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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Lower Gas Prices\nLikely for BI.\nNew Refinery at Coast, Pipeline\nTo Make Canadian Gas Available\nVANCOUVER (CP)--British Columbia motorists-\nhave the prospects of getting cheaper gasoline when Crude\noil begins to flow through the Trans Mountainpipeline from\n,Alberta. .,..-.-' 7\n. J. R. White of Toronto, president of Imperial Oil\nLimited, held out this hope Wednesday when he spoke, at\nopening ceremonies of the company's new $13,500,000 refinery.        '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0''.' -:. '\nThe new refinery at loco, where Imperial built.it-\nfirst plant in 1914, will have a capacity of 22,500 barrels\u2014\n787,500 gallons\u2014daily. '\n'\u2022It; will be fed crude oil from' the\nAlberta-fields when the 712-mile\n24-inch $00,000,000 Trans Mountain\npipeline opens in October.\nMr. \/White said price reduction\nwill depend on the tariff posted by\nTrans Mountain.\n\"Nevertheless, we are confident\nthat a reduction will be in order.\"\nIt Is estimated the reduction will\namount to about eight-tenths of a\ni cent a gallon. The present price for\nTegular gasoline is 40.8* cents and\nethyl 43.2.\nThe reflnary, largest In the Pacific Northwest, officially went \"on\nstream\" Wednesday when B.C. Finance Minister Einar Gunderson\ndosed a switch to start operations.\nFor the first time, B.C. motorists\nwill be able to drive their automobiles with all-Canada gasolines\nwhen production from the new refinery moves to market. Present\nsupplies come from California.\nThe big refinery, located 10 miles\nfrom Vancouver on the north shore\nof Burrard inlet, with a flare stack\nas high as a 13-storey building, is\non a 386-acre site. s'\nIt has the first fluid catalytic\ncracking unit\u2014known in the oil industry, as the \"cat\"\u2014in B.C.\nMr. White figured the cut on the\nbasis of a Trans Mountain tariff bf\n45 cents a barrel for delivering; Alberta crude in Vancouver.\n20.30 CENT.8AVINQ\nOn the basis of a 45-cent tariff,\nVancouver refineries will save between 25 and 30 cents a-barrel on\nthe California price. There are 35\nimperial gallons to the barrel. Imperial, Shell and Standard refineries operating here will'take between .40,000 and 50,000 barrels a\nday.\nMr. White-said that with the\nbuilding of new refinery equipment\nhere and in the Pacific Northwest\nstates an increased volume of crude\nshould move, through the pipeline.\nThis would result, he said, in lower\nlaid-down costs giving promise ot\nbenefits to the consumer.\nThe new refinery, he added, with\nits 'modern equipment, will permit\nmore economical operation.\noiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiii\nStiff Liquor Controls\nIndicated by Qov*t\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014British Columbia'! Social Credit government\nplana to throw out the alternative voting system formulated by a\ncoalition of the two parties it overwhelmed in the two elections\nthe system has been used.\nThis was indicated in the legislature Wednesday by Percy\nWright (SC\u2014Victoria) in his address in reply to the Speech from\nthe Throne..\nMr. Wright also hinted that stiff controls and local option will\nbe salient points in the government's new liquor by the glass legislation,  i \u25a0:\u2022     \u2022\nix-.- - .Bpth-Mr.. Wright; and Ray Willlston (SC\u2014Fort George), who\nseconded'the motion in reply to the throne speech, said the liquor\nlegislation will be based, on the report of the Stevens Commission\nwhich held public hearings on drinks by the glass last year.   ,-\n,-. -Mr. Wright quoted a section of the report urging that any\nlegislation state clearly it is designed to control sale and distribution of liquor. \"It is expected\" these controls would be covered\n* legislation which '1 hope will\npie - themselves might decide ->\n\"quite fully.\".\nWEOPLE'S DECISION\n-<i  There waa one as|\nby ia loctt.'optlon vate'v\/MVhef b^.hbt'they wish new\"types of\n\u2022   oufleta-tobe llBeb'teir In\"'their communities. .-:.\"\u25a0:\u25a0\nThe liquor bill \"will fulfill the wishes and be In the belt In-\n'   terests of the great majority of the province.\"\nMr, Wright said with court cases coming up shortly lt \"would\nnot be proper\" to. discuss Doukhobor-legislation at this time*   !\ngiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nGervinJUCHead\nTo Allend Meet\n..VANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 B.C.'s biggest l|bor organization will attend\nthe conference on amendments to\nthe Industrial Conciliation and Ar-\n' bltration Act, called Tuesday by\nLabor Minister Lyle Wicks, it was\nreported today.\nR. K. Gervin, secretary of the\nTrades Union. Congress of B.C.,\nparent provincial body of TLC\nUnions,.told the\"Vancouver Trades\nand Labor Council Labor Minister\nWicks' invitation to attend the\nmeeting was accepted.\nGervin is also secretary of the\nVancouver Trades and Labor Council.\nThe meeting, to be held October\n\"8 In Vancouver, will be the third\nconference on the ICA Act in less\nthan two months. The first was\nspurned by both the TUC and B.C.\nFederation of Labor (CCL).\n: Officials of the B.C. Federation\not Labor are in Montreal at the\nCanadian Congress of Labor convention and are unavailable for\ncomment on the Invitation. It is\nexpected they will follow Gervln's\nlead.\nDOCTORS TO;ATTEMPT\nTWINS SEPARATION\nNEW ORLEANS (AP) \u2014Surgeons\nwill attempt todfiy to separate the'\nSiamese twin daughters of Mayor\nand Mrs. Ashton Moutdn of Lafayette, La: The two.girls, Carolyn Ann\nand Catherine Ann, were born on\nJuly 22, joined ot. the base bf the\nsP'n\u00ab- -,\u00ab\u00a3     '   7\n(OataJt etavolL\nKootenay Lake, Wednesday, 7.75\nfeet above zero.\nG>5<\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny with cloudy,\nperiods today. A little warmer.\nLight winds. Low and high at Cran- -\nbrook, and Crescent Valley, 40 and\n70; Revelstoke, 45 at)d 70. -,.;'.'\"\nVol. 52\n-S__SON, B; C, CANADA-THOBSPAY MORNING. S0>TEMBER 17.1953\nNo. 124-\nMalan Segregation\nMeasure Rejected\n-\u2022'     E_ :\n- :--,--::.':-\"-\/.*-f:\u201e-,<j?r,-i\nfct_. ,-',.,\u25a0\u25a0, 7. .-.'\u201e\u2022.__,\n', IN BEAR LANGUAGE, that Is what tho cub\non the left could be saying as hit slx-months-old\nbrother bruin finishes off I toft drink ot National\nairport after their arrival In Washington, D.C.\nThe bears, captured by South Korean'toldlert,\nare gifts of Synnman  Rhee to  President Elsen\nhower who-plans to turn them over to the zoo\u2014\nthe White House grounds not being equipped\nat a Sear tanctuary. The. friendly orlttert practically beamed-as children-petted them, at the\nairport\u2014APWIfifhoto.-\nNATO Forces Stage\n\"Exercise Mariner\"\nOnly Belligerents\nBy-IviEt SUFRIN 7\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nUNITED' NATIONS, N.V. (CP)\u2014\nThe 16 United Nations allies of the\nKorean War decided at a closed\nmeeting Wednesday to stand firm\non the UN decision to limit the\nKorean peace conference to belligerents.\n-'\u25a0At last month's special session\nbt the UN assembly, it was decided that the peace conference\nwould be limited to those countries\nwhich fought in Korea plus the\nSoviet Union if invited by the Red\nside.\n.Since then, however, the Communist Chinese and North Koreans\nhave objected to this arrangement.\nThey want a conference made up\nof belligerents plus the following\nso-called neutral \u25a0 nations: Russia,\nIndia, Indonesia, Pakistan and\nBurma. '.'.-\u2022-,\nTax Cuts, Higher Old\nAge Pensions Asked\nUN Disregards\nRun Objections\nBy MEL  SUFRIN   '\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nUNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (CP)-\nThe steering committee of, the\nUnited Notions General Assembly,\ntwice overriding Soviet objections,\nrecommended Wednesday that the\nassembly . approve a list of 72\nItems for itt agenda.       7\nThe Soviet Union opposed proposals looking toward a study of\npossible revision of the UN charter\nin 1055, but the committee disregarded tha Soviet objections and\nvoted fo recommend that the matter, be included in the agenda for\nthe eighth .session of the, assembly.\nBoth' Russia and Poland abstained\non this question ,whi}e- the 10 other\nmimbert. of the steering committee, includinsf Canada\/voted to include it,     ;'\u25a0'.\u25a0 \/\nRussia also was defeated In its\nattempts to- remove from the\nagenda a proposed debate on Italian, German and Japanese prls\noners-of-war allegedly still held by\nthe Soviet Union. The vote was 12\nto - on this, with Poland and Russia in opposition.\nDelegates had expected the Soviet delegation to bring up the issue of the composition of,tlie Korean peace conference pnd possibly\nto demand that the whole question\nbe reopened in the light of the\nChinese Communist call for broadening the membership of, the. conference. \u2022 \u25a0-\/',--\nBut the: Soviet delegate; Jacob\nMalik, did not once mention the\nKorean conference. Aside from his\nopposition to any attempt to revise\nthe UJJ charter and any consideration of the prisoner-of-war issue,\nMalik remained quiet.\nThis doesn't mean, however, that\nRussia still won't make an attempt\nto reopen the question of .the Korean peace conference.\nPopulation Up\n2.5 Per Cent Yearly\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Canada's\npopulation is increasing at a rate of\nimmigration Minister Harris terms\nabout 2.5 per cent annually, and\nthis \"a satisfactory and substantial\ngrowth.\"\nnow- about 15,000,000, over a\nyear period --presumably by the\nChamber had suggested an objec-\nearly 1980s. Earlier Wednesday, the\ntive of 30,000,000 by 1975. The 3.5\nper cent annual increase, Mr. Harris said, hai prevailed since 1951,\nwith natural increase alone\u2014, by\nwhich is meant the number by\nwhich births exceed deaths\u2014about\n270\/100 annually.,....\nBy TREVOR BLORk,\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014.The biggest naval exercise ever staged\nopened In the Atlantic Ocean Wad-'\nnesday.. . .-, .\nCode-named Exercise Mariner,\nthe vast war game, will extend from\nthe United States' eastern seaboard\nto Britain and the English Channel,\nvia Greenland and Scandinavia, Its\nmain objective will be to keep open\nthe Atlantic supply lanes in the\nface of theoretical enemy submarines, air and surface attacks.      -;\u25a0,\u2022,\nParticipating are some 300 ships,\n1000 pianos and -500,000 men from\nnine North Atlantic Treaty Organization nations \u2014 Canada, United,\nStates, Britain, France, Derlmark,\nNorway, the Netherelands, Belgium\nand Portugal. \u2022\". \u25a0\nBefore it ends Oct. 4, another\nlarge-scale NATO operation will\nstart in the Mediterranean. There\nthe United,States Sixth. Fleet, the\nBritish Mediterranean ..Fleet: ond\nthe. navies, pf Greece,,Italy: ahdjfuj?\nkey wll).,team, up for-Exercise: W\u00abld\":\nfast Land and.air forces will -also\ntake part in this test of the defence\nof south Europe, which Begina\nSept. 29., '   :-..'\nExercise Mariner will deal mainly with problems similar to those\nof the Battle of the Atlantic in the\nSecond World War, keeping sea\nlanes open despite Nail U-boat and\nsurface raider assaults.\nAnti-submarine warfare and convoy protection will be a feature, of\nthe exercises. And ships and planes\nwill operate with tbe assumption\nthat both sides have the atont bomb.\nBlue Force represents the NATO\npowers and Orange the enemy.\nThe over-all aim is \"{8 train the\nforces of the NATO nations in coordinated operations.\"\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Prett Staff Writer\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014The Canadian Congress of Labor demanded\nWednesday that the federal government cut taxation,- boost old-\nage pensions and inaugurate a national health scheme..\nAt the same titae, It reaffirmed\nthe CCF as its political- arm and\nbeat down an attempt to reinstate\nthree expelled Communist-led\nunions. The unions were urged fo\nditch their leaden if they wanted\nto get back into the congress.\nThe 370,000-member labor body,\n'reaching the half-way. mark in a\nweek-long convention, called for a\nboost in old-age-pensions to $65 a\nmonth for all persons 05 and over\nwithout a test of financial means.\nThis compared with the currerit\npension of $40 a month for persons\n70 and over without a financial\nmeans test, and to those 05 and\nover with a test\nRAIL MEN MAP OUT\nNEW DEMANDS\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canada's\nrailway inen got together Wednesday to work out their demands for\nthe coming year.\nSpokesmen for some 15 international unions representing the non-\noperating staffs bf tour Canadian\nrailways met in private to discuss\ndetails of a new contract to be\nnegotiated shortly between the employees and the railways.\niiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWhat, Not Built In?\nEAST ST, LOUIS (AP)\u2014The\nnew- telephone directory here\ncarries an-advertisement announcing the Sutherland Lum-\n,ber Co..has for sale \"creosoted\n-  fence posts and holes.\"\nNot so, an officials of the firm .\nexplained Wednesday. It was a\ntypographical error. The items\nfeatured,by the firm ore creosoted fence posts ana poles.   .\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTOTVICTIM C-F\nHIT-RUN DRIVER\n-V^COinn-R <CP)'\u2014 Three-\n, year-old Wanda Munson suffered head injuries' Wednesday\nwhen, she was struck by a tar\nthat failed to stop,; The accident occurred-while the, child\nwas playing with other children-;\non a street hear her- home in\nthe Shaughnessy; district. - ;\n\u2022 She ti'rejSorted 'iB^ST'con-'\nditlon in Vancouver General\nHospital ,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nU.K. Would Spur\nPeace Talks\nBy ARTHUR GAV8HON\nLONDON, (AP) \u2014.Britain may\nmove to bring the United Nations\nond Communist sides together soon\nto .straighten out snarls over the\nshape of the Korean peace confer-\n\u25a0_\u00bb^f-KOs_e- eourtfts'saw^ww'\n_esd\u00abiy, night.:,.,'\n1; They reported, after a meeting bt\nPrime Minister Churchill's cab\ninet that Britain will, however,, oppose any reopening bf tbe Korean\ndebate in the UN General Assembly., - 7 :,-\u2022\nRed.China and North Korea have\nboth suggested to the'UN that\nmembership of the peace conference-be broadened to take in some\nneutral Asian nations.\nNevertheless,: one idea favored\nhere is that direct contact should\nbe'established between the two\nsides ta insure that peace talks\nbegin by Oct. 28, the deadline set\nIn the armistice agreement. This\ncould be done, the informants said,\nby appointing a committee of interested powers or by appointing\na mediator,   '\u25a0}\nThere was . no- way ot knowing\nwhether this move was considered\nby the cabinet, over, which Churoh-\nill presided. It is likely to be discussed by British and United States\nrepresentatives in New York if it\nhas not already come up.\nState Minister Selwyn Lloyd\nflew io New York Wednesday night\nwith cabinet orders to talk about\nall aspects of the Korean tangle\nwith State Secretary John Foster\nDulles and other Allied leaders.\n' The general British view seems\nto be:\n,1. !Red China and North Korea\nhave put fprWard proposals which\nclosely resembly those ' embodied\nIn !the Russian resolution : voted\ndown by the assembly last month.\n2. The Red aim is to exploit\ndifferences \u2014 since settled \u2014 between the U.S. and her allies,\n' 8. Britain is bohnd publicly to\nabide by. decisions already taken\nby the assembly \u2014 decisions which\nsuggested channels ot preliminary\nnegotiation with the Reds.   \u2022\n28 DIE IN\nPLANE CRASH\n! None Survive as\nAirliner\nExplodes,. Burns\nALBANY, N.Y. (AP)-An American Airlines plane crashed,' exploded and burned with a loss of\n28 personrf-Aall aboard\u2014near the\nAlbany airport today.\nThe two-engine Convair, en route\nfrom- Boston to Chicago, pitched\ninto' a small lot near the Albany-\nSchenectady highway, about 3%\nmiles from.the airport,        7\nThe plane exploded and burned\nrapidly. \u2022     ','-.\"\nAbout a dozen, passengers were\nthrown clear of the wreckage. The\nothers were trapped In the flaming\nship.'- .-'';\u2022\"\u25a0' i\nThe cause of the crash was not\ndetermined immediately.\u25a0,,.',\nJohn W. Hodd, 23, a former navy\npilot who' lived nearby,, laid he\nheard tha engine cut out and then\nroar as if the pilot had \"gunned it.\"\nHodd said that when he saw the\ncrash he ran to the door of the\nplane and tried to open it but was\ndriven back by the flames. :\n, Another witness, Mrs, Alice Flnne\nwho lived at. the trailer camp near\nthe scene of thi. crash, said the\nplahe seemed to explode. Then she\nsaid, she sow a \"shot of flame\" that\ndled,lfhm(_lately, \u2022-\nLester Hansen,. a truck driver,\nsaid,he saw the plane circling low\nover the area. \"It backfired a couple of times. ahd then came down\nfast at about a. 48-degree angle.\nThe Convair juat missed the\ntrailer caton. 7  \u2022\nThe accident scene was about six\nmiles east, of Schenectady city line\nand eight, miles west of Albany.\nPremier Loses by 16 Votes; Colored\nVoters Stay ion Common Electoral Roll\n\u25a0 C_VP-!TOrar '('fletfer*):..\u2014 South Aftl-a-Natipn\u00abJist\ngovernment fail-e( to; get parHamentery approval Wednesday for a bill providing for segregation of colored (mixed\nblood) voters, on a', separate,electoral roll, 'a ',.'-.\nThe measure, supported 122 to 78, was 16 votes short\nof the-two-third? majority- needed;     7\nPremier Daniel Malan told the joint session of Parliament he-wfU ty \"another bourse\" if his proposal was\nbeaten;';': ' '.-!-. y-'\"y',',,-\u25a0\u2022 \"-':' .'\u25a0\u2022'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0. '.'*\/\u2022'-\u25a0\u25a0\"'?. 7\n-he bill was designed to validate an earlier measure\nthrown out of the'courts. Passage-would have meant\" elimination of Cape Province's colored voters.from the common,\nelectoral'roll: '-; \u25a0'-,\nThe, \"Cape colorkds'* flow- votel \u25a0\nwith the Europeans. They have\ncentury-old voting rights which tha\nMalan party wanted to abolish.   - -:\nUnder the government bill, colored voters would have been restricted to electing four members\nto the assembly, where three memV\nbers for African native already sit.'\nTo get the two-thirds majority., ,\nthe Notionalists, who are committed'\nto a segregation: policy, heed aome\ndefections from the United party,\nthe official Opposition. They failed\nto get them.. ' \u25a0 7  h\nJacobus Strauss, United party,\nleader, came out strongly against\nthe bill on the grounds that it em-\nphosized the \"separate-ness\" ot colored people. '.\nWARNS GOVERNMENT;      ;\nStrauss: Warned, the government\nparty'that there was'a danger of a.\nsolid-racial-bloc arising in the Parliament. He said such a bloc would\nuse its position to advocate extrem-\/\n1st views.      '  \u25a0   '\n, None of' these opposition views\ncarried any weight with-Malan, who\nhas been trying for two years' to remove the colored voters from 'thl.\ncommon .electoral roll.   -;,     i\nSpeaking-in reply to the day-long'\ndebate, Malan said if his measure\nfailed he would follow' another\ncourse. He did not indicate'the exact\nnature of thit next.move.\" ' \u2022.,\"\n,... Malan maintained his clear cut\nvictory in'the-general election last\nApril; gm'iiit party * * ;yery, clear\nrtandita\" ior. the. sbparat. repfe-\nsentation of colored voter's.'\t\nBy JOHN DUOMAN   .,'\"\nSOUTHAMPTON, Eng. .(Reuters)\n\u2014Britain's ' first prisoners-of-war\nearner home from Korea Wedneiday\nio tell about .the bitter feuding on\nthe troopship Asturlai between loyal troops and victims of \"brainwash\ning\". by. the Communists.\nMost refused to talk about the\nfist fights on board the. 22,445-ton\ntroopship during' the homeward\nvoyage. But Jhbse of the 520 repatriate! who did talk spoke hard\nwords about buddies in the prison\ncamps who switched to the Communist line.\nCpl. Ken Walters,.29, said there\nhad been \"quite a bit of fighting\"\non the Asturias.     \u2022>'-   \u25a0\nSgt.. Bernard Smith aeemed to\nthink the Communists' relentless,\nsome of the victims all their lives,\nsystematic brain washing might dog\n\"The younger men-will forget It\nsoon enough,-' Smith said, \"but wit-\nsome of the older ones It will probably stick.\"     .         .7; -,\nThe British Army believes the\nbest way to lead the ideologically-\ninfected prisoners back to normal\nis to throw them right into English\nlife. That is why the \"brain-washed\" were shipped homo.\nSome, prisoners' were, especially\nbitter about, \"squealers\" who had\ninformed on them in the camps in\norder to get a few extra cigarets a\nday.\nSome, of the men refused to talk\nto reporters but none could be found\nto openly admit they had been eon?\nverted to communism.\nThree special trains'took the soldiers home for big home-town celebrations, tea in front of the fireplace, and'good talk over home-\ncooked food.\nNo Trace\nOf Plane's\nPassengers\nKETCHIKAN (AP) \u2014 Searchers\ncombined densely wooden moun\ntolnsides and twisting water channels Wednesday-for a trace of five\npersohl in a New Mexico plane\nfound wrecked- Tuesday in a wild\ncoastal area of southeast Alaska\nThe' latest radio report from the\nCoast Guard cutter Santa Monica\nsaid ground .parties had not- found\nthe bodies of oilman Ellis Hall of\nAlbuquerque, N.M., or the four\nothers with hi.m on the flight that\nended .in disaster soon after the\ntwin-engine plane left Annette Island; Alaska, Aug.. 17.\nHall's wife, ''two daughters and\n17-year-old Patrick Hibben, of Albuquerque wart- with him. As\nsearchers,\" rechecked. the .widely\nscattered ; wreckage there, remained only the faintest hope that\nanyon\u00bb-8_rviveds ( t;\n..-:, pilotyier&sV-y; i^kjajiia^p - of\nXMats-bn. wnd' fpund the wreckage 98 miles Oast of here at Boca* de\nQuadra; ari arm. Of Revillagigedo\nChannel, said be believed, the' plane\ndisintegrated In flight In, whip-saw-:\ning high; winds reported tho day\nof the-ash.   ' 7 ''.'-.'.'\nLudwigsen said, there was no\nsign of fire or explosion. Many\npersonal belongings were recovered unscorched. He said an explosion after, the crash would have\nscattered debris in ,a fairly close\narea, while disintegration in the\nair''could;.have strewn, wreckage\nover the half-mile area where it\nwas' foiind. \u2022 \u2022\nThe pilot said he believed the\nengines and front of tho cabin, still\nunlocated, ' may have passed over\na cliff ahd into the waters of Boca\nde Quadra with. the . five persons\nsUU inside.\nAs for. the 1953 federal budget,\nthe congress termed this as favoring \"big business.\" It warned that\nwage increases won by bargaining\ncould be eliminated by shifts ot the\ntax burden onto those in tha lower-\nincome brackets.\nTo help the low-income groups,\nthe CCL suggested that the government:\n1. Increase the basic tax exemption to $1500 from $1000 tor a single\nperson and to $3000 from $2000 for\na married taxpayer.\n2. Reduce \"drastically\" tbe 10-\npet cent tax levied.for the old-age\nsecurity fund.\nThe congress urged its-executive'\nto continue to press the government for a national health plan,\nadministered in a manner similar\nto the unemployment insurance\nplan and designed to provide adequate medical, surgical, optical,\ndental and hospital treatment tor\nall Canadians.'       .   , \"\nFragbt Rates, TC Airlines\nMonopoly Before Cabinet\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The cabinet,\nIn Itt third post-election meeting,\nfaces decisions today on two politically-ticklish | transportation\nproblemi.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent hu\nannounced that the cabinet will\nreview the bid by eight provinces\u2014 all oxcept Quebed and.Ontario\u2014to hive a freight-rate. In-\n.  crease granted \"Canadian rallwayt\nIitt March nullified,\nHe alto'hat said the oablnet will'\nconsider the application of Canadian Pacific Airlines to. break the\nmonopoly on east-west air cargo\nheld by Trans-Canada Air Lines.\nIt is understood, the cabinet haa\ndecided tentatively to reject the\nprovinces' plea against Jho $88,500,-\n000-a-year freight rate boost, But\nsuch a decision might be a difficult\npolitical step. .\nThe government likely would\nfind tome reluctance among its\nsupporters outside Quebec and Ontario to go along with rejection of\nthe provinces' bid; Strong opposition to past freight-rate increases\nhas come from both the West and\nthe Moritimt provinces.\nThe, question uppermost in the\nmind of the government may be:\nCan the plea of the provincial governments be rejected without further alienating the West?\nIf the. cabinet agrees to nullify\nthe freight-rate increase, the problem becomes one of the financial\nposition of the Canadian Pacific\nand Canadian National Railways\nand whether such a step. Would\nseem a victory for the CCF government of Saskatchewan, and the\nSocial Credit governments, ot Brit\nish Columbia and Alberta and perhaps the Progressive Conservative\ngovernment of New Brunswick.\nThe matter of CPA's request to\ncarry air cargo between Vancouver\nand Montreal fringes on another\npolitical question \u2014 monopoly by\ncrown-owned companies. -\nMONOPOLY DETRIMENTAL\nOpposition groups hove in the\npast charged that a monopoly such\nas TCA's is detrimental to the\npublic'good: The government hat\nargued that too much competition\nmay be equally detrimental both\nto the public and the companies\nconcerned.\nThe cabinet may also fill the post\nof clerk of the Privy Council and\ncabinet secretary. R. B. Bryce, 42-\nyear-old assistant deputy minister\nof finance, has been reported In\nline for the job.\nSand Fleas Plague\nCoast Housewives\nl VANCOUVER (CP) - Vencou-\nvcr housewives hove a new problem\u2014send flels.\nBug exterminating firms reported Wednesday that they ara receiving dozens of calls daily from\nhousewives whose homes hive been\ninvaded by. the Heat, which are\nabout twice the tlte of dog fleis\nand apparently delight In nippingi\nhumans.\nOne firm reported receiving SO\ncolls Wednesday.       i\nExterminators said land fleas\nare unusually numerous thlt year,\nprobably aa a result of the mild\nwinter experienced lost year which\nfailed to kill the insects oft.\nEskimo, Indian\nChildren at\nEdmonton School\nEDMONTON (CP) \u2014 Eighty\ntlx Indian youngttert, ill sporting wide grins, arrived hare\nWedneiday from Prince Rupert,\n- B.C., to attend . a residential\nachool,   :,      , \\i\n' The children came from at far\nat tht Queen Charlotte Islands,\nMoit have, attended the Edmonton ichool before.\nThe school, whloh drawn half\nItt Rupllt from B.C., half from Ai\nberta, thli year hai two Eskimo\nttudtnti brought to hospital from\ntha Northwett Territories. They\nremain' In Edmonton-for observation.    V\nSEE U.S. SCHOOLS\nNEW YORK' (AP) \u2014 With their\nnotebook! handy, 108 German teachert arrived Wednesday to- see how\nAmerican! run their schools. The\nWest German teachers will spend\nseven months observing United\nStates educational methods and\ncommunity life..\n\"I am not prepared to ignore.that\nnnHntfi\" hss s-nM' - >   1   --.--.-\u2014.\nmandate,\" he said\nSOCRED MEET SET\nFdROCTQMR\nVANCOUVER (CP)-The annual\nconvention of tho Social Credit Association of British Columbia-will\nbe held' here Oct'. 21 to 23. it waa\nannounced at the headquarters' office'-today\/   \u25a0       ',' '.'\u2022 i;\"   . >\nDuring the three-day conventloo\ngeneral matters of policy-will ba\nput before the delegates representing districts throughout the province.    ' \u25a0 \u2022   '   ' .  '. 1..V-;     ): '\nUTTLET>EtE, thit bachelor\nhippo with matrimonial Intentions, will hove to live alone a\nlittle longer for hit Intended bride\nwas banished from Bronx Zoo, In\nNew York. Reaton \u2014 \"the'a too\nfat\" When led officials-took ono\nlook at her bulging contours, following her arrival In a crate from\nAfrloa, they turned thumbs down.\nThe maiden hippo weighed an\neaty 700 pounds. Little Pate, a\nmighty midget, weight only Mb.\nThe official! tald they would not\nconsider trying to marry Little\nPete off to a creature twice hla\ntlte. Besides, the would not fit.\nIn. hit apartment.\n\u2014Central Pratt .anadlan.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR UP\nNEW VORK (AP)-fh'e Canadian\ndollar was 1-10 of a cent higher\nat a premium of 1 9-18 per cant in\nterm! of U.S. funds today. Pound\nsterling, wai down' 14 of a 'cent at\n$3.80.\nMONTREAL (CP)-The U.S. dollar closed at a discount of 1 17-81\nper cent ui terms ot Canadian\nfunds\/off 1-16. Pounl sterling at\n$2.75%, was off %.\nAnd in This Corner.. \u2666\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Board of control went along with a manual\nparking meter today, even If It It high-priced and made by a friend\n\u00abf the mayor. ;\nTha board totted out a workt committee recommendation and\nagreed that the city theuld buy the parking meters backed by Mayor\nAllan  Lamport\n\"I will always- support a frlond'o meter over somebody elitV\nthe miyor Mid. \u25a0-.\u25a0\u25a0>'\nHa wat criticised by the committee for openly backing the meter.\nCommittee members didn't liko tho Idea of accepting the highest\ntender .olther. '_\n.   The-mayor tald It wat time Toronto had a manual m'oter.\n\"We already have an automatlo type. Left Inotal a manual type\n.now.\" \u25a0   . .       ; .\u25a0 .    '\u2022\u2022\u2022        ,'..-.-\nThe board belled It down to accepting either the Toronto meter\nat' $61,863.76 or a mater made by a Montreal firm far $52,125. They\ntook the manual type and told the mayor he It a good taleiman.\n, PADUCAH, Ky. (AP)\u2014Postmen didn't even have to icratch their\nheadt Tueiday when they found a letter addressed to \"Embrace, the\nPharmacist, Paducah, Ky.\" \u25a0 ,'. >\nThe letter, mailed from Rockwood, Tenn., was delivered promptly\nto a Paducah drug store name \"Hugg, the Druggist.\"\nNORMAN,sOkla. (AP)\u2014University of Oklahoma enrolment official* tutptcted a prank when they found among the new freshmen\nene named Never Fall. '\nA check proved he wtt a real, live freshman- Another ihowed he\nhid never failed In high achool. The youth It the ton of Mrt. Fall,\nOklahoma City, and Never M. Fall, Sr., Memphis, Tenn.\nm\n\u25a0    ' - \u2022 '- -\n'aWSjMki\ni.:a-___\u2014\n .'  .-..\u25a0 ,'.',\nwmmmmmmmmm-\nMi\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT; 17, 1953\nLAST TIMES TONIflHT-Showi ot 7:00-9:00\nssmtN\nNOAH BEERY-GRANT WITHERS TesTOsTfosiS\"\nsMS>SMSiT-_.M-.s,l\u00abMlll_Mst_C.tssM\n__S*il_IliCS\n. Stortt Friddy\u2014\"PONYx EXPRESS\"\nChirlton Hilton \u2014 Rhonda Flaming\n\u25a0I \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nSTARU6W\nShowing 8:00 p.m. tnd 8:40 p.m.