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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" .bbott Mentions\nIssible Tax Cut\nSays Higher Production, Easing of\nCold War Could Bring Reductions\nCHARLOTTETOWN,' Oct.: 7: (CP)-Fintace Minister\nbbott said tonight he,will. be happy to break even On this\n[\u2022ear's federal budget, but he held out the possibility of\ncuts if Canada's production keeps rising.\n.,\" ri_-'_^|ip[i^\/|\u00a3i|^^:^^cmUc.tibn'' olr.^---n?4^ai9^^-.!j^'V'&*_^-- lbb}ii''''^ir^r\nuld bring major reductions, the minister said in an address\n'^e annual meeting of tile Maritime Province*'Board'of\ntide. He was, not optimistic'over the early international\n'Spects.\n\/ \u00ae tSM\nMinister said defence and'\nsecurity now account for\nbout three-fourths ot the 1052-53\nmdget of $4,200,000,000. Another\n|740,000,000 was taken up in fixed\n'j*_ges. ''\u2022'''   ''V\nFrom that, hs said, lt would be\nized that \"any substantial reduc\nin taxes can only be achieved\none or both ot two ways.\n\"First, by a lessening of Interna.\nlonal tensions which will permit a\nibstntlal reduction in our defence\njtlay..\n^'Secondly, by. an Increase in the\nItlonal production of our people,\nich will make, the relative tax\njurden llghter.1-\n\"I am not optimistic that we can\nioi_nt very much on the first of these\nthe near future. The second holds\nidt:'more promise.\" \\ <\nMr. Abbott said he shares the view\n>t those who question' the-need of\niSylng taxes under the present con-\nItlons to provide a substantial bud-\n!\u00abt inirplus. ,-.\n\"ORpLUS THREE TIMES    .\nSince the Korean War broke out,\nhid budgeted three times for \u25a0\nice. However, each time there\nbeen, a  surplus,  because  of\nlator-than-expected- business ex-\nloh   ahd   lower-than-expacted\n(^[enca expenditure. '\u25a0'-. ':22\"\nDealing with external trade, Mr,\n.bbott said Canada's policy has been\nachieve the highest possible level\nunrestricted trade and he -feels\n* country must do all In Its-power\nkeep the channel* of world com-\n\u00abfca free.\nHowever! he said, \"a great many\niuntries,.mony ot them traditional\njarkets for Canadian products, are\ntill attempting to solve their bal-\nnce - of - payment difficulties by\nlalntalnlng and increasing irnport\ncstrlctlons, exchange controls and\nte like.   . \u25a0 >\u25a0,\n\"Wo believe, and experience has\nhown that measure* ot this kind\n[old out no hope of a permanent\nolutlonof these difficulties.\" ,\nIOVEMBER CONFERENCE\nThese questions will bo among the\nlain subjects at the November Con-\n.rence of Commonwealth Prime\ntlnlsteri in London, Mr. Abbott\n. I need hardly tSl you,\" he added,\nthat we shall do everything in our\nower\" to, further the objectives\nrhlch we -hav* had constantly be-\nii\u00bb since'the end of the\/war.\"\nM Defence To\niel Transfusion\nVANCOUVER, Oct 7 (CP)-The\nirltlsh Columbia .Government to-\nlay announced a civil defence pre-\nNiredness program \u2014 including a\n132,016 expenditure \u2014 aimed at\ntepping up civil defence orgahlza-\nlon.\nThe .Cabinet decided to match\nlie federal government's $132,000\nwith an equal amount to meet\nirganizatlon and equipment expenses.   .\nIt also approved immediate conn\ntructlon of a civil defence control\n:entre, to be located some miles\ntorn Victoria, and to make a surrey of all fire fighting facilities in\nhe province. \u2022-\nThe government, too, will Imple-\nnent as soon as possible the agreement .with the federal government\nrader which civil defence vblun-\ncer workers will be compensated\nInjured during civil defence\nluties In peacetime.\nProvincial secretary Wesley\nHack, in charge of the program,\nreported 10,000 have enrolled in\nictlve participation in civil defence.\nCoast Chest Fund\n\"asses Third,Mark\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 7 (CP)\nindustrial workers in Vancouver\ntow are setting' the pace for the\n.ommunlty Chest campaign.\nIt has now passed the one-third\nnark with total collections for the\n11,260,000 drive standing at. $431,860,\nReports to campaign headquarters\nihow that many industrial employee\n(roups are exceeding their quotas.\nU.N. CANCELS\nTRUCE TALKS\nIndefinite\n, Recess Called :\nMUNSAN, Korea, Oct. 8 (Wednesday) (AP) - the United Nations\ncommand, today called off the Korean armistice talks: indefinitely.\nThe sudden action could mean *\nbreakdown of negotiation, during\nthe heat of the bitterest battle of\nthe Korean war in more than a\nyear., .  '\"\nThe talks, In their 15th month,\nwere recessed indefinitely at a 63-\nminute meeting of U.N. command\nand Communist trues delegates at\nPanmunjom\u2014their first session In\n10 days. .....   .\nRed reaction tb tho recess was\nhot immediately available.   ;..\u00bb.; '\nin tha past, TIN. delegate* have\ndeclared' recesses and then walked\nOUt . , ., ..';-    \" ;'.\u2022\nThe U.N. command 10 day* ago\noffered the jteda three proposals\nfor settling the prisoner-of-war ex-:\nchange question, the final stumbling\nblock to a truce in Korea.   '\nThe U.N. command insists that no\nprisoner be forced against his will\nto return: home. Th* Red* want all\ntheir prisoners, and specifically\n20,000 Chinese, returned to Communist .control.\nMine-Mill Head\nCharges\nU.S. Persecution\nSALT LAKE CITY, Oet i. (AP)\n\u2014 The International Union of\nMine, Mill and Smelter Worker*\ncontended today that It Is the victim, of \"a vicious Inquisition\" Intended to destroy It _.'-V-_j\n.v?4'dShn.v*<lii_r*W\n. president of th* Independent\nunlori which w\u00abs expelled from\nthe Congress of Industrial Organisations,' said tha union I* not\nafraid of the senate hearing now\nIn progress here.\nSenator Pat McCarran (Dom.\nNev.) began the lenlon yesterday,\ntaking testimony from four former officers of tho union.\nMcCarran said th* hearing ll\n- aimed at determining the truth of\ncharges that the Mine-Mill Union'\nhas been Communist-dominated.\nThat Is tho reaoon tho C.I.O. gave\nIn expelling It --...'\nClark called the hearing \"an Inquisition by * committee whose\naction Is deplored by right-thinking people throughout tho. nation.\"\n15r000 Chinese in\nBf)| Red Assault\n-.. -.. ,'.-     .-\u25a0.- \/\nBy GEORGE A. McARTHUR\nSEOUL, Korea, Oct' 8 (Wednesday) (AP)\u2014Chinese Red Infantry\nassaults, pounding In \"human sea\"\nwaves for the second straight night\nbreached Allied hill defences guarding Chorwon on the Korean Western front early today.\nSeven . outlying hill positions\nalong the 100 miles of blazing battle\nline fell at the first onslaught by\n15,000 Chinese in the biggest Red\nattacks In more than a year.\nAllied infantry counter-attacked\nIn an effort to seal off the Chinese\npenetration into Allied positions on\nWhite Horse Mountain. This height\nNorthwest of Chorwon, Is one* of\ntwo commanding the approaches to\nthe main road to Seoul.\nSIR HUGH ROBERTON,\nMUSICIAN DIES\nGLASGOW, Oct 7 (Reuters) -\nSir Hugh Robertson, 78, who\nfounded the Glasgow Orpheus\nChoir in 1006, died tonight He was\nwell known as an adjudicator, for\nchoirs In Canada as well as Britain.\n*&^4X 4ty Vears of Sj^vfcf to tb Kootenay-Boundary  -   1^52\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY \u2014 Clear. Not much\nchange in. temperature with local\nground frost In tho early morning;\nLight winds. Low and high at Cranbrook, 30 and 08; Crescent Valley,\n30 and 72; Revelstoke, 31 and 70.\nNELSON, B.G.,, CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 8,1952\nNo. 134\n\u25a0 CITY FIREFIGHTERS \u00abH\u00bb!\u00abl|?d Into pl\u00bby (top) following; th*\n\"dropping of an atom bomb\" over ;Now York City by two flight*\nof \"enemy\" bomber*. Casualty teams (bottom) utilize a city but\nas a first old station a* they treat two victims for -hock. More thin\n60,000 civilian defence worker* took p*rt In th* blty-wldo tent\n. \"-'-:-\u25a0 .':'   ':'..    '.'.   - -.'\u25a0 '.-.'; ,\"'.' \u25a0        \u2014$entr\u00abt Pres* C*n\u00bbdl*ny\nNo Job for Connelly\nSo lliey Retired fttii\nOTTAWA, Oct 7 (0?) \u2014 Defence\nheadquarter* announced today it 1*\nretiring' 44-year-old Brig. Alan B.\nConnelly because it'ha* no job it\nwanta him. for.\nTho announcement camo In response to inquiries about a published report that the former head ot\nthe- Canadian military 'mission' In\nTokyo was being Jet out because ot\nMs WhdljhiJ;\\^'!tte>:ittfiaent::last _.\nSpriM .\u2022\u2022*A^'-^J-*oy-~-^_l-\u00bbfifi\nwere -sent to help guard rioting p\npriiofiferi of War; onKoje Island.'\nTho 30^word statc'merit telephoned to Inquiring correspondents:\n\"Brig. .Connelly Is on retirement\nleave. The department doe* not normally give reasons for Buch retirements except that: senior officers\naro retired when thero la no further\nsuitable employment for them.\"\n..Retirement of a brigadier customarily comes, at ago 65 and It Is\nrare thatmlch a tehlor officer Is\nretired *o young *s In tha case ot\nBrig. Connelly.\n: \u2022\u25a0' \u2022 Defence headquarter* ..would add\nno further information and spoke*.,\nmen there said it wa* not known\nwhere Brig. Connelly Was spending\nMrleay*, :\u25a0\u25a0','.,: it;.   '\ntfc*f;^\u00abt^h'a_!_!_hF*i.\nrecord, Brig;'Connelly wafhesfl of\nthe military mission ih Tokyo wheri\na company, of Canadians was sent\nto Koje without tho knowledge ot\nOttawa authorities.   ,   \"   m\nHo returned to Canada torn*\nweek* ago and wa. In Ottawa recently. -      \u25a0;.. . \u25a0',\nRussia Making No\nMedical Advances\nSays Medical Head\nWINNOTX-> ,04 7 (CP)-NOt \u25a0\u00bb'\nsingle important medical advance\nhas emerged In1 the past quarter\ncentury in the Russian stave-state,\nDr. Harold . Orr; of Edmonton, president of the Canadian-Medical Association, said today.   '\nSpeaking tithe ahnuai'meettng\nof. the Manitoba Medical Association, Dr. Orr: said if research is to\nadvance \"we; must retain .our freedom, The loss of .freedom, dries up\nthe . wen-springs' of c r e a t ive\nthought\"   .,      \u2022<.-\nRecent research development*\ngave reason for hppo that within 15\nyears the cancer problem would be\nsolved. - - .:.:' .' '?, \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'''\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .,  ;. \u25a0 \\.\n\"There qremany lead* how,\" \"hi\nsaid.  ,   ]i.;.\"'~- \"\u2022'.*-22-   '\u25a0''\/,.:\nPoliomyelitis was.nearlng defeat\n\"Great hopes ore held' in some\nquarter* that the immune serum,\nnow being tried out ih a small area\nih the United States, ;may provo to\nbe the answer,\" he aald.\nProgress ..wag-also being mode in\nthe t_hdei*t_indlng.qf thegreat killer* of elderly; people^disease* of\nthe heart -and blood vessel*,\nTRAVEL EXPERT8 MEET\nNAPLESptily, Oct 7 (jleutefs)--\nTravel experts from .48 countries,\nincluding S, K. MacDonald; commercial councillor from tho Canadian\nembassy in Rome, opened a five-day\ncongress of the International Union\nof: Official Travel Organizations\nhere today, They will pres* for reduction of. frontier; passport and\nvii^formalitie* ahd for reduction of\ncurrency, restriction*., ..,'\nSECOND OF THE GIANT BOMBERS, bollovod\nto be the largest In the world, to be delivered to\ntha U.S. Air Force, the XB-52 Boeing Strato-\nFortresa takes to tho air In tests at-Seattle, Wash.\nThis bomber, U.S. air experts say, puts every spot-\non earth within range of U.S. atom bombs.\n\u25a0-.  \u2014Central Press Canadl*n_^\nWilkinson IfttHs\nLabor Board\nVANCOUVER, Oct. T (CP) -\nGeorge Wilkinson tonight publicly\nannounced his resignation from the\nBritish Columbia Labor Relatlohs\nBoard.     '','.      ;' '.- -',\u25a0':\nThe Labor nomine* to tho Board\ntold Trades and Labor Council members he was quitting to take n job\nin private industry, -    '\nLater ho told reporters: \"Ten tb\none I'd still bo there under,a coalition government.\" J\" *   s\nMr. Wilkinson said ho submitted\nbis resignation Sept 20, to' become\neffective Oct'15,.\"butVthe'gbvern-\nment hasn't accepted it yet\"\nt Mr. Wind\"800 - davbted niost of\nhis talk to defending the L.R.B.\nagainst. what ho called Unfair criticism,   , .: s  \u25a0  f  \u25a0' \u25a0-'- '::.;.'-\nHe said slnco tho board started,\n\"B.C. unions havo picked up 40,000\nmember*.\" ;'\n\"We've been clrtldied for-tblngs\nwe've done; not for things wb, have\nnot done,\" he.said. \"This shows at\nleast w* haven't otftx sitting around\ndoing nothing. \u25a0-.,\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\n\u2022 13?elt^er'Jor ,*ny.i'm*mbl.r bt the\nboard has any apology to make to\nanyono --unions, management, government*, ip*st. or present We've\ntried to make our decisions on what\nis right and not who is right\"\nKootenay Readints Lose\nThousands in Sweep Fraud\nBURNABY WANTS\nOAKAILA MOVED\n\u25a0 CouncilSc|\/s Room\nNeeded ;fbit    ; '\nI ndustriql Growth\nIJURNABY, B.e\u201e bet'' 7 (CP) -\nThe Burnaby Council wonts Oakalla\nprison, where prisoners rioted! last\nweel.; moved to another location.\nDecision waa, mado Monday to\nprotest against any further development ' of costly permanent type\nbuilding* at Oakalla. r .\n.'\"We; niust tell the .Jittorney-Gen-\neral that Surnaby is not- the ideal\nsite for a major provincial jail as we\nneed the room for our Industrial and\nresidential expansion;\" {aid councillor Georg* Isherwooii\nCouncil will suggesf to Attorney-\nGeneral Robert Bonner that a'new\nprison should .be;, built X\u2014 outside\nBurnaby L; at _f_;lecation where\nprisoner* would receive more opportunity for recreation ond useful\nendeavor. :,\u25a0'>:,'\u25a0 .-- \u25a0;(_'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0;'<%\u2022    , \u25a0\u2022'.'\u25a0\nOvercrowding caused tho riot at\nOakalla; and; the Attorney-General\nannounced yesterday tentporary\nbuildings to ease the situation would\nbe Completed by Christmas.:\n\"No dou)Jt the government has to\nput temporary units at; Oakalla,\"\nsaid \u25a0 ojuicU\\or.;,' C. W. Sla^orley,\n\"but they must be told wo want no\nmore permanent buildings there.\"\nCOAST FIRM GETS\nCNR. CONTRACT\nwnratPEO, Oct 7(cp> - a\ncontract for the building of n new\nCanadian National .Railways Une\nin British. Columbia from Terrace\nto Klt.mat has been\/awarded, to\nCampbell and Bennett'Ltd. of Vancouver, vice-president '..J;. - R.. Mc-\nMillan of tho C.N.R. announced today. Amount of the contract was\nnot-stated. ' -' v^'...' -\u25a0;-,. -\nThe contract covers the. \"clearing\nand grading, of tho 41-mtle right-\nof-way as well as-the, lnstdllirticih\nof culverts, \"timber bridges,. and,\nconcrete rab-structures. ,\":^Oft iteet\nbridges, but not Including.-the\nmajor brldgo to cross, the' Skeetta\nRiver.\nThe ntw line will serve the huge\nplant n6w bblng. built at Kitbhat'\nby (the Aluminum Company ' of\nCanada.\nWismer Proposal\nVANCOUVER, Oct.''* (GP) 4 A\npropositi otfotmer attomey-ifentr*!\nGordon Wismer that Soclnl Credit\nelections brought a quid: reply today from;, the C-C.F. ,\n\"NonsenseVV sild: Frank\/Snowsell, -C!C_T. \u25a0\" 'lirovlhcial organize!1.\n; '.'We'll fight-Social Crtdlt anywhere, anytime.\" ;\n\u2022 Mr. Winner,-noflr.but of pblltlcs,\nsaid Social Credit Premier. W. A.\na Bennett la *ntltled to irtaee his\ntwo: non-elected Cabinet _tii__lsters\n\u2014finance ___ih_ster-Elhar Guhder-\nson and: attorney-general Robert W.\nBonner\u2014In' ths' government vfith-\no'ut;'* tight1   '.''.. ''..'    22   2i-l\nHo cited a case in the 80s when\na member. of the ieglslature .was\nappointed to the Cabinet a by-\nelectlon was called, and the minister waa re-elected without op-;\nposition from Other parties. . ;\n' Til ere ' wis no comment; -.\u2014om'\nLiber*-* or iProgr*sslve Conserva.-\nUves oh Mr.' Wismer's proposal. !\n, -\"I can -uriderstana the CJC.F.\nfighting,\" he said...\"but there ai*\nno other issue* Involved at \\\\m\nmoment, eicept free enterprise or\nsocialism. .... ',\n\u25a0T-here won't b*: any pplltlcpl\nissue* until the-Social Credit have\nheld * session \u00bbn4 presented their\nprSgram.\"       . .- . . 2\nDogs May Ouarl\nDefence Plant!\nprtAWAi Oct 7: (CP) \u2014 Trained\npolice dogs\u2014Dobermann Plhs-h'er*\n*nd German Shepherd* like 'those\nused In waMnay \u00abobn help guard\nsome- of Canada's major defence\nand: industrial plants against saboteurs. \u25a0 \u25a0 r..,' v v; .'...' >,', '-\u25a0.;;\n- The R.C-M.P. disclosed today-that\nat the request of Industry it has\nconducted an experimental dbg\nguard at one big Eastern Canada\nplant \\. ;-;\nTwo,,trained.GJerman Shepherds\nproved themselves by sniffing out\nmen _ *hd make-believe- sabotage\nmaterial hidden along; the plant's\nsix mf-** of fenctag. which th\u00bby\npatrolled' with tha regular guard.;\nJ ft eenlor R-CM^P. trainingoffliier.\nsaid big plants in Ontario and Quebec and as far West as British Columbia; mostly engaged In defence\nwork have Inquired about the possibility of Watch dpg*.:\nConservaf Ives\nIn Convention\n.By FRASER WlGHTON\nSCARBOROUGH, Yorkshiro,\nEngland, Oct 7 (Reuters) \u2014 The\nadvance guard of Winston Churchill's Conservative*- drrived hero tonight In elated mood-for.an annual\nconvention which promises to look\nlike a sedate tea' party: after the\nbattles ot their socialist rival* last\nweek;- .-;-,\u2022 \u25a0'\u25a0:; \u2022':'\u2022-;\nPublicity given to tho coclolist\nconflicts couldn't havo been better,\ntimed for Conservatives, who settle\ndown to the madn bu*ineSs ot their\ncohferenc* Thursday. .,\nThree .months ago the^socialists\nclaimed'the government's.-prestige!\nhad dropped to tho .point: where!\n~ni_n_nedlat\u00ab^eoUon->?bjfl(|,*W|li\nAttl*\u00bb:iacktotoppwptfibi'\"'\nP3.WSo'nr'I?,v^'\n\u25a0s,The'Coisi_waUv\u00ab:|.itfty tt ndt|_*i.\nfrom internal bickering but Usually\nmanages to keep It; behind the\nspenes. In addition, the constitution\nof tho Conservative party give*\nwider responsibility for determining policy to its leader\u2014-in this cue\nChurchill,    .v.;' ,;.*;,,,-'.-'.,,,\u2022:   ,'\u2022\u2022;'\nCANADIAN DOLLAR DOWN     \u25a0\nNlEW yORKjQct 7 .OP) -rThe\nCnnadinn dollar,,was 11\/10 >of accent\nlower at a-premium of 31S\/16'p*p\ncent in .terms of! United , States\nfund* in i closing foreign exchange\ndealings today. Tho pound sterling\nwas ,Vt of a cent higher at $2;V0. - ,\nFence Electrocutes\nTwo Young Lads\nDAWSON CREEK, B.C., Oct'7\n(CP)\u2014Searchers tqday discovered\nthe: Bodies of two youths electrocuted:while crossing a wire fence\nover which a ZSOOtVoU British' C6-\n-lumbla:'.Power CommlBolon lino\nhad,-fallen; \u2022\u2022' - -\n';T-jj'b-dlgi;were;fobnd aboiit-two\nmilqs W^t ot Dawsoh Creole which\nIs 350 miles Northwest of Edmonton.\nR.C.M.P. said the next-of-kin are\nbeing ndtlfled and.the names will\nbe released later.\n, It Is believed that after- one of\nthejVlcttbis;,a Datvspn Creek.boy,\nhad beeri.'.mlsski_f for one-day on a\nhunting .trip, the; 'other youth, a\nfriend from nearby in - Alberta,\niwent'to:search for hliru\nPlane Falls To\nLocate Object\nSeen by Trapper\n:.-' A B.C. Forest Service plan*,\n-enrchlno tho Grluly Creek aru\nfailed' to find - any tree*: of the\nohlny object lighted by n Winlaw\ntrapper, and thought possibly to\nbo remnants of a piano wreck.\nTho trapper, Joseph Braun, told\nR.C.M.P. that ho and threo companions sighted th* object from a\nmountainside with the aid PI 2i\npair of binooularo*.\n:;M*\u00bbnwhll* the R.C.A.F. at Vancouver was notified but oxpressed\nlittle optimism that the object Is\nthe wreckiga of ,i twin entitle\nR.C.A.F. photographic piano lost\nIn 1947.\nWaiter Held as\nRobber Supsect\n*vAycyim$Ri.<bpt:2n (cp) -r\nA 2--year-old:'walt*r; wa\u00bb-held by\npolice today 'as i a suspect In last\nFriday's Paloniar Supper Club holdup and stiootlng. \u2022: i\nClub manager Sandy Do Santls\nwas shot.and robbed of $2001n the\nclub'*,Oflice. : ' -''\u2022,;;.'-\u25a0.\u2022 j-\nEarlier, three men and a girl'were\ntaken' into custody, but' wero re\nleased after questioning.\nRED JAM U;S. RADIO 'i     \\\n-\u2022BONN, Germany, Oct 7 (AP) --\nTho Russians have begun Intensive\njamming of the United States radio\nStation in Berlin, U.S. high commls\nsloner Walter Donelly said today.\nDonnelly .said a more; powerful\ntransmitter 'for BIAS (Radio in\nAmerican Sector)'broadegsts to. East\nGermVny'is under' cqnstrtictibn.*   '\nR.C.M.P. Worn Against Participating\nv   In Illegal Lotteries; Eastern\nOperators Convicted on Fraud Charges\nv BiCMP; sub-divlsiohai iott ic\u00ab at Nelson Mowdaytauei\na warning 1o Kootenay ^residents on \"the danger ot buyiit*\ntideete; of. taking part in illegal lotteries.!' Hundreds^ tlila\ndte^libt have: already suffered losses through a fraudulent\nlbttery,':. -.\nDuring the past year at least several hundred-Kootenay residents\nhave been, defrauded out of thousands of dollars when'they purchased tickets Issued by a \"Canadian\nracing assoclatloi.\" and distributed\nby district residents. ;\nLocal distributors, R_CJ-IJP, said,\nwere unaware of th* froudulont\nmethod used by this eastern association, The 'operal6r*-;ot the association have been convicted on\ncharges of illegal sals of ticket*\nwith intent to defraud th* Can*,\ndian public.\nQUEBEC GROUP ^\nThe association, not to be eoh-\nfused with the genuln* Canadian\nRacing Association interested in\norganizing spectator spbrt) operat-\ned from Quebec,,but according to\npolice report*, dldnt sell ticket*\nextensively within thit provliCe,\nThey operated mainly in tho Western province*.\nIn tho Kootonay, tho largest\nknown sales field was In tho\nKlmborloy nroa where nine sales-\nmen distributed doxons of books\nof tickets to tho publlo. Pollco\naald \"noprlie* war* aver given\nand. .money waa ;distributed\namong top-opanttor* of tho syndicate.\nEvery Kootonay eentr* wss affected and although RiC.M.P.\nhavo list* of salesmen and ticket\npurohOBore thlt list Ms by no\nmean* complete. Thar* ar* rnYiy\nR.C.M.P. said,,*wH*t* n*m.i are\nnn\/*n,otir.lists, wh* h\u00bbv*.**ld,'.\n,:;.W-R'1\u00bbnal>t: tlBketa.\"'\u25a0\/::~-i :'-<-\\\\\n^^S^'tMonp^m.\n._-,,,ibw, tfio; .New J3\u00bb_iv*-V'. o\u00abni!\nForks, Kaslo'and Rpsslahd bad one\n*acn...- \u2022  ,-,.\nB.C.M.P, said this association had\nreceived no authority from either\ntfovindal: or.', federal goveiliiMBt\nto function..--;-,.. ~- '.  ,    ',;,-,-;\u25a0.-.;?..\nThey emphasize that _lle|al\nticket sales wero still continuing\nin many centre* in the Kootenay.,\nMAYOR^ WHITTON'S\nTEMPER FLARES ^,\n- 6TTAWA,,Oet 7 (CP)-OtAwi\u00bb.i\nscrappy Mayor Charlotte- Whltton\ntangled today with board of control\nlit a name-calling, desk-thumping.,:\nargument, climaxed when she twico\nwalked out of the meeting.\nShe\" refused d'emanda of thre*\ncontrollers' that she disclose if she\ninstructed\" .two city, detective* 'ta\nsearch the office of Edgar .Pearce,\nboard bt control secretary^ lor a\ndocument reported missing.'\u25a0>\u25a0   \\ ;\u25a0\u2022'\nThe controllers wanted the matter.\ndiscussed In' tho board meeting.\nMayor Whltton said oho would dis-'\ncuss it only In the privacy of her\noffice;:' '\u25a0;\u25a0' ..\u2022;\u25a0'-',\" .\u25a0,.;-.:;.,;;..:,' .;\u25a0\nPOLIO PUGUE\n-tACKSOFF\nSaskatchewcin....\nHardest Hit Has\nMost NqwX-iaies\nRKaiHA, Oct T (CP) \u2014 W\u00ab*t*rn\nCanada'* 1951 polio toll wu increased today by 75 cases and nine deaths\nbut the bulk of the cases and all\nth* death* war* in the weekly Saskatchewan report\nThe Saskatchewan Health Department'* weekly rtport thowed 82\ncases. Albert*.; and British Columbia had live new cases apleco today\nand Manitoba threo.\nAlberta's - director of communicable diseases, Dr. Norman Baster,\nexpressed hope a sharp drop in tho\nnumber of ease* may be expected\nnext week. Ho noted thit two weeks\nago the number of cases reported to\nhia offic averagedjabbut 70 a week.\nDuring the last two weeks the overage has been about 35 a week.\n;; Western .'C*\u00bb\u00bbd\u00bb'\u00ab aggregate in.\ncreaseoVer a week ago. is -182 cases\nand 18 deaths. This is lower than\nprevious week* Ind indicates 'tbe\noutbreak may be easing, after record\nepidemics in British - Columbia, Albert* and S**k\u00bbtcb_w*h.\n:*rotal; ;cale\u00bb 'iuid .d.^tb*. to; d^ta;]^'\n__\u25a0\nand 80. deaths; .Manitoba 202 confirmed cases, and __61 suspected cases\nand 10 deaths,\nI.W.A* OFFICIAL\nPLANS APPEAL   ;\n.VAifCQUvi-R, Oct 7 (CP),--_ie\nBritish Columbia: Supreme .Court\ntoday denied the, appeal of Tony\nPoje, on officiol,of the International\nWoodworker* b!t;. America. |(C.I.O.^\nwho was sentenced Sept. 10 to\nthree months in jail and lined\nISOOO tor conteinpt of court\nHe was charged with contempt\nfor foiling to heed an Injunction\nIssued against picket action at\nNanalmo, B.C., during tho Summer lumber strike. Fourteen other\nI.W.A member*! were 'fined (300\ne\u00bbCh.