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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" $3.5 Million Deal.\nB.C Oil Stock\n, VANCOUVER,, Nov* 16 (CP)- $3,500,000 tri&saction\non the New York Stock Exchange was heralded by. finance\nmen here as a vote of confidence in British Columbia s future\nas an oil-producing province.\n\u2022They were commenting on this\nOversubscribing of a common stock\nissue of ,500,000 shares in Canadian\n'Atlantic OH Co., Ltd.\ninvestment dealers here said\nthey could not remember an instance where stock subscription of\n\u2022 .Western Canadian oil had sold\nio quickly \u25a0 on the New York\nmarket.,.\nThe transaction followed by two\nweeks the discovery of oil at the\nNo. 1 well hear, fort St. John in the\nPeace River District oftRC.\n' \"The NeW York oversubscription\nproves beyond a doubt that the big\nfinanciers believe the:*'B.C. discovery Is most significant,\" said a\nprominent member of the Vancouver Stock Exchange.\nProperty at the welt & kite ot the\nfirst oil struck in quantity in B.C.\u2014\nis held by Canadian Atlantic, Pacific Petroleums Ltd., Union Oil\nCompany of California and Stinray\nOil.\nBy DON HUTH\n,A'   -TOKYO, Nov. 18 (Saturday) (AP)--C;en. Ilfittfiew B.\n|,-Bidgway tonight; confirmed the authenticity of a reWt. of\natrocitiescommitted by Communist soldiers in Koref.\nBut* the Supreme Commander expressed regiifet that\nevidence had not been coordinated- before it was released,'* .\/'**\u25a0\n\u25a0He said* that it had caused unnecessary anguish among relatives\nof soldiers in Korea, saying that\nall deaths bad been reported to\nDext of kin regardless of how\n\u25a0death*occurred.\n6500 MASSACRED\nRidgway referred to a statement\nIssued .'Wednesday by Col James.\nM. Hanley, chief of the U. S. Eighth\nArmy's war crimes section, that\n8500 V. S. war prisoners had been\nmassacred* by the Reds since the,\noutbreak of the war.\nRidgway's statement said:\n\"It had been concluded some\nmonths ago that at an appropriate\ntime when the accumulated evidence warranted and when due coordination had been effected with\n, the ptoper authorities in Washington this evidence should be made\npublic, .        ...\n\"That .this co-ordination was not\nproperly effected at the t(me of this\nrelease is of the utmost'regret to\n* this;-headquarters.\" y\n. RidgWay's statement. made no\nmention of the exact figures on\natrocities against Allied prisoners-\njcf-war.;\n^.CHINESE STRIKE PACK \u2022*\n,w .The l?eiping radio * in a Chinese\nbroadcast   called   the   charge   a\n. \"shameful provocation.\" '\n*'\u25a0 Peiping asserted that \"thousands\n\u2022hd tens, of thousands\" of Chinese\nand North Korean Communist, soldiers \"who fell into the hands' of the\nUnited Nations forces have been\nmassacred.\"\nThe Allied side has been careful\nto point out, since Hanley's report\nStirred the world, that the U. N.\ncommand   treats   its   prisoners-cf-w)\n-war well in conformity with the\n\/Geneva convention.\nMolher, Babies\nBurn fo Deaih\nFIVE YEARS TO\nEQUALIZE RATES\nPossible Tomorrow\nSays Exoert, But}\nWould Create Chaos\nOTTAWA, Nov. 16 (CP)\u2014Equal-\nization of freight rates in-Canada\nIs going to take about five years,\ntwo railway experts today told the\nCommons special committee studying the\" Government's equalization\nbill.\nThe estimate came from'Leonard\nJ. Knowles, Canada's No. 1 freight-\nrate expert, and' If'. C. S\/- Evans,\nvice-president and general counsel\nof the Canadian Pacific Railway.\nMr. Knowles, traffic adviser to\nthe Royal Commission on Trans;\nportation and now special assistant\ntp C.N.R., President Donald Gordon,\nsaid it would take between one\nand two year; to equalize the basic\nrate scales as between regions.\nAnother 'three yew* or so ^ould\nto,: needed', to, adjust, thjr j\u00bbeny,\n^foa*ds;-of-inm^tot'imf55^*\n\u25a0'Stow:'   \u25a0',:\nMr., Evans said the equalization\nprocess must necessarily be a slow\none to, avoid \"upsetting the whole\neconomy.\" s*\n\"Drastic and quick adjustment .of\nrates might throw some industries\ninto bankruptcy.\" he said; \"Mechanically, you could do it tomorrow,\nbut we'd make such a mess that\nthe whole country would be in\nchaoA\" \/\nThe committee also heard from\nMr. Knowles today a suggestion\nthat an equalization plan could be\ndrafted with the Maritimes excluded, as sought by the governments of'the four Eastern seaboard\nprovinces.    \u2022\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 18 (CP)TA\nI young mother and her two sons\nj were burned ter death early today\n[iWhen fire swept their small frame\n\u25a0 home sit Crescent Beach, 20 miles\nI'-Soiith. of here.\nThe victims were Mrs. Madeline\nI Brown and her sons, Paul 2, and\nI Phil|p, 1.\nDefrick Brown, 28, received\nhums to the back, hands and face\nin vain efforts to rescue his family\nHis mother escaped unhurt.\nDetails of the fire were meagre\n;\u00bbs the Brown home and an adjoining vacant house- were burned almost to 'the * ground before neighbors reached the scene. The blaze\n1>roke out about 3 a m.'\nWEATHER, FORECAST\nClqudy and a little milder today;\nWinds light. Low and high at Cranbrook zero and 32, Crescent Valley\n15 and 40. Outlook for Sunday\ncloudy and milder. '..\nVol.50\nJjEtSDN, B,&. CANADA^ATURDAY MOSNttTG, NOy. 1?; .1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 17*\nThousands Homeless,\nans\nFlooding Po I|iver\nROVIGCV Italy, Nov. 16 iCP)-^The 40;000 citizens 'of\nthis beautiful renaissance town were, warned tb leave tonight\nafter .engineers decided they could'do nothing to save the\ntown from the swirling Po\" '\"\nRiver fldp'd wgtor.\nRovigo haa been a temporary\nhaven for thousands of villagers\ndriven from 200,1)00 acres of submerged farmlands in the fertile Po\nRiver valley. '\u25a0':\u25a0'.,\nAn air force plane bombed the\ndykes of a canal South of the. town\ntoday in a last-minute bid\/to divert\nthe water from' the town. But it\ncontinued to surge into the outskirts\nPf Rovigo tonight\n' Citizens gathered up a few belongings and headed North, away\nfrom the rain-swollen fraters.\nWORST FLOOD\nThe Wbrst floods .in North Italy's\nmodern history covered at least 15\nvillages today and claimed 94 persons dead or missing.\nPremier and Mrs. Alcide de Gas*\nperi were in the threatened city, 30\nmiles from the Adriatic .coast, on ah\ninspection trip. * .1\nThree feet of muddy water covered villages In the area, including\n\"The Town of the Mutilated,\" built\nfor Rovigo's wounded war veterans.\n[A spokesman said 74,000 acres of\nfarm land were flooded. Damage\nestimates were in the millions of\ndollars. A provincial legislator said\n30,000 cattle.have perished. .\nSmall boats and helicopters saved\n80 persons Isolated for 40 hours on\na bit'of high ground near Rovigo.\nTAKES 100 L|VES\nThe floods followed,several days\nof pelting rain. They came less than\na month after extreme South Italy,\nSardinia ahd Sicily were ravaged by\nother floods which took at least 100\nlives.*\" \u25a0 *    '   '-'\nThroughout the. whole of the Po\nValley weeping women and haggard\nmen lined thS*j*g|\u00bbiBd* stared out\nacross a, wastejjpMPflw.\nNo one knoWs now many .fer \u25a0 J.;st\ntheir homes, hut estimate! '\nhigh as ItKJiMft..;.;,,.\nWar Disabled\nSalmon Arm\nSchools\nCoast Man, Boy to\nIsland Leper Colony\nBENTINCK ISLAND LEPER\nCOLONY, B.C., Nov. 18 (CP) -\nThis dread lonely -island off the\nSouthern coast of Vancouver Island,\nhas two. new inhabitants, increas*\ning the total number of patients to\nfour.\nThe first two cases of leprosy\ndiagnozed in Vancouver in 10 years\nwere recently brought to the federal\nhospital here.\nBoth patients are Chinese, one a\n58-year-old man, the other a 16;\nyear-old boy.\nCanada's only other leper colony\nis at Tracadie, N.B.\nI Vancouver Man\nI Named\nMIAMiy* Fla., Nov. 16 (CP) \u2014\nErnest C. Carr of Vancouver, chairman of the British Columbia Milk;\nBoard, today was elected to the\nexecutive board cf the International\nAssociation of Milk Control Agencies.\nCourt Approves Will\nLOS ANGELES, Nov. 18 \"(CP) -\nR. Dwight Merrills plan for distributing the $12,500,008 estate of]\nThomas $: Lee was approved today]\nafter Superior Court rejected -\nclaim of a later will.\nThe planned settlement will divide equally $1,800,000 between two\nVancouver sisters, Eulalie, 20, and\nVirginia 22, unmarried daughters of\nwealthy lumberman Prentice Bloe*\n. These smiling faces belong to riflemen of\nthe 2nd Battalion Princess Patricia's Canadian\nLight Infantry as they take a last, lock at Korea\nreturned  to  Canada  Thursday  on  rotation  after\nmany months of combat In the battle areas of the\nKorean Peninsular-Central Press Canadian,\nfrom the door of a C-64 transport aircraft. They\n'VANCOUVER, Nov. IB (CP) ,**.\u2014\nThe British Columbia Appeal Court\ntoday brdered;the-Salmon-Arm district school board to open its schools\nto 510 students. *'.,\nThe, board had barred students\nfrom the municipality after rate*\npayers, in the ^municipality had\nvoted against paying a special tax\nto raise funds tor help keep the\nschools open.\nThe Salmon Arm school district;\ncomprises three areas \u2014 the city of\nSalmon Arm itself, the municipality\non the' city's outskirts and the rural\narea beyond'that.\nThe Provincial Government had\"|\nagreed to pay the rural areas, share\nof the extra $80,000 the'board said\nit needed to keep the schools'-open.\nThe city also agreed to pay Its share\nbut thevmunicipality refused.\nJack McCaig Named\nTruckers' President\nHARRISON HOT SPRINGS, BZ C.\nNov. 16 (CP)\u2014Jack McCaig of\nMoose Jaw, Sask., today was ejected president of the Canadian Automotive Transportation Association.\nHe succeeds John Veltch of WinnP-\npeg.\n\u2022v Other officers elected: Camilla\nArchambault, Montreal, first vice-\npresident; Jack Taylor, Calgary,\nsecond vice-president; H. F. Adams,\nChatham, Orit., secretary-treasurer.\nAubrey Gross, president of tht\nAssociation's British Colupibia section, was named C.A.T.A. delegate\nto the International Labor Office\nConference on Inland Transport at\nGenoa, Italy, Dec. 4-15.\nVISHINSKY CALLS\nFOR ATOMIC BAN\nGives Discrfmarnent \\.\nvpiarikBe^reU.N.v\nPARIS, Nov,*: 16 <CP)-Ru\u00bbila'\u00ab\nforeign minister . today called,\n\u2022gain, for an atomic ban In an\napparent effort to overtake Western Initiative In wprld disarms-\ngeneral debate before the United\nNations Assembly, a speech notably  free \\of  Invective,  Andrei\n- Vishinsky also urged adoption of\nthe old' Russian plan for a one-\nthird reduction In arms',\nVishinsky  added  the'  following\nplanks to a platform he put before J\nthe Assembly last week: ,\n1. A call for the Assembly to declare \u25a0 atomic weapons Instruments\nof aggression and to ban'their production immediately. The combined\nAtomic Energy. Commission and the\nCommission on Conventional Armaments, expected to be merged at\nthis session, would, report to the\nSecurity Council btf Feb. 1, 1952,\non details of this ban. \u25a0\n2. A demand for ithe five big\npowers \u2014 meaning 'ithe United\nStates, France, Britain, Russia and\nRed China \u2014 to reduce all armaments by one-third within a year.\n3. A demand that within one\nmonth after the Assembly approved the Soviet proposal all\ncountries \u2014 in or out of the U.N.\u2014\nwpuld supply full and complete\ndata on their armaments, including\natomic weapons.\n4. A call for creation of an international control'organ within the\nframework of the Security Council.\nThis means the Security Council\nveto could be used to block \"decisions of the control organ.\nWestern spokesmen pointed out\nthat these points have been debated thoroughly previously Within\nthe UN. and rejected by huge\nmajorities, usually gaining only\nSoviet bloc support.        ,\nllllllllllllllltlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSales Resistance       .\nHits Cigarette Staff\n(CP)\n\u2666tyOfjITREAL, Nov. 16\nMore than 200 tobacco workers\nwere laid off by Imperial Tobae-\n'co Company Limited at their Montreal plant today because many\nCanadian smokers * have retduced\nUj^l.r.cigaret'-purchases,    '*-,\nA total of 150 girls and 61 men\nWere involved In this morning's\nstaff cut,'according fo-offlclals of\nthij'sTobacco Worker*' l.nieril'itlon*\nly&to  .\"\u25a0 \"s.<-, ..v  T.\n'W*f\u00bbP6Ke\u00abman'f\u00abi'*)m\nArrow Lakes\nHunters Safe;\nWere You Counted\nWhen Census Taken?\n\u2022 Federal census figures for Trail .and Nelson are so far\nshort of population figures,enumerated by othey sources as\nto suggest that other communities may-have found the same\nsituation. To estimate if there is basis for appeal against the\nofficial compilations the Daily News is* conducting a census\nsurvey.\nCensus Survey:\nA Federal census taker did NOT call at my home\n.and I have checked with each member of my family \u2022\nto make sure.\nThere ar^ persons in my family.\n\u2022    _....:. '.  j (signature)\n    ,. -..., ... (address)\n52 Seek Seats \\n\nNfld. Election\nST. JOHNS. Nfld., Nov., 18 (CP)\n\u2014Premier gmallwiod's ruling Liberal party won two seats by acclamation and was expected to-take\ntwo more as candidates were* nominated today for the Newfound*\nland general election Nov. 28. Three\nNorthern districts have not yet re\nported. *       \u2022\nA total of 52 candidates filed\nnominations for the 28 member\nlegislature.\n*TH\nJailed Man Dies of\nAlcoholic Poisoning   '\n, NANAIMO, B.C., Nov. lft (OP) -r\nA coroner'* jury Thursday said Del-\nbert C. Heise, 51, died of natural\ncauses Saturday in the R.C.M.P.\nlockup here while in a state of intoxication.\nCoroner W. H. Jones said there\nwas evidence of Intoxication to the\npoint of a lethal'dose.\nR.C.M.P. officc-s testified Heise\nhad been taken io jail and charged\nwith driving while his ability to\ndrive was impaired by a.cohol after his car had been seen weaving\ndown a street.\nperlal said the lay-offs were due\nto tales resistance and the Com-\n\u2022 pany's concern'over Increased Inventories.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli\nNew Automobile\nVICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 16 (CP)\n\u2014Medical and hospital expenses\nare covered by a new automobile\nInsurance policy, which will become the standard for British\nColumbia motorists Jan. 1.\nThe new policy allows for\nblanket coverage against theft,\nfire, collision or upset, loss caused by missiles, falling objects,\nearthquakes, explosion, wind,\nhall, water, flood; vandalism and\nriofi\nThe medical payments clause\ncovers \"necessary medical, surgical, dental, ambulance, hospital,\nprofessional nursing and funeral\nservices\" for all occupants' of a\ncar Involved In an accident\nTragic Discovery    '\nBy Coast Wife\nVANCOUVER, Nov, 16 (qP) \u2014\nA horrified wife found her husband\ndead,' hanging from* a beam in the\nbasement of their home Thursday.\nMax Shore, 50,* was pronounced\ndead, oh arrival at hospital after,\nart Inhalator crew tried in vain to\nrevive him. Mrs,' Shore* cut her\nhusband down ahd called police,\nwho said Shore had been: in a depressed state of mind because of\nfinancial difficulties^'\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 16 (CP) -\nIt was only car trouble, two hunters believed lost for,' six days, reported today.., .\nHermhn. Moore, 48;.and\" Brill?\n..Friedli, 61, left here last weekend.\n\\ittt -a -hunting trip in the Arrow'\nCakes district,\nIVhen no word wAs. heard, from\n|;them by* Tuesday; Mrs. Moore noti*\nfled police. Moore spotted a newspaper account of the''preliminary\nsearch for him. and' his companion\nand phoned his wife today from\nHedley,\n\" The men had gone to Vernon\nSunday, leaving at 4:30 a.m. Monday In ah effort to get'over- the\nMonashee Pass. Icy roads caused\nthe car. to skid off the highway\nfour miles from Hedley and turn\nover twice.\n\u2014 Shaken up but not .hurt seriously the men righted the car.\nUnable to get chains., on, they returned to Lumby, \u2022*: remaining\nthere for two days while repairs\nto the.car were carried out\n-.It 'was then, they noticed the\nstory of the search. Moore said\nthey had instructed a passing\nmotorist at the accident-, scene to\nnotify their relatives in Nakusp of\ntheir, safety., but: the, message was\napparently not delivered.   '.,\n... .^,...\nIncreases to Be Effective in 1952;\nTo Drop Unempfbyability Supplements\n.OTTAWA, Nov. If (CP)\u2014Pension increases averaging\n\u25a0331\/3 per centfor Canada's 160,000 war disability pensioners,\n\u2022their wives. v,and war widows, were announced today l?y\n(\u2022Veterans Minister Lapointe. -\n;    .   He told the Commons the increases will become effective next year] the checks mailed at roe eh'tf of January tarry-\nling the new fates. *   i       \"\u25a0!,.\n:'.     At the Same time payment of the unemployment sup-\nfi\u2014r'   -    '..-.. .' *.* \u25a0.. \".~     ipiement,  begun  last \u25a0' June,\nLEAVE SUDAN\nI0U.H.-E6YPT\nBritain to Study\nProposal ' J\nOn Sudan Future\nBy JOHN RODERICK\nPARIS, Nov.! 16 (AP) \u2014 Egypt\nchallenged Britain In tha United\nNations today with a proposal that\nboth let the Sudan alone until i\nU.N. supervised election can de\nclde the future of the  million\nsquare-mile area,\nEgyptian Foreign Minister Mohamad Salah El Din said he was\ncertain Britain would not agree.\nA spokesman in London said Bri\ntain would think tl over,\nSalah El Din proposed lh the\nUN, Assembly's general debate that'\nthe U.N. run the Sudan \u2014 which\nBritain and Egypt have ruled jointly\nsince 1899 \u2014 until a.decision is made\nby vote bf the 8,000,000 Sudanese\npeople.' \",     '. .,\n-The proposal came as a.surprise\nto the U.N, onei.day 'after *King\nFarouk:was hailed in his parliament\nat Cairo as King of Egypt and\nSudan., - \u25a0     s  .',\nEgypt' and Britain each has .1000\nto11500 trodps-^h the Sudan, but\nBritain, commands 'the ' several\nthousand Sudanese police * 'troops.\nThe a'diwHistrttlott'is run by tfBHi\ntish governor \u2014 General, Sir Robert\nHowe. .\";.'-.-' \\;A';X::<': '\u25a0\u2022 '  '': :\nDrugstore Bandits\nGet 9 Years Jail\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 18 (CP) \u2014 |\nA drugstore holdup last July 14 sent\nPeter -Baziw, 23,'-and- Ralph-'Cbch-\nrane, 24, to the' penitentiary today\nfor nine years.\n\"If this sort of crime continues, the\nday may come.when the court will\nimpose life sentences,\" Mr. Justice\nA.' M<* -Manson said in -Assize Court\nwhen he passed sentence.\nFarmers Not Looking\nFor Hand-Out\nREGINA, Nov. 16 (CP)-Saskat-\nchewan Wheat Pool delegates told\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner today that a large number of Saskatchewan farmers need financial\nassistance because of inability to\nharvest or market their crops. But\nthey we\u00a5re not looking for a handout.\nMr. Gardiner addressed the delegates briefly, then called upon\nWheat Pool spokesmen to outline\nthe harvesting and marketing posi\nGov't Ban on Export of Dollars lo\nRed (bind Noi Feasible-Sinclair\nOTTAWA, Nov. 18 (CP)*\u2014James\nSinclair, parliamentary assistant to\nFinance Minister Abbott, told tbe\nCommons today the Government\nhas considered a ban on the export\nof dollars to Communist China and\nother iron curtain countries, but\nhas decided such action would not\nbe feasible.    - ... :\nG. K. Fraser (PC \u2014 Peterborough\nWest) had suggested such action be\ntaken on the ground of reports that\nChinese living in.Canada, and with\ntion and to indicate the type of relatives in China, are being \"black'\nassistance they believe needed.        mailed\" for money by the Chinese\nPermits are running at thriie or\nfour a month, No permit is required, for'exports of less than $100.\n\" He suggested that a ban. on exports would; work hardship, on a\ngreat many Chinese, particularly in\nBritish Columbia, who for years\nHave sent small remittances to their\nparents ln China.\nSanger's Health\nCertificate Lost\n\"NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C Nov.\n18; .(CP)\u2014 A prison guard may have\nused Daniel Leroy Sanger's health\ncertificate for a \"scratch, pad,\" Oak-\nalia Prison Warden John Mllljnan\ntdld a court of inijuiry yesterday.\nWarden Mlllmah said a iearch.for\nthe missing certificate was ordered\nby the Attorney-General but it was\nunsuccessful.    *       '\u2022   \u25a0-:.\n\u25a0Records - Clerk. William: S. Allan\nassured the judge that the proper\ncertificate accompanied, the deceased and he said he was certain\nit was signed by a doctor.\nAuxiliary Services j\nIn Korea Pressed  i.\n5 OTTAWA, \u25a0;Nbv. IB (CP)\u2014Progressive Conservative and ,_C.C.F,\nmembers pressed, the Government\nagain in the Commons today to provide.' recreational and educational\nservices.for the Canadian troops\nfighting-in bleak Korep, i>       \/'\nGovernment)\nMr.t Sinclair said the Finance\nDepartment has no knowledge of\nsuch blackmail or extortion  and\nhas noticed ho increase in permits,.,,   .     -,  - ,.       _. .,, <       .    .\nfor the export.of dollars to China.jMbnday: for the establishment of\nStep-Up Seaways Plan\n-. OTTAWA, .Nov. 16 (C^)\"\u2014 The\nCanadian Government' today tookj\nanother step towards launching the\nSt. Lawrence Seaway without the\nfinancial help of the United States.\n. Transport Minister Chevrier gave\nthe' Commons notice that he will\nmove the creation oi a $300,000,000\n''St. Lawrence Seaway Authority\"\nto build and operate the navigation\nphase of the big shipping-power\nproject, on the river and Grear|\nLakes;\nThe Minister .notified tile House\nhe will propose a-resolution next\nthe corporation, which would be\nempowered to borre\u00ab[ up -to $300,-\n000,000 and. to set tolls foi} shipping\niislhg the waterway.\na Wi'\u00ab \u00a3v,eI-\u00bb*'Nelson'.--Wednes-\nday 7.65, Friday 7.65.  .\nMONTREAL, Ndv, 18 (CP)\u2014Opposition to appointment of a Canadian envoy to the Vatican was\nvoiced today at closing sessions, of\na four-day meeting of the Canadian\nCouncil of Churches.\nDelegates to the council, which\nrepresents some 85 per cent of non-\nRoman Catholics in Canada, unanimously passed a resolution opposing such a move, saying they did\nnot recognize the Roman Catholic\nChurch as a political power!\nAmong its final resolutions were\ntwo calling bn the Federal Government \"to consider favorably, without delay such measures as would\nrestore the price of basic foods and\ndther necessities\" and to provide\n\"decent housing for people earning\nmoderate or low wages and salaries through an effective public\nhousing program ...\"\nThe foods resolution stated the\ndollar now is worth about 52 cents\nin comparison with its average value between 1935 and 1930.\nThe housing resolution asked a\nsystem of priorities for scarce\nbuilding materials to assure enough\nmaterial for defence without interfering with low-cost home building.\n' Another resolution expressed appreciation of the Canadian Government's intention of giving $10,000,-\n000 worth.of wheat\"to India.\nwill be dropped.\nThe minister said the Increases\nhad been decided on by the Gdv-\nernrhent after ' careful consideration of various veterans organizations' petitions >ylilch *, urged a \/\nstraight 33 1\/3-per-cent increase.\nThey will add another $27,916,885 to\nthe war pensions bill. The present\ncost is $06,697,683 a year.\nTHE NEW RATES!\n1. The basic 100-per-cent disability pension for a single Army\nveteran up to the rank of captain\n' Is Increased to $125 a month from\n$94. A 60-per-cent pensioner get*\none-half of those amounts, a 10-\nper-cent pensioner 1\/10th. .\/\n2. Allowance for a total disability pensioners wife Increased\nto $45 from $31.\n3. Allowance for the first child\nIncreased to $20 from $19. Rates\nfor other children\u2014$15 for second\nchild and $12 for eaoh. subsequent child\u2014remain unchanged.\n.4. Personal penSlon of a war\nwidow Increased to $100 from $75\n\u00ab month, : ,\nS. Additional pension for war\nwidow's flrat-child Increased to\n$40 a month' from.$38. Rates for\nother children \u2014 $30,for,second\nchild and $24 for each  subse.\nfluent child\u2014remain, unchanged.\n. Mr. Lapointe.Bald' in suspending\nthe   unemployability    supplement\nPayment of $40 a month to* married\n45rP!5r-cent: disability:  pensioner?\nand.$20,a month for single 35-percent disability pensioners, it was\nfelt the jsujmlement had; served its\npifffosev I\" was'-tntroducaB '.thi? '\nyear as yen -interim meansirfyelieV-'\ning the pressure of living costs on\npensioners.        --*.        \u25a0\u2022*. v'-'v,\n$170. FOR TO*TAL.DI8ABl,5D\nUnder present, \u2022 rates va total-\ndisability married pensioner gets\n$125 a month and $40 additional if\nunemployed; Under the'.new .rate's\nhe would get $170 a month. A\nsiiftle total-disability pensioner\nwith a $20 supplement now receives\na* total of $114 a month. The new\nscale would give him $125 without\nthe supplement. .\n' Questioned about the possibility'\nof. increasing the war veterans\nallowance, Mr. Lapointe said the\nquestions had no relation to tha\nmatter under discussion.   .*!V.\nHowever, plans already are under\nway for a special Commons, committee to study allowance changes\nat the next session of Parliament.\nAny changes could be made retroactive tb January, 1952.'      '\u2022*\"\nRoughly 200,000 war disability\nchecks are mailed each month.\nThey go tb 161,00,0 veterans, 20,000\nwidows, 125,000 children and 12,000\ndependent parents.\nU. S. Railways Get\nMail Pay Increase\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 18 (AP) \u2014\nThe United States Interstate Commerce Commission today granted\nrailroads an increase of about 32\nper cent in mail pay rates. The increase was estimated to give the\ncarriers about 74,899,000 more a year\nfor hauling the mails.\nALTA. STUDENTS FAVOR\nRUSSIAN VISITORS\n! EDMONTON,. Nov. 15 (CP) -r\nThe students' council' pf the Unl-\nversity of Alberta has unanimously\nVICTORIA, BiC, Nov. 16 (CP) \u2014 | passed a resolution favoring a, tour\nProposed sale of 100,000,000 board of Canada* by Russian students.\"\nfeet of mature timber located in Council members felt that Canada\nthe city's watershed is being con- had nothing to lose by encouraging\nsldered by the greater Victoria an exchange of students between the\nWater Board, *        > two countries.\nAnd in This Corner\n* * *\nBELLA COOLA, B.O., Nov. 16-(CP)\u2014Another case of mistaken\nIdentltyi -,\u2022\u2022- . .\nLoggers Stennor Saugstad,\" .Bill Harestad and Stewart Brown\nBrown spotted a bear while driving fo work In a small truck.    ..   \" '\nThe dark-colored bear was hunting grubs In an old log.      v\nThinking it a mild-mannered black bear, the loggers stopped and\ndecided to chase It va a tree..\n\u25a0   One of them whacked the* bear across the rump with a stick.\nBruin turned. The loggers didn't have to look twice to know It\nwas a grizzly. \/\nThe men dove Into the truck, the'bear after them. There was a\npanicky moment, when the motof refused to catch. The bear scraped\nthe cab door at the truck shot away.\nSaugstad got a rifle from a nearby farm and shot the bear, It had\nbeen wounded previously,.he found, and wasn't able to move quickly.\nOTTAWA, Nov. 16 fCP)\u2014Good news, school kids.