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Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" y-y\nTyphoon Toll May\n(Mount to 2,000\n90 MPH Winds Ravage Japan, Central\nIndo-china; Damage in Millions   .\nTOKYO (AP)\u2014Asiatic typhoons during the weekend\nUed from 115 to possibly 400 persons in Japan and from\nUppO to 2000 in central Indo-China.   ,\nI'    The latest count of Japan's typhoon was 115, dead,\n288 missing and 259 injured, <\nW     The governor of central Indo-China said nearly 1000\njfere known dead there, and that the toll may reach 2000.\nI    \"Homeless persons were counted in the hundreds of\nlousands both in Japan and Indo-China.\n|v'.   While .the 90-MPH windstorm which struck southern\njapan broke up Sunday out in the North Pacific, U.S. ser-\nIvicemen pitched in to aid stricken cities.\nis;      The U.S. Army estimated damage to its Camp Otsu\nliiear Kyoto at nearly $2,000,000.\nj The typhoon took its heaviest toll around Japan's\nIjiiland sea. Property damage ranged into uncounted millions\nKg dollars.\nI' In Indo-China, where there has been- a long, bloody\n(conflict between French troops and Communist-led Viet-\nJBiinh, aerial reconnaissance disclosed that Typhoon floods\njdamaged areas held by both sides. Vinh, the Vietminh ad-\njjninistrative capital and military base, was damaged\nverely.\nftSt'Red China Trade\nShowing Big Increase\nBy JOHN A. 8CALI\nWASHINGTON (AP) -\u2014 Foreign\nOperations Director Harold Stas-\nsen reported a big increase in\ntrade between the West and Communist China Sunday, but asserted it was not necessarily harm-\ntill.\nAt the same time, he said there\nbat been   \"considerable   improvement\" in the Free World't, drive\nstop strategic   materials   of  a\nr-making potential from mov-\nig to countries behind the Iron\nCurtain.\nBtassen's statement was contained in a 06-page report to Con-\ngress on world-wide -enforcement\nof strategic trade controls under\ntbt U.S. Mutual Defence Assistance Control Act.\nWhile reporting an increase in\nnon-strategic trade, Stassen said\n{he Western nations have tightened\nshipping controls and expanded\ntbe-: list of banned strategic items,\nespecially on goods bound for\nChina.\nattssen disclosed thtrt non-stra-\ntegic shipments to the Chinese will\nnearly \u00a70 per cent higher1 than;\nif trade continues at the1 same\nStassen's report, which' covers\nfirst six months, of the year,\nestimated non-strategic shipments\n0 China would total around $375,-\nJOJOOO this year against $287,000,-\n\".>._.- 1932.   r     77\n'The 1958 increase was not due\na relaxation of Strategic trade\nbnttrols,\" he emphasized. \"Tshe\nStrategic embargo was being, tight-\npied in the first half of 1953, not\njjelaxed. The increase was in non-\n(irategic goods.;;- y\nI.S, A'd to felgium\n%A-HINGTOT W) - Belgium\nand the United States Saturday\n\u2022jirere reported near agreement on\nJ proposal under wtS'ch the U.S.\n\u2022would assist Belgium to develop an\natomic power plant for  industrial\nSuch a step would mark a new\nShase in U.S. atomic policy, but\n; is understood that the United\nftates has already given Belgium\ntome assurances with which key\nmembers of Congress iare sympathetic.\n'\u25a0'' Belgium, through its control of\nthe Belgian Congo in Africa, has\nbeen the chief U.S. supplier of\nthe raw material of atomic weapons and atomic energy\u2014uranium.\nTop U.S. officials are known to\nfeel that it is time Belgium's own\ndesire for some return other than\nmoney payments be satisfied\u2014and\nwhat Belgium wants is the development of atomic energy as an\neconomically - practical source of\npower.\nMAR_ATE, England (CP) - An-\nneurin Bevan, leftwing Labor leader, says the Western world and especially the United States should\navoid the use of \"tougher diplomacy\" to exploit recent signs of\nchange and stress in the Soviet\nUnion.\nIn a curtain-raiser speech Sunday night before 3000- Labor Party\ndelegates gathered for the party's\n52nd annual convention, the fiery\nWelsh orator said:\n\"The time has come when a sincere and sustained effort should be\nmade to bring about an agreement\nwith the Soviet Union.\"\nBoth Bevan and party leader\nClement Attlee, spokesman for the\n.moderate wing of the party, called\nfor party unity during conference\ndeliberations which begin officially\ntoday and continue through Friday.\nTbe Bevanites still want more\nsocialism in British industry: -while\nI\nBevan Against\nSsade', unions 7r;asjave.;,called for'a\n\"go elow\" polity 'ah'', so'cialisfti.\nThere are bound to be clashes on\ndomestic affairs but in the foreign\nfield the moderates have picked up\na good deal bf the Bevanite line\nthat blames much of the world's\nill on U.S. foreign policy.\nAttlee told the rally; \"There is no\nsplit here ... we must always re-,\nmember our movement is not Just\na political party but we are a\nbrotherhood.\"\nBevan, who sat at the same table\nwith Attlee on the platform, said:\n\"We'll hammer out our differences,\nreach agreements and unite behind\nthose agreements.\"\nNow Drug Cure\nFor Bad Temper\nOKLAHOMA CITY (AP) \u2014 The\nOklahoma Medical Research Foundation announced Saturday it has\ndeveloped a new drug which apparently furnishes a hiental cushion for modern civilization's tensions, depressions and frustrations.\nDr. Max Huffman, chief of the\nfoundation's organic chemistry section, said the drug is pregnenolone\nmethyl ether which is synthesized\nfrom Mexican wild yams or soybeans.\nHuffman reported researchers\nhave found the medication, taken\nin doses of one-to three teaspoon-\nfuls one to four times, a day, has\nbrought relief to patients suffering\npersistent irritability, anxiety, restlessness, exhaustion, depression\nexplosive temper outbursts, chronic\nworry or insomnia.\nLIBRA 'fliv\n|-VICTORIA. F.^C.'lB'BB ^  li\nQbSri:\nVol. 52\n300 YARDS FROM STORE\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Continuing cool with\nshowers. Winds light. Low and high\nat Cranbrook md Crescent Valley,\n35 and 65.\nCANADA-MONDAY MOANING, SEPTEMBER 28,1953\nNo. 133\nYouths Hhd I>^i*iii\u00a3\nBy Track, Power Pole\n' ' Sixteen sticks of dynamite, fastened,to form a crude\nl\u00bbmb, were dug from the base of a power pole near Taghum\nby RCMP Saturday night. Sunday morning, 14 sticks of\nexplosives -were discovered on a railway track in the same\nana.' .\ntasses\n. The dynamite was discovered by\nTagljum boys playing ih the .area.\nSaturday evening about seven\no'clock, the boys, playing in a field\nsprite 300 yards from the Rlverview\nService Station,-saw two fuses poking from the grdun'd at the base of\nthe West Kootenay Power and Light\nCompany pole. Walter Stoochnoff\nand Sidney WappI? told an older\nWapple boy, Kenneth, who rushed\nto the service station. The owner,\nMr. Nixon, notified RCMP.' The\ndynamite was dug up and destroyed\nby RCMP.\nSaturday morning, Kenneth and\nhis brother\u201e Sidney found a second\nbomb made of dynamite placed on\nthe CPR Kettle Valley line in the\nsame area. The dynamite was-buried under the track.\nWest Kootenay's power line is\nsituated between the Southern\nTransprovincial highway and the\nCPR tracks at that point The pole\nunder which the dynamite was\nfound is in a clearing.\nRCMP praised the Taghum\nyouths for their alertness and\nspeed in notifying authorities.- Had\nthe boys been unobservant, the\ndynamite might have gone undiscovered.\nTwo (oast Fires\nIn Same Vicinity\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Two\npremises flamed -within two blocks\not each other here Saturday and\ndamage to one may go as high as\n$300,000.\nWright's Canadian Ropes on congested Granville island was gutted\nby flames that sent black creosote\nsmoke curling over the city's industrial district.\nOfficial damage estimate was\nlacking, but unofficial estimates\nranged up to the $300,000 figure,\nThe second fire broke out in an\napartment block nearthe scene of\nWorkmen , high - atojL the new\nGranville bridge, in construction\nalmost directly over the scene of\nthe Wright fire, said the premises\nseemed to explode and fold inward\nfrom the top.\nWind carried the choking clouds\nseaward while a fireboat attacked\ntpbm the north, pumper trucks\nblasted sea water from' the west\nand other fire halls responding to\nthe two alarms surrounded the\npremises on the west and south\nsides.\nThe flames were brought under\ncontrol within an hour after the\nfirst alarm sounded. Stored in the\nbuilding was a supply of tar-impregnated oakum and barrels of oil\nused in the making of ropes and\ncables. '\nTwenty-five persons fled the\nnearby apartment fire and two stayed behind.\n\u25a0 The two were Mr. and Mrs. E. A.\nKidd, who live on the grpund floor.\nMr. Kidd was.ill with pneumonia\nand a doctor treated jiim while\nsmoke poured through\/the apartment and staircases were turfted\ninto waterfalls.\nWOULD MAKE BLOOD\nDONATIONS   COMPULSORY\nWASHINGTON (AP)\u2014Representative Louis Heller (Dem.-N.Y.)\nsaid Sunday he will introduce a\nbill in the next Congress requiring\nall adults in the U.S. to donate a\npint of blood to the American Red\nCross. He said this would be a\nmethod of building up a huge\narsenal of blood for use in emergencies. *\nA MODEL PLAN for low-cost housing hat\nbeen In operation In Hamilton, Ont, for the pttt\nyetr. Residents of Roxborouah Ptrk, shown In\nthis air view, pty from $68 to $68 a month In rent.