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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Russia A-Bomb News\nMay Bring $1 Billion\nForeign Arms Program\nHouse, Set on $580 Million Vote,\nMay Be Influenced by New\nDevelopment; Senators Hopeful\nBy JACK BELL      \"'\u25a0\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 25 (AP) - New pressure Jias developed in Congress yto get the House of Representatives to\naccept the Senate's.-$1',000,000,000 figure, for arming the\nEuropean allies of the United States. It was a quick reaction\nto Russia's atorriic explosion. \u25a0\n...Until this news came Friday, a compromise lower sum\nhad been regarded as virtually certqin. The House.had' voted\n$580,495,000\nThere, wO's no assurance that the Senate Would prevail.\nThe Hpuse Republican leader. Joseph Martin, said be thought\nthe House would insist on Its*\nfigure.\nBut Senator Eugene Millikin\n(Rep, Colo.), head of the Senate's\nRepublican Conference, . told reporters he thinks the'.news, will im-\nproye chances, that Congress, will\ngrant the full sup.     ,\nChairman ' Tom Co'nally (Dem.\nlex.) of. the. Senate Foreign Relations Committee told reporters he\nahd his colleagues on a Senate-\nHouse Conference Committee will\ninsist that Congress make $1,000,-\n000,000 available for military supplies to North Atlantic treaty\nnations. ,        '-.-.'.',:     . .: \u201e\nHttPEFUL\nThe Senate approved this fund as\npart of a $1,314,000,000 outlay for\nforeign arms. The House' bill came\nto a ' total $869,600,000 for all\ncountries,   \u25a0\n\"I am hopeful the House will\nchange its 'attitude,\" Connally said.\n\"We feel that-the action of the\nSenate ought to be persuasive,\nparticularly lh the light of recent\ndevelopments.\"\nRepresentative'.' Percy Priest\n(Dem. Tenn.) predicted that the\natomic news from Russia will make\nthe- House change its' mind- and approve a larger outlay for European\narms. ' ''' '\u25a0' \u25a0;' '\u25a0'\nEMPHA8I8 ON AIR POWER\nRepresentative Law r e n ce M.\nSmith (Rfcp. Wis.) told reporters:\n\"If Russia has the atopic bomb,\neverything we' are doing, except for\nairpower, Will' be going down the\ndrain. The theory that we have to\ndevelop the ground -forces of our\nallies to stave off a' rush until we\nget there becomes nonsensical.\"\nThe conflict of' views between\nPriest arid Smith illustrated the\ndifferences, pf opinion among lawmakers over, the effect of Russian\nacquisition of the atom bomb on\nmilitary preparations.\n.. Senator Walter George (Dem.\n;,Oa.), who tried unsuccessfully 46,\n* cut 1 the -^European attns'ftiha'r said'\nthe'Soviet atomic explosion \"confirms my contention that you can't\ncontain Russia by land arms built\nup .-around her'.\"1 i   ,   <\u2022 -.     :.':-.\nRescue Award fo\nNelson Man\nTORONTO, Sept 25 (CP) \u2014 Two\nWestern Canada - residents are to\nreceive Royal Canadian Humane\nAssociation bronze medals for life-\nsaving.-   . :\u2022',,'     !\nDale E. Spearing of Auburnton,\nSask., won the award by rescuing\ntwo companions from a truck which\nwent through: river ice near Flln\nFlon, Man., last\" Jan. 9.-.<\"  -\nThe other award .winner, Mrs.\nBeatrice M. Molyard of Lulu Island,\nVancouver, plunged Into the Fraser\nRiver last November to save two-\nyear-old'Clifford'Gutltner.  > '\nIn addition, parchment certificates\nfor taking part. in.the rescue' of\ndrowning persons will be' awarded\nto the following:.-'    ,        \u2022\nTasma.Le Hinch, Campbell River,\nB.C:; JohnPlumptoh, Hariey, B.C.;\n. John Laltenen, Whonnock, B.C.;\nCUfford Brimacombe, (Bewicke St.)\nVancouver; Clifford Harkness, (971\nNicola St.) Vancouver; Karl Sol\nberg, Port Renfrew, B.C.; Vivian\nMyles and William Gillard of\nSummerland, B.C; E. Grey, Vancouver, and John R. Todd, Nelson,\nB.C.\nNELSON MAN,\nFRIEND KILLED\nIN CAR SPILL\nAllah Ojisdff, 22,\nPies in  ',        *-.    \u2022\nSymmerland Hospita;\n3 ROAD DEATHS\n. VANCOUVER, Sept. 25 (CP) \u2014\nThree persons are dead and five\nare in hospital today following traffic accidents in widely-separated\nparts of the Province during the\nweekend.\nDead are:    ';<     :'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0''\nWilma Sharp, six, daughter of\nJames Sharp, Surrey, B.C.; Allan\nOlisoff, 22, of Nelson, B.C., Robert\nHenry Abbott, 21, of Parksville,\nB.C.\nThe little girl died in her father's\narms after being thrown' from his\ntruck when it hit a depression in\nthe road. ,'\u25a0*'\u00bb\nThe two youths died in Summer\nland General Hospital where they\nwere taken after their jeep overturned-10 miles from that Okari-\n,'agan Valley centre. \" ,\ni In critical condition in Royal Columbian Hospital in New Westminster is David Disher, 22 of Vancouver. His car overturned near Han-\ney, B.C.\nOthers hurt In the mishap Include Elizabeth Racy, 17, of Vancouver, shock and lacerations and\nAayniond Brisseaij, 17, also of Van-\ncbuveri hand, chest and' leg\" injuries.        ...     ,\n. Their conditions are reported\n\u2022good;--    -,.,- \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0--*-*\u25a0-'\u25a0 \u25a0\n, Allan Olisoff was the son of Mr.\narid Mrs. John Olisoff, Granite\nRoad, Nelson. He left Nelson four\nmonths ago for Vernon. He had\nworked for the C.P.R. for early a\nyear, and also In the shipyards at\nVancouver.\nBesides his wife and son, and\nhis parents, survivors are five\nbrothers, John, Walter, Cyril, Gaston and Barry, of Nelson, and one\nsister,' Paula, who on the night of\nher brother's death was injured in\nan auto accident here, suffering a\nfractured arm.\nMining Men Gather\nAfSpokane\nSPOKANE, Wash., Sept. 25 (AP)\nThe vanguard of an expected 2000\nmining men arrived today for the\nannual Western division convention of the American Mining Congress.\nThe Resolutions Committee, headed by Chairman Donald Callahan of\nWallace, Idaho, met. The subject of\nthe resolutions will not be announced until they are Introduced at the\ngeneral sessions.\nRegistration got under way tomorrow but the'first formal session\nIs scheduled for Monday morning.\nThe first meeting will be opened by. Howard I. Young of St. Louis,\nMo.; President of the Congress.\nYoung is President of the American Zinc, Lead and Smelting 'Company.\nSee More Fresh Vegetables lor\nCanadians This Wiqler From U.S.\nBy the Ottawa 8taff of The\nCanadian Press\n-. OTTAWA, Sept 25 (CP)\u2014\nCanadian housewives likely will\nget a greater supply this Winter\nof American fresh fruits and vegetables at a result of readjustments in United States Import\ncontrols being planned by the\nGovernment.\nU. S. fresh vegetables have been\nallowed into Canada periodically to\nmeet Canadian demand when Canadian farm-, bins are cleaned out.\nAmerican fresh fruit now is completely banned.\nThlB import relaxation, likely to\nbe made by the Government within\nthe next few months, results partly\nfrom the recent trl-natlon dollar\ntalks In Washington.\nCanada gave assurance at those\ntalks that if the United States would\nallow the United Kingdom to- use\nMarshall Aid dollars to purchase\nCanadian wheat, Canada would review Its program controlling Imports from the U. S. with the possibility of helping American fruit\nproducers with a growing surplus on\ntheir hands.\nThe move, of course, will mean a\ngreater outward flow of Canadian-\npnovlNCiAi:\nLIBRARY    I\nu\u00b0a\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKpoteny\u2014Clear Monday, Continuing warm Light winds. Low and\nhigh at Cranbrook 38 and 73, Cres,\ndent Valley 38 ond 76.\nVOL\".\n.\u00ab?.\n6 CENTS A COPY\nSitf \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 'sfaS -^ Poles Apart\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIAi.CANADA\u2014MONDAY MORNING, SEPtT. 26. 1949\nMARGE RUSSIA\nNUMBER 120\nBritain's Foreign Secretary Ernest Bev|n folds his hands across\nhis broad chest and looks lugubriously at nothing In particular while\nRussia's Foreign Commissar Andrei. Vishlnsky (right): nibbles on a\nfingernail as the U.N. fourth General Assembly got underway at\nFlushing. Meadows, N.Y. All was sweetness and light as the session\nopened oh keynote of hope and peace. No one was fooling himself that\nthis atmosphere of harmony would oontlnue for the run of the\nAssembly.\u2014Central. Press Canadian. \u25a0 ;,,'<\nRussia Maims A&orrib\nA Two^ear Secret\n:.\"  By EDDY GILM0RE +\nMOSCOW, Sept. 25 (AP)\u2014An\nofficial Russian, statement said\n\u2022today .that Soviet Russia has possessed the secret of the atom bomb:\nsince 1947. The, statement was Issued, by TASS, the Soviet newB\nagency.\nAt the same time Russia renewed\ndemands tor prohibition and control\nof the atom bomb.\nThis was the first official reaction   to   President   Truman's   announcement Friday that,there was\na recent atomic explosion1 in' Russia.\nThe TASS statement did not confirm or  deny such   an   explosion.\nHowever, it recalled the statement\nof V. M, Molotov, then Soviet Foreign Minister, on Nov.- 6,-1947, that\nthe secret of the atom; bbmb \"has\nlong since ceased to exist.\" It-added:\n'This declaration meant that the\nSoviet Union had already discovered\nth, secret of the atom'weapon and\nit has at its disposal this weapon.\"\nBut It was the last two paragraphs of the   T.AS8 -statement\nwhich attracted attention. These\n\u2022 paragraphs We'rei-  -\u2022  -\"        -.*j\"\n\"It shoultl\/be \"po'l nttd'Tout that\ntho Soviet Government, despite the\nexistence In Its country of an atomic weapon, adopts and Intends\nadopting in the future Its former\nposition In favor of the absolute\nprohibition of the use of the atomic weapon,\ni \"Concerning control of the atomic weapon, It has to bo said that\ncontrol will be esssentlal In order\nto check up on fulfillment of a\ndecision op the prohibition of production of the atomic weapon.\nSTALEMENT\n(Russia long has advocated outlawing, the atomic bomb. She also\nhas stated'repeatedly that she favors\n\"controls\" to make thi* ban stick.\nHowever, she has rejectedthe Western plan for detailed controls and\nhas refused to explain in detail just\nwhat she wants. She has insisted on\noutlawing the bomb first, setting up\ncontrols afterward. The United\nStates has insisted on establishing\nthe controls before she: Agrees to destroy her stock of bombs.\nWithout confirming or denying the\nefficacy of. American and other\nagencies in detecting an atomic explosion in Russia, TASS said much\n\"blasting work\" -was- taking jplace in\nRussia with the \"latest technical\nmeans.\" It said \"it is possible this\nmight draw attention beyond.the\nconfines of the Soviet'Union,\n\"With Deadly   ;\nWeapon\" *\nLOS ANGELES, Sept. 25 (AP)\u2014\nJoseph Weissman, 39, WaS booked\ntoday tin charges of assault with a\ndeadly weapon.-     V.\nHis wife,\" Goldle, 40, told police\nhe struck her with.a prayer book.\ndollar reserves,' but the Government\nappears to have other plans to cut\nthe flow. >\nSTEEL REDUCTIONS\nTrade Minister Howe indicated\nthat the Government likely will\ntake steps to reduce the shipment\nof American steel to Canada. That\nwill save Canada a lot of American\ndollars. .\nSteel, once a postwar scarcity, is\nnow in plentiful supply in Canada.\nCanadian steel producers appear tb\nbe able to supply all requirements.\nA tew other American products\nused in construction, such as copper   doorknobs,   brass   and   zinc\nequipment,   also   may   feel   the\nbrunt of Canadian controls.\nOn a general basis, the Government   appears   to   be   considering\nmeans of turning back all American\ncommodities  .which , tbe  Canadian\nmanufacturing field can supply.\nThis strengthening1 of controls policy is .expected to be a temporary\nexpedient\u2014to halt any big run on\nCanadian gold and dollar reserves..\n1 When those reserves are rebuilt\u2014\nat least to more than $1,000,000,000\u2014\nGovernment policy may be reversed\nand the flow of American goods in-,\ncreased.\nICEBERG CAPSIZES\nCRAFT, NINE DROWN\ngodthaab, Greenland, Sept,\n26 (Reuters)\u2014An . Iceberg which\nsuddenly split In halves off the\nEast coast of Greenland capsized\na boat, drowning nine Greenland\n\u25a0 ers', \u25a0 \u25a0 i-\nGERMAN ATOMIC\nWORK FOR RUSS\nContribution by\nFormer Enemies\nAided Early Success\nIMPORT URANIUM\nBy RICHARD O'REGAN\nFRANKFURT, Germany, Sept, 25\n(AP)\u2014German brains, equipment\nand uranium ore helped Russia\nbreak open the secret of the atomic\nfynfob;    ' '-'\u2022'\n\u2022V'Without the help ot German\nscientists,\" a high American' officer\nsaid -.today;'::'.'Russiacon)d : never\nhwe^'jisiifliped,, an;, att^jiijkweapbn\nsd?sobri; --\" '\u2022\u25a0' -   --*-';r^v\nMore1: than 200 German experts\nare reported here to have worked\nin the'Soviet Union since 1945.\nIn Germany, tens of thousands of\nunwilling German workers have\nbeen and are being forded to work\npitchblende mines in \"the Soviet\nzone, Pitchblende is a source of\nUranium, a producer of atomic\nenergy. Every ounce 'is flown to\nRussia, ,     \",    ;\u2022\nGerman scientists started work on\nan atomic pile before the war\nended. The Russians, were not slow\nin picking up German atomic research at the point where the allied\nVictory brought it to.,'%n end.\nIn Eastern Germany, some German scientists were waiting for\nthe   Russians.   According  to  reports, they  had  already  packed\nGerman equipment UBed In nuclear research, and when the Russians came, they left,for Moscow,\nOther  German   nuclear physicists need6d  wooing. They were\noffered high pay and good homes,\nSome were forolbly \"recrultei\".\"\nIn Western Germany, Americans\nwere   similarly   invltirig   German\nrocket specialists to go to the,United\nStates to work on infprovement of\nthe VI and the V2.    \u00ab\nMOM\nPEACE THREAT\nYugoslavia Issue\nMay Go Before'\nU.N. Assembly Today\nFINISHING CHINA\njV-ly NORMAN ALTSTEDTER\n: Canadian Press Staff Writer\n'-\"NEW YORK, Sept 25 (CP)-Chile\naccused Russia Saturday in the\nUnited Nations of threatening peace\nby an imperialist, Nazi-like crusade\nagainst Yugoslavia.     -\nHernan Santa Cruz, chief Chilean  delegate) accused  Russia of\ndouble-talk and threatening, vlo-\n-   lent aggression\"against Yugoslavia\ni .\/'at the very moment when she Is\n(' concluding  her task   In   China.\"\n|   Nationalist   China   already   has\n\u2022j complained, |n the Assembly that\nRussia   Is  abetting  the   Chinese\n- Communists.\n,.,  Santa-Cruz, condemned, as \"pro\nfoundly ironical\" the proposals Friday by Andrei Y. Vishlnsky, Russia's\nForeign Minister; that the Big Five\nmake a new peace pact-.\nSeveral hours'later a Yugoslav\ndiplomat accused Russia again of\nplotting to crush the country. Ales\nBebler, Yugoslavia's Deputy Foreign\nMinister, said however his country\nwould not vote against Soviet moves\nin the U.N. Fourth Assembly just\nbecause th,ey vyere Russian-Inspired.\nBARED.B.Y TRIAL   \"\nBebler said in a U.N. radio broadcast that a treason trial in Budapest\n\"which was Intended to prove the\nexistence of a Yugoslav plot against\nHungary, has proved in fact the apposite: the. existence of a Soviet plot\nagainst the independence of Yugoslavia.\" '\nDelegates expect the leader of the\nYugoslav delegation, Foreign Minister Edward Kardelj, to. put the issue before the 69-member Assembly\nwhen the general debate resumes\nMonday morning.\nL. B. -Parson, Canada's External\nAffairs Minister, is also scheduled\nto address the Assembly tomorrow.\nStrikes This Week\nBomb News Should\nNot Change\nPolicies\u2014Pearson\nNEW- YORK, Sept. 25 (CP) -L.\nB. Pearson, Canada's External Affairs Minister, said topight that\nknowledge of an atomic explosion\nin Russia should not come as a surprise or alter Dominion .policies.\nNews of the explosion merely\nunderlines the conclusion that\natomic .energy must be brought under absolute international Control,\nPearson said in a CBC Canada-wide\nbroadcast\nAccuse Jeweller of\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nBURIED 5 HOURS IN COAL BUNKER,\nSEAMAN TO SAIL WIJH SHIP\nCHURCHILL, Man,, Sept. 25 (CP) \u2014 Mohammet Sail of South\nShields, England, burled, five hours under a-pile of coal In a bunker of\na British ship hero last week, Is recovering and will sail with the ship,\nThe seaman Is suffering from shock, bruises and several broken\nribs. He was trimming coal on the ship when a wall of,c6al closed In\nand burled him chest deep. A second slide burled him completely but\ntwo large lumps caught on his forehead In such a way that air was\nable to reach his hose and mouth.- ...\n1 111111 \u25a0\u25a0 11 111 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 i 1111 \u25a0 111 \u25a0 111 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 1111 \u25a0 1111 \u25a0 11 \u25a0 \u25a0 IF11111 \u25a0 \u25a0 1111 \u25a0 11111111\nThousands of Two Countries at\nSpecial Service for Noronic Dead\n\u2022 By The Associated Press\n! jJ'heVjfeargaining .log. jam ,which\nHas:'alr6ady'--ste'Smeti a \"part\" of the'\nIndustry, flow of the United States\n.will reach >a critical stage this week,\nThe key point in disputes affect-\ning \u25a0 three j three: of ..the\ning three of the largest industries\nrdvolv'es ' around employee-pension\nand insurance policy. It was failure\nof the coal inoustry's pension plan\nto maintain benefits for miners\nwhich set off the largest current\nstrike Sunday night\u2014that of 489,900'\nUnited:.Mine Worker followers of\nJohn L. Lewis.\n''Two-large CI.O, unions'are trying to make the steel and automobile industries underwrite surety\nprograms for- their workers with\nan additional 10 cents for each employee's, work hour footing the entire cost. The unions have the backing of a Presiderttial Fact-Finding\nBoard's recommendation for such a\nstep in the steel industry,.\nThe unions have said they'll call\nstrikes ih both industries if they\ndon't get their demands this week.\nBy ROBERT MARJORIBANKS\nCanadian Press Staff, Writer\nTORONTO, 8e'pt.' 26 ' (CP) \u2014\nPeople of many faiths from two\ncountries met here today to mourn\nthose who lost their lives In the\nburning of the steamship Noronic\nThey met in the Coliseum building In the Canadian National\nExhibition Park\u2014not far from the\nimprovised Flower. Building\nMorgue where many of the dead\nstill lie, waiting to be Identified.\nUnder the great glass .roof some\n8600 persons \u2014 the bereaved and\nthose, who came to show their\nsympathy\u2014gathered to hear what\nwords of comfort Toronto's religious leaders could offer.\nRelatives of the dead, most ot\nthem United States citizens, sat in\nthe tanbark ring where a few weeks\nago scarlet-coated huntsmen rode\ntheir horses in the C.N.E. horse\nshow. Beside them in the ring sat\nrows of men and women who have\nworked -tirelessly since,- the fire\nSept. 17 to comfort them ii) their\ngrief\u2014members of the St. John\nAmbulance brigade, the Salvation\nArmy; the Red. Crpss.\nSTIRRED WITH SORROW\nRt, Rev.Willard Brewing, Moderator, of the United Church .of Canada, said in his sermon: \"For good\nneighbors on a friendly \"visit to\nhave perished in- our country\u2014as it\nwere in our;hoUse-rhas stirred the\nCanadian heart with sorrow it has\nrarely jyftesed.'.'x,.,;;..^-..;--.-^^. ,-k_.\nThe great throng stood and their\nvoices echoed among the roof\ngirders as they followed Rabbi\nAbraham L. Felnberg through the\nwords tit the 23rd Psalm: \"The Lord\nIs Mx Shepherd . .'..\"       \u25a0    V\"\nThey stood again and sang\n\"Nearer My God ;To Thee*' and\n\"Abide With Me.\"    .\nA kilted piper, his white gaiters\npacing slowly over the . tanbark,\ncircled the platform as his pipes\nPOLICE EXTEND\nINVESTIGATION\nTOT CRUSHED BY   ' ^    *\nTUMBLING PEA SACKS\nSPOKANE, Sept ?6 (AP) \u2014 A\n10-year-old girl was thrown to.thd\nground and crushed tp death today\nby heavy sacks of dried-peas, that\ntumbled from a pile at a warehouse\nwhere, she ;was, playing.'\n' Four other children were slighti\nly Injured when the 100-pound\nsacks fell on them.\nFALLS TO DEATH\n\u2022 PRINCTON, NX, Sept, 26 (API-\nProf essor- Frank D. Graham, Internationally-known economist, saw\nPrinceton' University ' win a football game Saturday and then plunged to his death from the top of\nPalmer. Stadium,\nGraham, 59, was, professor of International Ftaance at Princeton. A\nnative of Halifax; he was a graduate of Dalhousie .University and\nlater taught there.\nMUST LEARN RUSSIAN\n,BLAGUE,. Sdpt. 25 (AP) -\nCzechoslovak newspapermen today\nwere ordered to learn Russian \"in\norder- to strengthen co-operation\nwith, the Soviet.press ahd inform\nCzech \"readers about the Soviet\nUnion.\" The order was given by\nthe. chairman of the Czechoslovak\njournalists' Union . at the group's\nannual, meeting. '''..'\u2022\nSHIP STRIKES MINE\nAMSTERDAM, Sept. 25 (AP) \u2014.\nThe '4157-ton British freighter Empire Baltic Saturday struck a mind\noff the tJutch Coast. A radio report\nfrom the,vessel said there were no\ncasualties aboard,-However, tugs\nwere sent to the aid of the ship. ,\nPROFESSOR SUCCUMBS\nKINGSTON, Ont, Sept 25 (CP)\u2014\nProf. Marcel Tirol, 6.3, died of a\nheart attack today while watching\ndedication ceremonies at Royal Military College. He was .head of the\nQueen's University French Department\nLupica\nComes Down\nCLEVELAND, Sept. 25 (AP) \u2014\nCharley Lupica, world champion\nflagpole-sitter, descended gingerly\nfrom his perch today, rfeeled over\nta his wife and children, and kissed\nthem in turn.\n' Then, with 33,977 fans watching at\nthe baseball stadium, Charley kissed\nhome plate. Thus ended a vain vigil\nof 117-days, two hours and 25\nminutes for Cleveland Indians to\nreach first place in the American\nLeague, '\nSaid moist-eyed Charley at this\nhistoric moment: \"This Is not the\nend, but the beginning.\"\nThe'Tribe .was ready for him. For\nhis loyalty, he received:'\nA new Pontiac sedan, bicycles\nfor daughters Margaret six, and\nNicole!ta, 10; a tricycle for his son,\nCarl, \"eight; arid a stroller for\nCharley, Jr., one month.\nA radio\"; a stove; an old-fashioned\nbath' tub (Charley hasn't had a bath\nfor a long time); a iour-poster bed\n(Charley was tired); a dog for son\nCarl; and, an added touch, a 50-foot\nflagpole. \u2022.,     ' '\u25a0\"\u25a0\nLupica,\/Who made the old flagpole-sitting record, of 72 days'look\nlike a mere hesitation, hadn't much\nto say. His .ankles: hurt*and he'\nheeddd-,.'slcep.\n', Lupica - confidently went up on\nhis pole; May,31 on a-bar-room bet.\nHe, swore, he'd stay- there until the\nIndians. reached .ilrst place. They\nnever did.' , \u25a0\"':\u2022'\u25a0\"'*'.-\"\n- They,won'today but they're still\nin fourth place.       .\nFOUND ON HIGHWAY   ,\n; .KELOWNA, B.C., Sept. 25 (CEV\n\u2014Bill Bazette of Verndpis ifi criK\nleal condition in Kelowna hospital\n.today, after being found lying un-i\nconscious ,on the highway near\nhere. ' - .\" .,\n' Police say he was apparently the\nVictim of ,a brutal attack.\nFIGHTING MAID\nROUTS-BURGLAR\nTORONTO, Sept. 25 (CP)\u2014A 210-\npound, fist-swinging maid early today routed a housebreaker from the\nhome of J. S. McLean, President of\nCanada Packers, Ltd.\nLater, Donald Brown, 20, was\ncharged with breaking into the suburban North York home and assault-\nting the'maid.\n'Mrs. Ruth White, 55,.the maid,\nsaid an Intruder wandered into her\nthird-floor bedroom and, when.she\nrefused to show him her employer's\nbedroom, hit her in the face with a\nflashlight. Mrs. White leaped from\nher bed, landed at least two solid\npunches bn the man's face, and continued f exchange blows with him\nuntil the man fled. %\nThe burglar, took several dollars\nfrom the maid's purse the police\nsaid..   . ..,.: .\nwalled a lament.\nThere,was a rustle as the massed\nSalvation Army-Band struck the\nfirst chords of \"God Save the King'\nand the Americans! seeking not to\noffend these people who have tried\nto be kind during the last week,\nsearched their programs for the\nwords. The opening bars of the\n','S tar- Spangled Banner\" and\nanother louder rustle. Then all sting\nfrom their programs a short hymn,\n\"Two Nations.\"\n1914 TRAGEDY RECALLED\n: The Moderator recalled that he\nhad addressed a similar service for\nthose who died in the sinking of the\nEmpress of Ireland in the St.\nLawrence River in 1914,- when the\nSalvation Army Band, seated on an\nupper, deck, had played \"Nearer\nMy God To Thee\" until the. ship\nsank out of sight\n\"I wonder if the echoes of that\ntriumphant song also hover over\nthe present scene?\ni \". . . Fortunately there Is no\nevidence that'the cause of this\ntragedy was rooted in any wantonness or folly and we will believe\nthat until it is refuted. But if it\nshould be discovered that any\nhuman folly or sin of Individuals\npr society produced it, we will set\nourselves to- deal with that thing\nWith the same moral courage and\nChristian-'-unselfishness that- has\nmarked the event Itself,\"\nI The Roman Catholic clergy celebrated a. solemn requiem mass lost\nSunday iar-the.s6ul*Nof the^Nordhlc\ndead.\nRev. H. H.^ Bingham, General\nSecretary, of the Raptist convention\nof Ontario and Quebec read a\npassage from Isaiah (63:9) and from\nJohn (14:1) and led the congregation in the Lord's Prayer. '\nBrigadier Ernest Green of the\nSalvation Army expressed a prayer\n\"that this memorial service result\nin a revival of the things that\nsurvive, faith, hope and charity.\"\n\"HE LOST\"\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 25 (CP), \u2014\nPolice are searching for two men\nwho they say victimized a California\nresident of $1000 here yesterday.\nAngelo Bussanich, a 71-year-old\nfish buyer en route from Alaska to\nhis home at Long Beach, Calif., said\nhe met and became frjendly with a\nstranger at a. railway, station.\n- They went for a walk, Bussanich\nsaid, and met a friend of the first\nstranger. Later one of, the, men suggested flipping coins and Bussanich\nwas asked to show his money. He\nbanded the money to one ot the\nstrangers and they walked off saying \"you lost\"\nBANDITS ATTACK\nCOLOMBIA VILLAGES\nBOGOTA, Colombia, Sept, 25\n(AP) \u2014 A communique'Saturday\nblamed bandits for attacks on the\nvillages of La Celba and El Play\non In which 18 persons we\/e kill\n\u25a0 ed.' \"\u25a0   -    '\nHULL,-Que:, Sept, 25. (CP)\u2014Fire\nbf unknown origin early today'destroyed the Chaudlere Golf Club qn\nthe Aylmer Road, five miles west of\nhere. Damage was estimated at more\nthan $100,000.