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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":" Korea Reds Throw\nAllies in Retreat\nStrike to Within 47 Miles of Fallen\nCapital; Troop Movement in\nManchuria Seen; Trap U. S, Cavalrymen\nSEOUL, Nov. 3 (Friday) (AP) \u2014 Enemy troops today\nstruck to within 47 miles of their fallen capital of Pyongyang,\nthrowing the entire Allied front ip Northwest Korea into retreat.\n! The U. S. 24th Division, whose tanks had bowled to with-\n, in 15 miles of the Manchurian border, raced back as much as\n1 50 miles to avoid entrapment. Commonwealth forces retreated\nwith the Americans.\nElements' of two regiments of the proud and veteran U. S.\n1st Cavalry Division were cut off in the Unsan sector on the\n. f24's Eastern flank.\nIndia Sees Likely\nPeaceful Tibetan\nWar Settlement\nBy STEVEN N. DAVID\nNEW DELHI, India, Nov. 3 (Friday) (AP) \u2014 India disclosed today\nshe has told Communist China that\nher invasion of Tibet is unjustified.\nAt the same time it was suggested\nthat a negotiated settlement of Chinese-Tibetan differences still is\npossible.\nPrime' Minister Nehru's government made public three notes exchanged between New Delhi and\nPeiping, Red China's capital, since\nthe Peiping radio announced 10\ndays ago a Chinese army had been\nordered to \"liberate the 3,000,000 Tibetans.\" The Communist vanguard\nnow is reported within 200 miles\nof Lhasa, Tibetan capital.\nAn Indian note to China last\nweek expressed surprise and regret\nat the invasion order. China replied\nsharply, that the issue was strictly\ndomestic. A second Indian note also\nsharply phrased, contained a paragraph- that official quarters said was\n\"a possible opening.\"\nThis referred to a seven-man Tibetan, delegation now at the border\ncity of Kalimppng on a projected\ntrip to Peiping after talks with Chinese diplomats here for an accord\non relations between China and\nTibet .which has claimed autonomy,\nfrom China for years.\n\u25a0'\"In view of these developments\nthe note said, \"the government of\nIndia is no longer in a position lo\nadvise the Tibetan delegation to'\nproceed to Peiping unless the Chinese- government thinks it fit to\norder its troops to halt their advance into Tibet , . ,\"\nThe Tibetan delegation nevertheless has planned to leaye Kalimppng for Peiping--at .the weekend.\nThe leader is Finance Minister Tse-\npon Shakabpa, who said in an interview before leaving New Delhi\nOct. 25 that the group had \"an-open\nmind and full hopes of an amicable\nsettlement.'*\nl4,i<\u00a3\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay \u2014 Cloudy and milder.\nOccasional light rain. Wind light\nand South 15. Low and high . at\nCranbrook 25 and 45 and Crescent\nValley 30 and 45.\nVOLUME 49'\n5 CENTS'A .COPY\nnelson, British Columbia, Canada\u2014Friday morning, nov. 3,1950^\nNUMBER 164\nQuiet Tibet Resounds to Communist War Machine\n* *, -^^r.i-ir-q*\u00ab\u2666 *  >*\n\"      -:T9\nU.S. 2nd Division troops were\nrushed North.to the Chongchon river\n40 miles or so North of Pyongyang\nto try to shore up the sagging\nallied Une.\nThe enemy battled with rockets,\ntanks and artillery in surprising\nstrength. Chinese Communist troops\nby front-line account were in the\nattack.\nU.S. Pilots reported new and ominous movements of Red forces in\nthe Manchuria-Korea border area\nalong the Yalu river. They spoke\nof these forces, as moving \"toward\nKorea.\" That would imply that the\nforces were in Manc'nuria.\nSwift enemy jet fighters, possibly\nfrom Manchurian bases, flashed over\nthe battlefields for the second day\nin a row.\nOnly In Northeastern Korea\nwere U.N. forces on the offensive.;\nU.S. marines jumped off In a\ngeneral attack this morning toward Changjln reservoir, which Is\nbelieved defended by Chinese Red\ntroops. .\nU.S. 10th Corps headquarters d\u00a3d\nnot disclose how many marines were\nin the attacking, force.,,However,\nthree days ago Maj.-Gen. Edward\nM. Almond said a big blow would\nbe needed to determine the strength\nof the Chinese Reds in the Northeast.\nThe marines'-began their attack\nfrom Sudong, 20 miles South of the\nhydro-electric complex which sup-j\nplies most of Northeast Korea's\npower. There were no early reports\non the Marines' progress. |\nA Communist communique, broad-\ncast by Soviet radios in Moscow|\nand Khabarovsk, claimed the allied'\ndrives North toward the border had\nbeen checked by Red counter-at-j\ntacks. I\nArrival of the 2nd Division\nMeteor Lights Skies\nIn Eastern Centres\nImport Curbs\nOn Capital Goods\nTo Be Removed\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2  (CP)\nBlinding Flash of Light Brightens\nMontreal; Looked Like Explosion\nBut No Sound Heard Citizens Say\nThis Is an air view of Shlgatse, the second largest city In Tibet, surrounded by the typical mountainous ranges of the country. The Chinese Communist radio at Peking has announced that China's\nRed army has been ordered to march into Tibet\n\"to free 3,000,000 Tibetans from Imperialist oppres\nsion\". The little-known mountain plateau land,of\nTibet covers 475,000 square miles. It was nominally\nunder the rule of China, but broke China's hold\nduring the 1911  revolution. \u25a0\n\u2014.Central Press Canadian\nAmericans Buying Canadian\nSecurities in Large Amounts\ni\nes\nResidents in Nelson District did\npreviously reported In Northwest not see much of the sun during bc-\nKorea \u2014 came as the United Na-;tober but according to measure-\ntions position was described of-'ments made at the Crescent Valley\nficially as \"very serious\" by U.S.'Radio Range Station the old sun\nEighth Army headquarters. A 1st did shine for 60 hours.\ncapital goods from the United\nStates at the earliest possible date,\ninformed quarters said today.\nCapital goods include such items\nas building stone, locomotives, automobiles in completed form and\nindustrial machinery in general.\nAll that, remains to be decided,\nsaid informants, is the timing. Mr.\nHowe's advisers have suggested the\ncontrols may well be lifted Jan. 2,\nthe same day on which remaining\nrestrictions on consumer goods will\nbe withdrawn by Finance Minister\nAbbott.\nHowever, lt still is possible that\nthe controls may be continued until\nMarch 31. This would give the Trade\nDepartment more time to reorganize the capital goods control branch\nand possibly turn it into a priorities\ndivision.\nSuch a division would be linked,\nwith its counterpart in the United\nStates to deal with allocations and\npriorities of materials needed in defence production. It would function\nunder the Canada-United States industrial mobilization pact signed in\nUnited I balance to all countries during the j Washington last week.\nEmphasis,   however,   Is   placed\n+   OTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP)\nStates investors gobbled up Canad-| first eight months of 1950 advanced\nian securities so fast in August that to $73,300,000.\nthey led to Canada achieving un-|   This compared with a small pur-\nprecedented  net  monthly sales  of chase balance last year. It was al-\n$53,900,000. | most four times the sales balance\nThis was disclosed today by the recorded at the end of July.\nBureau of Statistics in a reportl In August, Dominion bond sales]\nof international security transac-.accounted for 80 per cent of net\ntions for the month preceding an- sales of Securities to all countries,\nnouncement of the decision to free the Bureau said. Practically all net\nthe dollar. I sales of these, bonds \u2014 at $43,400,000\nWhen the dollar was set free for the month \u2014 went to United\nSept. 30, officials stated that the States purchasers,\nmain reason was the heavy pres-| Net sales of other types of securi-\nsure of speculative or \"hot\" moneyi ties to the'United States amounted\nflowing Into Canada In such large'to $10,800,000.\nquantities that they could not be! These net sales balances cover the\nmatched by Canadian exports, surplus of sales over purchases. In\nToday's report jshowed .j\\ist how August, total gross sales to the .U.S.\n._..   Jul,.   J_.\u2014~J.,'__   r.\u2014._._!!._   \u201e\u2022..   L-. niSSSiis    ,_.    e',.i r.nn nnn  \u2022TS..J-&\u2014....\nBy The Canadian Press\nA brilliant light that flashed across the sky over border\npoints in Eastern Canada and the United States last night was\nTrade' reported. by one source to have been from a Canadian-dis-\nMinister HoVe \"has\"decided to re-; charged rocket, although Observatory experts thought it was\nmove restrictions on'the import of q huge meteor*\n.        .u_   \u201e-.._., ^ Syracuse, N. Y., official of Colonial Airlines said the\nUnited States Air Forces had informed his Company that the\nR.C.A.F. had sent up a rocket at Rockcliffe Airport, Ottawa.\nThe Colonial spokesman declined to be identified.\nAt Ottawa, R.C.A.F. spokesman said no flares of any\nkind were set up at Rockcliffe.\nA Colonial pilot had seen the flash while flying off the\nAtlantic coast, 735 miles from the Canadian base.\nA bright flash also lighted downtown Montreal brightly\nfor a few seconds and sent citizens scurrying to their telephones for information.\nMost who saw the van-colored flash said it-looked like\nan explosion although no sound was heard. Many speculated\nthat a meteor caused it.\nWeather Bureau officials at\nAlbany, N. Y., discounted\nlightning.\nOfficials of the Dominion observatory in Ottawa said there was'\"no\ndoubt\" that the flash was caused by\na meteor.\nHarvard University observatory\nalso termed the flash \"an unusually\nbright meteor.\"\nA' spokesman said the meteor was'\nAtomic Weapons\nMay Be Used\nOn Battlefields\nCorps spokesman said It was \"not!   Continued rainy weather through-\n\u00abo good.as.lt could.be\";and; ndt'aiS out the month jyfll the cause of the\ngood-aj we would like-It\" |short hours of sunshine which was vast this demand for Canadian se-'.-iimourifed to $72,000,000. Purchases!\nEfforts' by other cavalrymen  to. a considerable drop from Septem- purities was. Practically all of Cana- from that country by Canadian in-1\nrescue their 1000 trapped comrades ber's showing of 252.7 hours.\" Sa's bond and security sales in Aug-jvestors amounted to $17,900,000.\nin the Unsan area failed. ]    The   maximum   temperature   for ust were made with U.S. investors,'   In security trade with the United'\nThe   1st   Corps  spokesman   said the month was 68.degrees above on th\" Bureau said. IKingdom, the smallest volume since1\nabout half the American force filter-.Oct, 7, while minimum was 30.6 de- 4 TIMES GREATER   , | August 1949, was recorded. Canadian! SSg.   S\"d .IT\u2122^'.\"!!..^covered tteTix-month periodTnded\non the Jan. 2 date in view of the\ngeneral bright picture In Canadian trade, United States pressure\nto have Canada lift all import\ncontrols and the lack of further\nneed In Canada for emergency\nexchange austerity.\nThree Arrested\nIn Assassination\nAttempt\nBy ED CREAGH\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (AP)\nFederal   Police   strengthened\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (AP)\nEnemy troops on future battlefields!    \u201e ,\nmay be blasted with atomic weapons a   \u2122re Phenomenon but not extra-\nlaunched by both the army ahd the ordinary. Several millions fall into\n\u2014     . . _     - tna    oarlh'c   fltivinrnhoro    atrcsrit   Ant. \"\nair fprce flying its support, a Defence\nDepartment report indicated tonight.\nThe atomic bomb up to now nasi\nbeen a strategic weapon, for mass;\ndestruction of cities, but not for tac\ntical use against forces in the field.1\nIn their semi-annual report released tonight the armed forcev\nnow engaged In strictly orthodox\nwarfare Jn   Korea, looked ahead\nand talked of an arsenal of new\nweapons  being  developed  or   in\nthe research phase,\nThese were references to the Hy-1\nthe earth's atmosphere every day.\"\n\"Apparently  a   large  stony  or\nIron masB fell from somewhere In\nthe solar system Into the earth's\natmosphere,\" he said,\n\"The heat of friction during Its\nfalling  through   the   atmosphere\n. caused the body to-be incandesced\n(lighted).\n\"The average aire Ii microscopic.\nThey are the common meteori.\nAn extra large body falls only\nrarely.\"\nAt Pittsburgh, N.Y., persons who\nhad seen Jlie light, said it \"lighted\ndrogen bomb project, radiological Up the whole sky.\" They said it\npoison weapons,, germ warfare, ofj occurred at 7:35 p.m. EST, There\nprogress in  guided missiles, of-ajwas  no  sound  accompanying the\ndevice whicfr-tbuld be used for making maps of hostile terrain under\ncover of night or. clouds.\n..   |   But much of the report dealth with\ndefence affairs now out of date. It;\nPrague Checks Up\nOn Housing Rules\nPRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Nov. 2\n(Reuters)' \u2014  Apartment   dwellers^* was obvious the enemy had picked'\nwithout work in Prague are being;up powerful support, tanks, planes;\ntold to give  up their  apartments and   artillery,  from  some  quarter.\ned through the Red ring during the'gress on Oct. 3,\nnight and-.got back-to U.N.- lines,)\n.They   abandoned   all   their   heavy\nequipment and vehicles. <*\nWhile the extent of Chinese Communist participation was not clear,\nlast June 30, and thus covered only\nto make way for working people\nwith jobs in the capital, it was disclosed today.\nTown authorities are also checking the Prague housing situation lo\nree that the one-room-a-person rule\nin force in this overcrowded city\nis more strictly applied.\nRefuse to Accept\nGuilty Plea\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP) A jury\ntomorrow will decide the fate of\nWalter S. Stoney who three times\nhas attempted and failed to enter\na plea of guilty to a murder charge\nii\ntha Rerreault.\nToday, Stoney took the stand in\nThe North Koreans who fled from\nthe debacle in South Korea had left\nall their heavy equipment behind.\nAmericans   who   escaped   said\nthere were many Chinese Reds In\nthe  attacking force.  A  captured\nChinese prisoner said there were\n3000 Chinese Communist troops In\nthe action. The Reds used American equipment against the trapped\nforce. (How they got It was not\nclear; it could be booty taken from\nthe Chinese Nationalists long ago.)\n,   As a result of August's heavy de-' investors purchased about 10 timesl SHU'lif tf W\u00a3$Mi ^\nTheim^lmaxiJnmn,Vias-51.8andJ,nia.nd for.,Canadian securities \u2014 a more from.Britain than. Britain didj E ]\u201e_!  _,_\\__i__  w.\u00a3^w\u00ab  m,r,'ifive days of the Korean war. Ae-      ... .\nxne \u00abw    usxuoum.vtfA^^    ^..^^.g ^^^ which be- from Cariada7The f g&essales' tdff\u2122 *   tehind--WBttaesdays   gun-,tu u \u25a0.\u201e com   isS four reports'to Ottawa,\nmean, minimum   was   recorded   at'i'ePet\"'\u00b0\"\n38.6 above. 6an t0 develop sharply in June and, the U.K., $100,000; purchases Jron^\nTwenty days with rainfall during July\u2014Canada's    cumulative    sales)the U.K., $1,000,000.\nOctober saw 6.72 inches measured,\nLower increase in\nNewsprint Price\nMONTREAL,  Nov.  2   (CP)\nOULETTE TO HANG\nJAN. 24\nAP correspondent Tom LambertJ T7wrT., DjV^f rVn\/rrkf\nwith the 1st Cavalry Division, said J^itXl iy 1JL1 U K^UUgtlL\nthe Red attack was effectively car-'\nVERNON, B. C, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014\nJoseph Arthur Oulette, 21, today\nwas sentenced to hang Jan. 24, 1951,\nConsolidated   Paper   Corporation, for the murder of a Chinese vege-\nLtd.,   has   notified   Its  customers table farmer.\nthat   the   previously   announced     He was sentenced by'lVtr. Justice\nIncrease of $10 a ton for  news* Cody after a jury had brought in a\nprint has been  reduced  to $6 a verdict  of  guilty   at   the   Assizes\nton,   It  wa3   learned   tsday.  The |,crc.\nnew base price, effective Nov. 1, Oulette was convicted of the\nmurder of Lee On, who with a\ncompanion, Mah Sing, was found\nshot to death in a shack near the\nVernon Airport Nov. 22, 1940.\nPrice of Chocolate\nBars Down Two Cents\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014The\nprice of most chocolate bars has\nbeen   reduced  two  cents to  the\nSecret Service men In New York < .. \u2022 \u201e.,.\u201e\u201e n\u00ab\u201e\u201e,*~,>\u201et \u25a0\u201e,) ,.\narrested three, Puerto Ricahs in the ^J^lTLmv t\u00a3lv ZIt\napartment of Oscar Collazo, one of \u00a3\u00a3* by the Amy' NaVy a\"d Alr\nthe two Island revolutionists who,\t\nshot their way to the President's!\ndoorstep before guards shot them NarCOtlcS Outlet\nrouted from home I From Vancouver to\nreaucea  two  cents to  me-    In   ^uert\u00b0   *,lc0, ''self' .f\u00b0 ,c.e ., c   ,,.\u00ab\u25a0*.-.     e Li\nsix cents they cost last Septem - i \u2122\"n\u00abd.Up m*!?* \u00b0r .the a.nUlUnl-| U.S. CltlBS SOUqht\nber, some manufacturers reported ,ed .S(tat^s   Nationalist   and   Com-!\ntotja\u201e I munist  Parties.   Routed   from   his\nI home with tear gas was Pedro Al\nVANCOUVER. Nov. 2 (CP)\nmember of the U.S. Federal Bureau\nlight, observers said.\nReports from Massena, N.Y., said\nthat after the flash of light \u2014 also\ntimed at 7:35\u2014a streak was observed\nto the North, travelling East. The\nstreak was described as green, turning to t>lue and then to yellow.\nThe phenomenon also was seen at\nBurlington, Vt., and Albany, Glen Falls and Utica, N.Y.\nRichard Herr, civil aeronautics\nadministration employee who was\nin the control tower at the Albany\nairport, said:\n\"It looked like an explosion of\nsome sort\u2014a great big green flash\nhigh in the sky.\"\nResidents at Cartierville in \"the\nNorthend of Montreal reported a\nrumbling noise which caused their'\nhomes to shake \"just like an earthquake.\"\nMost  eye-witnesses  here agreed\nSpokesmen for Lowney's, Nell-!\"?\u2122\u2122\" \u00ab\u00bb \u00ab*! ,wf.5 rear\u00b0\"1-! o7Narcotircs\"\"sard\"\"todav\"Th\"e~a\"rre7tl ,_M0St ^-witnesses here agreed\nson's and Molr', said the Price' b-u Campos ch.ef of \u00ab,e would-be g SiSS^'tttSK-lSte.'^Sl-*\" f,ash ca\u2122 *\u00b0m a *#**\ncut  wan  Mfa'aHva   Nnu.   1.   pPV., assassins party ana a Key tigure in t_  \u201e\u2022_ _. nt.__ \u201e,,,,_, %\t\nis $106 a ton, New York.\n_ c___ __ D  ._    ^_     It began about sunset Wednesday\nn*the ice-\"pick\" slaying of Mrs. Mar-! and continued until dawn Thursday.\n1    The Reds came at the Americans\nwith bazookas, Browning automatic\nhis own defence and instead of an-1 rifles, Thompson sub-machine-guns\nswering questions, repeatedly said and rapid-firing \"Grese-guns.\nPresident Truman\nhe was sick and wanted to plead\nguilty.\nTwice- previous the  accused   at-\nThe trapped troops fought back\nall night, At daylight a rescue team\nfrom  other  1st Cavalry  units ran\ntempted  to  plead  guilty,  once  at |into  heavy  Red  fire  at   Yongson,\nhis arraignment Oct. 17 and\non the second day of the trial. The\ncourt refused to accept the plea on\nall occasions.\nSamuel Freedman, appointed defence counsel by Uie court, today\nasked the jury to acquit the 39-year-\nold transient on a finding of insanity.\nCHARGE TORIES TRYING\nTO STIR UP TROUBLE\nBETWEEN U.S., BRITAIN\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (Reuters)\u2014The\nLabor Government again charged\n! in parliament today that Conservatives are trying to stir up trouble\nbetween Britain and the United\nStates.\nHugh, Gaitskell, who has just succeeded Sir Stafford Cripps as boss\nof the Treasury, attacked Oliver\n' Lyttelton. one of Winston Church-\nills chief lieutenants, for suggesting that the government was working out i^s rearmament plans on a\n\"business as usual basis.\"\nabout a mile from the surrounded\nmen. It was unable to break through\nTank radios of the surrounded\nforce, which had been silent all\nmorning came on the air late Thursday and directed allied plane strikes\nat the Reds.\nPresumably, it was over these\nradios that the trapped men were\ntold rescue was impossible and that\nthey should try to get out on' their\nown.\nCHINESE \"CRAZY\"\nA sergeant who escaped said the\nChinese soldiers in the attacking\nforce acted \"crazy.'\"\n\"They would stand  right up in\nfront of you, laughing to beat hell,\nhe  said.  \"We  killed  them  by the\nhundreds. Stil they kept coming.\"\nNO URANIUM ORE\nPLANTS FOUND\nU.S.   10th   CORPS   HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Nov. 2  (AR)\u2014Tenth\nCorps headquarters said  today no\natomic   energy   installations   have\nbeen found in Northeastern Korea\nHeadquarters  issued  a  statement\nwhich said:\n\"Uranium   ore   plants   or   other\n\u201e\u201e\u201e ,\u201e\u201e,\u201e\u201e\u201e,    \u00ab ,      plants connected with production of\nCEDAR RAP DS, Ia.. Nov. 2 (AP) ;atom bombs have not been dls.\n-James F. Williams. 64. of Cedar covered in the Ten1h Corps area ot\nRapids   is  a   bndegroom-for   the \u2022 operations up to the present lime\/.\nWed for 17th Time\nWest-German Police\nBreak Up Rioters\nBERLIN, Nov. 2, (Reuters) \u2014 A\nWest-German police squadron 200\nstrong, armed with truncheons and\nfire hoses, today drove off a mob\nof some 800 East Berlin \"peace\nfighters\" outside a courthouse in\nthe British zone of the city.\nThe  crowd   was  shouting   Corn-\ncut  was  effective\nCadbury's  said  fhei\nmaintained at the six-cent price\nand would be unaffected by this\nreduction.\nOfficial^ of Rowntree's and\nPatterson's said prices of their\nbars are  being considered,\nmmi    1    p\u201e\u201e . assassins  party ana a Key ngure in  , li~\"   \"vr. _\n\\t  h'J; \"wJE'fois week's bloody  revolt against   ? arran*e f ^rcot!cs ou^ from\nir  bars   were TT ^  wiln V \"\u25a0       | Vancouver to American cities.\nU. S< rule,\nIn Washington, Senator Kenneth'\nI Wherry (Rep. Neb.) said the assas-|\nsination attempt proves \"the seri-1\nousness of the Communist menace\"\nin the U. S. Wherry said a vigorous\nHenry Giordano of Seattle\/Wash.,\nwas testifying at the preliminary\nhearing of John and George Mal-\nlock and William Carter, charged\nwith conspiring to sell narcotics.\n..\u00ab \u00ab,\u00ab .\u201e\u201e. \u00ab-..-.\u00ab-.-\u00ab. ._   . ,       .     .. , \u201e       m.      i    They were among 20 persons ar-\nA   drop  In  the  cost of  cocoa' ^d roundup should follow. There resUd recent]   jn th   greatest drive\nbeans was given as reason for the\ndrop.\nFront Page News,\nDog Shoots Man\nCAMBRIDGE,   England,   Nov.\nhas been no evidence the Communists were involved in the assassination plot. !\nMeanwhile Collazo, the surviving\nassassin, was formally arraigned in\nhis hospital bed on a charge of\nmurdering White House policeman,\nLeslie Coffelt. The possible penalty j\n(AP)\u2014A  dog  shot   Donald   Webb is death in the electric chair. Col\nTuesday night. Webb, 25, climbed lazo was held for further hearing\nmunist  slogans  such   as  \"Tommy,' into a car, the dog jumped into the Nov. 21.\ngo home.\" I back . seat   to   welcome   him   and I    Little by little, relays' of Invest!-\nPolice made several arrests, and landed on a shotgun. The gun went gators pried from the sullen gun-\nsome persons were injured, one a off, wounding Webb in the neck. I man the story of the fantastic as-\nwoman. I Hospital officials say his condition sassination   attempt,   which   ended\nPolice cleared a space outside the 's serious.\ncour-lhouse,   where   a   28-year-old '  : '   '\nEast Berlin \"peace fighter.\" Werner SECOND U.S. NEWSPRINT\nByszio, was being tried. They cor- COMPANY RAISES PRICE\ndoned off a large area and combed;\nnearby houses for Communists.\nInside   the    courtroom\ndozen police kept order.\nByszio was arrested six weeks\nago and charged with illegally distributing Communist literature in\nWest Berlin.\nTruman \"Sick\" Over\nPoliceman's Death\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014\nPresident   Truman   said   today   he\nCOOSA PINA, Ala., Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014\njThe Coosa River Newsprint Corpor-,\nseveral! ation has notified all its customers of\nan increase of $6 a ton on newsprint.\nThe increase became effective yesterday.\nA telegram to customers said the\nincrease was 'made necessary as a\nresult of increased costs of both\nlabor and materials.\"\nThe mill, newest newsprint pro\nducer in the United States, is operating at capacity.\nThe Coosa River Company's in\n17th time,\nThe oft-wed laborer was reticent\nabout his latest matrimonial venture but said he was married Oct. 27\niet Kansas City, Kas., lo Mrs. Laura\nA. Martin, 70. of St. Paul.\nWilliams said today he has been\nmarried \"five or six\" times, but\npress records list this as the 17th.\nThere have been reports published\nin the United States that atomic\ninstallations were in the Hamhung-\nhungnam industrial area.\"\nThursday\u20147.15.\nLong before dawn, John Mc*\ndermott Jr., 8, left his Elmont,\nN. Y., home In excited anticipation of a possible meeting with\nPresident Truman, long famed for\nhis early morning strolls. And,\nsure enough, the Chief Executive\ncame down the street, swinging\nhis cane. Johnny is pictured as he\nstrolled with Truman, who told\nJohn he \"wished he were 8 again.\"\n\u2014Cental Press Canadian\nfeels he never was in any danger crease was.the second such action(\nfrom the assassination attempt yes- taken by a u-s- company since the;\nterday and is \"sick over the death initiative in raising newsprint was\nof the police officer who was fatally taken by leading Canadian produc\nwounded in his defence. ers two weeks B8\u00b0-\nSpeaking of  Pte.  