\nFoje'a, 'counsel plan* a aecond\nappeal\u2014this time to the Supreme\nCourt of Canada. \u25a0   i\nLONDON, Oct 7; (Reuters)\nLondon is cutting tho minimum age\nof its policewomen from 22 to 20 to\nboost recruiting, Scotland Yard announced today. The \"Yard'.hope* to\nIncrease it*nuinberof policewomen\nto 458 from;the present 388.   ';';\n(doisk. SjivsLl\n1952\n..._._   7,88\n-.:..._\u25a0;. 7.88\nOct 8\nOct 7\n1991 1948\n7.55 \u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0Kit-\n;7.5t,-:8.73 ,\nST; LAURENT NOTES \u2666,\nConodrfsP^^\n90O0am\nOTTAWA, Oct 7 (CP) \u2014 PHm*;\nMinister-. St Leurent raid today\nCanada will have a population of\nthis century if tb* current rate of\n35,000,000 or 40,000,000 at tho end of\nIncrease continue*. .. '   '.:'\u25a0!''\"\n-In an'address'at the 17th annual\nmeeting of the Quebec Chambers\nof Commerce, Mr. St. Laurent said\n;that at the,-start- of the' century\nCanada'had ia' population of 5,009,-\n000. At the 1051 census'the population totalled mora than 14,000,-\n000.;:  \u25a0-.'-'   :':\u25a0\u25a0:'\u25a0-:; \u00ab: .  '\nRAPID INCREASE \"\u201e.,,'\n. \"I believe, oiir, population Is Increasing at as rapid* rate as' in\nthe first half of the' century, said\nMr'. St Laurent who spoke 'in\nFrench; \"This mein* that: ot the\nend of the century wo will have\na population of between 35,000,000\n_md-,\u00ab4p,OJK),000.\" ..,;\u2022:,: '.;\u25a0,'.! .\n, He added that.Canada's natural\nresource* . must be preserved !*o\nthat;'* population (Of 35,000,000 will\nfind,.iWe!f.lh';a position'.'1** lht^r-\nesting as tho one we. are in today.\"\npurlngrecent-trips, to ,the Ltik*\nSt. John district of Quebec, to British, Coliunbla; gnd; ta -Alberta ihe\nWas shdym' examples'of what: is\nbeing done, .to use Canada's resources. >'-\u25a0.\u25a0- .;',-.\u2022' ^.' -'!\u2022\"   ::\u25a0'-,.  :\nIn the Lake St John, district the\nAluminum Company of Canada\nused only-Canadian watcrpowcr in\nturning out, $150,000,000 worth): bf\naluminum a -year,, Tker* wt*.- no\nwastage of resources' there.\ni In Trail, B. C., the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company, was\nsued by th* United State* for damages allegedly resulting from, poison gases coming from the smelting plant -       ..-     \u25a0 '   !\nThe company now is mixing the\ngases   with  o  phosphorous  rock\nbom Montana to make $20,000,00\u00bb\nworth of fertlliier a ye*r.' '.-';-\u25a0\u25a0\nThe examples, sail} Mr. St Laurent, showed that \"wo aro doing hot.\ntoo bad'' in the matter' of conserving our natural resources.:\niAncl iri This Cdrrier > > \u2666\n> WEtLFLEET, Mass., Oct 7 (AP)\u2014When the bell In th* town -look\nstrike* eight'.the-resident* of this Capo Cod town know If* either\nnoon, four.ft'oloek,.eight or, midnight\n. THo ship'* bell Idea, was approved by the annual town mooting\nas In keeping with tho town's seagoing tradition. Tho bell was adjusted\nduring tho last week,\n' So. f*r',th\u00ab only persons mystified by the new bell system.are\n. visiting landlubbers who know nothing about the aalty aystem of timo\nkeeping. .,;,... \u25a0 _\u2022 -i... ^ ..-.-.\u25a0 ...,->\u2022 .-...-rt,- \u25a0\n'-,.' Aboard ship, bolls divide tho day Into four-hour segments. Twolvo\nO'olOcl. Is eight bells; 12:30 I* marked by ono ball; 1 o'clock by two\nbells and'SoTon utitll eight belli at ,4 o'clock and ag*ln at 0 o'olock.\n.; GOTEBORO. Sweden. Oct :7 (AP).\u2014On a night walk.in the *m*U\ntown of Munkedal near.here, a young Swedish fisherman saw.what\nhn thntimi \u00ab,\u25a0\u2022'.\u25a0.. \"fl*l-*_. -Biirtor'* :\u00abMnu.n_V un  nni.   _n,,m   In' .Km -tr_>,'\nbe thought was a \"flying aaucer\" -moving up and down in tho sky.\nHappening to haVo his camera along,-ho took a picture.\nThe Swedish defence staff, studied the photo and conferred With\nleading astronomers. They concluded that the fisherman had taken\n-an.'tt-cellent Wlot- of the planet Jupiter,     ,. ; ,   , >   \u2022 \u2022';\nWA8HiNQTdN: Oct 7 (AP)\u2014The bottom eppoari'to'h\u00bbve,fallen\nout of a Communist manager's claim.that hla.Russian barrel shop\nover-fulfilled Its production quota, ' i\nTho publication Soviet Moldavia, a copy of which has reached\ntho ,8tato Department recalled that th* manager of the Consumer*\nGoods shop of the Brlchanek Timber Entorprls* rocontly claimed\nall Ita quota*.were filled up to 180 per'.cent, -:'!\".',\nNow sold Soviet Moldavia,: members of tho colloctlvo farm Novayn\nZhlin\u2014new life\u2014report this ''unpardonnblo mistake.\" .'I.'..\n\"Last Fall we bought'flvo'glolgh* Which Were made by. that shop.-\nEvery ono of them Wa* no good. Then our kolkhoz bought eight leak\nbarrolsi On the way to tho kolkhoz,.the bottoms fell out or thre*\nbarrels. Ths *th*r barrels \u00abr\u00bb leaklnti.\"\"< \".,->\u25a0\n______________\n\t\n____,\n w\u00ab\n2~-NEI_$ON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8, 1952\nLAST\"TIMES TONIGHT -- 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m\nRINGSIDE!\nWalter\nTotter in\nJERSEY JOE\nThe Sellout\" WAlCOTf\nTONIGHT jfigj^\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nTHE\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nNO. 3 HIGHWAY\nEA8T OF NELSON\nWednesday Only\nIT'S 100 TP -YOU'U.\nSTAND UP and CHEER!\nIbyBENSCHWALB\nlbru.i___i\n--,\u00bb.\u25a0_\u2022\u2022_*,    .\n%_-l\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb.\u00bbnif\u00bbM\u00bbHM\nCARTOON and SHORTS\nShows 7:00 p.fri:' - 9:00 p.m.\nAdmission 60c\nChildren Under 12 FREE\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nA Tr**t\nFor You and Your Friend*\nCHINESE \u00a9BHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\n- Open 4 p.m. to-4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House ,\n624 Front Sft ''Nelion\n$35 SPEEDING FINE\nJ. C. Ross of Nelson appeared in\ncity- court Tuesday on a charge of\nspeeding on Front Street Monday\nevening. He pleaded guilty and was\nfined $35 by Magistrate William\nBrown.\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nPlanning to move? Call _ '\ntint -Our modern vans and\nskilled mover* assure a SAFE\nmove wherever yon go. W*\nart agent* for North American Van Lines, America's\nleading long distance moving\norganisation. It costs no mor*\nto enjoy tills finer service!\nWW\nTransfer\n\u25a0.-.Co. .'\n719 Boker St.  Nelion, B.C\n< Phono 33\nDeer Cause Driver\nTo Crash Into Tree\nTo *vold hitting * number of\ndeer on tho highway, G, Otter-\nhbut of Nelson ran his oar off\nthe. road and crashed Into a tree,\nTha mishap eoourred early Sunday morning. about three mile*\nWait of Balfour. Tho ear was\ndamaged to th* extent of $150.\n25 Presenl\nProblems To\nVels Officer\nTwenty-five interview* with veterans were conducted by L. C. A\nMoor*, Veteran* Wetfare\/.Offitier\nof the D. V. A. Vancouver OHIco,\nduring bis. visit to Nelson and district over the weekend, tt   >. .\u25a0\nMr. Moore, who is\"visltlng officer\nfor the East: and West Kootonay,\ncomes to Kelson every'sj^.wfeki\nto make contact with veterans and\ndependent* who have 'allowance\nproblem*. He' deals' with' other\nD.V.A. affairs os well, distributing\nand gathering information   ,    *\nHe cooperates closely with the\nNelson branch of the Canadian.Legion, which arranges appointments\nand makes referrals tor .the Welfare OHIO**\". .,','-,' '   *\nAccording to Jock. Brinley, secretary-manager, ot Nelson branch.\nMr. Moore goes but of his way to\ndo everything possible for veterans\nwith any kind of problem, working long hour* and visiting people\nat their homes whenever possible.\nThe War Veterans Allowance\nBoard In Vancouver acts on the In-,\nformation which he collects and\npresents to it. \u2022\nMr. Brinley said Monday that\nthe next executive meeting ot the\nLegion would be Oct. 30, and the\nnext general meeting Nov,. 6. Ih\naddition to the three event* to be\nsponsored by the Legion In Armistice Week already reported in\nthe Dally News, ther* will ba *\nCenotaph Service ot 11:00 a.m. on\nNov. 11, Armistic* Day.\nSumy 'Copter\nVisits District\nA helicopter from Vancouver on\na charter survey trip, flew over\nNelson Tuesday afternoon. The,\n'copter, chartered by Calgary Power\nCompany, is engaged .in survey\nWork in the Columbia Valley. It is\npiloted by D, Pool of Vernon.\nThe craft stopped at Castlegar and\nCranbrook airports to refuel and\ncontinued on to. Kimberley where\nit was.grounded for the night.       N\nUnemployment\nInvestigator Here\nMurray Creighton ha* arrived In\nNelson to assume the post of district\nUnemployment Insurance Commission investigator, He will make his\noffice in Nelson,\nMr. Creighton, former assistant\neditor of the Campbell River Courier, will serve the Trail, Nelson and\nCranbrook offices. The' Kootenay\narea was formerly a branch of the\nOkanagan district under Investigator F, H. Bebb. Mr. Bebb now Is in\ncharge of the Okanagan dlstlrct\nonly. -..,..      '    ' .\nFined for Failing,\nTo Signal for Turn\nJohn S. Holuboff of Robson was\nfined $15 ond $33,70 costs when'he\npleaded guilty to a charge of failing\nto-signal when making, a turn in\non the highway, Tho charge resulted from an accident September 20\nwhen the truck he was' driving\ncrashed into an- automobile.   _ .\nHoluboff, represented by M. Mor-\nah bf Castlegar, Changed his plea\nto guilty following presentation of\nthe Crown's base. Three witnesses\nheard by the court testified that\nT. J. Teahan of Trail, driver of the\nauto, was attempting to pass tho\ntruck. 'A* he:drew his car.alongside, the truck swerved- to the left,\nand crashed Into the side of the car,\nNo one was Injured. ;.'\"'-'     '.' ;\nWitnesses were Mr. Teahan, his\nwife and niece,' Miss B. teahan, and\ninvestigating officer of tho R.C.M.P.\nBus Schedules\nMust Be Observed\nCity buses must adhere to schedules, City Council said Tuesday\nnight when it heard complaints\nthat buses were leaving Baker\nStreet, it later than scheduled\ntimes. ,' \u25a0\u00bb.\nMain complaint had been that\nthe buses due to leave Baker Street\nfor Fairview and Uphill sections\nat 12.07 p.m. and 5.07 p.m. were\ndelaying 'their departures, Aid. W.\nS. Smith, transportation committee\nchairman, said. Vociferous objection had been made by at'least one\npassenger recently and he had been\ntold a \"rough ride\" followed 4h\u00bb incident\nOverload buses were available\nfor those who Were unable to leave\ntheir work-in time-tor. these buses,\nit was pointed out\nllllll-IIIIIIIIIIIIUIIII_.lllllllllllllll.llh\n* INDUSTRIAL\nit COMMERCIAL\n* RESIDENTIAL   WIRING\n\u25a0  --''land :\u25a0;     '\u25a0;',  22\nCOMMERCIAL\nREFRIGERATION\nPREE ESTIMATES    .\nTED HILL ELECTRICAL\nCONSTRUCTION LTD.\n'hone 4947 P.O. Box 135\nCastlegar, B.C.\nNelson Power Cheaper Than B.C.E.;\n5000 H-P. Coffee Creek Potential\n'Nelson's power rates art lower\nthan those of B.C. Electric, In spite\not our higher operating cost per\nunit\" the superintendent' of the\nNelson electrical department told\nRotary Club member* Monday.\nSpeaking at the service club'*\nweekly luncheon meeting at tho\nHume, A, C. VanSacker described\npresent power facilities and out-\nlined tho department* plans tor\nthe future. \u2022\nMr. VanSacker said that roughly\n50 per cent of the power generated\nby two old end two new machines\nat the clty'a hydro plant ii delivered\ninside th* city limit*\/ while the rest\nis sold to the outlying area, with\nservice reaching aa far as Aina-\nwoHh. !-'\"       .- '.\nIllustrating his talk with two diagrams showing present and projected power lines, substations and\nother facilities, Mr, VanSacker told\nof th* connection to be mad* with\nlines-of the West Kootenay Power\nand Light Company in order to provide standby protection- '\nExplaining that mor* transmission line capacity was needed as the\nload grew with Nelson's post-war\nexpansion, Mr. VanSacker said that\nnew transmission circuit, will\ngradually be installed.        .'\u25a0_.-.\n\"To stand on our own feet\" ho\nsaid, \"we should have sufficient reserve generating capacity to take\near* of maintenance and of any\nbreakdown that might occur,\"\nThough the power possibilities ot\nKootenay Lake are now pretty well\nexhausted, he mentioned the possibility of a-5000-h.p. development\nat Coffee Creek.\nBut tha lolutlon adopted tor the\ntime being \u00abt any rat* has been to\nInstall new lines and step up th*\nvoltage cirrled from 12,000 to 23,000\nbetween transfer point*. A new\ntransformer bank at the city eub-\nstatlon would allow a step-up to\n00.000 volta,, ''\nTh* total capacity of th* plant is\n7000 kilowatts, and Its total load\nnow || 5000. The surplus power\nwill only be adequate for the next\nthree years' increase, Mr. VanSacker estimated.'\nOperating cost it .the plant li on*\ncent per kilowatt-bow, and total\ncost 1.8 cant*.\nMr. VanSacker, * Club member,\nwas Introduced and thanked by\nPraildent J. H. Coventry. Mr. Cov-\nentry elso welcomed th* two ntw\nmembers who were Introduced tt\nthe meeting. Th*y are Themis O. C.\nFox. sheriff tor South Kootenay\nand Ernest Nlcholls, district representative tor the Northern Electric\nCompany.\nFire Chief to Talk\nAt Chamber Meeting\nFire 'Chief Q. A. McDonald will\naddress Nelson Chamber of Commerce at Its , luncheon meeting\nThursday In the Hume.\nAs part of Fir* Prevention Week\nactivities, he will speak on that\nsubject\nNew Evening\nCourses Given\nAl Noire Dame\nFifteen adults attondod the first,\nclass In philosophy given by A L.\nCartier, principal. In Notre Dame\nCollege library Monday night The\nclass took the form of, lecture\nmaterial Interspersed with group\ndiscussion.\nThe whole field ot'human knowledge was surveyed \"In order to\nsee the pl\u00bbc* bf the philosophy of\nman 1n the scheme.\" The series\nwill continue next week.\nNotre Damb Is sponsorlng'a series\nof 10 lectures in speech and drama,\na course to be given by Miss Janie\nStevenson on' Friday nights. Miss\nStevenson is a well known teacher\not speech and drama and as tn\nadjudicator'of drama: festivals.,\nGlen Warren\nTo New Pipsl\nIn Okanagan\nGlen V. Warren who for the past\ntwo and a half years has been resident manager for Imperial Oil Company here, will leave at the end of\nthe month for Penticton as the company's manager for tha Okanagan\narea.\nMr. Warren came to Nelson trom\nCranbrook where he was local\nmanager., He is a member of. the\nNelson Rotary club and of the\nMasonic Lodge. Hi* wit* arid\ndaughter Pat will accompany him\ntb Penticton. :   -.-\nCity Postpones\nBus Purchase\nCity Council at a special meeting Tuesday night called to discuss\nrecently opened tender* for 'a new\nbui for th* City transportation lyi-\ntem, decided to mtke iti decision\nat th* reguler meeting next Tit**-\nday night\nCounoil member* Were unable to\ndecide whether to .purehwe a gasoline or propane gat type bus and\ninstructed its transportation committee under Aid. W. S. Smith to\nbring in * definite recommendation.\nPercy W. Hawtin, lervic* representative at Vancouver for Twin\nCoach of Canada, Ltd., Toronto,\nexplained the technical operation\nof propane gai buses and told of\nthe experience of operators of this\ntype of bus in Vancouver and Edmonton.\nAIderm\u00bbn Smith said h\u00ab w\u00bb* pre-\nSared to recommend, purchase of\nle propane type. He'foresaw possible future conversion to propane\nof other City vehicles if it proved\nsatisfactory. Cost of converting a\npui back to a standard gasoline-\ndriven vehicle if it wer* not satis-\nfactory, would he about $500. A\nlocally operated propan*. ,'truck\nhad beet, operated satisfactoriiy for\nsome time, h*!|ald.'''    !   \u2022\"\"'\nIt waa decided, however, that\nadditional atudy was required be\nfore a decision could be reached.\nBui Driven\nTo Have Uniforms\nDriven of City buses will soon\nsport uniforms. Two .of the present\ndriver* meet the requirement of\neight month* employment, and are\nto be provided uniforms. '\nCouncil Tuesday night approved\nrecommendation that uniforms be\npurchased from Charles Morris\nmen's furnishings store at a cost of\n$88.10 (or tunic, two pairs of trousers and cap, Under agreement the\nCity contributes half tb* cost of\ntha uniform*, ityl* of which must\nb* approved by th* City, - :\u2022..\u25a0'\nTwo mora driver* will _>\u2022 due for\nuniforms in .\u00bb Month, A. C. lies)\nHall, transportation superintendent,\nMid.\n(. G. Dull Again\nHeads Seoul\nGroup Committee\nWILLOW POINT - C. Q. Duff\nwas reelected chairman of the\nWillow Point Scout Group. Committee for the fourth consecutive\nyear at their annual meeting Men-\nday, night. Secretary-treasurer\nFraser Tee* wai alio named for a\nfourth term.\nCommittee member* choien were\nT. O. Ludgate, Thomas Wait Floyd\nSearle. C, Heibey, H. W. Altoh'ison\nJohn Learmonth, W, P. F. Greea\nGilbert Palmer and M. Fal'kn?r.\nNo definite plans have been\nmad* for construction of a icout\nball,; members war* told,. pending\na meeting with the Church Committee asking tor enlargement of\nth* church hall enough to accommodate tb* Scout* and Cubs, Vic\nHoward I* scout master and D.\nHaycrott, cub master. A scout\nassistant Is needed. ......\nA tentative data of Oct.. 18 was\nset for tbe Willow Point'.'Seoiit's\n:bottl* ac*mp\u00bblgrk ; \"jV;..\nCity Sprinkling\nRestrictions Eased\nEasing of sprinkling restrictions\nwas decided upon by City Counoil\nduring Its special meeting Tuesday night\nDecision to allow two hours \u00ab\nweek for watering ef garden* Was\n.made after Aid. J. H. Coventry\n\u2022aid many gardens, we're bolng\nruined beoause. of th* prolonged\ndry spell, Even, an hours hosing\nwould assist to overcome . the\nseriousness of the situation.\nSplrnkllng will, bo perrolttod\nfrom 2 to 4 p.m. on Wednesdays for residents Hying In\nodd-numbered homes, end -during\nthe same hours on Thursdays for\nresidents Hying In even-numbered\nhomes, It wai decided, after con-\nsulfation with 0. Q. Lake, public\nworks superintendent\nWomen's Group\nGives To Fire\nVictims'Fund\nThe Evangelicol Million Covenant\nLadies' Aid Tuesday became the\nfirst women's organization outside\nthe Slocan to contribute to the fund\nfor Winlaw fire victim*; Mr. and\nAir*. W, S. done* and their two\nyoung children.     -,-     \u2022'\u2022'\nIts contribution, along with donations from two businesses and tout-\nNelson and district residents, added\nto a Tuesday collection of 577 at\nThe Nelson Daily New* office.\nToll, plus $100, from Passmore\nand another $5 from Appledale,\nbrought the total in th* fund campaign to- $1328.88, in les* than a\nweek.   ,\nContinuing their Job ot replacing\nthe post office and store premises\nand the horn* th* Joneiei' lost ih\nan apparent Incendiary fire, Slocan\nValley volunteers put the roof on\nthe business building and will in-\natal the chimney today.' . \u2022.\".\nSupplies for the store are expected to'be moved in Saturday. \u2022\nSaturday and Sunday the-volunteers will, move two'shack* donated\nfor the house, and will begin the\nwork of putting thorn in shape.\n.-., i I,i     i 11 i  ,i     n>-\nCity to Purchase\nCalculator\nA. new printing calculator that\nwill add, subtract, multiply and\ndivide is to be purchased by the\nCity.. Authority to purchase a Burroughs machine for $410 was given\nCt-y' Clerk C, W. R. Harper by\nCouncil Tuesday night Three types\nof machines had been tested by the\nCity hall staff, Mr. Harper explained. Two of the machines still\nbeing used in the office dated back\nto 1900 and 1014.\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP) -\n'A firm of architects here signed\ncontract, to \"plan a new city for 300,\n000 persons  in  the  highlands -\nEthiopia. . '<.''\u25a0.\nnjuf\nPAINTS\nTKe Weather\nNelson\nWinnipeg  .\nEdmonton .\nKamloops .\nPehtlctoh\nVancouver\nVictoria . ..\nKimberley\nCalgary  \t\n40 76\n28' SS\n38 72\n32 70\n32 89\n43 66\n81 60\n28 69\n34 72\nCITY Of NELSON\nSprinkling Regulations\nCITIZENS OF NELSON WILL BE PERMITTED\nTO USE WATER I10R GARpfN .SPRINKLINfi\nAS FOLLOWS: _    '\n(A) Odd numbers of street address\n2 p.m. - 4 p.m. Wednesdays only.;\n(B) Even numbers of street address\n2 p.m. - 4 p.m. Thursdays only.\nThose sprinkling or. using hoses outside the above\nhours and days will be subject to prosecution;\nBy Order\nWATER WORKS DEPART\/vtfNT-, ^\nCITY OP NELSON\n\u2022ov- *o*\nmon-Y\u00bb\n<\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\nHAVE YOUR\nDONATION\nREADY TODAY\nSTOPS\nNEURITIC-rtEURflLGIC\nPAIN!\nISPSRII\nSPOKANE'S   ^\n* Finest Moderately.\nPriced Hotell\n. * Rett! Comfort tm  1\nOn*era Family\nTHI\nPACIH!\n\u2022 Coffoe Shop\n\u2022 Centrally Located\n\u2022Free Parking\nAlso Weekly and\nMonthly Rales   a\n\u25a0 -fnni\n:3r_r'\nSeagram's Crown Royal\nSeagram's V.O.\nSeagram's \"83\"\nSeagram's King's Plate\n\u25a0 Seagram's Special Old\n'\u25a0''    Thi* advertisement ti not published or displayed by '\n: tho liquor Control Board or by the Government of British CalumblJ\nFall is full of Colour and C^wfWt.*- travelling by\n^O\n\u00bb*\u00bb*!\nvM\n* _\nm\nHead a cor when you gel them*\nAt mo\/or point* wo con have a\ndr iV o-your<_\/. car walling tor\nyou when you -fop off In*\niroi'n.   Ask   your   Ticko.   Agent.\nGetting there is half the fun when yoo travel lyy train! Yoo\nenjoy a smooth, comfortable trip in air-conditioned cant\ni. .see the Canadian Autumn in all it* glorious colour\nthrough big Picture Window* . . . arrive relaxed,\nrefreshed. Meal*, are famous for wholesomeness and\nvariety. Service is unsurpassed.\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\n_4\nOnly train travel offers you such a wide choice of\nexcellent accommodation for longer trips..,aeq> I\n.tions, roomette*, compartment*, drawing room*, j\nExperienced travellers recommend the fast, convenient, dependable schedules, too. When yon |\ntravel, goby train.\nCANADIAN  NATIONAI\n>\" '\u2022' '\u25a0\u25a0:22-''222ii-222:,222^'.\n,\"\nsiMa-fet^^\n wwailpy'&Vf?\nSHOES\nof DfefinttioR\nJ&EMAN\n1 '8rn>rtly'BtVled \"\nFashioned for Comfort\n'-Made tevy\u00ab\u00abr\nSixef 6\n11\nTHE SI*OE\n,- -CENTRE:'-.v\nPhono 885\ni'lfl'l'll I    \u25a0\n653.Baker St\n\"Mr. Football-\"\niTBHtNIE \u2014 A   lifelong   Crow's\n; Pass resident whose name ha_\nsynonymous , with   football,\nrge William:, Oakley, died after\n* short illness ih.F.ernie Memorial\n\"ispltal. '\u00ab \"   .\nJtRVw \u25a0bprn,.48,; years V ago iri\ntichel, grew  up  at  Coal  Creek\nfhere he  began  playing  soccer,\nhen. was employed at Elk River\nblliery. He moved to Fernie;in\n' J...He,enlisted with the Calgary\nghlanders   In  1940,   and   trans.\nIf erred, to tho Canadian Scottish on\nIbversees service. Ho- returned  to\niFernie in IMS arid  resumed his\nIrnemberahtp in the Fernie -United\n\u25a0team of which - he svas ti, director.\nJHe  was a member . of, the -Mine\n\u25a0Worker* Union, the Eagles: Lodge,\nlend the- Canadian Legion.\nRage i* i survived' by>': M*. lather,\nIThpmas Oakley,: a brother, Thomas.\nT}r.\", *nd a, sister,'Mrs. Fred Daw-\n'son, all in Fernie. Rev. R, E. M.\nlYerburgh    officiated    at   funeral\n|iervlces':a\u00a3,Christ- Church, and :Ca-\n\" adian Legion burial rites,-followed\nCollege\nof Commerce\n'Home Furnishing Building\nDay or Night\nClasses\nREGISTER   TODAY\n\u2022 DONT DELAY\nPhono 38\nOUR SPECIALTY\n\u2022 ANY   WHERE\n\u2022 ANY PLACE\n\u2022 ANY TIME\n.2 .2 '    \u25a0\u25a0' A~o\nDally Freight Gorvlco\nNelion \u2022 Trail \u2022 Castlegar\nRossland \u2022 Frultval* \u2022 Salmo\nUNITED TRUCKING\n& STORAGE LTD.\nPHONE 1106\nCreston District Gives Okay to New Hospital\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT, 8,1951 \u2014 3\nProperty Owners Reverse Decision\nOf June in Approving $160,000 Loan\nCRESTON-fProperty owners in the Creston valley\nHospital lwpwy^-ftent District, who in June turned down\nai sim'U^-'plepii&it^, Tuesday voted in favor bf a modern\n30-bed hospital, to be built\nhere at a cost of $4.0,000.\nIn a record vote, 70.07 per cent\nof voter* were in favor of tho district borrowing $160,000 at 4.4 per\ncent to construct and .equip a replacement lor the present 20-year-\nold Creston Valley Hospital A 60\nper cent majority was required.\nThe June plebiscite gained only 55\nper cent '..'\" \u25a0\u25a0' ..\nA total of 884 \"ye\u00bb\" vote* were\ncast, and -OS \"no\" vote*.\nFOUR-WEEK   DRIVE\nFoiling climaxed an Intensive\nfour-week campaign which combined the effort* of -7 Valley organization*.\nThe government will contribute\n$300,000 toward the project. The\ndistrict loan, to be raised by taxation-not exceeding two mills on 100\n'percent land ahd 75 per cent Improvement*, would be repaid in\nfrom 16 to 20 year* at the present\nrate of assessment.\nThe hospital will be built next to\nthe existing 18-bed hospital..\nFollowing are figures on the vote:\n,    .... Yes. No\nArrow Creek\nBoswell .........