\nD. J. Hynes, Public School Inspector-for Glfengarry County, told a\nregional teachers meeting today that keeping students after school is\nan outmoded form of punishment.\n\"'\" A school is not a jail he said. And children should not be made to\nthink it is by making their punishment rake the form of detention.\nJACKSON, Mich.; Nov. 16 (AP)\u2014The college registrar, Barbara\nFausell, pofed as \"Mits Bikini of 1895\" and earned $20.\nHer contribution was only one In an unusual campaign by which\nJackton Junior College raited $276 for bookt for foreign students.\nDean William N. Atkinson got $5 for pressing a student's trousers,\nW. P. Rayner, English Instructor, was paid $31.90 for a hula dance.\nAnd a male ttudent handed over $7 for tho pleasure of teaching th?\ngirls'swimming class for a day.\n -T^^-~wmmf\u2014:\nmaaaaam\n2'\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, NOV. IT, 1951\nLAST TIMES TODAY -^SheWi \u00abt 2.00 - 7:00 - 9:00\n\u00a3\u00b1\u00a3*\nWere Comes\nme Groom,\n9\nLateit\nWorld News\nSPECIAL MATINEE MONDAY AT 2:00 P.M\n'M\nost forbidden of\nthe world's\npeat\nlovestories!,\nMIGHTY AS OOUATH I\ntimnstuoui m mm\nLOVI FUMINQ ACROSS\n3000YIARSI\nAND\ngfATHSHiBA\n1\"echnicolor\nGREGORY PECK-SUSAN HAYWARD\n-RAYMOND MASSEY   \/'\u2014\"-DARRYL F. 2ANUCK\n*-**>HENRYKING\nPrices: Matinee\u2014Adults 75\u00abi     Children 50^\nEvening\u2014Adults $1.00   .Children 50<S, Tax Inc.\n*'\nWilliam Holmgre\nPatient in Hospital\nWilliam Holmgren, Consulting\nforester in Nelson, fainted while\noh Baker Street Friday morning\nahd was taken to Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital where he was .reported by his family to be resting\ncomfortably Friday night     . '\nMr. '\/Holmgren, employed In the\nNeUWfiHtt^'or the B.Q JPorest\nService for more than 25 yisarsy has\nbeen consulting forester in Nelson\nsince retiring about five years ago.\nA Treat.\nFor You and Your Friends '\nCHINESE DISHES.\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelion\n* LLOYD CROWL\nHONORED\nTRAIL, B.C. \u2014 J. Lloyd Crowe,\nretiring chairman of the board of\nstewards, was honored at the\nmonthly meeting of the Knox\nA.O.T.S. club'Tuesday.      y\nA. ft B. Cooper on behalf of the\nboard-presented Mr. Crowe with* a\nsmoking jacket.    \u2022\n.Guest speaker C. H. Simpkinson,\na member of the development staff\nof Cominco, spoke on the structure\nof the atom and gave a visual\ndemonstration with colored disks,\nsmoke and lights of what is believed to happen within* an atom.\nFather of Kimberley\nWoman Dies at Coast\nNorroan William Burdett of Vancouver, father of Mrs. J. R. Buchanan ot Kimberley, died at the coast\nNovember 14 at the age of 64.\nSurviving is his wife, one son,\nRaymond at home, two daughters,\nMrs. 'Buchanan of Kimberley and\nMrs. J. C. Hall of Springs,.Transvaal\nS.A.; three brothers, one sister and\nfour grandchildren.\nN.A.H.A: Gets\nAdoption of the pool system, has\nImproved competition and . sportsmanship In thp Nelson Amateur\nHockey Association, President B.\niJA 'Crawford: (to)d ;the Junior\nChamber of Commerce Friday\nnight,-       -   ! -.\".   \"\u25a0\nUntil putting this system into\npractice last year, lop-sided scores\nwere common and difficulties with\nsponsorship were many, Crawford\ntold the club at a regular business\nmeeting. The system was proving\npopular lh other part; of B.C. as\nwell, he added.\nMr, Crawford was presented with\na check* for $80 from the Jaycees\nfor the furtherance of the NiA.H.A.\noperation. In thanking the'club he\nsaid he was gratified that others'\nwere showing an interest in. minor\nhockey and said the money would\nbe used to help buy new sets of\nsweaters for the teams. -\nHe said the main aim of the\nassociation was to foster sports*\nmanship and to this end he .hoped\nfor closer, friendlier relations between minor puck groups In Trail,\nKimberley qnd Nelson.\nFirst pre Goes\nFroni Delaware\nCRESTON, B. C-Flrst shipment\nof ore from the Delaware Mine,\nowned and operated by Frank and\nRobert Crawford, was made earlier\nthis week. '\u25a0\nThree truckloads were sent to\nKellogg, Idaho, for smelting.\nIf the ore comes up to expectations, further shipments will be\nmade.\nRUMMAGE SALE\nTo Be Held In\nTHE SALVATION ARMY\n613 VICTORIA 8T.\nToday, November 17\ni        9:oo to 12:00 \u2014 1:00 to 4i00\nPROCEEDS IN AID OF\nSALVATION ARMY SOCIAL WELFARE AND RELIEF FUND\nMOVING\nNT^L'   FROM\nHouse to House?\nTown to Town?\nProvince to Province?\nCall ARROW VAN & STORAGE LTD.\nto (landle your moves.\n_AJLR_fi_W\/.--With^*tfoeir .experienced\nemployees, ond fhodern, 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\nLTD.\nPHONE\n1106\nARROW\n7.12 STANLEY ST.\nVan & Storage Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nBLAME CHRISTIANS\nFOR RED INCREASE\nMONTREAL, Nov. 18, (CP)-Rev.\nWalter -Van Kirk of New York\nThursday night said historians\nwould have a . difficult time explaining the rapid spread of Communism from 1939 to 1951 while\nChristianity barely; managed; to.\n(hold its own.\nSpeaking at the night session of\nthe Canadian Council of Churches\nat its eighth annual convention\nhere, Mr. Van Kirk- said \"it will\nbe difficult to explain the spread\nof Communism to embrace millions of persons and 11 countries,\nwhile Christianity, with a much\nricher gospel, barely managed to\nhold its own.'1\nHe added: \"Christians practice\nspiritual isolationism. The total\nChristian population gave. less, towards evangelization iasT year than\nthe Methodist Church in the United\nStates paid for its own expenses.\n\"Communism embraced ' seven\nper cent of 'the total land area of\nthe world in 1939, and now embraces 39 per cent. Christians have\nabandoned their spirit of stewardship, and this is why Communism\nhas been successful.\"\nFowler's Goal Gives\nSaskatoon Draw\nEDMONTON, Nov. it (CP) -\nTommy Fowler's goal with less than\ntwo minutes, to go prevented Edmonton Flyers from tying Saskatoon\nQuakers for fourth place as the two\nclubs battled to a feverish 1-1 deadlock at the Edmonton Gardens to*\nnight.\nNearly 0000 fans saw Frankie Ku<\nbasek open the scoring for the home\njclub after four minutes of the\nthird period off Pat Coburns rebound. *\nFrom then on the Quakers poured\nunrelenting pressure, on Flyers and\ngoalie Bill Brennan, bidding for his\nfirst shutout pf the season. Brennan was forced to make a series of\nsaves in the final stanza that verged\non the miraculous.\nBut at 18:22, Fowler shot the -puck\nby him vrhen he. was off balance\nafter saving from George Senick,\n6 Million Douglas\nFir Seedling Planted\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 16 (CP) \u2014\nThe Provincial Forest Service this\nyear has planted more than 6,000,000\nDouglas Fir seedlings in its reforest*\nation program, it was announced\ntoday. -*\nThe Fall planting program ended\nthis week with almost 1,500,000\nseedlings planted on logged and\nburnt-over land ' op\" Vancouver\nIsland.   '\u25a0\u25a0.       \";\/-.' :'\u25a0'.-\" '\u2022.\u25a0' ;'..\u201e\nTo Make Margarine\nAt Saskatoon\nREGINA, Nov. Iff (CP> \u2014 Saskatchewan Federated Cooperatives\nin cooperation with the Saskatchewan Dairy Pool will manufacture\nmargarine at Saskatoon for distribution through cooperative stores,\nPresident George Urwin said today.\nMachinery had already been as-,\nsembled ln one building at Saskatoon and a carload of vegetable oil\nwas on the way to the plant..\nTractor Kills Youth\nDRUMHELLER,' Alta., Nov. 16\n(CP)\u2014Glenn Presho, 18, Edmonton\nconstruction worker, died tonight\nin hospital from injuries received\non a construction project,\nPresho was working for the Nu-*\nWest Construction Co. of Edmonton\non the Michichi Creek diversion\nwhen a 40-ton dragline tractor ran\nover the lower, part-of his body.\nHe died Stt hours after admittance\nto hospital.   \u201e\n* ' *j* * .    \u25a0\nThe jinns or djlhns, a class of\nspirits in- Arabian mythology, are\nbelie\\gd to have been superstitions\nlong before Solomon's tint*.\nZVQMUNT LEO FJOCERtoWICZ\n.'-'* \u2022<. who Is finding In Nelson a\nnew opportunity tox make his\nhomo In a free country. Tho 22-\nyear-old Polish youth, who was\nfound deportable by Immigration,\nauthorities, has been granted a\nfive year opportunity to prove\n'himself a good citizen. He may\nthen make another application\nfor Canadian citizenship.\nLeo claims to have undergone\nall the terrors of Buchenwald,\nGerman war-time concentration\ncamp. He entered Canada Illegally\ntwo years ago seeking a home\naway from the fear of balgg deported to Communist-occupied\nPoland. i\nLeo Is now employed with a\nlocal bakery firm.\u2014Vogue photo.\nScheme to Reclaim\nYoung Criminals in\nForests Successful\nVICTORIA, B.C,; Nov. 16 (CP)-\nA bold scheme conceived by For*\neats Minister E, T, Kenney of British Columbia to reclaim young\ncriminals has passed its first test\nwith flying colors.\n\u25a0 Eleven youths, 18 to 22 years old,\nwere taken from Oakalla Prison at\nVancouver last Summer and put to\nwork-in a forestry camp in the\nMonashee Pass.\nThe youths helped build forest\nroads, felled trees and slashed out\nright-of-way under direction of a\nForest Service foreman and a pro\nbation officer.\nThey were paid $3 a day j!lus\nboard. Fifty cents a day was\nallowed as expense money,.the re\nmainder being held.back until dis\nchargp.\nWhen forest fires broke out in\nthe area, the youths went into the\nfire lines. The probation report\nsaid: \"They worked long hours ahd\nmade a favorable impression with\nmen'wlth -whom .they worked.\"\nThe; ForesteDepartment reported\ntoday each yoiith had received If a\nor three offers of jobs from lofegtng\ncompanies. One company telephoned Mr. Kenney and offered to take\nsix. \u25a0       '>'\nGolden Man Dies   '\nSuddenly on Hunt\nGOLDEN, B.C. \u2014 Death of Nor.\nman Pratt, 81, of Golden occurred\nsuddenly during a hunting trip in\nthe Palliser Valley. With Alex\nLindgren and John Thorson he had\nmotored to the hunting country and\nthe three- separated planning tb return to the car by dusk. When he\nfailed to return'the others searched\nthe area and found him dead\nwithin a mile of the car.\n'He had come here in, 1945 and\nhad been .a mechanic at the Golden\nMotors since then. He had driven\nthe new Goldeh fire truck West\nfrom Stratford, Ont., a few weeks\nago. He was born in' Churchill,\nOnt., and served nearly four years\nwith the R.CA.F. prior to coming\n\u2022here to make his home.\nHis wife and son, Edwin,-survive him at Golden, and a brother\nand sister in Toronto. The body\nwas seht to Toronto for burial.\nInvermere Group\nPlans Programs\nINVERMERE, B. G\u2014Music and\nArts committee, of Board of Management of Lake Windermere Mem\norial Community Hospital is busy\nwith, plans for entertainment of\ndistrict people this.Winter. ,\nA community concert designed to\ntake the. place of school concerts\nwhen these are considered too large\nan. enterprise \\ Js planned. Each\nschool will be asked to contribute\nitems, .and convener will be Mrs,\nBeverley Harris of Windermere, assisted by Mrs. William Durham of\nInvermere. Aperies of monthly programs to continue a series presented\nlast year will start ln December.\nOkanagan Apples\nfor Britain ,\nReady\nKELOWNA, B.C., Nov. 16 (CP)~\nSome 500,000 boxes of Okanagan\napples are ready for shipment to\nthe United Kingdom, A. K. Loyd,\nPresident of B.C. Tree Fruits \"Ltd.,\nsaid today. Another 170,000 boxes\nnow are en route to the U.K.. .\n1 Mr. Loyd said he had no reason\nto think that any of the commitments made for Canadian apples\nthis season would be cancelled because of-the-British drive .to cut\ndollar expenditures,     f        ...\nbeer-guzzling moose\nKilled by hunter\nREID LAKE, B.C., Nov\/6 (CP)\u2014\nElmer, beer-guzzling pet moose belonging to Mrs. 3ert Pedersori, has\nbeen killed by a hunter's bullet\nElmer was about' 18 months old\nand was raised by. 'the Pedersons\non milk, beer and fable scraps, was\nbroken to harness and followed Mrs.\nPederson around like a pet dog.   I\nLast year> Elmer was the main\nfeature of the^Domlnlon Day parade\nin this town 400 miles North of\nVancouver.\nJudge Bwwson j|tttirfs Creston\nAs New Gbwity CtiiM Opens\nJimmie Davidson\nRetiring Ferry\nOperator, Feted\n'CASTLEGAR, B.C. '\u2014 Castlegar\nchamber of commerce Thursday\nevening paid tribute to Jimmie\nDavidson, well known Castlegar-\nRobson ferryman whose retiring\nafter'33 years on the ferry. ,\n\"Little Jimmie,\" as he is known,\nhas been on the ferry since 1919\nfor 33 years without missing a day\nfor sjckness.\nPresident William Waldie pres\nented him with a smoking stand on\nbehalf of the Chamber.\nEdgar Jamieson, district public\nworks superintendent, spoke of the\nold days when the ferry \\Vas not\non, a regular schedule, and the\ncheerful Work Mr. Davidson- did\neven when roused'at \"all hours to\nput someone across the river, ,\n,, District engineer- of public works,\nH. T. Mlard of Nelson, also spoke\nof Mr. Davidson's wonderful public\nservice.\nA letter from R. W. Diamond,\nvice president and general manager, extending personal best\nwishes.and those of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company\ncommended him on his'work. It\nwas-read,.by Mr, Mason.      ... '\nIt wag announced that Mr. Davidson will make his final trip on the\nferry at 2;30.'p.m. November 23.\nHe and Mrs, Davidson will live\nin Vancouver upon his retirement.\nFormer Longbeach\nResident\nDies in Ottawa\nA former Lphgbeach rancher,'Sgt\nHugh (Bill) Sykes, .53, Royal Canadian Mounted Police, died in Ottawa Oct 31, friends have been\nadvised. \u2022\"\nSergeant. Sykes, whose home was\nat 9 Huron Avenue, in Ottawa, purchased a ranch at Longbeach and\nlived there for several'years shortly\nafter World War 1. He then joined\nthe H.C.M.P., reaching the rank of\nsergeant before his death.\nHe is survived by his wife. Funeral service was held Nov. 2, Rev. W.\nR. Wright officiatfhg. Interment was\nin Baechwood cemetery in Ottawa.\n$17,2Sa> U.B.C.\nFrom Alumni Assoc.\nVANCOUVER;;Nov.-16 (PP),,- A\ncheck for $17,260 was presented to\nUniversity of B.C. by U.B.C Alumni\nAssociation at their annual dinner\nmeeting here Thursday.\nPresentation was made .on behalf\nof members by retiring fund-\nchairman Kenneth P. Capble to\nDean S. N. F. Chant, acting president in the absence of Dr. N. A. M.\nMacKenzie who is in New York.\nCheck represents this year's contribution by U.B.C.'s Alumni toward university funds.\nAnnual meeting was attended by\n150 members of the Association and\nwas under chairmanship of retiring\npresident James A. MacDonald.\n0aul Iffi. WiiL\nTJtaAuutmvduL\nHOLIDATE-BAIT i\nHERE, Teenej is your pet skirt\nand your pettiskirtl Plus a honey\nof a little blousel This outfit* is particularly smooth done in velveteen\nand a mad plaid taffeta in your favorite color combo. Make it your\nHoliday Special outfit!\nPattern 9252 in Teen sizes 10.\n12, 14, 16. Size* 12 blouse, petticoat, 4 yards 38-inch; skirt 3%\nyards 35-inch nap.\n.This easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\n, Send THIRTY. FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coin; (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS STYLE\nNUMBER.     '\nSend your order toM MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of NeJbn Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B.C\nCRESTON, B. C.-T In the first\ncase to be held in: Preston's'hew\nCounty court, a' Nelson man won\nhis appeal against conviction on a\ncharge of hunting after, hours.\nHis Honor Judge E. P. Dawson\nfound Fred Carmlchael not guilty\nafter his solicitor, W. P. Kapak of\nNelson, counsel, had shown that\nCarmlchael had used standard sunset.1 times os \"does the Game Department, ahd the game warden\nwho laid the charge had timed the\naction by the sun sinking over the\nmountain.\nCarmiichael was convicted Oct. 2\nafter hunting on Creston flats, and\npaid a $25 fine.\nArt Reid* and Erie Halliwell, also\nof Nelson, who appealed, had their\nfines reduced from $25 to $10. They\nhad pleaded guilty when the cases\nwere first heard.\n. The cases amounted to retrials.\nRaymond Cooper of Creston appeared for the Crown.\nA   court   registry   was   opened\nhere in October, and the appeals\nwere the first to be heard here.\nJudge Dawson told the court\nthat Cresfon's progressive spirit\nand thriving Industries had bttr\\\nfactors In decision to'set up a-\ncounty court here. He congratulated   Creston   people   on   their\ncommunity.\nC. B. Garland, K.C., of Nelson,\n, first lawyer \\o practice in'CrSs-\nton, also spoke, and Guy Constable expressed the gratitude of\nCreston   residents   In . eatabllsh-\nment of the court Roy Allen, formerly of Nelton, the first registrar, was in attendance, and W. J.\nSturgeon, court registrar at Nelson, was also present, -\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nBERLIN\u2014Berths Ganzlin, 106.\nBRANTFORD, Ont t*4 J: Campbell Dafoe, 54, International* auditor\nfor the Canadian Order of Foresters,\nPROVIDENCE, R,I> X Gapt.\nGeorge McVay, 71, pilot and master\nof two steamers involved in disasters to cost a total ot 200 lives,\nGLENDALE, Calif, '-r Thomas\nCrawford Hill, 51, veteran artist\nand newspaper cartoonist\nCOCHRANE, Ont \u2014 Magistrate\nE. R, Tucker, about 65, Northern\nOntario\" \"Flying Magistrate\" and\nchampion of Indian welfare.   .\nLONDON \u2014 Mai. Gen. Norman\nK.''J6Uey, 57, secretary of the Imperial Defence College.\nNEW YORK - Dr.-Mary Kingsbury Simkhovitch, 84, educator of\nsocial worker\/\nPublisher Deplores\nCurrent Education\n.VANCOUVER, Nov, 16 (CP) -\nThe^puWisheri.of th?;;Victoria-Daily\nTimes said Thursday that current\nmethods of \"assembly line education\" are not producing educated\npeople.   ..'y\nStuart Keate was addressing the\nannual meeting of the University\nof British Columbia Alumni Association.\n\"Today we have learned to blow\nourselves up, but we have not\nlearned, to get along with each\nother,\" he said.'   t> '\nLONDON (CP) - Captain Scott's\nAntarctic expedition ship, the Discovery, is being fitted with new\n.masts of spruce supplied by a Canadian lumber firm. Dry rot has\nweakened the old masts.\n* HURLEY, Berkshire, England\n(CP) \u2014Farmers in this ^district\nwill no longer dread coming home\nto fill in government forms after a\nday's work in the fields. Institutes\nare teaching women how to'handle\ntheslr husbands' paper work.-        *\nJunior Pupils\nIn Recital\nTwepty-four young students of\nthe piano, violin and singing, Friday took part in the junior recital in\nTrinity United Church basement\nsponsored by Nelson Branch of the\nB.C. Federation of Music Teachers\nthe first of the season.\nMrs.' Bain Oliver, president, introduced the pupils. The piano students were all in grades I to IV of\nthe Royal Conservatory.\nThe next recital, one by intermediate pupils, will be held in the\nnew year, and pupils of senior\ngrades who are In school, will be\nheard later in the season.\nPupils participating in the junior\nrecital were Iris Muirhead, Fred\nMcClelland, Beverley Matheson,\nUella Bates, Jean Street, Don Livingstone, Arnold Bates, Marlene Der,\nFrances Eberle, Carol Clark, Alex\nHanna, Heather McLeod, Benny\nMonteleone, Rhoda Smith, Robina\nMcFadden, Neil' McEachern, Jay\nPaterson, Lynne Mclvor,' Jo-Ellen\nKary, Judith Godfrey, Elaine Og-\nden, Billy Lambert, Tannls Foxall\nand Michael Horswill.\nTrail leeks\nCompletion of\nFriiilvale link\nTRAIL, B.C. \u2014 Trail Chamber\nof Commerce has backed Salmo\nBoard of* Trade in its appeal -.for,\nextension., of Fruitvale-Salmo road\nconstruction contract\nA letter has gone to Hon; E. C.\nCarson, provincial minister of public worlds, asking that contractors\ncontinue work through the Winter\nto enable early 1952 completion ot\nthe entire road. ...'\nA seven-mile section Southwest\nof Salmo remains to be fixed up; ahd\nit is this section for which the\nboards want extension of contract\nLAST RITES HELD\nAT CRANBROOK    .\nFOR J. W. CARLSON\nCRANBROOK, B.' C\u2014 Funeral\nservices were held here Friday\nafternoon for John W. Carlson,\nwell-known retired lumber worker\nwho died Tuesday at the age of 77\nyears, Rev. Cyril Clarke officiated\nat the services at McPherson Funeral' Home and interment was in\nWestlaWn cemetery.   \"\nMr. Carlson was born Johann\nKarlsson in Sweden and came to\nCanada and* Cranbrook in 1909\nwhere he engaged in lumber work,\nmostly.at Bull River. He came to\nCranbrook in 1931 and retired several years later. His health had\nbeen poor for the past three years',\nand he suffered injuries ifi a fall\nat home about 10 days ago. He aws\nu member of the Scandinavian\nBrotherhood.\nHe is survived by his wife at\ntheir home here, a daughter Mrs.\nThyra Sklllicorn of Abbotsford, a\nsonj Torie Carlson of Port Alberni\nand one grandson.\n54lh Vel Dies\nAf New Denver\nNEW DENVER, B.C., \u2014 A veteran\nof the 54th (Kootenay) ,Battalion,\nMartin Kennedy, has died In*hia\n64th year. '\u2022'*. '*: -.;.\"*.'*..'     im\n\u25a0 Born in Golden, he came to New\nDenver-at the ageof 10 arid lived\nhere most of his life. He served\nfour yearf overseas in the First\nWorld War.\nHe is survived by his wife, Lillian,\none daughter, Irene at Kamloops,\nand three sons, Roy in England,\nWilliam at Trail and Norman in the\nRoyal Canadian Navy.\nFINAL RITES HELD\nFOR NELSON MAN\nReqUiem mass, for Stephen Horak\nwas held at Sacrid Heart Church in\nNelson Friday mortiing,'Rev,-Father\nPeter Shewchuk officiating. Rosary\nwas recited in the Thompson Suner-\nal Home by Father Shewchuk\nThursday evening. *\nPallbearers were'F. T. Hunter, J.\nApostolluk, Pete.Wirstiuk, Alex Lo-\nbay, and John Ijhatiuk.        _\nInterment was,in Nelson Memorial Park..  \u2022      X    '\nMr. Horak, fprmer resident of\nCranbrook and** Creston, die\/1 at\nMount St. Francis Infirmary Tuesday at the age of 91,\nCreston Councillors\nTo Seek Rfeelection\nCRESTON, B,6C.-Charles Perry\nand Don Morrison,-whose terms of\noffice bn the village council expire\nthis year, will ..both stand for reelection, n\nElections have been set for December 13.      .:\nThe Weather\nSynopsis: Along the South coast\narid In the Southern Interior will\nbe somewhat colder.\nNELSON  29    45 \u2014\nMontreal    .   :  33    39 .32\nOttawa   29    35 .20\nToronto   .................... 33 ' * 40 .01\nWinnipeg  in    22 ,11\nBrandon        5 , 17 .,04\nHegma                  ...,'.()    13 .07\nSaskatoon             ... .4    20 Tr\nLethbridgp       '     . 11     27 .01\nCalgary            ; 9    22 \u2014\nEdmonton                    , 5     is .01\nVancouver   . .         . Ti    44 \u2014\nVictoria         '.  .   >. ' j(|    47 \u201e\nKimberley     -           . 5-.*27 ,   \u2014\nCrescent ViJley '. . 10    36 \u2014\nKaslo   .                   '. 18     32 \u2014\nPrince. Rune*r - 33    42 .05\nGrand Folks           . 14    31 \u2014\nSpokane        ............. 19    35 \u2014\nNew York    .         * * 33    57 .60\nWhitehorse   ...::..:'.....:... -6      B .01\nEast Kootenay Nurses\nReturn From Bermuda\/\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-MiSs ihes\nDeCecco of Cranbrook and Miss-.\nEdria Pachara of Fernie returned\"\nto their homes>in-this(d4stricti Tuesday after a year in Bermuda Where\nthey Were both staff members bf\nKing Edward VII Memorial Hospital;    . ,\nBoth are graduates of St. Eugene\nTraining School here which no\nlonger operates.       >\nThey made the most bf their return journey travelling by way of\nNassau; Bahamas, to New York on\na cruise, then circling the Southern\nhalf of the continent by bus to visit\nWashington, D.C, the Gulf Coast,\nthe Grand Canyon, Southern California and the West coast. They plan\nto resume their profession after a\nholiday at their'homes',';*\nG. H.JONG\n30 years experience   '\nIn Canada-\nChinese Herb. Remedies\nFor   stomach,   bladder, ;\nsinus, nervous and skin\n.!\u2022\u25a0 ..-\u25a0<   trouble.\n8I7A 1st. St. East. Calgary, Alta.\nenjoyed by\neveryone\nbut\nAPPRECIATED\nby those\nwho H know\nCONTENT*\nWi OZS.\nAs warrting as the company of an old friend\n... the gentle bouquet of Dewar's.carrie^\nIn it the subtle hint of the heather, Small\n\u25a0   wonder that connoisseurs the world over\nacclaim Dewar's ,-'.. the Medal Scotch, of\nthe World,\nfief ere you say Scotch :... say DEWAR'S\nDISTILLED, BLENDED AND BOTTLED IN SCOTLAND  :\nDewaits\nSpecial      ', - ,\n7&e\/tfectat Scol&c o#'Okrflkfy V*T_* -  ><\nm \u00bb<tarti\u00bbmenl fs not published or displayed by the Uquor ContnH Board or by (he GowmrtnUf^^\nTWAnsSpjcoAiT |\no\/grraf ap\nJohn DewarG-Sons Ii'l\n\u00bb_.  . Dttmuei, '\n^\"***JPW Scoria*\nmma\n Handbags\nAll Colon,\n' SEE OUR SELECTION\n$2.95   :\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n863 Baker St\nCrow's Nesl Men\nHonored by SI.\nJohn Ambulance\nFERli'IE, B.C.\u2014 Two Crow's Nest\nPass's most energetic longtime Supporters of St. John Ambulance work\nwere cited at a banquet which\nhonored members of Michel and Elk\nRiver Colleries first aid and mine\nrescue teams, at the King Edward\nHotel\nLong service in St John Ambulance work and instruction of classes by Carmlchael McNay of Fernie\nwas commended when T. G. Ewart\nas president of the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal Company presented his award\non behalf of the Association T. H.\nWilson, general manager of the coal\ncompany presented a life membership in the Association and an award\nfor services in this work to Bernard\nKeeling for outstanding similar service in Michel-Natal area,\nHELPFUL HINTS\nKeep a sponge and Some dry-\ncleaner handy in your cleaning basket After you've finished doing the\nupholstered pieces with a vacuum\ncleaner, go over soiled spots with\nsponge and cleaner. -'.*!\u25a0'.\n* a  ;-,-'\u00ab       \u25a0\nYou can use hotter water and\n. do a faster cleaning Job on dishes\nwith a. dish mop. It saves your\nhands and nails, too,\n.  \u25a0    \u2022 \u25a0' -.*     :'\u25a0\u2022\nLet the whole house harmonize;\nborrow a color from your living or-\ndining-room and bring it into the\nkitchen by using the color to pipe\nonto plain kitchen curtains.\n* ',*\u2022  \u25a0'.\"*\nLet wood frames on pictures\nsparkle by using a polish on them,\nas you do furniture. It can be done\nafter the glass Is cleaned, If you\nare eareful not to smear.\n* '\u2022*'\u2022'...\nLine the garbage can with a paper\nlack, with the top edges folded out.\nWhen full, these edges can be pulled\nover the top, and you need not get\ngerms on the hands from the refuse.\n-*     *    '\u25a0'*\"'<\nA   '\u25a0\u25a0 rtang your pot holders ever the\nrange If the space Is not In use.\n,  You'll have them handy as you\n.   need them,\ntill \u2022 'tin*\u00bbt \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab  tMll\nIB  \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0 '    i\n1       ' * .'.**'* <\n\u2022 t,a \u25a0:  '.\ni      to      i\ni $1,000 i\nm \u25a0\u00a7. . m\n\\%-%im\nIt debit are piling up, don't\nwall, see your Niagara\nCounsellor light away. Hell\nblip you select the friendly\nloan belt suited lo your\nneedi, without delay or red-\ntape. Four loan plant to\nchoose froroj loam up to\n$1,000 ar* Hfe-lniiired at\nno extra cost. Ratet are\nmoderate, repayment plant\nare geared lo your budget\nA private, friendly Interview\nU yours for the asking.