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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":" B. C. First Citizen\nVisiting Kootenay\nHon. Clarence Wallace Welcomed\nAt Nelson; Trail Program Today\ni Nelson'City'Council, representatives of the Board of\nyTrade, ahd citizens greeted Hon, .Clarence Wallace, C.B.JE..,\nLieutenant-Governor of British Columbia, on his arrival here\non Monday night's train from Vancouver.7       X'X.'x\\'X%\nFirst to greet His HonoryWe'fe Mayor N. C, $tibbs and\nI Harry D. Harrison, Board of Trade President. Members of\nthe Council and a group of businessmen were then introduced\nby. the aide-decamp, Cpl. p. L. Mitqhell. Also in the Wallace\nparty was' W.'M.' Manson, Vice-President, Pacific Region,\nCanadian Pacific Railway. \"\nFollowing a chat with the welcoming-delegation; the visitors left\nfor South Slocan for dinner ana to\nstay overnight They -will return to\nNelson Wednesday, when His Honor\nwill Inspect the Nelson Cadets and\nScout and Guide troops in Lakeside\nPark at 10:30 a.m. He is Patron of\nthe Provincial Council of the Boy\nScouts Association of B.C.\nJ 'After the inspection, he will attend a civic dinner at the Hume,\n' -and In the afternoon his party wlil\ntour the City: This will be followed\nby a tea at the Mayor's home.\n\u2022  A busy: time Is In store at Trail\nTuesday for  the. lieutenant-governor's party.'They will be welcomed\nJ   e>t Butler Park at 10.30 a.m. Tuesday\nI  by Mayor E. G. Fletcher and Lt-Col,\nI ,W. H. Taylof, commanding officei\nI'-.'tsf the 24th HAA Regiment,'B.C.A.\nI   (R). Inspection of a guard of honor.\nComprising personnel of  the 24th,\nwill be followed by presentation of\n\"members of the Trail city council\nand of J. V. Rogers', president of the\nTrail Chamber of Commerce.\nTO SEE NEW. SCHOOL\nThe lieutenant-governor will Inspect a parade of local military reserve units, Army, Air Force and\nSea Cadets, Canadian Legion and\nGuides and-Scouts, before leaving\nthe park for a visit to the new high\nschool and the Cominco arena,\nA civic lunchepn has been scheduled for 1 p.m., at the Rossland-Trail\nGolf and Country Club, at which\nofficials of district cities-and villages will be presented.\n. Following the luncheon, the, official party will bwguests of Cominco.\nThey will be welcomed by R. W\nDiamond, vice-president and general-manager, and attend a reception at the Diamond home-and tout\nthe plants. Late in the afternoon, the\nparty will return to South Slocan\nwhere they will dine and spend the\nnight, starting off Wednesday morning for Nelson. .       ',\nWl$0M -afytUti\nM\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: A'few cloud*. A\nlittle cooler. Winds light. Low and\nhigh at Cranbrook 35 and 75. Crescent Vaolley 38 and 80, Revelstoke\n42 and 75.\nVol. SO\nCominco Plan\nlo Outlaw Reds\nDraws Steel Fire\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Sept 17 -\n\"Bald hypocrisy,\" says the anti-\nCommunist United Steelworkers\n(C.I.O.) of (he C.M.&S. proposal to\noutlaw Communists from holding\noffice in B.C. trade unions by law.\n-Spokesman was Bill Mahoney,\nToronto office of Steelworkers, who\n\u00bbald, \"We've been. fighting an 18-\nmonth batUe to oust a Communist-\nled iniion from C.M.&S. operations\nIn Trail \u2014 now they come out with\nthis.\" j\ng The Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company suggestion that\nunion officials be compelled to file\nan anti-Communist affidavit was\nbeard $y the \".'special Legislative\ncommittee to the Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act\nInternational Union of Mine. Mill\njmd-feiaecterA. Workers-which' Was\nbooted from both the C.IX5,' and\nCCL. on charges of Communist\nleadership still holds bargaining\npower for some 8000 C.M.&S. employees to B.C.\nttO HIKE MEAT\n1\u00bbRICESiN U.S.\ny \"WASHINGTON, Sept. 1' (AP) -\n\u2022An Impending hike In the counter\nprice of beef, and pork was followed\ntoday by government plans to let\nthe cost of corned, barbecued arid\nother processed beef go up, too,\nThe Office of Price Stabilization\nannounced last night that' wholesale beef ceilings are being raised.\nIt said that retail beef and pork\nprice boosts will be coming along in\na few days, meaning the housewife\n-will pay abput two cents a -p&ind\nmore.  '\n'Today, O.P.S. said beef processes\ncan also compute new ceilings, They\nmay do So by taking pre-Korean\ntelling prices and adding the Increased cost of raw materials.\nO.P.S. said the overall result will\n>*e to raise prices at the butcher-\nshop counter.\n-TORONTO, Sept. 17 (CP) \u2014Tor\nOnto butchers predicted today that\n.housewives who hoped Fall cattle\n\u2022 shipments would lower current meat\n-prices would be disappointed.\nAn announcement Sunday that the\n\u25a0 United: States Price Stabilization\nBoard has allowed.Mgher butcher-\nshop ceilings for hams, bacon, pork\nshoulder and beef will ultimately\ncreate a firmer, market here, one\nretailer said....\nCROSSES TWO\nCOUNTRIES ON CRUTCHES\nANTWERP, Belgium, Sept 17\n'.(Reuters) \u2014 Luclen Rlsenaar, 60,\na one-legged tailor, It back home\n-.. today after walking acrott France\n-.. and Belgium with crutches on\n1 \"pilgrimage of peace.\" Rlsenaar\nI averaged nearly 19 miles a day at\nI .flrtt but, tiring toward the end,\nI -covered only six miles a day.\nWant to Sell\nMilk for Less\nVANCOUVER, Sept 17 (CP)\n(CP) \u2014 Safeway Store* want to\n\u2022all milk In Vanoouver and Victoria at let* than th* horn* delivery price. '...'.      .. \u25a0'\nThe company hat asked the\nB.C. Milk Board for no specific\ndecrease In price but they noted\nthat milk .bought In ttoret in\nstores In Winnipeg tells fpr two\ncents lest than tha delivery\nprice.\nN. W. Territories\nIn Firsf Vole\nYELLOWKNIFE, N.W.T., Sept,17\n(CP)\u2014Selfrgpvernment or a measure of it, reached Canada'silast frontier today as nn election was held\nfor the.first,time in the sprawling\nNorth- West Territories. Because of\nthe; vast area Involved final result*\nmay be slow. jX\u2014M\n''-#\u00bbre,^ffi''%00u':''\nwere to choose three\ndates for the eight-man council\ngoverning the Territories, The otb?\ner five members are appointed by\nthe Federal Government Until the\nNorth West Territories Act was\namended at the last session of Parliament the Government appointed\nall Council members.\nThe -candidates Included, one\nhousewife, Mrs. - Vivian Roberts of\nAklaylk, a bush pilot, a publisher,\nmerchants and trappers. Unlike\nmost elections, none campaigned on\npolitical issues.\nAlthough they were eligible both\nas candidates and voters, no Eski\nmos or Indians contested the first\nbattle for Council seats,\nThe three ridings, with headquarters of returning officers in brackets, are Mackenzie South. (Hay*\nRiver), Mackenzie West (Aklavik)\nand\" Mackenzie North (Yellowknife).\nTUESDAY MORNING, SEPT. 18, 1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 125\nCharges Labor Board\nPlot in Upholding\nWm, Mill in B.C\nKNOWN TO MOST CiiiPSTdN RE8lpBNTW\u00bb\n\"Smokey\" the tame crow.' Smokey, a favorite of\nall the youngsters who get a great.thrill out of\nfeeding him, has attached himself to the doorsteps\nand streets of Creston and IMs no uncommon sight\nto see him calmly walking down main street\nShown here Is Ledlcy Francis who wat visiting\nfrotn CrjnbrooK 'making' friends.' with Smokey,   -,\n! '.  ..   \u2022     \u2014H. Mc,8uckna photo,\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nSTORY OF A SODA \"POP;\/THAT it\nBE WORTH $14,000 ON FEB. 24\nANDERSON,   Mo.,   Sept. fa\n(AP)\u2014How' about,. trading\nstrawberry 'soda\n$14,000 farm  Iri\nbottle   of\n\"pop\"  for\nKansas?\nThat's-Just what an oldtlme\nminer and farmer.now living\nIn the Splltlog country North-\nof here expects to do next Feb.\n24, when he turns 66. - *\nBy a provision of his father's\nwill, George Willis should receive a farm In Kansas, If on'\n' his 65th birthday he can produce * battle of Strawberry\nsoda bottled by tha now defunct George H, Redell Bottling Company of Joplln before\nthe turn of the, century.\nThe cprlout provision'of the\ngrandfather's will .leads back\nto George'* fifth birthday. -\n-At that tint*,. Jamet Connor\nOf Ochelata, Okla., then a part\n..of Indian territory, leaded hi*\ngrandson, George ,ln a buggy\nand drove from Galena to Joplln to buy the youngster a\nbirthday present   ' '.\/-\u2022.\nThe pair wept to the. old\n\u25a0 Redell Bottling Company plant\nwhere: Connor bought a ease of\nthe strawberry soda.\nThrough the .year*' Willis\nhoarded the supply,, drinking\na bottle only on special occasions. Todayyonly one bottle\nsurvives from the ease of-24.\n' Willis will present tbe bottle,\nstill -tealedi i to the Probate\nCourt at Independence, Kas.,\nnext Feb. 24 to receive title to\nth* farm.       y\nWhat will he dO-with the\nbottle bf pop after he.'baii, produced -it In court?.     :  .'-..\n\"Drink It, of course,\" he tald.\nil Engineers'\nRIDGWAY OFFERS\nRESUME TALKS\nBy WILLIAM C. BARNARD\n' TOKYO, Sept. 18 (Tuesday) (AP<\n\u2014A United States liaison officer delivered to the Communists at,noon\nMonday Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway's\nlatest offer to resume the suspended\nKorean truce talks.\nRidgway himself made a 12-hour\ntrip to. Korea Monday but it evidently had no connection with the\narmistice effort-'   .\nInstead, the. United Nations commander conferred with Gen.-James\nA. Van Fleet, Eighth Army commander, and other field officers on\nthe sharpening warfare. He returned to his Tokyo headquarters Monday night..\nOLDEST MAN DIES\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa, Sept 17 (Reuters) \u2014 South\nAfrica's oldett man, 121-year-old\nPeter Chandler Prlngle, died In\nhospital today. i\nLOaisUL eXeveliL\nSaturday  Monday\nNelson    7.56 7.60\nIIIIIIIIIIMIillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nBreach Hill tine\nU.S.   EIGHTH ' ^RMY   HEAD-\nsmashed\u2022' remnant* of* a North\nKorean Column weaving down a\nmountain trail Monday as United\nNatlont Infantrymen .wrung new\n, hill positions from the-Communist\nmountain fortress lino In Eastern\nKorea, . \/\nCLEVELAND, O., Sept. 17 (AP)\n\u2014 Alvanley Johnston, 76, the chunky, hearty-voiced map known to\nthousands, of railroaders aa \"Al,\"\ndied in his sleep this morning.\nJn .the 25 years that the Canadian-\nborn Johnston was Grand Chief Engineer-of the Brptherhoqa of Locomotive Engineers, the most dramatic\nincident came in May,; 1048, when he\njoined uva.row with President Truman. It ended with Johnston calling his 81,000 members back to work\nminutes before Truman asked Congress for power to draft the striking\nengineers.\nFor two days the railroads were\nshut down. .      \u25a0\u25a0',..-',\nThe'president announced his Intention, ot running the trains with\ntroops. About half an hour before\nhe went before Congress to-ask draft\nlegislation, Johnston, a Republican,\ncalled off the engineers' strike, and\ntrainmen followed suit. < , ,\n' Johnston, a native ot Seelys Bay,\nOnt., suffered a heart attack last\nnight 'at his home in Shaker Heights,\na suburb. He had retired-last year\nafter 50 years of membership in the\nBrotherhood, and was succeeded by\na member of his staff, James I';\nShields.    -   . ; -\n200 Fight\nSquamish Fire\nSQUAMISH, B.C., Sept 17 (CP)\n\u2014 All men 16 years of age and\nover were ordered today to report\nfor fire duty tonight. - ;\n' Nearly 200 men are fighting tha\ntwo-mlle-long and ono-mllo-wlde\nfire that ia burning out of control\ntoward the Mamquam River near\nthlt town 60-miles North of Vancouver.   ,      . . \u25a0'\nHigh school students have left\nschool and .trades people are working their regular shifts then fight\nIng the blaze for- another eight\nhburt.\nThe fire It only a mil* away bin\nthe town It not In danger unless\na ttrong North.wind springs tip.\nStreets and buildings are covered\nwith a fine ash.   ...\nWanted: Bioneersfor Quebec North\nBY RICHARD DAIGNAULT\nCanadian Prett Staff Writer\nQUEBEC-Sept. 17 (CF)S - The\nQuebec government is looking for\n-pioneers to push out the boundaries\nof civilization in Canada's vastest\nprovince.\nCandidates are scarce because the\nwork of carving out new farm* from\nthe wilderness is one of the toughest jobs in North America.\nCourage and patience are the\nchief qualifications of a prospective \"colon\" (settler) since It takes\n\u2022Ix or teven yeari of toll before a\nfarm takes shape in virgin territory.\nThe reward It home-ownership,\neventual possession of producing\nland and the satisfaction of moving In the footsteps of pioneering\nforefather*.\nHeading tbe advance over the old\nfrontiers of Quebec are a few. thousand settlers in the Northwestern\nregion of Abitlbi, To spur land\nsettlement, the Quebec government\nhas invested $1,000,000 in land-clearing machinery.\n$60 MILLION 8PENT\nThe provincial treasury has also\npoured some $50,000,000 in five\nyears into construction of roads,\nbridges, houses, schools and small\nchurches thai produo a back-home\natmosphere for tbe pioneers from\nthe old Quebec farming communities.\nThe government hit upon the idea\not opening up Abitibi on a big scale\nafter the First flTorid War to counteract unemployment in the- cities\njand direct idle young farmers to the\nkind of life for which they were\ntrained.      <\nThe thousands who made the lonely 18-hour rail journey from Montreal and Quebec to Abitibi later on,\nduring the depression, opened tbe\nway for the mining discoveries of\nthe 1030s that suddenly put lowns\nlike Val d'Or (Vale of Gold), Rouyn\nand Noranda on the map. . ,    ,\nIn 1045, the present government\ndecided to form a committee ot experts to advise on methods of getting the program re-organized and\nthe Legislature voted a special fund\nof $16,000,000 for colonization apart\nfrom the usual budgets.\nWhile candidates are scarce, they\nare better-qualified   now   than In\nWallSlreef\nNEW YORK, Sept 17 (AP) - In\na rather mild and discouraged manner the stock market today declined.\nIt sh*ook off all attempts to fally.\nThe decline came from the 1851\npeak reached Friday.;\nSome of the recent leading divisions sagged narrowly. Among them\nwere steels, non-ferrous metals anti\nrails..    \u2022 ,,      .   , \u201e .-\nThe radio-television section, particularly! Radio Corp.i offered leadership, right from the first with a\nstrong showing, but the rest of the\nmarket never followed through.\nToday was the second time in the\nCanada Wants\nBigger lice lor\n\u25a0'\u2022';\nWASHINGTON, Sept 17 (Ap)\u2014\n__\u201e  .__ Approximately '6000  Army.- Navy\nlast 14'sessions that the-maTket has and Air Force men will r   yluct\nSmall Piters\nBy. DOUG1a8  HOW\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, SepKljl? (CP) \u2014 Oh\n.two fronts, Canada was reported\ntoday to be linketftwith efforts to\nhave; the voices dXjthe smaller Atlantic   Pact   powers   carry   more-\nweight in the forging of Blg.Three\ndecisions   that   affect   the. entire\nWestern world,     - -\ny At the 12;eountry North   At\nlantlc    Council    pressed    ahead\nwith secret deliberations, Ottawa\nwas *aU to share the view that\nsome\\sort of Informal procedure\nthoulo\\bV worked,.oul ib' that -the):\n:   amallciV nation*   have- a' better\nchance HcAspeak^ln..the  early,\nstages ef big decisions. It might,\nCanada feels, be sornethlng along\nthe Mnes of the constant consul\ntationt   -a\/fjong   Commonwealth\n- countries:\nuidCWfihe. pUiery^QiMya\nunBerstSod. %': 'tjruijf^oTfflatl\novtx \u25a0 the)-' existing- opportunities\nsmaller- powers--;to express their\nOpinions about the malting of top\ndefence strategy by the British,\nAmericans . and French IBS the\nPact's standing group.\nThis,latter point provoked 'rnore\ndiscussion among; defence ^ministers, Including. Canada's Brooke\nClaxton, than the heralded' report\nfrom .Gen Eisenhower which-iwas\nsaid, to .urge a speeding'of cofitri-\nbutlons for the..defence of Europe.\nCHIEF8 TO MEET \u2022    f*\nWithin the nexfr six weeks the\nPact military committee, formed\nof military chiefs of the 12'countries, will meet to study the 'two\nreports' and .to consider recommendations for building, up Europe's strength. Their recommendations will go .before a late-Fall\ncouncil -meeting in Rome,' which\nwill be more military in Character.\nAtOMlG TRAINING\nFOR M.S. TROOPS\nIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nThrown from Skidding Motorcycle,\nCranbrook Youth Dies Instantly\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept. 17\u2014Donald Sanderson,\n18-year-old son of Sdgar Sanderson of Cranbrook, was\n:\" killed instantly this afternoon when a motorcycle Jie was\ndriving along Van Horno;Street skidded in gravel just\noutside city limits ond throw him. ,','.'-\u25a0-.'\nHe was born and grew up in-Cranbrook and had\n-   recently been.employed by the Canadian Pacific Railway\nas car checker here.  \u25a0'.*. ''\nHe ii\"survived by 'his. father in Cranbrook, hit\n\"  mother in Vancouver and two brothers, Leslie and Douglas. '\u25a0' ' '.'\u25a0:-; ',' ,;\nThere will be a coroner's Inquiry.\naiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiilliiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillliliiliiliiillliiiillliiiililliii\nORDER SAVING IN\nNORTHWEST POWER\n.\" WASiHilMeTON, flept 17 (AP)\n\u2014 Coniervatlon.of power In'the\nPaclflo Northwest was ordered tonight, but an expected \"brownout\"\norder was delayed,  .\nstepped back a notch in. its strong\nclimb to successive new highs for\nthe year. \u2022    ,\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks lost 30 cents at $100.10 with\nthe Industrial component down 40\ncents, rails 30 cents and utilities. 10\ncents.\nThe volume bf business contracted\nto 1,830,000 shares, -the lowest\" in\nnearly two weeks. -: \"-'\nThe market was fairly broad wtib\n1.135 Individual, issues on thi* tape\nof which 379-advanced and S01 declined. There were 47 new bighs and\n8 new lows for the year.\nSAYS NATO\nTRANSCENDS U.N.\n. OTTAWA, Sept-. 17 (CP)-Her-\nbert .\u2022 Morrison, Britain's Foreign\nMinister, suggested tonight that\nthe Commonwealth Colombo Plan\nto succor and 'save large'fcreas of\nAsia charts a-path the North Atlantic Treaty Nation* might well\nfollow.\nIt sounded like one,of Britain's\nbig points in the council discussions about the long-range objectives of.N.A.T.O.    \t\nMr. Morrison called'NATvO. |a\nsupplement of the United Nations\nbut then said that in his view lt\nhaa transcended the U. N. lb importance.   - ,-    i< \u25a0' \u25a0; '\n\"In present circumstances It Is,\nin my opinion, the most important\nof all inter-government organizations.\"\nUseful\nEAST-CENTRAL FRONT, Korea,\nSept. 17 (AP) \u2014 Allied warplanes\ndropped burning napalm (jellied\ngasdline) on a mountain North of\nYanggu Sunday. Later, United Na\ntions infantrymen scanned the\nearlier years and government assist-j mountainside with field glasses. Reds\nance makes the life of a pioneer were still there \u2014 heating their ra-\neasier than it once was.       1 tions from the. residue of napalm. _\natomic warfare training in c mec-'\ntloh with forthcoming tests of nuclear weapons at Frenchmen's Flats,\nNevada. , - V      -. j\nThe Army announced today that\na battalion combat team with supporting service troops will .be provided, The personnel will be drawn\nfrom the six continental armies in\nthe United States.\n'.'Wijhin the safety and Security;\nrequirements of,- the test program,\"\nthe' announcement' said, \"units in\n\u2022Exercise Desert Rock' will have\nthe opportunity to test the principles\nof organization and training.appllc-:\nable to military operations: under\nconditions involved in atomic warfare.'   . '      ' '; -.,'\u25a0\u2022-,\n\"Prior to the detonations the\nwithdraw to pre-determined positions of safety.\"\nThree.of 6-Minufe\u2014^\nQuads Survive '\n. BALTIMORE, Sept1 17 (API-\nThree of Baltimore's \"six-mlnute\nquads\" were still on tha critical\nHit In  hospital  tonight.\nGloria, third of the four to be\nborn Friday night died Saturday. . \u25a0 \\\nMr*. 8utl* Avanc*, 31-ye*r-old\nNegro widow, gave birth to the\nquadruplets In - six minutes of\n.delivery tlm* after only 82 minutes of labor.\nHer husband wat stabbed to\n-death two months ago. Mrs.\nAvanc* hat five other children\nbesides the surviving quads;\nFIND BODY IN RIVER\nPQUCB COUPE, B.C., Sept 17\n(CP) \u2014 The body of E. Bare, 76, was\nfound today by R.OM.P. In the\nPouce Coupe River near this town >n\nthe Peace River district.   .\nRelatives said Bare had been missing from tbe home of hjs brother,\nWalter, since last Tuesday.\nThealre Fall Kills\n25 Youngsters\n[']y ^AJjPjNA*;' Brazil,' Sept 17\n'\u00bb (AP) '!\"i-jy>n\u00ab l|n'*\u00bb of blood donors formed, today to clve transfusions for Injured survivors of a\n; , moyle.theatre collapse' that killed\n& youngsters watching a comedy\nfilm yesterday. .\n\u25a0tost of the 1,000 or to In the\nEstimates .of the Injured rang*\nfrom 300 to 800 and 65 survivors\nera known to be In grave condl\n-tion. the roof of the old thow\nhouse fell In on them.\nGARGRAVEJAYS\nVICTORIA       !\nRUNS BOARD\nConroy' Cfaims<'^|i :^< \u25a0;;\nGolfusion.With   \u25a0..;\nEmployers, Parties\nV-ANCO.UVER, Sept. 17\n(C)P) X- Pat Conroy, national\nsecretary-treasurer of the, Canadian Congress of Labor,- to-\nday^'charged the'British Columbia' Labor Relations Board\nwith\u201ebeing in coUUBlohiwitH\nemployers,   political  parties\nand a Communist urrton in an\nattempt  to' smash  C.'C.L.'-\ngfoups in'B.C.'',-\u2022 -' -\u2022-\n*Hs,spplce.as- tlie Q.CL. at\nthe opening session of its annual ' convention adopted ia\n, ,    ,   ,        ,.   ,   ^resolution  condemning the\nto perfect a hydrogen bomb\u2014the board for rlepp'rtffvino tho Mi\nmost destructive weapon-attempted q.oarQ J\u00b0r aecmnying vat) Ma-\n- rine and Boilermakers'Union\nof B.C. (CCL'^as bargaining\nsgent for ,10 - .wooden ship- -\nyards.  .'   ..',\nThe decertification, Congress delegates said, wa* on tbe main ground\nthat members of the union had refused to, work overtime. They called\nthe action \"vicious;\" ' and Conroy\nasked: \"Does 'this board think if*\noperating In Russia?\". \\ *' \u2022 y,.\nLater,' he explained the \"Commu-\n' \"rejfejnqei^aa: to^tjie; jtoterba-\nAsks $484 Million\nFor Bomb Plan!\nWASHINGTON! Sept; IT (AP) -\nGrim effort* of the United States\nby man\u2014called today for the spend\ning of more than $1,000,000,000 on\none plant' alorte. \u2022\nOn the heels of disclosures that\nthe' U.S. already has secret, fantastic instruments of death, President Truman asked for $484,240,000\nadditional for a plant now being;\nbuilt in South Carolina; His request\nbrought' the total for that venture\nto $1.180,000,000,.-\nThe ;Soulh Carolina-i;iver. plant,\nalong tlie Savannah1 River, b>i de'-,\ned'to produce- Ingredient*' for,\nBRIEF SUGGESTS\nHOSPITALS SET\nCO-INSURANCE\n' VANCOUVBR,. Sept, 17 (CP) ' \u2014\nBf itish Columbia Hospitals' Association today' recommended .that B.C.\nHospital Insurance Service'permit\nhospitals to set co-insurance rates\npaid by. patients.\nThis was. one of several recommendations designed to. give flexibility to hospital insurance financial problems presented in a 12-\npage brief by A.\u00bbH. J. Swenclsky,\nPresident and Percy Ward, Secretary of the Association.\n\"Today's hospitals are trying to\ncarry on their work in' straight-\njackets,\" the brief said.\n.\u2022;ihe original intention of the\nHospital Insurance Act was to provide money to meet the needs of\nhospital patients. This has now\nchanged to cutting down Services\nto patients to meet the needs qf the\nhospital insurance fund.\"\n.. Co-insurance rate* are now fixed,\nwith a maximum bf $3.50 a day for\ntbe first 10 days.\nThe recommendation \u2014 if-acted\nupon \u2014 could mean that co-lnsur\nance rates would be higher in some\nRUSSIA ARMING\nSHINWELL WARNS\n.-. OTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CP) - Rt.\nHon)' Emanuel Shinwell, United\nKingdom Defence Minister, said today that the West's \"only bope\" for\npreservation of World peace Is the\nsupport of the North Atlantic Treaty\nOrganization \"by all means at our\ndisposal.\"\nRussia, In.what are supposed to be\ntunes of peace, is maintaining a,fleet\nof 300 modern submarines as well as\n-surface vessels, has 21S army divisions, many of them armored, and an\nair force bf more than 19.000 plane:\nAt least 70 of the army divisions\nare deployed against the- West, he\ntold tbe Women's Canadian Club.\n-\u2014-\u2014i*\u2014 ;\u2014i-\nIran to Deliver\nOil Ultimatum\n\u2022TEHRAN., Sept 17 (CP)\u2014 The\nIranian Cabinet decided tonight to\ngo ahead with Premier Mossadegh's oil ultimatum to Britain\ndespite W.\" Avert.! Harrlman's refusal to relay it to London.\nA Goyernment source.told earlier of Harrlman's refusal to relay\nthe ultimatum from Washington.\nIt gives Britain two weeks'to resume oil talks or face expulsion\nof British technicians still in Iran\nat the nationalized Anglo-Iranian\nOil Works.\nIrah struck at Britain In another\ndirection today when the Govern\nmont'issued an order forbidding\nthe British Bank of Iran to trans,\nact foreign-exchange business.\nis highly secret ibr. LeS- Szil'ard, ~a\ntop atomic scientist said -last year\nthat ilr cotild be' rigged to create a\ndust cloud 'of death,' killing \\ all\nhuman* in the' world.\nConsidering present requests, the\nU.S. bas marked more than $7,000,-\n000,000 for atomic-rand H-bomb ;\u2014\ndevelopment. The cost Of perfecting ,the first A-bomb was estimated\naf $2,OO0,t)OO|O00.    . \\ '-,\n. It was announced last July'l that\nthe:U.S. had spent $4,000,000,000' on\nthe'career of the atomic bomb, The\nAtomic Energy Commission then\nhad $1,400,000,000 in unspent funds,\nand bad. a request before Congress\nfor another $1,200,000,000;    '. -   -\nThe A.E.C. declined |to .eaf how\nmuch of that sum is devoted to the\nH-bomb.,-' y ... :v\nQUIT CLASSROOMS\nFOR ORCHARDS\n., KEl-bvVNA, B.C, 8epi 17 (CP)\n\u2022\u2014Three high schools at Kelowna\nclosed, today to enable students\nto meat the urgent demand for\napple pickers.' Stores may alto\nclose periodically,    ';,.,.   . ,\nA long dry spell Is causing the\napples to fall from the trees ahead\nof time.-Mcintosh Redt mutt all\nbe picked this week.\ned-'but of the COL,\nlast year for Communist domination.\nIt is certified'.for. the-big B.C. operations, of Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting, Ltd., - and the' United\nSteel Worker's ot'Amerlba (C.I.O..\nCCL.) has been trying vainly for\nmore than a year to have the board\norder a new . certification . vote in\nsmelters,   . ,   \u2022'\n' Bert Gargrave, B.C.. international\nofficer of the Steelworkers, today\ncharged ~th0 board with \"vic.91.8-\nness\" and said it is \"completely controlled by the B.C. government\"    \\\nGeorge Home, Vancouver member\nof, the B.C. Federation of Labor, said\nthere is a danger to the trade union\nmpvement in the board's rulings,\nsince its: policies now are being imported Into other provinces.\nA part of the Coiigresa resolution\non the board .was for an Investigation pf: its activities by tbe B.C.\ngovernment ' V\nSTUDY QUESTION OF\nRETURNING KOREA DEAD\nOTTAWAy- Sept. 17 (CP) \u2014 The\nquestion of whether Canada will\nbring;'home,her Korean war dead\nor leave them in graves in that-\ncountry now; is being studied by\nthe Defence Committee ot tbe Cablet    :\nAnd in This Corner :* *\u00bb\nCLEVELAND, O., Sept. 17 (AP)\u2014Eighteen angry women, carrying\n\u00a3aper sacks full of crickets, visited service director Samuel David\nl city hall today. '\nThey told him the crickets were overrunning their home* near\nCleveland's Kingsbury dump, then released a few in his office, - ,\nAfter a workout with> fly. swatter, David ordered a 10-foot atrip\ncleared between the dump and private property, a DDT barrage in\nthe atrip, and a special watchman to guard against \"wildcat\" garbage\ndumping. -.-.. \u25a0-.-; ,-\nLOUISVILLE, Ky\u201e Sept 17 (AP)\u2014Marvin Colyer popped up Short\nIn the popcorn department yesterday. Now he'* holding the bag for\na few thousand'friends.  ,-'..\nIt'* pure guesswork just how much popcorn the 44-year-old Colyer\ngive away In two years. But after hit arrett today, estimate* ran between 15,000 and'40,000 bags.\nColyer wat popcorn salesman for the. Rltz Theatre. \u2022\nHis employer, Allen Bradley, couldn't understand the diminishing\npopcorn supply, to he had Colyer Investigated. ..\nDetectives gave this account:\nAbout two yeari ago, Colyer started giving away popcorn to hit\nfriends because he \"Just wanted to be good to them.\" .\nHis supply of bags ran low. He ordered 40,000 at hi* own expense. He also bought some extra popping corn, too.\nv Colyer tald he Intended no harm. He wants topay for the popcorn\nhe gave^way.  . .\nAhd Bradley, Isn't real mad, either. He put-up bend for Colyer\nand relieved him of some of his duties. Colyer hid been booking\nagent as well *s popcorn salesman,    . .,:. ',..'\nNow he's Just booking agent    -\nVANCOUVER, Sept 17 (CP)\u2014You pay* your money and you get*\nyour.citizenship, in Vancouver naturalization court\nJudge Bruce Boyd asked a Chinese woman applying for naturalization: \"What do you. know about tbe responsibilities ot Canadian\ncitizenship?\" .;'-'\u25a0* \u25a0'\u25a0':\n\"Well,\" she replied, \"I've paid somewhere around $13,000 in taxes\nend . . .\" \u25a0\nShe is now a Canadian citizen.   .-\nTORONTO, Sept. 17 (CP)\u2014An amputee's pant leg was declared\na public place In court here today.\nErnest Carroll, 30, wat f Ined 415 whetfhe pleaded guilty to keeping\nliquor In a public place\u2014hit pant leg, \u25a0\"\u25a0\"\nPolice tald they taw \"Carroll crossing a street Intersection and\nnoticed hit pant leg Wat not swinging normally. They Investigated\nand a found a bottle of liquor.\nWACO. Tex., Sept-17 (AP)\u2014A car roared out of a tilling station\nyesterday, careened against a curb and, blew a tire.\nFour men jumped out and ran.\nPolice took over the car.\nWhoever claims it will have to explain a $4 gasoline bill the men\nwere running away from.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1951\n\\HOW-\nTHE COMMAND\nPERFORMANCE\nPicture of the Year!\n\u00ab\nShow* ot 7:00 - 9:00\nExtra: Cartoon\u2014New*\nSupport Coalition ...\nI\u00bbT\nSlocan Road; Reeled C. H. Bland\n\u2014 .\"\u25a0\u25a0'U7C. \u2014~r\nTORIES TAKE LEAD\nBOGOTA, Sept. 17 (AP)-Colom-\nbla's Conservative Party took, an\noverwhelming lead in Sunday's\nelections, assuring lt full control of\n-Congress for.the first time.in 19\n-sarear*.    \u25a0\n;*\u2022 The main:body of Ih* Liberal\n\"P\u00ab\/ty, which: controlled 'the':old\nCmigre**, ordered it* follower* to\n\u00abtay away from tha poll*.    ,\".\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Claiilfled Way\nMM!\"\nTo Speak Here\nAT BENCH OR DESK I\n-.Donald C. MacDonald, CCF, national treasurer, will speak in Nelson October 5ft;}:   .,-' \u25a0;\u25a0'. '-':X: \u25a0':\nHe is on an extended tour of B.C.\nfor the party's expansion drive and\nwill speak in Nelson during the\ncourse of a visit to Nelson-Creston,\n:aslo-\u00a3loean   and   Grand   Forks-\nfreenwood riding*.        V\nSAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 17 (AP)\n\u25a0William Green opened the 70th\nvention, of the A.F.I>. today with\ncry that Communist Russia must\nbattled \"until that nation ia de\nlively defeated.\"\nNELSON MUSICAL FESTIVAL ASS'N.\nPresent* the,?\u25a0\u25a0\nMUSICAL TREAT *\nOf THE SEASON\nDonald Brown\nBaritone\n'\".\u25a0Willi \u25a0   -\nHolm\nDahlstrom\n,   (PlanlH)\n\u25a0 .    Aseisrlng. Artist\nCIVIC THEATRE\nFriday, Sept. 28\nNIT PR0CHD8 IN AID OF\nPIANO FUND .-\u25a0\u201e,.,\u201e\n. Donald  BrOwiv B\u00abriton*\n5 A\u00ablmlMl*m     Adults $1.00       Student* 50c\nNelson-Creston Liberal Association, which in- annua' meeting Monday night returned to. office almost\nits entire slate, is urging that tlie\nSlocan Road be Improved.\nThe meeting drafted a resolution\nto H. ,'T, Miard, Divisional Engineer,\nrequesting that the highway from\nthe cutoff to \"as far as possible\" be\noiled, gravelled and graded. The district Surrounding the highway waS\nso dust-ridden It was \"almost impossible to live in,\" Louis Bourgeois\nof Crescent Valley said in making\nthe recommendation. -        .\nTraffic over tho road had tripled\nIn.the past few year*, and from\n\/our to six In the afternoon oar*\nand trucks ware only a few hundred yard* apart. '(Yon can't eat\nsupper for duit\",-h\u00ab Hid.\nMr.   Bourgeois 'mentioned   that\ntourists, on finding that the \"washboard   road\"   continued for miles,\nturned back to the highway \"more\noften than not.\"   ,.\",!\u2022\nThe' motion was made by Leo\nBrown bf South Slocan and seconded by V. T. Kosiancic  of Crescent\n.Valley.'.,-   ',:\u25a0   \u25a0.;.-\u25a0::\nA copy Of the resolution will also\ngo to Walter Hendricks, M.L.A. for\nNelson-Creston;'   .\nTwo resolutions were approved\n*nd will be forwarded to the Executive meeting of the B.C. Liberal Association In Vancouver.\nThe ; first;, recommended by the\nNelson Association, urged that \"as\na matter pf policy, the Liberal party refrain from adopting any positive course qf. action that might\ncause the termination of the Coalition Party ih British Columbia\" during the tenure of the present administration.   -     \u25a0\u25a0-.-,...''\nFrom South Slocan came a recommendation that livestock be kept off\nhighways! The' resolution suggested\nthat the \"onus of responsibility for\nlivestock- be on the owner, and all\nlivestock in transit, unless in bare'\nof a herdsman, be impounded.\" An\namendment,balled for the exemption of cattle-raising districts.\nCattle at large Were a definite\ndanger to traffic, it was pointed' out,\nand linder existing regulations, a car\ndriver was responsible for damages\nif an animal wa* hit.\nReturned to office for tha 1851\n62 year were Charlst H- Bland af\nSouth   SIbeSan,   president; Leo 8.\nGananer'of Nelson, first vlce-prei-\nIdenti Mri. Margaret Patterson of\n:'\u25a0 Nelion,. third- vice-president;-and\nMrs. Margaret Oliver of Nelion,\n' te'eretary-treaturer. A. Ft. Speert\nof Creston,'as second vlee-pretl\ndent,\"ls the only new member of\nthe executive.       >    ',--.'\nMr. Bland, was also' nominated\nas.. West Kootenay member of the\nAdvisory  Council   of   the   B.C.\nassociation.\nBanquet Marks 60th Anniversary\nOf First Presbyterian Church\nTo th* First Presbyterian Church\nof Nelson came nearly 100 membera\nMonday night to -feartakVof. a *up-\nper held in observance of the sixtieth anniversary of the church\nhat*.    . .   \u25a0\nTbe event, a milestone In the history of ih* church, was opened\nwith the congregation raising their\nvoices In th* old hymn' of thanksgiving, \"Praise Ood From Whom\nAll Blessings Flow\".\nThe opening address was given\nby Rev. L. S. van Mossel, minister,\nfollowed by Rev. W: Ly Detlor,\nModerator for the ,Pr**byte,ry Of\nKootenay who brought greetings\nfrom his congregation in Trail and\n<rom the Presbytery. Se spoke on\nth* advancement of the church and\ndwelt on tbe question, \"What About\nthe Future?\" \u2022\u2022:'\u25a0\u25a0\u2022, \u25a0\nRev, Allen Dixon of Trinity 'United Church, a*. President, brought\ncongratulations from the Ministerial Association of Nelson, followed\nby, an address by Mayor N., fi.\nobi,; who eirtfcdetty Hie 'Clfjr\nCouncil's best wishes, voicing the\nbelief that \"To have good government you must have the church\".\nMain speaker wa* Rev. F. G. St.\nDenis, Mount Pleasant Presbyterian Church. Vancouver, who based\n^0immb Ck^Jmwaa.\nFrom short ordef cooks to the head chefs\nof famous hotels; men who demand the best of\nkitchen utensils appreciate aluminum.\nThey know this food-friendly metal protects flavour\nI\u25a0'',-   ;pmd quality so-well... and meals are prepared\n '\u00bb    more ..easily In .e^ek-tod-even-heatirig\naluminum. So... home-makers... take a tip from\n,..,.;. the experts. Brighten your kitchen with\ngleaming aluminum. It will HgHten your work,'\ntoo, because aluminum is so easy to clean.\n* -1\nALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA, LTD.\nALOMINtTM IS FRIENDLY TO\nHEALTH\nWhen you see aluminum used\nas a food container or wrapper,.\nyou can be <ur\u00ab th* purity o!\ntb* product is well-protected.\nLook for butler In aluminum loll\nand pie* baked in foil plate*.\nAnd remember that mora and\nmore maple syrup these days'\n1* made horn tap collected in\nclean, hygienic aluminum palls.\nhis address on the text, \"Jesus\nChrist the Only King end Head of\nthe Chufch\", and dwelt nn faith-\nfluness; to the.church.,      \u25a0 '-.\nThe anniversary,-ai Well, held a\npersonal note, as lt was In this tame\nchurch 20 years ago the guest speaker, Mr. St. DeniS, was married to\n\u2022'Nelson girl,\\Christine May, in a\ndouble ceremony, with Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Johnson. Nelson- residents;. Both\nladles received corsages from the\ncongregation. Mr. St Denis for 12\nyear* was minister at Trail and\nmade frequent visits to Nelson as\ntoterbn Moderator.. y  >\u25a0'\nJhsi WtodhsJL\ny Synopsis \u2014'\/There have been\na, few changes in the pattern of\nweather over: B. C> but none seem\nlikely to produce any rainfall in\nany section of the province. A\nweak Inflow of Pacific air across\nSouthern B. C, has caused a little\ncloud' in the-Southern Interior and\ndropped afternoon temperatures\nslightly.'. Oh flief- 'co\u00bbst conditions\nwill refrtaln nearly unchanged with\nonly a freshening of the North\nWest wind and a slight decrease in\n-fog,--..  ...    -,-    \u2022--.,,\u25a0\u25a0-..\nNelSon \u25a0.\u25a0'..^.,._\u201e;:,..u i...\n49   77\nToronto  .............'.:.\t\n\u00ab  70\nWinnipeg         \u00ab._..\n87   08\nNorth Brttleford ...\t\n- 44   79\nMedicine Hat ....'.\t\n42   SI\nCalgary   \t\n44   77\nEdmontori    :,...X\t\n42 -79\nKamloops ' \u201e:_.._.\t\n42   84\nPenUctdb   ___.....\n45   77\nVancouver ....!.>..\u201e ....\n48   71\nVictoria   ..\u201e ^...\n, 45   65'\nKimberley   ...-..:.._. L\n-30 '1*\nCrescent Valley \t\n41   82\nKaslo  ..:....'.X...:.X.~..\n46   71\nGrand.Forks ...\u201e\t\n45   86\nSpokane     \t\n59   84\nNew York \t\n63   77\nWhitehorse  -\t\n55   64\n.05\nCHURCHILL, Man.. (CP). - Mr*.\nClara Pr*tt of Churchill Is believed\nto -be the first Treaty Indian to\ncontribute blood to a Red CroSs\nblood donors' clinic In Manitoba, '\nnaJionon\nHospital,Financing; Steps Criticized\nMembers of 54th '\nPlan Reunion Here\nEx-members of the 54th Battalion\nfrom Trail, Kaslo. Nakusp and other\npoints are expected to attend the\nreunion banquet: of the Battalion in\nNelson in October.\nPreparations are already under\nway for the affair October 10.'    '   y\nTRAIL,\" B.C.,-Sept, 17 -Adele-\ngation of .three citizens, M. Walsh,\np. Mussio and C. Orlando presented\na petition to the council,- signed by\n80 ih the area from Binns to Kitchener. Street*, requesting that hew\nstepi be built to replace faulty Old\nones. One member of the delegation\nstated,that his wife had been hurt\ngoing up and dawn the steps, The\nlack of water.pressure in the area\nwas . also criticized, The matters\nwere turned over to the Board of\nWorks fOr .nyestig*tion.   .,\nMembers' of the Ratepayer* Association asking the reason of reversal of stand on the matter of financing of the hew hospital,; were told\nby Mayor Fletcher, that as the ratepayers were already saddled with,\nquite a burden he was opposed to\nTrail carrying a larger load if outside district* could not carry' their\nshare.' It was not legally possible\nfor them to share the coat under\nthe present setup.    \",\nThe. menace of slag on, Victoria\nStreet Was brought up and .it was\nexplained that* favorable agree\nment with Cominco was pending.\nThe group was also told that under\nlocal improvement bylaws sidewalk construction.could be paid tor\nin one lump sum.\nA letter from Minister of Health\nand Welfare A. D. Turnbull stated\nthat the matter,of possible pollution of the Columbia River at Castlegar had- been taken up with the\nminister of land* and forests and\nwas being looked into. Department\nof Public Works stated in a letter\nthat repairs to Trail float would be\npaid for and requested a list of repair* hecessary.\n' British Columbia 1951 Aviation\nCouncil invited representatives to\nits Harrison Hot Springs conference Oct 12, \u25a0! '\u25a0';\n1 Trill licence for genet*! contracting Was granted to M. J. Morrison, licence tor a garage to\nGeorge 'Laurie}. '\u25a0.'.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0:'.-\nMr*.. M, J, Bennett was granted\na licence for a cake shop, subject\nto the approval of, the health\ninspector.-  y     ,-'.,\nNEW, MIRACLE ELECTRONIC\nDISCOVERY HIDES DEAFNESS\nCHICAGO (Special)\u2014An amaz-.out any button showing in the ear\ning new electronic ear which mlr- and without dangling battery wires,\naculously hides deafness and trans-1, To acquaint; the hard of hearing\nmits even whispers with startling, readers of this paper with thi* hew\nclarity,  has  been  revealed by\nnoted Chicago electronic scientist.\nHe disclosed that this new wonder discovery ha* rendered old-\nstyle hearing aids obsolete and\nbring* new:hope to the 15 million\npersons in the United State* who\nare hard of hearing. \";\nHe reported that this electronic\near enables the deaf to hear wlth-\nmiracle electronic ear which actually hides deafness, full details are\ndescribed in a fascinating booklet,\n\"New Discoveries to, Help \"tha\nDeaf Hear.\" It will be,sent free-toy\na plain wrapper tb anyone who requests it. Address: Electronic Research .Director, 1450 W. 19th St.,\n742H Beltone Building, Chicago 8,\n111. A postcard wiU do.   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0      '*\"\nIhitishMccer\nLONDON, Sept. 17 (Reuters) '\u2014.\nResults of soccer games played today in the United Kingdom:\nENGLISH'LEAGUE\nFlrtt Division\n\u2022'.- Stoke City 1, Charlton Athletic 2.\nSecond Division \u25a0'.' .\n,  Cardiff City 1, Sheffield United X.\n.Third DlvltlonNorth\u00abrn   .\nBradford p,' Carlisle United 1.    '.-\n- Mansfield Town 1, Rochdale 1.\nThird Division Southern\n'. Newport County- 3, Reading 1.\nStrikes n' Spares\nVARIETY' tEAGOE\nNorma Lang rolled a high, of-724\nto lead'the Madhatters to the top\nltt -Variety League play. Her 289\nSingle Was also high while the Madhatters' 886 single' and 2602 aggregate' paced the field.\nTeam  scores:  Madhatters  2602;\nJokers. 2087; Dead End Kids 2012;\nWhiz Bang* 1994}.Dreamer*-1.913;\nGranite Deers 1848.\nMEN'S COMMERCIAL '      -\nDave Proudfoot's 283 single and\n662 aggregate were best ih Wednesday men'* Commercial League\ngame* while Bennie's team single\not 804 and aggregate of 2580 led*\nthe way.--    -,;.-    \u25a0\nTeem* scores:   Bennie's   2580;\nFreight Shed .2308; Occidental 2220;\nTransfer No. 2 1804.\nMIXED COMMERCIAL   -\nThe New Atom*, paced by Bruce\nMalcolm, Lena Koehle and Fred\nKoehle, rattled off. the highest team\naggregate to date this season with\n3146, to .take the lead in-the Mixed\nCommercial rijee.      '.'.,,     \u25a0\u25a0'\nMalcolm and Lena Koehle each\nscored 692 while Fred Koehle.was\nright behind with 691. H.B.C., However, had the. hottest team single\nwith 1194.,     '\nHarry Kennell,' with 780, was\ntops in the individual aggregates\nwhile Lena Koehle'* 382 wa* top\nsingle.. '\nit-am scores: New Atoms 3146;\nRoyals 2948; Dairies 2848; H.B.C.\n2743; Sad -Sac* 2547; Seven Ups\n2523; All's 2405; Forbes 2365; I.A.C.\n2214; Wright 2132; News 1700.\nProcter Racquets\nClub Organizes\nPROCTER, B.C., Sept. 17 -j The\nProcter: junior badminton club has\norganized for the 1951-52' season,\nelecting Claudia Dosenberger president for the new term.\n\\ Vice-president Is Kay Batchelor\nwhile Ronald Garner and Rosie\nRenzle. were named secretary and\ntreasurer respectively.\ncf\nAtomic Warfare\nTo Be Theme\nThe first Fall meeting of the Nelson Ch*pter, Registered Nurses'\nAssociation og B.C., Was given over\nto a discussion on the various means\nof raising- money for'the bursary\nstarted this year. Thi* bursary will-\nbe tyven each year to help finance\na Nelson girl, through her nurse's\ntraining.   \u25a0 \u25a0       . \u25a0 , j\nThe'highlight of the evening wa*\nayreport by Miss Nancy Lee on the\nprogram and business discussed at\nthe provincial R,N.A.i njeeting *t\nVancouver last June.   \u2022 i.1 |\nOf. interest, to \u00bb11 nurse*, 1* the\nlecture'to be given on Sept 26 by\nMis* Margaret; Campbell, Assistant\nDirector ,0f Public Health Nurses,\nDept, of Health, Victoria, on the\n\"Nursing Aspect.; of Atomic War-,\nfare.\" -\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n\"Pays To Reap tha Claiilfled pally\nMontreal, Que.\n132 St. James St. W.\nPlateau 1133.\nNoranda, Que.\nP.O. Box 230\n820J & 1394M -\nadd COMPANY LTD.\nMINING ond GENERAL CONTRACTORS\nSpecialists in\nSHAFTS - TUNNELS - ROCK EXCAVATION\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.\nCurrently Contracting From Coast to Coast.\nFor base metal* and iron mines in Newfoundland, asbestos\nmine* in Quebec and Ontario, base metals -and gold mine* in\nOntario, ind Quebec, and base metals In B.C. Railway and\npower tunnels in Labrador, Quebec, Ontario, Alberta and B.C.\nPlant and Equipment Supplied on Contract or\nRental Bail*.\n- If yeu are contemplating doing any development work wo\nInvite your Inquiry.\nKeep parly snacks -h-evsli\n'^'H-aiFd'f'-wrai\nII  HEflVV WAXED PAPERJ\nYou can prepire party dalnlltt hours ahead ytt itrve\nthem cilsp and sparkling fresh. Simply cover parly\n\u25a0tniclci wllh Hand-e-wrap to Icaep them heih, moist\nind appetizing at (he moment you madi 'them. ,\nKeep Hand-\u00ab-wrap handy In your Icltchenl\nMetal Cutting Edge,\ntears quickly, easily.\n$a\\\/e food Waste - save food teste\nBe Economy Wise \u2014 Buy Right\nYou'll Find It's Lowest\nPriced at the Liberty\n\u00bb\/\u00bb\u00bb\nPink Salmon \u2022\nFancy.\ntin 26c\nV Sockeye Salmon K: 2 for 69c\nPkg.\n\/Cake Mixes R8b,\"H9oa\u2022\n\/Sugar\n100 lb.\ntack _\nBorden'* or Carnation only.\nTin 16c. Com .\u2014 ]\t\nRoyal Standard, All-Purpoio\n\/Flour St.:\n\/iPlj^taasju    R\u00b0y\u00b0l Standard, All-Purposo\nJrlOUr m ib*: _._;\u201e.\n\/Salmon\n\/ Fresh Eggs\n8 Free recipe* firit 100 tint.\nFancy Cohoe. ,Yx*, tin\t\nA Medium.\nIn carton. Dozen:\n$12.20\n-$2i98\n$5.75\n\u2014 35c\n\u2014 79c\nI\n\u25a0\u2022. \u25a0\nDELTA\nRICE\nShort Grain\n\u25a02 Ib. pkg:  .\n35c\nCRISCO\n..  \u00ab*! lb. tin     1     .,\nSULTANA\nRAISINS\n2.b49V\nRINSO\nGiant, with 1 coupon.\n72*\nLUX SOAP\n' Reg. With 1 coupon.\nFLOOR WAX.\nLiquid. Limit 2 qts.    ,\nQuqrt  mfy\nFRUIT JARS SALE\u2014While they lost.\nKERR JARS, reg. quarts. Dox. .. $1.53\nKERR JARS, reg. Vi-gal. Dox.._ $1.85\nGEM JARS, quart*. Dox. $1.49\nGEM JARS, pint*. Dox. . $1.39\nFor Nourishing Meals at Our Introductory Special\n5-lb> pkg. Cattelli Macaroni or Spaghetti ... _\u201e_\u201e\t\nNippy Canadian Cheese (Meat Dept.) Lb. ..;..\u25a0_ T....\u201e.\nRepeated by Demand\nADAM'S FANCY FRUIT JUICE SALE\nORANGE JUICE, 48 ox. tin 1 34*\nBLENDED JUICE, 48 ox. tin  34*\nGRAPEFRUIT JUICE, 48 ox. tin . 31\u00bb>\nBLENDED JUICE, 20 ox. tin  15*\n___\u201e_\u201e 69c\n 55e\n...SHOP lARLV ON THIS.OUTSTANDING OFFER\nLEAN POT ROAST I lb. 78*    BOLOGNA -, lb. 88*    BOILING BEEF . lb. 48*\nConcord Grape* for Jelly. Bo.ket - 98*       CANTALOUP,\nSllverskin Pickling Onions . S lb*. 45*       Tasty. Lb.   ' .     ,-.  \u25a0...\n12'\nLIBERTY\nfi\/toiUL 1192\nFor Greater,\nSavings\n )(oi\nCHILDREN'S\nBLACK OR BROWN\nOXFORDS.\nPatent Strap*\n.'(By Savage),\nSlzei 6-8 :  _\u201e... X. S4.9S\nSizes 8y*-12 : X....X $5.95\nSize* Wa-3 .....;......:..:..~....\u201e.. S6.95\nTTie SHOE\n.'CENTRE;'\nPhone 896:     .-.-'.-   653 Baker 8t,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1951\u2014 3\n380,000ih7300Glubs. .... ,,. 'v., ,.\nConsolidation, Rather Than\nExpansion to Be Rolary '51-52 Object\nRotary International-will tbi* year\nconsolidate rather than attempt to\nexpand further.       y\nThe world-wide organization, with\nmore than 7800 clubs in 83 countries,\nadded 364 new clubs last year and\nnow has a. membership of 380,000,\ndistrict governor Sidney H. Woodcock told the Nelson Rotary Club\nMonday.\nMounting administration and service costs were cited as the main\nreason* for the stabilization program, . said Woodcock, currently\ntouring Rotary district 158.\nThe- trend this year fwould be towards smaller, more compact districts, although large enough to\ncover administrative expense. At\npresent, there -are 203 districts containing an average of 36 clubs.\nHe mentioned no projected\nchanges for 168 which contains 42\nclubs in Northern Washington, Idaho and British Columbia, but saw\nI\nI \u25a0\nAll WINTER\nGUARANTEED!\nANTIFREEZE\n^1H01\nAntl-fraezo for guaranteed\nprotection ia coldest nib-\nzero   weather!   Genuine\nFord Permanent-Type -\nAntJ-Freeze  hat  a  non-\ne wrporariog base... won't\nboil away at high angina\ntemperatures ..... cap b*   ,1\nleft in radiator all year.   '\nNow available it your\nnearest deaien,   \u25a0'\n1100 DEALERS FROM COAST TO COAST\nrevisions In. three prairie districts\nwhich would create three new international districts. , ,\n'. The only all-Canadian district,\nstretching from Alberta through\nSaskatchewan and Manitoba to\nNorthwestern Ontario, will likely\nbe broken up into three North-South\ndistricts. This would link. Manitoba\nand , Northwestern' Ontario with\nManitoba, Saskatchewan with\nNorth Dakota and Alberta with\nMontana;\n. Mri Woodcock has visited Rotary\nclubs at- Cranbrook, Fernie and\nKimberley. on his present tour and\nwill be with the Rossland- club on\nTuesday before continuing into the\nOkanagan, ,\nOther guests at Monday's luncheon meeting here* were Stanley\nMoffatt of Cranbrook, Herbert Morrow and Douglas Toller of Vancouver, and Jack Yolland of Trail. \"\nAutomatic Meters\nFor Trail Curbs\nTRAIL;B. C.r Sept. h-rA total,\nof 24 new parking meters have\nbeen Installed ori down-town Trail\nstreets*\nThe automatic meters, purchase\nof which was'authorized some time\nago by City Council1 in an amendment to the Traffic Bylaw; have\nbeen placed on Bay Avenue, between Victoria and Farwell Streets,\nand on the Southeast side of Eldorado Street, oetween Bay and\nCedar Avenue. \"\nCANADA'S C. D. SCHOOL\nAFFILIATED WITH U. K.\nOTTAWA, Sept. 17 (CPJ-Can-\nada's Civil Defence' Technical\nTraining school at nearby Con-\nnaught Ranges' has formally affiliated with the British Civil Defence\nTechnical Training School at lay-\nmouth Castle, near Aberfeldy,\nScotland, the Health Department\nannounced today.\nThe. announcement said the move,\nis a further step in cementing an\nalready close association. The affiliation means that each School\nwill recognize Instructors and other\npersonnel passing through the\nother's school on the same basis\nits own gradautes.