Leslie Coffelt, ~\n40. Mr. Truman told reporters: \"He, DIVER FINDS SHOTGUN\nwas one of the finest fellows you|    VICTORIA, B. C, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014|\never knew and he was murdered i The naval diver who combed   the\noutright it just makes you sick,\"     | bottom1 of the inner harbor Tuesday, Nationalist movement in New York\nthe death of his confederate,\nGriselio Torresola, in the shrubbery at the front of the steps that\nled to Blair House, temporary\npresidential residence while the\nWhite House is undergoing repairs,\nCollazo said he and Torresola\n'just took a chance'\nagainst the illicit drug trade in Canadian hisfory.\nBroadway Blacks Out\nFor Bernard Shaw\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (^P) \u2014\nBright signs of Broadway were\nblacked out early today as a tribute to playwright George Bernard\nShaw, who died in England at the\nage of 94.\nShaw's    death    was    announced\nshortly    after    midnight.    Several\nminutes  later  the   brilliant lights\nof   the   Great   White   Way\nswitched off.\ndirection and seemed to start off\nlike a reddish cigar-shaped spot that\nstreaked like a torpedo across the\nsky. It turned pink and then blue\nbefore disappearing with a trail of\nsparks behind it.\nThe glow, brighter than lightning,\nshattered   the   darkness   over   the\nentire region around Montreal.\nLIGHTS FLICKER\nSeveral persons here reported the\nlights in their homes flickered for\nseveral seconds following the glare.\nOne housewife said the flash had\n\"scared the wits\" out of her\nchildren.\nDies, Aged 102\nCampaign to Smash\nPotato Hoarding\nBERLIN, Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014 Mass\narrests of farmers were reported\nordered by East Germany's Communist Government today in a des-\nwere1 perate campaign to smash hoarding\nof the blighted potato crop.\nMore than 100 landowners in fiye\nSoviet zone states were reported\njailed and many more faced arrest\nNath-Jas alleged saboteurs.\nCommunist officials accused the\n___    __\u201e     WINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2022       .\nthat Truman|an Travis, 102, a tailor until his re-1 .   ________      .___\nwould be in Blair House when they j tirement in 1934, died today. He was. \"wealthy, reactionary\" farmers of\ntried to charge up the stairs with, born in Russia and came to Canada \"dawdling\" in filling potato quotas\ntheir German Luger pistols blazing, in 1914. \u2022 'for tfi'e government,\nDEBATED TWO WEEKS .\nThe Puerto Rican said he and\nhis confederate debated two weeks\nbefore deciding to \"take the law\nin our own hands\" in a desperate\nstroke that \u2014 somehow \u2014 they\nthought would' aid the cause of\nPuertd Rican independence.\nThe new arrests in New York followed the seizure of Collazo's wife\nRosa, who was held in $50,000 bail\non a charge of conspiring with her\nhusband.\nArrested in the Bronx apartment\nof the Collazos\" were:\nJuan Pinto-Gandia, 42, self-proclaimed leader of the Puerto Rican\nHe'called it a \"terrible thing\" and for an expensive shotgun succeeded\nsaid he was sick too over the wound-j in getting a portion of it. |\ning of officers Donald T. Birdzell!   Police Chief Jahn Blankstock said\nand Joseph H, Downs. j today it was one of two sca'tterguns\nMr. Truman's statement that he stolen from Wilson and Lenfesty's\nwas  never in  danger clearly was Store a short while ago.\nmeant as  an  expression of confi-l    Two  sailors   have   admitted   the\ndence in the men who guard him.     break-in and theft ano four others\n\"I wasn't in any danger,\" he said,[in the city and now are awaiting sen-\n\"I never have been.\" \u25a0   Itence.\nCity. He once served six years in\nthe Atlanta Federal Penitentiary\nfor insurrection in Puerto Rico,\nJohn Correa, 43, sporting goods\nmanufacturer. He is reported to\nhave had a loaded pistol in his possession.\nJuan Cortes, Cordero, 71, uncle\nof Mrs. Collazo. He is a ship's cook\nand part-time clergyman.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nNIAGARA FALLS, N.Y., Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014Pop corn together if you\nwant to strengthen family ties, a Buffalo veterans' hospital psychiatrist\nsuggests.\nThe psychiatrist, Dr. Bernard Still, spoke at the 17th annual New\nYork State conference on parent education and family life.\n\"The parent who gives his son a nickel to get the family a package\nof popped corn does not do so much for family life as he who gives\nhis son the money to get a bag of popcorn kernels which the family\ngroup can pop together, achieving that shared emotional experience\nof working-together.\"\nMARYSVILLE, Calif,, Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014Mrs. Kate  Lenahan started\nher dally walk at 5 p.m. Wednesday.\n'   Members of a 40-man search party finally found her at 12:15 a.m.\ntoday In the rugged Sierra foothills.\nInformed of the big search, Mrs. Lenahan scolded:\n\"Why, I was just taking a little walkl Send me the bill.\"\nMrs. Lenahan is 80 years old.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014A rain of dollar bills from a Hotel\nMcAlpin window today turned hundreds of shoppers into a shoving,\nscrambling mob that blocked traffic at 34th Street and Broadway.\nPolice said the money downfall, estimated at between $700 and\n$800, was a publicity stunt by a- zipper manufacturer. Two persons\nwere charged with violating the sanitary code by littering the streets\nwith advertising matter, which was attached to the greenbacks.\n 2 ^NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, N6V. X 1S>50\nSPENCER TRACY\nJOAN  BENNETT\nELIZABETH TAYLOR\nON TNI I AMI _ lOOIAMMI\nNews\nCartoon\nDON TAYLOIt < SllllE BUftKB\nCMC\nStorm Victim\nH.LBrogan\nBuried, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, &&, Novi 2 at\nKilled Friday hddf Mocjuiahi, Wash.,\nin tHe'big storm that damaged the\nNortlUvi. st,- thfe fabdy 'of tiflwafd Le-\nland Brogan, age 46, was brought\nhere for funeral services Thursday,\nA tree blowii dtiwn in the storiri\nUtaek the PaulSfln Logging Company idling if aiB on which \"he fras\nemployed  as  a  brakeman.\nHe Was tHe blddst son of Ittfc and\nMra. J; A: Brogan and was born\nhere in 1904. He had his schooling\nahd early employment Here and at\nYahk until i?\u00a3il when He went to\nWashington. He was employed there\n, by Long-Bell and Weyef Hausef\ni Lumbefr, Coniganies arid most recently rtillsoh Luhibef Cdrhpatiy.\nSurviving him are his parents\nnow living at catiai Mats, t*o\nbrothers, Malcolm at Calgary ahd\nJoe. at Kingsgate, arid one sister,\nMrS; C, Fierlng at Duttendorf, Iowa.\nRev; W. H. McDannold officiated\nat the services at McPreson Funeral\nhome ahd burial wis ih Westlawn\nCemetery;\nRussia Liquidates\nPacific Institute\nMOSCOW, Nov. 2 (Reuters)\u2014the\nSoviet Academy of Sciences has ordered complete reorganization in\nthe field of Oreintal research be\ncause Its workers have \"failed to\npfodtice important works on Oreintal problems today.\" The academy's\nmonthly magazine, Vesthik, reported today that the Pacific Ocean\nInstitute will be liquidated. Nothing\nWas said of What will happen 'to\nthe workers.\nNelson Ready\nFor Legion Week\nNelson Branch of Canadian Legion is all set for'its tegidn Week\nobservances, rnembefs Were told at\na meeting Thursday night.\nThe Silver Jubilee bf the founding of the Canadian Legion Will be\ncelebrated here with poppy day on\nSaturday; a church parade to First\nPresbyterian Church Sunday! a\nmembers' smoker Monday; cards\nand entertainment Wednesday; Ladies' Auxiliary entertainrnent on\nThursday, a radio play over CKLN'\nnext Friday and Remembrance Day\nceremonies and cenotaph unveiling,\na banquet and dance Nov. 11.\nThe big event will be unveiling\nof the revamped cenotaph, bearing\nplaques with the names, of Nelson\nDistrict's fallen of the First and\nSecond World. Wars.\nMembers also backed art executive recommendation that the Minister of Veterans' Affairs be asked\nto approve the appointment of C H.\nCarne of Nelson to the local advisory committee of the Veterans'\nLand Act. \\     ;       ,\nApplications for membership wire\naccepted from G. C. Blaney, S.. W.\nMatheson, R. W. W. Salter, A, E.\nNorris, A. J. Dingwall and R. L.\nLancaster. Ways of boosting attendance of the branch's 400-odd members Were also discussed.\nA number of members will travel\nto Slocan City Sunday for presentation of a charter to the hewly formed Slocan City branch. The meeting also donated chairs to add to\nthe new branch's furnishings.\nBadminton Club\nNames A. Wilson\nNew President\nthe Neison Badminton Club, meet\ning Thursday night, chose A. H. Wilson an ardent follower of the sport,\nas the Club's new president for the\n1950-51 term.\nOther officers making up the new\nslate were Bruce Latremouille, vice-\npresident, Miss Margaret Campion\nsecretary and David Baker treasurer.\nFred Thompson was elected chair-\nrtian of the floor committee with\nDick Coates and James Sail, com:\nmittee. members while Doreen Wilson; Ruth Chess, Kay Apps and\nGeraidipe McDonell made up the\ntea committee. Other committees\nwill be appointed later.\npians for a club tournament to\nbe held around the end of November\nWere discussed at the meeting, the\ntournament will be held to prepare\nenthusiasts for the annual Kootenay\nBadminton Tournament.\nTrail\nBowling\nThe Lions bowling quintette walked off with all the honors in games\nrolled off this week in Trail. Pin\nsmasher B. Ross knocked the maples\nflying for bbth high single and high\naggregate With scores of 290 and\n684, respectively, High team Spot\nalso went to the roaring Lions with\ntheir 2916 Score.\nScbres follow:\nWHIZ BANGS\u2014B. Marapbdi 424,\nD; Pertnie 509, E. Allen 665; V. Gale\n578; T. MurdbCh 478. Total 2654.\nINK SPOTS\u2014I. Kendrlch 294, B.\n\u2022FarriSh 353, G. Jenkin 433, D. Ross\nR. SHulo^c 188, spbt 453. Total:\nNotre Dame College \"Cooperative\"\nSchool; Plan College Building Here\nNotre Dame College of Nelson is\na cooperative s6hd61 where students\nget tHdif edhdatibh by rlbiili their\noWn work, Kiwanis Club was told\nat the, Hume Thursday night.\nBut building of a liberal arts College, affiliated With ah tiaste'fh University aht} b\/terlfil a ibUt-_\/\u00a3tit\ncourse; is the objective, ft:'- L: Cii'-\ntier, M.A., principal;.told the Club;\nThe grade XIll stiiddrils Were engaged in a program similar ib one\nthey Wobld have undertaken at tJtil-\nversit*   bf BHtisH   <JblUtiibla_   At\nthough giveh pSfhapi a little Here'\nfreedbrh, Sohie initiative W8I alfcfi\nexpected.\nStudents Were building their\ndesks, shelves, library tables, arid\nso on, ahd did their owh cooking\nand janitor Wblk.\nOf the 13 students, three WIN\nbf Protestant faith. All attended\nclasses In religion, and where\nthere was divergence of opinion,\nMr. Cartlir laid he tried ii explain the different views, and lo\ncreate respect ldr each other's\nfaith*,\nThere  must  be tolerance,  add\nwhece .{HIM mt tewahee {Here\nmust Hi divergence, Hi said, There\nmust also be respect for the views\nof StHeri,\nLiberal aits were concerned ''With\nperfection of ourselves'1, he reminded the KiWaiUahS; Constant &ker-\ntlSe df the iriirid oh various types\nof fHiriklhg pfepated the students\nfbi- t.Htt'y lhtb -alhiost auy field,\n.fluildlhg of a hew dollegb would\nalso be a cooperative effort oh the\npart of studehis, parents arid others\ninterested ih the hiOva.   .\niNt_.R_.8t, Abyicfe\n'',WS are ndt looking! for mori\u00a7y.\nbut we do want your Interest and\nadvice\", he fcontlriUed;\ntHg CSlleg'S iS Idfcated iri the ibr-\nmer Choquette. bakery building on\nJosephiHe Street;\n.' tie told how Father Athol Murray\njtad organised auoh a college in\nWileoif,, sask.; now affiliated with\nuhlverslty   of  Saskatchewan   and\nuniversity of Ottawa, there were\n18 professors, but nohe received\nsalaries, they did receive board\nahd rodhi and mohey Was available\nfdr necessary-expenditures S'Uch as\nclothing. Non-seetaHah, the student\npopulation Was orid-thlrd Profesidht.\nGraduates had included three\npriests ahd three ministers;\nThe Nelsdn college was based on\nthese lines, and it was hoped soon\nfo be affiliated with University 6f\nOttawa.\nSoviet Claim Hearing Transformation\n01 Nonliving Matter Into Living\nBy ALTON L BLAKESLEE\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2- (AP)\u2014ftds-\nSlan Scientists claim a great he*\ndiscovery Which they say may everi\nhelp science create life \u2022from nonliving matter.\nthe purported discovery 16 in'\nhow living celli\u2014of plants Or animals\u2014are formed, it has been given\nofficial Soviet blessing as .a ri6w\nTRAIL\nCURLING\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov. 2\u2014Results of\nThursday rtjght's games In the trail\nCUriihg tllub's Pre-Seasoh Bdhiplel\nfollow;.      .\nK. S. Knight 10, D. McLellan 6.\nW. .A. Forrest 9, W. P. .Robert-\njon '12.\nR. MdGhie 3, D. Sutherland 8;\nE. Montpellier 9, L. McFash 4.\nt. A. fiice 11, P. F. Mtilntyre 7;\na. G. Service 8, a. Baifour Hi\nS. Matovich 8, W. Forrest 13;\nR. M. Hill 7, J. Derby 10.\nA. Snowball 7, R. Baihblidge 6.\nH. B. Reed 9, A. B. Ross 13.\nH. Murphy 8, ft. Donaldson 11.\nR.'P. Dockerill 8,'Ai E, Calvert 7.\nE. G. N. Player 8, A. G, Cheyne 6.\nW. E. Vance 7, J. Niven 13.\nW. Ginter 9, L. Landucci 16.\nA. H. Woolf 12, J. Lepage 7.\nJ. Jakel 8, Roy. Stone 10.\nN. Gordon 8, R. E. StOne 9.\nThe last two. games in the draw\nwere semi-finais play,\nFriday's draws follow:\n4 p.m.\u2014Landucci ys winner of\nRobb-Creighton; W' Cameron vs H;\nJ. McKinnon; J. Derby, vs Piayer;\nwinner Sutherland-ftobertspn vs\nWinner Balfour-Rice; A. B. Ross vs\nT. Krause; J. Niven vs Wooif.\n6:00 p.m.:\nt. J. Glover vs t. W. Mathiesorii\nR. McGhie vs W. A. Forrest; G. G;\nService vs P; P.. Mclntyre; R. E,\nHill vs Cheyne; Gihter vs loser of\nRobb-Creightori; Vahce vs Lepage.\n8:00'p.m., primary finals: .\nHOy Stone vs R. E. Stohe.\nThe Weather\n2117.\nLIONS\u2014B. Rhddes 595, L. Lyoh1 Gales and rairi pourtded the North\n461, M. Richardson 585, B. Ross 684,i Coast and Cloudiness from this storm\nC, Bradbury 691. Total 2916. iblahkets the whole province. Sndw\nCROWN POINT \u2014 H. Archibald!has  spread  through  the  Northern\n||W\u00ab'*\u00bbgiv\u00bb\u00bb'y\u00bb\u00bbOtt\u00bb,ir\u00bbfcij1li>\u00bb\u00bbw^^*\u00bbbw\u00bbwwwy\u00bb\u00bb>\u00bb\u00bbip\u00bbp\u00bb\u00bbw|,\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\n40c and 75c\nA Quick Relief for Acute ond Chronic _BR0NCH.lTJS\n\"YOUR FORTRESS Of HEALTH\"\nNELSON PHARMACY\nSEEK RESERVE\nTRANSPORT AIRCRAFT\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 , (CP)-Steps\nare being taken by R.C.A.J; officials and civilian agencies to provide   Canada   with   a   reserve   of\ntransport aircraft which coUld bej g83, A. SpoWatt; 512, _i7i^tri_Wm,\\V^i of the province and. ihahy pOlrits\nused   for   air   lift   Work   in   art D. gt. Marie 381; E. FoiSy 253. Total!hi the Southern interior have re-\n12118. ... j ported light rain:\nMAPLE LEAFS \u2014 V.  Cox 476,'    Improvement in conditions is ex-\nI Ivers 521,1. Martin 495, N. CapUtO'pected in the SpOtherh part but\n459, D. Decembrini 365. Total 2316.   'new storm is gathering Strength 600\nNURSES No. 1\u2014Kirk 373, MacKay: miles West of Vancouver Island ahd\n,379, Haruld 475, BroWn 561, Hall 371,!is expected to reach the North Coast\n! i! spot 3&9. Total 2558.   ' by  afternoon  bringing  more  rain\ni !|   EAST TRAIL GROCERY \u2014 G. and gales to that sectioh.\n' JHalbUm 476, G. Falrley-393, T. Ha- Nelson      ib\nJijkoWduck 330, B. Fletcher 393, Mj St. Johns    36\nemergency.\nNationally Advertised  Lines\"\nST, -er.JUST  BELOW  BAKER  St.\nNELSON, B.C, RES. 394-L\nT,-^-^rfJ.^BA^.,^Amg._>ff,^r1f\\\u00abfc^e\\rt-k\u00ab__.^^^._a*^^AA^A^Mi.iti,f SJM\u00b1&\u00a3\n\"FcaUirlnQ\n433 JOSEPHINE\nPHONE 1203\ni\ntells ths\ntruth abM...\nm\nPut Seagram's \"83\" to the\nwater test. For v\/dter (plain\nOr sparkling) is your most\nreliable guide to the whole\ntruth about any whisky.\nWater adds nothing, detracts nothing, but reveals\nd  whisky's true, natural\nflavour and bouquet.\nSay SEAGRAM'S\nand be SURE.. \u25a0.\nof 'he finest\n9\n*\nft\neagranft\n\"83V\nTa\/idciian\/\nThis ac'vpr:i.'.!!nv\niy, Ccr;r:;l licsrc\ni> hot published or displayed by\nb\/ lho Government of British Columbia.\nMohovuk 452. TtflUl.2044.\nLUCKY STRIKES\u2014G. Ioanin 452,\nJ. Scodellaro 386, G. Humphreys 431,\nV. Page 345, low score 430, spot 477.\nTotal 2521.\nATOMS\u2014B. Leamoh 445, I. Van\n531. M. Thompson 449. Total 1635.\nNURSES NO. 2 \u2014 Swenten 377.\nTaylor 534. Catalano 376, BurchlU\n311, OWert 284, spot 164.'Total 2065.\nSPITFIRES \u2014 J. Litcher 486, Pi\nReid 484, C. MacDOhald 440, M.\nFletcher 449, T. Bobertsoh 530. Total\n2289\nNOVICES\u2014T. Dorg 463. T. Parsons\n413, B; Lea 357, M. Sievlh 220, low\nscore 316; spot 189. Total 1958,\nNO DAMAGE IN\nCHIMNEY FIRE\nThe Nelson Fird Department\nmade a quick call to a chimney fire\nat 522 Lake Street early Thursday\nevening. Firemen extinguished the\nblaze without datfiage.\nPHONE 144 FOR OLASSIFIED\nFor Eczema -\nSkin Troubles\nMake up your mind today that\nyou are going to give your skin a\nreal chance io get well. Go to\nMann's Drug Store or any good drug\nstore and get an \u2022 original bottle bf\nMoone's Emerald Oil\u2014lt lasts many\ndays because it is highly concentrated.\nThe very first application will\ngive you relief\u2014the itching of\nEczema is quickly stopped\u2014eruptions dry up and scale Off ih a Very\nlew day*. The same is true of Itch;\ning Toes and teet, Barber's Itch.\nSalt Rheum, skin troubles.\nRemember that Moone's Emerald\nOil is a Clean, powerful, penetral'\ning Antiseptic Oil that does pot\nstain or leave a greasy residue.\nComplete satisfaction or money\nback.\nHalifax  31 54\nMontreal  38 68\nToronto   40 hi\nNorth Say :  4i 42\nPort Arthur  20 37\nKenora  21 31\nWinnipeg ...; :  26 44\nBrandon  29 35\nThe Pas ..:  26 30\nRegina  ;  27 40.\nSaskatoon   27 34\nPrince Albert i  30 35\nNorth Battleford ;.... 28 34\nSwift Current  24 42\nMedicine Hat  21 47\nLethbridge   17 46\nCalgary , *.:.....;...;...,._...,. 20 44\nEdmonton  17 44\nKamloops   3i 33\nPen^iCtOn  3i 44\nVancouver',  43 47\nVictoria    43 48\nKimmbeHey   18 39\nCi-esSeht Valley  16 39\nKaslo     27 ' 42\nPrince Rupert  42 46\nPrince George  '18 29\nGrand FOrks   36 41\nSeattle   .:  43 48\nPortland  :.  5l 52\nSpokane   , '... 4l 41\nChicago ...;  41 47\nSan Francisco  54 76\nLos Angeles  64 92\nNew Vork  ; B2 84\nWhitehorse  29 48\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW   VORk,  Ndv.   2' (AP)   <-\nSpot honferroUs meal prides. Copper\n24% tents a pound, cdhnedtieut\nvaiiey. Lead, 17 dents a pound Ne*\nYork, Zlhd 17% cents a pouhd East\nSt. Louis. Tin $1.2?^ a phUhfl NeW\ntek..   .\nTENDERS ACCEPTED    ,\nFOR TREASURY BILLS\n, OttAWA, N0v. 2 (C#) - the\nBank of Canada announced today\nlenders hat\/e been accepted for $76,-\nOSfyOO0 Of Goverhnieht treasury bills\n^ue Feb: 2, iioij Average discount\nprice of the accepted bids *as $-9.-\n84585 and average yield Was .620\nper cent. \u25a0     . \u2022\nPackers Defeat\nKimberley 9 A\nKELOWNA, B. C, Nbv. 2 (CP)\u2014\nKeidwHa Packers shewed little re-\nspeet tonight for the vaunted\npower of the Kimberley Bytiafri-\niters as they took a 9-2 *lri Offer\nthe leader., of the Western Inter-\nnauonal Leslie.       '\nDigging in from the. drop of the\n^Udk,   the   _i a i n 1 i n e^Okanagatt\nPackers roiled up a V-d count be;\nfore the Dynamiters could retaliate\nbehind Roy McMeekin early in the\nthird period;\nThO Writ eartted by a flashy offensive   ahd   defensive   display,\npulled the Kelowna sextet back iri^\nto second place in the M.O.A.H.L.\nahead of the idle Kamloops Elks.\nMike burbati got hts seebhd hat\ntrick of the season to pade the Kelowna snipers. Ex-Edmonton Flyer\nBob Evans was high\nthebty arid .hiarks another split with\nWeSlerh science:\nltdbgrt C, Cook, editor of the\nJournal Of Heredity, published by\nthe American Gdnetlc AsSOfciatlon,\ncalled ihis \"domplete nonsense.\"\nIfe Said It is !'part of -a gallop\nback into the middle ages or before!' by Soviet party-line science.\nScientists Outside Russia 'believe\nhe* living .cells afe formed by a\nCell's dividing into t*d hOw cellS.\nthe amoeba Splits into t\\V0 hew\namoebae. The human baby grows\nfrom the unloh of a human egg cell\nand a sperm cell, which divided\nInto two new cells, then four, and\non into the billions of cells of a\ncomplete human being,\nNot ehDlNARV\nThe SusSiahS agree, but say they\nhave foUnd something else: That\nsome living cells come from tiny\nliving particles- which are not cells.\n. The dells generated by thesd particles ate different froth ordinary\ncells, and form a vital part of the\nnew plant or animal, they hold.\nThese particles may be \"a connecting link\" between living and\nnon-living matter, declare articles\nih Soviet newspapers, adding:\nsoWtiotol^greL^rObfemof lhe Bob Evans was \"*\" P\u00b0int mal*\nKimberley \u2014 Quigley; CrUlck-;\nshank, Jones; Livingstone; Barre,\nMcDonald. Subs\u2014MerkoW'Sky, Bather, McNiven, Bell, Mathews,\nCalles, Sanderson, F. sunivan. <\nKelOWhS\u2014McMeekin; H. Middle-\nton, HartSon; Daskl; Durban, Kttip-\nplebei'g. Subs\u2014Crothers, A. Mun-\ndrud, Gorlle, Hoskins, J, Middleton,\nH- Sullivan, Lowe, BvanS.\nSUMMARY,:\nFirst period\u20141, Kelowna, EVahs\n(Lowe) 8:08; 2, KeloWna, Crothers\n(Evahfr, Lowe) 12:01; 3, Kelowna,\nDurban (Knipplebdrg) 13:42; 4,\nKelowrta, Evans (Lowe, B. Middle,\ntort) 19:09.\nPertalties^Barker.\nSecond period\u20145, KeloWna, DUN\nban (DaSki) :08; 6, Kelowna, Daskl\n(Crofhers) 9:51; 7, Kelowha, Amun^\ndrud (J. Middleton) 10:15.\nPenalties \u2014 Lowe, Merkowsky,\nBarker (2), Sanderson.\nThird period\u20148, Kimbrfrley,\nBarre (McDonald) :16; 9, Kelowna\n(Knippleberg) 1:20; 10, Kelowna,\nSullivan (Evans) 6:31; 11, Kimberi'\nley, Jones (McDonald) lij:41,\n; Penalties \u2014 Amundrud, Evans,\nBell. \u25a0\nShaw Ashes Hay\nRest in Abbey\nAYOTT St. LAWRENCE, England, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014The ashes of\nGeorge Bernard Shaw are likely to\nbe buried ih Westminster Abbey,\nfinal resting place Of Britain's great\nmen. But the decision mdy riot bS\nmade for several days.\nthe great Irish playwright, who\ndied at the age of 94 early today\nin this tiny North London village,\ndid not care.\n\"1 want my ashes mingled with\nmy wife,\" he told Lady Astor, ohe\nof   his   closest   friends,   recently.\n\"After that you dan do as you like.\"\nHis bbdy will be cremated privately\nirt London Monday.\nHis wife Was the former Charlotte\nFrances  Payne-Townshend,   his\n\"gfeeh-eyed Irish heltesS;\" Who died\nin 1943. They had Mo children.\nThe Dean of Wdttmlnster, Very\nRev. A. C. Don, will make the\nflHai   declnlort   Whither   Shaw's\nashes will be placed III \\h* poets'\neornor of the Abbey.\n\u25a0\u25a0''   '\"\u25a0   - \u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0    i \u25a0\u25a0\nRecord Fish Stolen\nSAW EIIEGO, Calif., Nov. 2 (AP)\n\u2014A world's record fish was stolen\ntoday, police Were informed.\nMrs. Howard Minor, who hooked\na l\u00a78'poUrtd Striped Marlln SWord-\nfiSh off Poirit LOma yesterday, reported that the giant Wai stolen during the hight frOm a waterfront\nhoist Where it was hUrtg.\nSmart Fall\nHand Bags\nAn Colon and styles\nPOPULAR PRICES\nFINK'S\nBelieve bead Boy\nAte Rat Poison\nCHEMAINUS, B. C., Nov. 2 (CP)-\nA five-year-oid Indian boy died in\nhospital here today after he is believed to have eaten rat pbison.\ntommy BaptiSte was rushed to a\nhospital ih this Vancouver Island\ntown shortly after he was found ill\non a bench near his home. He was\nthe adopted son of Mr. and Mrs,\nJohn BaptiSte.\nLIVERISH?\n\"Tfotibles never come singly\" they wyl\nSo take Dr. Chase'B Kidney-Liver Pills\nand get two trcatmehta in one! This\nprdven remedy htfpg you feel better\nfaster\u2014because it relieves both Ityer kiid\nkidney disorders and the backache and\npainful joints which so often result. Dr,\n'\"'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -yi   Chase\u2014a   name\nDR.CHASESL ,odc,Kai\u00b0B' ir\nKIONEY-I.IVER  PILLS\ntransformation of nOn-livihg matter\ninto living.\"\nThe theory also offers support\nto Soviet claims that wheat has\nbeen changed into rye by grafting\nplants together. The strange particles supposedly figure in bringing\nthis about,\nThe discovery is credited to a\nwoman biologist, Professor O, B.\ntepeshinskaya, Who Was awarded\na Stalin prize,\nAa&imilh Named\nRural School Area\nRepresentative\nA. G. Smith, Granite Road resident ,WaS elected representative of\nthe Neisen Extra-Municipal At'\ntendance area at a meeting of ratepayers of the area in the Central\nSchool library Thursday night,\nthe area will include the .rural\nsection immediately surrounding\nNelson in Rosemont, Cottonwood,\nUphill beyond the City limits, North\nShore to a point 3V4 miles on the\nhighway from the Nelson Post Of'\nfice, Granite Road and Shirley.\nFormerly of Manitoba, Mr. Smith\nhas been in the district for only a\nyear.\nOfficials of the Nelson ScHool\nDistrict No. 7 school board Were disappointed at the lack of interest\nshown by rural citizens.\nAlthough the meeting Was publicized and letters distributed to\nthe school children to take home to\ntheir parents, dniy two ratepayers\nshowed up.    .\nft Was necessary to have representatives fbr each area in ths\nschool district, E. E. Hyndman, the\nSchool irispeclOr poliited Out. their\nopinions, recommendations ahd help\nto the school Board were Vital in\nconnection With rural matters.