\nCanyon\nfer VI*\nLEAVING,Kail* soon\ntori*' where he will be ocslstont\npriest at 8t Mary's Church, Oak\nBay, vylll be Rev. J. S.P. Snow-\njden of St. Mark's Angllein\nChurch here.. He w*t ordained\nthis Spring and was later appointed vlcor of 'Kailo-Kokanee\nparish.\nAIRPORT PAYING\nWELL ApyANCED\nCASTI_OAR -^Atrport Commissioner R.'-A.'P- V?**t In hi* re-\nport to th* V-llsie-'of Castlegar\nboard meeting '\u00ab$ Monday evening\nstated that work '&t I blsektopplng\nthe ruhwiysOt th* airport was\nprogressing well -\nA total of $15,500 has been spent\nthi* year. \"Rie centre runway Will\nhave complete blacktopping this\nyear.\nMr. West also reported that on a\nrecent visit to Castlegar, G. W. G.\nMcConachie, president of Canadian\nPacific Airways, had said he waB\npleased with tho work done on the\nairstrip.        . .. '* , \u2022\nU.B.C. Professors\nWill Address Alumni\nTRAIL \u2014 Two speaker* trom the\nUniversity of Brlt-lh Columbia will\nbe heard at a dinner; meeting of\nthe Trail U.B.C. Alumni Association\nhere Friday night\nGeoffrey Andrew, assistant to\nthe president^-<\u25a0' tf.RC- will discuss the Doukhobor problem. He is\na member of the Doukhobor consultative committee. J. Gilbert\nHooley, head of the chemistry department at the University, will be\nthe other speaker, outlining events\nat the university and some of the\nproblems faced. .''.'.-\nKimberley Co-Op\nStore Income Gains\nKIMBERtEY \u2014 A generally\nfavorable position with current\nassets 3,86 \"times current liabilities,\nwas repo\u00bbJ_a;by Kimberley Co-op\nStore Association president O. F.\nLindqulst, at the semi-annual meeting. A distinct Improvement in the\nstock, turn-over, with a resulting\nupswing in the.net income, was\nreported. The loan'capital scheme\nwas reviewed to; provide for re-\nCreaton (1) ....._\nCreston (2) .__\nErickson ..,._._\nGray Creek ....\nKitchener i.\t\nKootenay Bay.\nLister .\n14\n27\n.   57-\n,261\n.202\nPort Crawford\t\nRlondel _______\nSanca \t\nSirdar i \t\nWest Creston \t\nWynndel \t\nAdvance  \t\nTotal\t\n50\n10\n3 .\n' '_--'\u2022\n29\n12\n'\u00ab\u2022\n6\n14\n10\n_._.'30\n 894\n\u2022 18\n14\n0\n9\n1\n3\n20\n0\n228\nMrs. Flnley,\nEast Kootenay\nPioneer, Dies\nCRANBROOK - One of East\nKootenay's longest-time and best\nknown residents, Mrs. Margaret\nFlnley died here at the home of\nher daughter, Mr*. R, W. Leonard,\nafter a long illness. ''.-\u25a0'\nBorn 82, yea^s ago at Mount\nForest Ont, she came to this district with her husband in 1898,' the\nyear.the railway was completed and\nSouthern East Kootenay was opened for settlement\n\u25a0 They established their horn* *t\nFertile, and in 1004 they-came, to\nCranbrook. Mr. Ftoley a sawyer.\nWas killed In June, 1929, on a demolition job at Moyie, Mrs.. Flnley\nwas a member of the Ladies'. Auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railway\nTrainmen for 35 years. She\" was a\nlong-time member of Knox Presbyterian Church.\nSurviving her are two son*, Wesley snd Robert, in Cranbrook, and\nsix daughters, Mrs. V. S. Liddicott\nMr*. R. W. Leonard and Mrs. David\nFrame, Cranbrook, Mi*. W. SL, Wilson in Revelstoke, Mrs. Hairy\nFyles In Coquitlam, and Mrs. William Bain in Trail, 20 grandchildren and 21 great-grandchildren. \\..\nl-_-_lBERLEY \u2014 The yeari Sewer\nprogram should be completed by the\nmiddle of October, City Council has\nbeen informed. Held up by repairs\nto ntachlhery, the Happy Valley\nsewer, a major project, is now moving ahead rapidly.    ; ''.'\u25a0'\u2022\nA $40,000 sewer-bylaw, for next\nyear's program, has received its\nsecond reading, If approved by the\nDepartment of Municipalities, it will\nbe submitted to the people in December.       ' , '\u25a0'\u2022\nA request has been received from\nthe village of Chapman Camp to\nconnect with the main Kimberley\nsewer line. Built to serve a.pbpula-\ntion of 10,000, the. sewer will, take\nthe extra load, but agreements will\nhave to be made to safeguard the\nfuture. Use of the sewer was okayed\n,6y the council, payment* to be\nworked out later.\nUnder the local Improvement bylaw,-a six-foot concrete sidewalk\nIs being laid on the East side of\nWallinger Avenue from Howard\nStreet to Boundary Street. The total\ncoast is $2663 of which $1065 will be\nborne by theclty. The work is the\nresult of a petition, from residents\nof this area.      , .,,'..\u25a0\nA dlaphqhe horn and equipment\nnecessary for its Installation have\nbeen ordered to make the city fire\nalarm system independent of tbe\npayment at loan*.\nThe resignation ef R. Spearman;\netorc manager, was accepted. Mr.\nSpearman will go into business for\nhimself at Canyon.\nLord Holder's Comments on Health\nAct Rouse Dr. Edith Summerskill\nttanley  Street  Nelson ....     LONDON, (CP),-, Criticism et\niBH-BH-^-^H-i_l-H-B Britain's   national   health   service.\ntern\nA most delirioiin wheat\ncereal with extra bran\u2014\nas a gentle aid to\nregularity!\nmum\nattributed in reports from Chicago\nto Lord Horder, Slyeor-old former\nnhyslcian to King iftward VHI, has\nbrought an angry retort from Dr.\nEdith Summerskill, Socialist member of Parliament and fojmer Minister of National Insurance.\nLord,Horder was quoted as saying that standards of medical care\nhad been lowered uiider the national health scheme and to have\nurged Americans to avoid the\nblunders made In Britain.\nAddressing a meeting of old-age\npensioner*, Dr. Summerskill said\nthat as a doctor who had been practicing for more than 25 years, and\nwho came from a family of medical\nmen, she categorically challenged\nLord Horder'* statements.\n\"British people abroad should\nnever denigrate their own country,\" she said. \"When I was a member of the last government I represented them abroad and in no\nspeech did I ever denigrate my\nown country nor attack any other\npolitical party. What Lord Horder\nhas done i* to foul hi* own nest.\"\nThe people themselves, she add-\nwder-eXLYCQX -1\ned, were the best judges of what\nthe national health service meant\nto them and she Was sure many\nwould recall the difficulties of\nother day* when Hiey had to consult their purse beforo summoning\na doctor.\n\"Lord Horder Is older than most\not you and should know better,\"\nDr. Summerskil ldeclar'ed, \"The\nAmerican* should be told that no\nmother in Britain today has to hesitate before calling in a doctor to\nattend a sick child.\"\nSTAVANGER, Norway (CP) .\u2014\nKing Haakon ot Norway formally\nopened the Norwegian canning\nschool at this centre of the sardine\nfishing industry. It is said to be the\nonly vocational institute in the\nworld providing long-term technical\ntraining in food preserving.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nipim * *\"\n.:  \u25a0!\nSCENIC\nINQUEST OPENS\nIN LISTER DEATH\nLISTER \u2014 An';lnque*t into the\ndeath ot a 83-year-old '.Lister farmer,\nLeslie Berecz, killed when * tractor\nhe was driving overturned and pin\nbed. him beneath it has. opened.\nAfter the bod > was viewed, the inquest was -adjourned until Friday.\nFuneral services were held at the\nLutheran Church, Rev. N. G. Robertson, Presbyterian minister, officiating. Pallbearers were James Sikora,\nAlex Ivany, John Bird, John Gury-\nkovltz, Herman Sommerfeld and Joe\nPogany, art ,.\u25a0>;\u2022:'\u25a0';'-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0-\nMr. Berecz was born In Czechoslovakia, and came; to, Canada in 1035.\nHe i bad lived in Lister tor the last\neight years. Surviving aro his wife;\none son at home ano.. another at\nBanff. '\u25a0 '\u2022\u2022':''\u25a0',.'.\"...'\"\u25a0\nNEW DENVER \u2014 Final arrange-\nments for their annual dance were\nmade 'by members of the New\nDenver' volunteer tire brigade at\ntheir meet-fig In the' fire hall.\nThe scarab was regarded in ancient Egypt as a symbol of Immortality and. was placed on mummies\nas a symbol of reincarnation.  .\nHAVE YOUk\nDONATION\nREADY TODAY\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"TOUR FORTRESS PF\nHEALTH\"   ,\n\u25a0\"\u2022 PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS\n\u2022 SUNDRIES\n- 433 Josephine St.\nPHONB RES.\n1203   , 394-L\nLardeau\ncountry was visited recently by Chamber of C_n\nmeree and Board of Trade men touring the area '\nvia. the newly-opened Kaslo to Lardeau read. Thi*\npicture was t*ken from Howser at the 8outhern\n\u25a0 end of the lake\u2014-Dally News' photo.\nKimberley Neors End\n52SemrProgram\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany fire alarm system. The\ncost ot $2500 includes\" the horn and\ninstallation.-\nTho Parks Board has agreed\" to a\n74:28 split ih gate receipts from\nhockey at. the Civic Arena. The Dynamiter Hockey Club httd refused to\naccept, a-request sttiat it pay a\nstraight $300 per game rental. A $25\ndonation has been made by the city\nto th* Trans-Canada Highway Association (Crows-Nest route) to aid\nin its campaign,\n. Failure, to live up to municipal\nlicensing bylaws by :bbth .city departments and the Park* Board was\ndisclosed at th,e Council;* meeting\nwhen the electrical supervisorstated\nthat,$342 worth' of rewiring at McDougall Hall had' been done by an\nelectrician-who hold no provincial\nlicence. The city had also purchased\ncinder .bricks from an out-of-town\nman who held.no local license, and\nwas building a garage without a con\ntrading license. A prompt tightening up on the licensing.bylaws was\nordered, with particular attention to\nbe given. to ily-by?night j peddlars.\nSOCRED HISTORY\nf OPIO 6F M.L.A,\nPROCTER \u2014 The history\" of the\nSocial Credit party in Alberta was\noutlined by R. D. Jorgenson, M.L.A.\nfor Pembina, to more than 50 persons in Procter hall.\nThe president of the Alberta\nSocial Credit League told of tbe\nhard struggle of Social Credit, and\nthe step-by-step advances' it had\nmade to bring the province from\ndespondency and bankruptcy to\nprosperity.\nAlberta Social Crediters, he said,\nhad been encouraged by the party's\nvictory in B.C. in the election\n\"earlier this year.\n-'\u2022 No ;. brifsh \u25a0 marks -or\nspotting\n\u2022 No tigly color streaking\n.   when you us\u00ab\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022  Pittsburgh   <   '\nWallHIde\nRubberized Satin\nFinish\nOnly one coat needed  ,\nNelson\nWoodworking\nCOMPANY\nPhona 1150   273 Boker St.\nDate Set for Start\nOf Defence Course\nKIMBERLE Y,\u2014' A technical\ncourse in civil defenco will' start\nhere on October' 30. -\"\u25a0.\nMarysville, Chapman Camp and\nKimberley, will, it 1* expected,\nshare the cost and the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company is\nalso being approached, for assistance.\nA residential school for boys,\nUpper Canada College was founded\nat Toronto in 1829.\n-38 inchos of gay\n'holittoyieolor*.\nTo send as your Christmas\nflroeting on gift.\nTo hold tho eorgo ef\ngood wishes you. reeetvo\non Christmas cards.\nTo decorate your mantel,\ntable or tra*.\nSpace for your name en\nthe bright rod cab'oose.\nPocked ready for mailing.\n$1.00 oath\nART SHOPPE\nA Greeting Card\nfor Every Occasion\nLET US DO YOUR\nLAUNDRY\nDISCOVER THE LOW-COST WAY TO\nFREEDOM FROM WASHDAY DRUDGERY\nor\n\u25a0   ... ,:f    -\u2022        \u2014.'        \u25a0\"-.'\/--\u25a0\u25a0.\"\nFor Your Dry Cleaning Special \u2014 Call Office\nIn at Nine ~ Out at Fowl*\nKootenay Laundry & Cleaners\nPhono 1175\n182 Baker St.\nFall Term Commencing Nov. 3\nPHYSICIANS'\nOFFICE ASSISTANTS\nCarlyle'Schools offers a six-weeks eotirse of     :\n\"  studyrto -train  worheh  for  positions  as\nphysicians' office assistants.\nPhone or Write\nMISS HELENE LUCKY\nExecutive Secretary for Full Information\nMA98-U Carlyle School* 110 Birks Bld|.\nVancouver, B. C.       .\nGRAND\nOpening\nSALE\nTHURSDAY \u25a0 FRIDAY - SATURDAY\nOCTOBER 9-10-11\nx   Men't and Boys'\nT-SHIRTS from 89c up\nA TOP-VALU5 BUY\nSHIRTS\nWork and Dress\nOdd Sites\nON SALE\nMen's and Bays'\nGirls'and Kiddies'\nSOCKS\nDiamonds, Argylee\nPlains and Others\nFrom 39c Up\nMEN'S TIES\nRegular $2.00 - $1.50 - $1.00\nTake your pick for 97c\nBoys' Cord Pants\n12,14, lis Years\nRegular $4.95\nOn Sale $4.10\nSaturday Special\nFORSYTH\nDRESS SHIRTS\nRegular $4.25 and $4.95\n$3.89\nMEN'S WORK SOX\n3 lbs. \u2014 All Wool\ncial \u2014 $1.10\nWe are your local agent ^fer\nTrail Dry Cleaners\nTWICE-A-WEEK DELIVERY\n10% OFF ALL SUITS ORDERED\nWEEK OF OCT. 9-16\nMEN'S and BOYS' FALL and WINTER JACKETS\nSpecially Reduced to Clear\nFlannel'\nWork Shirts\nFor as \\oyi as\n$2.69\nUnderwear\nMen's and Beys'\nReduced\nMens Wear\nTHE QUALITY SHOP\nSALMO, B. C.\n .\n, You don't have to lolo yeur home when tiro strikes.\nFire insurance will reimburse you for the amount of\ndamage incurred \u2014 partial er total. Insure against\nfire now! : :> \\.\nMcHardy Agencies Ltd.\n114 Ward It*\nPhone 1SS\n\u25a0\n:f\ni\n2\nC D. BLACKWOOD\nAGENCY\nINSURANCE and REAL'ESTATE\nPhone 99\n136 Ward St.\nFIRE PREVENTION WEEK\n'l I .    I      III )    I        II.I'M      .       I       l    I I    I\ndCTOl-RJ-ll f\n,.!* .   * U I I     ^     .\nHELP\nYOUR\nCOUNTRY\nPREVENT\nFIRES\nONLY YOU CAN\nPREVENT FIRES\nFIRE PREVENTION WEEK ~ OCT. 5th to 11th\n^a\u00bbaa^^*am\u2014*mmmm*'mmamma-m*a*matmmpm  i.\u00ab|i-iniifiiii|*\u00bb\u00bbs|>l  amsaam%a1*+mtpimimmaam>afr^\n\"   \u25a0 '   y    \u25a0 f   *_*..-     -\u25a0.-\u2022-'\"\u2022. - '   '.'..> ^ '.   \\\\ \".\"'\nTHIS IS MC & MC's CONTRIBUTION TO FIRE PREVENTION WEEK   . .\n' i s    ..-.'\u25a0      j.     . \u25a0\u25a0   l ''..'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0 ' -' \u25a0   _\u25a0** \u25a0   \u25a0 -\nA Limited Number of Non-Liquid\njuishers\nwill be sold \u2022\u2014 Reg. Price $3.00\nSafety with economy .... '    Effective for Gqs, Electric, er Oil Fires\nH\nIT\nForest Products Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nPHONE 1200\nFIRES ARE  PREVENTABLE\ni i \u2022\nEquip Your Home\nor Office\nwith'a\nPhister or Randolph\nFire Extinguisher\nSold only by\nStand\nBetween\nand Loss\nINSURE NOW WITH\nROBERTSON, MILLIARD,\nCATTELL INSURANCE\n456 Ward Street\nPhono 1112\nEquipment Company Ltd\n214 Hall St. 2      Phone 18\nThis Could\nHave Been\nPrevented\nWhen a fire breaks out, anytime . . . anywhere . .\n-   THE FINEST FIRE INSURANCE YOU CAN HAVE\nISA\nn\nPRESTO X B\nFire Extinguisher\nObtainable in Nelson\nNELSON SALES\nand SERVICE Limited\nass j. :?,.\" ,.:.r -Bga\nIgnorance\nand\nGar^lessness,\nCause Fires\nONLY YOU CAN\n^RiSVEN-T FIRES    \\\nvir. '    , j\\\nS\/v '   *\nKOOTENAY RIVER\nLUMBER and POLE CO.\n<J60 Baker It. Phone 1413\nWHEN THE\nQUESTION IS;\nTHI WWII IS\n?!Sia\nI\"\"!        \"    II*      Hi\n743 Baker St.\nPhone 977\ni.'i ''   i    \"..\u2014*\u2022*\nStop ond think ... a handful\nof-pennies can give you thi\nprotection of lniuror.ee to\n\u25a0cover the high cost of damage\nond loss by fir*.\nLow-Coit Fire Coverage\nIt's just good sense to pro-\ntect your home with adequate\ntixe insurance. Our ri_l.it'\npolicies cost so llttle'that y6u\n_nn't ittord to do without in-\n-U_-ai.es. Consult with us ttr\nUfA coverage at lew ntU.\nFire Cost\nThe Nelson District\nOF THE\nB.C. Forest Service\n,000\nBURGLARY   -   AJJTOMOBILl\nACCIDENT   AND   SICKNESS\nLOSS OF USE   \u2014   INDUSTRIAL   \u00ab-   AVIATION\nThe GILDAY AGENCIES\nREAL ESTATE and INSURANCE\n342 Boker Sh . Phone 1460\nAND\nTHE PROVINCE OF BC\n$599,000\nur to the snd or SriPtiMSIk\nFIRES CAN BE\nPREVENTED\nPassmora Lumber Co., Ltd.\nTaghum Lumber Co. Ltd.\nBurns Lumber Co.\nHI)  i  Hi mmmmmmami\n \u25a0\u25a0\nrm:\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUlll\n\"It Pays To Buy Quality\"\nf;'';',;;   , BY COTE\nBrown Grain Brogue'\n|llbXFORDS:\n,^';*$#^' \"'\"-''\nalso\nBrown Moccasin Balmoral\n2t :^C0y-r.:\n$10.80\n.. \u201eSJ!ses 6 to' 1-1 ...\nR. Andrew & Co.\n' V'': Established 8lnce 1902  \\%\nllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllDIIIIIHIIIIIIII\nNew Denver.'\nNEW;.PENVBR_\u00ab*..C.\u2014^Mrs.-'P. J,\nMcCrdry entertained- in honor of\nher daughter Maureen on her\neighth birthday.\nMr. and Mrs, C. Olson has left tor\nVancouver to attend the funeral et\ntheir nephew David.        ,  \u25a0: \u25a0\"\nJo_in; Henry ol Three Forks has\nbought the residence* ot Mrs; G.\n; Ronald Nelson on' Seventh-Street\n'formerly the Residence pi the late\nMr. and Mrs. George Burkett. .\nMr. and Mrs. W.:G. Balbirnie and\nBud have returned from.a three-\nweeks'vacation with their family,\n[Mr. and .Mrs. W: J. Balbirnie, at\nLillooet, Mr.'and Mrs. Les'Bal-\nbirnie and daughter, ol Abbotsford\nand Mr. and Mrs. Alphorise Le-\n> Blanc 'of. Lumby. ,     -\nMr., and Mrs. James Bon3.er.and\n('family ol Three Forks have taken\n.! up residence on Seventh Street, in\nI John. Henry's  residence.;\nFred A. Greer ot Montreal arrived by plane at Castlegar.,where\nhs was met by his parents and! Bis-\nI ter, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Greer and.\n[Miss Patricia Greer., Hi has, hot\nbeen In his home town lor lour\nyears and will visit lor a week before going on to Vancouver,, ac-\nI esompanled by his sister. Who will\n[returnto New Westminster Soyal\nColumbia Hospital, on the nursing\n..stall.\nI,. Neil Tattrie and E. P. Nelson has\n|lelt by car on a hunting' trip to\nPrince George and the Alaska Highway.\nUnder the French regime in Can-\n| ada there was no general tax\n| System; only temporary assess-\n(s,jnents for special purposes. . , \u2022\nHAVE YOUR\nDONATION\nREADY TODAY\nWatch for Our\nf   .Weekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT MARKET - Phon* (32\nNelson Social\n-i \u25a0 .  2:';: '2    .',.;'   ; ' '\u25a0:'\". 22 \"..; \"una*;.i_u;;\nWedding- and birthday anniversaries have be?n cause\nfor. a combined celebration here.        \"'\"'\nSUHPBISB PARTY ... Forty\nfriends and relatives held a surprise\nparty at the home of Mr. and Mra.\nElmer Kline, Silver King Road, the\noccasion being the 80th anniversary\nol their wedding and Mrs. Kline's\nbirthday. Mr. and Mrs, Kline were\npresented with an anniversary gilt\nand Mrs. Kline received a birthday\ngilt' J. J.; McEwen. made- the presentations! Alter' an evening ot\n'games arid dancing, lunch was\nserved.     \u25a0 \u25a0\"\u25a0\n. i.-.i '.'\u2022'. \u25a0\u25a0 \u00bb    .    .\n: VISITS FAMILY..,. Miss Marie\nDuck, who has Just completed her\nnurses' training course at Royal\nColumbian hospital in. New Westminister, is visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Duck, Robson\nStreet, before leaving 'lor Medicine\nHat    '\n.  \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTO ROSSLAND ... Mr. and\nMrs. C. B. Mutchler are visiting\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. N. E. Dobbs, at Pinewood,\nRossland. -\u2022 \u2022     >\n\u2022 \u00ab   *\n\": STITCH % CHATTER . . . The\nCanadian Bank ol Commerce stall\nStitch N'. Chatter Club, met at the\nhome of'Miss Esther Arnsdorf, 1013\nCedar Street, Monday night Guests,\nwere Mrs. William Freno of Victoria and Miss Marie Duck of New\nWestminster.\n* \u00ab   \u2022\nAT; WEDDING ... Mrs. J. Nagy\nand her son, Ray Carman, have\nleft for | Edmonton to attend the\nwedding of Mrs. Nagy's nephew.\n:    \u2022   *    *\nFROM VICTORIA ... Mr. and\nMrs. William Freno of Victoria are\nvisiting Mr. Freno's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs, Louis Freno, Falls Street.\nCastlegar Mi.\nMeets Teachers\nCASTLEGAR ~> The staff Of-the\nStanley Humphries high school here\nwas introduced at the first meeting\nof the . :ason of the school's Parent-.\nTeacher Association.       \u25a0 \u25a0\nJ. A, Thomas, principal and hon\norary president of the \/group, introduced the teachers, and Mrs. Martini, chairman,.wecqmed new.'mein-\nb'ers...     .. ...        '  ..'   ',.'.' ','\u25a0\u2022'\nE. Rice, member of the Stanley\nHumphries  staff,  suggested  the\nP.-T.A. take as Iti major project\nfor the year the problem of youth\norganizations for the district After Mr. Rice's talk on the need\nfor youth guidance out of school,\nDave Campbell agreed to head a\ncommittee to Investigate the,iltua\ntion and report on Its finding's.\nReporting on her visit to. a meetr\nlng of the Kootenay Society for\nHandicapped Children,: Mrs. Marshall of Blueberry said .bow impressed she was with the seriousness\nof those present the great need in\nthe district and the progress being\nmade by the -Society. Her remarks\nwere complemented by those of Mrs.\nMartini who represented the P.-T.A,\nat a similar meeting. It was, the\nunanimous wish of those who heard\nthe report that the P.-T.A. -become\na member of the organization1. \u25a0\nCharades were played by. the 60\nparents, teachers and friends of the\nP.-T-.A., in a program directed by\nMrs. Lipsett ;-'\u25a0>\u25a0'\nHollywood Republjcans Switch\nBack to Boost Adldi Stevenson\nBy BOB THOMA8\nHOLLYWOOD, Oct 7 (AP)\u2014The\n1052 Preslde__tial campaign is drawing the most Democratic activity\nhere in eight years.\nThe number of celebrities working for Adlal Stevenson still doesn't\nmatch the large groups who fol\nlbwed the magic drawing power of\nFranklin Delano Roosevelt in pre\nvious campaigns, but the current\nrace is a far cry from 1948, when\nonly Lucille Ball, Ronald Reagan,\nRobert Ryan, Humphrey Bogart and\nLaureh, Bacall spoke for Truman.\nOf that group\/Ryan now is working lor Stevenson, but Miss Ball is\non the Elsenhower bandwagon. Reagan, retiring president of the Screen\nActors' Guild, came out for Ike be.\nfore. the, conventions, ..but ..now is\nleaning toward Adlai. The Bogarts;\nwho attended the Madison Square\nGarden rally for Ike last Spring, are\nback in the Democratic column.\nSERVICES FREE\nOne of the leaders of the Hollywood effort for Stevenson is Allen\nRivkin,, a screen writer.\n\"We are organizing _. mass-media\ncampaign that would cost any commercial advertiser $1,000,000,\" he\nsaid. \"But all of the ..services Involved are donated, and the other\ncosts.are absorbed by our Hollywood contributors.\"\nI Unlike the Republican group,\n.which is concentrating on star appearances at rallies, the Democrats\nare mainly concerned with radio\ntranscriptions and TV films. On his\ntrip here last; month, Stevenson\nspent an hour and a half before the\nmovie cameras. The Hollywood vol-\nHere's a\nwelcome\nmeal-time\ntreat\nIf you are looking for a way to\nadd something special to the\nmeals you serve at home, try\nCoca-Cola as the meal-time\nbeverage. Your family will find\nit a welcome treat And you'll\nfind it so easy to serve\u2014ice cold\nright in its own sparkling bottle.\nYour food store has Coca-Cola\n\u2014in the six-bottle carton;\nAuthorli-d batt-tr ol Coca-Cob und-r -onli-M with Coco-Coin Ltd.\nMcdonald jam co., ltd.\nNELSON, BC. PHONE 1055\n!\"Co_.-_,0 ~y_v\u00ab. (-__\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab(.    '\u2022\";.'.'\nT\nunteers are producing four 15-min-\nute films and transcriptions add 25\none-minute shots. '\n8KIT8 AND SONQS\n. The Hollywood group. lias . also\nprovided skits and songs.\nThe Hollywood for Stevenson.\nSparkman Club books some stars to\nrallies. But the emphasis is oh radio\nand TV. The group is providing\nBette Davis, George Jessel and others to introduce such Democrats as\nHarry Truman on a radio .series\nsponsored by the A.F.L.  -\nOther players who have publicly\nsupported Stevenson: Dana Andrews, Ethel Barrymore, Eddie Cantor, Ava Gardner, Tony Curtis, Mar-\nlene Dietrich, Jane Greer, Janet\n\"Leigh, Harpo Marx, Ann Miller,\nDinah Shore, Frank Sinatra,'; Dpn\nTaylor and Shelley Winters.\nMany Attend Shower\nFor Boswell Bride\nBOSWELL \u2014 A profusion of carnations and roses decorated the Memorial hall here at a bridal shower\nfor Mrs. Frederick Simpson, the\nformer Miss Barbara Bainbridge.\nGuests from Sanca, Boswell, Gray\nCreek and Crawford Bay were\ngreeted by the hostesses,; Mrs. H.\nBell Mrs; Norman Bainbridge* Mrs.\nEric Bainbridge and Mrs. Whitney.\nTea was poured by Mrs. A. Mackie\nand Mrs. S. J. Cummlngs at a table\ncentred by a' wedding cake made\nby the groom's mother, Gifts were\npresented in a model; of a three-\ntiered wedding cake, ahd included\na large salmon caught by Arnold\nCummlngs.\nNew Denver W. A\nHears Cleric's Wife\nNEW DENVER \u2014 line- Thomas\nMitchell ol Nakusp, wife of Rev.\nThomas Mitchell, spoke on work\nof the St Monica branch tor\nisolated membera, at the October\nmeeting of St Stephen's Anglican\nChurch Woman's Auxiliary; at its.\nmeeting at the home of Mrs. Q. A.\nForsythe.     . \u25a0     .'\u2022\nMiss Lena Melnardus was named\nas delegate to the West Kootenay\ndeanery meeting, and arrangements\nwere made for a Little- Helpers'\nparty.\nBoswell Notes\nMr. and Mrs. G. Stevenson are\nspending a few week* at Calgary\nwith their son and daughter-in-law.\nC. B. Richard Embree, who has\nbeen stationed at the PhilTppines,\ntaking a course in diving, has returned for a month's, leave, travelling via Hong Kong and Manilla.