\nSaturday: 8:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.\nSHOWING TONITI, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\n\"Mississippi Gambler\"\n(In Technicolor)\nTYRONB POWER . JULIA ADAMS - PIPER LAURIE\n. 10 Mllea latt of Nelion\n. 10 Mllaa latt of Nelion\n^\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a01\nREX\nDRIVE-IN\nTHEATRE\nCRANBROOK, B. C\nLost Times Tonight\nPlrei Show Starta 7:18 p.m.\n\"Bitter Rice\"\n\u2022YLVANNO MANQANO\nV. QA88MAN\nMBCT ATTOACTIQN\n\u2022RIDE THE MAN DOWN*\nComing 8tpt 20 \u2022 21 \u2022 _J\n\"LIMELIOHT\"\nTORONTO (CP>-_aor\u00bbe -_ik\nof Toronto hai pedestrians and mo-\ntoritta. agog whan ht rolls by on\nTht odd-wheeled bicycle, a relic\nof tha gar M\u00bb, geti itt mme from\ntha tmall \"farthing-tlzeV back\nwhet! and the large \"penny-iize\"\n. frqnt wheel.\n, CSeorg. doesn't hit tall alow lor\nthe laughi, either. On a recent trip\nte Montreal, which took him tour\ndtyi, ht earned $500.\nPETERBOKOUGH, Ont. (CP) -\nVandalt caused extensive damage\nto a Boy Scout camp three miles\nfrom the tj\/iy during the rammer\nmonths. Ilia eeoutt occupy the\ncamo only on weekends, and gangs\nef teen-agere were aald to be re-\nsponsible for the raids In between.\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\nCASTLEQAR. B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\nDick Haymea \u2022 Nina Foch\n\"ST. BENNY THE DIP\"\nAlto \"GOLD FEVER\"\nShows Wed. at 6:30 and 8:00 p.m.\nShows -hurt, at 7 and 8:25 p.m.\nTUC Approves Red\nSponsored Motion\n. DOUGLAS, We of Man (CP>-\nBrltalo't \"middle ot the road\" Trade\nUnion Congress Friday approved a\nCommunist-sponsored motion colling on the governments press for\nBig Four peict talk- but threw out\nanother Communist motion which\nasked for a rearmament cut.\nDelegates' representing 8,000,000\nBritish trade unionists took the a<J-\nvioe of their leaders in rejecting the\nrearmament demand after they\nwen told it would Commit Britain\nto unilateral action.\n\"Wt would support aB round dii-\nnrmament but will not back a resolution which would weaken Britain\nwhile other nationi grow stronger.\"\ntald Arthur Deakln, congress vice-\npresident. \u2022\nREJECT eWU REQUEST\nThe trade unionists alio rejected\na demand by tht Chemical Workers Union which asked the British\ntrade union movement to take the\ninitiative In creating \u25a0 Socialist\n\"third force'' to \"fill tht vacuum'\nbetween Russia tnd the United\nStatot.\"\nDeakin opposed tha proposal on\nbehalf of vie general council, the\ncongress' policy-making body. It\nhad never bean-part of Socialist\npolicy to create-a third force, he\nlaid.\nA \"third force\" in eonfUct with\nthe policies of the United Nations\nwould be doing a lasting disservice\nto peace, he tald.\nusee toper\nCastigates Sons;\nAdds Library\n.(3HANP FORKS-Those. of tha\northodox -Doukhobor, group whoso\nreligion advocates peace and not\nviolence ai practised ''fe\/the Sen!\nare desperate to gain differentiation\nfrom the Sons.     .'\u25a0'.'\" ' \u25a0r\"\nThe USCp newspaper Iskra, published in Grand Forljs, is again\nforcefully condemning the renewed\nViolence of the S|ons; No Sons are\non iti subscription list. It has recommended segregation of the Bom\nto the-Consultative-Committee. -\nWEEKLY REPORT\nWith an average of 10 mimeographed capsize sheets, file weekly\norgan covers rellgiotil newi, Doukhobor affairs and Items of current\nInterest to tho 5000 In'ita organization. It enjoys a circulation of 850\nand many Molbkani In the. States\nas well as Doukhobors on the Prairies are on - the list. Periodically\nlome pages ire In English as well..\n\"Iskra,\" meaning . awakening or\nspark in the religious sense, got i\u00ab\nstart 10 yean ago when the Union\nof Spiritual Communities of Christ\ncommittee appointed Walter Lebe-\ndoff of Olade aa the first editor'. It\nWll then a three- or four-page\naffair mailed out only to organization branches. The second editor\nwat -li Popoff of Grand Forks. In\nFebruary, 1962, Peter'P. Legebokoff,\na quiet-spoken, courteous man of\nIntelligence came over from Glade\nto takeon the job at editor-printer-\nreporter-minager. Peter Soloyepff\nwho hat assisted for several years\nhat temporarily left the staff.\n\"Iikra\" it now in commodlus\nquartan occupying one of the four\nsuites In the Cannery Building,\nwhich. volunteer labor renovated\nInto beautiful office rooms. Others\nare the,organizational office, Union\nof Youth of the USCC office and\ntha USCC library.\nLately the newspaper office has\nbeen the reception room for. many\ndignitaries passing through' the city\nwho are Interested In the Doukhobors. A few hive beln Quakers\nfrom the States.'\nMANY BOOKS\nI library was opened July 1 and\nnow hai about 1000 books in Russian ind English. Several packing\ncases of books came in from England recently at a donation of a\nRussian publishing hou*se there,\nMost of the books have been contributed, but some ot thl classics\nhavt been especially purchased.\nNewest additions are the latest\nwork! of Leon Tolstoy and Mohtn-\ndut K. Ghandi.\nWhen fully organized the library\nwill be opened oftener thin once a\nweek as it is. now, and study tables\nwill alto be added. Membership is\nnot limited.\nTl\n|    -ALOARY (OP)-A former Brit-\n| lsh princess ,who made a special\nj   trip from England nil presented\nPILLS\n*gSfe\ntt\nfjr 1\n\u00ab=\nAQUASOL\nAll' Weather -\nTOPCOATS\n$45.00\nTailored by Fit-Reforjn, these\ncoats are made of durable rayon\nwhipcord and are the perfect\nanpwer to the raincoat-topcoat\ncombination' Slip-on model with\nfitted - shoulders and slash\npockett.' .;%,\nGODFREYS'\nPHONS \u2014 270 \u2014 BOX\nThe Weather\ncolore to her troapt.\nThe n\u00abW 2nd battalion of the\nPrincett Patricia's Canadian Light\nInfantry received the Queen't and\nregimental color from Lady Patricia\nRamsay, regiment colohel-in-chief.\nThe PPCLI \"wat named after\nLady Patricia when lt wai formed\nIn 1014, Just before leaving for\noversell service In tha Pint World\nWir.\nLady Patricia then wai Princess\nPatricia, daughter of the Duke ot\nConnaught, governor-general of\nCanada. She gave up her royal\nrank when she married her husband, now Admiral Sir Alexander\nRamsay.\nFULL 8CALE PARADE\nThousands witched in bright\nsunshine it Currle barracks, Canadian home of the PPCLI, while the\nregiment put on a 2^4-hour reviews\nAs Lady Patricia presented the colors, the 1st Battalion performed^\nfull-scale trooping of the color.\nThe review was the first time that\ntwo battalions of the same Canadian regiment paraded together in\nhonor of their colonel-in-chlef, It\nwas the. first time Lady Patricia\nhad reviewed the regiment on Canadian soil.\nANCIENT CEREMONY\nThe ceremony, carried out with\nsuperb precision, li as old as the\nbattle ot Htstings, in British history. The regimental color It a symbol of the regiment's pist achievements and victories. The Queen's\ncolon represent the Commonwealth. \u2022  :. :'i     : -,   \u25a0 \u25a0..-\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0\nTfobping the color Involves carrying it slowly down the ranks. It It\nin tradition., with a 17th century\norder that had mercenary soldiers,\nwho varied their allegiance, identify their latest commander. .     ;  !]\nThe PPCLI carried its colors-Hit-\nfectlonately called the\"Ric-a-Dam-\nDbo\"\u2014through the First World\nWar.\nLady Patricia tpoke reverently\nof those who gave their lives In\nbattle. She said she was confident\nthe honor of the \"regiment would\nbe safe in the 2nd Battalion,\nVANCOUVER  (CP) -\nAnother\nPacific disturbance is approaching\nthe'north coast Wednesday evening\nand   will   past  over tht  region\nThursday   morning.    Gale\nlorce\nwlndt will develop   in\nexposed\nnorth coastal water In advance of\ntht storm and will subside slowly\nthereafter.   Intermittent rain\nwill\naccompany the storm with  tome\nslight improvement following lt.\nFor the remainder of tht prov\nince, clearing akies ara\nexpected\novernight., Howevtr, cloud will tor\ncrease over northern Vancouver Is\nland and throughout the- northern\ninterior  Thursday.\nThe\nextreme\nsouthern  section  of-the\n.province\nwill remain tunny\nwith afternoon\ntemperatures a little higher\nthan\nthose of Wednesday.\nTEMPERATURES\nMlh. Max. Prec.\nNELSON _   \t\n4!)\n78\n\u2014\nSt John'l _____\n.50\n51\n55\n62\n.32\nHalifax        \t\nMontreal  ,\t\n. 41\n57\n.11\nNorth Eay \t\n. 41'\n46\n.26\nPort Arthur  \u201e,\t\n44 '\n.47\n51\n63\n.09\n.04\nKenora   .....__.\nWinnipeg   ._.___..\n. SO\n.42\n67\n73\n'Z\nBrandon .._ _\u201e.,\nThe Paa      \t\n.47\n56\n\u2014\nRegina  t....\n.47\n-49\n83\n71\n\u2014\nSaskatoon  \t\nPrince Albert\t\nNorth Battleford ..\n. 38\n68\n. \u2014\n. 49\n66\n\u2014\ngwift Current .......\n..50\n80\n\u2014\nMedicine Bat ......\n.. 49 \u2022\n74\n\u2014\nLethbridge \t\n. 51\n70\n\u2014\nCalgary   \t\n. 48'\n62\n.02\nEdmonton ;\t\n.. 48\n59\n\u25a0   \u2014\nKimberley  _.\n.. 40\n67\n. \u2014\nCrescent Valley ...\n..89-\n60\n.01\nKaslo \t\n. 47\n.. 52\n62\n72\n.08\nKamloops\t\nPentlcton  \t\n.. 50\n.. 55\n65\n65\nVancouver \t\nVictoria  .......\n.. 54\n68\n\u2014\nPrince Rupert\n..48\n58\n.01\nWhttehorie \t\n.. 30\n52\n<   \u2014\nSeattle\t\n.. 52  .\n63\n.01\nPortland\t\n..51\n68\n\u2014\nSan Francisco\t\n..60 .\n72\n_\n.. 59\ntin\n' \u2014\nSpokane ,-.\t\n50\n753\n70\n74\n_\u2014\nChicago  ..,....,\u201e:\t\nCURRENTLY CAUGHT UP In'mlxed-up divorce proceedings,\nactross Rita Hayworth and crooner Qlok Haymet. have announced\nin Lot Vegaa, Nev,, they will embark onua of matrimony once\ntlna on charget of Illegally ra-entenna the U.S. after vltltlng Rita\nIn Hawaii last Mty, probably will not bt free to mtrry her until\nSept. 23 or 24. Hit Nevada residence requirement, necessary befort\nht can file suit to divorce Nora Bddlngton Flynn Htymet, will not\nbe completed,until 8apt 20., In the meantime, M lit Hay worth hat\nturned down a 11,000,000 divorce settlement which Prince Aly\nKhtn would ttt up it a trutt fund for tholr only Child, three-year-\nold Princett Yatmln, with ttlpulatlon the girl would bo reared In\nthe Moslem faith. \"Million dollars or not, Yatmln It now being\nreared at a normal U.S. child and will continue to bt,\" Miss Hay-\nworth told reportertr-Centeal Prttt Canadian.'  -   '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nRail Tieup To Force Anti-Terrorist\nAction Sought by Running Trades\n>. Tie-up of all rait transportation\nin Britlih Columbia It a possibility\nli the menace of Soni of Freedom\ntrack blastings li not removed loon.\nAn authentlo source said the running trades 6f all railways throughout the province are being, aiked\nfar a withdrawal from work In order\nto gain safe working conditions tor.\ntha; railroad man on the Kootenay\ndivision. '.'.-\nA request came at a recent meeting of the railroad brotherhood at\nNelson, and now is In\nthe   Brotherhood   of   Locomotive\nFiremen and Engtnemeiv tnd the\nBrotherhood of Railroad Trainmen\nthroughout _, C. '\u2022 '\nWilliam Towhey, chairman of the\nJoint Running Trades tt Nelion who\nha| been lending the fight of the\nrailway men against the terrorists,\nwould neither confirm nor deny the\nreport.: \u25a0-   -\nMr, Towhey, who Ib alto a member of the consultative committee\nappointed by the B.C. government\nWeather Station Inspectors\nVisit 235 Stations in BC\nVolunteer Labor\nRepairs Church\nA hearty crew of volunteers are\nprogressing rapidly with repairs to\nthe basement of the Trinity United\nChurch. Repairs to the basement\nare estimated at 87000 counting the\nvolunteer labor ahd a new heating\nplant will be installed at a cost of\n$12,000.\nWork hat been going on for about\nseven weeks and about 60 men\nhave donated time to the project to\nfar. \u25a0 The Volunteers, under the\nleadership of Jack McLellan, have\ndone \"a wonderful job\" according\nto Rev. Alan Dixon.' .   \u2022. %\nThe men have donated an estimated 1000 hours of labor so far. In\none evening's work, eight men\nmoved 16 yards of gravel in two\nhours with wheelbarrows.\nThe work Is being done to renovate the basement and prevent wat-\ner-from seeplng^to and discoloring\nthe walls. The building has stood\nfor 40 years and the need for repairs has steadily built up,\nWork also consists of tearing\ndown the old walls and plaster in\nthe basement, cleaning up, and\nmoving of sand and gravel,\n- The basement is used as a church\nhall, recreation and meeting room,\nand tor young peoples' activities.\nRefreshments are provided every\nevening by the wives and women\nof the Church group.\nGeneral contractor in charge of\nthe alterations is Alfred Haveland.\nExperts Have Good\nNews for Diabetics\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014The day may\nnot bt far off when many diabetics will be given back the\nphysical ability to produce their\nown Insulin Instead ef relying on\nInjections, tho Canadian Diabetic\nAssociation wat told Monday.\nDr. Joseph P. Hoet, -professor\nof medicine at Louvaln University, Belgium, ttld at the association's Inaugural meeting that;\nseveral forms of reversible diabetes already ara known.\nResearch workers hoped thlt\n\"still In the toune of thlt genera-\nWork Is progressing on alterations to the old gll workt, building, now owned by Kelly Ozelle.\nAbout 25 feet will be cut oft the\ncorner of the building.\nThis will do much towards eliminating the traffic hazard previously offered by the blind corner on\nhighway No. 3 entering the city.\nThe well will be reBuilt from\nthe stones torn down in removing\nthe sharp right\" angled corner. The\nbuilding itself wll] be used os a\nwarehouse and truck terminus -for\nKelly's Cartage.\nThe building was sold by the city\nto Mr. Ozelle last year after the\ncity system was converted to propane git.;;    .. \u2022\nDwlght Williams, .district meteorological inspector, and hlB-asslstant,\nJoe Dawion of Vancoi)ver, are on\nthe latt lap of a province-wide inspection of 235 atations.\nThe tour, which bCgan at Old\nGlory, near Roiilands ilx.weeki\nago, hu taken them to Dawson,\nKamloops, Revelstoke, Arrow Lakes\nand throughout the Kootenay,\nThirty of the stations ore situated\nIn the Kootenay-Boundary.      .'.\nA large number of the stations,\nMr. Williams said, are operated by\nvoluntary   observers   -Who   take\nmeasurements of rainfall.' snowfall\nand tempereatures and keep daily\nrecords throughout the year'. \"Informations supplied from atations\nsuch as this is important for statistical purposes,\" Mr. Williams said,\n\"but is also used In planning, in\nagriculture, business, Industry\u2014including such projects as Alcan and\nCelgar.\" Larger, atations tuch as\nCrescent   Valley   and   Kimberley,\nand intermediate stations tuch as\nNelson,, Kaslo and Creston supply\ndetailed reports daily for use in\npublic forecasts prepared at Vancouver airport weather office,\nThe question 11 often asked, Mr.\nWilliams said, why the -forecasters lump together the Kootenay\nand   North    Thompson   regions\nWhin \"everyone knows that the\nweather varlei considerably over\nthlt large area.\"\nTha explanation lilt In tho\nlarge size of the province and\nthe great complexity of It geographically. It It physically. Impossible to make separate forecasts four timet dally for each\ntmall district In the provlnoo, he\ntald. The official division Into\nabout 10 forecast  regions  Is  a\nFIRST POLIO\nAT KIMBERLEY\n' KIMBERLEY\u2014First case of-polio\nin the city this year was diagnosed\nbete. In hospital with bulbar paralysis Is a five-year-old boy from the\nLola Creek district.\nCatholic Diocese\nBans Traditional \u2022-\nWedding Marches\nPROVIDENCE, R.. I. (AP) -The\ntraditional wedding marches from\n\"Lohengrin\" and \"Midiummer Night\nDream\" have been banned by the\nRoman Catholic diocese of Providence, along with other music of \"a\nworldly or theatrical nature\" to Its\nchurch services.\nMusic of the theatrical type has\nbeen discouraged to the past, but\nits use is now forbidden by church\nlaws, adopted at the diocesan synod\nlast October.\nOn the \"black lilt\" ire the traditional wedding marches.'a number\not familiar settings of the Ave Maria\nand a number of masses by composers long among the favorites of\nsome choir directors.\nPRIZE LIST REVISED\n\u25a0 Revised West Kootenay Exhibition lists show two awards to Mra.\nMary OrbellanI, 504 Latimer Street,\nfor a first prize in water' coloring\nand another first In textile painting.\nFurther Remands\nFor Freedomite.       &\nWilliam wMLaverendiofi. and\nWilliam panieR. Ch*rnoff\u25a0! ivjll ha\ngiven further remanda in Provincial Court here today. The two Sons\nof. Freedom were arrested to Po-.\nlatka Village September 8 and\ncharged With contributing to juvenile delinquency. The crown ia asking a remand pending return of\nwitnesses from Vancouver hearing\nof 144 Sons arrested at Polatka\nSeptember 9.\nSons Breaking Fast\nBURNABY (CP)\u2014A report from\nOakalla prison sold . the women\nhave, partially .broken their week-\nlong fast and now are asking for\nextra supplies of fruit juices and\nvegetable oils. Practically none of\nthe prisoners are eating solid food,\nWarden Hugh Christie reporteoV,   :\nTrials of the 144 sect members\nwiU:.open Thursday.7-\nnieetiiry compromise and often\nthe forecast fer a region It divided when the difference! ever\ntha region aro txpteted to be\ngreat\nthe hands of to itudy ahd mike recommendations\nregarding the Freedomite problem\ndid' say, however, that the railroad\nblasts and attempts were an \"ex-\"\/\ntremely   serious  hazar\/i\"   on   the'\nwinding line through the Kootenay V\ncountry..-..-'.-, ,.:\nIn the. past three years, there haa\nbeen between 20 and 25 blastings\ntnd eights attempts. Bridge! were\ndamaged aa well as tho railroad it-\naelf. ,\"\u25a0\u25a0.\" .     I\nAt present, bridges are flood-lit.\nand guarded but lt would take\nthousands of men to guard the railway adequately. Mr. Towhey declared that they could not understand why the CPR did not take a\nstronger attitude in demanding protection from the government.\nAim of the railwayman Is to get\nthe danger removed before winter,\nwhen long nights add to the hazard.\nA curfew on night trains through\nthe Kootenays was Imposed between May, 1851, and late February,\n1953, because of earlier dynamltlngs,\nAfter the curfew, the first blast occurred in April,\nFROM LIBERTY THIS WEEKEND\nSultana Raisins 2 lbs. 42c\nShelled Walnuts ;mi_ 35c\nRed Cherries\nPreserved Ginger\nMixed Peel\nRobinson'a\nGlazed, B oz.\nRobinson's.\n8 ot.\t\nGlace. Dalton'i.\n2'Ring.____\t\n33c\n55c\n18c\nYou Are Sure of Results With     -\n^S   ROBIN HOOD\n24 fbs. $1.78\nNew\nCrop\nAlta. No. 1 Honey\n;       4 lb. tin 89c\nLIBERTY\nFOOD STORE\ntion, thl falling pancreases of our\npatients may recover the ability\nto produce endogenous Insulin\nand to prevent all complications.\"\n$600,000 Spending Planned\nFor Trail-Rossland Schools\nTRAIL\u2014A bylaw for approximately $800,000 for impiovlng ahd\nadding additional apace to schools\nin District No.' 11 is being prepared\nby the board of trustees and will\n\"8HORX -NORTER,\" (right), owned by R. Stanley Dollar, Jr.\nof San Francisco, skims around flrst.turn on latt Itp of final htat\nof the Gold Cup race at Lake Tahoe, Calif. Following closely\nabreast It \"Hurrloane IV\".owned by Bill Stead of Lot Angelet.\nThe Dollar boat went on to win the race with a best time of\n92.276 miles an hour for the three heats. Stead's best time wat\n86.914.mph for itcond place.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nbe sent to the department of education for approval.\nThis includes an amount of\n$5080 for the McLean school to\nRossland and $12,000 for the junior\nhigh in Trail.\nA report was given at the board's\nWednesday meeting by the management committee on the establishment of a new Canadian'class\ntod the Central school. Ten new\nCanadians are enrolled.\nA. report from the scholarship\nCommittee revealed the purpose for\nwhich the t committee had been\nfarmed, to transact any business\nconcerned with bursaries, scholarships or fundi tor such purposes'\nthat have been assigned er donated\nto the board, ta make recommendations ' regarding bursaries . or\nScholarships t6 be awarded by the\nbeard df school trustees,    i .\nPeople bt Monttoie Will hear\nthat arrangement! have been made\nto have children picked up fer\nFruitvale not earlier'. than 8.05\nwhich will give only about 20\nminutes waiting period before\nIchool opens. '\u25a0'.'\nS. S. McDlarmld, retired at North'\nVancouver, attended the meeting.\nMr. McDlarmld, former secretary*\ntreasurer, was with the school board\nfor l_'yei_%  . '\"\nThere> a lifetime of comfort ahead\nwhen you insulate your home with\nFlberglas. And Fiberglas saves.on\nyour fuel bills so that it soon pays\nfor itself.\nFOR KEEFIN(\nBUILDINGS WARM\nIN WINTER\nAND COOL\nIN SUMMER\nfasufate fbr ttfa with\nFiberglas BUILDING INSULATION\n%\u25a0 > MAD<   IN  CANADA\nWON'T ROT   .   WON'T BURN   \u2022   WONT SETTLE\nWON'T SUSTAIN VERMIN\nBURNS\nLumhcr Company\n602 Baker St.    Nelson, B.C.\nPHONr\n1181\n_\n'     \u25a0' -. \u25a0\"\n \u2014 -\n<5b^9\nWarm\nSlippers\nCool Morningi\nSmart New Colon In Cosy .Styles\nWith  the  New  Foam  Solo.\n8EE THEM AT\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n653 Baker St,\nPhone 899\nNow Many Wear'\nFALSE TEETH\nWith More Comfort\nFASTEETH, a pleasant alkaline (non-\nacid) powder, holds false teeth more (irmly.\nTo eat and talk in more comfort, just\nsprinkle   a    little    FASTEETH    on    your\n? dates. No gummy, gooey, pasty taste or\neeling. Checks \"plate odor\" (denture\nbreath). Get FASTEETH at any drug\n\u25a0tore.\nE. Kootenay Carpenters\nAwarded 12vic Increase.\nCRANBROOK\u2014In a majority report the recent conciliation board\nhearing on the contract' renewal\ndispute between Southern Interior\nLumber Manufacturers' Association\nand the Woodworkers Industrial\nUnion of Canada, bargaining ageht\nfor over half the industry employees\npf East Kootenay and Nelson' district, increase of 12 _. cents an hour\nto all workers, .was recommended.\nThis would bring the basic wage\nfor WIUC certified operations up\nto $1.42% an hour.\nFurther recommended was the\n40-hour week, three paid statutory\nholidays, and adoption ot the Sloan\nFormula which would require compulsory payment of dues by all\nemployees in,a WIUC,certified operation whether the employee was\na union member or not.\nIn a district meeting of the,W!UC\nhere the executive and bargaining\ncommittee recommended acceptance\nof the report and is now circulating\nballots among the membership as\nto their wishes.\nMajority report was by concilia-\nMa^TOUGHt0fofceTOUGH\u00ab\nWood and cement floors can TAKE IT\nwhen they're finished with C-I-L\nFLOOR, PORCH AND DADO Enamel.\nTough and remarkably wear-resistant.\nlt givet thorough protection to floors,\ntteps tnd other surfaces that get hard\nuse. Ten colours, black and white.\nlaughs ot\nhard wear...\noutdoors and in\ntion board chairman Allan Hull and\nWIUC board representative Harvey\nMurphy, with employes' representative J: C. Munro dissenting on all\nissues in dispute. '\u25a0-:.\u25a0\u25a0'   ,,',..'.\nMaster contracts in.the industry\nwere due for ranewal-jrajjgh the\nInterior September 1, and opera-\ntor-IWA negotiations also went to\na conciliation board with findings\nnot yet reported.\nAt Ita special meeting here WIUC\nadopted a policy, that in the event\nof a strike in the interior lumber\nindustry,, presumably by the IWA,\nWIUC would respect all picket\nlines, and in the event of a lockout in the industry it would probably be treated aa a strike.      \u25a0 '\nSome operations in East Kootenay are IWA certified, some WIUC\ncertified and some companies have\ncontracts with both, while other\ncamps have no certification for\nemployees bargaining rights. Most\noperators have SILMA affiliation\nbut there are also many with no\naffiliation.  ,     ,    *\nCrawford Bay\nFair Exhibits\nReceive Praise\nBOSW---~7Judges lauded exhibitors at the Crawford Bay annual\nfall fair, Mrs. A, Mackle waa\nawarded the aggregate prize and\na prize for entering most exhibits.\nMrs. J. Karpowlch and J. Wilson\nwere also high on the prize win\nners' list. Mrs. Thompson won the\ncup for best gladioli entry in the\nfair.\nMany Hunlers,\nBui Few Birds\nCRESTON \u2014 Opening day tor\nhunting on the Creston Flats was\nreported none too successful.\nHunters found the weather far\ntoo good, the ducks were flying\nhigh and out of range.\nAlthuogh \"everyone with a gun\"\nwai out on the Flats for the opening only a few reported getting any\nbirds.\nOpening day was far below the\naverage of birds procured on other\nopening days.\nHH)%'pwm fmtmt coffee\nlETTfl FUVOUI THAN Will\nJo coffee-rich, wt guarantee\nyea belter flavour jn your tup\nat)\nthan with ground toffee...\nOR YOUR MONEY BACK!\nNowanomaz'mgsJetProcessexplodes\npure, choice coffee\u2014the -neat there\nis\u2014into millions of gems of Nescafe*.\nAll the pure flavour, body and aroma\nof fragrant coffee beam at their beat\nare sealed in. Even the deep, natural\nroasted coffee-colour tellB you that\nnothing haa been lost. The result ia\na flavour not \"juat as good\" ao\nground coffee... but better.\nHere's the Nescafe\"guarantee. Kyou\ndon't agree that new Nescafe* gives\nyoa better coffee flavour than any\nbrand of ground coffee, your money\nwill be refuhdesi, Just send the un-\nfinishedjartoNestle' (Canada) Ltd.,\n80 King St. West, Toronto. Start\ntoday. Make new Nescafe\" your\nFamily Coffee.\nJXdspiial Proposal prqw\n-   District Interest  7\nCRESTON \u2014 The Creston\nValley Fall Fair, 'scheduled\nfor Friday and, Saturday,\npromises to be one of the best\nin Crestori history.\nSeventeen sections .will feature\nentries ranging from - flowers to\nlivestock and a special. children's\nsection including fruit, vegetables,\npoultry, handicraft, livestock and\nhome cooking, is expected to draw\na large number of entries.\nA special Indian section,  open to\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Sauter of Salmo view a map\noutlining the proposed Kootenay Valley Hospital Improvement District with Mrs. F. M. Drew, organizing\nsecretary. The organizing committee, functioning from\nan office in Nelson, soon will begin the circulation of\npetitions to 3300 property owners throughout the area\nfor their approval of a hospital improvement district.\nUltimate objective is the construction of a new 120-bed\ndistrict hospital to serve, residents\" of West Kootenay\nwith modern medical facilities.\u2014Vogue photo.\nWork\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail's new hospital\nbuilding is structurally complete,\nA. J. Northey, construction supervisor told the Trail-Tadahac hospital board.\nThe hospital Is expected to be\nfinished late in Spring of 1954. All\nwalls have been poured In the main\nentrance and roof slab framing is\nunderway.\nInstallation of metal windows, suspended ceilings and- furring it proceeding in the nursing wing.\nBasement floor slabs have been\ncompleted In the nursing wing and\na start has been made on the north\nend of the operating wing.,' ' ,\nPERCENTAGE .PROGRESS\nPercentages or Itemi completed\nare as follows: general conditions\n(80 per cent), structural concrete\n(98 per cent), reinforcing steel (98\nper cent), plumbing (55 per cent),\nboiler plant (95 per cent), heating\n(55 -percent), ventilating (50 percent), and electrical (40 percent).\nA crew of 92 men is presently\nemployed, by the contractor,\nProvision of a target schedule to\nOctober 31, was said to be difficult\nas work will depend, to a great extent\/on the regularity in which materials are received. \u25a0 Mr. Northey\nsaid that schedules set for September 30, are well in hand.\nArdent Hunters\nReady fer Season\nINVERMERE \u2014 The hunting sea-\nton began in earnest September 15\nand already four, non-resident parties are out in the hills with local\nguides. Three of these are from\nthe United States and one from Alberta. 7 '   ;'   ,\nGoat and grizzly'have been open\nsince September 1 and elk and deer\nopened September 15 with two ape-\nclet of grouse Franklin and Blue\nGrouse open September 15. Ruffed\nGrouse will not open until October\n1.\nLocal big game guides \"expect a\ngood season this year because there\nwas little hunting.by non-resident\nhunters last year due to the embargo on shipping trophies. The season\nis still early and with the present\nwarm, dry weather it is likely the\ngame will, remain on the higher\nlevel for some weeks.\nMSm\u00aegMM3M,\nV\nBONNER ASKED\nNOT TO TAKE\nSONS' CHILDREN\nKRESTOVA\u2014A woman who 20\nyears ago was herself separated\nfrom her parents when the -government moved against recalcitrant\nSons of Freedom, has written to\nAttorney-General Robert Bonner.\nThe letter Is a protest and appeal\nagainst separation of children from\ntheir parents.\nMrs. Margaret Maloff tells the\nAttorney General df how-she received no-\"love\" in her foster home\nalthough the waa never mistreated. The letter said in part: \"No one\nwill lay God blesa you, but will\nlook at you as a homebreaker, I'm\nsure your dreams will not yet you\nhave peace. I do not think one\nshould feel very, good If one. has\nany feelings? Do you serve man-\nmade law first then you serve God?\nOr are you not. a believer in God\nand God'a power. And remember\nyou can not serve two masters,\nwouldn't chose the wrong matter if\nI were you, I am asking you with\nplease let us go frpin this country.\nHelp ui go to our'leader who has a\nheart! with unlimitless love and\nkindness, S. S. Sorokin. Do not tor\nture ui anymore.\nTrail Hospital\nConversion\nPlan Outlined\n.TRAIL\u2014Trail's old hospital could\nbe converted to a combination restaurant-office block, an apartment\nbuilding, a hotel or a YMCA centre, a report to the Trail hospital\nboard, from Vancouver architects\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\/THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1933 \u2014 3\nMany Exhibits Planned\nFor Creston Fall Fair\nIndians only, -will feature fruit and\nvegetable displays as well as women's and men's costume and mocassin making.\nOfficers of the exhibition are\nJohn Verkerk, president, W. S. McAlpine, vice-president; T. Swales,\nsecretary and C. B. Twig, treasurer.\nThe report was prepared in the\nform of a series of suggested types\nof occupancy for which the hospital buildings are most suited when\nthe new hospital is opened in East\nTrail.