\nNobody was, I njiired. Seventeen\npersons sleeping on the premises escaped in night attire,\nEDITOR  DIES\nLEAMINGTON, Ont; Sept.\\25 \u2014\n(CP) - Former Mayor Philip H.\nFader! 53, editor of the weekly\nLeamington Post and News, died\nSaturday following a heart attack.\nTo Pay More\nFor Oil in B.C.\nVANCOUVER, B.C., Sept 25-\n(CP)\u2014British Columbians who heat\ntheir homes with- oil started pacing\nan extra } \"4 cents a gallon for their\nfuel Saturday.\nThe' Increase, announced by, Imperial Oil Co., stems from the Canadian dollar's devaluation. Other\ncompanies are expected to fall in\nline.\nGasoline and kerosene ,also were\nincreased 1V4 cents a gallon by Imperial. In British Columbia, where\ncompanies have filed applications\nfor gasoline price boosts ranging\nfrom one to two cents, adjustment\nmust be sanctioned by the Coal and\nPetroleum Board.\nB. C. Imports nearly all its crude\noil from California, where the Canadian, dollar now is worth approximately 90 cents. The recent freight\nrate Increase did not figure in today's'adjustments, but it is expected\nto have little effect here,- as most\npf the crude oil is brought in by\nocean tankers.\nAdmitted AAysfery\nCourier        < !.\nKept Urider Y\/qtch\nBROKE CASE\nBy WILLIAM .STEWART ,\nCanadian Press Stafi Writer\nQUEBEC, Sept. 25 (CP)\u2014\nPolice during the weekend\nextended from shoddy downtown district in Quebec to\nremote St. Lawrence North\nshore point* their investiga-:\ntion into a \"love-plot\" bomb\nexplosion \"that wrecked an.\nairliner Sept. 9 killing 23\npersons.\nSaturday they' led J. Albert Guay, sharp-faced little\nQuebec jeweller, to court and\naccused him of murdering\nhis wife via the plane'crash\nin which pretty Rita Guay\nwas a victim.\nAfter  the  charge .-was  read to\nthe fidgetting 32-year-old jeweller.\nhe went back to Quebec Provincial\nPolice cells.\nMeantime sombre vigilance was\nmaintained .over Madame -Arthur\nPitre, occupant of a tiny apartment' In shabby (tlonielgneur\nQau.vreau Street.\nThe buxom, 41 -year-old woman\nWas under police. guard as the\nkey witness In the plane sabotage\ncase.'\n- Police said her act last Tuesday\nof absorbing an over-dose of\nsleeping pills \u2014 they left her unconscious for 72 hout-s\u2014 broke the\nj' case open and eventually produced an admission that'ihe wai'tHe\nmysterious'courier who slipped\nan exploslvo package aboard.the;\nplane;t   ' \u2022'\u25a0\nMrs, Pitre declared she was an\nunwitting participant in destruction,\nof the plane; that she thought the\nparcel she addressed to Bale Comeau, Que., on tho North Shore, contained a statue. .\nWhile R.C.M.P. flew dbwn the.\nSt Lawrence to Sept lies and Baie\nComeau, Provincial Police worked\naround Quebec and through Quarter du Palais, the unkempt-distrl.it\nwhere the bomb plot seemed to\nhave been hatched.\nSEEK HANDYMAN\nPolice had little to say about tbe\nactual manufacture of the instrument\u2014wrapped up to look like \u25a0\ncardboard suit box.\nThey were reported on the trail\nof a light-fingered handyman,\nknown in Quartier dn Palais but\nnot yet publicly linked with the\ncase.\nPolice and Crown authorities said\nthat \"for the moment\" no arrests\nin addition' to Guay's:were in the\noffing, that perhaps in the next\nfew days there might ba two others,\nand that eventually' the number\nmight be further increased depending on what investigation disclosed.\nDIE IN BURNING WRECK\nOLYMPIA, Wash;, Sept. 25 (AP)\n\u2014A light plane crashed and burned\nlate today near the Sumtnlt Lake\nresort, 12 miles West of here, killing\nthe two persons aboard.\nState Patrolman Riley Bryant said\nthe victims were believed to be Fred\nJaphet. 23 the pilot, wh'o lived close\nto the crash scene, and Delores\nGault, 22, of Oiympia.\nAnd in This Corner\u2014-\n. BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Sept. 25 (AP)-After almost a month aloft,.\nPercy (The not-so-fat-man) Coplon came down'from his little house\non a pole-to take a bath.\nCoplon, who claims he's the original Mr. Five by Five, announced\nproudly. Saturday that he has shed 54 pounds during the first 30 days\nof'his planned 100-day fast. That brings his weight down to a mere\n304 pounds. ,   . ...\nHe claimbed- down- a ladder Friday from his little house atop the.\n30-foot pole. He said he had three objectives: to weigh, take a bath,\nand exercise a little.\nWith all three accomplished, he clambered back up with somewhat more agilitj than when he first went aloft\nPercy started his fast days before he moved into the little pole\nhouse.. He moved up there to get away from it all\u2014mostly food. He\n\u25a0 says he's going to live in the little house until Dec. 4.    -\nCLEVELAND, Sept. 25 (AP)\u2014The thief who broke Into the automobile of George N. Morrow, Birmingham, Ala., \"salesman, probably\nstill Is trying to figure things out\nHe took two men's suits and two dresses. But the garments have\nno backs. They were made for use by undertakers In clothing bodies.\nBALTIMORE Sept. 25 (AP)\u2014You couldn't buy Howard J. Stru-\nben's wares Saturday\u2014he was giving them away.\nA dealer lh confections, novelties and religious articles, Strubin\nlost-the lease on, the combination store-apartment he'r,been renting,\nfor the last 10 years ..:.-'\",---,\u25a0\u201e'.'.   - -\nHe decided.to-go Into the. wholesale end of the business and to\n\u25a0wind Up his retail'.trade with a flourish. Besides, he likes kids.\nSo for two hours Saturday he posted the \"no sale\" sign' on the\ncash register and handed out his goods to the smajl fry. A detail of\n.cops ushered the kiddles along a line stretching down the block.\n-.   The first 144 got a pound tin of candy Latecomers wound up with\nbubble gum, lemon drops and balloons\nFrom time to time an adult cash customer tried to crash the line,\nbut Struben merely waved him'away with:\n' \"Come back later on, please. We're busy.\"\n i \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 26, l\u00bb4f\nSHE SUFFERS FRO^lCf .*\nYou wouldn't think it\nto look at her!\nMan Trouble\n\"WHO WILL TEACH YOUR CHILD\"\nA subject of vital importance to every citizen\nLatest World News\nTonight\nThru Wed.\nid wews \u2014 carrot\nGivi\nCartoon \"Grape Nutty\"\nShows at\n7:00-8:3*\nThe Weather\nSynopsis! {Increasing eloudlnes\nand strong Southeasterly winds appear to be-in store for the Northern B.C, coast with the approach of\n,\u00bbn active,storm centre which ap-\n-peered to bo developing-over the\nNorthern Pacific. However the remainder of the Provino 'will continue to have fine \"warm weather\nfor the next 36 hours.\nNelson 46   81   \u2014\nSaturday   . ... :..   45   77   \u2014\nToronto . ,12   50   \u2014'\nTho Pas ............................   46   57   .07\nEdmonton    ......,. ..     43   63   \u2014\nVancouver    .       ...     53   64    \u2014\nKimberley      -14   73   \u2014\nCrescent Valley   ........;.'   .'Id   70    \u2014\nSpokane   .-.    411   81   \u2014\nChicago     43   75    \u2014\n|Los.Angeles ................   69   86   \u2014!\nWhltehorse :...   45   55   \u2014\nKILLED WHEN CAR\nSMASHES IN TO TREE\nl OAKVILLE, Ont., Sept. 25 (CP)\n\u2014George Grlsko, 21, of Lethhbrldge\n; Alta., 'was killed early today and\n., his three companions were injured\n\u25a0 when their automobile crashed Into\nI a tree near here, about 20 miles\ni\"West of Toronto, Police said the\ncar was travelling fast.\nEAST KOOTENAY\nBUSHWORKER\nPASSES AT 73\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Sept 2J -\nJohn Sigfrled Lambl, age 73, died\nat St. Eugene Hospital Wednesday\nafter a long period of failing health.\nHe was a bushworker for many\nyears in the Wardner-Jaffray district and lived alone in a cabin in\nthat vicinity until he entered hospital here'Last, month. Me came to\nCanada from his native Finland in\n1920, and from 1925 until about 10\nyears ago he worked at woods jobs,\nTwo daughters survive him In the\nUnited States, He had no relatives\nin this district,\nNelson Girl's\nArm Broken\nIn Car Accident\nMiss Paula Olisoff of Nelson is in\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nreceiving treatment for a broken\naiih received in an auto accident\non Granite Road.\nMiss Olisoff was the only one of!\nfive injured when a car reported\nto have been driven by Douglas A..\nHall of Nelson left the road on a\ncurve on Granite Hood-about one-\nhalf mile West' of Nelson. About\n$300 in damage to the cor was reported. The driver end three other\npassengers were uninjured. Miss\nOlisoff was taken to hospital by\nThompson Ambulance.-\nPostpone La motto,\nCerdan Bout\nNEW YORK, Sept. 25 (AP)<rThe\nmiddleweight championship fight\nbetween Jake Lamotta of the Bronx\n\"and Marcel Cerdan of France,\nscheduled next Wednesday night at\nthe Polo grounds, was postponed In-\nteam . defeated Richmond back in\nLamotta's shoulder,\nLomotta won the title from Cerdan last Spring in Detroit.\nOnions ore deliberately over,\ncrowded In planting in order to stunt\nthe growth of the bulbs for food purposes.\n;:\"-*.-\n'M %\nJtounllRcyifd\nCanaManWluslu]\n^hdJ^f.\n4\na\nj)to^^\nSlip-\nCheckup Shows $200,000 In Goods\nIn Commercial Exhibits affair\nSome interesting figures hove\nbeen (timed at the job of \"cleaning\nup\"\" after the West Kootenay .Exhibition progresses. It is revealed\nthat more than $200,000 worth of\nmachinery, household equipment\nand gadget's and foodstuffs were\ndisplayed in the more then 30 industrial and commercial exhibits of\nNelson and District businesses. It\nwas the largest display of its kind\nin Nelson.\nNo count could be made ot the\npeople who saw the displays, but\nsome idea of the thousands who\npassed through the exhibits can be\nobtained from the fact that at one\nbooth nearly 3000'people registered.\nAisles \\*ore jammed oii occasions\nwith people studying the displays,\nasking booth attendants questions\nand picking up descriptive folders\nand samples.\nSeven exhibitors showed products\nthat were wholly or partly made in\nNelson, including lumber products\nand cabinets made in Nelson plants.\nThere were drinks, jams and\njellies, locally-constructed freezing\nunits and furniture. Largest item\nwas a school bus completed in Nelson, Actual sales from exhibits of\nNelson   industries   were   reported\ngood, with one purchase, mode by a\nparty from Penticton.\n. The exhibitors were Burns Lumber and Coal Company, R. B. Johnson, McDonald Jam Company, Kelson Sash and Door Works,-Nelson\nUpholstery\", Peebles Motors Ltd.,\nadd T. H. Waters and Company.\n' Considerable interest was shown\nin the displays of buses and-trucks,\npower units, power- sow, form\nequipment and tractors; Largest\ndisplay was that of Central Truck\nand . Equipment Company, which\nhad $40,000 worth of equipment on\nview on the Civic grounds, to bring\ntotal value'Of such equipment displayed tb $1_5;000.-\nOther exhibitors were Nelson\nFarmers' Supply Ltd., McKay Ond\nStretton Ltd., Brackman-Ker Milling Co. Ltd., National Fruit Co.\nBurns \u2022 Co. and Palm Dairies, Nelson Former's Market, Coventry's\nFlower Shop, Greenwood's. Furs,\nEllison.Milling Co, Ltd,, Me end Mc\n(Nelson) Ltd., Nelson Electric Co.,\nWood Vallance Hardware Co., Nelson Upholstery, CKLN, Heffepan\nSales Co., Empire Motors, Queen\nCity Motors, Finning Tractor and\nEquipment,. Slnnerud Truck ond\nTractor and Beacon Motors,\nDistrict Film\nCouncils Told\nOfWork'sValue\nTwenty-six delegates from Grand\nForks, Rossland, Trail, Creston,\nFernie and Nelson attended the\nSemi-annual convention of District\nFilm Councils held here Saturday\nand Sunday,.\nMayor T, H. Waters gave an\naddress of welcome to the visitors\nSaturday night and expressed tbe\nvalue films had been to the Conference of Federation of Mayors\nand Municipalities which he attended at Quebec.\nM. Norman Barton of the University of British Columbia Extension\nDepartment outlined the new film\npolicy for 1949-50 which will see\non increase of films to all Councils\nin accordance with; tho number.'of\nshowings,\nA discussion of i aro -mil uialnli n\nancc o\u00a3 Jilroi whs then held mid\nbooklets on the topic distributed.\nFollowing the banquet in the\nevening, Mr. Barton spoke of the\nnecessity of adult educatibn and\nthe present dayt importance, He\nstressed the fact'that films were\nan entertaining way of Instruction\nand that they were recreational,\ninformative - and technical, and\ncould he used or. the basis ior discussion.\nH. H. Hlnnltt of Nelson ;later\nshowed colored slides of the Kootenays.\nSunday morning reports were\ngiven by the delegates during\nwhich time Rossland extended an\ninvitation to have the Spring convention held there. The .council\nalso decided the coming convention\nshould include both the East and\nWest Kootenay,\nAlex Wilson, locol representative\nfor the National Film BoOrd, gave a\npreview of films in stock for the\ncoming year and Mr. Barton outlined the supplementary source of\nfilms.       l\nChairman of the convention was\nT. D. Rosling, President of the Nelson Film Council.\nWARDNER PIONEER\nDIES AT B3\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Sept, 25 -\nResident of this district for 48 years,\nCharles Frank Barnes of Wardner\ndied 'in St Eugene Hospital Friday\nafter two weeks' illne.ss. ,\nHe was a carpenter'by trade and\nwas born 83 years ago at Titurville,\nPa. He came to Canada and to this\ndistrict as a young man in 1901 and\nfollowed his trade until retirement\nin 1929. His wife died several,yeajs\nago. Funeral services and burial will\nbe in Wardner.   .\nA son, Charles Barnes, Jr., survives him at Wardner, and a daughter Mrs. Amelia Kievill at Van-.\ncouver.\nCF. FRIESEN, 24\nYEARS IN\nRENATA DIES\n. A resident of Renata since 1925,\nCornelius' F. Friesen, 80, died in\nKootenay Lake'General Hospital\nSunday afternoon after a lengthy:!\nIllness. .\nBom in Holland in 1869, Mr.\nFriesen came to Canada in 1874 end\nlived for a time at Boggy Creek,\nMan., and Chaplain,. Sask., before\nmoving; to Renata where he had\nworked as rancher since. He was a\nmember of the New Church of\nJerusalem at Renata.\nBesides his wife, survivors Ore\nthree sons,. Jacob ond David of\nRobin, Man., Henry of Renata;\nthree, daughters, Mrs, J. Funk of\nWinnipeg, Mrs. Mary Unger of\nNlyervllle, Man., and Louise of\nRenata, and one sister, Mrs, David\nDurkson of Niyerville, .Man.\nThe body will betforwarded to\nRehata by the Thompson Funeral\nHome where.funeral services will\nbe held.\nBali Standings\nBy The Associated Press\nPINAL PACIFIC COAST\nW     L Pet.\nHollywood        .-.        309    78 .583\nOakland          104    83 .556\nSacramenlo    102    85 .545\nScatlle ....     95     92 .508\nSan Dun..              95     92 .MB\nPortland .   .. .     85   102 .454\nSan'Francisco       '  84   103 .449\nLos Angeles ..:...........    74 - 113 .395\nSocial Evening to\nAid Nakusp W.I.\nLibrary Fund\nNAKUSP, B. C, Sept. 25\u2014Mrs. A.\nE. Fowler of Pine Lodge loaned her\nhome for a social evening affair\nThursday to raise funds toward the\nNakusp Women's Institute \"Library\nFund. Seven tables of bridge were\nin play. ,    ,-\u25a0\u25a0'.'\n., Mrs. David E. Johnson was convener and Harvard Hiltz was mas\nter of ceremonies. Assisting with\nrefreshments were Mrs, Fowler,\nMrs. M. Embree and Mrs. Johnson.\n. Prize winners were: Ladles' first,\nMiss Hazel Herridge; consolation,\nMrs. \u201eT. Cargill; gents' first, A. E.\nFowler, and consolation, J. G. Burns.\nMrs. T.. Mitchell and Mrs. A. E.\nFowler donated the prizes.\nNelson Angler\nNabs 11 -Pounder\nTrout catches on Kootenay Lake\nhave been light during the past few\nweeks, but some catches were reported over the- weekend. ,\nOn Saturday, Fred Brown of Nelson caught an ll-pounder and one\nweighing about 2% pounds off Pilot\nBay point. He was accompanied on\nthe trolling trip by his father, William Brown. \u2022 .  '  \u25a0, \u25a0-.\nShanghaied Into QreekQuerrillas\n11ib'!\u00abc\"yer'i$cmentvis not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or\n:%. \/'.by the Government of British Columbia.\nTwo tattered teen-age rebels, captured by Greek Government\ntroops In the fighting against guerrilla forces In the. Mt, Qrammos\nrange, are shown with on army intelligence officer of the regular\nGreek army (right) after their capture. The youths said they were\nforced to fight for the Greek Communists under threat of death. They\nwere trained In Rumania and recruited by the Greek rebels. The\nGovernment troops killed or captured approximately 1500 of the\n5000 guerrilla troops. In the battle; the remainder fled into Albania.\n\/ <\u2014Central Press,Canadian\nr\nr-ieliion-Cranbrook\u2014Nolson to Balfour fair. Balfour to Kuskanook\ngood. Kuskanook .to. Creston fair to\nrough. Creston to four mile's. East\nfair. M4-M7 construction.. Remainder fair to good.\nNelson-Kaslo \u2014 Gravelling between Coffee Creek and Balfour.\nNelson-Monsshee\u2014Fair to good.\n\" Creston-Porthlll \u2014 Road   good'\nBridge under repair MB,'\nNelson-Nelwey \u2022\"- Rough sections\nfor first eight miles, Good from I\nM30, M90-M44 fair to good.\nNelBonrTroll-Patterson'r'. Good to\nM10. Paving operations M10 to M13.\nGood from M1S-M19, Rough sections\nM19-M22, Rough sections M19-M22.\nRemainder fair to good.   -\nRoBsland-Cascade\u2014Fair.\nGrand Pylhlan\nOfficers Visit\nEast Kootenay\n. FERNIE, B.cV Sept. 28 '.Three\ngrand officers of the Order of Pythian Sisters\u2014Grand Chief Mrs. P,\nPalmer of Rossland, B.C. Grand\nJunior, Mrs, E. Beduz of Kimberley,\nB.C., and Grand Guard Mrs. E.\nCartwrlght of Michel, B.C, visited\nthis City i recently.\nThe officers and the officers and\nsisters of _|rlnlty Temple, were entertained at a tea given by Mrs,\nGwen Lilley, D.D.G.C. at her home\nin the afternoon, assisted by Mrs,\nIvy Harrod, Mrs. Sarah Rawsoii and\nMrs, Isabel Edgar, .\nThe visitors were then escorted\nto the home pf Mrs. Eileen Edgar\nWhere they enjoyed a delicious supper. In the evening a bonquet'wos\ngiven in the I.O.O.F. Hall. Grand\nChief Mrs. Palmer gave an enlightening, and instructive lesson on the\nprinciple \"Love', which was much\nenjoyed, Grand Junior Mrs, E. Beduz, Grand Guard, Mrs, E, Cart-\nwright, D.D.G.C., Mrs. Gwen Lilley\nand Ben Smith also gave their ideas\non the principle and 'work of the\norder. The grand officers were pre.\nsehted with corsages and Mrs. Palmer received a genuine leather\nhand-made purse, made by Mrs,\nLilley's son, Barry Clark.\n- The Grand'Clfief was then accompanied by Mrs, Beduz and Mrs.\niLilley on her journey to Creston,\nlwhei-c4tliey'weremet by Mrs.-Edith\nTruscbtt They visited Creston Hospital, accompanied by Mrs. Anderson and were later escorted to the\nhome of Mrs. Emily Bond where\nthey were entertained at a tea.\nIn the evening a banquet wos\ngiven ond the grand officers received, corsages and the Grand Chief\na lovely necklaces. V\nMrs. Donna Ried, Past D.D.G.C,\nand the Excellent Junior of Creston Temple, escorted the Grand\nOfficers to Kimberley by way of\nPort Hill and Kingsgate. On arrival in Kimberley they Were taken\nto the home bf Mrs. Beduz and Inter\nto a banquet in the K. of P. Hall.\nThe Grand Chief was presented\nwith a lovely rose corsage and a\nsterling necklace with earrings to\nmatch. Grand ' Junior Mrs\/ Beduz j\nwas presented with a corsage and\na lovely china cup and saucer, end\nD.D.G.C. Mrs. Lilley received a\ncorsage and china cup and saucer.\nAll thanked the sisters of Kimberley and'the Grand Chief gave an\nimpressive talk.\nOver the .weekend the Grand\nChief was the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nBeduz who took her by car on Sunday for a visit to Radium. Monday\nthey motored to Fernie with Mrs-\nOlive Mills and Mr. and Mrs. Col-\nthorpe to pick up Mrs. Lilley and\nproceed bn their way to Michel\nwhere they Were met by Mrs. E.\nCartwrlght who served them with\na delicious supper. In the evening\no banquet was given in honor of\nthe Grand Chief, all Officers were\npresented with corsages, made\nbeautifully by Mrs. Gaskell. The\nGrand Chief received a lovely pearl\nnecklace. Many sisters of Fernie\ndrove to Michel to-be present at\nthe meeting. >\nThey then returned to'Cranbrook\nto attend a meeting there, many\nmembers journeying from Kimberley. At a banquet, the visitors received lovely carnation corsages,\nthe Grand Chief also receiving a\nlovely china cup and saucer. The\nlatter plans to visit West Kootenay\nlodges soon,\nCanadian Football\nEASTERN INTERPROVINCIAL\nOttawa 14, Hamilton 11\nToronto 29, Montreal 14\n8ENIOR ONTARIO UNION .\nHamilton 18, Toronto 6 \u25a0\n.WESTERN INTERPROVINCIAL\nRegina 24\u201e Winnipeg 6     '   -\nCalgary.41, Edmontoh 5\nSASKATCHEWAN JUNIOR\nSaskatoon 27, Regina Dales 6\nRegina Bombers* 55, Moose Jaw 1\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP) \u2014\nMiss Alice Bacon, Labor M.P, for\nLeeds Northeast, says the Conservative party is using women in Its\nranks.as \"Whimpering Winnies\" for\nelection strategy.' Mies Bacon says\ntheir job is to.\"whine and grumble\nin the* shopping queues where\npeople will not think that they are\ntalking politics.\"\nFuneral Services\nHeld al Kaslo\nFor J. McCallum\n, KASLO, B.C., Sept. 25 \u2014 Funeral\nservices for John McCallum, 76, ot\nAinsworth, who died Thursday- at\nthe Koslo Victorian Hospital, were\nheld fronf St. Andrew's United\nChurch here Saturday. Rev, W. C.\nMawhlnney conducted the service.\nThe congregation song two hymns\n\"Unto the Hills,\" ond \"Abide With\nMe\". Mrs: S. H. Green.was organist. ,\".'''       ,    -\nPallbearers were Stanley McLel-\nlan, Robert Sheridan, Joseph Howes\nond George Hobbo of Ainsworth,\nand Frederick Spelrs and John\nMacPherson ot Kaslo. Interment\n.was in the family plot, I.O.O.F.\ncemetery, Kaslo.   .\nMr. McCallum; was born ond\ngrew up in Danville, Que, In 1697\nat the age of 24, ho. left Eastern\nCanada to settle in Kaslo with his\nparents, His father, the lote Archibald McCallum, was ono of the\nearly Koslo settlers and is still\nremembered by old timers as one\nof the dynamic and forceful characters of that era who laid the\nfoundation of the present main lake\ncity.\nFor many years John McCallum\nengaged, in forming at Meadow\nCreek and in the Lardeau, in Utter years he has resided at Ainsworth, Besides his widow, he is\nsurvived by three daughters, Eleanor (Mrs, Morley Levlck) Mary\n(Mrs. J. Bryan), ot Trail, and Emily (Mrs, George McFherson) of\nNelson, one sister, Mrs. Alfred Mc;\nQueen of Koslo, and several grandchildren. .:.'\nHunters Galore\nGo for Grouse\nNelson and district hunters are\nturning out in scores to hunt the\nwily blue grouse; and not so wily\nFranklin grouse, or, as they ore more\ncommony colled,\"\"fool hens\".    ,\nIn one spot of shooting, about 15\nmiles southeast of Nelson, there\nwere at least five parties with a total\not over 15 hunters and quite a few\ndogs, all hunting in a three-mile\narea, on Sunday.\nWith the noise of nuns ranging\nfrom the deep boom of the 12 gauge\nshotgun down to the sharp crack of\n,22 rifles the grouse were jumpy, and\nwild. Very'few Were shot in comparison with the number of hunters,\nAnother popular spot was the Six\nMile Lakes area at the head of Du-\nhamel Creek. Approximately halt a\ndozen groups were hunting in this\narea, with on estimated total ot 20\nmen and the usual number of dogs,\nThe'shooting here was not as fast\nand furious ss in some of the other\nspots, however, ds most of the birds\nput up were Willow or Ruffed J\ngrouse on which there is no open\nseason this year.   \u25a0' I\n' Such well known hunters ss Jock\nGallicano, Guil Brett, Glen Twells,\nGunnar Lepsoe apd Al Brown were\ndoing their share of the hunting,\nNEW MINISTER IN\nFERNIE CHARGE\nCRANBROOK, Sept.\"- 25 -;In\nspecial services at Knox United\nChurch in Fernie, Rev. J. Millard\nAlexander, formerly of. Vancouver,\nwas. inducted as minister of - the\nchurch at Fernie. He is a 1946 graduate of Union College at the University of British Columbia and accepted a call to,Fernie In the summer,\nRev. W. H. - McDanriold of Cronbrook and Rev. Neil White of Michel\nofficiated at the' induction service\nwhich a large congregation attended.\nMrs. Alexander and baby have\njoined Mr. Alexander to make their\nhome in Fernie. Rev. H. 'T. Allen\nwas minister of Knox United Church\nfor several, years until his resignation in early summer.\nCanada's fishing grounds, both\nocean and Inland, ore unsurpassed\nin extent by those of any other\ncountry,- .\n. WATCH THIS SPACE FOR\nOUR OUTSTANDING SALE .\nStore CLOSED\nToday, Tuesday and Wednesday\nFmKSPriMStop\nThomson of Trail Succeeds Becker\nAs BX, Hockey Association Head\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., Sept. 25 (CP)\n-^G. M, Thompson of Trail, B.C.\nwos elected new President of the\nBritish Columbia Amateur Hockey\nAssociation ot the 30th annual meeting held this weekend, Other\/ Officers ore:\nDr. L. Gidvondo, Nanaimo, first\nVice-President; A, S. Aitken, Nelson.. Second Vice-President; and\nLeo G.- Atwell, Nelson, Secretary-\nTreasurer, Retiring President is F.\nF. Becker of Vernon,\nD. G. Grlmston bf New Westminster was elected ss on honorary life\nmember, and A. W. Plcksrd, President, of the C.A.H.A., of Regina\nwas (node oh Honorary. President\nof ihe Association.  .\nBranch. District Executive mem\nbers are: J, W. Livingstone, Kimberley, East Kootenay; Bud Anderson, Vernon, Okanagan! E'. H. Martin, Kamloops, Mam-Line; A. R. V.\nGiles, Kamloops, Northern B. C.\n(pro tern); H. Jefferd,, Vancouver,\nLower.Mainland, -,\nThe main item of business\nbrought up at the meeting was the\ndecision of the Okanagon-Main-'\nLine League, which includes Nanal- '\nmo and Kerrisdale, to enter Senior\nA competition this year. Lost year\nthe League had been Senior B.\nKelowna will be the horn* of the\nmeeting next year,\nThe Kamloops convention was\ntho biggest ever held, tho more-\nthan-GO delegates said.\nDEREK H.TYE\nHEREON SEA-\nCADET CHECKUP\n, Lt.-Cmdr. Derek H. Tye, former\nNelson High School teacher and\nSea Cadet instructor, is In Nelson\non a routine, inspection of the Nelson Sea Cadots.