\nHe is staying with his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Embree; and at the\nclose of bis leave hopes to go to\nKorea. '..> '\nMr. and Mrs. A. Hepher are visiting their son ahd daughter-in-law\nat the coast \u25a0\nSee Our Windows for    .\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nj_\u201e-1\u00ab?lT!firtt.r.Jt-i_\nPHONE 627\nTHE BEST ADVERTISEMENT\nIN  THE  WORLD\n18 NOT WORTH 6o\nWITHOUT REAPER*\nTHE\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCIRCULATION\n18 YOUR GUARANTEE OF\nTENS OF THOUSANDS\nof\nREADERS\nMewlyweds Leave on\nTrip to H,&;Bat_|f\nNelson families, were linked with the marriage in St.\nSftyibtir'f-WoM?at_e^\u00bb-16i'Patrl(.is May Edwards and Harry\n_JofliW(_M.,v!;'\u25a0';':-',\u2022*\".'....'\u25a0\"' \"'  ~\nVery Rev. T.L. Ladb^ater, Dean\nof Kootenay, officiated for the\ndaughter of Mr..', and-Mrs) John S.\nEdwards-and the-son-ol Mr. and\nMra., William Sommers A hundred\nguests attended .the, evening service\nand;reoept_bn..;.'\u2022'.,'   .   .'.:\"'\u2022':.{'\u25a0''\nNET AND LACE .    \"\n.The bride was charming in a\ndainty, sleeveless dress of white net\nana ChantUly lace, with a matching\nbolero. Her elbow-lengthveilmisted\nfrijm a -headdress Of woven nylon\nnet, and she1 carried a- bouquet of\nred .roses. -, '.,'.'\u25a0.- .,'..'\u25a0\n, Her sister-in-law, Mrs Warren J\nEdWards, wore a blue bouffant'net\ndress as mattoh of honor. Her woven\nhat-' 'headdress -. matched ' iter'-;ensemble, and'pink carnations were in\nherboyquet .''}\u2022\nMr. Robert\u2014.ehnett'waS best man,\nand; ttfe guests-were ushered to their\npews hy lilr.'John Galiicano and Mr.\nBrpiio S__io\/,f\nWhile.th'ecouple signed the'regis-\nter,'\\. Mips', Joyce . 0'Hearns.'...sai_g\n*TraisBMv.S'oul.'V'- ,.' .-.\"iv.-j,.-.\nDean Leitdbeafer proposed a toast\nto the bride and gjoom.at a reception ,__,.\u25a0 Legion I-j-Bi'!. Mr.' '.Thomas\nPrime and his -daughter; Miss. Enid\nPr'ime^playediiianO'selectibnsat the\nreception and at a dance held later.\nThe bride changed to a navy-blue\ngabardine suit with matching-accessories for-a wedding; trip by -car to\nUnited. State's jioirits' arid to. Bahff. \u25a0\n' lir.'. add M_S,'Somh_ers $111 ts\/ki\nlip residence at their new home at\nIMS: Falls Street\nOut-of-town guests were Mr. and\nMrs;. George H; Greenwood df Van-\ncouver, uncle ahd aunt of the bride;\nMn. and Mrs. Art Sommers and\ndaughter Judy from Wetaskiwin,\nAlta., and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sommers, Mr; (ii.d Mrs. Cliff Wanless\nand Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Fletcher\nand daughters Marguerite and\nNoreen from Castlegar.:\nNew;?Di*nver P.-T.A.\nGives to Bursary\nJ^W.;DBNy|_R]\u2014. New Denver\nParent-Teacher Association decided at its meeting here recently'ih\nLucerne high (school to donate $45\nto the community bursary award\ntor three, years.'\/.\n. A Hallowe'en party and election\nof officers will be held at the next\nmeeting, it-was, announced.\nKaslo Group Readies\nWork for Fall Sale\nKASJ.0 \u2014 Articles of sewing were\nreceived and. materials' distributed\nfor making into articles,for Uie Fall\ntec, and bake-sale, at .the meeting of\nDowntown branch .of St. Andrew's\nUnited Church Women's Association\nat the home of Mrs, S H, Green,\npresident.\nMr\u00ab.'_>. W;McDerby-read a poem\nduripg the devotional period, and an\nauction sale and-quiz were held.\nWeivs xrf the Bay\nRATES: 80o line. 4tte line black face type; larger typo rates en\nrequest Minimum-two llriea, 10% discount for prompt payment\n.   Richard Lino Knives, 00c,\nBURNSI LUMBER COMPANY\n.-',-',-    BlM6 tONIOHT\n'C'ATHOtIC HA).L\n'.; ,   _^.; \"\u2022 .'\n' Fine supply of Mrs. Gray's and\nMo_r\"i .Chocolates at WAIT'S.'\nT? LIE SCO P E  SIGHtS ' AND\nl_K)UI.tS. -.JACK BOYCE.\n'Boy** Winter; conibioation under-\nweai- \u2014 Trtfe CHILDREN'S SHOP,\nBegiBttipgi Oct- 7 Vra Grocery\nwill tlosi .at .8:00-p.m.', ,7,\n...  ..,\u25a0.,-      ,.?-_-'\u25a0\u25a0,  -.-   .,\u2022,\n\u2022Wanted \u2014 Clean COlTON rags.\nNO buttops. Daily Newa Job Dept\n. Hunting and Fishing Licences.\n\"\u25a0'\u25a0 A -   Jaclc.Bqirc&      ,.\nSmart pipes and '.variety, tobaqco\npacks make a hit with any smoker.\nShdp.at'.VAI-.rmirai'S.'\n\u2022 Furnaceaaiid StOyes-. Cleaned\n-Pounder Chimney Service\n.''.'.\":    -.-,.<:_?fa)n'e'llHl--_..'';\"' ;\u25a0<'.\u25a0\n. A .shipment-of nylon scatter rugs\npriced from.$5.75 and up at the\nSTEfcLItfG' HOM? FURNISHERS\nCentral. School P.-TA meeting\ntoday at 2:30: p.m. Guest speaker:\nS^<W.HadJay.,'':'\"  ..''- ,,-;\"\n' Hospital 'Auxiliary \u2022 annual meeting fttday;, at 3, o'clock, 'Nurs'ej'\nHome. .--\u25a0'\u2022\n.Sixth; Nelson Mothers'. Auxiliary\nof Cubs and Scouts wilt meet at the\nMemorial\" Hall Thur\u00ab, Oct 9, 7:f\"\nTainily Polio Policy, $10.00 two\nyears.\" Phone C. W. APPLEYARD\nA CO. Lf D\u00bb 2\u00ab9.\n'C'EiM',E.'N-T\nJust- Arrived. Place your' ordir\nnow.-lor Immediate^delivery.PUbh*\n18; Nelson 'Machinery Co. :Ltd.,\nFriendly'Club.No. 2.coffee party\nand:bazaar,; 10 tb.ll:30 am, fhuri.,\nOct' 'Ath..: Trinity > United Church\n\u25a0basement       f.\nSocial Credit Rummage Sale at\nFarmers\" Market Sat\u201ev Oct 11th 4-\nBring dbnationsto Tot-n-Teen Shop,\n563 Ward, Street ;8:M to 5:00.\nA REMINDER: Boy Scout \u2022 bottle\ndrive-'continues this week. If you\nhave been mlssed'please contact any\nof. the Scout authorities.\nC.C.M. and Samson skating outfits, laminated hockey, sticks, shin\nguards, gloves, tendon guards, etc.\n\u2022       HH>P_5RSON'S.\nPresto .fire. extinguishers, only\n$5.95. The miracle fire-fighter'that\nputs out all iireS in' a Jiffy. Get\none, today at HIPPERSON'S.\nGirls' plastic raincoats; hood- and\nbelt, for ages up to 10. Novelty, score\ncoat printed design;, each $1.69. '\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nIf   BUTTERFIELD  cant fix  it\nthrow it away. Watch-work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.   ''   . j\nSuits to ..measure .for, ladies and\ngenaemen\u2014$89;50 tipi\"\n'   ROBX.'NOLTE  \u2022\n.,'.,    ,'.MasterTailor ... <.-..\nPatients In Kootenay Lake' Gen-\nOral Hospital; can have the; Dally\nNews, sent to them every rnornlng.\nPhone 144, Circulation Department\nDally News.\nSLAB DOORS\nA_l:8izes,,stylesand grades-ln-stock.\n'\u2022\u25a0:f \u25a0VAllffl'deorft-.nes.';\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u2022\u25a0;;\nT. H. W*TKR\u00bbV4 CO.. tTDi\n101 HAj-L.Wi PHONE 186\n\u25a0  V    \u2022, iCORRECTIpN\nI .will not .beresponsible for any\ndebts, incurred tor my. name from\nthis date.except by myself.    , \u25a0 \u25a0'\n''.', '..ia1- Henry.Neufeld,\n\u2022     --. y , Salmo, B.C.\nThere will be an Attendance Area\nmeeting held in the Balfour School\nat 10:00. p.m. Wednesday, October\n8th; Inspector E. Hyndman, Trustee\nOi?. Sargent and Chairman of the\nBoard G. Mermet will attend to\ndiscuss school affairs.\nLarge selection of used heaters\npriced to sell.\nWe buy and sell new and .used\nfurniture.\nSpecial price quotations given on\nall mining, logging and construction\ncamp bedding requirements.,       ,\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST. PHONE 1660\nThere will be an Attendance Area\nmeeting held in the Wtijbw Point\nSchool at 7:00 p.m. October 9th, and\nat 8:15 p.m. a further meeting will\nbe held for'the-Lbngbeachrarea-at\nthe home of Mr., Gordon Sargent.\nInspector Hyndman, Trustee. W.\nRamsay, Trustee P. H. Hosklns and\nTijistee Sargent will attend both\nmeetings to.discuss school affairs.\nFUNERAL NOTICE   <\nLEE \u2014 Funeral services' for' the\nlate Carl Lee will be held from the\nThompson Funeral Home Thursday\nat ll.a.m. Rev. G. W.! Payne of St.\nPaul's United Church will officiate\nand:interment will' be in Nelson\nMemorial Park., .\n(Dmal lip. (tfiik\nTTlaAlan. TfcvtiuL\nl\u00abV<r-M\u00bbA.\nHALF-SIZE  STYLE\nIt's cut in. half-sizes to fit per.\nfectlyl This design is beautifully\nslendering with that long panel\nto make you look taller, slimmer.\nMake it as shown, all in one fabric,\nor with contrast at panel and pock.\net. You'll like this charming dress\neither way!\nPattern 9099: Half-sizes 14%, 16%,\n18%, 20%. 22%, 24%. Size 16% takes\nS% yards 39-inch.\n- This essy to use pattern gives per.\nfeet fit Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coin's (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson.\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. T.\nH. Horner have returned trom\nLethbridge where they were guests\nof thejr son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Doe.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Chaloner of Lethbridge have taken up residence in\nKaslo.\n.-.. Armand Pender of Medicine Hat\ntr a-guest otitis brother-in-law ribd\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. H. A., (Larry)\nPotter.\nMr. .and Mrs. P. H. Bovair have\nreturned from a holiday of one\nweek In Spokane..\nMr. and Mrs. D. W. McDerby and\nMr. \u2022'<_. A. Carlson of Mirror Lake\nhave left by motor for Calgary to\nvisit relatives.\nThe VaUey of the Nile varies in\nwidth from less than half a mile\nin the South to over 10 miles in\nthe North;..\nRoyal Baby a Music Lover at Two\nLONDON   (CP) \u2014 A   little-\nphotographed royal baby is David,\nMeotihrhrtPt\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0   ;    \u25a0. . v-o\n3xwteL WhsudsA.\nCOLOR FOR KITCHENS\nColorful, vegetables, on black, lattice-work make, a cheerful- looking\nsextette of kitchen towels. Quick\nembroidery! Lovely gifts.\n. A child could begin on these embroidery motifs; Pattern 806 Includes transfer.of six motifs 5y<x6%\ninches.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coins (stamps cannot, be accepted)'for this pattern-to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson.\nPrint plaintly PATTERN* NUMBER,\nyour NAME and .ADDRESS. '\" '\nSuch a colorful roundup of handiwork ideas! Send twenty-five cents\nhow for our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalog. Choose ybur patterns\nfrom our gaily illustrated toys, dolls,\nhousehold and personal accessories,\nA pattern for a handbag is printed\nright in the book.\nViscount Lascelles, who will be two\nyears old Oct. 21.\nTwelfth in line of succession to\nthe throne, the young Viscount already shows something ot his parents' love of music. He sits enthralled listening to records and\n\"Children's Hour,\" -a BBC radio\nprogram for the younger set\nDavid's parents ate the {!arl and\nCountess of. Harewood, whose mutual love i of music led to the\nwedding-of-the-year in 1949.\nThe dark-haired Lady Harewood,\nformerly Maria Stein, believes that\na mother should bring up her own\nchildren. So, although there is a\n\"nanny\" for general routine, David\nSpends much time with his mother,\nmostly outdoors at the Harewood\nestate near Leeds.\nIf she has no engagements, Lady\nHarewood takes charge of her son\nalter his afternoon walk \u2014 and\nthere's always a. music session before bedtime. David likes it best\nwhen Ids mother plays the piano.\nOnce a.week at least, he goes to\nsee his maternal grandparents at\ntheir home in Kensington. He is\nalso a - great favorite with his\nfather's mother, Princess Mary. An\neven greater occasion is a visit to\nMarlborough House to see \"great\ngrandmamma,\" Queen Mary. She\nis a favorite with all the royal\nchildren.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8,1952 \u2014S\nSunshine Bay\nSUNSHINE ;__AYi B.C.-__&s.W.\nH. Stafford of Vancouver, spent a\ntwo-week vacation with her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs,\nR. C. Stevenson. ,.-\u25a0'\"\nMr.; and Mra Paul Martin,; who\nwere married recently, were honored guests at a shower in the Community Hall at. Procter. Military\nwhisf was. played during the early\npart of the evening, with Colin Major, in charge. The players at the\nwinning table, Ainswbrth, were Mr.\nand Mrs. Frank Bonacci and Mr.\nand Mrs. Paul Soleckl An artistically-decorated wagon and -'box\npiled high with gifts was drawn in\nby Elaine Dosenberger. Mary Stevenson, Barbara Stevenson and Ce-\nclle.Mucha helped the couple Open\ntheir gifts-\nBob Stevenson led in the singing of \"For They're a Jolly'Good-\nCouple.\" A dance followed immediately, at which Mr. Stevenson\nwas master of ceremonies. Conveners for the shower were Mra R.:\n0 Stevenson and her sister, Mrs.'\nW. H-. Stafford, assisted by Mrs;\nJernberg, Mrs. Feller and Bud\nQulnn. \"\n. Mrs.. H. A. Pearson made corsages which were presented to the\nbride; her bridesmaid, Elaine Dosenberger and her mother, Mrs. N.\nDosenberger. .\nNOTTINGHAM, England (CP) -\nA district fuel economy group discovered how to save fuel in offices.\nIt recommended making the typists\nand other workers wear more Winter woollies.\n111111111111111111111111111111miMi111111.ini\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN f\nFreeman Furniture CO.\n\u25a0 PHONE 118\u2014\u2022; NELSON  ':''\nTho House ol Furniture Values*\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIi\nThe independence of Greece after\nfour centuries of Turkish.rule dates\nfrom 1821..   .-'-. .    '    .    .,'. \u25a0-.-..\nLow-priced\ndish with\npriceless\nID FLAVOUR\nBEST\n\u2022~*MMMMIM\u00abIW\u00abHMW1\nin Coffee\nPacific Milk give*\ncoffee a rich,\ncreamy flavor.\nBuy B.C. Produces\nw&^s^mX^m m\nThousands using Combustioneer Stokers report; \"We are\namazed by the low cost of automatic heat... It is less expensive than hand-firing.\"\nCombustioneer is unlike any\nother stoker you ever saw ..,\nIts Automatic Respirator de.\nieeti... then measures out the\nprecise amount of air required\nfor complete combustion dt all\nlimes. Then Combustioneer's\n\"Impulse\" feed \"pokes-tip\" tha\nfire constantly assuring that\nair surrounds each.particle of\ncoal. Thus the fire-bed actually\n\"BREATHES\"... Combustion\nis always complete.., EXTRA\nheat snergy ts extracted front\nevery pound of coal.\nFor the most economical, eom-f\nforting automatic heat avail*\nable be sure to see Combustioneer. You'Uhe glad you did!\nModel! Vi  $345.50 and $360\n(for 16\", 18\"or20\"Fuma\u00abe)\nModel VA $391.25\n(For 22\", 24\" and 26\" Fumase)\n.V\n-.\n Established April 22, 1002\nf British Columbia'!\nMost Interestinq Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING- COMPANV, LIMITED,\n260 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorised as Second Class Mail,\nPoet Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nWodnosday. October 8, 1952\nThere Should Be\nContests\u2014Mr. Bennett\nExpects Too Much\nBritish Columbia's new Premier\nW. A, Bennett gave evidence, of a political naivete which we can hardly\ncredit as his, when at Edgewater he\nblandly proposed that opposing parties\nand the possible wishes they might\nrepresent be set aside so that his candidates might be unopposed in by-elections.\nWe are as ready as any to give Mr.\nBennett and his Social Credit Government a chance to show what they can\ndo for the good fortunes of British\nColumbia. This does not, however, include the advocacy of setting aside the\nprivileges of any section of the electorate. If any significant number of\nB. C. voters have changed their minds\nsince last June's long-count election,\nthere ought to be the opportunity for\nthem to let that fact be-known.\nRev. Harry Francis and R. 0. Newton have resigned their seats in Simil-\nkameen and Columbia ridings, respectively, to make way for Finance Minister Einar Gunderson and Attorney\nGeneral Robert Bonner. It is imperative to proper government that Ministers of the Cabinet should have constituency seats. It is equally imperative in the upholding of the democratic processes that the electors who\nmay have had second thoughts since\nJune should, if they so indicate through\nnominating conventions, have a choice\nof the various shades of candidates\nthey may wish to represent them.\nIt is incredible that anyone should\nhave expected the C.C.F., with such a\nslim margin separating it from numerical superiority over the Social Credit\nforces in t_tte House, to pass up the op?\nportunities of by-elections. For that\nmatter, the other parties, Liberal and\nProgressive Conservatives, looking for\nadded strength to their bargaining\npowers, could hardly be expected to\npass up the by-elections. Nor do we\nthink would they be fulfilling their full\nduties to the electorate if they did. If\nthey exist they should exist for a pur-\nppse, and that purpose should be to\nseek to represent the people.\nSocial Credit, what with the short\nintervening period since the election\nand preoccupation with whether it\nshould seek a complete new election\nor seek to win through a constitutional\ncrisis, has not built up such a record\nthat it should yet expect the electorate, or any portion of lt, to accept it\non the basis of that record. The by-\nelections ..of fer the Government a\nchance to test reaction to policies outlined to date. In the long run there will\nbe greater satisfaction for the voters\nfrom their Government if contests are\nheld\u2014and giving satisfaction to the\ncitizens, not political security for one\ngroup or another, is of first concern.\nSave Yourself\nNational Fire Protection Association advises us \"we can stop burning\nourselves up if we will\" by following\na seven-point program to the letter.\nMind you* only about _0 per fcent of\nfires could be prevented if everyone\nfollowed thl$ program (lightning, for\ninstance, has no conscience), but even\nif only 1 per cent of potential fires\ncould be avoided It would be worth\nthe bother. Here are the seven points:\n1. Be careful with matches and\nsmoking, Don't smoke in bed.\n2. Be careful with Inflammable liquids. Don't use explosive cleaning\nfluids.\n3. Throw out papers, rags, old furniture from attics, closets and basements,\n4. Inspect and clean chimneys once\na year.\n9. Keep heating plants clean and in\ngood repair.\n8. Recover combustible wood shingles with fire-resistant roofing, such as\nasphalt shingles.\n7. Don't overload electrical circuits. Replace frayed cords. Don't substitute a penny for a fuse.\n?Questiorts?\nTime for Modem\nOutlook Toward Nelson\nTent-Trailer Park\nWe cannot overlook any condition\nthat might be unsanitary or endanger\nthe health of the city. Nevertheless we\nmust recognize the acceptability of\ntrailer-living, and if Nelson Tourist\nPark is not suitable we should do something about it other than just give the\ntrailer citizens the gate and force them\nto move to some area outside the city.\nIt is quite possible such an area would\nbe less suited to trailer parking and\nless sanitary. We should be concerned\nsomewhat about the welfare of the\npeople in the trailers.\n(Editor's note: This first paragraph ot\nTuesday morning's editorial is reprinted here\nto avoid any confusion that might have resulted because of a typographical error.)\n\u25a0\u25a0LETTERS'TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may be published over a nom\nde plume, but the actual signature of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as\nevldenot of good faith. Anonymous letters\ngo In tha waste paper basket\nCommittees Set Up\nTo Aid Constituents;\nBlack Explains\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Due to the fact that I have had the\nhonor to be chosen in Mr. Bennett's Cabinet,\nI have found lt necessary to establish, both in\nNelson and Creston, what I have chosen to\ncall Legislative Assistance Committees. The\npurpose of these Committees Is to serve all\nwithin the district, whether group or individual, regardless of their political thinking or\naffiliation. I believe that I was elected to represent and serve all the people, and not merely\nthe political group I happen to represent\nTherefore, due to my dual portfolios In Executive Council, I am unable to meet with individuals or groups to discuss their problems\nand complaints. Consequently, I consider lt\nwise to set up Committees who can hear such\nproblems and complaints in my stead, and, in\naddition, these Committees can pass these\nproblems and complaints to local, Federal or\nProvincial authorities through me.\nI have felt that such Committees, if functioning properly, can gather all pertinent data\nand economize on time at higher levels, and\nfurther aid in the despatch with which a par-\nticular matter Is dealt.\nI sincerely hope  that  my constituents,\nboth Individuals and groups, will use these\nCommittees for the purpose for which they\nwere formed. However, anyone has the right\nand privilege to correspond with me directly.\nW. D. BLACK.\nProvincial Secretary.\nMinister of Municipal Affairs.\nIt's Been Said\nSo our lives in acts exemplary, not only\nwin ourselves good names, but doth to others\ngive matter for virtuous deeds, by which we\nlive.\u2014George Chapman.\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking queitlons will net b\u00bb published,\nThere It ne charge for this tervlo*.\nQueitlons WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there I. obvious\nnecessity for prlvaoy,\nE. J, P\u201e Rossland\u2014Will you please supply me\nwith the address of Her Majesty the\n, Queen?   ..-'.\nAddress envelope to Her Majesty the\nQueen, Buckingham Palace, London, SW. 1,\nEngland, All communications addressed to\nRoyalty are sorted by various secretaries and\nofficials who handle the vast amount of cor,:\nreapondonce received, The letter should begin\nwith the word \"Madam\" and close with the\nwords, \"I have the honor to be, Mtdam, Your\nMajesty's humble and obedient servant ...\"\nfollowed by the name ot the writer.\nQ. W\u201e Cranbrook\u2014Is there a firm in Nelson\nthat does fine mending, \"invisible mending\", et it it called? I have a new pair ot\ntrousers which were accidentally burnt,\n.and I would like them repaired,\nWrite to Tickner Tailors, Josephine Street,\nNelson,\nMrs. J. B\u201e Nelson\u2014Where ean I get Information on emigration lawt pertaining to the\nStates? I with to go South for tix months.\nWhat date did Easter Sundty fall on In\n185J? .\nWrite to the American Consul, Robert L,\nSmyth, S9S Burrard Street, Vancouver. Easter\nSunday fell on April 13 thlt year.\nInterested, Kimberley\u2014What it the addrest of\nthe Dominion Drama Festival headquarters?   '\u25a0'\u2022\u2022.\nDominion Drama Festival, -Room'8,  78\nBank Street, Ottawa 4.\nfor\nfly SAMUEL LUBELL\n\"WANTED: An issue to make\npeople mad and men of eottrage\nto lead the tight locally.\"\nThat might be tho wording of a\nwant\" ad prepared by Elsenhower\nleaders if they Were frank enough\nto advertise openly what they need\nto carry any of the Southern states,\nOne of the stronger impressions\n-jft.on me from my talks with\nSouthern voters was how many .ot\nthem\u2014mainly among the formers-\nhave not even given any thought\nto the possibility of voting tor Gen,\nDwight D. Eisenhower,\nIn Texas, for example, enthusiasm\n- Elsenhower wet red hot in cit-\n like Houston. But when 1 moved\nnorthwestward into the rural areas\n'where the Democratic strength it\ntraditionally greatett\u2014areas, whloh\nElsenhower must dent to carry the\nstate\u2014I found surprising numbers\nof people who Were almost indifferent to the campaign.\n\"I've lived to be 77 without vot-\n..jg anything but Democratic,\"\nshrugged one retired farmer from\nAmarillo. \"Why should I change\nnow?\"\nIn Wise. County, Northwest of\nFort Worth, people looked at me in\nsurprise that the question was even\nraised when I asked whether they\nmight vote Republican this fall.\nSeveral persona replied, In effect,\n\"We never vote anything but\nDemocratic around here. Everyone\nknows that,\"\nThe hand of tradition, of course,\nrests heavier on rural than urban\nOthers Mi&ht Follow\n(Ottawa Cltlien)\nTha Canadian Arthritis and Rheumatism\nSociety Is one of those welfare agencies that\nacknowledges a responsibility to demonstrate\nto the public not only the worthiness of its\ncause, but the efficiency of its operations. Having only incomplete returns from Its 1882 campaign for funds, the Society nevertheless has\noutlined roughly the form Its program will\ntake during the coming year. Moreover, lt\npromises to report in detail on its program and\n, expenditures when all local campaigns are\ncompleted, and Government and other grants\nare negotiated.\nSuch a report will reassure the public that\nits donations to the society ere being used\nneither wsstefully nor unwisely. The public\nneeds thlt assurance. Its good will will be\nstrained by the multiplicity of charitable campaigns.\nContributor! to the Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society probably have no fear\nthat Its work is being duplicated or that its\nadministration la inefficient But without the\ndetailed report that the Society proposes to\nmake they would have no way of knowing.