\nCome In today.\nIACARA\nFINAN( I  COMPANY ITD\nUMWil awe a >\u25a0\u00bb>\n1     Suite 1        ' BOO Baker St\n\u2022 . Rhone 1095\nlit t t aataMttaAaatXmt (tut\nNow Is the T^e to Shut\nOff Outside Water Valves\nThese colder nights make us wonder how many peqple have shut off\nand drained the water taps which\nsupply- their garden hoses. If you\nare an old hand at home maintenance and have just forgotten- this\nchore, now is a good time to take\ncare of it.\nNo doubt there are' people In\nnew homes, or who are In older\nhomes they rent or have bought\nwho do not know Just how to go\nabout the job.\nAt some point in your Water system, a short piece of pipe will pass\nthrough an outer wall to supply\nthe, hose faucet. In that short pipe\nwill be fitted what is known as a\n'stop and Waste.\" This provides for\nshutting off thp water supply to\nthe outside, and for draining the\npipe and tap so that they Will not\nfreeze and burst\nNO MORE SPRINKLING\nNow that the time has come that\nyou no longer need to water your\nlawn or garden, you should drain\nthe pipe before freezing takes place.\nYou first turn off the stop in the\nusual way. You will notice at the\nend of the stop either a small handle\nor a small knurled (or hexagon)\ncap. Well, you turn the handle 90\ndegrees, or twist the cap anti-clockwise several turns. But you are not\nfinished yet! Go outside and open\nthe tap a turn or two. This is to let\nair pass to replace water, a small\nquantity of \\yhich will drain either\nout or in according to the slope of\nthe short pipe.\nYou mlght'as wpll, after draining Is complete, close the little\ngadget on the stop, so that you\nwill not forget In the Spring and\nget a shower bath when you turn\nthe pressure through again. It Is\nnot Important whether you close\nthe outer tap, but you might as\nwell,\nWhile we are on this subject of\nyour water system, there is another\nstop and waste just inside where the\nwater first enters your house. This\nis to turn off the whole system if\nrequired. In old houses this has to\nbe done whenever a change Is to be\nmade in the piping or washers have\nto be renewed. In new homes all\nfittings have their own shutffs, but\nyou still may have a break somewhere and have, to. shut, off the\nwhole supply. (\nWHERE 18 IT?\nMake \u2122ra you lriiow where to do\nthis. It may be In some hidden corner, and when you want to find it\nyou may be in a hurry. Also test the\nshutoff tb make sure it will turn\neasily when needed in a hurry.\nThere is another shutoff, the property of the City or water company,\nwhich many people do not know\nabout. If they do, it is often buried\nunder a lawn or some landscaping.\nWe read a home repair guide which\nsuggested that you, personally, need\nnot worry,about this.\nNO KEY HANDY     '\nWe have had a personal experience which shows how wrong this\ncan be. There are a number of reasons, including frost, which can\nbr;ak the supply pipe between the\nCity main and ypur house. In our\ncase the settling of a fill under the\nfront lawn put such a strhin on the\npipe that it bowed downwards outside, and upwards-inside she basement wall, eventually cracking at\nthe threads at the outer end of the\nindoor shutoff.   V6\nThis happened on a Friday night.\nFortunately, the ljjk was not great-'\ner than would rim off through the\nsump, providentially right underneath, but we cooid have had a\nfountain under pressure gushing in\nall directions.    \u2122- '<\nWe knew where!'the City shutoff\nwas, at the bottom 'of a wooden vertical box, but we had no long-handled key with which to turn it off.\nOur neighbor across the street had\none, but we did not know that. The\nCity Water Works does not want to\ncome out at that time of night and\na plumber we called felt the same\nway, but was kind enough to lend\nus his key.\nAfter fetching the key, we found\nthat the old box had deteriorated\nand was full of debris. Next morning we dug It up and shut the\nwater off. Saturday we made repairs and got water again. Luckily K did not happen Saturday,\nwith, no chance to get supplies\nnext day. Then the water works\npeople came along and substituted\nvitreous pipe and a metal cap for\nthe old box.\nKASLO, B.C. \u2014 The Board of\nTrustees and area representatives\nof Kootenay Lake School District\nNo. .8, met in the City Hall, with\nInspector of Schools E. E. Hyndman\nas chairman. .'\nJohn Cochran of Mirror Lake\nwas unanimously elected as Trustee\nfor the Southern section of the\nSchool District for a t^rm of two\nyears, ;i\nA report' of the recent meeting\nof Trustees at Castlegar was read,\nregarding salary schedules, Mr.\nFinlayson of the Robert Day Co.\nwas present and reported on insurance coverage on all school properties.\nAlso present was Arthur Morton\nfrom the Nelson architect's office\nwho presented three line sketches\nKaslo Board Views School Plans,\nDiscusses Riondel Overcrowding\nof the proposed new addition .to\ntha Kaslo School, which were\nstudied and'discussed.\nOvercrowding of the new one-\nroom' school at Riondel and a temporary solution was considered.\nInspector Hyndman was requested\nto report on his findings when he\nvisits Riondel during the present\nweek. Permission was granted to\nuse the Ridndel School for church\narid Sunday school services, with\nthe understanding that School Representative Sutcliffe give rigid\nsupervision to order and proper\nmaintenance of the building, also\nthat fuel and light pertaining to\nsaid church services be accounted\nfor. \u25a0 , .     <\nMr. Carson, representative from\nLardeaU reported on needed repairs\nto the Lardeau and Jewitt schools.\nTrail Housing\nProject One of\nThree in B.C.\nVICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 18 (CP)-\nThe Dominion-Provincial Housing\nPlan, Instituted early last year, has\nresulted ln only three projects in\nBritish Columbia\u2014none of them\ncompleted. ,\u2022\".'.\"';\nMain cause of the lack of progress is that the Dominion Government had to * apply the brakes on\nthe scheme after the outbreak of\nthe Korean war when certain\nbuilding material became scarce.  \u2022\nFarthest advanced project is at\nTrail where a \"land'assembly plan,\"\ncontaining 277 lots, is underway.\nThe subdivision is being surveyed\nhow and the lots probably will be\nup for sale next Spring. Under this\nplan purchasers of lots build their\nown houses.\nA different type of scheme Is\nplanned for Prince Rupert where\nit is proposed to build 50 houses\nunder tbe Dominion-Provincial\nplan. This is an \"economic rental\nscheme\" where units will be rented,\nat regular rates large enough only\nto cover capital, cost.   ' ,\nAt Little Mountain In Vancouver,\na \"subsidized rental project\" for\npersons in the low income bracket\nis planned. On this project it is proposed that the city and the province share the losses. A housing\nauthority will manage the project,\nAbout 20u\"h'6us& are ptoposed.'\"\nTrail Armories\nConstruction\nGels Under Way\nTRAIL, B.C. \u2014 Construction of\nthe $330,000 armories on Shavers\nBench In Trail will soon get under\nway. An advance crew of Bennett\nand White' Construction Company,\nwhich is under contract to build\nthe new armories, is already in\nTrail-making preparations.\nSurvey for the main building is\ncomplete, and Leonard McLeod, job\nsuperintendent is working on a\nsmall frame office to be used for\njob headquarters.\n' Excavation sub-contract has been\nawarded to Miners Western Limits\ned. This job is expected to commence Wednesday,\nr- Work, which is expected to continue throughout the Winter, should\nbe complete* within eight or nine\nmonths.\nThe building, 163 feet long, will\nbe headquarters for the 109th\nBattery of the 24th HAA (R) and\nthe 44th Field Squadron H.GE. (R).\nIt will have as well as a large drill\nhall offices,' orderly rooms, stores!'\nspace and mess rooms.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the frlaitlflcd Way.\nCastlegar Remembers\nThose Who Took Part\nCASTLEGAR, B. C\u2014Passage of\ntime has not dimmed memories of\nthose who served and those who\ngave up their lives for Canada.\nCastlegar and district turned out\nover 400 residents to the Remembrance service on Nov. 11.\nParade Marshal McWhinnie was\nin charge of the parade from the\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING\n& HEATING\nCOMPANY LTD.\nA Cbmplete Plumbing      ,\nand Heating Service\n351 Baker St.\nPhone 666\nNelson, B.C.\nT\nLegion hall to the Castle Theatre.\nOn parade were represented in the\nfollowing order:. Canadian Legion\nBand, members of Branch 170, Ladies' Auxiliary, Castlegar Village\nCommissioners, Kinnaird Village\nCommissioners, I.O.D.E., Pythian\nSisters, Knights of Pythias,,St. Albans W.' A. and Guild, Kiwanis,\nGirl Guides.\nBranch Padre Archdeacon B. A.\nResker delivered an inspiring address on the subject of Peace. Rev.\nL. C. Johnston gave the scripture\nreading.\nW. H. Reed, President of Branch\n170, spoke on the significance of\nthe emblem of the poppy.\nThe Kiwanis Club Choir Was in\nattendance and under the direction\nof W., Graham sang \"Beautiful Saviour\" and \"O Valiant Hearts.\"\nA representative of each organization taking part in the parade\nlaid a-wreath in memory of those\nwho made the supreme sacrifice.\nThe honor roll was called by C.\nWools. \"Reveille\" and \"The Last\nPost\" were played: by G. Leitner.\nAt the. conclusion. of the service\nmembers of Branch 170 and the\nladies of the Auxiliary formed a\nparade for the return to the Legion\nball.\nit's star\nMilk,\nWet or Dry\nBy  LOUIS   FRYLING\nIt is to be sincerely hoped that\nthe Trail Junior Chamber will, not\nhesitate or hold back in its effort\nto assemble facts ahd inform the\npublic regarding the value of, raw\nmilk as compared with the pasteurized product. Three weeks have\ngone by since that worthy organization undertook this important\nservice and so far nothing has come\nout of the Chamber except a quotation from a local dairyman that he\ncan put raw milk on the doorstep\nat 20 cents a quart. The price of the\npasteurized Is 25 cents. This same\ndairyman, it was said, is planning\nto sell his herd and quit, because\nhe can't make ends meet by shipping his product to the distributor.\nFive cents is quite a margin to\npay for pasteurization. Perhaps the\nbogey of bugs in the. bottle is being carried too far in the interests\nof profit. Pasteurization is not a\nmysterious process known only to a\nchosen few, but is very simple and\ncan be easily accomplished in the,\nhome by those who desire to do so.\nIt might be that a return to the\ngood old days when the fanner\ndelivered the milk, himself or his\nson, fo the door, would be a curb\nto the trend of higher prices of\ninflation. Not only milk, but he also\"\nbrought, butter, eggs, vegetables, a\nsack of potatoes arid even a nice\nroast of the cut desired. In -the\nSpring, a big load of manure could\nbe had for a couple of dollars to\nhelp along the garden.\nMpre and more people are finding powdered milk suitable to most\npurposes. An expert. nutritionist,\nrecently . in Trail, stated that\npowdered skim milk contained\nmuch of the necessary mineral\nvitamins, and supplemented with\ncertain vegetables was' adequate\nfor adults. Powdered, whole milk'\ncan also be mixed at a nice saving\nand by allowing to stand over\nnight, the flat, powdery taste objected to by some, is removed.\nWhatever is most desirable, economical or best suited to the needs\nof the community, it is hoped that\nthe Trail Junior Chamber of Commerce will continue an extensive\nstudy of the matter. The time Is\ngetting short until when, next\nmonth, the majority of the citizens\nof Trail will decide what kind of\nmilk they all will be allowed to\nbuy. The facts should be clearly\npresented before then.-   \u2022\nMagnetic Can Opener\nIn New Housewares\nHere are some hew housewares\njust put on the market:'\nA company has introduced a can\nopener with a built-in magnet to\nhold the can top from the contents.\nThe opehet is of steel, with a sort\nof walk-in knife that automatically\npunches the top.\nThe opener Is long and rectangular, and is attached to the wall. It's\navailable in red, white and ham*\nmered silver.\nAnother company has a dust mop\nwith a detachable head that can be\nlaundered py hand or in the wash*\ning machine. The mop is made of\ncotton yarn and has a flat design\nthat permits dusting under low\nfurniture or even between slats of\na Venetian blind.\nA new picture hanger requires\nno nails. It consists of a hook\nmounted on a square of adhesive\ntape that sticks to glass, tile, pins\nter, wood or metal surfaces.\nU.S. Considers Cuts\nIn Home Building\nWASHINGTON - Top officials\nof two U.S. federal agencies are\nconsidering new* cuts in home\nbuilding that are calculated to reduce housing production next year\nsubstantially below the announced\ngoal of 850,000 dwelling.\n' Plans are still,in the very early\nstage of development but there is\nlittle doubt that the government is\non the verge of junking the 1952\nhousing program that was adopted\nlast Summer.\nCritical shortages of basic* materials combined with widespread\ngovernment fears of new inflationary pressures in early 1952 are\nforcing mobilization directors to\nthe conclusion that home-building\nwill have to be reduced.\nA spokesman for the National\nAssociation of Home 'builders says:\n\"We will fight such a proposition\ntooth and nail,\" arguing that housing is neither inflationary nor does\nit consume large amounts of scarce\nmaterials!\n^Ae. TTZorfeA^ ^fiame\nFor efficiency, convenience and\ncomfort this design stands high\namong those chosen by home\nbuilders in all parts of Panada.\nThe attractive exterior features a\ngenerous roof projection and a\nmodern, chimpey which shelters\nthe front entrance. The large\nliving room window gives light\nand view Just where It is most\nneeded. This design stresses an\nappearance\" of \"young modem\"\ncombined with practical durability.\nThe front entrance is planned\nfor an jye**catching effect with\ngood scope for landscaping. The\nvestibule opens into a good-sized\nentrance hall. A compact kitchen\nis just around the corner and a\nlarge closet is located well back\nto prevent congestion at the\nentrance. ,\n,    .' ' cmhc-m-v The living-dining room Ib of\nample size, pleasing proportion, and with excellent-window arrangement.\nA modern stone fireplace provides the focal point for a tasteful furniture\nassembly. The built-in china cupboard in the dining section is a handy\nstep-saver for the busy housewife, and adds to the decorative aspects\nof the room.     . .'\u25a0* ,\nThree bedrooms, a bathroom, three closets and a linen cupboard\ncomplete the plan. The master bedroom, with corner windows and an\nextra-large closet, has ample space for twin beds. The other bedrooms\nare a good single size and the bathroom is located conveniently for all\nthree* bedrooms,    '\u25a0.:\u2022. \" ; '      '\n*' One of the main features of this modern design is the location of the\nkitchen which, with good wall space for equipment, cabinets and corner\nwindows, adds up to the brightness and convenience any housewife enjoys,\nThe exterior appearance of this Ottawa bungalow li modern, attractive\nand logical. It is finished in white stucco with the chimney and foundation accented in rough stonework. A home of this type would be equally\nattractive in brick or stone. If frame construction were desired the\noutside over-all dimensions of the house and the minimum lot frontage\ndimension would be reduced by approximately one foot. If a side drive\nwere required the minimum lot frontage would be 42 feet instead of 30\nfeet.   This design is 86 feet 6 inches deep with an area of 1,046 square\nComplete construction drawings for this plan, known as Design No.\n60-9, are available from Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation at\nminimum cost. ,-,***..\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1931 \u2014 3\nHow to fix It\nSincerity Reigns Over Greenwood\nGREENWOOD, B.C., \u2014 Greenwood and district (Midway, Rock\nCreek, Kettle Valley, BridesviUe)\nmet together Nov. 11, at the Cenotaph at Ingram Bridge in remembrance of those who gave their lives\nfor their country. The Cenotaph\nstands near the Kettle River, and is\nconsidered the half way mark of\nthe valley,\nVeterans, Scouts,' Guides and\nBrownies of the District were in\nattendance and the program was\nconducted by the Chaplain, Rev.\nAdam Crisp.\nThe program was opened with\nthe singing of ) Canada followed by\na prayer by the Chaplain.\nRoll Cali, fpr the First World War,\nwas called by Comrade R. Norris.\nRoll Call for the Second World\nWar was called by Comrade Cam\nMacKenzie. Comrade MacKenzie,\nspoke for a few minutes as a tribute\nto the fallen. This was followed by\nthe crowd singing'\"Abide With Me.\"\nThe Last Post, was sounded by\nComrade Shannon, with the Dipping\nof the Colors, by Comrade G. Chisholm, followed by the two minutes\nsilence, '\nReveille, was sounded by Comrade Shannon, and the Raising of\nthe Colors by Comrade G. Chisholm.\nFollowing the program, wreaths\nwere laid by the following: Com\nrade F. Mahoney, for Legion No.\n155, Miss Diana Parker of. Rock\nCreek, for the Rock Creek Girl\nGuides; Scout-Master P. Morris of\nGreenwood for the Boy Scouts;\nComrade J, Fawn6, then played a\nlament on' the -pipes.\nAfter the \u2022 benediction by the\nChaplain, God Save the King was\nsung.\nIn the evening, a Remembrance\nDay Service was held i \u25a0*. the Green\nwood United Church, conducted by\nRev. Adam Crisp. The Legion members and the local Boy Scout troop\nattended this fine service. Organ\nand violin voluntaries Were played\nby Mrs. A. Crisp and N. McNab,\nTwo solos, sung by veterans, Comrade W. D. Timms and. Comrade J,\nW. Dobbie, were much appreciated\nas were the anthems by the Senior\nChoir.\n\/\nHerridge Presses\nPension Raise\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-At the\nregular .monthly meeting of the\nNew Denver branch No. 101, Canadian Legion, H. W. Herridge, MP.\nfor Kootenay West, in response to\na telegram, promised his support\nfor the increase of veterans' basic\npension. The secretary was requested to write Mr. Herridge and.\ninvite him to the meeting Jan. B,\n1952.\nIt was decided to buy for the\nClub rooms a colored picture of\nHer Royal Highness Princess Elizabeth, the Duke of Edinburgh,\nPrince Charlie and Princess Ann.\nChairman L. R. Campbell of the\ndance committee stated over 20\nposters were submitted by the\nschool children.\n* He thanked the members for help\nin decorating the Hall, also the Ladies Auxiliary and all who supplied\nsandwiches and cakes for our Armistice Dance.\nT. W. Clarke reported a good sale\nof poppies bad been made. More\nwreaths than ever before were laid\non the cenotaph Nov.ll.\nDan P. Morgan was thanked after\nhe read his account of the proceedings at the West Kootenay zone\nmeeting in Rossland, Oct. 20-21st.\nP. T. McRory volunteered to\nmake targets for the annual turkey\nshoot and the Ladies\"Aid sent word\nthey will supply coffee and sandwiches.\nThe Building Committee was\nasked to investigate .repairs to the\nkitchen sink, or to arrange for replacement\nA work-bee was called by the\nPresident to clean up woodshed and\nfix linoleum in the lower room.\nGoing into detail of the handyman's activities in the house\nelectric wiring system, wfe would'like to suggest some ways\nin which one cajsa, if necessary, reduce hazards already existing. We may assume that recently built homes; as well as\nhew ones, are wired safely and completely for the present,\nunless' some over-ambitious  \u2014. \u2014\n'owner has-done some sloppy\nwork.\n| Now let us consider the state of\nthings in many, if not most of the\nvery old houses. It is obvious that\nonly a kind Providence, and at times\nan efficient fire department^, have\nso far prevented many appalling\nconflagrations in the older sections\not many cities and towns.\nMuch faster than the fire marshal's Inspectors can keep track\nof them, people have been adding\nto their original wiring, which\nwas primitive at Its best. This Is\nhad enough, but, the worst Is that\nmany of these additions have\nbeen made In a manner which\nappears to defy all the laws of\nprobability. Deaths, fires and Injuries seem to have been averted\nfor years In-situations where disaster could and should have occurred,\nSAFE ENPUGH '   '\nThere is not much wrong with\nthe knob and the tube method of\nwiring used in the early houses,\nand still used extensively. Properly installed, the porcelain insulated wires, if large enough for\ntheir load, can be trusted to operate safely.    '  \u2022\nIt I! when Indiscriminate extensions are made, when oversize\nfuses are put In, when added wir\nIng is not itself made safe and\n, secure, that traps are laid for the\nunwary.\nSuppose thaj we enter a basement, with perhaps less than seven feet of headroom.\nOriginally the wiring consisted of,\nsay  two  outlets controlled  by a\nswitch at the head of the .stairs.\nWe will assume that these outlets\nfor* light bulbs are of porcelain as\nthey should be, though they probably are screwed to a board,1 with\nthe wires through a centre hole and\ninsulated* with short pieces of asbestos,loom.       \u25a0.-\u25a0.*\u25a0***.....-.*\"*\u25a0\nGAY ABANDON\nWith the basement cluttered by\nits\" furnace, \u25a0 coal bin and other\nthings, light.has been required over\n!a bench, in front of the furnace, or\n; elsewhere. A washing machine arrived and an outlet was needed.\nI Many times we have seen these\n| services provided by merely plug-.\n| gir.g in from one to three or more\nextension cords 'to one of the -original outlets, using multiple plug-In\ndevices.\nThese cords have with a gay\nabandon been draped amongst\nthe colling joists, hung over water\npipes- and. on nails. The light\nbulbs have been sorewed Into\nbrass sockets, with or without p'ull\nchain switches. With this set-up\nnone of this system works unless\nthe main floor switch be on.\nSometimes the fixer has managed\nto cut his extra circuits Into other\ncircuits on their way from the\nservice entry to the upper regions. Either way It Is a death\ntrap.\nIn the first place, these needed\nextra lights should be put on an\nextra circuit even if that means\nadding to the entry facilities. You\nwill find these dangling brass sock\nets so close to water pipes or taps\ntha) only a miracle prevents electrocution. Standing on a wet concrete or earth floor and turning\none of the socket switches, or pulling a chain, invites a sudden end.\nAll sockets in basements, bathrooms\nor kitchens should be porcelain. All\nwires should be normal two-wire\ncircuits firmly attached. Under\nmany municipal regulations they -\nmust be in metal armored (BX)\ncable and all joints made in metal\njunction or switch boxes. Even^\nwhere a porcelain socket is used\nwith a pull chain switch, the chain\nshould be cut and rejoined with an\ninsulating link.\nGROUND WIRES\nWhere for workshop or othgr op- '\nerations a cord is Required, it\nShould be rubber covered and have\na non-metallic socket. If your sockets are attached to metal boxes, but\nnot in grounded BX, the sockets\nshould each be grounded to the\ngreen wire grounding system or to\nthe water pipe as near as possible\nto its entry to the basement.\nIncidentally,   wa   have  found\nmany cases In new homes where\nthe electrician has, grounded the\nboxes by solderlpg on a grounded\ngreen   wire,   but   vibration   has\nloosened this soldering.\nWe   suggest   yoii. check   these\nground wires and if they are loose\nyou can probably make them secure by making a loop at the end\nand bolting this loop with a-small\nbolt through one of the small, holes)\nln the box not in use to fasten the\nbox itself to the house. Grounding ,\nis important, because if you accidentally short the circiiit it has a .\nchance  to  take   an   easy   course\nthrough the water system to ground\ninstead of through your body, with\nat least painful and possibly fatal\nresults. ' '..\u2022*.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n.AALESUND, Norway (CP)\u2014Residents of this Western area are\npraying for rain. After a near-\ndrought that has lasted almost a\nyear, the supply of drinking water\nis virtually exhausted. Water is being saved so - that the local fish-\nprocessing plants (an keep operating.\nM\u00abi North Jbmkot ** ?\nChoose a national ocgani\u2014  .\ntion devoted especially to the I\nproblems of moving household   goods   JurefuIIy   and <\neconomically.\nI Packing \u2022 Insurance' Stegaf   .\nWert\nTransfer\n' Co. \u25a0,\u25a0;\nPhone 33\n719 Baker St.  Nelion, B.C\nluinniiniiiiniinniiijuniBttHuiiHiH\nSHUTDOWN\nNext Shutdown have your electrical equip*\nment serviced by skilled specialists working\nwith the latest of equipment. You'll enjoy\nbetter performance,.. uninterrupted service.\nRepairs,Overbauls\nwade in our shop\nor oh tbe job.\nGuaranteed\nfor om uear.\n\u2022 Replacement units available\nNo need to stay shutdown while\nrepairs completed.\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1931\nIT'S HtCKEV\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\nW.l.L\nP W   LT F A Pet\nTrail      1fi 10  8 0 77 41 .UI\nSpokane .......   1\u00ab  I  8 't \u00ab7 M .868\nNelson        18  8 10 1 81 88 .343\nKimberley   .,   11   1 10 0 33 86 ,091\n(Inoludes Prlday gams)\nNelson Merchants Remind\nYou That Christmas\nMailing Dates Are\nGetting Closer\nDon't Delay - Shop Today\nCall In and Inspect the Large\nSelection Listed Below\nTonight's Game\nTrail\n*   $moke Eaters\nNelson\nMaple Leafs\n8:00 p.m.\nHOCKEY\non\nCKLN\n8:30 p.m. Tonight\n' -\u2022 \u25a0 \/ -\u2022\nCOURTISY PBEBLM MOTORS\nFast Service on\nlg| FURNACE REPAIRS\nThe first shivery day may tempt yon to net\n' el furnace dangerously In need of repairs.\nDon't invite trouble. Our service men will\ncheck and make necessary repairs for your\nat reasonable coet. Phone today for fast\n*\"\"\"'\u25a0  service.-. \u25a0 -\nLabossiere\nSheet Metal & Heating\nGeneral Sheet Metal and Warm Air Heating\n617 VERNON ST.      PHONE 1293      NELSON, B. C.\nThis Christmas \u2022 Qive Her 4\na Pair of\nOomphie Slippers\nBeauvais . . . Charming embroidered circles in green\n, and white. Open and closed heel,\nJUST RECEIVED ...\nA New Shipment of\nSKIRTS and BLOUSES\nTHE IDEAL CHRISTMAS GIFT      -\nSKIRTS BLOUSES\nLong and short sleeves.\nNylon and Crepe;\nSizes \\2-r-M-\n$2.95-r $\u00a3.95\nGabardine,   Flannel\nand Plaid.\nSizes 12 \u2014 .44\n$3.95 \u2014 $8.95\nALL THIS!\n449 BAKER ST.\nFashion Shoppe\nPHONE 874\nHEW DELUXE KIT\nRegular Refill \u2014 $1.50\nCreme Waving Lotion\n36 Spin Curlers .\n6 Midget Spin Curlers\nPermafix Neutralixer\nCreme Rinse\n3.00\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPhone 25\n503 Baker St.\nNelion, B. C.\nWhy Not Drive a\nSuperior Used Car?\nDRIVE THE FIRST 500 MILES FREE\nON THESE TWO UNITS\n1950 Dodge Vi-Ton\nLike new. One owner, winterized.\n1948 Plymouth 4-Door Sedan\nNew paint job, good rubber, winterized.\n1950 Plymouth 4-Door Sedan\n'\u00bb    Ope owner. Good rubber, hearer, winterized.   .\n1941 Plymouth Coach\nHeater, radio, good rubber, winterized.