\nThis is his first visit to the oity\nsince he left for the Coast early\nin the year. He is stationed with\nthe H.M.C.S. Discovery as administrator for the Province.\nDuring his short stay here, Lt.-\nCmdr. Tys will meet the 38 Cadets.\nWinter classes for the Cadets will\ninclude training in preparation for\nSummer camp. Cadets range from\n14 to 18 years.\ni Mr, Tya will be to Nelson until\nWednesday. He will then leave for\nTrail to conduct a checkup on the\nSea Cadets there.\nTo Close Kaslo,\nNew Denver Road\nFor Short Period\n. J. A. Dennison, Slocan District\nEngineer, announces that the Kaslo-\nNew Denver Road will be closed\nbetween Retallack and Kaslo commencing TuesdaV at 8 a.m. for approximately six days. Closure will\nbe at a point nine miles from Koslo\nto facilitate the replacement of a\ncrib.\nHelp for Homework\nStudents sweating over new mathematical equations may well\nTook with envy on this machine,\nwhich does problems of 64,000 dig-\nIts as fast as you eon push a button. It Is one of the calculating\nmachines at Harvard University,\nMass., which can be led through\na problem of 400 steps and give\nthe correct answer.\u2014Central Press\nCanadlaan.\nEarly Work on\nSilversmith\nNine Starting\nInstructions to proceed with preliminary work ot the Silversmith\nmine at Sandon have been Issued by\nCarnegie Mines Ltd., Montreal, R.\nCrowe-Swords of Vancouver announces.\nThe Silversmith is a famous lio-\ncon property, second only to the\nStandard mine to production, and\niii 40 years has returned $6,500,000.\nAmalgamated with tha Silversmith\nare the Slocan Starr and Slocan\nKing.\nPreliminary work will include\nblearing up of some of the underground works end doing soma timber work, under direction of T. R.\nBuckham, engineer for Santiago\nMines Ltd., of which Mr. Crowe-\nSwords is President. Work starts\nimmediately.\nm\n-\\\nDO YOUR\nNERVES\nPLAY TRICKS\nON YOU?\nIf your nerves \"\/limp\" at a\nsudden noise ... or you feel\nso qdgy and low in spirits that\nyou \"pick a quarrel without\nmeaning to ... look tmtl Perhaps your store of nervous\nenergy may be almost used up\n... and your body needs holpl\nThat's when you need a good\ntonic, like Dr. Chase's Nervo\nFood... to help build you up\nso you canget your proper rest\nat night That's when you'll\nreally feel the benefit of the\nVitamin Bi, iron and other\nneeded 'minerals this time-\ntested tonic contains! For Dr.\nChase's Nerve Food has been\nproven in over 60 years of use.\nAnd Canadians, by the thousands, say they rest better, eat\nbetter, feel better\u2014yes, and look\nbetter, toot\u2014after taking Dr.\nChase's Nerve Food.\nSo if worry, anxiety or the\n. strenuous pace of modern living\nis upsetting your nerves\u2014get\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food today.\nTho .name \"Dr. Chase\" is your\nassurance. The large \"economy\nsize\" is your best buy. it\nToKeepYourSfep\nFULL OF PEP\nIt's Dodd's You May Need!\nTrouble starts when your kidneys slow up.\nYou may feel tired all the time. Backaches,\nheadaches, con toon follow. Help keep\nyour kidneys in good order by using Dodd'i\nKidney Pill*\u2014tho 50-year-old remedy wilh\na reputation for quick results. Just say\n\"Dodd's Kidney Pills, please\" to your,\ndruggist. Look for the blue box with the\nred band, and the name Dodd's, 158\nDoddsK-dneyPllls\nDr* David C Cowen\nlllll   of    |\nSpokane, Washington\nwill accept payment, DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR,\nfor your Canadian money, in Spokane*\nDr. Cowan will, as ih the past, accept your\nCanadian dollars without discount*\n See the Selection of\nWOMEN'S BOUDOIR\nSLIPPERS\n$1.15 to $4.95\n..':\u25a0\".    At the '.\"\u25a0:.'\u25a0\nTHE SHOE\nGENTRE\nURGE BOYCOTT OF\nSOUTH AM, SIFTON PAPERS\nCALGARY, Sept. 25 (CP>\u2014Dele-\ngress convention were urged\ngress convention today were urged\nto enforce a \"do-not-patronlze\" boycott against newspapers of the\nSouthern and Sifton groups.\n\u25a0 The boycott has had the endorsa-\ntlon of the 450,000-member Congress\nfor the last two years, since shortly\nafter members of the International\nTypographical Union printers went\non strike.\nRAJK, 2 OTHERS\nTO DIE IN,\nHUNGARY CHARGE\nBy ENDRE MARTON\nBUDAPEST, Sept. 25 (AP)t-A\npeople's court Saturday sentenced\nLaszlo Rajk, former NO. 2 Communist, and two of his seven co-\ndefendants to die for plotting- to\nsupplant Hungary's Government by\na .regime obedient to Yugoslav\nPremier Tito.\nTwo other defendants were sentenced to lite Imprisonment and\nanother to nine years.\nBut- the court passed no sentence\non the 'other two defendants \u2014 Lt.\nGen. Gyorgy Paltry, former Chief\nof the Hungarian Army, and Bela\nKorondy, Colonel of Police. The\ncourt said it was not competent-to\ndeal with them and they were held\nfor Court-Martial.\nSentenced with Rajk to die were\nDr. Tibor Szoenyi, former member\nof parliament and -a Communist\nParty Official, and Andras Szalai,\nanother party official.\nLife sentences were Imposed on\nLazar Branko'v, Councellor of the\nYugoslav Embassy, and Pal Justus,\nB.C. Host fo\nLVUMeet\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Sept. 25\n(Cp) \u2014 A five-day convention; of\nthe International Woodworkers of\nAmerica (C.I.O.) will open here\nMonday. More then 400 delegates,\nrepresenting 100,000 union men' in\nCanada, Alaska and the United\nStates, are expected to attend.\nLloyd Whalen, President of Vancouver Local 1-217, will preside over\nthe opening meeting at 1 p.m. Monday, Labor Minister John Cates\nwill address delegates Friday, while\nJames Carey of Washington, D. C,\nSecretary-Treasurer of the C.I.O, is\nto speak Thursday.\n, B. C. District No. 1, largest In the\nI.W.A'., with 40,000 members*, will be\nhost for what is described as \"the\nmost important convention in\nyears.\"\na member of parliament and president of the Hungarian radio.\nMillan Ogyenovics, a confessed\nYugoslav professional spy, was sentenced to nine years' Imprisonment,\nYour right to know!\nANBW8PAPr..*,'i\u00bb\"   li mp,isvalu  ! \">r the light it gives. The\nmore you sec and know the greater your freedom of action.\nThe facts and opinions, good and had, pleasing and displeasing, that are'brought to you by the newspaper give you\nknowledge on which to base your decisions about what to do\n; to get more out of life\u2014to earn more money, raise your family,\n^protect your home and to enjoy all the rights of a free citizen.\n\u25a0 \u25a0   Some men and women don't think you should have such\nfreedom. They have other plans For you. They think you\nshould change your way of life to fit their ideas. And as a part\nof their planning they include the newspaper.\n* *       *\nBecause they know they can control your, thinking if they\nis .--,\u2022 - \"  ctnirtl your sources of knowledge, they art\nagitating for control of the press. Not only of\nnewspapers but of all publications. And in\nthe background is control of the radio and\nthe movies. Each of these supplies information to you and helps you remain free.\nThe newspaper is first on their list .because\nit is your main source of facts and opinions'.\n- From the newspaper you get the kind of\ninformation you need to see that you get\nthe right representation in government\nand the right laws. You learn of crime\nand corruption, of good deeds and better\nproducts. You know what is happening,\n\u00bbnd have a free choice of ideas.\nThat doesn't fit in with what certain individuals and groups\nhave decided. They claim that editors are irresponsible and\nthat you can't be trusted to read what the editors print. They\npropose a sort of over-all agency to pass on what shall be\nprinted and what shall be read, Hitler had such a set-up.\nStalin still has.\nYou may disagree with much that now appears in newspapers. You may argue for a more enlightened press. But, in\nplace of the great variety of facts and opinions which newspapers now print, what is in prospect is one kind of facts and\nopinions selected and published to keep you incompletely in-\nj formed and dutifully subservient.\n* *       \u00bb\nThe attack on a free press is an attack on your freedom.\nFreedom of the press is not the exclusive property of newspapers. It is your right also. It includes your right to printr\n.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 And equally important, your right to read and know.\nYou can, if you wish, be passive and permit your enemies to\nshut you off from what is going on outside your own neighbor-\nhood. On the other hand, you can refuse to give up your right\nto read and decide for yourself according to your own common sense and conscience. Which do you want?\nYour right to know is the key to all your liberties\nAustrian Refugee Makes Friends\nLeonard Oawlltia, an Austrian refugee who swam from a ship\nIn the St. Lawrence River three miles to the shore to avoid deportation, Is now learning the fundamentals of Canadian farming near\nDunnvllle, Que.-He was released by Immigration officials on $1000\nbond while his case Is,being reviewed. Here Gawlltza.Is shown with\nsome of his new-found friends who are helping him to acquire a\nknowledge of Canada. \u2014Central Press Canadian\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C. \u2014 Grand\nChancellor, Knights of Pythias, Horace Simpson of-Trail, paid an official visit to New Denver Knights\nof Pythias Lodge No. 22. A number\not Nakusp Lodge members were in\nattendance. ,\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Brown and\nson David, who were visiting 'or\nseveral days with Mrs. Brown's\naunt, Mrs.' Julia Jones, rcturno'd to\ntheir home in Nelson.\n'\"Mrs. Nora C. Clarke, R.N., spent a\nfew days In Silverton, guest of Mrs.\nBarnes.\nMr. and Mrs. H. B, Yonge of Zincton were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nHarry L. Taylor and daughter.\nMr. and Mrs. Joe Sewell of Wll-\nkle, Sask., are visiting Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Forsythe.\nMr. and Mrs. Norman Thomllnson\nand sqp Warren, who were guests of\nthe former's brother and sister-in-\nlaw, M;. and Mrs. Stanley E. Thomllnson, and. family, also visited his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J8.\" C, Thomllnson, patients In the Slocan Community Hospital.        ,-.;-\u25a0 i,;','\nMr. and Mrs. Horace Simpson of\nTrail visited friends here,\nMiss Dora M. Clever has returned\nfrom Edmonton, where she was the\nguest ot her sister, Miss Emily.\nClever. She also Visited her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nF. J. Kline and family, in Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Ted Clever and\ndaughter, Barbara, who were guests\nof the former's sister, Miss Dora M.\nClever, returned to their home lh\nVictoria, B. C.\nOn Sept. 19, Mrs. Fred B. Tess-\nman entertained in honor of her son\nTerrance's foUrth birthday. Games\nand contests were enjoyed by the\nchildren until supper was served.\nThe table was covered by a colorful\ncrepe paper cloth, and centred by a\nlarge decorated birthday cake,\ntopped by four lighted candles.\nEach guest's'place was set with a\nlittle ship filled with candles and\nnuts.\nSUTTON, Surrey, England (CP)\n\u2014 Britain's Christmas cards will\nhave less \"snow\" this year. A Sutton\nstationer said: \"There is an almost\ncomplete absence of the old traditional snow scenes; people are getting sophisticated in their tastes\u2014or\nat any rate the publishers seem to\nthink so.\"\nSlocan City...\nSLOGAN'CITY, B. C.-Mr. and\nMrs. Miles MacMiUan of Rossland,\naccompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Will-\nlam Cochrane of Kirkland Lake,\nOnt., were guests of Mr., and Mrs.\nM. MacMiUan.\nR. W. Gardiner has returned from\na motor trip to Revelstoke, He was\naccompanied by Mrs. Stan Perkln-\nson, who was visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Daney, at Ferguson,\nB. C.\nR. A. Chrlstofferson of Needles\nvisited his father, S. A. Christoffer-\nson. \u25a0> v\nMrs. S. Mlsuml has returned from\nLillodet, where she has spent the\nSummer with her son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. B. Mlsumi..\nMrs. K. Life and daughter Elsie\nwe're guests of Mrs. G. Anderson\nand family In Nelson. En route home\nthey visited Mr. and Mrs. D. Nelson\nof Crescent Valley.\nThe Presbyterian Ladles' Aid met\nat the home of Mrs. G. Forbes. Fpl-\nlowing the meeting a delightful, lun-\nchepn was served by the hostess.\nMr. and'Mrk. Andy Kraft of.Ymlr\nond'Mrs. O. Kraft and son Frank, of\nCalgary, were visitors of Mr. and\nMrs. I. Kraft. On the return trip\nMrs. I. Kraft sfccpmpanled Mrs. O.\nKraft and son as far as Maple Creek,\nSask., where she will visit her mother, Mrs. Emma-Anderson.\nBalfour Church\nGuild Raises $60\nAt- Garden Party\nBALFOUR, B. C, Sept. 25\u2014At the\nfirst meeting of the Ladies' Church\nGuild) held at'the home of Mrs. H,\nKelly, a report was given on the\ngarden party and Summer sale,\nwhen $60 was realized toward the\nblock assessment.\nA letter of acknowledgement was\nread from the Kootenay Lake General Hospital for a donation of fruit,\nvegetables and flowers that decorated St. Michael's and All Angels\nChurch for the Harvest Festival.\nThe contest was won by Mrs. G.\nWells, with proceeds for the reserve fund.\nThe hostess was assisted by Mrs.\nM. Chrishop of Willow Point.\nSinging was enjoyed, with Miss\nPat Kelly as' accompanist.\nRead the Classified\u2014It  Pays\nTy Cobb and Fiancee\nMaott laily -Nwrn\nSpecial Gutfls\nAf Fruitvale\nP.T.A. Meeting\nFRUITVALE, B, C, Sept, 25 \u2014\n\"Back to School\" Night was the\ntheme for the opening meeting of\nthe Fall 'season of the Fruitvale\nParent-Teacher Association, when\nparents of the hew beginners and\nthe teaching staff were special\nguests. \u2022\nPresident Mrs. Walter Veltch\nopened the meeting... by reading\n\"September Days\". On behalf Of the\nmembers, she welcomed the new\n\"school\" parents and the teachers.\nThe two new teachers were Miss\nRowling of Trail and Mr, Mosher of\nNelson, ' .\nThe meeting endorsed the action\nof the Trail Kiwanis Club In their\ndrive on pbscene literature, and a\nletter is to be sent our Member at\nOttawa urging immediate acUon.\nMrs. Graves reported the activities of the Ways and Means Committee during the Summer' recess,\nwhich included serving ltfnch at the\nFall Fair on 'Labor Day. She also\ngave a brief report on the recent\nmeetings in Trail on the suggested\nUnion Library for the School District.\nHAVE PROJECTOR\nMr. Morton reported that the\nopaque projector recently purchased\nby the P.T.A. for the school had\narrived.\nGilbert Hagg and David Ferraro\nUed for the P.T.A. prize for pupil in\nGrade 7 attaining highest points in\nSocial Studies, These will, be presented to them at class by the President'\nMrS, L. Simmons, In giving\nher report, revealed that two parcels had been sent through CARE\nto European countries. She read a\nletter from the lady who had received our first parcel, which was\nas follows:\nFrau Agnes Jakobs,\nVolklngln (Saar), Aufdem\nHeidstock No. 34.\nDear Madam:\nI was very glad to receive a parcel on the 27th of June. It weighed\n28 pounds. I was also glad tp see all\nthe nice Items; my income is so\nsmall and I'm not able to buy such\nnice Items.\nMy husband was missed in action\nand I am alone with my two girls,\nand it Is very hard for me to make\na living through this bitter war.\nWe received this parcel from Can.\nada, which reminds me of my granddad, who lives there. He sold all he\nhad and moved to America, and we\nhave not heard from him since. The\nsame happened to my parents, My\nfather was missing in action. He\ndid not return. It was left to my\nmother to bring up the children, and\nshe did not get any help as I did.\nWe all hope that the future will be\nbetter for us, and we will be able to\nhelp others as you have done for us.\nAgain many thanks for. the parcel,\nand all the things you have sent,\nand I can see that charity is not\ndead.\nYourS truly,\n-.-.-\u25a0 v FRAU JAKOBS.\nA short talk was given by Alex\nGraham on the Y.M.C.A., outlining\nthe aims and the program of the association. The members approved\not the Committee In investigation\nof this Dlstrict.with Trail.\nDuring Intermission, it was found\nthat Miss Irwin's Grade Ones had\nthe best representation of parents,\nand won the attendance prize.\nA social hour was then enjoyed,\nwith Mr. Morton acting as Master of\nCeremonies, which featured, contests, games apd a spelling match.\nMrs. Horace Vyse and the team captained by A. Graham were the yrln-\nners of the evening.\nBefore adjourning to the lunchroom, the President spoke of the\ntheme for October, which Is Better\nParenthood Month.\nMrs. F. Cole had charge of the re\nfrcshmpnts for the evening.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 26,1949 -\nBRISBANE, Australia (Reuters)\n\u2014Rum, with a dash of strychnine,\nwas decreed by experts as the best\nbait in a rabbit poisoning campaign\nafter experiments with apples, carrots, vanilla and jam as a lure. Rum\ndisguised the taste of the poison,\nthey said.\nDeaths\nMONTREAL, (CP)\u2014G. P. G. Dunlop, 65, General Manager of the\nMontreal Stock Exchange and Curb\nIvTsi'lrct\nVANCOUVER, (CP)\u2014David Stevens Saunders, widely known in Vancouver business circles.\n5T\/**Ts)7v,*sl\n\u00a34$sWflemt\\c\ni&m\\L\\\\c PAIN\nASPIRIN\nGENUINE ASnSIN IS\nMASKED THIS WAV-\nsee us for\nEXPERT\nreasonably-priced\nHOSPITAL EXPANSION\nSAID MAJOR NEED\nEDMONTON, Sept 25 (CP) -\nMajor expansion of hospital accommodation .is\" needed throughout\nCanada to meet the nation's require,\nments, T. C. Routley of Toronto,\nGeneral Secretary of the Canadian\nMedical Association said here today\nMr. Routley, also Chairman of the\nWorld Medical Association, said Canadian njedlcal schools will graduate\napproximately 500 doctors annually\nto meet growing demands for modi\ncal services, '\n\"Guess w\/to's\nfofowawM-\"\n- riooert C, AtKinson and the former Margaret Hastings (above)\nhave disclosed they have been\nmarried since last June. Mrs. Atkinson was the Wao.stranded for\n47 days In a lost Dutch New Guinea valley after an Army plane\ncrash In 1945. The Atkinsons make\ntheir home In Annapolis, Md,\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto\nThis advertisement is not put*;\nlished or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by tha!\nGovernment of British Ci-*\nlumbia.\n\u2022 developing\n\u2022 printing\no duplicate prints\n\u2022 enlargements\nTy Cobb, baseball's famed Georgia Peach, smiles with his prospective wife, Mrs. Frances Cats, at the Summer home of her parents,\nDr. and Mrs. John F. Fnlrbalrn of Point Ablno, Ontario.'Cobb said\na quiet wedding Is planned for the near future. Mn. Cass hoi been\n' married twice before and has two children. It will be Cobb's second\nmarriage.     1      . \u25a0' '. o     \u2014(AP Wlrephoto)\nKODAK FILMS\nand CAMERAS\nOoqvuL Studio\n460 Ward St.    Nelson, B.C.\n#J!%\n-i -jEaff\nAnd who wouldn't onthiiso over tho extra,.\n! mileage you get with Chevron Supreme\nGasoline? For power plus economy It's\n-UNSURPASSED'\n11\nv.' S!\nx**-**-\n\u2022v-,\ni\nGoCdnadianfacifio\n\"V*-      AfaUwe-ikoflelsurelytetotloriafloati..\nin the Canadian Pacific manner. Autumn sailings\n\".\"  from Montreal and Quebec by the scenic\ni    ' St\/Uwrence tonte. Winter sailings from Saint John\n(fain to shipside) and -^,^^1}^\nwv-;\n\u2022\"   EMPRESS OF CANADA\nFrom Montreal and Quebec\nOctober 21 e November 11\nFrom Saint John and Halifax\nDecember 6 \u2022 \"December 30\nMarch 1      -\u2022.*\u25a0'\u25a0 March 20\n\u2022Will call at Glasgow\n(Greenock)\nFIRST CUSS $264 Up\nTOURIST $167 Up\nAlso sailings by\nBeaver  passenger-carrying freighters \u2014 dates on\nrequest First class fare\n$242.\nEMPRESS OF FRANCE\nFrom Montreal and. Quebec   .\nOctober 7 & 28   \u2022   Nov. 18\nFroip Saint John arid Halifax\n'  January 18  \u2022  February 15\nMarch 15       \u2022      April 12\nfull,information from your own\nTravel Agent or:\nE.'Hospes, Canadian  Pacific\n,     Steamships, Canadian Pacific\nStation, Vancouver, B.C.\n 14\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 26, 1949\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDESEN, M.D.\nPlastic Surgery Has Changed Life\nFor Wounded Soldiers and Civilians\n..Plastic surgery hes ma$e many\nladvonces in recent years,,-portiQu-\nSeml-flttod fur coat.\n...   By GRACE THORNCUIFFE\nAlaska, seal  Ib  becoming  more\npopular   each   year,   as   well   It\nShould be, for no fur Is more durable, more pliable ore better buy:\nIt Is. used for this supple, semi-\nfitted coat which fattens ..under\nthe heat collar with a largo decorative hook ond eye,, The puffed\npouch pockets have cartridge\npleats at top. The bodice, which\n.has belled sleeves, Is blouscd In\nback above n twisted belt that\nbuckles In,back.  ,,'\nGuess w\/to's\nmcKM6eiimif*\nlarly os a result of the war,.so that\ntoday more, and more operations ere*\nbejng carried out, not only to moke\ngood -the deformities due.to Occident,\nbut to correct natural\"defects,\nNO SCARS\nCartilage \u2022 is, perhaps, the most\nwidely used.tlssue in plastic surgery.\nIt is possible to store cartilage tissue\ntor months in stilt solution so that it\nmay be-employed when needed.\nBone is also employed. The bone\nmay-be cut from the hip bones and\nthen transplanted to .the Oreo where\nit Is needed,..\nPot olso is employed to buildup\ncsvaties! - end- till: out depressions:\nThis fat may be taken from the wall\nof the abdomen.\nIf such-plastic operations .cannot\nbe successfully carried but to rebuild the.face structures, artificial\nmaterials, ore used for building the\nnose and ear or eye sockets. These\nmaterials, can-be colored to match\nthg flesh'and are held in place, with\nwaterproof. adhesive.- '\n. One of the most common types of\nplastic operations is to remove\nhump on the nose,' Such operations\ncan be carried out so that they leave\nno visible sear.-,\nAnother common operation is that\nto correct, a protruding,jaw. -.-.\u2022\u25a0\nEars that protrude cannot be corrected by pressure from a bandage\nor o cap. An operation is necessary\nto overcome this condition.\nQUESTIONS AND ANSWERS\nJ. D.: I have afriendwhohas been\nbothered with hives for several\nmonths. Would you please suggest\nsomething which wili relieve her\ncondition?   .-.'.-'\nAnswer: Recently, treatment with\nboth vitamin \"K\" and niacin has\nbeen found helpful in -elieVingkthe\nhives, as well as some of, the: new\nantl-histomine- drugs,.- such as pyri-\nbenzamine and benedryl.*\nYour friend should consult a physician'concerning this matter.\nBillboard Ait\nIn Old Vienna\n\u25a0 * *-*\u2014   *     -- - \u25a0   ,.\ny-S^'^'^'M-'---''\nFor ^Parents\nBy GARflV CLEVELAND MYERS, Ph.D,\nTeach Children-of All Ages to Be\nReliable to Share Responsibilities\nI know a young mother of three\nchildren 7, 5 and 3, who lets them\ndp many things. The older ones bake\nand cook Oil sorts .of simple foods.\nWhile- visiting with us last Summer\nI observed some of their accomplishments. Even the,youngest could, do\npretty wel) at this. ''\nMUST HELP\nIn the modern nursery 'school,\nkindergarten' and . primary grades,\nyoung children are encouraged 'In\nself-help and responsibility. Often\nthere are plants and pets .jin. the\nschoolroohi and a child is chosen\n(usually by the other children)' to\ncore for the plants of pets for a cer-\ntol'nnumber of days,,    \"\nIt seems that as the child, grows\nolder he gets less and less satisfaction from shouldering responsibility\nat school or anywhere else, Yet we\nwould like to belicvo he-would grow\nin this direction,     ,;\nA test of the child's dependability\nconies in the many, out-of-oloss activities which are somewhat voluntary, as in rehearsals for a public\nprogram connected with, the school,\nchurch, clubs or the.like, Leaders of\njunior church choirs, Scouts, Cubs,\nCamp Fire Girls ond the like constantly face.,this problem and they\noften wish they hod more help frpm\nthe teachers ond parents in these\nmatters, ,\nAll of us who deal with children\nshould aim to-get over In, these\nchildren a strong urge to fulfill the\ngreat principle: \"He that is faithful' in that which is least will also\nbe faithful in that which is great.\"\nBy IDA BAILEY ALLEN\nMONDAY'8 DINNER\nSliced Tomatoes with pilled\n-   Cucumbers on Lettuce '\u25a0-\n, -      Browned Veal Goulash\nButtered Noddles\nGreen Peas Dinner Rolls\nStrawberry or Raspberry \u25a0\ni \u25a0 Chiffon Pie   :-\nHot or Iced Coffee or Ten\n: \" \"'\u25a0'\u25a0    Milk (Children)\nAll Meoauremehts Are Level\nReolpes Serve Four     *\nBROWNED VEAL GOULA8H\nPeel  ond  slice  2 medium-sized\nOnions.. Half-fry in 2 tbsp. shorten-\n: By ALICE DENHOFF\ning or meat fat, Add 1% lbs. shank\nor shoulder of veal cut in 2-ln.\ncubes; coyer and slow-fry about.20\nmin., or until the veal is, lightly\nbrowned and the onions .tender,\nDust with 1 tsp. paprika, hi tsp. pepper ond 1 tsp. salt. Add % c. water\nor drained vegetable liquid, Cover\nwith 4 sliced peeled white potatoes,\nand Vi c. chopped . green pepper.\nDust wilh '\/_ tsp. salt Put on the\nlid again, and simmer until the potatoes are Very tender.\nTRICK OF THE CHEF\nWhen .making veal goulash odd M\ntsp. caraway seed with he meat.\nIDove ProMettis\nBy JANE ATKINSON\nDifference in Age Not Always As\nDangerous As Onlookers Believe\nDear Miss Atkinson: ';-.,-.\u25a0\nI have been going with a man for\na year and a half,'and.while we\nare in love with each other, we art\nafraid to get married, because.!, am\n12 years older than he is.\nBoth of us have tried going with\nothers neoror our own age but it*is\nno use, as we can't seem.to,enjoy it.\nShould we-get married or hot?\nMiss'A. C.\nDear. Miss A. C:\nSince ybu do not tell j-rie\". either\nyour own age or that of the man\nwith-whom: you hove been going, it'\nThis advertisement is.riot published.of displayed by the Li-\ni)Uor Control Board or by the\n; Government of British, Cd-\n,-lumbia.\nEvery available billboard In Vienna, Austria, has been taken over\nby electioneering parties of the\nforthcoming election, to take place\nOct. 9. The large poster, showing\na man burdened under the hammer and sickle of Communism,\n\u25a0ays: \"Don't let this happen to\nyoul\"\u2014Central Press Canadian.