\nIt is to be hoped that other charitable organizations will follow this lead.\nGems of Thought\nPARENTS\nHe is too experienced a parent ever to\nmake positive promises.\u2014Christopher Morley.\n* *     *\nChildren wish fathers looked but with\ntheir eyes; fathers that children with their\njudgment looked: end either may be wrong.\n\u2014Shakespeare.\n* e     *\n\"Love and honor thy parents, and yield\nobedience to them In all that is right; but you\nhave the rights of conscience, at we all have,\nand must follow God in all your ways.\"\u2014Mary\nBaker Eddy.\n\u00ab      *      *\nParents wonder why the streams are bitter, when they themselves have poisoned the\nfountain.\u2014John Locke.\n* *     *\nA suspicious parent makes an artful child.\n,    \u2014Thomas Haliburton.\n* *      *\nThe voice ot parents Is the voice of gods,\nfor to their children they are heaven'l lieutenants.\u2014Shakespeare.\nYour Horoscope\nThis time hes good aspects for friendship\nand romance. Stick to Important work. Do not\nbe afraid to make advantageous changes. A\nchild born under 'these auspices 'Should be\nvery popular and meet with success.\nToday's Bible Thought\nCorrupt judiciary It a great exception now. Once it was commonplace. Juries are not so trustworthy\nas modern Judges are.\nThe Judge aiketh for a reward.\n-Mleah 7:8.\nOunt ML\nHe acted dignified and never\ntalked, ahd we all thought ho\nwas wise. Then election excitement started him talkin', and it\nturned out he waa simple.\n.     1_  -\nLargest state of Central America,\nNicaragua was discovered by Columbus in 1801.\nAmerican Voters Speak\n\/m\nareas, lh addition, the farmers of\nTexas\u2014and other Southern states-\nare satisfied by and large with the\nDemocratic farm program The\ndrought. that scorched much of\nTexas this summer, in fact, has\nmade many farmers mora desirous\nof government aid.\nWhat political wavering was going, on among the Wise County\nfarmers seemed to center mainly\naround the Korean War. One elderly dairy farmer, whose only son\nhas been drafted, echoed a common lament, \"I don't think the war\nwas necessary, 1 may vote Republican this year, but I don't went another depression.\"    .\nAnother 86-year-old farmer recalled how he had Worked for 80\ncents a day during the 1930s. \"It\nwas a big fight with a .hort stick,\"\nhe remarked. \"1 don|t like the war,\nbut I don't want to go through those\nold days again,\"\nISSUES SOUGHT\nIn every Southern state the common problem of the Eisenhower\ncamp is to find some dramatic issue\nfor countering these \"back to Hoover days\" fears and for breaking tbe\ngrip of apathy and tradition among\nthe Southern farmers. The more\nrural the state the slimmer are Elsenhower's chances.\nIn Texas I found Elsenhower sup--\nporters banking heavily on the tide-\nlands oil question, as the issue that\nmay swing that state. The stand\ntaken by Gov. Stevenson on the\ntidelands has made it possible for\nsome Democratic lea'ders In Texas-\nend Louisiana \u2014 to throw, the\nweight of the regular Democratic.\norganizations behind  Elsenhower.\nOutside of Tiixus .tho query has\nsometimes been put to me whether\n''the plain people\" of Texas are\nreally aroused over the tidelands\nquestion? My own Interviews with\nTexan voters indicate a great many\nare. In Wise County alone, for example, the local editor, an electrician, a schoolteacher and the wife\not a storekeeper all give the tide-\nlands as their reason for shifting to\nEisenhower,\nSignificantly, though, all these\npersons live In town. Among the\nfarmers, the tidelands issue appears\nto stir less anger against the administration than the Korean War,\nOUTRAGED PRIDE\nOil is the No. 1 product, of Texas,\nemploying an estimated 240,000 persons directly or indirectly. Whatever, revenues may be drawn trom\nthe tidelands have been earmarked\ntor the state's educational institutions,' which appeals to teachers\nparticularly. But what seems to irritate Texans most about the issue\nis a sense of outraged state pride.\nAs one cabinetmaker in East Texas\nargued, \"The tidelands belong to\nTexas as part of the treaty ot annexation to the United States. If lt\nwasn't In the treaty maybe we\nwould have no right to it. But since\nit's In the treaty that's the .way it\nshould stay.\"   '\nThis Is a feeling that Texas apparently carry with them even\nwhen they leave their home state,\nIn southern Illinois, I ran, into one\nconstruction worker from Texas\nand, again in Los Angeles, Into a\nretired Texas businessman, both of\nwhom said they were shifting Re\npublican because it the tidelands.\nStrong as Is this feeling of \"I'm\na Texan 'ind I wont Texas to get a\nfair break,\" there Is also the offsetting sentiment expressed by a\ncarpenter's wife, \"Tidelands are lata.-;\nlmoprtant than daily living \"\n,  At   this , writing, .Elsenhower*!\nchances of carrying Texas must 1\nrated as no better than even, will\nthe outcome likely to be determlii\ned by which feeling is uppermos\nIn the minds of Texans on electlo;\nday\u2014their   anger  over   the  tide\nlands and the Korean War, or the!\ndread of a possible return of nan\ntimes. . ,\nTETTENHALL, England '(CP)\nThe Judge In this Staffordshire tow\ndismissed  an  Ice cream  salesmn\ncharged with blowing the horn o\nhis truck \"excessively.\" The judgf\ncommented \"it's'a pity we can't go I\nIback t. the good old days when tho j\nmuffin man went down tho road j\nringing his bell,'1 -    .%\nHAVE YOUR\nDONATION\nREADY TODAY\nCOA\nl\nPhono 8M\n_TOV__..\nFuoi &. Transfer\nNelioni B.C.I\n\u2022       .  .\nrffe_ff\/_fe$\n__^___i___>\n'.\/,-.',.  . '-}.-.   , . ,    .... \u25a0:'.,.  ,- ,\n\u25a0________\n 2' \\\nfip!^^^\n'\u25a0m\nCbwiuuLlhsL\nKOOTENAY A SpoAL\nLEN   WALkER\nI With the completion of one of\nthe best Masons on the tennis\ncourts and with the ever-increasing\ninterest shown by the Juniors in\nthlt tame, the time Is fast ap-\nKreaching   when   Castlegar   will\nave to extend their facilities.     ,\nj   With more and more enthusiasts\n: expressing their wish to play tennis it il a mutt that we have at\nleast two courts, The one that wat\nin use this season Was not enough\nto fulfil the demands upon It    .\n,-.'  The court Melt WU not the best\nby a long ways, yet a lot Of work\nwas done by the members to put ii\nTirnberrtion Beat\nPilseners 8-7\nI  TORONTO, Oct, 7 (CP) - Their\nleed dwindling in tht closing mln-\n. utet, Peterborough Tlmbermen. held\non grimly to squeeze out en 8-7 victory oyer Vancouver PUsenen tonight in the second game ot the\nM4np CUp and Canadian senior lacrosse final..\nThe win gave Peterborough a two-\nI geme lead  in the best-of-seven\nterles. The third geme will be play-\n\u25a0 ed here Friday.\n'l.l'n'.li.H.-T. '\"._i  il1'  Vi   In tv \u2014\n1\nAdult Skating\nTONIGHT\n8:15\nLOGY. LISTLESS,\nOUT OF LOVE\nWITH LIFE?\nft* wake \u00abpjou. liter bQa\nJuat WUl bed ruin' ton\nUmU op you^(ftow\u00abl\u00bb . . . you feil'eoc..\n\" fun \u25a0__ iptrkU. go oot\n1 Off MW mUd, \u00aboU\u00ab\n-_   t Puli. You we Certain\nlata your Uv\u00abci.-le till onca train\ngfe_^fei&VP\nhSMp\nin Shftpe tit the season, and a good\ndeal ot credit must be given those\nfellows for the work done as well\nas the patience they had in teaching juniors. They were iegarded\ngenerbusly by the showings of\nsome of these players in tho recent\ntournament in Trail when- Vic\nKrovdki, a local junior, \u2022eached\nthe final! and Jean Wyllle took top\nhonors In the senior women's singles. As far ts tennis goea Castle-\ngar is right in there. Therefore I\neliovo that tome consideration\nshould be given this club In the\nway of providing of two or three\ncourts.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nThe end of Summer iport has\nfinally arrived, but not before the\nlooal high school teams had their\nturn op the fastball diamond.\ntest weekend saw the first school\ntournament with entries from\nRossland and Trail. The Trail girls\nwon their division when they ran\nrough shod over the Castlegar girls\nand (hen went on to win a close\ndecision over Rossland when Kay\nRamsden, \"who won both games\nwith some fine pitching,\" scored\nthe winning run tn the final frame.\nWIN POR CASTLEQAr.\nIn the'boys' section It was another chuclter who starred when\nCastlegar, led by Rockey Plotnlkoff\ntrounced Rossland and then defeated Trail 5-1. Both victories\nwere largely due to Rockey's playing tor in the first game he held\nTrail to five hits, struck out 10 and\nbit a three-run homer.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\n'With the W.LH.L, almost ready\nto get under way, coaches, from\nthe tour cities are busy trying to\nline up the best possible teems they\npen and from here lt look! to me\nthat your guess is as good as any-\nones as to which team will come\nup with the best talent. One thing\nseems to be sure end,that Is there's\nan abundance of Junior players\ntrying out for senior teams. The\ntans will have a chance to see haw\nthings are lining up this week\nWhen those old rivals Nelson and\nTrail clash In a couple of exhibition games.\nThe origin of the ancient stone\nfigures on Easter Island in the\nSouth Pacific has never been\nestablished .\nNew York Yankees Bag Fourth Straight Series\nThe flay by Play\nWe Are Now Gathering\nThe PHOTO EDITOR is now gathering\nSNAPSHOTS suitable to use in the   -\nNelson Daily News\n1953 PICTORIAL EDITION\nReaders are invited to send pictures they\nthink suitable for publication\nto the Photo Editor.\nPictures of Industries, Public\nEvents, Sports, Scenery,\nVacation and-Hobby Subjects\nare all welcome.'\nPLEASE SEND NEGATIVES AND A\nPRINT WITH A CLEAR DESCRIPTION\nOF THE SUBJECT MATTER TO . . .\nTHI\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nAll Negative^ and Print! Will Be Ro.urnod\nFIRST INNING\nYANKEEEM-IcDougald slapped\nBlack's, first pitch on the ground\nto Reese who threw him out. \\ \u25a0 '\nRizzuto took a called strike, then\nbunted sharply' inside the first\nbaseline and was tagged out by\nHodges.\nMantle fouled off two pitches,\ntook a hall, and then went down\nswinging at a fast ball.\nAllie Reynolds, Yankee ace righthander, walked out to the bullpen,\nto be ready in case of emergency.\nNo runs, no hits, no errors, none\nleft.\nDODGERS \u2014 Cox struck out,\nswinging at a slow curve.\nReese bounced to McDougald\nwho threw over Mlze's head, Reese\nreaching first on the error The ball\nhit first-base Coach Jake Pitlor on\nthe fly thus preventing Reese from\ntaking an extra base,\nSnider struck out on a curve as\nhe tried,' too late, to check his\nswing,\nWoodling made a fine running-\ncatch of Robinson's liner in deep\nleft-centre.\nNo tuns, no hits, one error, one\nleft.\nSECOND INNING\nYANKEES\u2014Mize  walked   On\nfull count.\nSnider galloped In for Berra's\nhigh pop fly. behind second base.\nWoodling .skied to Shuba in shal\nlow left-centre,\nNoren raised a high tly to Furillo\nIn right,\nNo runs, no hits, no errors, one\nreft.\nDODGERS \u2014 Campanella sent a\ndribbler back to the mound and\nwas an easy out, Lopat to Mize.\nHodges chased Mantle back to\nthe centre-field wall for his long\nsmash,\nShuba rapped a single through\nLppat's legs Into centrefleld for the\nfirst hit of the game..\nMcDougald gloved Furlllo'\nbounder inside the third-base line\nand threw to Mize for the'oiit.\no runs, one hit, no errors, one\nleft.\nTHIRD INNING\nYANKEES\u2014Martin flied to Snider in short centre.\nLopat bounced out to Hodges who\nmade the putout unassisted. -\nMcDougald sent a one-bouncer to\nCox who threw him out.\nNo runs, no hits, no errors, none\nleft.\nDODGERS \u2014 Black went down-\nswinging on three pitches.\nCox bounced out, McDougald to\nMize.\nNoren went beck in front of the\nscoreboard to haul in Reese's driver\nto right.\nNo runs, no hits, no errors, none\nleft.\nFOURTH INNING\nYANKEES \u2014' Rizzuto rammed a\ndouble inside the third-base line,\nthe ball rolling out into the left-\nfield corner for the first Yankee\nhit.\nMantle went out on a one-bouncer to Hodges who made'the unassisted putout as Rizzuto advanced\nto third,\nMize 'singled over Cox's outstretched glove Into left field scoring Rizsuto with the first run of\nthe game,\nRobinson made a fine stop to his\nleft of Berra's smash and started\na double play, the second baseman\nto Reese to Hodges,\nOne run, two hits, no errors, one\nleft,\nDODGERS \u2014 Snider smashed a\nground single past, Mize into right\nfield.\nRobinson laid down a beautiful\nbunt between the mound and third\nbase, reaching flrat safely without\neven' drawing a throw as Lopat was\nlate fielding the bell, Snider reached second on the infield single.\nManager Stengel came.out to confer with Lopat, and Reynolds started to warm up in the Yankee bullpen.\nCampanella executed another\nsurprise bunt, beating out a little\nroller to Lopat inside the third-\nbase line to fill the bases.     *\nStengel again came out, and signalled the end of Lopat, calling in\nReynolds to pitch.\nThe first batter to face Reynolds\nWas Gil Hodges, who has failed to\nmake a single hit In IB official\ntimes at bat in this series, It was\nReynolds' fourth appearance of the\nseries.\nHodges lined to Woodling in medium left, Snider doming ahead of\nWoodllng's relay to the plate to tie\nthe score at 1-1,\nReynolds, who cut off the throw\nat the plate, allowed the ball to roll\naway from him and Robinson raced\nto third on the error.\nShuba went down swinging at a\nslow change-up.-\nRobinson made severe! gestures\nto steal home causing Reynolds to\nstep off the mOund repeatedly giving the excited crowd a big kick.\nFurillo's sharp grounder bounced\nright oft McDougald's chest but the\nthird baseman recovered, in time to\nthrow him out at first, ' ,\nOne run, three hits, one error,\ntwo left.\nFIFTH INNING\nYANKEES-Woodling walloped\nBleck's first serve over the right-\nfield screen for a home run,' putting\nthe Yankees In front again 2-1. It\nwas the lBth home run of the series\nand ninth for the Yankees.\nNoren popped to COx on the.\nedge  of  the  infield  grass,\nMartin rapped a ground single\nthrough the centre of the diemond.\nSouthpaw Preacher Roe and\nright-hander Carl Erskine. started\nwai-ming up In the Dodger bullpen.\nReynolds wes out on a slow roller\nto Robinson as Martin advanced to\nsecond.\nRobinson went behind second\nbase for McDougald'! hard ground\nball and threw' to Hodges for the\nout.\nkees tied a team World Series record set by the same club in 1928.\nOne run, two hits, no errors, one\nDODGERS\u2014Black looked at a\nslow curve for a third strike,\nCox. smashed a double that hit\nthe right centre-field well on one\nhop.        -,,- .,\nReese singled sharply to left scoring Cox with the tying run. Reese\nraced to second when Woodllng's\nthrow to the plate was very wide\nfor en error, .-\nSnider swung at the first pitch\nand bounced to Martin Who threw\nto Reynolds, covering first, for the\nputout as Reese went to third.   ,\nVic Raschl, who started yesterday's game, started warming up in\nthe Yankee bullpen.\nMcDougald speared Robinson's\nrising liner with a gloved-hend stab,\nOne run, two hits, one error, one\nlett,\nSIXTH INNING\nYANKEES\u2014Reese lunged to hli\nleft, throwing his gloved hand\nacross his body for a back-handed\nstab of Rlzzuto's low liner\nMantle crashed a home run high\nover the scoreboard and Screen lh\nright field to put the Yankees ahead\nfor the third time, 8-2. it was the\n18th of the series for both teams\nand the 10th for the Yankees to\nset a new team record.\nMize singled sharply Into right.\nManager Charley Dressen came\nout to the mound, and signalled the\nend for Black, and Preacher Roe\nwas summoned in from the bullpen,\nBerra struck out swinging at a\nscrewball.\nWoodling smacked a ground\nsingle through- the middle of the\ndiamond, Mize stopping at second.\nHank Bauer, a right-handed hitter, batted for Noren.\nBauer reached first safely when\nhis bounding ball bounced oft Cox's\nglove for an error and only alert\nbacking un by Reese prevented\nMize from going farther than third\nand leaving the bases filled.\nMartin filed to Snider in centre,\nthe centre-fielder almost losing the\nball as' the wind held back the fly,\nOne run, three hits, one error,\nthree lett.\nDODGERS\u2014Hank Bauer went in\nto right field for the Yankees.\nCampanella belted a long single\nInto centre.\nRizzuto made a fine stop of\nHodges' sharp grounder to his\nright to start a double play, the\nshortstop to.Martin to Mize..\nMartin whipped, out Shuba.\nNo runs, one hit, no errors, none\nleft.\nSEVENTH INNING\nYANKEES-Ralph Honk, a right-\nhanded second-string catcher, batted for Reyonlds who showed\nsigns of fatigue.\nCox knocked down Houk's torrid\nsmash inside the third-baseline and\nthrew him out.\nJohnny Sain Joined Raschl In the\nYankee bullpen.\nMcDougald looped a single over\nRobinson's, head Into right-centre.\nCox came in fast for Rlzzuto's\nbunt down the third-base line and\nthrew him out on a close play, McDougald moving to second on the\nsacrifice.\nThe switch-hitting Mentle, batting right-handed tor the first time\nin the game, shot a scorching single\nover -Reese's head Into left field\nscoring McDougald.\nFurlllo caught Mlze's long foul\nIn the Dodger bullpen.\nOne run, two hits, no errors, one\nleft.\nDODGERS - BlUy Loes joined\nErskine in the Dodger bullpen.\nRaschi went In to pitch for the\nYankees.\nJoe Collins replaced Mize at first\nfor New York,\nThe official paid attendance was\nannounced es 33,105.\nFurillo walked on five pitches. It\nwas the first Walk given up by\nYankee pitchers.\nRocky Nelson, a left-handed hitter, hatted for Roe and popped to\nRizzuto.\nCox lined a single to right field\nand'Furlllo was held at second\nwhen Bauer threw the ball back\nto the infield quickly.\nThe count went to three and one\non. Reese, causing Stengel to emerge\nfrom the dugout for e brief conference with his battery. Reese took a\nsecond strike, then walked on a\nlow pitch to fill the bases,\n- That was all for Raschl, and Bob\nKutava, a left-hander, replaced\nhim oh the mound.\nKuzava, it will be recalled, also\ncame In to pitch in the ninth Inning\nof the final game in th 1951 World\nSeries to retire the last three Giant\nbatters.\nSnider\/ran up a full- count, and\nthen relied a high pop fly to McDougald on the grass'for an auto-\nmatio out.\nRobimon  foul  tipped  the  first\npitch, took a slow curve bell Inside, |\nlooked et a high fast ball, fouled I\none over 'the left-field roof fouled \u25a0\nenother Into the box seats behind\nthird,   then   raised   a   soft   windblown pop to Martin who had to\nmake a  running catch  near the\nmound.\nNo runs, one hit, no errors, three\nleft\nEIGHTH INNING\nYANKEES H Carl Erskine to6k\nover the hurling duties tor the DOd-\ngen.\nBene triad to Furlllo in short\nright.\nWoodling lined directly into the\nglove Of Hodgfcs.\nBauer walked on five pitches.\nMartin lined to Snider In shallow centre.\nNo runs, no hits, no errors, one\nlett.\nDODGERS \u2014 Campanella struck\nout, swinging at a fast inside pitch.\nPlate Umpire Goetz, turned to the\nDodger bench to worn them against\nheckling, Ithen ejected Ralph\nBranca\nMantle Pitching 4-2 Win in 7th\nBreaks Third Tie-Up in Series    ,\nBy JACK HAND     .\nBROOKLYN, Oct. 7 (AD-Youiig Jtfickey Mantle,\ncapably filling the shoes of the great Joe DiMaggio, and stouthearted Bob Kuzava led Casey Stengel's New York Yankees\nto a record-tying fourth straight world championship today,\nin a- 4-2, seventh-game triumph over the' stubborn Brooklyn\nDodgers. '\"\t\nLefty Kuzava, supposedly a\nchoice morsel tor the .Dodgers'\nright-handed hitters, blazed his fast\nball down the groove in a 2 2\/3.\ninning relief Job to make, the\nYankees lead stend up.\nIt was switch-hitter Mantle who\ngave the Yankees their victory\nmargin\/He homered in the sixth to\nbreak a 2-2 tie and send the New\nYorkers shead for the third time.\nIn the seventh he scored Gil McDougald trom second with a sizzling single over Peewee Reese's\nhead.\nWhen Gene Woodling clutched\nReese's fly for the final out this\nchilly, sunny afternoon, the entire\nYank club descended on Kuzava,\nvyhooplng and leaping with the joy\nof men who suddenly found themselves some $6000 richer.\nIt was Kuzava who applied the\nfilial, killing blow to Brooklyn's\ndreams of Its first World Series\nwin with hli brilliant Job after\nEddie Lopat and the dog-tired\nAllie Reynolds and Vic Raschi had\ngiven- their all.\n18000; SHARES\n. Exact values of winning and los-\nCollins off the bag for an error.\nThis ran Hodges' hltless string to\n21 official, times at bat. No' other\nplayer has gone through seven\nWorld Series games without making a hit, although Billy Sullivan of\nthe 1906 White Sox and Jack Murray of the 1911 Giants'' went hltless\nin six games,\nAndy Pafko batted for Shuba,\nand went down swinging at a fast\nball.\nFurillo hit a long fly against the\nwind, Woodling hauling it in in\ndeep left.\nNo runs, no nits, one error, one\nleft,\nNINTH INNING\nYANKEES \u2014 Tommy Holmes\nwent in to left field for the Dodgers,\nKuzava rolled out, Robinson to\nHodges.\nMcDougald singled over second\nbase into centre.\nRizzuto fouled to Cox in front\nof the Yankee dugout.\nHodges mede a backhanded stab\nof Mantle's sharp grounder to his\nright and beat Mantle to the bag for\nthe unassisted putout.\nNo runs, one hit* no errors, one\nleft.\nDODGERS \u2014 Bobby , Morgan, a\nright-handeel hitter, batted for Erskine,\nMorgan tiled to Woodling In left.\nCox bounced out, Martin to Collins.\nReese filed to Woodling in left\ncentre.\nYankees win game 4-2 and\nworld's championship four games\nto three.  .\nNo runs, no hits, no errors, none\nleft,\ning shares must await an. announce.\nment from- Commissioner Ford\nFrlck. On the basis of 34 Yankee\nshares, each will-get approximately\n$6000 and each of the 88 'Dodgers\nlosing'shares will amount to about\n$4200.\nIn the final analysis this Series\nthet produced 16 home runs\u201410 by\nthe Yankees \u2014 was decided on\npower. Reynold! end Raschi about\nbalanced Black, Rob and Carl Erskine, who won the fifth game and\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 1,1952 \u2014 7\nworked the lost two innings today\ndespite'a blister on his right hand.\nThe bod'ger defence Wes. brilliant\nwhile the Yanks made four,error*\nIn the final game. None led directly\nta a riih,. however.' \u2022' ;\n-For- heroes, the Yenkeei can\npresent Mantle with' h_B ,345 batting r:average,, .and Mlze's three\ngreat homers, and his \"almost\"\nfourth in tho.Sunday, gome Then\nthere is Reynolds' ever-ready arm.\nOn the Brooklyn ilde, $hlder\nWu a standout with four home\nruns equalling' the Series' records\nset by Babe Ruthi end Lou Gehrig. I\nReese 'had a brilliant nerie) at bat\nand afield, and Black was tremendous in hU first two starts, winning\nthe opener 4-2 and losing 2-0 to\nReynolds in the fourth game,\nNO WIN SINCE '46\nTha National League hasn't won\nOver 20 playera turned out for\nseplor hockey practices . Monday\nand Tuesday nights as. an average\nof 70 fans looked on, Maple Leaf\nofficials are highly .pleased with\nthe showing the boys have made,\nthey said last night. i\nLine of Bill Haldane, Lee Hyssop\nand Jimmy Lowe looked 'Very\ngood\" to Maple Leafs' president\nFrank Hufty. He was also pleased\nwith the performance of Jim. Mal-\nacko, defenceman, who will definitely make the teem.\nLowe Is a former Nelson and\nSpokane player who last season\nwas with Kelowna Packers.\nExpected today are Don Haley,\nhere two seasons ago and lately of\nthei.New York Rovers; Boomer\nRodzihyak, goalie; and Glen Smith,\nLeaf regular who will he back\nafter playing ball on the prairies.\nLikely to report Thursday is Art\nStone, centre with New York Hovers last season.\nAmong regulars turning out are\nGeorge Barefoot, Ernie Gare and\nCoach Eddie Wares, all defence;\nand George Crothers, Fritz and\nRed Koehle, Neil McClenaghan,\nBUI Haldane and Mickey Magllo,\nall forwards.\nYounger players trying out Include Bill Ludlow, Billy Wah, last\nyear with Swift Current intermediates;   Scott,  brother  of  Archie\nScott and former Trail Smoke Eaters, and Calgary Stampeders play-\nand   Windy   Walters,   husky\nyoung Import from Trail juniors.\nWares   has   contacted   Johnny\nHarms,   who   played   with   the\nLoafs  last  year  and   has  been\ntrying out for the New Westminster Royals',, he didn't make It at\nNew Westminster, but Vernon Is\nafter him and feel they can rope\nhim In If he gets a Job he has In\nmind.\nDefenceman from last year,\nBruno PasquaUotto is still in Trail\nbecause of his mother's illness, but\nhopes to bo here soon Trying out\nfor Spare goalie is Gerry Koehle\nwho had been trying out for Lethbridge juniors.