\n1936 Ford, as is \u2014\u2014$250.0Q\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\nDodge-DeSoto Sales and Service\nPhone 75 :   , The Pest Office Opposite Us\nfor the dearest of mothers!\nThe first lady ih your heqrt and home deserves such a\ngift! Thryi her with a brcind new, 1951 model, stove,\nwasher or refrigerator, with qll the latest and best\nfeatures!\nGibson Electric Range 'AQ1?\nPriced at  \u2022.....\u201e..'.    ~ ** tJ\n'495\n\u2022149\nGibson Refrigerator\nil cubic ft\t\nTamper Washing Machine\nOne only ....,...; .-.\t\nNelson Sales and Service\nPhone 977\nLimited\nNelton\n745 Baker St.\nHERE FOR A RE AL TREAT\nIt's tasty menus such as ours that make eating three\nrrieals a day an adventure? You can count on good\nfoods . . . tastefully prepared . . . and served in a\ngracious, courteous manner. Our prices are always fair,\ntoo! Gome and bring your guests for dining pleasure.\nSTANDARD CAFE\n\"Nelson's Most Popular Eatina, Place\"\nECONOMICAL\n m\\%\ni2no\n\"It Pays To Buy. Quality\"\nB.F.GOODRICH\nQUALITY RUBBER\nFootwear for all, the Family\nR.. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFA\u00a7HION\n8 Established 1902\nAn electronic fuel gauge lor the\nUnited States Air Forces tells the\npilot how much gasoline he has in\nterms of flying time left.\nJAjuV&ddofc\nEast Trail Group Set\nFor Guide Hall Start\nTRAIL, B;C\u2014'Works, department ol the City of Trail\nhas levelled lots on which it is intended ih the Spring to start\nconstruction of a hall for the ;       ~~      \"     :\u2014~~\nFRUITVALE GROUP\nMEETS OFFICIAL\nuse of Guides and Brownie's.\nThe work was done free of charge,\nmembers of the East Trail and District Guide and Brownie Association learned at their monthly meeting at the home of Mrs.' G. Ioanin.\ntlrs. W. Martin was asked to send\netter of appreciation to the department,\nGIVE TO  UNIFORMS\nMembers voted to give financial\nassistance to leaders requiring uniforms.\nA forthcoming mother and daughter banquet which is-planned for\nFebruary was discussed, and several\ncommittees were set up to take\ncare of items such1 as program, decorations and food,\nLeaders.were, reminded of their\nmeeting which will be held Wednesday at the home of Mrs. U. E. Rella.\nThe Association's December meeting will take the form of a social\ngathering in Shaver's Bench hall.\nMrs. John Jerbs will be hostess to\nmembers,at their January*meeting.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nw&a\n*Y\n\u00bb*\"*\nJJrtttttg Hnxttb (Eljurdf\nJosephine and Silica Streets\n\u2022;._   MINISTER: REV. ALLAN DIXON, B.A., B.D. *.    .    .'\nOrganist omi Musio Director: Mis C. W. Tyler   *\n$:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Search After God.\nDaughters of Job in attendance. Broadcast over\nCKLN. \u2022   ,\n*7:30;pim.\u2014Life as Jesus Lived It. \"  \u25a0\u25a0.\u201e\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.;...-\u25a0        *,*     *\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Friendship Hour.\nSATURDAY, NOV. Mi\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Service Club annual bazaar at the Trinity Church\nHall. , . \u2022 ...\nFBUITVALE, B. C.\u2014Members of\nthe newly-formed Pythian Sisters\norganization here get with Mrs.\nPearl Palmer, deputy supreme\nchief, and Mrs. Brave, both of\nRossland.\nIt was decided that meeting\nnights would be changed from the\nfirst and third Wednesdays to the\nsecond and' fourth Wednesdays.\nNext meeting will be held on the\nfourth Wednesday in November.\nfk. Xante's Uxa-(fai$tftxtd\n8:00\n9:45\n,11:00\n7:30\n9:30\n(ANGLICAN)\nDean Thomas L. Leadbeater, D.D.\na.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\na.m\u2014Sunday School.  (Beginners\u201411:00).\na.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n\"VISITING  IN CHRIST'S NAME.\"\np.m.\u2014Evening Prayer. \u2022   . . \u25a0\n\"BEHOLD, I STANDI\"\n*  1    I\nI WILLOW POINT __\na.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\np.m.-*-Sunda'y School.\nSt fmd'* itattrt ety\u00bbrrf>\n. Minister: Rev. A. L. Anderson, B.A.. B,D\u201e S.T.M.\n,  Director of Music? Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, B.A., 'A.T.CJSL\n10:po a.m.\u2014Sunday School for Juniors and older.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School for Primary and younger.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"HOW TO PRAY.\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"TOO BAD Tp BE TRUE\/'\nThe Excelsior Club Monday at the home of. Mrs. M. L, Craig.\nIfrubgfrriatt (HJjurrij Ut (Hanaim\nFIR8T PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH\nKootenay and Victoria Streets\nMinister; Rev. L. S. van Mossel, B.A.\nOrganist: Mrs. W. A. Manson\n10:00 a.m.\u2014SUNDAY SCHOOL.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014MR. D. A. MacKELLAR.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014MR. D. A. MacKELLAR.\nEVERYBODY WELCOME.\n-Jfirrt QHjurrff nf\n(Eljrtat $rtfnttal\nA Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, ln Boston, Mass.\nSunday School \u2014 9:43 a.m.\nSunday Service \u2014 11:00. a.m.\nSUBJECT -\n\"MORTAL8 AND\nIMMORTALS\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8:00 p.m.\nReading Room open daily\nFrom 3-5\nMonday and Friday 7-9\nAll Cordially Welcome\nStoat lapttat\nCottonwood and Fourth\nRev. Theo T. Gibson, B.A.\n10:15 a.m.\u2014Siftiday School.\n11:15 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service.\nMidweek; Groups as usual.\n,708 Baker Street\nREV. L M PRESLEY, Pastor\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.T-Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning   Devotional\nService.\n4:00 to 4:15\u2014Bethel Fireside\nHour CKLN.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic Meeting.\nRev. P. S Jones, of Victoria,\nProvincial Superintendent of the\nPentecostal Assemblies of Canada; will be our guest speaker\nfor the Sunday Services.\nTUESDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer   and   Bible\nStudy.\nFRIDAY:\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples' (CAs)\nA Warm Welcome Awaits\nEveryone,\nSty?\n\u00a7alt\u00abftum Armg\n513 Victoria Street\nLIEUT. H. LEWIS    .\nLIEUT. W. McK^NZIE    \"\nSUNDAY:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting.\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n7:30 p.m.-'-Evangeiistlc Service.\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nNylons Glut U.K.,\nBut None For Sale\nLONDON, Nov.,iq (CP) - Al-\nthough eager women form long\nqueues every time someone whispers \"nylons'\", British, manufacturers are worried by \u00a312,000,000\nwbrth they tannot sell.\nOne of the Labor Government's\nlast acts\", say manufacturers, -was to\ncut home supplies of the best-quality nylons by one pair in 10. Yet,\nnylons are piling up by the hundreds in export warehouses, due\nto overseas sales resistance.\nOur Father's\nBusiness\"\nNelsori Social\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lakes\nare in the City from the Emerald\nMine and plan on spending a few\ndays at the Hume Hotel.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. Merz has; returned\nto her home in BridesviUe after a\ncouple of weeks in Nelson at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. J. (Mickey) McEwen,,202 Union\nStreet.,\n\u2022 Mrs. Alma TrUswell, who has\nbeen a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital for several weeks\nhas returned to her home in the\nHume Hotel.\n\u2022 Mrs. Walter S. Fisher, 609\nBaker Street, has-been called to\nVancouver where her husband is a\npatient in St. Paul's Hospital.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. V. Meyers,. Hall\nMines Road, is visiting- her son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr.\u00aband Mrs. W.\nKelly and their sons Jimmy and\nTimmy, in Spokane.\n\u2022 : Most- Rev. Martin M. Johnson, Bishop of Nelspn, has returned\nfrom Chicago where he spoke at the\nC.C.D., Congress tor the Diocese of\nChicago.' ,\n\u2022 Mr.-and-Mrs. P. E. Poulin,\nCarbonate Street, have hod as guest\ntheir daughter, Miss Jeanette Poulin, who has retained to Cranbrook,\n\u2022 A birthday party was - given\nin h,onor of Mrs. C. Senych at her\nhome at 523 Vernon Street She\nwas presented With a table lamp and\na wall plaque, and games were\nplayed.\nEvery so often we see in the\nnewspaper a list of names of people\nwho have secured Canadian citizenship by receiving what are called\n\"naturalization papers.\" The term\nsuggests the antithesis between the\nwords naturaland unnatural. Thus\npeople from another land are considered \"unnatural\" until they become one with us and our way of\n,iife and administration.\nHere, it seems to me, is a thought\nthat may be carried over into the\nspiritual sphere, the higher citizen*\nship of the Kingdom of God. Stanley Jones, outstanding misisonary\nand world traveller, declares that\nthe Christian way of life is the\nnatural\" way to live. It is according\nto the Divine Purpose, therefore\n\"natural\" in the highest sense of\nthe \u2022term. Any other way is contrary to God, therefore \"unnatural\",\nleading to chaos and confusion in\nevery department of life, both, individual ahd national. It would appear that our way of life is {po much\nalong .this line, and that it was high\ntime that many of us were taking\nout our \"naturalization papers\", our\ncitizenship in the Kingdom of God.\nSt. Paul gives us something of\nthis same idea in his letter to the\nEphesians, speaking of the two conditions of man, before and after the\nGospel. He says: \"At that time' ye\nwere without Christ, being aliens\nfrom the commonwealth of Israel\nand strangers, from the covenants of\npromise, having no hope, and without God in the world.\" But what a\nchange! \"Now therefore, ye are no\nmore strangers and foreigners, but\nfellow citizens with the saints, and\nof the. household of God.\"\nA person without God Is worse\noff than a man without a country.\nSomeone has said: \"A person without\nGod is an empty body, and an unin\nhabited house is a haunted house.\"\nWe are haunted today Tjy many\nphobias and frustrations, many of\nwhich would flee away the moment\nwe came to God. How wonderful to\nbe able to say: \"I belong. I am a\nfellow citizen. I have taken out my\npapers.\" Citizenship in Christ's\nKingdom is surely important as far\nas Our Father's Business is concerned.\nAllan Dixon,\nKimbqrley Couple\nMarried 25 Years\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - Friends of\nMr. and Mrs. J. Kindred'gave them\na gala party in Union Hall the 25th\nanniversary of their marriage,\nTables \"were arranged in horseshoe formation, and the head table\nWas centred by a two-tiered anniversary cake decorated in pink and\nwhite and topped' by a silver-\ncrowned bride and groom. Vases\nof chrysanthemums flanked it.\nToast to the guests of honor was\nproposed by J. Shiplak, and they\nreceived a 36-piece set of silverware. Hostesses were Mrs, Shiplak\nand Miss Helen Kindred, and dance\nrounded but the evening. \u2022*..'.\u25a0\nHonorary Slate Pours\nAt Lady Curlers' Tea\nMra. W. J. Hlpperson, president, welcomed old and new members\nto a season of curling at the annual tea Friday afternoon at the curling\nrink, given by executive ot Nelson Ladies'Curling ClUb. .\nYellow and bronze chrysanthemums .decorated the tables, and\nMrs, Betty Simpson, honorary president, and Mrs. J. R. Bailey; honorary vice-president, poured,\nThe executive consists of Mrs. Hlppersonj Mrs. J. S. Thorn, Mrs.\nE. N. Mannings, Mrs. T. Scales, Mrs. R. E. Hale, Mrs. B. B. Stallwood,\nMrs. Reg: Bush, Mrs: O. G. Macintyre and Mrs. L. P. Bond. There\nwere 12 visitors.at the tea. *\nW.I. Will Enter\nArrangements for competing in\nthe interprovfneial contest for the\nTweedsniuir Cup awarded for essays on village history and rural\nhomes, also for nig making in national patterns, were made at the\nmonthly meeting of \u25a0'\u25a0 the Nelson\nWomen's Institute in W. I. room in\nthe Civic Centre Friday afternoon.\nSewing for the Queen Alexandra\nSolarium for crippled children was\nreceived, as well as beads which\nwere donated fqr children's handicrafts.\nA substantial donation was voted\nto the Save the Children fund.\nPlans for the annual meetlng'and\nChristmas party were also made.\nTea hostesses were Mrs. A, Dolphin and Mrs. B. C. Affleck.\nFruitvale W. I. Has\nThird Card Party\nFRUITVALE, B. C\u2014Mrs. P. Plested and Pqn Morissette were.cribbage winners, and Mrs. D. C. Mason\nand Orland Kushton' whist winner^\nat the third card party of Fruitvale\nWomen's Institute in Institute hall.\n.Consolations for crib went to Mrs.\nWilliam Grieve and Fred Tull, and\nMrs. Charles Mawer and David\nPurdy were low scorers in whist.\nMrs. Lorrie McKeachie and- Mrs.\nHomer Godin conducted the cards.\nThere were six tables of crib and\ntwo of whist.\nSALMO LA IS\nSET FOR BAZAAR\nSALMO, B.C.* \u2014 Final arranger\nments for their Christmas bazaar\nwere made by members of the Ladies' Aid meeting at the home of\nMrs. W. Partridge.\nForms' were distributed among\nmembers to send-but for a parcel\npost tp be held at the bazaar. Miss\nJoahne Thiel ahd Miss Lois Hansen\nwere asked to make posters.\nMrs, Louis Anderson and Mrs,\nSmith Curwen offered to organ*\nize a telephone bridge. Mrs. Henry\nJohn reported that Presbyterian services would be held twice monthly\nin the afternoon.\nNatal-Michel C.W.L.\nHolds Mixed Whist\nNATAL, B. C.-rCatholic Woman's\nLeague of Natal-Michel, working\nin conjunction with the St. Michael's charitable bazaar, held a\nsuccessful mixed whist drive in\nI.Q,O.F. hall. Twenty-six tables\nwere occupied,\nWinners were * Mrs. Elio Bernardo of Natal and William Mihaly-\nnuk of Natal, firsts; Mrs. Nancy\nConstable of Creston and Jack\nWhittaker of Michel, seconds; and\nMrs.. Daisy Billy of Natal and\nCharles Kowall  of Natal,  thirds.\nEntire proceeds will go toward\nthe new St. Michael's hall which\nis being completed here.\n\u00a3tfang*iittl\nHtHsion (Em* ttani\nBaker and Hendryx Streets\nVERNON K LUND. Pastor\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"Faith on Trial.\"\nThe guest preacher at both services today is the District Superintendent  of  the  Ev.  Mission\nCovenant Church, Rev. Carl H.\nPeterson, of Seattle, Washington.\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer Time.,\n7:30 pm\u2014\"Concerning the    -\nFaith in Jesus Christ\"\nTUESDAY:\n.4:00 \"p.m.\u2014Confirmation Class.\n7:00 p.m.\u2014CKoir Rehearsal.\n8:15 p.m.\u2014Y.P.S.\nWEDNESDAY:\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer Service at the\nMagnus Christiansen home,\n114 Anderson St.\nTHURSDAY:\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Ladies' Mission\nCircle at the home of Mrs.\nErnest Olson, 76 W. Victoria.\nWelcome to a -Friendly, Spiritual\nChurch in the Heart of Nelson.\n(Anglican)\nFAIRVIEW\nCANON W. J. SILVERWOOD\nA.K.C, B.Sc\u201e Vicar.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Family Service.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer.\n9:00 a.m.\u2014SjutWSlocan.\nNew Denver L.A. Aids\nVets in Tranquille\nNEW DENVER, B.C;, -^ Ladies'\nAuxiliary'to New Denver branch\nof the Canadian Legion, decided at\nits monthly meeting in club* rooms\nto.sehd;J5 to,Kamloops for added\nOhrishpas cheer for veterans at\nTranquille..,   .\nPlans for the next tea and bake\nsale, were made, and Christmas\nparty committee appointed consisting, of Mrs. J, McDonaUgh and Mrs.\nA. *. Thomas.: Whist urive hostesses\nare Mrs. T. R. Buckham, Mrs. H. T,\nButler and Mrs. J.Cann.\n\u2022 The new visiting committee consists of Mrs. P. J. Crory-and Mrs,\nMcDonaugh.\nNews of the Bay\nRATES: SOo line, 49c tine black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nClarinet   tor\nNumber 78.\nsale.    Call    Dot.\nSUit Sale at   .,.   *   '\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S 8HOP\nRotary luncheon Mondajr November 19, Hume Hotel, 12:15 p.m.\nA Personal Property Floater gives\ngreatest protection. Blackwood Ag'y\nHot  peanuts  and   hot  buttered\npopcorn anytime at Walts,\nFor Sale \u2014 Kitchen range, beds,\netc. Phone 749-Y.  *\nj \u2022 . ; \u25a0\"\"\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix lt,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done and'fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices. -   , ,*\nJunior figure skating outfits. Soft,\nwhite' leather boots on fine' quality\nblades. Unexcelled value at $10.50\nand $15.00 pair. Sizes 8 to 2.\nHIPPERSON'S.   ,:\u25a0\",\nTHE PERFECT GIFT\nA portrait by McGregor.\nPhone 224 for appointment.\nClear Sheet Plasties %\" Lucite-\n36\"x48\" sheets, or cut sizes at\nT. H. WATERS 4 CO, LTD.\nD a n e e to the muslo\nRhythm Rascals tonight,\nHall.\nof   tha\n. Eagles\nInfants'   rompers   with   plastic\ninner pants. \u2014 $1.49.\nTHE CHILDREN'S.SHOP\nLet magazine subscriptions solve\nyour gift problem this year. Order\nNOW from VALENTINE'S.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSOI>rS-for reliable reoairs\nat moderate prices.\nFOR    FLOOR    SANDING    AND\nFINISHING, TILE OR LINOLEUM\nPlease phone 186-R-2\nLost \u2014 A large black and white\ndog near'' ferry, Thursday p.m.\nNamed Dusty. Please phone 663-X4.\nI'm going to give'my sweetheart\na Lane cedar chest for. Christmas\nfrom '   .\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nACE-TEX INSULATION BOARD\n4\" x 8', 7', 8', 9' and 10' sheets\nVi\" thick \u2014 8c per sq. ft\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nRENWICK'8   PORTRAIT   8TUDI0\nA dozen portraits as Christmas\ngifts. Make your appointment now.\nPhone 1465.\nNu-Life\nStainless Steel \"Waterless\"\nCooking Utensils .\u2022\nBox 333, Nelson, B.C.\nFull line of power tools ln stock.\nSee our display including lathe at\nspecial price of $15.95.\nMe A Me (NELSON) LTD.\nSCOTT'S TIRE SHOP\nVULCANIZING\nTRADE IN YOUR OLD TIRES\nWXSBWiraT. - PHONE 1122\nfiifr ZaWuL Whssihh.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, NOV. 17,1951 \u2014 S\nSalmo Auxiliary\nHears Officials\nSALMO, B. C.-Mrs. Charles Middleton, an official of B. C. Command, Ladies' Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion, and Mrs: Les Browett, president of West Kootenay\nzone, both of Trail, were guest\nspeakers at a meeting of Ladles'\nAuxiliary to Salmo branch,\nMrs, Middleton stressed the importance, of supporting the Legion\nin its recent request for increases\nin pensions and allowances for veterans and their dependents,\nPACK PARCELS\nFlans were fnade to. pack parcels\nfor armed forces personnel from\nthis'district' .   ,\nA report from Mrs. G. K. Rich\nardson of H. B: Mine, showed that\n$35 had been cleared in a bridge\ntournament Winners were Mrs. J,\nFair of Salmo and H. Maxwell, Emerald Mine, and consolation prizes\nwent to Mrs. Richardson ahd Jack\nKwasney, both ot H. B.- Mine.\nThe Auxiliary voted $5 to provincial command Legion Day fund\nfor the purpose of buying comforts\nfor patients in Shaughnessy Military Hospital ill Vancouver. Members were reminded that Paddy\nHughes is in the hospital.\nMrs.. G. Dauphinais and Mrs. J.\nGrant agreed to serve on the community Christmas tree committee.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIII\nORDER YOUR\nFLEXALUM\nVenetian\nBlinds\nA3 ADVERTISED IN\nTH18 WEEK'8 STAR WEEKLY\nAt\n\u25a0ii 111 iii \u25a0 11 \u25a0 i \u25a0 11 \u25a0 11 \u25a0 11111 \u25a0 11 j 1111 \u2022 i j 11111111111\nCHRISTMAS IDEAS\nThirty-inch doll wears child-size\n2 clothes! Pattern 581; transfer of\ndoll only.\nDQHM SHOES! Sew-easy \u2014three\npattern parts! Pattern 803 has pattern parts in sizes small, medium,\nlarge, extra.large.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson,\nB.C. Print plainly PATTERN NUM\nBER, your NAME and ADDRE88.\nSuch a colorful roundup of\nChristmas ideas! Send twenty-five\ncents for our new1 Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Catalog. Choose patterns for your Christmas gift-jhak\ning from the gaily illustrated toys,\ndolls, Household and personal accessories. And a Free Pattern * is\nprinted right in the book.\nGREENWOOD P.-T.A,\nSEEKING CLINIC\nGREENWOOD, B.C.-P6ssibility\nof obtaining a dental clinic for the\ndistrict, is bejng investigated by\nGreenwood Parent-Teacher Association. , \u25a0'   \u25a0 \u25a0\nAt its. meeting in the school, the\ngroup formed a \u25a0 committee ^consisting of Mrs. John Klemen, Mrs.\nGlen Weatherly and Mrs. Cam MacKenzie to look Into the; matter,\nThe'Association has 73 registered\nmembers, Mrs. L. Folvlck, .membership committee, reported, A report on the Eastern border conference of parents and teachers in\nNelspn was given by Mrs. M. Park,\nbranch delegate. A sale of liome\nbaking as a means of raising funds,'\nwas planned:\nMembers were entertained by a\npuppet show staged by pupils of\nGrades IV and V under the guidance of their teacher, Miss T. Mor-\nita.\nOfficers Elected\nBy Renafa W.I.\nRENATA,   B,.   C. \u2014 Mrs.   Isaac\nWiebe  was   elected  president   of ;\nRenata Women's Institute at its annual meeting at the home of Mrs.\nPeter Warkentin.\n.Mrs. Matt Rohn Is vice-president; j\nMrs,   Warkentin,   secretary;   arid '\nMrs, Tom Hunchak, treasurer. Mrs.\nHenry Funk is the other.member\nof the board.\nBU8Y ORGANIZATION\nA favorable yearly report was\nread. The organization's special\nproject was assisting the community to buy a spund projector. A\nnumber of demonstrations-were i\ngiven during the year and several\ncitizenship discussions were held.\nThe group had a handicraft display and sponsored a garden contest for school children. A lamp'\nv)\\is. bought for the teacherage. Two ;\nspeakers were Mrs. R. S. Chalmers\nof Robson and Miss Cres'sman, public health nurse, J\nAt the annual meeting Mrs. Lou .\nChizmazea,  Mrs.  Bessie Bestwick\nand Mrs. John Martens were taken\ninto the membership.\nFRISTON, England (CP)\u2014Arthur\nRldgeon, 72, was reciting a monologue at his club in this Suffolk.\nCounty town when he came to the\nline, \"That's where my horse fell\n\" Ridgeon collapsed and died.\nGov't Employees\nHold Annual Dance.\nNelson branch of the B. C. Provincial Government Employees'\nAssociation held its annual whist\nand dance in Legion hall Thursday\nnight. .\nW. C. Wicken was in charge of\narrangements. '\u25a0\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLE WOOD\n0PT0METRI8T\nSuccessor to J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293 NELSON, B. C.\nLOVELY HATS\n.in\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nCOAL\n^\u00ab      , TOWLER\nFuel A Transfer\nPhone 889    .\u25a0 . , \u25a0   Nelson, B.C.\nLADIE8   AUXILIARY  TO\nCANADIAN  LEGION\nTea and Bazaar in Legion Hall\ntoday. 2:30. Come and see our fancy\naprons,\nFibreglass Dustop Air Filters for\nFurnaces.  Sizes  16x20x2,  16x25x2,\nand 20x20x2; all at $2.65 each. For\nyour requirements see\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nSee our window for that extra\nSpecial Christmas gift, A small\ndeposit 'will hold for Christmas\ndelivery.\nCOVENTRY'8 FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 962\nPHONE 107 FOR APPOINTMENT\nin your' own home Jor measurements for your British Knitwear\ngarments, made-to-measure,\nTICKNER TAILORS\n461 JOSEPHINE ST.\nWash your car, windows,* outside\nfurniture* etc., with a Di*on Auto\nWasher.  Screws  on  garden hose,\ncleans quickly and easily.\n,  HIPPERSON'S\n1 used Coleman Oil Heater, half\nprice. \u2014 We buy and sell new and\nused furniture.\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging ahd construction\ncamp bedding requirements.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST. PHONE 1660\nMEN'S AND BOYS' 17 JEWEL\nCENTER SECONDS WATER\nPROOF WATCH. STAINLESS\n8TEEL BACK, THI8 18 THE BEST\nVALUE OBTAINABLE TODAY.\nFULLY GUARANTEED. $30.00.\nBETTER BUYS AT\nBUTTERFIELD8\nATTENTION\nB.C. GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES\nA. C. Bennett, assistant general\nsecretary B.C. Government -Employees Association will be in Nelson November 19 and 20 to interview Government employees,, Any\nmembers wishing to discuss work\nor wage problems with Mr. Bennett\nplease contact him- at the Hume\nHotel, Nelson on the above dates\nor phone Mri R. J. Simms at the\nLand Registry Office for appointment. '\nThe funeral of the late Martin\nKennedy will be held at Silverton\non Sunday Nov. 18 at 2 p.m. No\nflowers by  request.\nCAMERA FANS\nThe Nelson Daily News Photo Editor is\ngathering pictures for the 1952 Pictorial\nEdition.\nIF YOU HAVE PICTURES\nr \\ i Of scenery, sports, industry and community\n, * activities from anywhere in the Kootenay-:.\n. Boundary that you would like to see published\nin the popular annual edition, you are invited\nto submit them now. Negatives or prints that\nare glossy and sharp are best for reproduction. All will be returned to you. ,\nSEND YOUR PICTURES\nTO THE PHOTO EDITOR\n\u00bb\"\nNelson Daily News\nNELSON, B.C.\n V^BWl8^1\"1'1*1.1' :'\"^\n......\n2f^l0lttt laill| ^ttI0 Better D6al\nEstBbhsfed April Vi   \\W1\nBritish Colombia's '-.. ii',*'\n< Most \/nterestlng Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED;\n268 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized os Second Class'.Mall\nPost Office Department, Ottawa ,\n. MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n! THB AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\n., * Saturday, November 17, 1951\nNot Charity\nI    Prime Minister Winstpn Churchill\n: has put Britain's case  for further\nUnited States financial aid on a reasonable and firm basis. -     *    *\nHe is making it clear that whatever\nmoney is forthcoming'.will not be a\nhandout but will be money paid for\nvajuable services'rendered.\nIn a major speech in London, Mr.\nfChurchill.said, \"It must not be forgotten that under the late (Labor) Government we took peculiar risks in pro-\n| vlding the principal atomic' base for\n\u25a0 the United\" States in East Anglia, and\nthat in consequence we placed ourselves in the forefront of Soviet.antagonism. We have, therefore, every\nneed and every right to seek and receive the fullest consideration from\n;*v$he Americans for ourjpoint of view,\n\"\"and I feel sure this will not be denied\nus.\"    ' '\u2022 ,- v'\nThe important bomber bases were\n\u25a0granted to the United States by the\nLabor Government, the Calgary Herald\nrecalls, not without considerable grum-\n[ bling and opposition, from the Labor\n\u2022Party's more leftish elements, and\n\u25a0certainly with .wild screams from the\nCommunists both inside and outside\nBritain.  ,-\n\u25a0 The   existence   of   thn   powciful'\n.-United States strikin;; force m Britain\nhas nevev ceased to,infuriate Russia,\nand as Mr..Churchill said, it-lias had'\nthe effect nf focusing upon   Britain \"\neven more bitter Red antagonism thpn\nusual. It is dreadful even to think **of\nwhat would happen to Britain in a\nnew-style war of atomic,bombs and*\nguided   missiles.   Even   without   the\nUnited States bases on her soil, Britain'*\n:' would be a prime target, and with the\n; bases there Britain becomes a target\nwhich Russia would be compelled to\ntiy to destroy at all costs. To call this\n. risk \"peculiar\" is, as the Herald says,\nindeed a superlative bit of British understatement.