\nThe   Board   Is   considering   a\nbuilding program. It was hoped\nthat it could have been disoussea\nand   questions  answered   at  the\nmeeting,\nAt present the Students of the\nCity Schools were  carrying  on\npopulation survey of Nelsort to help\n_ the .board decide on the size of a\n'Jjg school required. It Was by doing\n'I the foundation v\/ork that the fioard\n_ would be able tO Supply Ihforma-\n_ tion to the citizens Whert the time\n;4(jlf6r the'project came. They felt that\n04 a bylaw Was not popular with tax-\n'_i payers, but that people should rea-\n04|lize the need for facilities for. the\n'sa! increasing enrolment. The pteSeht\nSituation was now fair to either the\nteachers or the pUpils.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiii\n,      6UILD B.C. PAVROH.8\nBABIES\nLOVE\nPACIFIC\nPERIODIC\nPAINS...use\nPARADOL\nLegion Gets\nCharier Sunday\n...SLOGAN CITY, B.C., Nofr. % \u2014\nVfeit.Kootenay. zone of tho Cafta^\ndian .Legion will have a new branch\nSunday. _~\nSlocan City's liiwly \u25a0 6rganii\u00abd\nbranch will be presented with its\ncharter at a ceremony Attended by\nzone officers, members of its various\nbranches, ahd members of Ladies'\nAuxiliaries.\nWreaths will be laid at ths cenotaph by presidents of each branch\nand presidents of each auxiliary,\nand officers will be instiled.\nHomogenized for easier digestion, always uniformly\ngood, Pacific Milk is recommended by doctors for infants' formulas. Increased\nVitamin D content makes It\na vitdl food \u2014 necessary, for\nbuilding strong healthy\nbodies. Get Pacific Milk far\nyour baby today.\nPacific Milk\n\"Vacuum Packed and\n\u2022 HofnOgeniMd''\nllllillllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllll\nDO YOU KNOW.,.\n4 Sheets of \"SYLVATILE\" will do\nthe Dado of an average bath room,\nand \\'2 to 14 Sheets of \"SYLVA-\nCORD\" or \"SYLVACRAFT\" will panel the walls of a 15'x 16' living\nroom. \u25a0.\nGHEGK THESE PRICES AND SEE YOUR COST\nOF FINISHING OR REMODELLING YOUR ROOM\n\"SLYLyATlLE\" is \u00bbeor^\ned in 4\" to 6\" Squares,\ngiving a nice tile ef'\nfeet.\n4'xS'8HEEfa\n4\" Sqs. Per sheet    $B.SO\n6\" Sqo. Per sheet....   5,44\n\"JYLVACOftb\" Is a\nnew patterned Plywood\ngiving a pleasing em'\nbdssed surface.\n4' it f SHEETS\nUtility Grade $S.J2\nSeteot Grade    5,92\nAntique Finish In Light\nor Dark Shades .   6.08\niyew\u201e.,lQwCc>sfi\nj\/\nm\n1D0I1CI_I5 flRWWDDD\nI \u00bb W\/tfiH.a\/'\n\"SYLVACRAFT\" Is a\ndecorative panel which\nreadily lends itself to\nmodem, streamlined wall designs.\nAvailable in 4 patterns\n4' x 8' 3HEET8\n$4.80 per sheet\nBURNS\n\u25a0    Lumber Company\nPHONE;':\u25a0% '.'EveryIhing lor the Builder\"\n1 \"W        602 Bcikcr St.   Nelson, B. C,\nPHONE\n1181\nmmtst\nmk\n.nthe tea With the flavvut rrii\/et folks\ntike besit Rich find robust, yet soothing, Satisfying...Carite*bite's flaVoiir\nis just the Way JfoU like it. feijoy a\nsteaming cup ofteh. Everybody who\ntries Canterbury likes it!\nit costs uou less at S A F E WAY (\n SKATES\n(BY SAMPSONS)\nWomen'i Figure Skates .... $15,95\nWomen's Tube Skatea     12.45\nMlsies' Figure Skntcn     12.95\nSizes 11 to ?..\nMen's Tubo Skates     11.50\nBoys' Tube Skates     9,96\nSlzei 2 to 6.\nThe SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone '895 553 Baker St.\nWindermere District\nElects Trustees\nINVERMERE, B. C, Nov. 2\u2014The\nannual ratepayers' meetings' held\nthroughout No. 4 Windermere\nSchool District were well attended\nat most points. At Windermere, V.\nS. Klmpton, present Chairman of\nthe School Board, was reelected as\nrepresentative. ,\nAt' Edgewater Hans Seel was\nelected to succeed present Trustee\nG. J. Ferguson, and Joe Roesch was\nelected as representative for Galena.\nWinston Wolfenden will serve as\nrepresentative for Brisco,\nAt Invermere a combined meeting\nfor Athalmer-Invermere, Radium\nHot Springs and Sparkling Creek\nattendance areas was held. Edward\nThouret was reelected representative for Radium. Trustees Oswald\nYoung and Mrs. Ian Weir for Invermere and Mrs. Ian Weir for Sparkling Creek were not up for reelection this year.\nV. A. Wlllard was elected representative for Wilmer.\nSells Hosmer Hotel\nFERNIE, B. C, Nov. 2\u2014Provino\nSerefino, owner and operator of the\nHosmer Hotel, on the highway East\nof Fernie, for many years, has sold it\nto A. R. Schram of Hosmer and A.\nL. Dupuis of Trail.\nTransaction is effective Nov. 1,\nand the new owners take over management of the hotel and general\nstore on that date.\nGLASGOW, Scotland (CP) \u2014English boys leaving school get better\nJobs than Scottish boys, says David\nCarson, retiring schoolmaster. \"Scottish boys do well on written papers\nbut lose marks on oral work.\" he\nsaid. \"They are diffident, inarticu\nlate and' monosyllabic.\"\nAMAZING I\nOn Display at\nMe & Mc\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS\nBOX 39 NELSON, B.C,\nMew Equipment\nFor T.B. X-Rays\nSel Up in Creston\nCRESTON, B. C,; Nov. 2\u2014President D. Andrews of Creston Valley\nHospital announced ,a technclan\nwas now installing the new $7000\nPhoto-Roentgen equipment at the\nhospital, a donation given to the\nlocal hospital (one of seven in the\nProvince) for the detection of T.B.\nThese machines, It is understood,\nmark the flfst progressve step in\nthe fight against T.B., and at the\nsame time eliminate the costly trav\nelling chest clinic.\nThe chest plates taken are free to\nthe patient, but the T.B. headquarters will pay the hospital the cost\nfor having the picture taken. The\nmachine, weighing approximately\n1300 pounds, is being nstalled along\nwith the other X-ray machine.\nMrs. Von Ferber, local hospital\ntechnician, who was formerly employed at the Regina General Hospital, will operate the new Photo-\nRontgen equlnmeht, which is as\ngood as an X-ray, but for chesl\nplates only.\nPyjamas to Truman\nFrom Coast Man\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)\nA Vancouver man sent President\nTruman a pair of silk pyjamas today.'\nBernard Rose, carbaret owner,\nsaid he was disturbed when he\nlearned that Truman's assassination\nhad been attempted while the top\nexecutive enjoyed a nap in his un\ndcrwear.\nHe sent this note with the pyjamas: i.\n\"A little humor helps to lighten\nthe seriousness of an experience\nsuch as you've just gone through...\nI hope these will be good for a\nlaugh.\"\nHm\nDeputy Chief Scout Quest at South Slocan\nLicence Some Help\nIf Car Hits Deer\nPORT ARTHUR, Nov. 2 (CP)\nA Fort William motorist found out\nlast night that it is some compensation to have a hunting licence\nwhen your cor kills a deer on\nthe highway.\nL. J. Gagnon reported to Provincial police that his car had struck\nand killed a deer on the Niplgon\nHighway East of here. Damage to\nthe car was estimated at $150. Being\nthe possessor of a hunting licence\nfor the current year, the motorist\nwas allowed by the Fish and Wild\nLife Division of the Department of\nLands and Forests to keep the deer.\nCrash Survivors to\nBe Married Soon\nVANCOUVER, \u25a0 Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014\nTwo persons ]pst in the wilds of\nBritish.Cpiumhip.tor four days last\nyear are getting married.\nSheila Cure, 29, and Willam D.\nGrant, lost when their light plane\ncrashed in a driving rainstorm atop\nMount Hozomeen in May, 1949, said\ntoday they will be married Nov. 15\nat Cardston, Alta.\nGrant, a 31-year-old pilot, and his\nformer flying student, were rescued\nabout 135 miles East of here after\nan intensive search by Air Force\nand ground parties,\nBritish Cancer\nDeath Rate High\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (Reuters)\u2014In a\nsingle year, cancer kills nearly as\nmany Britons as the 144,000 British\nArmy men slain In the Second\nWorld War, a Government report\ndisclosed yesterday. In England and\nWales about 100,000 contract cancer each year, the report said.\nWe're bound for the Rio Grande,\nAndatvay, Rio! aye, Rio!\nSing fare-yertvell, my bonny young gel,\nFor we're bound\/or ihe Rio Grande!\nFor over a century Lamb's Navy\nhas been the call of those who know\n\u2022 good rum. Smooth and mellow, it is\nmatured, blended and \"bottled in\nBritain of the finest Demerara Rums.\nLamb's Navy Rum\nThis advertisement: is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by thc Government of British Columbia,\n* An Old Sea Slianty\n3SB\n\u25a0 :\u25a0\".      i\n|it\nbHi9\nESetr* JY*'* \u25a0  -     1\nHESSflfiP!\nSHk^^H\nIk\n\\___e__v2r_5k___W\nni%\/^k\\mssw   \u25a0   at*\n^r*\n: TI\nt .i%r*   \/-'   v'^\nFireman Overcome\nBy Smoke at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Nov, 2 (CP) -\nOne fireman was overcome by\nsmoke when fire threatened the\nLapaul apartments here today. All\nresidents escaped uninjured.\nFireman Joseph Swenerton, overcome by smoke, was quickly revived.\nThe blaze started In the basement\napparently caused by a workman's\nblow torch. It was brought under\ncontrol within an hour,\nDuring his visit to Nelson and District Jackson Dodds, C.B.E., Deputy Chief Scout of Canada,\nand his'party were honored at a luncheon at tho\nSouth Slocan staff house of the CM. & 8. They\nalso toured the power plants. At the luncheon\nabove are, from loft, G. W. Sterling, K. R. Yale,\nPresident of Nelson and District Boy Scout Assoc\niation; Lt.-Col. G. E. Simmonds, Administration\nDepartment, Ottawa; District Commissioner Don\nL. Ure, Harry Burns,; C. H. Bland, G. R. Hammond,\nDn N, R. Jennejohn, Aid; Joseph Kary, Dean T. L.\nLeadbeater, J. V. Scrivener, Provincial Field Commissioner; and, in foreground, Mr. Dodds. Photo\ncourtesy R. Mulloy.\nFernie Red Cross Disaster\nCommittee Meets Test\nFERNIE, B. C, Nov. 2\u2014Simulating circumstances of a real disaster\nwhich wiped  clean with fire the\ntown of Fernie in 1908, the Provincial Red Cross Disaster Committee sprang a test on the Fernie Red\nCross Disaster  Committee,  which\nmet the emergency authoritatively,\nmobilizing within 20 minutes at thc\nCanadian Legion Hall, actual mobilizing point for any real disaster.\nMrs. H. E. Miard, as general chairman, was notified by Coast head-,\nquarters that a fire on F.ernle's outskirts had leaped to homes in the\narea and  the  unit was required.\nWithin 20 minutes she had established  headquarters,  notified  her\nsubcommittee heads, and the medical, cvillan aid and relief, housing,\nfood, transportation and recording\nchairmen or aides were on the job.\nTheoretically there were 25 seriously burned. The Medical Committee arranged for their Immediate transport to the hospital, and\nwired to Vancouver and Calgary\nfor specific plasma, streptomyclne\nand   penicillin   supplies   to   be\nflown to Cranbrook and rushed to\nFernie,\nThe 51 refugees whose homes had\nbeen destroyed were accommodated\nat the disused old Fernie Hospital,\nwhere beds were available, and arrangements were made for bedding,\nsoap and night clothes. The Provl:\nsioning Committee drew up lists of\nnecessary supplies to feed them for\na week and placed the orders. It\nwas assumed a regular agency\nwould take over after a week. Buses\nwere arranged for evacuating\n\"people. The Recording Committee\nset up files to list casualties, refugees and evacuees and maintain\nrecords of equipment and supplies\nand where they were available.\nThe real Fernie fire, Aug. 1, 1908,\nwas sprung just as suddenly about\nnoon, when the wind shifted at a\nlittle brush fire just East of town.\nBy nightfall all that was left of this\ncity of 2000 wft the coal company\noffice, surrounded by wide lawns.\nThe whiplash of lire in all direc-\ntons launched hysterical flight to\nany place. After the fire a family of\nfour who sought refuge in their well\nwere found boiled there. Six other\nbodies were found in the city ruins.\nMany sought refuge in the Elk River. Property damage was $5,000,000,'\nand the 2000 residents were chaotically scattered. ,\nC.P.R. trains in the vicinity, unable to go through on the twisted\ntracks, shuttled cars of refugees in\nboth directions. Relief centres for\n1500 were set-up at Cranbrook and\nMoyie .halls. Some refugees were\ntaken as far as Nelson and Medicine\nHat. The disaster brought financial\naid from a generous world when it\nwas over, ond Fernie Immediately\nrebuilt its city on a permanent basis.\nBadminton Clubs '\nForm League .... .,'.\nINVERMERE, B. C, Nov. 2\u2014Columbia Valley Badminton Clubs\nhave formed a league comprised ot\nclubs at Golden, Edgewater, Canal\nFlats and Invermere. Inter-club .play\nwill be enjoyed during tha Winter,\nand the Columbia Valley tournament will be held at Golden next\nSpring. The East Kootenay badminton tournament will be held at Invermere in April.\nOfficers for the Invermere Club\nwere elected at the annual meeting.\nPresident Is Mrs. E. C. Phillips; Vice\nPresident, Corbin Mitchell; Secre\ntary, H. R. Wannop, and Treasurer,\nMrs. Marvin, Tunnacliffe.\nThe season will start Sunday, Nov.\n5, with play twice a week in the\nCommunity Centre at Invermere.\nAddresses School\nMeeting, Fruitvale\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Nov. 2 \u2014 The\nannual school meeting was he,ld in\nthe old elementary school with\ntwelve people present. Inspector\nLucas spoke to the gathering, expressing disappointment at so few\nin attendance, although he felt their\nstaying away spoke well of the\napproval they had for the program\nof the Board. He said they (the\nBoard) would feel better if they\nwould come out to the meeting, Mr.\nLucas outlined some of the duties\nof a representative.\nRalph Leckett was elected chairman of the meeting.\nMrs. Walter Veitch, Mrs, Nels\nMolle'r, Ralph Leckett, Fred Peitzsche and Mrs. P. Harrett were elected by acclamation as representatives\nfor Fruitvale. There was no one\npresent from Parks Siding. Their\nrepresentative will be appointed\nlater by the Crown.\nRural Trustee E. Broadhurst, who\nhas another year to run as trustee,\ngave a very comprehensive report\nof the activities of the Board during\nthe past year. Dealing first with\nthe transportation of pupils, he said\nit costs about $150 a day for transportation. If possible, they didn't\nwant to take out by bus pupils of\ngrades one to three. Discipline on\nthe school buses was very good this\nyear. Tie urged that parents Impress on their children that any\ndistraction on a bus which Indirectly drew bus drivers' attention was\nhazardous.\nPlans for the remainder of the\nFruitvale School and for Central\nSchool will be ready by the end of\nMarch, 1951, and lt Is hoped that\nall scheduled new school buildings\nwill be finished by the end of 1951.\nThe new Trail High School will be\nopened by September.\nMr. Broadhurst said the Board\nwas very proud of their teaching\nstaff and felt they were the finest\nthat could be had. It was the aim\nof the Board that every child in the\ndistrict receive the same chance for\neducation, he concluded.\nRailway Dispute\nHearing Expected\nTo End Next Week\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 Hearings in the Government's arbitration proceedings on the railway\nwage-hour dispute are expected) to\nconclude late next week.\nReception of submission from..the\nRailways and 'Unions' is in the final\nstages, and Mr. Justice R. L. Kellock\nof the Supreme Court of Canada\nis to .resume sessions with them at\nMontreal next Wednesday to receive the remaining material.\nSuffers Heart-Attack\nAt Sight of Police\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) -\nA bank robber suspect suffered a\nheart, attack at his home when officers walked In, police disclosed today.\nHe is held under guard in hospital\npending investigation of the $9300\nrobbery at a branch of the Bank\nof Montreal last Saturday. Three\nmen participated in the holdup.\nThe 37-year-old man was located\nin the basement of his home. Police\nsaid he was attempting to burn a\nlarge amount of money in the furnace.\nClothing found in the getaway\ncar, located in a West End garage\nSunday, led to the arrest of the\nman.\nCharges U.S. Breaks\nPotsdam Declaration\nWASHINGTON, Nov. 2 (AP) -\nRussia charged in the 13-country\nFar Eastern Commission today that\nthe United States used Japanese\nsoldiers in the Korean fighting.\nReciting the North Korean charge\nthat Japanese troops took part in\nthe fighting at Seoul and in the\nCholwon sector, Russia demanded\nthat.the Commission find this was\na \"gross violation\" of the Potsdam\nDeclaration and of the Big Four\nPowers policy for keeping Japan\ndisarmed,\nMay Succeed\nBen'Qurion\n'X-'r\"\nPlnhas Rosen, Minister of Justice and leader of the small Left-\nof-Centre Progressive Party In Israel, is believed possible successor\nto outgoing David Ben-Gurion.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nAnimal Demand\nExpected to Raise\nNeed for Wheat\nOTTAWA, Nov. 2 (CP) Canada's\ndomestic wheat requirements are\nexpected to climb in the new crop\nyear, but there still will be plenty\nleft for export. \u2022\nThe Bureau of Statistics estimated today that in the 1950-51 crop\nyear Canada will need about 155,\n000,000 bushels of wheat, an increase\nof some 23,000,000 over last year.\n, Mainly, the reason for the increase Is not so much human demand,'as animal. With the World\nmarket for beef and pork bouyant\nand with a greater supply of low-\ngrade wheat available in Canada,\nlivestock feeders are expected to\nuse more wheat as feed than a year\nWashington Mines\nShip to Trail\nOres and concentrates received\nby The Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Limited, at Trail, for the week ending\nOctober 14, totalled 4765 wet tons\nof which 1567 wet tons were forj\ntreatment in the Lead Smelter and\n3198 wet tons were for treatment\nin, the Zinc Plant.\nOres and concentrates for treatment at the Lead Smelter were received from: Anacon, Garneau,\nQue.; Base Metals, Field, B. C; Canadian Exploration, Salmo,- B, C;\nCork Province, Retallack, B. C;\nDundee, Ymir, B. C; Grace & Co.,\nNew York, N. Y.; Highland Bell,\nBeaverdell, B. C; Lead Trust, Lead\nPoint, Washington; Midnight, Rossland, B. C; Mullen & Son, Cheiye-\nlah, Wash.; Nameless Fraction, Kaslo, B. C; Neosha, Ainsworth, B. C;\nNew, Calumet, Campbell's Bay\nQue.; Queen, Sheep Creek, B. C;\nRed Top,' Evans, Wash.; Reeves\nMacDonald, Remac, B. C; Rochette\nGold Mines, Mountain Grove, Ont.;\nScranton, Ainsworth, B. C.j Sheep\nCreek Zincton, Zincton, B. .C.j Silver Standard, New Hazelton, B. C;\nSpokane, Tye, B. C; Torbrii Alice\nArm, B. C; Utica, Kaslo, B. C; Vigilante, Ainsworth, B. C.j Violamac,\nSandon,. B. 'C; Western Exploration, Silverton, B. C; Whitewater,\nRetallack, B.C.; Yankee Girl, Ymir,\nB. C.\nConcentrates for treatment at the\nZinc Plant were received from:\nBritannia, Britannia Beach, B. C;\nCanadian Exploration, Salmo, B. C;\nCork Province, Retallack, B. C;\nGoldfields, Northport, Wash.; Red\nTop, Evans, Wash.; Reeves MacDonald, Remac, B. C; Sheep Creek\nParadise, Lake Windermere, B. C;\nSheep Creek Zincton, Zincton, B.C.;\nSilver Standard, New Hazelton,\nB.C.; Western Exploration, Silvtr-\nton, B. C; Whitewater,-Retallacki\nB.C.\nAverage quotations for week ending October 14, 1950:\nSilver, New York, 72.75c per oz.\nLead, New York, 16.00c per lb.   -\nZinc, St. Louis, 17.50c per lb.\nU. S. Exchange Premium: 5.625%.\nInvestors Should\nBack B. C. Steel\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014\nEvery effort should be made to\ninterest. Industrialists ln investing\nin a British Columbia steel mill,\nD.. J. Proudfoot, Victoria M.L.A,\nsaid today.\n\"We have been without a steel\nmill too long,\" he declared. \"The\nneed for one has long been evident\nand there is no question that it\nwould be a success.\"\nA mill could be built and put\ninto operation in a year or 18\nmonths.\nHe thought such a mill could successfully produce and sell its product at less than the existing price\nof Eastern steel in Vancouver.\nFive Year Sentence\nFor Drug Pedlar\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014\nMechanic Paul Lemay, 44, was sen-\nwhen convicted of selling narcotics,\nwhe nconvicted of selling narcotics.\nMagistrate J. Bruce Boyd sentenced him lo an additional two\nmonths in default of a $200 fine.\nLemay was alleged to have sold.\na capsule of heroin to an R.C.M.P.\nConstable Sept. 21.\n\u25a0 LONDON (CP) \u2014 A -prisoner at\nOld Bailey Court, given the choice\nof-24 barristers, said \"he'd take the\ngentleman with the red carnation,\nfor Stubborn4iang-on Bronchial\n1 COUGHS\nGREAT ALNE, Warwickshire,\nEngland (CP) \u2014 Mrs. A. Richardson, a soccer fan has a washday ritual. Shirt tails right way up on the\nline Monday morning mean a victory for her favorite team; down\nmeans a loss and sideways a draw.\nAN\nJL\nD\nTHERE'S NOTHING\nHELPS AS SWIFTLY\nAS\nUCKLEY\nM IXTU n c\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 3, 1950 \u2014 3\nBishop To Dedicate Maimer's\nChurch of lhe Canadian Martyrs\nINVERMERE, B.C., Nov. 2-Ded-\nicatlon bf the remodelled Church\nof the Canadian Martyrs at Athalmer by Bishop Martin Johnson of\nNelson is expectedl to take place\nSunday, November 12. The' church\nand adjacent newly built rectory\nare now almost completed..\nThe main body of the church has\nbeen enlarged and placed upon a\nnew foundation. A new sanctuary\nhas been added to the West end\nand a small Lady Chapel which will\nserve also as sacristy is behind the\naltar.\nStyle of the church is Franciscan\nGothic with adapted gothlc windows of sparkling amber glass. Panelling of the lower walls in the\nbody of the church is walnut stained fir with upper walls of mist grey\nwallboard. The floor will be grey\nflexstone. Light fixtures are' of hammered copper with flood lights over\nthe altar. ,  '\nThe communion table Is deslgfted\nafter that in Da Vinci's famous picture of the Last Supper. The entrance to tho sanctuary will be\nmarked by a Triumphal Arch from\nwhich will be suspended a cross.\nThe old pews will be used temporarily until new ones in a simple\nmonastic design are ready.\nEntrance to the church is from\na porch on the East with a new\nbelfry above, Joining the church to\nthe rectory is a cement floored\ncloister walk in which the Stations\nof the Cross will be grouped along\nthe West wall. In front of this will\nbe a cloister garth planted in garden flowers next year.\nThe four room rectory in which\nthe resident priest will live is an\nattractive bungalow compactly planned and heated with a heatalatpr\nfireplace. Built-in bookcases and\ncasement windows add character to\nthe living room decorated hi rosewood and Windsor blue. Adjacent\nto this room Is the office and the\nmodern kitchen complete with , a\ndining nopk has an attractive color\nscheme of primrose yellow and\ngreen.\n. Exterior finish of both church\nond rectory when completed will be\nCalifornia white stucco with a Montrose red tiled roof.\nRev. Father Agnellus moved Into\nthe rectory this week from Invcr-\nNew Denver P.-T.A.\nStarts Dancing Club\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Nov. 2-The\nWays and Means Committee of the\nParent-Teacher Association held an\nexecutive meeting at the home of\nMrs. A. C. Peterson and formed an\nold-time dancing club which will\nbe sponsored iff the P.-T.A.\nJ. Steele of Silverton was appointed chairman and Mrs. A. C\nPeterson Secretary-Treasurer,\nSpecial Squadron\nReaches Lisbon\nLISBON, Portugal, Nov 2 (CP)\nRear-Admiral E. R. Mainguy, Commander of the Canadian Special\nService Squadron, said last night\nthat the Squadron's European cruise\nis designed to show other members\nof the North Atlantic Pact that\nCanada is interested not only in\nsafeguarding peace and freedom but\nwants to co-operate in making this\neffective on a world-wide basis.\nHe said it Is also- hoped that the\nCanadian officers and men will see\nfor themselves there's much in common between Canadians and the\n\"peoples of the nations we are visiting.\"       .\nThe aircraft carrier Magnificent\narrieved yesterday with the destroy,\ners Mlcmac and Huron for a four-\nday visit. It is the first time Canadian warships have visited Lisbon.\n24,000 Hospital Beds\nProvided in Canada\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014Health\nMinister Martin said today that in\nthe last 2V4 years 24,000 additional\nhospital beds\u2014more than 25 a day-\nhave been provided in Canada\nthrough the construction of new hos\npitals and hospital additions.\n\"Hardly a day passes that I do not\napprove at least one hospital con\nstruction project somewhere in Canada,\" said Mr. Martin in a speech\nprepared for delivery to the Ontario\nConference of the Catholic Hospital\nAssociation in Toronto.\nUp to date the production of Alberta oil has\" reached a level of\nabout $60,000,000 annually. -    .\nThe planet Jupiter is prominent\nin the Southwestern sky during the\nevening in November.\nASTHMA\nBRONCHITIS\nIf you can't sleep because of gasping,\nand coughing\u2014fight for breath night\nafter night, get Templeton's RAZ-MAH\ntoday. It will -loosen the stangling\nphlegm, give you comforting relief. A 60c\nbox will convince you.\nSee the\nBeautiful\nNew\n0\u00b0\nFrig\nLarge Wi cub. ft. space In\na new compact full door,\nmodel just received.\nONE ONLY\n566 BAKER.\nPH. ^490\nWALKERS SPECIAL OLD\niCANADIAN WHISKY!\nNation-wide Popularity Is the proof\nof its Traditional High Quallty!\nDISTIUER? OF THE  FAMOUS,\"^miacUmi &hl6\" WHISKY\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nFRIDAY\n9 a.m. Specials\nPERSONAL SHOPPING ONLY \u2014 LIMITED QUANTITIES\nReg. 3.98\nReg. 1.29 and 1.89\nBoys1 Tweed Pants   Boys' Shirts\nPleated and plain front, regular\n- loops. Assorted colors. 6 to 16 years.      4   A A\nDoor Opening Special      <l\u00ab?rjP\nReg. .39\nCups and Saucers\nDecorated English china\ncups and saucers. Door\nOpening Special \u2022\nReg. 2.25\nSatin Cushions\nSmartly styled in  three shapes.