\na Series, since 1946 when St. Louie\nCards whipped Boston bed Sox in\nseven games. The count now stands\n32 to 17 in favor of the American.\nThe umpires were In hot water .\nthroughout the Series but nobody\nwas tossed out until the eighth inning of the last game. Then plate\numpire Larry : Goetz thumbed\npitcher Ralph Branca, who bad\ndone\" little since he threw'. the\nhome-run ball to the Giants' Bobby\nThomson when the Dodgers blew\nthe pennant lest year.\nKino's hoton,, England (cp>-\nBecause there are no longer any\nMethodists In this Huntingdon village, the Methodist Church will be\nsold to a farmer. It will be converted Into a residence. '\n!\n1\n-\n;*HAVE YOUR\nDONATION\nREADY TODAY\n2\nHodges reached first safely when\nThe nine hoftie runs for the Yah- McDougald's   nigh   throw   pulled\nAnnual Clearance Sale\nUsed CARS and TRUCKS\nWe Must Sacrifice Our Complete Stock\nMATCH THESE VALUES ANYWHERE\nNO. 1\n1950 PontiaC 2-d00r-Sedan Air-conditioned, now tires. Very clean $1795.00\nNO. 2\n1949 Chevrolet Sedan   Motor overhauled, new tires, heater .___\nNO. 3\n1951 Chevrolet Pickup Privately owned. Heater and\ndefroster. Like new \u25a0,.::_..\u2022-.\n1949 DODGE SEDAN\n1948 DODGI SEDAN\n1947 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n1941 PONTIAC COUPE\n1938 FORD COACH\n1949 G.M.C. '\/.-TON\n1949 DODGE '\/2-TON*\n1947 MERCURY '\/j-TON\nEVERY CAR HAS BEEN THOROUGHLY CHECKED\nG.M.A.C. FINANCE PLAN\nTRAIL MOTORS\nTRAIL, B. C.\nPONTIAC     \u2014     BUICK     \u2014\nPHONE 275\n1949 MORRIS 10 H.P. SEDAN\n1947 PONTIAC SEDAN\n1941 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n1941 PONTIAC COACH\n1938 CHEVROLET SEDAN\n1949. CHEVROLET '\/.-TON\n1948 INTERNATIONAL 34-TON\n1946 CHEVROLET 44-TON\nTRADES ACCEPTED\nG.M.C.\n1040 TAMARAC AVENUE   \u25a0\nPP.-\n'\n w^^mtm^m\ny^mmFW\np^ppp\nWMWte.\nh\nL\nr\nMAKE HIM LOOK LIKE.\nmk-an'me LOOK    \/\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8,1952\n\/fP\n1 PERSOHO-PERSON WANT ADS\n\\    FOR QU\/CK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nOoadllno tor Claiiltied Adi\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nCANN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. John\nCenn of Rosebery, it Slocan'Community Hospital, New Denver, October 8, a son.\nBUCKHAM \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nThomoa H. Buckhom ot Sandon, at\nSlocan Community Hospital, Now\nDenver, October -, a eon.'\nHELP WANTED\nMEN WANTED NOW TO QUALIFY\nos Radio and Television Technicians or Wireless Operator!, Government and Industry now pay\n5210 to $542 monthly depending\non length ot service. No experience needed to start approved I\nnight \"Or daytime courses or study;\nat home with parts supplied.\nWrit, without obligation, for free\n40-page booklet, stating ago and\neducation. Radio College of Canada, 80 Bathurst Street, Toronto.\n. man with good personality. Xx-\ni perlenee bookkeeping, general office, insurance and real estate preferred. Junior partnership for\nagency continuance contemplated.\nAll particulars flrat letter, own\nhandwriting. Strictly confidential.\nBox 5055, Daily Newa.\nist-clAsS SAwiteR ANi. !__.<_.-\nornian, immediately, to set up mill\nand cut fifteen thousand feet,a\nday. Will pay by day or contract.\nBox 57, or phone 41-F, Nakusp,\nWMTE^J^WRIGH*, mil.\nexperienced; able to hammer and\nlook after saws as well Top wages.\nApply Halston Planing Millo Ltd.,\nKamloops, B.C.\nWh6__es\"AL1_ WSVtf 66. S__-\nqulres salesman for Trail. Good\nopportunity for man with real\nsales ability. Box 8884 Daily News.\nI WANTEI^VAft6M__N tO W<MlK\nat Tadanae. Apply the Canadian\nPacific Railway yard office at\nTadanae or Nelson, B.C,\n| RELIABLE MIDD__E-A6_.t> W(5ta-\nan as mother's helper. Apply 124\nHouston Street.\nIrequired IMMEDlA'l'ELV \u2014\nHousehold help. Phone Trail,\n1655-L-2, collect.\nIWAMiro-ILWBy MAN \u00a56\nput up tire racks. Apply Scott'4\nTire Shop.      -.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nLOGGING SUPT., SEVERAL YHS,\nexperience, capable taking full\ncharge large or' medium opera\ntions, available immediately. Ap\nply Box 4683, Dally News..\nRENTALS\n$25 REWARD FOR INFORMATION\nleading to. rental of suitable house\nIn Nelson or.district for family\nman. Box 5830, Daily News.\n(TANTED-ROOM FOR MEGHAN,\nic repair shop in Nelson. Apply\nBox 4883, Dally News.\n2 ROOM-HOUSE FOR RENT. AP-\nply Zibiri's Gen. Store, Robi<m.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT-519 SIL-\nlca St, Gentleman preferred.   \u25a0\nWANTED\u20144 OR 5 ROOM UNFUR-\nnlshed house. Phone' 1442-L.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\nFour New\nFOR SALE\u20141851 GREEN CONSOL.\nShowroom condition. Mileage 12,-\n400; all Vancouver area. Cash,\n$1675.00, or highest offer. Contact\nJ. Lyall, Hume Hotel, Nelson, 9th\nor40th October,\nNEW AUSTIN SOMERSET\n.   .        SEDAN\nIn Beige\nNEW AUSTIN SOMERSET\nSEDAN\nIn Seal Grey\nNEW AUSTIN, PANEL\n.\".'-,\"  NEW AUSTIN\n;    COUNTRYMAN\n1951 Austin Sedan     ,\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1952 Prefect Sedan\n1951 Prefect Sedan\n1950 Morris Sedan\n1951 Studebaker Coupe\n1950 Hillman Sedan\n1949 Pontiac Sedan\n1947 Oldsmobile Sedan-He\n1941 Austin Coach\n1940 Pontiac Coach\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1947 Pontiac \"8\"\n1952 Dodge J4-Ton\n1950 Ford Vi-Ton\n1949 Dodge 3\/4-Ton\n1949 Dodge Vi-Ton        .\n1950 Austin Vi-Ton\n1951 Austin Countryman\n1947 Mercury 3-Ton with\nHoist and Box\n.1947 Willys Station Wagon\n,    TERMS and TRADES\nEMPIRE\n803 Baker St.    Phono 1135\nNELSON, B. C.\nJust Arrived\nThe New\nROYAL ENFIELD ,\n500 CC.\nTWIN\n\"The Machine\nThat's Made Like a Gun\"\nEasy Terms \u2014 Trade-Ins\nKOOTENAY MOTORCYCLE\nSALES AND SERVICE\nBox 350 \u2014 Phone 2601 \u2014 Castlegar\n\"The Shop of Friendly Service\"\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n2. Method of\nleerninff\nS. God of war\n(Or.)\nO.A.woyo\n10. Touched\n11. Yield\n12. Former\nRussian\nruler\n18. Electrified\nparticlf\n14. Cobalt\n(eym.)\n18. Genue of\ncetacean*\n18. Chinese\ndialect\n10. A day o!\nthe week\n21. Taverns\n24. Little chile.\n25.Back.eu   .\naeat\nIT. Stairway\npost\n31. Pole\n33. Send dun.\n(Eng.)\nJ4.OI.oet\n38. Neuter\npronoun\n89. Employ\nforwageo\n40. Each'\n(abbr.)\n41. Past\n42. Peel\n44. Duration\n4\u00ab. Solar dial.\n(Egypt.)\n4T. Melody\n48. Nobleman\n49. Marshy\nmeadowt\nDOWN\nt. Tell over\n1 Baking\nchamber\nJ. Spread\ngrata\nto\ndry\n4. Upright\n8. Aot.ro\no. Withstood\nT. Antelope\n(So.Afr.)\n\u2022.Narrow\nband\n13. Certainly\n(archaiC)\n15. Retired\n17. Affirmative\nvote\n(var.)   \u2022\n20. An age\n12. Negative\nreply\n23. Magician\n26.Hate.   \/\n28. Plural\n- pronoun\n29. Puzzles\n30. Mother of\nApollo\n(myth.)\n38. River In\nScotland\n84. Shilling\n(abbr.)\n8S.Aflg.ree\n(Ind.)\n36. Muse. of\".\nlyric poetry\n-lU-JUl]\n_]__\u00ab___)\nuiauata\nu,:ii_ii_iu\n-U-iiaaa\ni-.r_._ai._i_3\n..uiliiJ   !\n_..[\u2022![\nJlll-IHLJI\n-ii  WM\nli-Jl.l\n\u25a02 ;_][j__;.i\nhe. una\nL1UI.1UB\nLH'lllil   [\nJUUUHH\n1         r)lll'i;IJ          [\nr_a__ i:n\n..   1_L_1_1H|\n0HB u\nLlHUUlil\n!Ji;j____li\n-jnuis-jl\nQaaaH\niJB-laii]\n\u00a5_.t.._-y'_ Aniwco\nll Amount\nat which\noperson\nla rated\n41. Melody\n43. Finish\n45. Before\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n$'.:'  (Continued)\ni\ni\nI\nJ.\nI,\nK\ns\nr\nr\n8\nI\n1\n9\nt\n10\nl\n%\nII\nI\nit\nVA\n\u2022*\"'\u2022\n!\n1\n14\nIS\ni\nii\n17\nia\n^\/A\n%\nFT\n\u00bb\n\\\na\nXX\nu\n%\nit\n%\ni\n%\n\u00bb\nvs \u2022\n%\n>'>\na\n29\n\u00bb\n%\nVA\n%\n\u00bb'.\nn\ni\n31\n14\n_J\n\u00bb\n57\nl\n%\n30\n31\n%\nm\n|\n.i\nl\n\u00ab\n43\n1\n44\n43\n%\n4.\nI\n47\n%\ni\n\u00ab\n'\nI\n4-\nw\ni\u00ab-\u00bb\nDAILY CBYPIOQUOTE\u2014Here'a how to work itt\nit I. on of ci tow\n> AXYDLBAAXR\nOne letter simply otaadc tor another. In this example A it used\nfor tho threo Li, X for the two O'l, etc. Single letters, apot*\ntrophies, the length, and formation of the wordt are alt hint\u00a9\nBach day the cade lettert are different\nA Cryptogram quotation\nFBMDDO  FCOOO.    BHO.    ATM.    P    AHB\nX\nRAKO.    NPN    OCVB    K.1HO    .KTMI\nBDEHO    DC    BCIM    JMAMB    SCTMlt-\nw \"*...    .    '\nVcsterdaye Cryptoauete-fc-TTLBf SINS MAKB ROOM F09\nGREAT, AND ONE BRINGD IN AL-..-EDWARD&\n~>attatt\u00bbeiiaae\u00bb\u00bbN-ii.M _i-e_ui\u00bb.\nFOR SALE-1852 METEOR VIC-\ntorla. No mileage, WIU sell $200\nunder list price. Phone 420-Y,\nTrail, or 1879 Riverside Ave.,\nTrail.\n1947 CHEVROLET ..-TON. GOOD\nrubber and new paint; mechanically good. Can be financed. Also\npickup body for sale. L. V. Kos-\nlanplc, Crescent Valley, B.C.\n22' ALUMINUM HOUSE TRAILER\nfor sale. Fridge, oil heater, propane stove, Apply L. Bergeron,\nRemac, B.C.\nWELL CARED FOR 1851 NASH\nsedan. Extras, 12,000. miles. One\nowner. Should be.seen. Reasonable for cash. Phone 559-Y-l.\nFOR SALE - 1837 TERRAPLANE\ngood condition. Heater, spotlight.\n$150 cash. Apply H. Brown, South\nSlocan.     \u25a0\u25a0..'\u2022\nFOR SALE\u2014TD9 INTERNATION-\nal crawler tractor. Apply Box\n8877, Dally News.\nDEALERS   IN   ALL   TYPES   OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new end used\nwire ' rope; pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate end' shapes.\nAtlas Iron & Metals Ltd, 250\nPrior St., Vancouver, B.C Phone\nPacific 8357. . V ,\nFOR SALE, - THE NAl-dNAt\nGeographic Magazine, years 1030-\n1031 and 1938 to 1845 complete. 1\npair white flannel pants,, as-new,\nsize 34; 1 shooting coat, size 38.\nPhOne 883-L,   '        , . :.,\nGREY WINTER dOAT Wttt.1\nsmall fur collar;, 2 wool dresses,\n1 light grey, 1 bottle green, all\nas .new, size 18; baby, crib and\nmattress, go-cart, 1 single bed and\nspring; mattress, used only,three.\nmonthe. Phone 883-L mornings,\nFOR SALE - WOOD AND COAL\nMcClary range, $25.00, Good condition, Apply 480-R or apply 1101\nCarbonate Street.\nMcCLARY . FU1JNACE, NO. 538,\ncomplete.with pipes for 8-room\nhouse. Apply 807 Vernoa phone\n684-Y.     \u25a0\n_5LECTR0tU3_*fitt!AMl_It1r6R\nsale. $10.00. Apply Box 8908 Dally\nNews. \u2022\n1951 CHEV. BUSINESS COUPE\u2014\nGood condition.- Can be seen at\n507 Carbonate Street, suite 8.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1935 FORD COUPE.\n. Best offer. Phone 1043-Y.\n1936 FORD tt-TON. LICENSED.\u2014\n95 High St. Phone 451-Y.    .\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE-20 FT. CABIN CRUIS-\ner. Sleeps _. foam rubber mattress. Powered by 14 horsepower\nEvinrude. Used 1 season. Long\nand short shaft. $875.00. Phone\n1542, evenings,.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALBHBUS AND TAXI BUS-\nlness in growing community ot\nRlondel. Mall contract. Only lie\nence in area, with business in.\ncreasing steadily. Rlondel Transportation.\nNelaDtt'latlg ita.\nClno-lfled Advertising Rates:\n15c per lino first insertion-and\nnon-consecutive insertions\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 8 consecutive lnser-\n,   tions.\n$1.58 line per month (28. conseo-\nutivo insertions). Box members lio extra. Covers any\nnumber of Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES.\nTENDIKRS. Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst   insertion.   18c   per   line\neach subsequent insertion,\n- ALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FORJBOMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not Mora Than U-ted Here)\nBy carrier! per week,\nin advance          .30\nBy carrier, per year        $15.60\nUnited Stiles, United Kingdom:\nOne month.     $ 1.25\nThree months       3.75\nSix months         7.50\nOne year;'.....      15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne montij,.  \u201e _\u201e_     1.00\nThree 'months       2.75\nSix montha       5.50\nOne year ,'.     10.00\nWhere extra postage It required,\nabove'rates plu'n'-. pottage.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUl\nFOR SALE\u2014LADIES' WHITE TIG-\nure skates; in good shape. Size\nV& or 8, Phone 1355-L.\npipe, f_tt_n\u00ab_. And FLuMfelNfl\nfixtures. Columbia Trading Co.,\n902 Front Street. Phone 1511,\nSEVERAL   TRUCKLOADS   Of\nsoil to be had lor the hauling.\nPhone-12-1-L, r -\nCRESS   WART   REMOVER \u2014\nLeaves no seen. Your Druggist\ntells CRESS.\nir6R Uljs-VaWc'MI 6H.\nrange;, new condition, Value $280,\nfor $100, Phone Kinnaird, 3502.\nWHITE ENAMEL COAL AND\nwood: range for sale at-118 Hous-\nton Street. Phone 98-L-2.\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS.\"\nWrite P.O Box 39. Nelsoa B,C '<\nQUEBEC BRICK-LINED HEATER.\nGood condition. Phbne'651-X,\nFOR SAUM--RM.'.-WHITE FIGJ\nure skates; size 11. Phone 988 _,\nFOR SALE-QUANTITY OF USED   |\nlumber at No. 8, Govt Road.'\nGENDRON BAB?. _UfiGY, fiAS.\nsinet, baby sleigh. Phone 1884-Y.\nFOR SAI_E-GIRL_i' WHITE FIG-\nure skates; C.C:M\u201e size 2. Ph. 2J8R.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR SAl_E -2 BULLS, ONE 38\nmonths old Ayrshire dnd one 18\nmonths old Holsteln, vaccinated;\nMillett's Dairy,- Rossland, B.C.\nPhone 420.\n7-MONTH-OLD LEGHORN FUL-\nlets, good stock in full lay. 1- is\n500, $2.50 each delivered. Write\nW. J. Mastin, R.R. 2, Langley\nPrairie, B.C.\nFOR SALE - SHETLAM\u00a3. fdNY,\nwith complete outfit Will.trade\nfor cattle. Apply Dally Newa\nBox 3855. '\n7-WEEK-OLD PIGS FOR SALE \u2014\nApply Guy Hamilton, R.R. No.,1,\nNelson,, B.C.\nNEW HAMPSHIRE LAYING PUL-\nlets, $1.75 each; shipping crates\nextra. George Game,,Armstrong.\nQUIET JERSEY COW-M1LKINO.\n16 qts. p6r day,' to freshen in April\n$125. Write ijox 51, Nelson.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULT*\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n1                              (Pacific Standard Time)\nWEDNESDAY,\nOCT. ,8, 1952\n7KW\u2014Newt,\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n7:05\u2014Morning Revue\n2:30\u2014Easy Listening\n7:30\u2014News\n3:00\u2014Here's Health\n7:30\u2014Morning Revue\n3:16\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Trans Canada Matinee\n8:00\u2014News\n4:15\u2014Young Man With a Song\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins'\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n4:45\u2014Pecifie News\n' 8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament IBB\n8:55\u2014Consumer's Corner\n5:00\u2014Rawhide    '\n. 9:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n5:45\u2014Strikes and Sparee\n8:15\u2014Western Fred's Ranchhouse\n5:50\u2014News             \u25a0   ....\n10:00\u2014Sons of Pioneers\n5:30\u2014Something in Harmony\n10:15\u2014Sports News\n6:00\u2014Family Theatre\n10:25\u2014:News\n6:30r-Int Lmbr. Talk\n10:30\u2014Coffee Time\n6:40-Cavalcade.of Melody        '\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n7:00\u2014News\nll:0Oi-Shut-In Show\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n11:15-t-Dorothy Douglas\n7:30\u2014Orch. con by G. Waddington.\n11:20\u2014Date With D'Arcy\n8:30\u2014The Damnation of Vancouver\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n10:00\u2014News\n12:80\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\nlOa-^-Harpsichord Recital\n12:55\u2014Behind the News\n10:30\u2014Starllte Ballroom.\n1:00\u2014Music Mill\n11:00-\"NEWS\" Night Cap\nCBC PR\nOGRAMS '\n(Pacific Stai\nidard Time)\nTHURSDAY, QC\nTOBER 9, 1952\n8:00\u2014News\n4:15\u2014Hoad Show\n8:10-Here's Bill Good\n4:30\u2014Pat Ma-Shanty Meets tho\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\nPirates                     J\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n4:45\u2014News\n4:55\u2014Spotlight\n9:00-BBC News                     ,\n5:00\u2014At Home with the Len__i\u00abi\u00bb\n0:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n5:30\u2014Father Knows Bert\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n6:00T-John and Judy  .\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n6:30\u2014Wayne and Shuster\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n7:00\u2014News\n10:4_\u2014-Musical Kitchen\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n7:30\u2014Eventide\n-1:15--A Man ad His Music\n8:00\u2014Points of View\n13:15-News .\n8:15\u2014An Ant's Life\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n' 8:45\u2014Louallen Trio\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Or.\n12:55\u2014Five To One\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n10:00\u2014Ntwt\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n10:15\u2014Midweek Review\n2:30\u2014Today's Guest\n10:30\u2014Nocturne\n2:45\u2014Piano Pops\n11:00-\u00bbU_N. Today\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage    1\n11:15\u2014America's Musle\n3:15\u2014Musical Program\n11:45\u2014Nightc*-\n3:30\u2014Trans Canada Matlnea\nll;57-Ntwe\n fflT-^^W^^^F^*^0^^\nWi\nMACHINERY\nWELDING WIRE' -\nAVAILABLE FROM NELSON\nSTOCK,\nLincoln Electrode-\nLincoln 200 amp,- 300 amp.\n\u2022 :,: .Welding -Units'\nFire Extinguishers\n* Available From Nelson Stock. ,\n? Carbon Dioxide Snow Type\nW. Iri m lb.. 8 lb.. 10 lb\/. 15 lb sires\nte'. \u00a3;a>bbh Tetrachloride*..\nIn 'l-.Quar.f and'Larger Pressure\n\u2022;-''\u25a0' :;. \u25a0 :\/; JSl-ee. ' '   '       ,\n'    Air Contractors\nyr.   \/Supplies\nCem'enf Mixer's,- porter Coble,\n:   ,   Electric Saws, etc.\n- Roller Chain Drives\n2.\"''.22 Morse,Brand'\nS Chains, Sprockets, Pulleys,\n*\u25a0''-      Belts, etc.\n...  >We Invite\nDealer inquiries\nThe Selkirks\nEquipment & Supply\nCo., Ltd.\nPhone1590 P.O. Box 61\n\u25a0 'i   '\u25a0\u25a0     520 Vernon St\nFOR SALE-USED CATERPILLAR\n. D7 tractor. A-l condition; 50 hours\n\u2022 only since major overhaul. Com-\nj plete with 11-ft. hydraulic engle-\ndozer. F.O.B. Nelson Machinery\n-. Co. Ltd., $9800.00.\nUsed   Bull \u25a0 Moose   C28   tractor,\n.equipped with angledozer, winch,\n-. ' starting and lighting; near new\n'   condition.\" F.O.B: Nelson Machin-\n\u25a0 ery Co. Ltd., $2950.00.   .\nUsed Caterpillar RD0 Tractor\n. equipped with crankcase guard,\ntrack roller guards. 10-foot La-\nPlanto Choate hydraulic angle-\n-doier. Good shape. F.O.B. Nelson\nMachinery Co. Ltd., $5950.00.\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\n\u2022'-  .- \u2022\u2022\u25a0'   LIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\n.   Enquiries Invited\nGranville Island, Vancouver 1; B.C.\n-FOR. SALE \u2014 INTERNATIONAL\nCub tractor.1951 model! hydraul-\nf lc lift, power tekeoff; also mower,\nplow and blade attachments. $900\ncash. Apply R, Brand, Renata,\n'.CATERPILLAR RD8 .COMPLETE\n?'  with\": belt   pulley   drive,   new\n'   engine. Priced low. Bayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE   \u2022\nBUNGALOW \u2014 6 room's tnd\nbtth. 1 acre. %TIW\nCash price\t\nBUNGALOW-1 blk. off Baker\nSt. 5 rooms; cement tCfiAA\nbasement. Mc......*a\u00b0UU\nNORTH SHORE BUNGALOW\nfor sale. 4 rooms and bath.\n$2750    w_handIe.\nF. A. WHITFIELD\nReal Estate end Fire Insurance\n302 Baker St '   '      Phone 312\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METAL\nor iron. Any quantity fop price\npaid Active Trading. Company\n916 Powell St. Vancouver. B.C\nWANTED-SMALL'AWrO COURtf,\npreferably leke frontage.. Wrlto G.\nHughes, Rlmbey. Alta.\nClBAfe EoU-iT- ALL CUSSES\nend lengths; Larch poles Koote-\nnay ForcBt Products Ltd. .   -\nwANTED-Bo^-i^sKAwa, sizes\n12 and 13. Phone 337-R,\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nPO  BOX 388. NELSON. BC\nWAvvaNeSA'MUWAL flW--H\u00bb:'\nsurance Co.. D L Kerr; -Agent\nALMfet. wuw mmn \u00a3_\u00bb_..\nDepot Clean rooms end reeton-\nable rales  Vancouver. B.C\nLOST AND FOUND\nPAIR GLASSES IN GREEN AND\nred plaid case. Urgently needed,\nPhone 1736-L.\nLOST-SPARE TIRE IN ALLW\nbehind Silica and Victoria Streets,\n600 Block. Phone 1077-L. Reward.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAVERS AND MINB\n-  REPRESENTATIVES   . '\nH.\"\\v. WiDboWtoN % Q022KS-\nsayers 301 Josephine-St... ijelaon.\nU   S   ELMES,   ..(.-.-SLA!.!..   B.'C\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOVDC AFFLECK,.18GOR_.STh\nNelson. B.C  Surveyor,\" Engineer.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALERS\nWe b(jv or seLL' LiVB-.toCK-\nContact H   Harrop: Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS    .\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop   Acetylene   and\nelectric v welding, motor rewinding Phone 593 324 Vernon Street\nTIMBER CRUISING, ETC.\nWMBteR dRt)\u00ab-r.(S ANVwt__.KI_\nIn B.C B H Hird. Slocan City\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBODfi-IB-IW\nMINING IN THE KOOTENAY\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8,1952 \u2014 9\nIntematipnalZinc Plans Expansion\nApplication hat been made \"tor\nconversion of International Load\nZinc Mines Ltd., from a private to a\npublic company. Capitalisation is\n3,000,000 .hares, no par value, of\nwhich 800,000 have been issued for\nproperties and 600,000 will .be offered for tale,\nThe company'i holdings In ihe\nSalmo district are extensive, and\nInclude the Pend Oreille group of 20\nclaims, taking in 18 Crown-granted,\non the Pend d'Oreille River between\nthe'Reevet MacDonald Mine and the\ninternational border. .\nThe company's second group consists of 72 claims known at tht\nSouth Fork or Lead Cteek group.\nThese are situtted 10 miles East of\nthe Pond Oreille group where they\nadjoin the Bunker Hill and Grand-\nview Mines properties. Claims held\nby Sheep Creek Gold Mines are\ncompletely surrounded by the South\nFork .group.\nCamps have been established at\nboth properties, and geological mapping has been in progress during\nthe -past Summer. E. G. Brown,\nPresident, states the company will\nendeavor to carry out the work es\noutlined by Arthur Lakes, consulting engineer-geologist. In a September report after intensive examination of the South Fork group,\nMr. Lakes gave the following conclusions and recommendations:\n\"This property hat surface exposure of the two most Important\nproductive horizons of. both Meta\nline and Salmo districts, a condition\nnot present in eny other property\nNorth or South ot the border. It\nhat tho outstanding fetturet proven\nmost ore-favorable. throughout'Met-\nnllne-district) ahd alto has presence\nof the most ore-favorable formation\ndt the Salmo district.\n\"The property's location In depressed fault block, which includes\nthe Important Metaline mines, gives\nIt benefits of ore productive history\nof these mines, and the occurrence\nof three ore outcrops in the most\nfavorable - Metaline horizon gives\nfurther encouragement for future of\nthis property,   i .--.-..      ....\n\"Extensive geological mapping accompanied by bulldozer. .stripping\nshould be continued to detail present prospected area between South\nFork and the border, ahd later extended Northerly within the lime-\nstone< belt West of. slate-carbonate\ncontact and into Maltland horizon\nEast of Slate Creek fault.\n\"This work should be followed by\ngeophysical work over slate outcrop\nand by drill holes up to 500-600-foot\ndepths Into the most geologically-\nfavorable localities.\"\n\u25a0\"',-'\u25a0\u2022.'*..\u2022 .'\u00bb\nCOMPLETE MILL\nAIN8WORTH> BASE METALS\nLTD, commenced production Sept\n18 following completion of construction, of Its jig mill. Initial milling\nhas been at 39 toAs per day.\nSatisfactory development results\nare reported by H. F. Kenward,\nmanaging director. Surface atrip-\nping of the Dublin vein, in extension of the Cork-Province, het revealed ore which hat been con-\narmed by diamond drilling. On the\n\"A\" vein, 288 feet of ore has been\ndeveloped, with an average width\nof five feet, end full facet of ore\nremaining it both East and-West\nends. A raise from the main level\non the \"B\" vein require! only 85\nfeet to reach the surface,\nBefore installing Its Jig mill, the\ncompany made some custom shipments. From 877 tons sent to the\nWhitewater mill, recovery was 838\nounce's of silver end 89 tons ot tine,\nvalued at $18,528. Further shipment\nof 184 tons to the Kenvllle mill\ngrossed $4053 after recovery of six\nounces gold, 159 ounces silver, 8014\npounds lead and 68,458 pounds zinc.\nThe company owns all necessary\nmining equipment, consisting of mechanical loaders, machine drills, ore\ncars, compressors, diamond, drills\nand accessories,\"      \u25a0-.; .\nOf 3,000,000 shares of authorized\ncapital, 750,000 (escrowed) shares\nwere issued for properties and 448,-\n908 shares were sold for cash, leaving 1,800,092 in the treasury!\n\u2022  \u00bb V\nREEVES MACDONALD, LTD,,\nshowed a profit ef $1,000,919 fer\ntha first seven months ef this year\nbefore  deductions for deprecia\ntion,- depletion and amortization\nallowances, Mining HI Lltes reports, .,...'