\nUNDISCLOSED CHARGES\nAGAINST OFFICERS      '\nLONDON. Sept 17 CAP) \u2014 The\nWar Office announced today that\ntWoofficef*'Of the-Royal Ordnance\nCorpb,\u2014on\u00abJ decorated for gallantry\nin 'the last war'-t- \"are undtsi arrest\non unspecified charges.\nThey are Col. T. Q. Gore and Maj.\nR. H. T. Newman. The Ordnance\nJCorp* has charge ot servicing and\n| maintaining Army weapons and vehicles. Gore was awarded the Order\nof British Empire in June, 1844, for\n\"distinguished and gallant field service\" in the, Second World War.\n-The War 'Office said charges\nagainst tha two will be disclosed\nwhen court-martial proceedings take\nplace.' .--A':-;-\n-The world population has increased by 826,000,000 in the last\nSO year*; tofc total of 2,378,000,000,\nfor,Eczemas, Boils, Psoriasis, Leg Ulcers\nwm\nAuthentic photographs of IL R. Obemwlfan en March IV\nhafnrm  trsBMhuat  with   C  \u00bbW\nEMINENT Scientist* have discovered\nthat the lack of unsaturated fatty acids\nin human nutrition is one of the main\ncause* of skin diseases, such as Eczemas,\nBoils, Leg Ulcers and Psoriasis. The\nmodern diet, in which these essential\nsubstances are often completely lacking,\nhave brought about a deficiency in a great\nnumber of individuals.\nRemarkable Swiss Discovery.\nA Swiss chemist, Dr. W. Schmitz,-succeeded\nafter 10 years of research work in extracting from pure vegetable oils an unsaturated fatty acid in a concentration of 99%\n\u2022and therefore named F \"99\". Thanks to\nthis hitherto unattained purity, F \"99\" is\nso readily absorbed into the Wood stream,\nthat it has a decisive biological activity in\nthe treatment of skin diseases.\nIllustrated Booklet on F \"99\"\ncontaining all the Interesting fact! concerning this\nremarkable new Swius Discovery which -Will bring new\nhealth and happiness to innumerable skin sufferers, can\nbe obtained free of ebssve from any good drug store.\nDiva Laboratories, Dept.,,, P.O. Box 116, Victoria, B.C\nA specie! pamphlet has been Issued dealing with the\ntwo-way treatment of ocne end pimples mid II available\nlies of charge from your druggist.\nAuthentic   photograph   of   R.   P..   Obirmsllsn   \u00ab  June'5,\noiler 10 weeks treatmsnt with f \"\u00bb\".\nNatural way to dear up akin troubles\nF '\"99\" is not a synthetic drug but a\nconcentrate of natural nutritive substance*.\nIt is so harmless that it may be given\neven to infants without any hesitation.\nIts remarkable efficiency in the treatment\nof Eczemas, Boils, Leg Ulcers and Psoriasis\nhas astonished even Skin Specialists of\ninternational reputation.. As its name\nsuggests, the F \"99\" Two-Way Treatment\nacts internally as well as externally. While\nF \"99V Capsules or Liquid give the body\nthe power to suppress the cause and\ncombat successfully skin disease, the F\n\"99\" Ointment treats its external, visible\nsymptoms. To many thousands of skin\nsufferers all over the world; F \"99\" Two-\nWay Treatment has already proved its\ntremendous value and is being used with\noutstanding results even on cases where all\nordinary treatments have failed. In severe\ncases medical advice should always be\ntaken,\nF9r\nTwo-Way Treatment\nfor Skin Diseases\nArranged Historical\nDisplay at Exhibition\nA- committee of. 12' persons-arranged \u2022 the historical exhibition\nwhich drew much attention at the\nWest Kootenay Exhibition. Mrs. Reginald H. Dill was chairman.;\nOther members of the committee\nwere Mrs. A M, Noxon, Mrs. H.\nHughes, Mrs. A. Dalgas, Mrs. James\nMcGregor, Mrs. H. C. Came, Miss\nCOnnie Andrews, Mrs. C. My-Bennett, Howard THurman, Boss Fleming, H. E. Brown and Arthur B,\nGilker.\nSee Doubled\nOufpuf for\nPend Oreille\nSPOKANE, Sept. 17-J. A Hogle\n& Company's research department\nestimated that Pend Oreille Mines\n& Metals Company's output would\nbe doubled in 1951, and quadrupled\nby 1953.,   ' ' \u25a0 ,y'\n4 A Hogle official said the estimate was based on the \"conservative\" assumption Pend Oreille ore\nbodies would average between 5\nand tVs per cent recovery of lead\nand zinc from its milled ores. The\nreport would indicate that the company would be capable ot grossing\nabout $11.50 per ton on the ore it\nmills, he said., The report was\nbased on estimates of direct operating costs of approximately S3 per\nton and- the assumption that Pend\nOreille would be exempt from excess profit* taxes, he said.\nAccording to the investment\nhouse, Fend Oreille should mill\nabout 400,000 ton* of ore this'year,\n600,000 tons in 1952, and 900,000\ntons during 1953. The 1950 output\nwas only: 186,197 tons, Ten-year\nnigh for.the company was 1942,\nwhen 213,323 tons ot ore were\nmilled. '\nPend Oreille Mines & Metals is\nbehind schedule on its expansion\nprogram, it was noted. If further\ndifficulties are encountered in obtaining sufficient materials 'and\nsupplies, the expanded production\ntotals may be delayed, tha official\nsaid.\nThe company has an old 600-ton\nconcentrating mill, and this year\nbegan operating its new 800-ton\nmill. Another 800-ton mill is slated\nfor production by Christmas, with\na fourth mill, also of 800 ton capacity, scheduled. for completion\nby next Summer.\nOf Fend Oreille's 2,388,136 shares\nof common stock, Sullivan Mining\ncompany owns 30 per cent, or 717,-\n700 shares. (Sullivan is owned\nJointly by Bunker Hill & Sullivan\nMining and Concentrating Company and Hecla Mining Company)\nHecla Mining Company solely owns\nan-additional 86,781 shares of Pend\nOreille stock., \u201e\nPend Oreille operation* embrace\n5000 acre* in the Metaline Mining\nDistrict bf Northeastern Washington.\nKASLO, B. C, Sept. IV Representatives from all West Kootenay\nhospitals, some East Kootenay\nmembers and officials of the B. C.\nHospitals Association will convene\nIn Kaslo on Sept. 29. Present difficulties-of each-institution will\nbe studied and representations to\nbe made at the B. C. Hospitals\nconvention to be .held in Vancouver in October. The Women's Auxiliary of the Kaslo Victorian Hospital will -liv .hostesses to\" the\nguests at a buffet supper.\n'.:.--.- -\u2014\u2014^ r\u2014\u25a0 \u2014\nMissing Cranbrook\nLads Found in Hotel\nTwo boys, Walter and Wesley\nScott, missing from their iBald Hill\ndistrict home near Cranbrook since\nSeptember 12, were found Saturday\nin a hotel 12 miles South of Cranbrook.\nTbe older of the two had gone to\ntbe hotel for., food, leaving his\nbrother in the.woods near by. The\nhotel proprietor had been alerted\nand recognized the lad, ,\nHe called police, who returned the\nyouths to their-anxious parents.\nHarvest Begins _\nAt Sunshine Bay\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C, Sept 17,\n\u2014Nick Dosenberger had a crew of\nsix to help him fill his alio last\nBob Stevenson's silo wiJl' be\nfilled,tbi* week.\nPotato digging and apple: picking are next on the list and will\nsoon be under way. -,'..-\n18 Years'Jail for\nRomanian Bishop\nLONDON, Sept 17 (Reuters)\u2014A\nBucharest Military Tribunal has\nsentenced Agostino Pacha, Roman\nCatholic Bishop of Timisoara, Romania, to 18 years \"severs imprisonment\", on treason and espionage\ncharges, the Roman news agency\nreported today.\nThe court, which met ia secret,\nalso deprived th* Bishop of civil\nliberties for 10 yen*, th* agency\ndispatch said.\nTried with tha Bishop on similar charge* were a number of Roman Catholic priests and Italian\nlegation officials.\nAll defendant* were accused of\nespionage, treason and conspiracy\n\"in the service of the Vatican and\nthe Italian espionage centre,\"\n, The indictment alleged their aim\nwas to overthrow the Communist\n.regime in Romania and restore\nthe rule of the big landowners.\n. It accused the Vatican of. haying\n'supplied the \"espionage organization\" with funds.\nLicence Suspended\n, NAKUSP, B, C\u201e. Sept. 17 - Roy\nSundstrom of Burton wa* found\nguilty of reckless driving, fined\n$50 and his driver's licence was\nsuspended for 18 months by Stipendiary Magistrate A, R. Bedard\nin Provincial Court at Nakusp as\na result of a motor vehicle acci\ndent on September 1. ,\n& GETTING UP\ntfettinftytw'DtywK?\nIfinsnliU Bull )**\n\u2022nr\/hi\u00bbrwt\u00abl,itill\nweuy\u2014if jour floes\nUinkm b, fitful\ntessinj end tuminj\nbeta tlm*. When\njeuriddiMji pi out\n*-*iwivy*c-f sfec-p\nmaiHr infer!.   I* help ymir Idinen\nrejein i nomul eooca'tion. me Dodcf'a\nK&aynU. Dodd'iritlDii\u00bbHcb\u00bb,ifet\nrid ol poiiou *nd excess iddi ia tmr\nijitera. Then your uneuineu (brail*\n~-yen can enjoj reitfnl uuiroiien ileep\u2014\n\u2022nd iwiie refreshed ind re\u00abd> lor worker\nplay. (MtDodd.KdiwjrP.lli.oder. 147\nDocWisKidneYPiils\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, .Trade th* Claiilfled Way\nHospital lo\nDiscuss Problems\nBoswell Students\nMay Take ,\nU. B.C. Short Courses\nBOSWELL, B, CSopt 17-Allan\nDesChamps bf U.B.C., Was a visitor to Boswell in the interests of\nthe' University Short Courses for\nJanuary and February,' 1952.\nPossibly some young 'people\nwill take the course frqm Boswell.\nVera B. Eidt Honored\nMiss Vera B. Eidt, Superintendent of the Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nwas honored at St. Louis, Miss.,\nwith a nomlneeship in the American\nCollege of Hospital Administrators.\nMiss: Eidt was formerly Superintendent qf Kootenay Lake General\nHospital.\nThe-honor reflects the high\nstandard of the. Trail hospital\nwhich recently; was granted provisional approval by the American\nCollege Of Surgeons. Membership\nin the hospital administrators'\ngroups is confined to those attached to approved institutions which\nhave reached the standards set by\nthe surgeons.\nWhile in St LoulS Miss Eidt will\nalso attend sessions of the American Hospital Association convention. She is a member of the house\nof delegates or executive of this\ngroup.     ,\nFormal granting of nomineeshlps\nand memberships in the administrators* college tookplace Sunday.\nB.C. Would Profit From Socred\nPrincipals, Blackmore Says\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., Sept.'W\u2014 Social Credit is a scientific method of\ndistributing products, based on creation of money' debt-free, circulation add a compensated dividend. .\nThis is what J. H. Blackmore,\nMP. for Lethbridge, told r. meeting\nM Coronation ball here. He Was introduced by M Dalton. -\nMr. Blackmore said that If private enterprise Ii given the raw\nmaterial!,' market* and Mir. prides,\nIt can produce the goodi. It was\n' private ertterprlie'i duty to produce goodi ai cheaply ai possible\nand It wa* a government'* reipon-\n' slblllty to distribute the producti.\nLiberals,   Conservatives,   Democrats' and Republicans had the same\nthings in common, the Member said.\nSocialists had three main characteristics \u2014 conception  of  govern\nment ownership of industry; high\nrange of taxation and natural tendency to force people to do things.\nSocial Credit was. diametrically\nopposed to Socialism. It favored pri- -\nvate ownership and private enterprise, decrease in taxation ahd decentralization of . power, in other\nwords, a government that could be\ncoerced Into meeting public demands. ' '\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0\u2022, \u25a0 \u2022'- i\nB.C.- would do' well under this system, he said. ...\n, A study group-.wr... formed under\nchairmanship of Robert Sqmmer*.\nA secretary will be a jpjinted at the\ngroup's flrrt, meeting.\nFORMER. TRAILITE\nDIES AT COA$T\nRobert TaylOr Gordon, formerly\nof Trail, died at the coast Sept .12,\nat the age of 49.\nHe ia survived by His wife; three\nbrothers arid a sister.\nHe was- a charter member of\nEmulation -Lodge AF. and A.M. of\nTrail as well as Richmond Lodge,\nNo. 142 A.F. and AM.\nA COMPLETE CHOICE OF\nWEll-APPOINTEDANDFUllY\nSERVICED APARTMENTS AND\nHOTEL ROOMS*MODERATE\nJoknHXrami RATES Manager\nVANCOUVER B-C-\n^fe?i\nw^rmmmrm^i\nIn the orchards and fields... on highway arterfes ofiater-cfty\ncommerce... on busy streets everywhere ... yon see more\nFord Tracks than any otbet make !And there's a good reason\nwhy\u2014Ford Trucking com less because Ford Truck* ar*\nbuilt stronger to last httgert\nTake die rugged, hardworking hauler shown afcove\u2014the\nFord F-3 with dual rear wheel*. There's long-lasting strength\nto spare a\u00bb every part and detail of this husky Ford Truck\nwith its sturdier chassis and heavy-duty channel frame...,. its j\nfull-floating rear axle and strong, load-free axle shafts... its.,\nairplane-type shock absorbers and needle-bearing ttoiversal.\nJoints. Youll find the same unexcelled durability and on*,\nstanding track-built features throughout this year's bigger,\nmore complete Ford Track Koe, in every model from\nstwdy >\/\u00a3-ton Pictaip to massive 5-ton \"Bigjob\".\n-' -i \u25a0 \u25a0' 'v\nVisit your nearby Ford Dealer soon sod get aH the facts on\nthe Ford Truck that fits your hauling needs. You'll find that\nFord Trucks give you more in performance, dependability,\nand economy.. .and that Ford Tracking costs less because\nFordTrucks are built stronger to last longer!\nSte ywr\/VX0 TRUCK Pe*\/er\nPOWER PILOT\n<*&>\nThe Ford Power Pilot is ai fiifly-pnoved method of\ngetting; the most power'from the least go. it\nautomatically meters and fires the right amount of\ngas. at the right instant, to match constantly\nchanging speed, load, and power requirements.\nk Choke of 2 Ford Deluxe Cabs\ni 7 Series Ratings\n^ 12 Ylheefbases\nY Host Complete ford Trade Ua$ Ever Offered\nI 3 Great Ford V-8 Engines\ni 2 Cab-OverEnglne Models\nCanadians use MORE FORD TRUCKS than any other make!\nQueen City Motors Ltd.\n561 Josephine Street\nPhone 43\n ------\u2014\u2014\t\n4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NIWS, TUISDAY, SIFT. H, 1\u00bbST\nWoek, fyum.-\nOutlqpk on Musical Instruments\nSurprise^ to Most Movie Addicts\nNorth. \"But when you bear il, you\nknow that lt possesses sensual qual\nity BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Sept. 17 (AP)-\nBet you didn't know that the piccolo ia sexy.\n'Neither did I. I had always\nthought it a comical little instrument used for filling lb tha lulls\nof -sousa marches.\n\"But Composer Alex North informs me otherwise. He recently\nfinished' the score .for th* film\n\"Streetcar Named Desire\" \u00bbnd-hW\n.music is reputed to be the sexiest\never recorded on a sound track; -\nNot being sura' what comprises\nsexy music, I asked North,\nSEN8UALSOUNDS\n\"It's   hard   to   describe,\"   said\nAdvises on Important subject\nAs a mere male I told my daughter,\n\"Remember what your mother and\ngrandmother' use to keep their\nwashing white\u2014Reckitt'a Blue in\nthe rinse will keep your white\ndothes really white.'' \"Trust Dad\ntb give good advice!' she said later,\n\u2022Reckitt's Blue prevents clothes\nturning yellow, and out: of the blue\ncomes the whitest wash.'\nltle\u00bb.\"\nAnd did the piccolo really help?\n\"Absolutely,\" he replied, 'There\nis something about tha piccolo\nwhen played in the higher registers that sounds sexy.\"\nThe saxophone cap alio exude\nsex if played well, he added. North\nHas discovered such qualities in\nInstrument* a* part of his work in\nscorlrig motion pictures. y\n, MTh*.<flute , give*.':* primitive\nsound,'but i* not dynamic or emotional,\" he laid.' \"It can be used\nto depict pure. innocence, On the\nother hand,- the trumpet. 1* highly\nemotional and dynamic.\"\ni He added that the 'trombone la\nsentimental, the cello personal and\nthe, bassoon capable of high comedy, Drums can be used to promote\neerlness and suspense,' the French\nhorn to describe desolation and\nloneliness.' 'Y\n\". Even movie stars might be identified with instruments, he agreed.\nFor instance, Gary Cooper might\nbe personified by a' tuba; Betty\nHutton by a soprano sa:: and Betty\nStable by\" a flugle\" horn, whatever\nthat Is. i\nLOUDER   MAESTRO\nAround Hollywood ther* is a\nsaying that good musical score is\none you don't notice. North doesn't\nagree.\n\"If the music Is so noticeable\nthat you overlook the dialogue, it\n1* bad,'' he said. \"But I think\nrnusic can be a great asset to a pic,\nture during the scenes of action\nand when there is no' dialogue,\"\nMrs. Dale Carnegie\nCompare! Blue Bon net\nV- It's Her Favorite I\nBomber Looks for\nSignal lights\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 17 (CPU -\nR.C.A.F. bomber tonight will comb\nthe Manitoba-Ontario border area\nfOr signal tire* or light* which might\nlead to an American sportsman-filer,\nmissing in-the area' for the second\n-time in four years.\nThe filer, Ray Nelswander of\nSpringfield, 111., left God's Lake,\nMan;, a week ago on a 800-mile\nflight to Red Lake, Ont His plane\nwas last seen the same day over\nElk's Island near the South end of\nthe lake, 430 miles Northeast of here,\nAt the weekend, the R.CA.F.\nlaunched an aerial search, A Dakota from Winnipeg ha* been\nsweeping along the pilot'* proposed\n'route, ,-.\nToday, his wife notified the\nR.C.A.F. that Nelswander carried a\npowerful flashlight which' can lend\na beam 1,000 feet. In hopes of spotting a signal from the flier, a Lancaster bomber from the Maritime\nSquadron at Greenwood, N.S., will\nfly low over the route from Hed\nLake to God'* Lake tonight and investigate all light*, and fire*. More\nplanes will join the search tomorrow.\n. Mrs. Dale Carnegie-has an idea for\n: winning praise and influencing compliments.   Compare   Blue   Bonnet\n_. Margarita with any spread at any\nI price. Like the author a wife, you'll\nlove the delicate, sunny-sweet flavor\n'\u25a0\u25a0 of Canada's fine-quality all vegetable\nmargarine. You'll appreciate Blue\nBonnet's nutrition. And you'll welcome\n\u00abits real economy. So buy Blub Bonnet\nand get \"all 3\"\u2014Flavor! Nutrition!\n. Econom-e-e! Use it in cooking, on\nvegetables, as a delicious spread. .\n, Blue Bonnet margarine is sold in two\ntypes \u2014 regular economy package with\ncolor .wafer and also in the famous\n. Yellow Quik bag for fast, easy color.\n!\u2022 \u25a0 *T-\u00bbI\nHarrop W. I. Shown\nExhibition Display\nHARROP, B. C.\/Sept 17 -Articles entered in Harrop *nd District Women's Institute display in\nWest Kootenay Exhibition in Nelson were shown at the organization's meeting at the home of'Mrs.\nMcTavish. \u2022\nThe group came third in the Exhibition section and was on* of,\nfour W.I.* entering displays.\n, WIGAN, England (CP) - Pity\nthe teachers at St. John's school in\nthis Lancashire district It now has\nseven sets of twins between the\ns of 8 and 13. Last term the\nschool had two 'other sets.\n1792\n=n\n1951\nMAKE SURE YOU HAVE\nTHE RIGHT KIND OP\nLIABILITY INSURANCE\n3EMBMBER, you may be financially liable\ntoothersifyoucausethembodilyinjury\nor damage their property. Doe* your\npresent Liability Insurance policy\ncover against these risk* and against\nother* for which you may be directly or even\nindirectly responsible?\nYour Liability Insurance policy should insure yon\nagainst every possibility of liability which the\nDominion and Provincial law* permit insurance\ncompanies to include in one all-embracing Liability\nPolicy. A \"North America!' Companies' Liability\nInsurance Policy may be had to covet all risk*.\nPlay safe. Let your Agent or Broker go over yonr\nLiability Policy and make sure yon are properly\nprotected.\nBusiness accepted solely through\nAgents and Brokers\nINSURANCE COMPANY OF\nNORTH AMERICA\n' COMPANIES\n, CANADIAN HEAD OFFICE-TORONTO\nFIRE; MARINE * CASUALTY\nService Offices throughout Canod\u00ab '\nINSURANCE COMPANY O* NO\u00abTH AMERICA\nKDtMNrTY WSURANM COMrANY Of NOHIH AMERICA\nPHIUDEIPHIA FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE COMPANY\nWOMPN WRITERS\nMEET NEXT WEEK\nHALIFAX, Sept. 17 (CP) -\nNewspaper women and authors\nfrom all over Canada, gathering\nfor the biennial meeting Of. the\nCanadian Women's Pre** Club here\nduring the week starting Sept, 23,\nhave a busy schedule of work and,\nentertainment laid out\nThirteen branch clubs from Vancouver to Halifax will be represented at thi* 19th general meeting\nof the .organization, which dates\nback to 1804, and noW has nearly\nBOO members scattered across the\nDominion, , ..\nUnder the presidency- of Reta W.\nMyers of Vancouver, the business\nand .craft sessions continue from\nTuesday, Sept. 25, through: Friday.\nWeather to Decide\nPrincess* Menu\n' MONTREAL, Sept. .7 (CP)\u2014Th*\nweather will .have a great effect\non the daily, menu aboard the\nEmpress of France carrying th*\nRoyal couple to Canada.\nChief Chef J. Melarangl said the\ntastes of his special' guests are\nsimple, but atmospheric conditions\ncould make it difficult to determine what to serve.\n'-'If the, first'three day* ol the\nvoyage were rough, many \u00abpe-\nelfic dishes would, have to, be prepared,\" he tald. But he haa found\nfrom experience that when'passengers get their sea legs they\nhave a tremendous appetite\nThe \"menus have not been prepared yet and Melarangl will sbar*\nthis task with Chief Stewart W. H. I\nMEDICINE HAT, Alt*. (CP) -\nEmployee of the .city park* department for 40 year*, John Bruce ha*\njust' retired on pension. He wat\ncemetery superintendent for 21\nyear* during which time he supervised burial of more than SHOO per-,\ntan* at Hillside Cemetery,\nBlease, A report that Princess Elizabeth is oh a diet doesn't worry the\nchef in the least He said he will\nbe given a copy of it and there's\nnothing difficult about preparing\nsuch meals.   ,      \/\nAlthough Melarangl Is a descendant of a long line of famous\nItalian chef*, he was born in Manchester, England. Most of his experience was gained in leading\nhotels in Northern England and\nhe joined tha Canadian Pacific\nSteamships in 1021.\nNew Denver LA.\nNames Delegate\nNEW DENVER, B.C.,:S*pt. 17 -\nMrs. John Taylor, president, was\nappointed by New Denver Slocan\nCommunity Hospital Ladies' Auxil-\niary at its meeting at her home as\ndelegate to the annual hospital auxiliaries' convention ih Vancouver in\nOctober. Mrs. J. A. Greer is substi-\ntute.,  '. -..,.'\nReport* were given by Mr*. Qrieer,\nbuying committee; Mrs. W. K. Stau-\ndinger, sewing committee. Mrs.\nStaudinger and Mrs, Q.A. Forsythe\nart on tha September visiting committee.\nMember* made bandages after\nbusiness meeting.     1\n- Ravenna in Italy in ancient timesi Sir Ch\u00abrle* ReiUy, fimou* Brit-\nw*s a Rort on the Adriatic but ow- ish architect who died, in 1948, wis.\ning' to the sea receding, now is one of the flrrt adVOate* of \"play*\nabput six miles inland. I streets\" for children.' \u25a0\nThis superb tea guarantees\nthe flaydur of every cup\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sail, Trad* th* Classified W\u00aby\nOMHGE PEKOE\nHere's why a further '\n\"^-oUbl.^oiior,\nAluminum Company <>\u25a0\nI\nm\niJMbwhj,\n^^ IN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nProject a* planned calls for\nexpenditure in the first stage of $200\nmillion; the final stage when completed\nWill increase this to $550 million.\nFirst stage lo be completed 1954.    -\nKIVMAT SMELTER\nCapacity one billion pound* of\n' aluminum a year.\nlake, above Nechako River Dam;\n500 square miles In area.\n\u25a0    Kemano powerhouse, ta be buty\nVa mile Inside mountain. Eventual .\ncapacity 2,000,000 h.p.\n50 YEARS AOO\nthe company's first smelter\nopened ot Showlnlgan Falls,\nand produced 130 ton ef\naluminum that year. The metal\nwot just starling to male* a\nmarket for Itself,\nTODAY\nAlcan has 4 smelters\u2014\nat Arvlda, ble Maligna, \\\nBeauhamoii and\nShawlnlgariFal).\u2014with\n' a capacity of nearly 500,000\ntons. And this light, strong, non-\nrusting metal has found an almost\nlimitless range of useful jobs to da\n>smtmm<.^r*Z%?,%T\nssisssas--*^-'. \u2022 \u25a0\nexpansion progr\"*\nO..I*... \u2022 \u00ab**'\"\u2022* *,, ^m, ,111\nC*\"\"\"\u00b0.... -\"J-SSS*. \u00abp.* I. \u2022\n^\u25a0W0^\u00a7?mm:'.\nplatuitog Btege, <* WOT*\non.thejob.\n. m4_j.i> were new names, too;\nresources so that now \u00bbv *\n.  '\u25a0 ^m^'S*-*-\"**-\nIN QUEBEC\n\\o o \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022'\u2022 \u2022 \u2022'\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u00bbt\nCHWW-DLAUM '\n250,000 h.p. Installation, Begun\nautumn, 1950. Will, be in operation\nMay 1952*    ,\nCHUTE-A-LA-SAVANN!\n250,000 h.p. Installation. Begun\nsummer, 1951, To be completed\nIn 1953.\nISLE MALIGNE\nSmelter. Output doubled.\nConstruction underway.\nBEAUHAKNOIS\nSmelter. Re-opened April, 1951*\njp*'\\\n\\ * S\ntrainers ana Processor, of Abmfnum for Canadian himlry snf WorW Uarktls.\nPLANK Al Shawlntgon Folt,, Arvldo, Isle Mallgno, Shlpihow, Port Alfred\n.\u2022o*i*omcils;Waktflitd,Klngstciii, Toronto, Boblcoko\nAd. No i?l!!f\u00bb - 8 cols, x 240 lines 9\n .    '   .  \u25a0  ;\nIt Pays 'To;:Bu]j Quality\nfrlUUL ^sUlc\/UL\nBlacker Brown\/Kid\nSTRAP PUMPS\nCuban heel, open toe.\nAAA-AA-A-C widths.\n$15.50\nM\njti UM14\nR. ANDREW\n&epa\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished-1902\nSilverton N^Iyweds\nTo Reside in Nelson\nSJXVERTON, B.C.,, Sept, 17\u2014A gown of English lace\nover white satin was worri by the former Beryl liary.Elsmore\nfor her marriage Saturday }n Anglican .Church here to Eric\nPaul Anderson. Rev. M. C. T.'^\u2014'\t\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nDESMdND t.-\nLI TTLE WOOD\nOPTOMETRI8T\nSuccessor to J. O. Patcnaude\nPHONE 893 NELSON, B. C.\nCOA\nL\nPhone 889\nTOWLER,\nFuel & Transfer\nNelson, B.C.\n[Percivall officiated\nThe bride is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. H. Elsmore of Silverton\nand the groom's parents are Mr.\nand Mrs. A. Anderson of Nelson.