\nRose, blue, gold or wine. Door    %   AA\nOpening Special      JlaWy\n2 \u00abor .49\nCotton   gabardine   and   doeskin  In\nsizes 2 to 6x. Door Opening Special,       If A\neach ...:     \u2022 J JP\nReg. 2.95 i\nRoys* Rubber Boots\nBoys'  laced  live  eyelet  rubber>;,-<\u00a3   g__m\nboots. Door Opening Special        1\u00abS9\nReg. .65\nPrinted Plastic\nSmall blue flowers on clear background. 36\" wide. Door Opening\nSpecial, yard      \u2022\n39\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 3, 1950\nTreasure Trove Accessory\nBy PRUNELLA WOOD\nLady Buxton\nWoman Collector Seeks Old Folk\nSongs for Canadian Archives\nBy ROD CURRIE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nDARTMOUTH, N.S. (CF)-A woman who makes a career out of\ngathering age-old folk songs and\nfolklore says that Nova Scotia has\nan eridleBs supply\u2014probably the\nmost fascinating in Canada.\nHelen 'Creighton, a Dartmouth-\nnative, has been touring Nova Scotia In pursuit of almost-forgotten\nfolk-music since 1928,\nEvery Summer she packs her Oar\nwith tape recorder, typewriter, notebooks and pencils and goes on a\n\"collecting\" tour of fishing, villages\nand hamlets,\nShe collects recordings of folksongs, ballads and dialects and also\nmakes notes of historical interest.\nA number of her collections of folk\nstories, traditions, witch craft, legends and ghost stories have been\npublished.\nMiss Creighton's latest book \"Folk\nLore of Lunenburg County\", was\npublished recently.\nThe soft spoken historian, who\ndoes most of her writing sitting before a huge bay window overlooking Halifax Harbor, has been awarded three Rockefeller Fellowhips.\nShe used two of them to continue\nher studies at Indiana University,\nand the third assisted her In thc\nrecording aspect of her career.\nORIGINAL LEGENDS\nWhile all the ballads published in\nher book were found in this prov-\nInce, she said that none of them\noriginated here. They were brought\nto this country by early settlers;\nHowever, the province Is rich with\noriginal legends.\nMiss Creighton, who admits she\nIsn't \"too good a musician\", says\nwhen she first started her collection\nshe used a. melodeon, and had to\ntake the music, down by hand. Since\nthen the United States Congressional Library,, for whom she has done\na great dea] of work, supplied her\nwith a recording machine.\nShe now uses equipment supplied\nby tho Canadian Government and\nall recordings aro sent to Ottawa to\nbe archived and transcribed. The\nfolklore notes she makes are also\nsent to Ottawa.\nOne of Miss Crolghton's most difficult jobs is investigating tho foundation for some of'the many stories\nand traditions she picks up.\n\"Many times\", she explained, \"resident* of a hamlet will tell me a\nstory of a particular event that they\nbelieve happened in the village\nmany years ago. Often I find it actually happened in the Old Country\nand the story was brought to this\ncountry by settlers\".\nBesides her job With the Government, she is a fellow of the American Anthropological Association,\nrepresents the American Dialect Association and is correspondent In\nthis area for the International Folk\nMusic Council.\nThis Is a mighty pretty girl, and she has on a mighty pretty after-\nski, or Ict's-stay-ln lounging costume. But the nugget of the picture\nIs that billfold she Is tucking In her pants pocket... surely the most\nfeminine and prettiest yet provided for mad money.\nMatter of fact,-It's been a long year Since women limited their\ncash and carry to mad money; busy careers promote business responsibilities, and a gal needs dough, Identification cards, membership\nditto, with her at all times, even as does the male. To sugar coat this\nstern necessity, new billfolds like this one are made of calf suede in\nthe maddest, unmascullno colors ... chartreuse, shocking pink, Italian\nblue, poison green, etc, bright as Jewels to accent feminine costumes,\nGilt metal tabs heighten the fashion effect, Inside Is room for usual\nbillfold gear, plus plenty for snapshots, and even samples and receipts, In transparent shutters. On the outside Is a coin ohange purse\nwith snap fastener, handy and capacious. Miss Julia Buxton designed\nIt herself, and she knows what women need In bl,llfolds, having been\nat this chore for a couple of decades.\nLove Problems ...\nSHE'S AFRAID TO MARRY\nFOR LACK OF EDUCATION\nGussie Moron's Father Tells\nHer to Keep Out of Movies\nBY BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014The\nwiry, deeply-tanned man who was\npushing equipment around the movie set was Harry Moran.\n\"Been at the studio (Universal-\nInternational) 30 years,\" he said\nproudly. But though he worked so\nlong in the glamorous industry,\nfame never touched him\u2014until his\nyoung daughter began playing tennis.\nYoung Miss Moran is named Gertrude, also known as, \"Gorgeous\nGussie\". She parlayed a pair of\nfancy pants into International fame.\nBY CHANCE\nThe panties occurred quite by\nchance, he declared. \"She only posed\nln them to help out the British designer who made them for her,\" he\nsaid. \"And after she posed in them,\nshe got to play in thc middle court\nat Wimbledon, which is usually reserved for champions. Eight in front\nof the Queen and her daughter.\"\nGussle's latest outfit \u2014 leopard\nshorts \u2014 are the real McCoy, he\nadded. \"When sho was touring ip\nIndia, some man shot the leopard\nand gave her the skin,\" he said.\n\"There was a lot left over after tho\nshorts wero made from it.\"\nFrom Factory to You\nBABY CHENILLE\nBEDSPREADS\nLOWEST PRICE IN CANADA.\nBeautiful first quality\/completely\ntufted. No sheeting showing. All\ncolors, double or single bedsizes.\nFlowered or solid patterns, $5.25\neach. Sent C.O.D. plus postage.\nImmediate money-back guarantee.\nOrder one, you will order more.\nTown    4,    Country    Mfg.,   6330\nMountain   Sights   St.,\nQuebec.\nMontreal,\nDespite Moran's long association\nwith the movies, he has advised his\ndaughter against them. \"I have told\nher to stick to tennis, which is\nsomething she knows well,\" he said.\n\"I've seen too many come and go at\nthis studio. It's tough business.\"\nNEW HOME FOR\nAGED WOMEN\nSASKATOON, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 A\nnew home for elderly persons Is\nscheduled to be opened during November. Less than 12 months after\ncompletion of the Oliver Home for\nelderly ladies, the Provincial Social\nWelfare Department has offered two\nsmall buildings to the United\nChurch for the same cause.\nThe buildings are former Air\nForce structures which havo been\nhousing veterans' families. They\nwill be joined, renovated ond furnished with money to be collected\nfrom the people of Northern Saskatchewan.\nSixty persons ultimately will receive care in the new home. Supervisor will be Mrs. E. C. Marshall,\npresent matron of the Oliver Home\njust across tho street.\nBy, JANE ATKINSON,\nDear Miss Atkinson:\nDo you honestly believe that a\ngirl who has never had any formal\neducation, but has tried to educate\nherself through wide reading and\nobservation of life, could make a\nprofessional man happy? My friend\nis a doctor;\nBecause of my self-c'onsclousness\nover my inadequate education, I\nhave for years discouraged someone\nI love very dearly, We like the same\nthings and have the same ideals\nand interests.\nI have tried to forget him by\ngoing out with someone in my own\ncircle, but.it only made me realize\nall the more how much I really need\nhim. I am, interested in his work\nand would like to help him In It.\nWhat shall I do? I know he, too,\nis suffering. V.T.S.\nDear V.T.S.:\nIf you and this man are as congenial as your letter indicates, then\nI think perhaps you're making too\nbig a problem out of the.situation.\nSince you've been wise enough to\ntry and develop yourself through\nreading and intelligent observation\nof the world about you, you probably have a good deal of practical\nMackie-Van Hemert Vows Spoken\ncommonsense, which is sometimes\nan even more useful asset than aca\ndemic achievement. What you learn\nfrom books isn't necessarily more\nvaluable than what you learn from\nlife itself, you know.\nThink of all the. outstanding men\nand women in this country who had\nlittle or no formal schooling, yet\nmanaged to reach high. places in\nmany different walks of life. If you\nkeep your eyes, ears and mind open,\nyou will continue to learn from\nwhat you see and hear about other\npeople doing, and there's no reason\nat all -why you shouldn't be just\nas interesting a eompanion as anyone else.\nI advise you to talk this whole\nthing, over with your friend, and\nsee how he feels about it. If he\nagrees with what I have said, then\nyou're foolish to make an issue of\nwhat you believe to be your educational lack. On the other hand, of\ncourse, if you find that he hesitates\nmerely because you haven't graduated from some school or other,\nyou'd be right in thinking marriage\nbetween you would be unwise. Then\nyou'd have to have character enough\nto close the. chapter, and turn your\nattention elsewhere.\nFormer Nelson\nWoman Returns\nFrom Scotland\nMrs. Frances Russell, one time\nresident of Nelson, and her daughter, Evelyn, have arrived from Carluke, Lanarkshire, Scotland, to\nmake their home here.\nMrs.. Russell's husband, the late\nJ. R. Russell, was a department\nmanager for Hudson's Bay Company, Ltd., store in 1914.\nThey are staying with Mrs. Russell's brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. James Lundie, 111 High\nStreet.\nASK   FOR   SCOTLAND'S   FAVOURITE   SON\nJOHNNIE\nWALKER\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nBORN   1820\u2014\nStill going strong\nreal good\nScotch\nDistilled, Blended and\nBot        in Scotland\nContemn \"b.\nJOHN WALKER & SONS LTD., SCOTCH WHISKY DISTILLERS\n-     KILMARNOCK,  SCOTLAND\nMUSICAL COUPLE\nGET ROYAL BOOST\nLONDON, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Queen\nMary has given encouragement to\ntwo music composers, Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Webb of Fulham. Mr.\nWebb is a former Saskatoon, Sask.,\nnewspaper man.\nThey have received from Queen\nMary's lady-in-walting a.letter saying .that the Queen Mother was\npleased to accept Mrs. Mary Webb's\npiano solo \"Twilight Tapestry,\"\nwhich has been accepted by publishers and broadcast.\nWith Mr. Webb composing the\nlyrics and his wife writing the music, the couple have composed 20\npieces of music ranging from classical to novelty numbers.\nAn accomplished pianist, Mrs.\nWebb gave many concerts .for\ncharity during the war, but did\nnot become a composer until her\nhusband became ill two years ago.\nOn his release from hospital he was\ntold he would be unable to work,\nand lt was then that he and his\nwife decided to try composing music.\nNakusp Catholic\nWomen Hold Tea\nNAKUSP, B.C., Nov. 2 \u2014 An\nafternoon tea and bake sale held\nunder the auspices of Catholic\nWomen's Guild netted $45.\nThe affair was hold in BrouBC\nCommunity Hall.\nRecipes . , ,\nTry Tasty\nBeef Stew\nBy ALICE DENHOFF\nHearty faro just right for the\nseason, Is on the fire today. First\noff, a honey of a boef stew with\ntoothsome dumplings.,\nTo servo 4, melt' 2 tablespoons\nfat In large frying pan. Flour lightly one pound found Steak that has\nbeen cut Into inch cubes. Brown\nmeat In frying pan. Arrange one\nmedium onion and three medium\ncarrots, all,sliced, oil top of moat.\nAdd an 8 dunce can tomato sauce,\nteaspoon salt, Vs teaspoon popper,\nMi teaspoon celery salt, Vs to Vs\nteaspoon garlic salt, and water to\ncover. Cover and simmer slowly\nfor.'about 2 hours or until moat Is\ntender. Add more water If gravy\ncooks down.\nTHE DUMPLINGS\nDrop dumplings by spoonsful on\ntop of boiling stew, cover, and simmer 15-20 miri. To prepare dumplings mix and sift One cup sifted\niflour, 2 teaspoons baking powder,\nVs teaspoon salt. Cut in 2 tablespoons shortening, then add Vt cup\nmilk, % teaspoon dry mustard,\nteaspoon minced parsley (dry or\nfresh), V. teaspoon each onion salt\nand tjelery, salt, Stir quickly to\nmake soft dough. Proceed as above.\nMakes 6-7 dumplings.\nA casserole of tuna fish with potato chips makes a hearty supper\nspecial. To serve . generously, stir\nVs cup milk Into a can condensed\ncream of mushroom soup; heat. Put\ncontents of a. 7-ounco can tuna fish.\nInto a strainer, and.,pour over it.a\ncup of hot water to take off the\nexcess oli; then break the fish into\nrather large pieces and add it to\nthe sauce. Crush medium size package of potato chips. Butter a small\ncasserole; pour half the creamed\ntuna fish in the bottom, then\nsprlnjsle with half the potato chips\nover the fish, then add another layer of the creamed tuna, and top\nwith potato chips. Bake at 375 F. for\n20-30 min.\nEGG CURRY\nA tangy egg curry Is a good\nchoice for something different by\nway of a luncheon or supper dish.\nTo serve 4-6, cream 2 tablespoons\nbutter and 2 tablespoons flour together. Add teaspoon curry powder,\n% teaspoon paprika, Vs tablespoon\nfinely-chopped onion and Vt teaspoon salt. Stir well; add 11\/3 cups\nscalded milk, then cook until mixture thickens, stirring constantly.\nChop the whites of 4 hard-cooked\neggs and add with one cup cooked\nrice to the above mixture. Serve\nin patty shells garnished with the\negg yolks, grated.\nCab-drivers in London, England,\nwork entirely on commission and\ntips, getting up to 40 per cent\nof receipts.\nbif 3bwML LtJh&sklL\nKaslo . . .\nDr. William and Marian Irwin,'\nof \"Walmar\" Mirror Lake, returned\nfrom a short holiday spent at Edmonton. '\nMrs. A. Lefolll of Vancouver, was\na visitor here en route to Lardeau,\nwhere she has accepted the position\nas teacher In the Jewett school.\nDavid Dryden of Nelson, spent a\nfew days here at the hme of his\nparents, Mr, and Mrs, A. H. Dryden.\nOh Saturday evening, Miss Helen\nCarpenter, entertained a number of\nher young friends at her home at\nShutty Bench, in celebration of her\nsixteenth birthday. A variety bf\ngames made up the programme of\nentertainment , after which tho\nguests \"sat down to a daintily decorated supper table centered with a\nbirthday cake lighted by sixteen\ncandles. Miss Carpenter was the re-\nslplent of many lovely birthday\ngifts.\nA Jocobs received word that his\nfour-year-old son Bruce, while visiting relatives in Calgary with his\nmother, met with an accident that\nresulted in a broken arm.\nwmmmwMw\nmmmmwmm\nFruitvale*..\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs,\nFrank Halifax left on Saturday for\nVancouver by car. They were accompanied by their daughter, Mrs.\nMcCarthy and her two sons, who\nreturned to Vancouver. While there,\nMr. and Mrs. Halifax will also visit\ntheir other daughter, Mrs. G. Little\nand family.\nHome on embarkation leave this\nweek are Pte. John Seifrit, Pte.\nWilliam Wilmott and Pte. James\nPeitzsche, all of the Princess Pats\nof Calgary.\nMrs. S. Polock returned Saturday from a holiday ln Colville,\nWash., guest of her son and family,\nMr. and Mrs. Clifford Pollock.\nMr. and Mrs. Clifford Pollock and\nfamily were Saturday visitors at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nDuncan. While here, they attended\nthe opening ceremony of the new\nTrail Business College.\nTerrlll Simmons leaves soon \u25a0 for\nVancouver where he commences his\ntraining as flight engineer in the\nR.C.A.F.\nMrs. Ralph Gregoire and sons,\nRay and Roger, left on Sunday to\njoin Mr. Gregoire at Galloway,\nwhere they will make'their home.\nNelson and Trail families were linked with the wedding In\nBethel Tabernacle at Nelson of the former Rlena Van Hemert and\nAlexander Ernest Maoklo. The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mn.\nC. J. Van Hemert of Nelson, and the groom Is the son of Mrs. Elsie\nMackie of Trail. Rev. I. M. Presley officiated, and the couple were\nattended by Miss Agnes Jean Mackie of Trail) the groom's slater,\nand Mr. Robert Ryjins of Trail. -\nBootleg Hats\nParis Racket\nPARIS, Nov. 2 (Reuters)\u2014\"Boot\nlegged\" hats are * secret of Parll\nmillinery circles They're on sail\nonly to those who know their way\naround tho Paris fashion Underworld,\nThe first step is to obtain the Address of a good hat-bootloggor \u2014 a\nrare bird because she must have a\nquick eye, olever hands end many\nfriends. \\\nThen the inevitable climb up one\nflight after flight Of stairs to the\ndoor which hides a woman's paradise, An eye appears at a paep-hole,\nCredentials are checked more closely than if you were being admitted\nto the vaults at Fort Knox.\nOnce inside, It is a \"prlx unique\"\n(one price) system\u20145000 franos\n(514) for any hat But the choico includes all the latest'models from the\nleading milliners. If you have your\nheart set on a little Dior or a wonderful Legroux number which has\ntempted you, there it Is\u2014for SOflO\nfrancs instead of the 20,000 ftancs\nwhich caused you to quail at the\nthought's of your husband's reception of the bill.\nA careful explanation to Madame\nBootlegger sufflcies. She knows\nevery hat in town and is capable of\ncopying it so exactly that even its\ncreator would be mistaken.\n0AUL lApL Wiik\nWUuiian, VftartitL\nCALICO DANCES\nMADE POPULAR\nBY NAKUSP LA.\nNAKUSP, B.C., Nov, 2\u2014A calico\ndance sponsored by Ladies' Auxiliary to Nakusp branch of the Canadian Legion scored a direct entertainment hit hero.\nV. C. Smith was master of ceremonies, and Mr. Coates called the\nsquare dances.\nMrs. Hempseed and Mrs. T. Sten-\nhoff were in charge of the supper;\nMrs. Shelling and Mrs. E. F. Edgington, the door; Mrs, Forrie, Mrs.\nBylund and Mrs. F. Field, the check\nroom. The orchestra, under the\nleadership of F. Bryant, consisted\nof Mr. and Mrs. Williams, W. Robson and Mr. Bryant.\nMrs. 0. Jansen and Mrs. Edgington were dance conveners.\nShower Held\nFor Kaslo Bride\nKASLO, B.C., Nov. 2 - Mrs. Tho-\nmas Hetherington, the former Miss\nMary Bendis, was guest of honor\nat a miscellaneous shower Held at\nthe home of Mrs. T. H. Horner.\nSolos by Mrs. F. V. Webber and\nMrs. Horner, and a contest which\nwas won by Mrs. G. S. Baker, entertained the 49 guests.\nMrs. Hetherington was presented with gaily decorated baskets of\ngifts, and Mrs. J. Tonkin extended\nwell wishes to the bride.\nFEEDBAG SEWING\nOne 08-pound feedbag Is all you\nneed for this neat sweet apron! Or,\nget 1 Vi yards of 35-inch fabric. (To\nmake it with two of those cute cir\ncular pockets, add Vs yard to above.)\nWhat a wonderful idea for gifts, ba\nzaarsl'Pattern 8488, sizes small 10,12;\nmedium 14,16.\nThis oasy-to-use pattern gives a\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step,\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(25c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept., address.\nNEW season styles for you! Send\ntwenty-five cents (coins) for our\nMarian Martin Fall and Winter Pattern Book. Fashions for the. young\nond young in heart plus Christmas\nideas galore! A free pattern of a\nbloUso to make from a yard of 39-\ninch fabric is printed in the book.\nBalfour..\nBALFOUR, B.C.\u2014En route to Ot-\ntawo, Mr. and Mrs. Tim Dauphlnee\nand children Rlskey and Chesley\nof Vancouver, visited the C. Brown\nhome.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Oakley were\nTrail visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Sweeting of Calgary are at their home here.\nMrs. Samartino and children have\nreturned to Trail for the Winter\nmonths.\nCommunion Service was held at\nSt. Michaels and All Angels' Church\nwith Archdeacon B. A. Resker of\nCastlegar officiating.\nMrs. J. M. BroWn of Vancouver\nis a guest at the home of her son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and1 Mrs.\nChesley Brown.\nFive tables of Canasta were played Woodland Hall in a scries of\nparties sponsored by the Women's\nInstitute to raise funds for the annual Christmas party. A community\nsing-song under the leadership of\nFritz Hanson concluded tho evening.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government ot British Columbia.\nNew Denver...\nNEW DENVER, B.C.\u2014Mrs, Di-\nanne Johnson New Denver, is' a\npatient in the Slocan Community\nHospital,\nOn Monday evening October 30,\na surprise party waa held at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Fred fi,\nTessman in honor of Mr. Tessmmn's\nbirthday where twenty guests arrived. Contests Were enjoyed and\ngames? Refreshments wero served\nby the guests vyro also presented Mr.\nTessman with a gift.\nBud Browell of Nelson Is a patient in the Slocan Community\nHospital.\nPHONF iU FOR CLASSIFIED\nA postal service has been operated since the earliest days of settlement in North America.\n\"WITCHES BREW\"\nSETS OFF FIGHT\nPRINCE GEORGE, B.C., Nov.\n2 (CP) \u2014 A witches' Hallowe'en\nfrolic left the women's section\nof the Prince George .tall In a\nshambles,\nA witcho'o brew\u2014police called It \"moonshine\"\u2014was prepared for a hallowe'en party by\nwomen prisoners.\nA fight started when one\nprisoner accused another of\nsampling the brew before it waa\nready.\nIt developed Into a Hot and\nIt took police, firemen and ambulance attendants to restore\npeace. One woman suffered serious Injuries.\nA meagre police report said;\n\"We are Investigating.\"\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED.\n'Bisfc-\n-Hwts\nSiDiu-t\nPAA1L\nYou always experience a nice\nwarm feeling     (gM  \u00abj-\nwhen   you ^w&lSfc.\nknow frienda  W^SffxH\nlike to come *~**5W^U'\nto your. home..For times like\nquiet evenings\nbetide the Are,\nbridge game*\n\/lifll^   and small unexpected   parties,   serve\na delightful   tffiW**\nwine...Paarl &4ro$f\nSouth African \"\\\\T>T\\tV%.\nMuscatel. Your family and\nfriends will delight in its superbly sweet taste, its pleasant\nbouquet. Muscatel is the per.\nfeet wine to serve at all times.\nInsist  on  the finest  <  \u2022 >\nask for Paarl.\nCo-Optralive Wine Growon\nAnoclotlon of South Africa, limited\nPaarl, South Africa.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nlumbla.\nEASY SMOCKING\nIt's easy to have exquisite smocking on children's clothes or on\nyours. Four designs; use as is, or\nrepeat for wider' bands.\nSmocking-mode-easy Pattern ,531;\ndirections; charts for four simple-\nto-do designs. Two shown.      ,\nLaura Wheoler's improved pattern mokes crochet and knitting so\nsimple with its oharts, photos, and\nconcise directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this' pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Noedlccraft Dept, Nelson,\nPrint plainly PATTERN 'NUMBER,1\nyour NAME and ADDRE8B.\nNew! Household accessories to I\nknltl Motifs to paint on textiles!'!\nSend twenty-five cents (coins) for\nour new Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. Illustrations.of crochet,\nembroidery patterns plus many fascinating hobby Ideas. And a free\npattern is printed in the book.\n4Tafy'H&'CM\nFOR ACTIVE CHILDREN\nHmm ... a delicious,\nsteaming bowl of Brex is a\nwonderful way to start the day\n... an ideal, sustaining\nbreakfast for growing, active\nchildren. Get Brex, a tasty '  v\nenergy and health builder, today.\nThe whole family will enjoy'lt.   ,\n\u2022\u25a0jjp\u00ab\u00abeftfe\/\n J4t<\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nB.I-. Goodrich  DeLuxe\nWomen's Elf\nRubbers\nSpecially   made   for   wedgies.\nButton strap fastener.\nSizes 4\u2022 10..\ndolors:\nBlack and Brown .... $3.3S\nRed  $3.50\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1903\nBritish Girls May Measure\nUp to M^n on Prairie Farms\nWINNIPEG,! Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014Miss Beatrice Brigden, President of the Winnipeg Council of Women,,said\ntoday, she couldn't see any reason why British Land Army girls' \"shouldn't be as useful as a man\" on'\nPrairie farms. -\u25a0 '-,',.'.\u25a0 \u00bb       '    '\u2022  !\nA London report said. Canadian immigration offlclaU are trying to interest the British farm girls\ninto coming-to Canada to work.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 3, 1950 \u2014 5\nNakusp Bazaar\nHuge Success.\nNAKUSP, B.C., Nov. 2 \u2014 Thc\nannual Bazaar of Nakusp Pythian\nSisters held in K.P. Hall, brought\nin $135.    .\nThere were booths of home cook-\nI ing. novelties, aprons fancy sewing\nand knitted articles. The tea tables\nwere arranged with Autumn flow-\n'ers.\nMrs. C. H. Horrey was tea convener, with members of the Lodge\nassisting. Mrs. J. Parent, Jr., was\nin charge of novelties; Mrs. J. Morehouse sold.tickets on a cake guessing contest; Mrs. H. Cann and Miss\nCann and Mrs. Glen McMullen\nhandled the sewing table, -and Mrs.\nC. Jensen and Mrs. F. Johnson, the\nbake table. Mrs. V. Hill assisted as\ncashier. '.'.'\u2022\nThe first vessel to cross the Atlan<-\n\"tic under steam in 1833 was the\nRoyal William, built at Quebec,-'\nDESMOND    T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor To J. 0. Patenaude\nPHONE 293 NELSON, B.C.\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\n|\\OOTENAV     VaLCEV     |^AIRV\nWWBIIiWatlll^tPillHTMpBW\nRAYON GOWNS\nand PYJAMAS\nDelicate shades of blue,\npink,  yellow  and  green.\nSize: Small, Medium, Large\n$3.95 - $4.95\n\"They could do combining as well\nas any man* Said Miss Brigden\n\"Some 'farm women, I know, do.\nWhether a woman's strength could\nstand up to the size of prairie farms\nI'm not prepared to say.\"\nCONFLICT\nAnother view was expressed by\nH.R. Richardson of Manitoba's Farm\nHelp Service who said there is no\nplace for women farm workers in the\nprovince'\"because of the highly-me\nchanized type of work..-'\nMiss Brigden said there might be\na field for the girls in fruit, corn,\nsunflower and sugar-beet .production but those crops were not too\nwell developed on. the prairies.