 feet 2 inch\npipe,\nApproximately 300 feet IH Inch\nPipe. '\n10 ton 12-lb. mine rails.\nBlacksmith shop equipment consisting ot anvil, vice, drill press,\npipe, dies, sharpner and furnace\nsharpner, Sullivan Class C), '\nOne P.D. 40 International Delsel\nengine.\nOne Sullivan horizontal 10 x 12\n286 r.p.m. compressor.\nThe above have all b.efn used\nbut is in' good condition; with\nthis outfit you can start mining.\nappl* '\nMr C. DONALDSON-'\n, 'Solmo, B.C.   7\nWire Rope\nWe stock this best quality wire\ncable in sizes from H\" to Vt\".\nWe will take your order for\nlarger or any size bf cable you\nmight require.\nNelsprt Machinery'\nEquipment Company\nSTATIONARY\nGasoline . \u25a0\nEngines\nfor wood saws, water pumps\nsand numerous jobs.    From\n1 Vi tp 5 horsepower, j\nCentral Truck\n& Equipment Go. '\nWHIZZER\nPOWERED       '\nV, arrior Motorbikes\n' ;        ti'our-cyi-k motor   '\n,*'*,  150 miles per gallon\n. i     Stainless steel fenders'\nIWlnun tiros\n-- .' Full price \u2014 $225\n? .''?,  Immediate delivery      \\   '\n\/\u2022Aotorcycle Sale?\nLimited\nThe House of Friendly Service\n561 W. Broadway r?   Vancouver.-)\nIndian\u2014Royal Enfield\u2014Triumph\nMotorcycles ' ; \u201e\nMOTpRCYCLES. BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVB\ni#^i>-W_-i J^\u2014>_\u00bb_-_n_nlHi>^l__->#\nPurvesE. Ritchie & Son\nLimited\n8S8 Hornby St., Vancouver, B.C\nMA 4557\nCalling All Painters!\nSEE OUR MODEL 20, TWO-\nWHEEL PNEUMATIC TIRED\nSELP-STARTING   PORTABLE\nAIR COMPRESSOR\nParticularly adapted for spray\nwork.\u2014Also full range of spray\nequipment.\nFOR SALE \u2014 MAN'S BICYCLE,\ncomplete with chain guard, carrier\nand generator lamp.-. Practically\nnew. Phone 826-Y-2 or call 87\nHigh St.\nSAWMILL, WOODWORKING ASD\nContractors equipment of all\nkinds. National Machinery Co.,\nLtd.. Vancouver. B.C\nFOR SALE \u2014 BENCH SAW, TILT-\ning arbor, $80, 1 h.p. motor, $80,\nwood lathe, $40, new Marlln 80-30,\n$80. Box 9022 Daily* News.\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nwelding. Portable welding equipment for field work. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, 708 Vernon St.,\nNelion? B.C.\nCARCO TRACTOR WINCHES AND\nlogging arches' ib stock. Bayes\nEquipment Company, Cranbrook,\nB. C.   '\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT - PARTLY FURNISH-\ned modern cabin on North Shore.\n3 minute walk from ferry. From\nnow ind? Winter months. Apply\nCon Cummins, 206 Vernon St.\nlllGH SCHOOL TEACHER AND\nWife wish to rent small house in\nNelson. Apply Box 9036. Daily\nNews.\nFOR RENT \u2014 TWO HOUSEKEEP-\ning rooms with necessary furniture. Apply Sat' 2-4 p.m. .723\nSilica, Suite. 4.\nBUSINESS LADY WOULD LIKE\nlight- housekeeping rooms as soon.\nas possible. Apply Box 9498 Dally.\nNews.\"\nROOM SUITABLE FOR TWO FOR\nrent, with breakfast, A 988-Y,\nWANTED TO? RENT-4 OR ' 8\nroom house. F Phillips, Phone 6.\nFR6NT BEDROOM - Q UIE T\nstreet,1 close in. Phone 653-R.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\nSO Industrials 184.35 off .04.\n20 Ralls 62.77 off .13.\n15 Utilities 35.39 up .01.\nCaterpillar\nMOUEL.D4*      ,\nTractor\nWith . Isaacson   hydraulic   tilt\ndozer and Hyster towing winch\nand operators guard.\nCondition Al\nOFFERED AT SPECIAL PRICE\nFinning'\nTractor & Equipment\n\u25a0'. \u2022: \u25a0\u2022.,\u25a0'\u25a0 Co. ?Ltd7 7  \".\nNELSON,       ;\nNew premises corner Railway\nand Silica Sts.\nNEW FLYING STANDARD\nCOACH\n1949 MERCURY SEDAN\n1946 PONTIAC SEDAN\n1948 FORD SEDAN      -\n1940 MERCURY SEDAN\n1939 6UICK SEDAN  \u25a0\u25a0\".'.'*'\n1938 D0D6E'C\u00a9UPE\n1936 DODGE SEDAN    *\nNEW REO 3-TON TRUCK\n1947 AUSTIN 2\/2-TON\n'\u25a0'\u25a0' TRtlGK\n1942 FORD 2-TON TRUCK\n1939 FORD L.T: DELIVERY\n1927 DOD&\/PICKUP. '   '\nPONYTRACTflR\n1945 CLETRAC TRACTOR\n4 Yard Gravel Box and Hoist\n.    TERMS \u2014 TRADES'.' \\\n\"WE PAY CASH FOR CARS\"\nI Baker St.\nPhone 1135\nLATE 1947 CHRYSLER WINDSOR\nsedan', over $300 extras, includes 8\ntube custom radio and air conditioning unit. Car driven 7000 careful miles. Not a scratch. Will sell\nfor list price $3179. Terms arrahg\ned for responsible party. Write or\nwire Box 0392 Daily News.\nNEW HOUSE IN FAIRVIEW DIS-\ntrlct. 2. bedrooms, living room,\nmodern bath and kitchen with\nSpace ln attic for 2 more bedrooms. Full basement and wired\nfor electric range. Phone 1179.\nWANTED IN GOOD CONDITION.