\nEaoh family hat at least two children and the\nhousehold does not htve an Income more than\nsix times  greater thin  tht  rent The  project,\nthough developed with government supervision,\nreceives no subsidy. Only one tenant has moved\nfrom1 the project so 'far, and most residents are\nSulck to point out they are escaping the- 100-\n. ollar-a-month rent demanded'In Hamilton proper\nfor similar accommodation. ,      ,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHitler's Servants,\nGeneral Reported\nSoviet Prisoners\nCAMP FRIEDLAND, Germany\n(AP)\u2014Repatriated German prisoners of war reported Sunday three\nformer servants of Hitler and 14\nformer German army generals are\nstill in a Soviet camp in the Ural\nmountains.\nThe three Hitler aides, long-believed in the West to be dead, include Hitler's valet H. Linge, who,\nthe freed prisoners said, helped\nburn the Fuehrer's body after his\nsuicide in the air raid bunker of\nBerlin's Reich chancellory.\nThe others were described as\nPlight Capt. Hansl Baur, Hitler's\npersonal pilot and a personal adjutant, \u25a0 Guentsche. \u25a0 ,'f .'\nThe prisoners \"said that the Hitler aides and German generals\nwere being held in camp. Pevpj\nUralsk in the Ural mountains.\ns\\mong other prominent prisoners reported held there was the son\nof Arthur Seyys-Inquart, tbe N|_t\nleader and former Austrian chancellor who was hanged for war\ncrimes in Nuernberg in 1948.\nAnother was a member of the\nfamily of the former German arm\nament king, Alfried Krupp, the\nfreed PoWs said.\nThe generals included several infantry division commanders and\ntank experts.\nIgnore Priests'\nAdvises Tito\nRUMA, Yugoslavia (AP)-rrPresi-\ndent Tito, shied away frpm.any\nreference; to- Yugoslavia's .quarrel\nwith Italy; ovex.the future of Me?.te\n'^.he'--ie^va^~'a-rnajbr-'.fab^ti\nSundey4 before a crowd pttldelly\nestithate'd at more than 250,000 persons.\nDespite advance reports he would\ndeal with international affairs and\nparticularly Yugoslav-Italian relations, he concentrated on domestic\nissues, including ' agriculture and\nreligion.\nTita has demanded the internationalization of the port of Trieste\nitself with Yugoslavia acquiring\nthe surrounding area, which was\ndeclared a free territory under the\nItalian peace pact. Italian premier\nGiuseppe Pella has countered with\na call for a plebiscite to determine\ncontrol of the area.\nTito acknowledged, and deplored\nthe fact that there has been physical attack upon certain church \"dignitaries.\" He did not identify their\nchurches.\n\"Such excesses should not happen. We condemn it. We have other\nmeans to deal with-the priests-\nignore them.\"\nIn appealing to the farmers for\nsupport of Yugoslavia's agricultural\nprogram, he expressed regret that\n'in previous years a state-operated\n\"compulsory buying up, .program\"\nof basic food stuffs had been necessary. \u25a0'  - ...\n\"I did hate this program, as did\nmy colleagues, from the depth of\nmy soul. But it was necessary\ntnen.\n\"Now in agriculture, we have a\nfree system. You can sell what\nyou do not need for yourself.\"\nTO CONFISCATE EFFECTS\nCAIRO (Reuters)\u2014The Egyptian\nrevolutionary council has decided\nto confiscate ex-king . Farouk's\nmulti-million dollar assets in Egypt,\nMaj. Phloh Salem, the minister of\nnational guidance, announced early\nSunday.\nHe said the council had also decided to end its custodianship over\nthe ex-king's property. \t\n-Folio claimed ita first victim in\nthe district this year when a 24-\nyear-old Fauquier man, William\nHermann Brunner, flown into Nelson from Nakusp, died in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital early Saturday evening.\nThe young man, married, and the\nfather of one child, took a turn for\nthe worse and died suddenly in the\nrespirator as preparations were\nunder way to fly him to Vancouver.\nHis case was the third in the\ndistrict and the first of the dread\nbulbar polio which attacks the\nheart and respiratory system.\nAn RCAF Dakota landed at Columbia Gardens airport about 18\nmiles southeast of Trail with a\ndoctor, medical sergeant, and flight\nnurse Saturday afternoon.\nThey were met by Dr. H. T.\nLowe, medical health officer, and\nMisst Margaret Lattlmer, senior\npublic health nurse, who brought\nthe RCAF mercy team and their\nequipment into Nelson.       '   '\nThe patient was transferred from\nthe iroh lung where he had been\nplaced on his arrival Friday evening to the RCAF portable respirator for the trip to Vancouver. He\nwas overcome-by the disease some\ntime' later. It was planned tp\ntransfer him to \/Vancouver early\nSunday morning.\nDen TJiomson had flown the vie-\ntime to Nelson from Nakusp Friday night in the plane employed\nby the B.C. Forest Service in the\nfirst stage of. the attempt to save\nBrunner's life.\nMr. Brunner was born In Kimberley and had lived at Fauquier\nsince 1946. He serves, three years\nin the merchant navy.\nSurvivors include his wife; one\ndaughter, Lorraine; his parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. Ernest- H. Brunner, and\none sister, Arlene, all of Fauquier.\nThompson's Funeral Home is forwarding the -body to Farquler\nwhere funeral services will be held,\nMembers of the RCAF team included Dr. David Allan, medical\nSergeant Little, and Mrs. David\nAllan,  flight  nurse.\nPaving of the Castlegar airfield\nnow under way made necessary the\nlandiiig at Columbia Gardens. The\nRCAF plane, besides the respirator,\ncarries a full supply ot medical\nequipment, including: instruments\nfor emergency surgery,\n\u25a0a\"np7 drugs,\nKilted in Crash\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Dale Edward\nKehler, 14, son of Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Kehler of Marysville, was\nkilled Saturday night on the Kimberley road: when the truck in\nwhich he was riding overturned.\nHe. had been spending the evening\nin' Cranbrook with two other\nMarysville - boys and they had\nthumbed a ride home on the truck\nwhich overturned near the Mission\nRoad junction.\nHospitalized here and seriously\ninjured are Bill Carter, 14, in seri-\nous condition, and Frank McNa-\nmara, 15, with broken collarbone\nand leg, both of Marysville.\nDale was born in Swift Current\nand lived in Vauxhall until the family came here three years ago. His\nparents and a sister, Beverley, and\ntwo brothers, Jack and Bruce, survive him at home. Funeral services\ntake place at Kimberley Wednesday afternoon. ,\nBARRED BY McCARRAN\nGETS SPECIAL PERMIT\nLETHBRIDGE, Alia. (CP)\u2014Dr.\nKenneth Hisoaka, the young Canadian of Japanese origin who was\nbarred by the, American McCarran\nImmigration Act trom entering the\nUnited States to teach on biology at\nLoyola University, has been granted special permission to enter the\nU.S.\nPermission was granted Friday\non the special petition by the university. It is regarded as a special\ncase, officials said, and markB no\nchange in the policy of allowing\nonly 185 persons of Japanese racial\norigin into the country a year no\nmatter what their nationality.\nSordid Murder Spijee\nRevealed by Womian\nNEVADA CITY, Calif. (AP) \u2014\nThe jealouB loves of a convicted\nmurderer were credited Sunday by\n\"officers of this gold mining country with solving the nearly year-\nold horror mystery of a grocer\nand three cBildren, brutally beaten\nto death: s\nThe four victims, officers said,\nwere among seven persons who\ndied, because they got in the way\nof a man seeking easy money for\nhimself and. bis women.       ,.\nOne woman supplied the tipoff\nwhen she bragged how she put it\nover on another woman by slipping\noff to Reno with the killer for\nfree-spending weekend, The other\nwomen, .now held for an earlier\nkilling, cleared up everything with\na confession, tbe Nevada county\nsheriff's office announced.\nIt's a sordid story with the central figure mobster Jack Santo, 48.\nSanto how faces \u2022 death  sen\ntence for the robbefy-kllling last\nMarch of a wealthy .widow, Mtb.\nMabel Monahan, In southern California. So does his companion, Em-\nmett Perkins}, 44, and one of Santa's girl friends, Barbara Graham'.\nBut Santa's home -territory was\n.the high Sierra liimber and gold\ncountry of northern California\nwhere he spent much time with\nhis common - law wife, Harriett\nHenson, 30.\nNov. 29, 1951, * gold buyer, Andrew Coiner, was tor'ured and\nrobbed of $4000 in-'gold at Folson,\nThe. following Sec, 29, Edmund\nHansen, a gold mirier, was shot\nto death in Neva City by men\ntrying to rob him of $40,000 in gold;\nOct. 10, 1952, grocer Guard\nYoung and thrie children were\nkilled near Chester by men who\nseized more than $7000'Young had\nwithdrawn from a bank tp c\nlumberjacks' pay cheques.\nPioneer Kaslo\nLost in Midnight Fire\nKing GeorgeTHotel was Kaslo landmark.\nRules for Handling Balky\nEx\n.    By GEORGE MoARTHUR    s\nPANMUNJOM (AP) \u2014 The reparation-commission, headed byln-\ndia, was due to hand down an explosive decision covering rules for\nexplanations to war prisoners balking at returning home.\nThe ruling was expected to draw\nimmediate fire from either the\nCommunist, or the United Nations\ncommand, and possibly both because of sharp .clevage of how\nexplanations are to be handled\nThe UN command also called the\ntop-ruling military armistice commission into session to discuss\ntechnical details of the truce such\nas troop rotation. The full purpose\nof the meeting was not announced.\ni^sS^ii^ipSip^ii^{i^S\nchairman of the five-nation com-\nto Draw Fire\nmission, was squarely in the middle on the explosive explanation\nissue. Apparently the Indians have\nbeen feeling their way in. an effort\nto get a set of rules that would\narouse minimum disagreement.\nThe Communists want to conduot\nindividual interviews with the 23,-\n000 anti-Communist Chinese and\nNorth Koreans in an effort to induce them to change their minds\nand return.\nThe Allies would have a like opportunity to interview one by one\n28 Americans, one Briton and 335\nKoreans   refusing   repatriation.