\n\"I see no reason why, :we can't\nabsorb a number of the British, land\narmy girls, although not too many,\nshe said. \"They might bring new\ntechniques, careful and painstaking\nmethods with which Manitoba farmers are not too familiar \"\nNelson\nSocial . . .\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u00ab Miss Marjorie Whitmore, Superintendent of lhe Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, has returned from\nVancouver, where she attended the\nB.C Hospital Association convention.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Phil Long, Silica\nStreet, have had as guest, Mrs. A,\nD. Kelsall of New Denver.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Morrison, Carbonate Street, have had as guests\ntheir son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Jack Morrison and young\nson Johnny of Vancouver, also, Mrs.\nBergstrom who is remaining in\nNelson. - *\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs .E.. S. Price and\ntheir children, Bealby's Road, have\nreturned from spending nearly a\nfortnight motoring to Seattle, Tacoma and. Vancouver Island.\n\u2022 Mrs. C. P. Moran and family,\n806 Vernon Street, have taken up\nresidence at 521 Silica Street.\n\u2022 Young Douglas Matheson,\ntwo-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMatheson of Balfour, is a patient\nin Kootenay Lake General Hospital.\n0\/ Balfour<Queen's Bay Interest\nShown after their marriage' In St. Mlchaells and All Angels'\nChurch are George Men and his bride, the former Wllla Adell\nSaunby. The brldeji the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. E.\nSaunby of Balfour, and her groom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. A.\nMerz of Queen's Bay. Rev. A. R.T. Dixon.of Nelson performed the\nnuptial ceremony.\u2014Alice Stevenson photo.\nEqual Pay Law .     ,\nUrged for Sask.\nREGINA, Nov.2 (CP.-Saskatch-\newan should have an equal pay law\nto eliminate discrimination against\nwomen, Miss Ruth McGill, Regina\nalderman, said today at the convention of the Saskatchewan Implement Dealers' Association.   ;\nMiss McGill, immediate past,president of the Canadian Federation of\nBusiness and Professional Women's\nClubs, said the Dominion Government supports the principle of equal\npay. The Federal Civil Service had\nadopted this principle.\nAll Saskatchewan need do is\namend its Bill of Rights Act of 1947.\nThe   Provincial  Civil  Service   al-\nC.G.I.T. Party\nHeld at Fruitvale   .\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Nov. 2-C.G.\nI.T. intermediate' group and its'\nleader, Mrs. Fred Haines, were hostesses here to the Explorers' Girls\nand their leader, Mrs. Veitch, at a\nHallowe'en party in the United\nChurch Hall.\n.'. The hall was decked with black\ncats, jack-o-lanterns and the traditional Hallowe'en symbols, and contests and fortyne telling entertained\nthe 20 girls.\nready has an \"equal pay\" clause\nin its agreement with the Government, she said.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllhllMlllllllllll\nEx-Fruitvale\nCouple Wed\n50 Years Ago\nFRUITVALE, B. C\u201e Nov. 2 \u2014Sixty\nfriends and relatives honored Mr.\nand Mrs. T. Wilcox Sr., on'their golden wedding anniversary at a party\nin Parish Hall.\nFormer residents of Fruitvale Mr'\nand Mrs. Wilcox now live in Burnaby. Thfy came to Fruitvale to be\nwith their sons on the anniversary.\nReceiving were Mr. and Mrs. T.\nWilcox and Mr. and Mrs. R. Wilco*,\nsons and daughters-in-law of the\ncouple, Mrs. M Sadler and Mrs. J.\nStartup.\nCards were played and the hon-\norees were presented with many fine\ngifts.'\nAmong guests were Mr. and Mrs.\nJ.'Webster of Robson, Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Jones of Genelle, Mr, and\nMrs E. Thompson, Mrs. F. Shimmel\nand Mrs. Lois Whitehead, all of Trail.\n\u2014: __, 1\u2014!  j\nKaslo Bride Is\nShower Guest   \u2022\nKASLO, B. a, No.. 2 \u2014 Mrs. Hetherington, a recent bride, was complimented at a miscellaneous\" shower\nin Shutty Bench school house.\nThe bride was presented with a\ndecorated pink,and while basket\ncontaining a variety of gifts.\nColeman Oil Stove for sale.\nTHE CRAFT CENTRE\nBuy your Christmas decorations\nnow at the TOT-N-TEEN SHOP.\nRUMMAGE SALE SATURDAY\n\u25a0-.> AT THE MARIiyET.\nRussian film \"Mashenka\" Eagles\nHall Sun. Nov. 5th, 7:30 p.m.\nELECTROLUX SALES - SERVICE\nPhone Nelson 1108 j or 553.\nDANCING   AT  THE   PLAYMOR\nSATURDAY NIGHT.\n\"SADIE HAWKINS\" NIGHT AT\nPROCTER HALL, NOVEMBER 17.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nJhL\nQ&wsuv $ic?iSL\nNO. 2 SUB POST OFFICE\n1224 STANLEY STREET NELSON, B.C.\nPRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nMaple Leaf Soap Flakes        3      QQ^\nGiant Size; ..'..\"    \u00bb pkgs. T^fXf:\nPork and Beans\nNabob, '15 oz.;\t\nMilk\nAll Brands, Tall; .... .'.\t\nBlue Ribbon Tea\nlb.\nVi  Ib.   ' -._..:.. 50*\nTomatoes _)      A] *\nMalkln's Best. 28 oz.;  '   <*\" tins     *'\nEconomy Oats E[ C3*\nRobin Hood;        rsJ \\_, bag. **\u25a0 **\u25a0 \u25a0\nQUALITY MEATS\nLeg Pork Roast E6*\nStewing Beef ^5*\nLean. Boneless; LB.      ,.......S::.;; ser.tsw   .\nSirloin Steaks %      0SC\nLB.\nSmall Sausage KJ 3 *\nFresh; LB       stf <s9\n65*\nVeal Oven Roast\nRolled; LB\t\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix lt,\nthrow it away. Prompt service,on\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nCURLERS ATTENTION\nCurling starts.Nov. 15, 1950. Membership list closes Nov. 10,1950. Sign\nnow   at   Wood   Vallance,   Albert's\nBarber Shop, 7 Taxi.\nSaturday, November 4\nhome cooking, Christmas gifts and\ntea at Trinity Church Hall.\nWe buy and sell used furniture\nantiques. HOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE. Phone 1560. 413 Hall St,\nCarpenters Union meeting 8 p.m\nFriday, Legion Hall. Special business. All members please attend.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nBlack Strap Molasses, 50c per tin.\nNELSON FARMERS' SUPPLY\nLIMITED\"\nIRENE'S MILLINERY AND DRESS\nSHOP\u201410% DISCOUNT ON\nCOATS AND SUITS.\nChildren's English imported felt\nslippers; hard .soles, from $1.19 to\n$1.95. THE  CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nMothers' Auxiliary to Troop 6\nmeet tonight at Mrs. Fowles', Cross\nley Avenue.\nREDICRETE, ready-mixed cement\nfor patch-up jobs. Handy 15 lb.\nbags only $1.00,\nBURNS  LUMBER CO,\n,A shipment of galvanized range\nboilers just received. Extra heavy\ngauge, No. 30 size. Order yours today from HIPPERSON'S.\nRemember FalrVlew C.W.L. Tea,\nbake sale, and sewing table Wednesday afternoon, Nov. 15. Everyone\n.welcome. 704 Fourth St.'Adm. 25c.\nJUNIOR JOYMAKER8\nHallowe'en Masauerade, Civic Centre ball room..7:30 tonight. Prizes\nfor best costumes.\nThose Improvements to your\nI property\u2014are they covered by in-\n, surance? [f not. see BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY today.\nCut your fuel costs this Winter\nwith a Fawcett Torrid Oil Heater\nfrom\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nCORSAGES\nSTYLED TO SUIT YOUR GOWN.\nORDER EARLY FROM COVENTRY'S FLOWER SHOP.    PH. 962.\nORDER YOUR CORSAGE FROM\nBRIDGE'S GREENHOUSE FOR\nTHE SILVER SLIPPER DANCE\nTONIGHT.   PHONE   1480.\nFHCNE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nCribbage   tonight,   Eagles   Hall,\n8:00 p.m. Everybody welcome.\nYou are invited to a tea, work\nand bake sale at the Oddfellows'\nHall on Saturday, 4th. Auspices\nL.O.B.A. \u2014 2:00 to 5:00 p.m,\nChurch Parade next Sunday\nmorning. Legion members and Auxiliary leave H.Q. for Presbyterian,\n10:^0 sharp. Caps and medals please.\nTEA AND BAKE SALE IN\nEAGLE HALL\nLadies' Aux. to F:O.E. tea and sale\nof home baking Saturday, Nov. 4th,\n2:30 to 5, Door prize.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces, hot\nand cold air duets cleaned by\nvacuum, chimneys topped, thimbles\napplied of stopped. Prices reasonable. Pounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 968-X noon and evenings.\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSPECIAL\nDUST MOPS FOR ONLY\nMe & Mc (NELSON) LTD.\nIn case of trouble with your adding machine or typewriter call us\nat \"1.\" -Fast and efficient service,\np. W. McDerby, \"The Typewriter\nand Adding Machine Man,\" 554\nStanley Street, Nelson, B.C.\nInvestigate the savings to be made\nwith a home freezer. For information, prices end equipment phone\n497. 40-cubic foot freezers at less\nmoney than some competitive 18-\ncubic foot models. HIPPERSON'S.\nCEMENT\nImmediate Delivery of Cement\nby Sack or Carload.\nNELSON   MACHINERY\nEQUIPMENT CO.\n214 HALL ST. PHONE 18\n'    BE A\nWEDNESDAY NITER\nFOR ADULT PROGRAMME\nSKATING\nEVERY WEDNESDAY\n8:15'P.M. TO 10:15 P.M.\nADMISSION 35c\nCanadian Legion\nGet your ticket for the smoker\nMonday, Nov. 6 from Comrades\nNewell, Anderson or Bailey at the\nLegion Office. Only paid up mem\nbers. One guest only allowed. Admission Is free, but by ticket only\nAccommodation Is limited.\n$1  DOWN  AND $1   PER\nWEEK places a choice Alberta\nturkey on your table at Christmas, fully paid for, ready for\nthe oven and delivered. SUB\nSCRIBE TODAY TO THE\nBUTCHERTERIA'S CHRIST\nMAS TURKEY BUDGET\nPUN.\nFUNERAL  NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late Mrs.\nChristine E, Johnson will be* held\nFriday, Nov. 3rd, at 2 p.m., from\n'the Presbyterian Church. Silverton.\nRev K. Hansen will officiate. Interment in family plot, New Denver.\narid JUST ARRIVED a lovely selection of\nBRITISH INDIAN EUGS\nPURCHASED BEFORE THE RECENT PRICE INCREASE\nA big saving to you. Enchanting patterns . . . Just-\nright colors for every decorating scheme. We carry\nevery type of rug for ypur home from scatter.rugs to\nCongoleum rugs.\nFor top quality floor coverings at prices you wont to pay,\nSee us first for\nBouquet Cheaper\nThan Alimony\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014That\nhusband of yours may not be the\nbest or most handsome specimen on\ntwo feet, lady, but there's a way\nto make your wedded life a lot\nmore acceptable.\n\"It's no farther away than the\nlip of your tongue,\" says provincial\npsychiatrist T. A. Pincock.\nThe key to domestic bliss? Brag\nabout ttte'guy, do it where people\ncan hear you. If you look hard\nenough, you can find something in\nhim to brag about.\nBut Dr. Pincock says you should\nbe cautious: don't extend the bragging to a point where it becomes\nboring. ,\nThe psychiatrist gave his advice\nat a young couples' club. And he\nhad some advice for husbands, too;\nHe said they should remember anniversaries and show other common\ncourtesies.\n\"A bouquet costs something,\" he\nsaid, \"but it's a lot.cheaper than\npaying alimony.\"    , >\nMarriage failures, the doctor con\ntinued, are usually due to \"emotion'\nal or other personality failures.\"\n\"No marriage runs itself; it must\nbe managed.\"        , \u2022\nHOW, TO AVOID'SPATS\nSpats out of proportion to their\ncause could be avoided if couples\nwould understand each other's\nmoods. B^ remaining calm, one\npartner could \"usually\" bring: the\nangry one around to apologizing.\nIncompetent housekeeping, inefficient use of leisure time and unfair division of labor were secondary causes of marriage failures.\nELLESMERE PORT, Cheshire,\nEngland (CP) \u2014 Because it feels it\nwould make'members \"look ridicU'\nlousMhe local council has changed\nits mind about sending a bachelor\nrepresentative to a woman's conference.\nT-HIS HOSTESS\nKEPT \"MUM\"\nKASLO, B. C., Nov. 2-Llfe is\nfull of surprise's, as two Kaslo\nwomen, Mrs. H. F. Bacon and\nMrs. C. H. Greensword, know.\nIn a conversation with Mrs.\nCarl Lind Jr., Mrs. Bacon suggested that as Mrs. Green-\nsword's birthday was near her\nown, she would like to arrange a\nsurprise party for her, and Mrs,\nLind offered her home.\nLater, Mrs. Greensword, in\ntipping off Mrs. Lnd about Mrs.\nBacon's birthday, said she would\nlike to give a party. Mrs. Lind\nwas again accommodating\u2014and\noffered her home for the same\nnight.\nTwo tables of whist were arranged, and Miss Amy MatsuzakI won first prize, and Mrs.\nBacon the consolation. Mrs,\nGreensword and Mrs. Bacon\nvere presented with corsages\nand gifts.\nIt wasn't until during the\nparty that the women learned\npf each other's \"surprise\".\nThe taste*s the test for teal\nCanadians buy more Salada\n{than any other brand.\nW\nm\nT Eb *n\nKASLO W.l. !\nPAYS TRIBUTE\nTO MRS. CHALMERS\nKASLO, B.C., Nov. 2\u2014A framed\npicture of Kaslo has been sent to\nMrs. R. Wv Chalmers of Thrums\nfrom Kaslo' Women's Institute in\nrecognition of her work for the\nInstitute.\nThe secretary told members of\nthe tribute at a meeting at the\nhome of Mrs. Edward Wardle.\nArrangements were completed\nfor annual Christmas parcels, including a food parcel for a Women's-Institute in England..\nThe November meeting will be\nheld at the home of Mrs. R. Morton.\nOXFORD, England (CP) \u2014 A fur-,\nniture dealer put in his window a\nlist of people who owed him money.\nAll paid within a few days.\nClassified  Ads Gets Quick- Results\n'WW\nBPREFRKHED?\n\"   LOVELY\nFALL HATS AND\ncoats ,\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nyoURS-triplet\/ate!\nCrrspor flakes! Fresher than\nother BranFlakes! Double your\nmoney back if you don't agreel\nSend empty carton to Kellogg's,\nDept. 4-A, London, Ont.\nBig Economy-Size Package!\nRegular size tool Kellogg's Bran\nFlakes contain the bulk many\nneed to keep regular! Try 'eml\nNew exclusive \"Signature\"\npattern silyerwaro offer! Your\nown initial on every lovely\npiece! See back of package\nfor details!\nAiOTHetz wows \\^8asr\/\n Established April 22.1902  j\nBritish Columbia's, \u25a0'.\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY,  LIMITED\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPost Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER'Or THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1950\nInspector R. S. Nelson\nIt is ill news for Kootenay district\nto learn that Inspector Robert S. Nelson\nis being transferred by the R.C.M.P.\nto Winnipeg. We will be sincerely sorry\nto see him leave a district where he\nhas accomplished such good work.\nInspector Nelson, though only three\nyears here as commanding officer of B-'\nDivision, fitted right into the Kootenay\nscene, and in doing so gavefthis district\na new outlook on police work. It was\nnot that his predecessors were not good\nmen, but the veteran officer from the\noutset showed an understanding beyond most that police service was public service\u2014he made it so in every way.\nHe tackled the vexatious terrorism\nproblem with intelligence and full appreciation of its complex nature. He\nnot only won the cooperation of the\nfanatical sect with which he had to\ndeal, but, with an able staff instilled\nwith the same approach, made perhaps\nthe greatest gains in the policing aspect\nof the problem in the 30 years it has\nexisted. The achievement was in the\nface of bitter disappointments and the\ndemands of excessive hours of duty.\nInspector Nelson's record here was\nin keeping with his record of public\nduty. A war veteran, he joined the B. C.\nProvincial Police Force in Kimberley\nin 1925. He has served in at least seven\ndifferent British Columbia centres, and\nsuccessive promotions brought him as\na sub-inspector to Nelson in 1947. He\nremained when the Provincial Police\nforce transferred to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.\nInspector Nelson has been a credit\nto his service in this district, and\u2014with\nno reflection of any who are his successors\u2014the Kootenay, knowing his\nqualifications to handle its own peculiar problems, will regret his call to a\nnew post. \u2022'\nThe Hallowe'en Party\nA Real Community Service\nA big \"Thank you\" is due the service club members who staged what certainly must have been this city's largest Hallowe'en party. They performed\nevery task they set, those of giving the\nyoungsters a big time and minimizing\nthe vandalism usual.to the ghostly festival.\nThere was some vandalism, but only\nby those of an age to control themselves br be controlled only by police.\nCertainly the younger element was\nkept from mischief, and it was hard to\ntell who enjoyed themselves most, the\nkids or the parents and teacher bystanders. What destruction there was\u2014\nthough the fact is small consolation to\nthe victims\u2014was but a sampling of\nwhat had been experienced in greater\nproportions in other years.\nThe Nelson Kinsmen Club, with assistance from members of other service\norganizations, teachers, civic officials,\nthe Fire Department and Police Force,\ndid a splendid job. They deserve the\ncitizens' thanks.\nV    'Why Not      ,\nYellow Margarine ?\n,   ;    . (Victoria Daily Times)\n\u2022 The status of margarine ln British Columbia has not been altered by the Privy Council's rulltfg reaffirming Provincial authority\nover Its manufacture and sale. The decision\nfrom'the law .Lofts merely drives the argument home\/ .: \u25a0 -' \u25a0'\nThe butter substitute, propeny identified,\nis acknowledged as a staple in households-of\nthis Province. It seems pertinent to ask, however, how long it will be before the spread Is\ngiven the color which most purchasers appear\nJo prefer. It Is illegal to retail yellow .margarine.' To overcome that, difficulty, manufacturers enclose a special- no'n-injurious dye-in\nthe packages. That-is kneaded or mixed into\nthe product fit the wish of the housewife. Why\nshould,the extra labor be forced upon her?\nAs long as the spread is so much cheaper than\nbutter, it Is going to be bought by those who\nfeel they cannot.afford the more expensive\ndairy product. If the purchaser wants it yellow, why shouldn't it be that color? Pale butter\nIs given a warmer hue artificially.\nIn the Doctor's\nConfidence     -< .\n' (The Vancouver Sun)   -\nThe medical profession is once mors being\nurged to throw off some bf its ethical reticence\ni and tell the people more about available treatments and medicines.\nDr. Russell S. Boles of Philadelphia, writing in the Journal of the American Medical\nAssociation, urged physicians to cooperate\nwith newspapers in helping them report medical news within the limits of propriety.\n\"Today,\" Dr. Boles assures his colleagues,\n\u2022 \"the physician may feel safe in the confidence'\nof the reporter and can feel assured that interviews and releases will be reported accurately.\nAlso that care will be taken to include reference to any qualification he has expressed\nconcerning his investigations.\"\nAs this newspaper has suggested before,\nthe medical profession must ask itself if it is\nignoring a public duty as well as a big job in\npublic relations. *\nThe public stands to benefit most from\nmedical science or suffer most through-ignorance of its possibilities.\nVerse\nNeglected Love\ni A rose as of ev'ning,\nMy life she is leaving,\nAnd my vows will remain in my heart;\nFor time drowned by my dreams,*\nTill now ifsadly seems\nThat a love has been lost at its start.\nHer Irish eyes gleaming,\nThough never were they seeming\nTo be now and forever only mine;\nFor my darling never knew\nOf my wishes for her true\nTill the twilights stole the golden threads of\ntime.\nThis tender bud of love\nNe'er unfolded to above,\nWhere the truest breath of time would do\nthe rest;\nBut was nipp'd by early frost\nOf neglect and ever lost\nIn the swelling waves of time without rest.\n' And yet I am to blame\nThat my vows they weretoo lame,\nAnd my love therefore never reached... her\n\u25a0      heart;\nHer heart that is so pure\nMust a diff'rent life endure,\nSince her life from mine own is apart,\nYet wherever she resides\nGentle love sincere abides,\nAnd her silver  thoughts  are  planning  for\nthe best;\nAnd hence my mind's at rest,\nSince in bliss she's softly blest,\nAlways dwelling on a God-illumined crest.\n-D. WILLIAM TURNBULL.     \u2022\nPenticton, B. C.\nIt's Been Said\nTake care to be an economist in prosperity; there is no fear of your being one in adversity.\u2014Johann Georg Zimmerman.\nYour Horoscope\nYour business, should progress rapidly,\nthe more so if your own intuitions are acted\nupon. Do not be afraid to adopt original methods. The child who is born under these influences may hold advanced ideas on many subjects.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be oubllshed.\nThere Is no charge for this service. Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except where there Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nCurious, Castlegar\u2014We have to thank Mrs. E.\nV. Calkin, Kinnaird, for the information\n'     ; that The Kamloops Sentinel is published\nthrice - lyeekly, Monday, Wednesday and\n-   Friday, not twice weekly, as previously\n. ^'stated.\n\"Sliver\", Nelson\u2014Who would I see to rent a\nstall at the market? If selling hand-work,\ndoes one have to charge the 3 per cent\ntax?\nAll sales of merchandise to a consumer are\nlegally subject to payment of the 3 per cent\ntax. With regard to renting a stall at the market, you must get in touch with the owner of\nthe building. A licence is required to operate a\nstall.\nProspector, East Kootenay\u2014Is it possible to\nstake a claim on ah Indian reserve without\npermission? ,\nDisposal of minerals on an Indian reserve\nIs authorized under Section No. 50,of the'Indian Act to the condition that the consent of\nthe Indian band occupying 'the reserve must\nfirst be obtained through their Agent.\nSpider in the Paper\n\u25a0r- Many years ago Mark Twain waa editor\nof a small-town newspaper. A reader wrote in\nsaying that he had found a spider in his paper,\nand wanted to know if that was an omen of\ngood or bad luck. Mark Twain answered;\n\"Finding a spider in your newspaper is neither\ngood nor bad luck. The spider was merely\nlooking over our paper to see which merchant\nwas not advertising so he could go to that\nstore, spin his web across the door, and lead\na life of undisturbed peace ever afterward.\"\nPress Comment\nTANNING SPOT COVEREDI\nLooking over the fashion patterns, we\njudge that the bathing suits are just big\nenough to prevent tanning where the wearer\nought to be tanned.\u2014Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph.\nUSES OF GRAMMAR\nGrammar is more than a system-of rules\nfor the use of the English language; lt is a\nmental discipline which leads toward clarity\nof thought.\nIf a man understands the use of a language, he is not likely to slip into the vague\nand foolish writing which is so common,\nand so infuriating, today. The question which\nis always at the back of his mind is not \"How\nam I saying it?\", but \"What am I saying?\"\nAnd his ear becomes sensitive not only to\ngrammatical niceties, but to niceties of reason\nand expression.\nThe sensitive ear\u2014the outpost of a sensitive intellect and a sensitive conscience\u2014Is\ntoo rare in Canada today. Those who have\nit have acquired it, in all likelihood, at home.\nOur educational system not merely neglects\nit, but is hostile towards it. And for that\nthe directors and heads,of that system must\nbear the blame.\u2014Peterborough Examiner.\nSome People Never Learn\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Nov. 3, 1940\nChief of Police Alex Stewart yesterday\nended 43 years of active police work when he\nhanded over the keys to his office to Nelson's\nnew Chief, George H. R. Bone, former R.C.M.P.\nofficer of Calgary.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Nov. 3, 1925\n\"The Mollusc\", clever and amusing English comedy, was given by a small English\ncompany at the Nelson Opera House last n,ight.\n40' YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News\" of Nov. 3, 1910\nFive thousand dollars is to be raised by\nbusiness men of Nelson and in the city at\nlarge for the carrying on of publicity work.\n'An agency will  be maintained in London,\nEngland, to carry on a* campaign of personal\nwork with prospective settlers and' other investors. Altogether about $15,000 will be spent\nthis year in furthering the developments of\nthe districts.\nLabor's New Proposal Daring and\nMost Controversial Issue Known\n\u2014Morris, in The Rochester Democrat and Chronicle\nBy   DEWITT   MacKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nOne of the most daring and controversial issues yet advanced by\nBritain's Labor Government is its\nproposal to make numerous wartime regulations permanent.\n, These   include   food   rationing,\npi-ice   controls   and' allocation   of\nscarce materials.\nCertainly the Socialists had to\nhave the courage of their convictions to bring forward such a far-\nreaching program; Naturally it has\nbrought from the Opposition bitter\ncharges of a further swing to the\nleft and of labor being bent on, regimenting the life of the country.\nYou will get a quick denial of\nthese charges of dictatorship if you\ninquire (as I have done) in authoritative British Socialist quarters.\nYou will be assured that these are\n\"democratic safeguards\" supporting the Government's belief that it\nmust have basic controls in order\nto carry out its program. It is\nclaimed that the Government needs\nthese controls for fundamental nationalization.\nGOOD DEAL FURTHER-\nThe extreme left wing of British\nSocialism goes a good deal further\nthan that and has been vocal of late.\nHowever, the indications are that\nPrime Minister Attlee and the great\nmajority of the Socialist party do\nnot subscribe to these left-wing\nviews. \u25a0\nAttlee is a quiet and unassuming\nsort of man, but he has maintained\nfirm control of his party organization. He can be tough when he has\nto, and he has cracked the whip\nover the extreme left on numerous\noccasions'of late.