\nCab for Model A Ford or something similar. Anyone knowing\nof such a thing please write,\nphone or call Ray, Kosiancic,\nCrescent Valley, \t\n22% ACRES FOR SALE, 7'.ACRES\ncultivated 8 room house, Summer\nhouse, barn, chicken house, etc.\nNear main highway. $1600 .for\nquick sale. G. Olieck, Shoreacres,\nB.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1935 HUDSON SE-\ndan, good tires, good running\n-condition $300.00 -R. J.''Christie,\nSlocan City, B.C.'\nFOR. SALE \u2014 MODEL A PANEL\ntruck. Reconditioned motor. Good\ntires. Apply 824 Mill St. or phone\n639-Y? \u2022\nWANTED TO BUY FOR CASH\u2014A\nmodern home 4 or 5 rooms...Good\nlocation, about $5000, Immediate\noccupancy. Phone 883-R-3,\n1937 CHEV. SEDAN FOR SALE -\n'In good condition. Apply Max\nZeeben, YmirrftC,\nFOR SALE \u2014 1 'BALLOON TIRED\nbike, excellent condition. Phone\n476-Y.\nNEW AND USED PARTS FOR ALL\nmakes of cars, City Auto Wreckers. Box 24, Granite Road.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1932 PONTIAC\n\u2022 coach, fair condition. P. Gilchrist,\n* Retallack, B.C,\nWILL PAY SPOT CASH FOR\nlate model passenger, cars, any\nmake. Queen City Motors.\nFOR SALE \u2014 FORD COUPE\nmodel A, rumble seat, good condition. Phone 839-X.\n1935 MAPLE LEAF HEAVY DUTY\ndump truck for tale. Phr 462-R-4\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFOR SALE --19 FT. LAUNCH,\nStar motor: Good condition, also\nhoathouse. Cheap for cash or exchange for car or land. Box 9483\nDally News. \u25a0  _^\nFOR SALE \u2014 18 FT. INBOARD\nmotor boat with cabin. A-l con-\n\u2022 ditlon throughout. A real buy.\nPhone 392-R. .\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nSealed tenders will be received up\nto noon September 17th, 1948, by the\nChief Forester, Victoria, BCr, for\ntHe\" construction of an Office and\nStores Building and Four-car Garage at Elko, B.C. i -\u25a0::\nPlans and specifications may be\nobtained from the District Forester,\nNelson, the Forest Rangers at Cranbrook, Elko and Fernie, or the Chief\nForester, Victoria, on a'deposit of\nfive dollars, which will be refunded\nupon return of plans, etc., in good\ncondition within'thirty days.\nThe lowest Or any tender not necessarily accepted..--.\nTenders must be submitted ln an\nenvelope marked \"Tender for the\nconstruction of' Ranger Station\nBuilding at Elko.ffl.C.\"\nV\nLIVESTOCK, POUUTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\/\nFOR TRADE - 18 MONTHS OLD\nYorkshire Boar. Lb. for lb. on fat\nsow or what have you. Nice quiet\npig, S. C. Griffin, Twin Lakes Resort, Cranbrook, B.C..,       \t\n4%. MONTH OLD .NEW HAMP-\nshire Pullets for sale, $1.75 each.\nApply Bartelme and Neumayer,\nLardeau, B.C.\nGOATS FOR SALE - 4 DOES\nrising 2 years. Fresh in early Feb.\nOce milker rising 4 years. 'Henry\nKnowles. Crescent Valley. B.C.\nFOR SALE -I CHOICE. LAYING\nbens, also pullets ready to lay,\nPhone 1242-Y.\nLAttN'6; WiL.' HENS- $L50 EACH\nJ, Peachey,.Balfour.J\n2 JERSEY COWS FOR SALE.,AP-\nply Box 9930 Daily News.\nFRESIJ COW FOR SALE. APPLY\nTr ^maro<fin. siocahrperls, B.e.\nNELSON DAIC1 NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1948 \u2014 7\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR- SALE\n1 Attractive ranch home with\n24 acres, approximately 6 cleared. 2 bedrooms, large living\nroom, open fireplace, 3-piece\nbathroom. 2Vi miles from- P.O.\nand store on good blacktop highway, Lake frontage,   $5000\n2. Good log cabin at Crawford\nBay. 4 rooms. 7 acres, Vs slashed\nand cleared. Water <S19ilft\navailable. Price*?- ....\u2022*\"Aw\"\n8. Two first class corner lots in\nl^V. ...:$$75:\n4? Two excellent lots with lawn,\nfruit trees, hedge and shade r\ntrees. .Cemeht sidewalks, -corner\nKrty- ;  .$1275\n3. One of Nelson's finest homes.\nExcdleht construction throughout.  Full   details   on  request.\nPrir.\".rT.a7. $20,000\n6, Ranch and poultry farm, 20\nacres CA cleared)1, hayland, fruit\nand vegetables,, Family home\nand good poultry houses. Electric light and lots ot water. 2%\nmiles from store and schools.\nLake view. Terms     $5500\navailable. Price .......... '\n\\\nCtW-Appleyarcl\nReal Estate and Insurance\nEstablished 37 Years\nFOR SALE \u2014 6 ROOM HOUSE.\nCement foundation garage and\nfour lots 1 block from car line,\nImmediate possession. Also 1 pair\nchesterfield chairs, dining room\nfurniture, 1 ring and 1 Coleman oil\nheater, gas range, etc, Phone 132-Y\nCanadian pacific railway\nCompany; Unimproved farm and\ngrazing lands in tbe Provinces of\nAlberta and Saskatchewan at reasonable prices. For particulars\nwrite to Land Branch, Dept ot\nNatural Resources, Calgary.