\n\"Reality\" Subject\nLesson-Sermon\n\"REALITY\" was the subject of the\nLesson-Sermon in. oil churches of\nChrist, Scientist, on,Sunday<,.',\nThe Golden Text .was!.\"3*hou, 0\nLord, remeihest for ever;'tby throne\nfrom feneration to generation,\"\n.    '\u25a0\"  -Lamentations 8:. 19.'\nThe Lesson-Sermon included the\nfollowing passage from the Bible:\n\"Remember the termer, things.of\nold: for I am God, and there is none\nelse; 1 am God, and there is none\nlike me.\"\nIsloloh 48: 9\nAmong..the selections from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nond Health with Key. tp: the Scriptures\" by-Mory Beker Eddy, was the\nfollowing: \"The divine Principle of\nthe universe; must, interpret the\nuniverse,. .God is the divine Principle of all that represents Him and\nof all that\" really-exists.\"\n \u2014; -V-1 - if , __\nUncover Secret   ;\nChinese Red Network\nIn Australia.\nSYDNEY, Australia, Sept. 25 \u2014\n(CP) \u2014 The Sydney Herald says today a security raid on a native.hut\nin' the jungles of Malaya several\nmonths ago resulted in uncovering a\nsecret Chinese Communist network\nin Australia, . . .\n\u25a0; .The newspaper sajNs a shadow consulate is in existence here, ready\ntp \"take over\" the Chinese commu-\n\u25a0nity in Australia if the Government\nrecognizes the Communist People's\nRepublic in China. Government officials, shy Australia is certain to\nrecognize the Communist regime\nwhen Britain end the United States\ngive de facto recognition.. ,\" .\nWALK DOWN MEMORY LANE\nwith\n(Wi Jattoriies\nPresented Dally by\nPR. DAVID C.COWEN\nStation CKLN\nwould be very hard for me to give\nyon an answer to this question.\nThere ere some peribds of life in\nwhich s wide difference of age\nmakes it risky to merry, and other\nperiods'In which the age difference\ndoes not seem: to matter.\" By and\nlarge, It depends on how congenial\na man and a woman ore in regard\nto their interests, their standards,\netc Since you and this man appear\nto enjoy each other's company so\nmuch, it might be'thatyou are congenial along these important lines,\nIf you are bjUite sure that there is ah\napproximate degree of maturity between' you, marriage might workout successfully. !\nPRETTY WEDDING\nAT WILLOW POINT\nWILLOW POINT, B, a, Sept. 25-\nA wedding of interest in the district\nwos solemnized' quietly Sunday,\nSept 18, in St Paul's United Church,\nRev. A. L. Anderson -officiating,\nWhen. Mary, daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. W. Fawcett of Kinnaird,' be.\ncame the bride of Herbert Lear-\nmonth, son of Mr. and.Mrs. John\nLearmonth.\nThe bride, given in marriage by\nher father, wos lovely lh a frock of\npole pink organza, with matching\nhot ond white accessories. She wore\na corsage of pink and'white coma\ntlons, and was attended by the\nMisses Marjorie and Morion Lear'\nmonth, sisters of the groom, and\nattired In misty blue crepe end pole\nyellow moire, respectively, with\nmatching flower hots end corsages\nof pink and white carnations.\nGeorge TUcker of. Crescent Bay\nsupported the groom. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022  ,   .\nfollowing the ceremony luncheon\nwas' servpd 'at the .Willow- Point\nLeormonth home,'when the Immediate families were present. The bride\nxut her beautiful three-tiered wedding cake with the same knife Mrs.\nJ. Learmonth cut her wedding cake.\nFollowing a honeymoon-trip'by\ncar to Okanagan'points, Mr. and\nMrs. Learmonth will make their\nhome ot Willow Point,\nFruitvale...\nFRUITVALE, B. C. - Rodney\nRaymond were' the names given to\nthe infant son of Mr,: and Mrs.\nDouglas Haines st the christening\nservice Sunday afternoon in the St.\nPaul's United Church, Rev. W. J.\nMore officiating. The dish Used to\nhold the water was a heavy cut\ngloss bowl, a wedding present of\nthe infant's grandparents; and has\nbeen used for the christening for\ntwo generations of the Haines family.\nMr. end Mrs. Leon Simmons were\nSpokane visitors, accompanied by\nMr. and Mrs. J, Hanson and family\nof-Rossland.\nMiss Eileen Endersby , has returned from o holiday at Tisdale,\nSask. : r'-.-i\nVhiting Committee\nNamed for Denver\nPythian Sisters;\nNEW DENVER, B.,C\u201e, Sept. 25-\nThe New Denver Past'-Chiefs' Club,\nto Lucerne Temple, Pythjon \"-Sisters,\nheld their September meeting at the\nhome of Mrs. J, E. Kennett, when*\nthe Visiting Committee report was\ngiven by Mrs. Emily Hambly. flew\nVisiting Committee appointed was\nMrs. May Crellin ond Miss'-Beatrice\nBell. ;*, ':\u25a0'%\nAt the close of business five hundred was played, with first prize\ngoing to Miss M. H. Butlin.ond consolation to Mrs. Lilo Thomlinson.\nThe hostess was assisted by her\ndaughter, Mrs. Thomlinson.\nPHONE 144 for CLASSIFIED ADS\n'THE FAMILY THAT PRAYS TOGETHER; STAYS TOGETHER'\nA menage to vital, so simple it it bringing rich now happiness to family life all over\n,- Canada and the United States\n: '       Attend the\nFamily Prayer\nRALLY\nBUTLER PARK\nTuesday* Sept* 27\n8 P.M.\nYou will soy:.''This Is one of,the.greatest moments\nIn my life, when you heor\"Father Pat\" speak.\nInspired, dedicated, thli one man ti leading a tremendous crusade for the revival of Family Prayer'In\nCanada and the United States.\nBring the whole family to hear Father Patrick Peyton\naddress the Family Prayer Rally at Butler Park on\nSeptember 27th.\nADMISSION:   FREE\nAll Nelson and District\nPeople Welcome\nRev. Patrick Peyton, founder and director\nof the Family Prayer Crusade ond of\n. \"Family Theatre\", broadcast weekly from\nHollywood.\nIS   Tiff   WORD    FOR\nv.y\nLuxurious riding comfort, superb driving ease, more than ordinary foom\nwith rich styling and convenient appointments\u2014,,\ntruly, Elegant, is the word for Chrysler I\n\u2022Wterever you drive this beautiful automobile, your pride of ownership.;\nwill grow when you hear that tribute, to,\nyour discrimination \u2014 \"I See You Drive A Chrysler*\nSRI VB SMOOTHLY \u2014 EPrORTlESSLY WITH FLUID DRIVE   AND\n\u25a0'\"\u25a0\"'   -^-standard-equipment on-\nChrysler ROYAL models.\n,'.',. '*' .    - Mlnlmlzes-georshifting. ,\n-VRISTd-MATIC\" TRANSMISSION\n\u2014standard equipment on-Chryoier \u25a0\n. WINDSOR models.   Lets you'-\n(Irlvo without shifting gears. \u25a0\nset YOUR\nI    O   C   A    1\nC    H    a    Y    S    L    BR    *    PL    V   Al    O    U    T   H\nFARO    O\n0     I    A     I     I   \u25a0*..;!\n 'It Pays to Buy Quality'!\nA Recti\nGrowing Girls Brown Elk\nOxfords with hard wearing\nNeolite Soles.\n$4,95\nSizes 4 to 9\nWidths-A and C \\\nR* ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTpASHION\nNo Forest Fires\nIn Nelson District\nCool night? have greatly reduced\nthe forest fire hazard In .the Nelson\nForest District and there are no fires\nburning, ...    .-.'.,-\nTotal number of fires in; the District to date is 476 compared to 177\nlast year at the same time.\nAll sizes of films at WAITS. We'\nhave a developing service also.\nHospital Auxiliary bake sale: at\nStar Grocery, Saturday Oct 1.\nElectrical - contracting \u2014 wiring\nalterations - hot water heaters*\nMCKAY. & 8TRETT0N\u2014Phone B44\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllll\n* \"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS'\nRemember, Pacific Milk Is\nthe only evaporated milk\npacked in B.C. and it's irradiated to give you added\n\"goodness. Form-fresh from\nquality farms'.-. .'vacuum\npacked for your table.\nPacificMilk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\nflllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllll\nHints\nBy IDA JEAN KAIM\nTime To. Tell Teen-Ages How\nTo Keep Down Over-Weight\nTeen-agers,.stop sipping that choc-,\nolate soda and try this parody on\nyour ukulele ... to the tune of \"A\nYou're,Adorable.\" \u2022\n! A Is for appetite,\nB you're the bulgy type, if-r-\nC stands for chocolate galore;\nD means a dentist date . . .\nYOuT healthy normal weight depends on your frame. The following chart give:' average Weight for\nmedium frame. If you have a small\nframe youv normal: weight may be\nslightly less; with \u00bb very large frame\nand heavy bones, you,may normally\nweigh more than this, Ask the doctor. Get a clean bill of health and\ntomorrow, start trimming the be-\nWeen-meal calories,\nAverage Weight for Teen-Age Girls\nWith Medium Frame\n\u25a0   AOE \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\n18   14   15   16   17   18\n4 ft. 7 ta ....\n.   77\n4 ft. 8 in.....\n.   81   83\n4 ft. Din.....\n.   84   88   82\n4 ft. 10 in...\n,88   83   P0 101\n4ftll4n...\n92   08 100 103 104\n6 ft  '.\t\n97 101 105 108^108 111\n5 ft 1 in,;.\n101 105 108 112 113 118\nOft 2 In. ...\n108 108 113 115117 118\n5 ft 3 in. ..'\n110 112116 117 119'120\n5 ft 4 in. -\n115 117 119 120 122 123\n5 ft S in...\n120 121 122 123 125 128\n5* ft. 8 in. ...\n124 124 125 128 120 130\n5ft 7 in. ...\n128 130 131 133 133 135\n5 ft 8 in.*...\n131 133 135 136 138138\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line.black face type; larger typo rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nif BUTTERFIELD cant fix lt\nthrow It. away. Prompt service op-\nwatch work; fully guaranteed... .\nWhy, not give tis-a call to increase\nyour fire Insurance protection' today?--. W. APPLEYARD.\nClearing out .of wool. 3.and 4 ply\nat greatly reduced prices. , '\nAT WADE8'\nDo you carry enough Insurance on\nyu ir property and effects? If not see\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY\nWe  have   a   complete  stock   of\nammunition Including 30\/08.\nMc A Me (NELSON) B.C.\nBring that valuable timepelce to\nCOLLINSON'S Ior reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nThe new shipment of hats you\nhave been waiting for,1 has arrived\nat ADRIAN MILLINERY.    \u25a0;.\"..,-,,\nEVERY  DAY   18  BARGAIN   DAY\nAT FAIRWAY.     :\nPHONE 1177 AND H78.    .\nKootenay Roofers \u2014 A better roof\nat a lower price. All work guaranteed, estimates -free. Phone 658-L1\njLewlsta and Blue Swan 3 and 4\nply unshrinkable wools. Bargain\npriced 22c oz.    -..-,' '\u25a0\u25a0'.\" '\nTHE CHILDREN'S 8HOP\nGYPROC LATH \u2014 One of the\nbest khownt-b'onds for Plaster -s-\n$53.50'per thousand si], ft.\nBURNS LUMBER & COAL CO.\nFor .that sweet tooth In your\nhome, VALENTINE'S offer everything from fine brand chocolates tb\nall-day suckers.\nNow is the time to get your supply\nof blankets, bed throws, and flannelette sheets from\" \u25a0'\u25a0-.'\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nGive best lighting value\nov.r aoo ,..,. \u00ab-jssi \u00a3&\u00a3:\u25a0\nCANADIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC\ni O M T.'-A N V\".t t -MI T ( 0 -.-:'\n- For the hunter! Shot-gun and rifle\nammunition. Our stock Ib complete.\nBuy now and be ready!\nHIPPERSON'S   : -i\nGloss Blocki\u2014Something new and\ndifferent Enquire about their many\nuses, ihany patterns to choose from\nat T, H. Woters.Co, Ltd., 101 Hell\nStreet Phono 156.\nPRE-WINTER SALE\n{..-.; - .   :- of Fine Furs,i\n;l All coots Extra Special Values.\nAlii' GARMENTS 'GUARANTEED.\nGREENWOOD'S FURS\nStudents, we can rent you any\nmake of a standard typewriter. Get\nyour speed up with a little extra\npractice each day. D. W. McDerby,\n'The Typewriter & Adding Mack-\n.lie Man\", 554 Stanley. Street\nChimneys, stoves,' furnaces, hot\nard cold air ducts cleaned by vacuum, chimneys topped, thimbles applied or stopped. Prices reasonable.\nPounder's Chimney Service. Phone\n1028-Y. \u25a0>.\n#THE OFFICERS AND MEMBERS of Rose City Chapter\nNo. 28 OJE.S. are invited to a reception honoring Mrs. Florence Struth-\nSrs, W.G.M. on Monday 26, at 8p.m.\nat the home of Mrs. R. B. Brummltt\nEdna Earle- Brown, W.M.\nCatherine Argyle, Secretary.\nNo matter what moke of oil heater\nyou own, Coleman makes \"extras\"\nfor your heating comfort The Coleman Chimney Crown ireans positive\ndraft and no down-draft an Oll-\nLlfter pump takes the drudgery out\nof filling yoiir fuel tank, and an A.P.\nThermostat klt.glves you automatic\nheat. See them today at-\nHIPPERSON'S   ,-'<\nCARD OF THANK8\nWe wish to thank our friends ond\nfriends of the late William Mack for\nkind expressions ot sympathy and\ntor the beautiful' fforal offerings in\nour'recent bereavement in,losing\nour close and dear friend, Special\nthanks to.Dr. Morrison, the nurses\nand staff of they Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital.\nElsie and Tom Mclnnls.\n,     \u201e    IN MEMORIAM :'-.\/\nIn loving memory of Dad and\nGrandad Robert Francis Jerome,\nwho passed  away  Sept. 26, 1948,\nFondly remembered. by Douglas\nLenore, .Jack, Leonard and Susie.\nIN MEMORIAM\nJEROME\u2014In loving memory of a\ndear husband and father, Robert\nFrancis Jerome, who passed away\nSeptember 26th, 1948. ,\nI You're not forgotten, father dear,\nNor ever shall you. be, -\nAs long as life and memory last,\nWe.shall remember thee.\nEver remembered by wife, sons\nand daughter.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nDOUBT-^Funeral services for the\nlate William (Bill) Frederick Doubt\"\nwill be held this Tuesday.afternoon\nat 2 p.m. from East Trail United\nChurch; Rev. W. D. More* will officiate. Interment will be in the\nfamily plot, Mountain View Cemetery. Remains ore resting at Clark's\nFuneral ChapeL\nWomen's Club Hears\nPiano Recital\nA tworpiano recital by Mrs. Margaret Fraser and Miss .Catherine McLean was enjoyed by the Nelson\nBusiness and Professional Women's\nClub Friday night at the home of\nMrs. Fraser in Foirveiw. It was reported previously that the recital\nhod been held, at .the home of Mrs.\nT. J. S. Ferguson,\nNew Fall Stock\nArriving -\nMILADY'S, FASHION SHOP\n'  GOTHIC CORTEX\nGIRDLES\nThe new two way' stretch\nfoundation. Sizes small, medium\nand large. V\n$3.95\nFashion First\nYour General Electric Dealer in Nelson  ,\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 260\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nIYooten'V Valley Uaikv\nNelson Social\n\u2022 Miss Pat Davis, daughter of\nMrs. Guy W. Davis and Miss Sheila\nDawson, daughter . of, His Honor,\nJudge Erie P. Dawson and Mrs.\nDawson, hove left for Montreal to\nresume\" their studies at McGill University. .'.--.. ' '\u25a0' '-\n' \u2022 E. H. Stubbs, Nelson Avenue,\nis spending a holiday at Black Diamond,,Alto.' '\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Hall, who\nspent a fortnight visiting friends In\nNelson, hove returned to their home\nin Victoria.   '\n\u2022 Mrs. Robert Smlllie leaves today to visit her old home near Toronto.- -\n\u2022- St. Clair ond Eorl Duffy, sons\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Duffy* Victoria Street, have left to attend St\nMichael'* in ToroHto.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. E. Borden, Silica\nStreet, has left to Spend o few\nweeks With her daughter, Mrs.\nElizabeth Horton, in Vancouver,\n\u2022 Mrs.' C. P. Perry of, the Emerald mine, who has been a patient\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nIs guest at the Whlmster- home,\nThird Street.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. F. Bunysn of Patter.\nson, B.C., is spending a few days at\nthe home of her mother, Mrs. James\nJohnstone.\n\u2022 Dr.  Joseph  Vlngo' and  his\nWloAiatL Wlwdin.\nHf'LL FALL FOR IT\nThe dress that mikes his heart\ndo nlp-Ups! New silhouette, new\nsleeves^-it's but Swlshl Waistline\nfits closely, semi-circular skirt has\none seam! Alphabet transfer tool\nPattern 9483 comes in Jr. Miss\nsizes 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13 takes\n3V<i yds. 39-inch fabric.\nThis - easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfectfit Complete,, illustrated\nChart shows you every step.\nSend TWENTY, FIVE CENT8\n(25c) iii - coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly . 8IZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\n8TYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept, 266 Baker St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN,, core of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept, address.\nJust out.\u2014 our Marlon Martin\nFall- and Winter Pattern Book!\nSmart new- clothes to sew at home.\nGift idea j by the score, Send twenty-\nfive.cents 1\" coins for this book\u2014o\nFree Pattern is printed in the' book\n\u2014s new weskit to weor with skirts\nand cresses!\n'     ByMHS.M.I.yiGNEUX\naunt, Mrs. M. Scally, have recently\nreturned from a motor trip to Spokane and Portland, Ore,  \u2022\n\u2022 Mrs, M, Cox, of Saskatoon,\nSask,, was a guest of Mr, and Mrs.\nE. J. Fltzpatrlck, 41S Falls Street.\n\u2022< Miss Peggy Shrieves of Kimberley and Nelson left Friday evening tor the Okanagan Valley\nwhere she plans on making her\nhome at West Summerland.\n. \u2022- Dr. and Mrs. F. M. Auld, Nelson Avenue, have left on a motor\ntrip to Coastal cities in Victoria.\nThe doctor will be attending the\nB.C.' Medical Convention,\n\u2022 -Mr.: and Mrs. Henri Cho*\nquette have left to make their home\nat Everett Ont\n\u2022 Mr. end Mrs. W. H, Cox,-412\nMill Street, hove as guests, Mr. and\nMrs; William George of Tredegar\nMon, SouthWoles, who have been\nguests at the home of Mrs. George's\nbrother-irt-law and sister,' Mr. and\nMrs. Robe,' in ' Victoria. since May,\nand who are now enroute to New\nYork-to ?oil on the Queen Elizabeth. '-'\u25a0\n'\" \u2022 E. H. Henley, ex-resident of\nNelson, now of Toronto, spent the\nweekend in the City. In' company\nwith Norman C. Robertson, president of, the North American Life\nAssurance Co\u201e<. Toronto, and Mrs.\nRobertson.    '   .\n\u2022 . Members of the St. Saviour's\nMother's Club met in the Memorial\nHall, Tea hostesses were-Mrs. F.B:\nPearce, Mrs, F. Phillips, Mrs. C. E.\nA; Simonds and Mrs. J. Dawney.\nLEARMONTH-FAWCETT\n: \u2022 A member of a pioneer Willow\nPoint family was groom at a wedding at St. Paul's \"United. Church\nin Nelson when Rev. A. L. Anderson\nunited in marriage Mary S. Fawcett\nOnd Herbert J. Leormonth Sept. 13.\nThe bride Is the daughter of Mr.\nand 'Mrs. Walter Fawcett of Kinnaird, B.C. and the groom is the\nson of Mr.1 and .Mrs. John Lear-\nmonth of Willow Point The bride,\nwho was given away by her father,\nwore a chic princess dress of pink\nsheer over White taffeta, with hot\nto match. In her corsage were\ncarnations of harmonizing tone. She\nwas* attended by the groom's sisters,\nMarjorie and Marion . Learmonth,\nwhose goWns were blue and yellow\ntaffeta with corsages: of carnations.\nGeorge .Tucker of Willow Point\nwas held at the home of the groom's\nwas best .man. \u2022 The reception\nparents, the table being prettily\ndecorated with pink gladioli. Among\nthe guests were the bride's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nBarber,.of Trail, who will'celebrate\ntheir diamond wedding on Sept. 29.\nOn returning from the Coast the\ngroom and bride will take up\nresidence at Willow. Point.\nDRAMA FEATURES\nTRINITY\nRALLY SERVICE\nThe feature ot the Rally Service\nin Trinity United Church Sunday\nmorning was a dramatization by\nthe Junior Bible Class. The dramatization was in three parts, the first\nshowing the origin of the name Dominion of Canada,\nThe Conference of London 1866\nhad worked hard on 'the problem\nof choosing the right' name. Sir\nLeonard Tilley upon retiring at\nnight took up his Bible and it opened at the 72nd Psalm. In the 8th\nverse he read, \"He shall have Dominion from sea to sea.\" The name\nDominion of Canada was thereafter\nadopted.\nThe second scene wes from the\nlife of James Evans, missionary to\nNorway House who devised the\nfirst Cree alphabet. The third scene\nWas of young people enjoying the\nmodern, \"Sunday School in Home\"\nprovided by' the church for out of\nthe way placeS,\nThose taking part were .Anthea\nFoster, Mono, Loomer, Don Kettlewell, Earl Mason, Margaret Rat-\nkowskl, Tom Pagdin, Jeanette Mulr\nand Harry Mason. Mrs. E. G.\nKettlewell was Director. -   ,\nCellulose sponges, mode from specially treated wood pulp, will absorb 20 times their dry Weight and\nstill float   '\u25a0*\"'\u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 26,1949\u2014 S\nHemline Moves Up . . \\    \u2022 <\nNew LoQk for *50\nDefinitely Feminine\nPARIS, Sept 28, <Reuters)-The\n1950 New Look is completely feminine\u2014from head to tbe.\nWith plenty of choice of style\nfeatures, all women this Winter will\nbe wearing shorter skirts, The exact\nlength, hanging from 13hi to 16 inches off the ground, will depend not\nupon height but upon the shapeliness of the leg which the skirt is to\nconceal\u2014or reveal\u2014and the occasion\nfcr which the dress is intended.\n. The sharply-tailored look is definitely out and the well-fitted feminine clothes of the season are more\nattractive than'ever, as well as more\nadaptable to evfery figure grfytp.\nFabric combinations ore a boon\nto poor figures with only one rule\nto follow\u2014use the dull' -fabric to\nconceal bad points and the shiny\nto reveol good points,, Moires will\nput on pounds and dull erepes or\nfine wools will take off inches.\nVelvets ore a  luxurious \"must\"\nthis season, and are available ta a\nvariety of textures suitable for everyone. But those who are plump\nshould avoid shimmering soft types\nof velvet\nThe theme of the new silhouette\nis slender and more feminine than,\nin previous seasons. The majority of\nthe Paris dressmakers still respect\nthe natural figure.\nMake-up Is pinker and lighter and\nmore subtly applied. A natural look\nis the rule for this .Winter ond everyone should hove two, shades of\npowder, the darker being used to\ntone, down bod features.\nBalfi\nour\n, BALFOUR, B. C. \u2014 Visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. M, W. \"Wellwood-is Mrs.\nWellwood's mother,- Mrs. I. Johnsen\nof Vancouver, and her brother, E,\nJohnsen ot Everett, .Wash.,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Oakley have as\nguests J. Oakley Sr. and Mrs. Oakley,', of Vancouver,     a -...-.-\nMr. and Mrs. E. A. MacGuilvrnry\nhave as guests Mrs. MacGuilvrary's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. R. Ban Alstino of Langdon,\nAlta. :\n' Mrs. W, McKay has returned after\nspending the Summer months with\nher son, Sergt McKay of Kelowna.\nAtfeMtot V V UsJttftS\nCHOOSE THIS 8ET\nEnjoy the beauty of lacy touches\non your chairs! All pineapples, this\nset,'easy- to crochet, is rewarding\nneedlework.\nHandiwork,that the whole'family\nwill  praise   and   appreciatel   Pattern 877; crochet directions.\n\u2022 Laura Wheeler's improved' pattern makes needlework sovsimple\n'with Its charts,- photos and concise\ndirections.- - ;.    .     ....,<.\nSen* TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., 266 Boker\nSt, Nelson, B.C Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nGood -news! Send- .twenty-five\ncents more, in coins, for our Laura\nWheeler Ne-'dlecraft Book. 104 Illustrations of your favorite needle\nhobbies. Beginner-easy designs and\nideas worthy of an expert's. atten-\ntloi., Free needlework pattern is\nprinted in the book!  . ,  \"\" .'.,\nGrand Matron   r,,\nVisits District\nO.E.S. Chapters\nMrs. Florence Struthers of West\nVancouver, Grend Matron of the\nGrand Chapter of British Columbia\na-rlved In Nelson Saturday for her\nofficial annual visit of the District\nEastern Star Chapter. Also here\nfrom. Vancouver is George Well-\nwood, Grand Patron.\nMrs, Struthers has already toured\nEast Kootenay and from Nelson\nwill go to Rossland, Trail, Nakusp\nand on through West Kootenay\nthen back to the Coast. From there\nshe wlU proceed North.\nA dinner will be given for Mrs.\nStruthers Monday night while on\nTuesday evening a banquet will be\nheld at the St. Paul's Church. Chapters from throughout the District\nWill attend. :V\nToo Old at 21 ,\nTo Go to School     -\nVANCOUVER,,B.,C\u201e Sept 25-\n(CP) \u2014 Marjorie Hlldebrand, win-\nnor of the Miss P.N.E. title at the\nPacific National Exhibition, believes\nshe is too old at 21 to go back to\nSchooL ,\nMiss, Hlldebrand has decided\nagainst a four - year ' university\ncourse in personnel work as advised by a Special Scholarship Cltn-\nmittee. Instead, she plans to enroll\nta a night school personnel class.\nShe will receive $500 of the $1000\nP.N.E. Scholarship Fund.'\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 - NEL80N, B.C.\nThe House: of Furniture Values\nYour $ $ $ Buy More ot Freeman\nBUY\nON   OUR\nBUDGET   PLAN\n10% DOWN\nTO MONTHS TQ PAY\n..'It\ngives me\nlovelier, washable\nwalls and actually\nIT COSTS ME LESS I\nThat'o tha report from women\nwho hnvo used Monnsenl . , .\nand they're right! Mcmaseal la\ntop quality at lower prices than\nanjr comparable Snlsh. It covers\nmore wall pet can, and dries\nquickly to a smooth, even\nfinish that le washable ... .\nlonger lasting.\nLovely pastel\ntints and new\ndeep colors.\nRead the Classified\u2014It Pays\nDistributors for\nEast and West Kootenay*\nBURNS\nLUMBER e, COAL CO.   -\nPhono 1180\n602 Baker 8t\n'Cake that has >*\u00ab\u00bb\n:ydesen\u00ab ^^tdve^U-\u00bb>,lCfsPta'-\ny*0^h^%\nneot pieces! to^^p^downonth?\nSff^^^^ \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\n^^anat^tangelfo6d,yoa\nq to serve spongeca^ ^g.yety\ndotation, ^f^&throu^\n'       ^ cake, l\u00bb\u00bbfg\u00a3 \"an becut anl ie-\n. ' t CAKE HINTS, RECIPES In\n'  \"ISAM 10 SAKE - YOU'll lOVS Iff\"\n80 piges of wonderful recipes for cakes, frosdngs,\n5ssaies, cookies. Success-making baking hints. Scad\n0^ in coins,' with your name and address, to\nGeneral Foods, Limited,- Cobourg, Ontario.\n4 ij the wowl {ot\nVm* FIKTA CAKl\n::3\u00a7i\nO^fi\nWyyMi\nWM\n\"\\\nTEAM UP the feather-light moistness bf a Swans Down cake\nwith the tropical richness of banana... add billowy whipped\ncream and maraschino cherries ,.. and Lady, you've, got something! But\u2014don't expect the spectacular results you want, with\nany other flour than Swans Down Cake Flour.       . .\nSwans Down makes every woman a better cake miafe... . ;led\nfrom selected wheat by specialists in the making pf cake flour,\nSwans Down is sifted over and over again until unbelievably soft\nand even\/and 27 times as fine as ordinary flour.   .    \"'     >,.'.. .-,\nTlE-fTA, CAK**\ncupi sifted Swam Down Cako\nFlour\ntoaipoon Calumot Baking\n, Powder.\ntoaspoon baking loda\nM   teaspoon salt\nW cup buttor or other shortening      ,.\n114 cops sugar \u2022 ^   '      .