\nThe newlyweds will live in Nelson. ,\nThe bridal gown featured a scalloped neckline with a net yoke, a\nbodice beaded with pearls, and\nlily-point sleeves of lace. Her fingertip veil of net appliqued with\nlace fell from a scalloped net halo,\nand a single strand of pearls and\na bouquet of pink and white carnations completed her outfit.\nMiss Alma Lazzarotto chose a\npink nylon dress ' styled floor-\nlength, and Miss Gayle Elsmore,\n\u2022the bride's sister, was in pink taffeta. Their, matching halos of net\nwere caught with forget-me-nots,\nand they carried y bouquets of\nmauve asters and white carnations.\n.Mr. Kiiut Anderson supported\nhis brother, and Mr. Ivar Anderson,-another brother, and Mr. Ken-\nYouth Training\nTopic of Talk\nNEW DENVER,. B. C, Sept 17?-\nAllan. Deschanips of University of\nB. C. gave a^talk on youth training\nat monthly theetlng of New Denver Women's Institute In LeglOn\nHall. Films were also shown.\nj Mrs., J.-A,Greer reported cemetery work was still required,' ahd\nMrs, C. W. Nelson in. reporting on\nbeach improvements, gave results\nof swimming lessons. Mrs. Williamson Gould will continue on visiting committee for September.\nArrangements were imade for a\ntag day in aid of Canadian National Institute for the Blind. Mrs.\nGreer is convener, and Mrs. A. E.\nThomas, Mrs. Hermann Clever,\nMrs.- W.' E.\u201e.. Jienks, Mrs.,' Thomas\nSteenhoff and Miss Joy McPhail\nwill- assist\nneth Gordon seated the guests.\nThe church was decorated with\nflowers of many hues and wedding\nbells bung from an archway under\nwhich the bride and groom pledged their vows. Mrs. George Gra;\nham of Silverton was soloist, and\nMrs. J. Steele, organist -\nBOUQUET TO MOTHER\nMr. Percivall proposed the toast\nto the bride at a reception at the\nhome of the bride's parents. .The\nbride's father read: a telegram\ncongratulating the couple, and the\nbride presented her bouquet to heir\nmother, A three-tiered wedding\ncake topped by a miniature bride\nand groom was cut.     -..-.''\".'' \u2022\nMr. and Mrs., Anderson left on a\nWedding trip to the United States,! Rickets, a bone disease in the\nthe bride wearing a grey wool suit first two or three years of infancy,\nand hat. white accessories and a is caused by shortage of vitamin C\nrose topcoat '-'., found in cod-liver oil.   '\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022;\u25a0    '\u25a0\nNews of the Day ,\nRATE8: 30o line, 40o lino black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nTod Much\n\"Beefing,\"\nDixon Says\ni Too many people complain' about\nconditions today wlthou' attempting\nto improve them, Rev. A, R. T.\nDixon of Trinity United Church told\n[Soroptimist Club of Nelson at its\nfirst dinner meeting of the season\nin Hume, Hotel.\nMr. Dixon's theme was \"Too Much\nBeef in , Our Everyday Life\". He\nnoted also that there was a tendency today tor the individual to fall\nj into line with feelnlg of the majority of the people.\nHe' called for world Unity, peace\nand understanding, and explained\nthe part of armaments in world affairs. . '; \/,.-.\"..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-\nMrs, Marl* Coventry introduced\nthe speaker and he was thanked by\nMiss Eileen Mackenzie.\n. Miss Leona Boss, the new. president, .called for a minute's silence\nfor the late Mrs. W. O. Rose, an \"honorary member.\nBINGO WED. NIGHT THIS WEEK\nINSTEAD OP. FRIDAY.\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY  ALL THE  WAY.\nLOVELY HATS\nto. .\nALt-STYLES AND COLORS\niMltADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nIf it's 1 worth owning, it's worth\nInsuring. See BLACKWOOD AGCY\nMore miles per foot on shoe repair* at TONY'S REPAIR SHOP.\nGet your hunting and fishing license at Jack Boyce'* Men's Shop.\nSunset Sale Special\u2014Combination\nSandwich Toaster and Waffle Iron,\n$16.65.\u2014MC,A MC (NELSON) LTD.\nNew P & B Nylon reinforced it-\nply wool. All colors; 40c.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nLAUX WALL SIZE\nIA Casien Sealer \u2014 1 lb. pkg.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nASK   YOUR   DEALER   FOR\nMacDONALD'8  PURE\nDAMSON JAM.\nOur Fall bulb* will be in soon.\nCome in and leave us your orders.\n.COVENTRYS' FLOWER SHOP\nPlastic Washing Machine 'Cover*\n\u2014 $1.59.        ' . T\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nGood supply oi Budgie* and Goldfish now in at\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nWORLD WIDE\nELECTROLUX\nPHONE 110S OR 653\nKnee Socks. Sizes 6% to 8%.\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable reoalr*\nat moderate prices.\n-        .'   * '\nJust received \u2014 A shipment of\nCorde Handbags, at\nADRIAN  MILLINERY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, WI \u2014\u2022 S\nWomen Get Results\n\u25a0' CLEVELAND,' Sept 11. (AP) \u2014\nEighteen angry women, carrying paper sacks full 'of crickets, visit ed service director Samuel David in city\nhall today.,\nThey told him the- crickets were\noverrunning their homes near Cleveland's Kingsbury dump, then released a few in his office. After a workout with i. fly swatter, David ordered a 10-foot strip cleared between\nthe dump, and private property, apd\na DDT barrage in the strip.\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\n'The House of Furniture Value*\"\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 -'NELSON\nNELSON and O'l^ry, P.EX, share interest in the\nmarriage in Trinity United Church of Kenneth R. Turner\nand the iormer fris-A.-Sanders.iThebfide. is the daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. H.E Sanders \u00abf Nelson and th?-groom\nis the son of Mrs.:Alice Turner.of \u00a9'Leary.\"\n\" \u2014Vqgue photo.\nNelsoii Social\nFor ice-cold Cokes, the \"Pause\nThat Refreshes.\" stop at VALENTINE'S.\nP.-T.A.     -  '\nCentral School tonight at 8:00 p.m.\nSOCIAL EVENING\nPARENTS\u2014Ah excellent opportunity to meet your teachers. Everybody welcome. '\nITS DANDY\/ ^\nFluffy Puffed Wheat\u2014\nhoney-flavor coated\u2014\nsweet enough you don't need\nto add sugar. Every spoonful\ndelicious, nourishing. Just pour\non the milk or cream and\nwatch. the whole family go for\nthis \"honey\" of a NEW cereaL\nRoller skates. Double ball bearing wheels, adjustable to any size,\nfirm heel Support and felt ankle\npad. - HIPPERSON'S.\nPrize winner on our. draw was\nMrs. G. McGillvary. Ticket No. 2294.\nCentral Truck & Equipment Co.\nNelson, B.C.\n'.Furnace Cement Stove Lining,\nStove Pipes; Elbows, etc. Check\nyour requirements now at\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nSteamer Trunks from $28.60, and\nDress Trunks from $34.75 by Me-\nBrine and Travelgard, at\nWADES'.\nrrt so WAiv\/cv\/\nSo quick, so easy.\nPerfect for'tween meal snacks.\nAnd good for kids\u2014\nwholesome wheat tot nourishment, plus quick energy\nbecause SUGAR CRISP i*\nflavor-coated, with honey and\nsugar. What a combination!\nif\n0*\nC.C.M. Bicycles for all ages. Men's\nand ladies', boys' and girl*', standard and balloon tired models.\n.    HIPPERSON'S.\nALL CUBS AND SCOUTS\nare requested to wear their full\nuniforms to school Wednesday, Sept\nIS, and immediately after dismissal\nto report to the Scout Hall on Cedar\nStreet\nI would like to express my sin-,\ncere thanks to .fellow members bf\nLodge 181, B.M.W.E., the officials\nand trainmen, and special thanks\ntb AyL. Anderson.\n3. Ceochinl,\nNELSON   BU8INE8S COLLEGE\nNIGHT CLA88E8\nThe College will be open oh Tuesday'evening, Sept 18th, from 7:00\np.m. to 8:00 p.m. for registration.\nNo night students accepted after\nOctober 1st\n\u2022 Mrs. W.. M. Ciiniiffe, Terrace'\nApartments, has as guest her sister,\nMrs. JY S. Clute of White Rock, B.C;\n70c I \u2022 Miss Alice Dunlop, Strath-\ncona Hotel, has returned from a\ncouple of weeks at Crescent Bay\nWith Mrs. H. J. Edmdndson.     \u2022\n\u2022 Cecil Moloneyhas returned\nto. Tranquille where' ,he' is on the\noffice staff of the sanatoriumt,after\nspending his. holidays at the home\nof his parents, Mr, and'Mrs, David\nMaloney, Fairview.' '''   \u2022   \u00bb-',\n_ Mr, and- Mrs. Dean of Castle^\ngat spent- the weekend.'.in .Nelson\nand attended the Exhibition.\n\u2022 Mayor N. C. Stibbs and Mrs.\nStibbs, Silica Street, have.as guest\nMrs. Gladys Shantz of Vancouver.\n' \u2022'. Miss Ami' Davis,', younger\ndaughter of \"Mrs. Guy W. Dayls,;\nStanley' Street! has lqft for Van-\nicouver where she will- attend\n:U.B.C. ;'.vy\u201ey..- '',.'. .'.-jM}\n\u2022\u2022'-.# -Major and-Mrs. P. Mathisen,!\n324 Fifth Street, have returned from\nTrail after spending* few days with\nfriends.\nWE NOW HAVE A GOOD STOCK\nOF CANADIAN PORTLAND CEMENT. \u2014 IT IS EXCELLENT\nWEATHER FOR DOING CEMENT\nWORK. BUY YOUR CEMENT\nWHILE WE HAVE IT.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nSPECIALIZING   IN\nWATCH REPAIR8\nALL MODERN EQUIPMENT\n-  F. C R. GREEN\nWATCH REPAIRING AND\nENGRAVING    >    \"      \u25a0\nMED. ARTS BLDG. \u2014 SUITE 205\nBy MRS. M. I. VIGNBUX\n\u2022 Mrs. I. T. Cameron, 612 Mill\nStreet, accompanied by her two\nsons,' Ian and Colin, have returned\nfrom- Raymore, Sask. They were\naccompanied home by Mrs. Cameron's vmbther-H.-law, M\"-' J< '\u25a0\nCtuneron, Sr.'   .\n. \u2022 JWrs. Robert Waldie, Cotton-\nwood Street, is visiting relatives in\nTrail.'\nV^\nlong sleeve\n\/in Ihirers\n'\"\u25a0'-\nI\nKNIl\nllw best J\nof lirilish     \\\npure wool \u2022 shrirtk-resistant \u2022 budget-priced\nJ^n^^SholfL\nti63 WARD STREET\nNELSON. B.C.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. Fetterley\nwish to announce the engagement of\ntheir younger daughter, i Sylvia\nDawn, to Mr. Kenneth Donald Smith\nof Calgary, 'son of Mr. and Mrs.\nMichael Smith of Nelson, B.C. The\nwedding will take place in St.\nPaul's United Church on Saturday,\nOct 6th, at 3 p.m.\nMr, and Mrs. V. Hamberg announce . the engagement of their\nyoungest daughter, Anna, to Colin\nDonaldson, son of Mrs, C. Donaldson. The wedding will take place at\nHast Trail United Church, Trail\non Friday, October 12th at 7\no'clock p.m.\nWATCH REPAIRING\nIS A JOB FOR EXPERTS\nOur Work assures your Satisfaction\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\n491 Baker Street\nHOT ROUS c\/ouhk-qaick\/\nwith wotidtrful n\u00ab?w fast-acting DRY YEAST!\nSAFEWAY PRICES ARE RIGHT\nRight down the line, you get more for your money ot SAFCWAy\nCompare. Make your own test Of the savings we promise you at Safeway. Compare\nprices, on items you need less frequently,\nsuch aa spices, aa well as the items you buy\neveryday or so. Compare brand for brand\nand quality for quality. Right down the line,\n'U find Safeway prices right. You'll see\nr folic*] BVflrvroho^, ow\u00bb \u00ab\u00ab..:\u2014 >\u00bb\u2014 \u2014-\nm> A\nSO CRISP\/-  \u2022>\nAwcmatr-\/\n. Grand to eat plain-\nright out of the package.   -\nSweet enough and so crisp\nyou'll enjoy every delicious\nnibble. What a taste-treat!\nPut Post's SUGAR CRISP\non'your grocery list now!\nYou are invited to hear Mr. Peer\nY. Paynter, Provincial organizer,\nB.C. Social Credit League, speak in\nthe Community Hall,. Ymir, Wednesday, Sept 19, at 6:00 p.m., and\nProcter Hall,Sept 20, at 8:00 p.m.\n\u25a0 \u25a0 .   .,\nMetal   medicine   cabinets   with\ngleaming plate glass mirrors and\nsparkling crystal glass shelves. 4\ndifferent styles to choose from at\nT. H. WATERS A. CO., LTD,\n101 Hall St. Phone 156\n1, Only \u2014 Beach Refrigerator in\ngood condition priced for quick sale.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture. ,   .,\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1660 \u2014 413 HALL ST.\nPARKER HOUSE ROLLS\nMeasure into large bowl, ^ gm\nlukewarm water. 1 tup, fp-f-i..-\nlated sugar: stir until \u00ab,\ndissolved. Sprinkle with 1 .-\u00ab.\nvelone Fleischmann's Fsi.t Pi.\ning Dry Yeast. Let uta-irf in\nA Product of Gonoral Foods\n^ goR swks fr$ so ^wpy\/1\nNO CONSTIPATION\nSINCE 1919!\n\"Way back in 1919 . . . I wa*\ntroubled with chronic constipation. Then I started eating MX-\n\u25a0BAN every day.\nI've been regular\never since!\" Harold\nHail, 113 Somerset\nSt., St. John, N.B. ,\nJust one of many |\nunsolicited letters\n'rom    ALL-BRAN\nusers.   If you  are\ntroubled with con-  . \u25a0  .\nitipation due to lack. of dietary\nDulk, do. as this man doe*. Eat an\n>ojice of tasty Kellogg's all-bran ,\ndaily, and drink plenty of water.'\nIf not completely satisfied after 10\ndays, return empty carton to\nKellogg's, London, Ont. Get\nOOUBLtt TOUR MONtjr  HArlKl\nminute*. TakN stir \u00bb.JL\nScald 1 c milk and stir in S tb*.\nBranulated sugar, 7f\/s tsps. salt;\ncool to lukewarm. Add to yeast\nmature and stir in H c lukewarm water. Beat in 3 e. once-\nnfted bread flour; beat well. Beat\nin 4 tbs. melted shortening. Work\nin 3 e. more once-sifted bread\nflour. Knead until smooth and\nelastic; place-in greased bowl\nand brush top with melted butter\nor shortening. Cover and set in\nwarm place, free from draught\nLet rise until doubled in bulk.\nPunch down dough in howl,\ngrease top and let rise again until\nnearly doubled. Punch down\ndough and roll out to Y,\" thickness. Cut into rounds with 3\"\ncutter; brush with melted butter\nor shortening. Crease rounds\ndeeply with dull side of knife, a\nhttle to one side of centre; fold\nlarger half over smaller half and\npress along fold. Place, touching\neach odier, on greased pans.\nGrease tops. Cover and let rise\nuntil doubled in bulk. Bake in\nhot oven, 400\", about 15 minutes.\n\u2022 No more spoiled cake* of\nold-style yeast I Thi* new\nFleischrnann's DRY Yeast\nkeeps fresh In your pantry I\nAnd it's fast-acting. One ,\nenvelope equals one cake of\nfresh yeast in any recipe.\nGet a \/nontAls su\/op\/y\/\nyOU1- ....\u00ab....\/ v\u201e\\xa rigrll.   XOUU&eO\nwhy folks everywhere are saying, \"you get\nu.imore! for your money at Safeway\"\nJIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII1IIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIB\nS ;\"*\"\nAIRWAY^\nCOFFEE t\nAIRWAY\nCOFFEE\nFresh ground.\n16 oz. bag...\n__ 93c t\n;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.'\n* Whole Apricots KSfcl\u201e2for45c\n-jir Crushed Pineapple 3'IttU-xx 29c-\n2 for 29c\n^_14c\n*\nAustralian.\n20 oz. can\nle Juice\nGolden Corn StVe'\"e,,oIet\nTomato Soup fo\noz. can\t\nAylmer. .\n-oz. can\nUnger's.\n1514 oz. can\nBeef Steak and Kidney\nPork and Beans fc^\u2122\nC\u00ab.L   Dukl \"-% Ann, wrapped, .Heed,\nrresn oreao \u00ab\u00ab\u2022 m\u2014 \u2014\nJjteiL fifwducg. -\u2014\n6 for 65c\n.   _39c\n2 iV27c\n2 for 25c\nLocal,\nl-ripe\nRed.\ntable variety\nj{ Field Tomatoes $\nit Malaga Grapes\nj( Sunkist Oranges %$'*\u00bb*\u2014\n\u2014 lb. 16c\n-2 lbs. 37c\n2 lb$. 27c\nit Sirloin Steak B.\u201ee Brand\nj*Z Veal Shoulder Roast\nif Regular Hams\nHalf or\n-whole _\nlb. 87c\nlb. 78c\nlb. 79c\nSAFEWAY\nPRICES EFFECTIVE SEPfMSrl\"~\n -.:-'  \u25a0\u25a0'-,-        ,-\n\u25a0\u25a0\nI      Established April 33. 1902\nBtitiih Columbia's     \u25a0    '\nMost \/nferesllng Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunoay by th*\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthoriied a* Second Class Mail\nPost Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS\n- Tuesday, Sepf, 18,1951\nA Longer Travel\nSeason-Would (3e '\n\/    Of Wide Benefit :\n,- .Over' the years, probablyV because\nof the resumption of school studies in\nearly September;, many have come to\nregard Labor Day as the close of the\nSummer vacation and travel season.\nThe Kootenay's sunny days of September have, once again proven this\nan unnecessary acceptance, and, top,\nhas again .Indicated the B, C. Tourist\nCouncil is well advised 'in seeking\nacceptance of a broader holiday travel\nseason..; - \":',-; --,\n. By and large,\" the tourist holiday\nseason dwindles about Labor Day, although the calendar tells us Summer\ndoesn't end until the Autumn equinox,\nabout Sept. 21. And usually: the\nweather is ideal for holiday-making\nfor at least that long,\n\/tourist^revenue Is already wjirth\n$60 million to the people of this Province, according to figures announced '\nfor last season by E. G. Rowebottom,,\nDeputy Minister of Trade and Industry. The extension of the recognized\ntourist season is onethat could put the\nSummer resort' business and all it\nmeans to the thousands of British Columbians who reap benefit from it on\na still sounder basis, A longer season\nmight mean an additional benefit to\ntravellers as well, for it-could make\nthe resort business less expensive to\noperate. It can scarcely be claimed that'\na resort season of something under 125\ndays in a 365-day year is economic.\nB. C. has at least 1170 auto courts\nlicensed under the Tourist Camp Act,\nit has 36,000 hotel room beds, 24,000\nautocourt and.resort beds. The Kootenay- has a large interest in this trade.\nf'j'Ah extension of the travel season,\nsuch as is the aim of the B. C. Tourist\nCouncil, seems without question a\nJjKbrthwhile objective.y  . ,\n- f For Drivers\nFor those interested; the subsection\nthis year inserted in the Criminal Code\nreads as follows: ...\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\"Everyone who, while his abil-\n\u2022 ity to drive a motor vehicle or au-\n- y tomobile is impaired by alcohol Or\nany drugs, drives any motor vehicle or automobile, or has career control'of a motor vehicle or\n..automobile, whether it is |n mo-\ntion or not, is guilty of an offence\nand liable, upon summary conviction or upon Conviction under indictment: '\u25a0'\u2022',\n' \"(a) for a first offence, to a\nfine' not exceeding $500 and not\nless than $50, or to imprisonment\nfor a term not exceeding three\nmonths, or to both fine and imprisonment.\"\n:;    The subsection providing for compulsory imprisonment,  or imprison-\n'toent and fine, on conviction'of driving\na motor vehicle while drunk, remains\nin the Act.\nWhat Are You\nDoinfc About\nFamily Living?\nTh* family it tha btete unit of civilized .\n\u25a0oclety, Because that is eo, tho strength and\ncharacter and worth of any particular civilisation can be measured by it* family life.\n, It* unity, lis Royalty, it* morality, it* sense\nOf responsibility and service, are what count\nWhat, then, about family life?\nPlenty of people squirm Whan that subject is mentioned, They become rather guiltily\naware that their own family Ufa has deteriorated close to being no family lit* at all.   -\nWhat used to be called home, with, all that\nhome meant in affection and mutual under-\nstanding and unselfishness and' upright conduct, isn't what lt one* was. Something has\nhappened to it\nAll kind* of thing* happened to it\nMors spare time 1* spent on entertainment\nand away from home, making home unneces-\nnry u a otntre of productive leisure and true\nrecreation.\nMora spare-time (octal activities separata\nwives from husbands and children from both,\nClub* and lodges, sports' and movies, cars and\npoolrooms, and a dozen other thing* cut into\nhorn*.if*. ,    - ,\nWhich again suggests a thought.\nEveryone agrees home Ufa 1* essential and\nadmit* wo Jeopardize lt at our peril. It 1* th*\ngreatest single influence on maturing personality. Nearly all that Is great in our national\nheritage cut be traced to background* of Godfearing family life and love. Why not reclaim\nit now?\u2014Vancouver Sun.\nScience\u2014Action\nWithout Fear\nBy Maurice Goldsmith, Unesco Science Editor\n. Because all people* fear war, many people ^\nfear science. They see clearly how the scientist has contributed to the development of\nweapons Of mass destruction. They do, not see\nthat lt it not the scientist -who makes wan, .\nbut that lt (i tho society for which they themselves share responsibility that compel* the\nscientist to engage in the kind ot applied\nscience whOtt end-product* ar* death and\nd\u00abvtlt\u00bbtion.\nThe popular identification ot science with\nprogress, typical of the 19th century, has gone.\nIt is perhaps the fault of the educator* that\nscience ha* not been presented a* a vital part\nof human culture, but primarily as a tool to\n.provide the comfort* of modern civilization.\nWa ar* surrounded by the apparatus of\n\u25a0cienca in our everyday lives, but how many\nknow-what science is? Is science the lenses,\ntho lighting apparatus, tho acoustic design of\n. tha modern cinema? I*, it the medicine we take\nwhen alck? Is it \"a haphazard collection ot\nmanufacturing techniques, carried out by a\nrace of laboratory dwellers with acid-yellow\nfinger* and iteel-rimmed spectacles and no\nhome life?\" Is it \"the jungle of valves and\nformulae and shining glassware\" that wo see\nin the l\u00bbbpr*tory?  . \u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0.\nTh* answer is \"No.\" Over 80 year* ago, a\nBritish scientist, W. K. Clifford, gave a definition which is still valid, Ho wrote: \"Rcmcm-.\nbdr, then, that scientific thought is the guide\nof action') that the truth which It arrives at 1*\nnot that Which we can Ideally contemplate\nwithout terror, but that which, we may aot\nupon, without fear; and you cannot fill to it*\nthlt scientific thought is not nn accompaniment or condition of human progress, but human progress Itself.\"\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpart to any re\u00abder. Nam** of person*\nliking questions w(lII not ba published.\nThar* I* no ehirg* for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT Bt ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Ii obvious\nnecessity far prlvaoy.'.\nMrs. R, J. C\u201e Rossland\u2014Please tell ma the\nname of'the enclosed Insect, which ha*\nbeen living me trouble in my garden.\nWhat il used to destroy it, and to keep lt\nfrom coming from another garden?\nTho insect appear* to ba an earwig, creature* which during the pait year* have been\nipreadlng over the West Kootenay. Ask at\nCoventry'* Flower Shop, Rossl\u00abnd,'for a trade\nproduct made for the purpbs* of destroying\nthai* p**t*y\nMn. 0. AM,, Fernie\u2014How does one remove\nenamel from kitchen cupboards?\nUse paint and varnish remover, obtainable\nat hardware store*, and tut according to directions,\nMr*. K\u201e Creston\u2014You frequently five win*\nrecipes. Can you tell me how tb make non-\nintoxicating ginger beer?\nTo one gallon pt boiling water allow one\nto one and one-quarter lumps sugar, oh* ounce\n. or less ot whole ginger; two lemon*, hilt ounce\nof croam of tartar, half ounce of compressed\nyeast, one teaipoonful of powdered sugar.\nWipe lemons, peel off tha yellow rind very\nthinly, remove whit* pith and out remainder\noi lemon* Into thin illces, Add peel and (licet\nto the other Ingredients, pour over boiling\nwater. Cover and allow to stand until lukewarm, stirring now. and. again until sugar\nhas dissolved. Then add yoast, which haa been\nmixed until liquid with th* castor tugar (similar to creaming butter and sugar for cake),\nleave all standing in moderately warm place\nfor 24 hour*, then *klm and strain free of sediment. Bottle and tie down, or use screw-top\nbottles or jar with tap. The ginger beer will\nbe ready for use in two or,three day*.\nLooking Backward\n;   in Years aoo (\nFrom The Dally New* of 8*pt. 18, 1941\nAlan C, Clapp, Put President ot the B.C.\nTelephone Company'! Employees' organization, has be\u00bbn nominated as CCF. candidate\nfor th* Grand Forks-Greenwood Riding,\nIn conjunction with the nationwide reconstruction program, the Nakusp Board ot Trade\nheld a special meeting Monday evening, Guest\nspeaker was Hon. C. S. Leary, Minister of\nPublic Work*.\n28 YEARS AGO\nFrom Th* Daily New* of Sept. 18, 1928\n,  The famous Valentino*, aerlalists, one ot\nthe most spectacular of Fair attraction*, will\nbe a feature at the three-day Nelson Fall Fair\nn\u00abxtw\u00abe*v .'\u2022-'\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\nMrs. Hugh Ross of Nelson will be Judge\not domestic science and women's work at the\nFill Fairs in Sainton Arm and Kelowna.\n40 YEARS AQO\n,    From The Dally N>w* of 8ept 18, .1911\nW. E. Scott, Deputy Minister of Agriculture, will perform the opening ceremony it\nth* big fruit Fair which op'*n> her* Sept, 98\nlor three d*y*.\nVerse\nGems of TkoUkht An Autumn Reverie\n'  *\u2014' T.kn-   dllVnmaK   Ata'trm   nra   n'taT.\n- NATURE\nTo the material sense, everything is matter; but spiritualize human thought, and our\nconvictions change: for spiritual 'sense takes\nin new vlewi, In Which nature become* Spirit;\nand Spirit is God, and God Is good,\u2014Mary\nBaker Eddy.\n' *        *        *'\nNature Is an Aeolian harp, a musical Instrument, whose . tones' are the ..re-echo of\nhigher strings .within ua,\u2014Novtlli,   -    - \u25a0\nI-'??.\"'*        *   '.    *\n: Nature. I* thought Immersed In matter.\n\/ \u2014Amos Bi-onson Alcott.\n* * *\nNature knows no pause in progress and\ndevelopment, and attaches her curse on all\nInaction.\u2014Johahn Wolfgang von Goethe.\n-.'*-.* *\nAll things In common nature should produce without sweat or endeavor.\u2014William\nShakespeare.\nIt's Been Said\nFaith Is * higher faculty than- reason.\n\u2014Philip Jame* Bailey.\nLazy Summer day* are o'er,\nLoaves are falling'round my door;,\nthe swimming hole looks bleak and cold,\nThe robins, too, are getting bold,\nNo longer af* the worms so fit, - \\,\nBut rather long, and sort of flat;\nThe garden patch looks desolate,'\nThe kid* \u00abre twinging on the git*.\nA sen** of lazy boredom reigns,\nThe cows are lagging in the lanes.\nLeave* are splashed with red and gold,\nAs though by,magic painter* old,\nAnd ai the twilight climb* the hill\nI bow my head; the whole world's still.\n-GLADYS COLL1NSON.\nKinn\u00ablrd, B. C. \u2022\n, Your Horoscope\nAvoid monty matters today, avoid landing\nor borrowing, Keep a sharp eye on your personal possessions, for temptation may overcome someone nearby. Drive with cautlonl\nYou may be given a traffic ticket. If so, accept\nit without argument, for objecting may get\n'you in more serious trouble, Ba amiable.