\nThe UN command has opposed\nindividual interviews ind urged\ngroup 'explanations in the belief\nthlt .'would, offer less chance, for-\n-\u2022^1*%. _B$et' \"threats' a.'a-ist\nthepWonera(,''7v\nNear Full-scale\nTOKYO (Heuters)\u2014-Japan has\nmoved a step nearer to having\nfull-scale fighting' forces for the\nfirst time since the Second World\nWar Sunday, with plans for 260,000\nmen under arms, jet planes and\naircraft .carriers,\n'Premier Shlgeru Yoshida and\nProgressive opposition leader Ma-\nmoru Sigemitsu agreed Sunday on\na long-range defence plan to increase the \"national safety forces.\"\nIt is intended primarily to build\nup Japanese defences to compensate for the gradual reduction of\nUnited   States   forces   in   Japan.\nUnder her constitution, Japan is\nnot allowed to have fighting services as such. But the present \"security\" forces are organized and\nequipped in such a way that they\ncould quickly be developed into a\ndefence force.\nThe security forces now number\nabout 110,000 men, equipped with\ntanks, bazookas and artillery and\nsmall naval Vessels.\nThe agreement calls for a \"juji\"\nself-defence, force of 250,000 within\na year.\nThe newspaper Asahi recently\nforecast this increase, and said the\nnew forces will have 1400 planes,\nincluding 300 jets, and 170 ships,\nincluding 18 frigates and 50 landing\nships being leased to Japan by the\nUnited States.\nQueen Back from\nBalmoral Holiday\nLONDON (AP)\u2014The Queen flew\nback to fog and rain-swept Lon-j\ndon Sunday from her summer holt*\"\nday in Scotland.\nLarge crowds braved the rain to\ncheer the Queen who arrived after\nthe worst of a heavy fog had\ncleared.\nThe Queen returned to deal with\ndetails of preparations for the\nforthcoming Commonwealth tour\nwhich she will undertake with the\nDuke of Edinburgh. Other members of the Royal Family are still\nin Balmoral Castle.\nPAPER WORKERS TO\nTAKE STRIKE VOTE\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A strike\nvote will be held,in the British\nColumbia pulp and paper industry\nfollowing- rejection of a councilia-\ntion board award by the International Brotherhood of Papermakers\nand the International Brotherhood\nof Pulp, Sulphite and Paper Mill\nWorkers.\nH. L. Hanson, union international\nofficer, said Saturday, that mora\nthan \u2022 4000' workers had turned\ndown the board award recommending a four-cent-an-bour pay\nincrease.\nLady Patricia\nEnds 3-Week Tour\nOf Canada\nMONTREAL (CP)-Lady Patricia Ramsay, whose name has been\nlinked with one of Canada's finest\nfighting units since the First World\nWar, left-here for England Saturday night following a three-week\ntour of Canada.\nLady Patricia presented colors\nto the second battalion of \"her\"\nregiment\u2014the Princess Patricia's\nCanadian Light Infantry\u2014in Calgary. On her way back, she visited\nRideau Hall in Ottawa and the\nCitadel in Quebec, where, as Princess Patricia, she spent a number\not years while her father, the\nDuke of Connaugbt, was governor-\ngeneral of Canada.\nSeven Flee From\nFlames; 3 Treated\nFor Minor Injuries\nKASLO \u2014 Fire roared:\nthrough the Kong George\nHotel here at midnight Satin--:\nday, completely destroying a.\nlandmark that has stood since'\n1893.\nSeven persons fled the flam-:\ning structure, some in night!\nattire, and three were taken:\nto hospital for treatment.\nNone of the three was seri-:\nously injured. One person was'\nhurt slightly after leaping to\nthe ground and two persons\nwere treated for shock.-\nLoss was estimated to be at least\n$80,000. The three-storey hotel con*\ntaltted about 40 rooms, and was understood to.be partially insured. All\npersonal effects were lost, including a valuable camera and film!\nand pictures taken of Germany ahd'\nAustria during travels-abroad ot\nMr. and Mrs. G. L. Laughton. Mr.\nLaughton was co-owner, with J.\nStaudacher of the hotel.\nCause of the fire had not been\ndetermined Sunday night, but investigators felt that an exploding\nfurnace was a possibility.\nThere was brief delay in turning\nin the alarm when smoke prevent,\ned anyone reaching the telephone\nin the hotel. The alarm was sent in\nalmost immediately, however, by\nFrank Carney and David Glaholra\nfrom down-town Kaslo. :\nThe stuccoed frame building did\nnot burn at once on the outside, >\nbut inflammable gas generated by\nthe flames filled it from top to\nbottom. \u2022\nThe entire inside of the structure\nwas ravaged by fire when tho fire\ncrews arrived-    - ''\u25a0\"'\u25a0\nOne woman was rescued from a\nthirdjfloor .-window-by ,tbe depart-\nm'etif ladder \"crew.        ' ~'.r \u25a0\nThe. biiiiding dated back to 1893,\nwhen it was known as the St. Pan-\neras' Inn. It was later purchased by\nReuter and Latham and the name\nwas changed to the King George\nHotel.\nSince that time, the hotel - had\nbeen under various managements\nand had been completely modernised. Kaslo residents consider it a\nserious loss for' it was the only\nhotel in Kaslo.\nU.S.-Spain Pad\n' LONDON' (Reuters), \u2014 Western\nnations Sunday welcomed the defence pact between the United\nStates and Spain, but Moscow was\nquick to me the new agreement\nas a weapon in its drive to divide\nthe Allied powers.\nTo British and French diplomatic\nquarters is wat a case of having\nyour cake and eating it too.\nBritish paper, generally saw the\npact in this light The Sunday\nDispatch bannered: \"Spain joins\nthe West front.\" The headline in\nThe People said: \"Franco signs as\nally of West.\" The Sunday Express headlined: \"U.S, brings Spain\ninto the Western defence line-up.\"\nBut- Reynolds News, a leftwing\npaper published by tha co-operative movement, took another view.\nIts 'headline was: \"America buys\nSpain for $226,000,000.\" The paper\nsaid the pact \"will turn Spain Into\na gigantic United States atom bomb\nand naval base.\"\nBRITONS SEE END OF\nSUGAR RATIONING\nLONDON (AP)\u2014Sugar rationing\nended in Britain Saturday midnight\nafter 14 years. Price and distribution controls over sugar, syrup and\ntreacle were also abolished. Meat,\nbacon, cheese and butter are the\nonly food- now rationed.\nRhodes Scholars\nLeave for Britain\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Seven Cane*\ndian winners of the 1053 Rhodes\nscholarships left for Britain Friday aboard the liner Empress of\nFrance to begin a. two-year .course\nof studies at Oxford University.\nThey included Bill Norris, Winnl*\npeg; Otto Lang, Humboldt, Sask,\nand Jim McWilliams, Victoria.\nTO SING AT QUEBEC CONCERT\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014Margaret Trn*\nman, daughter of former United\nStates President Kerry -tunian,\nwill sing here Oct, 10 in a.concert\nsponsored by Les Soirees Qassiquet\n(evening concerts), it waa announced Saturday.\nniiiiiiinHiiiiiiiimiiHiHiiiimiiiiiiim\nRussians Too\nHappy-Go-Lucky\nSays Pravda\nLONDON (AP) \u2014 Pravda,\nnewspaper of the Soviet Communist party, complained Sunday that Russians. aren't tak-\nCommunist propaganda seriously  enough.\nA Pravda editorial, quoted by\nthe Moscow radio, said ther*\nis too much wishful thinking,\ntoo much simplification, and too\nmuch of a happy-go-lucky attitude toward party education.\nOther faults in party education listed by Pravda were: A\nvulgarization of Marxism-Leninism about party history, a\ntendency toward a cult of .personality, and too little attention paid to the education ef\nworkers in Soviet patriotism.\nTo overcome all these alleged\nfaults, the editorial said, evening party schools and Leninist-Marxist universities will introduce a three-year course\nOct. 1 on \"Marxist-Leninist\nliterature and party decisions.\"-\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nAnd in This Corner...\nLA 8PEZIA, Italy (AP)\u2014Agottlnl Blggl, 58, has been sleeping\nIn a wooden coffin every night since 1933. He has'lt In his bedroom\nInstead of a bed. \"I find It more comfortable,\" he explains. \"Cant\nfall out\u2014and It's warm In the winter.\"\nDALLAS (AP)\u2014Dallas plays host this week to two conventions\nwhich just about sum up man from beginning to end: the Diaper\nService Institute of America and the National Cemetery Association.\nMANILA (AP)\u2014Pal Ping, 31. t stowaway, was pulled weeping\noff a plane which landed here Saturday from Hong Kong.\nThe tears? \"I took the wrong plane,\" ha sobbed, \"I wanted te\ngo ta Formosa te see my girl friend.\"\nmmmm^\n mammagmimtrwmetm^tt^^\n<$?35\n2 ~ NltSON DAII-Y NEWS\/MONDAY, SBPt. $|| IWS\nTONIGHT-TUESDAY. COMPLETE SHOWS AT 7.00-9.00\n\u25a0v.,.;i:'V'--''J-.fj-':i;.-;.'.'- \u25a0-' ':\"\u2022\u25a0: '\u25a0'\u25a0;\u25a0'--..\" ';     \u25a0 . \u25a0   '-.\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 7\u25a0\u25a0;\u2022'..   \u25a0 ;-.\u25a0--,\u25a0. y-yy. ,.'\u25a0-\u2022: . ' \u25a0-'.   ' i-'    \u2022 ~\u25a0-\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\nSHOWINO TONIGHT and TUESDAY\nStarting T:I0 p.m. and 8:10 p.m.\n10 MILH EAST OP NEtSON\nREX\nDWVf-IH THEATRE\n\u2022MHBROOK, B.C.\nTonight and Tuesday\ni****\"*^\nW\u00bb_$_\nItMM*\nBacks South Route\nV1CTORJA\u2014Completion of tho\nsouth*\u2122 Trans-Pfovlneta! highway\nwas urged in the Legislature Wednesday by Frank Richter (SC-SI-\nmiikameen).\nNOW PRESIDENT pf Nelion\nTeaohen' AaioOlatlon Is John\nHolden, above, eleotod a\\ a,meet-\nlng In Central eohoqi, j, tarla\nKennedy was namod vlo\u00ab.-pr\u00abil-\ndent: H, loewen, leerelaryi Ow\u00abn\nKelly, treasurer, and N, I. Mo.\nNolll,- jsviblla relations officer,\nRail Union LAs\nDemand Action\nLadles Auxiliaries to tbe CPE\nrunning trades have appealed to\nNelson and district olttsens to \"give\nfull support In ridding the Kootenay ot the Sons ot Freedom menace.\"  \u2022\n\"All employees In the running\ntrades and passengers are in danger\nof their lives when they are travelling on the trains. Their families\nas well as the men are under a\nterrific strain,\" they said at a special meeting. They deitfand \"immediate action to safeguard the lives\not our husbands, sons and families.