\n1   egg and 1 yolk, well beaten\n1    cup mashed bananas '\n*M cup sour milk or buttermilk\n1    toaspoon vanilla *\nSift flour once, measure, add baking powder, soda and salt; sift 3 times.\nCream butter, add sugar gradually; cream until light: Add eggs and beat\nwellf then add bananas and beat again. Add flour, alternately with milk,\ni Ia small amounts; beat smooth after each addition. Add vanilla. Br:'.-, in\n2 deep 9-inch:layet pans which-have been lined on bottoms wi:li p. --r,\nthen greased, Use moderate oven (375\u00b0F.) about 25' minutes. Cool.\nCover one layer with sliced bananas, then with whipped cream to which\nchopped maraschino cherries have been added. Add\nsecond cake layer; top with whipped cream, sliced\nbananas, and sliced maraschino cherries.\nBate a Better Caf\u00ae with\n$wan$Vom\nA Product of General Foodt\nCAKE FLOUR\nTESTED RECIPES ON THE PACKAGE\n Established April 22, 1002\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\niHtbllshed every morning except Sunday by tho\nHBWS PUBLISHING-COMPANY, LIMITED,\n200 Baker Street,, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized on Second Class Mall,\nPost XJHJce Deportment, Ottawa,\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUIlBAtJ OF CIHCULATIONR\nMONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2B,1949\nSchool's Value '\nEducation should never be regarded\n! only from the viewpoint of the earning\npower it enables one to attain. Yet, in\nthis modern world, it cannot be easily\ndisassociated.\nMinister of Labor Humphrey Mitchell, who came up the hard Way himself\nand thus appreciates the value of an\n! education, counsels school children to\nremain nt school as long as possible.\nHe produces figures showing that earning power Increases in proportion, to\nthe amount of education one gets.\nThis doesn't mean all need attend\n'university, Or -seek white-dollar vocations. A large proportion of the Important tasks in this country must bo\ndone with th* hands, or with hands'\n. that can operate ifta.hines. But every-\n| one knows that a good head is a fine\nhelp to hands. .\n\u2022 In this era of high pay and ready\nemployment, there Is a temptation for\nyouths to quit school and get a job; all\ntoo often overlooking that they may be\nscaling down their .future earnings.\nThat Irresistible Urge'\nWe know she shouldn't have done It\n\u2014particularly to a policeman.' But we\nhave a bit of sympathy for that Minneapolis-Woman arrested because she\nkicked a oop. She' saw him stooping to\npick up a pencil, and the opportunity\novercame her. f \u2022\n\u25a0 Most; humans, probably, are possessed of some suppressed desires or\nsome almost irresistible Impulses. And\nthese have to be kept under control,\nelse they can get one Into trouble. For\nmost such urges are such as can lead to\nfoolish actions.   '.,'.',-\n;We often think.the world.would be\na much more amtisihg and; lively place\nIf humans didn't keep themselves under such strict discipline. Some of the\nmost interesting characters we have\nknown have been those who 'list gave\naway \u2014 some all. too frequently \u2014 to\nthese sudden impulses.\nBut witnessing present troubles In\nthe world today, in International, national, community and domestic life,\nperhaps It Is just as,well most humans\ndo discipline themselves. Else all would\n\"be chaos doubly confounded. After all,\npeople can't go around kicking constables on the posterior, even if opportunity and Impulse coincide.\nEngland's Stately Homes.\nThe castles, country homes and\nitately homes of England long have\nbeen famous. The issue now is arising,\nwith Increasing urgency, whether these\nshall be allowed to Ijecome mere historic ruins.\nIncome taxation now is of, such\nheavy incidence in the United Kingdom that fewer and fewer are able financially to maintain these places\". And\nestate taxes are so high that heirs often\nhave too little money left to keep up\nancestral mansions.\nIt is not just that they are, pr have\nbeen, private property, and that it Is\nan Individual loss when the owners\nhaye either to sell them to any'who\nWill btty or allow them to deteriorate.\nMany of them, and their contents, ar?\nnational treasures. They are part of\nEngland, Scotland or Wales. To have\nthem crumble; oyer a period df years,\ninto ruins would he a national loss.\nThe tabor Government '.becoming\nmore and more, cognizant of this problem. It has appointed a special Treasury Committee to consider how these\ncastles or fine homes, with their often\npriceless contents, can be saved for the\nnation. They have been part of Britain's greatness and prestige at the1\npast. To let them fall Into decay would\nbe evidence of decline,\n\"The stately homes of Englandl\nHow beautiful they* stand,\nAmid their tall ancestral trees,    i\nO'er'all the pleasant-land!\" '\u25a0\u25a0\nIn a larger sense, they are not just\nthe: heritage of Britain, Ihelr historical\nsignificance and architecture pre world\ntreasures also,    :. :\n?Questiotis?\n,   SkyJiifeh'\nTho attempt of the United States Navy e\nfew days ago to fire a rocket'100 miles into the\nolr was adjudged a failure when a breakdown\nin fuel supply stopped 11* progress, at a mere\n33-mllo altitude; But previous efforts had been\nmore successful\u2014two years' ago a rocket\nreached a height of H* mlljn and a \"piggyback\" missile has. been projected 260 miles\nfrom the earth's surface. There Is no reason to\ndoiibt that future experiments will achieve\neven more spectacular, performances. The most\nrecent rocket, which weighs some 8800 pounds\n.and has a length of 40 feet, was reported as\nhaving attained \"a relatively low maximum\nspeed of 1775 miles an hour.\" .This, to tho layman, would seem quite fast enough, and such\nspeeds, coupled with atomic or other high explosive warheads, appear to promise an Interesting time for civilian populations In the\nevent of another war.\nTke Automobile A&e\nThe automobile ago has brought many\nproblems for the town and city planner. An\nautomobile needs a garage, smooth-paved\nhighways, gas stations and parking space. The\nnumber of people who' own automobiles in\nthis country end the United States\/admittedly\nhigher than anywhere else lh the World, runs\ninto millions. In some areas, for instance, Los\nAngeles, tho ratio is ns high at one car to\nevery two persons. ,''-\nConsider tho price we pay for this conveyance. Recently the City of Toronto announced a master plan estimated to cost $170,-\n000,000 for new highways, .bridges, etc., fli\nmade necessary by the increasing number of-\nautomobile users, estimated to double their\nnumber In the next 10 years.\nYear round, more lend IS being levelled\nfor highways end cities ore moving buildings\nto make room for parking space. The gas stations are fast becoming as numerous as the\ncorner: drug stores.\n\u25a0 Yes, sir, we've come a long way since the\nStanley Steamer days. Will there ever be a\nsaturation point? Someone will undoubtedly\nthink of a new method of transportation before\nthat situation arrives.\u2014Niagara Falte Review.\nPress Comment\nPOS8IBLE SENTENCE ,\nIt took an astute Vermont judge to handle\nthe situation in novel but sensible fashion\nwhen a man was beforo him on a charge Of\nnon-support of his wife and two children, Instead of giving the defendant 00 days in Jail,\nBurlington Judge Bernard LIsman made it a\nsentence of 90 nights in jail. It was reasoned,-\nand rightly so, that the men should work in\nthe daytime to support his family, instead of\nhaving them placed upon 'ho public rolls.\nThen after work he Will have to return to the\njail and stay there until breakfast Maybe that\njudge has not all the wisdom of a Solomon, but\nthere is some common sense In the idea. Most\nappreciations of our freedom consist of our\nnights out. Thus the decision does come under\nthe heading of \"posslbilitjei't:\u2014Brandon Sun,\nOpon ta any reader. Names at parsons\naiklna questions Will not be published.\nThoro Is no o'lnroo for this service. Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except Where there is obvious necessity for privacy.\nR. W., Marysville\u2014Our garden is full of slugs\nthis year. How can wo get rid of these!\nTry' spreading soot on top  of the soil\naround the plants; U that is not effective, get\nany brand of slug-killer from a hardware\nstore..\" i '-'\"'.-   '\u25a0 \u25a0\nMusical, Trail\u2014When, and where, was Stephen\nFoster; bornt   \u2022.''''       ,\nPittsburgh, Pa., July 4,1020.\nPlayer, Trail\u2014When did the game of curling\n.   become popular? \u2022\n'   to woo..: ..'':..-'\u25a0\u25a0 :-    >\nKatie J., Nelson\u2014Is it truo that sound travels\ni faster in Warm weather than in cold?\n' ,,\u2022***\u00bb\u2022,'.:.'. ;-..\" .       -V\"'\nT. F\u201e Nelson\u2014Where Is' Sir. Thomas Beecham\nliving-at present?\n.;'   Wo understand that Sir Thomas Beecham\nhas been In New York for some time.\nDoubtful; Nolson\u2014Was a woman ever nominated for President of the United States?\nIt so, who was she, and whit .Party nominated hor?    _ -\n, Mrs, Victoria Woodhull was nominated in\n167. by the Sauol Sights Party.' ....''\"\nK 0\u201e Creston\u2014To settle an argument, is Benjamin Britten English or American? ,\nEnglish, born in Lowestoft, Suffolk,   ,\nLooking Backwards\n10 YIARS AOO\n' Prom The Daily News of Sept, 26,1080\nInter-Houso athletics at tho Nelson Senior\nHigh School swing into notion on tho Junior\nHigh School grounds tonight, with the opening games of aix-game Schedules ta boys' and\ngirls' divisions. The boys will play soccer\nwhile the'girls play softball.\n\/ Search falling at 144 feet depth, the Blue-\nstono vo'n of the Reno Gold Mine, Sheep\nCreek -District, B. C, was revealed' by diamond drilling, SO feet from where lt was ox\npeoted. ' ,,-s\nMrs. A. Whitehead, Hendryx Street, has\nreturned from a few days' visit ta Spokane,\n28 YEARS AOO\nPftim The Dally News of 8ept, 26,1024\nMrs. Hugh Ross.-Sllica Street, has been In\nNakusp for the past week acting as judge of\nthe fair.. .\nHunters may shoot 20 ducks of all kinds In\nont day, and not moro than ISO of all kinds in\na season in British Columbia this year.\n40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom the Dally News of 8ept. 20,1000\nThe Silver King Mine will reaumo shipping on or about pot. I, is the gratifying announcement made by R. S. -Jennie, local representative of the Kootenay Development Syndicate, the Company which Is'.at present operatingthe property, ,' ., .,\n: R, W; Brock, Director of Geologic Surveys\nfor Canada, la ta Nelson looking over the field\nhere. He is Just returning from a trip through\nthe mining districts of the Coast, and also of\nthe North, His principal object in coming, here\nwas to meet W. H. Boyd and Osmondo E. Le-\nroy, who are preparing a mineral map of the\nSlocan for the Dominion Government.\nYburHoroscope\nTake advantage of every opportunity on\nthis anniversary. Some success seems headed\nyour way; during your next year. Make the\nmost ot it. Today's child should develop.lnto a\nproud, Intellectual and ambitious Individual,\nIt's Been Said  T\nHealth-isthe greatest of sit' possessions; a\npole cobbler Is better than a Sick king,\u2014Isaac\nBlokerstBtt.'\nPLOWS IN BRITAIN\nIrish Inventor and manufacturer of tractors Harry Ferguson believes Britain can produce almost enough food for.herself, by modern cultivation methods and ploying 27,000,000\nacres now idle-Being a good salesman, naturally he would have this done by Ferguson tractors. ;. \u25a0\u25a0 - _\u201e   -\nMr. Ferguson wants to make Britain prosperous by plowing her up. He's different from\nmany Irishmen who would be happy to have\nBritain plowed under.\u2014Windsor Dally Star.\nIt Happened Today\n1768\u2014Gen. Thomas.Gage arrived\nIn Boston with a force of British\nregulars. 1818\u2014Battie of Meuse-\nArgonne begun in World War I.\nCLAIMS POLITICS\nDO NOT BOTHER\nGERMAN STUDENTS\nVANCOUVER, Sept SB (CF) \u2014\nGerman Students don't know, what\nis going to happen to their country\nSO they Just ','dOn't bother\": about\npolitics, a delegate to the Interna-,\ntiorial \u2022 Student Service Seminar in\nEurope Said oft.hef return this week.\n'.Miss Margaret Low-Beer, a University of British Columbia senior,\ndescribed the trip as a \"wonderful\nexperience\" and said it '\"gave-the\ndelegates a better perspective of the\ncountries we visited.\"  - .\nHEADS HOTELMEN\nVANCdUVER, Se.iL. 25 (OP)-A.\nH. Harrison of Vancouver was -fleet-'\ned President of the British Coluiiibia\nHotels' Association at the group's\nthree-day convention Which wound\nup .here last night\n- The Association passed a resolution urging speed in completion of\nthe Trans-Canada Highway, A copy\noi thS resolution will be Sent to the\nProv-ncia*. Government\nPHONE 144 POR CLASSIFIED\nArk, Bullf loLfftl Six Months, Had\nRomantic 50 Years as City Landmark\nBy R. Q. JOY, Historian\nNelson and District (.lii Timers',\nAssociation '\nThi) condemnng of the Ark oh the\ncorner of Josephine and Vernon\nStreet by the powers that bt and\nthe ultimate dismembering ot its\ntimbers bed been called to my attention. ' \"\"   \u25a0-,'\u25a0\n\"Write a story, R.G.,\" an oldtimer\nMtaV\nSomewhere in the News is a story\nI wrote years ago, However, here\ngoes; end lt those timbers-could\ntalk, they wotild say:\n\"Bob Yulll felled me when I was\na tree, tall and straight, without a\nknot In my butt for over 30 feet\nand sold for $10 per thousand,'.' ,\nThose trees were cut at Buchanan's sawmill at 13-mlle, or On the\nbanks of Cottonwood end Give-opt\nCreeks by John Bell's henchmen,\nOscar Johnson, Tom Berry, Joe Dumont, who is now 02 and at Mount\nSt. Francis.\nOld Man Crow waa tha teamster,\nand John Bell, later Alderman of\nour city, was boss, George Naden,\nJohn- Bell's partner, was: the tallyman, later manager fbr Mr. Beloy\nat Greenwood as financial. agent\nand who wound up as Deputy. Minister ot Lands and Works under the\nJohn Oliver Government\nRobert E, Lemon (Bob Lemon)\nwas responsible tor the building of\nthe Ark. He was ah ex-school teacher from Kentucky. ,\nSome 40 years ago I met an English sailor who has sailed the globe\nand eventually entered the United\nStates. It was during the construction of the Great Northern Railway\nSouth of tho border. He met Bob\nLemon, Who working in the commissariat department THIS was in\nthe 60s. Sob and the sailor used ti\nClash. Both wero ambitious, Result\ntho sailor retained his position and\nBob deported fbr Canada,'\nBob Yuill in his story tells of\nbringing Lemon's groceries ta row\nboats down the Columbia In 1800 to\nSproat'3 Landing, Bob Lemon built\nand opened a store at Sproet's, and\nalso had one ta Nelson, during the\nconstruction of the Columbia and\nKootenay Railway.'\n\u25a0 Tom Collins mentions that Lemon btiilta log house behind site of\nSmedley's garage, when, the cabin\nwas completed, a partnership was\nentered itno by Lemon and Hume.\nPIRIT MERCHANT*\nDenny and Devlno, wero first pioneer merchants of Nelson. Their\nbuilding-was built of shakes West\nof the C.P.B. yards near where the\nsteamers Kokanee and NelSon and\nthe Moyle were'bullt. If was afterwords moved td the site of the'\nProvincial Courthouse,\nThe partnership between Lemon\nand Hume was dissolved: One of\nHume's clerks was sent to Lemon's store to borrow a keg of nails.\nLemon had plenty, but he would\nnot let htm havet hem. The clerk\nWas Fred Irvine,\nWhen the railroad was finished,\namong whom was the late Frank\nLemon celebrated the event by calling In some qf the track workers,\nArcure. Lemon confined his energies to his Nelson store, which in\nlater years was called the Ark;\nThe Ark was built and out nails\nthat came from England via the\nold steamship Beaver around Cape\nHern were used In It, oonstruo-\ntlon. It was designed to last only\nsix months In Nelson's boom days.\nActually It .lasted over 60 years.\nWe can surmise It was built\naround 1891. R. E. Lemon was going strong In \"1093. It has been\nsaid that In a period of 12 months,\nhe   did   n   business   of   $100,000,\nmost of It In liquor.\nMr.   Seeiy  was  R.  E.  Lomon's\nbookkeeper   and   clerk.   Hi   later\nyears, he was Nelson's, first city\ntreasurer. Paddy Sheran was. cellar\nman. Mr. Brown was tinsmith and\nplumber. Billy Ward was clerk and\nteamster. He was at tho celebration\nof the opening of the first electric\nlight plant in Nelson situated at the\ncorner of Hell and Trbnt Streets\nwith a case of champagne.\n- There was a space between tbe\nmain Ark building and some enterprising individual closed lt, and put\nin a Window and dodr in front and\nopened up a small -peanut stand,\nfruits, etc, This did hot continue as\nsuch, ahd later E. Murphy and Sons\nopened lt for the sale of wallpaper\nand paints. When they vacated Ji\nHolmes put ta a motley collection\nof beds and wallpaper.\nchurch's First service\n. The first Church of England\nservice was held at the Ark building In the early 00s during its construction. The seats, some say, were\nkegs of nails, Thereon were placed\nplanks. Others say that the kegs of\nnails wero Interspersed with kegs\nof Whisky.        .\nLemon gave up his business and\nbecame a mining broker for a time.\nThen the' Government appointed\nhim to succeed Capt Fitzstubbs, an\nold Hudson's Bay factor, who spoke\nall the Indian languages of B.C.\nWhenever there was trouble with,\nthem, he- was sent to render\njustice-\nLemon sold his building to the\nTurner Veeton Company of Victoria.\nThe late H> M, Thompson was the\nManager, During, tho First Great\nWar Mr. Thompson was food controller for Canada,\nThe late Copt J. C. Carruthers\nvies the travelling salesmen; Percy\nCrlddle was the accountant Time\nWent' on arid they vacated the\npremises which was empty for some\ntime..   ,       \u25a0\".*'.\u25a0\u25a0\nThen J, Holmes commenced a secondhand store ahd named it the\nArk. W. H, Jones, job printer,\nsuggested the.heme,.It was a lucky\none for Mr. Holmes, for he retired\nwith a good monetary reward for\nhis efforts, ,\\,\nI was Joe's assistant and confidential clerk for nearly, nine years\nand found that the Ark Was most\nInteresting. It was while opening an\nold trunk I found 18-copies Af St.\nHarb't history, I. have only one\nnow ta my possession, giving the\nbalance to people interested In\nNelson history.\nTho second hand and new goads\nthe Ark hod for.sole ranged from a\nneedle to oh sea anchor. We also\nhad ah optical department There\nwere no frills, and .customers were\ntold the lenses were only for reading, We had customers for glasses\nfrom all walks of life. Sometimes a\nbusiness man would forget his ahd\nhis home was too far away, so to\nthe,Ark he went-and he was more\nthan satisfied.\nFears Cat Started\nFire That Took\nLife of Son\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Sept. 39\n(CP).\u2014Amid sobs and breakdowns,\nMrs.: Malcolm McLeod said .today\nthe family cat may have caused a\nfire which claimed her year-old son,\nDonald, and demolished their Salmon Valley home Wednesday.\nthe kitchen fire was low, she said,\nand the cat may have pushed a b)t\nof paper against the stovepipe, setting it afire. Mrs. McLeod said the\nkitchen was an inferno when she\nrsn into -the bouse after Donald\nscreamed\".\n\"I threw a tent over my head and\ntried to enter, but I -couldn't get\nthrough thoSe flames,\"\nSBr.husband was working at a\ntwo miles away,\n\"Thero was nobody around to do\nany -good,\" she told police,    i\nGov't Plans Forest\nExperimental Area\nOTTAWA, Sept. SS- (CP) \u2014 Re.\nsources Minister Gibson today gave\nnotice the Government is going to\nestablish a national forest or a forest\nexperimental area.\nMr. Gibson placed on the Commons order paper a resolution prior\nto introduction of a Sill which\nwould allow the Government also to\nestablish and maintain forest research laboratories, to assist the\nProvinces or owners of forests, and\nto enter lntfr agreements respecting\nthe protection ahd development of\nforest lands.'   '.'\"\u2022'\"\nIn early Rome the \"evil eye\" was\nSo well- recognized that special laws\nwere enacted against injiiry to crops\nby fascination.\nNoronic Captain\nA Htle-tctlng member of the Communist civil mllltla (left)\nstands erect end expressionless as two Czech youngsters and their\nmother elap their hands to their mouths In despair os their father\ndfid five Other \"revclutlonarlcs\" ore sentenced td die Iri Prague,\nCzechoslovakia. TKIs photo was made shortly after the Communist-\ndominated country Had announced the suppression gf.o revolt against\nthe government\u2014Central Press Canadian,\n Taylor, master ot the .flre.swept Noronic, that\nburned In the Toronto Harbor, Is shown ns ho talked with police\n' officers. The 65-year-old mariner said he had Just boarded the.ship,\nafter visiting some friends on shore, when the fire broke out. Picture\nwas mode on the pier soon after ths captain left the.burning ship\nafter he rescued many passengers from death,\u2014(AP Wlrephoto).\nRealizes Dream\nIn Sailing to-L A.\nFrom Honolulu\n; VICTORIA, Sept. S5 (CPJ-A two-\nyear-old dream to return from Honolulu tb Los Angeles via Alaska and\nB. C. has been realized by Ed.Fabian, owner and master of the 40-foot\nketch Resolute who sailed from Victoria today on the. last leg of an\n8000-mile trans-Pacific voyage.\nTyro years ago Mr. Fabian soiled\nthe Resolute in the California-\nHawaii race and .discovered that\nonly a little more sailing would take\nhim to Alaska before he reached\nhome. He believes he is the first in\n80 years-to make this trip aboard a\nsailing craft ;\nComing third In his class in the\n1047 race, Mr. Fabian did not make\nout as well this time..coming in\n18th .,:.. but this did not lessen his\nenthusiasm about deep-water sailing,\nBefore leaving Victoria today,\nhaving made the long voyage from\nSan Pedro to Honolulu, Alaska and\nVictoria, he reported that it takes\njust about one third longer, to go\nthat way and that the voyage has\nths added attraction of sailing down\nthe'B..C. Coast- ,   -\nMr. Fsblen said the Resolute hod\nenjoyed good weather moot of the\nvoyage. Equipped with nn engine\nwhich gives him a Speed of four\nknots, he estimated he hod been\nable to usoiaall about 60 per cent\nof thi time during his trip down\nthis coast.\nHis ketch is gaH-rlgged at the\nmainmast and has mnrconl rig at\nthe mlzseri. :\nAccompanying Mr. Fabian on the\nreturn voyage from Hawaii are Bob\nSwelnhart, Los Angeles; Celia Darlington, Associate Editor of the-Los\nAngeles \"Sea Magazine,\" and Dorothy Neal of Mexico City.      .\nPHONE 144 POR CLA88IFIED\nFIRST ORIENTAL\nSTEWARDESS\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 28 (qP)-JBt*\ninaugural flight of the Canadian\nPacific Air. Line's Hong Kong service was completed when the\nCanadoir Four Empress of Auklahd\ntouched down at Vancouver Inter-\nnotional ;Airport,\nOut-of the gleaming silver ship\nStepped the first Oriental stewardess\nto Work on any Canadian air line. -\nShe is petite, 80-year-old Dulclo\nHall of Hong Kong, the first of four\nChinese girls who will bo used by\nC. P. A. On rUtts.\n'Gms&wfo's\nAAA   tt\\\\tttts% ' u_*j-_n_C\ninrUmrWan\nBlACKlABUMlf\nThis advertisement is hot published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by -th\u00ab\nGovernment of British Columbia.\n1\nTurn It Into\n\u25a0$. CASH i|lf\nWinter sports will be starting soon\n\u2014there will be lots of buyers of\nskates, skis, curling rocks, etc.\nIf you have such equipment and\nwant to sell it, now is the time to\nadvertise them for sole. If you want\nsuch equipment advertising in the\nClassifieds will find a Seller for you\ntoo!\nBuy or SeU\n'   With a\"    ,-\nClassified Ad\nPHONE 144\n*\"   '  -\n \u25a0u-tf\niorgeous George Finished Kallio\nh Fifth, In FigHf Card Here;\n.ocal Scrappers Please Good Crowd\nWhen Almo Kolllo, *fTh* Flying\nInn,\" took his second foil of the\nrenins at the hands of \"Gorgeous\nieorge\" Pavich at the five-minute\nid 17-second mark of the fifth\njund of their scheduled, six-round\nout in the Civic Centre Arena\nhuredoy night,. Pavich was pro-\nliimed. \"the winnahl\" Nearly 1000\ntW. the match. . \u2022 ,\nSplendid .ringmahship. ond show-\nmnihlp were shown'by the -Fin-\nmder and the Montr6aler.\n\u25a0There was action-'throughout the\nihgth of the bout):\" which* ran for\niur and a half of jits six 10-minute\npunds.       '***-,'   '\/\u25a0\niThe boys really got down to bross\ncks In the first round. At 6:98, Fo-\nch threw, Kolllo for the first foil\n5 the bout. Howeverv thi? did not\nlake the Finn much. He came back\nthe second round to hold Pavich\n'the canvas for the count, thus\nrenlng the score at the 9:38 mark,\nwas not until the fifth round that\nItorgeous\" finally retaliated, to win\nio bout. '.\" .-\nPavich, at 240 pounds, and Kallio\n; 225 pounds handled themselves\n1th the agility of many people half\nteir weight\nThis wos a tight with \"no holds\nMred\", That is so long as the ref-\nree wasn't looking. The \"Flying\nInn.\" seemed to have trouble under-\nlanding Referee Bruce Clark of\nelson, when he was told that he\n'as to hit only with the flat of his\nand, not with the clenched fist. As\n)on ss the ref turned, his bock for\nmoment, Kolllo would smock Patch with his clenched fist\nOMECOMEDY\nAt the beginning   of   the  third\nmnd Pavich threatened to use the\nme treatment, and a humorous\nintomime ensued.\nPavich may. continue'. in Nelson\nr some time, but  Kallio leaves\nonday to compete in a bout ar-\nnged for him at Portland on Wed-\nisday. . ,'..\nJCAL8 8TEAL SHOW ..',-..'.\nThe show was almost stolen once\naln by the same two fellows who\n>le the cord in their bout here in\n47, during Nelson's Golden Jubl-\ns 'week. \/\nBob, \"Red Robert\" Groham, pow\ntendingJU.B.C. at Vancbuver, end\n>b, \"Bkmdle\" Smith of. Nelson\n,d the crowd roaring in their dis-\nay of catch-as-catch-can wrest-\nig. It looked ss though this bout\nas for the purpose of letting ony-\nGuess wAv's\nmfmnw\/fh\nsHACfdABSlsWMt\none wishing to'participate, to do so.\nThe struggle involved the wrest;\nlers* seconds, tho referee, and the\ntwo contestants. Incidentally, Bruce\nClark who trained the Nelson lads,\nwas- no slouch st handling himself\nwhen both boys started in on him.