\nThgyH Do It Every Time\nmaw** o. *, t****t oflot\nWf\u00abn eaj=Ry wapa xmooVR to\n. BBPHOL\u00a9 OF, BOSIOA SVSSRBP 'HIM\nTO1HE MRK,SECUXiH> OJRNHRS-\n%\u25a0 Jimmy Batlo\n'EVft?yiHII>!e7 OW*9aJS\u00abmmtS\n.wJie$ 0KK wsres AsV-m&tfs,\n5l<Ui.U-(W \\O0< WHERE THmY PMl\n\"Today's Bible Thought\nWe may b* misunderstood every\nday, but God understands, la thlt\nnot enough?\u2014The Lord is a God of\nknowledge,.and by him actions ar*\nweighed.\u2014I Sam. 2:3. '\nCLunLdM.\nAfter thirty \u00bbwom*n m\u00abrrie\u00bb to\nget a home; before that she doe* lt\nto show other women she can,\nFUN FLON, Man. (CP)-Thls\nnorthern Manitoba mining town\nsoon will have It* first concrete\nsidewalks. Work hat Begun on the\nfirst sidewalk project, a contract\nfor $1809.\nCanadian In^\nInspire U*K Trust\nOTTAWA, Sept 17 (AP) \u2014 Em-\nmanual Shinwell, United Kingdom\nDefence Minister, said today he has\n\"solid evidence\" that Russia has 318\ndivision*, 300 submarines and 19,000\nalroraft and i* making \"great efforts\" to build it* power further.\n\"Like us, they are making- great\nefforts, and their force* ore growing\nin power and number* every day,\"\nMr.ShthWell said.\nThe British minister is here tor\nthe North Atlantic Council meeting.\n\"Weakness li a temptation to the\nwould-be aggressor,\" he told the\nwomen's Canadian Club In a speech\nprepared for delivery. \"W* mutt\nbuild up our strength ai quickly ai\nwe can, not as a threat to anybody\nelse, but because wa know it ii tha\nbest means of insuring peace.\"\nHe said  Russia is .ahead  In the\narms rae* -\u00bb \"Huiiia** *tr*ngth It\nactual, ours, is still largely potential\" \u2014 but he-predicted that eventually the greater productive capacity, natural resources, Intelligence\nand skills of the free nations would\npay Off and \"the democratic countries will be lup'reme.\" '.'\nHe laid tha role ot Commonwealth\nin the world of the i-iture \"i* to\nassume * moral leadership far more\npowerful In it* result* than even the\ndefence preparations now being undertaken,\nv \"We In. Britain take the keenest\ninterest in Canadian affairs.' Wo\nforecast Most economic progress for\nCanada and with the inevitable increase in population .. . Canada\nwill become one. of the greatest Industrial countries In the world,\"\nAUSSIES SELL MOST\nTO U.K., U.S. BUYERS\nSYDNEY, Auitralla, Sept. 17-\n(AP)-rForty countrlei shared in\nAustralia's wool clip last aeason\nWith Britain and the United States\ntha biggest buyer*, and Russia taking her smallest consignment*\nsince she resumed buying five seasons ago.-\nJapan showed a big,- Improvement In buying during the season\nended June 30, taking. 230,001 bales\ncompared with 182,470 in 1049-60.\nPrisoner Proves\nFreedom Rights\nBROADMOOR, Berkshire, England, Sept, 17 (Renter*)\u2014A murderer who made \/ dramatic Jail'\nbreak and lived on hi* wits for two\nyear* to prove he was sane today\nwon hi* fight to convince mental\nspecialist!. .-';-,\nAfter 13 years \u2022 in Broadmoor\nCriminal Lunatic Asylum, John Edward Alien\u2014known throughout\nBritain ai \"The Mad Parson\"\u2014will\nsoon be released with medical approval.\nAllen, now 38, was sent tp Broadmoor for life after killing 17-\nmonth-old Diana Woodward in 1987.\nFor 10 years he was a model prisoner.\nHI* favorite hobby was acting\nand in 1947, dressed in a parson's\ncollar and somber black suit for a\ntheatrical performance, he climbed\na 18-foot wall and escaped, with\n$450 from the canteen^ . \u25a0\nPolice caught him two, years\nlater In London.\nWhen Allen returned to the Asylum ha set out In earnest to prove\nhis unity, Under Britain's Lunacy\nAct, on escaped lunatlo who maintains himself for 14 days must bo\nro-certifled before he can be locked up again. Doctors found Allen\npassed all sanity test*,\nWhen he Is freed, Allen must\nobey certain condition*.      \u25a0    \"\n\"So long as he satisfies these conditions, h* will remain free,\" an\nofficial laid.  : '\u25a0:,'\u25a0\nRussians Listen\nTo Allied Radios\nLONDON,\" Sept, 17 (Reuters)-\nThe BBC -said today that United\nStates and British news broadcasts\nare listened to throughout Russia\u2014\ndespite jamming and penalties for\nspreading \"rumor* from' abroad.\"\nthe Corporation's annual report\n\u25a0aid there alio is considerable evidence of listening by Soviet occupation troops in Germany and Austria.-\nItaly, Greece and Canada are cooperating with the BBC and the\nVoice of America to defeat. Bus-\nilan Jamming, by broadcasting\nRussian transmission* simultaneously, the report said. .\nKING PODGES PAILS\nLONDON, Sept. 17 (AP)-The\nKing 1* ducking decorators at\nBuckingham Palace.\nHe left the family at their Scottish vacation home in Balmdral\nCastle and flaw here for a week of\nintensive medical tests and possible\noperation on an Inflamed lung.\nHis unexpected early , return\ncaught th* palace household staff\nin the middle of a redecorating\nJob. Court circlet said th* King\nmay move over to Windsor Cattle\nlater in the'week to keep out of\nth* w\u00aby.   .\nDEATHS\nBy Tha Canadian Pre**\nMiami, Fla.\u2014Bill Klem, 77, -on*\not the most famed of all baseball\numpires, who served with th* National League for 88 year*.\nPari)\u2014Maurice Petsche, 89, chief\nfinancial expert of the, French\nFourth ^.Republic\nHaileybury, Ont\u2014J. T. Leiih-\nman, 71, editor ot the Weekly H*U-\neyburlan for 32 years.\nParis - Ludmtlla Pltoeff, BS,\nworld-famous French actress.\nProvidence, R.I.\u2014Albert E. M*r-\nshall, 87, consulting chemist and\nformer President of the American\nInstitute of Chemical Engineer*.\nPRIZE FOR SCHWEITZER\nFRANKFURT, Germany,. Sept.\n17 (Heutera)--Dr. Albert Schweitzer, 78-year-old scientist, philosopher and medical missionary, yesterday wis (warded. the German\nBook-Selling Trades' Peace Prize.\nSchweitzer has spent most ot his\nlife as a medical missionary In\nAfrica.      ' . ...\nRecife or Pernambuco in Norths\nem Brazil was colonized by Portuguese settlers in 1537.   \u25a0-'\nBlame Union for\nDelroll Blast\nDETROIT, Sept. 17 (CP) - A\ndynamite explosion in the Northeast section bf the city early today\ndestroyed two nearly-completed\n\u25a0tores, damaged. five other* and\neight private- homes. No one was\ninjured. -y ,-,.,\u25a0\nPolice attributed the explosion to\nunion labor anger over remploy-\nment of non-union workers on new\nconstruction,\nJoseph V. Krug, Inspector in\nCharge, of the Special Investigation\nSquid, said, ha believed union\nagents found'' out - that Fred Navarro, owner and builder of the\nitoras, had lied about labor employed on the Jobs,\nNavarro admitted to Inspector\nKrug that he had lied to union\nagents when they atked him how\nmany of hit employee* were union\nworker*. Navarro admitted that\nnone of th* workers belong to a\nunion\/\nPolice said 12 sticks'of dynamite\nwar* planted in a newly-dug sewer\nat the construction ait*. They were\ntimed to go oft early today,\nBristol Strike\nNay (ripple Port\nBRISTOL, England, Sept. 17 \u2014\n(Reuters)\u2014A ttrike of dock workers protesting payments for handling American carbon-black cargoes today threatened to spread\nto the whole Bristol port art*.\nCrane* and ships, were idle while\ndocker* held meeting* in support\nof 60 men who Saturday walked off\n^he 'MOT-tori Leslie Lykes' from\nNew Drleant. .'       \u25a0       .::>\nIhi striker* complained that a\nbonus equivalent to 75 cents a\nhalf-day for unloading carbon-\nblack was not enough.\nSeveral baths ara needed to get\ncarbon black out of their pores,\nthey claim.\nLondon alio had dock labor\ntrouble today, with 4800 tugmen\nbeginning a go-slow strike to tup-\nport a demand for higher wages,\nTruman Lashes at\nSoviet Society\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 17 (AP>-\nPretident, Truman likened the\nKremlin to \"\u00bb bent of prey\" today. He spoke at a ceremony ip\nwhich the United State* Constitution and Declaration ot Independence war* tailed In new protective cases,\nTruman said the freedoms embodies In the yellowing parchment\ndocument* are growing throughout, the wdrld except In the Soviet\n.Union whose. ruler*- hold \u2022 \"their\ncitizens la \"terror ind bondage.\"\n\"The Soviet citizen* live in fear,\"\nih* President said. \"Their society\n1* a jungle, through which the\nnaked power of -the government\nprowls like a beast of prey, making all men afraid.\"\nThe precious 175-year-old Declaration ot Independence and 164-\nyear-old Constitution were, locked away in gas-filled glass and\nbronze containers to preserve them\nfor centuries. -    \u2022\nResearch Committee Finds Grave\nDeficiencies In School Education\nSASKATOON, Sept 17: (CP) -\nThe Canadian Research Committee\non practical education today reported \"gray* deficiencies\" in the basic\neducation of seoondary school children, In a 26-page, 11,000-word report it recommended a' \"stronger\nemphasis on thoroughness\" in the\nthree Rs---readin',\"'rltmv and 'rith-\nmetlc, \":   \u25a0 '\n- The committee's final report on *\nfouriyaar study ot education In\nCanada, to be presented here tomorrow to the annual convention\nof the Canadian Education Association and simultaneously to th* annual convention' of the Canadian\nCongress of Labor in Vancouver,\ndeclared; _\n\"This conclusion is based not only\non the reports of employer* but alio\non the replies of employees who\nhave been out of school for two\nyear*. Surely thlt Is a serious reflection on the present program\nof our secondary schools.\n\"That both employee* ind employer! attach primary Importance\nto a solid grounding In the basic\nfundamental* of arithmetic and In\noral and.written expression is not\nsurprising when we realize that\nthen basic skills are essential in\nall Jobs and in all activities ot\neveryday life.\"    .   \u2022\nA summary ot recommendation*:\nTe\u00bbch\u00abn;\nThat education authorities tike\nsteps to raise tha status of the\nteaching profession by providing\nremuner\u00bbtion .\"commensurate with\nthe. training, responsibility and significance of the tiicher'* function\nin our society!\" longer \u25a0 period* of.\nThree-Year-Old Diet\nHAWARDEN, Sask, Sept. 17 -\n(CP) \u2014 A S-y\u00abar-old girl pitying\naround her father'* wheit combine,\nwas drawn into the cylinder ot th*\nmachine yesterday, and wa* killed,\nThe child wai Sheila An Lucki:\nHer father, Cliff Lucki, wti r\u00abpalr-\ning tht combine on hli farm. He\nturned on the machine for a test. It\nJammed, At the tame moment he\nmissed the lit.li girl.    .\neducation and training; batter methods of teacher selection and recognition ot work experience as part\not the-qualification* for teaching.\nRetention in *chpol( \u2022\n\"That education author'itie* provide educational programs which,\nby their availability to all pupils,\nhowever economically or geographically situated, by the quality ot\nthe instruction ahf \u00bbupervi*ion, by\nthe variety of courses, by th* ade- i\nquacy of the accommodation and\nequipment, and by the atmosphere\nof democratic freedom under wis*\nauthority, will be.conducive to retaining pupil* in the community in\nadapting tho curriculum to local\nneeds.\"   ' -.--\u25a0' t\n\"The development of good citizenship In iti broadest meaning b* the\nmain objective,\"\nN0Ht?SI\u00a3\narid ftUOm-SCENT\nNelson and District Distributors!\nWoodyalU.net\nHardware) Co. Ltd.\n893 Baker St\nPhon* 1590\n...combine beauty with low-cost protection!\nOn new home* ind old, Jobu-Manviile\nAsphalt Shingles make roofs as charmingly\ngay and modern at they can be. The wide\nselection oi distinctive designs tad appealing\ncolours provide stylet to harmonize with all\ntypes of architecture,\nAnd J-M Asphalt Shingles art. Just aa\npractical at they are beautiful I Backed by\nJ-M't near-century of roofing experience,\nthey assure you of complete weather-protection and if* reilsunce for long, trouble-\nfree years, For greater protection, choose\nJ-M Flexitono Shingle). They ar* made on\na heavy asbestos felt bit* that minimizes th*\nhazard of roof-communicated fires.\nC6LOUKFU1 JL,\nYou con choma VJ?\u00bb\nfrom a wld. rang. W\u2014~\nof bland, or solid shad.! la\nmatch any colour iche-mt-,\nKONOMICAt      >\u00bb?\u25a0\nInMptnil.. lo kuyKgglk\nend otiply-, OM'\u2022^i\nmany yean el fflalntgnarice-\ntr.. ssrvlc, -,\nIASTINO\nWad. from croal-\nIty  materials  to\nrl\u00bbld j.M stand-    _\nardl ta allure you more for\n\"  i dolbrl -\nyour roofing I\nmil for HUrotur. on LM Asphalt shingles, m your J-M dsol.r or\nWftta Canadlen Johni-Manvlll*, Dipt. N.I4, IN Bay St., toronio.\nArctic Insulating & Roofing Ltd.\nAPPROVED APPLICAT0R8 FOR THE KOOT,ENAV8\nPHONE 955 NELSON, B.C.\n33=\nSS\nNelson Machinery Co. Ltd.\n2)4 HALL 0T. PHONE 18 NELSON, B.C.\nScience Progresses\nFor id years we hav. uied lllllo\nwhile tablets\u2014aeetylsallcyllc add\n\u2014for relief of pain. Today this\nfamiliar pain-killer Is available In\na MW form without tha disadvantages ef acidity, Insolubility and\nbitter laite.lt Is called 'OHPRIN'\nand Is said al druggists everywhere.\n'DISPRIN' Is available In BohIm\nof 26 tablets or Handy Pocks*\nFolders of 8.\n\"Headache?, .take a Dispriri\"\nWhy DISPRINT Became DISPRIN Ii soluble ami itibifanlfolfy noufral.\nWhen token In water ai recommended, It enters the stomach as a\nfrua loluMon and not at undissolved particles. Il II therefore lei) liable\nto cam* stomach discomfort.\nDISPRIN II readily absorbed. Becaui* It definitely dlssolvei (nel merely\ndisintegrates) DISPRIN permits ipeedy absorption and gives fast relief.\nDISPRIN is palatable. Even children will lake It readily.\nSAFE    SPEEDY    PLEASANT\nDISPRIN\n...eejiii pain Mil*'   \"\"\"'\nBY THB MAKBH9 Of''DITTOf ANTISEPTIC,.. KiCKITT A COIMAN (CANADA) UMITED, FHARMACEUTICALXII VISION. MONTrtEAt\n\\D|spR\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1951 \u2014 7\nNEW LEADER in Slocan-Lake trout derby is this\nfour pound, eight ounce Rainbow entered by Tracy\nCooper of Slocan City. His nephew, Tony Schumacker\nfrom Venezuela, who was there on three-months' holiday,\ndisplays ,the catch.\nFASTBALL FINALS\nOPEN TONIGHT\nNelson Disrict Fastball League\nfinals will get underway thi* evening with Legion and Transfer\ndashing in the first game of a beat-\n,of-three series to decide the title.\nRelayed by the Exhibition and\nfaced with shortened daylight hours,\nteam managers decided to reduce it\nfrom a best-of-tive series as planned.\nEASES BREATHING.\nRELIEF\nreoM HAY FEVER and\nASTHMA\n\u2022 Inhale tha toothing herbal\nvapor* of Kellogg's Asthma\nRelief \u2014 Breathing becomes\nawn free and natural.\n\u2022 Bring* effective relief even to\n\u2022bronic Asthma and Hay Fever\nsufferers. Over SO years in us*.\nAvailable in cigarette form, if de-\ntired \u2014 Ask your nearest dealer.\n....\nNO*rHROP*LYMANC0.1TD\u201eTOIIONrO\nIM.IM4 SK-I\nKELLOGGS\nASTHMA\nRELIEF\nYanks Mepeat Over Indians\nTo Qrcd} Om-Qame head\nKefauver Would\nModify Majors'\nReserve Clause\nNEW YORK, Sept. 17 (CP)\nSenator Estes Kefauver, the Crime\nInvestigator, says in a copyrighted\narticle In the October issue -of\nBaseball magazine that Congress\nTrrilght be wise to establish a baseball commission to govern \"th*\nbasic structure of the sport and the\npower* of the high commissioner.\"\nThe Senator also suggests that\nthere should be some modification\nof the controversial reserve clause\nwhich binds a player to a single\nclub for all his career, unless he is\nipld or traded. ,,\nEstablishment of an all-powerful commission by legislation\nwould, the Senator suggests, \"eliminate any danger that ownership\nmight tend to elect It* commissioner* with the understanding\nthat he would' act principally as a\nfigurehead for them.\"\nSenator Kefauver' suggests that\nthe owners might give their players contract \"for a term ot years,\nwith options to renew, which\nwould give the individual player\nmore latitude in negotiating for\nhis continued services.\"\n.627\n.621\n.610\n1\n2*4\nBy The Associated Press\nNew York's defending champion Yankees opened up\na full game lead over Cleveland in the tense American League\npennant race Monday by beating the Indians for the second\nstraight Hme, 2-1. y-T\nBoston's third-place Red Sox\nkept pace with the Yankees,\nknocking off Chicago-* White Sox\n12\"-5. to climb within IH game* of\nthe Indians and stay-within 2V4\nlength* of th* top.\nChicago's cellar-flirting Cubs\nkept the National League race\n\u2022live by whipping th* front-running Dodgers 0-3 to Cut Brooklyn's\nlead over th* idle New York\nGiant* to four game*.\nA perfectly exeoutlve squeeze\nplay with Phil Rluuto bunting\nJos DIMagsio horn* In th* ninth\nInning gave the' Yankeet a thrilling victory ,ln a brilliantly-\nplayed game- Winner Ed Lopat\nand loser Bob Lemon were tu\nptrb on the mound and both got\ndazzling support In the field,\nLopat, who netohad . hit 20th\nvictory, allowed only three hit*\nand would have had a. shutout\nexcept for a tlxth Inning error\nby, the usually reliable Rluuto\nLemon wat touched for a run\nIn th* fifth whan Bobby Brown\ndoubled and crowed the plate on\na tingle by Rlziuto,\nThe score was deadlocked 1-1\nuntil the last half of the ninth.\nLemon retired Yogi Berra for the\nfirst out but DiMagglo was credited with a single when AI Rosen\nfailed to come tip with his tricky\nbouncer.\nGene Woodllng bounced a single\ninto right field and DiMagglo raced\nto' third. Manager Al Lopez of\nCleveland then ordered Lemon to\nwalk Brown, to load the bases and-\nprovide for a force play, at any\nbate. , '--.''.\nOn Lemon's second pitch to Rlz-\nzuto, DiMagglo broke for the plate\nand crossed it standing up as Phil\ndropped a neat bunt.\nLed by Ted Williams and Clyde\nVollmer, the Red Sox rapped four\nWhite Sox hurlers for 13 hits including a double, triple and two,\nhomers.\nIrvin All Smiles Over\nCanadiens' '51 Rookie Crop\nHOMER CHAMP AGAIN?\nBy Alan-Mover\nRed Wings Down\nForm Hands 5-0\nSAULT STE. MARIE, Mich,, Sept.\n17 (CP) \u2014 Terry Sawchuck registered hit second straight shutout tor\nDetroit Red Wings ai the National\nHockey League champions defeated\nIndianapolis Capitols, their American Hockey League farm team, 8-0\nIn an exhibition game at the teams'\nFall training camp here.\nForward Gordie Howe paced the\nRed Wings with two goals and one\nassist.\nme ft amy\nottum\nEn\/oyThe\nat\\       V*fl        I \u2022 II     vrtttcrre\nBest-Looking \\\u2122*\u2122*?\nShaves Ever\nmm\nGIUEiTE\n8lue6Ja<fes\nWILLIAMS GET8 30TH\nWilliams had a perfect day with\ntwo singles, a double, his 30th homer and his 141st bate oh. ball* in\nfive trip* to the plate, He drove\nin'three runs. Vollmer hatted In\nfive with hi*. 22nd homer and two\n\u2022ingle*, Ray Scarborough had a\nihut out until the ninth when five\nhit* gave the White Sox as many\nrun*.\nTommy Brown hit hit n,in,h\nhOme.run of'the season into the\nleft-field bleachers Monday night\nto give Philadelphia Phillies a 2-1\nNational League triumph over St\nLouis Cardinal*, The payoff four-\nbagger came in the 10th inning of\nthe game at St. Louis. ,\nRESULTS!\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nCleveland    000 001 00fc-l S 0\nNew York .;.'. 000 010 00f-2 7 1\nLemon and Hegan; Lopat and\nBerra.\nChicago    000 000 005- 5 10 0\nBoston 400 250 Olx-12 13 0\nJudson, Aloma (1) Grimsley (5)\nGumpert (5) and Shealy, Mali (6);\nScarborough and Rosar.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn 000 011 100-8 t 0\nChicago  000 000 41X-5 7 2\nNewcpmbe,' King (7) Erskine\n(8) and Campanella, Walker (2);\nLown 'and Owen.\nPhiladelphia    000 100 000 1\u20142 5 1\nSt. Louis  100 000 000 0-1 8 1\n(10 innings)\nRoberts and Semlnlck, Wllber\n(8); Brazle and D, Rice, Sorni (8).\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPLAYOFF\nSyracuse 11, .Montreal 8.\n(Best-of-seven final series tied\n1-1). , ,\nBy The Associated Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nW  L    Pet. OBGL\nNew York ..  89 53  .627 \u2022-\nCleveland   \u201e   80  58\nBoston   ..-..   88  55\nRemaining Garnet:\n-New York at home (9)\u2014Chicago\n8, Philadelphia 1, Boston 5. Awty\n(3)\u2014Boston 8.\nCleveland at, home, (3)\u2014Detroit\n3. Aw\u00bby (8)\u2014Boston 2, Detroit 3,\nChicago 1. \u25a0       '\u25a0(.'\u00a3'\nBoston at home  (5)\u2014Cleveland\n2, New York 8. Away .(g)\u2014Washington 8, New York -5.   ',-'':'.\",\n.NATIONAL LEAGUE\n; W'L PctGBGL\nBrooklyn .....DO 51 .638 \u2014 .':< 18\nNew York ;.  88  67  .607 *      \u00bb\nRemaining Games:     :\nBrooklyn at home (8)\u2014Phlladel\nphia j. Away (tt\u00bbH9t. Louis 8\nBoston 4, Philadelphia 3.\nNew York at home (3)\u2014Boston\n3. Away (o)-Cincinnatl 2, Phlla-\ndelphla 2, Boston 2. '\nTHE'BIG SIX\nSABK   H Pet.\nMusial, C  141 532 118 193 .367\nAshburn, P .... 145 596   87 206 .346\nFain, A ...    .... 108 398   58 135 .341\nRobinson, D ... 136 465  86 183\nKelt,  T      ....... 137 553   88 178 .332\nMinoso, WS .    138 502 104 161 .321\n, (C-Cardinals,'; P-PhUlies,   A-\nAthletlc*,   p\u2014Dodgers,   T\u2014Tigers,\nWS\u2014White Sox.)\n- Run* batted in: National League:\nIrvin; Giants 109; American\nLeague: Zernial, Athletic* 124.\nHome Runs: National League:\nKiner, Pirates 40; American\nLeague: Zernial, Athletics 82.\nFOOTBALL     *\nWho Eats Crow\nAfter This One?\nBARRE, Vt., Sept. 17 (AP)\nAllan MacDougal of Montpelier\nwon the Midway Golf Club championship -Sunday.\nBut would he have won if i\ntame crow hadn't gotten into the\nmatch on the 37th green?\nMacDoug*l wa* even with Billy\nBottomley at the 37th green. Both\nhad landed long approach shots,\nAs they walked to the green the\ntame crow suddenly swooped down\nand half rolled, half carried Bottomley'* ball into the rough.\nThe golfer* were at a loss what\nto do. There'* nothing in. the rule\nbook about tame crow*. Finally\nthe contender declared1 ,the bole\neven; ..-\u2022\nBottomley dubbed hi* next drive\nand MacDougal took the 38tji hole\nand the match.\neYottiklmofftoughbeudilid1\" ?\na whistle with -\u00bbd.jr*s Gillette BluO\nBlade*. Their wper-keen double-\nedge, far outlaw the ordinary kind\n...are you money. Alw\u00bby\u00bb \u00ab\u00bb\u2022\nGillette Blue Bl.de*. Precitioa-\nmade for your Gillette Razor.\nGlltinE20-BU0IDISP!MSES?WlTH\nUSED-BLADE COMPARTMEMI-M1^\n10-Blude Conventional Dispc-nsci 50'\nRi-guloi Parkuge - 5 Blorles lor 25'\nMrs. W. H. Tonkin\nHeads Kaslo\nBadminton Club\nKASLO, B.C., Sept. 17 \u2014 The an.\nnual organization meeting of the\nKaslo Senior Badminton Club was\nheld in the City Hall on Thursday\nwith an excellent attendance. Plans\nfor the coming season war* discuss,\ned and officers elected, alto committees appointed, Mr*, W. H. Tonkin was chosen as president, Mr.\nROy Driver as vice-president and\nMis* Freda Laybourne a* secretary,\ntreasurer. Mrs. E. South wa* appointed convenor of the refreshment\ncommittee. The age limit for members was fixed at 16 years and over.\nArrangements are being made with\nthe Canadian Legion for use of the\nbadminton courts In the Legion Hail\nfor about four times a week on a\nrental basis. A regular meeting is\nto be held at. an early date when\nmatch committees will be''appointed\nand duet let out for the Season.\nK\/M\u00a3\/f,\nPlTTeBURoH\nsLueeBR, nwose\nRAce nnerAiff\nm homer croiym^,\n\u2022SHAPES VP AS OHB\nOF. 77\/tT IBASUe'S\nToP WATTIBS,\nMt\/1 BROOKLYN\nOUT TO\nMAKB\n-rue\nPgM\/iAHT\nFAce\n\"to    .\ncourts'*!\nWteii evi ifopees ms Rtf\/f\/fiM&\nJlKTBEBAT^lNa FORPUMER-SP\nHONOPS-6\/t. IEP By9ATAeotir\n'TMmF-WAYMABK\/ .\nff-m j i w.\u201e ..,,,\u201e t .\"j;..->,ji^ ii \u25a0-   m l*i*ii .is\u2014i. ii\nSlUCE KIHERBROKEtf\nMi 1946 HE'S flBVER ;\n0ar0\/trVtYrf\/\/M-0ttr\\\nt*roRTmPFtiR,l*r\n\/HHCUAEPS\u2014 AW\nhe's -the om.t one,\nAtVPg FRM RtWI, Ttf\nHtT OVER SO \/* A -.'.\nSSA&O\/i TfftCE.'\nJZ\nCZECH CHAMPION BEATS\nWORLD RUNNING RECORD\nBERLIN, Sept 17 (Reuters) \u2014\n.Czech Olympic ohamplon Emil Zat-\nopek bettered a long distance world\nrunning record in Prague Sunday,\nthe,East German news agency ADN\nreported today.\nii m ii*J\nW.I.F.U.\nW\nL\nF.\nAPts,\nEdmonton  \t\n.   6\n1\n149\n104   12\nSaskatchewan\n8\n4\n111\n87    8\nWinnipeg  \t\n.   3.\n4\n135\n174    6\nCalgary   .'\u201e.\n. <2\n3\n84\n114    4\nBIG FOUR\nw\nL\nF\nA Pts.\n4\n0\n96\n20    8\n2\n2\n89\n64    4\n1\n3\nISO\n78    2\n1\n3\n81\n89    2\no.r.f;u.\nW\nL\n\u25a0F'\nA Pts.\nBalmy Beach\n8\n1\n67-\n38    6\n2\n0\n.1\n3\n60\n7\n25 ,4\n71    0\nWindsor\"   ......\n0\n0\n' o-\n0    0\nToronto Leads\nSoccer Finals\nMONTREAL, Sept. 17 (GP) -,\nTwo goal* by centre forward Jack\nDouglas in the second half tonight\ngove Toronto Ulster United a 2-1\nvictory'- over Vancouver St. An-\ndrew'* in the Dominion Challenge\nCup soccer final and left the Toronto team in a favored position,\nThe tint game of the three-game\nseries ended in a 1-1 draw Saturday. A tie or a win tomorrow night\nfor th* Ulatarmen will give them\nthe Dominion title.\nTonight's game at the Westmount\nAthletic Ground* waa played in\nchilly early Fall weather, under\nlights, before a crowd of about 1800,\nThe young and speedy Vancouver\nteam (cored the.only goal of the\nflrtt half, after 17 minute* play. A\nshot by George Steel, the Vancouver inside right, Went into the net\noff Jock Ferrett, Toronto'* left fullback, at he tried desperately for\nthe ball.\nUlster goaler George Anderson\nmade a tine save just before that\nwhen he tipped Don Mathesoh's\nhard shot over the bar.