\nFor Korean Troops;\nIt came. is a surprise to find that neither\nthe Salvation Army nor the Y.M.C.A. have\ntheir welfare teams in Korea doing the,kind\nof work which became so well and favorably\nknown in the last war.. It came as even a\ngreater surprise to learn that both these organizations offered their, services long ago,\nhave stood ready at all times'to take on their\ntraditional Jobs in Korea, and that the only ,\nreason,they are not but .there now li that the\nDepartment of National Defence will not let\nthem go.       ... ;\u25a0\nIn letters to the Globe and Mail in Toronto, the Commissioner of the Salvation\nArmy and the General Secretary of the Y.M.\nC:A. make it very clear that both these ;or-\nganliatlona are ready and anxious to move\ninto Korea, and have been ready lor at least\na* year.   ' . *\n\u25a0 Mr. Claxton,. the Minister of National 'tie-\nfence,, says the nature of the Korean terrain\nand the fighting makes it impossible for out-\n\u25a0 side organizations tq operate welfare and rec.\n' reational centres, We find' this difficult to\naccept. Throughout the last war, the auxiliary\naervices provided their facilities under a great\nvariety, of circumstances and in many coun-\n' tres, Granted that Korea may present special\ndifficulties, we believe that the Sally Ann\nand the Y.M.C.A. would find ways to surmount those difficulties if they were given\nthe opportunity. ''     . :V ,\nThe situation, then, is this: Recreational\nand welfare facilities for the Canadians in\nKorea are, by Mr. Claxton's own admission,\ndefinitely inadequate, and organizations willing and anxious to improve them are not being allowed even to try. This is Just not good,\nenough. The excuses offered are* unconvincing.\nIt is time.not only to.ask why this situation\nprevails, but, to insist' that it be corrected\nimmediately.\u2014Calgary Herald.\nWorth a Cheer\nOne of the most subtle, penetrating\nand delightful writers in English today\nis E; M. Forster. In his recently published, book of essays, \"Two Cheers for\nDemocracy\", he explains that he con-\n' siders democracy worthy of two cheers\nonly\u2014one because it permits variety\n.and two because it permits criticism'.*:\n> His third cheer, he declares, is reserved\nfor what he calls \"Love, the Beloved\nRepublic\".\nThe thought is significant, the\nChristian Science Monitor finds. Democracy is not an end in itself. It is\nvaluable for what it permits. But to\nlove one's neighbor as oneself\u2014here'is\nthe principle that gives positive content\nto the permissive freedoms of democracy, that points the way from com-\n: Jjetitive struggle to cooperative order,\nthat lifts the free individual into the\nuniversal republic of man ahd'reflects\nthe LoVe that is God.\n.\/Watering, the Mortar\nAppropriations   of   the   82nd   Congress\namount ttb $89,000,000,000.\n.  Eighty-five billion dollars.!\nThis thing we^ call money is only paper,\nafter all. Same papei; to print a fin, a C, ever)\na grand. Run off $9 bills on one press, $1000\nbills on another. It's that easy. Turn the crank\nand we are all millionaires.\nHere is a dollar bill, and on lt is printed:\n\"This certifies that there is on deposit in the\nTreasury of the United States of America one\n\u2022.dollar in silver payable to the bearer on de-\n'* mand.\"'   '   \u2022\u25a0-\nWhat good is silver? We can't eat it or\nwem it. It won't hunt our houses. It in a token,\n\u2022a symbol of faith...,\n' \u25a0'   Give a pnii of milk for n'bucket of flouri\nand such trading we understand. A horse for*:\na cow. A plot of ground.for a pair of mules.\n\u25a0 But hand over a blanket or a shirt for a piece'\nof paper and we are trading on faith.\nFaith in the United States of America to\nmaintain values that will enable us to get just\nreward for our labor in weaving the blanket:\n' and sewing the shirt   *  '\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0; v Then our Congress appropriates eighty-\n:?five billion dollars) That is a lot of paper, gen-\ntlemen. If''you don't watch out, you won't be\nable to redeem it even with silver, much less.\nwith food and clothing. .\nThey turned the presses high speed in\nGermany and Austria alter World War II,\nturning out bundles of 10,000,' 20,000-mark\nnotes. And the, money had no value, no Use.\nPeople in the country bartered butter for eggs,\nbut people in the city had no medium of ex- *\nchange and the stores were Jammed with food\nthat nobody could buy. The economy of the\nnation clogged and collapsed and the people\nrioted .and smashed the shops and took the\nbread and shoes. i    \\   ' \u2022 \u25a0' \u2022\nIn China, the Government ran the presses\nhot, and people walked the streets pushing\nwheelbarrows stacked With currency. They\nwere trying to buy a meal or a garment. They-\ncouldn't, and the Communists took the coun-\n*\u25a0*\u25a0 .'.''.:\nIf the Congress continues to weaken our\n.: currency, print and reprint the green paper,\n\u2022it will weaken our faith in our Government\nAnd faith, gentlemen, is one of the few forces\nthat still holds the American structure together. If you continue to water the.mortar,\nthe structure, may collapse.\u2014Atlanta Const!-\n\u2022.iution, '     \"   '\nYour Horoscope\nGood progress and promotion are prob-^\nable. Because of a sterling character today's\nchild should overcome all exigencies.\nFOR SUNDAY, NOV. 18: Conserve your\nresources and you should be optimistic for the\nfuture. Today's child is likely to be a helpful\nisOUl.\nIt's Been Said\nThe employer generally gets the employees.\nhe deserves.-\u00a3ir Walter Gilbey.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\n\" Opon te any reader Names ot potions\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no <eharge fbr this service.\nQusitipns WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL exoept whirs there Ip obvious\nnooonlty for privacy,\nR. D\u201e Trail\u2014Please tell ine where I might\npurchase a textbook on automotive engineering or diesel engineering,*\nv   Write to the Director, Educational end\nVocational Guidance, 701 Yates Street, Vic\ntorla, fl. C. Specie], books on this subject are.\nused by the department of adult education;\nM. R. K, R.R. 1\u2014To settle en argument is\nthere only one Sphinx in Egypt?\nThere are. many Sphinxes ip Egypt, the\nword meaning a compound creature with a\nlion's body and i human head, Tbe Great\nSphinx of Giza is the one known to most\ntourists. Sphinxes in pairs guarded approaches\nto'temples, and the Great Sphinx guards the\nentrance to the Nile Valley and has a shrine\nbetween Jits paws.\nMrs, F. L., Bast Arrow Park\u2014Please name the\ngame you were playing to aid us in\nanswering your question on how to count\nthe hands.\nCurious, Kimberley\u2014Where* is the Blngling\nMuseum of-Art?\nThe John and Mable Ringling Museum of\n'Art is situated ln Sarasota, Fla. It contains\n400 valuable paintings, including 'works by\nHubens, Rembrandt, Titian, Tintoretto, Van\nDyck, Frans Hals, and others! It was John\nBingling'a intention that his home should become a museum of Venetian art and many\nVenetian pictures have, been moved from the1\nbouse to the Museum. As fer as we know there\nare no circus exhibits ln this Museum, They\nare shown in the Museum of the American\nCircus, opened in 1948, among then) being old\nparade wagons, circus models, etc.    \\\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AOO '\nProm The Nelson Dally News, Nov. 17, 1041\nFour choirs of St Paul's United Church,\ncomprising 140 voices, will be heard in Musi-\nKhana Nov. 28 under the leadership of Mrs.\nT. J. S, Ferguson.\nA total of 2110 names are on the Trail\ni.vpters' list this year.\nMio. Ni Dip Innes of Va'Hmii who i Nolinn\nvioltoi. .     , -   . ,*,.'..\nMetals\nAlarms\nWASHINGTON, Nov, 16 (AP) -\nUnited States production officials\npredicted today that new outs ordered In civilian use of scarce materials\nafter Juit. 1 represent the worst that\nwill befall Industry and consumers,\nTb; national production authority\nannounced Thursday that the auto,\ntruck industry will be allotted only\n40 per cent of the steal plats needdd\nto meet scheduled production during January,,February and March,\nThis could moan ah ultimate ruo\nin price ceilings on car\" end trucks,\nN.P.A. administrator Manly Fleischmann asked the industry tr make up\nthe plate shortage by using a ropro-\nexpenslvo but Icss-criUcol form\ncelled \"conversion \u00abt\u00abel,\"\nManufacturers of \"Jess-essential\"\nconsumer goods will get an average\not only* io per cent copper, 20 per\ncent of aluminum and 90 ner cent\nof steel, as compared with 'their\npre-Korean usage,\nDrastically curtailed item's Include\nsporting goods, lamps, Venetian\nblinds, springs and mattresses, dolls,\ntoys and games, cigarette lighters,\nChristmas .decorations, umbrella's,\nJewelry, signs and advertising displays* :.*;\u25a0-\u25a0}\nA long list of 'imore-essential\"\nproducts also will be curtailed, but\nnot as severly, Fifty per cent of\nsteel, 35 per cent of copper and SB\nper cent of aluminum will go to\nthe makers o'f refrigerator, washing\nmachines, radio and television sets,\nand other products ranging down\nto zippers, buttons and pins.\n\u25a0The entire field of consumer bard\ngoods, more-and lessee jentlal, now\nia receiving about 58 per cent of the\nsteel, 48 per cent of tho aluminum,\nand 94 per cent et the copper lt\nconsumed in the first half of 1090.\nTha new curbs apply to metal\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Nov. 17, 1928\nC. H. Haniilton, Treasurer of the Nelson\nQyro Club, announced that the club would\nprofit by about $380 from the three-night production of the revue \"Step Lively\" at the\nOpera House. \u25a0 \u25a0\".*,\nMiss Olive M.  Garrood,  public health\nnurse of the Kootenay Lake district gave a\nresume of her work at the Central Women's\n\u25a0Institute annual conference opening session.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Nov. 17; 1011'\nS. P. Tuck, Sheriff of South Kootenay,\nwill take the chair at the musical social which\nwill be given by the Nelson branch of the\nOverseas Club.\nRoland Bourke, a rancher of Nine-Mile,\nI on the West Arm, will leave soon for a three-\nmonth visit to the Old Country. '\nCaptain end Mrs. Richardson, who have\nbeen in charge df Salvation Army work-in\nthe city for the past 19 months, have been\nappointed to Vernon.\nallocations for the first quarter of\nnext year and probably *wlll continue untlljuly !.\"\u25a0-\nWASHINGTON, Nov. It (AP) -\nThe Power CJommissipn said today,\n-that oral arguments on the proposal of Montana Power Company,\nButte, to import natural gas from\nCanada will start here Dec. 7,\nOne of the roughest seas in the\nworld, the North Sea is also one bf\nthe shallowest, with greatest depth\nat 1088 feet,   ;.'.\nU.S. to Consider\nWheal Pact Ttrmi\nBy OVID A, MARTIN\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 16 (AP) -\nThe United States will soon consider\nwhether it wants to extend a world\npact under which it ia selling wheat\nabroad at \"cut-rate\" prices.\nAmerican wheat now' is mode\navailable to eligible foregin buyers\nat prices ranging from 87 tq 73.\ncents a bushel less thtir domestic\nusers pay.\nThe poet \u2014 called the Interna*\ntlonal wheat Agreement <- has been\nIn offoot since Aug, 1, 1840. Thi\nagreement has only one more year\nto run,. \u2022        ..\"\u2022'\u25a0\"\nParticipants ln the agreement are\n42 wheat-importing countries, and\nthree major wheat exporters.. The\nlatter comprise Canada, Australia,\nand the U.S. The agreement sets\nexport and import quotas and fixed\nprices,       ' -  ', .      .     '  ;;   \u25a0 \u25a0' '\nAt the time the agreement was\nsigned, prices were going down, and\nthe pact looked like a good deal\nto help the U.S. hold foreign markets\nat reasonable prices.       . '\u2022'   .\nBut the change ln international\nconditions last year reversed the\nprice trend, For nearly* two years,\nthe U.S, prije has beer above the\nexport price let by the agreement.\nAt a con*equerce, the United States\nIb committed to sell at the lower\nexport price, making up the differ,\nence from the treasury.\nDespite the cost, the Truman ad*\nministration is expected to Join\nother-countries soon i.. negotiating\nan extension of the agreement. The\nextension would have to I* ratified\nby the Senate. The Issue is expected\nte come up at the next session or\nCongress. ....\nAgriculture Department officials\ndefend.the agreement,They say lt\nhelps US, wheat growers to hold\nmarkets abroad, Without the agree\nment, they siy, wheat' prices might\nbe depressed to a point where many\ndomestic growers wbuld :>e forced\nout of production. \u25a0\"..-\u25a0\u25a0.\nCaricature of Early Singapore\nClfy Father Has Familiar Look\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nBoy Ferroa, ' Singapore newspaper man, forwards to the Canadian Press-a special edition of'the\nStraits' Times.' \u25a0\nit is a 60-poge production which\ncelebrates the fact that Singapore,\nhitherto a \"town\" of about 1,000,000\npeople, has been granted i royal\ncharter as a \"city,\"\nThe full significance of the\nchange of status is not yet indicated,\nbut lt apparently heralds an increasing measure of self-government for the British bastion at the\nSouthern extremity of the Malay\nPeninsula.\nMr, Ferroa was one of the newspaper men who visited Canada ln\n1040-90 to study Canadian newspaper operation under scholarships\nfrom UNESCO ' (United Nations\nEconomic and Social Council) and\nbecame knowh In many newsrooms across the country.\nJudging by the special edition of\nthe. Straits' Times, the new city\nnow is a go-ahead place, with Its\nmisfortunes of the Beoond World\nWar fading into the background.\nA half-page grqup caricature of\nthe \"First City Father\" of the new\n.\"city\" by T. H. Peng, looks, in\naction and attitudes, like a job\ndone on the city council of most\nany Canadian city by a Canadian\nstaff artist.\n* The problems seem the same, too.\nMunicipal President AS. P. F. Mc-\nNelce waves the oharter as o baton\nbefore the council of about 30. Mrs.\nRobert Eu carries an axe celled\n\"Consumer's Resistance;\"' \\Com-\nmlssloner Son Ghee soon runs with\na basketball labelled \"Public Nuisances;\" while Commissioner Alia-\ngoff holds \u25a0 serin entitled \"Injustice to Landlords.\" ,\nLiko Canadian cities, Singapore I*\nspreading Into the country, and Mr.\nFerroa is one of the commuters\u2014a\ngardener and a flood victim. He\nsays in an article In the special\nedition: ....\u25a0'\n; \"Although the Bedok soil is\nsandy, I have managed to raise ln\nmy. little garden chlllle, papaya,\nlime trees, an* egg plants (brln-\njals). As a matter, of fact 1 have\nso many egg ulant, trees that we\nhave to give away* our surplus . ..\n\"We \"have killed more than a\ndozen centipedes and scorpions\nwhich found their way Into our\nhome, to say nothing abput the\noccasional land crabs which visit\nour scullery for scraps of food.   -\n\"One day during the rainy season\nour house waa completely flooded\nout and we were marooned for 14\nhours. The dog, my wife's chickens\nand hens,, the cat, and our'three\ngeese spent the long, wet night\nwith us in the dining room,\"\nFor Your Protection\nThe Law Requires That Every Real Estate\nAgent   and   Salesman   be   Licensed   and\n,. ,*.     Bonded.\nEach properly licensed person is given an\nidentification card by this Board.\n, ,.;       PLAY SAFE \u2014 Deal only with a Licensed\nAgent or Salesman, who will be glad to show \u2022\nyou his credentials..\nREAL ESTATE AGENTS'\nLICENSING BOARD\n(Established under section 42 \"Real-Estate Agents' Licensing\nAct\" CH 180 R8BC 1948) *\nPress Comment\nWhen you go hunting it is not enough to\nmake sure lt Is a deer you are shooting at,\nwarns the Saint John Telegraph-Journal; you\nshould know where the bullet is going. \"The\ncities and some of the larger towns have local\nordinances which* prohibit the discharge of\nfirearms within* their limits, and the law is\nrigidly enforced. But the peril to human life\nis just as great if a bullet Is carelessly fired\nnear the smaller community, or in the vicinity\nof isolated farmhouses, and the hunter should\nkeep this always in mind,\"\nChanges in procedure ln Parliament are\nlong overdue, declares the'Edmonton. Journal.\n\"The present rather happy-go-lucky system\ndeveloped ln another era, when Canadian Parliaments had comparatively little business before them, and could afford to handle it in a\nleisurely fashion, allowing every Member-to\nspeak at, length on everything before the\nHouse. In the last 30 years, however, Parliament's duties have increased so enormously\nthat this spaciouB method of doing business\ntends to stretch the sessions out Interminably,\n. even with sittings twice a day.\"\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nj5u KNOV'SUflWTB-BBSS AHO PU54CS\nTbR DUCATS TD THE SELL-OUT EVEtfT OF\nTHE VfeW-SD VtXl GIVE \u2022\/i=M TD l-*M\u00bb>\u00bb\nAnc\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\n.    IO THEN VOU COME UPOH HIM\nLWEXPECTEOUY \/WD FIND Ht?S GOT MORE ,\nTICKETS THAU THE &JY WHO CWHS THB 7T54M.'\nToday's Bible Thought\nAndrew did e great, life work Just\nin en hour. His influence indirectly\non civilization was surpassed by\nfew men.\nHe first flndeth his own brother\nSimon.\u2014John 1:41.\n(fajnldbL\nJane ain't so sensitive as she\nmakes out. She Just goes around\nwith  her feelin's  primed  to  get\nI hurt because.she enjoys bein' mad\nI at somebody.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nnor\nITSREDUCE\n-.   |-\"'IlWl\n*      '\n\u25a0 \u25a0 mm IIMWVH\nHID    RUT\n\u25a0urn\nlUlf... Dili\n[ICE win\nMin\nEASE JOBS\nSounds confusing but it isn't. Profits pay\nfor new machined and equipment which\nmean more* efficient production with\nshorter working hours and less physical\neffort.. .therefore profits reduce labour.\nProfits pay for new product research, new\nplants and new development. This means\nthe employment of more men. Therefore\nprofits reduce labour but increase jobs.*\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company has continually \"ploughed back\"\na substantial part of its profits to modernize its plants, develop new mines and\nexpand its operations. In the first years of its operation Cominco employed around\n175 men. Today, this great company provides jobs for over 8,500. Many more\njobs at wages many times that of the early days... all made possible by \"company\nprofits.\"\n*\n$6^,000,000from Company profits\nis now being spent on new projects. The completion of these\nprojects will mean the addition\nof 800 permanent jobs.\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company\nis one of the largest producer! of lead and zinc in\nthe world and Canada's leading producer of\nchemical fertilisers.\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MINING & SMELTING\ne n p sir .    if       ii i ii i       limit ii\n*      .   \u00bbK  \"NO MAN  IS  AN  WUNB\" A  Wll  COtOUl  SOUfW  \u00abOVll   ON  C01WNCO        \u2022        WIIH   COMINCO,  TMH,  l\/C, *\nCMSJJI\n j^HptHM\nHHP?\ntffi'l\n(bwwuL ihn-\nJUL\nLARRY JtATCLIFFE\nKIMBERLIlY - LoSs Aumbir 10 weht UP in the books last weekend for the Kimberley Dynamiters, but loyal fans ire not losing interest,\nIn fact, the ten losses have produced mere coffee-shop and beverage-\nroom conversation than any other topic. After th* showing Kimberley\nmade in the West Kootenay\u2014we didn't see the games\u2014the odds it*\nslowly shifting In favor of the Klmberieyites.\nit may surprise some readers, but et last eeunt the Dynamiters had\n.' 12 forwards, five defenoamsn, and two goal-tenders still In oimp,\nRalph Redding's troubles slim to be Ih outtlng someone out fer there\nseem to be ne stand-outs ai In ether years. Thi whole gang Is near\nenough equal In calibre to mike the competition for a spot on the\nsquad Interesting. ,\nThe,local executive Is Willing to admit that new players are still\nbeing sought. Ohcs. again the old \"no names until thiy get here\" system\nIs enforced, but thli timd no one's kicking,\n.*\u2022.-*   *     *\nSmokle Tootles, Nelion Officiating Criticised\nSotting beck to those \"beverage-room\" conversations, anyone who\nsaw those games over in the West Kootenay last weekend and tried to\ndescribe them couldn't do better than the Klrnberloy Bulletin writer\nwho made the trip and wrote the following\n\"Nobody argues the fact that Trail has a good hockey club and\nStaley was a stand-out for them Friday, with Cavanaugh and Cook alio\ngoing good. However, when the going got tough some of them . . .\ncouldn't take lt. Particularly in this connection was Dick Kotanen. This\nleague would be well off without this type of player\"\nGetting on to>. this writer's favourite subject, refereeing, the\nBulletin scribe said, \"The refereeing of Jim Morris and Jim Anderson\nwas good\u2014although they were several seconds behlhd the play most of\nthe way, Their one big mistake cost Kimberley the game for Cook was\nabout six feet offside when he went In for the winning goal\" '\nAbout the Nelson game the following caught our eye, \". . . it was\na different story, The Dynamiters worked hard but made many mistakes\nand took a well .deserved trimming.\" '.--...-\nThough it waa admitted that Nelson played a hard-skating game\nall the .way, tht peeved poncll-pufhcr really-lashed out at Nelson\nrefereeing, Certainly space won't permit copying all his comments but\nhe summed it up nicely ln one paragraph that we will print, We-won't\nprint all he suid for the simple reason thlt yours truly Is supposed to\nbe writing this column. \/\n\".. .We believe Kimberley Dynamiters would have lost on Saturday night to the .Nelson Maple Leafs\u2014but that kind of officiating is not\ngood for hockey,..\" Who ire we to argue when we didn't see the game.\nAs you read this, the Kimberley team will have played Nelson in\nKimberley. Odds up here favor Kimberley and we ere inclined to agree.\n'The Kimberley team should begin to roll now, and the league will\ntighten up some. ,\nRalph Redding hai moved Spence Tatchell up forward again,* at\nleast he did for the lilt workouts, ind the former Nelson puckster should\nadd scoring punch as will Bun Mellor.\nit    *     *\nABBREVIATED SPORTS PAGE\nWednesday's column made several itatements about Junior hockey\nthat should be rectified, Elmer Pelto, who had \u25a0 tryout ln Lethbridge, Is\nnow with Calgary, Art Gold, who pliyed a game for Crow's Nest Pass,\ncame home for a short while but left again Tuesday along with former\nKimberley Juvenile Bob Qelgerloh and Joe Kershaw who has been with\nthe Dynamiters until now. A Crow's Nest seout nibbed Oeigerlch at a\nJuvenile practice ... 7-\nThe Dynamiters hive six local boys On their roster, more than\nmost senior teams ln Canadi, Besides flashy Dave MoLay. defenceman\nTank Johnstone, Claude Bell and Buok Kavanough, the Dynamiters have,\ne brother combination ln Red and Bun Mellor ...\nHarry Brown will coach the Kimberley Juveniles once again With\nArt Mackie, a former Dynamiter, probably handling the midgets,'..\nFertile High School basketballers invade Klrnberloy ttmlchl (n the\nEast Kootenay league opener for Kimberley.\nC.R.U. Prexy Ignores Sarnia\nCry for Qrey Cup Default\nMONTRE\/VL, Nov. 18 (CP) \u2014\nMyer Insky. Canadian Rugby Union\npresident, said tonight the East-\nWest football playoff for the Grey\nCup will be played Nov. 24 as\nscheduled.\nCommenting on a report from\nSarnia, Ont., that a group of sports-\nWHO PAYS?\nK Tour Accounts Receivable\nAnd Inventory Hecordi Are\nDestroyed by Fire\nBE SAFE \u2022 BUY BATH\nEnquiries solicited\nJ.\u00abrJ.TAYLOR UMlTtD\nTORONTO SAFE WORKS;\n145 Front St. E.,   Toronto\nMONTREAL   WlNNirtd   VANCOUVH\nSalei tmd Se\/miao\nmen -were considering seeking ah\ninjunction to stop the game on\ngrounds the teams competing are\nprofessional, Insky said the game\nwas for the C.R.U. championship.\n\"The winning club will be awarded the trophy,\" Insky said, \"notwithstanding any such protest.\"\nThe Sarnia group claimed that\nthe trophy Is emblematic of the\namateur football championship of\nCanada and should be awarded to\nSarnia by defaUlt because Sarnia\nImperials, Ontario football champions, are the only senior amateur\nclub in Canada. 5\nInsky declined comment on this\nclaim.\nMinor Ifiockey\nup\nMonday 8-8 bjm.\u2014Bantam Heps,\nTuesday 8-8 a^.m,\u2014Commercial\nHockey. 9S\nThursday 9:3o4l):30p.m. \u2014 Commercial Hockey. *\u00bb\nFriday 5-8 p.m.-\u2014 Midget Heps.\nSaturday 9-10 a.m. \u2014 Bantam\nPool.* i\n12:30\u20141:30 p.m. \u2014 Bantam Pool\n1:30-2:30 p.m. \u2014 Bantam -Red\nWings vs Black Hawks.\n2:30-3:30 p.m. \u2014 Midget Rockets\nvs Ironmen.\n3:30-4:30 p.ni. \u2014 Juvenile Reps.\n6 Senior Hockey 6\n>                TONIGHT x\n\u2022trail SMOKE EATERS \u2022\n6    NELSON MAPLE LEAFS 6\nm 8:00 P.M.\n\"            Tickets on Sale at Kootenay Stationers w\nToday 10100 a.m. to 6 p.m.\nFraser Tees, District Agent, 832 Ward 8t, Nelson, B.C.\nHerbert H. Peacock, Representative, Nelson, B.C.\nJat. Skinner, District Agent, Trail, B.C.\nDonald J. Brown, Dlstrlpt Agent, 703 Hermla Crescent, Trail, B.C.\nGeorge W. Dill, Representative, 475 Howe St., Vancouver, B.C.\nCyril Bell, Representative, Castlegar, B.C.\nG. W. Hertlg, Representative, Rosiland, B.C.\n, Wm. F, Tyers, RqhresenUtlve, Kaslo, B.C.\nH. C. Webber, C.LXI., Branch Manager, 476 Howe St., Vancouver, B.C.\n10-2 For First Win\nDynamiters Drop T.N.T. Charge After\nLosing 10; Wares, Barefoot Banished\n\u25a0'\"\u25a0',. ..'\u25a0'\u25a0' \"..'\u25a0.        ',.* ' :      ',;,-.'\" \u25a0 'l'   .    '-\nKIMBEBLEY, B.C., Nov.. lMt t<5ok ifgamfts b&fors\nthe Kimberley Dynamiters found the range but when they\ndid it wag .with explosive results, trouncing the third-place\nNelson Maple Leafs 10-2 here tonight fpr their first win of\nthe Western International\nHookey League season.  , ,\nThe Leafs went the last 45 min*\nutes without Coach Eddie Wares,\nled from thi ice by police at 13:30\nOf the first frame, after Kimberley\nhad sedf ed goal number three.\nThe Wares Incident ollmaxed\nbut by no means finished the rug.\ngid, high-stick play that started\nearly and didn't end till the last\nminute. The Dynamiters led 1-0,\nRecord Ottawa\nCrowe! to See\nBig four final\nOTTAWA, J*fov. 18 (CP) '- A\nthen M, after the first ,two slushy snowtM melted \u00bb* it fell\nperiods, with scoring well dis- on ttii Landsdowne Park gridiron\ntflbuted through the lineup.       12\u00a38d\u00a3\u00bbM,\u00ab on, hoP\" on,tt* \u00abv\u00ab f'\n.\", \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0. I Tiger-Cats final chance in the Big\n(Boumer)    Rodzinyak    saw    50, Four football playoff with Ottawa\nshots come his way in the wide- Rough Riders,\nopen game as the Leaf defence\nfloundered with Wares out ot the\nlineup.\nBall' nabbed the first goal with\nDobni off and Calles added a pair,\nthe f nal one at 13:17, causing tha on the Cats tonight,\nrumpus that ended with Wares\nBut despite the snow, which gave\npromise of a greasy playing field,\nand although Tl-Cats are rated the\nbest mudders ln the Canadian game,\nthere was little local money riding\nbeing sent off tha Ice,\nKimberley had a man advantage,\nwhen Calles put Johnston's passout\ninto the twine. Wares, who had\nargued previously, continued argu\ning, and after receiving a match\nmisconduct, an R.C.M.P. constable\nescorted him off the Ice,\nIJimberley's four second period\ngoals Were chiefly of the scramble\ntype, with three of them coming\nwithin two minutes and four seconds. Doc Livingstone nabbed two,\nKavanagh one and Barre the other.