\u2022\nA subsidiary of Pend Oroillc\nMines and.Metals Company, Reeves\nhad a revenue, lest transportation\ncharges, from concentrate production totaling $1,898,949 for the seven\nmonths ending July 31, 1953, compared to $3,448,149 for the entire\nyear 1951. The firm's profit T>efore\ndepreciation, depletion and amortization deductions for the first seven\nmonths ot 195.1 equals approximately 43 cents a share. Cash balance at\nthe end bf July, 1952, emounted to\n$1,048,623.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nSILVER RIDGE MINING COMPANY, LTD, is blocking out ore for\nits own milling operation, end has\nstockpiled 800 tons of high-grade'\nsilver-lead-zinc ore to date, it was\nreported from Vancouver.\nThis ore came from the No. 3 level\ndrift on the \"Wonderful\" vein and\nfrom a raise up from that level to\nthe No..2. On completion of this\nraise another will be started 150 feet\nfurther into the ore body. The No, 4\ncrosscut, glylno 150 feet vertical\ndepth below the No. 8, is in more\nthan 460 feet \" \"'\nArrangements ara being made to\nhave the stockpiled ora tnd other\nore from the development custom\nmilled it a concentrator in the vicinity.\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)  \u25a0\nGCTA\nUp to $t.000 ifel&rM\nW_|   __J  nunui v _m\u2014ui __._.._*.\n- C0W0-UTIC* Urn.\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Boker Si.\nFOR SALE\u2014ONE OF FAIRVIEW'S\nbetter homes. Owner transferred\nFully insulated eight-room family\nhome. Automatic oil burner, hot\nwiter heating system; hardwood\nfloors downstairs, electric kitchen,\nPembroke bath, entrance hall, living room, dining room, den, two\nbedrooms downstairs; two bedrooms upstairs. Full size basement\nwith garage and laundry tubs. For\nappointment to, view phone 1361.\nTOR SALE - 40 ACRES GOOD\n..-- land- *>n. Nelson-Castlegar highway,, 954 miles bom Nelson. Will\nsell SO acres .separately. $2800.00\nfor 40 acres, $1500.00 for 20 acre\nblock and $1300.00 for other. Approx. 1100 ft. to spring water. 1400\ntt. frontage on highway. This is\nIdeal land tor farm or building\n> aite. Apply S. A. Myers, Box 367,\nNelson, B;C.\nFOR-SALE -fl ROOM MODERN\nhome, g yea'nf old, 3 bedrooms,\nfull basement, automatic oil heat;\nlng, city gas in basement and\n, kitchen, hardwood floors, close to\nschools and bus. Cash or terms\narranged. Phone 1252-R.\nFOR SALE - YMIR PROPERTY.\nElectric lights, water, full plumbing; chicken house, shop, etc. 6\nlota fenced. Furniture, stoveB included. $3500 cash. Box 4942,\nDaily News,\ni.y .New\n\"_8_lS\n_\"<_\u201e'\u2022'\u201e__-stucco house\nwith spacious living room, dining\nroom, entrance hall, .kitchen and\n.   three hedwoms,upstairs; all new-\n~ '1y-\u00abeep_-ated,'ii_J'Ba!-et->t. Phone\n951-R.' ' J r '\"''       \"'\u25a0\u2022'\"\"\nHOUSE.FpR SALE\u20143 BEDRMS.\nStucco bungalow,' modern, insul-\n' ated.   $5500,. and   some   terms.\nPhone 184S-H. \"\n5-B_.6Rfl6--r\"Fl-4W i-fai.-.RN\nstucco house; wired for electric\nrange. Apply 426 Hamilton Ave.\nPhone 909-X.   -\nFOR SALE \u2014 PROPERTY WITH\nSummer home, North Shore, one\nmile from Nelson. Lake frontage.\nWrite Box 5238, Daily News,\nFOR SALE\u2014CLUB HOTEL, SIT-\nuated on four lots. Apply 513 Silica Street.\nBuy, Sell. Trade tht Classified Way\nNEW YORK, Oct.-7 (AP)\u2014Quietly and with little' cejjviction, prices\nheld steady.\nCanadian issues were lower. Dome\nMines and Hiram-Walker each\nslipped Vt, CanadlanJPacitlc was off\nVt, and International Nickel dropped\nV_. Mclntyre and Distillers Seagram\nwere unchanged.      K\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Prices continued to decline In sloW' trading.\nBoth base metals. ..and Western\noils reached new low* for (he year\nas they and Industrials, each slipped\nmore than a point on the Exchange's\nindices. Golds recovered slightly\ntoward the close. Volume for the\nsession was expected .6 reach about\n1,700,000 shares.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Prices sagged\nin late trading.        '_\nSenior metals set the pace for the\nlower trend. Aluminium fell H4 to\n48, while International Nickel and\nConsolidated Smelters slipped fractions.\nLONDON (Reuters') \u2014'Domestic\nIssues took the limelight, and several good gains were recovered.\nThe news that Britain earned a\npayments surplus in the first half\nof this year, and that domestic steel\noutput had reached a record, was\nthe mainspring behind thlt Improvement.\nCalgary livestock\nCALGARY, Oct. 7 (CP)\u2014Prices\nwere generally steady at Monday's\nlevels on the Calgary livestock market today. Bulk of the 500 cattle and\ncalves on otter were medium quality. A liberal truck run was in sight.\nNot enough bulls or good light\ncows were offered to test the market\nStocker and feeder steers were\nsteady to barely steady, mostly medium to plain quality. Veal calves\nwere $1.50 to $2 lower.\nHogs gained 20 cents Monday, to\nclose at $24.10, and sows were up 15\ncents at $12.80. Good lambs \u2022 were\nsteady at $20.75.\nGood light butcher steers, $20.50\nto $22.50; common to medium, $15.50\nto $20.\nGood light butcher heifers, $19.50\nto $21.\nCommon to medium light cows,\n$10.50 to $12; cahners and cutters,\n$7 to $10.\nGood stocker and feeder steers,\n$17 to $19.50; common to medium,\n$14 to $16.50.\nGood to choice veal' calves, $19\nto $20; common to medium, $14.60\nto $16.50.\nU, K. Steel Output-\nExceeds Records\nTROSTRE, Wales, Oct. 7 (Reuters)\u2014Duncan Sandys, Minister of\nSupply, predicted today that Britain's steel production in 1953 will\nexceed \"by a substantial margin\"\nthe existing record of 16,293,000 ingot tons In 1950.\nSandys, visiting a new mill here,\nsaid the steel increase followed an\nincrease in pig-Iron production.\nMINE8\nAkaltcho '...- ;\u201e:.....\nAmal'Larder,...\u201e;....,\nAmericen Y K\t\nArjon\t\nAumaque; \t\nBagamac  ,.\t\nBase Metals ._.\t\n'Belloterr.e .,...:. _.\nBevcourt   '.:..: ....\u201e._\nBidgoodKirk- :...\nBobjo \t\nBoymar Gold .....\nBralorne        .\nBrewis R L\t\nBroulan \u25a0_...\nBuffadison    -.\nBull Can -\nCampbell R L . :.\nCariboo Gold \u201e._._-.\nCastle Treth .; __\nCentral Pore  ...\nCetnremaque \t\nChestervllle  ....\nChlmo G \t\nCochenour \t\nCoin Lake   \t\nCons M & S  ...\nConwest   . .J....\t\nCrolnor   \t\nDetnite  ._;.._\nDome -.....-\nDonalda \t\nDuvay   _\t\nEast Amphi \u201e...._,_..\nEast Malartic ..\t\nEast Sullivan  .,\nEider Gold __..-\nEldona     ...\nEstella   \t\nEureka ...\nFalconbrldge \t\nFrobisher   \t\nGiant Yel .....\t\nGod's Lake- ....\nGoldale     ......\nGoldcrest     .....V...\nGolden Manltou ....\nHasaga  _\nHeath , .- \t\nHomer YK _\nHudson Bay ...\t\nInspiration _..__.__\nJoliet Que ,.,\u201e.., .\u201e..\nKayrand  ,_._-\nKelore  -. ...._._..\nKenvllle   . ..-.....\u201e\t\nKerr Addison \t\nKirk-Hudson Bay\nLabrador \t\nLakeshore  .....\nLake Wasa  \t\nLeltch\t\nLittle Long Lie ....\nLynx .. .    i\t\nMacDonald   ......._..\nMacassa -.'.     -\nMacLeod Cock .\t\nMads.n R L ....:.\t\nMagnet\nMalartic G F \u2014\nMining Corp\t\nMoncta  L-\nNegus \"..'..\u201e.\u2014,,..i'__,,\nNew Alger  _....\nNew Calumet '.\t\nNew Lund\t\nNoranda     ..._....\nNormetals \t\nO'Brien  .....< ,.._-\nO'Leary  \t\nOsisko ___.\t\nPaymaster    _\t\nPickle Crow  _\nPioneer \t\nPlacer Develop ....\nPowell Rouyn\t\nQuebec Man \u25a0\u2022\u2022.\u2022\u2014\nQueenston  \u2014\nReeves Mac  \u201e\nSan Antonio \t\nSherritt Gordon ._.\nSilvermiller\t\nSilanco  \t\nSisco ...\t\nStadacona  .\u2014\nStarratt Olsen\t\nSteep Rock \t\nSudbury Cont\t\nSylvanite \t\nToburn \t\nTombUl\nP. C. HEAD SAYS\nTrans Cont Res\nUnion Mining ...\nUnited Keno \t\nUpper Can  -\nVentures ., ._\nViolamie _\nWaite Amulet ..\nOILS\nAnglo Can ...._..._\nA P Can _.\u2014\nB.A OU  ___..\nCal tt Ed .;\t\nCalmont\nCentral Ledue _-___.\nChemical Reseerch  \t\nCommonwealth Pete ...._\u2014\nPalhousle    ........\nDavles Pete-\t\nDecalta  \t\nDel Rio  \t\nEastcrest _.\u201e___..._\nFederated Pete \t\nHlghwood   -\t\nHome   .  ___,.\t\nImperial Oil  \t\nInter Pete\t\n\u25a0 1.10\n.15.4\n.40\n'    .10\n.18\n.18\n. ..81\n-., 4.00\n1.20\n-' \u25a0\u2022 '.i2y\u00ab.\n\u2022 -.22\n.16.4\n8.50\n.-OH\n2.73\n\u202211V4\nMm\n. 10.00\n' i.3i  :\n2.70   i\n.21\n.14\n.22'\/.\n,60'_3\n1.48\n...    .11\n82.25\n3.10\n.40\n1.65\n19.65   '\n.47\n.45\n\u202211H\n2.85\n6.90,\n\" .82\n.15\n.40\n1.15\n16.25\n6.15\n8.35   .\n\u25a0 .63  '\n'.20V4\n.19\n4.90\n.12.4\n.25.4.\n.10\n56.50\n, \u2022'\u2022 ,30\n'   .30 .\n.  ,...10\n. ;i3'\n.15V_t\nTI8I00\n.   as -\n9.10\n8-20\n.33\n1.05 -'\n\u2022 .'.66\nL02\ni;80\n2.52\n\u2022 1.75\/\n.10\n1,87\n13.75\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'   '.38 \"\n'   -.55\n\u25a0 .19\n-   1.30\n.41\n77.00\n4.70\n1.0?\n.16\n.70\n.52\n1.58\n1.90\n42.12%\n.73\n2.00\n.42\n2.90\n,   2.15\n4.60\n1.41:\n.38\n.53\n.32\n.28\n6.20\n.13\n1.30\n.33%\n.      .22\n.      .40,\n.18\n9.85\n.     1.56  '\n.   18,50\n. ,i.4S;\n.   12.50\n, 6.75\n.38\n. 10.65\n. 11.35\n. 1.05\n8.10\n1.25\n1.85\n.25\n.28\n.81\n2.88\n.12V*\n7.30\n.23\n12.50\n30.65\n26.00\nFinance Department Is\nOver-Taxing Canadians\n..HALIFAX, Oct. 7 (CP) \u2014 George broadcast over the CBC's French\nNowlan, president of the Progressive\nConservative Association of Canada,\niSaia tonight that when, parliament\nreassembles Nov.. 20 ihe government should annbtince reductions In\ntaxes..'. .\n. His.' speech broadcast over:, the\nTrans;Canada network in the CBC's\nseries \"The Nations Business.\" Later\nfrom Montreal, Henfl Courtemanche,\nProgressive Conservative member of\nthe commons for the'Quebec constituency of. Labelle, made a similar\nCariboo Gold.\nEstella \t\nGiant Masco'\t\nHighland Bell \t\nKootenay Belle\t\nPioneer Gold ........\nPremier Border\t\nQuatslno :..',.\t\nReeves. MacDonald\nSheep Greek:...-..,....\nSherritt Gordon     4.50\n.20\n4.25\n.42\nSilver Ridge\nWestern Uranium\nYal    \t\nOlIS\nAnglo Canadian  6.50\nA P Consolidated ..-.   .37\nCalgary & Edmonton \u201e....- 11.00\nCalmont  1.02\nCommonwealth \u201e  '4.50\nHome' \u201e  12.50\nMercury 20\nNational Pete    1.70\nOkilta Com :...... _. 2.80\nRoyalite  13.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nCap\".al Estates  17.00\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW' YORK, Oct. 7 (CP)-Spot\nprices:    .\nLead, N.Y., .16. \"\nZinc, East St. Louis, ,13H.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBralorne   5.50\n  1.25\n 37V.\n,.._      .58'\n..,_      .57\n 10\n.... 1.90\n.,.. .15\n...      .51\n.... 8.00\n,..; 1,34\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 7  (CD-Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, 79.4.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 teed, 1.36.\nKroy ...:\t\nMacDougal Segur ..\nMid Cont\t\nI^at Pete\t\nNordon\t\nOkalta   \t\nPacific Pete \t\nRoyalite    _.\nRoxana  \t\nTower Pete ...: .....\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi, -\nAlgoma Steel \t\nAluminum\t\nAtlas. St  \u2022\u2022\nBell Telephone ....\nBrazilian      \t\nB C Electric \t\nB C Packers A\t\nB C Power B\t\nBuilding Products.\nCan Cement \t\nCan Packers B\t\nCan Oil      -\nCan Colaneso \u201e\u201e__.\nCan Pac Rly , _.\nCockshutt   .....\t\nCons M & S  \u2014\nDist Seagram  \u2014\nDom Foundries \t\nDom Stores    \t\nFamous -Players ..\nFanny Farmer ....\nFord A   -\nGatineau \t\nGreat Lakes.;\nGreat Lakes pfd ..\u2014\t\nGypsum Lime  \t\nImperial Oil\/ _\u2014\u2014\t\nImp'Tobacco ...._-\u2014--_-__\nInt Nickel',...'--; -~~-__-\nInt'Fete ....... .-__--\nKelvlnetor  \u2014i _-_-\nLaura Secord \u201e._-__-\nIloblaw A    \u25a0\u2014\nLoblaw B     \t\nMaple Leaf Mining\t\nMoore Corp  -._....\nMcColl Frontenac  ..\t\nNot Steel Car \t\nPage Hershey \t\nPowell River   ,\t\nPower Corp    \t\nSimpsons pfd   _...-_\u25a0\t\nUnion Gas of Can \u2014.-..,\nUnited Corp, B  ..\nWeston George -  \u25a0\u25a0\n1.90\n.22\n.38\n1.75\n.10\n3.00\n9.65\n13.50\n.21\n.42\n1.43 ..\n... in\n... 44%\n... 48\n-. 20W\n~ 35.4\n..     9%\n... 92\n.- 14\n...    IVt\n... 82V.\n.. 72.4\n__ 28.4\n... .14.4\n._ 40\n.... 30.4\n... 16%\n... 82.1\n.. 22V4\n.. 14%\n-_ 12%\n.... 16%\n_ 23\n-. 39\n_ 20%\n_ 15%\n_ 48\n_ 31%.\n__ 80%.\n\u201e    9%\n_ 42%\n- 26-\n_ 18\n- 13%\n_ 33%\n... 34%\n10%\n23%\n35%\n.   28\n65%\n21\n32%\n103%\n25\n44\n.25%\nnetwork,\nMr.. Nowlan, Progressive Conservative member for the Nova Scotia constituency pf Annapolis-King's,\naid that since Finance Minister Abbott was appointed head ot the Finance Department Dec, 10, 1946, he\nhas been over-taxing the people at\nthe rate of $1,000,000 a day.\n\"I do pot say that taxes can or\n3hould be cut drastically,\" slid Mr.\nNowlan. \"Wo all realize that the\ngovernment cannot finance, the\noperatons of this country without\na heavy tax burden. But some reductions can be made, and these\nshould be made now,\n\"Today the great majority of our\ncitizens find it very difficult to make\nends meet. Between the high cost of\nliving and oppressive faxatibn some\nof us. have but few dollars left at\nthe end of the month, and many are\nin debt. These people can be helped,\nWe >H can ba helped, by moderate\ntax reductions now.\"   .\nReferring to defence expenditures,\nMr. Nowlan slid \"we may criticize\nthe manner in which dollars are\nspeAt for these matters,' but not the\npurposes tor which the dollars are\nexp'ended,\"\nMr. Nowlan, a veteran of the First\nWorld War, said that last yeir the\nDefence Department purchased 1,\n150.000 neckties \u2014 \"so many thai we\ncould bind hind and feet, any number of eg-Tesosrs who might attempt\nto lind on our shores.\"\nHowever, he asked, \"hive we the\nradar with whieh to detect their\narrival, or ths anti-aircraft, guns\nwith which to shoot down their\nplanes.\"\nBoard Announces\nDelivery Increases\nTo Penticton Post   \u2022\nWINNIPEG, Oct, 7 (CP) - The\nCanadian Wheat Board today announced increases in delivery quotas\ntor grain to 149 Prairie points. Shipment of wheat, oats, barley and-rye\nfrom 18 points wis banned in a\nmove to equalize the supply of boxcars . among points with ' lower\nquotas,\n' Transport controller R. W. Mllner\nrecently asked that points with five\nbushel quotas get first preference\non Cars.\nGov't Personnel\nAf Record High\nOTTAWA, Oct. 7 (CP) - More\npersons were working lor the federal government this year thin ever\nbefore.\nFigures issued by the Bureau ot\nStatistics todiy showed tho civil seri\nvice at a peak ot 131,648 on March\n31 \u2014 up 700ft compared with a year\nago, topping the wartime high of\n115,908 end almost trippling the\npre-war 1939 figure ot 46,106.\nChief .increases during the year\nwere In departments associated with\nthe defence pr.jram.\nStatistics Include those classified\nit \"permanent\" md \"temportry\"\nemployees under civil service regulations e do not take in casual\nheli,, who make up about 20 per cent\nof the payroll. Many \"temporary!'\nemployees heve worked for the government for yeirS, ind they outnumbered the \"permanent\" group.\nIn the year ended March '81 \u2014\u25a0\nclose of the 1051-52 fiscal year \u2014\nregular employees hid Increased by\n5.7 per cent over the 124,580 of a\nyear earlier, while the 1951-52 pay\nroll of $340,045,000 was up 13,8 per\ncent ever tht $288,977,000 of the\nprevious yeir.\nWhile no employment figures\nwere available for casual workers,\ntheir payroll tdded $97,(.07,0_0 for\n1951-52, compared with $70,854,000\nthe previous yeir.\nHuman Behaviour\nStuns Two Bears\nVANCOUVER, Oct. T (CP) - It\nwes a surprise for the two block\nbears at Stanley Park too.\nA big man climbed into their cage\nand chased them into their cement\n\"cave\" Monday afternoon\nThe six-foot, 175 pound mm\nbattled park police before he could\nbe removeo from the cage.\nWhile the battle raged, the bears\ncowered in their cave, stunned with\nsurprise.\nPolice art holding tht mm for\nmental examination.\nDiane Foster Out\nOf British Film\nLONDON, Oct 7 (CP) - Dianne\nFoster, 24-year-old Canadian stage\ntnd screen actress, hu given up\nthe femlnini load in \"The Red\nBeret,\" a film \u25a0story of Britain's\nwartime paratroopers..\n\"Columbia Studios it id Miss\nFoster hat been replaced \"by British actress Susan Stephens. Hollywood's Aim Ltdd remaint in the\nleading mile put.\nA. studio spokesman said the\nEdmonton-born Mist Foster could\nnot arrange shooting dates tor the\nfilm. Dianne, however, told reporters she had been held up making\nanother picture, \"Isn't Life Wonderful?\"\nSome British papers have crlticli-\ned the selection of Ladd, on American actor, to play the leading\nrole in an, essentially British film,\nbut there has been no suggestions\nthat Miss Foster stood aside to\nmake way for a British actress.\nHERE TOMORROW will be John H. F. Turner, (left), assistant'\ngentral manager of the Bank of Montreal's Western branches, while\non hit first offlolal tour of branches In British Columbia llnee hll\nappointment u heed of the bank's Western division list March.\nMr. Turner Is accompanied by W, H. Ralkes, (right), resident superintendent of the British Columbia district. Mr. Turner ind Mr.\nRalkei Will visit over 70 brinohes during their month-lona tour of\nB. of M', offices. '  .\nBusiness Spotlight\nWith Holidaying North Americans\nBy  PETER   BUCKLEY\nCanadian Prett Staff Writer\nBy trimming the frills, from\nTrans-Atlantic travel, the air lines\nhavt found i new market In the\nman with i small poeketbOok md\ne big yen for travel.\nLast May 1, itr lines tn Canada,\nthe United States and Europe Inaugurated a plan called \"tourist\nclass\" air travel.\nSince then there has been a substantial increase in the number of\npersons traveling to the continent\nof Europe ond most of the air lines.\ngive the credit to tourist-class\nfares,\nBasically, tourist cliti means flying without the trimmings.\nPreviously most air travel wit\nfirst class with such things u\nmeals \u2014 md .much-disputed drinks\nit the aircraft's bir \u2014 Included in\nthe list price of the flight\nSUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS\nTourist class eliminates such\ntrills trom the ticket price and\nmakes them extras, to be purchased\nat the traveller's request Ariyone\ntravelling on a limited budget can,,\nby sacrificing tome of the \"extras,''\nmake substantial savings,\n. For instance, British Overseas\nAirways Corporation provides\nround-trip flights trom Montreal to\nLondon by tourist class for $447\nduring the tourist season \u2014 April 1\nto Oct. 31 \u2014 while fli-it elate la\n$688.     \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022\u2022';':   \"\nTrans-Canada Air Lines report!\nsimilar tourist claw savings and\nhave discontinued their old first-\nclass Trans-Atlantic travel completely In favor of .tho tourist elite.\n60 PER CENT INCREASE\nAn Insight into the increase' la\ntravel was given recently by Sir\nWilliam .P. Hiidred, Diroetor-G\u2014.\ne'ral of International Air Transport\nAssociation; at the eighth annual\nmeeting.of I.A.T.A. In Geneva.\n.He said that during May, June\nand\"\"July ' \"ajSprexlnlately' 150,000\npersoni erossed the North Atlantlo\nby air \u2014 on Increue ot 80 par cent\nover the corresponding period of\n1951.' \u25a0\u2022 \t\nHe said the gain wat broufbt\nabout with only a 10-por-ccnt increase in the number et fllghtt md\ndespite curtailment of many schedules due to the oil-industry ttrike\n-in the' United Ste.es.'\nWhether the new mtthtxj pt\ntravel will prove equally successful in tho \"off' montht \u2014 iron.\nNovember.to April \u2014 romalna an\nimportant factor in tho continuation of the \u2014rvice on a year-round\nbasis, :.;\u2022. ...\nPresent Indications art that the\nairlines have hit \"paydlrt\" ill providing (.helper Trans-Atlantic ser-\nvico to travel-hungry North Americans.\nBritish Firm Fires Entire Staff\nForfailure To\nMARKET MARKS\nSLOWEST SESSION\nNEW YORK, Oct 7\" (AP) \u2014 lithe slowest session in more than five\nweeks, the stock merket today held\nto I steady course.\nThe slowness was Induced of\ncourse by the victory ot the Yankees\nover the Dodgers 4 to 2. Attention\nwas on the bal) game, not the market.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks closed unchanged at $105.70\nwith the Industrial component unchanged, the railroads up 10 cents,\nand the utilities down 20 cents!\nThe list harrowed down to 1070\nIndividual Issues on the tape. That\ncompares with 1116 issues traded\nMonday. Out ol Tuesday's total 332\nadvmced md 388 declined with 14\nnew highs md 37 new lows for the\nyear touched during the dey.\nVolume amounted to only 950,000\nshores, slowest day since August 29\nwhen 890,000 Shares chmged. hands.\nMonday's business amounted to\n1,070,000 shares.:.\"\nOLDHAM, Lanes, England, Oct 7\n(CP)\u2014The entire staff of ntt old-\nestablished paint firm here was\ngiven one week's notice of dismissal\n\u2014not, because the company it folding up, but tor gross inefficiency.\nThe dismissal notice read: \"Owing\nto the inefficiency of this compmy\nmd the resultant effect on the company's trtdlng, a complete reorganisation it necessary.\"'\nWilliam Fethybrldge, 42, managing director, said the action was\ntaken because bf rising production\ncosts and loss of important orders at\nhome and abroed. To Illustrate hla\npoint, he picked up \u25a0 tin ot paint\nmarked \"Green.\" It was red.  ;\n\"It's only when you get the sack\nthat. you realize how important\nyour Job was, and how much greater\neffort you could have put into it,\"\nPethyridge said.\n; Consideration, he added, would\nbe given to those applying for re-\ninttatement.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Current reports\nshowed the United Kingdom exported 31,000 tons of wire rope in\n1951, compared to 16,107 tons exported by the United Statei. British exports now are about 2500 tons\nmonthly.\nAdequate Fuel Supplies in Store\nFor Winter, Coal Prices Higher\nBy Tho Canadian Prose\nCanadians will find adequate supplies of mott tutlt thlt yeir when\nthey stock up tor Winter. And the\nchances are the prices will be about\nthe same as last year,\nA Canadian Press survey of coal,\nwood, fuel oil add natural gas stocks\nacross Canada showed only isolated\nwood scarcities. Coal prices showed\nIncreases ranging from a tew cents\na ton in Saskatchewan to about $2\na ton in Nova Scotia. Quebec, however, reported a slight drop. Gas\nmd fuel oil prices wero about the\nseme or slightly lower.\n. Some dealera anticipate a slight\nrise in coil and wood prices. Fewer\nhouseholders have bought their\nsupplies early thlt yeir, md a ruth\nof orders in the first cold spell\nmight force prices up, they said.\nBritish. Columbia faces an acute\nfir wood and sawdust shortage, due\nto Summer strikes by lumbermen.\nHowever, coal supplies. are oder\nquate, with prices about 30 cents a\nton higher. - \u00ab\nB, E. Games Head\nTo Ask Gov't foV\n$500,000 Grant\nVANCOUVER, Oct 7 (CP)\u2014The\nBritish Columbia Government will\nbe asked for a $500,000 grant for the\n1954 British Empire md Commonwealth Games here.\nStan Smith, president ot the British Empire Games Society, will\nhead a 10-man delegation, assisted\nby representatives of four political\nparties, to discuss financial aid with\nthe Cabinet In Victoria on Friday.\nRepresentatives ot the political\nparties will be Bert Price, Social\nCredit -Member lor . Vancouver-\nBurrard; Reg McDougall, Progressive Conservative Member, Vancou-\nver-Burrard, CCF. leader Harold\nWinch, and J. G. Gould, former\nLiberal Member tor Point Grey.\nThe Amharas, ruling race In\nEthiopia, form iess than half the\npopulation.\nWater Taxi Sinks\nIn Horsehoe Bay\nVANCOUVER, 6\u00abt T <Cf\u00bb -\nThree mm swam 300 yardi to .hon\nafter a water taxi exploded M\nHorseshoe Bay late Monday.'\nAn the deck tank under tbam\nthe mm grabbed lifebelti poA,\nthough stunned, made: short NNf.\nStved were Phillip; Pawtofc g,\nand his brother, J. 8. Paweofl, 88,\nbath of New Westminster, ami Man\nHurrell, 87, Horseshoe BajV the\nbolt operator.\n'That boat blew into a mffl-on\npieces,\" laid Hurrell. \"When -we\nlooked around later all we ttnld\nfind wat my driver's teat I don?\nknow how  we turvived.\"\nCause ot the explosion wu unknown. \"When I turned the i_nlt_on\nkey the whole boat seemed to oomo\nup in my face,\" said HurrolL      .\nWoman Turned\nMan to Marry\nABERDEEN. Oct 7 (AP) - Dr.\nEwan Forbes-Semplll, whose change\nof sex from femele to male wes\nannounced last month, posted notice\nin his parish church yesterday that\nhe will marry his housekeeper, Iso-\nbel MltcheU.\nThe announcement Is a ^formality required for all church weddings. Date\" of 'the* \"vredding wea not\nspecified.\nThe 40-year-old doctor uoed to\nbe known as Elizabeth Forbes-Sem-\npill. On Sept. 12 a newspaper advertisement announced that she\nnow was a male.