\nFOR SALE\u20144 BEDROOM HOUSE,\nexcellent condition, has basement\napartment, centrally located.\n$8000.00, some terms, Immediate\noccupancy. * Write P.O.- Box 219\nNelson.        !\nFOR SALE \u2014 SMALL, ATTRAC-\ntlve, modern \u2022 residence, 28'x28',\nupon -li of an acre a. Longbeach.\nApply J. W. Hobson, 1.R.1, Nel-\nSAVE MONTHLY WITH KIRK\nshire Savings certificates. $7.00\nmonthly for 120 months ,ives you\n$1000 cash. \u2014, See Appleyards.\nFOR SALE \u201420 ACRE FARM,\nquick sale. Apply A. Olychlck,\nShoreacres, B.C.\n3 ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE ON 1\nlot at Ymir. Quick sale for cash,\nApply F. Moskwa, Ymlr. B.C.\nFOR SALE-26 ACRES AT\nBlewett. $1500. 'John Arishenkoff,\n30j_ Morgan Block, Nelson.\nFOR SALE \u2014 MODERN NEW\nhouse. Crossley Ave. Possession\nvery soon- .S. P. Pond.\nFOR SALE-6 ROOM HOUSE ON 3\nlots at the corner of Stanley and\nHoover. For particulars Phone 139.\nFOR SALE \u2014 5 ROOM HOUSE, 2\nlots. 124 Chatham St.- Phone\n599-L-3.\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 MODERN\nfive or six room house In,Nelson.\nP.O. Box 309 Nelson.\nWANTED TO BUY \u2014 COMPACT\n3 bedroom house, preferably semi-\nbungalow. Phone 1146-R.\nBRITAIN NEW\nVENUE FOR KING,\nTHOMPSON GO\n' LONDON, Sept. 3 (CP) - That\non-again-off-again , fight between\nBilly Thompson and Ll'l Arthur\nKing ls on again\u2014this time in Britain.\nIt was announced today that To\nronio's King, lightweight boxing\nchampion of Canada, will meet\nThompson at Manchester Oct. 1 for\nthe British Empire title. Thompson\nholds the British and European\nlightweight crowns.\nThompson and King were originally scheduled to meet in Canada\nlast June, but the match was called\npff following a dispute over? officials,\n. , _\nAND HE'S GOT A SORE\nHAND TO PROVE IT\nPICTONjitOnt, Sept. 3 (CP)\u2014Robert McLeod, Jr., 'of nearby Adol-\nphustqwn has a sore hand but he\ndoesn't mind. He hurt his hand\nwhen'ihe used it as agaf^rto land\na muskellunge i after hooking it on\na 10-foot linei Pain in the hand,\ndisappeared when he found the fish-\nweighed\/28' pounds. ,) ;'?\nRESCUE EXPERTS PARLEY\nHalifax, Sept. 3 <op>r-Miiitary\nofficials in charge of rescue operations all the way from the Equator\nto the North Pole began a tWo-day\nconference here today; The Canadian and United States representatives will dismiss -olnt operations,\npolicy, communica53ns and facilities.   '\nIT HAPPENED TODAY\nIn World War II, on Sept .4, 1944,\nAntwerp and Brussels, Belgium, fell\nto the Allied armies. On the same\ndate, in 1939, the British liner, Ath-\nenla was torpedoed and sunk, oft\nScotland; most of ,the 1400 persons*'aboard were i'sayed, On Sept\n5, 17)4; tha first Continental Congress met at Phlladelphia.: -.   ,-\ntfca, the f'Cli-sslfled\" and. save.'\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP)-The stock\nmarket slowly wo.ked Its way into\nlower price ground today. Declines\nWere, mostly fractional, few topping\na point. A good handful edged Into\nthe plus column. .   ; .?\u2022   \u2022  ,\nTORONTO (CP) - All groups\nmatched ahead in another 1,000,000-\nahare day. Industrials strengthened\nslowly on fractional gains and golds\nfirmed. Base metals raced ahead ln\nactive trading and Western oils presented a solid front of gains. Volume was about 1,064,000 shares,\n. MONTREAL (CP)-Stocks turned Irregular after a firm start. Industrial sales were approximately\n20,900. shares .and. mining- sales totalled 166,900 shares.\ni LONDON. (Reuters)\u2014Approach of\nthe weekend restrained business to\nSmall proportions,' Price movements\nwere irregular.\nCHICAGO , (AP)\u2014Country unloaded much more corn on cash\ndealers today than was wanted,\nknocking cash prices and the September futures quotation sharply\nlower. But other corn futures as\nwell es wheat and oats, held up fairly well. \"*,.',',\nMONTREAL (CP) - Dominions,\nProvincials, Municipals and Corporations were steady and unchanged.\nWINNIPEG. (CP)-Most classes of\ncattle wound, up oh a reasonably\nsteady basis.   .\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Oats am} fear-\nley futures were firm- In an active\nsession. There was good shipper and\nAmerican, demand which absorbed\nvery liberal hedging offers from\ndevator Interests. ; \u25a0'\u2022'?) \u2022\n' VANCOUVER (CP)-OIls recorded good gains in heavy trading.