\nCALLED EACH SHOT\nAttlee never has concealed from\nthe public his party's program for ,\nnationalization- On the contrary, he\nhas called each shot as he made it,\nNow he has- called the shot again\nin connection with his project of\nmaking various .wartime economic\nregulations permanent. He has\nplaced his proposals before Parlia'\nment and they will go through a\nprocess of manhandling to determine whether they are acceptable.\nCertain for Canadian Products\nBy FORBES RHUDE \"\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nPeculiarly enough there, just now,\nconsiderable talk about a possible\nfall-off in business.\nThis comes chiefly from the\nUnited States, but it may be heard\nin Canada also in this time of re-l\nadjustments. \"I\nBut* the' basic fact in all this is\nthat there is virtually certain to\nbe a demand for 'evefything that\ncan be produced \u2014 which means\nthat there will be enough to keep\neveryone more than busy.\nThat is the over-all situation.\nThe more-detailed picture may\nshow shome people and some business. The more-detailed picture may\nshow some people and soma businesses being hit in the process of\nturning from a half-peace economy\nto a half-war basis.\nThe in-between . situation seems\nto have developed further in the\nUnited States than here.\n\"The Government is appropriating, but it isn't spending,\" says a\nbig Wall Street banker. \"So we\nmay be in for an interim'deflation.\"\nHe thinks it will be a while before much cash is paid out for\ndefence goods. And business may\ndip in the next few months because\nthe curbs and allocations of materials may cut back- consumer\nspending and production.\nSimple Comments\nFrom RX.A.F.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nl*|KMr*4 V. I  Faitm OOa\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nHE'S CERMlNl-y\nDOME A60OD JOB\n.OF .SWING THE FOOOJ\nFROM KINS A\nToday's Bible Thought\nWe are not aa safe ai we Imagine,\n8ecurlty cannot be barf from legislation ' nor even by thrift, nor by. a\nstrong fortress, Most accidents happen In homes, Better lay up treasures of glorious memory where\nthieves .cannot break through.\u2014\nThem that lay foundations of clay,\nwhose foundation is dust.\u2014Job 4:19.\n. JELL, you CAN'T\nEXPECT. 4 fiuy 7D\nTAKE CARE. OF\nEyERyiWMS*v\nTlArVX 70 MRSttDk\/HCi,\nAYfAULT'-RevtP,\nPA\/RPOKTj NSW >&\/&<\n\\l   '1-3\nOur old car is like my old hat.\nIt's still got a lot of service in it,\nbut it's quit makin' me feel respectable.\nINTERIM   DEFLATION\nThe interim deflation would lie\nbetween the present full-tilt prosperity and price Inflation\u2014which\nthe Government controls are intended to brake\u2014and the time\nwhen the big boost from the planned defence production comes\nalong. The banker thinks there may\nbe a time lag hetween the slowing-\ndown of production for consumers\nand the start of actual production\nfor defence.\nMany, however, argue that a\nslump isn't in the cards, that inflation has too good a head start,\nand that the very anticipation of defence orders and shortages will\nkeep civilians buying consumer\ngoods out of bigger pay checks, and\nkeep factories going full tilt.\nEither view, of course, depends\nentirely on the one big \"if\"\u2014if preparedness doesn't change overnight\neither to war or to a better prospect\nfor peace and disarmament.\nBut whatever happens in the\nUnited States, there does not appear\nto be much need for worry in Canada, as far as any over-all fall-off\nis concerned.\nOur raw \"materials, which are in\ndemand, and the great expansion of\nour resources\u2014capital investment\u2014j\nwhich is going on, seem to put us in\na strong position,\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Animal expert\nH H. Goodenough climbed to the\nroof of an apartment block chasing\nan escaped monkey\"*Veported seen\nthere. It turned out to bo an'odd-\nshaped chimney cowl.\nm\nmm\n\u2022tslfled Ads Gets Quick Results\nBy DAVE  MclNTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMcCHORD AIR FORCE BASE,\nWash.; Nov. 2 (SP),\u2014 It may get\nnew aircraft and devise new techniques, but the air force hasn't\nchanged since the war.\nSample comments'gleaned from\nmembers of R.C.A.F.'s 426 Thunderbird Squadron operating on Korean\nair lift:\nAn Erk: \"There are too many\nN.C.O.s standing around doing nothing.\"\nAn N.C.O.: \"There's too much\nbrass sitting around doing nothing.\"\nAn officer: \"Those jobs are supposed to get 15 minutes fpr coffee\nbut they  usually  wangle  25.\"\nAn Erk: \"I want to get home and\nget some skating in.\"\nAn N.C.O.: \"I want to get home\nand see my wife.\"\nAn officer: \"I want to get home.\"\nBANG-UP JOB\nThe usual beefing mean.s of\ncourse, that the R.C.A.F. is doing\nits usual bang-up job. i\nThe Thunderbird (Squadron occupies two or three , little corners\npn this big airfield near Tacoma\nand Seattle.\nThe men get more money down\nhere than at home\u2014$30 a month\nmore for an Lac\u2014But most of them\nsay it doesn't go as far as what\n-they were getting at home. The officers get $4.50 a day subsistence\nallowance, but have to buy all their\nmeals and extras.\nThey say the people of Tacoma\nand Seattle have been wonderful to\nthem.\nOne of the big grouses has been\nthe weather\u2014it has rained almost\nconstantly here for nearly two\nmonths. .a\nMilitary Service\nFor Pte. Wallace\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 2 (CP) -\nPte. Wallace, regimental number\nK57Q00, a proud mascot of a proud\nregiment died late last night in his\nsleep.\nThe 13-year-old Second World\nWar veteran, a namiable St. Bernard, died of old age and a rigorous\nlife. Pte. Wallace was mascot of\nthe Canadian Scottish First Battalion Overseas.   '\nTrustees of the' regiment plan a\nsoldier's funeral for the dog \u2014 cremation, with ashes scattered to the\n.skirl of the lament.\nDr. M. L. Olsen, veterinarian,\nsaid Pte. Wallace died quietly. He\nsaid the mascot had a long life for\na St. Bernard, a breed which has\na lower than usual life expectancy, j\nMorocco leather originated from\nthe red goats of Nigeria, which\nshipped hides to Morocco centuries\nago.\nNew Provincial Jail\nFor B. C. Prisoners\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014\nA new provincial jail to house between 400 and 500 prisoners now is\nin the process of being designed,\nAttorney-General Gordon Wismer\nhas revealed.\nThe building is needed to relieve\npresent overcrowding so a new system of handling prisoners can be\nintroduced. Just where tie building\nwill be put up has not been disclosed.\nThe new system for operating\nB.C.'s prisons has. been developed\nby a special committee.\nWhile the committee's recommendations have not been made public\nit has. been suggested the aim of\nlhe new system is to place emphasis\non rehabilitating wrong-doers instead of on puishment.\nIt may be prison guards, under\nthe new system, may be trained for\ntheir duties at the university.\nCoast Students Win\nAwards, London, Ont.\nLONDON, Ont., Novl ,2 (CP) \u2014\nThree students from Western Canada were included in a list of winners of scholarhip3 and prizes, announced by the University of Western Ontario today.\nSamuel Laimon of Kamsack, Sask.,\nwon a J. William Horsey Fellowship in Business Administration,\nvalued at $500.\nIan H. Fjddes of Vancouver was\nawarded two prizes Jn- the Faculty\nof Medicine \u2014 the J. G. Campbell\nMemorial prize in Physiology and\nthe IJahki University and Y.M.C.A.\nscholarship.\nMary Patricia Leith of Victoria,\nB.C., won the Charles R. Will prize\nin Applied Pharmacology or Therapeutics. .,\nA Good Host is\n\u2022     a Mind Reader\nTastes differ. Some like dty drink,,\nothers tHe opposite, sweet drinks.\n00ly because Burnet* i  \u00ab\u00ab*\u00a3\nDRY (unsweetened) Gin can you \u00bb\nofleave  out the sweetness and meet\nevery individual preference.\nBURNETTS\n1ONDON    DRY\nGIN\n11115}\nNext time\nbuy\nI BURNETT'S\nI\ny,''i\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe LiqMor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia;\n ' (for Additional Sporti New* See Page\" 2)\nr^: \u00a7      By OLIVE FLEMING   %\/,    0\nWhen Eddie Wares- gets back to\ntown today, he will have two\nplayers on the club, new arrivals\nsinco ho left, One of them, Don\nGriffith, not Art Griffis as previously named, was on hand to play\nagainst Spokane, and another,\nrightwinger Eldon Willox showed\nup last night.   -\nWillox seems to be a sure bet.\nUsed at centre at the workout last\nnight) he showed as a good skater,\na good passer, and apparently, he\ncan get the puck around the goal-\ntenders too, a weakness that has\nplagued the Leafs so far this season. Last year Eldon played for the\n| Calgary Buffaloes with Jack Steele.\n.    Willox was with Kamloops, but\n! waa cut off wheh the Elks had to\ndrop two Imports. Kamloops had\napplied for more  imports,  eight,\n'under the special assistance clause\n1 lit ths rule book which allows a\nclub which has lost many players,\nto receive more than, the quota of\nimports (six for B. C.) if all the\nother clubs in the loop agree. Apparently  their  bid  fell  through,\nand someone had to. go.\nHe related that the Elks have a\npowerhouse, but no reserves. Don\nCampbell had arrived back in\nKamloops, but Billy Hryclul^ who\nphoned the Elks that he was on the\nway there, placed another phono\ncall the same day, this one from\nNanaimo, saying that he had signed\nto play for Nanaimo Clippers.\n(Sounds exactly the same as the\nprank Kelowna's Bud Evahs pulled*\non Nelson Maple Loafs).\nMoose McNaughton, who has a\ngood job in Kamloops, didn't like\ntho Kerrlsdale offer, and is apparently back in Kamloops again. It's\nlikely the Elks, If they get' Moose's\nrelease from Nelson, could dump\nhim back into the lineup. By the\nway, Moose got married last Summer.\nA meeting for senior basketball\nplayers will be held at tho CJvld\nCentre Gym Monday for the formation of a local senior hoop\nleague. Early this week there was\na meeting of players Interested in\nsuch a plan, and this corner has\nbeen told that tho outlook was\npromising.   -\nEddie Wares, who is returning\ntoday from Calgary, will continue\nstraight through to Spokane, where\nhe will meet his family, on their\nway up from Victoria. When Eddie\nleft for Calgary, his father was almost given up for dead, but Pop\nWares pulled through, and is very\nmuch alive, we're pleased to report.\nTo Fill Rickey's Shoes\nThe Power Behind'the Dodgers\n_\".\"   j:\"\"v\nKonstanty Most Valuable\nPlayer in National League\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (AP)-Big\nJim Konstanty, who rose from ob\nscurity to become the best relief\npitcher ln baseball today, is the\nNational League's most valuable\nplayer for 1J50\u2014a \u2022 precedent shattering feat '\nKonstanty, whose superb pitching featured Philadelphia Phillies'\nfirst pennant triumph in 35 years,\nis the first relief pitcher in either\nLeague to win the coveted award.\nThe 33-year-old specialist gained\n18 out of 24 first place votes and\npiled up 266 out of a possible 336\npoints to win the award with ease.\nOnly two of the 24 members of the\nBaseball Writers Association of\nAmerica who participated in the\npoll failed to name Konstanty anywhere on their 10-player ballot.\n\"DELIGHTED\"\nBeached at his Worcester, N. Y.,\nhome, the former Toronto Maple\nLeaf hurler said: \"It's something\nyou always work for and never expect. I'm very'excited and delighted about it.\" The right hander\npraised his teammates anil said\nthey deserved the laurel as much\nas he did.\n\"I never could have won it without help from the rest of the team.\nWithout them I never could have\nbeen mentioned for such an honor,\"\nKonstanty said.\nStan Musial, St. Louis Cardinal\nstar, finished a distant second to\nKonstanty. Musial, a three-time\naward winner and the League's\nbatting champion, drew one first-\nplace vote and finished with 158\npoints. The only other players who\ndrew first-place votes were Eddie\nStanky of Now York. Giants and\nGran Hamner of the Phils, two\neach and Ralph Kiner, home run\nking of Pittsburgh, one.\nObviously happy about the whole thing here are Walter O'Malley,\nVice-President-Secretary of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and Mrs. John\nSmith after It was announced that they Intend to \"exercise prior.\nrights\" to purchase Branch Rickey's 26 per cent share of the Dodgers'\nclub stock. This will give them control of the club, with ownership\nnow divided as follows: O'Malley, 37(\/2 per cent; Mrs. Smith, 37i\/2\nper cent, and Mrs, Jim Mulvey, daughter of the late Steve McKeever,\n25 per cept.\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nRoy Conacher Nets 200th Goal; Leafs,\nHawks Win; Rangers, Detroit Tie 2-2\nStrikes n Spares\nVARIETY CLUB\nHigh single\u2014Gwen Macrone, 265.\nHigh aggregate\u2014VI DeLucrezio,\n674.\nHigh team\u2014Bombers, 2683.\nStandings \u2014 Bowling   Vees,   12;\nBombers 11; Humdingers, 9; Mad\nHatters, 9; Dead End Kids, 8; Flying Floozies, 8.\nMEN'S COMMERCIAL LEAGUE\nHigh single\u2014Keith Lepage, 243.\n.    High aggregate\u2014K. Lepage, 592.\nHigh team\u2014C.P.R. General Office,\n2798,\nStandings\u2014Bennies, 20; Bankers,\n16; C.P.R. General Office, 16; Rigby,\n13; Transfer, 10.\nScores follow:\nVARIETY LEAGUE\nHUMDINGERS-D. Norfield 649,\nL. Meakins 391, H. Leeming 551, B.\nIceton 454, low score 299. Total 2344.\nFLYIN' FL002IIES-N. Benedetti\n631, M. Benedetti 366, B. Maloney\n-468, 0. Cassan 423, V. Lapointe 348\nTotal 2236.\nBOWLING BEES-L. Elphlck 629,\nC. Fletcher 425, T. Bird 244, M. Arnot\n443, B. Breeze 455. Spot 96. Total\n2194\nMAD HATTERS-M. Giles 310, D.\nFaweett 454, M. Wells 602, B. Ross\n460, G. Macrone 657. Spot 51. Total\n2534,\nBOMBERS\u2014L. Chapman 467, M.\nStangherlin 485, V. Pacaud 388, G.\nOlund 507, V. DeLucrezio 674. Spot\n162. Total 2683.\nDEAD END KIDS-E. Farenholtz\nSKATING\nTONIGHT\nADULTS\n8:15 \u2014 10:15 P.M.\n472, H. Smith 507, low score 244, M.\nWhitelock 386, E. Milne 379. Total\n1988.\nMEN'S COMMERCIAL LEAGUE\nTRANSFER\u2014J. Gold 583, J, Am-\natto 431, J. Hudson 464, A. Anderson\n478, H. Forster 461. Spot 258. Total\n2675.        .     .\nBANKERS\u2014D. Mclnnes .506, S.\nGordon 370, T. Trehearne 510, J.\nClarke 406, D. Sykes 491. Total 2283.\nBENNIE'S-B. Schneider 461, W.\nAbrosimo 477, T- Sewell 416, J. Hies\nterer 471, A. Schneider 664. Total\n2389.\nC.P.R. GENERAL OFFICE \u2014 A.\nGackle 371, G.B. Gullivan 555, K. K.\nLepage 592, C. D. Westwood 557,\n\u25a0R. B. Stewart 504: Spot 210. Total\n2789.\nRIGBY\u2014G. Bond 546, G, Johnson\n521, J'. Postnikoff 494, B. MacDonald\n583, Y. Hamakawa 508. Total 2052.\nBy The Canadian Press\nRoy Conacher, veteran of the Na\ntionai Hockey League, scored two\ngoals to run his lifetime record to\n200 as Chicago Black Hawks bolstered their fourth-place hold by a 5-2\nvictory Thursday night in Chicago\nover the hapless Boston Bruins.\nIn other games, Toronto Maple\nLeafs tightened their hold on first\nplace by edging Montreal Canadiens\n2-1 In Montreal, and New York\nRangers came from behind to tie\nDetroit Red Wings 2-2 in Detroit.\nThe Hawks swept into a 3-0 lead\nbefore the first period was half\novar, Conacher hitting for the third\ngoal at 8:28 after rookie Vic Stasiuk\nhad connected at 1:46 and Gus\nBodnar at 4:59.\nJohnny Peirson saved Boston\nfrom a shutout at 3:2L of the second, when he climated a play pattern engineered by Paul Ronty and\nLoren Ferguson. Then at 18:06 Gor-\ndy Fashoway, another Chicago\nrookie, hit to bring it to 4-1.\nConacher joined the olub of\nrarities, those who have scored\n200 or more goals in a lifetime of\nbig league hockey, at 8:1o of the\nfinal period when he converted\na pass from Adam Brown Into a\nscore that raised the Hawk edge\nto 5-1.\nToronto made it nine games in\na row without defeat by downing\nCanadiens for the second successive\nnight. The Leafs to date have only\none loss^and two ties in 10 games\nand now have a five-point lead\nover thc sccond-pl^ce Habitants,\nLeafs had a far wider margin of\nthe play than Canadiens but couldn't crack through the sterling netminding of little Gerry McNeil until\nthe final period.\nMcNeil was the standout for Canadiens who otherwise played a\nragged game. In the last few seconds they almost rammed in a goal\nfrom a wild scramble just in front\nof the Toronto net, Maurice Richard missing on one effort and Calum\nMacKay on another.\nTWO HURT\nThc third period of the Detroit-\nNew York game was rough, with\nplay held up twice while Terry\nSawchuk and his teammate, Marty\nPavelich, got first aid after being\ndumped hard. Sawchuk was felled\non a hard smash by Gus Kyle, injuring his cheekbone as he fell\nheadfirst into the Red Wings' net.\nPavelich suffered a possible chipped\nbone in his left shoulder when he\nwas ridden into the boards by Mic-\nkoskl,\nMONTREAL-TORONTO\nToronto\u2014Broda; Thomson, Mortson; Kennedy; Sloan, Smith. Subs-\nWatson, Barilko, Bentley, Klukay,\nMeeker, Mackell,  Gardner, Juzda,\nReferee \u2014 H\u00bbgh McLean; Linesmen\u2014Sammy Babcock, Bill Knott,\nFirst period\u20141, New York, Kaleta\n(O'Connor, Sinclair) 3:08; 2. Detroit,\nCarveth, 8:00.\nPenalties \u2014 Raleigh, Sinclair,\nHowe, Leswick.\nSecond period\u20143. Detroit, Lindsay\n(Abel, Howe) 10:11.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird period\u20144. New York, Sta\nnowskl (Laprade, Leswick) 17:38.\nPenalties\u2014Kyle, Mlckoskl.\n^ftHHTlffli\/\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquo\u00ab\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nVictoria Swimmers\nEstablish Records\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014\nThree unofficial swim records were\nestablished by Victoria swimmers\nhere last night.\nNorma Stewart sot a record of\none minute and 16.8 seconds for the\n100-yard butterfly stroke.\nUntil this year the butterfly\nstroke and the breast stroke were\nclassified as one. Now the butterfly,\na variation of the breast stroke, is\na classification of its own. The present junior breast stroke record, set\nby Irehe Strong, is one minute and\n18 seconds.\nAlso being submitted to the C.A.\nS.A. for the record book is Miss\nStewart's 40-yard butterfly swim,\nmade in 26 seconds flat. The present\njunior breast stroke record for the\n40-yards is 26:8, and the senior record 26:1. Both were held by Irene\nStrong.\nIn the senior division, Joan Morgan last night did the 40-yard butterfly in 30 seconds. Her time will\nbe the first one to be recorded and,,, \u201e .   .     ...  _-]_\u201e\u201e\u201e,,\nso will probably stand as a \u00ab^\\fflg\u00ae$\u00a3^j$\u00ae^\nPherson: Lach; Richard, Dussault.\nSubs\u2014Leger, Curry, Harmon, Johnson, MacKay, Laycoe, Reay, Gravelle, Mosdell, Kaiser, King, Masnlck.\nOfficials'\u2014Referee, Bill Chadwick;\nLinesmen, George Hfcyes and Herb\nGallagher\nFirst period\u20141. Montreal, Mosdell\n(Curry) 2:55.\n, Penalties\u2014Lach, Sloan, Harvey.\nSecond period\u2014No scoring.\nPenalty\u2014Sloan (minor and misconduct).   \u00bb\n' Third period\u20142. Toronto. Sloan\n(Kennedy) 6:30; 3. Toronto, Gardner (Mackell) 16:35. I\nPehaltles\u2014Mackell, Harvey.\nDETROIT-NEW YORK\nNew York\u2014Rayner; Egan, Stanley; Laprade; Fisher, Leswick. Subs\n\u2014Eddolls, Stanowskl, O'Connor, Raleigh, Lund, Mlckoski, Kyle; McLeod. Kaleta, Kullman, Slowinski,\nSinclair.\nDetroit \u2014Sawchuk; Reise, Kelly;\n\\bcl; Howe, Lindsay. Subs\u2014Gold-\nKim, Gee, Peters, G. Slewarl, Prys-\n, lali  Pavelich,  McFadden,  Carveth,\ni Couture, Black, Fogolin, Pronovost.\nCHICAGO-BOSTON\nBoston \u2014 Gelineau; Henderson,\nQuackenbush; Ronty; Peirson, Ferguson. Subs \u2014 Kraftcheck, Reigle,\nSandford, Flaman, Dumart, Schmidt,\nHarrison, Creighton, Smith, Maloney, Kryzanowski, Horeck.\nChicago\u2014Lumley; Stewart, Dewsbury; Morrison; Brown, Conacher.\n['Subs \u2014 Dickens,' Gadsby, McCaig,\nMosienko, Babando, Fashoway, Bodnar, Oimstead, \u2022 Guidolin, Stasiuk,\nLundy.\nReferee\u2014George Gravel; Linesmen\u2014Harold March, Red Storey.\nFirst period\u20141\". Chicago, Stasiuk\n(Fashoway, ^undy) 1:46; 2. Chicago,\nBodnar, 4:59; 3. Chicago, Conacher,\n8:28.\nPenalties\u2014Gadsby.\nSecond period\u20144. Boston, Peirson\n(Ronty, Ferguson) 3:21; 5. Chicago,\nFashoway (Lundy) 18:06. -\nPenalties\u2014None.\nThird period\u20146. Boston, Conacher\n(Brown) 8:10; 7. Boston, Ferguson\n(Horeck, Quackenbush) 13:17.\nPenalty\u2014Guidolin.\nFresno Thompson,.\n\/'Buzzy\" Bavasi\nNamed by O'Malley\nBROOKLYN, Nov. 2 (AP) -\nBrooklyn Dodgers today named\nFresco Thompson and Emlle (Buz-\nzy) Bavasi, two of Branch Rickey's\nbrightest aides, to fill the big shoes\nof the departed general manager.\nBoth Thompson and Bavasi, gen-\noral manager of Montreal last year,\nWeiSe appointed vice-president^ by\nPresident Walter O'Malley who said\nthey wil share the general manager-\nShip duties Rickey handled so ably\nduring the last eight years, The\n69-year-old Rickey was both president and general manager until he\nresigned last week.\nNext en  O'Malley's agenda Is\nthe   managership.   Burt  Shotton,\nRickey's field boss, still Is manager. But the betting around Brooklyn's headquarters was that Harold (Pee Wee) Reese, Dodger captain and shortstop, would be at\nthe helm  when  Spring training\nrolls around',\nDixie   . Walker,     the    \"Peepul's\nCherce,\" in his Brooklyn  playing\ndays  also, rated   a .possibility  for\nthe manager's role.\nO'Malley, however, indicated\nShotton still was in 'the running.\n\"No decision will be made Until\nI have a good talk with him,\"\nO'Malley said. \"He is a very fine\ngentleman.\"\nUnder the new regime\/Thompson,\nwho has been in charge of scouting,\nwill hanc\"e the club's sprawling\nminor league system and scouting.\nBavasi, an energetic 34-year-old\nminor league executive, will assist\nO'Malley in corporate matters and\nwill be In charge of player contracts and deals.\nHe also will have a big say in\nthe financial affair of the Dodger's\ntriple \"A\" clubs. The Dodgers own\nMontreal in the international league\nand St. Paul in the American association. They also have a Working\nagreement with Hollywood iri the\nPacific Coast League.\n\"The three of. us wil confer on\nall important matters,\" continued\nO'Malley.\nN.B.A. RECOGNIZES\nEZZARD CHARLES\nCINCINNATI, Nov. 2 (AP) -\nThe National Boxing Association\nmade it official today\u2014lt gave Ez\nzard Charles a certificate for his\n' courage and ability\"- and recogniz-!\nIng him as the World Heavyweight\nBoxing Champion.\nCharles has been recognised by\nthe N.B.A. as heavyweight champ\nover since he beat Jersey Joe Walcott. New York state, was a dissenter, however, until Charles whipped\nJoe Louis in New York last Sept. ii.\nMELSQN DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. g, 1950 \u2014 7\nGame Dept. Not to\nCut Pheasant Season\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014\nThe British Columbia Game Commission has decided not to cut\nshort the pheasant season, The\nCommission said few.birds were\nbeing shot and added that the\npheasant \"decline has been universal throughout the Northwest.\"\nKilburn Leading\nPrairie Scorers\nREGINA, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 Colin\nKilburn, last year's scoring champion, is leading the Western Canadian Senior Hockey League scoring\nlist.\nLost week's leader, Don Anderson\nof Calgary, is deadlocked in a\nthree-way tie with Alex Pringle\nand Bing Merluk of Edmonton for\nfourth place with 10 points apiece.\nTwo Quaker rear guards\u2014Larry\nZeidel and Bill Heindl\u2014are running one-two in the \"bad man\" department Zeidel has served 33\nminutes in the penalty box, three\nmore minutes than Heindl.\nTHE LEAGUE LEADERS:\n,Q A   P\nKilburn, Edmonton .... 7   7   14\nBarry, Edmonton  5   7   12\nWitiuk, Edmonton  3   8   11\nAnderson, Calgary  6   4   10\nPringle, Edmonton   9   1   10\nMerluk, Edmonton 4 6   10\nWiest, Saskatoon   3   6    9\nKyle, Regina    3   6    9\nFinney, Calgary   9   4    9\nShabaga, Saskatoon .... 4   5,   6\nSnead Leads North,\nSought Golf Open\nP1NEHURST, N.C., Nov. 2 (AP)\u2014\nSammy Snead came slamming\nthrough the third round of the\nNorth and South Open Golf Tournament with a sux-under par 32-34\n\u201466 today to charge into the 54-\nhole lead by two strokes, with a\n205 total.\nHis three-day spree of 68-71-66\nloft him 7.1 under par and two\nshots in front of Johnny Palmer,\nBadin, N.C., the leader through the\nfirst two rounds, and Jim Ferrier\nCanadian Open Champion from San\nFrancisco, who is No. 2 money winner this year back of Snead.\nJim Conacher\nSuspended\nCHICAGO, Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014 Chicago Black Hawks of the National\nHockey League announced today\nthat forward Jim Conacher has\nbeen suspended indefinitely.\nGeneral Manager Johnny Gottse-\nlig said the 29-year-old Conacher\nhad refused to play for Hawk's\nfarm club in Milwaukee when his\nsalary was cut.\nGottselig said the salary cut was\nordered when Conacher \"didn't\nshow too much\" with the Milwaukee team, the Sea Gulls. Conacher\nplayed two full seasons for Hawks.\nHe was obtained from Detroit Red\nWings ln 1948.\nEskimo Fans Plan Toronto\nInvasion if in Finals\nEdmonton, Winnipeg\nFootball Final\nSaturday Night\n, EDMONTON, Nov. 2 (CP)\u2014The\nexecutive of the Western Interprovlnelal Football Union today reversed a previous decision and ruled\nthat the first game here of the final\nseries between Edmonton Eskimos(\nand Winnipeg Blue Bombers wilLj\nbe played Saturday night.\nEskimo Manager Al Anderson,\nwho had held out four days for a\nnight game, immediately announced\nthat the fixture would start at 8 p.m.\nWinnipeg had sought an afternoon\ngame.\nBy CAMERON JAMES.