\nLate in the half Hugh Suttie,\nUlster inside, right, missed a chance\nto even the count when hi* shot hit\nthe crossbar.\nThe hard, rugged, play of the Ul\natermen began to tell in the second\nhalf, in which they.held a good\nmargin of the play and withstood\nVancouver's lata drive. An increasing wind wa* in the Ulstermen'i\nfavor.\nS. Davidson, right half, hooked a\nhigh shot that goalie Bob Newbold\not Vancouver just managed to clear.\nThen, at the 11-minute mark, Douglas headed in a long corner shot\nfrom Jack Long.\nA few minutes later Newbold\nhad to make a smart aave on a shot\nby Suttie. After 21 minutes of play\nDouglas scored the winning goal,\nteaming with Suttie and beating\nNewbold with a low shot to the\ncorner of the net.\nWalter Novak gave goaler Ander\nson a close call late in the game\nand then Paul Fabrls, who replaced\nGeorge Steel at inside right for\n.Vancouver In the second half, just\nmissed heading In a shot\nNELSON LADIES\nGOLF CLUB TITLE\nAT STAKE SUNDAY\nMatch play for the Nelson ladle*'\nclub championship is expected to\nsee the feminine shotsmiths out in\nfull force Sunday on the local\nlinks.        I\nThe ladle* will be competing for\nthe Ruth Armstrong Rose Bowl,\nwon by last year's tltlist, Mrs.\nMargaret Harrop.\nMrs. L. S. Bradley I* In charge\nof entries which may be received\nuntil 6 p.m. Friday. Qualifying\nflight positions will be decided according to handicap.\nKiner's 40th Homer\nSets New N.L. Mark\nMONTREAL, .Sept 17 (CP) -\nCoach Pick Irvin looked over more\nthan three score hoefcey player*\ntoday at Montreal Canadiens' opening training-camp session and\nsmiled happily.'\n\"Lota of big, young fellows out\nthere; good players, too,\" he said,\n\"Never saw so many big boys at\nthe camp. It's tough that the new\nrujle allow* ua to dress only 15 and\ngoaltender tht* season instead of 17\nas before.\"\nThe big squad ar* working out\nin relays on the - Morltreal Forum\nice. Three more Players will report Among them are Butch Bouchard, towering defencoman.\nRICHABP IN TOP 8HAPB\n. Last year's regulars looked to be\nin top physical shape. Typical\namong them wa* Maurice (Socket)\nRichard,1 starry rightwinger, who\nat 184 pounds wa* only five or six\npounds over hi* normal hockey\nweight.        -\n\"JuBt the way they should he.'\nsaid Coaoh Irvin. \"I'd rather they\nwouldn't have their weight down\ntoo fine now.\"'        V.  \u25a0.\nThe players did a lot of skating,\npuck-carrying and shooting. Starting tomorrow there will be two\nworkouts daily, except Wednesday\nwhen there'll be a specially arranged golf tournament.\nOne of the likeliest looking\nyoungsters at today's workout wat\nEddie Lltiehberger from -the Regina Pat*' Juniors. The tall, rangy\nright-winger showed good speed\nand smooth skating,\nANOTHER HOWE7\n\"Ha looks and acts like' Gordie\nHow*,\" said Irvin. \"And he still\nhas more weight to fill out as he\ngrows older, I think 111 try him\nout at centre as well a* right\nwing.\" \u25a0 :-'fi,\nIrvin.- waa also pleased at the\n\u25a0peed shown by Eddie Mazur, called up late last season from Victoria of the Pacific Coast League,\nand at the rugged play of Gordon\nCowan, a husky teammate of Lit-\nzenberger from Regina. Doug Anderson of Edmonton, appearing to\nbe carrying too much poundage,\nworked out strenuously.\nPITTSBURGH, Sept 17 (AP) \u2014\nRalph Kiner's booming bat is rewriting the chapter he inscribed\nlast year in the record book of the\nNational Baseball League.\nPittsburgh Pirates'- home run king\nnow is the first player in National\nLeague history\u2014and that goes back\nto 1876\u2014to hit 40 or more homers\nin five different season*.\nIn 1950, He let the y>ld record\nwhen he did it fOr the fourth season.\nKiner's new mark; was given added\nlustre since he has done the trick\nin consecutive seasons.\nThe \"golden boy\" of Alhambra,\nCalif,, clouted No. 40 Sunday while\nPirates were dropping a double-\nheader to New York Giants.\nMost expert*'felt that this was\nKiner's year to break Babe Ruth's\nrecord output of 60 home runs in\none season but pitchers 'haven't cooperated. They walked Kiner 130\ntimes to date, a record for the\nPittsburgh olub. Last year Ralph's\nfree ticket* totalled 122, passing by\nthree, the record set by Elble\nFletcher,\nBABE WAY UP\nKiner still la far below Babe\nRuth's record of belting 40 or more\nhome runs in 11 different years in\nAmerican League play. Ruth hit 54\nhomers In 1920, 59 in 1921, 41 in\n1923, 46 in 1924, 27 .in 1926, 60 in\n4927 (major league record), 54 in\n1928, 46 in 1029; 49 in 1930, 46 in\n1931 and 41 in 1932.\nHere's Kiner's horn* run tally for\nthe last four years:\nFifty-one ih 1947, 40 in 1948, 54\nin 1949, and 47 In 1930.\nIf Kiner wins tbe major league\nhome run championship this year\nhe'll become the first player to\nachieve that peak five year* in a\nrow. He now is leading Gil Hodges,\nwho has 38 homers.     -\nCreeks Take Spotlight\nIn Fishing Picture\n\u25a0   By SPORTSMAN.\nMountain lakes and streams in the district are offering\nexcellent sport fishing right around now\u2014and tiding a lot\nof anglers over until the big ones get frisky in Kootenay Lake.\nNakusp Captures\nArrow-Slocan\nBall Crown\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Sept. 17\nNakusp seniors took possession of\nthe Sid Leary Memorial Trophy\nand the Arrow-Slocan Lakes baseball championship here Sunday by\ndowning Silverton 17-14 to win the\nbest-of-three series in straight\ngames, l\nHeavy hitting and loose fielding\ncombined to run up the big score\nwith the teami blasting out 27 hits\nand committing 15 errors.'\nNakusp ......   534 300 020-17 -18   10\nSilverton.,   300 024 005-14  14    5\nYano and HoshlzaM; Roenhuysen,\nGordon and Avison.\nUmpires \u2014   Tessman,   Highland\nand Natsuhari,\nSummit Lake between Rosebery\nand Nakusp is in this class, and\nstrangely enough, so is the Slocan\nRiver. A party of Americans took\n100 trout out .of ii recently.\nWhile we're in the slocan,- Tracy\nCooper of Slocan City is at the top\nof Slocan Lake derby with a iVs\npounder.sThe sponsoring Slocan and\nDistrict Board of Trade - is campaigning for a greater number of\nentries, but there's still a while to\ngo until closing date.\nKOOTENAY LAKE . . . Silvers,\nthree to four pounds, and Dollies\nare coming in at Kaslo, and they're\nsaying the same thing at Balfour\nand Procter. Californian parties\nhave been playing .with them at\nBalfour, and veteran Leslie Pick-\nard of Trail collected, 23 in two\ndays, They're small but it'* surprising how then enhance a frying pan.\nROCK HOPPERS... One of our\nBalfour informants said Woodbury\nCreek Is the place to go for nice\ncatches of Cutthroat. Kokanee\nCreek (barring upper reaches) and\nCoffee, Creek weren't bad but in\nCoffee Creek his party was tossing\nback four out of every five, Spawning Dollies were hindering operations.\nWATCH IT! . . . Game wardens\nare giving lessons around Kootenays\noh how to carry a fishing rod, rather costly lessons, too. You may have\nseen in the Daily News items on\nso-and-so being fined for carrying\nfishing tackle without a licence.\nThat means anywhere.. You don't\nhave to be out in the woods; you\ncan be packing it home from the\nsport* shop and still get hooked if\nyou're llcenceleaa. In the long-winded phraseology of'the regulations:\n\"NO person over the age of 18 years\nwho is. a resident shall at any time\nangle (as the term i* generally understood) for fish.in any non-tidal\nwater* of the province, or carry for\nthe purpose of to fishing, any fishing rod or My other device which\ncan be used for catching any fish\nby angling, without first taking out\na licence in that behalf.\" Non-resident* are included.\nSYRACUSE, N. Y, Sept. 17 (AP)\n-Joey De John, 161, of Syracuse\nknocked out Lee Sale, 160Vi, of\nDpnora, Pa., tonight in 2:29 of the\nsecond round of their scheduled\n10-rouhd fight.\nSport Briefs\nNEW YORK, Sept. 17 (AP)-Bob\nFeller, big guri of Cleveland Indians pitching staff, today was named the August winner in the Hickok\npro athlete of the year poll.\nFeller, first baseball player to\nqualify this year for the top prize,\nnosed out light heavyweight charii-\npion Joey Maxim for the month's\naward, Bobby received 40 first place\nvotes and 181 points (on a 3-2-1\nbasis). Maxim, who retained his\ncrown by defeating Bobby Murphy,\ngarnered 33 first places and 168\npoints.\nNEW YORK, Sept. 17 (AP) -\nAllie Reynolds, bothered by an\naching elbow all season, plans to\nundergo an operation in November.\nThe New York Yankee right\nhander has been suffering from a\ncolclum deposit in the elbow. He\nmissed part of the Spring training\nand wat out for two weeks during\nthe season because of the pain \"and\na swelling in the elbow.\naumiTY\nRTEIT\nt POPULAR\nmet\nILU\nQlDRVEVJHiSHV\nthlt advertlKment It not published m\ndliplayed by the liquor Control Board es\nW th* Govemeienl of Brlllils Q}lu\u00abb4\u00ab\nTie in E. Kootenay\nPlayoff Opener\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Sept. 17-\nCranbrook and Kimberley city soft-\nball champions battled to a 3-8 ti*\ntonight in the opener of their best of\nthree: city playoffs and will resume\nhostilities {here Wednesday. Cranbrook fumbled into a first-inning,\ntwo-run deficit, then got a 3-2 lead\nin the fourth. In the last inning three\nhits scored Kimberley's Don Lane\nfor the tie. All games will be play-\ned ih Cranbrook.   .<    \u25a0\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nSMOOTH,\nPIGSKIN\nTOUGH.\nCHEYROH\nGAS STATION\nMOVING\nFROM\nHouse to House?\nTown to Town?\nProvince to Province?\nCall ARROW VAN & STORAGE LTD.\nto handle your moves.\nARROW, with their experienced\n\u2022 employees, and-modem, clean vans,\nhave established a very popular\nreputation across the continent.\nWhen it's time;to move, let your first .\nthought be ARROW VAN & STORAGE\n' LTD.\nPHONES\n1106\nARROW\n212 STANLEY ST.\nVan & Storage Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\n SINCE WE 15 GONNA BE\nFRESHMEN TOGETHER,\nLE'S TALK \"BOUT SOME\nSUBJECK ALL COLLEGE\nKIDS IS INTRUSTED     \"\nNATCHEPU.V. NOW'TAKfe THEX\nHAM. AH LOVES IT.^fT KEP1\nOUR FAM BLV ALIVE TH ROUGH\n\"MANY A HARD WIMTER,AN'AH\nEXPECKS T'UVE ON IT; ALL\nTHROUGH COLLEGE. '\nIT SOT A UOVABLE NAY-CHUR.\nNOT ONLY IS YO' NEVER\nHONGRY, WHEN YO' GOT\nA DOGPATCH HAM-YO*\nIS NEVER LONELY.'?'\nMahorite Foods Not to lAking\nOf^yqlPak; Both Eat Heartily\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nS\nE\nC\nR\nf\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\n8O5S,J-riitN0\nGOOD AT THIS T0U5H-\neuv STUFP! cArilTl\naer bach to mi\nEASELf\nKREEPER, rr<\u00bb\nDEBATABLE IF YOU'D\n<WK6 A*MN6STEIf\nOB A (WINTER!\nThe Royal Edinburghs.\nBy MARGARET 8AV1LLE\nHostesses who receive Princess\nElizabeth and Prince Philip during their tour will not find them\ndifficult to please. Neither of them\nlike elaborate foods or extravagant entertainments, nor has indeed any personal tastes : that\ncould be described as luxurious.\nPrincess-Elizabeth was very simply\nbrought up by the Queen who has\nalways disliked 'anything approaching ostentation while Prince Philip's youth; as a student at a Scottish\nschool and later as a naval cadet,\nwas marked \u25a0 by discipline and\nplainness too.     '..'-\u25a0'\nSo the Royal Edinburghs have\nno food fads, eating frankly ahd\ngenerously. At public banquets\nthey do not take certain things\nsuch as soup because it becomes\ndifficult to maintain an adequate\nconversation while eating them\nand they appreciate that such oc-\nWuuAksJiaQL\nLi^cfawicL IjJhsstkJt\nA SQUARE A DAY\n. Crochet one a day\u2014you'll have\nyour new accessory in short order!\nSeven-inch square in No. 30 cotton,\nit's the easy pineapple design you\nlove so much.        - '-\u25a0.\">?\u25a0:\"'\nA few hours! easy crocheting-\nlittle time to make, this' square!\nPattern 817 has direction!\".'\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS to\ncoihs (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNew*, Needlecraft Dept., Nelson,\nB..C Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nSend Twenty-five Cetas more\n(in coins) for our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book. Illustrations of\nPatterns for crochet, emrboidery,\nknitting household accessories,\ndolls, toys ... many hobby and\ngift ideas. A free pattern is printed\nin the bOOk.\ncaslons must be considered primarily social At home they generally have their breakfast trays\nin their own rooms, Princess Elizabeth served with tea and fruit\njuice while Prince Philip has coffee and maybe porridge to begin\nwith. They like practically all\nkinds df meat and fish and vegetables. Prince Philip does not care\nmuch for desserts except' icecream but Princess Elizabeth enjoy* them and also likes candy and\nchocolate, especially peppermint\ncreams, : \" \u2022   , -\n, Lately she ha* been saying a\nfirm \"No\" to sugar foods. Following the birth of Princess Anne in\nAugust,. 1950, she \"put oh a good\ndeal of weight particularly round\nthe waist so after consulting with\nthe' Court physician, she embarked oh a strict diet to regain- her\nslender figure. No sweets, no starch\nand'very little fat were laid down,\nwith plenty of salad and fruit of\nwhich she is fortunately fond. Now\nthe Princess can relax, and eat\nsomething like normal meals again\nfor.all her former slimness has\nreturned and once more she measures. 34 inches round the bust and\n36 round the hips. Her height is\n5 feet 4 inches.\ndo not Smoke V\nPrince Philip was away in Malta\nduring the period of his wife's dieting otherwise her resolution might\nhave been weakened by example\nSince he likes candy himself.\nNeither df the Royal Edinburghs\nsmokes. Princess Elizabeth puffed\nan experimental cigarette when\nshe was 18 and grown-up according\nto Royal law but decided she did\nnot like the taste and has never\nsmoked since. Prince Philip has\nsometimes smoked lightly for a\nfew days, then given it up again.\nHe finds It no effort, considering\nto do without tobacco helps him to\nkeep in the best possible physical\ntrim for the active games and\nsports he delights to play.\nPrince Charles and that tranquil\nblue-eyed baby Princess Anne are\nnot being encouraged in any diet\nfads ' either. Prince Charles gets\nmuch the same food as other British children of his age, liking fish\n^and chicken and cheerfully consuming creamed spinach and carrots. He has ice-cream almost\nevery day but since he often refuses to drink plain milk, some\nchocolate or strawberry, flavoring\nwill be'used to disguise his bedtime glass. He did once throw i\nbowl of apple puree on the floor-\nhe doesn't like aples at, all\u2014but\ngenerally: takes his meals without\nany fuss. He knows that if he does\nflniek with his plate, it is promptly\nremoved from the title table by\nMiss Lightbody without any comment.\nPrincess Elizabeth leaves all\nthese 'training'! problems to the\nnurses' wise discretion, though she\nalways wants to hear in full detail\nhow her children have behaved\nwhen she pays her morning visit\nto the nursery, suite.,Miss Light\nbody, is highly. experienced with\nRoyal- youngsters, being nurse to\nthe Duchess of Gloucester's two\nsons before she came to Clarence\nHouse. Princess Elizabeth herself\nhas carefully read some books on\nchildwelfafe but does not consider\nherself any expert She often discusses her family's upbringing\nwith the Queen and with that sil-\nON THE AIR-\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nTUESDAY, SEPT. 18,1951\nver-haired counsellor Queen Mary,\nwho likes to come across the road\nfrom her own home at Marlborough House to see how her two\ngreat-grandchildren are progressing. Queen Mary is never impressed when Princess Elizabeth tells\nher about the latest theories in the\nnursery. \"Nowadays they call it\napplied ^psychology and in my day\nwe called it common-sense but' lt\nseems to mean the, same thing in\nthe end,\" she once remarked.\n' The Duke of Edinburgh does not\nInterfere in nursery matters at all,\nbelieving the children should be\nleft to their mother to direct But\nhe does intend to play a personal\npart in teaching Prince Charles to\nride and swim and follow masculine sports when he is old enough,\nand he wants bis son eventually\nto\" do the customary period of\nRoyal service with the Armed\nForces In the,navy, following his\nown footsteps.\nLIKE WHO-DUN-ITS\niWhen the Duke and Duchess\nhave an evening to themselves at\nhome they usually listen to the\nradio or watch the television with\ncomedy and vaudeville programs\nfirst favorites if there, are no sports\ncommentaries. Or they play some\nrecords from their large collection.\nPrincess Elizabeth is fond of jazz\nand dance tunes and numbers from\nmusical shows she has seen at the\nLondon theatres. If they read, the\nbooks are generally who-dun-its,\npausing before the last chapter to\nexchange their views on the solution. Princess Elizabeth sometimes\nreads modern novels too. Those; by\nDaphne du Maurie always find a\nplace in the library, for the writer\nis the wife of Lieut. General Sir\nFrederick Browning who Is the\ncontroller of Princess Elizabeth's\nhousehold and'has office at Clarence House. Prince Philip generally has time tor the latest biography of a traveller or Seafarer or\nfor any new book about ships\ngreat or small. Occasionally the\nRoyal'couple Will dd a crossword\npuzzle together or play canasta at\nwhich Princess Elizabeth is good.\nSometimes they occupy themselves\nhappily in pasting and captioning\ntheir photographs in the appropriate albums. Already several of\nthese are filled with the studies\nthey have: taken of their children,\nto be proudly shown to visitors to\n'Clarence House with a \"Do look at\nthis picture. . . ,\"\nPrince Philip, who likes to be\nwelMnformed on, current affairs)\nhas a large collection of magazines\nand periodicals and will take half\na dozen to bed with him to read\nlast thing at night Princess Elizabeth prefers to glance through her\nfashion and fiction magazine at\ntea-time. She takes several French\npublications, for she speaks French\nwell and fluently, having been accustomed to it since her childhood.\nEditor's note: This is the sixth\nin a series of 12 articles).    .\nFLY 15 ESKIMOS\nTO HOSPITAL\nMONTREAL, Sept 17 (CP) \u2014\nAn R.C.A.F. plane on a mercy\nflight from the Labrador wastelands tonight landed here with 16\ntuberculosis-ridden Eskimo, being\nbrought for treatment at a nearby\nIndian hospital,\nThe Wait ot the Vatican gardens\nat Rome contains part of the wal\nbuilt by' Pope Leo IV in A.D. 850.\nQjlMA. IripL WML\nYOUTHFUL CHARM! \u25a0\u25a0:.\nLook young and beautiful' in thi*\nnew afternoon dress! From the scallops at neckline, pockets and\nsleeves to the,lovely easy skirt, thi*;\nis guaranteed to flatter. At its most\ncharming if you make that neckline insert of lace, a new fall '51\nfabric fashion! :,  -,\nPattern 9147 in sizes 34,i 36, 38, 40,\n42,44,46, 48. Size 36 takes 4% yard*\n39-inch; % yard 3-inch lace.,\n'. This easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit; Complete, illustrated\nSew' Chart shows you every step-\nSand THIRTY-FIVE CENT*\n(35c). in coin* (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this i pattern. Print\nplainly 8IZE, NAME, ADDRE88,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Daily News, Pat-\nterm Dept, Nelson.'   ',\nSTEAMER WINS\nNEW YORK, 8ept 17 (APJ2.\nA steam-driven auto and-an\"\nequally ancient gas buggy wound I\nup their Chicago-New York race\ntoday, the steamer the winner ly\nabout 37 minute* In their .battle\nagainst age and time.      t        ,'\nThe two relics\u2014a 1913 Stanley\nsteamer   and   a   1911   Stoddard- y\nDayton\u2014chugged    Into   modern\nRockefeller Plane,\nThey had settled the argument\nthat ha* been bothering hardly\nanybody\u2014except the two- driver*\n\u2014Just before - reaehlntv.the New\nYork City line. The race ended j\nIn nearby Yonkera, N, Y, at\n2:16 p.m. EDT.    ,\nThe, steamer, driven by 78-\nyear-old Jack Brauae, one-time\nvice-president of the Stanley\nSteamer Company, wheezed to\n' the finish line a minute ahead ef\nTube-de  Launty's buggy.\nThe elapsed time was given a* \u25a0\n63 hour* and four minutes for th*\nwinner, and 63 hour* and 41 minutes for the loser.\nModern stage jugglers are theatrical descendants of the old Roman\nstrolling players.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n:00\u2014New*\n:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n;30\u2014News '.-.<'  '\n:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n:00\u2014New* ' .';\n:10\u2014Sport* New*\n:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n:45\u2014Towler Serenade        '\n:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n:00\u2014News\n:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n:15\u2014Western Tune*\n45\u2014Your Musical Appointment\n:59\u2014Time Signal\n:00\u2014Newa :   -.-\/\u2022'\u25a0\ni05\u2014Piano Prelude\n:15\u2014For, You, Madame\n30\u2014Aunt Mary -\n:45\u2014Notice Board     ,\n;00\u2014New*   -,-  -\n:01\u2014Notice Board\n15\u2014New* i '\u25a0 '\n^S^-Sport New*\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n:55\u2014From Parliament Hill\n:00\u2014New*\n:01\u2014Carnival of Fun\ntfO-VTuesday Serenade\n:59\u2014News\nSOO\u2014Easy Listening\n30\u2014Intermission    '\/\n;45\u2014Our Town Council\n3:00\u2014New* ,\n3:01\u2014Easy Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Western Five\n3:30\u2014Musical Roundup\n3:45\u2014Pacific New*\n3:59\u2014New*\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society\n4:30\u2014Tall Tales\n4:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:00\u2014News\n5:01\u2014Superman    --.'.' -\n5:15\u2014News   ''\u2022;'.\n5:25\u2014Sports News\n850\u2014Intimate Review\n5:45\u2014Easy Aces\nSiOO^-Doctor's Orders\n6:15\u2014Dinner Date\n'6:80\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014New*    ,\n7:15\u2014New* Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014Club Date\n8:15\u2014National Business\n8:30\u2014Tzigane\n9:00\u2014Capitol- Club.\n9:30\u2014Continental Varieties\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n10:65\u2014News Nite Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n\" PACIFIC DAYLI.GHT TIME\nWEDNESDAY, SEPT. 19; 1951\nlOO^-News\n:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014Breakfast Club.\n45\u2014Anything Goes\n:00-BBC News\n15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n3D\u2014Laura Limited\n45\u2014Your Music-Appointment\n00\u2014Morning Visit\n:15\u2014Strike It Rich   .\n:45\u2014Musical Kitchen   -\n:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n:15\u2014A Man and His Music\n15\u2014News ...\n25\u2014Showcase\n30\u2014B.C: Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Five To One     i\n00\u2014The Concert Hopr\n:00\u2014Easy Listening\n:S0\u2014Program Resume\n:45-rWhy prices are high\n;56\u2014Women's Commentary\n00\u2014Brave Voyage\n:15\u2014Don Messers Islanders\n'    t      -   .\n3:30\u2014Let's Look Around\n3:45\u2014Announcer's Choice\n4:00\u2014Stars of Radio Opera\n4:15\u2014Music by Goodman\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins .\n4:45\u2014:Music for Juniors\n5:00\u2014International Commentary\n5:10\u2014Alberta Pipeline\nStfO^-QUestion Box\n5:45\u2014SOm\u00abthing\"lh,Harmony\n5:55\u2014New*\n6;00\u2014Neighborly New*\n6:15\u2014Intro, to Wed. Night\n6:30\u2014\"Man's Last Enemy, Himself\"\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Recital\n8:00\u2014\"The* World's Illusion\"    '\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\n10:30\u2014Canadian Concert\n11:00\u2014U N Today\n11:15\u2014Collectors' Items\nli:57-r-News    --,,.,,\nChair\nRivers\nStrikes\n(slang)\nLong-\nhomer!\nwild ox\nImmense\nMas*\nof.\nice\nHubbub\nPerform\nCovered\nwith rust .\nLittle girl\nObserve\n19*. Outcast\nclass (Jap.)\n20. Middle\n21. Faultily\n22. Straight\n23. Writing;\nfluid\n24. Parasitio\nherb\n26, Monetary\n. unit (Bulg.)\n28. Pocketbook\n29. Boundary\n30. Land held in\nindependence\n31. Affirmative\nvote\naaaai Hnrjnrj\niJHHH'S  HH!;i;=||.l!\nfitlHil        HHUIRI\nHHSHi,'!\naaa m 01.11.1raR\nataraioa Hisnari\n\u25a0JHfflffllinH   iufdE.\naillHHH\nasmm ammii\n3HMHH  HGMffiU\nIeitt-ntsjr's smmta\n33: Month for\n-bride* .'.\n34. Entitle\n36. Not in office\nI\n22\n23\n1\n*\nI\n28\n33\n38\n*\n12\nis-\nm\n20\nACROSS\n1. Donkey\n4. Underrate:\ncraft\n(abbr.V\n7. Measures\nof length\nI. Order under\nseal\n10. Place of\nworship \u2022\n11. Foretell        9.\n13. Competitive 10;\ngames 12.\n15. Greek letter\n16; Beverage     14.\n17. Sloths 18.\n18. European\nwild boar\n19. City (Pruss.J\n20. Dissolve\n21. Mine\nentrance*\n24. Devouthes*\n25. Unit of\nweight (Or.}\n28.. Cover\n27. Vex\n28. Writing-\n,   implement   \/\n29. Ballad\n82, Selenium\n(sym,)\n38. Youthful\n35. Scrub\n37. Pacific\nIsland\n38. Large cask*\n.39. Among\n40. Elevation\n(golf)\n41. Cherished\nanimal\nDOWN\nI.Sicilian\nvolcano\nDAILY CRlFtOQUOTB-Here's how to work Mx\nAXYDLBAAXR\n.    Is LONG FELLOW\nOn* letter limply stands for another. In this example A is used\nfor th* three L'\u00ab,.X for the two O'*, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words ar* all hints,.\nBach day the code letter* are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n80    RFD    IBYR    YEDOD    TJ    TW'B>   B.\nYDOYDIDYY    AIBG \u2014 ETXADN.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: PUBLICANS AND SINNERS ON\nTHE ONE SIDE, SCRIBES AND PHARISEES ON THE OTHER\n\u25a0^-CpUJNGWORTH. ~\n34\n JXSIHII .IDS\nmsoNW-fflso\/i\/mmps\nFOR QUICK RESULTS.'