\"\nThey ask enforcement of the legislation which has already been\npassed hy the Provincial Government and that extra guards be\nplaeed \"where required to avoid\nloss of life.\"\nFriday morning a train passed\nover 44 sticks of dynamite to which\nthree fuses were attached. The\nbomb failed to explode because the\ninner-tube rtas tied too tightly, it\nwas stated.\nAMBITIOUS CYCLIST\nHARROW, Eng. (CP) \u2014 George\nInns, as, who has only one leg,\nplanning to ride by bicycle from\nLand's End to John O'Groata in\nSeptember. The distance la about\n900 miles by road.\nGARSEkperlit\\-nfv^.;'' .-y-\nTravelling Consultant\nBritish Col-MbiH\u2014which, according to leading medical men, is always one step ahead ofthe continent in its\ntreatment of arthritic pgtients\u2014hU put int6 aftoot another\nnew .ides. The travelling consultant clinic, still in an.experimental stage, was awmed a success from the start.\nthe field In\nReading the field In the tight\nagainst CanadVi Numbtr 1 erlppw\n-narthrlt|s--Rr|tlsh   Columbia   Hll\nbe promt of its successes end Its\npace-setting ways for ft\u00bb past pf\nthe continent, Dr. Lamont Havers,\nconsultant visiting patlenta in the\nWept Kootenay, said.\nThe schedule\u2014not yet perfected\n\u2014la' tight and doctors find them-\nNor Farrell,\nEast Kootenay\nOldfimer, Dies\nAn -est Xootepay pioneer, Peter\nFarrell died at Vancouver Satiftday\nafter an Ulnesa of five waeHl. He\nwas, 78,\nMr. Farrell mads bis home In\nCranbrook from 1818 until be moved to Vancouver in JStU attar his\nretirement. He had worked for the\nCrow's Nest Pais lumber Company\nas superintendent for.their lolling\noperations, In his earlier years he\nbad been a logger on the Made-\nwaska River In Ontario. Mr. Farroll\nwas born at The Shews, near Arn-\nprlor, Ontario. ,\nFuneral services will he held at\nVancouver Wednesday.\nBesides hla wife at Vancouver,\nhe is survived by one son, John,\nof Seattle; three daughters, Mrs.\n8. P, O'Connor ef Vancouvers Mra.\nG, Shallenberger of Spokane, and\nMrs. v. L. Davles el Nelion. and\nseven grandchildren.\nThe Weather\nNelson  K  M   \u2022\nSaturday   .,  41   41   -\nKimberley     40   SO   -\nCrescent Valley   13   M   \u2022\nPentlcton     4S   SB   -\nVancouver    ,  48   US   .21\nVictoria    SO   M   .18\nPrince Rupert   42   4\u00ab   ,S2\nLos Angeles  86   70\nSpokane   46   80\nNew York   85   7*\nMedicine Hat   43   82\nCalgary  J7   86\nEdmonton   34   S8\nConvicted Freedomite Released ...\nNelson Man's Evidence\nGives \"Pete\" New Start\nPint Show 7:16 p.m,\nBach Show Approx. 2 Hours\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\nTONIOHT AND TUESDAY\n\"ABOVE AND\nBEYOND\"\nRobert Taylor,\nEleanor Parker\nShows at 7:00 and 8:10 p.m.\n. effort should ba made\nto oomplete this route,\" Richter\nsaid, \"ao that We might get the\nbenefit ot the millions of dollars\nwa now lose by having the east\nand west flow of traffic diverted\nfrom B.C. through the state \u25a0 of\nWashington.\"\nRoads and bridges and problems\nof the southern B.C. agriculturist\ncomprised the bulk of Richter's\nfirst speech to the House.\nHe said a group of ranchere\nliving near the U.S. border must\ndrive through Washington to get\nto their nearest B.C. town because\nthere is no bridge across the Si-\nmilkameen Rivtr at that point\nAppointment of a Royal'Commls-\nsion to study marketing and distribution methods of food to change\nthe \"unsatisfactory\" B.C. Natural\nProducts Marketing Act was also\nurged.\nNORWICH, England <_P) - The\n315-foot steeple on Norwich Cathedral, second highest in Britain, requires \u00a312,000 worth of repairs immediately or it faces collapse, experts have told the dean. Total repairs on the 900-year-old structure\nwill cost \u00a360,000 \u2014 double the\namount sought In a funds appesl\nIwo years ago.\nChurch Marks\n20th Anniversary\nFlowers decorated the Mission\nCovenant Church when a commemoration service was held In the\nchurch, marking its 20th anniversary, Sunday. Rev. Carl H. Peterson, Conference Superintendent of\nSeattle, attended the eservices.\n(Also see page 10.)\nEmphasis on organization of the\nChurch featured the services. Eighty\ndollars was offered towards the\nbuilding fund.\nRefreshments were served after'\nthe services, which had a large\nattendance. I\nMEN'S\nr\nUnderwea\nFor Fall and Winter\nWear\nA complete selection of\nStanfield's unshrinkable underwear, from cottons to\nfine wools, including, several new weights in athletic\ntwo-piece styles.\nGODFREYS'\nPhone\u2014270\u2014Box\nA Doukhobor is on his way to\nEdmonton to make a new home tor\nhlmaelf and his femlly after a Nelson man testified that ha hed been\n\"driven Into this by others.\"\nRobert Kidd, safety engineer for\nKootenay Forest Products, told the\nBurnaby court room where 123\nSons of Freedom are being triad tor\nparading In the nude, that \"Pete\",\nwhen away from Krestova, could\nnever he classed as a Son ot Freedom.\nBeeause of tha way lt all work,\ned out. Magistrate Graham ladner\nasked-that his full name -not be\nused, that he just ba called Fete.\nHe bad been charged 11 days ago\nwith being found nude in public.\nFour days ago ha was convicted,\nFriday, when no previous record\ncould be found, he was remanded\na week for sentence.\nIt was then that Bob came tor-\nward. Bob had been a B.C. polioo\nofficer three years ago and Friday\nhad supplied much of the evidence\nwhich sent Pete's relatives and\nfriends to prison for three years.\n\"Pete drove a 'cat' for me,\" Bob\ntold the court. \"Ha alwass did an\nhonest day's work. As long as he's\naway from Krestova, you'd never\nclass him as a Son of Freedom. I\nbelieve he was driven Into thli by\nothers.\n\"I would give this man a job\nagain at any time.\"\nHe turned to the bearded, tanned\nman and the court forgot legal\nprocedure as he walked to him,\nspeaking low.\nPhrases such as \"stand up 1 . ,\nspeak, Pete,\" and \"... tell thorn\n...\" reached the audience.\nWhen  he walked back to the1\nwitness box \u2014 a earner  ef the\ndraft   meeting   hall   where  the\ntrials were  being  held \u2014 there\nwere  tears  on   Pete's  faee.    He\nlooked from the   magistrate   to\nthe witness.\nMagistrate Ladner sent Pete to\nhis chambers \u2014 In this case' a\npantry off the hall's kitchen \u2014 to\nthink things out and wrestle with\nhis spirit.\nIt was hours later when Helen,\nPete's wife, faced the court. \"No\nrecord in this case,\" crown counsel\nJohn Farris said,   and   she    wss\nPHONE 689\"\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\ntaken to join Pete In the pantry.\nThe court was close to adjourn\nment when they were brought back\nto face It together. Bob spoke te\ntbe magistrate and the magistrate\nspoke to tbe orown counsel.\n\"I sentence you both to the time\nspent in custody,\" Magistrate Lad\nner said. For Helen, that was.one\nday since conviction, tor Pete,\ntow.\n\"He's a traitor to them now,\nsaid a reformed   Doukhobor   girl\nwho has watched the trials stace\nthey started- \"The Sons wont forget.\" .\nFor the radical sect, it Is a form\nof martyrdom to go to prison tbt\nwhat they profess are their religious beliefs.\nThey go proudly and \u2014 since they\nclaim they have broken none ot\nGod's laws which alone rule them\n\u2014they go Silently, refusing to recognize man-made law.\nSullen and al|ent, SS male Bona\nand 10 women,- dubbed enomiea of\nsociety by the magistrate, drew\ntbe maximum of three years for\nnude parading \"and I'm sorry it\ncan't be mora,\" . thd magistrate\nsaid. Twenty-seven men and 41\nwomen were remanded a week for\nprobationary reports. One man\ndrew a two-year term and two\nwomen were sentenced to one year\nin Oakalla prison farm.\nOne aged woman was given\nAne-day sentence te return to her\nSlocan Valley home where her bus\nbend lies desperately 111.\nBob it personally acquainted with\nmost Sons 6f Freedom in the Kootenay aria. He asked Some ot the\nconvicted Freedomites where oth\nera of the sect were and was told,\n\"they aren't here. They'll be down\nwith the next batch.\"\nA Freedomite from Krestova who\nhad gone to Burnaby to sit In on\nthe trials, shouted at Pete, \"you\ntraitor,\" but Pete Is on his way to\na new job near Edmonton, secured\nfor him by a parole officer.\nOf 129 Softs of Freedom charged,\n97 had bad previous convictions\nOne Freedomite, William George\nKonkln, out on parSie, has 17 convictions against him. His term Is\nnot finished until 1099. At the time!\not hit latest arrest In 1049, he wii\ngiven an indefinite sentence by Mr\nJustice W. A. Manson. When be\nwas subsequently released oft a\n$1000 bond to keep the peace, Judge\nManson told him that lt he were\negaln convicted, he wbuld be sentenced for earlier crimes.\nCfown Counsel Farris wSa l*<\nstructed to look into the Konkln\ncase lest week.\nselves lushed for time.   The object\not the travelling consultants is to\nStudy medical histories, see patients\nat tha request of the attending\nreal-ant physician and advise the\ndoctors In connection with treatment ef (he patient. This helps\nthe private* practitioner to treat the\nvarious caiei,\nBritish Columbia founded the Canadian ' Arthritis and Rheumatism\nSociety end'ita founders, Miss Mary\nPack and Dr. Arthur Bagnall, have\nworked hard to find ways and\nmeans of helping those stricken\nwith tho disease.\nBEST ORGANIZED\n\"British Columbia is best organised and does more tor arthritic\nand rheumotio patients than any\nether province In the Dominion ol\nCanada,\" Dr. Havers said here Sat-\nurday. The consultants' advice to\nthe physicians helps to get the\nbeat out of the physiotherapist, Dr.