\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014\nDog sleds mushing up Bay Street,\nan oil derrick \"drilling\" In front\nof City Hall, oll-rlch millionaires\nlighting' cigars with $10,000 bills\n\u2014all these and real live Eskimos,\ntoo, If Edmonton goes to Toronto\nto represent the West In the Grey\nCup final.\nAt least, these things are what\nEskimos' hottest supporters feel\nshould be in the script if Edmonton,\nwins the best-of-three Western\nfinals against Winnipeg Blue\nBombers.\nOriginality will be the keynote\nif Touchdown Cluh members\u20141000\nstrong\u2014have anything to say in the\nmatter. . \u2022\nOne suggestion which' has met\napproval is that huskies and sleds\nbe shipped to Toronto\u2014Just as Calgary sent prairie schooners and\nhorses in previous years.\nIf there.isn't enough snow, \"small\nwheels can be attached to the,runners for lhe Bay Street parade and\na dozen or' so Eskimos might be\nimported from the Arctic as\nmushers.\"\nBUFFALO STEAKS\nInstead of Calgary's flapjacks,\nbuffalo steaks would make a \"tasty\ndish\" for barbecuing on City Hall\nsteps. And just to remind Easterners of Edmonton's.oil \"an oil derrick wouldn't be out of place on\ntho front lawn.\"    '\nSome of the Eskimo Club executive, a trifle more cautious than the\nTouchdown Clubbers, admit they\nhave  given  some  thought  to  the\npossibility of an Eastern trip this\nyear.\nPresident Walter Spraguo said he\nhas received several letters suggesting ways and means of making\nEdmonton's presence felt.\nOne writer said that all'supporters going East should \"dress to the\nhilt.\" This means \"wearing silk\nshirts, expensive suits, and large\ndiamond rings and stick-pins.\" The\nfact that the jewellery is to be\npurchased in the flve-and-dime\ndoesn't detract from the idea, which\nis to impress Easterners \"with the\noil and industrial wealth that lies\nin the Edmonton area.\"\nThe writer went on: \"Everyone could smoke cigars and light\nthem with $10,000 bills\u2014a bale\nof which can be printed for tho\noccasion-\"\n\"I like that Idea,\" said Mr.\nSprague,\nAnother writer thought several\nthousand imitation cotton-batten\nsnowballs could be carried East on\nthe Eskimo special. Unsuspecting\nEasterners and even fellow Westerners along the route would be\npelted. Investigation of the Ersatz\nsnowballs would reveal (to the surprise of those hit in the eye with\nthem) a brief brochure on the City\nof Edmonton.\n\"Not so good,\" said Mr. Sprague.\nAlmost everyone ln this football-\ncrazy city is giving the trip soma\nthought. Almost everyone agrees\nIt's going to be a lot of fun\u2014if:....\"\nPlans to double Australia's steel\nproduction include a plant for manufacture of tinplate.\nBOXER DIES AFTER\nBEING KNOCKED OUT\nNEWPORT,    England,    Nov.\n(Reuters)\u2014Gordon   Avery,   18,   an\namateur   boxer,   died   here   today\nseven days after he was knocked\nout in a contest.\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014\nUnited States professional football's\nbiggest league still i? playing, its\ngames before a lot of empty seats,\nThat was disclosed today in an AP\nsurvey of the National Football\nLeague's first 42 games. Total attendance was 1,151,040, some 85,000\nless than the same teams had counted at the gate at this stage last\nseason. The total then for 41 games\nwas 1,236,574.     .\nPn\nPACIFIC COAST HOCKEY\nATTENDANCE UP\nSEATTLE, Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014 The\nPacific Coast Hockey League,\nwhich had expected a slight attendance drop because of the similar\ntrend in baseball, has Instead been\ntreated to a slight increase.\nLeague headquarters said today\nthe gain was 3303 paid admissions\nfor the first 29 games. The,only\npoints to lose were Victoria, which\nreported a decrease of 507- for six\ngames, and Vancouver, down 488 in\nfive games.\nTO ENIIST YOU MUST -\n1. Bo a Canadlpn citizen or British subject,\n2. Bo between 17 ond 29 years of age,\n3. Bs single.\n4. Meet Army test requirements,\n5. Volunteer for service anywhere.\nREPORT RIGHT AWAY TO;\nNo, 11 Porionriol Dopot, 4050 Wait Fourth Ave,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nA2403-BC\nTo bring this anti-aircraft gun into action calls for\na full crew \u2014 skilled men trained to fight as a fast-\nthinking, fast-acting team. To train such a crew takes\ntime: gun crews must know how to handle modern\nscientific equipment \u2014 electronics, radar, radio, telephone i men must work together with the closely timed\nco-ordination of a championship football team.\nThe Canadian Army Active Force needs men today\n...keen young men who can begin training immediately as anti-aircraft gunners. You can take your place\nat the side of the men who defend Canada by reporting for training without delay. Act now \u2014and\nhelp make Canada strong.\nREMEMBER WHEN . . .\nThe British Government 28 years\nago today banned a boxing bout\nbetween Joe Beckett and Battling\nSikl, a Negro fighter, soheduled for\nDec. 7. In later years however Larry\nGains, a Toronto Negro, fought in\t\nEngland    and    won    the    Empire   rhls advertisement Is not published oi'\nheavyweight crown. displayed by the Liquor Control Board or\n\"\"   \" by the Government ol British Columbia.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED    - \u25a0 ..\nHELP MAKE CANADA STRONG\nJoin the CANADIAN ARMV ACTIVE FORCE How!\n L.\nI\n'L\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\n\"f\/'TH'WIDPER\n\u25a0^VOKUM IS P1CKIN\nOUTA HUSBIN T'\nKETCH, COME\n'  SADIE\t\nDON'T BE SILLY.1'\/' WHO'D\nWANTMEP  TAKE A\nAT ME. TAKE\nA DEEP SNIFF\namir am\nisolrlaz^.\nAN'\n.UNSANITAW-\nah is-c|K\u00abft.'.wo'fiorrA make\nAS SAFE AS \/UP YORE MIND,\nEFAH\nIN MAH\nMAMMVS\nWHO-AD'DUKE\n.FO'ANEW\nPAPPY- ?-?--\nWHO ISYO'LOOKIN'\nAT WIF SECH AD-\nMEE-RAY-\nSHUN?\n-\u25a0SSV  HOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.\n&%MSZt JUST ARRIVED!   LARGE SHIPMENT  OF PICTURES.    SEE OUR WINDOW\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\n-^\nj^''X'.X'.y: .-\u25a0*-?\nBit\nVv^'': v \"V*\n~\/f\na^wv^w \u00bbhw\n\"N\/   L.J-3\nCar)\u2014 0\namdeiwom \u2014\u2014\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nGum, Candy or Money?\nNew King and Queen\nAn old, old custom Is badgering grandmother for a nickel or a\nstick of gum, and Prince Charles of England is no exception. Here he\ntakes a peek Into the purse of his grandmother, Queen Elizabeth,\nwhen they were together recently at Buckingham Palace.\n\u2014AP Wirephoto\nRecord of Red Atrocity\nCrown Prince Gustaf Adolf, who has been sworn In as Sweden's\nnew King, Is shown above with his wife, Crown Princess Louise. The\nnew King will succeed his father, King Gus\u00bb\u00ab' v. who died in Stockholm at the age of 92.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nOld Soldiers' Reunion\nThis grlm^cene of murder at Suchon was left by fleeing North\nKorean Reds after they massacred more than 65 American prisoners and wounded another 21. The wounded tell how their guards\nherded them out of a railway tunnel, presumably for a meal, and\nthen callously turned machine-guns on the helpless G.I.'s. U.S. paratroopers landed too late to catch the prisoners' train.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nfr'      \\:\n9^^MH\n| ,\n9\n\u25a0' J9   \u25a0\nMf\n*tK\nHt.y v,     ..Hz-ttm\n__*_'\u2022'        \u25a0_____%       I\nHi 'ml\nSsBH\nrap\u00bb\nWm Spjjl '\nBptlfl\n^Bfa \u25a0T5' \u25a0tHiJf s^yj .\\p^y y.-^^B\n, j\n-JeW^--   '           \u2022 \u25a0         1\n\\\\*\\\\mi ' _4 '_____W\\\\\nField Marshall Montgomery bends over for a quiet word With\n'Winston Churchill as they attended the annual Alamein reunion-\nThousands of Eighth Army veterans with wives and friends heard\nspeeches by. Monty and Mr. Churchill at the reunion, commemorating the eighth anniversary of the Battle of Alamein.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian.\nON THE AIR\nFRIDAY, NOV. 8, ]950\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News        -:\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n1:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You, Madame\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Musicale\n10:00\u2014Time Signal and Train Time\n10:01\u2014Ladies' Choice .\n10:15\u2014Tel OliveaShow\n10:45\u2014Robin Hood Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Song Parade\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast,\n12:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Friday Serenade\n1:45\u2014Needlepointers\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n3:00\u2014School Broadcast\n. 2:30\u2014Kootenay Concert\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3:11\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Don Messer's Islanders\n3:30\u2014CKLN 'Pacific News\n3:40\u2014Musicale\n4:00\u2014Here Comes the Band\n4:30\u2014Sleepy Time Stories\n4:45\u2014Lyrical Lady\n4:55\u2014CKLN Reports\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:45\u2014Myrt and Marge\n6:00\u2014God's World\n6:15\u2014Bill Good\n6:30\u2014R.C.A.F. Sport Cast\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n7:45\u2014Canadian Health Story\n30\u2014Fall Fare\n:00\u2014Music by Eric Wild\n;30\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n9:45\u2014Canadian Forum\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Club Dai?\n10:30\u2014Riverside Rancho Orch. '\ni 1:00\u2014Hot Air\n11:55\u2014News Nile-Cap\nSATURDAY, NOV. 4, 1950\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05^Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News *\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Show Case\n9:00\u2014News        '\n9:01\u2014Western Hit Parade\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014The Stamp Collector\n9:45\u2014The Answer Man\n10:00\u2014Train Time.and Time Eignal\n10:01\u2014Bandstand\n10:15\u2014Notice Board    -\n10:45^-News\n10:55\u2014Sport News\n11:00\u2014Folk Songs\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Saturday Magazine\n1:00\u2014Saturday Serenade\n1:30\u2014London Studio Melodies\n2:00\u2014Dance Music\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Saturday Teen Beat\n,3:29\u2014Train Time\n3:30\u2014Saturday Pops Concert\n4:30\u2014Sports College\n4:45\u2014Memo From Lake Success\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014N.H.L. Hockey\n6:30-rCavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Sport News\n7:15\u2014Saturday Barn Dance\n7:30\u2014Square Dance\n8:00\u2014Prairie Schooner\n8:30\u2014Dance Orchestra\n9:00\u2014John- Sturgess\n0:15\u2014Armdale Chorus\n9:30\u2014Can You Top This?\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Trocadero Orch. \u25a0\n10:30\u2014Request Program\n11:30\u2014St. Francis Hotel Orchestra\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Can\nGREENWICH, England (OP) \u2014 A\ncaretaker, investigating noises in a\ndisused wing of the Brook General\nHospital found cats had established\ntheir own maternity section. Animal\nexperts were sent for and caught 51.\n\"We are using humane traps baited\nwith kippers,\" one said.\nHtTNSTANTON, Norfolk, England\n(CP) \u2014John Richardson found a\nshort thin-bladed sword buried 'in\nhis garden and gave it to his younger brother to play with..Now a museum has offered to buy it. The plaything was a 14th century sword.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nl.Mix ...\n5. Snare .\n9. Fleshy,\nmany-celled\nfruit\n10. City (Nev.)\n11. Encamp-'\nments\n12. In the axis\n14. Biblical city\n2. Male cat\n3: Inculcated\n4. Set again.\n5. Instructed\n6. King\n7. Cuckoos\n8. Courteous\n11. Raise to\nthird\npower\nfmath.)\n20. British\nstatesman\nand premier\n24,,RIpped\n26. Missions\n28. Kind of duck\n29. Assail\npersistently\n30. Egyptian\ngod\n32. Apprehend\nBBfsu uaua\naamaa KHania\nUDHtiaH rcniiu\nPiiMiMUE mm\nQEiD     HHHUfrtl,\nhh immmw\nhbqhh hmi-jhn\nhhbihhh h13\nHUHUH3:    hhh\nl'ihdj unnrannu\ntUBBO   HGIflSECl\nnnaisM hhhhh\n. ehbdq nans\n15. Son of Jacob 13. City (Okla.) 33. Former\n(Bib.) 16. Vitality\n17. Wrongdoing 19. Monetary\nunit\n(Irani\nRussian title\n(var.)\n36. Vast region\n(Afr.)\nYesterday's Annies\n38. To bandaga.'\n42. Flow ,\n44. A vessel ort\nduct (anat.J\nm\n&\n25\n26\n37\nu\n11\n4Z\nKing George Sends\nMessage ro Truman\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe King today sent a message to\nPresident Truman congratulating the\nPresident on his escape from assassination by two Puerto ltican reyol-\nutionists yesterday. ;\nThe King's message, one of many\narriving in Washington from world\nfigures, said:\n\"I am indeed glad to hear that\nthe dastardly attempt on your life\nhas been frustrated and send you\nmy sincere and thankful congratulations on your providential escape.\"\n^\n6\n3\u00b0\nto\n36\n43\n48\n^\n44\nV\/.\nCANTERBURY, England (CP)\nMayor H. S. Jennings accepted a\nchallenge from the organizer of a\nprocession planned for the 1951 festival of Britain. As a result both the\n:nayor and the organizer will grow now    being    repaired,\nbeards for their parts in the parade.I structed 700 years ago.\nA wall of lhe Tower of London,\nwas   con-\n18. Scolding\n21. Music note\n22. Ireland\n23. Thawed\n25. Consumed\n27. Philippine\ntree\n28. Doorkeeper*,\nof Masonic\nlodges\n31. An interjection\n34. Half an em\n35. Chests\n37. Astern\n39. Touch\nend to ena\n40. Sun god\n41. Gain\nknowledge\n43. Seaport\n(Eng.)\n45. Potato\n(slang)\n46. Collections\n47. Decimal\nUnit (pi.)\n48. Cozy nook\nDOWN\n1. Leaner\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\n.    AXYDLBAAXR ;   \u25a0\nIllOKOFBLKUl\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A la used.\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos.\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day, the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nRIT    DTEATC    DZAT    WYF\nTATFQ    IEBBQ    RFTT\nC T E C Y H \u2014 G D E M L Z E H.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote:   VERY OFTEN, SAY WHAT YOU,'\nWILL, A ROGUE IS ONLY A FOOL-VOLTAIRE. '\nnuirthuled by Klflff feature. Byndlcatt\nDYAT,\nDYATC    ZH\nE-H.B\nIZOi\n \\ mim-w'-msoNw\/mAos\n\\   \u25a0'FOR QUICK ffiVLTS!   L\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 P.M.\nPhone 144\nHELP, WanIted\nPANTED \u2014 SALESMAN, BY\n'prominent Canadian Manufactur-\n| er of sanitary ahd janitor supplies.\nCar essential. Established interior\nterritory. Good earnings for high\ncalibre producer. Must be prepared to live in Okanagan or Kootenays.  Pfotected territory  on\nj sttalglit commission. Applications\ninvited from young inexperienced\nI but ambiilous men. Box No. 7785\nDaily News.\nVANTED \u2014PROOFREADER FOR\ndaily newspaper. Must have high\nJ school education. Apply after 2:30\nI p.m.  to  A.  W.  Gibbon,  Nelson\nI Daily News.\nXITCHEN AND GENERAL Assistants, female, single, for Anglican\nMission Schopjs. Apply Indian\nSchool Administration, 102 Bank\nStreet, Ottawa, Ontario.\nVANTED\u2014SALESGIRLS, AGES 18\nto 24. Neat appearance, free to\ntravel. No 'experience necessary.\nWrite box 2139 Dally NeWs.\nLB SUPERVISORS, SINGLE,\nfor Anglican Mission Schools. Apply Indian School Administration,\n102 Bank Street .Ottawa, Ontario.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nProvince of British Columbia\n\"CHANGfc OF NAMfe ACT\"    \u25a0\nSedtion 6, R.S.B.C. 1948\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCHANGE OF NAME\nNOTICE is hereby given that an\napplication Will be made to the\nDirector of Vital Statistics for a\nchange of name, pursuant to the\nprovisions of the \"Change of Name\nAct,\" by me: Gerald Ronald fceber-\nger In the tdWh df New Denver, in\nthe Province of British Columbia, as\nfollows;\nTo change my name from Gerald\nRonald\" Reberger to Gerald. Ronald\ntoelson. My wife's name from Fran\ntes Lillian Reberger to Frances Lil\nlian Nelson. %'.\nDated this 30th day of October,\nA.t>. 1950.\n. ...      G. R. Reberger.\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nIWoRKMAN REQUIRED TO CON-\nstruct shelving in Nelson Municipal Library. Interview Librarian\n_   during Library hours.\t\nWanted \u2014 first aid attend-\naht Western Exploration Company Limited! Silverton, B.C.\nVKANTED \u2014 POLE MAKERS. Apply Glacier Lumber Co. Ltd.\nWANTED-EXPERIENCED WAIT-\nresses. New Star Cafe.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNelson Building Contractors\nBuilding and remodelling. Specialize in architecture. No jobs\ntoo large or too small. 132.1\nMc&uafrie Ave. Phone 384-X-3\nSuH|Pvy to Put Up\nHOME-CURED MEAT!\nMACHINERY\njers.\nLiners\nWe ore distributers lor:\n\u25a0    CATERPILLAR\nEQUIPMENT\nJOHN &EE&E\n\u2022    FARM MACHINERY\nSKAGlf L6GGING HOlStS\nAND DRAG LINES\nJOY COMPRESSORS AND\nALL MINE EQUIPMENT\nYOUNG LOGGING\nEQUIPMENT^\nKOHLER LlGHt PLANfS\n\/   \u25a0 \u25a0\nConsult Us for Your Needs\nLady will care for chil-\ndren any hour of day or evening.\nPhone 1009-L.\nPERSONAL\nCRESS CORN SALVE\u2014FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist sells Cress.\nWaWANESA MUTUAL ifIRE IN-\nSUtahce Co.. D. L. Kerr, Agent.\nfrULLER   BRUSH   SALES,   SER-\nvlce. Phone 1067-R. Ted Mills.\nLet me help you with your\nbeauty problems on any subject.\nAny number of questions $1.00.\nBox 7789 Daily News.\nSLMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.K\nDepot Clean rooms and modern\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single. $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles. Vancouver, B.C.\nDressfnaker sp Remodelling\nLearn practical dresmakihg. Evening classes. June Ife, 317 Richards Street.\ntfYGIENIC SUPPLIES (RUBBER\ngoods) mailed postpaid in plain\nsealed envelopes with price list.\nSix samples 20c. 30 samples, $1.00.\nMail Order Dept. J-50. Box 120,\nAsbestos, P.Q.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\n&H1P US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid.. A'ctive Trading Company\n916 Powell St., Vancouver. B.C.\ntvANTED - CEDAR POLES AND\nfejice posts. Al Maida, Box 1119.\nCastlegar, B.C.\nShip\nYOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOK\ngan. Nelson, B.C.\n1. Dissolve Morton's Tender\nQuidt in waiter. Pump this pickle\ninto bams add shoulders along the\nbodes. This starts die cure INSIDE.\n2. Rub with Morton's Sugar-\nCute, it strikes in froth the OUTSIDE, curing toward the center-\ngives a rich, wood-smoke flavor.\n3. Result\u2014the best-tasting,\nbest-keeping meat you've ever had\n. . , uniformly.cured front rind to\nbone ... no bone-taint, no wosta\n... home-cured meat at its very best\nNelson Fafmecs-\nSupply Limited\n524 Railway St\nPhone 174 Nelson\niJWftistfcJtaf^fcgfcfri^\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE\nD\u00bbv nnd Night Classes\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W.   WIDDOWSON   &  CO.   AS\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH.   S.   ELMES,   ROSSLAND,   BC\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Represent\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYUHti\"\nBOYD C. AFFLECK 218 GORE Si.,\nNelson, B.C.,' Surveyor. Engineer\nINSURANCE  AND  REAL   EST A I i\nMcHARDY   AGENCIES   LTU    Ik\nsurance,\" Real Estate\u2014Phone   13-\nBULLDOZERS. TkuCkERS.  Fi\nBULLDOZING,'TRUCK HAUI.Iiili\nsatid and gravel Contract M\nHarrop   Phone 117\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS. LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding,  motor  rewinding\nPhone 593 324  Vernnh  St\n\u00a3frl0\u00bbu Sailji Sffttifl\nClassified  Advertising  Rates-.\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions.\nlie line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1,56 line  per muiitfi   (26 consecutive Insertions) Box num--\nbers   He  extra.   Covers   any\nrtlithber of insertions,\nPUBLIC   (LEGALI    NOTICES,\nTENDERS. Elc.-20c per line,\nfirst   Insertion.   16c   per   line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n' Subscription Rates:\nSingle Copy   $    05\nfey Carrier, per week;\n: in Sdvance  \u00a36\nBy Carrier, per year        .  13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month       _^_   1.00\n.Three mohths 2.60\nSix months   _...H_~   4.50\nOne year       ,....    8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month    ;..._._\u201e.\u201e\u201e.   1.00\nThree months _ __._   3.00\nSix months     ...,    6.00\nOne year  __\u2014...._  12.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nAbove rates plus postage\nELECTRIC FIXTURES\nFOR STORE OR HOME\nNew\nFixture.Catalogue\nnow available\nSee Your Electrical Dealer\nor Write\nELECTRIC   EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nCalgary \u2014 Edmonton \u2014 Regina\n\u2022 Saskatoon\nFOR SALE\u2014SPENCER COAL AND\nwood range, G.E. hotplate with\ncalrod elements, WestinghoUse\nautomatic electric oven ' with\nbroiler. Phone 1381-L.\nFOR SALE\u2014BRIGGS & STRAT-\nt'on % h.p. engine in good condition; also battery radios. 410 Jos-\nenhlne St., phone 7B0-R.\nJiLiiUlKULuX FOR SALE, PRAC-\ntically new. Will sell at reasonable\nprice. Phone 864. Lakeside Auto\nCourt.\nI'li-u i-tri llMlia - TUBES, SPE-\ncial low prices Active Trading\nCo. 935 E. Cordova St.,\nVancouver.\nFOR SALE - 3 - BURNER GAS\nrange, with automatic oven coh-\ntrol. It\u2014rt one month. Ph. 1478-X.\nrun _,,\\ LE - tOXEDO, PERFECT\ncondition; size 37. Cheap. Phone'\n732-X.\nTtiLiJSCOPE    SIGHTS     AND\nmounts. Jack Boyce Men's Shop.\nFOR SALE\u2014CULL LUMBER. S. P.\nPond, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR  SALE\u2014LARGE  BRICK-LIN-\ned coal heater. Phone 928-L.\nFOR SALE - MAYTAG IRONER.\nPhone 188-L1 after 5 p.m.\t\nGIRLS'   WHITE   C.CM.   FIGURE\nskates. Size 3. Phone 828-Y.\nFOR. SALE-MAYTAG WASHING\nmachine. 1 yr. did. $100. Ph. lOlO-R\nIhe MICRONIC HEARING AID\nSales   -   P.O   Box  39\u2014Service\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\ni YEAR OLD WALNUT TREES.\n$2.50; blue and white grapes, 75c\nand $1.00; shrubs 75C; raspberry\ncaneS 75c per dozen, $5.00 for 100;\nearly and late strawberries 50c\nand 00c per dozen; Bleeding Heart\nand Lily of the Valley. Phone\nMrs. Becker, 1418 Vancouver St.\nTractor and\nEquipment Co*\nPHONE 930 BOX 119\nNELSON, Bid    '\nCONTRACTORS -  SAWMILL -\nLddGtlNG & MINING\nEQUlPMENt\nCC-   LTD\nsend your enquiries to\nnational Machinery\nGranville Island MA   1251\nVancouver, B.C.\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT. D'4\ncat, equipped fbr excavating,\nroadbuilding, etc C, Ross, phone\n588-R or  1376-L. Nelson,\nCATERPILLAR D-4 WITH BLADE\nandB*iicyrdS-Erie fe t!u yd, shovel\nfor sale. Inferior Contracting Cti.\nLtd., Penticton. B.C,\n16 K.W. DIESEL LIGHT PLANT,\nNew condition, fiayfes EtjUfptflent\nCo., Crarlbrook, B-C,\nRENTALS\nCOTTAGE FOR RENT\u20143 ROOMS\nand bathroom, partly furnished.\nVery reasonable rate fOr Winter\nmonths. Three mlhutes walk from\nNelson ferry. Con Cummins. Ph.\n738-L2 afternoons and evenihgS.\nFOR RENT\u2014FULLY FURNISHED,\nfully modern coltage, including\nwater, light, gas stove. Steam\nheated.- Windsor Cabins, 821 Nelson Avenue.\nELECTRIC SEWING MACHINE\nfor rent by week or month. We\ndeliver and pick up, Phone 41.\nSinger Sewing Machine Company.\nCABIN FOR RENT. APPLY. 1011\n4th St. Also bedroom for rent at\n614 Josephine St., phone 967-X2.\nFURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT.\nPrivate entrance. Also garage for\nrent. Phohe 668-Y.\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS\nwith double bed, at Winter fdtfes.\nLakeside Bungalow Court.\nWANTED- 3-BEDROOM HOUSE,\nadult tenants! will pay top rent.\nBox 7768 Daily News.\nHOuSfiKMSPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. Anply 401 Silica Street;\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, APPLY 519\nSilica St. Close to Baker St.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nsuite for rent. Phone 1418.-\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, SUITABLE\nfor two girls. Phone 1069-Y.\nFOR RENT \u2014 3 ROOM MODERN\nhouse. Apply 610 Front Street.\nFOR KENT\u20144-ROOM HOUSE, 825\nGordon Rrd (rear), $40. Ph. 1467-fr\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. - APPLY\n920 Edgewood Ave., after 6:30.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\n, FARM SU^LIESt ETC\nFOR SALE-GOOD YOUNG AYR-\nshire cows; .also 1 purebred Ayrshire bull, 3% years old. J. O'Gen-\nski, Apex, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014COW, JUST FRESH-;\nened. Apply P. Zoobkoff, South\nSlocan, B.C.\nSIX AND EIGHT WEEK OLD\nYorkshire pigs. Phone 6534-1,\nRossland. B.C.\nLOST MO FOUND.\nLOST\u2014WHEEL AND TIRE, WIL-\nlys Jeep truck. Red wheel, 700-16\n6-ply heavy duty commercial\nGoodrich Silvertown. Lost Friday\nnight between Nelway and Nelson. Reward. Phdne 482-L1.\nLOST: BETWEEN GRAND FORKS\nand Trail, small white dog. Fox\nterrier. Black spot on bdek. Answers to the name of \"Skipper.\"\nSubstantial reward. Phone 365.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nFOR SALE\u201417 FT. PETBRBOR-\nough with 3:6 h.p. Scott AftfirfH.\noutboard. Sacrifice $150.00. fiiofiS\n760.\nROWBOATS FOR SALE. \u2014\nSmoothskin, 4-mbnths-old. Bargains for cash. Ph. 434-R3 Nelson.\nYukon territory. 207,000- square\nmiles, has an estimated population\nof 80000.\nAUfOMOTlVP\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n\u2022^^\u25a0\u25a0^^\u25a0^^\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0j^jM^^^rf^^*;^^^^**\nUSEBCAR\nNew\n1950 Aiisfih A-40 Sedan\nNew '\n1950 Austin  A-40 Station\nWagon\nNdw\n1950 Austin   A-40  Pickup\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n1950 Pontiac Stiddh   .