\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145. p.m.\nBIRTHS\n- CARR\u2014To Mr. and Mr*. Alfred\n(Red) Carr, formerly of Nelson and\n-now of Nanaimo, at Nanaimo Hospital, Sept. 17, a son.\n'    VANlNMTo'.Mr, and Mrs, Fred\n' Vanln of Sandon, at Slocan. Com-\n| munity Hospital, New Denver, Sep-\ntemberlS, a son. ,   \u2022'\nKOZAR\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Horace\n; Kozer, Remac, at Kdbtenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, Sept. 10, a son\nPhone 144\nPUBLIC NOTICE^\nREGULATION NO. 22,\nHELP WANTED\n,       WANTED\".    '\n\u2022 miners, timbermen\nand muckers. yale\nLead and zinc' mines,\n\u2022 ltd.,, Ainsworth\nWANTED- YOUNG MAN TO\nlearn;>\u00bbgrocery business. Steady\nemployment and good advancement 'for anyone willing to work.\nApply Overwaitea; Nelson, B.C.\nYOUTH WANTED TO WORK-IN\ndaily newspaper pressroom. Good\nopportunity to learn trades. Apply to the NelsOn Daily News,\nday Or' night          .\nWANTED^FIRST CLASS MECH\n- anic; Top' wages; preferably ex-\nt perlenced -in Gen.. Motors work\n\u2022Call Art sFournier, 122\n\u25a0WANTED '-.-EJC.PERIENCED\nmine electrician. Apply immediately. Yale Lead and Zinc Mines\nLtd., Ainsworth,\n| BALL   MILL   OPERATOR  'AND\n\u25a0:\u25a0'\u2022' crushermari 'warited. Apply Yale\nLead & Zinc Mines Ltd.; Alns-\n*   worth, B.C\nYOUNG MAN TO LEARN BIND-\n'.   ery.trade. Day-work. Apply In\n\".person   to  J.   J.  Boyd.   Nelson\n' Daily News'. ' :\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR hCT\nSection. 25\n, Notice is' hereby given that oil\nthe. 1st-day of October next,' the\nundersigned The Koctenayf Centre\nClub-'intends to apply to. the\nLiquOr Control Board for a Club\nLicence in respect,of premises situate at 533a Baker Street Nejson.\nB.C., upon lands describee] as Lot\nNo. Parcels A of 10 and 11, Block\nNo. I Mop Mb OP, Nelson :Uina>\nHegistralion District;.in tbe Province of British Columbia, to entitle\neach member Of the said Club to\nkeep on the premises a reasonable\nquantity ot liquor ' for personal\nconsumption on the premises, and\nentitling the Club . to ' purchase\nliquor from a vendor and to sell by\nglass the liquor so purchased to its\nmembers and guests for consumption on the Club premises in accordance, with, the-provision's of the\n\"Government Liquor Act\"-and -the\nr e g u11 a 11 o hs promulgated there'\nunder. \u25a0 \u25a0\nDated this 27th day of Aug. 1951.\n\u2022      The Kootenay Cenfre\/Cltib.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLIS\nWANTED\u20141 GOOP TRUCK AND\ntrailer for log haul, 6 mile haul.\n. Apply,Cranbrook Sawmills. Pardon, 8-C\nW A N T E D \u2014 AN EXPERIENCED\nchambermaid. Phone 234 or write\nBox 350, Nelson. New Grand\nHotel. __ _\nWANTED \u2014 GIRL FOR  OFFICE.\n\u2022 Some typing. Box 4432, Daily\n. i News.\nAGENTS WANTED\nWANTED: RELIABLE MAN AS\n, Rawleigh Dealer. Experience not\nnecessary. A fine opportunity to\nstep into profitable -business\n, where Rawleigh Products have\nbeen sold for years. Write Raw-\nleigh's Dept WG-I-158-163, Winnipeg.\n^SITUATIONS WANTED\nJUNIOR MINING ENGINEER\n(U.B.C. 1951) seeks employment\nin Nelson area. Family accomodation essential. Box 4447 'Dally\nNew*. :_.\t\nWANTED \u2014\"TUNNEL OR ROCK\nwork. Have own complete equipment Can start on or before Oct\n1. Box 4488, Dally News.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nAZZA JEAN ROSE, DECEASED.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nall persons-having claims against\nAzza Jean Rose, alto known as Azza\nBrownell Rose, deceased, late of\nthe City of Nelson in the Province\not British Columbia, who died at\nthe City of Vancouver in the said\nProvince on the 8th day, of August\nA.D., 1951, are required to file particulars thereof with the undersigned solicitors for the executors on\nor before the 10th day of October,\nAD, 1951, after which date the\nexecutors will proceed to distribute\nthe assets of the said deceased\namong the persons entitled thereto,\nhaving regard only to the claims\nwhich.shall then have been filed\nas above required. .   .,\nDATED at Nelson, B.C, this 30th\nday df August, AD. 1951.\nO'SHEA, GARLAND & QANSNER,\nP.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C..\nSolicitors for the executors.\n\u2022   $1785.001 '.'\u25a0\nImmediate Delivery\nTHE BEST IN\nUSED CARS,\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n\u20221950 Austin Sedan   '.\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1948. Austin Coach\n1947 Plymouth Coupe\n-1947 Dodge Sedon\n1942 DeSoto Sedan\n1940 Ford Coupe\n\u25a0 938 Ford Coupe\n1936 Chevrolet Sedan\n1935 Ford Coach    ...\n1933 Model-B Coupe)    '\n.1931 Model-A Coupe\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued) y\n1937. DODGE SEDAN, RECONDI-\n\u2022 tlonett motor, 8000 miles. All part*\nrecently, overhauled.. Radio,, heater and 2 Winter tires', Can be seen\nafter 12:30 Wednesday only at\nNelson Transfer.     \u25a0   ~ ,\nWHAT IS YOUR OFFER? 1935\nStudebaker Sedan. Motor, body,\nA-l shape. Phone 473-R.\n\u202247- CHEV. SEDAN DELIVERY. \u2014\nPhone, Trail. 1624-X.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nETC.. POP SALE\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nCITY OF NELSON\nBUS. FRANCHISE\nThe City-Council- is prepared to\nconsider granting *a franchise to\noperate Buses' within the City, subject to the approval of the Public\nUtilities Commission. '. ,\nI- Proposals addressed to the under-\n'signed will be received up to 5 p.m,\nOctober 1st, 1951.   '        ' -'\n\u2022WvfA.'Gordoni -\ni '\u25a0\u25a0       City Comptroller.\n\"    SPECIAL\nAUSTIN SEDAN\nOnly 4000 Miles\n<  $1450  7\"\n, BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nPET5' CANARIE5' gg\u00a7& ETC\nFOUR REG.'PUREBRED, BLACK\n\u25a0and white female Springer Spaniels, 1 yr. old. These dogs must be\ntold or be destroyed. Time limited so please act promptly. $25.00\neach, with papers. Box 98, Elrose,\nSaskatchewan.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n\u25a0B.  W   WIDDOWSON & CO.  AS\u00bb\nsavers 301 Josephine St.. Nelson\n,H.  S.  ELMES.- ROSSLAND,  B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist Mine Rep.\n:AVfo WRECKERS\n, DAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEER8 AND SURVEYORS\nR.  W. HAGGEN.' Land Surveyor.\nMining'and'Civil Engineer. v\nGrand Fork* ahd Rossland\nBOYD C AFFLECK. 218 GORE ST..\nNelson, B.C..Surveyor. Engineer\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY'\"AGENCIES LTD.. IN-\n\u00bbur\u00bbnce. Real Estate\u2014Phone J35\nTHIS IS A STEAL!\nPriced very low for immediate\nsale. A-l location,  in NelsOn.\nGROCERY\nCONFECTIONERY     ,\n\u25a0:'\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0:'\u25a0 BUSINESS    '\nqnd\nAPARTMENT   BUILDING-\nFully equipped and furnished..\n3-self-contained Suites, rented;\ngross $100 monthly. Owner's\nsuite consists of 3 large rooms.\nStore turnover $1000 monthly.\nThis can be doubled. $3500-$4000\nwill handle.\nE-Z TERMS\nIncreasing care of other bus- \u25a0\niness interests only reason for\nselling. \u2022\nFor appointment Phone 1434-X.\nUSED TRUCKS\n-a 1951 Ford Pick-Up '   '\u2022'-\n.\".1?50\"'Ford Fldt'DjBck 1 -Ton\n19^8 Dodge \\-Jqn -.-.\nJ 946 AAercury Rick-Up\n1946 Mercury 1 -Ton\n;.1>40 ,Fbrd.:Pqner\n1947 Willys Station Wagon\n1939 Ford Light Delivery\n.   TERMS AND TRADES\"\nEmpire Motors\nPK.\/.i 133    . 803:Boker St.\nAUSTIN SALES AND SERVICE\nHART:;\nKqthanode Propulsion\nType Batteries\nMining Locomotives\nIndustrial Trucks\nand Other Motive\nPower Purposes -\n20 years of progressive\ndevelopment is the main\nreason why Hart batteries\n' are always in demand.\nwe carry in stock\nAll The wanted\nsizes and can give\nyou immediate serVICE   '''    f\u00aeyi\n'  FAMILY  RESIDENCE\n8   room*   and   bath.   Cement\nfoundation; '    \u2022\u00a3 osfkA:\ndose to MhOol* . , y   \u00abM\u00ab\"W\nT BOOM HOUSE '\nFully modern, full cement\nbasement, hot water heating. 12\nlots, 2 in the city. Excellent\n\u25a0oil. To close estate CftSAA\nwill \u00abell for -.. \u00abPO\u00bbWW\nCash or Terms   \u2022\nFully modern 5-rooms and bath.\nNewly decorated. Fireplace in'\nUvlng room. Furnace..2 corner\nPrice51. *\u2122en',lawy $6300\nRESIDENCE\nt rooms and bath, centrally located, full basement, bot water\nheating, recently redecorated\ninside and out ... 4LA1AA\nPriced for sjnUek;'*aler\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\"\"\u00bb\nf\/A WHITFIELD\n.;. Car and'OFire In*ur\u00bbrice\n30 Years Real Estate Business\n. At -Your Service\n302 Baker St.      s    Phone 312\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1951 \u2014 9\nToronto Stocks\n\u266610.00- PER ACJtE, 60 ACRES, 10\nmiles Edgewood, 8 miles What-\nahan.Bydro Electric. Level black\nloani; on. highway and Inanoaklin\nRiver. Blocks 14, 13, 16, 17. 18, 20,\n21; S.W. Vt, Sec. 37| Tp.. 69, Plan\n060. Mrs.. R. Woods,, 10904- S.E.\nHolgate Blvd., Portland Oregon'.\nFOR SALE-\u00ab-BOOM HOUSE ON\nsix lot*. 3 bedrooms, kitchen, sitting room, dining room and Bath.;\nGood location. Garden and fruit\ntrees. Lower part of house can\nbe used as apartment Apply 1302\nCrossley, Avenue; phone 1043-Y\n20 ACRE FARM, 1 MILE FROM\ntown.   House,   barn,   2   chicken\nMINES (Closing Price*)\nAcadia Uranium .'. X...\nAkaitcho -.    , ...\u201e;_4.'.:\nAmerican Y k ZX-J.\nArjon tXXXUXt\nAubelle   ..... XsL&Lk\nAumaque  _.__...\u201e__.\u201e.;\nAunor -X:..X,^.XX~XXXl'.\nBagamao  :....'. ~-\nBase 'Metals j\t\nBelloterre  \u2122_.\u2122:......\u201e\nBevcourt _ __\nBobjo  .-. ..*\u201e.\u201e\nBonetal   \u201e...\nBralorne   \u201e..\nBrewis R L \t\nBroulan .,..\nBuffadlson  \t\nBuffalo Ank .......\nBuff Cany. ;,._..\nCaUimaq'-.: 1.\nCampbell R L ._..\nCastli'Treth \t\nCentral Patricia'\nCentral Pore........\nCentfemaque -~\nAnkeqo ...._\nChestervilie - ..\nChimo G, -XmJX\nCochenour   ,...1\nCons Beatty\n-J.\n-2614\nU0\n:. .12Vi\n.19-\n.25.\n3.23\n- .19M\n'..63.,\n5.00\n.56\n-lOVi\n- 134.'.\n.11\n1.34\n.24\n.48 V>\n.3.55\n2.75\n.58\n.19\n.16 '\u2022\n. .88\n.33'\n\u25a0,20\nii.60\nHome \t\nImperial Oil' ;\t\nInter1 Pete \u2022\u25a0   .....\u201e.,\nMacDougal Segur\nMid Cont. ..:\u201e.\u201e..\u201e\nNat. Pete ' \u2022 _\u201e\niN.ew Pacalfa ..4;\t\nOkalta  ;\nRoyalite ..\u201e a*\nRoxana  :..JX.\n[Tower Pete ...:.\u201e.....\nUnited Oils     ....\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi,. . \u25a0.,,...\u201e,.,.\nAlgoma Steel ,..'\u201e\t\nAluminum\t\nArgus   ,..'...:.-.\t\nAtlas St..\n20%\n59V4\n111. '\n15\n23 Vi\nBathurst Power '...ZIZZIZ     54\n.    '    .45\nCons' M & S ..\u201e.\u201e\u2122...  175.00\nConwest\nCrestaurum .\t\nDetta R L .\u201e,\u201e.\nDiscovery .......\nDome\t\nDonalda\n      .,       ........  .   a      UI.kACII\nhouses, 80.fruit tree*, hay meadow, water. $2500 cash. Art Miller,\nK\u00ab\u00ablo,B.C. .:.\/.,  \u25a0        '    ,.\nFIVE-ROOM BUNGALOW, WITH\ngarage; on two lot*. Close in. Excellent condition. Insulated,; part\ncement basement and furnace.\nImmediate occupancy. Ph. 893-X,\nBou\u00a7e^f6r SALE, SIVERTpN.\nPHON^IS      '\nOR WRITE TO\nNelson Machinery. ,\nCompany, Ltd.\n214 Hall St.      Nelson, B. C.\n. -USED\nLIVESTOCK   PEA LER8\nWE-BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\n... BENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, 'acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 593 \u25a0    324| Vernon St\nSfalami SaUn Urns\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first insertion, and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first Insertion.\n48c line for-6 consecutive inser-\n. tions.\n.   $1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions).  Box numbers lie extra. Covers  any\n\u25a0 number of Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst Insertion.   16c   per line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy     . ....   $   .05\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance          .25\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOn* month          $ 1.25\nThree  months  \u2014 8.75\nSix  months          7..50\nOne year              15.00\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month       1.00\nThree  months       2.75\nSix months     .__      5.50\nOne  year ,.         10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nALBERTA\nOPPORTUNITY-\nContinued ill health forces immediate sale of one of Central Alberta's largest General Motors\ndealerships handling all lines.\nVery large mixed farming area.\nTwenty miles to nearest .General\nMotors dealer on hard surface\nhighway half way between Ed^\nmonton arid Calgary. Fully modern frame and stucco .garage, 10,-\n000 sq. ft., built 1948. Heavy Imperial Oil gallonage. Easy term*\nto right buyer. Phone or wire\nowner,\nS. R. HANSEN,\nINNISFAIL, ALBERTA\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE -IN-\nsurance Co., D. LT Kerr, Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Clean rooms and moderate\nrates $1.50 to S2.00 single,' $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles. Vancouver,  B   C\n1\u20146x6 International Truck\n6 Wheel Drive, 361 Cubic'Inch\nMotor, All Steel Civilian Cab.\nEquipped with Twin Cylinder\nHydraulic Hoist and -8 yard\nSteel Dump Body. Front End,\n\u2022 Power Winch. Will sell.with or\nwithout Hoist and Body, Truck\nin almost new condition.\n.1 -\u2014KS7\" International Truck\nEquipped with Cam and \"Roller\nHydraulic Hoist and Steel\nDump Body. ' Recently reconditioned. . \u2022 y\n1\u2014KS7 International Truck\n178 Inch Wheel Base, Reconditioned.\n' 1\u20145-Ton. G.M.C. Truck'\nSuitable for Logging Jammer.\n]_4.Ton WC 20 White '\nTruck\n120 H.P:.H:p. Motor, 178\" Wheel\nBase. Reconditioned throughout. Equipped With Hydraulic\nHoist and Body. Will sell with\nor without Hoist and Body.\nFOR SALE AT VERY LOW PRICE\n\u2014 Berkela meat, slicer, bakers'\ntable with'flour bins, ice cream\nmaking machine, National cash\n- register, National safe, 3 feet x 25\ninches x 24 inches; 2 Frigldalres,\nkitchen stove for restaurant or\ncamp, potato peelers; pie plates\nand dinner plate*. Apply Golden\nGate Cite.\nImmediate occupancy. For further Information apply C Cave,\nSilverton.\nfor \"Sale '- MGderH HoUSB,\nsmall fruit farm. Close to Castlegar, '. Apply John Gall, Robson,\nB.C.\ni IMS,-too BlRT'oM sth1 ST.\nfor sale. What offers? Box 8823\nDully New#. \u25a0   . . -     .   .\n-rtbUSE FOR^SALE-mMEDlATE\nEast,'Sullivan \u2122_i\t\nElder Gold   \u201e.\nEldona \u201e__..\u201e..\nEstella   ........ ...\n\u25a0Eureka'-..,...'.... \u201ei_.\nFalconbridge _\u201e_\t\nFroblsher ...:\t\nGiant .Yd  ^ ;_.\nGod's Lake        '\nGoidale ---'... . ,\u201e\u25a0 ., .'.,\nGold Arrow \u201e....___\nGolden Manitou -._\nHalcrow' ........:...., i\u00a3\n^Hardrock '^..\u201e^..\u201e.^__;\nHarricana '\u25a0-'' \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 i, i\nHaJraga'\"-      V     -\nHeva ..:... ..' \" \u25a0\u25a0\nHollinger'-,. -1^.:-.:'- -i-,-\u201e\u201e\nInspiration\noccupancy. Cash or term*. Phone\n1403-R.  ,-     '     .   .   \u2022..',,.\nsuites, occupied. 2 lots. $5500 caih.\nApply, 1011 Front Street.\nTOR SALE\u20144-ROOM HOUSE IN\nYmir. Box 4810, Daily Ne%*.'\nRENTALS\nFOR SALE\u2014BRAND-NEW WESTr\ninghouse Deluxe washing machine\nwith pump; $30 off list price.\nTerm's available. Phone 1327-R or\ncall at 802. Victoria Street,\nFOR SALE \u2014 CHESTERFIELD,\nMixmaster, typewriter,': skis and\npole*, double bed, washing machine, couch\/ radio, heater. Apply\n1302 Crossley Ave... or ph. 1043-Y,\nWANTEB\u20145 OR 8-HOOM HOUSE,\nclose in. Box 4311, Daily New*.\nFor couple and 13-year-old- son.\nSUITE FOR RENT AT.SALM6 -\n4 room*, private entrance. Write\nBox 4902, Daily New*, ,     \"\"\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\nFOR RENT-2-I.60M yruRlrtSH-\ned suite. Phone 491-L or Victor\nApartment*. \u2022      .'    \u25a0.;-.\nWANTEDHSMAiL  APARTMENT\nInt Nlckd XXXi\t\nKayrand'  \u00ab.\nKenville .........,\u201e..._^..\nKerr Addison ..... r\t\nKlrk-Hudsoa Bay \u201e._,\nKlrkland. Lake  ~-X\nLabrador  __.\u201e.\nLake' Dufault ._.__^_.\nLakeshore . -\nLake Wa\u00aba    '..\nLeitch.\n4.00\n-\u2022 .\\\u00bb.\n.   ,..1S -\n. ...;\u00ab%\u2022\n:   18.65\n..  '.a\n:   9.15 .\n:    .\u00abi\n.      .22%\n.    1.70\n,    1.10\n.   10.85\n.    4.40 .\n11.85\n.38\n'     .17-\n.10\n7.00\n- .14%\n.13%\n.10\n.36\n- .15\n15.25\n\u25a0'.40\n41i75'\n.21%\nBeattie- Bros \t\nBell'.Telephone  ...7\"\nBrazilian...,.\u201e\u201e: ', X-\nB.C. Electric pfd 1..\u2122-.\nB.C. Forest ... X^XJ.\nB.C. Packers A X\u2014-L\nS.Q. Packers B\t\nB.C. Power A ...\t\nB.C. Power B X^^X..-\nBrown'Co.  .' --'y\nBrown Co. pfd...;:. \u201e_\nBruck Silk B. i_ij,\nBuilding Product*\t\nBurl. Steel '. ..........,.r..\u201e,\nBurn* A  ,.  ;.;_-.\u201e\nBurns B.\n'Can. Cement X  i\nCan.. Malting:.;......\nCan., Packer* B _,\n| Canadian Brewerle* ...\nCanadian Canners   \t\nCanadian Car & Fdy ....\n. Canadian Car & Fdy A\n|Can!. Oil .;...:\t\nCanadian Dredge\nCockshutt\t\nCon*. Mining & Smelting\nCons. Paper _^_\n.Dlst. Se\u00bbgr\u00abm...       \"\nDom. Foundries\nLittle Long Lao\nLouvicourt\nLynx ...; .\u201e._\u00bb\nMacDoHald ...\t\nMacDonald ...__.\nMacasaa  .\nMacLeod Cock\t\nMadsen R L .\nMagnet  I\nMalartic .G F X~-\nMarcu* G  L.\nMclntyre   .\nMcKenzle R L.....\nMining Corp _.._.\nMoneta' tiil;\nNegus\nclose in for young married cou\npie. Apply Box 2262, Dally New*.\nO R R E N T \u2014 HOUSEKEEPING\nroom.'711 Carbonate Street.\nFOR RENT A HOUSEKEEPING\nroom, phone 617-Y. \\''\n0-room :h6use, close m. -\nWrite Box 3880, Daily New*.\nBEDROOM   FOR   RENT.. APPLY\n923 Verrion Street. ..-.-.\n2-ROOM UNFURNISHED APABT-\nment for rent. Apply 214 Vernon.\nNew Calumet X~*\t\nNew Goldvue \u201e _;\nI New Jason   -, ''\u25a0\"\u201e , ,.\nNew luni .....X\u2014\nNew Thurbol* \u201e.\u2122...\nNoranda \u201e.......\u201e.^.\u201e.^.\nNormetals       \u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0   '\nNorth Can \u25a0 \u25a0 ;,    \u201e - -\nNorzone   \u2022 -   ...\nO'Brien. i___._\nOLeary \u2122_\u2122i,....~_\nOsisko '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u25a0'.-.-.:\u25a0.\nPamour\n17.83\n.35\n.88\n8.70\n'\u25a0   .77-\n9.40\n.38\n1.03\n,'- .76\nMVt\n.      .1$\n.      .15\n. '-. .87\n.-2.05-\n;<   2.9$\n.. .$.20\n.      .65\n.    9.15\n.      .12\n. '74.00\n.47\n.   18.3$\n'.32\n.03\n.    8.10\n,     .36\n.      .10\n1.'63\n.48%\n,78.00\n$.00\n.14\n. \u2022!*\n1.35\nJ!6 s\nCanadian Steamship ;\u201e\nCanadian Marconi  .'.......\nCanadian Pacific RIy     ., n\nCanadian West Lmbr    ' 12%\n12%\n38%\n\u2022   28%\n.'79%\n10\n20%\n\u2022 19%\n,   30\n.3%\n16\n\u25a0 122 -\n.'\u2022\u25a09%\n. 35\n23%\n\u202256\n40\n90%\n52%\n34%\n20%\n33%\n16\n18\n23%\n44%\n43\n8.65\n33%\nMarket Trends\n. NEW YORK. Sept. 17 (AP)-rRa-.\n16.50 dio-televislon issues made good\n39,75     progress.\n22.13V     Gain* and losses spread out fiver\n.32     a range running to between $1 and\n[45    $2 a share in active'areas.\n2 65        The volume of business was estl\u00ab\nill% mated at 1,800,000 snares.   ' , ; .-\n'2 80'l ' -C*nadiari issues I were lower.\" HI-,\n18 50     ram   Walker  increased   Vt.: Dome\n24.-; MIne,s a^d -Mclntyre decreased %^;\n'43     Canadian Pacific and Distillers Sea-\n\".,   |<ram'jf each  fell   %.  International\n**-  'Nickel was down %.\nTORONTO \"(CP)\u2014Prices continued ' mixed toward the session's\neiose. Firm support pushed stocks\nhiRlier at the opening but wesk-\u2022:.\neried abruptly during the mid-Eer-\n\u00bblim.' \u25a0',:\nTrading was-again aclive ar a\nwide list of .base metals and-VYJJt.\nern oils -Caught investors'.attention\nIn highly selective bu.vlhg. Vniiime\nfor the session was about 4.5M.0CQ\nshares. 'i'fo*.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014An Irregular-^-\nly higher trend prevailed. Trading -\nl-continued active.\nThe .industrial list displayed a\nmainly- steady to1 firmer tone in\nlearly r1\u2014 '\u2022'\u25a0'\u2022?!, but as the session\nprogressed, profit-taking appeared\nand many^eaders were dropped In- \u2022\nto the minus column.\nA few strong spots-brightened the    *\nlist, as gains and losses were mostly\nsmall.fractions.   \u2022   ' \/ V-   .\ntONDON VReuters) \u2014 Japanese\nbonds soared following a weekend\npress assessment of the prospects of\nsettlement of outstanding debts..\nGains of between 3 and 7'polntr\nwere well held despite considerable\nprofit-taking. German issues moved\nhigher also. -\n.....-v.wmiy   n.c.ui   p,l,  Aind-X.\nFOR SALE AJT VEBY'tC^f PRld!\n\u20149 booths and tables, 15 stools\nand counter; 1-desk, Apply Golden Gate Cafe.\nI FOR SALE\u2014.30-30 WINCHESTER\nrifle; Model 94, Never used. Priced at $100: A. Fulton, Stirling\nHotel, 6:00 p.m\nRANGE feME*!' d&MPl'E'TE\nwith fittings; 2 two-burner gas\nplates, quantity BX cable. 1103\nHall Mines Road, phon* 1434-X.\nMACHINERY\nSTAIR CARPET, AXMINSTER,\nred and blue, 28 feet x 22 Inches.\nGood condition. A. P, Hudson,\nR.R. 1, Longbeach,\nSienerud\nTRUCK & TRACTOR if D.\nNelson, B.C. Phone '1030\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately. Dally News Printing\nDept.. Nelson, British Columbia.\nMEN! PERSONAL- DRUG SUN-\ndries: 25 deluxe ,-samples.. $1.00.\nMailed m plain, sealed wrapper\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain Catalog free. Western\nDistiibutor*. Box 1023N. Vancouver. B. C- '\nLADIES I DUPREE PILLS iM-\nproved Formula Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\nperiods. $3.00 per box. Also Cote*\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 . Oer\nbox. Western -Distributors. Box\n1023 AN Vancouver. B C\n1949 METEOR SEDAN\u2014$1650. \u2014\nGood tires, air conditioner, rubber undercoated, low mileage. For\nfull particular* phone Trail 53\nfrom 8 to 5 p.m. or write to Victor\n'Bilesky, 2266 6th Ave., Trail. Car\n, will be shown in Nelion If requested,        '\u2022'.'\nFOR SALE S 2 FOLDING COTS,\nwith mattresses.' Practically new\nand i Premier duplex vacuum.\n\u2022Phone 884-R,.\nFOR SALE-12 GAUGE SHOTGUN,\nWinchester .22, in good condition;\nday bed, also large heater. Phone\n1829-Y.\nBOATS one) ENGINES\nFOR SALE - '49 INTERNATION-\nd.KB,2 Panel Delivery. Low\nmileage, good rubber. Direct re\nPlies to Star Grocery.\nFOR SALE-19-FT CRUISER \u2014\nMust be seen to be appreciated.\n.Phone 695-R2.\nFOR SALE-1949 MERCURY SE-\ndan, 24,000 ml. Radio and heater.\nWill accept older model or ded.\n314 Mil! St., Ph. 48-R.\nFOR' sAlE'-'iW'MERCUkY, s-\nton dump truck. Licensed and\nworking. Take part trade in. L. D.\nSniith. R.R. l,.Ne|Son.\nHARLEY DAVIDSON TWIN \u00ab\nmotor' bike for sale. Price very\nreasonable In good mechanical\ncondition. Apply P.O Box 142,\nNelson or pHnne I2P. ,.\n(Continued in Next Column)     I\nLARGE CmCULATOR HEATER.\nTake* extra large pieces of wood,\nin good condition, Apply 316 Kokanee Ave., City.\nIflRfsS WART' REMOVER =\nLeave* no scars. Your Druggist\nsells CRESS., \u25a0\nTRADE HOPKINS AND ALLEN\n12 gauge S.B. shotgun for .22. Box\n4473, Dally News.       '\nSWAP USED OFFICE TYPEWRlT-\ner for anything worth $40, or what\ncash offer? P.O. Box 266, Nelson.\nfouH-MB. WALfflW BlMoBM\nsuite, waterfall edge. Goodc ondi-\ntlon. Phone\/1364-Y.       ,-'- \u25a0\nPfpfc\u2014 FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncid low prices. Active Trading Co.\n935 E Cordov* St.. Vancouver.\nWOOD AND COAL COOK STOVE\n\u2014 Phone 828-Y.\nMTCR'ON-IC HEARING AIDS.-\nWrite P.O- Box 89. Nel*on. B-C-\nBABY BUGGY WITH JfAI\u00bbTWET\nmat-: collapsible go-cart. Ph 761-Y\nCONTRACTORS \u2014: SAWMILL\nLOGGING * lWnNO   -\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY   \u25a0\n'EQUTPMENT-   '.\nCO\u00bb LTD. y;\nGranville Island M.A, 1331\n\u25a0 \" .- Vancouver, B C '.--.\nwWchM -' cAfteo ffiXCTOR\nWinches, Braden Truck Winches,\nSingle and Double Drum Loading\nWinches. Bayes Equipment Co,\nCranbrook, B.C.    ' j. .\n'FOR SALE-2 BOTTOM TRACTOR\nplow, 14-in. bottoms, Mollne. Ar-\nthur Mackereth, Jr., Broadwater.\nWANTED \u2014 SMALL, PORTABLE\nsawmill. Arthur: Mackereth Jr.,\nBroadwater, B.C..\nWAITED-JAMMER OR WINCH\nPayma*ter ..Xii\nPickle Crow.....\nPowell Rouyn \u201e\n|Pre\u00bbt.ottEA \u2022-~\nQuebec Lib. .\u2014\nQuebec Man .....\nQueens ton XXX\nQuemont;... ^\nBeeys Mac .\n1 'San. Antonio- i\nSen; Houyn XX\u2014\nghawkey: ..\/...:\nIherritt Gordon\nJigma .....v.... ^.\nSllvermiller 'XX\nSllanco... ._\u201e\nSiscoe  ...O.....\nSteep.Rock \u201e\t\nTeck Hughes ii\t\nThompson-Lund\nTombill X..... ;....\niTorbrlt\nwith friction. Paul Markoff, Slo-\ncan Park, B.C:     ' j.. :'.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\n1 payment made. Atlas Iron is Metal* Ltd., 250 Prior SU Vancou.\nVer, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357..\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top price*\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916' Powell St, Vancouver. B. C.\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths. Larch- pons*. Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 450, Nelson, B.C.\nstm\t\nTrans Cont Res.....\n(Union Mining \t\nUnited Keno ........\nUpper Canada\/\t\nVentures '...........,^_\nViolamac,.; _.\u2122\n|Wdte Amulet .....\nOILS\nAnglo Can.\nA P Consolidated .is 1\nAtlantic 'Oil :.\u201e_\nIB: A. Oil .\u201e,.:.\u201e.. \t\nCdgary and Edmonton.\nICalmbnt-......: ; \u201e\nCentrd. Ledue .'..\u201e\nCommonwedth Pete .....\nDavie* Pet* ......*,..,.,._\u201e.\nDecalta \u201e......;. ,\t\niDel.Rlo :.\nEastcrest:\n\"V6UR   HIDES'  TO\nMorgan. Nelson; B. C>\n777.