\nHavers explained. While a great\ndeal la being done for arthritic\nand rheumatic sufferers in British\nColumbia and other provinces, a\ngreat deal mere can be accomplished If funds were available,\nSuch things as research\u2014necessary\nte eventually find better and speedier treatment for petienti\u2014Is hampered by lack of funds.\nDr, Haver* began his day at the\nNelion arthritis and rheumatism\nsection ef the hospital at 8 o'clock\nin the morning. He stopped tor\njust a bite of lunch and continued\nhia Interviews and examinations\nthroughout the afternoon and evening. Again he waa on hand at\ntbe same early hour Saturday\nmorning and he worked through\nuntil the departure ef his plane.\n\"I am aurprlsed at the many\nspry young people of M and 82 In\nthis part of the country. It must\nbe a good place to live,\" Dr. Havers said.. Dr. Boyce, one ot the\nconsultants, is working In East\nKootenay, while Dr. J. Fenwick\nand Dr. C. Robinson, medical director ot the B.C. Division ot the\nCanadian Arthritis and Rheumatism Society, are consulting in the\nOkanagan and Coastal areas.\n\"It is unfortunate that wo cannot\ncover every part of the province,\nbut we did not realize how many\npatients were on hand,\" Dr. Havers\nsaid. By Saturday noon, be had\ninterviewed 43 patients in Nelson.\nIf,the consulting cllnlo'continues\nto be es successful as it has started\nout to be, careful schedules will\nbe mapped out for the'doctors.\nJ. Es MacDonald,\nOldfimer of\nDistrict, Passes\nJohn Edward MacDonald, 07, former resident of Nelson and resident\not Slocan city tar the part tive\nyean, died in Kootenay take General Hospital Saturday after a\nlengthy illness.\nHe- waa born In Charlottetown,\nPrince Edward Island, and has re.\nsided (n this district for 47 years.\nHe waa a blacksmith by trade.\nHe la survived by hla wife, two\nstepsons, Roy Caaley ef Victoria\nand Kenneth Casley of Slocan. City,\nand two stepdaughters, Mrs. A.\nCooper of Silverton and Mrs. F.\nDeGuglielmo pt Nelson.\nHe was a veteran of th* First\nWorld\" War and a member e* th*\nmmmmmmmmmm\nResearch Chief\nTo Join Canadian\nCelluloM Nov. 1\nDr, C. J, Mookenale, past president of  the  Nstlenal  ReaMrch\nCouncil whs retires as president ol\nAtomic Energy ot Canada, Limited,\nen November Is -will become associated with Canadian Chemical and\nCellulose Company. Umltsd.\nIn majtlng this announcement, M.\nW- Mackenzie, executive vice-\npresident, said that m company\nintend! fo seek authority at foe\nnext meeting of shareholders to Increase the number of its directors,\nend that time Pr, Madkennle would\njoin the board. Effective November\nI, however, Dr- Maekenale will become iclentlflc advlter fo foe com-*\npen*.      7\nBuy. 8ell, Trade the Qualified Way\nSleean City Branch ol the Canadian Legion. Funeral services wttl\nbe held in Nelson,  . \u25a0.,\n\u25a0\nARCHII BIRSE\nGUEST SMAKIR\nAT ST. RAUL'S\nGuest speaker at the morning\nRally Day service at Bt, Paul's\nUnited Church was Archie Birse;\nformer member of foe congregatM\nat s*eMnt studying tor the min-;\nlatry at vnlon College In Vanceui\nver.-Mr. Blrje's eddress centred on\n{the missionary theme and the need\nfor churches and Sunday Schools\nIn large housing development areas\nacross Canada.\nAls\u00ab assisting Rev. Q. W, Payne'\nSt foe service were foe Junior antj:\nsenior Sunday School auperinten<i\ndents, Lloyd Howarth and Leii\nChltler.\nSunday School attendance awards\nware presented to 14 children by\nMra. Leonard Catley.\nMr, Birse, who waa former man*\nager ot foe Civic Centre, and Mra,\nBirse and their two children, sis\nHvfog in New Wejtmlnster,  ;\nSII THE\nWEDNESDAY\nPAPER\nFOR\n4 BIG PAGES\nOF STOM-WIDI\nBAY\nDAY\nSAVINGS\nFISBBlng to move? Can u\nfirst Our modern vans and\nskilled movers assure a 8AFB\nimts wherever yon so. Wa\nare agents for North American Van Lines, America.\nfeeding long distance moving\norganisation. It coats no moro\nto enjoy this finer service!\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n71* Boker St.  Nelson, B.C\nPhona 13\n(David. Tl^AJbwm.\nFor Your\nPAINTING\n| PAPERHANGING\nNEEDS\nPhone 792-X. .\ns\nAny Malklns or Helm labels eligible for the \"lucky\" Fun\nContest. Enter today.\n24 Tins\nFancy 15. ox,\nApricots\nStrawberries *\u25a0*\u00bb \u00ab\nRaspberries F\u00ab\u00aby\u00ab\u00ab\nGreen Beans *\u2022\u2022>\u2022\u00bb\u25a0\u00ab\nSpinach .\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022* \u00ab\u00ab*_\nPeas '\u00ab\"\"*\u2022,i,e 3<is \u00b0*\u2014\nPeaschoicr siu *'is u- \u2014\u2014\n2 Tins\n47c\n6 Tins\n$l.3\u00bb\nfic\n$1.85\n65c\n51.19\n35c\n$1.03\n31c\n90c\n47c\n51.39\n33c\n97c\n55.25\n56.90\n$7.15\n53.98\n53.49\n55.25\n53.69\nTomato Juice \"\u2022\u25a0\u00ab\nApple Juice1\"\"\"*\"\"\u2014\nOS.\n2 Tins\n75c\n(3c\n6 Tins\n52.20\n5.1.87\n12 Tins\n$4.1)\nSi).\nUVEUER\nFRUITIER\nFLAVWR\nSHIM9Plt.(USflCi\u00a3\nANY ASSORTMENT\n3 for 29c\nT?>\nit-woe*.\nWSiSS\n.44*1\nSHIRRIPP.\npiecrust Mix-\nPackage\nJJ3W\n35c\n2 lb. pkg. 37c\nBurn's\nGolden Loaf\nCHEESE\n8 os.\n2 pkgs. 55c\nNescafe Spc. Offer fl.74\nReg. $1.99, 6 oz     I\nChicken Bouillon Cubes\nNestles\nMclNTOSH APPLES\nPRUNE PLUMS 14-lb. box\nJunior Box, Fancy.\nApprox 20 lbs.\nSweet Potatoes 1Q*\nLb      te*\nTokay Grapes       J\nCriip Lettuce\nLb.\t\nConcord Grapes\nO.K., For Jelly; S lbs\t\nlbi.\n39*\n19*\n$|.10\nJonathan Apples A       AK*\nlatin* or C6e\u201elng; ~lb. bag   **\nSunkiit Oranges 7       ft1)*\ntop Quality;    ' Ib. bag **\u2022*\nJO-., 65'\nOnions\nNo. li \t\nGENUINE, IMPORTED HOLLAND\nBulbs\nRavol Park, 25 crocue,\n25 Snowdrops, per ctn..\nAll verities of\nTulips. Per etn.\t\n69\nIdeal for forcing, low priced. King Alfred Daffodils dox..... 75c\nPEAK FREAN'S, famous imported English\nQueen's Drum:\nSweet Biscuit\nIb. 14 es. tin\nPrices Effective\nMonday, Sept. 28 to\nSaturday, Oct. 3.\n\u2022.\u25a0.:\u25a0\u25a0.:- :; .. . : i'*:.\u25a0.\u25a0    '     \u25a0\u25a0\n...\n \"\u25a0\nFOAM CQSHiONEO, smartly styled\nand comfortable as can be...\narch casuals\nas seen in\nGLAMOUR\nTHE SHOE CENTRE\n553 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 895\nill, Homes Destroyed;\nSpark Ignites Gasoline\nIT\nPresented by\nSUTHERLAND\nJEWELLERS\nBulova Dealers\n6:30 p.m. Mondays\n.CKLN\nn.\u00bb,,..-v\u00bb,.s\n\u2022l*. ..I...  ...|'s\nROCK CREEK \u2014 The Miller\nLumber Company sawmill and\nthree homes were destroyed by fire\nnear Westbridge, 10 miles north of\nhere.\nThe mill fire occurred when\nworkmen were preparing the mill\nfor operation. It had been closed\nfor several months and was to open\nMonday. Workmen were welding a\nateamboiler used to operate the\nmill when a spark from the torch\nIgnited gasoline in one of the containers.\nA nearby fire extinguisher failed\nto quell the blaze and while workmen rushed out for another, the\nfire engulfed the entire building. A\nnearby dwelling was also destroyed. The mill was Insured.\nA house owned by Zamora Forest Products and occupied by Mr.\nand Mrs. Cliff McNeil, burned to\nthe ground. Mrs. McNeil first noticed the fire and rushed to the mill\nto seek, help from workmen. The\nmen were successful in removing\nmost of the furniture from the\nhouse, but the fire spread quickly\nand was out of control in a matter\nof minutes.\nH, A. Patton,\nDies in Penticton\nGRAND FORKS\u2014H. A- Patton,\n57, who. for many years lived in\nGrand Forks, died in Penjicton\nHospital.\nBorn in Dundalk, Ontario, he\nspent 37 years of his life in British\nColumbia. While in Grand Forks,\nhe operated his own plumbing and\ntinsmith business. - -\nBesides his wife, Mildred, he it\nsurvived by two daughters, Joan of\nPenticton and Mrs. B. Grant of Yakima; four sons, David, Stan, Bill\nand Jim, and three brothers, Frank\nand Delbert of Toronto and Ray of\nDurham, Ont.\nAnnouncer Required\nby CFRN-Edmonton\nGood salary, excellent faeilitiet and staff benefits.\nSend detailed application, complete audition and\nsnapshot to CFRN, EDMONTON.\nRecord Crowds See Display\nIn RbekC^\nROCK CREEK - The An\nnual Rock Creek ancT Boundary District Fall Fair was an\noutstanding success as record\ncrowds flocked to see the\nmany, exhibits.\nC. G. McMynn officially opened\nthe fair and for the first time a\nqueen was crowned. Mr. McMynn\ncongratulated the fair board for\nthe -splendid efforts in making it\nan outstanding success. A caravan\not Board of Trade officials accompanied Queen Maxine Olson to the\nKettle Valley Fair Grounds. She\nwas attended by Princesses Jo\nAnne Cole of Brldesville and Shir\nley McClure of Midway. Master of\nceremonies was Eric Lohlein of\nOsoyoos.\nF. W< Hack of OJlver copped first\nprize for the best farm display in\nthe fair and Rock Creek Women's\nInstitute took first place with their\nWI entry. During the afternoon, the\nGrand Forks city band provided\nmusic.\nJudges were Alex Gardiner of\nPentlcton, cattle and sheep; Fraser\nCarmichael, district agriculturalist,\nhorses and swine; W. Liddicoat of\nGrand Forks Fowel; D. A. Allan,\ndistrict agriculturist of Osoyoos,\nfruit and vegetables; Mrs. O'Don-\nnell, sewing; Mrs. A. Talarico,\ncooking, and Mrs. C. G. McPhail,\nart and school handicrafts.\n60 Attend\nFilm Council\nal Trail\nParley\nTRAIL,\u2014Sixty members attending the annual West Kootenay Film Council conference in Trail enjoyed an educational and entertaining' day\nSaturday, the first of the two-\nday convention.    >\nDuring the afternoon they received instruction in a workshop\nunder the supervision of experienced projectionists. Some of the\nthings they learned Included cleaning a projector, changing fuses,\nways to correct sound, changing\nlamps and tubes and splicing film.\nA chicken \u2022dinner in the evening\nwas followed by a meeting at which\na number of interesting addresses\nwere given. Alderman F. A. Sin-\ndel, acting for Mayor E. G. Fletcher,\npraised the local group for its cooperation with City Council in obtaining films on traffic safety, sanitation and financial problems.