\nThe report stated that the ground\nfloor' frontage along Cedar Avenue\ncould be renovated to accommodate\na restaurant or stores, with limited\naccess to the service court at the\nrear. Second and third floors ot tha\nbuilding could be economically\nused for business, dental, real estate, insurance and government offices.\nPart of the ground floor and first\nand second floors could also be\nconverted into suites and the report estimated that 21' suites could\nbe integrated forming 11 bachelor\nsuites with a minimum size of 300\nsquare feet.\nThe building also could be taken\nover at little cost and-occupied as\na chronic hospital or Infirmary.\nCONSIDERABLE COST    .\nConversion of the building Into\na hotel, the report suggested, would\npresent considerable cost' as corridors lie too wide and glass area is\nlimited. An estimated 48 rooms\ncould be accommodated on the first\nand second floors, with the ground\nfloor devoted to dining, beverage\nparlors, storage and a lobby.\nUSEABLE FLOOR AREA\nUseable floor area exclusive of\npartitions, corridors, shafts, stairs\nand boiler room in the first building is -3633 square feet on the\nground floor,\" 3643 on the first floor\nand 3820 on the second.\nUses to which the second building on Bay Avenue could be put\ninclude a community service building, offices and commercial business, apartment suites, a chronic\nor infirmary institution or a hotel\nbuilding.\nFloor space in the ground floor\nIs 2750 square feet; first floor\nsquare feet, and second floor 2930\nsquare feet.\nLAST RITES FOR\nJACK HOOPER,\n'51 FIRE VICTIM\n' INVERMERE \u2014 A funeral ter-\nvice for Jack Hooper of Windermere, who was burned Jo death ih\nhis home December 26, 1951, will\nbe held from. St. Peters' Anglican\nChurch -at Windermere, Wednesday, September 23.\nRegistration of death has recently been approved by tha Attorney-.\nGeneral's .oMice and the estate has\nnow been settled\nMr. Hooper, it was believed, .was\nIn hii home alone ,at the time, the\nbuilding caught fire, probably from\nan overheated stove. By the time\nresidents from nearby houses; railed the alarm no one could approach\nthe building. Human bones were\nfound in the ashes and an. investigation was ordered by the Attorney-General's office. .-'\u2022\nThis held up funeral arrangements.   \u25a0\u2022\u25a0.\"\nJoins St. Anthony\nParish in Trail\nTRAIL\u2014Father L. Frytek, member of the Franciscan Fathers, arrived here to join St. Anthony's\nParish. He was formerly of the\nFranciscan monastery In Winnipeg.\n:, He has been active as a missionary priest in gold mines of Ontario\nand Manitoba for the past seven\nyears.\nFather Frytek was born near\nBanff, Alta. Later the family moved\nto Merritt, B.C., where be attended\nhigh school and worked In the coal\nmines for four years. He left his\nhome to continue his studies at St.\nAnthony's college in Edmonton.\nAfter completing his arts course he\nwas accepted into the Franciscan\norder and entered the novitiate at\nSherbrooke, Que.\nHe was then sent to study philosophy for three years at the Franciscan-seminary' in Quebec city,\nwhich is affiliated with Laval university. He then completed his\ncourse in theology, the first two\nyears at the Clerl in Regina and\ntwo more years at the Franciscan\nStudium in Montreal.\nStudies for the priesthood completed. Father Frytek left for his\nparents' home in Courtenay, and\nin their presence was ordained to\nthe holy priesthood by Hie Excellency Bishop Cody.\nPrettiest Block\ntrophy Awarded\nCRANBROOK - At Fa\u00bb garden\npeak the East side ot the 400 block\non Eleventh Avenue has been judged top block In the city on the basis\nof landscaping, flowers and shrubbery, building, maintenance and\nneatness-of laffes- and backyards,\nand has been awarded the Kiwanis\nbest block trophy, which was presented to longest-time block resident H. R. Hinton on his boulevard\nby Mayor R. E. Sang.\nThe six properties are on a slight\nslope, the upper three neatly hedged, and the lower three featuring a\ncontinuous terraced lawn to the cor\nner.     *\nClose competitors were east sides\nof Thirteenth Avenue and Fifteenth\nAvenue on the 300 block, and Ninth\nAvenue in the 400 block, but standard on all points did not meet those\nof the winner.\nThis is Initial award of the trophy\nby the Kiwanis Club whose purpose\nis to encourage pride toward city\nImprovement among private house\nholders.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nWins Montreal Trip ,.\n' GREENWOOD \u2014 Mrs. Koy Jones,\nGreenwood representative of a cosmetic firm, was one of the winners\nof a nation-wide mileage contest,\nsponsored by the company. She won\nan three-day all expense trip to\nMontreal. \u25a0\u25a0-,   \u25a0 \u25a0   j\nHTJHK_TT, Ont.. (CP) - Scarcity\nof berries in the bush is. driving\nbears into the open Jn this district near the Lakehead. Motorist!\non the Niplgon highway havo\nspotted numerous bears, and Fj\nLarocque shot ope in his garden\nhere.        '\u25a0      .,;'\u25a0\u25a0 - - , f\nfor irregularity\nBut there is a simple, natural amwer\nto the common problem of irregularity\ndue to lack of bulk\nOldest building in Finland, Turku Castle was built by Swedish invaders at the end of the 12th century.\nThem bra men and women (perhaps you're one of them) who\nwon't let \"nature take its course\". '\nTHEY TRY TO SUBSTITUTE\nUNNATURAL \"FORCING AC-\nTION\" FOR THE NATURAL\nREGULARITY WHICH SENSIBLE DAILY HABITS AND\nSUFFICIENT BULK IN THE\nDIET COULD PROBABLY\nMAINTAIN.\nMany fall Into tbe habit of using\nlaxatives in a way laxative makers\nnever intended. They tain \"big\n< doses\" willy-nilly without even\nreading the directions on the label.\nNaturally, tuch overdosing\u2014with\nproducts intended only for overnight relief of a temporary stoppage\u2014exerts upon the delicate\ndigestive system an unnatural\n\u2022train.\nThere's nothing wrong, of course,\nwith taking laxatives occasionally.\nIf you feel you have to take a\nlaxative, just be ture you take it\nwisely\u2014in an accurate, recommended dose.\nbut there is a way to\navoid taking drug-type\nlaxatives and to puce\nyour dependence on\nnature. it lack of bulk\nin the diet is your\nTrouble.\n*     \u25a0\u2022      \u2022\nIn many natural foods\u2014such at\ncertain vegetables,)fruits, -and,\ngrains\u2014nature growt abundant\nnatural bulk which normally and\nnaturally aids the rhythmic process of elimination.\nIn no other natural food It natural\nbulk to ideally found at in the outer\nlayers of the whole wheat kernel,\nknown generally at bran.\n.Bran is,nature's \"laxative food\ninstead of, a medicine\". When\nproperly processed and shredded,\nwhole wheat bran yields smooth\nnatural bulk that the digestive\neystemcan handle in a natural way.\nThe Kellogg Company hat made.\",\nwhole wheat bran into a delicious\nbreakfast  cereal\u2014Kollogg't All-\nBran.\nKELLOOG'S ALL-BRAN PM.\nPORMS NATURALLY WHAgj\nbRUG-TYPE LAXATIVES DO\n' CHEMICALLY.  IT HELP?\n____j\nBULK FOR EASY (iATURM\n_2TO__\nThere Is no stomach upset, ae .\nchurning, no after-effectexcepttlia I\nfeeling of satisfaction and, fulfill- '\nment that comet with natural,\nnormal elimination.\nTo obtain lasting relief, of count, \u00ab\nKellogg's All-Bran must be eaten\nregularly. You can have it for\nbreakfast every morning secure in\nthe knowledge that it isn't habit-\nforming. .      -        i\nMore than one million servings ef v\nKellogg's All-Bran are consumed\neach siay. Thit popularity of itself\nis proof that this natural laxative\ncereal lives up to what we say7\nabout it l\nBut even better proof comes from\nthousands of satisfied All-Bran :\nusers. They write of their own free\nwill to tell us what natural relief\nthey receive from eating Kellogg's;\nAll-Bran daily and drinking plenty\nof water.. . r i '\u2022\nEAT KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN\nEVERY MORNING FOR\nBREAKFAST FOR 10 DAYS.\nTHEN, IF YOU'RE NOT COMPLETELY SATISFIED, SEND.r\nTHE EMPTY CARTON TO-\nTHE KELLOGG COMPANY,\nLONDON, ONTARIO-AND:\nGET DOUBLE YOUR MONEY\nBACK\nRemember\u2014Kellogg's All-Bran\nhas helped millions. Why not you),\n* sVtsW laxative ttrts-\nSteer Beef\nTatty,\nBlade Removed\nflood .\nWeekend Values at Fairway I\nlb. 59c\nIb. 59c\nIb. 49c\n3 lbs. $1.00\n\u2014 lb. 47c\n\u2014 Ib. 22c\nIb. 43c\nlb.55c!\nIb. 55c\nIb. 45c\n* ROUND STEAK\n^ RUMP ROASTS BEEF w_._\n* BLADE POT ROAST\n* LEAN MINCED BEEF\n* BEEF LIVER SB\n* BEEF BRISKET\n* Pork & Beef SAUSAGE\nLean\nFresh,\nSmall Casings\nTatty.\njf Shoulder Veal Steaks\nit Pork Shoulder Oven Roasts\n\u00a7 FRESH BOLOGNA\n* PORK PIESS^\nSliced .\n2 for 25c\nPHONE 1177\n \u25a0.\t\n \u25a0as-\nHtlH JUS* LETTERS TO ? Questions ?\nTHE EDITOR\nBltabllthed April 22, 1002\n7\nMi''\n;>' '* Bt*__\u201e CdIiur)Wo'*\nMoat Inferesffng Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by tht\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n296 Baker Street,   Nelson,   British Columbia,\nAuthorized at Second Class Mall,\nPoet Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUBEAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nv Thursday, September 17, J953   ,\nPunishment Alone\nFutile; Move on Sons,\nShould Be Starting Point\nIt is difficult to view the forced\nseparation of parents and children\nwithout emotion. The Government's\nmove to meet the united defiance of\nits order that Sons of Freedom children must attend school has 'been\ntsrmed by same a step backwards to\nthe time 20 years ago when children\nand parents were sipiilarjy separated.\nThis criticism, however, should be\nqualified.\nThe move, if it is merely designed\n-to be a punishment for non-conformity is certainly open to vigorous criticism. British Columbia has tried force\nagainst the dissidents before, and we\nare fully aware of the completeness\nof its failure. However, if it is the\nstarting point of a fair and considered\nprogram with the future of the children, in mind, then, and only then, is\nit acceptable. The Social Credit Government will be making British Columbia history if it carries through\na program of sensible, consistent action. Or if it believes force alone is\nthe answer to this minority problem,\nit will merely be adding to a long list\nof dismal failures..\ni It would be interesting to know just\nhow many of the 144 adults arrested\nafter the Perry's Siding incident were\namong the children separated in 1932\nwhile their parents were isolated on\nPiers Island as culmination of a series\nof troubles begun in August, 1929.\nPolitics cannot escape blame in the\npresent situation. A very real and sizeable measure of co-operation had been\nwon from the Sons of Freedom, but\ndelays because of political considerations, the failure of the Coalition Government to follow through on Doukhobor Research Committee recommendations, and' the turmoil of two successive elections have been interpreted\nby the Sons as betrayal. Delays and\npolitics of others -have hamstrung and\nfrustrated the Consultative Committee\nuntil progress in the good work it was\naccomplishing has come practically to\na halt.\nBut the recommendations and experience'of those committee members\nand researchers remain. It is time they\nwere put to full use. It has been suggested by this newspaper that the Government set up a permanent Doukhobor Affairs Bureau, and a long-range\nprogram of rehabilitation, relocation\nahd assimilation where these are found\npractically applicable. It is to be hoped\nthat the latest government move in\nsome manner will become a starting\nplace.\nThe Biqqer a Mqn The\n' More He Must Serve\nMen m great places are thrice servants\u2014servants of the sovereign or the\nstate, servants of fame, -and servants\nof business.\u2014Francis Bacon. .\nLetters to tht odltcr.on any toplo of\ngeftulrie InMrtit in welcbmo If thiy are\nbrier, accurate and fair. No letter will be\nInserted In whale, or In part, except ever\nthe ilanature and address of the writer.. ,\nUntollrjlted correspondence cannot.bt n- '\nturneds ,  '    ,\nSavings for Boards\nTo the Editor:\n. Sir\u2014I note that two or three letter! hiye\nappeared.In. the newspaper! recently, stating\nthat the Provincial Governmenfhas borrowed\nseven million dollars.  7       . -\n, Thl3, of course, is not true, but In accordance with en Act passed by the Legislature,'\nthe Government guarantees all school bonds\nfor capital purposes.\nThe Government should not be criticized\nfor this, but complimented, as it it saving\nlocal, School Boards one-quarter of their interest charges.\nAll lean say to the Social Credit Government Is, keep up the good work,\nE. H, BAKER.  \u2022\n444 Constance Avenue,\nVictoria, B. C.\nHealing\n(CIL Ovtl)\nThe hlltory or aisease is the history of\n'man himself. Undoubtedly, eirliest mm was\nafflicted with many if not all of the ills which\nstill afflict us now.; Segments of blood vessels\nrecovered from mummies show definite hardening ot artery walls, and so, presumably,\neven the ancient Egyptians must have suffered\nfrom that great killer of our own hlgh-pret-\nsured civilization, coronary thrombosis.\nSections of bone from archaic .deposits\nthow evidence of tuberculosis, and a form of\narthritis. And evidences of abscess cavities\nsurrounding teeth are commonly teen in ancient skulls, while unhealed bones are typical\nof the burial mounds ot warlike ancient tribes.\nIt is difficult to know exactly how earliest\nman dealt with disease, Probably his reaction\nwas not unlike that whleh has recently been\nobserved-in the Kubu tribe of Sumatra. Al\nlong as the affliction doei not impair the suf-\nfere's tribal activity it is Ignored\u2014as soon as\nthe .individual weakens and falters he is isolated from the tribe. \u2022   .\nLater In man's history, at he began to\nthink and reason more, he became more fearful of his surroundings, he wondered about\nhis own death, and he speculated on the meaning of life. It was only a simple ttep to the\nconclution that disease was the work of evil\nspirits, and, tccordtngly, the job of a special\nreligious leader, witch doctor or medicine\nman to cure, This Identification of disease and\nIts treatment with religion runt threadlike\nthroughout the history of medicine.\nSince possession by demons Is so early a.\nconcept, lt is not .surprising that perhaps .the\nearliest surgery practised wat the'cuttlpg of a\nhole In the skull (trephining) to let out the\nevil spirits. The practice was common in Egypt\nand persists even yet in certain primitive societies.\nAs lt was In other countries, the medicine\nof ancient Greece was entangled with religion\nand In, its ultimate form was represented by\nthe mystic cult of Aesculapius. But Hippocrates and his School for a brief moment broke\nthrough this Intertwining. Thli brilliant Greek\nthinker founded a school separate from the\npurely religious groups and made considerable\nheadway. His thesis was tb observe, record and\nreason. Some of his descriptions of disease are\nstill valid today, and. by noting symptom! and\nclassifying some of the empirical remedies of\nthe time, he stood at the threshold of modern\nmedicine even though he had only primitive\nequipment.\nOpen to any riadir. Namti bt'tbrsbnt\natklng queittent will not ,bt'published,.\nThere li ne oharge for thlt- service.\n'\",. Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\n\u2022Yi MAIL except where thirt ll ebvloui\nneeitilty far pMyaay.   -\n_H|i'Mrt_jOT\"-jWhat la'the letting capacity\nof the, newV^placopal Cathedral of St.\n'7 fi-JWm tl)e Plylsioin Neiy Yorls City? Also,\nhb*r does It compare 'In site with other\ncathedral! of the worlds'   ^\n\u2022 Nelthn't incyolbpedli says, regarding St,\nJohn the Divine':.\"Seating capacity for 15,000\nand standing room for 40,000 more will oe\nafforded by the lihmense nave, . . . When\nfinished, it will rank third among the great\ncathedrels, being exceeded only by 8t, Peter's\n: In Rome md Seville.(Jathedral Ii>8paln.\"\n' Glirdener; Creston-iWhat- is the different\n;, between, high and low; pressure wltti regard to conversion oil burners for homes?\nWhich of the two ere b|st and molt eco'-\nnornloal?, My   celery   during -'the   past\ncouple of years hat gone to'seed about\nthis time of year. What-causet thto?\nWe advise, you to consult a contractor\nregarding oil burners, Referring to the celery\nproblem, we presume they have been allowed\nto grow too quickly. Keep the plants nipped\noff.\n' H, C. C, Nelson\u2014Kindly let.me know if there\nil any plaoe in Nelson where one can get\na map of Nelson showing all the streets\nand numbers.\nTlje Nelson Chamber of Commerce, 501\nFront Street, carries theBe maps.\nT. A, W., Nelson\u2014Can earwigs fly?\nBefore consulting an encyclopedia we\nwould have replied, No. But apparently, th.ey\ncab. We quote: \"Earwlgt are characterized by\nvery short leathery fore-wings and large\nsemi-circular membranous hind-Wings which\nhave highly modified veins disposed in a\nradial manner,, When-the insect li-at rest the\nhind wings are folded longitudinally in a\n. fan-like fashion. . . . The origin of the name\nearwig is uncertain, but some claim It is a\ncorruption of earwing in allusion to the form\nof the hind wings. It lt a curious fact that,\nin spite of possession of well-formed wings,\nthis insect has only on very rare occasions\nbeen seen to fly.\"\nPress Comment\nLOGIC?\nMost Interesting feature of the budget debate may'have been when M. J. Coldwell, Socialist leader,' in a moment of candor, blurted\nout that of course corporations passed their\ntaxes on to the public in higher prices. This\n. being generally so, why has that party, which\nalways claims a-monopoly.qf concern for-tlje\nwelfare of the consumer, Invariably advocated higher and higher corporation taxes and\nclamored for re-Introduction of an excess-\nprofits tax?\u2014The Printed.Word.\nBritain's tax burden shows what the people are paying because of the Russian menace.\nBut it It also Impressive, thinks the St. John's\n(Nfld.) Evening Telegram, \"as a demonstration of Britain's recuperation In eight years\nfrom the almost overwhelming strain of World\nWar II.\"       \u2022 >. .   .\nVerse\nVestment\nNothing is wrong with our young people,\nthinks the Ortngevllle (Ont.) Banner. \"The\ntrouble is- with the old- people, the parents,\nthe grandparents, .the uncles and aunts\u2014all\nold people. . . . If ^our young folk can be\nrightly accused of being - unmanageable, too\ndemanding, spoiled, and unable to provide tor\ntheir own entertainment and social life, plcnse\ndon't blame them. Blame those who are or\nwere responsible for their'i)phringlng.\"\nCbfap to-\nDriver, Artist\nIn Summits\n. . . F. B. Pooree\nMo doubt the proposed road\nthrough Paulson to Blueberry\nCreek will be shorter and in many\nways better than- tha present'road,\nbut I shall mils the summits. Despite all.the unkind words said of\nit, I love it.' It is none of your tame,\nsupercilious highways, but a sparkling, lusty,-, pioneer road. It does\nnot meander .through the. valleys\nbut climbs the heights and skirts\nthe precipice. Once every io often\nI like to' pit my skill against. its\ntwists and turns and steep Inclines\nand descents, to- feel the car beneath me respond to my will .and\nknow-that I,still have some of the\ncourage of youth and that my reflexes are still prompt. -\n1 have small patience with, those\nwho say, \"I wouldn't iplnd going\nover the Cascade if it were paved.\"\nThey imply, not that they are afraid\nof If, but that their car mutt not be\nsubjected to any rough treatment,\nand yet. If there is one thing that\nthe makers ot modern carl have\nstressed, it'll the ability of their\ncan to absorb all road,shocks. My\nsmall car doesn't'squeal over it.\nIt sometimes seems as if Canadians make the worst of what they\nhave. If the Cascade-Rotsland rpute\nwere in Britain the car owners\nwould thoroughly enjoy it, They\nwould have races of all kinds with\nall kinds of cars and the motorcyclists would have weekend meets\nto the peril of life and limb, and\nnewspapers would carry vivid accounts of it all, and everyone would\nbe quite proud of lt. But not us,\nwe ostentatiously pass through the\nStates.\n. This passing through the States\nhas become a fetish with Many\npeople! Now, if-you please, instead\nof taking our own Canadian route\nfrom Grand Forks we are Invited to\ndetour through Northport and proceed through Republic and Tanav\nket to Osoyoos. A matter of 200\nmiles through foreign territory,\nand for why? To avoid 18 miles of\ngravelled road at Greenwood or to\ngain one hour of time. For this we\nput up with the dull roads, indifferent scenery and uninspiring villages of that particular part of the\nState of Washington.\nAWAITS THE ARTIST\nPoett have sung of the joys of\nthe open road, but none of them\never suggested that the joy of the\nopen road was getting from place\nto place as fast as possible. In their\nleisurely days they walked, and as\nthey walked they enjoyed all tbe\nsights and sounds and. smells of the\ncountry side. If we can no longer\nstay to savour the sounds' and smell\nof the countryside, we can, at least,\nenjoy the beauty of our own fair\nland. The= men .who built our\nSouthern Transprovinc'ial highway,\nwere not only builders, but artists.\nInspired by the hills and vales they\nmade a road which becomes one\nwith the pattern of the hills. The\neye never tirei of looking at the\nroad ahead for the road is part of,\nbut subordinate to the landscape,\nthe smiling rolling landscape, of the\nBoundary. In the years to come,\nno doubt artists will make famous\npictures of the Boundary-country,\nbut not till then will we recognize\nits Inherent beauty,\nSome roads wind- through rocky\ndeserts and others through .tree-\nclad desolations, but the. road of the\nBoundary winds happily among the\ntowns, villages and homesteads. To\npass along that road Is to feel that\none is never out of contact with\nhumanitv, that life flows along and\naround It, that lt is itself part of\nlife.\nTkftfters More Prone to\nHeadaches Experts Say\nBy; ALTON L. BLAKE8LEE\n, SHEW YORK (AP)-Thlnker are\nJpore llkeljr t* get recurrent headaches then dunces, some headaches\nexperts agree,\nThe aches don't come from wear\nInd tear or pain dr surprlpe over\nthinking up thought!\u2014that is, not\nfrdm tho actual process of thinking.\nRather, they come from what the\nthinker does, He reads mbro, uses\nhit eye! more, often works with\nneck muscles under strain, says Dr.\nFrancis L. Lederer of the University of Illinois.\nThe thinker hud more,time to\n\u25a0build up all kinds of tensiops, less\nchance to work them-out by exercise, The n6n-thlnker Is -usually\n\"too busy with routine work, has\nno time for headaches.\"\n\u25a0\"Thinkers take in more wavelengths\" from events and thoughts\naround them, have more chance for\nunconscious anxieties, adds Dr. Ar-\nhold P. Friedman, director of the\nheadache clinic at Montefiore Hospital here.\nHeadaches were dlscused Tuesday\nby experts from seven\" branches of\nmedicine at a round-table talk before the Internatlenal. College of\nSurgeons.\nEight to 12,000,000 Americans suffer\"\" from recurrent headaches, Dr,\nFriedman estimated. He says- he\ndoesn't feel there is any specific\noersonallty type marking sufferers\nCambodia's Premier\nExplains Comment\nPHNOM PENH, Cambodia (API-\nPremier Pen Nouth aald Wednesday Cambodia will fight the Communists when the little Indo-Chinese\nkingdom gets indepnedence from\nFrance and military aid from the\nU. S. and France,\nThe premier's statement was an\nobvious attempt to smooth over\nU. S. and .French displeasure last\nweek after a remark by Pen Nouth\nthat Cambodia has \"no quarrel with\ncommunism as long as it doesn't impose itself by force on our people.\"\nHe hinted that his country would\ntake a neutral role in the Indo-\nChinese war if the Communist-led\nVietminh rebel troops would withdraw from Cambodia.\nfrom migraine headaches, often\ncalled the worst headaches, or from\ntension or other forma of headache.\nThere are many possible causes of\nheadaches, including physical\nhealth, stress tnd strain of life, emotions, the kind ot job or marriage a\nperson has.\nDoctor Friedman aald psychotherapy and other treatments had\nhelped but not cured 05 per cent\nof 2000 patients coming to Montefiore with recurrent' tension and migraine headaches. Drugs and other\ntreatments can overcome the pain of\nacute attacks 75 to 60 per cent of\nthe time. \"\n>i mi   \"\"    in  ,i   i;\nCCC Certificates\nFor E. C. Graduates\nEDMONTON (OP>\u2014Twenty, gra- j\nduates of the Canadian Institute for\nBoard of Trade and Chamber of\nCommerce Secretaries Tuesday received certificates of merit at the\nannual meeting of the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce. s   -\u25a0   i      \"'\nL. W- Simms, president of tha\nChamber, made the presentations,\nThe 'institute is held each spring\nat McMaster University, Hamilton.\nThe certificate winners Include!\nBritish Columbia: T. R. Hill, Kelowna,'Mra. E. D. Emerson, Prince.\nGeorge.\nAlberta: D. S. Griffin, Red Deerj\nV. G.-Evans, Edmonton.\nManitoba: A. C. Counsell, Winnipeg.   ' -\nVntiadiii, FASHIONS\n(LOCAL MANAGEMENT)\n* TAFFETAS\nno\nFor .fall: 12-18:\nat a thrifty\t\n.95\n\u2022 SKIRTS\nIn larger sizes. . $A<9B\n38-44 in. waist     W:\nShep Early While Colon and\nSizes Lett\nSPECIAL\nJUNIOR TRENCH COATS\n12-UX\n$13.95\nJAc SitftiL Otf-Jmndttf. SehjaiaL\nWHERE YOUR CLOTHING $ GOES FARTHER\n449 BAKER ST. PHONE 874\nMOST EXCITING LAUNDRY\nEllCfRlcSH\nHe wears his only suit tp auction tales\nAnd school board meetings. It Is faded, worn\nA little at the seams, but. freshly pressed\nFor each occasion. His wife. heats - the Iron\nOn their old kitchen combination-range,\n-Applies it deftly to each .crease and fold,\nAnd hangs the garment carefully away\nFor its next use. He wears h)s deiilm clothes\nAt work about the farm, and goes to town\nOnce or twice a week in overalls. \u25a0\nAi rugged man, with weathered countenance\nAnd eyes the color of deep larkspur blue,\nHo saves hii only suit for wearing when\nIn company with more thtn average men.\n-BILLY JB. COOPBR.\nIn Christian Science Monitor.\nFICKLB LADY   .,'.\u25a0\nIf luck Is a lady she mutt blush at some\nof the names men call her.\u2014Brandon Sun.\nYour Horoscope\n. With favorable Influences prevailing, life\nihould proceed on a more or lest even keel;\nbusiness expansion is indicated, and new\n'frlendi, too. Today's child.may be methodical,\nindustrious ind ambitious, also popular and\ntuccesetful.\nIt's Been Sold\nGod mode tht country, ind man madt the\ntown.\u2014William COWper.\nThey'll Po It Every Time\nBy Jlnwny Hatlo | Today's Bible Thought\nThe Christ did so lay down His\nlife. We can give our life one day\nat a time for all good causes.\nI am tht good shepherd; tht\nrjood shepherd loyoth down  hii\nlift fer tht shcop,\u2014John 10:11.\nCbmL ML\nI mver get caught pronouncings\nword wrong. If I'm among folks\nthat are apt to know what's right I\nitlok to; little .'two-jointed, everyday words, and take no .chances.\nThe Dominion of. Ceylon  has  a\nlarge export trade In precious\nstones, chiefly rubies and sapphires.\nThe Montreal Ski Club; first of\nits kind in North America, was\nIncorporated In 1004.\nU, dsnahir*ml\/I...sailm'l*rM\nGet money qvltkly\nNIAGARA\nAMMH\nWith   proof of ownership\nand'your'Ilanature you ean\nC3t an onto loan In minutes.\np to $1,000*. or more, depending on what you drives\nLong or abort term plant.\n'Loans to $1,0(10 Ufa Insured\net no extra colt to you,\n\u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0'   lOWIt RATKON\nMANY PMIND1Y WANS\n'K\nMsssslMy\ns-ssym.nl .\nNr.-ssf\nloymtnli\n'\u2022 (\u2022\u00bb.''\n(41.10\n\u25a0 Wi \u25a0\u25a0\n600\n. 46.60\nIS\n330   '\n33.10\nii\ny\n3S.T1\nt\nMlACARA\n560 Baker St.     >\nPhono 1650\nAn AH-Csroadlon C\u00ab\u2014\u00abiy In OMf SOillht\nFMENDIYIOANS tltlll FCIENDIY IffilNSt HSU\nIII\nIfnuglliS malting the smoothest starching r\nsolution you've ever used, with NO mixing, NO\nboiling, NO straining, NO lumps to stir out, NO\nmessy pots and pans to wash and NO waiting!\nThQt'f GLIDE Yousimply pour GLIDE\ninto water (hot or cold) and your starching solution is ready! No blueing or wax is necessary!.\nWith EilCh WaSh Glim htely releases dirt\nClothes and linens becomo freshly fragrant, newly\nclean with each washing.\nHappy Ironing glide gives\u00bbfinish of such\nevenness and smooth lustre that your iron will\nglide over clothes as effortlessly as a skater skims\nover ice. And you'll love the delicate jasmine\nfragrance'!\nYOU'VE  NOTHING TO LOSE!\nIf, after using GLIDE, you fee\/ you'd prefer\nold-fashioned if arching methods, simply\nreturn this boff\/e fo your grocer and he will\nimmediately refund the,full purchase prho\nen our behalf. (We re-lmburse the grocer.)!\nliLetreimuleWm\n__\n\u2014\n^m\t\n..'^vy-v\\\n-   *\n _-_i_______\nI\n'\u00a3SSI\n\"IT PAYS TO BUY QUALITY\"\nVtrnOVT    TdTlCVB\n^tjouH^tyowtn-UtUUtt-\nTHE CLINIC SHOE\npair $17.95 R. ANDREW\nL- & CO.\nCome In and, choose a pair\nof those  smart, trim   thoes. LEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n'.'-.- Established 1902\nThe Shetland islands,   north   of\n| Great Britain,  are about  equally\ndistant from Norway and Scotland.\nThe'guild chapel and guildhall at\nStratford - on - Avon, Shakespeare's\nbirthplace, were built ln\\1269.\n\u2022 Here's tha thrifty way to help\nyour whole family to akin beauty\u2014\nakin comfort! Get the big 6-ounco\njar of grease\/ess, medicated Nox-\nxama Skin Cream-now only 98f\n\u2014and save V- over smeller sizes!\nYou'll use it dozens of ways!\nAs an all-purpose beauty cream,\nJsfo-zema helps skin look lovelier-\nquickly. It helps heal blemishes,\nminor akin irritations. If a soothing\nfar bums, chapped hands, before-\nand-after shaving, for baby's skin.\nStock up now) Get Noxzema at any\ndrug or cosmetic counter. Save % I\n1953 Winter Styles\nStrike at Midriff\nBy MURfEL WARSAW AY '\u25a0\nCamdUrn Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014This year's most attractive winter\nstyles hit right where it hurts rtost\u2014in the midriff.\n, Christian Dior's \"princess line,\" a moulded look that\nruthlessly spotlights that extra curve around tiie hips, lias;\nits counterpart in almost every couture collection in:Lbn-'\ndon, Rome and Paris,.\nIt's as figure-revealing as a one-\npiece bathing suit\u2014but predictions\nare it will be the smash hit ot the\nseason. The selling point Is that undulating look of seemingly uncontrolled figure appeal most women\nyearn for. ;'\nEMPHASIS ON WA|8T .\nUnbelted, lt moulds the form\nfrom under a well-defined bust to\nthigh level, and It gives sharp emphasis to the waist It Is, in fact a.