\nGolds were firm and in good demand. Base metals, and industrials\nrose, slightly.   ., :     \u2022   \u25a0''-\u25a0\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG.-Sept 8-,(CP) - Wto..\nnlpeg grain quotations: j-\n.        Open   High   Low Cose:\nOat*!\nOot   ..   .72       .72%    .71% .72\nDec.   ..   .89%    .10JA    .69% HOY*\nMay  '.'.   .71%    .7*%    .71% 1.72$\nBarley: '     ;\nOct.   .. 1.00H   1.01%   1.00% too*\nDeo.   ..   .89       .89%    .99 < ,99W\nMay   ..   .99%    .99%    .99% .00Wf|\nOct '.. 1.44% 1.44% 1.43% 1.44%!\nDec?-'?. 1:43 . L44'.','*1'.4S\" ? l.\"43%\nMay?.. 1.45%   1.46%  1.48%   1.46%!\n'\u25a0mme  \u25a0 >\"*?\u2022-\u25a0\nNov. ..4.14% 4.17 4.14% 4\/J3 ,\nDeo.':\"_ 4.07%   4.10     '4.07%   4.09%\nOct..   r\nCash prices:\nOats-No 2 CW. 73; No. \u00bb. J\nCW. 71%; No. 3 C.W.71; Ex.,1 Feed-\n71; No. 1 Feed 70; No 2 Feed 67; No.\n3 Feed 64; Track .73%.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 C.W. 8-row 1.08%;\nNo. 2 C.W. 6-row 1.08%; No. 1 C.W.\n2-row 103%; No 2 C.W. 2-row 1.03%;\nNor 3 C.W. 6-row 1.06%; No. 1\n1.00%; No. 2 Feed 09%; No. 3 Feed\n94%; Track 98%; No. 2 C.W. Yellow 1.02%; No? 3 CW. YeUow 1.00%.\nRye: No, 1 C.W. 1.43%; No. 2 CW.\n1.43%; No. 3 C.W. 141%; Rej, s C.W.\nT.26%rNo? 4 CW.'1.32%! Track\u25a0 1.44.  :\n:, Flax: No. ?1 CW 4,18; N6. 2 CW. S\n4.14; No. 3 C.W. 4.01; No. 4 C.W. 3.85;\nTrack,4.05. *   *\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\n; CALGARY, Sept. 3 (CP)-A good\nClean-up of medium to good cattle at?*\nsteady prices.   ' '    '\u25a0   ?.r   S\ncalves,. 332 hogs, 99? sheep. Friday-:?:\nThursday's receipts: 825 cattle, 153'f\nmorning's receipts: 200 cattle,, 37'J\nCalves, 28 hogs. \u25a0\u25a0   ,\nI Hogs sold Thursday at $34 for A'a\nat yards and plants. Sows $22.75-1\n$23.00 live weight; -,:\nMedium to good butcher: steers?\n18.00-22.00. Good to .dholce butcher?'\nheifers 20.00-23.00; commoh- to medl-3\nurn 14.00-19.00.\nGood cows 15.50-16.00; comrnon to\nmedium    13.00-15.00.    Good   bulls?\n.18.00-19.00; common to medluht 11.08.\n'-17.50. -Canners   and .cutters .'9.00-?,\n12.50. -.;?\" ...ir... -r?\nGood to choice veal calves 18.00-\n20.00;  common  to medium  14.00-f\n19.00. Good stocker and feeder Stee. i\n18jD0-20.00; common to medium 14.00'r\n-17.50.\nGood lambs 30.0O.Good ewes 6.50- :\n7.80.\nTHE ANSWER, QUICK!\n1. Namejhe five states that touch\u25a0:\"*?\nthe Gulf ol Mexico.\n2. Is the greater part of the continent of Africa North-or South of 11\nthe Equator?\n3. How many umpires are .on thSj?\nbasebaU'field during n  World Se-\nrrl'es-*game7\n-4. What boo'i i*r essential in every\ntrial   courtvroom \u00ab-ln   thejrUnitcd ?l\nStates? ... \"? I \u25a0\n6. Who devised the lightning rod?\nHOW'D YOU MAKE OUT?      *\n1. Florida, Alabama, Mississippi,!\nLouisiana and Texas, .r. rr...\n'2. North.\n3. Six\u2014One behind .'home plate,\none at each base and one rat rthe r\nend 'of the foul Unes.\nI   The Bil*l\".\n5. Benjamin Franklin.\nMODERN MANNERS\nIn an open church wedding, any.??\none who knows the cquple may go?\ntortile ceremony? but only invited?\nguests may : attend? the reception;.;\nafterwards:\n.   YOUR FUTURE\nPromote goodwill of .others at\nthis time and this period is good\nfor making contacts and for travel.\nDo not indulge in useless worry\nover events beyond your control, or\nyour'health and fortunes may suffer. Avoid erratic' changes and .actions, take plenty Qf rest and pleas-\nant exercise. ,\nIf you birthday comes on Sunday,\nSept. 5,.ybii should gain a broader\nperspective-bri ways and means to\nstrengtheti. your position.\" Promote\nthe goodwill of elders. In the. year\nJust commencing, your partners and\nassociates will contribute greatly to\nyour success and happiness. Push all\nyour affairs\u2014property, churdh' matters, law, study and travel\u2014as aU\nare well favored.\nIT'S BEEN SAID\n. To,a resolute mind, wishing to do\nis, the first step toward doing. But\nif; we do not wish to do a thing it\nbecomes impossible.\nI !\t\n HBHHH___________H\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4,1948\nSCHoO-V opining\nill\nTUESDAY,\nSeptember 7\nAS ALWAYS\nwe ore ready with\na complete stock\n.,.-\u2022\u25a0 of\nTEXTBOOKS\n-... and  \u2022\nALL SCHOOL SUPPLIES\nAT THE LOWEST PRICES\nDRUG STORE\nThe Bawalian_Islands are, more\nthan 2000 miles from the United\nStates r mainland.