\nNelson's lone counter came In\nthe dying seconds, Haldane scoring,\non a three-man attack.\nThe final session, started by Mag-\nlio's goal, taw Schmeld'make thr\nTen points down, end beaten\nIn their last four encounters with\nOttawa, Hamilton will be playing before .What Wes Brown, Big\nFour seoretary, figures' may be a\nrecord crowd. The park Is sold\nout, snd barring ebntlnued bad\nweather, Lansdowne may exoaed\nIti previous record of more than\nu,ooo.\nRiders tonight were using a\n\"tarp\" of their own \u2014 left over\nfrom baseball days. The tarpaulin\ncovers only the infield of the baseball diamond used by Ottawa Oiants\nof the 'International League,\nWith one exception, Riders will\nstart with the same 24 men who\ndefeated Hamilton 17-7 on Wednes-\nscore 8-2' and Buzz Mellor add! a day, tiackflelder Joe AsqujnJ will\nbrace more. ,       .'    ib>   \u00b0\"'   *Mt   *n   injured   left\n* shoulder.\nThen the period erupted Into\nmix-ups thet ended with George\nBarefoot boarding Sohmeld, tang-\nCoach Clem Crowe, who ran his\nteam through brief workouts last\nnight and again tonight, was re-\nling with Barker and Sohmeld, \"^i-. hV.TT \u00a3 . \u00ab\u201ei\u00abA\u00a3;\n.J\u00abmL ., . .\u201e.0i.w. \u00bbnd fin. >en>** decision on.a replacement\nfor Asquint. It may be lineman\nJack Morneau, Roy Battagello, former Windsor Rocket end, or it\nmight be Don Crowe, 31-year-old\nswinging at a spectator, and finally Joining Coach Eddie Wares\nIn the dressing room,\nThrough the game wis1 10 penalties were handed .out, including all-round\" backflelder.\nmatch misconduct wIJi the local\nsquad drawing,eight to the Leafs'\n11.\nLINEUPS: .   \u2022\nNelson \u2014 Rodzlnyak; .;*-*,Barefoot,\nGilhooly, R, Koehle, F, Koehle,\nMcClenaghan, Pa'squalotto, Wares,\nDobni, Haldane, Harms, Appleton,\nMaglio, Smith.\nKimberley \u2014 -McLay ;,',, Johnston,.\nBarker. .Livingstone, Irving, Barre,\nJones, ' Sutherland, Buzz Mellor,\nCalles, Kavanagh, Schmetd, Bell.\nOffioials-3Layton, -Sanderson. K\" \u25a0'\u2022\n8UMMARY!\nFirst period\u20141, Kimberley, Bell\n(Schmeld, Calles) 3:40; 2, Kimberley; Calles (Barker, Schmeld) 10:40;\n3,   Kimberley\/   Calles   (Johnston)\n15:17.'\nPenaltles-rDobni (2), Schmeld,\nKavanagh, Pasqualotto, R. Koehle\n(10 minute misconduct), Barefoot,\nWares (match misconduct).\nSecond period \u2014 .4, Kimberley,\nKavanagh (Tatchell, B, Mellor)\n2:16; 5, Kimberley, Livingstone\n(Irving) 13:58; 6, Kimberley, Barre\n(Livingstone, Jolmston) 14:15; 7,\nKimberley, . Livingstone\" (Barre,\nJohnston) 16:02; 8, Nelson, Haldane\n(Appleton, Pasqualotto) 10:58.\nPenalties\u2014Bell, Schmeid, Sutherland, Barefoot, Dobni, Maglio (10\nminutes misconduct).\nThird perlod-r8, Nelson, Maglio\n(Smith, Appleton) 2:18; 10, Kimberley, Schmeid (Bell) 6:38; 11,\nKimberley, B. Mellor (unassisted)\n6:47; 12, Kimberley,- B. Mellor,\n(Tatchell, Kavanagh) 13:10. -\nPenalties\u2014Sutherland   (2),' Pasqualotto, Schmeid, Barefoot.    \"\nStops by Rodzinyak ....   18 10 11 40\nStops by McLay     6   7   7 20\nPaddy DeMarco\nDecisions Chavez\nNEW YORK, Nov. 16 (AP) -\nRoughhouse faddy Demarco of\nBrooklyn' bullied young Ed Chavez\nof San Jose, Calif., and wore him\ndown with body blows tonight to\nwin a unanimous 10-round decision\nat Madispn Square Garden, Demar-\nHow They\nStand\nW.l.L..\nP W   L T F  A Pet\nTrail \t\n..   12 10   2 0 77 41\n83.1\nSpokane    .\n.   18   8   6 2 67 86 .562\nNelson-  \u201e,.,\n... 18   5 10 1 61 68\n...11   1 10**0 83 66\"\n,343\nKimberley\n091\n(Includes Friday game)\nP.C.H.L.\n,\nWL   D   F   A\nPt,\nNew West.\n...'*. 10   5   4   68   44\n24\nSeattle\\.-...,\n.9   8   4   72   63\n21\nSaskatoon\n..     9   5   3   55   47\n21\n..    8   7   271   59\n18\nEdmonton\n...    8   3   2   49   33\n18\nTacoma\t\n...    8   9\u201e 4   58   73\n18\nCalgary .. .\n...     5 10   1   40   62\n11\nVancouver\n..    2 12   6   50   01\n10\nBryan G. Wins\nPimlico Special   '\nCo weighed 138V&, Chavez, 138V4.\nMany of Demarco's body punches\nwere close to foul territory and one\nleft Hook that knocked down Chavez for a .five count in the 7th\nlooked low from ringside. Referee\nMark Conn* blocked from a clean\nview by Demarco's body did not\ncall it.\nThe crowd, aroused by Demarco's\nbully boy tactics, booed when the\nOfficial votes were announced by]\nJohnny Addle. Referee Conn saw it\n9-1, Judge Art Aidala 8-2, and Judge\nBill Healy 7-3. The AP card agreed\nwith Alrdala.\nIt was Demarco's 11th straight win\nin his chase of Jimmy Carter's\nlightweight title.\nBALTIMORE, Nov. 16 (AP) \u2014\nBryan G, a second stringer from\nthe Virginia Stable of C. T. Chen-\nery, led all the way to grab an easy\nvictory ln the 15th running of the\nsporty Pimlico Special.\nThe chestnut four-year-old ion\nof Blenheim ll-Anthemlan, overshadowed by such itsblematei as\nHill Prince and Mangcchlck, never left any doubt about the result si Jockey Qvle 8curlock\nsteered him'home by five lengths\nover the favored County Delight.\nCounty Delight, from the Rokebv\nStable of Paul Mellon and ridden\nby, Eddie Arcaro seeking his fifth\nPimlico Special victory, was 12\nlengths ahead of Bedford Stables'\nCall Over. The latter wound up 2Vt\nlengths ahead of the only other\nhorse in the field, Mrs. E, Dupont\n. Weir's Royil Governor.\nj Fanfare, Please\n1 Tarpaulin Is.   .\nFinally Unwrapped\nTORONTO, Ndv. 16 (CP) \u2014 It\nfinally happened: The Canadian\n\u25a0Rugby Union's $12,000 tarpaulin was\nspread over Varsity Stadium field\nlate today.\nIt will remain on the field until\nthe Nov. 24' Grey Cup final, for\nwhich it was purchased.\n\u25a0 Today was the first time the huge\ncanvas has been used;\nBritish Heavyweight\nTermed a Fizzle\nLONDON, Nov. 18 (AP)\u2014British\nsports writers roasted \u25a0 23-year-old\nheavyweight Ray Wilding as another \"busted flush\" today.\nIn their comments on the British\nyoungster's first fight in his own\ncountry for nearly two years, the\nunanimous opinion was that he\nhad learned nothing during his stay\nin the United States.\nWilding and his French-Polish\nopponent, Stefan Olek, were thrown\nout of the Harrlngay ring last night\nby Referee Sam Russell for not trying.\nWilding had been touted by his\nAmerican manager, BUI Daly of\nEnglewood, N.J., as a world heavyweight championship prospect but\nBritish critics toda,y wrote that his\nshowing last night Daly's sights\nhave been much too high.\nPage on Majors'\nDraft Lists\nNEW YORK, Nov. 16 (AP)-For\n$10,000 \u2014 a good day's hot dog arid\nbeer take \u2014 any big league club\ncsn, have Joe Page, the gay reliefer\nof the 1947-49 champion New York\nYankees, \u25a0      '\nFireman Joe and 4883 pther\nplayers are on the draft list for\nMonday's grab bag at Cincinnati.\nOwners are:t. displaying unusual\nInterest ln the bargain basement\nsale.\nHere's how the draft' works. The\nlapt-plsce olub in .' the American\nLeague \u2014 the St. Louis Browhs,\nnaturally \u2014 gets first pick of all\neligible minor leaguers. Then the\nChicago Cubs, last in the National.\nAnd so on through the New York\nYankees, No. 15, and the New York\nSlants, 16th and-last.\nLast year the majors drafted 28\nmen for $269,500. Prize pick was\nMorVis JJartin, the ex-Brooklyn\nlefty who wound up with a fine\n11-4 record for the Philadelphia A's.\n\"Lfale Qrey\nCup\" oft Jjne\nIn Edmonton\nEDMONTON, Nov. 18 (CP) -\u00bb\n\u25a0Skates may, be more appropriate\nthen cleats tomorrow afternoon\nwhen Edmonton M\u00abpl\u00ab Leafs and\nHamilton Junior Tiger-Cats meet\nln the sudden-death final for the\nCanadian junior football champion-\n\u2022h|P*. ,      '*-\u2022*'.',\nEdmonton's Clarke 8tadlum Is\ncovered by \u2022 thin sheet of Ice and\nboth coaches Fred (Smut) Voale\nof Hamilton ahd Nate Shore of\n, Edmonton consider footwear cf\nprime Importance for the \"Little\nQrey Cup\" classic,\n\u2022 Tiger-Cats, claiming they are\n\"red hot,\" arrived ln Edmonton this\nmorning and Veale was anxious to\nhave a look at the footing on the\nplaying field!\n* The grid Is almost, clear of snow,\nalthough preseht forecasts are for\nsnow flurries which may provide a\nwhite carpet for the Junior final\ntomorrow. Temperatures are ranging between 20 and zero;\n\"We have a good ball club, and\nIt should be a good game,\" Veale\nsaid, And Judging'from the Ticats'\nrecord, Veale does have a good ball\nclub.:\nThe Junior Tfeer-Cats came\nthrough victorious Mall 10 games\nthey played this.season, compiling\n329 points in their favor and limiting the opposition to 88.\nBesides this record, the Cafe are\nout to cop their fourth straight Jun-\nier crown, They have held the title,\nfor three years in a row and the\nfirst thing in their minds is: \"We\nwant the Little Qrey Cup again.\"\nAnglers Haul rEm\nIn at Balfour\nBALFOUR, B,C. \u2014 Two Trail\nanglers, Joe. Nicholson and Joe\nKline, caught between 40* and 45\npounds of fiBh, in a'few days here.\nThe largest was an\" 18-pound'\nKamloops, arid others, included, a\nfive and a one pound Kamloops and\nDolly Varden ranging in weight between three arid elgbt pounds. -\nTrophy for Best\nIndian Athlete\nCAUGHNAWAGA'INDIAN RESERVE, Que, ,(CP)-A trophy is going to be awarded annually to Canada's best all-round Indian athlete,\na Government official announced\nyesterday. Medals will go to outstanding Indian athletes in eight\nregions across Canada*.\nThe trophy and medals are to be\nnamed after Tom Longboat, famous\nIroquois runner who scintillated on\nCanadian and international cinder\npaths at the turn of the century.\nMajor Ian Elsenhardt, supervisor\nof physical education and recreation\nof the Federal Indian Affairs\nBranch, > said the project is made\npossible by the cooperation of'the\nAmateur Athletic Union ot Canada\nend through the generosity of the\nDominion Bridge Company.\nLongboat medals are to be\nawarded to outstanding Indian athletes in each of these regions: British Columbia (including Yukon),\nAlberta (Including Northwest Territories), Saskatchewan, Manitoba,\nOntario North, Ontario South, Quebec and New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.\nThf Longboat trophy is to be\nawarded to the outstanding medal\nwinner.\nCurling Club\nDraws\nFollowing are tonight's draws in\nthe CrOwn Point competition:\n6:30* P.M.\nV. E., Ferguson vs. T. W. Mathie-\nson.\nH. Marshall vs. L. F. Wendel.\nJ. Atwell vs. W. A. Forrest.\nT. A, .Rice vs, William Forrest\nJ. D. Rae vs. G. K, Falrbairn.\nA. E, Calvert vs.\" L. Landucci.\n8:30 P.M.\nP. F. Mclntyre vs. A. G. Cheyne.\nM. D, Desbrisay vs. A. M. Chesser,\nF, J. Glover vs. E, L. Jones.\n* H.- Currle vs. J. DeVito,\n\u25a0 R. McGhie vs, S. Gray;\nA..R. Criohton vs. A. W. McDonald.\ntear Rehired as\nCoach\nStamp\nCALGARY, -Nov. 16 (CP)\u2014Les\nLear, coach of Calgary's Stampeders\nfor the past four years, takes over\nthe coaching assignment for his fifth\nseason in charge of the Calgary\nfootball team that will be sparring\nfor Western Conference Gridiron\nhonors when another campaign gets\nunder way. . \\   '\n' C, E. (Cec) Chesher, president of\nthe club, made the announcement\ntoday following a Tuesday night\nmeeting of directors of the club.\nAbout a month ago the entire\nStampeder executive resigned and\nthe first play for the next campaign\nbrought on the appointment of\ndirectors and a board of governors\nto take over for next year.\nLear Came to Calgary in 1948 to\ntake over the coaching chores and\nln his 'first year produced an undefeated season with the Grey Cup\nand 17 straight victories.\nA-mand LetnieuK \"of. the newly\nformed Syracuse Warriors' of the\nApierican Hockey. League was the\nlatest player to reach the 100 goal\nmark In league competition, scoring\nhis century marker'on October 31st.\nVALUA0LE\nCatcher Yogi Bern of the New\nYork Yankees has been voted the\nAmerican League's molt valuable player for 1951 by the Baseball Writers' Association of Am-\nerioa. The squat, homely, but\nheavy-hitting catoher Won tho\ncoveted award after a close\nbattle with 20-game winner Ned\nGarver of the last-place St. Louis\nBrowns and teammate Aide Reynolds. All three received stx first-\nplaoe votes but Berra was named\non 23 of the 24 ballots while Garver was named on 20 and Reynolds on only 12.\nNipawin Event\nOnly Car Spiel*\nThis Season\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP)-\nDates for the annual automobile\nbonspiel in Nipawin, Sask., have\nbeen set for Jan. 11 to 19. Entries\nclose Jan. 4.\nIt Is expected to be the only\nauto bonspiel In Canada this year.\nOfficial! of the Edmonton auto\nBonspiel havo Indloated they are\nabandoning the competition after\n: a two-year tryout. The 'spiel, born\nseveral years ago In Nipawin, also\n. has been dropped at other Prairie\ncentres due to lack of entries and\n'  high oosts.\nThe Nipawin group, under President and Bonspiel Chairman George\nFurneaux, has announced the entry tee will be' boosted to $30 per\nmen, It was formerly $100 per four-\nman rink.\nThe olub lost money on the\nventure last year. But exeoutlve\nmembers havo ben canvassing the\ntown for the last two weeks and\nbusinessmen have guaranteed\nsufficient capital to cover any\nIon.\nFour events will be run off during the week. Semi-finalists in each\nof the first three events will qualify for round-robin leading to the car\nprizes. There will be * fourth, con*\nsolatton event for entries not reach*\ning the semi-finals.   ,\nNIUON DAILY NIWS, SATURDAY, NOV. 17,1?31 'i-i 7\nMtUukusBows Out,\nFttchoek Esks' Coach\n\u25a0y GRAHAM TROTTER\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON, Noy, 18 (CP) -\nThe lest* Canadian-bora coach hes\nleft big-time football with the stepping down of Annls Stukus sis coach\nof Edmonton Eskimos In favor of\nFrankie Fllchock. .\nAppointment of Fllchook, expected ever since he left Montreal Alouettes aftpr the 1960\nseason to become Edmonton quar\ntcrbaok and backfield ooaoh, was\nofficially announced at the Cllib's\nwlndup party last night\nBig Stuke, whose name became\nsynonomdus with the popular \"Educated foe\" expression tagged on\nbrilliant placement kickers, had\nlong since announced that this was\nhis last season,\nHe is returning to his sports-\nwriting Job with the Toronto Star,\nActually, the big Lithuanian was\nnever out of 'contact with sports\nreporting during His three-year\ntenure' as coach ot Eskimos, He had\na weekly, half-hour sports broadcast over an Edmonton radio station\nand always rose to the occasion with\nchoice quotes in interviews about\nhis Eskimos,\nTO AVOID ULCtR\n\"I don't want to live the rest ot\nmy life with an ulcer,\" the chainsmoking, ever-pacing coach-Joked\nas he called it quits.     .\nRetirement of Stukus, a playing\ncoach in the last two seasons after\ncoming out of retirement, will take\na big chunk of color ahd drama out\nof the Western Football Union.\nThe sight of the bareheaded, pad-\nless Stukus Jogging onto the field\ntd kick for that point-sfter-tbueh-\ndown or attempt a field goal became\na familiar sight dear to the heart\nof most Western football fans. When\nhe missed, it was an event,\n*   Big Stuke were a well-publlelz\ned wrist watch on the field. This\nwas Intended as added Incentive\nfor his line to protect his yanky,\n37-year-old figure.'But, he was\nknooked about on occasion and\nones even raced over in oppon\nent's goal line to rough e padded\ngladiator who hid retrieved one\nof his erring plaocment attempts.\nStukus was recognized as one of\nCanada's all-time kickers long before he took over'Esktmos and sold\nfootball back to Edmonton after \u2022\n10-year absence,\nTITLE WITHOUT T.D.\nBest indication of this was ln 194S -\nwhen Stukus, playing with 'toronto\nIndians, won the league scoring title\nwithout making a touchdown. All\nhis points Came on converts, field\ngoals and singles.\nStukus performed brilliantly for\nToronto Argos from 1935 to 1941,\nhelping them to two dominion titles.\nHe waa both quarterback and punter. After a hitch in the navy he\nhad a hand in coaching Toronto\nIndians. .\nAt Edmonton, he pushed Eskl-\nmoes to' the Western final In the\nlist two seaicns after a third-\nplace finish In the first year. He\nmissed taking his ohirges Into the\nGrey Cup final this yeir by the\nsmallest of margins \u2014 that 19-18\nheartbreaking loss to Saikatche-\nwan Roughriders.\nIn 1950 he was in the first 10\nIn the point-scoring race; this year\nhe finished second, three points behind Bob Shaw of Calgary Stampeders, In the process he kicked 42\nconverts in  the  14-game  regular\nseason, a Canadian record.\nFllchook needs little introduction\ntp football fans on* both sides of the\nborder. He's made headlines ever\nsince he reported to the professional\nWashington Redskins in 1938, fresh\nfrom Indiana University.\nFlinging Frankie stirred with\nthe Redskins for sevsn seasons.\nThen  It was on V>  New York\nGlints, Hamilton Tigers, Montreal\nAlouettes ind Edmonton. He was\nCliMdi's athlete of the year In\n1949 after  leading  Alouettes te\ntheir Grey Cup viotory over Calgary 8tampoder\u00bb.\nThe Maryland-born Fllchock, now\n34, may not be a plating-coach like\nStukus. After being officially an-\nnounced as Eskimo coach for 1952,\nhe dropped this hint:\n\"All I hope Is that I can sit oil\nthe sidelines,\" he said. \"I don't want\nto have to go in and kick the extra\npoints or wear a wrist watch.\"\nWith Stone\nAnd Besom\nResults of Friday draws at the\nNelson Curling Club:\nR. Foxall 6, H. Greenwood 9.\nM. B. Ryalls 11, T. S. Jemson 7.\nD. Meakins.10, R. Chandler 8.\nA, H, Whitehead 8, C. H. Parrlsh\n6.\nt>: M. Sample 11, J. D. Hingwing\n9.       '\nJ.' Campbell 8, D. 3. Valentine 9.\nT. A. Wallace 10, A. Rfinmirk 10\n(tie). -     \u2022\nD. S. Creighton I, W. Gold 0.\nR. Swanson 6, J. Morris 11.\nA. Farenholtz 7, W. A. Duckworth\n\u00ab\u2022 \u2022\u25a0\u2022\"\u25a0<.  **\u2022*.##\nBadminton; Boxing, Wrestling\nInterest High at frail\nBy LOUIS  FRYLING\nHurrah for the badminton clubs\nin this area. Extending from Trail\nto Rossland, Fruitvale and Castle*\ngar the shuttlebird enthusiasts have\norganized under one district which\nthey hope is to.become part of one\nassociation,of clubs West of Kootenay Lake to here and perhaps in*\neluding Crawford Bay. Plans are\nunder way to meet the Nelsonites in\nthis respect,\nBob Inkpen Is the chairman ef\nthe Trill irei group and he nys\nthlt Trill Is going to attempt to\npromote further Junior play by\nIntroducing them Into the senior\n.organization at in earlier age,\nThis Is to ellnmlnate \u25a0 wilting\nperiod between Junior end senior\n' play which allowed the young\nones to often get away from the\ngame completely.\nBOXING INTEREST HIGH\nAffiliated with the Trail Amateur\nAthletic Association but Completely\nself-sufficient the Silver City Box*\nIng, Wrestling and Bar Bell Club\nhas really gone ahead since it organized together* this year.\nThe official consolidation of the\nBoxing, Wrestling and Bar Bell Club\ntook place in the early part of\nJanuary, 1951, It .was felt that this\nmove would benefit the members\nmore by having only one'govern*\nIng body instead of three separate\nunits of administration. This c6n<\nsolidatipn was. also necessitated by\nthe fact that there was, and still is,\nonly limited space from which the\nB.W.B. can operate.\nThe activities that are undertaken\nby the B.W.B. includes the following:\n1. Boxing:\n- i. Beginners\nb. Advanced\nc Preparation for* fight cards\n2, Wrestling:\n*   1, Olympic Style\nb. Collegiate Stylo\nc. Judo, etc\n8. Bar Bell:\ni. Weight Lifting\nb. Development   of   certain\nmuscle's thlt ire week\ne. Conditioning of the body\nd. Preliminary  setting  up\nexercises\n4, Other, activities whloh tie up\nwith the three above mentioned:\n(.Skipping '\nb. Calisthenics\ne. Agility\nd. Co-ordination, eto.\nThe club rooms are open at all\ntimes for any member who is desirous of enjoying a workout. Classes are-based on a rotating schedule\nwhich covers every day of the week\nexcept Sunday, this day being.re\nserved as a \"free\" day. Instructors\nare down each day from 4:00 until\n10:09 p.m. The competent staff of\ntrainers and instructors who handle\nthe boxers includes Frank Saunders,\nJoe Haywood, Dave Hughes, and\nGeorge Shanks,\nUp to date there havo been three\nboxing and wrestling cards held in\nTrail with all proving a big success\nnot only from the spectators' point\nof view but also as far as the participants and officials were concerned. .    \u25a0     '\nThe plans for tho club for the\nWinter months ire to hold boxing\nind wrestling shows throughout\nthe  Kootenays, using either ill\nlocal boys cr boys from the towns\nIn which cards ire held.\nIt Is also hoped to have two or\nthree 1 boys ready to send to the\nGolden Gloves in Vancouver early\nne?ct year.\nSix-Fool Goose\nShofal Creston\nCRESTON, B. C-Allan Watts of\nCreston goes in for bird hunting\nin a \"big\" way.\nWatts brought down a goose on\nthe flats here recently which had\na wing spread of six feet one inch,\nand weighed 13 pounds.\nA local garage placed the huge'\nbird on display.   \u2022\u25a0\nStamps to Seek\nNo Limit on\nAmerk Imports\nCALGARY, Nov. 16 (CP) - A\nrequest, for unlimited use of imports or, in lieu of that, permission\nfor each Canadian football club to\ncarry 12 Americans will be proposed by the new execijtive of the\nCalgary Stampeders 'at the next\nannual meeting of the Canadian\nRugby Union.\nEach club now is limited to\nseven I\u00a3S. imports.\nClub' President Cec Chesher, in\nannouncing \"this move yesterday,\nsaid that if the import ruling ia\neased,the Calgary club will concentrate on bringing in young\ncollege stars instead of proven professionals as ln the past,\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy the Canadian  Press\nMARITIME MAJOR\nGlace Bay 2, Sydney 2.\nSaint John 5, Moncton 1.\nO.H.A. SENIOR A\nKitchener 0, Stratford 8.\nP.C.H.L.\nVancouver 6, New Westminster 3.\nSaskatoon 1, Edmonton 1. '\nTacoma' 6, Victoria 1.\n A\nB\nI\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nf\nE\nTHE FASTEST-KNOwVl BOMBER and fighter\nIn the.world\u2014the Boeing B-47 Stratojet and the\nNorth American F-86 Sabre\u2014are shown together\nIn flight for the first time ever Kansas. The sleek\nships, both record-breakers, are In service with\nthe U.S. Air Force. The Stratojet, weighing 185,000\npounds and capable of more than 600 miles an hour,\nis powered by six G.E. J-47 Jet engines. The Sabre,\nwhich has proved more than a match for the Red\nMIG-15 over Korea, Is powered by a single G.E.\nJ-47. It holds the official world's speed record at\nmore than 670 miles an hour,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nQUEEN ELIZABETH \"calls the\nclass to order\" as she.sits, at a\nteacher's desk In a classroom of.\nthe Emanuel Hospital School In\nLondon. She was on hand to commemorate the 350th. anniversary\nof the institution.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian.\nPOLITICAL DIFFERENCES In Berlin, the divided city, were\nsharply Illustrated on the occasion of the 34th anniversary of the\nRussian revolution. While Red troops In East Berlin marched through\nBrandenhug Gate, top, to lay a wreath on the Soviet War Memorial\nJust Inside the British sector:of Berlin, anti-Communist West Berlin\nyouth organizations \"celebrated\" the revolution In a less'orthodox\nway. They released thousands of propaganda balloons over East Berlin, containing pamphlets demanding release of 30,000 political prisoners now held In Russian-German concentration camp's.\u2014Central\nPress Canadian. '\nSTERNWHEELER ICEBOUND\nDAWSON, Y.T.,\"Nov. 16 (CP) \u2014\nThe sternwheeler Nasutlin of the\nBritish Yukon 'Navigation Company, the last boat to arrive here\nthis year, is icebound in the Yukon\nRiver,\nAttempts to pull her ashore for\nthe Winter after she was caught in\nthe freezeup failed.\nBuy, Sell', Trade, the Classified Way\nSalmon Pack Nears\nHigh 1941 Record\nVANCOUVER, Nov. ,16 (CP) \u2014\nThe Federal Department of Fisheries announced today that the\nBritish Columbia salmon pack\nreached 1,945,039 cases by Nov. 14,\nthe highest figure since -1941.\nREAD THE-CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nrr-\nG\nG\nS\nr w\u00bbnt you TO so\neisHTovee-roMB.\nHAVADEINK'S OPFICE\nAMD SEE HIM AKID\nLET ME KNOW WHAT\nHE has TO say-\nvEuy sowrv-Bur\nMB. HAVADEINK IS\nIMA CONFERENCE\nANP CAN'T SEE\n>C.' ANYONE\/'\nOH-fM\nUTTEELy\nCHSAPFWrED-\nACROSS\n1. The gun\npersonified\n6. Pierces, as\nwith a\ndagger\nH. Worship\n12. Bay window\n13. To be\nobsequious\n(var.)\n14. Man's name\n(Sp.)\n15. Elevated\ntrain\n16. Encountered\n4. Fragrance 24. Mountain\n5. Fresher * pool\n6. Soak up 25. Girl's name\n7. Supporting 26. Moisture\nbeam- 28. Golf club\n8. Officer's\nassistant\n9. City\n(Switz.),\nJO. Vent\n17. Evening\nsun god\n29. Miscellany\n32. Pig pen\n35. Piece of.\nfurniture\n36.,Chieftain\n(Arab.)\n37. Pant\n19. Nobleman 38. Voided\n20. Recent 'escutcheon\n21. Part of 39. Macaws\n:   \"to be\" (Braz.)\n. 18. Dispatched   22. Coin (Swed,)4i. God bf love\n19. A relative\n21. Sorrow\n23. Dissolved\n37. Sphere of\naction\n30,,Intertwrne\"\n31. Finches  '\n33. Uncooked\n34. To grow fat\n37. Aim\n40. Sweet\npotato\n41. Electrical\nengineer\n(abbr.)\n43. Sharp edge,\nas in mold-  ,\nings (arch.)\n45. Endures\n47. Not tight\n48. Citrus fruit\n49. Vexatious\n50. Rub out   -\nDOWN\n1. Seize\nJ. Heathen\nImage\n3. Little child\n\u25a0 aaaui \u25a0 Enaaa\nnnsa asati\nsaarjH HtaaHH\nhcj aa aa am\nnan nn@ acin\nHHHElMI*i    raSBH\naaaa aaianaE\nHHa   HHH   HBD\nfcJU   ISG!   [OH   Hia\nHnamia hbhbh\namiaa aam\nHHHH   S@SS\nVcntcrday'B Aluwer\n42. Serf\n44. Firmament\n46. Wine\nreceptacle\nA WEARY 80UTH KOREAN hitch-hikes a ride on a load of\nbombs at an Allied airfield In Korea. They were delivered with telling\neffect shortly after to the Chinese Reds and their allies above the 38th\nParallel.\u2014Central Press Canadian. .\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\n(>:\u2022:\n2\n3\n4\ns-\n^\n6\n7\n6\n9\nIO\n11\nl\n12.\n15\n%\n14\n15\"\n^1\n\\b\nh\n1\nie\n...\ni\n^\/f\n19\n20\n|\n\\\\\n1\n2I\n22.\n^A\nWt\n4?\n24\n25\n2fe\nIf\n28\n29\nl\n30\n31.\n32.\n1\n%\n33\n%\n'^\nf,\n34\n35\n36\n^\nl\n37\n38\n39\nl\n40\nI\n41\n42.\n45'\n'\n44\n1\n4ST\n44.\n47\nl\n48\n49\nt^t\nSo\n\u2022\n11-17\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\n.-\u25a0'\u2022-- A X Y D L B A A X R '\nIs LO N fi F E L L O W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ia usee\nfor the three L's, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints,\n^ach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nKV    KVD    G    FTUUB    BIB \u2014FSYBISAGYIT\n\"*      -.       \u2022 ' - ,l':'J\nOCJS,    C    ERCYH    C    APME     EGHS     PK\nXCER    GOGDCJS-WTDWY. ~\nYesterday's Cryptoquot*\u00ab THE CONSTITUTIONAL GUARDIAN\n|, OF PRETTY YOUNG WARDS IN CHANCERY-KSLBBRTi\nBlaintiM M Kins Flltum OynOlclj*\n'       .   '        \u00bb \u25a0   ~\nSATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1951\n7:00\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Folk Song Time\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n1:30\u2014London Studio Melodies     \u25a0\u25a0\n7:30\u2014News\n2:00\u2014Trans-Canao a Bandstand\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n3:00\u2014This Week\n8:00\u2014News\n3:15\u2014News         '\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n3:30\u2014Saturday Pop Concert\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n4:30\u2014Sports College   .,;         '...t\n8:30\u2014Show Case\n4:45r- On, the Record\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n5:00\u2014Sports Page\n9:00\u2014Western Roundup   '\n5:30\u2014Cavalcade\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n6:00\u2014News                 \u25a0   ..\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club '.'  '\n6:05-NHL Hockey\n9:45\u2014Songs of the West\n7:30\u2014Organ Music\nlOiOO-^hildren's Theatre\n8:00\u2014Columbia Collection\n10:30\u2014Sat. Review\n8:30-W.I.H,L. Hockey\n10:55\u2014Weather    ;\u2022\t\n9:30\u2014All-Request Program\n11:00\u2014Opera Stars.and Stories\n10:00\u2014News\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n10:15\u2014Trocadero Orchestre\n12:15\u2014News\n10:38\u2014Penthouse Party\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n11:00\u2014News Nite Cap    *\n^SUNDAY, NOV. 18, 1951\n9:00\u2014British News\n4:15\u2014Piano for Sunday\n9:15\u2014News        \"\n4:30\u2014Roll Beck the Yearr.\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n5:00\u2014National Sunday Eve. Hour\n10:01\u2014B.C. Gardener\n5:30\u2014Sunday Serenade\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n6:00\u2014Stage 52\n10:30\u2014The Way of the Spirit\n7:00\u2014News\nll:00r-Trinity Church\n\u20227:16\u2014Weekend Review\n12:00\u2014New York Philharmonic\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking    \u25a0'\n7:30\u2014Salvation Army\n2:00\u2014Fiddle Joe's Yarns*\n8:00\u2014Showtime\n2:30\u2014Jake and the Kid\n9:00\u2014Organ Reveries\n3:00\u2014S.S. Marigold.\n9:30\u2014Record Album\n3:15\u2014News, and Weather\n10:00\u2014News                             l.-m\n3:20\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n10:15\u2014Hour of St. Francis\n3:27\u2014Regional* Weather\n10:30\u2014CKLN Sports Report\n3:30\u2014Sunday Serenade\n10:45\u2014Musicale             \"\"    '\n4:00\u2014Bethel'Fireside Hour\n11:00\u2014News Nite Cap'\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STA\nNDARD TIME\nSUNDAY, NOV. 18, 1951\n8:15\u2014Sunday Morning Music\n3:27\u2014Weather Forecast\n_8:30\u2014To Be Announced\n\"8:45\u2014Sunday Morning Recital\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n3:30\u2014Vancouver Symphony Orch.\n4:30\u2014Roll Back the Years\n9:15\u2014Musical Meditation\n5:00\u2014National Sunday Eve.' HoUf\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n5:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n10:00\u2014B.C. Gardner\n6:00\u2014Stage 52\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n7:00\u2014News\n10:30-Way of Spirit\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review      ,   -'\u25a0 '\n11:00\u2014News\n$20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n11:03\u2014Capital Report\n7:30\u2014Geoffrey Waddington\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n. 8:00\u2014Showtime\n12:00\u2014N. Y. Philharmonic\n9:00\u2014Chamber xvluslc\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n9:30\u2014Vesper Hour\n2:00\u2014Fiddle Joes Yarns\n10:00\u2014News -\n2:30\u2014Jake and the Kid\n10:15\u2014Nova Scotia Folklore\n3:00\u2014S.S. Marigold\n10:30\u2014Collection Items           -'\n3:15\u2014News\n11:57\u2014Marine Weather\n3:20\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n12:00\u2014News\nMONDAY, N\nOV. 19, 1951\n8:00\u2014News\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society        '   \"   ,\n. 8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n4:30\u2014A Tale of the Friendly\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\nCreatures\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n4:45\u2014Young Man With a Song\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n4:55\u2014News\n0:30\u2014Morning Concert\n5:00\u2014International- Commentary\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n5:10\u2014Etude     .\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang    ,\n5:30\u2014Dixie Land Jazz\n10:45\u2014Robin Hood Musical Kitchen\n6:00\u2014Lux Radio Theatre\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n7:00\u2014News\n11:13\u2014A Man' and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014For You\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n7:45\u2014Revolution in V.I.\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n8:00\u2014Linger Awhile\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n8:30\u2014National Farm Radio Forum\nWO\u2014Afternoon Concert\n8:00\u2014Melody From the Sky\nI:4i}-Club Clinic\n9:30\u2014Songs by Norman Harper\n1:58\u2014Women's Commentary\n10:00\u2014News\n2:08\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n2:3B-Strike It Rich\n10:30-K3erry Peter's Varieties\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n10:30\u2014Serenade for Strings\n3:15\u2014Program Resume\n11:00\u2014U.N. Today\n3:30\u2014Pop Tunes\n11:15\u2014Hot Air\n. 3:45\u2014Solo Guest\nll:67-.*News\nA\n\t\n >ya\n1 PERSOKTO-mSOIilWANTAUS\n\\    FOR QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Claiilfled Adi\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nELLIOT\u2014Born to Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Elliot, Victoria, at Royal Jubilee\nHospital, Nov. 5, a daughter! (Mrs.\nElliot was the former Dawn Shannon ptNew Denver).\nCRAIG\u2014Boirh to Mr. and Mrs. V.\nCraig of New Denver at Slocan\n* Community  Hospital,  Nov.   12,  a\ndaughter.\nMEYERS\u2014Born to Mr. and Mrs.\n.'M,  Meyers,   Silverton,   at  Slocan\nCommunity  Hospital,  Nov.  13, a\n\u25a0 son.\nNORTH-Born to Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn North', 724 Silica' Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,:\n* Nov. 14, a daughter.\nSUTHERLAND\u2014Born to Mr. and\nMrs, Edward Sutherland, Winlaw,\nat Kbetenay Lake General Hospital,\nNov. 16, a daughter.\nBETKER\u2014To. Mr. and Mrs. E..\nBetker, Lister, at Creston Valley\nHospital, Nov. 10, a son.\nRUNDRUM\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn, Hundrum. Fruitvale, at the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital, Nov 5,-Ja\nsort,; \u25a0\nROBISON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nHairy Roblson, Fruitvale, 'at the\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital, Nov. 11, a\nson.\nHELP WANTED\nMECHANICDRIVER, TO DRIVE\nschool bus approximately sixty\nmiles dally and to keep two\nbuses operating for the ten school\nmonths. Required to do repairs\non six other buses during July\nand August. Applicants must\nhave a Class \"A\" Licence. Apply,\ngiving full particulars of expert*\n' ence, references and stating sal*\nary required, to Secretary*\nTreasurer, School District No. 1,\nFernie, B;C.\nWANTED \u2014 FULLY QUALIFIED\nbookkeeper for office within city.\nState age and experience when\n: npplying:td:Box'260fl:Paily.News,\nAil iiiphcntioiin In :\\M cou\nfldcnce;-\nFIRST CLASS \"MECHANIC. IM*\n; mediate employment,.; top wages.\nExperience in heavy equipment\n.preferred . 'Supply references on\napplication. Drawer 580, Castlegar,\nB.C. Phone 8051\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\nInsulating'\nFor That\nEXTRA BEDROOM\nRUMPUS ROOM -\nATTIC ROOM\nBASEMENT ROOM\nYou will be surprised what\ncan be-accomplished with\ninsulating board at low cost.\nV Easy To Handle\nEasy To Apply\"\nDISTRIBUTORS    >.,   \".\nson\"'\nCompany, Ltd. .\n*     *.'        rlmni' 30 *\nm Hall St\/'     .Nelson, B.C.'\nMW CHESTERFIELD, WINK\nbrocaded vulvm Ainu coal and\nwood heafc II rt piuiinii' shears\nand other tnoli. Via. 26, Amiable;\nBlock.\nREQUIRED, \u2014\" A.. YOyNG~~MAN\nwho works as mine sampler and\nsurveyor assistant. Some previous\n, experience, preferred. Apply Cos-\ntella Mine Ltd.,' P.O. Box . 1087,\nKimberley, B.C.\nTWO HUSKY ENERGETIC MEN,\nused to the outdoors. Not over 85.\n' For N.W-.T. $175.00 and board.\nMorgan, No. 15, New Grand. 8\nto 8 ptm;\nSMART VOUNG LADY WITH\nsome knowledge of bookkeeping\nand typing. Apply own handwriting first letter. Box 2033\nDaily News.\nCURLING RINK CONCESSION. \u2014\nAny person wishing to take over\n.   same contact J. H. Long. Phone\n786-L-2.\nWANTED \u2014 REPAIR MAN FOR\ndiesel Caterpillars. Apply Western Exploration Co. Ltd., Silver-\nton, B.C.\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED   D-8\noperator   for   bushwork.   Good\nwages, steady work. Phone No. 6,\nI   Cranbrook, B.C.\t\nCARETAKER WANTED. FREE\nfuel and rent. R. D. Boyer; R.R..1,\n\u25a0Nelson.\nWANTED   \u2014   HOUSEKEEPER.\nGood working condition. Apply\n814 Victoria.\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED WAIT*\nress. Apply New Star Cafe.\nAGENTS WANTED\nWANTED - RELIABLE MAN AS\nRawleigh Dealer. A fine opportunity to step Into a profitable\nbusiness where Rawleigh Products have been sold for years.\nExperience not necessary. Write\nRawleigh's Dept WG-K-153-163,\nWinnipeg.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWOMAN WANTS POSITION AS\nassistant cook;'good baker. Mining or logging camp preferred\nBox 2603 Daily News.\nRESPONSIBLE    LADY   \"WILL\nbaby sit mornings and afternoons.\n. Phone 504-R.\t\nMAN WANTS PART TIME WORK.\nBox 2608 Daily News.\n\"    Classified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 8 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers any\nnumber 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         f   .05\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance           .25\n-By carrier, per year '.     13.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month         $ 1.25\nThree months 3.75\nSix  months       7..50\nOne year            15.00\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month             1.00\nThree  months 2.76\n'   Six months    \u2022     5.SJ0\nOne year        ,      1000\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\ns \"Wu-Llfe\" Stainless Steel double\nbottom waterless cooking utensils,\noffer a special u-ade-in allowance\non your old cookwore. ;BoxS333,\n\"Nelson, ll.O.\nPROPERTY; HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nWith Occupancy\nFIVE ROOM DWELLING on\ntriangular parcel of land,, six\nlots, cut stone foundation, root\nhouse and fuel shed. CK3AA\nPriced at  ,.., \u2022*W'V\nSIX.ROOM DWELLING, good\nconcrete foundation, piped hot\nair furnace. Four rooms down\nand two up;, three corner lots.\nMove in today. t^Qftft\nPriced at,     ?0\u00bbUU\nAlso we have a very modern\nfive room dwelling wltb lake\nfrontage, one mile CfiQflA\nfrom Nelson.    *0\u00bbUU\nAND\nOther City dwellings at\n,$4600 and $4800\n'Tt-D. Rosling\nReal Estate and Insurance\n568 Ward Street       Phone 717\n<&3finn CASH   buys   a   3-\n\u25a0-T.. \u2122\" bedroom   home   on\n*     ; *       two   lovely   corner\nlots.\nttl\u00bb7Cfl with   $15(10'  down,\n\u2022I'*'\"\"Balance  monthly.\n|H2\nBalance monthly.\nAAA is asked for one\n\u00bb\"\"\" of .Nelson's   best\nhomes. Excellent\nfoundation, furnace, etc. CJosein\nand secluded location.\nFOR SALE ,-* BROWN .STEEL\ncrib, Parkhlll . mattress, also\nbaby's \"swing in* good condition;\nPhone 1244-R.\nPAIR BOYS' CCM. TUBE\nskates, sizes 7 and 13 for sale,\nwill exchange for 1 pr, size 2.\nPhone 442-Y.\nSMALL SIZE CRIB, HOT WATER\nJacket heater, six cubic-foot Mc-\nClary refrigerator, baby.sleigh.\nPhone 703-Y.\nFOR SALE \u2014 COMPLETE UNIT\nfor'Converting wood and coal\nstove to oil burner. Phone 1358-L\nafter 6 p.m.\nSHOW CASES, PLATE GLASS\nfor sale. Apply Bewley's Drug\nStore, 956 Spokane St., Trail, B,C.\nAPARTMENT HOUSE\n1 block from Baker St.\n(\u25a0':\u25a0. j;*' Good revenue.\u2014$5800\nF. A. WHITFIELD\n302 Baker St.\nAutomobile and Fire Insurance\n. Real Estate\n250 BD. FT. pJP NO. 1. EDGE\ngrain clear cedar bevel siding.\nPhone 1170-R. ,\nFOR SALE \u2014 SPIN DRY EASY\nwasher. $145.\u2014Phone 936-R or\n609-6th St.\nFOR SALE\u2014BEATTY PRESSURE\npump and tank; Also 100 ft. 1-inch\ngalvanized pipe. Phone 462-L-6,\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\nrial low prices. Active TradlrigXo.\n035 E. Cordova St\u201e Vancouver.\nCRESS CORN SALVE\u2014FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist Sells Cress.\nSKATES \u2014 SIZES 2 AND 6 FOR\nsale. Phone 605-X-l,\t\nMICRO NIC HEARING A1DS.-\nWrlte P.O   Box\nNelson. B.C\nPERSONAL\n\u25a0WAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsurahce Co., D L. Kerr, Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R.\nDepot Clean rooms and moderate\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles.   Vancouver.  B. C.\nADULTS I PERSONAL RUBBER\ngoods 25 deluxe assortment $1\nbill. Tested, guaranteed, fine\nquality. Mailed in plain, sealed\npackage, including free Birth\nControl Booklet and bargain\ncatalogue of Marriage Hygiene\nSupplies. Western Distributors,\nBox 1023-PN. Vancouver\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nMine Accounting Service.\nPhone 1229-R-l, Nelson, R-C\nE  W   WIDDOWSON  & CO.  AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\na S.  ELMES.  ROSSLAND. B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist Mine Rep.\nAUTO WRECKERS\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND. AUTO\nWrecking Phone Rossland, 171,\nENGINEER8 AND 8URVEVORS\nR W. HAGGEN. Land Surveyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\nC.W.Appleyard\n'\u25a0:'\"$t Co. Ltd.\n\"\"Real Estate and Insurance\nFire, Car and General Insurance-\nEstablished 39 Years\nPh. 269\u2014Box 26\u2014392 Baker St\nInsurance Manager\u2014\nT. C. LAMBERT\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, llCYCt|S\nNEW *\u2022\u25a0'\" .'.'\":\u2022\nAUSTIN SEDANS\nTHE BEST IN\nUSED CARS\n1950 Mercury Light Del'y\n1950 Chevrolet Coach\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n1950 Plymouth Coupe\n1950 Ford Coupe\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1949 Ford Light Del'y\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES (Closing Prises)   . Central Fore. -\nAcadia Uranium .',  .21\nAkaltcho   ;.-..\u201e 1.00\nAnacon    _  J.25\nAnkeno .  *  .75\nAmerican Y. K.:  M *.\nArjon   . ,  ,15\nAumaqus*'.:...,  .22V4\nBase Metals  .i., ' ,56\nBelloterre .'.:  5.13\nBevcourt\nBobjo     \t\nBrewis R, L..\nBuff. Can\t\nCalliman\nCampbell R, L.\n.57\n.10\n.23tt\n.19H\n.32\n3.65\nCastle Treth    '2.25\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\n\u2022SPECIAL   '\n1939 International\nLight Delivery\n$500\n1\/3 Down\u201418 Months\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copped\nlead,, eta Honest grading Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron St Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St\u201e Vancou\nver, B.C Phone Pacific 8357,.\natisf us vouit scrap meials\nor Iron. Any quantity Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St, Vancouver. B,C\nWANT TO BUY FOR SPRING DE\nlivery a quantity ot (lr piling, 20\nfoot long. S. P. Porid, Nelson. \u2022\n.18\n.17\n1.62\nChesterville .\nChlmo G\t\nCochenour  ....\nCons. Beatiy ,\nC M & S  174.00\nConwest  8.70\nDelnite  ....,'.,;....v....:\u201e..'.. 1,18\nDiscovery .',  .33^\nDonalda        _, ,\u201e ,36\nEast Malartic ,. ...ST.\nEast Sullivan  ..\u201e:........\u201e.... 9.50\nElder Gold \/.   1,50'\nEldona .:. '_ ;  .16\nEureka ; _..;  ;65\nFalconbridge  ...   10.50\nFrobisher .'.  3.60'.\nGiant Yel  XL.. 10.65\nGod's Lake   .35VJ\nGold Arrow     '.16\nGolden Manitou  7.00\nHalcrow _ ' .12\nHollnor  L........  8.60\nHardrock .,....\u201e\u201e........\u201e .14\nHollinger  .'  14.50\nHudson Bay \u201e  62.73\nIndian Lak'  ,.. .14'\nInt, Nickel    .:.:  44.25\nNELSON DAILY NEWS; SATURDAY, NOV. 17,19S1 .\u2014'9\nWANTED JO'BUY\u2014VIEW. MAS-\nter Stereoscope and reels. Phone\n710-R.\nWANTED - PR. GIRL'S SKATES,\nsize 1. Will trade size 5. Phone\n816-L-4.\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1947.Pontiac Sedan\n1946 Pontiac Sedan\n1941 Studebqker Sedan\n1940 Ford Sedan\n1938 Dodge Sedan\n,1939 International \u2022\nLight Del'y   *\n1937 Ford Sedan.\"\n1934 Plymouth,Sedan\n1930 Model-A   '\nTERMS and TRADES '\nEmpire Motors\nPh.. 1135       803 Baker St.\nFOR SALE - 1940 FORD Xi TON\npickup.  New  motor,,; new  tires,\n.heater, defroster, New paint job.\nAluminum canopy.. Reasonable\nprice: Phone 1575-X or call at\n912 Vernon St.\nFOR SALE\u20141 6-TON COLUMBIA\ntrailer, bunk and sub frame. New\nrubber; folding pipe reach for\nlong and short logs. Apply J.\nFerguson, Lardeau, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 5 ACRES IN DELTA',\nnice view over fraser River, 5\nmiles. to New Westminster, no\nbuildings. For* Information apply\nSteve Drosdovech, Northern \\Con.\nCo., Waneta, B.C.\nFOR SALE.\u2014 15 ACRES, 8 CULTI-\nvated, good hoUBe, barn, garage,\nchicken house. Few fruit trees.\nQuick sale, Nick Popoff, Bonnington.\n5 ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE\u2014\nat .Winlaw. All cleared; v piped\nrunning water, fruit trees. Price\nnext to give-away. Apply Wm.\nW. Markln,,Frhltvale, B.C.\nFOR SALE -\" 3 BEDROOM HOME\non North Shore, beach property,\n6 years old, ln good condition,\ngarage. Reasonable. Phone 1478-L.\nNEW 3-ROOM HOUSE \u2014 TOILET\nand shower. $2750. Cash or terms.\nApply Mr. Street, Salmo,\nTIMBER LAND FOR SALE-TIM-\nber plentiful, Joe Lang, 222 Vancouver Street.     '       \"\n- RENTALS\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 LOCAL\nbusiness man wishes to rent, 2\nbedroom home, furnished or unfurnished within reasonable distance of Baker Street. Please\nphone Bob Roberts, 144 days or\n265 evenings.\n50 ACRE RANCH\nFOR RENT - SUITABLE FOR\ndairy and pasture; buildings and\nfruit trees. Apply Box 5278, Daily\nNews.\nFOR RENT \u2014 2 ROOMED FUR-\nnished apartment, twin beds,\nshare bath. Ground flor, private\nentrance: Close in. Available Dec,\n1st. Write Box 2869 Da,ily News,\nFOR RENT - A TWO-ROOMED\nhouse with running water, lights,\nfor $15.00 a month near Blewett\nStore. Apply at Blewett Store.\nUNFURNISHED 2 AND 3 ROOM\napartment Dec.  1st. Adults.\nCarbonate St.\nTWO FURNISHED CABINS WITH\nautomatic oil heaters. Crescent\nBeach Auto Camp. Phone 471-Y-l\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST..\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nIN8URANCE AND REAL E6TATE\nMcHARDY AGENCIES LTD. IN-\nsurance. Real Estate\u2014Phone. 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H  Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop,   acetylene  and\nelectric welding motor rewinding\nPhone 593 324 Vernon SL\nFOR RENT \u2014 FURNISHED FOUR\nroom house. Phone 1312-Y,\nFOR SALE \u2014 2 DQOR SEDAN.\nPrivately owned. $375 cash. Terms\non balance. Phone 799-R.'\n1949 FARGO %-l TON. CAN BE\nfinanced, $550 will handle. Apply\nE. W. Roach, Salmo, B.C.\n1949 FLYING STANDARD. GOOD\nshape. What offers? Contact G.\nFortln. Phone 766-R-3.\n1942 FORD 2-JIOOR SEDAN. A-l\ncondition. Price reasonable.* Ph.\n799.R. Terms can be arranged.\nFORD    1936    %-TON \u2014 CHEAP.\nPhone 451-Y.\nMACHINERY\nJack Waite, ; ....... ,16}4\nJoiiet Que  .45\nKenville  ,25\nKerr Addison  .16%\nKirkland Lake ,......\u201e.\u201e ,\u201e\u201e .75\nKirk. Townsite  ,16ft\nLabrador  8.00\nLakeshore ....,..,  12.00 .\nLamaque  '6,40X\nLeitch                 1.03\nLittle Long Lac \u201e  ,19\nLouvicoUrt                      . \u201e   .33\nMacDonald    :....i ; '   .86\nMadsen R. L.  2.06\nMagnet  ,34\nMalartic G.'F.....'. ;\u201e.\u201e\u201e.\u201e\u201e. 1.85\nMcKenzle R. L.  .48\nMining Corp.  If 50\nNegus  :         ...;  ,69\nNew Calumet1  3.00\nNew Goldvue  .34\nNew Lund  .*.  1.15\nNlpissing  . 2.35\nNorth. Can  98\nFOR   SALE - REGISTERED Norzone   : ..;.,....'-.-.......;.:;\u201e.*f:.*' :\\16\nSaanen   Goat,   6   years,   with   6:0'Br'ei 120\nWAivrEU\u2014EASY CHAIR, UPHOL-\nstered, good condition. Write Bain,\nSheen Creek, B.C.\nu'lSUAtf, fUUhiS, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch pole; Glacier\nLumbermen' Bcm';450,.N<\"lsnn ,BC\n\u25a0>ttir>   YOUil   HIDES   TO   J    P\nMnr\u00bbin   Nelson. B C\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nmonths female kid. Gives 7 pints\ndaily; Kind home essential.\nCourse, R.R, No. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nBalfour 4Q. '.\nOsisko\nPamour    ,..;...\nPaymaster\nPickle Crow,\nPioneer\n.82\n.80\n' .58\n1.60\n2.00\nREG    JERS2Y    COW,    JUST\nfreshened. S250; 1 pin-e bred Ayr- Plac=r Dpvulop 54:00\nshire, just freshened, $250; 1 Reg.\n3,year old Jersey bull,l'$lo0; 1\nFal-Sow, ready* to'kill, $150.\nH. Harrop,\nFOR SALE,:M: CHICKENS AT 30c\nper lb; tJlten alive*Inidozen lots.\nApply aft*i* 5 pm. J. Doerksen,\nKnox Read.\nPreston E. D. '           136\nQuebec Lab *\u2022                 25\nQuebec *M,*n j 25\nQueenston \"...      .44\nQuemont 2' \" 1\nSaanorm -    .        ...     2 50\nSen. non-U u *                .*     ,17\n[Sherritt Oidoii     *\" \u25a0' ^3 30\nWHOLi? CARCASS i \"\u2022mn           \" *        7 m\n\u25a0  , .   ... . I fit limt\u00bbti\nFOR SALE\ndressed hoss, 32c per\n130 lbs. dre-sed. F.O.B. Wynndei.\n,D. S. Rowtely, Wynndei.\n1b.*about|S'Jvermillci    *      .'        ,      '\"\"C\nYOUNG JERSEY MILK COW- FOR\ns sale, Just freshened. P. Zaitson,\nSouth Slpran. B.C.\nLOST AND FOUND\nSilanCp-\nSiscoe\nSladon Mai \"\nStadacona\nStarratt O'sen\nSteep Hock\nSylvanltes\nFOUND ~f' OUTSIDE* PROCTER\nCommunity Hall'Nov. 10. One\npair light colored plastic rim. bifocal glasses. Owner may have\nsame by payln? for this ad and\ncalling at my home for them. F.\nBonaccf. Procter,..B.C.\nLOST - DAHK BROWN PLASTIC\nton Rlasses in case. Phone 1119-R.\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\nSTORE FOR SALE OR RENT. Going concern. Also, 4-roorned modern house with furnace and basement on 2 corner lots. $3000 cash\nwill handle. Bal. terms.-Will;sell\nor rent,both or rent store only.\nApply 402 Fifth St. or ph. 1380.\nSAWMILL - FOR QUICK SALE.\nOkapagah Valley. 7-8M per day.\nTimber and cutting contract,\nBbx 2716 Dally News.\nPEACHEY'S CONFECTIONERY. -\nNice .business,, good opportunity.\nReasonable offer. Box 114, Silver-\nton, B.C.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\niners ;\nMODEL WNl 12\u2014395 CF.M.\nSemi-portable compressor\nwith   electric   or   diesel\npower. This compressor is\nlike new. Can be seen at   '\nour shop.\n1\u2014USED D4400\nCATERPILLAR'\nEngine completely\noverhauled.\n1-4JSED RD6 CATERPILLAR\nTRACTOR    \u2022\n1 with coble angle dozer\n*   1\u2014USED CATERPILLAR\nNO. II MOTOR GRADER\nwith cab and scarifier.\nVery good cohditi-Jn.\nLower your drilling costs\nwith  a  joy package of\n\"JOY\" tungsten carbide   '\nbits, \"JOY\" rock drill and\nair leg.\n., Ask for a\ndemonstrdtion.\nTractor & Equipment\n' Co., Ltd.\nNelson, B.C.\nBox 119 -    Phone 930 -\nROOM TO RENT \u2014 917 VERNON\nStreet. Phone 1575-Y.\nTHREE ROOM APT. FOR RENT.\nNo children. 1305 Cedar St.\nA WARM BEDROOM FOR RENT.\nApply 210 Vernon SL after 5 p.m.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nONE FEMALE AIREDALE PUP\nfor sale. 5 mos. old. Phone 1046-X\nevenings.\nREAD  THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries invited.\nGranville Island, Vancouver 1, B.C.\nFOR SALE - USED GUIBERSON\nradial-diesel, 250 B. If. P. power\nunit. Used only a short time fn\nSawmill.  Snap at $2000.00  cash.\nSilver Ridge Sawmills, Box 245,\nCranbrook, B.C.\n>Vi\u00abCHES - CARCO TRACTOR\nWinches. Braden Truck Winches,\nSingle and Double Drum Loading\nWinches Bayes Equipment Co..\nCranbniuk, B.C.\nNow Is the\n\u20ac\nt\nto protect your home and\nmachinery against fire loss.\nTAKE ADVANTAGE OF\nLower Insurance\nPremiums\nSafeguard life and property.;\nEQUIP WITH\nFire Extinguishers\nof the proper type.    -\n.(Either CO. or C.T.C.)\nAvailable From\nVan Roi Opens\nGood Grade Ore\nIndicating appreciable, additional\ntonnage of ore, Van Roi, Consolidated Mines Ltd. has opened\nore of good grade across * good\nwidths in the Southwest ore shoot*\nat\/Van Roi mine in the Slocan on\nNo, 5 level. This new development\nis 340 feet down the dip of the vein\nfrom No. 3 level on which the ore\nshoot is currently being mined.\nContinuity of the pre is suggested\nby diamond drill Intersections from\nNo. 4 level about midway between\nNo. 3 and No. 5 level.\nThe Southwest ore shoot was\nreached on No. 5 level by driving a\ncrosscut South from the North Vein\ndrift. This crosscut intersected the\nSouthwest ore shoot at about 300\nfeet from the North Vein. -\nAt point of intersection a sample\nacross 2.5 feet assayed 1.2 ounces\nsilver per ton, 0.5 per cent lead and\n15.1 per cent zinc.,\nFirst drifting showed that the\nvein widens rapidly to the East of\nthe intersections with values improved. At-6 feet values across'3.8\nfeet were 2.7 ounces silver; 5.2 per\ncent lead, 7.5 per cent zinc. At 12\nfeet values across 5.0 feet were* 3.4\nounces silver; 2,8 per cent lead and\n6.3 per cent zinc. At 18 feet across\n8.6 feet values were 24.Q ounces\nsilver; 4.4 per cent lead and 5,0\nper cent zinc.\nMidway between 3 and 5 levels\none D.D. intersection across 3 feet\naveraged 4.6 ounces silver; 7.7 per\ncent lead, 9.8'per cent zinc. A second intersection across 5.0 feet\naveraged 2.7 ounces silver, 3.5 per\ncent lead and 7.2 per cent zinc.\nrii\nWhen you buy o\nUSED\nCAR\nyou need the security\nof a Dependable\nDealer\nWe Offer You\nGOOD USED CARS\nPlus a\nGOOD REPUTATION\nSEE US BEFORE YOU DEAL\n.'\u2022\u2022'\u2022\n1947 Plymouth\nSedan\nRadio, Sun Visor, Heater.\n1938 Chevrolet\nSedan\nA REAL SNAP AT $593\njj.57\n;*I-.68\n.84\n.40\n.46\nr'SM\n1.25\nTeck HurIics 2.30\nThompson-Luml       -.12\nTombill * 30\nTorbrit     \u2022  :     2.00\nTrans,'. Com   Rci .      .55\nUnion  Mining    , 12\nUnited Keno    13.00\nUpper Canada     1.53\nVentures     12.65\nViolamac         95\nWaite Amulet'    12.25\nOILS\nAnglo Can.          8.10\nA P Consolidated  48ft\nB. A. Oil    21.00\nCalgary St Edmonton    14.75\nCalmont             1.65\nCentral Leduc       .'. '  2.65.\nChemical Research  90\nCommonwealth Pete     3.10\nDalhousle        ,38\nDavies Pete ,. 45\nDecalta  30\nDel Rio  .'_...    1.85\nEaslcrest     _..      .22\nFederated Peto     7.00\nHlghwood       .21\nHeme   .      ....'.    16.50\nimperial Oil \u201e\u201e..   39.75\nInter Pete         ,    21.50\nMacDougal SegUT    ' .27\nMid Cont        .44\nNat. Pete .'. \u201e..    3.15\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, Nov, 16 (AP) -\nIn the quietest session of the week,\nprices drifted louver.\nCanadian issues continued mixed,\nDome Mines and Distillers Seagram\nboth lost hi, Mclntyre dropped 1\nand Hiram Walker w*' off Vt: International Nickel advanced Vt ahd\nCanadian Pacific, remained unchanged.\nTORONTO, (CP) - Prices turned\n'lower af fer 'a-ib'ri'ef ''earlysaf terrfoo'ii;\nrally.v    *:\nFoods and.retail stores showed; a\nmajority of advances to form the\nmarket's strji gest sections. Utilities,\nsteels, textiles and miscellaneous industrials held gain's and losses in\nbalance but liquors, banks and\nmanufacturing companies weakened. Papers, agricultures, constructions and refining oils dipped sharply- \t\nMONTREAL, * (CP) - Irregular\nopening support faded and prices\nclosed moderately lower. Trading\nwas light.