\nRev. J. Rogers, representing the\nWelfare Society, commended the\nfilm council in operating on a small\ngrant, covering only bare necesst\nties. 'William Orr of Nelson, representing East and West Kootenay\nfor the National Film Board, gave\na report on children's programs\ninaugurated at Nelson. The programs were a great success and an\naudience of 60 at the beginning\nof the Winter season soon grew\ninto an audience of over 450.\nAn address oh the importance\not communications was' given by\nNorm Barton of UBC Committee\nreports were - heard at a Sunday\nmeeting in the City Hall.\nFined $300 on\nIncome Tax Charges\nORANBROOK\u2014Two charges of\nfailure to file income tax forms\nin 1051 were heard is city court\nhere before Magistrate Richard\nShiell Thursday against Joseph McDonald, who pleaded guilty and\nwas fined $300 and costs on each\ncharge. \\\nMver of the car which precipitate a three-car .pileup near the\ndrive-in theatre Tuesday evening,\nRobert Thomas of Parson pleaded\nguilty in district court to operating a vehicle while his ability\nwas impaired by alcohol and was\nfined $50 and costs.\nCharged under the Customt Act\nwith smuggling t revolver into\nCanada from the United States,\nLawrence Gilchrist pleaded guilty\nand was fined $50 and costs.\nFights\nBy THE ASSOCIATED PRESS\nNEW YORK\u2014James J..Parker,\n201%, Barrie, Ont., and Paterson,\nN.J., outpointed Jimmy Slade, 177,\nNew York, 10.\nRENO\u2014Edgardo Romero, 235%,\nArgentina', knocked out Junior\nPayne, -75H, San Francisco, 9.\nBROWNS' TRANSFER\nTURNED DOWN\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014The American League Sunday turned down\nthe transfer of the St. Louis browns\nto Baltimore by a vote of-4 to 4.\nThey needed six votes to approve\nthe transfer.\nCalvin Griffith, vice-president'of\nWashington Senators, said president\nBill Veeck of the Browns told him\nhe now would sell out to St. Louis\ninterests.\nKONSTANTY ASKS\nTRADE TO PHILLIES\nPHffisADELPHIA (CP) - Jim\nKonstanty has asked to be traded\nfrom Philadelphia Phillies of the\nNational League because he feels\nhe is not being given enough chance\nto pitch, lt was disclosed Sunday.\nKonstanty said that in view of\nhis pitching up to six weeks ago,\nhe thought he \"should have been\nused more during our drive for\nthird place.\"\nKimberley Presbyterian\nChurch Is Dedicated\nKIMBERLEY\u2014 For four years,\nwithout; a church building of their\nown, congregation of St.-Andtew's\nPresbyterian Church held formal\ndedication services Sunday for\ntheir beautiful new atone and concrete church on Boundary Street.\nIt has been built during the past\nfour years with money from drives\nthrough the work of the congregation and an impressive volume of\nconstruction work also volunteered\nby the congregation. It is constructed with two floors, the main building and sanctuary occupying most\nof one floor, and a club and social\nrooms in the basement.\nVery Rev. Norman D. Kennedy,\nMC, MA, DD, 1051 moderator of\nthe General Assembly of Presbyterian Churches, delivered the dedication sermon, with Rev. Norval\nG. Robertson of Creston, acting\nmoderator of Kootenay Presbytery,\nRev. William Black of Cranbrook,\nand Rev. J. M. Young of Trail also\nassisting St. Andrew's minister,\nRev. D. G. M. Herroh In the service.\nLaymen taking part were Mayor\nClifford Swan, building committee\nchairman, and David Hogg, session\nclerk,\nSt. Andrew's Presbyteflean\nChurch was established as a mission\nin 1026 by Rev. Wayman K. Roberts, now minister of First Baptist\nChurch, in Vancouver, and since\nthen there have been 17 ministers\nand students in charge. For several\nyears the congregation waB served\nby the incumbent of Knox Presbyterian Church in Cranbrook, but\nfor the past couple of years the\nsituation was reversed when Mr.\nHerron of St. Andrew's Church extended his services to Cranbrook.\nKnox Church now has Its own minister.\n, First services in the new church\nwere held in the sanctuary in February, but dedication marks going\nof the whole new building into\ncongregational service. Monday\nevening a congregational dinner in\nthe basement Church hall is being\ngiven in honor of the clerical guests\nand civic representatives.\nJ. J. O'Neill, Weil-Known Drugglsf\nIn East Kootenay, Dies al Coast\nKIMBERLEY\u2014One of East Koot-\nenay's best-known citizens, John\nJoseph O'Neill of Kimberley died\nThursday at Vancouver where he\nhad gone recently for surgical treatment. He was 65 years old.\nBorn In Ireland, he became a\ndruggist and settled in Kimberley\nabout  1014   in   its  mining   camp\nFernie Socreds\nAsk legal Bingo\nFERNIE\u2014Legalization for charity and community purposes is being sought by the Fernie constituency Social Credit Association.\nAt a meeting ot the group in\nElko, It was also decided to request\nthe transfer of. four small polls of\nthe Fernie electoral district to the\nCranbrook area.\nThe. resolutions will be presented\nto the British Columbia Provincial\nSocial Credit Convention in Vancouver late in October,\nA decision to request legalization\nof bingo was taken after delegates\nto the meeting pointed out that car\nbingo and other large prize bingo\ngames were being-operated in the\nprovince ot Alberta.\nMany people from the Birtish\nColumbia section of the Crow's Nest\nPass travel to these Alberta centres\nto play bingo. Alberta does not pro\nhibit or prosecute operators of bin\ngo games held occasionally for\ncharitable or community purposes.\nThe meeting felt that the Attorney-\nGeneral's department should, take a\nsimilar view of this Dominion legislation and that the enforcement in\nall provinces of this particular\nlegislation should be the same.\nFernie constituency residents now\ntravel to Alberta centres and assist\nthose places in the promotion of\nlooal charitable and community\nventures but; were prohibited from\noperating similar ventures in their\nown province, even though both\noperated under the same Dominion\nlaw, lt was pointed out.\nNoted tor its deep clear waters,\nReindeer Lake covers \"1765 square\nmiles on tht Manitoba-Saskatchewan boundary.   >    -\nLooking for Real\nBARGAINS?\nCorrugated Roofing\nin (3'x-1(3'x8f (3'xlO')\nused but in first class\ncondition, \u25a0\nlOe tq. ft.*\n\u2022\nUsed Mining Rails and\nMine Cart\n'     \u2022    .,'\nUsed Steel Plates\nLargo Sheets 6c lb.\n\u2022     ',\nWe have a quantity of used hot\nwater tanks whloh ara suitable\nfor culverts. Each one makes\n5 feet of pipe, with ends cut out,\n$2.00 each,\n\u2022\nAlso a quahtity of used wood\n' and coal heaters at reasonable\nprices:\nCOLUMBIA\nTrading Co.\n902 Front St.  ' Phone 1511\nNelson, B.C,\ndays. He established his own pharmacy, Kimberley Drug and Book\nCo., which had had operated continuously since then until he left\nlast week for Vancouver. He was\na lifetime Liberal and was candidate for Kootenay East constituency in 1945. He was a member of\nSacred Heart parish and-active In\nKnights of Columbus affairs. He\ntook an active part in all progressive community affairs, was a local\nsports supporter, and a member ot\nthe Chamber of Commerce and Hie\nElks Lodge.\nSurviving him are his wife, two\nsons, Dr. Jack O'Neill, John Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, and Jimmy at home; two daughters, Mrs.\nHubert Sullivan of Kinnaird, and\nMrs. Malcolm Sykes of Kimberley,\nand five grandchildren.\nThe body will be brought here\nfor funeral services Tuesday,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 28, 1953\n\u25a0PUTNAM,' former B:C. minister-of agriculture, congratulates Creston\nEall Fair high aggregate winner Mrs. C. R. Cotton. Shown here are L. W. Johnson\nof Victoria, who supervises all Fall Fairs in British Columbia, Mr. Putnam, Mrs. Cot-\nton and J. Verk-erir,, president of fee Creston 1953 Fall Fate.\u2014H. Buckna photo.\nr\nStudy and investlgatton\nhuge Celgar , Development forest\nproject in the Kootenay-Golumbia\nId \"continuing,\" Canadian Chemical & Cellulose Co. Ltd. announced.\nThe Celgar project involves\nbuilding of newsprint and' pulp\nmills, phis plants to turn out other\nlumber products, at Castlegar.\nHarold Blanche, president of\nCanadian Chemical, said at Vancouver that the three sawmills\nthat his company already owns in\nthe area are operating at slightly\nIncreased levels over lest year.\nCanadian Chemical's report showed that the company for the fast\nhalf of this year climbed out ot\nthe red and showed a net profit of\n$268,784.\nFor the last hai* ot M6B, ft Deported a net loss ot $1,087,148 and\nfor the first haft of MM \"a net, loss\nof $1,087,146.\nThe statement showed the results\nof operations at the Columbia Cellulose Co. Ltd. pulp mill near\nPrince Rupert and the Celgar sawmills, but does not include any operation at the Edmonton ohemieal\nptynt.\nMr. Blanche sgjd Columbia Cel\nl-lose operations are at a \"sa-sfaa-\ntor-y level\" and increased capacity\nfrom the planned expansion ot the\nmill Is expected to be ready by Hie\nend of the year.\nMet sales of Canadian Chemical\nfor the first half of this year were\nlisted as $0,256,188 compared with\n$0,W2i883 in the similar period ot\nNew Furnishings\nfor the old bathroom . . .\n\u2022 DESIGN       \u2022 COLOR       \u2022 SMART LINES\nThese ere available to the heme owner\net e very moderate cost.\nWith complete fixture change or perhaps a\njudicious use of aeeessories, the bathroom ean\nbe made like new.\nBring your requirements to no.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\nT. 8. JEM-SON, Manager\n351 BAKE* ST. PHONE 666\nHEAVY-DUTY\nEvery power-packed Atlas JHeavy-Duty Battery\nis guaranteed for 30 months in passenger Gar\nservice\u2014with a,Written Guarantee backed by\nImperial Oil Limited and honoured by 38,000\ndealers in Canada and the United States.