\nColumbia Records\n\u2022 Popular\n\u2022 ? Western\n*\n\u2022 Classic\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized-G.E. Dealer\nPhone 260     574 Baker St.\nWhen your radio develops\nthose mysterious, small\nnoises, -don't wa it for\nsomething more serious\nto. happen before you\nhave it serviced. Radio\nrepair-can run-Into costly\nsums unless you have the\n\"small things\" attended\nto \u2014by\nSERVICE SHOP\n>H6NE  1115\nRADIO and REFRIGERATOR\nSERVICE and REPAIRS.\n. ,--S28Si~irernon St\nCBelow Farmer's Market)\n15 years experience with\nT; Eaton Co.\nKNOWLE, Gloucestershire, Eng.,\n(CP)\u2014Every year? confectioner\nFrederick Horlick, 85, makes his\nwife a wedding anniversary cake.\nHe recently completed his 64th.\npairs have saved the steeple of 600-\n(CP) \u2014 Four times previously re-\nELLISON'S ROYAL PATENT\nPASTRY FLOUR\nBEST FOR CAKES AND\nPA8TRY\nGUARANTEED TO SATISFY\nYour Grocer Has It\nHove the Job Done'Right.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER '\nPHONE 815\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE 8ERVICE\n515 Kootenay St       \u25a0\u25a0   Phone SSI\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts BUc.\nPHONE 26\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUl4 TELEPHONE'LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175\u2014182 BAKER ST.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountant!\nAuditors .\n660 Baker St.* - Phone 235\n\"YES'\u2014 YmHv+ytayr*\nIs bound to be MORE STYLISH,\nLA8T LONGER and\nLOOK  LOVELIER\nat the \u25a0 'f<\nHAIGHTRU-ART\n _  >*>***aaeeeeeflaiun*-tdtAfl*\nuitaiiifiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiififiniiiMiiiiiHiiniiHHiffpiiiiiiiiiiniiiimniiiiitiiT\nSome\nBEAR\nFACTS!!\n..*-\u25a0.\u2022'\u2022 ,' .   . V .\nAbout Ecoilomic Driving\nThis:\nNew. Derwer\nNEW DENVER, B.'C'^-Mr;. *nd\nMrs. A J&. Avlson entertained at a\nparty ih honor of the ladies'fastbMl\nteam. The evening was spent inVar-\nious-games and contests and'mtisic.\nMiss Nora Woods, P.HJJ;,-?w4h first\nprize in the fastball quiz contest and\nthere were several other prizes. The\nhostesses served delicious luncheon\naslsted by Mrs. Aviexm's sister, Mrs.\nE. J!. Crellln? Invited guests Included Miss Doreen Nordbye, Miss Doreen Baynes,' B.N.,; Miss Monica V.\nButlln, Miss Hazelde'an Nelson? Miss\nNancy Harris, Mrs. -Olive Crellln,\nMrs. Dorothy Balbirnie, Mrs. Clara\nHill, Mrs. Marguerite Thring, Miss\nFrances Hawthorne^ Miss Norma\nEdwardsbn, -Miss Nora Woods.\nP.H.N. Miss.Nonie-EdwardscnvMissI\nElizabeth Merry, R.N.,-Miss .Laura\nEdwardson, Miss Vicki Copeland,\nRN, and Mr. and Mrs. Ai E. Avlson.\nMrs. G. Haskell and. Miss Gay\nIXishy of Kelson w,hre the-guests\nof Mrs. Henry KelsalL   \u2022      I\nSister CarmelJosqph of Seattle Is\nthe guest of her parents, Mr. arid\nMrs. Mark Du'Mont and sons Carl,\nPaul ahe. Alfred at Hunters Siding.\ni Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bdlley who\n'were visiting Mr; and.Mrs. WlBlaift\nGould for a week returned to their\nhome in Trail, B.C.\nr Dr and Mrs. H. Kamltakahara and\nfamily of: Greenwood, B.C.; were\nvisiting Mrs. .Kapaltakahara's parents, Mr.'and'Mrs. Enyu. \u25a0 .\n'\u2022Mr. and Mrs? Mack Watson and\nMissSuth LenquISt who were guests\nfor s week of MrS, May Crellln ahd\nson David. rCrellin and also visited\nMT. and .Mrs? B; E.Crellln returned\nto their hom.esWn Kimberley.\nDr. and Mrs. Shimokura and family of Lethbridge were visiting Mrs.\nM. Hoshino and family.\nr Mrs. E. F. Angrlgnon and .son\nFred.H. Angrlgnoh accompanied the\nformer's daughter,'- Mrs. Archie\n[Greenlaw as far as Kaslo, enroute\nto'her home at Lardeau, RC,\ni Mr. and Mrs. Claud Hooker ahd\ntwo children and Ernest Elliot of\nNelson were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nAiKAyitM.:    \u25a0'*.'*.\nLeonard Kayanagl of New Denver, who was a patient in the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital, has been discharged.     :* :.: ..\nDr. Norman Carter, former dentist\nin New Denver and Nakusp is visiting the district ior several days. Dr.\nCharter is now of Vancouver, B.C.\nDan P. Morgan was a visitor in\nSandon, staying with Mr. ahd Mrs.\nJ. M. Harris.   -.\n.\u2022 Nell Tattrie St., returned from\nUis holiday in Creston, guest of his\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Les K. Jones? .\nMiss Edith Aylwln, who was visiting her aunt, Mrs. M. E. Aylwln and\nseveral cousins, returned to her\nhome at Procter, B.C.   <*\u25a0';    .\nMissS. Tsuchida of New Denver\nIs a patient in'the Slocan Community Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. James Draper, Con.\nstable and Mrs. J. A. Roberts and\ntwo sons Ted and Bill returned from\ntheir motor trip.\nMrs. G. M. Canty of Vancouver ls\nvisiting her son and daughter-in-law\nMr. and Mrs.. John L. Canty.\nAlbert E. Angrlgnon and son Eddie of Armstrong, B.C, are guests of\nthe former's mother ahd. brother,\nMrs. E. F. Angrlgnon and son Fred\nH. Angrlgnon.-' .\nMrs, Mi E. Ayrtainand Her twd\ndaughters, Miss N. mi-' Aylwln ana\nMrS. G. W. Teir returned from Nelson where they were.visitors for a\nfew d-ivs \u25a0\nMiss -Anne M.. Kenhett left for1\nPort Alberni, B.C., where she will\nbe on the teachers staff for the Fajl\nterm.'\".\nMrs. Y. Yasul of New Denver\nIs a patient In the Slocan Community Hospital.\t\nMr. and Mrs. Andrew Schnaebele\nand daughter Sharon were Trail visitors at the home' of Mrs. Schnae-\nbele's brother. Mi*, and Mrs. John\nBoisvert and.family.\nDr. A. J. Venables returned from\nCalgary and is visiting his parents,\nMr. and Mrs: R. V. Venables in NelsOn.\nMiss M. H.; Butlln. and Mrs. John\nTaylor were Silverton visitors at\nthe home of Mr: and Mrs. R. Hanib\nly.-Sr.\nMiss Gwenyth Ormrod who was\nvisiting her brother-iri-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Quentin A. Forsythe and daughter Mary Phyllis,\nreturned to her home at Saskatoon,\nSask.\nWilliam E. Howe's? new building\nhas been completed on the corners\nof Sixth Street and Klldard Street\nand has two stores.   \u25a0\nMrs. Jphn Teir, her' daughter, Mrs.\nPeter Rodall, Mrs? M. M Grimmett,\nA Saving YOU\nCAN'T AFFORD\nTO MISS\nis the\n;\"    Bear\nWheel\nAligners\nSTOPS\nSHIMMY\nTire wear\nhard steering\nand\nWANDER\nUTHBEH\nMOTORS\nDODGE - DE SOTO DEALERS\nOpposite Post Office \u2014 Nelson, B.C. \u2014 Phone 75\n[1llllllllilllllll!lllllillllllliillllllllllllllllllihllhl\u201e,\u201eil|illlllihlilli,,,,,,,111111111\nWhile you wait our experienced prescription .department fills your drug\nneeds rapidly, flawlessly.\nFreshest ingredients\nused.'''\n, Wo Carry a Complete\n\"''',;\u25a0.    Stoeltio*^ 7;\u25a0 '\nSICKROOM and\nFIRST AID SUPPLIES\nMonster Cake for Trainmen's Birthday\nRELIEVES HEAD COLDS\nMeasuring two feet by \u00ab16 Inches, this huge\nbirthday cake had a place of honor at the Brotherhood fof Railway Trainmen's Golden Jubilee\nbanquet at the Clvlo Centre. The lettering In tho\ncircle reads, \"Brotherhood Railroad Trainmen,\"\nwhile the years, 1898*1948, were printed on each\nside of the circle. \u25a0..'\u25a0\u25a0\nNATAL, B.C.-Mrs. F. Slapak and\ndaughter Bessie returned to Nampa,\nIdaho, after a one week visit to.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Troyanek, Michel.\nMr. and Mrs. S. Brewer of Vancouver were visitors at Natal.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Ans'elmo and\nfamily of Natal enjoyed a tWo week\nholiday at Kelowna.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Jenkins returned\nto Natal after a two week visit at\njPentlcton.\nMr. and Mrs. George Oley from\nDetroit, visited Mrs. M. Oley. .,\nMr. and Mrs. D, Leske and family\nreturned to Edmonton after some\ntime In Michel at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Kotek.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Pugliese and son\nMichael returned to Natal after, a\ntwo week holiday at Kelowna.   ,\nThe Natal-Michel Band, under the\nleadership of Charlie Thomason\njaraded through both towns on\nSunday. Twenty - eight, bandsmen\nWere on hand,\nFreddie Brewer of Vancouver\nvisited relatives and friends here.\nMrs. Mary-Chala returned a<Jer\na one-month visit with her daughters, Mrs. Les Smith of New West\nminster and Mrs. Al McRae of\nVancouver. \"   . \u25a0  ' \u25a0\nMrs. J. JenSen and son Jimmy of\nNatal are spending a holiday at\nSwift Current, Sask.     .\nJoe Pettoello of Michel is visiting-relatives at Swift Current, Sask.\n.'\u2022   Among the many banquet speakers was H. W.\nHerrldge, M.P, Kootenay West, shown with micro-*!\nphone. Others, from left! D. D. McLean,' Master\nof Ceremonies! Mrs. R. Campbell of Lethbridge;\nC. E.'Lister, .'Superintendent,. Kootenay Division;\nMrt. G. B. Carlson, President, B.R.T. Auxiliary, and\nActing! Mayor T. S. Shorthouse?\n\u2014Dally Newa photos.