\nREVENGE FOR GRAHAM\nMany times during the .bout the\ntwo lads were rolling around on the\nfloor of the arena, both having fallen\nout of the ring, but they continued\nthe'fight Just the same. -\nIt was oil decided at the 30-sccond\nmark of the fifth five-minute round.\nGraham -mode Smith take the only\nfall of the bout to win revenge, over\nhis defeat at the hands, arms, legs\nand feet of Smith, two years ago.\nSteve Cameron of Nelson was\nlauded tor his port in arranging the\nsnappy preliminary boxing card. Be\nworked long and hard over his boys,\nJoe Posnlkoff, Dean Mclnnes, Harry\nMason and Blllie Jackman,\nThe 138-pound Jackman lived up\nto expectations and had Garth Aldrich of Creston, 138 pounds, literally hanging on the ropes at the end\nof the bout Jackman won a unanimous decision.\nAldrich was outclassed oil the way\nand, although he\/tried several des-\npnroto rallies, Jackman kept hammering down his resistance.\nThe opening bout of tho evening,\nbetween Joe Posnlkoff and Peon,\n\"Cut'ch'1 Mclnnes, both of Nelson,\nwas a little slower, but it provided\nits thrills. The boys showed a good\nknowledge of boxing although there\nwas much close in-fighting ond\nsome clinching.\nThere was option aplenty in the\nthird round when Mclnnes knocked\nPosnlkoff to the-floor twice, but Joe\nwos up both times before the referee started to count The'decision\nwas given to Mclnnes, but lt was\nnip and tuck. \u2022,\nDRAW\nOldest of three fighting brothers,\nHorry Mosoii of Nelson, and Jimmy\nAldrich of Creston fought to s drow\nin their bout Jimmy is the younger\nbrother bf Gerthf\nThere wos some wild slugging, hut\nboth boys looked good, ond otter a\nbit moro training should shape up\nnicely. They displayed some exceptionally good footwork, At the end\nof the second round Mason looked\nin fairly bad shape,-but he come out\nslugging in the third round. .,\n. The large crowd gave all the boys\na good hand.\nThe cord wos arranged by the Canadian Legion in \"order to rolse\nfunds for Nelson District War Memorial. '.   \u25a0\nOfficials were;\nReferee for the boxing\u2014Joe Holland of Nelson: judges\u2014Murdo Morrison of Trail; Guy Taron, welterweight champion of the Kootenay,\nof Trail; and Charles \"Wag\" Rushby\nof Nelson; timekeepers\u2014E, C. Col-\nUnson ond T. R, Wilson of Nelson.\nReferee for the wrestling\u2014Bruce\nClark; Frank Russell was announcer.\nhis advertisement is not pub-\nshed or displayed by the Li-\nuor Control Board or by the\novernment of British Co-\nimbla.\naT\"S Bosox Tie Yanks With 4-1 Win\n.  By The Aiioolatod Press\nAMERICAN LEAGUE .\nTeom W L   Pot GB TB\nNew York 93  65  .628 8\nBoston ......93   55   .628 6\nRemaining schedules:\nNew York\u2014home (8)\u2014Boston 3,\nPhiladelphia 8. Awoy-(O),\nBoston\u2014Home  (0). Away  (6)\u2014\nNew York 3, Washington 3, -\nNATIONAL LEAGUE   .\nTeam \u2022 \" W  L Pot GB TP\nSt. Louis  '. 94   54   .038   .    - 5\nBrooklyn .., 94  38  ,827   hi    i\nRemolning schedules:\nSt Louis\u2014home (0). Away (5)\u2014\nChicago 3, Pittsburgh 2..,\u25a0'' \u2022 , ..'. \u25a0'\nBrooklyn\u2014iionie (0); Away ,.(4):-^\nPhiladelphia 2, Boston 2.\nBall Standings\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nSt Louis 95   64\nBrooklyn 94   68\nPhiladelphia ............79  72\nBoston .; 73  77\nNew York 73   78\nPittsburgh: ..87  82\nCincinnati 60  90\nChicago 59  91\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nN\u00ab*W York   .'. 93   65\nBoston' ...93   83\nDetroit .................87   64\nCleveland  83  85\nPhiladelphia 79  70\nChicago .........62   86\nSt, Louis -'..: 81 100\nWashington  ..48 101\n688\n627 IV.\n523 17\n487. 22*.\n483 23\n450 28\n400 35\n893 ifihi\nm . .\n576\n561\nIhi\n10\n630 14%\n.419 31\n336 43V.\n822 45%\nBalling Leaders\nPlayer and Club G AB R H Pet\nWilliams, R. Sx. 140 548 147 191 .349\nRobinson, Dgs. 152 581 122 199 ,343\nKell Tigers 131 514 97 176 ,342\nSlaughter, Cotd. 148 544 91184 ,338\nMusial, Card. 152 580 124 100,337\nMitchell, Inds, 142 613 76 193 .315\nDillinger, Bns.   134 830   67 167.315\nHome runs: National\u2014Kiner, Pirates, 53. American\u2014Williams; Red\nSox, 43.\nRuns batted in: National\u2014kiner,\nPirates, 125. Artierlcan'-Wllllams,\n\"Red Sox, 158.\nHamilton faces\n9-Year-Old Jinx\nIn Boxla Series\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 23 (CP)-H\nHamilton Tlgere era to successfully\ndefend-their Mann Cup Lacrosse\ntitle here next week oginst the rampaging Burrard Blue Bombers- of\nof Vancouver, they will have, to\novercome o nine-year-old jinx.\nNo Eastern hoxls squad has been\nable to win n aeries In the West since\no scrappy St Catharines, Ont,\ndefinitely because of an injury to\n1914 for the coveted mug.\n. Monday will be the opening game\nin the five-game series at Vancouver\nforum. Second game goes ot Queens\nPork arena, New Westminister, on\nWednesday,\nBy STEVE ROBERTSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBoston Red Sox climbed Into a\ntie with New York Yankees-for\nthe American League lead Sunday. The 8ox defeated the Yanko\n4-1 for their' second straight victory. Each teom hot only six\ngomes left,\nIn   the   National    League   St.\nLouis   Cardinals  stretched  their\n'\u25a0 'lead to V\/a gomes over Brooklyn\nDodgers. While tho Cords wore\nbeating   Chicago   Oubi   6-1,  tho\nDodgers suffered a heavy blow as\nthey- lost 5-3 to tho Philadelphia\nPhillies. And St, Louis hove five\ngames left, the Dodgers only four.\nAt Boston Sunday, Lefty ParneU's\n25th pitching triumph and Ted Williams'   43rd   homer   detested   the\nYanks, who hod topped the league\nall season The Red Sox closed out\ntheir home season with their 21st\nstraight success. They hod been 12\ngomes behind the Yonks on the\nJuly 4 mid-season date.\nIt was a gaudy four-hit sparkler\nthat Parnell threw at the desperate\nYonks before a crowd of 35,517 at\nFenway Park. Allio Reynolds on\nthe Yankee mound, without Joe\nPage this time, esooped early disaster td keep it close until Williams\nsmashed'n 400-foot homer into the\nright-field seats with Johnny Pesky\non first tin the seventh inning.\nSHUT-OUT\nOn Saturday Boston's nee Ellis\nKinder pitched a six-hit shut-out in\nthe Sox victory by 3-0 over Stan\nLopat. The only other Saturday\nAmerican gome was on 8-5 win for\nDetroit Tigers over Cleveland Indians.\nSunday!tho Indians beat Detroit\n7-1 as Bob Lemon hurled his 21st\nvictory. Lemon fanned 11 Tigers'in\nthe final home stand at Cleveland.\nArt Homlteman, Virgil Trucks and\nU.S. Football\nBy The Canadian Prats'\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nChicago Bears 17, Green Bay\nPackers 0,\nPittsburgh Steelers 28, New, York\nGionts7.   \u25a0-\u2022\u25a0;\u25a0-\u25a0:\nALL-AMERICA CONFERENCE\nBuffalo Bills 28,  San  Francisco\n49'ersl7.     ',    '\nCleveland Browns 23, Baltimore\nColts 20.\nCOLLEGE FOOTBALL\nFar Welt\",\nSouthern Californio 42, Navy 20. '\nCalifornia 29, St, Mary's (Calif,) 7.\nStanford 44, Harvard 0. .-..-'\nColorado 13, Kansas 12,\nWashington  State-13, Montana\nStatel   ->--'\u2022 -.-,\u25a0..-\u25a0\u25a0.'\t\nWhitmon 6, University of British\nColumbia 0.\nOregon State 27, Utah 7.\n> Arizona 40, New Mexico A. and M.\n1.       ,.\"V''. . - ,\u25a0'-'\nWyoming 41, New Mexico 14,\nOregon 41, Idaho 0.\nColorado A. ond M. 14, Denver 13.\nKing No Longer\nLightweight Champ\nTORONTO, Sept 26 (CP)1\u2014Fred\nSteel, President of the Canadian\nBoxing Federation, announced today that Arthur King ot Toronto is\nno longer Canadian lightweight\nchampion., - \u2022\n\"We gave him until Sept 20 to\neither defend his title or agree to\ndefend it\" sold Steel, \"but he didn't\neven hove the courtesy to answer.\"\nKing has been fighting tor some\nmonths under Manager Blinkey\nPalermo of Philadelphia.\nRossland Hunter\nPays Fine for\nPossession of Willow\nVICTORIA, Sept 25-(CP)-Seven\nhunters charged with contravening\nprovisions of the game Oct pleaded\nguilty in two provincial police courts\nFriday,\nCourts were held ot Victoria and\nSidney ond complaints were tiled\nby game wardens Joseph Jones and\nRobert Sinclair. ;::\nThomas Eccles, Rossland, B.C., was\nfined $25 ond costs for illegal possessions of t willow grouse, while.\nThomas Goodmamon, (20 Gorge\nRood\/East) paid a fine'af if..0.oncosts -for; that offence.   *','\u25a0\u2022>';\nTed Grey all foiled to item the\nCleveland tide.\nPhiladelphia beat Washington 8-5\nin the first gamo Sunday but Dick\nWalk's two-hit pitching gave Washington a 4-0 shutout in the eea>-\ngame, out to seven innings by darkness. -\u25a0\u25a0\n10OTH L088\nThe St. Louis Browns suffered\ntheir 100th defeat in dropping p 7-5\ndecision to Chicago White Sox, but\nthe Browns came back to 'win the\nsecond, game 6-2. That was stopped\not six innings by darkness,\nIn Notional League gomes Sunday the Phillies came from bo-\nhind to jolt tho pennant hopes ot\nthe Dodgers. Tho Phils staged a\nfour-run uprising In the eighth\nInning that Andy Semlnlok topped with o two-run homer, his\n23rd of the seoton. the score wos\ntied 3-8 In'the eighth and Dlok\n8l\u00ab|or woi on bate When Semlnlok struck hit mighty blow off\nJack Banta to make It 6-3. There\ntho score remained as Reliefer\nRuss Meyer throttled the Broffks\nwith a single bit In tho lost three\nfromei.\nIt was a double blow tor the\nDodgers. Ralph Branca, after seven\nbrilliant innings on the hill, broke\na blister oh his pitching hand and\nwas relieved by the luckless Bonto.\nBanta pitched to five men, including Seminick, and four of them\nscored,   ' :.\nHarry Brecheen Kit safely four\ntimes, driving in three runs, and\nheld Chicago to six hits as the\nCards beat the Cubs Sunday. The\nonly Chicago run was a homer by\nBill Serena. Three singles gave the\nCards a lead in the first inning. In\nthe second Marty Marlon walked\nand Del Rice and Tommy GJaviono\neach singled. Brecheen came up\nand singled sharply! for two runs.\nThat was all for Johnny Schmitz.\nSt. Louis added, another run in the\n53rd Homer\n.     .     RALPH  KINER\n\u2014Central Press Canadleh\nRalph Kiner hit his 63rd home\nrun Sunday as Pittsburgh Pirates\nbeat Cincinnati Reds, 7-3 and 8-3.\nsecond and Brecheen batted in the\nfifth tally ' in the third. Bilko\ndoubled home Red Schoendienst for\nthe final run In the fourth.\nAt Cincinnati Ralph Kiner eon1\nnected for his :63rd homo run of\nthe season a> the Pirates beat the\nRedo twloo, 7-3 and 6-3. Klner's\n.-; homer was In the first gome.\nThe New York Giants got within\nhalf'a \"gome of the fourth-place\nBoston Braves, beating the Braves\n3-2 and 5-2. The second game was\n:.. cut to six innings by darkness,\nIn Saturday National League\ngames Pittsburgh shaded Cincinnati\n6-5 and Boston beat the Giants 8-4.\nCoast Rider\nTo Qui. Bikes\nAfter Empire Games\nVancouver, Sept. 25 (dp)\u2014Bicycle rider Johnny Mlllman, who has\nWon three Canadian championships\nin the current competition, says he is\n''sick end tired of bikes,\" and will\n\"quit riding after the British-Empire\ngames next .year.\"\n, The lB-yeer-old Vancouver rider\ntold reporters\" tho gomes hove been\nmy aim all along. After that you con\nhave it. I have lost o week of school\nnow and will lose almost another\nyear when I go to New Zealand.\"\nUPSET CLIMAXES\nCOAST.RACING WINDUP\nVANCOUVER, Sept, 26 (CP) -\nAbout 15,000 racing fans jammed\nExhibition Pork hero today for the\nwindup of 70 doys ot racing to\nWatch a Vancouver-owned three-\nyear-old . pull one of \u25a0 the most\ndramatic upsets of the season.\n', Ab, Jr., ridden by Kenny Copper-\ntnojf itBAie doj otn o) poiuwds .'mm\nthe gate.in the featured $1500 Al-\nberni Handicap, hit- the stretch\nthree lengths ahead o'f the field and\nheld on gamely to the wire to beat\nthe fast-closing His Brother by a\nnose. ,      -\nBarbour Wins Appleyard-Lowe\nCup; Women's Games Unfinished\nMurray Barbour defeated T. R.\nWilson to win the Appleyard-Lowe\nGolf Trophy and the club championship In. the final round of ploy in\nthe championship flight. The game\nwas ployed at the .Nelson Golf ond\nCountry Club Sunday, Murray beat\nT. R. Wilson on the. 18th hole, Lost\nyear's winner of the trophy was A.\nH. Allan,\nIri the first flight final .J. E.\nYoung defeated R. L. McBride.\nThe championship flight consolation gome, between L, M. McBrlde\nond Doug Campbell still hits tp be\nployed,: end they will meet jpme\ntime during* the next week. Leo\nAtwell and. Herb Kline,will meet\nto decide the winner of the consolation, game for the first flight also\nduring: the jiext week. ,\nWinner In the championship flight\nof the women's Ruth Armstrong\nTrophy has not been decided. Miss\nJessie Gentles and Mrs. L. S. Bradley will tee off for this decided go^ie\nsome time in the coming wteek. To\ngain their positions Miss Gentles\nbest Mrs. Margaret Harrop and\nMrs. L.~ S. Bradley beat Mrs. D.\nBurgess in the semi-finals,\nIn the first flight games Miss\nAgpes Jerome < defeated -Mrs. D.\nPorteous to wind up that flight\nRoyals Ban; Out Four Homers,\nBeat Trail Twice to Tie Series\nt is not published or displayed by the liquor Control Board or\nby tlif Government of British Columbia.\nNelson Royals'6ame out of the1\nthird and fourth softball gomes for\nthe West Kootenay title with flying\ncolors when they downed Trail\nR\u00abpS 13-1 ond .18-9 In -a 'double-\nheader oh the Civic grounds Sunday afternoon. The o\"buble victory,\ndeadlocked the two teams. :Trail\nwon the opening gomes in Troll lost\nweek. \u2022'.'\u25a0,\u25a0 . .'.y '\nJ\u00bbiry . Cronie notched-the only\nTroll run in the first game, Edi\nPlppl was the big gun of the game,\nhitting a homer in the third frame.\nEdi Fippl's three base hit caused\nsome excitement in the second\nframe of the second game, and\nwhen another Royal, Mary McGinn,\nchalked up another homer in the\nfourth, the crowd In the grandstand\ncheered her all the way in.\nScoring for the Trail reps was\nopened in the fourth again by Mary\nCronie. Other runs were made by\nI. Morris and E. Wilmot.\nIn the filth Inning, Evelyn Pratt\nhit another homo run to keep the\nRoyals ahead. Each time one of the\ngirls got a circuit clout, they received a bottle ot pop.\nIn the ninth session another,\nbottle of pop was handed to Kay\nSwales, who notched tho fourth and\nfinal homer of the afternoon,\nbringing the Royals' score to 18.\nShoring the battery, duties for the\nRoyals Were Ann Kostrikoff ond\nEvelyn Pratt while Helen Rothery,\nPhyllis Scaio and, Hazel Johnson\ntook turns pitching for the reps Ond\nE. Wilmot occupied the catcher's\nmound. Next games are scheduled\nto lake place-in Trail.\nLineups .were:'.    .\nTroll Reps\u2014M. Brown, J. Baldassi,\nI. Morris, E. Wilmot H. Johnson, X.\nCronie, H. Miscislo, D. Densky, P.\nScaio, E. Leopold apd G. Dion,\nNelson Royals \u2014 Mary McGinn,\nLpis Taylor, Kay Swales, Edi Plppl,\nEvelyn Pratt, Marie Stongherlin\nDienrie Chvrslnow, Jean Koehle,\nMode Boll afld Ann Kostrikoff.\nGUNS\nWANTED\nWo will pay you cosh for any gun In ony condition ond give\nyou the price you aik (within reason). Now Is the time to\nsell your gun.\nJack Boyce Men's Shop\nPHONE 160\n614 BAKER ST.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. H.6,1949 \u2014 7\nRees Beats Cotton\nTo Win Golf Title\nWalton Heath, Surrey, England,\n- Sept, 26 (Reuters)\u2014Dal Roes of\ntho British Ryder Cup team Saturday boat Henry Cotton, throe\ntimes former open champion, by\none hole In the 36-hole'final of\nthe British professional golf\nohamplonshlps on the' Walton\n, Heath oourse.\nThis 'is the third time Rees hat\nwon the title.  .\nCotton, apart from his. open, successes, has also won the match-ploy\nevent three times, Had he been suc\ncessful he would have equalled the\nrecord of veteran James Braid who\nhas been match-play champion of\nfour occasions,\nRees finished the first round with\na lead of four holes but lost two of\nthe-first four in the afternoon.\nCotton was only One down with\nnine to poly.\nCotton's 18-holo score was 72 to -\n76 for Rees.\nCoffee is known to have been cult\ntivoted In Arabia about 575 A.D.\nSON...\nSons get good smoking odvlco\n- whan fathers lay \"Smoko Old Chum.\"\n-n|oy Iho frcih, rich flavour that mokes\nOld Chum |uit right for day-ln, dqy-out imoMnBc\nStart today i;. with a package or half-pound tin.\nMm wto (ft. a fehmo\nihfi envoys good..\nOLD CHUM\nI'Jutfpad flnJ.reh, \u00bbJnc\u00bb !S8H\nCUT  COARSt   l-OK\n\u25a0 CUT   IINE   IOI!   HULLING   rOUR   OWN\nBeacon Motors\n701 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 578\n On the Air\nMONDAY,-SEPT. 26, 1949\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n:00\u2014Sign on and O Canada\n:01\u2014Top' ol the Morning\n:0Q\u2014CBC Newa\n:15\u2014-Breakfast Club\n45\u2014For You Madam\n:00\u2014BBC. News\n:15\u2014Western\" Tunes\n:45\u2014Music Kitchen\n:00\u2014Time Signal.and Train Time\ntfl^-Ellen Harris\n:15\u2014Old Favoriteo .'\u25a0::.\n:46\u2014Kate Aitken \u25a0\"\u2022  , '\n:00\u2014Kindergarten\n:15\u2014Footlight Favorites\n;S0\u2014Famous Voices\n:00\u2014Your Notice Board\n:16\u2014Stirling News\n:30\u2014Farm Broadcast -\n:00-rAf'erhoon Concert\n:30\u2014Waltz Time...\n:45\u2014Cooking Commentary   .\n:00\u2014Easy Listening\n:30r-Your Little Show      ,\n:00\u2014Odds and Ends\n:15\u2014Sketches in Melody\n:30\u2014U.N. Commentary\n:45\u2014Divertomento        ..    l\n:00\u2014Train Time*\n:0-r-Bernie Uroden's Story ,\n:15\u2014Betty Phillips '\u25a0',-\n:30\u2014Bluenose Island\n:4B\u2014Merry Go Round\n:0o\u2014Music in a Mellow Mood\n:30\u2014Peerless' News       ;\n:45\u2014Sacred Heart\nlOO\u2014Tlme Signal \u2022 '...'\n:01\u2014Firefighters-\n18\u2014To be announced\n:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n:00\u2014CBC News\n:16\u2014Roundup\n:30\u2014Local Talent\n:00\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n:30\u2014My Favorite Husband\n:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n:30\u2014Make Mine Musle\n'00\u2014Peebles News\n15\u2014On Mike Tonight\n30\u2014To be announced\n00\u2014Sign off. Th? King.\nCJAT\n810 ON THE DIAL       .,\n8:30\u2014News\n6:35\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n7:00\u2014News       -  - ..\n7:05\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n-7:30\u2014News-  > '.:\n7:35\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Ltd.\n9:00\u2014Coffee Time\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Housewives Hit Paradi   \u25a0\n10:00\u2014Homemokers Club   ,\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45^-Rita Martin's Music Kitchen\nll:00-^News\n11:05\u2014MUsic for Milady    ,\n11:45\u2014Eddie Arnold Show,\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Concert\n12:30\u2014News\n12:45\u2014Afternoon Recess\n1:00\u2014Tuneshop.-,-;'.\n1:45\u2014Comm.: Cooking School\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening .       \u25a0\u25a0\n2:30\u2014Waltztime\n2:45\u2014Claire Wallace\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15-CJAT Goes Calling     :\n4:00\u2014Bernie Braden \"\n4:15\u2014Club Calendar\n4:3,0\u2014Old Corral ;      ;     ,    .\n4:45\u2014Superman  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022''\u25a0''\n5:00\u2014News .\n5:05\u2014Supper Serenade\n6:00\u2014Lux Radio Theatre\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15-*CBC Nfews Roundup\n7:30\u2014Gtiy Lombardo Show .\n8:00\u2014Box 13 V\n.8:30\u2014Michael Shayna\n9:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:30\u2014Music You \"Love\n9:45\u2014Memory Lane.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:05\u2014Sports Cavalcade\n10:15-On Mike Tonight   -,.\n10:30\u2014Evening Meditations\n10:45\u2014Reverie\n11:00\u2014To Be Announced\n11:30\u2014To Be Announced \u2022\n11:55-CBC News '-.-..\nTOD AFS News Picture.\nBritish Ship Sunk in Hong Kong\nThis 928-ton British-owned steamer Chale Sang\nIs shown In the Hong Kong harbor after It exploded and sank Just before a typhoon struck the\nharbor on the night of Sept. 7. It Is alleged that the\nship was about to depart for Tientsin, ih Commu\nnist-held China, with a cargo Including oil and\nfertilizer, when the blast occurred, killing 14 men.\nPolice are Investigating, the possibility that tho\nship was sabotaged.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nTo Strengthen Hawks\nWinner Congratulates Winner\nFRANK BRIM8EK\nPresident W. J. (Bill) Tobln of\nthe Chicago Black Hawks said ha\nexpects goalie prank Brlmsek,\nnewly purchased from'tho Boston\nBruins, will give the Hawks the\nsteadying Influence they- have\nneeded on the Ice. \"I figure Brlmsek has two or three good years\nleft, and I think he will steady our\nteam greatly,\" said Tobln, as he\narrived at North Bay, Ont., with\nthe Black Hawks for their preseason training session. He revealed he paid $25,000 for Brlmsek.\u2014Central Press Canadian-\nWholesaler of\ntraffic Tickets\nAnother \"V\" for victory Was: scored by Winston Churchill recently when his horse, Colonist II, came In an easy winner In the\nLime Street Stakes. The affable'Churchill made a personal visit\nbook to the stables to give Colonist a rewarding pat for his noblf\neffort\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nYoung Communists in Berlin\nSoviet occupation forces In Berlin held a mass rally recently i\nthe L-stgarteh to commemorate victims of Fascism and Nazi persel\ncutlon. In the evening a torchlight procession highlighted tho day*\nlong rally. These youngsters are members of the Youth Pioneers, \u25a0\nyouth organization of the Communist Party. The only sign of unl j\nfbrmity of dress In the outfit appears to be the kerchiefs tied around!\nthe neck.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nTUESDAY, SEPT. 27, 1949\nCKLN\n1240 ON \"THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Sign On\n7:05\u2014Top bf the Morning\n8:00-^3.0. News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For\" You, Madame\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Coffee Time\n10:00\u2014Mor^ng Visit\n10:15\u2014Old Favorites k\n11:0(H-Strlke Up the Band\n11:15\u2014Waltz Invitation\n11:30\u2014Melodia\n12:00\u2014The Notice Board\n12:15\u2014Stirling News\nWtfO-^Farm Broadcast.\n1:00\u2014Summer Symphony\n2:00\u2014In a Lighter Mood.\n2:15\u2014The Little Show\n235-:-Comment?ry\n3:00\u2014Odds and Ends\n3:15\u2014Serenade\n3:30\u2014Divertimento\n4:00-^Bernie Braden\n4:15\u2014Meet Gizelle\n4:30\u2014The Marsons ,\n4:45\u2014Patsy and Patches\n\"5:00\u2014Songs From The Shoiys\n5:30\u2014Peerless News\n5:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n6:00\u2014Fishing Forecast\n6:02\u2014'Teenage Requests\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014CBC News\n7:15\u2014Science Reporter\n7:30\u2014Leicester Sq. to Broadway\n8:00\u2014Alberta Ranch House\n8:30\u2014Local Talent\n9:00\u2014Eric Wilde   --.:\t\n9:30\u2014Conductor's Choice\n10:00\u2014Peebles News\nl0:15-4Points of View\n10:30\u2014Drama      '\n11:00\u2014Sign OH\nURGES RESTORATION\nOF STRIKERS PENSIONS\nOTTAWA, Sept. 25 (CP). -The\nquestion of pensions for Canadian\nPacific Railway employees who lost\ntheir benefits as a result of the 1819\nrailway strike was. raised In\nthe Commons by Alistolr Stewart\n(C.C.F.\u2014Winnipeg North):\nSpeaking in the Throne Speech\ndebate, Mr. Stewart said the C.P.R.\n{continues to discriminate against\n'those men. He asked for action lo\nrestore the pensions.\n\u2022 f\nGoing calmly about his business\nhere Is Traffic Officer Christopher\nAspall of Springfield, Mass., who\nseems to be the undisputed ticket\nhandcr-outer of North America.\nSince he began his crusade against\novertime porkers In September,\n1945, Officer Aspall has handed\nout 123,073 tickets. His average Is\n119 tickets a day. To lighten his\nwork, the officer carries a chalk-\ntipped wand with which he marks\ntires of parked cars on his beat to\ncheck their time.' One unhappy\n-motorist has had 22 tickets from\ntho untiring cop, who uses up his\nspare time at home writing out\nthe ducats. One of the results of\nhla. campaign was the granting of\ntwo Judges to Springfield. One\ncouldn't cope with the business In\ntraffic court\u2014Central Press Canadian.\"\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n24. Draw up\n25. Plants of   ,\nbean family\n26. Employ\nV. A Dutch\nIsland*\n(Malay\nT. Amultitude      Arch.)\n8..ConstelIa-    29. Wit   \u25a0\u25a0\n2. Rascal\n3. Little\n'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0Island\n4. Observe\n5. A detach-\nable lock\nUQ-JLI   HHULIu\nniiau i\"ii\"iuH['i\nQUHamuu nu\nuniiniin    uiii-i\nrata   aaHiamju\nU-iL-k.   UHHH\nauuu nana\nnunauun   uu\nViUUS     QHU-llil\"!\nnn hquiuliijuh\nDUUItlU   UUii-EI\nUUHllllil   UUIJkl\n17. Cereal grain 34. More\n21. Aperture Infrequent\n22.Err)m?t        S&Flat-\n23. Watch bottomed\n'   pocket boot\nSaturday's Aa\u00bb\u00ab\ngg.Topoi\nhumming*\nbird\n41. Openings '\n(Anot.)      -\nLang ley Reeve Dies\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Sept. 25\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Reeve Thomas Reid of Lang-\nley died In General Hospital Friday,\nfollowing a short illness. He was 64.\nA First World War, veteran, Mr.\nReid retired from business in Vancouver to Fort Langley'In 1945. In\nDecember, 1947, he was elected\nReeve'.-..\nHe U survived by his wife, Gertrude; one daughter, Mrs. L. H. Salt,\nVancouver; two sisters, and one\ngrandson.\nSEES INDUSTRY THREAT\nSEATTLE,. Wash.. Sept 25 (AP)\u2014\nThe $38,000,000 annual payroll of the\nState of Washington's pulp industry\nis threatened with ruinous foreign\ncompetition because, of European\ncurrency devaluation.\nThis was the meat of an editorial\nlii the forthcoming October issue of\nthe international industrial maga\nzine, Pulp and Paper, published here\nby Miller Freeman Publications, Inc.\nand edited by Albert Wilson.\nACROSS\n1'Firm and\nbrittle\n. 6. Fish\n10. Book of Old\nTestament\nU. Apple center 6. Shuffle\n12.Eyed\n13. Custom\n15. A hint\n16. Low storj\nunder '\u25a0 -\ni     a roof\n18. Sun god\n19 A weight\n(Egypt.).\n20. Simpleton\n21. Fuel\n22. Perform\n23. Diminish,    .\nas color\n24. Fall to pass\n27. Contends\nwith\n28. Disease of\nplants\n29. Nctworlt\n30.'Sunlon\n31. Chum.-;\n32.Thrlce\n\u25a0*     (mus.)