\nAtlas Batteries exceed the standards set by the\nSociety of Automotive Engineers in all three important performance measurements... up to 90%\nmore life cycles\u201420% more reserve power\u201440%\nmore'starting punch... than S.A.E. standards\ncallfor! \"        \\\nGet Atlas\u2014and 'get coast-to-coast protection!\nSOLD AND SERVICED BY IMPERIAL OIL DEALERS IN\nCANADA AND HONOURED BY MORE THAN 38,000\nDEALERS  IN  CANADA   AND  THE  UNITED  STATES\nIMPERIAL\n\u20acsso\nDEALER\n'  : . ; -\n mmmw*m^mi\n- Established April 22, 1002*\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n266 Baker Street,   Nelson,   British Columbia,\nAuthorised as Second Class Mall,\nPeat Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nMonday, September 28, 1953\n\"9\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' : 1\u2014\u2122  i   I.., -I. i . .     i    \u25a0\nSafer Industry .\nMakes Safer Homes\nAll forest industries have'made\ngreat strides in improving their safety\nrecords over the past decade. Much\ntime and energy has been spent to\ncontrol the heavy drain of human suffering and the crippling effect that\naccidents could have on the Province's\nproductive capacity.\nIa 1947 the accident frequency rate\nof the pulp and paper industry was\n30.86, but by steady, yearly gains it\nhas been reduced to 14.80 for the year\n1952.\nToday every man in the forest industries receives an education in safety. Much of this education and habit\nis carried home, resulting in his home\nbeing a safer and happier place to live.\nThe forest industries are the life-\nblood of our Province, producing 54\ncents out of every dollar. Therefore,\nforest industries safety week concerns\neveryone.\nAlthough every week is safety\nweek In the forest industries of B. C,\nthe special w\u00abek of September 28 to\nOctober 2 has been set aside to draw\nattention to safe living.\nCarnegie Hall Concert\n' Another Stimulant\nTo Canadian Advance\nIn the music world of this continent, Carnegie Hall has long signified\nan objective. To appear there means\nto have \"arrived\"\u2014in the sense of\ngaining good auspices to appear before\nan. accepted jury. The six Canadian\ncomposers whose works will be performed there October 16 are to be congratulated.\nTwo hundred Canadian works were\nsubmitted to the Selection. Committee\nfor the Carnegie Hall concert. Mr. Leopold Stokowski, who will conduct the\nconcert, in announcing the winners\nsaid that \"the best music that Canada\nhas to offer ranks with the best that\nour country, and possibly the best that\nany country in the world, is producing\ntoday.\"\nWith one exception the chosen composers are Eastern Canadians, and\nthree are French Canadians, lending\nemphasis to the leadership our copartners hold in the musical arts nationally. The sixth is Dr. Healey Wil-\nlan, English-born composer of the Coronation Suite.\nBut whether the works were the\nproducts of East or West, Canada will\nbe all ears when the stimulating Carnegie Hall concert goes over the airwaves October 16.\nLETTERS T0\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters to tht tdlter on any topic ef\ngenulnt Interest trt welcome If thty trt\nbrltf, teeurtte tnd fair, No letter will* bo\nInserted in whole, ar In part, oxoopt over\ntht signature tnd tddrtti ef tho writer.\nUnsolicited correspondence cannot bo returned,\nDefenders Role\nReordained\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014In the Nelson News of Aug. 28 I\nread the very fine article, \"Common Heritages\", end I would ask, Mr. Editor, are we in\ndanger of losing, temportrlly, the Law of\nMoses, the Sermon on the .Mount; the Magna\nCarta, our freedom and.self-respect? It would\nappear, Mr, Editor, that the U.S. are engaged\nin an appeasement policy that will make Munich appear kindergarten stuff,' and what\ngoes for the U.S. goes f,or Ctntda also, and\nthe Joker Is the \"treaty\" making powers of\nthe President and Senate. '    \u2022\n>- Secretary of State Dulles recently expressed oposltlon to the constitutional amendment proposed by Senator Brioker of Ohio,\nto limit the treaty making powers of the Administration so that no treaty can deprive\nany citizen of his \"inalienable rights\" as\nguaranteed under the Constitution.\nIn a speech delivered at a regional meeting of the American Bar Association in Louisville, Ky., on April 12, 1952, Mr. Dulles is\nreported to have said: \"The treaty making\npower Is an extraordinary power, liable to\nabuse. Treaties make international law, and\nalso they make domestic law. Under our Constitution, treaties become the supreme law of\nthe land .They are, Indeed, more supreme\nthan ordinary laws, for congressional laws\nare Invalid if they do not conform to the Constitution, whereas treaty law can override the\nConstitution. Treaties, for example, can take\npowers from the states and give them to the\nfederal government or to some International\nbody, and they can cut across the rights given\nthe people by the Constitution Bill of Rights.\"\nThe only charitable construction which\ncan be placed on this \"about 'face\" by the\nSecretary of State Is that he hopes to further\nthe cause of world peace by bartering away,\nsome of the constitutional guarantees.\nMr. Editor, the British Commonwealth\nand the United States today are the only defence against totalitarian world rule. They\nare the \"multitude (or commonwealth) of nations and the great people\" promised for the\n\"latter days\" in Gen, 48: 15 to 22. If we are\nnot those people, then we might just as well\nresign ourselves to destruction like all the\nproud nations who have gone before us, for\nseme other group must arise to fulfil these\npromises.\nROBERT KIDD.\n' Fruitvale, B. C.\n?\n? 'Questions ?\ni\nThreat to\nFashion Czars\nA large grocery chain has announced\nfrom Chicago that lt intends to spend $2,000,-\n000 on a \"new look\" newspaper advertising\ncampaign which will feature women's fashions\nside -by side with food items in full page layouts. Faith and Dior had better look sharply\nto their- laurels or the food chain kings will\ndictate the length of milady's skirt as well as\nher dinner menu.\u2014Ottawa Citizen;\nMechanical Thanks\nA new vending machine says\n\"Thank you.\" If gadgets are going to\nstart talking,back to us, they may as\nwell be polite.\n. Open to any reader. Names of psnoni\nasking questions will not bt published,\nThere It no ehtrgt for thlt service,\nQuHtlom WIU. NOT BE ANSWERED\n\u2022\u25a0'\u2022' $Y MAIi. except where thtrt It obvious\nnecessity fer privacy.\nP. J. ..., trtnquille\u2014Could you please give\n.  me.the dates and' days on which Thanksgiving has fallen for the past five years\n\u2014(samtfly 1952, 1951, 1950, 1949, 1948?\nThanksgiving always falls on the second\nMotjday In October. The dates for the five\nyears listed above were: 1952\u2014Oct. 13; 1951\u2014\nOct.  8;   1850\u2014Oct,  9;   1949\u2014Oct.   10;   1848-\nOct, 11..   ;\nB. W., Nelson\u2014If a person owns a home and\nthe ground around it, can that person\n' strip in tht front or back yard?\nSection'205 of the Criminal Code deals\nwith Indecent exposure and nudism respectively, and states a person is liable to $50\nfine or six months imprisonment or both,\nwho wilfully commits an indecent act in any\nplace In which the public are or have access.\nSection 205-A deals with nudism, nudist colonies, and sun bathing, and states lt Is an\noffence\u2014and a person is liable upon summary\nconviction to five years imprisonment\u2014for\na person, while nude, to appear upon his own\nproperty so as to be exposed \\o the public\nview whether alone or In company with other\npersons. . ,'   ,\nKootenai, Kelowna\u2014Please print recipe for\npie-crust  mix;   recipe  for  upside-down\ncake; and one-egg pumpkin-pie filling.\nPlaih pastry: two cups floilr, two-thirds\ncup shortening, half teaspoon salt, half-cup\nIce cold water. Sift flour and salt, cut shortening with knife, and add water to make paste.\nChill and roll out as lighty as possibe. Makes\ntwo sfie.ls.\nMixture for Upside-Down Cakes: Two\ntablespoons butter, fresh or canned fruit, four\ntablespoons sugar (white, brown or maple).\nIn a deep cake-pan or heavy skillet, melt two\ntablespoons butter. Sprinkle tour tablespoons\nsugar over bottom of pan and cover with\nwell-drained sour cherries (or other canned\nor fresh fruits). Pour cake batter or light\nyeast dough over this and bake at 425 degrees\nF. for* thirty minutes.\nPumpkin Pie Filling: One tablespoon\nflour, half-teaspoon salt, quarter-cup brown\nsugar, quarter-teaspoon ginger, quarter-teaspoon nutmeg, one teaspoon cinnamon, quar:\n\"ter-cup honey or maple syrup, one cup milk,\none tablespoon melted butter, two eggs well-\nbeaten, one-and-half-cups pumpkin. Mix all-\ningredients together, bake ten minutes in hot\noven, reduce heat and bake till filling is firm.\nVanishing Farmhands\nEnough immigrant farmhands have mysteriously disappeared from their plpces of\nemployment in Western Ontario to suggest it\nis no coincidence- They are of German origin,\nand evidently Just disappear, usually after a\nvisit of a man of their own nationality.\nIt just may be that some person is notifying them of jobs elsewhere and they are taking them in preference to farm work. But\neven If it be only this, it Is sufficient for some\ncheck being made. If these men are coming\nout with the understanding they are to spend\na period in farm work, they should not violate\nthis understanding. This is a busy.season on\nthe farms, and it isn't fair to a farmer to hire\na New Canadian with the prospect of having\nhim for some time only to have the man iip\nand quit, leaving the farmer to cope with the\nwork as best he may.