\n1950 Chevrolet  5 - Passenger Coupe\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1947 DODGE\n21\/2-TON\nSpecial\n$1200\n1947 GM.C. 21\/j-Ton\nDump\n1949 Austih Sedon\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1947 Dodge Pickup\n1946 Mercury Pickup\n1939 Chev Sedan\n1938 Ford Convertible\n1937 DeSoto Sedan\n1939 Hudson Coupe\n1935 Ford Sedan\n1935 Chevrolet Express\nDelivery\n1940 Studebaker Coupfe\n1935 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1934 Oidsmobile Sedan\n1934 Plymouth Sedan '\n-   TERMS   AND   TRADES:\nEMPIRE\n803 Baker Street,\nNelson, B. C.\nAUSTIN SALES AND SERVICE\nUSED CAR\nBETTER BUYS *\nBEST VALUES\n1949 GMC %-Ton Pickup. I fiflfl\nHeater and defroster  \u25a0 \"\"\"\n1B40 Chevrolet %-Ton Pickup.\nDeluxe cab, heater     I \u00a300\nand defroster.  ,. :.,0UU\n1950 Austin Pickup. I I lift\nHeater,and defroster \u25a0 ,ou\n1947 Willys Station Wagon.\nHeater and l\/l^O\ndefroster.   I1*IV\n1849 Che\\yolet Fleetllne   l nan\n4-Boor Sedan       'OOU\n1947 Oldsmobile Sedan.\nHydramatic. I SOO\nConditionaire  * ouu\n1950 Chevrolet Demonstrator\nSytleline Deluxe 4-Door Sedan.\nConditionaire, Radio, 9 9^0\nSeat Covers, Sunvisor *\u2022*\u2022\"**\nTHE YEAR'S BEST BUY\n\u2022   1950\nCHEVROLET and\nOLDSMOBILE CARS\nImmediate  Delivery\nTRANSFER\nCO., LTD.\nThe Largest .and Most Completely\nEquipped Garage in the Interior\nof British Columbia.\nIN STOCK\nImmediate Delivery\nNEW DODGE\nCUTHBERT\nMOTORS Ltd.\nAUTOMOTIVE PROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nMOTORCYCLES,    BICYCLES (Continued)\n(Continued)\n-\u00bb*\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb*. \u00bb\u00bb\u00bb-*_. j. _..\u00bb\nPick of the\n\"DRIVE A BARGAIN\"\n1948 Dodge 4-Door Sedan.\nExcellent  condition,\nRadio,     heater,\ndriving   .lights,    loW-\nniileage. Gull grey.\n1947 Oldsmobile   4-Door.\nExcellent  condition.\nHydrbmatlc drive. A\npremiurh car! Airway\n\u00bb   blue.\n1942 Dodge 4-Door Sedan.\nGood tires. Recondition ed throughout.\nTwo-tone green.\n1937 Chevrolet Coupe.\nBetter than average.\n\"SPECIAL BUY\"\n1940     .\nDODGE CUSTOM 4-DOOR\nFull  price $795\nPRICED\nTO\n.Pnntlnn.-.n   m   ticY.l  Column.\n1940 Plymouth DeLuxe Se-\n, dan;    Low    mileage.\nHeater,  winterized.\n1939 Ford DeLuxe Sedan.'\nGood motor, good\ntires, winterized. A\nfine family cor.\n1949 Austin DeLuxe Sedan\nLow mileage, heater,\nwinterized. Economical   transportation.\n1949 Morris Minor Coach.\nA-l shape, Priced to\nsell.\n1935 Oldsmobile Sedan.\nReddy  to go,  $295.\n1929 Chev Coupe, $150.\nGood rubber. Ready\nto go.        ...\nWE STAND\nBETWEEN\nYDU\nAND LOSS!\nNELSON BAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, MOV. 3, 1950-9\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMines .(Closing Prices)\nAcadia Uranium  3By4\nAkaitcho      1.44\nAnglo HUronlan      9.60\nRobertson, Hilliai-d,\nCattell Realty  \u25a0\nCompany, Limited,\nINSURANCE  OFFICE\n456 Ward St..       Ph, 1112\n-\u2014i-^^----\u2014j-^\u2014\u2014.*\u2014^\nfefcj^AJia^fcj\nFOR SALE\nSix-Room House\nthree bedrooms, cement basement, US lots on Hodver St.\nPrice $4500\n$2500 will handle.\nApply\nP. POULIN\nPHONE 70,\n-_~_~~~^*.^.*-^.\nFOR SALE \u2014 5-ROOM HOUSE, 3\nbedrooms, 3-pce. bathroom, basement. About 4i dcre lahd In frllit\ntr.ees and garden; chicken house,\n2-car garage, on highway at South\nSlocan. Apply t). G. bavls, South\nSldcah, B.C.\nTHREE- BEDROOM OLD-TYPE\nhome for sale. Five minutes' walk\nto down town area. Immediate\noccupancy. Price $8650.00 \u2014 BOme\ncash, balance in monthly pay\nments. Ph, 623-Y or call 605 Ce\ndar St.\nCHEAP FOR CASH, ON .KOOTE-\nnay Lake \u2014 Store building with\nliving quarters. Light and water,\nWould consider car as part payment. Apply 712% Josephine St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 FOB IMMEDIATE\noccupancy, 5 rooms and bath, full\nbasement. One acre of land, .15\nfruit trees. Adjoining City limits.\nApply P. E. Poulin, phone 70, Box\n130, Nelson, B.C.\nSIX HOOM HOUSE ON BAKER\nSt., $4500.00. half cash. Immediate\npossession. Phone 387-L1.\nFOR SALE\u2014NEW HOUSE, READY\nto move in. Near school. Terms.\nS. P. Pond, Nelson, B. C.\nFOR SALE\u2014NEW 4-ROOM HOUSE\nat Castlegar. Apply P. Cheveldave, Robson, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014LOTS. APPLY TO D.\nMaglio, 1019 Latimer Street '\n.     NELSON 1949 LTD.\nCASH '\u2014 TERMS \u2014 TRADES\nPhone 117 Baker St.\n1949 FOHD'5-PASS, COUPE. Excellent condition, 20,000 miles.\nHdaler.-air-cohdltioning, seat covers, back-up lights and underrating. Phone 476-R2 8^5 p,m. Eve-\nhings apply Clark's Cabins, Ymir\nRoad,\n1848 DODGE 3-TON SPECIAL,\nequipped with St. Paul hoist and\nTimken double reduction rear\nend. A-l throughout. New rubber,\nsteady work. Apply box 2143 Daily\nNews or phone 158-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1947 CHEVROLET\nFleetline 2 door sedan. 20,000\nmiles. Radio, heater, fog lights,\nspot light, seat covers. Best cash\noffer takes car. Apply F. B. Tessman, Box 391, New Denver, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 3 TON FARGO,\nlong w.b; Good condition. Also\n1931 Model A Ford Coach. Good\ncondition. Cah be seen at Green-\nlight Garage, Slocan City.\n1948 MONARCH SEDAN. RADIO,\nheater, block heater, overdrive,\nWinterized. A-l condition. $1400.\nApply 303 Ward St., pr ph. 562-X.\n'48 CHEV. PICKUP. A'BEAUTIFUL\nbuy. Phone 158-R or box 2145\nDaily News.\n1942 FORD 2-DOOR COACH AND\n2-wheel trailer with steel box.\nApply 71S Baker Street.\nFOR SALE ^ '37 CHEV. COACH.\n510 Carbonate St.. after 8 p.m.\n'KOPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nM-^-^^^^^*^'**^\nT.\nINSURANCE\nALL FORMS EXCEPT'LIFE\nINDEPENDENT     \u25a0\nUNDERWRITER\nRepresenting\nCanada's Oldest Insurance\nCompany\n\u2022THE    -\nHALIFAX INSURANCE\nCOMPANY\nNelson 717\n568 WARD STREET\nfc*\u2014\u00bb\u00bba*ag<ma\nFOR SALE-VACANT fiUSlNESS\nlot, 25x100, centre of City of Trail,\nOpposite Bus Depot. Apply to Box'\n2151 Nelson Daily News.\nFOK SALE OR TRADE - LATE\nmoddl car for fal-m or timber lot\nclose to Nelson. Box 2001 Dally\nNews.    ,\nfConfmirn ir. Next Column)\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK; Nov. 2 (AP) \u2014 The\nmarket pulled out of a losing streak\nwith a decisive advance today.\nSteel' shares acted .as the backbone of the rise most of the- day. In\nlate dealings oils fought for the\nspotlight. Gains .running to about\n$1.50 a share, though, were liberally\ndistributed in other groups,\nCanadian issues shoAed good\nstrength. Mclntyre was the leader,\nadvancing % while Hiram Walker\nwas up Vs, Canadian Pacific gained\n% and International Nickel added\nVs. Dome was unchanged.\nOn the curb, Lakeshore, Giant\nYellowknife and Royalite were unchanged.\nTORONTO, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 Industrials advanced fbr the second session today.      >\nIndustrials opened mixed and then\nbegan a steady climb to the final bell\nGains about doubled losses and rang\ned to over a point. Activity was fairly brisk and volume was 2,400,000.\nIn the -base metal group Consolidated Smelters, East Sullivan, International Nickel, Noranda, and Steep\nRock made strong advances.\nQuemont lost fairly heavily.\nMONTREAL\u2014Strength in papers\nfeatured slow trading near the tlose\ntoday.\nThe market was ahead from the\nopening bell but the advance was\ncomparatively small. Changes for the\nmost part were minor fractions with\na few leaders rising well beyond a\npoint.\nMines moved irregularly after a\nweak opening but Western oils continued lower. United Asbestos\nbtightehed the section with a gain\nbf six cents at a new high of $1.05\nunder a turnover of more than 115,-\n000 shares. East Sulllyan was up 15\ncents at $8.40, while QUentont lost\n$2 at 24.60.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 There was\na blaze of interest and activity in\ncommodity shares todgy. Buying was\nencouraged by rising prices of the\ncommodities and minor boom conditions existed in tins and rubbers.\nAdvances of one to three shillings\nwere spread over wide lists and were\ngenerally well held at the close..\nAfter an initial decline due to\nswitching of interest to tins and\nrubbers, copper share prices were\ninclined to rally. Gold shares were\nquietly irregular.\nArjon    40\nArmistice  15\nAumdque  32\nAunor      313\nfeagamac    30\nBarymin          .93\nfeevcoUtt   43W\nBobjo 12\nBrewis R L 13%\nferoulan liVi\nBuffadison    12\nbuff Can 25\nCampbell R L       2.01\nCariboo Gold        1.26\nCastle Troth       2.00\nCentral Patricia  78\nCentral Pore  22\nCheskiirk    12\nChestel'Ville  06\nCochenour         1-63'\ndoln Lake  16\nCdHs Beatty    ,-. 59\nCons Mihing & Smelting .... 119.75\nConwest        1.B5\nDetta R L  - 16%\nDiscovery   33V4\nDome     15.65\nDonalda  36'\nEast Malartic      ligg\nEast SUllivan     8.50\nElder Gold  50\nEldona    30\nEureka        4SV4\nfalconbridge       7.78\nFroblsher      2.95\nGod's Lake       .35\nGold Eagle      14\nGolden Manltou      (US\nHasaga    31\nHollinger     11.00\nHudson Bay     54,75\nHugh Mai        .23\nInspiration    50\nInt Nickel     36.50\nJack Waite  14%\nJoliet Quebec      116\nKelore  15%\nKenville        IS\nKerr Addison     16.25\nKlrkland Lake      1.00\nLabrador '      5.90\nLake Dufault      -1.11\nLakeshore       9.75\nLake Wasa 53\nLamaque    ,      5.65\nLouvicourt   20\nLeitch        105\nMacDonald   .'      140\nMacassa      i           2.15\nMacLeod Cock       2.35\nMadsen R L         2.20\nMagnet  29\nMalartic G F       2,40\nMarcus G  : 13\nMclntyre            56.00\nMcKenzie R L 46\nMcMarmac    14\nMining Corp     15.00\nMoneta 31\nMosher L L  18\nMylamaque  ,      M%\nfregus      100\nNew Alger    10\nNew Calumet      2.25\nNew Goldvue  22\nNew Jason       -24\nNew Lund         2.20\nNew fhurbois  10\nNicholson    31\nNoranda       73.00\nNormetals      4.75\nNorseman    _      .1414\nNorth Ihca  13\nOgama   17\nO'Leary   17V4\nOmega    15\nOrenada 10%\nOslsko         1.29\nPaymaster  79\nPicadilly    33\nPickle Crow       1.80\nPore Reef         1,10\nPreston E D       1.56\nQuebec Lab  18\nQuebec Man  :.      2.40\nQUeenstdn  80\nQuemont        24.00\nSen Rouyn 25\nShawkey  25\nSherritt Gordon       2.42\nSigma   <...     6.40\nSilvermiiler   90\nSilanco 19\nSiscoe.    47\nSladon Mai  68\nSteep Rock       5.80\nSurf Inlet 10\nSylvanite       1.21\nTeck Hughes       2.50\nTorbrit       1.26\nTrans Cont Res  44\nUnion Mining ^, 14\nUnited Keno      8.85\nUpper Canada      1.95\nVentures   \t\nviolsrttae\t\nWaite Amulet \t\nOILS \"\nArtglo Gan _....\t\nAtlantip Oil \t\nB A Oil \t\nCal & Ed '., i\t\nCalmont  ;.\t\nCentral Leduc\t\nChemical Research ....\nCommdnwealth Pete\nDalhousle\t\nDecalta  _\t\nDel Rio\t\nFederated Pete .\u201e\t\nGlobe   \t\nHome\t\nunpenai on\t\nInter Pete \t\nLeduc West \t\nNat. Pete  _\u201e\nPacific Pete \t\nRoyalite\t\ntower pete \u201e.\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi   \t\nAlgbtria Steel \t\nAluminum \t\nBathurst Power ...,...;,.\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian  \t\nB.C. Electric  i\t\nBiC. Forest\t\nB.C. Power A\t\nB.C. Power B\t\nB.C. Pulp \t\nBrown Co. pfd\t\nBruck Silk A\nBuilding Products\t\nBurns A  ,..:.,._\u00bb.,...,..\nfiutns B\t\nCanadian Celanese\t\nCah. Cement\t\nCain, Malting\t\nCan! Packers A ..,..:,\nCan. Packers B  ....\u201e ,\nCahadian Bakeries _\nCanadian Breweries \t\nCanadian Canners  .... .    ..\nCanadian Gar % Fdy A .....\nCan. Oil \t\nCanadian Dredge\t\nCahadian Steamships .\u201e.,,.,\u201e\nCanadian Marconi\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly \t\nCockshutt\t\nCoast Gopper\t\nC M & S \t\nCons. Paper ,\t\nDist .eSagram \t\nDbrti. Bridge  \t\nDom. Foundries ..:\t\nDom. Steel & Coal B \t\nDom. Stores\t\nDom. Tar & Chemical\t\nDom. Textiles \t\nEddy Paper ,\t\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer\t\nFleet Air \t\nFord A  ! ;\t\nGatineau\t\nGatineau 5% pfd \t\nGen. Steel Wares  ,'.\t\nGoodyear   \t\nGoodyear pfd \t\nGreat Lakes\t\nGypsurit Lime\t\nH. R. MacMiilan B \t\nithperial Oil\t\nImp. Tobacco\t\nInt. Metal \t\nInt. Nickel \t\nInt. Pete\t\nKelvlnator   \t\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A ., \u25a0\t\nLoblaw B\t\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\nMassey Harris \t\nMercury Mills \t\nM & O Paper  \u201e.\nMont. L0c6 \t\nMoore Corp ..:\t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMcColl Frorttenac pfd \t\nNat .Steel Car\t\nOgilvie Flour \u25a0.. , ,.\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River  ,\t\nPower Corp\t\nRuss. Industries \t\nShawlnigan    '.\t\nSicks Brew. s,\nSimpsons A\t\nSimpson pfd\t\nSoutham\t\nSteel of Canada\t\nSteel of Can. pfd _\nUnioh Gas of Can ,\t\nUnited Corp B _\nUnited Fuel A\t\nUntied Steel  , ,..\u201e\nH. Walker\t\nWestern Grocers A \u201e\nWeston George  \u201e.. .-\nWinnipeg Electric com ,\n9.10\n.43\n11.35\n4.85\n2.35\n29.75\n7.50\n.90\n2.48\n1.08\nl.QO\n.36    ',\n.17\n1.12\n4.80\n.58\n14.50\n28.00 '\n13.25\n1.08\n1.75\n7.25\n12.7S\n.ih\nm*.\nn\n90%\nm\n4.55\n1.65\n1.29V4\n18\nsm\n89\n27W\n44%\n48%\n52 \\_\n40\n30%\n10%\n18\n24%\n17\n17%\n29\n24  -\n4.00\n20%\n22%\n1.30\n121\nSOW\n26\n51%\n38\n27%\n12%\n27%\n12%\n19%\n16\n32%\n1.50\n52%\n17%\n107%\n20 Vi\n105\n52%\n47 Vi\n. 21%\n13\n28%\n12%\n39%\n36%\n13%\n18\n14%\n32%\n32..\n12%\n42 y*\n4.75\n24\n19%\n84\n18%\n89%\n26\n20%\n49%\n61%\n20%!\n22%\n26%\n22\n35%\n1.00%\n20\n30\n29\n19%\n34\n66%\n8%\n84%\n34%\n28\n37\n\"CaptainMoron's\nIn town r\n1\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES (Closing Prices)\nCariboo Gold       1.30\nGrandview       .30-\nHedley Mascot ..;       .42\nHighland Bell  90\nInt C & p  ,       .30\nPioneer Gold      2.20\nSheep Creek       1.25\nSilver Sfandard      2.34\nWestern Exploration 63\nWestern Uranium 96\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian     5.00\nCalgary & Edmbnton      7.75\nCalmont   93\nHome       14.50\nOkalta Com         1.80\nPacific Pete       7.85\nVanalta    32\nVulcan    30\n__Wwf^ And now you can enjoy something\nnew and delightful\u2014ciScktiil* add \\ottf_\ndrittks Made with Captain Morgan Rufii. There 4re two\nbrands, each with its own distinctive taste ... Gold Label\nis rich and full-bodied ... Black Label is extra smooth\nand flavourful. Both brands make taste-tempting drinks I\nCaptain Morgan\nGOLD LABEL RUM ^^^X&U\n\u2022Pkail-. 1 -l Canada \\i$n\\ tm-fiilK '-.ek^ni R-.i'r: 01(1 Hums\nby Captain-Morgan Runi.JJisiilkrsi Limited.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nContrpl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 3, 1950\nToo Young\nTo Find Her Way\nTo the Powder Room?\nYet her comfort and health can be attended to by the\n. judicious use of\nDennison Diaper Linings-39c & $1.70\nChux Disposable Diapers-$2.19\nand\nJohnson and Johnson Baby Powder\n39c and 57c\nMANN'S\nDBUC STORE\nLEEDS, England (CP) \u2014 Mrs.\nCharlotte Sawyer is blind, but rides\na bicycle. She rode on the back of a\nbicycle built for two, and enjoyed\nit 60 much that she decided to or-j\nganize a tandem bike club for the\nblind.\n11111m1111111111111iMi111111111.ini..mini\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat  the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall St Phone 146\niiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiitiiiiii\nSTOCKPORT, England (CP) -\nDriver Ernest Bamber left his trucsk-\noutside when he entered the police\nstation to inquire the way Outside\nagain, he found a policeman waiting, and was fined $2.30 for leav\ning the engine running.\nDr. Schlnbein,\nFamous Surgeon,\nDies in Boston\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 2 (CP)-Dr.\nAustin Birrel Schinbeln, 64, one of\nCanada's most brilliant and\nspected surgeons, died yesterday in\nBoston, Mass., where he was attending a meeting of the American\nCollege of Physicians and Surgeons.\nHe was Chief of Surgery at Vancouver General and nearby Shaughnessy hospitals for the last 25 years.\nA native of Listowel, Ont., he was\nmade a fellow of the Physicians and\nSurgeons College in 1317 and later\nbecame Its Governor, Vice-President and Regent.\nHe also was a fellow of the Royal\nCollege of Surgeons of Canada. He\nwas educated at the University of\nToronto and graduated in 1907.\nHe served with the Canadian\nArmy overseas during the First\nWorld War and was commended in\ndispatches by the Commander of\nBritish forces In Salonika.\nIn 1946 Dr. Schinbein received\nthe O.B.E. in recognition of his\nlong service as a surgeon, particularly with the armed forces.\nHe is survived by his widow\nGrace, and one son, John, who is\nstudying final-year medicine at the\nUniversity of Toronto.\nMAKE   YOUR   CLOTHES   UNE\"\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST   KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nMONTREAL, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 The\nAmericah dollar today closed at\n4 9-16 per cent premium to the Canadian dollar, 5-32 lower than Wednesday's close. That is, it took $1.04\n9-16 Canadian to buy $1 American.\nThe pound sterling was $2.92%,\ndown %.\nWOMEN'S PUMPS\nShoes that lend additional elegance to your\nFall clothes.\n'    Made of fine calf leather with perforated,\nvamps, 3-inch continental heel, 1-inch\nplatform sole.\nDARK GREEN and GREY\nWIDTHS A and C       SIZES 4]_ to 8K2\nPRICE $8.95\nThe NELSON SHOE Co. Ltd.\n41T BAKER STRRET\nPhone SI 14\nNELSON, B.C.\nCanadian Dollar Up\nNEW YORK, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 The\nCanadian dollar was up 14 of a cent\nat a discount of 4% per cent in terms\nof United States funds in closing foreign exchange dealings today. The\npound sterling was unchanged at\n$2.8014.\nBest at Hallowe'en Party\nThere are two youngsters under that big black cat. They aro\nSylvia and Pauline Butllng, and their novel eye-blinking disguise\nwon'them a top award at tho Kinsmen Hallowe'en Party here.\nOther first prize winners were Carol Ryalls, old fashioned lady,\nat left, and Duane Bourgeois, the topsy girl at right,\n.'.      \u2014Alice Stevenson photo.\nDenim Work\nPANTS\n7<A and 8 oz.. Blue Denim\nSanforized Shrunk\n$3.50 Pr.\n\u2022\nG.W.G. Snobak Denim  (9 oz.)\nSanforized Shrunk\n$3.95 Pr.\nALL SIZES\nWADES1\nLondon Press Gives\nPrecedence fo Shaw\nLONDON, Nov.' 2 (Reuters)\u2014 The\ndeath of George Bernard Shaw took\nprecedence over the attempt on President Truman's life in. today's London evening newspapers.\nOnly one of the three, the Star,\ngave Truman top-of-the-page head-\nInies\u2014and then they were shared\nwith news of the playwright's death.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n' 30 industrials 227.25 up 1.56.\n20 railroads-66.84 up .33.\n15 utilities 40.35 up .22.\n65 stocks 81.61 up .49.\nHaigh\nTru-Arr\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St\nPhone 327\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE   SERVICE\n515 Kootenay.SL Phone 36!\nJ. A.C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nMedical Arts Building\nSUITE 206\nCrehan Meredith\nand Co.\nCHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS\nAUDITORS\nW. H. Kitto, C.A.\nResident Partner\n560 Baker St.    Phone 1584\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGAEY, Nov. 2 (CP) - Trading continued fairly active on the\nlocal livestock market today though\nreceipts were heavy. On offer were\n1024 cattle and 199 calves. Wednesday's sales were 1010 cattle and 362\ncalves compared with 895 cattle and\n163 calves a year ago. j\nA few more good quality butcher\ncattle were on offer, the odd choice\nsteers bringing $27.50. Stock calves\nand good light stocker and feeder\nsteers were holding steady. The odd\nchoice stock calves went for $30.50.\nBoth hogs and sows were 25 cents\nstronger Wednesday, th'e former a\n$26,75 and the latter at $17.75.' Good\nlambs went for $26 and good ewes\nfor $13.50. -\nGood butcher steers 26.50 to 27.00,\ncommon to medium - 22.00 to 26.00.\nGood butcher heifers 25.25 to 26.00\ncommon to medium 21.00 to 25,00.\nGood cows 18.75 to 19.50 with the\nodd light choice up to 20.00; common\nto medium 17.00 to 18.50, canners and\ncutters 14.00 to 16.50. Good bulls 22.00\nto 22.75 common to medium 19.00 to\n21.50. Good to choice veal calves 27.00\n'to 29.25 common to medium 22.00 to\n50. Good light stocker and feeder\nsteers 26.00 to 27.50, common to medium 21.00 to 25.50.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nParis\u2014Leo Earguler, 72, poet and\nwriter.\nHalifax\u2014Thomas R. Clouston, 50,\nGeneral Manager and Vice-Presi-\ndeht of General Seafoods, Ltd.\nCarthage, Mo. \u2014 Benjamin F.\nHackney, 100, oldest practising lawyer ln Missouri.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 2 (CP) \u2014 Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed 82%. .\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.3,5%.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone' 1302 446 Ward  St\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED ft REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St.,.\nPhone 63\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nFOR   DEPENDABLE\nPAINTING AND\nPAPERHANGING\nSee\nMURPHY'S\nPhone 555\n745 Baker St\nSEE OUR\nDISPLAYS\nWYR-O-GLASS\nGLASS\nSUBSTITUTE\nThe best material for closing In\npoultry houses. Shuts out wind\nand weather yet admits beneficial ultra-violet sun rays,\nTransluscent coating over wire\ncloth. It's easy to put upl It's\ndurablel \u2014 36 inches wide \u2014\n$1.30 yd.\nFURNACE\nSCOOP\n$1.85\nSteel  \"O\"\nhandle, deluxe\ngrade. Made\nfrom  carbon\nsteel, finished\nMB*\/   r\nIn black\nfl\u00bb   \u25a0   1\nenamel. Blade\n'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'   *W~    \\\n10\/2 x 15\n.:\u25a0, <!_J\nInches. 30-Inch\nhandle.\nHurry to Wood Vallance Hardware for\nsupplies to winterize your home.\nFelt Weather\nStrip - 25c Pkg.\nSeals windows and doors\nagainst drafts, dirt and soot.\nEasy to apply, 1-Inch width, 20-\nft. rolls.\n,   SNOW\nSHOVEL\n$2.90\nLong-handled\nsnow scoop\nwith tough\nsteel blade 18\nInches wide,\nCleans snow\nfasti\n6 IN. PIPE\nDAMPER - 30c\nCast Iron plate, nlckle plated\ncolled steel wire handle, stayB\ncooler. Reversible spindle.\nSTOVE\nBOARDS-$2.00 up\nDecorated tin plate metal over\nnon-warping base. Protect your\nfloors and rugs from heat, ashes\nor oil.\nSEE OUR\nDISPLAYS\nPURE\nP.UTTY-25cCan\nPure linseed oil and whiting\nputty for painting and glazing\nwork. Packed In air-tight\nhandy cans.\nWINDOW GLASS\n8\" x 10\" PANES\n16c\nSee us to replace broken window glass panes. We have standard size, ready cut. We will\nquickly cut special sizes to your\norder.\nTHERMOMETERS\nFrom\n25c up\nASBESTOS\nCEMENT - 25c\nA pure asbestos fibre cement\nIn powder form, Just add water\nto use. Works like putty. 1 Ib.\ncan.\nSTOVE\nPIPE-50c Up\nMade from uniform color cold\nreduced blue sheets. Hammer\nlock seam. 24-Inch lengths. 5 to\n7-Inch diameter pipes In stock.\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nPhone 1530\nWholesa le-Retail\nNelson, B.C.\nBe Sure To Ask for\nPREMIER\nLAGER\nIt will be your favorite. Those\nwho have tasted it pronounce\nit  the  best  in  the West.\n.INTERIOR BREWERIES\nLIMITED\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nChrome Furniture\nHigh Gloso Plastic top. Two styles to choose from.\nHard wearing, abuse'resisting table-tops, heat\nproof, color fast, non-porous melamine surface.\nChoice of blue, red, yellow and grey, $C\"Q.50\nPriced from  _'_ . J. Jr\nCHAIRS TO MATCH\nStrong, durable, plastic coverings.\nBlue, red, green, yellow. Priced from .\nAirfoam seats extra.\n'13\n.50\nSterling\nHOME FURNISHERS\n441 Baker Street Nelson. B. C.\nPHONE 553\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C TRUCKS\nMetal and  Paint Work Specialty\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n660 Baker St. Phone 233\nWE NOW HAVE THE\nNEW MEDICINE *\nSARNAK\nFor Rheumatic and Arthritic\npains, also for the stomach,\nkidneys and bowels. A combination of herbal extracts\nand minerals. '\n$1.35 Bottle\nAt Your Rexall Store\nCITY DRUG\nCO.     '\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Day \u2014 807-R Night\nBOX 460\nFlannelette\nPyjamas\n\u2022 Cold weather Is\ncoming ... Be comfortable in these\nwarm flannelette\npyjamas,\n. Neat or bold stripes.\nPre-shrunlc.\n3-7510 5.95\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n'Have the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\n'    \"JUST A  HINT\"       \"\nFor Dellcloui Pancakei Try\nELLISON'S VUO\nPANCAKE FLOUR\nELLISON MILLING\nAND ELEV. CO. LTD.        <\nWxM\n2 00\nThe\nSensational \"45\nrcaVictor\nRECORD CHANGER\nLOWEST PRICE EVER\nFOR A FULLY AUTOMATIC RECORD\nPLAYING ATTACHMENT\nAUTOMATIC\u2014\nload up to 8 of the new non-breakable \"45\".\nrecords \u2014 touch one button \u2014and enjoy up to\n40 minutes of |ust the music you want by the\nartists of your choice,\nDEPENDABLE-\n\"45\" changer Is simplicity Itself \u2014 has far fewer\nparts - operates with trigger-action speed. It's\nthe greatest musical achievement In 50 years at\nthe lowest price in RCA Victor history.\nPLAYS\nTHROUGH YOUR\nPRESENT SET\nCan be attached\nwith ease to any radio\nor radlo-phonographl\nCorns In and gel\nyour RCA Victor\n\"45\" Changer\ntoday       ' |\nMcKAY & STRETTON LTD.\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\n\u25a0k^\u00bb*fcS\nWINTER IS TOUGH ON CARS-\n6a 1\/otw> tieadtf NOW\/\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped\ngarage in the Interior of B. C.\n35  PHONE   35\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_1950_11_03","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\/1.0426394","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":"1950-11-03 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1950-11-03 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}