\ndream line for the tall, the slim or\nthe well-proportioned. For those\nwith the slightest bulge, it means a\nspecial foundation or diet\nTha swathed and pleated Dior\nbustline calls for a deep, up-cut\nbra as well as the midriff, waist and\ndiaphragm control required for that\nfaultless curve from bust to thigh.\nDi6r rightly calls it his \"living\nline.\" Only a soft, smooth foundation on a fairly-slim figure will give\nthe right effect Too firm corseting would show up mercilessly because\u2014as most curvaceous women\nfind out early\u2014rigid control in one\nspot means an, extra bulge somewhere else.\nThe princess waist Is the most\nemphatic inward cut Dior has shown\nsince his post-war New Look and lt\nwon't take the waist corset designed\nfor the New Look. Those skirts\nflared fully from the waist perfect\nfor hiding the hard edges of a waist\nbelt The smooth curve of the princess, line would show every ridge,\nDIFFICULT JOB '    \u2022     -I\nEven with strict dieting It's difficult or impossible for most women\nto achieve the perfect Dior figure.\nJudged by the measurements of hit\nfavorite mannequin, Renee,- lt Is:\nHeight five feet seven inches; bust\n33, .waist Mi,,hipsM. .     '\nAsked what he thought of the\nParis princess line, London's latest\nroyal designer, John Cavanagh\u2014\nwho featured his own figure re\nveallng styles, said: \"It gives length\nand it flattering.\"\nBut he added this warning: \"If\nthe'line is broken by a swathed\nbodice, then it ls'only for the high,\nfirm butt, ind flat diaphragm figure.\" '\u25a0-\u2022''-\nThlt youthful figure It certainly\nneeded for Cavanagh's Gitana skirt\ndress in,flamenco pink tatin em-l\nbroidered with net rhinestones and\ntassels. From the'cameo neckline\nto the skirt flare, starting low on\nthe diaphragm, It silhouette! the!\nfigure like a lighted backcloth.       !\nMost of London. \"Big-Ten\" fea-'\nture something of the same line in\nday and evening -wear. Mattll shows\na gauzy pure silk cocktail dress'In\ncyclamen, bronze and black that\nfollows the unbelted look and low-\nflare skirt He features it however,\nwith a draped bust add deep fold\nto the front skirt that diverts the\neye from the midriff severity.\nLodge Officers\nVlsilNebon\n\u00a311. dtcuuuL WhesliUL\nIr\nT- ;'.    ! \"' * >'; ' IT\nBkADLtY S\nMEAT   MARKET\n*\n*\nGrade A,\nLb.__L\nLOW WEEKEND SPECIALS\n49*\n65*\n'it Veal Steaks - Roasts\n49<\nFrying and Roasting.\nLb\t\nShoulder.\nLb.\nif Lean[Brisket Beef\nLb.\n19'\nir Veal - Pork - Beef\nMinced.\n3u *r\nCome In ond Inspect the Specialty Lines at Displayed\nDuring the Fall Fair.\n\"ONpA-DAY TOWEL*!\nGay gift for'your hostess\u2014or to\ncheer up chores in your kitchen!\nTme-a-day towels aro jiffy embroidery\u2014do one a day!\n' Even hubby enjoys drying dishes\nwith these towels. Pattern 521 has\nseven embroidery transfers, each\nabout 6*)i x T inohei.\nSend _Tv_IN-ir-lTv_ CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, 238 Baker\nSt, Nelson. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS., j 7\nEXCITING VALUE! Ten, yea TON\npopular, new designs to crochet\nsew, embroider, knit\u2014printed right\nin the.Laura Wheeler Needlecraft\nBook. Plus many more patterns to\nsend for \u2014 Ideas for gifts, bazaar\nmoney-makers, fashions! Send 35\ncents for your cdpyl\n_)>___, lAp. (t)itk\nTfloAuuL TltttAlin.\nInteresting talks on lodge work\nwere given by visitors to the Nelion\nOrange Lodge.\nAmong those who visited the\nQueen City JOA Lodge and tbe\nLadles Orange Benevolent Association wore Mrs. Irene Beaton of Vancouver, Grand Mistress of British\nColumbia, Past Grand Mistress of\nB.C., Mrs. Lees of Vancouver, Fast\nGrand Mistress Mrs. Beckett of\nVancouver and Past Grand Mistress\nMrs. Hazel Miller. Mrs. Miller Is\njuvenile director for Vancouver.\nMrs. Beaton and the accompanying officers met the juvenile lodge\nin the Odd Fellows Hall and were\nwelcomed -by Guardians of tha\nJuveniles Mrs. Blanche Gray and\nMrs. Ivan Lewis.\nThe girls put on lodge work for\nthe visitors. Later, visiting officials\nwere welcomed by the senior\nLadiet Orange Lodge and introduced by Mistress Mrs. A. Crlttall. Refreshments were served.\nMoyie Notes\nMO-IE\u2014Mr. and Mrt. Nell Rob-\nerti motored to Flnley Creek to\nvisit friends.\nMr. and Mrt, V, G. Whlffen of\nPullman, Wash., spent a one month\nholiday here.\nJjfrB. C. Stephen and ton Bobby\not Winnipeg spent the week visiting with Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Stone\nand sonB at their summer home\nhere.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Redford left for\nNevada on a three week holiday.\nMrs. A. H. Warren and daugh\nters Myra and Doreen left for their\nhome at Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson L. Smith\nvisited their parents, Mr. and Mrt.\nR. A. Smith on their way to\nCreston.\nMr. and. Mrs. George Whitehead\nand daughter Caroline and ton\nJimmy of Kimberley visited Mr.\nand Met. Andrewi.\n, Mr. and Mrt. Jake Munshaw and\nsoh of Kimberley were visitors at\nthe home of Mn. Munshaw't parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. S: Stanton.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Clark ot Calgary\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. L.\nGarvefi\nMr. and Mrt. C. Falconer and\nton at Calgary were the guests of\nMr. and Mri. L. Garvell.\nMr. and Mrt. Walley Cottle ot\nSeattle left by ear for Calgary\nwhere they will visit with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H, Warren.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1953 S\nWindermere WI Plans    BUY\nSeventh Anniversary\nFOR YOU, JR. MISSI\nFor Juniors on tfle go\u2014and in the\nknow\u2014a Sew-Easy wonder to wear\neverywhere! For a change of pace,\ntop the dress off with the plaid or\nchecked jerkin that has handy pockets at the hips. Choose rayon, winter cotton, or wool.\nPattern 9385: Jr. Miss sizes 11,13,\n15, IT. Size 13 dresi takes 3% yard!\n30-inch fabric; jerkin take! V\/t\nyard! 54-inch fabric.\nthia easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nsew chart shows you every step.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE GENTS (35c)\nin-coins (stamps cannot bo accepted) for thla pattern, Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to. MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelion Newi, Pattern Dept, Nelson.\nWarm Welcome\nGiven British\nBallet Star\n' NEW YORK (AP) -Margot Fonteyn, London's ballet star, got such\na warm and noisy welcome in the\nMetropolitan Opej-a house Sunday\nnight that you would have thought\nLondoners themselves could hear\nit- '-,-     7\nIt was the gala opening of Sadler's .Weill ballet on its third visit\nto New York, and lt marked the\nstart ot a third North American\ntour, 1\nMist Fonteyn led the company\nIn a full-length, four-act performance, of \"Le Lac del Cygnes.'-\nThough she was handsomely supported by a cast that Included-Michael Somes, Anne Heaton, Pamela\nMay, Lesque Edwards, Alexander\nGrant and others, Miss Fonteyn\ngave the evening its special flavor,\nThe best part other rare theatrical and balletic gifts is a kind of\ncourtly grace and elegance.\nMiss Fonteyn's appearance in act\nII, let loose the first fiery burst of\napplause, and she did lt again after\nperforming with Somes in that act\nand the next.\nBonnington,\nBONNINGTON-Mr. and Mra. R.\nMcFadden and daughter have returned from a motoring trip, having visited Spokane, Creston and\nCalgary for their vacation.\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER\u2014Thomai Pearion,\nAllan Llnd and Andy Avlson left\non Sunday to attend UBC.\nPeter Rodall of Windfield, Okanagan, visited at the home ot Mr.\nand Mrs. Andy Anderson and family.\nMrs. William Graham of Kimberley visited with friend! here.\nMr. and Mri. Ernest Dpney, Sr,,\nleft for a holiday in Cranbrook\nwith their ton and daughter-in-law,\nMr. and Mra. Ernest Doney, Jr.\nMalcolm Aberdeen of Kamloops\nIi visiting his aunt Miss Betty Hopkins.\nMrs. W. E. Rowt of Vancouver\nvisiting with Mr. Rowe for a short\ntime.\nMr. end Mrs. Frank Russell were\nholidaying in Kaslo and In Nelson\nwith tho former's mother, Mrt. C,\nRussell.\nMr. and Mrs. L. P. Todd and family of Whitehorte, Yukon, have\ntaken up residence In New Denver.\nMr. Todd Is the new principal for\nthe New Denver Lucerlne Junior-\nSenior high school.    '\nINVERMERE \u2014 Windermere Die\ntrlct Women's Institute will celebrate the seventh anniversary of\nthe formation of the branch at a\nbirthday party in the Lake Win\ndermere Memorial Community Cen\ntro at Invermere, Sept. 30.\nFriends of members and former\nmembers will- attend- the event\nwhich will take the form of a so\ncial afternoon. A 'special program\nof entertainment la being planned\nto celebrate the anniversary. Convener Is Mrs. W. Hi Cleland.\nPlans were made at the September meeting ot tht executive committee held at the home of Mrs.\nThomai Seaton of Winner. It was\nannounced that the Salvation Army\ndrive undertaken by the W.I. earlier in the' year had been the most\nsuccessful pn record. Mrs. W. R.\nLake of Invermere, waa convener.\nDeer Park Notes\nDEER PARK\u2014Mr. and Mrs. J. T.\nTaylor have returned to their home\ni Wallace, North Carolina, after\nspending a Week hunting grizzly\nbear, Arriving in their own seaplane, they travelled to the Summits on horseback, Their trophy\nwai one grizzly and were accompanied by the district guide Carl\nSchwartzenhauer and Carmen Git-\nman of Rossland.\nMri. E. Coleman wai guest of\nhonor at a surprise baby shower,\nwhich wat held in the Community\nhall. She wai tbe recipient of many\ngifts.\nMr. and Mn. V. Walker and son\nDon of Vancouver wera guests of\nthe former's brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. ,G. A. Walker,\nON OUR BUDGET PUN    '\n10% DOWN      *\nBalance 18 Monthi\nJhsuwumL\nMrs. George Trnf ton\nPuis on Blue Bonnet\n\u2014Scores as Hostess)\nBlazers\nFOR AUTUMN\nCall in and see pur selection of smart, trim, navy-\nblue blazers today. One of\nthese expertly tailored\nblazers is just the thing to\ncomplete your Fall ward-'\nrobe. 'J' \u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\"[\nSlzet 12 to 18.\nCorduroy\nJackets\nIdeal for cool Autumn evening. These jackets come in\nall shades. \u2014 Sizes 12 to 18.\nBoth the blazers and jack-\/\nets are perfect for informal!\nor sports wear. If you want 4\nto look your best at all \\\ntimes, call in and choose  \\\none now.\nBosweU W! Plans\nCard, Dance Night\nBOSWELLr-Plahi 'or a card and\ndance evening were finalized at a\nmeeting ot the Boswell Women's\nInstitute ot the home bf Mrs. Eric\nBambrldge. An added attraction\nwill be a home cooking stall and a -.\nparcel post table. Almost $40 wat\ncollected among the group for the\nRemdell family who lost their belongings in a recent fire.\nSirdar Notes\nSIRDAR\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nScott and son of Kimberley wen\ngueati of Mr. and Mri, Chorlei\nWilson.\nMr. J. Atkinson of Blairmore vii-\nIted Mr. and Mri. R. Heap.\nMr, and Mri. R. Heap ara leaving\nfor Nelion where the former wiH\ntake medical treatment.\nroA\nL\nPhone SSt\nTOWLER\nFuel dt Transfer\nNelion, I.e.\nRUTCHERTERIA I\nCORNED BEEF\nBoneless, mild aured,\nPer Ib.\t\n35'\nROASTING\nCHICKEN\nFreshly dressed;   Pft^\nper Ib ...JW\nCORN ON THE\nCOB\nPer dor. J J\nYEARLING\nHENS\n3 to 4 lbs. each;   _1 C#\nper Ib *f _#\nPICNIC\nSHOULDERS\nTenderized.; __L\"T#\nper Ib _.....*f #\nSpecials in Good Veal\nRump Roasts, lb. ...\u2014.I. ... 59c\nLoin Steaks and Chops, Ib ___._ 65c\nLean Breast for Stewing, Ib. 25c\nLean Minced Veal, Ib. .. 45c\nPOT ROASTS\nof Top Steer       _LA#\nBeef, oil cuts; Ib.TV\nBOSTON BUTTS\nFresh; Cff*\nperlb: J J\nBEEF\nKIDNEYS\nFresh;\nper ,1b. '.\t\n25*\nCODFISH\nFresh;\nper lb.\t\n28'\nBEEF DRIPPING\nFreshly rendered; ^ \u00a3*)\n3 lbs.,  JLj\nBABYBEEF\nLIVER\nPer lb.\n35'\nGOOD LEAN\nHamburger and Sausage Meat\nlb. 35c     3 lbs. $1.00\nPhones 527-528\nFree Delivery\nNEW PACK PARADE\nFresh from the fields\n .', \u25a0     \u25a0\n<\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1953\nPolice Trqmees Mutiny, E. Berlin\nBjftUN <A\u00bb \u2014: SoWet trodpi\nand tank! Ware called In to quell a\n\"mutiny\"' among Communist Peoples' Police trainees at an East zone\n1 barraclq, _ Welt Berlin newsppaer\n1 reported W\u00abdneliaay.   .-\nA brief report, which could not\nJminedlately be confirmed here,\naald one police lieutenant wat killed\nand several other men wounded at\nPinnow near Angermuende, 40\nmiles, northeast of Berlin.\nSome 2000 police cadets are reported under training there.\nThe newspaper did not say what\ncaused the disturbance and. the\nsource of the information wai snot\ngiven. \u25a0 :!\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nSHORT\nCOURSE\nfor\nCO-EDS\non how\nto dress\nfor a date\nYou'll learn your lotion In\nfashion   aftor   juit   ono\nlook at our date clothes!     !\nComa in and mo our doto     '\ndreiiei In Fall's crisp fab-\nrlei and rich eolouri,\nQjQSJlU  Ladies* Apparel\nTHE FASHION CENTRE\ntHON! 775 53S BAKER ST.\nmm\nHome Building\nOn the Increase\nOTTAWA (CP> 4,Cana_ana are\nbuilding mare houses,; and- building\nthem faiter, than they were a year\nWO' \u2022\nStatistics released Wednesday by\nthe Bureau of Statistics ihowed that\nfor the seven-month perlodehdlng\nJuly 31, completion \u201e hew _0uilii|\nwll. running '40 per *ent ahead at\nthe some period ISsT year,' with\nnew starts 83 per cent ahead.    > '\u25a0\u25a0\nThe bureau said 46,310 units were\ncompleted ih the itven-month ptt-\nlod, compared with 33,059 A ait\nyear. Housing Starts totalled M,,\n580.as against 44,-90. \u25a0.\/';,'  ' *\".'l|\ntimi ofiira j\nBuilders cut the average eon*\nstructioh time In July for the seventh straight month. In July the average t|nia wai 6.i} Months; to June\nIt was 7.4 monthi and to July,\n1852, 6.0 monthi,\nAt the end of July, 68,216 units\nwere still undtr cdnstructlon, 28\nper Ce&t mere thin thl 94,179 at\ntha tenia tima list year.\nBeth starts and completidns wen\nhigher in the teven mentht to all\nptovlncei. ,'\u2022' The totals. I* western\nCanada-.with'1 Ust year's figure! In\nbrackets:\nStarts: Manitoba, 2912 (2082):\nSaskatchewan, 2594 (1911); Alberta, '9972 (3780); British Columbia,\n9055 (4155).    .\nCompletions: Manitoba, 1049\n(1020): Saskatchewan, 1337 (529) j\nAlberta. 4074 (2684); British Columbia, 4956 (9655).\nGordon Graydon in\n\"Fair Condition\"\nTORONTO (CP)-Hospital authorities laid Wedneiday that Gordon Graydon, 96-year-old foreign\naffairs expert for the Fregriiilve\nConservttlvt party, ii In \"only fair\ncondition'' with a stomach ailment,\nMr. Graydon, who represents\nPeel riding In the House of Commons, underwent 1 stomach operation lost month.\nDoctors declined to give tha nature's- his illness.\nIn the West\n.\nAmi more people\nprefer NABOB\nthan any other\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\n14    7\n\u25a03m?r\u00bb\nWINNIPEG STADIUM ... Thli It tn aerial\nview of the hew $900,000 ttadlum of thl Winnipeg\nBlUt   Bemoan  bt the  Welttrn   Interprovlnolal\nFCetball Union. Covering four city blocks lh tha'\ncity't Win end, the ttaalum wat dailgned te ao-\n,' '   .\nii \"\u25a0  '\ncomrnodate 16|00O, Two permtnent concrete standi\non either tide of-the field can hooortmodate 9000.\neach, Movable bleachers ot the ends can take cere\nef an additional 900. None of the itandt It covered.\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- \u2014(OP Photo.)\nTechnician* Start\nOn Annacii Island\nLONDON (CP)i-Twelve teehnl-\nciihi have started working on Annacii island, B.C., 'for the Industrial development project planned\nby the late Duke of Westminster's\nGrosvenOr estates.\nMore than half a dozen British\nfirm! have already Indicated interest In the project, it wai learned\nhere Wednesday. The project Is intended to provide ready-made factories it long-tefm rentals ind cost\nof preparing ready-made factorial\nat long-term rentals and cost ot preparing the 1200-acre Island it estimated $170,000,000 to the next 10\nyean,\nMews of the development was disclosed shorty before the death two\nmonthi ago of the' Duke Of Westminster, one of Britain's richeat men.\nThe Development company already hai applied for ind received\ntwo allocations ot Canadian dollars. Others will be f tinted readily by the treasury, It II understood,\nwith capital coming wholly from\nthe Duke'i estate.\nNo RCAF Jetton\nNon-Slop Flight\nOTTAWA (CP) - The RCAr has\nno plans to send one of Its two\nComet Jets on a non-stop transatlantic flight next Sunday, an air\nforce spokesman said Wednesday.\nHe wu commenting on a Toronto\nreport which quoted Sqdn. Ldr. Roly\nLloyd 11 saying the trip would be\nmade from Goose Bay, Labrador, to\nLondon. Sqdn. Ldr. Lloyd is,captain\nof one of the Comets.\nThe. spokesman here itld the officer wu apparently mistaken.\nPHONI 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nCoast Clfy Authorities Consider\nSewage Plan for Vancouver Area\nVAN-OUVEB (CP) - A report\nbefore civic authorities Wednesday\nout-lined a vast sewerage plan for\nGreater Vancouver, aimed to care\nfor a papulation estimated at i,-\n412,000 to 47 yean. >\nThe estimated cost ii placed at\n$45,289,000 for > sewerage systems;\n$.0,982,000 for drainage, with on\naverage of two mllfl extra on municipal taxes in the Greater Vancouver area over a 43-year period to\npay lor the system.\nThe plan for the City of .Vancouver would mean clearing\nbeaches pt pollution, with construction of new lowers ond drains starting In 1955. included in the plan\nwould be New Westminster, North\nand West Vancouver, and many\nadjaeent municipalities.\nThi plen, which took four yean\nto compelte tt t oost of $100,000,\nwat prepared' tor the Vencouver\ntnd District Joint Sewerage and\nDrainage Board,\nFlrit reaction came from Reeve\nRay Parsoni of Richmond, who\nsaid hit municipality will have\nnothing to do with the plan.\n\"All they're doing Is clearing\nVancouver belches at our expense,\"\nhe aald.\nUnder the plan \u2022 primary iiwage\ntreatment plant would be constructed on lona island In Richmond.\nThe proposed plan, he said, Just\nmovei sewage from English Bay to\nRichmond.:-   ' \u25a0\nNothing Queerer\nThan House of\nLords -Simonds\n.OTTAWA (CP)-Lord Simonds,\nLord High Chancellor of Britain,\nSLid Wednesday there Is a \"dangerous trend\" that la liable to tip\nUie balance In favor of order and\nauthority at the expense of liberty.\nHe told the Canadian Club hi\nbelieves the greatest talk facing\nlawyers and politicians It to reconcile order with liberty end freedom with Justice.\nThe problem of reconciling authority with freedom wai oni aspect of a larger problem\u2014that of\nthe corrupting influence of power,\nit wai not safe to put uncontrolled\npower Into the hands of one man\n0- a small group of men.\nDANGEROUS TREND\nHe laid ha referred particularly\nto Britain. In I parliamentary democracy, an aspect of the dangerous\ntrend wis that lt might take the\nform of tingle-chamber government,\nBritain tried that more than 300\nyean ago.under Cromwell. But it\nWas Cromwell himself who hid finally recognized the need of a oheck\nto authority which li supplied by\na second chamber.\nLord Slmondi said there Is nothing \"queerer\" thin .the composition of Britaln'i House of Lordi.\nNevertheless it wu valuable ai a\nchick to the Commons ind is t\nrevising body.\nADMITTED TO BAR\nLETHBRIDGE (CP) - Richard\nWation Williams, formerly of Regina, wat admitted to the Alberta\nbar Monday before Chief Justice\nC. C. McLarian at the opening of\nSupreme Court sittings here.\nMr. Williams, ion of Mr, ind.\nMrs. P. S. Williams of Regina, re.\ncelved hit law degree from the' University of Saskatchewan In 1052.\nHe will practice in Tiber, Alta.\nIf you hove \u00ab tore ttvont, 7 1\n\"SIFTO'1 Soil ond woter\nmokoi an affective ond\neconomical gargle.\nShow Empty Camps\nTo Danish Team\nCOPENHAGEN (CP) - The Com-\nmuniiti dined them royilly but\nihowed \"a regrettable tendency to\ntake UN medical teams to empty\nprison camps,\" the leader of i' Din-\nlih mtdlcil tetm which Inspected\nUN POWt before their return from\nNorth Korea, itld on hii arrival\nhome Wednesday.\nSurgeon Tage Christiansen said\nHe and his colleagues tte caviar and\nvodka for breakfast In a general's\nmess.\n. \"And dinner was also a tremendous affair,\" he said. \"There were no\nfewer than 20 courses.\"\nHe said he and Hit team did get\na chance to examine and talk to\nUN prltoneri about to be frt.ed.\nOther teams weren't so fortunate.\n\"There wai 1 regrettable tendency to take UN medical teamt to\nempty prison camps.\" Christiansen\nsaid.\n^Sfe BUYS WHYS\n^J\/UyfV{\/A\/    ,,   w 1 f k i v    INFORMATION   s 1 11 v I C 1\n] MONTREAL, September 17th\u2014Is the combination of Fall houseclea-ing and a stuffy head-cold\nmaking you feel bluer than a rainy dty? Here's'\nwhat to do I Spcetd MENTHOLATUM liberally\ninside etch nostril and miff well back for cooling,\nsoothing relief. Mentholatum's medicated .vapours\nrelieve irritated membranes almost immediately\u2014\nesse the stuffiness\u2014tnd, drat thing you know,.you\ncon breathe easily again. Meatholttum, with its\ncombination of ftst-aoting iagrediento in a bland, soothing base, relieves\nmany other diteomforta, too. Send for a generous fret sample\u2014\nBarbara Brent, 1411 Crescent St., Montreal, P.O..\nExciting Netesf ...A Special Shampoo Brush It Yours FREE I (For\nonly the cost of mailing and handling.)  Nothing\nmora sttisftotory than a shampoo with thit proper\nshampoo brush-designed by a hair expert. It has\ndosene ol'tiny fingers instead of bristles\/ These\npliable \"fingers\" gently massage your scalp  and\nitimulate circulation, to help keep your hair healthy\n... and gleaming I To get this FREE SHAMPOO\nBRUSH (worth IO cents) send BOTH END-FLAPS\nof any site: carton of either RAYVE  CREME\nSHAMPOO OR LIFEBUOY SHAVE CREAM uith\nloe to cover handling end mailing costs to: Shampoo Brush; Dept, \"\u2022\nPO. Box 1518, Toronto, Ont.\nThe Pick Of Tht Nats Crop...\nyet, Heina gives\nyou only the\nfinest ol tomttoel\nin their famous\nTomato Products\n... one reason\nwhy HEINZ\nT O MA T O\nKETCHUP\nis such a favourite.\nIt's .rich with tha\nflavour of riot, red tomatoes \u2014\nand of course the Htins Chefs\nadd juit the right combination of\nfragrant tpiCea to give it that very\nspecial good taste. Then there 1.\nHeine deliciout Cream of Tomato\nSoup and Heint Chili Sauce that\nadd sparkle to many 1 \"Plain\nSusan dish\u2014and, last but not\nleast\u2014Heint Tomato Juice that's\ntuch a delicious source of Vitamins\nA tnd C, Look for tht \"New Pack\nPtrtde\" of Heint Tomtto Prod-\nuote\u2014at your grocer's now.\n\/ Reach For Them with pleasure\n\u2014beoause I\nknow that my\nS.OS. Scouring\nPads will do\nwhatever I need\nthera for in1 a\njiffy. Mtybeit'a\nto scour tht\nbtth tub \u2014 or\ntht top of the stove\u2014or a burned\npot. Sometimes it's to take a\nstain off linoleum ... or remove\nold wax. Any time\u2014eotrv time I\u2014\n8.O.S. does the job I It's really a\nmagical combination of sturdy,\ninterwoven fibres, filled with\ngrease-dissolving soap, They're to\nneatly made too\u2014a pleasure to\nuse in every.wty. I think thtt\n\"8.O.S.\" must stand, too, for\n\"Socret of Secrete\" for every\nwoman who wtnte her house to\nshine with cleanliness. It'a certain-\/\nly minel\n* CHOICE PINEAPPLE i\u00bb.,_~- 29c\nit\n\u2022\n*\n*\nI\n*\n*\nCHOICE APRICOTS M-____ 25c\nLEMON JUICE f\u00ab __ 14c\nGRAPEFRUIT JlCE \u00bb____\u25a0 3fr\nAPPLE JUICE 5#s^^--_ 35c\n, \u25a0\".    p. . 7v \u25a0 \"\u25a0- \u25a0 .. \u25a0 \u25a0\"\u25a0 \u25a0 ;\u25a0\u25a0 m\nGOLDEN CORf .W?_-__-___ 14c\n 17c\n\u2014 25c\nPORK and BEANS &-?__ 6 for 69c\nSWIFT'S PREM ..*-___. ______ 31c\n* AIRWAY COFFEE\u25a08_-_r=_^_ 96c\ni DAVID BISCUITS tea \u00a3_______: 39c\n. Sugar Ball*, eleve 5;\nI5-oi. eon  _______\nBlue Ridge, atd.;\n28-oz. ean ____-\t\nTeste Tells;\n15-or. ean ..\t\nIdeal Luncheon Moot;\n2-oz. round can\t\nMild and Mellow;\ni-ox. bag -\njM&k fijuojduai\nt Bless Tfct Day when I Srtt brought FRENCH'S INSTANT POTATO\npowder into my home . ... \u00abd threw ;out the old\ndrudgery of potato preparation! AU the.full flavour\n\u2014and nutrimente-of the finest potatoes are ready in\nthe twinkling of an eye\u2014as the best mashed potatoes\nyou ever tasted! . . . Or, maybe as.a crisp brown\ncosting to fish cutlets, or croquettes . . . Try it as\n_ __c_e_i_g for graviM, it-w* ind aoupt . . .or\nu a topping (or baked c_u*ro!e dishes, Shepherd t\nPit . . . meat or chicken pie. It turna a delicate\nbrown wider, the broiler ind adds food flavour and\nfood values that I. seed'in meal-planning for my\nhungry wood.\nCooitl Thrnnl All the things you'll like about BLUE'BONNET DE\nLUXE MARGARINE! One of them is the inapt of\nthe De Luxe Blue Bonnet quarters. They go right\nfrom thi package to the plate . . . and they're\nindividually wrapped in pure aluminum foil. That a\nto preserve the delicate flavour of De Luxe Blue\nBonnet . .vdelioioua freeh from the refrigerator\u2014...\nor when served melting hot on toast, meat or\nvegetables. Incidentally, besides tho natural nutation of good ingredient!, 16,000 units of Vitamin A\nare tdded^to every single pound of De Luxe Blue\nBonnet. And another thing you'll like about De Luxe'Blue Bonnet\u2014\nthe handy chart on tho package shows, whero to cut for rcoipca \u25a0\n       \u25a0  i       1    rv        \u2014\nSweet, plump\nclutter\t\n* Freestone PEACHES\n\u2022 TOKAY GRAPES\nif    C ANTE LOUPE    Okanagan, pink field\nSmJuudeecL TThaiA\nArrow Lake V'i, 72i,\nopp. 16-lb. crate\t\n$1.49\n2 lbs. 39c\n\u2014 lb. 10c\nRod Brand,\n\"'% lean\n^GROUND BEEF \u00bb\n\u2022 Pork Shoulder Roast\n\u2022 BACK BACON\nWhole\nor Half ...\nNo. Vpiect\nlb.39c\nIb. 47c\nlb.79c\nWo reaorvo tho right to limit quanlitiel    Prleei Effective September 17th, 18th, 19th\naawammmmma^mmmmmm^mmmmmmmmmmmm^mswmsmmmmmmmmmaammmmm^m\n_______________\n______\n'\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\"*\u25a0\u2022 ''---\n \u25a0\u25a0\n&5$3\nRed Twists lii^p^i^|^|^\nin\n_.\nm\n(EDITOR'S NOTE: Here Is another tn a series of,articles by\nWilliam N. Oatis, Associated Press correspondent, who ll telling\nwhat happened to him In Czechoslovakia. He returned to the\nUnited Slates last May after two yeari imprisonment by the Communists.) \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022   ',\nBy WILLIAM N\/OATI8\n(Copyright 1853 by The Associated Press),\nA slim man with'pouched eyes \u2014 a man who always\nreminded me of a lizard \u2014 leaned across a desk and said,\n\"\"This Is the best prison in Europe.\"\nHe belonged to the Communist secret police of Czech-\n\" -Slovakia.-They had arrested me six days before on suspicion\n' that I, the Associated Press correspondent in Prague, was\nalso a spy.\nThey had questioned me at the\npolice station day after day until\nfinally, weary for 24 hours of\nsteady grilling, I had balked. .Then\nthey had brought me here, handcuffed and blindfolded In the back\nof a car.\nNow, with the blindfold off, 1\nfound myself In a spsrely furnished office in the dim light of dawn\n\u2014the dawn ot Sunday, April 29,\n1951. Through the window I saw\na courtyard' and, beyond, a new\nbuilding going up.\n\"How many steps are there on the\nway up here?\" the man asked. ,\n\"Ninety.\"\n\"You're still a spy,\" he said, smiling,\nSIGN HERE\nI smiled back. It was supposed\nto be a joke.\nThe men from the police station\nwent on interrogating me' all that\nday. We all staved off hunger with\nfat tlabs of bacon tent from downstairs.\nMany questions concerned an Incident of a few weeks earlier: an\nIndian .diplomat   had heard   that\nBetter\nvinegar\nwill\nu\nWs_.M--__ksl____.__ss.\nBETTER\nOUR VILLA\nMOTEL\nChat. E. Slgni, Prep.\n8 new and modern coblni\nClean and comfortable\nkitchenettes\nOnt mile wttt ot -poktnt\nCity Limits on Highway No. 2\nRoutt 1. Box 26\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\nCORNER 1ST AND WALL\n\u2022i\u00ab->.v;...'^-'.^L-NEWLY DECORATED   .--;-\u00ab-    ,\nAn ideal family hotel right down town.\nReasonable rates.\nUNDER  NEW  MANAGEMENT\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nQuick\nPRINTING\nService\nAlways\nOrder your\nLetterheads\nOffice Stationery\nEnvelopes\nAccount Forms\nin fact, any type of printing .....\nYou can be assufed of\nthe highest quality of work\nand good service. \u25a0\u25a0'*\u2022\u2022\nPHONE 144\nOur representative will be pleased to discuss\nyour printing problems with you.\nNELSON\nDAILY\napartments In his neighborhood of\nPrague were .being taken over lor\narmy officer!. I asked 1st. Col.\nGeorge _-. Atwood, American military attache, if ho had heard this,\ntoo. He sold he had, and foore. And\nhe gave me a list oi! supposed military sites In and around the city,\n. Tha pol.ioe already bad my signature on a .statement to the effect\nthat, in thua picking up \"military\nInformation,\" I bad committed espionage. Now they wrote another\nstatement tor me te llgn.\nThla would have bad me. admit\nthat I gave military Information\nto Atwood and into doing commit-\ned espionage. I refused to sign it,\n\"I want to go to bed.\" I said.\n\"Just rewrite thit for us tho. way\nyou want It, and then you can go\nto bed,\" said the lizard-faced man\nSLEEP AT LAST\nI rewrote it They brought it back\nto mo, rewritten again, and asked\nme to llgn it.\nI bid been up 42 houn, and I wai\ndesperate for sleep. So I signed.\nThen I wai blindfolded and taken\ndownstairs, and when I took the\nblindfold off I wai In a cell.\nI had aome smelly blankets and\na straw mat. I made a bed on the\nfloor, tied my handkerchief across\nmy eyet to keep out tbe electric\nlight and went to sleep. I waa\nawakened only once\u2014to get a number: 2091. '\".'\"\u2022\u25a0'-,\nTbe next day, the men from\nheadquarters questioned me' morning and afternoon In the upstairs\noffice, and I had vegetarian noon\nand evening meals in my cell.\nAfter tupper I was taken back\nupstairs. Thsi time all my old acquaintance! were gone except a\npudgy little curly-haired interpreter\nA REWRITE JOB\nSeated at a desk wu a new\nmen. He wis a rangy, brown-haired young man with a sardonic look\n\u2014squlnty yellow eyes, high cheekbone!, hollow cheeki ind a narrow\nmouth with the corners turned\ndown.\nHe might have passed for a\nsmall-town roughneck, but ha waa\nin the red-trimmed olive-drab uniform of a police lieutenant. He wai\ntaking over my interrogation. In\nthat prison, every inmate hai a\n\"referent,\" whd questions him and\nprepare: him for trial. Thli referent lit bolt upright, looking serious. The interpreter translated:\n\"Make no mistake. Your American citizenship will not help you\nhere.