\nMiss M. H. Butlln and. Mrs. John\nTaylor were ..visitors ih Nakusp ii-\n'tending a meeting, of Martha Chapter No. 24, Order of Eastern Star,\nJames E. Denni'son, assistant district engineer. of Public Works is\nvisiting'his wife and two daughters\nin Victoria, B. C.    ,\nMrs- Stanley E. Thomllnson 'and\nfamily. Misses Barbara and Norma\nThomlinson . and Edwin, returned\nfrom a week's holiday at Salmo, B.-\nC, with Stanley E. Thomllnson? who\nmotored his family back and; will\nvisit his home for a few days.\nMr. and Mra.'Eugene Laundervllle\nand daughter of Trail 'visited the\nformer's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Laundervllle and -brother Pat\nfor aj;few days.\nMrs. R. Satta of New Denver Is a\npatient in the ' Slocan ' Community\nHospital. . '.-.   j .\nMrs. E.C? Johnson, after a .week's\nvisit to the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Draper, returned to her home\nat Nakinsp., \u2022.',  .:'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 V.\nMiss Yoko Estelle. Iwase Is working in Dr. A. J. Venables' office for\ntwo weeks.\nMrs? J. A. . Saunders and two\ndaughters Misses Shirley and Louise\nSaunders who spent sevetal_weekSi|logging and sawmill activities al-\nat the home- of Mrs. C. J. Sinclair\nreturned to'Trail, B. C.\nMrs? .Joseph Laundervllle ls visiting, her son and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and.Mrs. Eugene Laundervllle.\nMr.;and-Mrs. Mark Du'Mont of\nHunter's Siding and their daughter,\nHolden Back in the Saddle Again\nWith Return to Paramount tot\nthe town's newest star discovery\nOrson Wells surprised everybody\nby getting married in,; Santa Monica. He appeared the same night at\nhis magic show for. servicemen . ?.\nFifty-one \u25a0 features were? filming\nin \u25a0 Hollywood, iriijliiding a, rlittle\nnumber, called \"Going My;,Way\" (29\nare shootlnginil9'48).-\nBy BOB THOMA8 returned from a 10-week troop en*\nHOLLYWOOD, Sept,-3.(AP) ***4^Sf3;' toiP J'**\"\u00bb**. Sng-and,\nWilliam Holden looks set (of * ran \u00a3*^_?2?*R \u2022i'\u201eSun^y\nof heading 'emoff at the crossroads | j\u2122^,\/^Proudly We Hail'^was\nIn big-time Western films.     -';-.-'\nHolden, whose acting talent belongs alternately to Paramount and\nColumbia, goes to the. latter lot after ;he finishes his current* outdoor\nopus, \"Streets of Laredo?\" He'll start\nanother Western within three weeks\nbefore returning to Paramount.\n.,' Bill-says Westerns,are-in the;up-\nswing at Paramount and he'll doubtless be called for more roles in the\nsaddle at-.that, studio. \"He likes-.the\nhorse operas and has no complaint\n\"They're so healthy,\",he grins, '\nBOGART MAD,    ,\nHumphrey Bogart gave. a .-loud\n\"No\" to a request for. him to appear\nin-the film.\"Hbwdo you like that?\"\nhe wittered. \"They treat mj\u00ab wife\nlike a dog, then want me to dp them\na favor.\"-   .,'- \u2022* \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nTlle-Bogarts are still fuming about\nher suspension. Bogie claims the picture Lauren turned down, a remake\nof \"Torrid Zone,\" will never be\ninade. \"They can't suspend her lor\nrefusing a? picturei.they're .'Dot-go- jl\nink' to make,*' he declares. \" ' : r I\nTODAY'S FEATURE: FIVE YEARS\nAGO IN HOLLYWOOD     \u25a0:\nlob?.Hope and Frances Langford\nHowser Mill, (\nLogging Camp Sold\nHOWSER, B. Ci Sept 3r- A. Bed\nwell, whcwlth-ftls brother W, Bed-\nwell, operated^ a mill and logging\ncamp near here, hasssold out his Interests to Mn Harrison, owner of a\nmill at Crawford Bay. The new owner will continue operations at the\nsame limit here, carrying on the\nready well established by the Bed-\nwells.   \u25a0\"\"*\nBoth this mill and the local Duncan Lake Lumber Company have\nbeen greatly handicapped lately ln\nshipping.otit.their products. A runaway freight car, at Lardeau wrecked the loading slip and as a result\nIt has been impossible to ship out\nloaded cars or bring in empties to\nhandle the accumulated stocks of\nlumber. Work on the slip has now\nbeen completed and it is hoped that\nnormal - shipping will be resumed\nwithin the next few days.\nSister Carmel Jbseph\" of Seattle,\nIT. S. A., were the guests of Mrs.\nHenry Kelsall and daughter Mrs.\nFlorence A. Moss.\nMr. and Mrs. S. E. Ellis and family Miss Kathleen Ellis and Clyde\nwho spent the Summer holidays\nwith Mrs. Ellis' father Edward Tingle, motored back to their home in\niVancouver.. . ?-7\nMiss Marge Iwase who was visiting her sister Miss Joan Iwase and\nMiss Jean.Harada and other friends\nat Kamloops returned home.