\n35 Note in the\nscale\n36. Wise man\n37. Constellation\n38. Perform\n40. Clayey\n42 Bacchanal's\ncry      ....\n43: Appearing\naa if eaten\n44 Cutting\ntools\n45. More normal\nDOWN\n1. Wedge of\nwood\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It;\nAXYDLBAAXR\nis LO.NGFELLOW\n' One letter simply stands for another. In this example A lo used\nfor the threefL's. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoi\u00bbi\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.'\nEach day the code letters.ore different .- . j-\nA Cryptogram Quotation \\\nUZD    HKIKLUK    1    DKYL-OLJF    NSKfli\nQJL   DSKG,   DSK   FZLK.   K H Q L Y H T S XNK O-\nOK YO\u2014 ULiJ'CJNi v . .\nSaturday's Cryptequetet SLUMBERS SWEET THY MERCY\nSEND US, HOLY DREAMS AND HOPES ATTEND US\u2014'\nVVHATELY.      .\nDistributed by Kinn Features Syndicsts\n l\u00b0lt\/>\nCLASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nBIRTHS\nPETERS \u2014To  Mr.  and  Mrs.\nSharles, Peters, 408 Vernon Street,\nit Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nleinember 19, a daughter.\nHELP WANTED\n*,l*i+*S-+**-~i*~ *+*****+*\n..  HELPWANTED\nStenographer, Shorthand,\nrjot necessary. Ideal working\nconditions and holidays vvlth\npay. State age, education^\nexperience and give,p.hone\nnumber In first letter to Box\n2838 Nelson Daily News...\nWANTED: RELIABLE MAN AS\ndealer In and around Nelson. Experience not necessary. A fine opportunity to step into old profitable business, where Rawleigh\nProducts have been sold for yeara.\nBig profits.'Products furnished bfl\n^credit Write Rawlelgh's, D.ept\nWWG---1-8-.6S, Winnipeg.\nirM^B-tfi^M-JED 'wm-\nOgrapber. Reply in own handwriting, stating experience. Bote 2878\nDally News,\nIfAN* man : wrK_; MiCfiTSSB\ntrailer haul tor Elmer Johnson at\nS. Fork, Koslo. S. P. Pond, Nelson,\n\u25a0.atriRED .IMMWA\u00bb\u00a5-Ott*l.\nf experienced mine pipe fitter. Ap-\n:-ply Emerald Mine, Salmo, B.C,\nJAfeHIER    AND    WAITRESS\nRanted. Apply Golden Gate Cafe1.\n[XPERIENCED W A IT RE S$ E S\nwahted. Apply Standard Cafe.\nKv#i^*^ptoMda_B- wait-\nresses, New Star Cafe.  ,-,-.-. -\u25a0\u25a0-.\u2022'\nSITUATIONS WANTED\niAVB YOUR CITY GAHDSlN\nplowed thin Fall with a, rotary\nplow. Reasonable rates. Book now.\nPhone 4S1-Y.\nJft->_5N6\"AB_.A.   pRAC-riCAi\nnurse open tot engagements. \u2014\nPhone 653-X. '-\nPERSONAL\nITAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co, D. I* Kerr, Agent \u25a0;\nOMk H6ttLi 6PP6I. m 6.VX\nDepot Clean rooms and modern\nrates. $1.60 to $2.00. Binglo, $2.50 to\n$8.00 doubles, Vancouver, B.C.'\ntmmrm&wmfiriXi\nformation and catalogue of hy-\n, glenic supplies.'  Write Western\nDistributors, 61-L Ray Building,\n\u2022'Vancouver.\n\"WtorftdN sdHOOL b6ard\nSocretarlca Wo havo t largo stock\nof newsprint,, mimoo and bend\npaper end can fill any order immediately Daily News. Printing\n'   i)foj*\u00bbi, !BritJBh.eMiiiiatiia^.\n:leo, 10 Deluxo assorted $1.00,\n,mailed in plain sealed wrapper.\n'finest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain catalogue fret Western\nPlstributors. Box 24RN, Regina\nRenfd\nElectric Portable\nby the month\nImmediate Delivery\nPHONE 41\nSINGER SEWING\nMACHINE CO.\n\u2022 Nelson\nAT ANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSO> OS YOUR SPRAP METALS,\nor Iron: Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C\nWanted\u2014carload of aouNt).\ncedar fence posts. Apply A. Maldo,\nCastlegar, B.C.\nWanted ' \u2014 child's \" skates,\nsize 7 or 8. Phone 306-L.\nfrANtaib - B6YS'   \u00a3icy<3LS *-\nSmell Blze. Phone 829-R.\nHtt1 VC-U-t HIDES TO J. P. MOB-\ngan. Nelson. B.C-'\t\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nCHIROPRACTORS\n'. dOtlN' SlcLAHEN, D.C CHIRO-\npractio X-Ray, Spinography,\n\u25a0 Strand theatre Bldg, Trail, Ph. 328.\nfWATUROPATHIC PHYSICIANS'\nG6_tDOt*! A. SUMNER, tklt.\nlicensed Naturopathic Physician\nEremenka Building, Castlegar\nasSayBrs AHd \"MWiT\"\nREPRESENTATIVES\nL W. WIDbOWSON It CO. AS-\nSBjers, 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\nk S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, a C\n,- Afsayer, Chemist, Mine Repfesnt\nDIAMOND DRILLERS\nNATIONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nCo., Ltd., Drilling and Bit Service. Box 608, Rossland. Ph. 420.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nHaggei* and currie, b, c.\nLand Surveyors, Mining and Civil\nEngineers, Rossland, Kelowna,\nGrand Forks, Ph. Rossland 384.\nfclOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nInsurance and real estate\nkcHARDY AGENCIES LTD. IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 136,\nMACHINISTS\n'   -be-WettS Uk*Eli\"\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding,\nPhone 693 324 Vernon St\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\nSpeeialists in mine and mill work,\n708 Vernon St, Nelso .. Phone 88.\nMachine work, light and heavy.\nSALES AGENTS\nFuller Brush Sales \u2014 J. C McKim\nWrite Box 123 - Phone \"799-R.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\n'CANADA\nDEPARTMENT Of AGRKULTURB\nPrairie Farm Rehabilitation Act\nTENDERS \u25a0    ,\na%ARCH    ot   \u25a0-..:..: ......\nSealed tenders will be received\nby tho undersigned until 2:00\no'clock p.m., Regina Time, October\n12,1840, for the. construction of a\nrolled earth fill and reinforced concrete spillway structure. The work\nIs located on Shuttleworth Creek in\nLot 3039 Simllkameen District about\neleven miles East ot Okanogan Falls,\nin the,Province of British Columbia.\nTenders must be submitted on the\nforms attached to the specifications\nin the envelopo provided.\nThe following are the wain Items\nof work and the -approximate\nquantities of each:\n7. Tamping   BaokflU-200   Jack\n\"   Hammer hours.\n1. Clearing\u20146 acres.\n- 2. Stripping\u20144500 cu* yd.\n8,, Common Excavation \u2014 18,000\n-- \u25a0\u25a0'   cu, yd.\ni. Placing Plll-_5,000 cu, yd.\n\u2022\u25a0   8. Additional Rolling; - 16,000\n\u25a0\u25a0'-,   squares. \u2022\u25a0''\u25a0'\n6. Placing Backflll-230 cu. yd.\n'     Hammer hours.\n8. Concrete, less cement\u2014870 cu\n\"yd,. ..\n9. Cement\u2014855 bbt\n10. Reinforcing Steel, in place \u2014\n87,0001b. i\n11. 2 ft. by 3 ft. gate and h'oist\u20141\n.   -Only.-.'- i.- \u25a0\n12. Rock Riprap\u201470 oq. yd.\n13. OpetHlle drain\u2014300 lin. ft.\n14. Copper water stop\u201420Q Un; ft.\n15. Wire MeSh-WOO lb.    .\nPlans, specifications and forin of\ncontract are'on view at the following \"P.F.R.A. Offices: '        ;>\"\u25a0:'\u25a0' ...\n418 Public Building,\n- Calgaiy, Ailberta.\n910 McCallum-HlU Bldg.,\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\n. 'P.F.R.A.,\nThe Airport,\n\u25a0''   Lethbridge, Alberta.\nV.L.A. Building,\nVictoria Avcnuo,\nKamloops, B.C.\nPlans, specifications and tender\nforme for bidding may be obtained\nfrom the undersigned at his office\nin  Regina,  Sask,,  and  from  the\nP.F.R.A. Office in Kamloops, B.C.,\nupon the deposit of Ten Dollars\n($10.00) cash or a certified cheque\nfor the  amount,  payable  to the\nReceiver General of Canada, which\ndeposit  will be redeemable upon\nthe return of the plans and-specifications Ih good order within one\nmonth after tenders have closed..\nAny tenders which are not (prepared strictly In accordance with\nthe \"instructions to Bidders\" May\nbe rejected,\nThe lowest or my tender not\nnecessarily accepted.      \u2022\nBy Order,      ,-\" ,     ;\nL, B. Thomson, -    ,\nDirector of Rehabilitation,\nv .-\u25a0\u25a0 v -41\u00ab-MeCantim Hill Building,\nRegina, Saskatchewan.\nProvince of British Columbia\nDepartment of Public Works\n. KASLO-NEW DENVER ROAD\nKaslO-New Denver Road will be\nclosed between Retallack and Kaslo\ncommencing 8:00 a.m. Tuesday, September 27th, for approximately six\ndays. Closure will be at a point nine\nmfles from Kaslo to facilitate the\nreplacement ot a crib.\nSigned:  J. A. Denhisoh,\nDistrict Engineer.\nMew Denver, B.C.,\nfcpt 23rd, 1949.\nRE: LAKEVIEW ROAD\nCRESTON\nTo Whom It May Concern:\n- The gate on,my driveway, which\nleads to what is known as the Lake-\nview Road, will be closed to all\ntraffic for one day only, on Monday, October 3rd, 1849.\nCarlton S. Hester.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 A BLACK SUITCASE,\ncontaining personal belongings,\non highway between Castlegar\nand Vernon via Nakusp, Finder\nplease write William Ohlhausen\nat 2108 East 84th Ave., in Vancouver,'B.C.,Reward.\nLOST\u2014FROM CAR NEAR SALMO,\nbox containing electric heater.\nReward. Phone 189-R-2.   -        \u2022\u2022\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON BUSINESS: COLLEGE\nDay ahd Night Classes.\nJMaott Eattg 2fottt0\nClassified Advertising Rates!\n15c per line first insertion end\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion, after first insertion,\n48c line, for .6 consecutive Insertions.\n$1,58 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers, lie  extra.  Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\n.TENDERS, Etc\u201420c ber line, v\nfirst  insertion. \u2022 18b  per  line\neach subsequent Insertion.\nALL ABOVE HATEF LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle Copy  .-. .....___\u00bb   .05\nBy Carrier, per week,\nin advance ~~    .26\nBy Carrier, per year  13.00\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month : .\u201e.\u201e......_   1.00\nThree months _....    2.50\nSix months .... ........ 4.50\nOne year       8.00\nUnited States,- United Kingdom:\nOne month  . \u2014...  1.00\nThree months  \u201e .,.    3.00\nSix months  .' -,...   (.00\nOne year,  .'... 12.00\nWhere extra postage Is required:\nAbove rates plus postage.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nWell constructed 7 roomed\nhouse on 4 corner lots,,Living\nroom with fireplace. Hardwood\nfloors in living and: dining'\nroom. Large kitchen and downstair, bathroom. Four good sized\nbedrooms and full bathroom upstairs. Well, developed lots,\nlawn, garden. and fruit trees.\nFirst class garage.'House could\nbe duplexed. Terms could be\niSSfSSfc'-i.. \u00abs,\u00bb\nUpMU .\nGood hoihe on 4 developed\ncorner lots. Close to bus line.\nLiving room, dining room,\nkitchen, 1 bedroom and bathroom downstairs, 2 bedrooms\nand hall bedroom upstairs.\nBasement and several shods on\nproperty. Stove included. Own-\np^vZ.zf_\u201e;-l4500;\n'Fairview\nA 3\" bedroom, 2 storey house.\nLiving room, dining room,\nkitchen and bathroom downstairs. 8 -bedrooms upstairs,\nOwner leaving City; CIKfift\nFor quick sale ..:,i,. .y-'OUU\ny Cosy bungalow,.close in. Living\nroom, large kitchen, 2 bedrooms and combination laundry\nroom and bathroom.-Good fixtures. Fun basement and furnace. Early sale. \u25a0: e47f Ah\"\nSome-terms, Price .'. W*U\u00ab\nRobertson; Hflllard,\nCattell, Realty'Go; Ltd,\n532 -Ward St       Nelson, B.C.\n.****+*****,*,*\u2022*,*,*> *'\u00bb*j**,*,*.*.,.\n**,* ++ + ***'*\u25a0** ***' 0 + mm\u00b1**\nCOTTAGJE\n- and 20 Acres\n- \"   with\n500 FT. OF BEACH\nThis is one of the most Ideal\nlocations on the North Shore\nsituated 16 miles from Nelson.\nDwelling hoi living room with\nfireplace, two bedrooms, large\nkitchen, sleeping porch,' bathroom, and closed in back porch.\nOutbuildings consist of chicken\nhouse, pig house, work shop,\ntool shed, barn and'root house.\nGrounds in lawn, flowers, ell\ntypes of fruit garden, pasture\n\u25a0SfSS^^*5^\nPrice' $4150\nFor appointment phono\nMISS FRISBV-7W\nT.B.\nReel Estate and Insurance\nFOR SALE AT WINLAW, B.C,\nSlocan Valley\u2014105 acres of land\n54600.00. Enough poles on lend to\npay for place In making poles and\nloading samo on cars. Dumont\n1104 W, 32nd, Vancouver, B.C;\nFOR SALE\u2014100 ACRES, liC-USfe,\nbarn, outbuilding, fruit trees, pine,\ncedar, birch, etc., $25,000. Will\ntrade for few lots In town With\nmodern house, Box '2335 Dally\nNews,\nFOR SALE-SAWM-Uj, isM CX\npaclty, little used, at sacrifice\n-price, Also good stand of timber\n4 miles to railway. For further\nparticulars apply V. K. Pooha-\nchow, Winlew, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 4 LOTS, 120 FT. SQ.\n6 room house, cement foundation,\nlight and water, 'For price end\ndetails write Mrs. Bessie F. Clark,\nW. Grand Forks, B.C.\n6 ROOM HOUSE,' 3 gf-RbdMS,\nfurnace. Located across from High\nSchool. Enough household effects\nto start housekeeping. Immediate\npossession, Phone 760-Ii.\nSMALL ne# \u25a0fotMtfOR SALB-\n5 rooms and bath. Central location. Some terms. Priced reasonably. Phone728-R,\nFOR SALE-LOVELY HOME IN\nFairview: 6 rooms. Fdr particulars\nphone 022-X.\nsiIALl '' __6u_ltJ for ' SALE -\nCheap tot cash. Box 2559 Dally\nNews.\nOLDER TYPE HOME, CENTRAL\nbus route, immediate title and\npossession, Box 2636 Dally News.\nTWO LOTS :FOR SALE-APPLY\nby phoning 811-R.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nREQUIRE PALOMINO STUD SER-\nvices for saddle mare pony. Light\nWeight. Apply Box No. 2524 Nel-\nson Dally News.\nFOR SALE-1 BAY PERCHERON\ngelding, 8 years, quiet, reasonable.\nPete Glrardi, Kinnaird:\nGOOD HORSE FOR SALE. MED-\nium weight; with or without harness. F. H. Chanter, North Shore.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE - GEM GROUP: GEM,\nSapphire, Mlneapolis, on Payne\nMountain, Sandon. Shipments\nfrom 1019 to 1923, 131.70 tons,\nvale $6585. Apply G. Jackson,\nPaulson, B.C,\nfcOR SALE-THE SELKIRK HO-\ntel, Silverton, B.C., fully licenced,\nmodern, For details apply to Mrs.\nRuth Barnes, Silverton, B.C.\nSell  tho  auro  Way\u2014CLASSIFIED\nAUTOMOTIVB\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nMACHINERY\nNew\nNEW A40\nDEVON   SEDAN\nF.Q.B. Nelson $1320,00\n3% tax \u2014__\u2122,v   45,60\nLicence and Reg.        20.00\nDriveaway ,- -IL, $1585:60\nA90   Atlantic   Convertible\nPrice  ;..;, ,;- ,\"\u201e $2595\nA40 Mt Ton Pickup $1470\nA40 Vt tan Panel . $1520\nA40 Stdtionwagon _ $1650\nAbove Plus 1% Tax\u2022\u25a0'\nTiRMSUPTOlYBARS\nTRADE-INS ACCEPTED\n*'     ','\"'?'       \u00bb     \"''    '.\nEmpire .Motors\n603 Baker'St.   Phone 1135\nNELSON       -\nFOR-SALE\nReo Truck\nW8>Ton :\nCoterpillai- RD4\nDozer; winch and driver's\nfludrd\n. Allis Chalmers\n;HD7 Crawler\nDozer; winch and driver's\n\u25a0-\"'.-   -juard\nAllis Chalmers\nHD10 Crawler\n11: Dozer and driver's guard .'\nSinttefiid'-Trucli\n& Tractor Ltd.\nNelson, B. C.\nFOR QUICK SALE-LAW MODBL\n1947 Oldsmobilo 4 door sedan.\nEqulped with Hydromatlc drive:\nLow mileage. Good tires. Heater\nand clock. Price $2500.00.\"'Oruflnal\nowner. Possibility of finonclttS.\nPhone \u2014. pays Kimberley 370,\nMights Kimberley 72,\n\u00a5bfi\"fM'&Mi.- 19.6 MON-\narch 5 passenger coupe, has radio,\nheater,' defroster, excellent condition throughout Box 2583 Daily\nNew.\n-W'SAtE = 1986 WAlf>!_,_3l.l__iA_'\n2%-ton truck anil 1949 Dodge %\nto 1-ton* truck. Small mileage;\nvery reasonable. N. K. Poohachdw,\nWinlaw, B.C.\nFOR SALE-^1_.9 INTBRNAtriON-\n\"  ol light delivery in good shape,\nor will trade for oar and some\ncash.  Apply   618   Sixth   Street\nPhone 1282-L.    \u25a0\u25a0':':\u25a0>\nim STUDBBAJ-BR dHAMhb-X\n5 passenger coupe, Radio, under\nseat heater, defroster; recent motor, brake and clutch job. $795.00,\nPhone 146..\nFOR SALE-1946 fabt)-4B SPAS'\niel Deluxe Sedan. Air conditioner,\nradio, fog lamp, seat covers,'two\nextra studded tires, chains, frost\nshields. Phone 450-L.\nFOR QUICK SALE-1940 DODO-J\npanel -yj-ton truck. New engine,\ngood' rubber, Sacrifice, Can be\nseen at Nelson transfer between\n10 and 12,\nFOR SALE \u2014 1.88 PLYMOUTH\nSedan, Perfect condition, reason-\nable price. Phone 1440,\nFOR SALE CHEAP-'28 CHRYS\nler sedan. Qood running order.\nP.O. Box 42, Nelson, B.C.;\nFOR SALE-'Sl PLyMOliTH, NEW\nrubber. Good running condition.\nPrice $250. Box 2526 Dally News.\nBOYS' BICYCiLB FOR SALE -\nGood condition. Phone 1183.\nRENTALS\n1 ROOM FURNISHBD HOUSB-\nkeeplhg cabin's for rent for the\nWinter months. Lakeside Bunga\nlow. Court. Phone 864.\nFOR RErrt1 \u2014 feBbRbok SUIT-\nable for one or two men. Phone\n878-R, mornings or evenings,\nYOUNG COUPLE URGENTLY1 RE-\nquire small unfurnished suite by\nOct 1. City location, Phone 650-R,\nFOR RENTv-BEDROOM WITH 2\nsingle -beds. Wih tor without\nboard, phone 423-R.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. PHONE\n371-Y or call at 928 Vernon St.\nSMALl-'riduSti F6R RBn* A*\nWillow Fplrtt Phone 461-R1.\ncabins ton R-Sh-r by the day,\nweek or month, Phone 387-L-4.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC\nMORRHILL KENNELS RE'G AT\nstud. Champion Alberta Gunner,\nred and white. Alberta Call Me\nCharlie, black. Puppies: Red and\nwhite,. blacks, buff. $28 to $50.\nPercy Morris, owner.- Box 618,\nGreenwood,- B. C. ...\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nFRUIT TREES, ORNAMENTALS,\nand roses, See H. C. Came, Agent\nfor Layrltz Nurseries. Phone 312,\nWrite Box 37, Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED - 1-HORSE HAY MOW-\ner. Nick ty'ctln, Winlaw, B.C.\n+*,****\u25a0*\n***,*,i**,p\nIT'S TttE TALK*OF\nTHE TOWN\nThe JOHN DEERE\nTrack Type\nCRAWLER TRACTOR\n20 top. with hydraulic angle\ndozer and winch and pulley\nSEE IT and ORDER IT\n','\u2022. ffom .\n.Tractor\n& Equipment Co, Ltd.\nYour Caterpillar; John Deere,\n. ; Skagit, ipy Dealer'\nWB.HAVJi SOMB GOOD BUYS\nTO OPFBR IN SECOND-HAND\nTRACTORS'      '-\nPOR SALB-WARSOP D.P. ROCK\ndrill with air pump and 4 sets ot\nsteel, IH ft. to 4' in 6\" changes.\nUsed 3 months. \u2014 Gould Jet-g-\nMaltC pump, 10 G.P.M. to 80' head\ndirect, Connected  to  ft  horse\nSower G.E. motor with suction\nose and thermal safety .cut off,\nUsed two days., Box 2541, pally\nNews.   \",-.\nCONTRACTORS -. bAWMfti. -\nLOGGING & MINING\nEQUIPMENT, ,\nSfiNO \".'OUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY'\n-:.,.co..wo.'-'. '\u00bb\"\u2022   -'\",\nGranville Island  \u2022;'\u25a0;.\u25a0   MA 1201\nVancouver, B.C,\ndoiiiTRACToas Aftb -MAdHIW-\nCry dealers \u2014 Spokane contracting firm is selling entire fleet of\nconstruction equipment at wholesale prices Can suppb late model\ncat .shovels, scrapers, etc. Write\nBox 1585 Dally News,\nCUStdM MAfcriiNE WORK ANb\nwelding. Portable welding equipment for-field work. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, 708 Vernon St.,\nNelson, a a\nfBfftftLfe mm wtoctttg win\npower'suitable for Jammer, hoist\nor cut-off. Bayes Equipment Company, Cranbrook, B.C,\nsWglb drum heavy duty\nwinch with engine, suitable tor\nlogging and loading, $450. A. Dos\nenberger, R.R. 1, Nelson, B.C.\nD4 CAT. FOR RENT OR CON-\ntract. Equipped tor excavating,\nroad building, land clearing, etc,\nC Ross, Phone 68>R, Nelson.\nSTANLBY 'TORTY FIVB\" PLANE.\nComplete. Perfect condition, Ph,\n'509-L, :':\u25a0\"'.\",.-.-*;\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE - CAMPING EQUIP-\njneat used.-this: Summer only:-?\n14x16 O.D. wall tent 14x10 white\nVail tents with flys, 12x15% white\nwall tents, waterproof! 12x14\nwhite wall tents,. waterproof;\n12x14 white wall tents, waterproof; Coleman lanterns, No. 295;\nColeman lanterns-No. 237; Coleman lanterns, No. 202; folding\ncanvas cott, light wool, blankets,\ntrail stove, Marshall Wells Model\n- 622, used 4 months; down sleeping bags, Pioneer Brand, Write\nBox No,'2540.Dally'News.\nW6MAN'!. W_NtbR 'Cb'Kt W&\n46, $12.00; girl's Winter coat, size\n15, cost $40, new a year ago, $10.00;\nwheelbarrow, steel tray, $7.25; 40\nfeet eaves troughing, $4.00; 20 feet\nConductor pipe, $3.00; compressed\nair sprayer, $6.1)6; woven wire\nstretcher .or stump puller, $9.00;\nsingle driving harness, $18.00;\ncollars, breeching, halters, bits\nand. harness parte like .new; hi\ngal. and qt. sealers, 65c and 85c a\ndoz.; gal. vinegar jars. P.O. Box\n257, Nelson, B.C.\nLower Melal\nPrices Give\nBrilpnsEdge\nNEW; YORK, Sent \u00abj ;(AP)r-Dorn-\nestlc copper sales held fairly high In\nthe United States last week, but lead\nand line markets were quiet Prices\nwere unchanged here, despltp the\nlowering ot ^on-ferrous prices in\nLondon in terms of the American\ndollar.\nLewer metals prices IH Britain\nwill dive British manufacturers an\nodoo In world competitive markets, American trade souross said,\nCopper prices here held at 17%\nCents a pound, In London, after devaluation of the pound sterling, the\nMinistry of Supply\u2014sole buyer end\nseller ot metals* In Britain\u2014lowered\nthe price of copper ilk terms ot the\ndollar, to the equivalent of 17 Vi cents\na pound, delivered. Copper had been\n19.34 ;oms a pound there.\nBritain lowered the price ot lead\nto 16^4 Cents a pound from 16.71\ncents, Zinc was dropped to' 10.84\ncents'a pound from .11,43 cents,'\nBritain pared 2% Cents a pound off\nthe price ot aluminum, to 14 cents.\na pound.   \u2022\u25a0'',\"\u2022 '      '.\u25a0\u25a0'.. ,\nLead buying dropped off during\ntha week, but the -price here held,\nunchanged at, 15V4 cents a pound.\nLead scrap Wat offered in greater\nvolume. ' \u2022   ;'-\u2022-\nMajor non-ferrous metals prices'.\nCopper \u2014 17.025 cents a pound,\nConnecticut Valley, Foreign, 17,625\ncents, New York.\n- Lead\u201415.125 cents a pound, New\nYork) 14.925 cents, St. Louis, Foreign,\n14,625 cents, Gull df Mexico ports.\nZinc\u201410 cents a pound, Bast St,\nLouis; 10.721 cenis, New York. Foreign, nominal, 0.5 Cents* Gulf Ot\nMexico ports,, ,\n. Aiuminum-T-i7_cehts a pound, ingots, shipping point; pigs, 16 cents,\nshipping'point, .\nAntimony\u201441.78 cents t pound,\ncased, New York; 88.5 cents, bulk,\n.Laredo,--Tex. ' ,\nNickeM8 cents a pound, electro*\nlytic cathodes. Port Colborne, Ont;\n42.83 cents, New York.\nPlatinum\u2014$69 an \u25a0 ounce, -wholesale; $72 'retail. New York.' \u25a0 :\nSllveis-73.25 cents on ounce, New\nYork; 04.25d., London. : - *.-.\nTin\u2014$1.08 a pound, New York,\nWinnipeg Cyclists\nWins One-Mile\nVANCOUVER, Sept; 25 (CP) -\nA shy, 25-year-old Winnipeg root-\nsalesman today IS the holder of the\nCanadian one-mile picycle title.\n; Fighting off a Into challenge from\ntrlple-crown\/wlnner Johnny Mill-\nman of Vancouver, Brie Oland\nyesterday, posted the first Prairie\nvictory in the three-day Canadian\nbicycle championships herei with a\ntime;.bf 2:30;6,- -     -,'-   .   \u25a0       ~ :\nMillman came back tb chalk'up\nanother victory In the gruelling\nfive-mile event over 21 laps, reversing the placlngs against Oland wlht\na time'of, 11:46.8.\nMillman's victory in the five-mile\nevent gave him a total of 31 points\nfor the three-day meet, sufficient to\nmake him 1949 Canadian bicycle\nchampion, .    .\"' '\n' Oland wound up second with 16\npoints, and Lome Atkinson ot Vancouver took'third, spot: with 12.\nFOR SALE-% BED COMPLETE,\ndresser, carpet, camp cot, ,'iavvn\nmower, crosscut saw, wringer on\nstand and .man's bone dry suit,\n. Phone 314-1. \u2022\nFOR SALE\u2014BATHROOM SCALES\n3 burner gas plate, 1 set of\ndrawers, kitchen cabinet. Phone\n666-L.\nFOR SALE\u2014HOUSEHOLD FURN-\nlture. Excellent condition. Will\nrent house to buyer. Phone 786-L1\nafter 5:00 p.m,\nFOR SALE\u2014KITCHEN TABLE, IN-\nlaid linoleum covered, chrome\ntrim, and three, chairs, $15.00.\nPhone 348-L.      '   .      ' \u25a0\nFOR SALE-LARGE STEEL CRIB\nwith mattress. Phone 306--4.\nUNDERWOOD TYPEWRITER, 12-\nInch carriage. Good condltlqn. \u2014\nPhone 367.\nFOR SALE\u2014PRACTICALLY NBW\nfur coat. Size 40. Apply 125 Silica Street,\nPilONE 462-Y-2-BIHCH, FIR AND\nTamarac wood. Place your orders\nnow for winter.\nTACk BdSCB guN E\"kCHANfl\u00bb\n. Guns for sale and exchange and\nexpert gun repairing.\nPlPB -fiWiNos - TUBHisrSPIP\ndial low prices. Active Trading\nCo;, 916 .Powell St., Vancouver,\nDARK ROOM EQUIPMENT FOR\nsale. Phone 1183.\nFOR SAiiB-MAN'S BICYCLE, In\ngood condition. Phone 439-Y,\nROOM AND BOARD\nKOKANBE LODGE - ROOMS\nwith or without board. Cabins for\nrent, Winter rates. Phone, 678-R1.\nB.C. STARS KNOT\nMINTO CUP SERIES\n'OWEN.SOUND. Ont, Sept.' 25\n(CP)-Paced by Eddie Bell with\nthree goals, the British Columbia\nAll-Stars Saturday tied their Canadian junior lacrosse final'for the\nMinto Cup by defeating the Ontario\nAll-Stars 9-6 in the second game of\ntheir best-of-five series, Third game\nwill be played Monday.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n*-^s\u00bbS*^\".^^t\ni. Dlsoolvo Morton's Tender\nQuick in water, pump this pickle\ninto hams and shoulders along the\nfcones. This starts the cure INSIDE.\n2. Rub with Morton's Sugar-\nCure. It strikes in from the OUTSIDE, Curing toward'the center\u2014\ngives a rich, wood-smoke flavor.\n3. Reoult\u2014the best-tasting,\nbest-keeping meet you've ever hod\n..'. uniformly cured from rind to\nbone'... no bone-taint, no waste\n\u201e.home-cured meat at its very b\u00abt.\nFarmers. .\n- 'Supply. Ltd^ '\u25a0\n524 Railway St.       . Plione 174\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Sept 26-(CP)-Cash\nprices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 Feed 75%;\nBarley-rNo. 1 Feed l.S9hi, .\nNE..SON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY\/SEPT. 26,194* \u2014 9\nBaseball Scores\nSunday\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL\nPhiladelphl.  d00 010 040^5 il 6\nBrooklyn    000 201 000-8   8 1\nHelnteelman, Meyer (7) and\nSeminick; Branca, Banta (8) Era\nkine (8) Newcombe (9) and Cam-,\npanella.'\nChicago ...;.;....:... 000 100 006r-l 6 0\nSt., Louis...:  131 100 OOx-^-O 12 0\nSchmitz, Lake (2) Hacker (5) and\nScheffing; Brecheen and Rice.\n. First: \u25a0        ;..'\u25a0,,\nPittsburgh -..; 300 020 201*\u20147 12 0\nCincinnati    :. 000 001 020-3   6 0\nChesnes and Maslj * Wehmeier,\nPahovich (7) Erautt (9) and Howell, Pramesa (9).\nSecond;\nPittsburgh   020 300 060\u20145*8 1\nCincinnati   ..........000 030 000-8 7 i\nLombordii. Dickson. (5). and'-Mc-\nCullbugh;,iFox, Lively; (6) Perkow-\nski (7) Burkhart (8) and'Cooper.\n.-pirst:-   .      \u25a0-*;,-; -v '\nBoston ,:......: 010 001000^2 T 2\nNew-York .......... 000.300 000-8 9 2\nBlckford and Crandall; Koslo and\nCrandall; Bowman, Jones (3), Ken;\nnedy (6) and Mueller, Westrtun (6).\nSecond}- '.'\u25a0     '\u25a0\u25a0\"\"\nWestrum. \u25a0  :> -..\nBoston  :...... .'. 002 tJOO-8 4 0\nNew York ....;............. 100 081-5 6 1\n(Called end sixth, darkness).\nAMERICAN\nNew York - 000 010 000\u20141  4 0\nBoston   ,....;:. 020 000 80X-4 11 0\nReynolds, Porterfleld (8) and 311-\nVoisell; Hall li) Barrett (0) ond\nbetts, ' ---.