\"   \u25a0\nThat wat bow I met Lt Josef\nLed! (I learned his name later,\nfrom hit signature, on a, paper.)\nEarly next morning, he called me\nfrom my cell and began putting my\ntestimony,in writing.\nThe document wat called a protocol. From tune to time, I wat presented with finished pages and asked to write i on each, \"I have read\nthis, I have approved It. I- have\nsigned it. William Nathan Qatls.\"\nI did so readily as long as the\nprotocol kept near the facts.\n'. Then the referent and Interpreter\nbegan to rewrite my account.\nOUT IN 10 WEEKS\n\"Thia Is not right,\" I said one\nday, pointing to an Inaccuracy.\n\"What difference doet lt make?\"\nThe referent showed exasperation.\nSuch arguments became more and\nmora frequent Gradually it became\napparent he want not ther facta as\nI knew them, but as he would have\nliked them to be.\nMeanwhile, I was trying to find\nout what waa likely to happen to\nme. Four people now were at work\non my interrogation\u2014the referent\nand three interpreter! in turns. One\ninterpreter, a young woman, asked\nme, \"How would you like to go\nnoma'on the Fourth of July?\"\nAnother, a dapper little man named Vilda, said, \"You won't be here\n10 weeks.\"\n\"I don't believe you,\" I told him.\nA LETTER HOME\nHe insisted he knew whst he was\ntalking about\nThe referent said a foreigner\ncould be punished with \"a sentence,\n'or expulsion.\"\nI knew that my wife in St. Paul,\nMinn., must be worried about me.\nBring the\nChildren...\n'   V,'\" - -\nOn your visits to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel'Spokane.\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstay free with their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire. . .\nthey're welcome\/too!\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\n'Door!\n\u2022  Air Conditioned\nSilver Grill\nBlindfolded William N. Oatla la led from Fragile Jail call In thla tktteh\nby AP Artist John A. Carlton.\nI asked thi lieutenant to let me\nwrits her. He put me off.\nOne night Vilda suggested I try\nagain. The referent asked me what\nI wanted to say in tha letter. I\ntold him, and he left the room.\nPretty toon he come back with\nsomething written In Czech. The\ninterpreter put it In English and\nhanded it to me, The referent had\nwritten my letter for mi.\nIt wat fantastic. It made me say\nthat I had been \"caught In espionage,\" that I had told all and that I\nwanted to live \"a clean, new life.\"\n\"Keep   your   hope!   high,'.'   lt\ni iwid up, \"and trust in the justice\nof the Czechoslovak people, who are\nworking for peace.\"\nTHE CAPTAIN TAKES OVER\nI laid, \"When my wife reads thli,\ntha 11 think I've gone crazy.\"\nBut Vilda reminded me, \"Your\nwife la clever\u2014ihe_ underttand.\"\nThe -referent insisted the letter\nwould go out that wty ot not at\nall. So I copied it in my own handwriting, and he tent lt\nThat waa tha first statement I\ntlgned that was quite out of character and patently phony. Once\nthey had got me to sign that- one,\nit was easier for them.\nThat-talk about high hopes and\na clean, new life wai encouraging.\nSo was Vilda. He laid, \"Don't\nworry tbout a trial.\"\nA few nlghti later, about a month\nafter my arreit, i police ttaff captain sat down at the desk and I eat\ndown In my chair facing him. He\ntmlled end begin to talk, tmoothly\n\u25a0nd courteously.\nHE EXPLODED\nHe asked me what connection the\nAP had with the United Statet government. I laid it had none.\n\"Oh, Oatis,\" he said, dubiously.\nMy referent, standing by, must\nhave felt he had muffed the case,\nsince His. commander, the csptaln,\nhad had to intervene. He now exploded.\nHe twitched, frowned and screeched at me'iomethlng interpreted at\n'You  1\"\nHe accused me of backtracking\non testimony.\nIn due course the captain tsked\nme about a card found In my effects. It was an off-duty pass from\nthe Military Intelligence Service\nJapanese language school at Ft\nSnelling, Minn.\nI had been there briefly in 1044\nenroute to a year's ttudy at a similar\n\u2022chool at the University of Michigan.\nAt Michigan, I continued training\nin Japanese that I had begun in the\nAroiy Specialized Training Program at the University of Minnesota.\nThough Military Intelligence ran\nHie Michigan school, I was never\nIn that branch. At tha school I was\na corporal on the detached enlisted\nmen'i lilt And I never got Into it\nfor after I finished the course, I was\ndischarged from the Army.\nSIGN AGAIN\nBut the commander told me to\nwrite about tht school and the men\nI had known there, and put me\nback In my cell with a typewriter\nandclgarets. I wrote several pages,\nsent them to him and went to bed,\nThe next night's questioning had\nbrought out that Col. Atwood had\nbeen in the language school while I\nwas there but that we had not met\nthere.\nSome 24 hours later, the commander laid a long document before me and said, \"Sign this and\nyou don'.t need to Worry.\"\nThe first part wai a garbled version of my account about the language school. The second part was\nsomething new. It introduced Atwood ss an old fellow student It\nhad me saying that he wat a spy\nand that I gave him information because \"I knew he was Interested in\nespionage reports of all kinds.\"\nIt was so weird I smiled. I thought\n\"This looks as if it were all aimed\nat Atwood. HI sign it they'll expel\nhim\u2014out maybe they'll expel me\ntoo, \/without' a trial.\" \\\nI. signed that statement \u2014 and\nhooked myself properly. Because,\nas 'I law with chagrin later, they\nwere not trying to get Atwood out\nof the country, they were trying to\nkeep me in prison.\nRESISTANCE LOWERED\n- By now, I had signed so many\npapers .that it had become a habit\nI went on signing them almost automatically, seldom questioning the\nwildest departures from fact\nI had come to the conclusion that\nmany prisoners\u2014I daresay most prisoners\u2014come to in that place. You\nare in the hands of the secret police. You will never get away from\nthem until you give them what they\nwant\nOn_f my will hid faded away In\nthat fashion, the referent had plain\nsoiling. He re-wrote all my protocols from the beginning, introducing changes.\nFinally, I wat ushered Into an\noffice of the prison Where a fidgety\nwomsn Interpreter sat With a bald-\nhead, crosseyed man in shirtsleeves\nand bow tie.\n\"I am Judge Novak, the chairman\nof the Senate ot the State Court of\nPrague,\" he told me. \"Your behaviour here hat been good. It you\nbehave well before the court also,\nyou don't need to worry.\"\nHow often had I heard that line!\nTHE INDICTMENT\nThe judge read what he said wat\ntht Indictment Nowhere wat there\nany mention of the paragraphs of\nthe law under which I was Indicted.\nI stood accused formally of espionage for thf \". S. government Words\nthat the referent had put .into my\nmouth, by putting them into my protocol, were used to show that I had\nsent news itories on the arrests of\nformer Foreign Minister Vlado Cle\nmentis and Otto Sling, deposed Brno\nCommunist leader, with Intent to\nadvise \"the American espionage net'\nwhich of its strongpoints In Czechd-\nSlovakia had fallen, so that lt could\nre-group.\nJudge Novak tald a lawyer had\nbeen assigned ma.\n\"The function of a lawyer,\" ha\nsaid, \"ll not to help the defendant\nescape sentence. It it to help him\nget a lighter aentence.\"\nThis seemed to mean I stood convicted even before I went on trial.\nAnd it wes tha presiding judge that\nwas giving me- the newt,\nFour dayi later, I met a rabbity,\npoker-faced man. whom hit interpreter Introduced aa \"your lawyer,\nDr. Bartos,\"\n, Dr, Bartot told me, \"I think you\nhave a good chanca to go home this\nyetr.\" He advised me to testify according to the protocol and slid his\ndefence would be that I did not go\nInto espionage deliberately but \"just\nfell into It\"\nThat week, the referent had me In\nhearsed the protocol: He asked the\nhis office almost dally, and we re-\nquestions and I gave the answers\nmore or lest as written. At length, I\ngot lt down pat\nAnd on Monday, July 2, three of\nmy employei and I want on trial\nbefore Judge Novak'i court at Pan-\nkrac Prison.\nEqual Pay Rate\nEnchants TLC.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Vmeou-\nver labor leaden greeted with\nenthusiasm the throne speech an\nnouncemeht Tuesday that the So\nclal Credit government propose! to\neniure equal pay for equal work\nby women.\n\"I'm fully In favor of It\" laid\nR. K. Gervin, secretary of the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council\n(TLC).\n\"The council hat been fighting\nfor it for the past 12 years,\" he\nsaid.\nTom Alsbury, preiident of the\ncouncil and a high ichool principal,\nlaid:.\n\"It's fine, but only io long as\nthe pay In either case is enough\nto keep a family.'The person who\nheads the. household must get\nenough to support a family.\"\n' eun\n8>0KANE'8\nDOWNTOWN\n8HOPPING  HOTEL\nBe olote to everything In\ndowntown Spokane at tht\nhotel that hat every eon- '\nvenltnca    \u2014    delightful\nmeals In the Coffee Shop\nand Dining-Rooms, cocktails   In   the   baautltul\nDonkey    Room,    nightly\ndancing   In the  Pioneer\nRoom. When you're itop-\nping   for   shopping.   In\n-8pokano It's\n-   the CordisiI\nCOEUR D'ALENE\nHOTEL   _\n228 N. Howard at Iron! Ave\nLimelight Again\nBy 80NIA  YOUNG\nCHISLEHURST, England, (itout.\ner|) \u2014 A Broadway drama critic is\nwaiting here for permission to open\n\u00bbn,aid ftiarble tomb, which he believes, will yield conclusive evidence that the immortal William\nShakespeare was nothing, but a ham\nactor and a complete literary fraud.\nCalvin Hoffman of New York\nsoys he expects' to find with the\ncoffin In the tomb\u2014which hei been\nsealed for 300 yearl\u2014a lead box\ncontaining 38 manuscripts.\nHoffman thinks the manuscripts\nwill prove that the famous plays\nthat established Shakespeare as a\nliterary giant actually were written\nby Christopher Marlowe, an English\nElizabethan dramatist after Marlowe was supposed to have been\nmurdered.\nLONG HUNT FOR CLUES,\nHoffman, (who write! about\n^roadway for a chain of U. S. newi-\npapera, haa spent .15 yean tracking down cluet In Britain, France\nand Denmark.\n\"At first It wat Jutt hunches,\"\nthe critic aays. \"Now there li evidence enough to make me think I\nshall disclose a major historical\nsecret\".'\nThe tomb is that of Sir Thomas\nWalalngham,, Marlpw'i patron and\nbenefactor, who Hoffman believes\nengineered the whole scheme.\nHoffman said, he has been trying\nfor months to get permission from\nthe local church authorities to open\nthe tomb. He says he expects it to\nbe granted soon.\nHoffman contends thit Marlowe,\nreported to have been killed In a\nbrawl in 1593, actually faked his\ndeath and fled the country after being condemned to die at the stake\nfor hereiy.\nRecord! thow that Walilnghim'i\nservants were accused of the murder, but Walslngham got them pardons and hired them again.\nMAHLOWE RUMORS\n\"I think he helped Marlowe to\nflee under cover of the murder,\"\nHoffmm laid.\" \"I found out that\nMarlowe wat known to have been\nin Doual in northern France three\nmonths after hit alleged murder. I\nbelieve he alio went to Italy, and\nthli account! for the Italian atmosphere of aome of Shakespeare's\nplays.\"\nThe critic thinks Marlowi continued to write, sending his plays\nto Walsingham, who had them copied and produced under a falsa\nnime.\nHoffman claims Walalngham paid\nShakespeare to father. Marlowe's\nworki when Shakespeare wai \"Just\na third-rats actor.\"\n\"Tht money would account for\nShakespeare -r about -whose play-\nwriting or acting nothing was heard\nMarlowe\u2014being able to buy his f am-\nuntil after the supposed death. of\nous 'new place'jsj Stratford-on-Avon\nonly three yejirt'-after coming Into\nprominence,\" Hoffmen said.\nLower Milk Price\nGoes on Trial\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Lower\nMainland dairies Wedneiday promised a fair trial to milk decontrol\nbefore launching any appeal for its\nremoval.\nA. W, Edgar, secretary of the\nB.C. Milk Producers Association,\nlaid today however, that no copy\nof the decontrol order ' bad been\nreceived and \"we are still up In\nthe tlr at to itt actual' content\"'\nMahogany and cedar trees are\ncommon in the forests that cover\nmost of British Hondurat In Central AmelrCa.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SIFT. 17,19SS \u20147\nA-Energy President' On Retired Lit.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014' br. C. J. Mac-\nkenzie, preiident of Atomic Energy\nof Canada will retire Oct. 31 and be\nreplaced by W, J. Bennett, president of Eldorado Mining and Refining Limited, Trade Minister Howe\nannounced today. .\nDr. Mackenzie, who reached retirement age of OS on July 10, waa\none of a small group ot Canadians\nwho guided the development ot\nCanada's atomlo energy program.\nThe annCuncement from Mr.\nHowe's office alio disclosed that the\ngovernment plant to amalgamate\nAtomic Energy of Canada Ltd.,\nwhich operatel the atomic energy\nplant at Chalk River, Ont, and El\ndorado Mining and Refining Ltd;,\ntha Crown company which mines\nand refines uranium-bearing ores.\n' The announcement said Mr. Bennett 41-year-old former lecretory to\ntbe late Prime Minister W. L. Mac-\nkenzie King, will administer Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd., and tha\nEldorado company aa soparoto companies.\nLONDON (CP) - Britoni ar*\neither making their tea strong since\nrationing ended last year, or drinking more ot lt. Average consumption now ia nearly 2,000,000 poundi\na week higher than a year ago.\n7<-\n:-'\n01AME PEKOE\nMake Life Easier!\nTHUctdg\nRIUF TOUVFK\n\\WmWm    S W m m m m *&\nip^ay-'\n)      _E_>_?0 lewis, WtsisWse,\nL_..1hey save you -time\n^gancf mtk so many\n\u00abW bams*-* art -Mir, tsnaor ata\nHon* ara ittsb sjiHtkly, foully wti. uft <-M>t\u00bbni Mllotiy\neivwtowth.\nKMmo -wimp \u2014 Ibt remit an Mod' far dons, tl\nAwm \u2022\u25a0\u00bb poDuipsa ohm, smmowis as ufcsB smHi cMcnMrf.\npoluhu of \u00abop.\nHttStatW pntot\u2014Oft s_\u00bb for BsQAKUnAQ tt pswiCisOO OQaln\u2014\nf law \u2022 handy itsfiniir of MDotsV \u2022*\u00bb Towili la your Ulcttus\ntoday \u2014 you'll find Him al your gracar.\n4Uctptxasu64tiEfa6&.M\n.'\u25a0....\ntm*^ ^....^__^_^^ ^.,__,., .M \u00ab\n \u25a0.3554\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1953 -\nFiji Isltintfe\n@&em<mies for Queen's Visit\nBy .. K. STONE\ngtlVA, Fiji Island (Reuters)-\nPageantry full ot dignity and rich\ncolor, and ceremonial in which\nevery word, and almost every\nmovement has Its own significance,\nwill set the keynote for the two-\nday Visit of the Queen and the\nDuke of Edinburgh to Fiji.\nDec. 17, 1953 has already been\nset down as the greatest day in\nFiji's history since Oct. 10, 1874\nwhen tha Fijian chiefs and Queen\nVictoria's emissary signed the deed\nof cession, under which these islands entered the British Empire.\nThe visit is the first to Fiji by a\nreigning British monarch.   .\nThe Queen's first view of Suva,\nthe Fiji capital, as the: liner Gothic\nglides through the reef pass leading\nto Suva harbor is bound to be dramatic\u2014whatever the weather.\nMornings of mid-December are\neither brilliantly aunny, with the\nsweeping, reef-sheltered bay a glittering sheet of tropical blue and\ngold, or dark with -rain and the\nragged, ]ungleTcovered mountains\nto the west looming fantastically\nthrough trailing curtains of mist.\nWAITS TENSELY\nSuva, a modern, cosmopolitan seaport will be waiting tensely. Its 30,-\n000 people comprising Britons, Fi-\njians, Indians, Chinese and Polynesians, with Indians 'in tho majority, will be augmented by thou-\naanda from other parti of the it-\nland, or Vitf Levu, and from the\nouter islands.\nInside the coral barrier reef and\nJti flurry of white breakers, a fleet\nof Fijian canoes will meet, the\nGothic. These graceful, seemingly\nfragile oroft represent the last descendants of the giant canoes for\nwhich tht Fijian! were famous\nthroughout! the south seas In pre-\nEuropean days.   -\nSith the Fijian fleet will go the\nem pleasure craft of the Royal\nSuva Yacht Clubs\nAs the liner drops anchor, eoastel\nbatteries-manned almost exclusively\nby Fijian-soldiers will flra a 21-gun\nsalute.\nTha governor, 81r Ronald Gar-\nvey. and Lady Garvey will go\naboard to meet.the Queen and her\nhusand,   \"    .\nAfter that, the stateliest 'ceremonies of a proud people will be\nperformed mainly by statuesque,\nbushy-haired Fijlans, wearing only\npre-European style \" garments of\nMasl (patterned bark'cloth), with\nvivid touches of freshly-gathered\ncolored leaves.\nIn contrast, some of the high\nchiefs and Fljians officials, will\nwear well-tailored lightweight suits\nwith trim sulu (kilt) in the plact\nof trousers.\nFORMAL WELCOME     <\nAboard the Gothic the first Fijian ceremony will be \"Thavulkel\nekele\"\u2014the traditional formal invitation to the Queen to come ashore.\nAt the King's wharf, the Queen\nwill receive heaped masses of the\nsoftest, finest and rarest of Fijian\nwoven mats and of jbarkcloth made\nand  selected  especially  for  her.\nAshore, '.the Royal couple will\ndrive through the heart of Suva to\nAlbert Park, and then on to government house.\nBecause the sovereign is a woman, Fijian women will have an\nunusually prominent place in the\nceremonies.\nAs with men, the women will\nwear garments of. whlte-and-black\npatterned bark cloth, and garlands\nor necklets of brilliant flowers and\nleaves.\nFijian tinging and dancing will\nlink an ancient culture with expressions of loyalty to the throne.\nAt many points during the\nQueen's visit she is expected to receive Tambua\u2014a whale's tooth\u2014\nthe formal offering of which implies the highest honor any Fijian\ncan bestow.\nELABORATE RITUAL\nThe Yanggona (kava) eeremony\nit an elaborate ritual, unchanged\nfrom time immemorial, for the presentation of the greatly valued roots\nof the Yanggona shrub, the preparation of the drink in a vast wooden\nbowl, and the offering of It In\nbeautiful cups of polished coconut\nshell.\nIf tht Queen and her husband\ntake part in the Yanggona ceremony, they wlil probably agree\nthat taste for it must be acquired,\nand that \"soapy water\" is a reasonably accurate description of the\nimpression given by tho first taste.\n....During her visit, the Queen will\nbe presented with a ring of Fiji\ngold with a Fijian grey pearly set\nIn diamonds, and sapphires.\nAt plans for the visit ire completed, the calptal le preparing for\nan \"invasion\" which will tax. ita\nfood and housing resources as never\nbefore and double Suva's'normal\npopulation ot 30,00,0.      \u2022,\nThe \"invasion\" will come from\nwithin Fiji,' for the \"house full\"\nsign it already displayed against\npossible overseas visitors, apart\nfrom the press, radio and newt-\nreel men.\nLOYAL SUBJECTS\nFijlani have a particular lovt for\ntheir sovereign. Even in the remotest village in the remotest island\nin the. group, nearly every house\ngives a permanent place ot honor\nto pictures of the Royal family.\nIn many, there It a complete\ngallery beginning with Queen Victoria and ending with Queen Elizabeth II.\nThe liner Gothic will sail en the\nmorning ot Dev. 10 for Nukualofa,\nIn Tonga, where Queen Elizabeth\nand the Duke ot Edinburgh will\nspend about six hours as the guests\nof Queen Salote on the following\nday.\nRodney Brodie\nSpends Happy\nSecond Birthday\nBy  ROBERT QOLDENSTEIN\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014They put three\ncandles on Rodney Dee Brodle'a\nbirthday caka Wednesday\u2014two for\nhis two yean of age and \"one to\ngrow on.\"\nThat one-to-grow-on candle li -\ngood luck wish that Rodney will\nreach hit next- birthday safe and\nsound.\nHe may need a little of that luck\nin the year ahead.\nRodney's chances of having another birthday seemed agonizingly\nslim on his first birthday a year ago.\nHe and his Siamese twin brother,\nRoger, were joined extensively at\nthe tops of their heads. A separation operation was on tap and no\ntwin ever before had survived such\nsurgery.\nRodney came through the Dec.\n17,' 1052, history-making operation\nwhich cost Roger his life: He is\ngaining strength steadily In response to special exerolse and treatments. Doctors at the University of\nnilnoiti medical *entre give the\nbrown-eyed boy a good chance to\nlive a nearly normal Hie.\n8UR6ICAL PROBLEM\nBut there la one big surgical\nproblem ittll to lick that has sent\nRodney's doctors Into frequent huddles In the last six months. That is\nV Insulates against heat and cold\n\\l Deadens noise\n\\E Easy to apply-economical\/ too\nV Ideal for oil, rubber-base paint\nOther Barrett made insulating boards include:\nInsulating Lath     \u2022     Insulating Roof Board\nAsphalt Coated Sheathing Panelt\nJAKE YOUR BUILDING PROBLEMS\nTO YOUR BARRETT DEALER\nBesides Insulating Boards, your Barrett\nDealer has a complete line of roofing   as,,?-\nand weather-proofing materials. (EiAM\nTHE BARRETT COMPANY, LIMITED\n104. West Pender Street, Vancouver, B.C.\n\u2022K._'d Ttsd. Mar*\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nCOMPANY  LIMITED\n395 Baker St. Phone 497\n'. Ii\nsupplying a hard roof substitute\nfor his missing skull top.\nRodney's own skull, shaped like\nan open stove pipe, extends upward only to an inch and a half\nabove his eari. Surgeoni will have\nto build the skull sides higher and\nthen complete a roof-like cover.\nBone transplanted from other\nareas of Rodney's body would be\nideal for the job, but the area to be\ncovered is far too vast for the\namount of bone available.      \u2022\nThe hard roof will have to be inserted under'the transplanted skin\nthat covers the brain and will\ncome in direct contact with this\nvital tissue.\nBut like any two-year-old who\nknowt he's going to have a birthday, Rodney zipped through the hospital pediatrics ward on, his four-\nwheel walker Wednesday, jabbering and proud.\nSUNNY DISPOSITION\nOblivious to his condition and the\nproblem! ahead, Rodney it a happy\nboy with a sunny disposition. He\nstill ii unable to walk or' get up\nfrom bed unassisted, but his muscle\ntone is improving with physical\ntherapy. A weakness of hll left side\nmuscles that followed the separation operation has all but disappeared.\nHe it 33 inches tall and weighs\n24 pounds and 4 ounces,. around\nnormal for a baby of his age.'\nNurses gaily bedecked the largest room In the ward, and invited\nthe four other children patients\nthere to Rodney'i. party.\nHis parents drove in 225 miles\nfrom their home, in Ferris, 111., for\nthe party, bringing Rodney's two\nbrothers and two sisters.\nThat was enough Jo make it a\njoyful, wonderful world for Rodney.\nU.S. Cuts Down\nOn Jet Engines\nWASHINGTON (AP) \u2014 Air Secretary Talbott aald Wednesday the\nU. S. Air Force will cancel production of several thousand jets and\nother aircraft enginei.with a pos-\nBible saving of \u00bb400,Q00,M0 to $500,-\n000,000.\nTalbott and' Defence Secretary\nCharles Wilson told a press conference the cancellation'would \"not\naffect the production of one tingle\nplane\" In the planned build-up ot\nthe air force to 143 wings by 1955.\nThe engines-are not needed, they\nsaid, for these- reasons:\n1. A; much greater time between\noverhauls It - now' being realized\nfrom jet engines. This results from\n\"accumulated knowrhow\" In operation of jet engines,' improved design\nand increased maintenance capability.\n2. Attrition rates have decreased.\n\"Our accident rate has been gradually decreasing,\" Talbott said,\n\"and we consequently have requirements fof fewer engines.\"\n- ,MI-S_AMERICA-of 195f_.MItt. Pejintylvahla In the pertonof-\nEvelyn Margaret Ay, of Ephrata, a -O-year-old blonde, receives\nher crown from latt yetrVMIlt-Amtrlct, NavaJahe Langley.after'\nthe final telectlon at Atlantic City.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.     .   '' ,\nU...K.; Names Envoy\nTo Italian Embassy\nLONDON (AP)-Brltain Wednes,\nday named Sir Ashley Clarke ambassador to Italy, dark, deputy Under-Secretary of state in.charge of\nadministration at the foreign office,\nsucceed! Sir Victor Mallet who is\nretiring soon, a government statement said.\nU.K. Minister\n.S.\nBy FRASER WIGHTON\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The gov-\nernment Wednesday instructed Sel-\nwyn Lloyd, minister of state, to\nsupport the United States in opposing Chinese Communist and North\nKorean proposals for including India, Indonesia, Burma and Pakistan\nin the Korean political conference.\nLloyd flew to New York Wednesday to lead the British delegation at the eighth General Assembly of the United Nations..\nPrime Minister Churchill presided over a cabinet meeting Wednesday which gave final instructions\nto Lloyd on problems which will\nbe discussed in the assembly. .\nPelping and Pyongyang have\nboth objected to -United Nations\nproposals for a Korean, political\nconference limited to the two warring sides. , \u25a0\u2022\nBRITAIN 8USPICIOU8\nBritain's view is that in wanting\nthe conference to be enlarged on\na round-table basis, the Communists art making a propaganda\nmove.\nIt is seen as an attempt to widen\nthe split which appeared in last,\nmonth's debate when the United\nStates and Britain voted on opposite sides over 'tne question of\nwhether India should be included\nin the political conference. The\nUnited. States opposed India's Inclusion.\nUNITED RESISTANCE\nIndia, at the last moment, withdrew, and the Commonwealth and\nthe United States.now will resist\nany attempt to revive the controversy.    .\nThe United States has made it\nclear that it will stick to the United\nNations' plan for the conference.\nOfficials hero say it is now up to\nthe Communists to prove their sincerity in wanting the talks to take\nplace.\nSmuggled Allen\nST. ALBANS, Vt. (AP)-An Immigration official said Tuesday\nthere is no evidenc>v-so'fari-df organized smuggling of aliens: into\nthe United States from Canada.\nQueried about a story in the\nMontreal Star that European aliens\ninducting Communist underground\nworkers, are.being smuggled across\nthe border at a rate of 20 a week,\nE. E. Salisbury, district immigration director, said:\n\"We dont know of any such operation. There is no evidence of it.\nI heard about the article in The\nStar and, naturally, I'm very much\nInterested and we'll try to find' oiit\nif there's any basis for it. So far\nthere isn't.\"\nThe story in the Montreal paper\nquoted an unidentified and minor\nmember of the: alleged smuggling\nring as saying some 11,800 aliens\nbad been brought illegally into the\nUnited States in the last 2% years.\nThe Star, Wednesday said the ring\nmaintained headquarters in New\nYdrk with .stations in. London, Paris\nand Canadian cities- and that the\naliens were sneaked into this country for a large fee, regardless of\npolitical background..       '\nTRAIL, B. C. (CP)-rCa_nlballsm\namong cutworms was revealed\nwhen the worms were treated with\na radio-active substance, Dr. J. W.\nL. Sinks, president of the Chemical\nInstitute of Canada, related in an\ninterview here..\nHe said the experiment was to\naid Priarie farmers In their fight\nagainst wlreworms ahd cutworms\nwhich cause enormous crop damage. Course of .wormt treated with\na radio-active substance was followed when one disappeared from\nview\u2014one.. worm had simply swallowed the other,\n; Dr. Splnks told, how mosquitoes\nand flies were'treated in the war\nagainst Insects. Flight of mosquitoes had been calculated up to a\ndistance of 10 miles.\nHe also described uses of radioactive phosphorus in determining\nquality of fertilizers in the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nplant here.\nSeagrams Crown Royal\nSeagram's V.O.\nSeagrams \"83\"\nSeagrams King's Plate\n', -\u25a0\" v \u2022   : ''' '\u2022'\u2022'\"\n-.\"-.\u25a0\u25a0: \\  ' \u25a0        . r \u25a0,   . -\nSeagrams Special Old\nDlstlllei  In Canada  and distributes by tht \"Hasn't ef teaatere\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by -\nMia liquor Control Board or by Hie Government of British Columbia.\nElegance Outstanding\n|^_i^'l|^|ii Styles\nBy JEAN THOMPSON\n, (Canadian Pratt Staff Writer\nI TORONTO (CP)\u2014The new. ele-\nganco of winter fashion is one ot\nline and figure. The slim silhouette with the closely-moulded; belt-\nless, torso line 'was used by' many\ndesigners in a collection presented\nby a large department store fash-\nIon show here.\nI In late day and evening dresses\nthe' fuller skirt is included, sometimes its fullness -flowing toward\nthe back, at others using the cupola line, a shaped skirt that stands\naway from the body.\nI Daytime 'skirt length in this collection was generally fixed at one\nInch above mid-riff. It ii balanced , with an economy of line\nthrough the body of the dress, and\na bulky look abut the shoulders,\nachieved with wing push-up\naleeves, the fUled-ln neckline and\nthe high-rising frame neckline.\nGrowing In popularity for fall\nand mild winter wear ia tha box-\njacket suit; sometimes with a fur-\nlined jacket. One Import in the\nnew camel color had Its stand-away\nneckline filled in wit- nutria. The\ncostume, slim woollen dress with\nmatching box jacket was exempli-\nf'ed in a fine midnight blue worsted wool crepe with satin-banded\n,midriff, the hip length straight\ncolumn jacket lined with white\nmink, designed by Anthony Blotta\nof New York.\nWOOL POPULAR\nWool dresses for late \/lay wear\nare mentioned in almost every re\nport from' Paris. One European\nsheath dress of black wool was\ntiered and fringed. While a Ben\nRelg of New1 York design was in-\ntrlcally tucked. Richness and elegance are achieved with material\nand color, lace and Iridescence.\nA Malnbocher model of red' chan-\ntilly lace wit.h covered shoulders\nand short sleeves, flowered down\ninto a full skirt over a five-toned\nlame underskirt. \u25a0\nHate for daytime wear are in furry texturei, deeper in the crown\nand frequently with a backward\nflow. .Fabric! are rich in color and\nmaterial with added jewelled motifs. A Laddie Northbrldge of New\nYork pill-box In gold metallic with\nturquoise beads had a collar to\nmatch. From _ Mr. John of New\nYork was a small black evening\ncap with jewels, while the veil had\nlittle- clusters of burnt ostrich feathers; each could be worn separately.\nGLEAMING GOWNS\n> Important evening gowns have a\ngleam about them, whether- of a\nmaterial, color or ornamentation.\nAs in daytime dresses, the slim\nsilhouette gown is present, sometimes with a backflowing line.