\nPHARMACY\nPhono 25 \u2014 Nelson, B.C.\nMedical Arts Building\nm\np Appliances ,\nfor the '\nMome\n\u2022  Radios\n*  Heating Pads\n\u2022 Toasters\n. ., \u25a0*\u2022 -'* .,, \"'*\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0;\nSmith,\nElectric\n; '\u25a0\u2022:\u25a0'-, .', >\n,'..' \/   \u25a0 * .-\u25a0       f '\n645 Baker St.     Phone 258\nI Bawrence McPhail\nTeacher of\n;    PIANOFQRTE a*l THEORY\nrpreseiits results; obtained by pupils taking 1948 Royal   '\n' ! Conservatory of Music of Toronto exams, as follows:\nriXno  ^       ;\nGrade; III\u2014Elizabeth *,jA'; ?Wilson, Honors, Marylynn\ns    Wat_rer, First Class Honors.   -,    '..'\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022'   '*<; ;\n6ra<Je;iiy\u2014Margaret OWen,' Pass, Patricia Walgreh,\n,.;\u201e- DfhjijBsitcKelor, AjnieR. Brown, Ruth Larseii,\nHonots. .\nGraide V\u2014HeiybWt Klein, Honors, Jane Butling, First\n\u25a0-*::  Class aooarBi'V. '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0,''<:\u25a0''\n'Grade VI\u2014Ro'se-Ani^e, Zabawa, Pass. i\nI, Grade,Vin-r-BettyA.Wassibk,Pass,HeatherAlleyne|\n,7'\"'?,Clarke, Honors,..Jfhomas. George Pagdin, First\nClass-Honors.    ..'\nGrade X\u2014Ethel Hook, Margaret J. McCosham, Pass,\nTHEORM        7,   :p?\nGrade I\u2014Rose-Anne Zabawa, Pass, Anne R. Brown,\nMarylynn Waterer, Margaret-Ann\". McFadden,\nFirst Class Hbiors.; \"'\nGrade IIIr-Harmony, - Margaret J. McCosham,- First'\n?     Class Honors.\nStudio: 808 Ca rbonate St., Phone 1070\nReopens September lsf, 1948\nHas* ond throat\nRelief -flffi-v\nEPHEDRINE\n25\u00ab-5b*\nYour Rexall Drug Store\nCity Drug Co\nPhone 34\nBox 460*\nNatal...\nICKLETON, Cambridgeshire, EiJ\nyear-old Ickleton Church. No]\nsteeplejacks are fighting a fifth bi\ntie against the death-watch beet)\nJ*\" iKWinHBMivi'' PWWW\u00ab^l-, J'  '  '^i\nSCHOOL OPENING\nJUST AHEAD!\nOur Strfek of Chlldrens' Wear\nIS COMPLETE\nThe Children's Shop\nHAVE YOOR FURNITURE\n\u2022EXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the c.\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n413 Hall St Phone 146\nIF IT'S INSURANCE\n,   OR REAL ESTATE\nPHONE 980\nSTUART AGENCIES\nBusiness and Home Locators\n617 Baker Street\nROSCOE\n'i    AND\nFOURNIER\nGARAGEMEN\nSKY CHIEF AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 122 Nelson, B.C.\n111 \u25a0 I \u25a0 I \u25a0 11111 \u25a0 \u25a0 11M111S111111111 iy M111111111111\n' \u25a0 '.For-\u2022'\nWallpapers \u2014 Kahomines\nPaints \u2014 Varnishes\n745 Baker St. Phone 855\n\u25a0nHiiiimiini.iiiiiHHiiiiumins;.-\nRELIABLE SERVICE\nAT REASONABLE COST\nSmedlev Garage Co.\nReo Sales and Service\nHarder and Co.\n519AHallSt.    Phone 1363\nPainters & Decorators\nSpray or  Brush\nInterior \u2014 Exterior\nSATISFACTION*\nGUARANTEED\nFree Estimates\nHEAR\u2014\n\"SONGS OF OUR TIME\"\nWith Bob Grant\nSATURDAY NIGHT\n9:00-9.15\nOver CKLN\nSALE\nof\nLeather\nCoats\n11 AM\n14\nGenuine Horsehlde and!\nSuede Leather Coats. Zipper style in brown, black\n: and green colors. Regular\nvalues to $25.00. All'\nsizes 36 to 46.\n\u00a3mory'sltd.\n..   THE AAAN'S STORE .\".\nSuite 205\nMEDICAL   ARTS   BUILDINOi\nJAC LAUGHT0I\nOptomettist\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nCleaned and Recoret\nRADIATOR REPAIR!\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n301 Ward St Phone 6:\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllU\n\u25a0\u25a0^#iiw^\u00bb-iaii<i\u00bbar\u00bbeiypei.\u00bbww'is'i\nIt's the Holiday Weekend\nTO THE MUSIC OF THI\nRhythm finas\nAND \u2014 DONT MISS td\nPRE-HOLIDAY\nMidmghll\nFrolic\nSunday Night\nTo \"Top Off Your Hoiido|\nWeekend There's the\nGIGANTIC\nlabor Day\nDANCE\nMonday\nRed Tux Men Orch.\nFor your holiday dancing pleas*\nure head for the Playmor\u2014the\nKootenays' smart dance rendezvous. I\n** At Last!'!\nAll the FLASHBULBS You Can Use\nAnd a Splendid Stock of ANSCO Film\nCAMERAS\nBy Kershaw and Spartut,\nCpme In*\nAhldSee\nJim Abqul It\nMcKAY & STRETTON LTD.\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\nV.\u00bb i\n'\nIff \u25a0\n7\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1948_09_04","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0423953","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1948-09-04 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1948-09-04 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}