\n.      .90\n\u2022''-'   .70\n. i i;73\nI \"in:\n. 1.5J*\n. .3D\n. \u2022 .8.30.\n. .60\n.\" 25.15\n;\"' 5.85\n. -:2.7s\n.20\n,      .1$\n8.00\n7.15\n1.60\n.25\n.82\n8.00\n2.16\n.14\n.37\n1.90\n.65\n.14\n15.00\n1.75 :\n14.15.\n.85\n12.00\nT.80\n<H>\n- $.10\n22.75\n16.50\n1.5*\n' 2.25\n8:30\nXI\n.29\n.1.30.\n.21\n.800\n\u25a0Dom. Magnesium'..! \t\nDom. Steel &,Cod B ...__:\nPom. Store* _,__\nDoin Tar & CrJemtcai\t\nDom. Textiles \t\nFamous Player* I\t\n'Fanny Farmer .\u201e \"\"\nFleet Air  ._\nFord A  :\u201e,..:._\nGatineau  .\"~\nGen. Steel Waresy! ~\"\nGoodyear '\nGoodyear pfd ....\u201e\t\n! Gypsum Lime   -\nImperld OU ^_____\nImp. Tobaeco ___i_\n,Int,Nlckd -::'.::.   \u25a0    ' \u25a0\nInt. Pete ..\u2022  -\u25a0'-   \u25a0 Z\nLaura Seeord '      -\nLoblaw A :::\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:'. :\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nLoblaw B \t\nMaple Leaf Milling\".\nMassey H*rrl*\nMont..Loco  iu\nI Mopre Corp\t\nMcColl Frontenac\nNat. Steel Car.\t\nOgilvle Flour\t\nPage Hershey j\t\nPOwell River\t\nPower Corp\t\nRuns. Industrie*\nI Shea Brew.\t\nSick* Brew.\t\n.Simpsons A,..._\n[Simpson* pfd _\nSouthern\nSteel of Canidii.\"\nSteel of Can. pfd .\nStandard Paving .\nUnion On-of Can\n.United Corp A-_\nUnited Sted\nWert'on George ;..,.        \"~\nWinnipeg Electric coni'l\t\n[Winnipeg Electric pfd,\t\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBrdorhJ \u201e.\u201e\u201e\nCariboo.Gold 'XX.\nGr*ndvi*w\/i...__\n|Highland Bell .....^.\nKootenay Belle ii\nPend Ordlie;,....._\npioneer Gold (....'.-,._\nPremier Border y_\nQuatslno \u201e...._\nSheep Creek \u201e::.\u201e\nSilver Ridge ......:...\nSilver Standard ...\nVananda;\t\nVan Boi\n40\n175\n- \u00ab\n29%\n14%\n\u202213%\n22%\n12\n43%\n' 14%\n13%\n28%\n2.30\n50%\n19\n18\n96\n18%\n29\n99%\n11%\n41%\n22%\n-   14\n32%\n82%\n-'9%\n14%\n\u201416%\n28\n86%\n30%\n1 23%\n60\n87%\n28%\n26%\n14%\n21\n34\n94\n18\n26%\n36%\n13%\n19%\n28%\n11\n24\n39%.\n100\nCUT 260 FEET\nAT WAR WORSE\n\u25a0 SPOKANE, Sept IB \u2014 Thomas\nConsolidated Mines, .Inc., drifted,\nand crosscut through 260 feet during the month-of August, according to Information receive by R. E.\nNelson & Co.     .:\nThe Company's War Horse mine,\nnear Kimberley, Is approximately,\n15 miles Southwest of Consolidated\nMining and Smelting -Company'*\nSullivan operation.\nNelson said Thomas Consolidated\nhad averaged. 250 feet per month\nIn drifting and crosscutting at the\nwith a nomlneeshlp in the American\nwere cut ' '   .'\nThe Company 'i\u00bb completing*\nfive-mile access road to the' mine,\nSkeenaAcquires   '\nClaims\nSPOKANE, Septylffe-Skeen* SII- '\nver Mines, Ltd., has acquired three\nclaim group* for  exploration  on  *\nthree sides of the Western Uranium. Cobalt Mines property near*\nNew Hazelton,' B.C., M. W.. Jas-.'v\nper,   resident   engineer,   reported\nyesterday. Skeena Is a new Canadian corporation headed by Daniel\nMcLellan jjr'\"\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\n^ARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nLOST AND 'POUND\nLOST-;\u25a0* 620 BOX CAMERA BE-\ntween Willow ..Point and Nelion\n, on Friday. Leave at Dally News\noffice. .\t\ni''OUND\u2014CLUB BAG ON SLOCAN\nhighway   near   Playmor.   Phone\nPlaymo\/. y\nfound- nATH ow prNK-.nTMM]JD\nclasses. Owner ohone 1488,\nTHE SNOWSHOE RANCH. OF-\nfers you the finest In registered\nPOlled Shorthorns. For inform*-\ntion, writ* C. Flick. Edgewood\nRCy \u25a0-..:\nFOR   iALE--i-.l---YOPNG.MEUC\ngoat   (milking),   IT\noilly, 6 mo*, old. Apply.. _. ~,.-\nldson, Mirror Lake, phone 46-K.\nFOR SALE-TEAM OF HORSES\nwith harness. Apply Jack Kos-\niancic, Crescent Valley, B.C. ;\u2022'-\n 1 --Z- -,     :<if.:\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 Indus  25.09 Off 97 or .35 pc.\n20 rails    ' 84.22 off 23 or. ,27 pc,\n15 utils.     -45.48 oil 09 or .20 p'el\n65 stocks  93.56 off .30 or .30 pc.\nWellington\"\"\"\"'\"\"\"\"\" \"\nWestern Explor\u00abtion i\t\nWoodbury :\t\nOILS \u25a0:. .'-.\"\u2022     '\u25a0\t\nCalgary 4 Edmohton XXX.\nCalmont .-, __\nIComm'onwgdth'\"'\"\"\"'\nHome ..-...,     ,   .,    \u25a0\nOkdta Coin :...''   '   \" '\nPacific Pete \u25a0\u25a0  '  - \u25a0   \"~~\nI Vandia i.X:X.     ~^~]\nVulcan ..-.-.  ,.,.,.. ,\nINDUSTRIALS;\nPapltai Eitita* ,..i_\nInter-Brew :..-:..\nAlberta Dlit .. . ^_\nAlberta Dist V.T.\n6.00\n.   1.40\n.40\n. .85\"\n\"1.28\n10.75\n'2.20\nXI\n.64\n1.75\n.18\n\"2.65\n.16\n.03\n.03%\n8.20\n.40\n18.75\n1.60\n8.60\n17.00\n2.8$\n9.50\n\u2022' ;44.-\n-    .70\n19.50\n4.60\n3.20\n3.05\nCalgary Livestock .\nCALGARY, Sept. 17(CP)-Price*\nwere generally steady in active\ntrading on the Cdgary Livestock\nMarket today. On offer were 810\ncattle and calves. .M\nButcher steers and heifer* war*\nfully.steady. Good cows were stea- .\ndy, but fair to medium kinds .were\neasier, to 50 cents lower In spots.\nBull*' were steady. Stocker and\nfeeder steers were in keen demand\nat steady to strong prices. Veal\ncdves were about steady.\nSales last week were 3067 cattle,\n377 calves, 784 hogs and 317 sheep.\nHogs closed steady last week at\n$33.50, sows at $18.50 tb $18.75. Good\nlambs closed at $29, good ewes at'\n$17 to $18.50.\nGood   to   near \u2022 choice   butcher\nsters, $33 to $34.50; common to me- :\ndlum, $27 to $32.50.\nGood butcher, heifer*, $31.50 to\n$33: common to medium, $26 to $31.\nGood cows, $26 to $27.50; common\nto medium, $23 to $25; canners and\ncutter*, $18 to $22.50.\nGood bulls, $26.50 to $27.50; common to medium, $24.50 to $28..\nGood stocker and feeder steers,\n$33 to $34.50; common to medium,\n$26 to $32.50.\nGood to chol,Ce veal calves, $34 to\n$36.50; common to medium, $28\nto $38.\nIACARA\nFINANCE COMPANt- LTD,\nT op uuviiRiju, MdraMT\nSUITE! \"\nPhone 1095    560 Bailer St.\nWaddinqton Options\nIsland Group   .\u00bb..\nWaddlngton Mining Corporation\nof Vancouver report*, that an, option has been taken on a group of\nl.claims on the We*t coast of Vancouver Island possessing an outcropping of high-grade magnetite\nore. The claims ire.,at. Clayton\nLake, near, -the head of Herbert\nArm. -.\u25a0-.\"      \u25a0        ':.-.'-;'\u25a0\nInspection of the property by\nrepresentative* of Eastern interests will be made as soon as helicopter transportation can be arranged.    ,\nAssays are'*dd to have indicated\nup to 64.4 per cent lion.\nS.   Crowe-Sword*  i*  Preddeht\nof Waddlngton Mining Corporation.\n.. J 1, n'l>,, w.   ,..-.\nWinnroea Grain  ,\nWINNIPEG, Sept 17 (CD-Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOat*\u2014No. 1 feed, 81%:\nBarley\u2014No. I feed. 1,21%.\nPROFIT MAKING\nis a MANAGEMENT\nFUNCTION not an\nEconomic Circumstance!\n.'\u2022 HrWra...\nGeorge S.Mtf Company\n\"8tt\u00bbVTU\u00bb4. Sm^MjutuMtj\n' . W\u00abst*m Division\n291 Crniy SlrMI, Sal Frtnxlsco 2, Coflf.\nE.lobllshid ISJ5\n\"PirOTECTIoifl\nAGAINST INFLATION\"\n: As* your Invutmml Daolar\n;f\u00bbr Hie obov* foTde'r'ond\n,    prospectus of:\nPHflNE  144 FOR T.l ASS'F'CQ\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nCALVIN BUU0CK\n . :\u25a0\u2022':' l \u2022?.\nShe Talks d Good Diet\nBut. . -..'\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\"'\nl\u00abHtt\u00bb\u00ab\"|\n\"Meet Her at - - - - -1^ftettV\u00b00tl |\nV.i-'-- \u25a0 \u2022'tea:-   -I\nGoaded by hunger,. I-'^;     ,v*|:\nwill-power'cannot    I      1i1\u201eii\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\"u,ttH\n\u2022Ibng^endure      %< | Sff\".        \"^\ntemptation.-\u2022\nSLENDdlt TABLETS\n- can be a moroie-bodstef. \u2022\u25a0'- '','.\u25a0'*\nDRUG STORE\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, SEPT. 18, 1951\nSPECIAL\n' \" t '\nBalance of,\nSALE\nSHOES\np\nRegrouped for\nQuick Selling .\nPriced' from\nMe\n.YOUR OPPORTUNITY\nTO SAVE\nPHONE 1114\n411 Baker Street,\nNelson\n' -if,\nSLIGHT INCREASE\nIN NEWSPRINT OUTPUT\n...MONTREAL, Sept 17 (CP)\nCanadian newsprint production in\nAugust amounted to 484,563 tons'\ncompared with 466,443 in the corresponding month last year, the Newsprint Association of Canadarreport-\ned today. ,    -'\u25a0-\nCanadian shipment in August\nwere 430,681 tons, an Increase of\n62,622 tons over the same month in\n1950. Uhited. States took 85.1 per\ncent of the total shipments, an in\ncrease of 9.8 per cent over the like\nperiod last year.\nCan Su\n, CALGARY, Sept. if (CP) - The\nphysical volume of Canada's industrial production has more than doubled In the last decade, P. J. Lyle,\nDirector; Ontario Trade and Industry Branch, Department of Planning ahd Development, said today.\nAddressing \"a joint! luncheon of\nthe Kiwanis Club and the Calgary\nChamber of Commerce; held In connection with the annual conference\nof the. Provincial . Governments'\nTrade and Industrial Council! Mr;\nLyle added:.  ...   v   ... :-\u25a0\u25a0\n\"The significance of thi* achievement has apparently escaped most\nCanadians,' for I know-it has created more stir ln'Newi'york-,ahd\nLondon, than it has In Toronto or\nCalgary.\" ; : '  \u25a0  '    \u2022 \u00bb  ' ' '\nSome, industries^ including those\nin which further broad development might be expected, had done\nbetter than double physical production'. '\u25a0\"'\u2022\u25a0-\u00bb* *\n\u25a0'. Primary iron andateei'had-trl-\npleS, as; had- transportation, equipment; electrical'apparatus ahd supplies had increased four times; generating capacity In central, power\nstations advanced 60 per' cent; oil\nreserves are 25 times as .much ss\nfour years agp.\n' Speaking  of  Canadian  exports,\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE  .\n515 Kootenay St Phone 861\nCUTLER'S\nJEWELLERY\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 Years' Experience\nPROMPT  SERVICE\nYour Grocer Has Qur New\nVIJO PANCAKE AND\nWAFFLE MIX      --;\u25a0\nPhono 238, or Call at\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCompany, Ltd.\n.623 Front 8treet\nMr. Geor&e Bruce Arneson\nB.A., L.L. B.\nwishes to announce that he has opened an office\nfor the practice of lam at Room 200, Medicat Arts\nBuilding, 507'Baker Street,'Nelson, B.C. .:\nTELEPHONE 383\nMr. Lyle laid the line of least resistance would be to go on supplying\nthe World with raw materials. However: \"We cannot expect to. pay\nwith,wood, pulpi-br grain, or iron\nore alohe\" for all the finished products we buy abroad Accordingly,\nhe .urged that Canadians keep as\nTow- as -possible the United States\ncontent in their products, and Increase the manufactured content of\ntheir exports', .    i\n' For, example;    M\n\"Avton of Iron ere> mined In\nCanada and sold to a foreign steel\ncompany, brings Canada a rove\nnue of about $10. When the same\n.   ton of ore' Is. smelted In Canada\nand turned Into a wide' range of\n;: steel prodUcts\u2014as a great, deal ef\nIt I*\u2014It makes about half a ton\nof such  products as  nails, coat-\nhangars, screws, etc. So used, a\nton. of   Canadian   ore   becomes\nmanufactured product* with a re\ntail    value'   ranging    from  $80\nto $90., : ,-.\n; Mr. Lylesafd it-would *be neces-\nsary to continue  exporting, large\namounts of goods In raw and semifinished form, \"but, -as Canadians,\nwe are',within our rights iri-reserving for Ourselves an .adequate chare\nofthese same materials!\"\nSalad Poisons\nNewspaper Staff\nYAKIMA, Wash., Sept. 17 (API-\nHealth officers seeking the' exact\nsource of food poisoning suffered by\nsome $00 picnickers settled today on\npotato salad served at a newspaper\nemployees' picnic as the top sus-.\npect -     - *   \u25a0\nTwo hundred of the more than\n350 attending the picnic ttaged Sunday by the Republic Publishing\nCompany were treated at hospitals.\nOthers were treated at home after\nMayor Gilbert W. Burn* reported,\nint* radio appeal that hospitals\nwere loaded to capacity.\n, Publisher Ted .Robertson, \u2022 Justin\nN. Thomas, managing editor of the\nYakima Morning Herald, and Bob\nHansen, managing editor of the Ya\nkfma .Daily Republic, were among\nthe victims.   .\nOfficials planned to call iri out\nside mechanical and editorial help\nto publish the Republic's afternoon\nedition today. '\u25a0\u25a0\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescription*\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed.- Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's  Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St.      \u2022 Phone 63\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\n'\u00bb'  VISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Art* Building   -.\nSuite .206 Phone 141\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n;. ; 'at th*'\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street\nPhon* 146\nMeet B.C.'s Expert on \"Slowdowns\"\nThroughout British Columbia'*\nindustries, wherever \u00ab speed\nreduction with * minimum -\nlob of power It required,\nyou'll often find a Holroyd\nReduction Unit. ''Ther* Is\ngood reason for: Holroyd'*\npopularity. Although it Is\nruggedly constructed, the\ncomponent. gear* are 'finely machined to provide '\n\u2022.degree of efficiency second\nto none. For efficient\n\"slowdowns\" Holroyd can't\nbe beaten. -\nHOLRpyD UNDRIVEN WORM REDUCTION UNIT\n; Crossman Machinery maintains the largest and best equipped repair shop on th*\ncoast. Here, electrics I equipment of ell sizes is serviced. The shop Is staffed by\nhighly skilled technician* working with the most modern facilities available. It\ncost* you no more lo have your electrical equipment serviced In the Crossman\nshop. For repairs and overhauls lo Motors, Starling Units, Generators send them to:\nCROSSMAN\nMACHINERY     CO.     LTD.\n806   BEACH  AVE        \u2022        VANCOUVER.   B  C.       \u2022       PAnfic   5-161\nC.P.C. to Storm.\nOttawa Conference\nVitrtORIA, B.C., Sept. 17,(CP)\nDr. James Endicott, -President of\nthe Canadian Peace Congress, told\nan audience here'Sunday night,\nthat the Canadian Peace Conference will storm Ottawa with peace\npetitions, oh Armistice Day..\nHe told an audience of 300 persons that most of the delegstesrto\nOttawa will be veterans of two\nWorld wars... . '\"..-\nDr. Endicott urged His listeners\nto'slgh\"the world- peace petition,\n-denounced the Japanese Peace\nTreaty and said Canada should recognize Communist \"China.\nCalifornia Fires\nWhip (armel Area\n\u25a0SAN.FRANCISCO. Sept.-17; (API\n\u2014Fire-plagued California today arr-\npealed to neighboring Arizona (or\nreinforcements as overworked\ncrew* battled almost 100 fires knifing Into the State'* forest land.\n\u2022Most of the..fires..were set ..by\nlighting Sunday, about '30 of them\nin. the lush Carmel Valley alone.\nOthers were.touched off in Lake,\nMendocino and Humboldt counties\nfarther North. \"... \",' 5,;V',\n- Wind* of moderate-gale velocity\nwhipped the already-large fire on\nBoardman Ridge in the Mendocino\nNational Forest to almost twice its\nearlier size.. By Sunday It had\nblackened more, than 6700 acres\u2014,\nor -more than 33,000,000 board feet\nof plne> :.,.',\nForest'Supervisor Lee Thomas\nestimated the loss at $100,000.   ' -y\nMore than 1609 men, Including\nSan'\"Quentin prison Inmates, battled the fires.\nCOLOR TV A LONG WAY\nOFF FOR BRITAIN\nLONDON, Sept 17 (AP), - Color\ntelevision Is still a long way off for\nBritain, the BBC Indicated today, j\nThe BBC wants let maker* to design color TV receiver* and' other\nequipment ao it \"can be thoroughly\nstudied and tested before' iny decision about a future color television\nsystem for public service is made,\",\nsaid the corporation's annual report'.\nTeacher Is Still\nThe''Kingpin\"\nSASKATOON, Sept 17'(CP) -\nThe teacher is still the k'ngpin ot\neducation, representatives of seven:\nprovince* agreed today a'- the annual meeting ot the. Canadian\nSchool Trustees .'Association. ',\n\u25a0 The consensus, was that' the type\not school building and equipment is\nsecondary; to the qual'.ty of the teacher ih assuring that children are\nproperly educated. '-\u25a0'\u25a0\": '\nT h el p r o,v inclal' representatives\ntook part in.a panel discussion on\nthe \"Responsibility of 'Trustees.\"\nSpeakers \u00bbwere\u00bb George Fitton. Manitoba; John Barsby, British Columbia;. Mrs. J.' Isabel Ross, Ontario;\nMrs. F. C. Butterworth, Alberta;\n'John McAskill; Saskatchewan; A.\nR. Almond, Quebec, and D. tj.' Montgomery, Nova Scotia.\nMr. Barsby said trustees .should\nmake themselves familiar with the\nwelfare problems of youths and with\neducation problems. They should\nh-vethe Interests of the community\nat heart They must cooperate with\nall groups interested In education\nand keep fully Informed'on all\ntrends In their respective districts.\nBrothers United\nBy Sask. Eslafe\nREGINA; . Sept. 17 . (CP) -A\n$10,000 Canadian estate \"has reunited\ntwo.brothers in London who lived\na three-penny bus'ride apart .but\nhadn't seen each other in 35 years.\nThe Northern Trust Company\nbranch here told the story today.\nHenry pore, a rancher at Maple\nCreek, .Sask., died last October and\nleft neatly- $10,000. He had been 'in\nCanada since 1002 and had no close\nrelatives. ;\n' The trust company* cdmlnlsterlng\nthe estate, advertised for possible\nkinsmen in a London newspaper.\nLetters, from Morris GOodwln, who\nsaid he was a nephew, and George\nDavidson convinced Duncan Grosch,\nthe trust company's Regina manager,\nthat the two were related.\nHe sent.Mr. Goodwin's address to\nMr. Davldsbh \u2014 and it turned out\ntha. the huncl .wa- correct. The two\nbrothers had'been brought up in an\norphanage and had lost touch. Both\nhad changed their names from Dore\nwhen they came of age. .\nShoof and Run\n'\u2022V.;\u00ab '\"'- $'\u2022-     -\u25a0    -:-\n1 VANCOUVER, B. C, Sept 17-\n<CP~)\u2014Shades of .the Nova Scotia\nrumrunner*     ,-.\nA bright -moon shone down on\nCowichan Bay in the' small hoiy*\nof Saturday. Two small fishing\nboats siippedylnto the'Bay on Van:\ncouver Island'*. Easty-coastyythmf\nrunning lights doused.\nQuietly, Z00 fathoms of net was\nlowered. Before long, the three men\nori the two boats had 1600 pounds\nof.Salmon and were about to haul in.\n\"\" On .Shore, Fisheries Inspector A.\nA. Sherman clambered Into his 14-\nfoot patrol'boat and shoved off to\nsee what was going on In his prohibited fishing area.\nBedlam broke loose. ,\nAs Sherman started to board one\nof the boats, he was. shoved rudely\nback into his own. A shotgun blast\nrang out over the still water.\nSherman, unhurt,' shouted for\nhelp. William Barton arid T. W.\nSpencer put out in Barton's boat.\nA fusillade of shot* made them dive\nfor the deck.\nThree Mountle* .arrived. They\nhopped Into Barton's boat and gave\nchase. y\nOne' of the poachers veered\nsharply and bore down-'on-.the pursuit craft,, trying to cut her in. two.\nBarton pulled Hard over and\navoided a collision.\nThe MountieB opened up on the\n.two fleeing boats, but they, made a\nclean getav\/ay.\nFisheries patrol boats were ordered out immediately. The R.C.A.\nF. sent out planes to sweep Georgia\nStrait.\nYesterday the two boats \u2014 the.\nDiana Lee and Sandra M \u2014 were\nfound at nearby Steveston, 40 miles\nfrom Cowichan Bay, and seized.\nArrested and charged- with illegal\nfishing was William MacDonald.' a\n38-yearro!d Steveston fisherman. He\npleaded guilty and was remanded to\nSept. 23 for sentence.\nPoller were still looking for the\nother two men today.\nINQUIRY ORDERED ON       i\nMRS. AMERICA RESULT\nTALLAHASSEE,'Fie., Sept. 17-'\n(APl^Governbr, Alfred Drlscoll of\nNew Jersey Has ordered an Invest!- j\ngation of the Mrs. America Contest, Floradia's Advertising Commissioner Director,. Beverly Grlz-\nzsrd, said toda^r. r\" '\u25a0> I      \u25a0 (      .'I\nGrlzzard tald he had 'protested\nto the Governor after several\njudge* announced the-most vote*\nhad goen to Mrs. Central Florlds\u2014\nMrs.. Peggy Creel of -St.. Peters.-\nburgh-rthough she was given third\nplace. Mrs. New York City was\nthe announced winner.\n..Controversy over the choice of\nMrs. Penny Duncan of New York\nwas ' sparked, by Actor Wendell\nCorey, one of the judges.'He said\n23 of the 24 judge* voted for Mrs.\nCentral Florida. \" \u00bb\nHaigh\nTrii-Art\nBeauty\nItSdldn\nOi^.'Bafcer St.\n\u2022 \"'phono-'ai?\nWldlNfpN\nMOTOfRS LfO.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nCMC. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\nfflMRIE    .\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n676-Baker St Phone 236\nUNITED REFUGEES URGED\nHAMBURG, Germany, Sept. 17\n(AP)\u2014Thirty refugee Russian sol\ndiers. called on all Russian refugees Sunday to Join them in\nqualntlng the West -\"'with the true\ntacts about the Soviet Unlonj'\nBroadcasters Plan\nCulture Programs\nOTTAWA. Sept. 17; (CP)'.'\u2014 The\nCanadian Association of Broadcasters, whose membership includes\nmost privately owned -stations in\n.Canada, plans to launch a drive to\nstimulate book reading, especially\namong 'younger people; it was announced today. \u25a0'\u2022 \u2022'\u00ab'?\u2022'\u2022 -\u25a0)'. \u2022 ;\n' D. Malcolm Nelll, Chairman of\nthe 'Association's Board of Directors, said the plans will include special radio programs on classic literature- for young people In the English and French languages. .\n, Mr. Nelll. making his announcement following a meeting of the\nBoard, said a second project will be\ndesigned to encourage the Increased\nuse of concert music.in.broadcasting, A third envisages scholarship\nawards for young Canadian composers.\n, At the meeting, Station CKLN,\nNelson, B.C., was accepted as the\n103rd member of the association.\nMrs. MacLean Ends\nMonth's Holiday\nNICE, France, Sept. 17 (AP) \u2014\nMrs. Meiinda \"MacLean, wife of the\nmissing British diplomat, took a\nplane for London today, ending\nmonth's holiday on the French Riviera. , ,\nWith her were ber three children, Fergus,' 7, Donald, 4, and three-\nmonths-old Meiinda who was born\nthree weeks,after her father, Donald MacLean, vanished.\nMacLean disappeared with a Foreign Office colleague, Guy Burgess, last May. There have been reports they went to Russia.   \"\u25a0'-,-,-.\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR* TELEPHONE LINE   .\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM  LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nTi\u00abd&FIX-IT.$\nEDWARD ARNOLD TO WED\nHOLLYWOOD, Sept 17 (AP) -\nScreen actor Edward Arnold, 61, today confirmed his forthcoming marriage to Mrs. Cleo McCain, 43-year-\nold Detroit welfare worker.\nPhilco Radio\n\u2022    Sole* and Service\nJeffery\" Radio Service\nPhon* '1302    : 440 Ward St.\n; NEL80N, B.,,C.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nuhis gentleman.   e\nIs quite forlorn\nHe woke up to\nA plumb-less morn.\n. Don't send for a plumber\nunlet* you're sure of him.\nOur men do' better work\nfor leu money. Ask anyone\nwho   knows.   They'll  tell\ni you our service Is tops In.\nevery way.\nKootenay\nDiuttdiHg&I\/e<tting Co.h\nT.S.JEMSON\n351 BAKER STREET      PHONE 666\nStrain. Hot WciterS Hot Air Heatii ;\nPlumbing (nstallci lions flSupplie.\nGordon A. Sumner\nNATUROPATHIC\nPHYSICIAN,\nI.O.O.F. Bldg.      605 Kootenay 8t\nYOUR\nNEW\nSUIT\nfUll'51.*.\nSee the terrific range\nofmew Fall Suits in all\n\u25a0 wool fabrics that will\n\u25a0 wear andiwear V ,. .\nPlain color* and neat\npatterns in both tingle\nand double \u2022 breasted\nmodel*. '\nEmory's Ltd.\nThe Iran's Store ';\nHELP AVOID COLDS\nImunovax\nCOLD VACCINE\nTABLETS\nS1.75 Bottle of 25 Tablet*\nAt Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nKelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone: Day 34 - Night 807-R\nBOX 480\nASK  POD  SCOTIAKD'S  FAVOURITt SON\nJOHNNIE WALKER\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nSORN 1120 \u2014 . ;'\nITIU GOING STRONO\nreal good\nScotch\nDistilled, Blended find\nBottled in Scotland\nContent* 26M*\nJOHN WALKER & SONS lip., SCOTCH WHISKY DISTILLERS\nKIIMARNOCK, SCOItANO\nIhis advertisement is-not published or displayed by the,Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nTtmrf\na home permanent that's specially created\n\u2666, to \"take\" on young, hard-to-wave hair!\nSo safe, so gentle, so easy to give.. .now every\nchild can hovo curly hoir. Kit Includes a now,\nmilder, gentler Special Creme Waving Lotion\nand Specie) Liquid Neutratlxar plus the\nSpecial Children's Home Permanent Conditioner\u2014\nlojrlalc* boby.fln*, llmft, young hair \"lak*\" a\nwave better, easier, foster. Leaves hair soft,\nlustrous, manageable\u2014like naturally curly hair.\nUse 'any plastic curlers... but we especially recommend the new Richard Hudnut Whlrl-A-Way*\ncurlers for ease, speed, and smoother waves.\nLike all famous Richard Hudnut Hair Preparations,\nthe Children's.Horn* Permanent has been,\nlaboratory and salon tested and proven safe,\nevon for toddlers' hair.\nNELSON PHARMACY\nPHONE\n1203\nYOUR FORTRESS OF.HEALTH\n433 Joiepnlne St.\u2014 Nelson, B.C.\n'\u2022'fi'ES. '\n894-L\nCOME   IN   FOR  A   ;\nJSRONT \u25a0 TO - REAR \u2022\nCHECK - UP!\nMake sure that cold\nweather ahead, finds\nyour car In shape to\ntake on the extra strain\nput upon it. Drive irt for\nthe necessary car checkup soon.   \u2022'\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\nThe largest and most completely equipped\ngarage in the Interior of British Columbia\nPhone 35\nNelson,'B. C.\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_1951_09_18","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\/1.0425962","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":"1951-09-18 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":"1951-09-18 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":""}]}