\nA black peau de londre sheath\nU. S\u201e W. Germans,\nRatify Agreements\nWASHINGTON (AP)-The United States and Western Germany\nTuesday exchanged instruments of\nratification on four agreements covering nearly $1,300,000,000 In German debts. Tha most Important of\nthe agreements concern'! the settlement of claims by the United States\non Germany for post-war economic\nassistance. This calls for payment\nof $1,000,000,000 over a 35-year period,\nBRIGHTON, England (CP)\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. Henry Schaverien had a\nlot of cleaning up to do when they\ncame home from a continental tour.\nThieves not only stole \u00a372 worth of\ngoods but stayed in the house tor\nseveral days.\nby Oleg Casslni of New York-had\nfaded pink and aquamarine hands\non tha bodice flowing down- into\na swan-like back movement, Nor-\njnan Hartnell's champagne net was\ngiven an almost wool-like appearance, hand-tucked and buglebeaded\nwith high-rising, waitline and _ull\nskirt. Ari ollye green, chiffon .by\nJean Desses was treated with classical column drapery and a flower\nstole in motchnig tones.\nCadets Chosen for\nService Colleges\n- TORONTO.-(CP) - Names of 18.\nsea cadets, additional to scholarship winners, who have been selected for entry to Canadian service\ncolleges by the national defence department, were announced today by\nthe Navy League of Canada.\nAmong those attending the College Milltaire Royal de St. Jean will\nbe L. G; Temple of Victoria.\nAttending the Royal Military Col-\nlege, Kingston, will-be J. W. Beare\nof Edmonton.\nThose' selected for training at\nRoyal Roads, Esquimalt, B. C; In*\ndude KM. Gllllland of New Westminster, P. D. Croftdn of Wlnfrith,\nB. C, and D. H. Oke, Ponoka, Alta.\nPAINT\nEiAPCO   ;    BAPCO\nSHING0LEEN I PORCH PJIIMT\n0_C_ For Complete Color Information Asfc Your\ntremm--. BapfioPslntD-lerl\nWbod glance Hdwre. Co. Ltd.\nS93BqkerSt. phone1530\nJ;\"L WILSON\nGENERAL MERCHANT\nSILVERTON. B.C.\n\u00bb\u25a0'\nand you get so much more\n\u2022 Room to move around and stretch your\nleg., visit with friends. \u2022'\u25a0\"\u25a0;    ,.\n\u2022 Wide choice of air-conditioned accommodations for day or night tripe \u2014\n, berths, sections, roomettes, drawing\nrooms, compartments.   '\n\u2022 Wonderful meals, served aboard train.\n\u2022 Dependable, safe travel la all kinds of\nweather,   ' \u25a0'\"\u25a0 \u25a0\/ '.'\no Large, picture windows, comfortable\nreclining seats.\n\u2022 Free baggage checking to your destination (up to 150 lbs.).\nWhen you (rani, go by train\u2014   \/jSjl you SAVE on low-cost round trip fares'\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nCANADIAN NATIONAL\n...sM\n '\ncPSSS\niCbwmui ihsL\n|W)OTE_SfAY ^ Spoil\nBy LEN WALKER\nHave you ever heard of an umpire winning a ball game for a\nearn? You have! At any rate ait\nI patrons who attended thcHume-\n-ldtlmer game Tuesday night cer-\nlinly saw lt happen, Fred Graves,\nJ who  rather  than call  the  game\n| elected to try his hand at playing,\nbashed out the single that scored\nthe winning run.\nGraves, overjoyed about his win,\nmade a statement that will go down\nfin Nelson history! ''After watching\nTozer behind the plate in this game\n| I can well understand why Pass-\nmore protested his officiating. .Why\nI even had to tell him to clean oft\n.the home plate so' I could te.ll\n| Where to swing.\" Graves incidentally, is Walt Tozer's partner as\n\/bail officials so just couldnt resist\nthe chance for a dig. It's so seldom\nhe wears the* spurs.\nI Dennis Ball, the one man responsible for getting this game,\nproved the big gun on the attack\nfor the Oldtlmers by banging out\ntwo hits. They tell us that he Is 40\nyears old. Shame on you Hume\nboys.\n7 That run by Chum Schumacker\nin the second was really out ot this\nworld. He ran a country mile to\npull down that blast by Barefoot.\nM you can vision a country mile\n11 then you will agree that this was a\nI remarkable run for a man who only\nlast week was reported to be 51\nyears, old. We don't know what his\nage Is being reported at thlt week.\nBut the game'didn't seem too tough\non his ancient bones. Shame to the\nHumes because Schumacker during the season was their manager.\nThey should know all his secrets.\nI don't know whether the Humes\nrealized lt or not, but I did spot\nChummy stealing their signals\nfrom third base.\nMickey Maglio played for   the\nHumes  (he It still a youngster)\nOn one play he shunted back, and\nforth between second and   third\nI while Jesse Seaby and Bob Morton\n\u2022played a game of catch that had\nLen Bicknell standing behind the\nmound,- going up and down like a\n: jock in the box to keep from being\nbit\nAl Thlessen ot South Slocan came,\nup with THE catch of the game\n'when he actually juggled a fly\nball hit by Nell McLenaghan. His\nplay overshadowed a shoestring\ncatch made by Harold Mayo earlier\nIn the game.\nAdding insult to Injury to  the\nPHONE 75 -\nFirestone Tires\n$1 Down, $1 a Week\nFair Allowance On Your\n' OlPfMP* :--\nSuperior Motors\nDodge \u2022 DeSoto Dealer   '-\nppp. Post Office, Vernon It\nHavt You Always Wanted\nTo Play the Piano\nAccordion?\nEnrol your child new fer\nPIANO ACCORDION\nLcitont\nWE LQAN YOU THE\nACCORDION FOR THE\nBEGINNER'S COURSE\n\u2022 -\nSalmo Residents Note \u2014\nA studio will ba opened\nIn Salmo\nWrltt tor tnrolmint form to'\nPRIME\nACCORDION COLLEGE\n418 Gore St.     Nolson     Ph. 1224\nHumes was Len Bicknell who, it\nmay be remembered, tailed to run\nout a bunt! Bicknell was saving his\nstrength for the final frame when\nhe blasted a homer far over Mayo's\nhead. As lt wat Len didn's use Up\nmuch - energy, he just walked\naround the bases.\nThe last we. saw of Mayo when\nwe left the game, he was still looking for the ball and muttering, \"if\nI'd had my lacrosse stick he'd have\nbeen out.\" ' ,\n' \u2022   \u2022  \u2022\nIt was quite a game, but the\ncrowd on hand for this effort for a\ngood cause was trifling, Place all\nthe fans In the squared circle and\nthere would still be room for La-\nStarza to lay Marclano out flat on\nhis bock without touching a single\nother person. The fastball tans\nmissed a fine ball game. We can't\nbelieve that it was the price that\nkept them away. Those who gave\ntheir quarter to help'lnjured play\nen admitted that what they saw\nwas worth a buck.\n%-m , 1 --.  .   -\nArgos Humble\nTiger-tab 21-20\nHAMILTON (CP)-Toronto Argonauts Squeezed out \u2022 21-20 victory\nover Hamilton Tiger-Cats Wednesday night to break a three-game\nlosing streak in the Big Four football loop. The victory created a\nthree-way tie for second place between Argonauts, Tiger-Cats and\nMontreal Alouettes, two points ,pe-\nhind the pace-setting Ottawa Rough\nRiders.\nKept, off tbe win column since\ntheir season'! opener 11-0 decision\nover Montreal, the 1052 Dominion\nchampions jumped into an 11-1\nhalf-time lead and didn't look back.\nHamilton knocked at the gates in\nthe dying minutes but the Double\nBluei held them out.\n^Kinnon Chucks Near Perfect\nBall But Smokies Cbp Dpeiifcr\nE^ST CONSIDERS\nPROTECTION OF\nSALMON RUNS\nMONTREAL (CP) - Canadian\nanglers and fishermen, concerned\nat the way salmon Is disappearing\nfrom the rivers ot eastern Canada,\ndecided Wednesday to place before\nthe governments of four provinces\nproposals to protect the fisheries.\nTho annual convention of the\nAtlantic Salmon Association, reer\nresenting some .500 anglers, commercial fishermen and provincial\ngame officials In eastern Canada,\nordered ita board of directors to\ndraw UP a list of suggestions for\nthe ogvernments of Quebec, New\nBrunswick,'Nova Scotia-and Newfoundland.\n- The move to approach the provincial governments directly followed a two-day conference at\nwhich members of the association\noutlined the state ot the fisheries\nIn their region, and proposed\nmeasures to deal with lt.\nAt the meetings, attended by\nfishery experts from the federal\ngovernment and i provincial game\nofficials from the four' provinces,\ndelegates heard speakers say that\n\"a state of emergency\" now exists\nwith salmon fast disappearing from\nmany Canadian rivers.\nPALMER ELIMINATES\nWESTLAND IN TITLE PLAY\nOKLAHOMA CITY (CP) - Defending champion Jack Westland\nwas eliminated Wednesday and 23-\nyear-old, unheralded Arnold Palmer\nemerged as the dark horse of the\n83rd annual U. STamateur golf\n\"hampionship.      '\nPalmer, from WicklIHe, O., eliminated Westland, golfing U. S. Congressman, one up in a morning third\nround match end then took the measure of a second Walker Cup player,\nKen Venturl of San Francisco, in\nthe afternoon 2 and'l.\nD. C. MURPHY, JR.       DR. R. A. GRAY\nme^msssm^ammmms\nDR. D. C. -MURPHY\nOwntr\nHOURS: 8:30 AM TO 5:30 P.M\nDr. D. C. MURPHY\nand ASSOCIATES\nOptometrists\nPHONE MAIN 3S37\nLICENSED BV\nSTATE EXAMINATION\n43 Years In Spektni\nCorner Spragut and  Wall\nSPOKANE 8, WASH.\nLocal SALES & SERVICE Doalor\nCentral Truck & Equipment\n>02 Front Street\n_*-\nNelion, B. C.\n; TRAIL \u2014Southpaw Don McKln\nnon came up with another outstanding pitching performance Wednesday night under the lights at Butler Park but to no avail for the\nLeafs dropped the first game of the\nWest Kootenay championship playoffs to Trail Smoke Eaters 8-2. ;\n\"Leafs were riding along on. a 2-0\nlead going into the bottom of the\neighth frame with McKtnnon chucking a masterful one-hitter when\nsuddenly the .\"roof tell |n.\" Two\nwalks, a single, the second hit oft\nMoKinnon, and another walk\nbrought in one run and led to the\ndeparture of McKlnnon, in favor Of\nLes Hufty, Hufty gave up a single\nto score two more runs. Before the\nside could be retired two more runs\ncrossed the plate giving Trail five.\nOpposing the Leafs was another\nlad with McKlnnon for a name, slim\nBob McKlnnon, although not doing\nanything sensational, did manage\nto hold the hard-hitting Leafs to\nnine well-scattered blows and only\ntwo runs.\nNelson opened the scoring in the\nthird frame when McKlnnon and\nBill Haldane singled. McKlnnon\nraced home when Emle Gare\nbounced out to the infield.\nIn the fifth the Leafs took a two-\nrun lead when Haldane collected\nhis second hit of the game, a screaming double. Herb Lovett, best hitter in the game, oollected three\nblngles, singled Haldane home.\nHARVEST WINNBR8\nBoth chuckers bore down and a\ntight duel -was in the offing until\nthe fatal eighth when the Smokies\ncame out ot their shell to gather In\nthe winning rilns.\n' Don McKlnnon was charged with\nthe loss, but In going- the eight\nframes struck out eight batters.\nHufty whiffed two In his short stint\non the mound. Bob McKlnnon tent\nsix Leafs down via the strike-out\nroute.\nMarsh Severyn late In the game\nshowed temper when, after striking\nout for the third time, he threw his\nbat against the backstop, breaking\nIt. He was chased from the. game\nby the umpire.\nThe second game of this bett-of-\nflve playoff will be staked In Nelson Sunday afternoon with the third\ngame going back to Trail next week.,\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Results ol\nsoccer matches played In the United\nKingdom today:\nENQLI8H LEAGUE\nDlvlilon I\nCardiff C 2, Sheffield U 0.\nLiverpool 1 Wolverhampton 1.\nManchester C 0, Huddersfleld 1.\nMiddlesbrough 1 Manchester U 4.\nNewcastle U 8, W Bromw'ch 7.-\nPortsmouth 4 Blackpool 4.\nSheffield W 2 Bolton W 1.\nTottenham 2, Burnley 3.\nSwindon T 3, WaIiall-0. ,\nTorquay V 2, Leyton 0 3.\nDivision II\nBury 3 Bristol R 1.\nFulham 2 Rotherham U 4>\nLeeds U 1, Plymouth A 1.\nLuton T 2 Birmingham C 0.\nNotts F 2, Hull C 0.\nDlvlilon III,, Northern\nAecrlngton 3, Grimsby T 1.\nBarnsley 1, Crewe Alex 1.\nBradford 1, Port Vale 2.\nChester 2, Darlington 2.\nDivision III, Southern\nAldershot 1, Shrewtbury T 0.\nCrystal P 3, Newport C 0.\nGlllingham I, Ipswich T 1,\nSouthamoton 3, Queens P R 1,\nSCOTTISH LEAQUE CUP\nQuarter Finals, Second Leg\nAyr U 3, Rangers 2 (Rangers win\nround 8-5).\nDunfermline A 2, East Fife 3\n(East Fife wins round 0-4).\nLEAQUE LEADERS\nBy The Canadian Pratt\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nAB    R\nFurlllo, Bkn 470  82\nIrvln, N.Y,'., 420   70\nSchoendienst, S.L. 520 97\nRobinson, Bkn... 407 106\nSnider, Bkn  561 128\nRuns: Snider, 128.\nRuns batted in: Campanella,\nBrooklyn, 130.\nHits: Ashburn, Philadelphia, 180.\nDoublet: Muslal, St. Louis, 48.\nTriples: Gilliam, Brooklyn, 16.,\nHome runs: Mathews, Milwaukee,\n45.\nStolen bases: Bruton, Milwaukee,\n25.\nPitching: Erskine, Brooklyn, 19-\n8, .760.\nStrikeouts: Roberts, Philadelphia,\n188.       7\"\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nAB    R    H\nVernon, Wash 575   98\nRosen, Clev 561 101\nMinoso, Chic 518  09\nGoodman, Bost. .. 493 72\nPhilley, Phil. ,... 588   75\nRuns: Rosen, 101,\nRuns batted In.: Rosen,\nHits: Kuenn, Detroit, lBB.\nDoubles: Vernon, 42.\nTriples: Riyera, Chicago, 14.\nHome runs: Rosen, 40.\nStolen bases: Minoso, Chicago, 23.\n'Pitching: Lopat, New York, 15-8,\n.833. '\nStrikeouts: Pierce, Chicago, 173,\nH\nPet.\n165.\n.344\n143\n.340\n174\n.385\n156\n.334\n187\n.333\n195\n185\n163\n153\n181\n138.\nPet.\n.338\n.330\n.315\n.310\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nW   L\nBrooklyn     99\nMilwaukee      87\nSt. Louis      79\nPhiladelphia\nNew' York .\nCincinnati 7\nChicago\nPittsburgh\n78\n67\n64\n61   83\n47 100\nPet. GBL\n,678\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\n,596\n.549\n.538\n.450\n.488\n.424\n.320\n12\nIB\n20H\n82\n38\n37\n52%\nSa|monac$ fake 2*0 Lead\nLeague Approves\nBrowns Shift\nBy JERRY LI8KA .\n'CHICAGO (API\u2014A shift of the\nImpoverished St. Louis Browns to\nanother city, apparently Baltimore\nwas approved Wednesday by an\nAmerican-League screenlng.com\nmlttee. \u25a0 \"  '    -\nThe \"tour-man committee after a\nthree-hot)r huddle with president\nBill Veeck and other Brownie off!\nclals said it would ask tha full\nleague to permit the Browns' fran\nchile to be twitched to a city \"to\nbe later determined.\"\nJuBt before tha session, a wealthy\nBaltimore attorney and a Brownie\ndirector Issues a statement saying\nthat if the American loop approves\nremoval ol the Browns from St.\nLouis to. Baltimore, there would be\n\"substantial\" Balt'more capital represented In the Browns' ownership.\nLast Spring, the league rejected\n5 to 2 Veeck's request to shift to\nBaltimore at that time.\nAnother committee meeting, at\nwhich a new site probably will be\nproposed, will be held shortly before the world series end unquestionably, the league then will act\nquickly.\nVeeck didn't beam as much as\nmight be expected following the\nannouncement by the committee\ncorotiosed ot Charles Comiskiy of\nthe White Sox, W. a (Spike) Briggs\nof the Tigers, and two substitute\nmembers, Will Harrldge, league\npresident, and Arthur Frlelund, secretary of. the Yankees. \",\nHerridge. and Friedlund sat In\nfor Tom Yawkey of the Red Sox\nand Dan Topping of the Yankees,\nwho were said to be unable to attend.\nTalking about a likely shift to\nBaltimore, Veack said: \"I have\nnothing to do with the matter. It's\nup to the club owners.\"\nVeeck reportedly sharei two-\nthirds of the Browns' total stock\nwith a group of Chicago associates\nStrikes V Spares\nThe 18-team Mixed Commercial\nLeague which got uhder way last\nThursday will resume Its lengthy\nschedule tonight.\nFirst half will close December 17.\nThe second half will get undePway\nafter Christmas.\nSept. 17 at 7 n.m.\u2014Alf's vs. Na-\ngara: Question Mark vt. Hllle and\nLlnets; Shoe Centre vs. Playmor;\nGreyhound vs, Orange Crush.\nSent. 17 at 9 p.m.\u2014Traders vs.\nMacDonald Jam: K. Laundry vs.\nSparklers.\nSept. 18 at 9 p.m.\u2014Colman vs.\nHumes; Malklns vs. Seven Up: B.\nMacDonald vs. Montreals.\nSept. 24 at 7 p.m.\u2014Humes vs, Orange Crush; Traders vs. Seven Up;\nKootenay Laundry vs. B, MacDon-\nsld; Niagara vs. Colman.\nSept. 24 at 9 p.m.\u2014Hllle and\nLlness vs. Malklns; Shoe Centre vs.\nMontreals.\nSept. 25 at 9 am.\u2014Greyhound vs.\nAlf's Lunch: MacDonald Jam vs.\nQuestion Mark; Sparklers vs. Playmor.\nTORONTO (CP)-New Westmln\n) ster Salmonacs Wednesday, night\ntook a 2-0 load in their best-of-flve\nfinals for- the;. Canadian junior lacrosse championship by defeating\nLong Branch Monarchs 14-10. -.\/\n- The Salmonacs showed a_ reversal of form from the first' gam e\nMonday {in which they had to come\nfrom behind throughout to squeeze\nout a 16-14 overtime decision.  .\nThey istruek first and fast, ;\u00bbnd\nat no time were they headed. As\na result of New Westminster's concentration oh attacking, Salmonacs' netrainder Ron Deltnonico\nthrew; himself In front of shot after\nihdt.'-. - .. ,\n.The .undefeated western champions carried a 5-3 lead .into the\nsecond quarter and .held an- 8-0\nedge at the end of the half. They\nincreased the jap to 194, in the\nthird but were outscored 3-1 in the\nfinal period.\nMathews in Line\nFor $10,000 Belt\nNEW YORK (AP)-Ed -Mathews,\nslugging third baseman of Milwaukee Braves, was named winner of the August award in the\nHickok pro athlete of the year poll\nWednesday.\nThe 21-year-old sophomore sensation thus joined Lloyd Mingrum,\nKid Gavllan, Gordle Howe, Ben\nHogan,, and Roy Campanella in the\nrace for the $10,000 belt awarded\nat the end of the year.\nCLASSIFIED ADS OET RESULTS\nBall Scores\nBy The Canadian Prut'\nNATIONAL LEAGUE    . v,\nNew York  000 010 120-4 10   0\nCincinnati  000 0001013\u20143 ,7   0\nKoilo and Katt; Perkowikl, Podblelan (9)'and Seminlck. L\u2014Perkowikl.\nPittsburgh  000 1O2 2MH-3   8   1\nMilwaukee  .... 200 030 OOx\u20147 11   2\n;. Face, Waugh (3) Hetkl (7) and\nJanowicz; Buhl and Crandell. L\u2014\nFace.\nPhiladelphia   .021001000-4 10   0\nChicago 001 002 22x\u20147 ll! 1\nMiliar, Drews (7) Lindell (8) and\nLopata; Pollet, Church. (8) and.\nGaraglola. W\u2014Pollet, L\u2014Miller. 7\nBrooklyn  .,: O00 010 102\u20144   8   1\nSt. Louis   200 001 02x\u20145   7   1\nRoe,   Black    (7)   and   Walker;\nStaley, Brazle (9) and Rand. W--\nStaley, L\u2014Roe..\nAMERICAN  LEAQUE\nDetroit    121 010 003\u20148 18   1\nBoston   000 101 010-8   9   1\ni Gray and Batts; N|xon, Delock\n(2) Sullivan (6) Brown (8) and\nWllber. L\u2014Nixon.\nSt. Louis   002 002 001\u20145   9   0\nNew Yqr.k    000 002 O10-8   7   2\nPlllelte, Paige 03) and Moss; Lopat, Gorman (6) Shallock (8) and\nSilvera, Triandoi (8). W-Pillette,\nL\u2014Lbpat.\nSt. Loult    010 000 100-2   8   0\nNew York  000 003 00x-\u00ab   4   0\nTurley and Courtney; Reynolds\nend Silvera.\nCleveland    002 020 003-7 12   2\nPhiladelphia     000 000 020\u20142   8   3\nFeller and Hes\u00bban; Frlcano, Bishop (6) Martin (7) Fanovich (8) and\nMurray. L\u2014 Frlcano.\nChicago  COO 000 200\u20142   6   2\nWashington   .. 101 100 10x-4   9   0\nTrucks,' Dorlsh (7) and Lollar;\nMarrero and Fitzgerald. L\u2014Trucks.\nRough Rid*** Take\nAlouettes 22-13\nOTTAWA (CP)-Montretl Alou-\nettes outplayed Ottawa Rough Riders for moit of three quartert of\na Big Four football game here\nWednesday night, but failed to\nbreak a four-year jinx as they lost\n22-13.\nRiders, who crushed Montreal\n26-6 In their last visit here SeP'- 8.\nwere overnowered in the first half\nby a hard-charging Alouette line\nwhich fouled up a. 12-8 lead at\nhalf-time and led in the scoring\nstatistics.\nRiders vaulted Into first place on\nthe strength of the win, from, a\nthree-way tie with Montreal ,tnd\nHamilton, aa Toronto\u2014in last olaca\n-defeated tbe Tiger-Cats 21-20 at\nHamilton.\nKelowna Goalie\nJack Gibson Signs\nWll h J moke Eaters\nTRAIL\u2014Tho Trail Smoke Eater\nhookey club, have made lt. official\nabout the signing ot a net minder\nfor the coming season.\n'Jack Gibson, formerly Of the\nKelowna Packers in the Okanagan\nleague, hat been sighed to take\ntheplace of Johnny Soflak who\nwill be. ploying this season for Vernon, -\nGibson had only a fair season\nlast year playing with a team that\nwas anything but strong. It the\nSmokies can come up with'\nstrong defence Gibson should, fill\nthe hole In the armor left open\nwhen Johnny, Soflak left\nFor Series Named\nNEW YORK (AP) - Twenty\neight Yankee players and 28 Dodgers were declared eligible fer the\nworld series by commissioner Ford\nFrlck Wednesday.\nThe Yankee players are Hank\nBauer, Yogi Berra, Don Bollweg,\nAndy Carey, Gerry Coleman, Joe\nCollins,' Whitey Ford, Tommy Gorman, Stave Kraly, Bob Kuzava, Ed\nLopat,.Mickey Mantle, Billy Martin.\nJim McDonald, 611 McDougald, Bill\nMiller, Willie Miranda, Johnny\nMlze, Irv Noren, Vic Raschi, B1U\nRenna, Allie Reynolds, Phil Riz-\nzuto, Johnny Sain, Art Schallock,\nChiiey Silvera, Gus Trlandoe, and\nGene Woodllng.        7\nAlio manager Casey Stengel, coaches Frank Crosettl, Bill Dickey,\nJim Turner, and Ralph Houk, and\ntrainer-Gus Mauch.\nThe, Dodger .players are Bill An-\ntonello, Wayne Belardl, Joe Black,\nRoy Campanella, Bill Cox, Carl Erskine, Carl Furlllo, Junior Gilliam,\nGil Hodges, Jim Hughes, Clem Labine, Billy Loes, Russ Meyer, Bob\nMilliken, Bobby Morgan, ErvPal-\nica, Johny Podres, Harold (Pee\nWee) Reete, Jackie Robinson, Preacher Roe, George.Shuba, Duke Snider, Don Thompson, Ben Wade, Rube\nWalker, and Dick Williams.\nAlso manager Chuck Dressen,\ncoaches Cookie Lavagetto, Bill Herman, Jake Pltlir and trainer Dr.\nHarold Wendler.      '\nFights\nTO CHOOSE QOLP TEAM\nCANTON, Yorkshire (API-Brit-. ...\nain's Ryder Cup golf team to play CANADIEN. SIGN\nUie U. S. will he chosen^Sept. 27, Ujp TWO MORI\nThe match ll at Wentworth Oct 2-3.\nNew York\nCleveland ...\nChicago  ...,..\nBoston   ...\nWashington\nDetroit \t\nPhiladelphia\nSt. Louis \t\n.671\n.589\n.575\n.537\n.510\n.395\n.372\n.354\nlltt\n13H\n19  '-,\n23\n40\n43\n46    i\n1   By The AiteOlited Prett\nButte, Mont\u2014Glen Flanagan, 134,\nSt. Paul, drew, with Freddie Herman, 138, Los Angeles, 10,\nAllentown, Pa.-!-Johnny Saxton,\n1507 New York, -stopped Charlie\nWilliams, 156, NeWark, N.J., 8; \u25a0\nMiami Beach, Fit.\u2014Nino Valdes.\n214V4, outpointed Charlie William's,\n108Vi, Mahwah, N.J., 10.\nLos .Angeles\u2014Mario Trigo, 138%,\nLos Angeles, outpointed Ramon\nTlscareno, 141, Mexico, 10.\nSanta Ron, Calif.\u2014Ludwlg Ligh-\nburn, 135, British Honduras,. stopped Doug Klrby,.136Vi, San Francisco, 7.\n8 U. S. Pros Slated\nFor Tennis Tourney\n\u25a0 QUEBEC (CP) \u2014 Eight United\nStates tennis pros will compete In\nthe Canadian professional tennis\nchampionships to be held here Friday, Saturday and Sunday.\nTournament officials announced\nWednesday U. S. players entered\nare Bobby Riggs, Bob Stubs, Joe\nFishbaok, all of Miami; Vinl Hurac,\nBaltimore; Charlie Swanson, Prov-\nvllle, R. I,; Frank Kovacs, Oakland,'\ntden'oe, R. I,; Herb Stead, Harris-\nCalif,, and iPancho Gonzales, Los\nAngeles. No Canadians ire entered\n\u25a00 fir.\nTha tournament Ii for slngiei and\ndoubles title!.\nMdNTJtiiAiV (CP) - Montretl\nCanadiani of tha National Hockey\nLeague Wednesday announced the\ngoalie Gerry McNeil and defence-\nman Dollard St Laurent. Termi\nwere not disclosed.\nMaurice (The Rocket) Richard\ntalked over termt with Frank Seiko, ' Sr.,' Canadiens' general manager, but asked for more time .to\nconsider. He said he wanted to work\nout first In practice sessions next\nweek before talking terms.\nDR. R6DOLFO ARAUJO of Mexloo City, attrNl thi 728-pound\nbluefln tuna whloh gave hit team vlotdry In the 10 International\nTurn Cup Match it Wtdgeport, Nova Scotia. Aroujo boated tht\ngiant, on the latt day of the match, In which 10-tiamt from four\ncontinent! computed.\u2014-AP Wlrephoto,        -.-',\nThlt advertisement la not published\nor dltpliyed by The Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nNELSON DAILY NtWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1953 \u2014 9\n11    \u25a0 \u25a0\u2014    \u2014...^1   \u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 I  -\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u2014 \u2014  \u25a0_ ,   ,__\nGets 46th Homer\nBy In* uinadlan Pratt\nEddie Matnewa got hit 48th home\nrun.of the* season Wednesday as'\nMilwaukee Bravei clouted Pittsburgh Pirates 7-3 In the shortest\ngame of tbe Notional League\nseason.   .\nMathews' belt, In the tint inning with! Johnny Logan aboard,\ntravelled some 400 feet The: whole\ngame was over In one hour and\n47 minutes.\nNew York Giants took a three-\ngame lead over Cincinnati Red-\nlegs for fifth place in the National\nwith a 4-3 victory over the Red-\nlegs.   Daye Koslo was the winner.\nChicago Cubs, picking up their\nwinning streak again after a loss\nto Brooklyn for their first In 10\ngames, downed Philadelphia Phils\n7-4 as Howie Pollet picked up his\nsixth win..\nIn the American League the only\nday game wll at Boston, whore\nDetroit Tigers blasted four Red\nSox pitchers, for .18 hits to win 8-3.\nThe night gomos were hard on\nthe pitchers as Eddie Lopat suffered a foot, injury and lost his\nfourth decision at New York Yankees split with St, Louis Browns;\nVirgil' Trucks was robbed of his\n20th win as Washington Senators\ndowned Chicago White Sox; and\nSt Loult Cardinals broke Preacher\nRoe's 10-game Whining ttreak at\nthey beat Brooklyn.\n-Bob Feller was one exception ai\nwith eight hlti as Cleveland In-\nho tet down Philadelphia Athletics\ndians won a 7-2 victory, V   ^  \u2022\nLopat lost his game 5-3 in the\nopener of 4 double header but the,,\nYanks came back In the nightcap *\nto win 3-2 as Allie Reynolds\npitched his second ttraight com-,\nplete game. Lopat waa hit by a\nsmash off Don Lenhardt's bat and, ,\ntaken to hospital lor X-rays.  ,   ;.\"y\nTrucks tried hard to break Into\ntbe 20-game circle   but  Washing- \u201e\nton's   Chico   Marrero   put   up   a\nsteady six-hit job to choke off tha.;\nSox for -a 4-2 decision. ri\n* The   Cards   broke Roe's   heart\nwith a 8-4 win\u2014the first decision\nagainst   Roe   since May 17.   Roe\ngave up only tour hits in the six,.\ninnings he  pitched  but he  twice).-.\nwalked the lead-off man, resulting .\nin Cardinal runs.\nTitle Bout fo Gel\nFull TV Coverage\nLOS ANGELES (AP) - Fight\nfans here will get full treatment, although Indirectly, on the Rocky\nMarclano-Roland la Starza heavyweight title fight In New York on\nSept 24.\nThe match will be screened via\ndirect television at four theatres,\nand at one the bout will be covered\nIn this fashion:\nA regulation preti bench will be\nset up with typewriter!, telephones\n\u25a0haded lamps and wire facilities\nfor the boxing writers.\nThe fight will be judged by a\nlicensed referee and two Judges ot\nthe California athletic commission.\nIn cise of disagreement between\nthe actual officials In New York\nand the long-range California panel, or the ringside reporters and\nthe television experts, nothing more\nthen verbal-and literary fur will\nfly. .-\nMEEKER MAY BE\nFORCED TO RETIRE\n_T. tfATHARrNES,'Ont (Or.\u2014\nHpwie Meeker may be forced, to\nretire from.Toronto Maple Leafs\nbecause of a soro bick.\nThe right-wing veteran of seven\nNational .Hockey League seasons\nhai been plagued by recurring back\nmiseries since he was \"boarded\nheavily during a game at Toronto\nlatt October. He hat put off signing a contract for the 1933-84 season\nuntil ho sees whether he \"can take\nit\" during Ice drills it.the team's\ntraining camp here.     .\nSAUi-T STE. MARIE, Mich. (CP)\n\u2014Edmonton Flyers of the Western\nHockey League will play Detroit-\nRed Wings of the National Hockey\nLeague in an exhibition series for\nthe championship of the Detroit!\nsystem's training camp. First game'\nis scheduled for Saturday night   ;\nThe prize will be the \"training\ncamp trophy,\" originally presented\nthree years ago for annual compe-|\ntition between the Wings and Indianapolis of the American loop.:.\nIndianapolis hii since been dropped\nfrom the Wings' farm system. I\nSuper-Keen,\nSmooth\nGillette\nEk\u00a3i~ Looking\nfor MINING\nCOMPANIES\nWe ore equipped to\ny^e you service\non any kind of mining\nforms.\nPay\/oils, cheques, time,\ncards, v assay sheets, mill\nrecords, letterheads, envelopes, vouchers, etc.\nWe will gladly give you an estimate\nof your printing needs.\nNfelson Daily News\nPRINTING DEPARTMENT\nNelson, B. C.\nI\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022-\n L\nr\nL\nA\n-B'\nN\nE\nR\nB\nL\nO\nN\nD\nI\nE\nWHEN IT REACHED TORTUS J\nBOLL. IT APPEARED TO BE_ \u25a0*\nA GIRL-BUT WHEN IT,\nGRABBED THE BAT. ,\naPROVCDlTSAJ\nOH.DOCTOR. I IT'S HUMAN.rvsAT's\nUIUIIT \u201eV'\"AT IT liff-GLAO\n~IsTJUl If TO HAVE HELPED\n\u2022* OUR .AYOU POLK..\/1.'\nBABV?*^\"\"\"\nI m I |\ni g^lg'.g;^yi.fffg\u00bbtj bfK.W.ff'W\nHB5SW5&5LiVvJILLViTL\n'\u2022BE INTERESTED TO & BET\nKNOW I'M GOING TO\nrTAKE SAXOPHONE\nLESSONS\nWANTED,.\u2014 EXPERIENCED\nflotation mill operator- Write\nBox 387,' Nelson, B.C.\nEXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER\n\u2014 Shorthand not essential but\nmust have speed typing. Phone\nMr. Irvin, 1690.\n10\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1953\n1 PERSON-TO-PERSON WANT ADS\ny    FOR QUICK RESULTS I\nPhone 144\nDeadline let Clauified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nLOCAL REAL' ESTATE AND Insurance office requires. steno:\ngrapher, October flrit or sooner.\nMutt have shorthand: Experience\nnot essential but preferred; Please\nstate qualifications to application.\nBox'26, Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED - APPLE PICKERS TO\npick 40 to 45 thousand boxes.\nOood crop and good accommodation. Commencing Sept. -Oth.\nBhagu Singh, Phone 6019, Box\n\u25a0145,-R.B, No. 3, Kelowna, B.C.\nWAK'-ED - YOtWG\\ MAN Tri\nlearn, men's retail business in interior ;_EC. city. Excellent opportunity for right party. Apply Box\n9263,' Nelson Daily News, stating\nage, education and marital status.\nYOUNG.MAN BY LARGE NA-\ntional firm for general office\nWork. 20-25 years of age, with\naome business training preferable\nApply in own- handwriting to\nBox 5321,' Daily News.\nWANTED-\u2014 HOTEL DESK CLERK\nApply Unemployment Insurance\nCommission Office.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nCLERK FOR SERVICE DEPT. \u2014\nExperience not necessary. Must\nbe honest and a willing worker.\nApply Liberty Store.\nWANTED - A HOU,_____fe_ft\nlor elderly couple. Good wages\nand good home. Apply 61. Carbonate Street.\n'6b6b, reliable h6uSei__p.\ner, for North Shore. To live to.\nPhone 877-R after 3 p.m.\nWANTED \u2014 WOMAN COOK FOR\namall logging camp. Phone 1421-R\nor write Box 364, Nelson.\nAGENTS WANTED\nEASY EXTRA MONEY'IS YOURS I\nSell Name-On Christmas, Everyday assortments for highest commissions. Over sixty sales-tested\nitems, terrific customer appeal.