-'    -\nDetroit  000 100 000\u20141  5'1\nClevelo'nd  ....... 020 000 14x~T 11 0\n. Houtteman, Trucks (8) Gray (8)\nand'Robinson; Lemon and Tresh,\nHegati,\n.First: v\nWashington  000 004 100\u2014B 10:0\nPhiladelphia .... 003 401 OOx\u20148   7 2\nWelteroth, Haynes (4) Gonrsles\n(5) Hlttle (6) Hudson (8) and\nEvans.   .        . - '   '    .   .\nSecond:\nWashington , 020 020 0^4 U 0\nPhUadelphla  000 000 O-fl 12\n(Called end 7th, darkness).\nWelk and Evans; Brissle and As-\ntrdth. '   ,        ...\nFirst:-'      ' : ' . -\nSt. Louis ., 010 000 810\u20145 18 1\nChicago  ;...... 212 200 OOO-T   90\nFannin, Papal (2) 3: Ostrowski\n(5) Ferrick (7) Kennedy (8> and\nMoss; Wight, Pierettl (8) Cain (8)\nand Malone,\nSecond:\nSt. LoulB .......,; 280 100\u2014B T 1\nChicago- :...,.. ioi ooo-a 8 i\n(Called end 8th, darkness).\nStarr, Garver \"($) Lollar; Bruner,\nPierettl (1) Kuzava (2) and Wheeler, MalOrie (i).'.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 3, Indianapolis 9. \u2022\n(Indianapolis-leads best-of-seven\nseries 3-0).   .\nINT6RNATiONAL\nBuffalo 2, Montreal T.\n(Montreal leads best-of-seven series 2-1,  \"'\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nPortland 8, 9, Ooskand 4, 4.\nLos Angeles 0*, San Diego 12.\nSeattle 4, Hollywood 8.\"\nSecond games:\nSeattle 2, Hollywood 0.    .\"     '.\"\nhos Angeles 1, San Diego 4,\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON, Sept., ii-' (Reuters).-\nReaults  of  soccer  games  played\nSaturday in the old country:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDIVISION I: Arsenal 4, Birmingham City 2; Aston Villa 2, Evertori\n.2; Burney, 1, Manchester United 0;\nCharlton Athletic 0, Middlesbrough\n3; Fulham 2, Newcastle United 1;\nLiverpool 3, Derby County 1; Manchester City 0, Blaokpool 3; Portsmouth 1, Bolton Wanderers 1; Stoke\nCity 2, Chelsea 8; Sunderland 2,\nWest Bromwlch Albion 1;-Wolverhampton Wanderers 1, Huddersfleld\nTown 1. ''\u25a0--,\" - \u25a0 \u25a0\" \u25a0\u2022\u2022\n- DIVISION H: Bradford 3, Cardiff\nCity \u2022 3; Bury 1,' Southampton 1;\nChesterfield 2, Blaokburn Hoversl;\nGrimsby Town 4, Sheffield United 0;\nLeeds United 8, \u2022 Coventry City 3;\nLeicester City i, Tottenhaifi Hotspur 2; Plymouth Argyle 2, Brentford Of Preston North End 1, Barn-,\nsleyl; QUeen's Park Rangers 0; West\nHam United 1; Sheffield Wednesday\n6, Hull City 2; Swansea Town 0.\nDIVISION VX (Northern): Ac-\ncringtoh Stanley 2, Tranmere Rovers\n0; Carlisle United 2, Barrow 0; Darlington 0, Southport 2; Gateshead 1,\nDoncastor Rovers 1; Halifax Town 3,\nBradford City 1; Hartlepools United\n1, Stockport County 0; Mansfield\nTown 3, Crewe Alexandra 0; New\nBrights 13, Chester 3; Oldham Athletic 0, Rochdale 0; Rotherham United\n1, Lincoln City 3; Wrexham 2, York\nCltyO.    '\u2022 ...\nDIVISION HI (Southern):\nBournemouth 2, Brighton ahd Hove'\nAlbion 2; Bristol Clty-2, Walsall 1;\nCrystal Palace 1, Bristol Rovers 0;\nExeter City 1; Ipswich Town 1; Ley-\nton Orient 1, Port Vale 0; Newport\nCouty 4; Mlllwall 8; Northampton\nTown 3, Torquay United 0; Norwich\nCity 4, Swindon ToWn 0; Nottlngr\nham Forest 3, Aldershot 0; Reading\n0, Notes CoUnty 1; Watford 1, Southend United 0.\n8COTTI8H LEAGUE\nPIVISION B: Albion Rovers 2,\nAlrdrieonlans 2; Arbroath 2, Forfar\nAthleUo 3| Ayr United 2, Kilmarnock 1; Cowdenbeath 2, Dunfermline Athletic \u25a0 0; Dundee United 3,\nSt. Johnstone 1; Morton 2, Hamilton\nAcademicals 0; Queens Park 4,\nDumbarton 1; Ste'nhousemulr 4, Alloa Athletic 1.\nDIVISION A: Aberdeen 2, Dundee\n2; Clyde 4, Partlck Thistle 1; Hearts\n5, Hibernian 2; Motherwell 2, St\nMirren2; Queen ot the- South 4,\nThird Lanark 1; Ralth Rovers 4, East\nFife 4; Rangers 4, Celtic 0; Stirling\nAlbion 3, Falkirk 2.\nIRI8H LEAGUE    >\nCITY CUP: Ards 3, Portedown 0;\nBallymenia United 2, Glentoran 1;\nColeralne 4, Cllf tonvilUe2; Crusaders\n0, Llnfield 3; Distillery 2, Bangor 0;\nGlenvon 3, Derby City 3.\nSaturday\nNATIONAL\nChicago 3, St Louis $.\nPhiladelphia 1, Brooklyn $.\nPittsburgh 6, Cincinnati 5.\n. Boston 6,'New York 4.\nAMERICAN   ':','.'\nDetroit 8; Cleveland 6.\nNew York 0, Boston 8.\n(Only games scheduled),\nINTERNATIONAL   ';\nMontreal 6, Buffalo 5.\n. (Best-of-sevon series tied 1-1).\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMilwaukee 4, Indianapolis 8.\n(Indianapolis leads best-of-sevoil\nseries 2-0).\nPCL\nSon. Francisco I, Sacramento 4.\nLos Angeles % SaA Diego 6.\nSeattle 3,. Hollywood 10.\nGoess wfa's\nBIACXLABEUW\/*\/'\n\"fills odvertissment Is hot published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by tho\nGovernmisnt of . British Co-\nlumbla.\nPHONE\nAnd Have Our\nMany Yean\nof Experience\nHelp You\nSOLVE\nTHESE\nPROBLEMS\nStorage.\nWEST\nTRANSFER CO.\nPhone 33    P.O. Box 116\nNELSON, B.C.\n 10 \u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 26, 1949\nTho Saturday Evenlna Pott, Life Magazine, Colliers, The\nProvince\u2014ail of these and many other publications, hove ear-,\nrled sehiatloriarstorlei aboilt { .     ,. .\ni'\".V:-;..\"' -     COMPOUND E\nThli product li still th the test-tube stage and It has been\nestimated that It has-cost $300,000.00 to treOt each patlont id far.\nIn the meantime, thousands of Canadians claim they\nhave received lasting benefit from Arthritic and Rheumatic pains by using\nWhat, No Sunshine?\n$6.00 per bottle\niANNS\nDRUG STORE\nTo Nationalize\nExternal\nCommunications\n\u2022 OTTAWA, Sept 25 (CP)-Trans\nport Minister Chevrler sold today\ntho Government will spend $4,500,-\npop to nationalize all external com'\nmunlcations systems operating ih\n-   Canada. Domestic communications\nj. will not.be involved... .,.. ...\n\u25a0\u2022'. A Crown company, to be known\nts Canadian Overseas Telecom'\nmunlcations Corporation, will be\nlet up to administer the property\nmid equipment bf, Canadian Mar-\n\u2022 coni Company of Montreal and\nCanadian . Interests of Cable . and\nWireless Ltd., a United Kingdom\ncompany. Nobody has been selected\nyet to head ther6orporotion.;\nA resolution preliminary to Intro..\nduction of a bill establishing the\ncompany today was placed- on the\nComm'ons. Full. details, will not be\nknown until tjie bill is introduced,\nprobably \/next week.\n.: If passed, the' bill will bring\nCanada into line-with other members of the British Commonwealth.\nThe   tlniW'd   Kingdom,. Australia,\n. New ,Zealand, South Africa, India\nand Southern ' Rhodesia alreody\nhave .obtained -the necessary legislation and put it into effect Object\n' of the move is to co-ordinate the\ntelecommunications systems of -the\n\u25a0\u25a0', entire Commonwealth.\nAn official said one result should\nbe the provision of communications\nservices in isolated sorts of the\nCommonwealth where It might not\nbe economic or financially .possible\nIf the particular oreo was not port\nof the,entire ^Commonwealth plan.\n! 8EtL THE CLASSIFIED WAY.\nGeneral\nElectric\nLAMP\nBULBS\nAll   Sloes  and . Typos   .\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized GE Dealers\nPhone 260 674 Baker St.\n\u2022 CHRYCO SPEEDC-tN-\nFor nil car finishes. Just apply\n...let It dry...wipe it off.\n-     Gives lasting, bright polish.\no CHRYCO CHROME POLISH\nRemoves root, corrosion, tar-\ntiish. Restores brilliance. Keeps\nChrome bright as new.        -\n\u2022 CHRYCO FABRIC CLEANER\nRemoves spots, stains, grease,\nEalnt arid gum from car fabrics,\neaves no odor. Will not shrink\n. Ar injure fabric.\nCHRYCO\nFUEL TANK\n; LOCKING CAP\nPrevents theft or contamination\nbf fuel. Can't be opened without\nkey. Chrome-plated.\nCome Iri and dee our complete\nline of genuine CHRYCO. parts\nand accessories.\nUTHBER\nMOTORS\nLoses Licence for\nSix Months^ Fined\nFor, Dangerous, Driving\nPleading guilty'to a dangerous\ndriving charge, Dennis M. Mohaghan\nof Nelson .was: fined $50 by Stipendiary Magistrate William Irvine in\nProvincial Police Court Saturday.\nHis driver's licence was suspended\nfor six months. The charge was laid\nwhen his car was In collision with a\ncar,, driven-by*I* P. Gormley on\nGranite Rood Friday night\n116 Cars With\nDefects Find\nIn Check Here\nResult of the traffic safety check\nheld in Nelson- Thursday, Friday\nand SoturdOy,' by Nelson City Police\nand Provincial Police Highway Patrol follows: \u25a0  '  ':'\nNumber of vehicles checked\u2014658.\nNumber with defects\u2014Jlfl.\nDefects': Brakes\u201414; lteadlights-r\nB7; tail, lights-^.; borns-r-3; windshield wipers\u2014Sj windshield glessr-\n8; rear vision mirrors\u20142;.mufflers\n\u20144; licence pistes (lost or damaged)\n-4; -clearance . lights' (trucks)\u20145;\nsignal arms .'(trucks)\u20142.\nCAPTURE THREE\nAlfTER ROBBERY\nVICTbRIA, Sept. 25, (CP)\u2014Th\/ee\nyouths are ih custody ot Wells, B.C.,\ncharged with robbery with violence\nearly Friday afternoon; it was re\nported.' today by B.C Police, head\nquarters here. ',;'\u201e,'\u25a0\nPolice said that A. St. Louis while'\ndriving oh the main highway leading.to Wells was held lip and robbed\nby, three youths Friday afternoon.\nSt' Louis sold that he was tied up\nland thrown Into the bush, but\nmanaged- to 'free- himself shortly\nafterword. The robbers drove off in\nhis;cair.   ..' '\nSt. Louis called in police and road\nblocks \"were established-to appro-'\nhend the fleeing bandits and the\ntrio was captured without -a fight.\nThe' three arrested young men\nare. Gerald McMssters, aged ' 20,\nLawrence Wade,, 19, ond- a boy of\njuveniie age. Police sold the boys\nore residents of the Prince George\ndistrict. .\u2022;;!'\u25a0'     _     -    .'   '.'\nCAMPBEtt~SHANKLAND~\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n560 Baker St. Phone 235\nBRAND NEW TOGS\nFor Boys and Girls\nTo Go Back to School     ,\n\u25a0, '- ,;':' At; .; ,.;..;, -.:\nThe Children's Shop\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiTiTiimiiiiiiTijTiiiiiiiiiiiii\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY   RECOVERED\n\u25a0   '    \u25a0\"   ' ot' the '\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n4r3' HalJ 8t.' ',.-,'\u25a0   phone ,14$\niniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\n[North Shore\nFLEURY'S Piwinocy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arti Blk.\nPHONE 25\nSECOND HAND TIRES\nVALVES GROUND\nOVERHAULING\u2014TUNEUP8\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nMANN'S REPAIR SHOP\nPhone 3-2-L\u20142021 Stanley 8treet\nTHOMPSON\n.    FUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St. 'Phone'38..\nMin America fn the'person of Jacqu? Mercer (above) li In\nHollywood, Calif., to model bathing suits, listen to offers from movies\nand sample the Southern California brand of sunshine. As o bathing\nsuit model she's doing fine, thanks, and she's had several nibbles\nfrom studios, but a heavy smog effectively hid the sun as this\npicture woimode.-r(AP Wlrephoto.)\nCanada to Fore in Experiments\nIn Chemical and Germ Warfare\n\"   By DOUGLAS \"HOW.\nCanadian press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA, Sept?. 25 (CP) 4 The\nbig hush-hush name in Canadian\ndefence comes from a small community 10 miles from Medicine Hat,\nAlta; If is Suffield....-,.\nOn 1000 squaro miles of Prairie,\nCanada It making experiments\nthat are believed to have put her\n\u25a0In front among the Allied nations\nIn the haunting fields of chemical or gas, and bacteriological\nor germ warfare.'.\nThli Is probably the moot spectacular   If  most  underpubllclzcd\nexample of the growth of Canadian  defence  preparedness  beyond the limits of the three forces.\nMeJ.-Gen. Brocjc Chisholm, a Co-\nWorld Health Organizatiin, said re-\nadlan and Director-General of the\ncently there is a biological product,\nseven ounces of which is enough to\nkill everyone in the world. .Suffield\nprobably knows all about it.\nCanadian scientists'say there1 are\no number of germ agents capable\nof fantastic human havoc. The greet\nobstacle is distribution, the problem of spreading them around. That\nproblem is'beng tackled but is far\nfrom licked.\nSuffield, officially known as a\nChemical Warfare Experimental\nStation, Is seldom mentioned publicly except in official statements\non efforts,to control form pests with\nchemical agents that could be turned against mankind. Eight years\nold, it is the biggest establishment\nof its kind-in tho Commonwealth,\nSTORY UNTOLD   *,\nMuch of the story of: its mojo^\ncontributions to victory in the recent war has never been told. Its\nefforts,, tightly linked with those\nof Britain ond the United States,\nwere directed ..towards' retellettbh\nand defence if the enemy launched\ngas or germ war. They have the\nsome purpose nowv\n.iSuffield is-one of - the.- reasons\ndefence now claims 17 per cent of\nthe Federal - budget* '.-\nKILLS-FATHER\nTO SAVE HIM\nFROM SUFFERING\nSTAMFORD,'Conn., Sent ?4 (AP)\n\u2014A police sergeant died today in\nhis hospital bed after being shot by\nhis 20-yeor-old daughter because he\nwas hopelessly 111 with cancer.\n\"She didn't want to see him suffer,\", said police Chief John B.\nBrennSn.\nSgt Carl Faight, 50, died at Stamford Hospital-of a head wound.\nBrennon said the daughter, Carol,\nshot her father with his own service\nrevblveryesterdoy o few hours offer\nshe learned his case wos inoperable.\nGEOGRAPHERS\nBUSTLING\n- OTTAWA,\"Sept. 25 (CF), \u2014 After\nbeing almost deserted all Suhimer,\nthe1 map-lined offices of the Canadian Geographical Bureau are\nbustling With activity .nowadays as\ngeographers classify a mass of data\non widely-scattered parts of. Canada.\n. This paraphernalia is the. result\nof the largest program of field work\nyet undertaken by \u2022 the rapldly-\nGeographiqar. \"* Buregu, organized\nabout-two years ago. This. Summer,\nfield parties'handled' six investigations, three, in the Arctic, others to\nthe Yukon, Labrador and the Great\nLakes. .'.' , ,,'\nNEW YORK, Sept. 25 (AP) \u2014 A\nspokesman -for Kenecott Coppet\nCompany,here said today there is\nno truth to a report that $500,000 in\ncompany funds was on board the\nCanadian Pacific Airlines plane\nthat crashed near Sault Au Cochon,\nQue,, Sept, 0 with a (ieath toll,of 23.\nRAILWAYS CAN\nISSUE HIGHER\nRATE SCHEDULES\nOTTAWA, Sept.; 25 (CP)-Board\nof Transportation Commissioners\nSaturday Issued .their formal,.order\npermitting the railways to Increase\ntheir freight rates by eight per cent.\nThis left the.effective plate ot the-)\nincrease in the hands of the. railways, who now must- issue new\ntariff 'schedules; The new rates become effective 10 days after the\nrailways file their new tariffs with\nthe Board;*   .     '  . .-   ' . .\nA meeting wos expected to be\nheld next week by officials of the\nCanadian Pacific and Canadian\nNational Railways to discuss the\n'matter' of tariffs. '.-,'  .\nHEAR SPEECHES\nABOARD PLANE\nNEW YbBK, Sejit, 25- (AP),.'\u2022- A\nwoman's group that wonts more 'women -in higher jobs in 'the United\nNations held a .meeting Saturday to\ndiscuss the. subject* on the proper\nplane\u2014a.DC-fl..'..'.'.'\nAs part of the celebration bf United\/Nations Dayi'38 members of the\n|American ,-Wo'm'eh.'s: Association\nworkshop held o two-hour meeting\naloft   \u2022-. ;\u25a0\u25a0'..;     -\">-\nAs they lunched.and heard speeches, the. plane -flew them over the\npresent United Nations headquarters\nand the .site where, the permanent\nheadquarters are being built. .\n'The, speakers included' Dorothy\nKenyon, United States delegate to\nthe Commission on the Status of\n; Wonieti; Mrs. Lakahmi, Menon, .of\nIndian and Mrs, Alva Myrdal, of\nIsweden. i\nBirds of a Feather\nEngland's Dean of Canterbury, Hewlett Johnson (left), ll shown\narm-ln-tirm with. Metropolitan Nicholas of Krutitsy, Russia, a delegate to the conference, as the two men appeared at the recent all-\nunion .conference for peace In Moscow. ,'\nHHHaBH \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nWHiLOWj-PQINt. B.G, Sept. 25-\nlA RatepflyersjAsspcratlon was formed at a meeting of North Shore residents at the Crystal Hall Friday\nnight '',' \u2022\";';\u25a0'\u25a0       -    - .\nJ. P. Keiran bt Longbeach outlined\nthe purpose ot such on organization\nlh an address. All, residents will be\neligible to join.'. -''..\nMrs,' A. M. Banks and T. G. Lud-\ngate were named delegates' to confer\nwith, the Longbeach and Balfour\nexecuttve*'<3}_irman of the meeting\nwas R. A. Grimes and H. C.Carae,\nSecretory.\n'\u2022..'- ,Kilted Escort for Princess\n.|-r\u00ab--v--r   \u25a0\u25a0tssssssssssssssssssasss\\\\\\m\u00bbMimm\nInflation Threat\n, LLANDUDNO, Wales, Sept 25-\n(CP) - Prime Minister Attlee Saturday told Britain that inflotion\nthreatens to wipe out the benefits\nof chceapening the pound.\n\"There is no occasion''for general\nprice increases,\" he said. \"It is the\nduty of every good citizen to co\noperate ;with : the, Government ^n\npreventing inflation,''\nIn a speech prepared for a Labor\nParty roily here, the Prime Minister\nsaid his Government is more than\never determined' to,, hold down\nprices, wages and profits.\nTo let them get out of line would\nJeopardize' the \"economic survival\nof the country.\":;\nALTER DISTRIBUTION\n\"Such rises would no nothing to\nincrease the sum total at the wealth\non which incomes have a claim. It\nwould only.alter.its distribution.\n\"Some would gain nt the expense\nof. others, but the. general effect\nwould be inflationary, and, by raising the cost of production, would\nmake lt harder for us to .sell our\ngoods^brosd.   \"  .\n\"It would, therefore, defeat the\nwhole dbject: which we have in\nview,\" ,-, ... :    , ,' . ,'J '..\nAttlee sold he believed that, as a\nresult of the Anglo-Amerlcsn-Cono-\ndiah financial talks in Washington,\naction will be taken on both Sides\nof the Atlantic \"which will pOve the\nway to o freer flow of trade.\"\n' .\"The task is not easy, but, .given\nthe will and the time, it con be accomplished.\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Sept 25-\nOne ' of the largest semi-annual\nmeetings of the District Association,\nIndependent Order of Odd Fellows,\n(West Kootenay Association No, 3)\ngathered here Saturday.      ',\n.Over 100; delegates arrived via\nchartered \/buses and private cars\nfrom Nelson; Rossland, Trail, kaslo,\nWinlaw. The Odd Fellows.and Re-\nbekahs held their respective sessions\nin the afternoon.\nA huge banquet sponsored by the\nWomen's Institute of Slocan City,\nwos held, in the I.O.O.F. Hall. The\nChairman, Past Grand Master, D. H.\nFroudfoot of Nelson, called on the\nNoble Grands of each Ledge to give\nshort-address:   --,'.!\nThe gathering wound up the day\nWith a dance in the I.O.O.F. Hall.\nAmong the notables who attended\nwere Kenny Martin, Sr., Noble\nGrand, and J. H. Hoyte, President of\nthe District Association; Mr. and\nMrs. G. Nash, Secretory-Treasurer;\nMrs. Frank Grufaislc and Kenneth\nMartin; Noble Grands of Rossland\nLodge No.''36.\nFrom Trail came Duncan MacDonald, Noble Grand, and Mrs. A.\nCormock, Vice-Chairman, of the Re-\nbeliahs, representing Trail' Enterprise No. 43; from Nelson, Kootenay\n10, D. D. Paul, Noble Grand, and\nRebekah Queen City Lodge, Mrs. J,\nMcCellond, Noble Grand.\nSlocan City Oddfellow Lodge No\n40 Noble Grand'lsF.Storgard and\nRebekah, Floral No. 15 Noble Grand\nis Mrs. A. Merry,:  '\u2022\"      '',\nTO APPLY FOR\nGIANT LOANS\nCANBERRA, Australia, Sept. 25\n(Reuters)\u2014Britain and. Australia\nare' to seek n $1,125,000,000 loon\nfrom the International Monetary\nFund, it was authoritatively stated\nhe'retonight\nThe source added that \"this was\nOne, of the 'other' oteps agreed' to at\nthe Washington , finance talks\"\namong the United States, Britain\n. and Canada.''\n. Britain's share of the loan would\nbe $975,000,000, to betaken at a rote\nof $325,000,000 a year during the\nnext three years, the source stated.\nAustralia's share would be $150,-\n000,000, at' $50,000,000 a year for\nthree-years. -.'.'V\n'\u25a0\u25a0 Interest on the loan would be one-\nhalf of one per cent for the firit\nyear, rising to a maximum of 2hi or\nthree per,cent in the third year.\nFIND PART OF BOAT,\nWEST VANCOUVER, B.C., Sept,\n25 (CP)\u2014Dlscbyery of the stern of\na small inboard power boot ot Eogie\nHorbor today resulted In police, renewing their search 'for, a 70-year-\nold sport fisherman who disappeared \u00bb week; ago. '.\n-West Vancouver Municipal Police\nreport they again are \"making o\ndetailed search of Passage Island,\nabout ten miles North of Vancouver, fbr some traceof William .lack-\nson. He failed , to return to Horse-\n'hbe Bay where he rented the '12-\nfoot boat last Sunday.\n, Prlnceiii   Margorijt .RSe.^dressed   tor   Inclement  weother,   li\nescorted  by  kilted,  umbrella-carrying  Lord  Ogllvy, at the  Perth,\nScotland,.race course for a hunt meet recehtly. Lord. Ogllvy,- 23, ll\nJhe heir of tins, Ettrl ofAIrlle:\u2014 (*P Wlrephetoi):\nBy. DEWITT. MACKEriZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst'\nPresident Truman's announcement (concurred In by Britain)\nthat there li evidence of an atomic explosion  recently  in  Russia,\nshould: cause no surprise. Such a\ndevelopment was a foregone conclusion. It had to come some time.\nMoreover, there is no reason toi\nassume that this news has increased\nthe' danger of war between Russia\nend the Western Powers. Inject it\nmay,give a fillip.to peace. \u25a0\nPi'df. Otto' -Hohn, regarded as, a\ndiscoverer of nuclear . fission, declared- -in -Bonn, - Germany, \"The\nnews that. Soviet Russia has the\natomic bomb is good news,\" because\n\"if both the United States ahd Russia hove. It there will be no; war -\nU. S, State Department officials generally take the* line thot: the donger\nof-war hasn't, been increased or decreased, but that ih fact Russia may\nnoy be more ready to make a pltin\nfor international atomic control,\nWhether that was an inspired es\ntlmate-of possibilities, 'the \u25a0 fact remains that Foreign Minister Vishlnsky of - Russia, in addressing the\nUnited Natlbns Assembly Ot Lake\nSuccess Friday, called on the,Big\nFive Powers > to < conclude - a: peace\npoet among themselves. He. didn't\nmention the atomic explosion, leav-\nSell .the *Suro Way\u2014CtASSIFlEP\nBack to School\n.Among'the passengers who ar\nrived In New York recently was\nLance Reventlow, 12-year-old ion\not heiress Barbara Hutton Trou-\nbctzkol. Ho Visited his mother\nabroad and stayed ! longer then\nusual with, her because, ihe was\nIII. He IS returning to school ot\nNewport. ' .:     '.( .-\u2022    I\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTDi\nPOiNTIAC \u2014 BUICK'\nQ.M.C.   TRUCKS\n-Metal and. Point Work .Specialty\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED  &   REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St. Phone 63\ny*.*...*i*, '\u201e:\t\nY6S \u2014 Your. New Wave *\nll bound to  be  MORE STYLISH.\nLAST LONGER ond     ' \u25a0\nLOOK LOVELIER\nat the   ...    -\nHAIGHTRU-ART\ning hls.eager audience to draw their\nown conclusions. r, \u25a0>,'\u25a0..\u25a0 .'\u25a0\nA couple of months ago this column reported there was widespread\nbelief among scientific observers\nthat Russia had at least the theoretical knowledge, as distinguished\nfrom the industrial' knowledge, of\nhow to make'the bomb. Britain also\nhad'the secret.\nHowever, the- United States was\nthe only country Having the vast\nand, complicated Industrial faclll\n' ties and .the Industrial know-how\nto construct a bomb. That's what\nstymied Germany In the Second\nWorld War. Her scientists claim\n\u25a0he 'had the know-how for the\natom bomb, but lacked the Indus\ntrial setup.\nHas Russia now overcome these\nindustrial hazards?^ Perhaps nobody\noutside Russia knows. AU we have\nbeen told is that there, has been an\natomic explosion in Russia. No details.,- .  ,   .\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER      , .\n-PHONE'815\nMAKE  VOUR .CLOTHES  LiNE\ni.\"  OUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\n' PHONE 1176\u2014182 BAKER\" 8T.\nFor  Dependable\nPAINTING and\npaperhaNgiNg\n.   -See:\nMurphy Brothers\nPhono 655\n746 Baker St.\nm*Mm4**^0UmMmv*f*mi*mi*%mmAm%\nJAC LAUGHTON\n, Gpforrietrist\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDING\n.      Suite 205\n*0w*m,w*www&n*mi.m*i*ntm*0j0wi\nYOUR GROCER HAS\nELLISON'S BEST and\nELLISON'S ROYAL PAT.\n^PASTRY FLOUR\n_. ELLISON  MILLING\n!\u2022;\u2022'*; ELEVATOR CO. LfD.:\nJeffery Radio Service\nScleiitlflc Radio Repairing\n446 WARD ST. -   PH. 1302\nNELSON, B.C.\nMackinaw\nClothing\nFamous for over half a.\ncentury. Jackets In plain\ncolors or beautiful plaids.    |\nDouble or single back,\n1     SHIRTS  '.\nPAIMTS \u25a0\n- MACKINAWS\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nWON'T COVER WAGE HIKE\n^REGINA. Sept. 'M (CP); - ,Th*\neight per cent interim increase lii\nfreight rates granted to the roil'\nways by the Board of. Transpori\nCommissioners \"will not.even tak\u00ab\ncare of the increase in wages granted last yeor to railway employees,'\nR. id,' Voughoh of Montreol, Presi?\ndent of the Canadian National Roll-\nways, said here: today-\nCity of Nelson\nAnnual'\nTAX SALE\nThe annual fax sale of land I\n'for unpaid taxes will  be '\nheld orv Fridpy,. SejJtember.\n30th,;   1949;    at ' 10:00\no^clock\/ a.m.\nW.A.GORDON,\nCollector\nCity Hall,\nSept. 26, 1949.    .,\n\\&\nm\n........ W.\nA New Look\n, fwrifovt\nO^dClothei!\n3-PiEGE SUITS\nLADIES7 SUITS\n, lipiert,Plain \u2022\nDRESSES\nm\nSPRING GOATS\n$1.25\nTwo Day Service\nJUST CALL 288\nWe Call\nDeliver\nCLEANERS\nWgiineriV Puiiaps\nMade of .fine; black leather) uppers,'with the very popular platform sole, medium fcuban heels arid :_.'\u25a0 \u2022\nclosed toes. r\\ dressy.-wide fitting shoe.   -    Pf Q?\nSizes 5 toi9. EE widths.,     '{.';- - , *\\*7-\nModerately priced at |,-'   ,        \u25a0    ,   y*\nNELSON SHOE CO., LTD.\nPhone 1114 ! 411 Baker 8t\nHIGH QUALITY - MODERATELY PRICED\nMall'Orders Given Prompt Attention\n4\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_1949_09_26","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\/1.0426178","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":"1949-09-26 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. 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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. 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