\nHAVE YOUR\nDONATION\nREADY TODAY\nCould a Fire Destroy the Heart\nof Your Business?\nACCOUNTS REGEJVABUi-sfeowW- be .protected\n, by fire -teatsrorrt-storage.\nUNDERWRITER APPROVED SAFES\nwltK models for:home *6r office from\n$ IM J O.B. Trail\nROBERT  #LSON\nOffice,  ^uxnUriLnqi,\nShowroom at 1234 Bay Avenue, TRAIL, B.C.\nBusiness 'Machines''. File'CabihelS'-Oli'ice furnitule \u2022 Soles\n mmiw!?sW^^^^^^2 \u2014:\u2014'\u2014~!\u2014\u25a0'\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 8,1932\nSETS, STYLES, WAVES,.\nALLATONETIWE!\nSO EASY YOU DO IT YOURSELF!\nNO HELP NEEDED!     ,;\n[BoM>l toltei |uit o few more minutes thon putting , v\\^^ <*\nyour pin eurli up ot night. So fait...to familiar.*\"\"* \u00a3'* -\" k' *\u25a0\u00bb\no method I And Bobbl permonenlj your most Hollering \"\"\"^   \u25a0\nhair styles for woota ond woobf\nO NO NEUTRALIZED\n\u2022 NO RE-SETTING\n\u2022 NO TIRESOME\nWINDING!\n*Z^d&\nLotidbn Test Appeal Case\nMportarit to Canadians\n'      IByALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Stiff Writer\nLONDON, Oct 1 (CP)-Heiring\nof on appeal involving oil rights in\nAlberto, described at a test case of\ngreat importance , for Canada,\nopened today.'In the Judicial Committee ot the Privy Council, Argument It expected-; to: last; several\ndayi.. \u25a0 f-'w-iv.-.-.:\nAt Issue is the question of\/vhether\nthe' Alberta Government haa the\nright to levy royalties on certain oil\nlands-In the Athabasca tar tabids\narea.' , '\u25a0 -;.\\   \u2022\u00ab i \u25a0\nThe appeal wit brought, with ope-\nclal leave, by the Attorney General\nof Alberta and the Province's Minister of Lands and Forests. Respondents are Huggard Assets, Ltd.,\nowners of on area of about two\nsquare miles.\nH. J. Wilson, Alberta's Deputy\nAttorney General, told the Judicial\nCommittee today on behalf of. the\nappellants that the question was\nwhether the company held the land\non terms which permitted the. Prov\nince to exact royalties. Tho ficts\nWere not In dispute, but wero somewhat Involved, and required examination of Dominion and Provincial\nlegislation. ,\nA, G. SUPPORTS APPEAL\n'The decision in thlt appeal will\napply to n vast tract of land in\nWestern Canado held on similar\nterms,\" Wilson said, adding that the\nAttorney. General Of.'jCanada I Wft\nalso, supporting the appeal because\n\"ob tho case has\" developed the validity of Dominion grants, or some\nof their provisions, hat been called\ninto -question.\"\nCounsel argued there had been a\ngreat difference of judicial opinion\nin the case, twice argued in the\nSupreme Court Of Canada. The trial\njudge held that the Province had\nno right to demand any royalty, a\ndecision which was upheld in the\nAlbert^ Appeal Court. A further\nappeal was dismissed by the .Supreme Court In February, 1951.\nFrank Gahan, Q.C, formerly of\nLondon, Ont, is assisting Wilson,\n\u25a0v\nOverseas iubscripiions Welcomed\nLONDON, Oet T (Reuters) -\nOversees donations'to tho newly-\nlaunched fund for a memorial.to\nKing George VI would be welcomed, a fund spokesman said today.\nNo subscription -centres will be.\nset up in Commonwealth countries,\nhe said, but \\donatlons from overseas may be addressed to the Lord\nMayor of London.\" \"'-\nSix mailbags filled with subscrlp-\ntions large and small from all parts\nof Britain - arrived today for the\nfund which wai opened Saturday\nnight In a broadcast by Prime Minister Churchill,\nThe fund is to be used for a statue\nof the late King and a charity\nfoundation. Details, of the foundation have not. yet been decided but\nit's to benefit both young md' old.\nMofo than 13 personi hive been killed, 28 wounded and an undisclosed number arrested In an attempt to overthrow Veneiuela'o\nthree-man Junta, shown here. Left to right: Col, Luis Felipe Llevera\nPaez, minister of Interior; President German Suarei Flamerlch, and\nCol, Marcus Perez Jimenez, minister of defence, who hive ruled\nVenezuela since November, 1948, when the army ousted President\nRomulo Gallegos. The attempted coup wat blamed on members of\nthe outlawed Democrats Action - party,. Communists, and disgruntled arrhy officers.\u2014Central Prett Canadian.\nMANN\nGerm Resistance To Wonder Drugs\nRouses Fresh Research For Cures\nBy ALTON L. BLAKE8LEE\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 More md\nmore germs are just laughing at\nman's wonder drugs. These germs\nhave become resistant to the antibiotics. It's their counter-attack in\nthe never-ending germ warfare.\nThe. first good weapon against\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n801 Ward 8t Phone S3\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n815 Kootenay St       Phone 881\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n878 Baker St Phone 238\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhono 827\n878 Baker St.\n\u00a3\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nthem was the sulfa drugs. Then\ncame penicillin, the first antibiotic.\nAt first, it slaughtered the staph\ngerms.\nThen many strains of staph .germs\nbecame resistant to penicillin. Perhaps the germs changed to be able\nto get along despite penicillin.\nOr perhaps a few germs were, by\naccident, genetically different, and\ncould take penicillin, and all their\noff spring also could resist it.\nThe- germs were pushed back\nwhen newer antibiotics came along\n\u2014aureomyclh, terramycln and Chloromycetin. Doctors could give one\nof them to patlentt not-helped by\npenicillin.\nBut now there'! a serious worry.\nMany of the staph germs that resist\npenicillin Have become able to laugh\nat the other antibiotics also.\nA new antibiotic, erythromycin,\nseems to kill an overwhelming majority of the staph germs that fight\noff the other antibiotics. The new\ndrug is not yet on the market, but is\nbeing produced.\nFrench to Oppose\nTunis Discussion\nPARIS, Oct 7 (AP)-The French\nCabinet decided today to oppose\nany discussion of the Tunisian or\nMoroccan Issues at the United\nNations General Assembly opening\nin New York next week.\nA Cabinet spokesman said the\nministers decided that questions\naffecting the protectorates of Tunisia and Morocco concern \"the national competence of France.\" This\nmeans that the French believe the\nU.N. is not a competent body to\nJudge the Issues.\nBoth Tunisian and Moroccan nationalists have been demanding increased self-government ot the\nFrench.\nKids'Haircuts to\nCost. $1, Spokane\nSPOKANE, Wash., Oct. 7 (AP) w\nChildren's haircuts will cost $1 here\nstarting Oct. 15 when a new working\nagreement with union barbers goes\ninto effect, it was announced today.\nAdults will continue to pay $1.25\ntor a hair cut Children's haircuts\nhave been 78 cents.\nPoliceman To Pay\n$61,000 Back Tax\nOTTAWA, Oct. 7 (CP) \u2014 A former $240-a-month Vancouver police-\nma . today ves ordered by the supreme court of Canada to pay income tax on $81,000 real-estate profits In the three years 1948-48.\nThe court handed down a decision dismissing the appeal of\nThomas Campbell from a Judgment\nof the Exchequer Court of Canada\nassessing the former policeman for\nIncome on his property transactions.\nMr. - Campbell, whose home Is in\nVancouver, was a member of the\nVancouver nollce force for 21 years\nup 'to 1947. In 1939, according to\nevidence, he bought a 10-suite apart\nrrtent block known as \"KUlarney\nCourt for $31,000. He sold, it in 1943\nfor $38,000.\nHe bought and sold other apartment buiailngs later, and eventually\nthe Revenue Department essessed\nhim for tax on real-estate profits of\n$2000 In 1048, $29,500 in 1947 and\n$31,880 in 1948.\nThe Income Tax Appeal Board\nreduced this, and on appeal the Exchequer Court set the profits at\n$8?00 for 1948, $20,500 tor 1947 and\n$31,880 for 1948.    '\nSecond \"Guinea Pig'\nDies in U.S. Jail\nTACOMA, Wash,, Oct, 7 (AP) -\nThe second of 200 volunteer \"human\nguinea pigs\" has died at McNeil\nIsland federal prison, a victim, of\nArmy experiments' seeking a cure\nfor a liver disease prevalent in\nKorea. ,'\u2022\nThe death Sunday night of Walls Harvey Wood, 89, was reported,\nby Warden Fred Wilkinson, who\nsaid that of the 200 convicts Inoculated with hepatitis, a form of\nyellow jaundice, only 15 per cent\nhad come down with the disease.\nThe men offered to help the Army\nfind a method of combatting the\nsometimes fatal ailment which\nstruck many servicemen In the\nSecond World War and also In\nKorea.\nWood, sentenced for Interstate\ntransportation of forged securities,\nwould have been eligible tor parole\nnext April,\nGreek King Calls\nGeneral Election\nATHENS, Greece, Oct 7 (API-\nKing Paul today ordered the Greek\nParliament dissolved and called a\ngeneral election in an effort to get\na majority Government that might\naid the country's grave economic\nsituation.\nThe King's decision ended several\nweeks of unsuccessful efforts to get\nFields Marshal Alexander Papagos,\nwhose Right-wing Greek Rally\nParty is the largest In Parliament,\nto join Premier Nicholas Flastlras\nand Deputy Premier Sophocles Ven-\nizelos In a national Government\nBERLIN, Oct 7 (AP) - An\neleven-year-old German boy boarded a plane, in Berlin tonight on a\n6000 mile journey to his heartsick'\nmother.\nUwe Mahlfeld was, placed aboard\na' Pan-American liner enroute to\nPasco, Wash., where physicians said\nhis mother, Mrs. Elwood Dwlnell,\nneeded him to recover from a \"wasting\" Illness. ,\n'Tm coming back,\" young Ewe\nsaid as he left his foster peents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ernest JersynskI. He. had a\nround trip ticket paid by the Koeh\n\"Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!\"\nMOOSE JAW, Sask,, Oct. 7 (CP)\n\u2014Sitting l^ull and Plapot would\narise with wildly waving tomahawks if they could scan the contents of,a'letter filed in the Moose\nJaw Chamber of Commerce office.\nEven the officials of that Organization, which advocates free enterprise, feel there is a limit . . . because China is trying to sell North\nAmerica native novelties to Moose\nJaw storekeepers.\nIn a letter from Hong Kong; the\nChamber was advised that K. S. Lau\nand Company are the manufacturers\nof all kinds of Indian beaded belts,\nas .well as jewelry, moccasins, novelties, etc. The company said It had\nbeen handling this line for years,\nestablishing a good name in the\nwhole ot the United States.\nWild-Eyed Man Fires\nGun at Church Altar\nVANCOUVER, Oct 7 (CP) - A\nlone rifleman walked, into Holy\nRosary Cathedral in downtown Van.\nccuver today and fired a round from\na rifle into the altar.\nHe fled without saying a -word and\nminutes later was arrested on the\nstreet, the rifle under his arm.\n\"The wild-eyed man rushed into'\nthe church,\" said A, P. McKenna,\nparishioner at the cathedral, \"and let\nfire -at the altar. No one was injured.\"\nPolice quo' .' the man, whom they\nbooked for Investigation, as saying\nhe did it for \"personal reasons.\" He\noffered no other explanation.\nUwe Mahlfeld Files To Visit His\nHeartsick Mother in Pasco, Wash.\nKorean Casualties\nOTtfAWA, Oct 7 (CP)'\u2014 The\nArmy today issued its 140th casualty list of tlie Korean war, reporting eight men killed in action,\nseven wounded in action and one\nInjured in action. The last previous\nlist was Issued Oct 4.\nThis brought to 1069 the number\nof casualties so far suffered by\nCanadian troops In Korean action,\nincluding 198 dead, 789 wounded,\n73 Injured, 10 missing and ono\nprisoner of war.     \u2022\nShore, Henry James Donald, Sgt:\nE. C.R.; Frederick James Shore\n(father), 153, 3rd Ave., Vlile St\nPierre, Que.- '\n.Among those killed in action\nwas the name of Gordon'Harry\nWaldner, Burnaby, B.C.\nlert \u2014 long advertising-agency in\nBerlin,'^\/ ,',;' '     '.:\"'* :\u25a0,'-.\" \u2022\u2022\u2022\nThe JersynskU hove, taken cere 'of\nyoung Mahlfeld since his mother\nand her. American husband left In\n1948. Mrs. JersynskI Is Mrs. Dwinell's\nsister.\n, News dispatches trom. Pasco said\nMr. Twinell would.have a better\nchance to recover from her illness\nif she could see her son.\nHis- foster father is unemployed\nand was unable 4o pay the. cost of\nsending the boy.\nThe advertising egency supplied\nthe funds, the American consulate in\nBerlin arranged-the visa quickly and\nthe airline provided half-fare rates.\nYokohama Funeral\nFor Iroquois Dead\nTOKYO, Oct 7 (AP)-Funeral\nservices tor an offlcer.and two seamen of the Canadian destroyer\nH.M.C.S. Iroquois killed by Communist gunfire'will be held at the\nCommonwealth cemetery in Yokohama tomorrow.\nThe ship was hit by Communist\nshore batteries recently while bombarding the coast of Korea.\n-The Iroquois, the first Canadian\nship to suffer casualties in the Korean war, ' continues to- operate\nagainst the enemy oft Tanchon on\nthe East coast of North, Naval Head,\nquarters said,. She will 'W to briefly tomorrow,in honor of her dead\npersonnel ,'..'\u25a0 \u25a0*,'\u2022'\n4WU1MIPII\nMrs. Smith Held\nBy U.S. Police\nTOKYO, Oet T (AP)-Mrs. Dor-\nerthy' Smith, daughter of Gen.\nWalter Krueger, has been charged\nS with murder In the fatal stabbing\nSaturday of her husband, Col-\nAubrey D, Smith, Gen, i Merk\nClark's headquarters announced\ntonight .\nThe attractive, woman, mother\nof two children, Is held under ob-\n- tervatlon In a Tokyo army hospital.\nA maid found Smith, 45, of San\nAntonio, Tex., on his bed vainly\ntrying to stem the flow of blood\nfrom a wound In his right side. His\ndazed wife sat on an adjoining bed\nclutching a knife.\nSmith was. chief ot the Plans and\nOperations Division of the logistics\nsection ot the Far East Command.\nMrs. Smith's father was Second\nWorld-War Commander of the Sixth\nArmy In the Pacific.\nThe Drews Lunch\nWith Churchill\nLONDON, Oct 7 (CP) - Prime\nMinister Churchill gave a private\nluncheon today for George Drew,\nleader of the Opposition In the Canadian House of Commons, and Mrs.\nDrew.,\nThe Marquess of Salisbury, Secretary of State for Commonwealth\nRelations,, also was present with\nhis wife.     .\nMr. and Mrs. Churchill entertained the guests In their private apartments at the Prime Minister's official residence, 10 Downing Street\ntsa\nNeVK\nTopcoats\nThe warm weather\nwon't last forever , . .\nSo get your topcoat\nlined tip for   '\ncooler days.\nWo have a fine selection\n. .'--.'\"   ..;.* of',,.',*:.. v'7.;,-;i\n' FLEECES;\nTWEEDS        v *-.-\nGABARDINES\n$45 Up\nEmory's\nLIMITED'\nThe Man's Store\nChrome-Cobalt Used\nIn New Denture's\nWASHINGTON, Oct 7 (AP) -\nThe Army Medical Service estimated today that It is saving about\n$500,000 a year by using a chrome-\ncobalt alloy Instead of gold In manufacturing partial dentures and\ndental replacements. Maj.-Gen.\nWalter D. Love, chief of the U.S.\nArmy Dental Corps, said the alloy,\nwhich looks somewhat like silver,\nIs stronger, more durable, lighter\nand considerably cheaper than gold.\nPorgy ind Bess Face Indefinite\nRun Yer II Ain't Necessarily So\nLONDON, Oct 7 (AP) \u2014 There\nwere no signs today'of an end to\nthe \"will It\u2014won't it\" battle over\nthe London engagement of' the\nopera \"Porgy and Bess.\"\nStraight from triumphant Berlin\nend Vienna engagements, \"Porgy\"\nis scheduled, to. open for an Indefinite run at London's Stoil\nTheatre Thursday.\nThe bone of contention it the\nconductor's baton.\nHardie Ratcliffe, secretary of the\nBritish Musicians Union, Insists\nthat a British conductor take over\nfrom U.S. maestro Alexander\nSmollens after, .this week. Otherwise,. Ratcliffe threatened, the all-\nBritish orchestra would walk out\nafter Saturday night's show.\nALL-NEGRO CAST\nBacking Smollens it .producer\nBlevins Davis and his all-Negro\nAmerican cast\nDavis argues that because\nSmollens has conducted the complicated score many time's since the\nopera's premiere 17 years ago, he's\nthe man for the job. The cast says\nlt would lose confidence under\nanother stick-waver.\n. Davis fired the latest shot this\nmorning \u2014 a notice posted on the\noutside  of the  theatre  that  the\nNorway is about 1100 miles Tong   V\nbut its greatest width is 250 miles.\nYour Bread Will Be Tastier\nMade From        .\nELLISON'S BEST FLOUR\nAsk Your Grocer or Phone 231\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nPABLUM\nBABY CEREALS\nPtblum Mixed\nPablum Oatmeal\nPablum Rice\n\u2022 Pabltlm Barley\n.25e and 48c    '\n4 Cereals for Flavor Variety\nAt Your Rexall Store\nCity Drag\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern. Pharmecy*\nBOX 460 \u25a0\nPhone 84, Day - 807-R Night\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIHIHUII\nCEREMONIAL OFFICES AT CORONATION\nFOR MASSEY SUGGESTED BY SENATOR\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street\nPhone 140\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 2R\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nBy. \u00a3. 8. JOHNSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Oct. 7 (AP) \u2014 A suggestion that Canada's governor-general, Vincent Massey, or Prime Mln-\nister St Laurent be Invested with\none of the great ceremonial offices\nat the coronation of the Queen next\nyear, is made by Senator W. Rupert\nDavles of Toronto and Kingston,\nOnt, in a letter publihsed today by\nthe Times.\nPresident of the Kingston'Whig-\nStandard and high sheriff last year\nfor this native county of Montgomeryshire, the Senator offers the idea\nin support of proposals in the\nUnited Kingdom press, that overseas commonwealth subjects be given a more active part In the Queen's\ncoronation.   \u25a0\",\u2022'. \u2022\nNEWS FOR BRITON8\nToo fey residents ot Great Britain, the senator's letter says, are\naware of the fact that the dominions\nare completely autpnomous or that\nQueen Elizabeth 111 much the\nQueen of Canada, Australia, and\nthe other member notions of the\nCommonwealth overseas, as she Is\not the United Kingdom.\n\"Anything mat can be done to\ntighten the bonds ot the Common\nwealth at this time should be done,'\nthe Senator writes, \"even at the In.\nconvenience of some of the British\nhigh officials and peers ot the realm,\nmany of whom seldom grace the\nHouse ot Lords when there is work\nto be done.\"\nDEATHS\nBy the Canadian Press\nPeterborough, Ont. \u2014i Johp E.\nSullivan, 71,.. former ..vice-president\nof the Ont rlo Amateur Softball\nAssociation and Peterborough alderman.\nOttawa \u2014 Alphee Simon Pothler,\n60, superintendent of savings in the\nTresauty Branch of the Post Office.\nBelleville, Ont \u2014-B. Reginald\nHirchey, 66, well-known bandmaster, composer and' arranger of band\nmusic.\n. St, John's Nfld,, \u2014 W. S. Monroe,\n81, Conservative premier of New.\nfoundland. from 1024 to 1928, died\nat his home,   ~2'.~.        \u25a0   > ,\nMatches, Causes Many Home Fires\nshow will open on shcedule \"for an\nindefinite run.\"\nAs the producer sat back and\nwaited for Ratcllffe's expected\ncounter-attack, Britons who have\nbeen humming \"Summertime\" for\nyears lined up two'deep to book\nseats for as long as three months\nohead.\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD,.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and paint Work Specialty\nBuddy\nReynolds\nFRIDAY\n- Hebr Buddy Sing the\nSensational\nOGOPOGO!\nand other recording hits\n. ADMISSION $1.23\nllllllllllllllllllillilllllllllllllllllllllHII\nBy D. KEMP EDWARDS\nPresident Dominion Fire\nPrevention Association\nOTTAWA, Oct 7 (CP)-Exerclse\nof a little care by Canadians last\nyear could have prevented 40,875\nfires and property loss of $21,317,651.\nDuring first prevention week it is\nwell to impress upon .Canadian\npeople the serious consequences\nthat result from tiro in the lost of\nlife and property.\nIn the past 10 years, 034,735 fires\nin Canada have claimed 4085 lives,\nseriously injured 15,000 persons\nand destroyed property valued.at\n$540,000,000.\nIn 1051 alone, there were 60,000\nfires. They claimed 493 lives and\ncaused property damage of $78,-\nOQO.OQO. Most of tHe fireJ-45,000-T\nwere in the home.\nSHOCKING RECORD\n., Just think, careless smoking\ncausing 21,-395 fires and damage of\nFreak Explosions Shake Town\nNear Darwin After Atom Test\nPERTH, Australia, Oct. 7 (Reuters)\u2014Britain's atom test wss \"a\ngreat success\" and everything went\naccording to expectation, Dr. O. M.\nSolandt, Canadian scientist who attended the test said today,\nSolandt. heed of Canada's Defence\nResearch Board, was chief assistant\nto Dr. W. G. Penney of the British\nMinistry of Supply.\nSolandt arrived here by air tonight from the Monte Bellos Islands,\nwhere the blast took .place last Friday.\nSolandt was accompanied by Prof.\nL. H. Martin of Melbourne'University and W. A. S. Butement Department of Supply scientist, who also\nwitnessed the atomic explosion.\nNOT OFFICIAL \u2022\nSolandt said he witnessed the ex\nplosion as a working scientist and\nnot as an official observer for the\nCanadian Government,'but that he\nwill furnish the Canadian Government with a report on his observations.\nAt the Monte Bellos he had been\nengaged on health survey work on\nthe civil defence phase, taking measurements to tell what would have\nhappened to.'human beings it, any\nhad been in the area.\nThe tests appear to be over now,\nthough lt was once thought there\nmight be further explosions.\nTwo Air Force transport planes\narrived today at Onslow, mainland\nport nearest the island test site.\nThey stood by, apparently In readiness to fly the test team back to\nEngland.\nSTARTING  AGAIN\nBut for away in Darwin, on the\nNorth coast ot Australia, natives figured the atomic blast was starting\nall.over again.\nTWo freak explosions followed by\n\"blinding flashes\" shook Borroloo-\nla, tiny town oh the Gulf of Carpentaria, during the weekend, according to reporta reaching Darwin, i\nI The first explosion' followed a\nrumble from the\u25a0 Northwest,Seconds later there wat a blast overhead, leaving buildings quivering\nfor several seconds, and the rumble\nmoved Eastward \"at terrific speed\".\nThe shocks were apparently unrelated to the atom tests. A Bureau\nspokesman suggested lt might have\nbeen a meteorite.\n$3,509,294. Defective chimneys, flues,\nstoves, furnaces, boilers pipes, hot\nashes coals and open fires were responsible for another 11,437 fires\nand loss of $8,813,413.\nOn the human aide, 15 persons\ndied in fires as a result of smoking\nIn bed. Sixteen children left alone\nwere lost In fires. Children playing\nWith matches were responsible for\n12 deaths. The careless use of gasoline and kerosene was responsible\nfor more than 60 deaths.\nThe fire causes In the home require, your attention and this loss of\nlife can be prevented with the\napplication of your care and knowledge of how to protect your property against fire.\nNEED FOR INSPECTION\nDuring fire prevention week lt is\nrecommended that:\n1. All dwellings, public buildings, stores, warehouses, factories,\nfarms, mines and forests be carefully inspected by their occupants\nand all-conditions likely to cause\nor promote the spread of fire be\nremoved.\n2. All theatres, hotels, hospitals\nand other institutional buildings be\nInspected and provision made for\nall changes necessary to protect\nthe occupants in case of fire.\n, 3. Fire drills be held for the children in all schools, for the inmates\nof all Institutions, arid tor the employees in all factories.\n4. Special Instruction on. the subject of fire prevention be-given by\nthe teachers and by municipal officials in the schools and that, such\nappropriate literature as may be\nmade available be distributed to the\npupils.\n5. Federal, provincial and municipal authorities endeavor by means\nof public meetings, the press, radio\nbroadcasts, specially prepared motion pictures or otherwise to impress upon citizens the national Importance of protecting life, property and natural resources trom\nloss by fire.\nHOCKEY SEASON TICKETS\nand\nHOCKEY CONTRACTS\nON SALE TODAY\nCIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\n10:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.\nBBinC WW MB WEHE FOB [\nGet Ready for\nCold Weather Ahead!\nWinter\nLube Special!\nOur  Winter-pi'oofing   service includes\nlubricating  chassis,  changing oil  and\ntransmission    lubricants    ahd adding\nanti-freeze! Drive in today!\nBring your car to us and\nknow that < it's thoroughly\nchecked end ready for safe\nWinter driving! All Work\ndone by experts, factory\ncharts carefully followed.\nStop in soonl\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped garage in\nthe Interior ot British Columbia\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_1952_10_08","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\/1.0426507","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":"1952-10-08 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":"1952-10-08 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":""}]}