\nUnequalled Christmas values including 29 card Prize Assortment,\nGold'n. Christmat; Velvet, Madonna, Duets, Surprise, Currier\nand Ives, Canadian Scenes, Appealing Everyday, religious, humorous cards. Personalized cards,\nstationery, napkins, Gift Wraps,\nKiddles' Christmas stockihgs,\nPop-up books, Bible stories, paint\nbooks, ribbons, gift cards. Write\nfor complete catalogue, samples\nNOW. Prlnte name, address clearly. Name-On Stationery Company Limited, Dept. B2, Room F,\nYonge Street Arcade, Toronto.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNURSING HOME CATlE FOR\nelderly man or woman. Particulars will be supplied on application. Box 276, Creston, B.C.\nEXPERIENCED BOOKKEEP-\ner and typist desires work. \u2014\nPhone 758-Y.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\u2022'GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n\u2022 (Section 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nSi CONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\n- ' -BEER LICENCE \u25a0 ','\ni NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\non the 17th day of October next,\nthe undersigned intend to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for content to transfer of Beer Licence\nNo. 10023, issued in respect ot prem\nises being part of a'buUding known\nas the Civic Hotel, situate at 705\nVernon Street, in the City of Nelson, Province ot British Columbia,\nupon the lands described as Lots\n21, 22, 23 and 24 in Block 68, Official\nPlan Nelson City, Nelson Land\nRegistration District, in the Province . of British Columbia, < from\nGeorge Herbrik and Augustina\nHerbrik to Oscar Esalas Beck and\nDagny Octavia Adella Beck ot 1411\nHamilton Street, New Westminster,\nBritish Columbia, the transferees.\nDated at New Westminster, British Columbia, thit 14th day of September, 1953. .'.-,''\n\u25a0    Oscar Esalas Beck,\nDagny Octavia Adella Beck,\nApplicants and transferees,\nTIMBER SALE X60985\nThere will be offered for sale at\nPublic Auction, at 1:00 p.m. (local\ntime) on Monday,- October 5th,\n1953, in the office of the Forest\nRanger, Kaslo, B.C., the Licence\nX60985, to cut 16,000 cubic feet of\nsawlogs and 2870 lineal feet of\nCedar Poles and Piling on an area\nsituated near Gray Creek, Kootenay\nDistrict\nThree (3) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nProvided anyone who Is unable\nto attend the auction in person may\nsubmit a sealed tender, to be opened at the hour of auction and\ntreated ai one bid.\nFurther particulars may be ob-\ntanled from the Deputy Minister of\nForests, Victoria, B.C., or the Dls\ntrict Forester, Nelson, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. \"We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders on\nour own farm. Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nItock in Whito Leghorns, White\nRocks, New Hampshire* and\nCrosses. Catalogue 'on request\nFROM FAMOUS EGG LAYING\nstrains R.O.F. Sired Neew Hamp\npullets, vaccinated against Newcastle and bronchitis. 10 wks. old\n$1.20, 12 wks. old $1.50, any\nquantities. Kromhoff Farms, R.R.\nNo. '5, New Westminster, B.C.\nPhone Newton 60-L-3.\nFOR SALE - TWO MONTH OLD\ncalf for veal. Two milking cows\nfor'sale, just freshened, first calf,\nApply Mr. P. G. Konkin, Slocan\nCity, B.C\nFOR SALE - HEAVY LOGGING\nteam harness and spreaders. Delivery by request F. P. Woods,\nWhonnock, B.C.\nFOR SALE-COW; FRESHENED\n1 month. 5 years old. Apply J. J.\nKoochin, Brilliant. Phone 4571\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n< DOWN\nI. Butter-\nmaking\n\u2022vessel\n1 Enticed\n{.Malt\nbeverage\n4.Father\n9. Fish\n6. Candle\nmakers\nT. River,\nIn Frtnoe\n8. Without toes\n11. American\npoet and\n1 author .\n12. Cheep, a*\na chicken\n13. Concise\n15. Malayan\ndagger\n(var.)\nM. Placed\nbeneath\nSO. An age\n83. Rock\n,   garden i\nplant\n24. Dare -\n39. United\nStates of\nAmerica\n(abbr.)\n26. Particles\nof'dirt\n26. Foreman\n31. Silly\nkxirt :r iritotaa\n\u00b0U1!,7- \u00bb!i\u201eni=im\nfliOK    -IllM!   _ll>\n\u25a0f_t_:ii'),s':j(-i tiBia\nIIHM   Sl;\u201e__\nBUHraiB  Hl-GIBl-\n,_hi_g. Haa\nr_K!u wan-nine\nHi.'   QHiU-l  I3HB\nsnaciDn warns\n- \u25a0atamm raaan\nIMwshr'i Attww\n32. Parries\n33. Affirmative\nreply\n36. Troublei\n39. Flowed\n40. Stripe   '\n42. Music nolo\nsW\n-4\nI\nl\nST\n\u00a3\niT\nACROU\nI. Applaud\n8. Begone!\n9. Hawaiian\ndance\ntO. U.S. river\n11. Unadulterated\nM A body\nthat\nrevolvea\naround\nthe tun\n14. Metallic\nrock\n15. Sharp\nK.The (Ft.\narticle)\nIT. Bear\n10. Antlered\nanimal\n31. Pinch\n32. Destruction\n23. Potatoea\n(dial.)\n\u25a036. Thick\n37. Scottish.\nGaelic\n36. Prickly\nenvelope\nof a fruit\n\u00bb. Costly\n30. Change\ninto bona\n84. Personal\npronoun\n15. Careen, .\nas a ship\n(naut)\n37. Born\n38. Wall\npalntlngi\n40. Forbids\n41. Post\n43. Disembark\n43. Finishes\n44. Greek god\nof war\nEM&Y GKYPTOQUGTE-JIere's bow to WW* Itt\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIsLONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In thli wtmptc A la wed\n. for the three L's, X for the two O'l, etc. Single letters, -poo-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the \u2014M\u2014 aai aM Iftita.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram (Quotation\n\u00ab.a,-RSV     NXt    BI     WKS     QPVH\nWXDS     L M B 11 S,     OPW     O     Y B R 8 Q\nWKS     K V S X W     t \u00bb X     tin     t|C\n\u00bb B V 8 ~ E V > Itll.    '\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: AS HE PBONOBSWES tA8l_Y\nON   EACH   DEED,  OF  SO   MUCH   FAMB  W\n__\nis\n^\n1\n_*\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE: 1 CREST-AIR OIL\nfloor furnace used 2 winters. Al\nthape, complete with fan, thermostat, draft meter and switch,\nhand or automatic operation. 1\nsmall Coleman Oil Heater used 3\nwinters. Al thape, Complete with\n, floor board, guard, draft meter\nand pipes. Both cheap for cash.\nApply Box 9127, Nelson Dally\nNews.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES' OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and ahapes, At-\nlat Iron &,Metals Ltd,, 250 Prior\n, St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\nLADIES' SUITCASE, EIGHsT-PCE:\ndinner and tea set dishes, silverware, books, washing machine\nand tubs, lamps, Thermos kit, bed\ncoyers. Phone 10 or 1044-L. \u2014\nF. A. Baker.\n-ASY'WASHER, 375.00; feRArtt\nnew Diamond 6H-foot felling taw\n330.00. Call Suite A, Strathcona\nHotel.\n1 APARTMENT SIZ_ rAN(3e.\nA-l condition. 1 54\" link, twin\nboards, swivel taps, and trap.\nPhone 502-L-2\nFOR SALE-G.E. WASHER WITH\npump, under 3 yn. old, 3100.00;\ndinette extension table with 4\nchairs, 320.00. Phone 805-Y.      \/\nTRAILER FOR SALE \u2014 IDEAL\nfor camping or hunting trips. \u2014\n, Phone 1381-Y or call at 516 Cottonwood Street.    ,\nPIPE - FI-TINd- - TUfeSS -\nSpecial low prices. Active Trad-\nlng Co., 939 I. Cordova St. Vancouver.\nf6r sA__-6Ne pepSi-colA\npop cooler, one Enterprise cook-\nstove, one oil heater.'Ph. 1010-Y.\nFOR SALE\u2014O.W MANURE, $8.00\nper'2H-yd. load, delivered in city.\nPhone 186-L-3.\nOIL SPACE HEATER, MEDIUM\nslze, as new, 390.00. Apply 1311\nKootenay Street.\nFOR SALE-COAt AND WOOD\nrange and Quebec heater, $65.00.\nPhone 1102-L.\nBRADSHAW PLUMS 3c LB. PICK\nyour own. Bring containers. G.\n. A. Sicotte, Sunshiny Bay.\n3-PIECE BEDROOM SUIT*, $79.00.\nGood condition. 514 Observatory.\n1 DROP-LEAF KIT-HEtt TABLE\nand two chairs. Phone 1099-R.\nSWEET    CORfr    FOR    SAtE\nvPhone. 1.88iL-3.    ., j ;, ! *\nCRESS CORN SALVE\u2014FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist Sella Crets.\nCOMPLETE    HOUSEHOLD FUR-\nniture. Phone 924-Y.\nFOR SALE\u2014NORGE OIL HEATER\n$80.00. 720 Latimei1 St Ph. 580-L.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nSPEEDBOAT, 14 FT. STEP HULL,\n5-ft beam, bitch and mahogany\ndeck, 1952 Jdhnson 25 h.p. out-\nbpard with criiise-a-day tank. In\nA-l condition,;Bbat has been used\nfor 25 hrs..M6f6r for 50 hrs. Can\nbe seen at Hltindel. F. Shannon.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT, TO RELIABLE COU-\npie, .comfortable 3-room house.\nRent, reasonable. Some work.\nAdulta'.ohly. Harper'a Cablni,\nYahk, B.C.\nWANTED - N-LSON _.U_1N__S\nman urgently needs two or three\nbedroom furnished house or apt.\nclbse to by Oct, 1st Best reference. Phone 1364-Y.\nWmm. -6 .r_nt-6n_ 6H;\ntwo bedroom houie. Close in, option to buy, Apply Box 5478, Daily\nNews. '.Ta|\ncALEfidMjA MW_ is tiM\nlease. High grade, silver-lead ore\n. ready ta stopi. Near Kaslo. G, E.\nMcCready.\nWANTED TO RENt BV RB-rtMJC,\naible tenants 8 or 4 room apart*\nment or house partly, furnished.\nPhone 632-R after 6 p.m.'\nWANTED BV! KJiiSPb'MBLli\nbusiness couple unfurnished 3\nroom house or apartment Phone\n1105-Y after 5:d0p.m.\nwANT_t  lMM_blAtH_? ^' I:\nroom completely furnished apt'\ntor young couple. No children.\nApply J. Byrne, Hume Hotel.'\nROOM FOR R_MT-<CLOSE Ilfi\nBoard or Breakfdst later. Respectable business man or traveller preferred. Phone 665-Y.\nFOR RENT-SMALL t_W_S\nsuite, fully furnished, for refined'\ncouple. 809 Silica Street.\nfc_DR-OM FOR RENtf. Bb___.II\nfast if desired. Gentleman pre-,\nferred. Phone 286-R evenings.\nWANTED f- R-NT^4 OR Pm\nhouse or apartment. Phone Staff-\nSergeant Tralnor, 921.\nFOR RENT: -8 ROOM\" 6FFR3I.\nsuite on Baker St. Apply 304\nMedical Arts.\n_6U.SI_-EEPIN<_ R-ldMS FTSE\nrent General heat, electric stoves.\nNorth Shore Motel. Phone 1684,\nNEW FOUR-ROOM HOUSE NEAJT\nichool. Rent: 335 month. Mark-\noff's, Slocan Park.\nBEDROOM. FOR RENT. BUSINEsi,\nman preferred, Apply 410 Victoria St.\nHOUSE FOR; RSrTT WITH 2 SEEK\"\nrooms, fully modern. Oct. 1, U\\.\nCastlegar. P.O. Box 232, Castlegar.\nFOR RENT - 2-RdOM APART-\nment. Phone 423-R.\nFOR RENT-LIGHT H&US_*_fff'\ning room. Phone 48-L.\nBEDROOM   FOR   REN*,   _____\n________L____-_________i\nGARAGE FOR RENT, VI-toOTl;\nHospital. Box '3349, Dally Newa.\nHOUSEKEEPING   R O O M ' F O |\nrent. Phone 396-Y.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED 1006 FT. OF 3 AND *\ninch pipes. 200 lbs. press. State\nprice and condition. Box 9641\nDaily News.\nWILL STORE PIANO IN NEW\"\nhome for use of same. Box 939),.\nDaily; News.\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTOrt\nrags. Must.be 12 inches iquar*\nor more. Daily Newa.\n1 ON THE AIR\nC K L ^PROGRAMS ... w\u00ab on thb __a_\n'   > (Pacific Daylight Time)\n\".\"THURSDAY, SEPT. 17, 1953\n:00\u2014News\n;05\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n15\u2014Sports News.\n:20\u2014Warren'a Wigwam\n30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n:45\u2014IJel Buerge Motors Show\n:00\u2014Newt.-\nilO\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Breakfast Club\n:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n:55\u2014Sport News\n:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n:15\u2014Earl Warren Show\n00\u2014Riders of the Purple Sage\n19\u2014News\n20\u2014Morning Visit\n30\u2014Story Parade\n45\u2014Invitation To The Walte\n00\u2014Musical Minutes\n15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n45\u2014Consumers Corner\n00\u2014Liberty Special\n15\u2014City Tire Sporta\n20\u2014News\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Chatting With the Listener!\n00\u2014Man In the Kitchen\n19\u2014Hollywood Calling '\n1:30\u2014Falrview Shopping Guide\n2:0Ot-Family Theatre\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:19\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Afternoon Varletloa\n4:19\u2014As Tunes Go By1\n4:30\u2014The Magic Kayak '     -\n4:45\u2014Pacific Newi\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill j\n3:00\u2014At Home With the Lennichl\n5:25\u2014International Commentary\n5:30\u2014Behind the News\n3:35\u2014Spotlight On a Star\n5:50\u2014Newi\n6:00-Hit Parade\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:19\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Salvation Army\n8:00\u2014The Jeffersonian Hesitaga\n8:30\u2014Musical Program\n9:00\u2014Thursday Playhouse\n9:30\u2014Popular Organ Music\n9:45\u2014This 'N That\n10:00\u2014Newa\n10:19\u2014Midweek Review\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12.00-NEWS Night Cap\nFRIDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's   Broadcast\nMarine Weather\n7:19\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:39\u2014Musical Minutea        ,\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:16\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goea\n9:00\u2014BBC Newt\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Famous Voices\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014HI\n10:49-Muslcal Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n11:19\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30-A Man and His Magic\n12:19\u2014Newa\n12:23i\u2014Showcaea\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Behind tha Newa\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nSEPT. 18, 1953\nand  1:00\u2014Afternoon Conceit\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n8:15\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:30\u2014Programo Resume\n8:45\u2014B.C, Roundup\n4:15\u2014A Trip to the Moon\n4:30\u2014Sleepytime Storyteller\n4:49\u2014Music tor Children\n9:00\u2014Settler's Choice\n5:25\u2014International Commentary\n9:00-_tuaical Program\n9:49\u2014News and Weather   \u2022>\u25a0-..\n9:55-Hava ,Yori Heard?\n6:00\u2014Bill Goou Sporta\n6:19\u2014Ragtime Trio\n6:30\u2014Ballad Time.\n7:00\u2014Newa\n7:19\u2014Newa Roundup\n7:80\u2014Waltzei\n8:00\u2014Bob McMullln Show\n8:30\u2014Songs of My People\nu:00\u2014International Concert\n10,00\u2014Newt\n10:19\u2014Acidemia Freedom\n10:30\u2014Sportt Page\n\u201e*!____ ^__iia\n :\n &&$*\u25a0?\nCLASSIFIED\n\u25a0-''''':'i'-*HdNi:';144.'7.,;'\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\n.FREE SERVICE TO BUYERS\njWe'll help you own your own\nbusiness or Income . property\nanywhere In Canada.or U.S.A.\nPrice range $1,000 to $1,000,000.\nTell us what you want, where\nand amount you can pay down,\nWe'll mail you.free information,\npictures and descriptions of just\nthe kind of business you want\nand , a wide variety to choose\nfrom, Trades Included. Absolutely\nno obligation. You can deal with\nowners direct Pictorial Listings,\nSo. 310U Cedar, Spokane. Wash\nIn UHK, _.-., _om_R _A*_\nand Service Station on main\nhighway.-It you have the cash,\nthla lt i real buy. Come and see\nfor yourself. Immediate Possession.      -\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n?\u25a0-\nUsed Car\nLot-\nOpening\n_00 BLOCK VERNON ST\n1 JUST BELOW THE NEW\nI   .    CEMENT WALL\n11952 Chevrolet Coupe\n11952 Austin Somerset\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n: 1947 Dodge Sedan          i\nV 1947 Ford Coupe\nOPENING\n|    . SPECIALS!\n! 1952 Austin Somerset\nOnly $1475.00\n1950 Austin Devon\nOnly $875.00\n,1949 Ford Pickup\nOnly $750.00\nALSO\n1,194$ Pontiae Sedan\n1950 Austin Devon\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\ni^l936 Chrysler Sedan\n,,,1937 Fprd.Fprdprp   .,\n? 1934 Ford Fordor   '   .'    -.->\nCOMMERCIALS\nj 1952 Studebaker Pickup\n1950 Ford Pickup\n1949 Ford Pickup\n1949 Thames Panel\nJ Austin Panel\nXASH, TERMS AND TRADES\nJoe Lengin, Manager\nEMPIRE\n600 Block Vernon Street\nNelson, B.C. >\nIMMEDIATE   ,\nDELIVERY\nNEW AOSTINS\nCREAM, GREY, FAWN\n1953 Packard Clipper\n1953 Austin. Convertible\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1952 Chevrolet 6-Passenger\n1951 Studebaker Sedan\n1951 Monarch Coupe\n1950 Standard Vanguard\n1950 Mercury Fordor\n1950 Chevrolet Deluxe '\nSedan   '\n1951 Austin Devon\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949 Austin Devon\n1949 Mercury Coupe\n1948 Dodge Sedan\nCOMMERCIALS\n1951 Mercury Pickup\n1949 Austin Panel\n195J Austin Pickup\nTERMS and TRADES\nAUSTIN SERVICE ond SALES\nEMPIRE\nMOTORS\n803 Baker. St.   Phone 1135\nNELSON, B. C.\nIT- HERBl THE NORTON \"PKA-\ntberbed\" Dominator Come In,and\nsee thlt famous motorcycle, the\nholder ot the Isle of Man TT ot\nKootenay Motorcycle Sales and\nService. Box 350. Castlegar; phone\n2601. \"Tht Shop of Friendly Service.\"\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\nFOR SALE\n1-Ton InternQtjortal Truck\nStake body, good running condition, fair rubber. Ideal for\nshort haul trucking. Snap tor\nSulcli   cash   sale.   Write   Post\nfflce Box 00 for particulars.\nTHE J*OI_OW1NO DAMAGBD\nvehicles are for sale. Send oldi\nfor salvage In writing to Bourque\nand McOary, P.O. Box 100, Nelion,\u2014 1082-Vanguard Sedan. Licence BT\u201e, located at Taylor Bros,\nOarage, Salmo. 1992 Vanguard\nSedan. Licence 4T0B5, located at\nDavles Transfer, Rossland. 1951\nDodge Sedan. Licence 1T670, located at Motor Inn, Trail. 1847\nPlymouth Coach.' Licence 5475,\nlocated at South Slocan Oarage.\nOFFERS TO PURCHASE 1949\nPontlac tidan delivery will be\naccepted at the Singer Sewing\nCentre, 339 Baker St this car haa\nonly been used In our business\nand haa been kept In the beat\nof mechanical condition,\nFOR SA_E-194l1 1-TON ClfflV.\ntruck. Low mileage and new\nUrea. Can be teen at Smedley\nGarage, next door to Pott Office.\nAny reasonable offer not refuted.\nPhone 1623-L-2. Con Cummins.\n1950 MODEL CAR FOR SAL_ -\nRadio, heater, new motor job,\nnew rubber. Phone 253-R-3 after\n5 p.m. ' ' '    '\n1947 MONARCH: COUP_. RA616,\nheater, etc. Good rubber. $700.00\ncash. A. Legebokpff, Crescent\nValley. 7\nPROPERTY   HOUSES. FARMS\nETC.. FOR SALE\nFOR SALE\nTWO SUITES,\n\u2022 DELBRUCK STREET\nFive rooms and bath down.\nTwo rooms and small kitchen,\nSink and toilet up. Large lot,\n75x120. Fruit trees, flowers and\noTTerms $6000\nBuy now for' next summer\ncamp. Owner moved out. 4 level\nacret nicely treed with creek.\nFive rooms on concrete. Hand\nEump in kitchen. 275 feet sandy\neach, south shore, 20 minutes\nto city. 12-ft. cabin cruiser with\n12   h.p.   Johnson   motor.   Eull\n5nfye^.w!th..te^m.,:.... $4000\nMcHXRRY\nAgencies Ltd..\nReal Estate tnd Inaurtnee\nPhone 135, or Eves. 620-Y.\nPRICED FOR $UICK SALE \u2014\nModern, tmtljytiew home. Wired\nfor electric range, electric hot\nwater tank Installed. Fully Insulated. Beach frontage; close to\nPark. One bloc|f.', from but. $5500\ncash. Phone 40J-R.  .\nFOR SALE - Bit TENDER, ALL\nbuildings and-890 acres of lend\nLot 9037. Marblehead, B.C. Send\nbids to Alberta Granite, Marble\nis Stone Co. Ltd., Edmonton,\nAlberta.\nSALE OR SWAP-5-ROOM HOU-6\non 4 acres in-Oliver. Good location, unfinished, basement habitable. Price $4000, terms. Apply\nBox 1487, Nelson Dally News.\nFOR SALE - BUILDING LOTS.\n60x120, outside city limits, one\nblock from but. Phone 1099-L or\ncall at 208 View Street\nFOR SALE - 1-4 ftdOM rfOUSE\nfully modern; 1-3 room house,\nfully modern. Apply Wm, A\nHenke, Procter,  .\nORCHARD FCiR \u00abAtE4 0t\u00bb\nArrOw Lakes. Easy termt. Box\n5245, Daily Newt,\nTWO CHOICE LOT- ON _US\nroute. Fruits and garden. Phont\n1S5-R-1.\nMACHINERY\nRamp Body and\nFender Works\nDEALERS FOR\nBRADEN and TULSA\nTRUCK WINCHES\nFOR EVERY APPLICATION\n3 to 50 Tone Capacity\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 195 \u2014 856 Josephine St\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nFOR SALE - PORTABLE SAW-\nmill; \"Belshaw\", including power\nalso track, cart and extra parts\nin good running order. Cash $750.\nAlso have a stationary engine\nand tawing outfit tor $100. Apply\nBox 5139, Daily News,\nNATIONAL MACHIiMEKV CO\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING.\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' BQUlPM-NT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island  Vancouver I   BC\nirOR SA-E-l DQU6_- 'Btt-M\nwinch, 1 pair logging bunkl, 1\nfour-wheel drive truck- Apply\nShorty's Repair Shon.\nCHAIN  SAW, PERFECT\"'__}__.\ntion. $150. Box 5230 Datly News.\nSEWING MACHINES\nSINGER  CAN   REPAIR   VOUR\npresent   machine   at   reasonable\ncost For free estlmatei Phone 41\nSINGER SEWING CENTRE\n339 BAKER ST. - NELSON, B.C.\nMillet Trends\n7 NBW. YORK .{Afi -V The tmart\nrecovery movement from tht low\nof the year extended through the\nsocond straight session.\nCanadian stocks wore higher,\nToronto (CP) --Ail iroupt\nWere gaining strength toward the\ndose of trading here. Western oils\nand Industrials gained, golds, | down\not 1 p.m., showed a Blight rise.\nBale metals traded strongly and\nthe picture waa little changed since\nthe forenoon.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Algeneral\nImprovement marked quiet afternoon trading following two days\nol declines.\nFractional advances were in the\nmajority with the odd issues showing a gain of a point or more.\nLONDON (Reuthers- With Wall\nStreet staging a rally overnight and\nthe sterling dollar rata recovering\nsomewhat there waa a tendency In\nLondon to mark up prices tor the\nstart Ot the new account. But operators proceeded cautiously and\ntreated Wall Street'! upturn with\nreserve. The result was that trading wat quiet and prlcei generally\ncame back later In the session.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nLEADING MINERALS\nINCREASE OUTPUT\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Marked production Increases in the majority\nof Canada's leading minerals were\nrecorded during the first half of\n1953, the bureau ot statistics reported Wednesday.\nLeading in the gain, were crude\npetroleum, natural gat, Iron ore,\nsilver, lead, zinc, cement and clay\nproducts! Among those declining\nwere asbestos, coal, nickel and\nsalt. .\u201e\"'.'\nHalf-year output of crude petrol-\neumn rose to 33,282,708 barrels\nfrom 25,906,646, natural gai to 52,\n376,627,000 cubic feet from 49,299,-\n705,000, iron ore .to 2,425,495 ..ton \u2022\nfrom 1,641,408, silver to 15;100,635\nfine ounces from 12,550.274, lead to\n100,220 toni from 80,792, line to\n202,845 tons from 178,786,' cement\nto 10,437,674 barrels from 8,895.420,\nand clay products to $12,797,219\nfrom $10,170,204.\nCopper production climbed to\n135.364 tons from 131,169, gold to\n2,204,012 fine ounces from 2,160,079,\ngypsum to> 1,485,262 tons,from 1,-\n425,478, and lime to 600,079 tons\nfrom 584,377. Asbestos production\nfell to 458,477 tons from 460,291,\ncoal to 7,732,867 tons from 8,756,353,\nnickel to 70.295 tons from 71.286, and\ntalt to 460,214 tons from 473,572.\nWinnioeq Grain\nWINNIPEG   (CP)   -  Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices;\nOats, No. 1 feed, 66.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.04%.'\nPERSONAL\nMICBONIC HEARING AIDS-\nWrit* PO  Box 9b Ns\u00bb|iinn  BC\nWXWANESA, MUTUA)   FIRE  IN\nstirsmc* m   D L Kerr Aeent\nxam tt^Ttt; ast-swttt ct tt\nDepot  Clean rooms and reason\ntble rates.  V\u00bbmv>u<r<sr  BC\nAlAWo  Cum, AL-0&6_tt!_\nAnonymous meet Tues. and Frl.\n425 Baker St.. Nelson. Write P.O.\nBox 888\nY6ur ESsMWnAt iodWe ra-\ntion may be obtained by regular\nuse of palatable Nova-Kelp Tablets. Avoid tiredness, rundown\nfeeling, nervousness, and other\ndeficiency disorders. At all druggists, in three economical sizes.\nROOM ANP BOARf*\nROOM AND BBAftl) FOR TWO\nyoung business men to share the\nroom. Phone 474.X. ._'\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AMD MINE\nhfcphEsiNtAtivj,*\nE. W. WIDDOWSON.& CO., AS-\ntayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nB 'Mutes. Rb__t_VNb, &.<S,\nAwiayer. Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENQlN-ERa AND 8URVS\u00a5oK8\nft. K. -6AT1S, 6t_,\u00bb6. 8, 378\nBaker St., Nelson, Phone 1118.\nB.C  Landt Surveyor.\n.. V.,,_\u201eAV!_6r, p.<S. JW\u201e 552,\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB.C. Land Surveyor. Engineer.\nNf-lsnn. B.C. Surveyor. Engineer.\nMACH INI JT\u00bb\n\u2014binnetts tmm\u2014-\nMachine Shop, Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phnnl> 693. 324.Vernon St\n- ,  '      \u25a0\n-frlaon UaUif -faroa\n.Unified Adverfltlna rlttti:\n15c per lino flrit insertion ind\nnon-consecutivo insertions\nHe line per conseeutlvo insertion after first insertion\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions\n$1 56 line for month (26 consecutive insertions) Box numbers He extra. Covert my\nnumber of insertions. -\nPUBLIC (LEGAL* NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc.\u201410c per line,\ntint insertion 16c per Una\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% TOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n.   Subscription Rates,    '\n(Not  More Than Listed Hire)\nBy carfier. par week.\ntn advance .so\nBy carrier, per yetr $15.60\nUnited States. United Kingdom:\nOne month        .       $ 1.2S\nThree monthi  __\u00bb:\u201e     $,79\nfit- month!        \u2022-\u2022       7.50\nOne -ear ... 15.00\nMall In Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month        1.00\nThree-monthi ...__.\u201e \u201e,..   1.75\nSix monthi .-,.,     $.50\nOne rear 10.00'\nCVhoro extra pettaot It required.\nabove ratet plui pottage.\n'.' *\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 :,(CloilisB Prloet)\nAcadia Uranium . ..7...........\nAkaltcho .\u201e.....;\u201e.,..\nAmal; Larder .';,7..;...;.;;,.-,,\u201e..\nAnglo Huronlan .;.,.,.....;..\nArmistice ,.,.....,..\u201e..,.,....;.,.......\u201e\nBagamao' \u201e\u25a0.\u201e;.....\u201e-_._\t\nBarymin..,\u2014._ ......\nBase Metals ,., .......\nBavdoun ,', ...,....;..\u201e..,\t\nBobjo I .'.' :..:.;._.......\t\nBrowlt R L \u201e,..\t\nBroulan  v \u2014,..\u2014\nBuffalo Ank ..._.:......\nCajlffan         .'. \u201e_:....;.\nCampbell, R I,, ;.,.....;..\nCariboo Gojd :....,\nCastle Trath    ..\u201e.\t\nCentral Patricia ,\u201e..__..\u201e\nCentral Pore ..........,\u201e.,.._,..\nChesJervHle \t\nChimo G :\u2014...\nCOchenour\t\nConwest .-., ....\u201e ,.\u201e\nCom Dlicovery\t\nCrolnor \t\nDome\t\nDonalda  \t\nDuvay _ \u201e......'__.\nBait Malartie\t\nEast Sullivtn :\t\nEattern Metals \u201e\t\nEstelM\t\nEureka .     \t\nPalconbrldgt  .'\u2014\t\nFroblsher   .............\nGiant Yel  \u201e ,\t\nGod't Lake  _...\u201e\t\nGoldcrest\t\nGolden Manitou\t\nHarrlcana\t\nHasaga  ,.\nHeath\t\nHolllnger , ,\t\nHomer Y K\t\nHudson Biy .  _\t\nInspiration    ;\t\nInt Nickel _t\u201e\t\nJollet Que  -\t\nKerr Addison :\t\nLabrador  \t\nLake Dufault '..  \u201e\nLakethore ..: \t\nLake Wasa  ;\nLamaque ..: \t\nLeltch\t\nLexlndin  \t\nLoiivicourt  \t\nMacassa\nMacLeod Cock \t\nMedian R L  \u201e..._,\t\nMaltrtlc G T \t\nMclntyre Pore\t\nMcKenzle R L  .\nMining CoTp  \u201e\t\nNew Bldlamaque\t\nNew Kelore   \u201e..\nNew Lund \t\nNew Larder U ..\" \t\nNew Mylemaqua - \t\nNib  \t\nNlplsslng    _...r__\nNoranda \t\nNormetals _. _.\nNorth Can \t\nNotrh Inca  \t\nO'Leary    ,.\t\nOslsko    \t\nPamour   _  \t\nPaymaster  '. \u201e....\nPickle Crop  _  .'\nPioneer    _\nPlacer Develop\t\nPreston E D ,\t\nQuebec Lab  __.-\nQijemont  \t\nRadiore - \u201e.\nSherrltt Gordon \t\nSigma M  \t\nSilvermille \t\nStadacona r \u201e..\t\nStarratt Olten  \t\nSleeloy  \t\nSteep Rock  \t\nSudbury Cont \t\nSurf Inlet  .-.\t\nSylvanite _\t\nTeek Hughet \u201e..\t\nThompson-Lund  \u201e.\nTombill   , _\t\nTorbrit\t\nTram Cont Ret\t\nUnited Keno\t\nUpper Ctn \t\nVentures  _.\nVlolamac \t\nWalte Amulit \t\nOILS\nB A Oil \t\nCalgary & Ed _,.\nCalmont\t\nCdn Atlantic \t\nCentral Ledue , \t\nCentral Ex  ,.\nChemical Research  .-.\nDalhousle   ..\nFederated Peta \t\nHome    \u201e\t\nImperial Oil \u201e.\nKroy\t\nMid Cont \u201e\t\nNat Pete \u201e .._\t\nOkalta    .-_.\nPae Pete \t\nRoyalite    - \t\nUnited Oils  \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbl \t\nAlgome Steel   ;..\nAluminum  _\u201e _\nArgus  .-\t\nAtlas St.\nBethurSt Power\t\nBeattie Brot    \t\nBell Telephone\t\nUrMlliin  ._\nB C Elec ll \t\nB C Elec sftil\t\nB C Packers B\t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Po#er'B\t\nBuilding Product! _.\nBurpl A .'-'-.!\t\nCtn Cement \t\nCan Packer! A\t\nCan Packers B \u201e.\nCan-Breweries\t\nCan Canners  \t\nCan Car & Fdy A .....\nCan Ceianese\t\nCan Pac Rly _.\nCons M Is a -.\nDiet Seagram\t\nDom Foundries \t\nDom Steel is Coil B..\nDom Storei\t\npom Wr is Cham.....\nFamOut Pllyerl _\u201e\nFord A \u2022 _.\nGatlneaij \t\nGatlneau 5* pfd .....\nGoodyear pfd\t\nOrtet iiakea..-.,-. .\u201e..\nGypiutt tl** \u2014~\nImepriai Oil  \t\nImp Toboeco\nInt MetalS ..\nInt Nickel ..\nInt Pete \t\nLoblaw A' ...\nLoblaw B\n.15.\n.91\n.16 r\n13.25\n.22\n.18\n1.40\n,   .20\n. ' .34\n'I\n2.1S.\n.Wt\n\u202221\n-VPS\n1.00\n2.40\n.it\n.17H\n.^S3\n1.18\n.95\n3.85\n1.0$\n42\n18.75\n.53\n.82\n1.65\n4.85\n1,35\n.30\n.30\n14.00\n4.60\n$.10\n.67\n.18\n1.65\n.\"_\n.17\n.11\n11.85\n.24%\n39.50\n1.66\n37.75\n.26\n19.35\n6.75\n.72\n6.00\n.26\n4.25\n.72\n.10\n.13\n1.65\n1.49\n1.70\n1.40\n62.00\n.38\n10.30\n\\I4\n^0\n.21\n1.78\n.40\n.10\n1.50\n64.75\n2.65\n.55\n.22\n.20   ,\n.43\n.80\n.38\n1.17\n1.65\n30.50\n2.87\n.11\n. 16.73\n.45\n4.00\n7.20\n.75\n.35\n.16\n.11\n0.10\n.27\n.ir\n1.10\n2.00\n.18\n.22\n.95\n.38\n6.25\nLOT\n13.75\n2.55\n10.15\n17.50\n7.85\n1.06\n3.80\n1.75'\n3.35\n1.08\n1.46\n$.90\n6.65\n28.50\n1.08\n\u25a0Wi\n1.91\n165\n,7.60\n12.75\n.70\n  14\n  3l>4\n.... 44\n  11%\n.._. 14%\nMassey Harris  ,..,.._..\nMcColl Frontenao ,.\u201e-\u201e\u2022\u25a0\nPage Hershey     .,.; \u201e..\nSoutham.' '    ..;.\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\t\nSteel oil mn \t\nStandard Paving \t\n7\n36%\n10%\n93\n50\nTA\n33%\n7%\n36%\n49%\n77%\n37\n30V,\n19%\n27\n17\n27y,\n22%\n23%\n25%\n13%\n10%\n14%\n7%\n,20%\n\u00abH\n21\n105\n47%\n18%\n3$%\n28%\nI\n.   37%\\\n,  19%\n42\n43%\n:    8%\n.   24\n.   68\n.   25V,\n29%\n18\nBusiness Spotlight...\nLwhiffl(MM* tecribed as\nRo$Klisr-f to Tinged Bluish\nBy FORBES RHUDE  ,'\n(Canadian Prltl ^uslnocs Editor)\nEDMONTpN ;(CP)-\"Cloudy, not\nnecessarily stormy, but some, possibility of squalls.'       -.!;'  ,'.'\u25a0;'\u25a0:;\nThis tarepast; for'.\" the Canadian\nbusiness scene \u2022' was prepared' tor\nVra annual meeting of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce Wed.\nneiday by J- T. Bryden, TortontO,\ngeneral manager of the North\nAracrlcan Ailuranca Compmy.\nOr, to expreis lt to color: \"The\nlonger term outlook for Canada IS\nah extremely rosy one, but I think\nthe nearby outlook It tinged with\nblue.\"\nBANKER'* VIEPOINT\nJ. Douglas Gibson, supervisor of\nthe Bank ''f Nova Scotia's eqono-_\nmlcs department,, put it this way:\n\"At the end of this year, we shall\nprobably find it to have been the\nbest year in the Canadian record.\nNext year should be a pretty good\none, but probably not as good as\nthis.\", '      ,  .    -\nA papereprepared by Alenander\nFont of Vancouver continued some\nwhat more pessimistic passages.\nHe expressed a retailer's view, especially In 'household appliances,\nradios, furniture and dry goods.\n, Mr. r.pnt'said \"there are danger\nslgnala ahead\" . though he expr&k'\nted belief 'the! fall turnover would\ncarry the retailer through the rest\nof 1953 satisfactorily.