\nSteel dipped sharply. Papers and\nsenior metals were considerably\nlower. All other ndustrlals sections\nwere lower with the exception of\ncarriers, which held steady.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014'There was\na slow deterioration ln prices in\npractically all sections. Business was\nat a low ebb.\nDeclines in British Government\nfdnds were up to %, and there were\nfalls of several pence in the majority of industrials. Weak future was\nEnglish Electric 2\/9 lower at 49\/3\non talk of a new Issue. Lever Bro\nthers, however, moved up to around\n49\/6. *\nTHE\nEQUIPMENT'\nand Supply Co., Ltd.\n505 Vernon St, \u2014 Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 1590 P.O. Box 61\nSales Manager, Mort Browne\nOkalta\nPacific Pe<e \t\nRoyalite \t\nRoxpna \u201e\t\nTower Pete ..._..\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi'. \t\nAlgoma Steel *...:..,\nAluminum \t\nArgus   ....,\t\nAtlas SL \t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian \t\nB.C, Pickers A\t\nB;C. Power A \t\nBrown Co. .\t\nBrown Co. pfd\t\ntruck Silk A  \nullding Products ...\nBurns B\t\nCan. Cement\t\nCan. Malting\t\nCan. Breweries \t\nCan. Canners\t\nCan. Car & Fdy\t\nCan. Car It Fdy A\nCan. Oil\t\nCan. Celanese .'.\t\nCan. Dredge  XX.\nCan. Steamships\t\nCan. Pacific BlyS.....\nCan. West Lmbr ......\nCockshutt'\t\nCM&S\t\nCons. Paper .\nCleanup\ntills \u00bb>lth'\n\"pi^ASmJLlUL.\nJ^&tXMs\n4LOANM.ANS\n1 LIFE INSURED AT NO EXTRA COT\nIACARA\nFIN'.NCf COMPAN1* LTD.\n11 mil \\\\\\\\\\VJ   MMtur er mmstrul \u00abccdt**\u00bb\n\"\"\u2022\", WOUTM LT*.\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560. Baker St.\n2.75\n11.25\n17.25\n.25\n.30\n.83\n-    17\n48\n104V<\n13\n22\n38%\n24%\n20\n31\nI3\u00abi\n110\n20\n34%\n88*\n79%\n51\n19\n33\n15%\n17\n25%.\n50\n60\n43\nSSVt\n11%\n*17%\n174\n36\nDist. Seagram         28%\nDom. Bridge   ., ...'. :.._.,     68H\nDom. Tar St Chemical\nEddy Paper '.\t\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Fanner _*_\nFleet Air  ;..._,.\t\nFord \/,  \u201e\nGatineau   ;..,__\u201e\u2022-\nden. Steel Wares ....._\t\nGreat Lakes .:.. ___\u201e\nGreat Lakes pfr! _'\u201eJ\t\nGypsum Lime   \t\nH. R. MacMillan A\t\nH. R. MacMillan B\t\nIhL Metal \t\nInt Nickel\t\nInL Pete  '.\t\n1-Celvinator\nMoore Corp.\nMCColl Frontenac .\nNaL Steel Car .......\nPage Hershey\t\nPcwell River  _\nPower Corp.\nRuss,.Industries\t\nShawinigan ...\n41%\n23\n17\n27%\n1.90\n52\n18\n16%\n22%\n50\n20%\n25%\n25%\n44%\n44%\n49%\n16\n24%\n38%\n28%\n64%\n27\n28 \"'\n25\n37%\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Nov. 16 (CP) \u2014 Trade\nwas not too brisk on the Calgary\nLivestock Market today and prices\nwere steady to weak. Receipts were\nlight, 700 cattle and calves, with in*\ndications of a good cleanup for the\nweekend.\nButcher steers and heifers were\nabout steady. Cows were under\npressure, * bulls weak to 50 cents\nlower. Good stocker and feeder\nsteers were steady to weak. Good\nstocker steer calves were in good\ndemand at steady prices, but veal\ncalves were no better than steady.\nGood to near-choice butcher isteers\n32.50 to 34.00; common- to medium\n25.00 to 32.00. Good to near-choice\nbutcher heifers 30.50 to 32.00; common to medium 24.00 to 30.00. Good\ncows 24.00 to 25.00; common to medium 21.50 to- 23,50, canners and\ncutters 16.00 to 21.00. Good bulls\n25.50 to 26.50; common to medium\n22.00 to 25*00. Good stocker. and\nfeeder steers 29.00 to 32.00; commoh\nto medium 23.00 to 29.00, Good tb\nchoice. veal calves 32:00 to 34.00;\ncommon to medium 22,00 to 31.00.1\n1947 Mercury\nSedan\nSun Visor, Radio, Heater;\n1947 Chrysler\nSedan\n,'.   One Owner, Radio, Sun\n, \"A Visor, Hcnier. .\"*,\n1947 Chevrolet\nSedan\n* New Paint, Good Rubber.\n1937 Ford\nPickup\nIn nice shape\u2014$495\n1947 Dodge\nSedan\nColor; .Grey\u2014i$1393 .\nREPOSSESSION!\n1946 Ford 3-Ton\nWith 5 yard box and'H.D.\nhoist. Tires nearly new.\nYours For What's\nAgainst it!\n1949 Pontiac\nSedan\nIn lovely shape.\n1949 Mercury\nPickup\nLow Mileage. Like new.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES (Closing Prices)\nCariboo Gold     1.25\nGrandview  _ 51\nGiant Mascot 95\nHighland Bell __- 86\nInt. C & C      1.05\nKootenay Belle _     1.06\nPend Oreille      9.50\nPioneer Gold  .'.     2.00\nPremier Border       .32\nQuatsino .,:....:   55\nReeves MacDonald     6.75\nSheep Creek      1.70\nSilver Standard       2.75\n.17\nVan Roi '. Z\n.83\nWestern Uranium _..\n3.50\nOILS\nAnaconda  XX.\n.16\nAnglo Can. r.  ui-\n8.00\nA P Consolidated \t\n.49\n1.65\nPacific Pete  ;\t\n11.25\nVanalta  .*  -X    '_.\n.66\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates \t\n18.00\nInter Brew.  \t\n4.40\nAlberta Dlst .._\t\n2.95\nAlberta Dist. V. T.\t\n2.95\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG. Nov 16 (CP) - Win-\n\u2022Vneg grain ca6h prices:\nOats No. l'teed, 1.0E\nBarley, No. 1 feed, US>,4.\n1947 Chrysler\n7 PASSENGER. Jdeal for\nTransportation Society. New\nrubber, reconditioned motor,\nbody good.      i\n1938 Plymouth\nSedan\n'Priced right.\n1950 Morris\nMinor\n'  Saloon\nLike new\u20144\n1946 Pontiac\nSedan\n$1280\n1949 Ford 3-Ton\n. Chassis and Cab or Dump\n.'\u2022 Body and Hoist.\nPEEBLES\n^ MOTORS\n\/CHRYSLER'PLYMOUTH??,\n\/f-AR.G0-o<|\u00bb>:^\u00bbff.TIP-E^j'\/,'\n -^\u2014\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, NOV. 17, 1951\nThe Modern. Pharmacy\n.must have inbdern drugs\n^ ppd modern pharmaceuticals,\nAllergy Therapy\nAnalgesics ' *\" ' \u2022. \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 *i\n\u25a0>'\u25a0\u2022\u25a0*    Antibiotics -    ', - i\nX:A '        Antlhlitamlhle*\nChloagogues    \u25a0\nCoagulants\nEstrogens\n'..-*,'\u2022       Dietary Supplements\nHematlnlcs >*   *\u25a0 *     i '*    *\nHypnotics-'\nPediculicides\nPenicillin Preparations\nVitamin'Therapy\nThese and hundreds of. other modern preparations '\ni  '*\u25a0     -are ready for your-doctor's use\nat:.    \u25a0\nMann's Clinic Pharmacy\n'. -'AND\nMANN S\nBarbara Stanwyck Urges Adulf\nPictures for Adult Audiences\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Nov. 16 (AP) \u2014\nBarbara Stanwyck today agreed\nwith the growing feeling among\nmovie-makers that Hollywood needs\nmore adult movies.\n\"I think it is time to change our\nWhole thinking about' censorship,\"\nshe said. \"The public has got tired\nof the same old formulas. We have\ndone the old 'boy-roeets-girl' theme\nto death.\nMORE REAL\n\"We've got to meet the challenge\nof the foreign films. They are far\nahead of ,the: Hollywood product\nin depicting life. Yet\" I can see\nnothing wrong about them, r They\nare merely slices of life.\n\"Naturally we can't throw cen-\nYmir\nDancing\n\"      EVERY\nSaturday\nNight\nMICKEY McEWEN\nAND HIS\n\"MELODY MAKERS\"\nCome and Meet Your\nFriends in Ymir\nDANCING 9 TO 1\nADMISSION 750\n J your\njfaioto-Greeting Cards)\n'     Now .*T. made by\n[our experts from\/\n*   your own i.   .\n'.Kodak Snapshots;\nMake Your Christmas\nPortrait Appointment\nNow\nOoqusLSkudw\n460 Ward St. Phone 106\nNELSON, B.C.\nsorship off completely. But I do\nfeel that the real creators in this\nbusiness should be allowed to give\ntheir talents a free rein and be\nable to deal with any adult subject\nas long as they do so with taste.\"\nALL AGE3 .\nAh, but what about the kiddies?\n\"Listen,\" she continued, \"those\nkids know mora than we do. All\nthey nave, to do Is read the first\ntwo pages of any newspaper and\nthey can leprn all about rape, arson,\ndope ahd murder. And the adventure shows they listen to on the\nradio\u2014thejr even scare me.\n\u25a0'\"\" \"Besides,'there art plenty of good\npictures for Children to see. I'm\nmerely advocating soma for the\nadults, too.\"\nThis may shock your Aunt Nelly,\nbut Miss Stanwyck even suggested\nthat the screen could stand an occasional cuss word.\n\"If it would help the dramatic\nvalues and make it seem more like\nreil life\u2014why not?\" she asked. \"I\ndon't think it would hurt the\nkids . . . I certainly hear them say\nfar worse.\"\nVansillarl Calls\nFor Tass (heck\nLONDON, Nov. 16 (AP) - Lord\nVansittart called today for a stoppage of diplomatic privileges enj dyed in Britain by Russia's Tass News\nAgency.\nVansittart gave notice that he will\nask in the House of Lords \"whether\nthe diplomatic privileges enjoyed\nand exploited by the Tass agency\nwill now be terminated without further delay.\" .   ,\nBritain has given such privileges\nto'Tass on the grounds that the\nnews agency is an arm of the Soviet\ngovernment.*\nLast month, however, Britain\nclosed down the Soviet Monitor, the\nTass agency's London station used\nto pick up Moscow radio broadcasts\nfor distribution here. Britain said\nthe Soviet Monitor was a special\nfacility granted Tass, during the\nwar.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nHaigh\ntru-Ait\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker St.\n9\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St Rhone 63\nMINIIIIIIIIII'IIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIMMIIHIIIIIIIIIIMIIII\nAn ideal TONIC i6oz.bottle\nfor all the Family $,2S\nW BUIIDS KESBTANCE-HESTOIIES APPETITE\nWATERBURY'S\nCOMPOUND\nPLAIN OR WITH CREOSOTE AND GUAIACOl I\nNELSON PHARMACY,\nPHCINE YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH RES. '\n'1203 433 Josephine 8f. \u2014 Nelson, B.C. 394-L\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllMIIIII\nAnnual Kimberley\nCommunity\n(best Drive On\n(KIMBERLEY,, B.C. - Annual\nKimberley' District Community\nChest two-weeks membership drive\nit; underway to continue until Nov.\n24,. preparatory 'to allotting ihe\nbudget for 1063 to the 26 affiliated\nagencies. . v        . \u25a0* .\nBudget requests of. the member\norganizations for which the Chest\nhandles all financial * appeals and\nAllminates a year-long flurry .of\ndrives for funds from the public\ntotal $38,000 foe next year. During\n1051 the budget totalled $22,450.\nHalf this amount went to financing\nof local sports, including a $2500\ngrant to the Dynamiters as senior\nhockey and $75db to the. Amateur\nAthletic Association for all other\nsports, Dynamiter affiliation will\nbe discontinued in the next budget.\nGrants of $1000 each went to Red\nCross, Cancer Society, Tuberculosis\nChristmas seals, and-Salvation\nArmy in national appeals. March'\nof Dimes, Crippled Children's.fund,\nSL John Ambulance,- Unitarian\nSociety, Canadian' National Institute for the. Blind, were- also\nincluded in the budget with-Substantial aid. '\u2022\u25a0.,-\u201e\u25a0\nLocal organizations < benefitting\nfrom the budget were the public\nlibrary, string orchestra, Boy Scout\nAssociation, Squadron 266 Air\nCadets,. Sullivan Chapter I.O.D.E.,\nChapman Camp Recreation Society,\nbrass and pipe band, Girl Guides,\nWelfare Council, P.-T.A. playground, and Pioneer Lodge,.\nStress in the drive by. carivasseis\nis placed on small monthly payroll\ndeductions over the year .through\nthe Cominco office which assures a\nsteady stream of revenue for the\nvaried Chest purposes. Persistent\ncampaigns in the past have been\nonly fairly successful with membership considered below expectations\nfor a city of 6000 people who bene*\nfit directly from its grants.'     '    *\nFpr all membership subscriptions\nCominco matches the amount given,\nand in capital expenditure projects\nsuch as sports and community\nfacilities the company has given\ndouble the amount subscribed.\nH. G. Anderson is Community\nChest secretary-treasurer and Chest\noffices are located in the bus depot\nbuilding.\nNepal Swears In\nAnti-Red Premier\nKATMANDU, Nepal, Nov. 16\n(Reuters)\u2014King Trlbhuvana of Nepal today swore ln the first \"commoner\" Prime Minister of this Himalayan kingdom\u2014Matrika Prasad\nKolrala, president of the Nepali\nCongress,    ,\nNepal's Coalition Cabinet dissolved three days ago after disagreement between the' Ranas, Nepal's ruling family, .and the Nepali\nCongress.\nKolrala will head a 12-member\nCabinet in which the Nepali Congress has eight seats, the others being independents.\nKing Tribhuvana, no ^constitutional head of 7,000,000 Gurkhas in\nthis 64,000-square-mile state, said\nhe hoped the cooperation Of the retiring Prime Minister, Sir Padma\nShumshere Jung, will always be\navailable to the Government.\nKolrala, 40, is the eldest son of a\nformer Nepal judge who was jailed\nby the Ranas for alleged sympathies with popular movements. His\nappointment - is expected to lessen\nthe threat that Nepal might fail-\nas did neighboring Tibet, to Communist China,\nHe will use neither the bejewelled, gold throne of his predecessor\nnor. his titles oi \"Maharaja\" and\n\"Theen Sarcar.\"  '\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0'.',    \t\nLawyers Receive\nKnighthoods\nLONDON, Nov, 16 (AP) \u2014 The\nKing, handed out the customary\nknighthoods today which he gives\nthe two top legal officers of a new\ngovernment.\nThey went to Lionel Frederick\nHeald, 54, the attorney-general, and\nReginald Edward Manningham-Bul-\nler, 46, solicitor general.\nMETAL PRICIS\nNEW YORK, Nov. 16 (AP)\u2014Stbl\nnon-ferrous metals prices; Copper\n24^4 cents a pound, Connecticut Valley; lead 18 centa a pound, New\nYork; zinc 18*4 cents a pound, East\nSL Loutf; tin $1.08 a pound; New\nYork.\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nHAVE YOUR: FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n' akthe\nNelson Upholstery\n408 Hall Stceet .''hone 146\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nPainting and\nDecorating\nG. R. (BOB) PICKERING\ni. PHONE 44-R2\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone 1\u00bb\nBOUND FOR INDIA with a cargo of desperately heeded wheat, the U>8. ship George Walton\nIs fire-swept following an explosion some 400 miles\nWest of Seattle. Six members'of the crew.perished\nand 30' were rescued. Twelve were picked up by\nthe Japanese freighter Kenkon Maru.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nKamloops Man\nTo Koolenay\n<G. A, Luyat, supervising agriculturist at Kamloops, has been\nmade responsible for the Kootenay,\nGrand Forks and Boundary region.\nHon., Harry Bowman, provincial\nminister, of agriculture, iij, announcing the extension of territory,\ns it* is felt. there should be*\ndefinite value\"' in. having district\ndepartmental offices throughout the\npresenti-ranching areas of B.C.\nunder one supervisor,\n' The Southeast .region has been\nadministered from Cteston.\nJ. '6.1 Allln, supervising agriculturist for. this* district, is being\ntransferred to a similar post in the\nVancouver Island and LoWer Mainland region. He will be stationed\nat Victoria. \u25a0':>'.-'\u25a0-.\nMore Churches\nRev. I. Roulsfon\nWoodworkers Await\nOperators'Move\n\"VANCOUVER, Nov. 16 (CP) -|\nInternational Woodworkers of Am- j\nerica (CCL.) said,today the next!\nmove iri the threatened strike of m, .'\u00bb ..*; ' *'\u00bb\u25a0-'.* *'\"\u25a0% \"'.\nwoodworkers in Interior British TaWAC NAW DACI\nColumbia is \"up to the operators.\" I WlVj IIV OT W VJl\nThe Union has set next Wednesday\nas the strike deadline. '\u25a0'\nDistrict President Stewart AlsT\nbury said it, is up to the operators\nlo make a move.\nal Banquet\nAt Fruitvale\nCRANBROOK, B* C.,*- Resident\nand good citizen for ithe past 10\nyears, Rev. T. E. Roulston, minister\nof Knox Presbyterian Church, has\naccepted a call to the Presbyterian\nChurch at Sylvan I,,ake, AHa. He\nhas been active ih many community affairs here since he came from\nNew Westminster In 1041, is a\nmember and past president of the\nRotary Club, and also member and\npast president of the Ci'anbrook\nArts and Crafts Association.\nMrs. Roulston has been on the\npublic  library  board, .and  Cran*\nJanuary Slarl\nFRUITVALE, B.C. \u2014 Over  100\nveterans With their wives and Aux-    \t\niliary members and their husbands brook Public Librarian during her\nenjoyed the Remembrance Banquet residence here, and dlso is a past\nin the newly enlarged Legion Hail, president of Kootenay pfesbytery\nThe Ladies of the Auxiliary had of the Women's Missionary Society,\ncharge of the catering. |   They will leave for their new\nLegion  President Jack  Flndlay, home next week.\nwas master ot ceremonies and pro-j        -\u2014*   *.   . ,- ','. ,* ...\nposed the toast to the King. Prin-I_ .      \u00bb'.\"'..      .\nciple speaker was Jack Wilson of |lAM\/\u00bb<\\ DlA\u00ablr<*MA\nRossland, president of the Rossland KOIICC DIDCKtlDC\nbranch and also president of'the, \u00bb\"\"\u00bb\u00bb:*^\u00abw\u00ab\u2122uuu\nWest Kootenay Zone Council.        I\nMr. ' Wilson \/congratulated   the\nFf. Steele Nine\nKootenay Base Metals Ltd. has\ncarried out new work which discloses that replacement mineralization continues down* to 'considerably greater depth than No. 1 level,\nthe horizon to which ore tonnage\ncalculations were made.\n.Officials advise that the property\nat Fort Steele, East Kootenay, B.C.,\nis expected to start pfoductibn during latter half of January. The\nmine camp has been' completed and\nwinterized. Mine machinery has\nbeen Installed. The mill' building\nhas been erected and installation\nof equipment ia under way.\nThe new progress report says\nrecent sampling . and geological\nmapping on No. 2 level has indicated the presence of appreciable\nore of milling, grade not \"Included\nin previous ore estimates!\nIt is explained that the ore\noccurs as a replacement of a favorable horizon of dolomitlc arglllite.\nPrevious ore reserve estimates were\nbased on surface, underground and\ndrill core samples from the replaced horizon at or above No. 1\nlevel!    -     \u2022 \u25a0.) -    ,\nThe recent work Indicates that\nthe replacement mineralization con,\ntlnues dow nfrom No. 1 level to\nand beyond No. 2 level, The uncut\naverage of 52 samples taken over a\ndrift length of 180 feet on No. 2\nlevel - is; reported at 2,0 ounces\nsilver \"per tori; 3.8 per cent lead\nand 4.3 per cent zinc.\n\u25a0 Width of the replaCed horizon on\nNo. 2 level has not yet been determined but is at least 12 feet. Full\nlength of the ore zone on No, '2\nlevel will be determined by drifting.\n\"Urgency of. the Task\", in- con-' Fruitvale branch on its progress and,\nnection With extension of the especially in the improved hall. In\nchurch in the North Pacific Dis-Comparison with other Legion bran-1 NEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\ntrict was the topic of Rev. Carl H.jches, he said, Fruitvale was far Nov. 16 (CP)\u2014R.C.M.P. formed i\nPeterson of Seattle, Superintendent ahead in attendance and results of seven-car blockade across Pattullo\nof the North Pacific District of\nEvangelical .Mission Covenant\nChurch of America Friday night at\nNelson Mission Covenant Church.\n' Opportunities to bring religion to\nthe many unchurched people in\nsuburban areas through *,establishment of- chUrches was emphasized\nby Mr. Peterson who also mentioned the hope that the .Mission Covenant would soon bring churches\nto- the Peace River District where\nreligion advances have been limited\nSlides on the church's work in\nthe North Pacific District which\nincludes British Columbia; Washington, Oregon, Montana and Idaho\nwere also shown by Mr. Peterson.\nEvangelical services were held\nWednesday and Thursday on the\ntopic \"The Need of the Revival of\nChristians\" by Peterson.\nHe wiU take Sunday morning\nservices . speaking on \"Faith on\nTrial\" and evening services speaking on \"Concerning the Faith of\nJesus.\"\nworks of projects undertaken. j Bridge here and arrested two men\nDouglas Haines' report on poppy, who \"seem to tally closely\" with\nskies and wreaths showed sales to-'the men who robbed three service\ntailing $265.. stations early today.\nA short program of music, songs' Police said a constable spotted\nand stories was enjoyed. Douglas the suspect car near Whalley across\nHaine was chairman. Artists were the bridge'from New Westminster\nW. Maze, Felix Hardy, Bert. Patton and Informed headquarters by ra-\nand Cecil Turner, all of Trail and dio. Mounties with drawn revolvers\nAlan Johns of Beaver Falls. I intercepted the car as it tried to\nA dance of old and new dances cross the bridges.\nwound up the evening.\n _i_\nBritain Confident\nOf Future Sales\nLONDON, Nov. 16 (CP) \u2014 Sir\nWilliam Rootes, chairman of one of\nBritain's biggest automobile-exporting groups, today said manufacturers here are confident of. recovering\nthe Canadian market for cars despite credit restrictions imposed in\nCanada.   : \u25a0**. \u25a0'\nSir William, in a letter to the\nFinancial Times, said the industry\nis backing this belief by organizing-\na special motor display at the 1052\nCanadian National Exhibition in\nToronto.;\n' The letter follows news that about\n3500 British cars have been shipped\nback from Canada, where they*\ncould not be sold because of Instalment-buying restrictions Imposed in\nthe Canadian budget.\nThe three robberies netted the\nthieves a total of $170.\nOne robbery was in Vancouver,\nanother in Burnaby and a third in\nSurrey near New Westminster.\nWe  Serve the  West\n.   With Ellison's Best\nWHOLE WHEAT AND\nVITA B FLOUR\n... Phone 238 or Call\nEllison' Milling & Elevator\nCompany, Ltd,\nFINE, DRIVING\nSUSPENSION FOR\nBLEWETT MAN\nPeter J. Masloff, 20-year-qld\nBlejvett man, was fined $60 and\ncosts and had his driver's licence\nsuspended for six months when he\nwas found guilty of a Highway Act\ninfraction ln Provincial Court Friday.\nStipendiary Magistrate William\nEvans found Masloff guilty of driving a motor.vehicle while his ability to drive was impaired by alcohol, i\nThe charge resulted from an ac-1.\ncident Nov. 3 when a car driven by j\nthe defendant * left Granite RoaS'\nand slid into the ditch. ' j      ,.        .\u201e_\u201e.,.,\nHe had pleaded not guilty when , meeting of the Kimberley Boy\nthe case opened Nov. 0. At'thatiScout Association re-elected J. M,\ntime, Carl Henne of Trail andjw\u00b0lverton as President, Other of-\nR.CM.P. officers Sgt. W. H. David-1ticers ore vice-president, Father!\nson and Constable K, Wickerisi gave Smith and E. J. Colthorpe; secre-\nCrown testimony on the accident! tary* c- A- F\u00b0ote| and treasurer, G.\nand condition of the defendant at A- -Thdjiipspn. ' '\nthe time of the accident.. j   The executive committee consists!\nNo defence evidence'was present. ot George Clinton, T. Wilson, L. |\ned when the case resumed Friday, I Saunders, William Vaskovitch, H. j\nSuspension. of. the driver's licence jO.Howey and Charles Smith. !\nwill be in force throughout Canada Reports were given by* J. Giege-!\nfor the. six-month period. i rich, .District -Scout Commissioner;!\nW. N. Ferguson appeared for the'District Scout,Master B. O, Iver-i\ndefense. Sgt, Davidson acted on be-'son  and  District  Cub  Master  J,\nhalf of the Crown.: '\u25a0\u25a0 ! Turner.\n '\u2014;\u2014'\u25a0\u2014  !   Films were, shown by J. Wight-\nCHILDREN SAVED    :n,an \u00b0'a trip be tdok 'rom Kim\nJ. M. WOLVERTON\nAGAIN HEADS\nKIMBERLEY SCOUTS\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.\u2014 The annual\nCHECK YOUR\nMEDICINE CHEST\nNOW FOR\nRexall\nCough and\nCold Needs\nBRONCHIAL, SYRUP\nREXILIiANA  ;\u2022\nCHE8T RUB\nASA TABUETS      ,....\nOnly At Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 34 Box 460\nMall orders promptly despatched\nShirts\nFOR FALL,\nOR XMAS...\nSee our Fall ond\nChristmas range'of\nForsyth Shirts. Plain\ncolors, white and\nstripes in the new\ncollar styles,\n$3.95 to $7.50\nEmory's\nLI Ml HP ......\nThe Man's Store\nPHONE   144  FOR CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Claillffcd Way\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nMIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nS^EEMS\nBY CUTLER'S JEWELLERY\n_.,  , , ,\u201e\u201e   \u201e    , .berley  to* Nova   Scotia.\nBY MOTHER'S CARE :ment3 were served.\t\nTflE PAS, Man., Nov. 16 (CP) \u2014\nThe story of a heroic mother's dyini\nact which saved the lives of her\nfour young children came lo light\ntoday ln this Northern Manitoba'\ntown.\nRefresh-\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral'Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\nThe mother, Mrs. Maggie Bailey, j 515 Koolenay St       '\u2022 Phone 36!\nCt,ffn\\.nr1     fit*     iH.rtMHihl     l> ,x_~ t. - _- _    '.        ',\n35, suffered an internal hemorrhage\nwhile her husband was away from\ntheir lonely trapper's cabin, about\n200 miles North of here. She feared\nshe would die before his return and\nbundled the four small children into\nbed. with her,     .,\" ,\nWhen the husband, Fred Bailey,\nreturned next day. he found her\ndead. But the children .were safe.\nThey ranged, in ,age from, three\nmonths to five years.\nHe bundled them Into a dog sled\nand took them 28 .miles to, Thicket\nPortage, 175 miles North' of here\non the Churchill Railway, where\nhe reported the'mother's* death to\nr.cm.p.     : '\u2022\"'     '. \u25a0   '\nThe body at the mother hu been\nbrought out for burial.\nThe onerroom log house where\nshe-died was a .typical NortherA\ntrapper's cabin\u2014small and isolated,\nmiles from neighbors and a base for\ntrapping operations which sometimes take men away from home\nfor two or more days at a stretch.\nSAVE\nYOUR\n*P *p \u00abp \u00abP \u00abp\nLet Us\nRepair.\nYour -,\nRadio   and\nRefrigerator\nWELLS\nService Shop\nPhone 1115\nNELSON,BX.\niSla almost didn't\nTie the knot\nBecause he lilted\n'  The ring a lot.\n,!\nFOR-CHRISTMAS\nGIVE HER A\n\"BLUE BLOSSOM\"\n*     DIAMOND\nENGAGEMENT RING\nFashioned in palladium or Combination palladium ' and 14K\nyellow gold, Their perfection,\nyour protection.\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 YEARS EXPERIENC\nNELSON, B.C\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiimiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiimii\nwm\nWhy Pay More?\nUSED   CAR  VALUES\n1950 AUSTIN SEDAN\nOne owner, low'mileage       -'      S1350\n1950 25 SERIES\nUndersea! heater, air condition     \\ Zl50\n1949 DODGE SPECIAL DeLUXE\nAir concjjtion, heater^ custom radio, sun visor, bock\n- up light,-blowout proof tubes. One owner. Color\nmaroon\n1940 PACKARD SEDAN\n.'McriB'   \u2022'   ---... $775\n1948 CHEV. DeLUXE SEDAN\nUndersgqt  heater,   fully  winterized   CiLf\\C\\\nOnly l^pOO miles i_- 4>IOUU\nSUPER VALUE\n1946 CHEVROLET\n-TON PICKUP\nNew Motor\n$900\n1949 FORD HALF-TON\n4-speed transmission, heater, defroster \\\\ 1 \/ r\\\n1949 CHEVROLET %-1 TON\nHeater and defroster, Ci^lC\ngood condition' \u00b1_A \\lX \/ *%\n1948 G.M.C. HALF-TON\nh~\u00bb \u2014\u2014\u2014_ $1320\n1940 CHEV HALF-TON\n4-speed transmission _'     Snllll\nPONTIACS   NOW ON DISPLAY     BUICKS\n|QC| CMC 1\/2-TON\nVAUXHALLS\nPICKUPS\nWIGINTON MOTORS Ltd.\nPhone 122\nNelion, B.C.\n^\u2014\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_11_17","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\/1.0425964","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":"1951-11-17 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":"1951-11-17 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":""}]}