\n''It ii our opinion, however,\" he\nadded, \"much as we regret Ita pes-\nilmlstic Inference, that-rnany retail\nconcerns- will succunib within the\nnext 12-mbnth 'period.\nCASUALTIES EXPECTED\n\"Following the war, a large number of people entered the retail\nbusiness field,, many of them, it is\nto be-stared,' unsulted by temperament, ability or training, and It\nis from their ranks that business\ncasualties may be expected.\" .\nReferring to Increased buying on\ncredit, Mr. Forst stated:\n\"During the last few months\nthere has been a distinct-tendency\nto soft-pedal on the granting of\neasy credit. There Is, surely, no\npercentage to be gained by loading\ndown the consumer under heavy\nobligations, since to do so must\neliminate him from the buying category for a long time,\n\"Further, should anything unforeseen ot an unfortunate nature\nchance to happen, heavy repossessions would undoubtedly bring dls-\n\u25a0aster to a large number of retailers\"\nThe views of the speakers were\npresented to panel discussion on\n\"the business outlook,\" perhaps the\nbiggest question mark overlaying\nthe current meeting.\nEXPORTS MAY BE LOW\nMr. Gibson's speech laid tome\ndeoline in United Statea activity,\nla quite likely In 1954, though not\na Were one,.\"..,!.' ,7 .. ;\n,,Any downturn, however, would\nprobably . mean ' that commodity\nprlcei < would decline, further and,\n\"because of .the fact that grain supplies are now .10 large on thlt continent, itt effect on Canada might\nbe considerable.\"\nAn,American downturn would\nalso affect demand for Canadian\nexport- -\n\"My gueil would be that our exports In tB54 will not.be larger than\nIn 1963, and may be somewhat\nlower. However, our export position and tome ot our domestic industries might, in such circumstances, be aided by a decline In\nthe exchange rate. Fortunately, the\nCanadian economy has a stronger\ngrowth element In it than that ot\nthe United' States.?\nMr. Gibson said savings deposits\nIn chartered banks have risen surprisingly despite increased con\nsummer credit.\n\"If we would count on the people\nwho are increasing their savings to\nenter the market for consumer\ndurable goods as the commitments\nof credit buyers increated, .or. if,\nby some strange chance, the people\nbuying on credit should olsq lie\nthose who are Increasing their bank\naccounts, we might regard the very\nrapid Increase \u25a0; ip consumer - credit,\nwithout much concern, *;.- .. ;\n. \"But It scarcely seems probable\nthat^there art'very many people\ngoing into debt and alio building\nup their livings.\"\nVancouver Stocks\nm..' (Cloilng Prlcei)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge ,._ -\t\n,76\n3.50T\nCanusa .      \u201e \u2014,..\n.04'\nCariboo Gold ....'.\t\n1.00\nEstella' ...      -C,~ _\n.35\nGiant MaScot .:.-..-._...,._\n.51\nGoiconda|., ,..;\t\n.25\nHighland Bell' .'.'\n,   .34\nPac -Eastern Gold \u201e\n.10\nPioneer Gold\t\n1.60\nQuatslno . ; .; ,.;..  \u201e\n.16%\nSheep Creek \t\n.55\nSilver Ridge\t\n.10\nSilver Standard ...,\t\n.70\nUtlca  _.\n.01%\n.01%\nVan Roi ,...\u201e \t\n.04\"\nWoodbury ' -..,._.\n1.63\nYale         :....\t\n.24\nOIL*     :\n4.88\nA P Cons:..:,  ;\t\n.32\nCal _ji-_a _.. \t\n7.75-, \u25a0\nCalmSpt7.....; \u2014 ...\n1.03\n.15\nCommonwealth  - -..._\n4.00\nHome \u25a0 ;  .\n6.23\nMercury         \t\n.10%\nNational Pete _._,'\n1.85\nOk'alfa Com   ...\n' 1.657\nPac Pete  , :.....:..\n7.40 '\nRoyalite    ;..;., _.._.:..\n12.25\n' '.19\nVulcan  U . '\n.40'\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates ;..i..'\n20.00\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 The Hvettock\nmarket was active with 1409 cattle\nand' calves on offer of- which 702\nwere held over. All were steady at\nthe week's advance.\nHogs told Tuesday 75 cents higher at $31.25. and towt were 25 cents\nhigher at 16.50; good lambs 25 cents\nhigher at 17-18.25.\nGood to choice butcher eteert\n18-20.50; common to medium 10-\n17:50; good to near choice butcher\nheifers 16.50-18; -common to medium 10-16; good cows 10.50-11.50;\ncommon to medium 9-10.25; canners and cutters 6-8.50; good bull!\n10.50-11.50; common to .medium 9-\n10,25; good stacker and. feeder\nsteers 14-16; common to medium\n10-13.50; good to choice veal calves\n16-17; common to medium 10-15.50.\nUN E88AY WINNER wat 17-\nyear-old- Donna Manahan, above,\n.Grade XI student of 8tlklrk,\nMan., whote estay Vvti btit of\n44 submitted In a competition\nconducted by Winnipeg branch\n'of the United Nations Association.\nThe essay wat on the tubject:\n\"World Peace and My Community.\" The prlie wat a trip to. New\nYork for a five-day vltlt.\nGOOD  TRACTOR,  GOOD  PRICED \/'(\"_,'\nJohn Deere Model \"M\" \u00ab2-Plow Tractor\n' Complete -with lights ond hydaulics.       91 AAA\nPriced at ^^._:^..-^__il-J.i---: jjfVVV;\nVERSATILE FARM. TPOLI        J .,   .,.. . -''.    ;   \u2022'.-    \"\nJohn Deere Model 'MC Crawler Tractor\nwith Horn Loader and dirti or gravel .-loadihg bucket;-\nThis-unit.has very low hours. ''\/J^TiCA\nPriced, at....;.._...-____:._-\u2014t ____7,*f IVV\nFARM IMPLEMENT BARGAINS! 7    .\nJOHN DEERE NO. 5 POWER MOWER,      f^TiA\n7-foot. - e^i:,-\u00bb-.-: \u25a0^M^wmm\nJohn Deere 9-Foot .\nWindrower .,\t\nNEtsSONDAILYXEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1953-^11\nhi .L2F,' \\ M,PU,NTA\"< LIONE88 cub who live, with the\nFloyd Miller family In Tlicton, Arlx., poket her sleeping playmate,\nSteven,-, to route him for tome play. Steven opined his eyet a\nfew itepndi after thlt picture wit taken but pleaded \"Aw, kitty,\nI'm aieeoy.\" Miller It curator of large mammals fer the Arltona-\nSonort Desert Museum at Tucion^-AP Wlrephoto.\nIndian Studertt in\nComMa Wins Honors\nVANCOUVER (CP) -. Righblr\nSingh Basi, 22, hu won high scholastic honors since coming to Canada from his native India three\nyears; ago.\n\" The Intense young man with the\nflashing eyes now Is president- of the\nNational Federation of University\nStudents, and this fall will study.at\nHarvard under one of seven \"administration fellowships\" offered\nannually to students frqm all over\nthe,world,,, , ,\nRaghbir'i father, who died several'\nmonths ago, was employed In the\ncentral government.service ln.In-\ndie. His work necessitated much\nmoving: about for Haghblr and\nstudying in different i private\nschools. ,'\n\"There were many loose educational ends to be tied up but I had\nmuch help from my father who had\nfar more than average ability,\" the\nyoung man says, i\nHe came to the University of\nBritish Columbia in 1949, and in\n1952 received his B.A. degree and\na little later hit bachelor of social\nwork degree. , \u25a0    \u2022 \u2022 \u25a0[\nHe was given ,the honorary\naward of the literary and scientific\nexecutive at UBC and was made\nmember of the Sigma Tau society.\nHe  says  living: in Canada  haa\nPRESTWICK, Scotland (CP) -\nTrade Minister Howe arrived by\nair Wednesday en route to Geneva\nwhere he will lead the Canadian\ndelegation at the 33-coUhtry conference on trade and tariffs, Opining Thursday fii,\nHowe said he expects to spend\nabout six or seven weeks In Geneva, returning to Canada by way of\nLondon for talks with members of\nthe British cabinet. ,-\nThe Geneva meeting marks another session, of the signatories to\nthe General; Agreement on Tariffs\nand Trade, which represent! the\nclosest-approach yet made to a\nsystem,of International trading arrangements,- There have been reports |hat the forthcoming talks\nmay raise the broad issue of the\nplace of Imperial preferences within the GATT framework.\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK (CP)-Spot prices:\nLead, N.Y., .14.   \u2022\nZinc, East St. Louis, .10.\nchanged hii whole outlook on Ufa.\n\"In India I beloved to what you'd\ncall the upper middle class. Hera I\nhave had the opportunity!of melting all types of peoples,' at all igei.\nI have become democratized, Sometimes I feel that I've seen more of\nCanada than have many Cana-\ndtant.\" Later on, he plans entering\nthe Indian administration service.\n1952 DODGE POWER\nWAGON-\nOnly 7500 Mile*\nPrice $2650\n1951 G.M.C. 1 TON\nPANEL TRUCK\nPrice $1450\n1946 MERCURY VA TON\nSPECIAL\nFlat Deck\nPrice $750\n1 ONLY I.E.L. 5 H.P.\n,    CHAIN SAW\n48\" Blade\nPrice $95\n1 ONLY SAFE\nOutside Measurements:\n28\" Deep, 34\" Wide, 40\" High.\nPrice $175\n.'\u2022'\u25a0\u2022'\nPHONE 18\nPhone 792-Y Kvenlngi\nCompany Ltd.\nOf It'i Machinery You Need,\nConsult Ui Flnf\n214 Hall St.     Nelion, B.C.\n-XJCUTOIt   AND   TgUSTttS   TO*. 'OVM   HAIP   A   CINTUKI\n'525\nCOCKSHUTT MOWER, In good cpri,itibn.    $.'\nA good buy at \u25a0\u201e_,,_\u2014.\u2014;\u2014__7 7v- _.':.;\nFROST & WOOD 8-Foot HAY RAKE,  ;'\nIn good -hope \u2014\u201e..\u201e_....-._._.... _\nIDEAL  FOR  SMALL  CONTRACTOR  OR   MINERI        '\"\nBuhl Compressor\n210 CFM, on stelel wheels,-serial 1648.   $1DAA\nIn good mechonical condition. , ......    .I.Ow.W\nFINNING TRACTOR\n& EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.\ni NELSON * CRANBROOK\nPhone 930 Phone 61    -\nAdministering your estate and looking after your family's-\nfinancial needs is too great a responsibility to entrust to an\nindividual, however capable he may be.. Preoccupied with his\nown business, and social affairs he may apply himself to the\naffairs of yciur estate only in his spare time\u2014an occasional\nweek-end or evening.\nThe.task of settling accounts; paying taxes and succession\nduties, managing investments, and collecting revenue cannot\nbe done properly at odd times. These matters require close\nattention tnd prompt action. Neglect and deity could be\ncostly for your hein.\nIt it both wise Did economical to employ in experienced full\ntime corporate executor. Protect your fimily't future tecurity\nby appointing The Royal Trust Company in your will.\n-'     ^ Ask for tur booklet:\n\"A Practical Way to Plan your Will.\"\nROYAL \"TRUST\nCOMPANY\nbib WEST PENDER ST., VANCOUVER   \u2022   MA. 8411\n7. \u2022'--'    -'.    GEORGE O. VAIE, fflANAOER\n\t\n ; !    \u25a0\u25a0,..-\u25a0\u25a0.    -\ndh^mm&i^^MmiMmmi\nmM&m\n mmw^w^^V'\nwmm\nasz&y\n12 -- NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 17,1953\nIt's a Race.'\nTHE LAST ROSE OF SUMMER '\n:. ':' v*.  '\u25a0-    ,.'.\u25a0''.',.   -'>\u25a0\nTHE FIRST COLD OF Al<TUMN\nand you will be a,sun winner if you protect\nyourself now against thp ravages of tho season of\n_   colds by using\n': .-'\u25a0 rlMlJNOVAX , -7\nA vaccine In tablet form for building resistance'\nto bacterial infections associated with the    '   .\nGommon-Cold ,-  ,    -\n3 Weeks Supply $1.75\n. \"   '   V,\nmm *\\   ,y\nDRUGS LTD.\ni George Barbour Newfoundland\nsealing-ship master who died in\n1893,. took mora than 700,008 seals\nIn hjs lifetime.\nDANCE\nFRIDAY\nWestern and Modern\nINTRODUCING THE\nMello-Aires\nIF YOU  LIKE  EA8Y,\nDANCEABLE RHYTHM \u2014 IF YOU\nLIKE VARIETY, WESTERN\nAND MODERN - IF YOU  LIKE\nPLEASANT  V0CAL8\nTHIS IS YOUR DANCE\najorr- \u00bb-.i?r^r\u00bbqs\u00bb,r\nl^-st.'j.,s.\u00abiV'.-!._-_;-L_\u2014\u2022\n,ir-X7W.it*j\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n- \/    ;  \"    !     \u25a0 '      ^^\nBIG MISSION FIELD '\nBRAMTORD, Ont. (CI*)-Rev.\nFrank Carey, United Church mia-\nslonary home no furlough\/said in\na sermon here \"the gates of Japan\nare open to Christianity as never\nbefore,\" fie , aald ; Japan had\nemerged from the last war with\nIta faith in old customs shaken and\nthe Christian church in Japan now\nwas made up mostly of young\n.people. ..-,..;\nFor All Vour Baking Needt Try\nELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\nTht flavor It right On Sale at\nVour Grocers, or Phone 231.\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nFILM, KODAK\nAND BROWNIE CAMERAS\nFor Best Results From Your\nExposed Film \u2014'\nMall or Leave With\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson'i Modern Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34, Day \u2014 807-R, Night\nBOX 460\nFQR\nGENERAL OFFICE SUPPLIES\nSEE US FIRST:\nYou Name It \u2014 Wa Have It\nOr We Can Oet Iti\n\u2022 Paper  Clipt      \u2022 Pencils\n\u2022 Staples \u2022 Tacks\n\u2022 Carbon Paper\n\u2022 Synoptic Sheeta     \u2022 Cash Books\n\u2022 Journals \u2022 Ladgert\nThete are Just a few of our\ncomplete lines.'\nKOOTENAY   STATIONERS\nAND SPORT SHOP\n466 WARD ST.\nPHONE 382\n.   . Arriving In Miami after a 1245-mile bike ride from Columbut,\nOhio, John Chlppl, 42, -tayt'h'e will choose a more conventional modi'\nof travel forthe,return trip. He tald the 10-day trip ooit hint 190, THe\naveraged 126.miles a day on the Frenoh-ttyle bike.\u2014Central Preti\n'Canadian,.        \u25a0 7 \"\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0,'.\u00ab.--,'\".\u25a0        \"\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0 .7-V   - ..-..-\u25a0\nGas fer Ont Would\nEliminate Import Texas Gas\n'.'     By JOHN 'E.BIRD :\nCanadian Pratt Stiff Writer\nOTTAWA  (CP) -.The federal\ngovernment hopee .:. arrangement\nwill be re&ched soon to pipe Alberta natural gas to Ontario. and\nthus eliminate plans to bring Texas\ngas into the province:\nThe movement of the Western\ngas to Eastern Canadian markets\nwill, involve the federal government and the provinces of Alberta\nand Ontario. Initial talks are sched\nvl <d ao open today at Niagara Falls,\nOnt, -at a meeting of provincial\nmines ministers attended by Mines\nMinister Prudham, Premier Frost of\nOntario and Premier Manning of\nAlberta.\nThe Niagara Falls meeting is being held following j a United States\nfederal power commission - order\ngranting the Tennessee Gas Transmission Company of Houston, Tex,\na permit to move some 22,000,000\ncubic feet of 'gas annually to the\nCanadian border. The plan is for\nthe Consumers Gas Co. of Toronto\nto pick up the gas and move it by\npipeline to the Toronto area for\nsale to consumers there.\nThe federal government has taken\nthe position that the natural gas\nneed of eastern Canada should\nbe filled by Alberta through an oil-\nCanadian pipeline across Uie Prairies and northern Ontario. The Ontario government also- favors this\nidea because the gas will:be available to more of Ontario than the\nToronto area.\nThe federal, position at the Niagara Falls meeting will be that\n\"there la sufficient gas in Alberta\nto serve the' Ontario market without importing- American gas,\", a\nmines department official said.\nThe official added that the government believes ample supplies\nof gas will eventually be released\nby Alberta and that \"this should\neliminate any need to bring TJ. S.\ngas into this country.\"\nFederal officials have, said on\nseveral occasions that imports of\nAmerican gas into the Toronto area\nwould virtually \"kill\" the economic feasibility of developing an\nall-Canadian route for Alberta natural gas.\nHEARING CONTINUE\nThe mines official said the current controversy over importing\nAmerican. gas would be resolved\nif Alberta took action sobn to permit gas to move east. However,\nhearings on applications for licen-\n,o*-DRAW DRAPES\nPRICED FOR\nSPECIAL SAVINGS!\nA Thrilling Value that the budget-wise\nhome-maker will not want to miss! Gdme in\nto see us early and let us take care of all\nyour drapery needs for the Fall and Winter\nmonths. Select yours from a distinguished\nassortment of fine quality fabrics, in eolors\nand designs to please the most discrimindt>\nIng shopper. Each one will be lined with\nthe best quality lining and tailored to fit\n(rods are not included in this offer). 30\npatterns to choose from. Sterling Special,\nI width. Pair\n$26.98\nIV. widths, pair  2,3- widths, pair\n$19.98  $67.98\n2 widths, pair 3 widths, pair\n$54.98 $79.98\n81\" finished.'\nBUDGET PLAN TERMS MAY BE\nARRANGED     '\nFOR 7 DAYS ONLY\nSTERLING Home Furnishers\n441 Baker St.\nPhone 553\nces to export.Alberta gas still are\ncontinuing before .the'Alberta petroleum and natural gas conservation board, and are hot expected\nto conclude'fo rat least two weeks,\nThe report said!, the, board'a findings ion whether the province had\nsufficient reserve for export,would\nnot be ready for about six weeks.\nAnOthei* report, said recently that\nPremier Manning waa expected JO\nannounce in a week or ao Alberta's\nWillingness to permit its surplus gas\ntj be piped east.\nThe mines department official declined to comment on possible fed-\noral moves to prevent the Toronto\ncompany importing American gas.\nHe said there it legislation- -to\nstop'the export on the statute books\nto preyent it being imported; tine\nsuggestion is IHatOttawa cplild curtail imports by orderJn-council or\nby and act of Parliament.\n\"We hope that wo don't, have to\noppose imports of American gas,\"\nthe official said. \"There is no gas\navailable for movement' east at\npresent. But it Alberta declares a\nsurplus, and there is good reason to\nbelieve she will\u2014we hope the eastern market will be served with Alberta gat and that nothing Interferes with that\" .\nOfficials said the Toronto -gas\ncompany does not need to apply\nto the board.iof transport commissioners lor permission to build a\nline from the Harder in Ontario to\nthe Toronto area. However, the ofr\nficials said such a line would have\n,to be licensed by the Ontario government.\nFOUR POMPANIES...     7777\nThe Alberta conservation bdard\nis hearing applications by four\ncompanies for a permit to export\ngas.' Once a permit is granted-the\nrecipient company! must be incorporated by ah act pf Parliament\nbefore applying to the board 'ot\ntransport commissioners for authority to build a pipeline\nCALGARY (CP)-The Alberta\npetroleum and natural gas conservation board wouldSlnot confirm\nor deny Tuesday^ a report that\nTrans-Canada. Pipelines Ltd. would\nsoon be awarded a perrplt to export gas from the province to<_ast-\nern Canada. ,7'\nI. N. McKlnnon, chairman of the\nthree-man board, said'he would not\ncare ot make any comment at the\npresent'lfine. \"' '\"* \".'\u25a0\" *\nThe Alberta conservation hoard\nhas already indicated that.there is\nenough surplus in Alberta to allow\nexport.      .:\u25a0.:'\/'.\nIn the meantime.the gas hear-\nWide Search for Mrs. MacLean . . .\nMissing^\nCMfoeti^ (0xetia\nGENEVA (AP)-Pdlice said Wednesday the Amerlcpn-born Wife and\nthree children of the missing British\ndiplomat Donald MacLean have\ndisappeared. .They have not' been\nseen since Friday.   ''.-'\nBritain has called officially for a\nRestless Labor\nThreat in U.K.\n; LONDON, (Reuters)\u2014 Demands\nfor higher wages 'by mora- than\n5,0,00,000 British workera ire threatening' Prime Minister Churchill's\ngovernment with its first major\nlabor'crisis since lt took office two\nyiare ago, -\n-Compared with the labor party's\nsix-year reign - after tha Second\nWorld War; the Conservative government has been relatively free of\nlabor trouble despite\/its policy of\nkeeping wages os low as possible\nto prevent prices soaring. , 7\nPRICES BATTLE ,\n'-But.'labor is getting restless.\nUnion leaders claim the cost-of-\nliving is crippling the country's\nlower-paH workers. The price of\nbuttfr has, risen 20 cents a pound\nover the last two years, cheeSe 24\ncents, meat eight cents, and flour\nsix cents..\nAgainst this background of rising\nprices, worker! in engineering,\nshipbuilding, rill and ioad transport, mines, electrical enterprises\nand building have either presented\nclaims for more: pay or are preparing their demands.\n' The state-run railway executive\nhat rejected demands for a 15 per\ncent increase by 620,000 railroad\nworkers. The rail unions now will\nnegotiate at a higher level. .\nMINEW0RKER8 MEET\nLeaders\"of the mlneworkers are\nmeeting; to draw up wage demands\nfor 400,000 lOwer paid' workers.\nAbout 4,500 electrical workers in\nkey Industries have been on strike\ntor two weeks to support demands;\nby 40,000 electrlciahs.      -   .\nDock workers have reported a\nwage dispute to the labor ministry\nfor mediation following a rejection\nof wage demands by 77,000 men.\nClaims by 150,006 bus drivers and\nconductors are already under consideration. ...\nLeaders of 1,125,000 building\nworkers meet later this, month to\ndraw up a combined wages policy\nand 3,000,000 engineering and shipbuilding employees are awaiting a\nreply to their demand for a 15 per\ncent wajge increase.    ,      ,.\nThough labor is opposed to using\niti strength for political -purposes,\nwidespread industrial unrest this\nwinter could bring about early general elections. It is widely rumored\nin, labor circles Churchill has. already decided on a spring elec--\ntion in a bid to, Increase his slender\nparliamentary majority;\nSTUDENT EXCHANGE PLAN\nMONTREAL- (CP),\u2014 A itudent\nexchange program between Israel\nand Canada will be sponsored by\nCanadian Hadassah, a Jewish women's organization, to enable undergraduate science students in Canadian universities and ' students of\nthe Weizmann Institute ot science\nat Hebrew University in Jerusalem\nto exchange places for a year.\nings here are continuing and three\ncompanies are still competing for\nexport rights. They' are Trans-\nCanada, Western Pipelines Ltd.,\nand Mid-Continent Pipelines Ltd;\nCounsel tor these firms Say lt is\nexpected that all evidence will\nhave been presented- to the board\nwithin two weeks.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nJ-\nNews 6f tlm Day\nRATES! Me line, \u2022We line black\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10\u00b0,\nface type; larger type ratet en\ni discount for prompt payment\nSmartest hats iti town at\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nNelson Garden-Club-meeting in\nW.I, RoOm, Civic Centre, Fri., 18th.\nGuns For Rent\nJACK BOYCE'MEN'S SHOP\nFor Sale\u2014One Hartman Langmuir\nfull-size wardrobe trunk, and one\nViking mantel radio. Phone 1478.\nSaturday, Sept. 19, Pythian tag\nday, on behalf of Cerebral Palsy\nchildren.    7\nTrade your old tires at\n8UPERI0R MOTOR8\nTire Department  '\nDurham's rock hard-water putty\nfor lOW uses. Nbn-shrink. 45c.\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY\n- LsA. to F.O.B. Public--Partner\nWhist Drive,, 8 p.m, tonight. \u2014\nEagles Hall.       '\u2022\nAPPLE PICKING BAGS ON SPECIAL. REGULAR $4.10, NOW $2.30.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\n.Pint Presbyterian Church (2nd\nAnniversary Dinner Monday, Sept.\n21st, 6:30 p.m. Tickets $1.00.\nRuffled mirquitette' dOtt-d cur-\ntaint, 95x00, at the     :,\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nBlazers for girls and boys, $2.05\nand up. All sizes. .\n... EBERLE'S JUNIOR SHOP. .....\nJust Received! All metal combination cake, decorator and cookie\nmakers. Well made, inexpensive,\neasy to use. - HIPPERSON'S.\nHunting and Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyca Men's Shop.\nSt. Matthew's, South Slocan.\nSunday next \u2014 9:00 a.m.\n*    THE CHICKEN INN\nSteak and Chicken our specialties.\n'7,.4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\n210 Venjon St - Phone 396-Y.\n\u2022I   a_ __\nLUMBER SPECIAL \u2014 Cull lumber, $10.00 per load. Alio yard clearance of remnants. ,\n:  kootenay Forest Products,\nIf BUTTERFIELD cant fix it\nthrow It away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prlcea.\u25a0\u2022\u25a0.-. .y.i\nWe are prepared to. take, on any\nbuilt-up or asphalt roofing job.\nSide.wall shingles and shakes. All\ninquiries promptly attended to. I\nD. B. Merry Lumber Co., Trail\nAPPLICATORS\nFor Saie-7-First time offered \u2014\nmust sell\u2014near schools and bus \u2014\n3-bedroom home. Living room, dining room, kitchen, full basement,\nautomatic hot water heat. Box\n1483,. Dally Newi.\nDixon auto wash mops in stock\nagaiin. Metal tube fastens to your\ngarden hose and you can quickly\nahd easily wash your car, windows,\nOutside walls, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nSpeoial: Large selection ot reconditioned oil heaters. All makes\nand sizes from $45 up.\n. We buy and sill new end used\nfurniture. '\u2022\u2022\"'\u25a0 \u2022':. '\u25a0'\u25a0\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413-HaUSt\nEurope-wide search tor the family\nof the man who Is believed to have\nskipped behind the Iron Curtain.\nIn London, William Didsale foreign office press officer,, said it was\na \"matter , of speculation as' to\nwhether Mrs. MacLean had left to\njoin her husband,-who vanished in\nMay, 1951.\"\\ ',\"-.\nMrs. MacLean, 37, a native ol Chicago, and the three MacLean children\u2014two boys,' nine and seven,\nand a two-yead-old daughter\u2014had\nbeen living here with her mother,\nMrs, Mellnda Dunbar, for tome\nmonthi,\nHAVE NO TRACE  <\nRldsdale told a crowded London\npress conference two security men\nwere rushed to Geneva the,moment Whitehall got word Monday\nthat the woman add her children\nbad  vanished  without a  trace,\nGeneva police chief Charles\nKnecht said Mrs. MacLean and the\nchildren left home Friday, by, car\nfor a three-day outing with -friends\nnear Montreaux and had'not returned, Mrs. Dunbar did not report\nthe family missing-until they failed\nto return after the weekend. '\nImmediate consultations between\nBritish; authorities and the Geneva\npolice rilled out the possibility Mrs.'\nMacLean was Involved in an auto\naccident,\nBRITAIN CALL8 POLICE\nBritain at once called upon the\npolice of Italy, Austria, West Germany and France\u2014countries id'\njoining Switzerland\u2014to search for\nthe missing family.'\nMcLean' and Guy Burgess, another British diplomat, crossed from\nEngland to France, In 1951, ostensibly on a holiday, and vanished. '\nIt'has been widely assumed >they\neither; slipped behind the Iron Curtain or. wire kidnapped by Com\nmunist agents and taken, there,. No\nword has.been heard of them since;\nKnecht issued an urgent warn-:\ning to all Swiss frontier posts, police;\nstations, hotels and garages to keep\na close lookout for Mrs. MacLean\nand her. .children, and Issued detailed-descriptions.\nLIVED IN SECLUSION\nSince the publicity over her husband's disappearance, Mrs. -Mac-\nLean and the. children.had-llyed\nmuch of the time in seclusion, in;\nFrance and Switzerland.\nIn London, her brother-in-law\nAlan MacLean said he had been informed of her disappearance but\nadded, \"I don't know where they,\nare.\"\nControl of the many thousands\not cart crossing the encircling'\nFrench-Swiss frontier li comparatively lax.\nNo records are kept and definite\ninformation that Mrs. MacLean had\ndriven into France might depend\non the possible observation and\nmemory of an individual frontier\nguard.\nKnecht said Mrs, MacLean had\nnot been under any .kind of police\nsurveillance or protection since her\narrival here, early in 1953.\n\"She always maintained that she\nhad received no news whatsoever\nfrom her husband,\" Knecht de,\ndared. , ,, .- \u25a0 \u2022\nHer two boys, Fergus and Donald; were due back at school Tuesday after their summer holiday.\nat the STAR\nEllison's Best Flour\n24 lb. sack\n49 lb. sack\n$1.8*\n$3.54\nEJAO0UI. (bBpahhwnL\nU Bake Bread Mix ^..or.,^.^: 3,9*\nSeedless Raising S\u00a3^\"$S\". ...._ 43*\nBa'kersClioedate^Xc'ak^L,\t\nCake Mix Robin Hood, ChocoltUe or White;\nMargarine J^ : _\t\nBakers Cocoa Lb. tin ....\u201e\t\n. White Beans ISfiikt. ..I...:\t\nCheese, Kraftufrtkt. <!;.\u2122\u2122*!..i\u201e\nKraft Dinner\n45f\n29*\n W\n.......: 65*\n 29*\n$1.13\nfpktaJP\nCampbell's Soup K \u201e It.n,37*\nTomato Ketchup Wffie :....:|for 59*\nKddotO Figs  _$,Voz. tins, each ....1.   59*\nFruit Salad %\u00b0\u00a3$nS , 34*\n'Nabob;l)esleiti:i*? \u00a3\u00a3% m :5*\nPo^Food^^S; $\u00abin.;23*\nG3   Large-\".!.'.  3 bo*: ctn. 29*\nMotctr- ReaBird'\nMIX Giant Size Pkt .7..\t\nSoapFlakes::^^^\n67*\n87*\n1(VhaL 0\u00a3paAimatL\nPot'Roasts of Beef S^n!,,^ue 49*\n>ot Roasts of Beef S_\"oU^:..!^... 39f.\nHomade Sausage SJ-^'^\t\n39*\nTasty Veal Patties Lb 39^\nBoneless Veal Roasts Lb      55^\nFresh Salmon Slices _b. 57.0\nfljuidtuji. OispvdmjnL\nOkanagan Peaches^f8 ^;1;     $2.29\nTatle Peaches ^^ \u2022\u201e. 3,b. bskt. $$$\nBartlett Pears ;   3ib.bskt.45*\nMaglio PlumSFaAout Variety; .... 3lb. bskt. 45*\nItalian Prunes 0kanagan)No.,,.Cm    $1.79\nCantaloup Vine j,ipened. Lb     13^\nOranges Sunkist; \u2022 ;;   \u201e..;..;7,b. bag 790\nCauliflower Snow.WhlteHead8. Lb 17^\nCarrOtS rre\u201e Bunches;  3 for 25*\nTumipS local, Excellent Cooken;' 5 lbi- 25*\nPrices Effective Thurtday, Friday, Saturday\n* STAR *\n488 Baker St.\nGROCERY\nH. A. D. GREENWOOD\nPhone 10\n_Kai\nNo matter how much yoa twist tnd -\ntoil in your sleep, your Harvey.\nWoods Sleepsult stays comfottoble.\nEven after'repeated laundering, the\noriginal fit and comfort of the garment remaio. That's because of the\nace that goes into the making and ,\nof the fine Interlock and Jersey,\nfabrics used. Thiy never need iron,\nlog. Choice of'tailored collar or\ncrew neck. H_tv'ey-Wobdsoo.|)utton\nSleepiulta come in many styles tnd\nColours for men tnd boys.; 7 -'\nRsmsmbm BtrDsf-Wruds\nere alio famous for \"kroy\nwool socks that don't\nshrink... and for so many\nstylos ojundtratar.\n\u2022MUat'd\nEmory's Ltd.\n\u25a0THB MAN'S STDHJE''\nPHONE 31 BOX 100\nFOHT WHi-UM (CP) -'About\n$300 damage was done to a motor*,\ncar driven by Godfred, Madieil\nwhen it crashed into a moose .that\njumped oh to the,highway na\nhere, The moose, apparently t\nhurt, strolled off into the fields.\ns-s\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED _ REPAIRED  \u25a0'-' ;\n, ) RECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n511 FRONT 8T.     '    PHONE 63\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAsNlNQ\nMedical Artt Building\nSuite 206 Phont 141\nHoigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 327\n570 Baker St\n9\nHavt tht Job Oont Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountanti\nAuditori'      '\n571 Baker St Phont 235\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \/- BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCK8\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n503 Baker St\nMed. Arts Bin.\nPHONE 2\u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPreaeriptiona\n'.'. Phone 26\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat tha  \"\nNelson Upholstery\n409'Hail 8treet Phono 145\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n- \"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515.kootenay St       Phone $61\n'      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n_\n\u25a0\n'\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_1953_09_17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0427644","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":"1953-09-17 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1953-09-17 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"Nelson Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}