\nAnother angle should be checked, just in\ncase. There are recurrent rumors of a ring\noperating in the bringing in of Europeans and\nthen spiriting them Illegally across the border\ninto the United States. This isn't fair either to\nCanada or the United States, and every precaution should be taken against It.\u2014Windsor\nDaily Star.\nPress Comment\nREMINDING THE SENATOR\nIf Senator McCarthy feels that the Measure of one's right to criticize is the number\nbf war casualties we would point out to him\nthat in World War I, United Kingdom casualties were 812,317 killed and 1,849,494 wounded,\ncompared with the United States' 115,660 killed and, 205,690 wounded. The ..total for the\nBritish-Empire was 1,089,919 killed, and 2,-\n400,888 wounded, or altogether, ip round figures -3,480,000 to the U.S. 321,350. The figures\nfor World War II also show that the United\nKingdom had more casualties than the United\nStates, without counting Empire losses. And\nthe population of the United Kingdom is only\nabout one-third that of the United States so\nthat the proportion of losses was tremendously higher.\u2014St. Thomas Times-Journal.\n[.otters to\nThe Editor\nLetters to the editor on any\n. topio ot genuine Interest aro\nwelcome If they are' brltf,\naccurate and fair. No letter will\nbe Inserted In whole, or In part,\nexcept ovtr tht Blanatgro end\naddress of the writer- Un\u00aba|l-.\ncited oorrtspondenoe cannot bt\nreturned.\nU.S. Appeasement\nWorse Than Munich\nTo'the Editor:\nSir\u2014In the. Nelson News of Aug.\n26,1 read the fine article.\"Common\nHeritages\" and I would ask, Mr,\nEditor, are we In danger of losing,\ntemporarily, the Law of Moses, the\nSermon on the Mount, the Magna\nCarta, our freedom and Self-respect? It would appear, Mr, Editor,\nthat the Uunlted States art engaged in an appeasement policy that\nwill make Munich appear kindergarten stuff, and what goes for the\nU.S. goes for Canada also, and the\njoker is \"Treaty\" making powers\nof the President and Senate.\nSeoretary of State Dulles recently expressed opposition to .the Constitutional Amendment proposed by\nSenator Brlcker of Ohio, to limit\nthe treaty making powers of the\nAdministration, so that no treaty\ncan deprive any citizen of his \"inalienable rights\" as guaranteed under the Constitution.\nIn a speech delivered at a regional meeting of the American\nBar Association in Louisville, Ky,\non April 12, 1952, Mr. Dulles is reported to have said, \"The treaty\nmaking power is an extraordinary\npower, liable to abuse. Treaties\nmake international law ahd ' also\nthey make domestic law. Under\nour Constitution, treaties -become\nthe supreme law of the land. They\nare, indeed, more supreme than\nordinary laws, for congressional\nlaws are invalid If they do not conform to the Constitution, whereas\ntreaty law can override tha Constitution. Treaties, for example, can\ntake powers from the stateB and\ngive them to.the federal government or to some international body,\nand they can cut across the rights\ngiven the people by the Constitution Bill of Rights.\" The only charitable construction which can be\nplaced on this \"about-face\" by the\nSecretary of State is that he hopes\nto further the cause of world peace\nby gathering away some of the constitutional guarantees.\nMr. Editor, the British Commonwealth and the United States today\nare the only defence against Total\nltarian World Rule. They are the\n\"multitude (or commonwealth) ol\nnations and the greet people\" promised for. the \"latter days\" in Gen,\nFig if Victor!\u00ae\nWorst Hazard on\nVICTORIA (CP)-A 30-year-old\ndentist from London, England, who\nsailed the \"Atlantic and parts ot the\nPacific for two years in a 24-foot\ncutter, found lt was \"easy.\"\nWith no auxiliary engines, Dr.\nWilliam Howell was dependent on\nwind for the 18,000-mile voyage in\nthe \"Wanderer II.\"\nHe did run into some foul weather, \"but the Atlantic and Pacific\nwere just snaps\u2014provided you sail\nwith the trade winds.\"\nftfgh spoti of his cruise wbb Tahiti, where the young, bearded sailor had planned to lay up his boat\nfor only two weeks.\nHe was there six months, and intends to to go back.\n\"It's a fabulous place,\" he said.\nHe said Tahlbltlan women were\n\"the best looking in the world\" and\nhe plans to return to the islands\nto practice, dental surgery. ,\nBorn in Australia, Dr. Howell\nserved during the Second World\nWar as a navigator with the. RAAF.\nLater he set up a successful practice in London.\nDespite the \"ease\" with which he\nsays he made the trip here, he'll\nleave the little G-'t cutter beh'nd\nIn a few days when he returns\nhome by air.\nFOG WORST PART\nWorst part of the trip, the doctor said, was when he hit the\nstraits of Juan de Fuca just outside\nVictoria. Almost within sight of his\ndestination, he was becalmed in a\nfive-day fog.   \u25a0\n\"I just had to wait it out.\"\nHis worst storm came on the leg\nfrom Hawaii to Victoria.\n\"It was a pretty bad gale,\" he\nsaid. \"I took all the sail down and\nlet the seas do their worst. I just\nlashed myself to the bunk, curled\nup with a good book and d'dn't get\nup until it was finished, 48-hours\nlater.\"\nALONE AT8EA\nHis craft was the smallest yacht\never to go through the Panama\ncanal and the smallest to enter the\nports of Tahiti and Honolulu from\nacross the seas,\nit took him along the famed Kon\nTiki -route across the Pacific and\neased Its 4\"j-ton hull into Gibraltar, Canary islands, .West Indies,\nPanama, Galapagos islanders, Tahiti, Hawaii and Victoria,.\nThe doctor and his \"Wanderer II\"\nwere alone together at sea for seven\nmonths.\nSailor's.,,,\n-Year TrEp\nSentence Absent\nCzech Mr Pilots\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Czechoslovakia today sentenced five men to\nprison for \"having seized a Czechoslovak passenger plane and taken\nlt to Western Germany.\"\nThe sentences, announced by\nPrague radio, referred to the Czech\nairliner taken last March and flown\nto freedom in West Germany with\n29 aboard.\nThe Czech news agency Ceteka,\nreporting the Supreme Court verdict at Prague, named the live men\n\u2014but they do not include the pilot\nand five others who asked for political asylum in the West after the\nairliner landed at Frankfurt-.\nKelowna Girl Among\nNew Women Lawyers\nVANCOUV-R - (CP) - Two\nyoung women were among the 18\nnew barristers called' to the bar\nSaturday In a brief ceremony before Mr. Justice Davey at the Court\nHouse.\nSwearing in of Dolores Rost\nBranca gave lawyer Angelo\nBranco, QC, a partner. She's His.\n24-year-old daughter, who saya\nshe's been getting free legal advice\nfrom her father all the time. She\narticles with him too.\nOther feminine addition to the\nlegal profession was Patricia Matilda Fahlman, 25-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. J. E. Fahlman\nof Kelowna, B.C.\nEXPERT ADVICE\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 First year\nmedical students at McGlll were'\ngreeted by Dr. Wilder Penfield, dis-;\ntinguished surgeon, with the advice that \"the humanitarian feeling\nshould be the over-all motivating\ndesire behind the ambitions ol\nmedical students.\"\nGREYHOUND\nAnnounce Special\nMid-Week Round Trip\nExcursion Fares\n%\n48-15 to 22. If we are not those people then we might just as well resign ourselves to destruction like\nall the proud nations who have\ngone before us, for \u25a0 some other\ngroup must arise to fulfill these\npromises.\nRobert Kidd,\nFruitvale, B.C.\nJs?  _\u25a0\n*y^ \u25a0\nBetween NELSON and\nCRANBROOK .... $ 4.30\nFERNIE     6.45\nFORT MACLEOD \u201e   9.95\nLETHBRIDGE    10.45\nOn Sole Tuesday and Wedneiday,\nSeptember 29th and 30th.\nReturn limited to midnight Friday, October 2nd.\nCorrespondingly   low  fares  apply\nto all  points between  Nelson and\nLethbrldga   and   all   Intermediate\nb,                points. For full Information contact\nKj                your local Greyhound Agtnt.\nIt\nEYHOUN\n'\u25a0;\u25a0*\nMr. E, G. Hansell (Macleod) in thq House\not Commons:\nI do not claim to be an elpert on defence.\nAs a matter of fact I have never fired an\narmy- gun In my life. I have never been in\nthe army, the navy or the air force, and\nknow very little abput that. The last gun\nI ever fired was a 12-gauge shotgun, and it\nkicked so bsdly lt knocked me over and I\nlost my hat. However, I got the bird.\nYour Horoscope\nAttend to your regular routine and guard\nagainst mistakes. Try hard to make your\nlife count for something. Help should be\nforthcoming if you need it. A child born on\nthis date will very likely be artistic, refined\nand idealistic. -\nIt's Been Said\nGood words do more than hard speeches,\nas the sunbeams without any noise make the\ntraveler cast off his cloak, which all the\nblustering winds could not do, but make\nhim bind it closer to him.\u2014Robert Lelghton.\n  'I     ii     \u00bb     ->   \u00ab lis**\u2014\nTheyH Do It Every Time\nToday's Bible Thought\nBut when he came there was no\nroom in the inn.\nThou Bethlehem \u2022 \u2022 . which art\nlittle among -the thousands of\nJudah, out of thee shall come*. , .\nthat ii to be ruler In  Israel.\n\u2014Micah 6:2.\n(hunt disiL\nThe worst shock I ever had was\nseein' that movie star. I knew cameras could do tricks, but makln'\nher beautiful on the screen is a\nmiracle.      ,\nArfe-tfbe ggtc Md artis mbbovi!\n6f course, when a new bridge of highway .is completed, it's traditional for some prominent citizen or\ngovernment official to cut the ribbon in the opening\nceremony. And yet...\nOften this honour might be awarded with good\nreason, to any one of the nation's life insurance\npolicyholders.\nWhy should they deserve this distinction?\nBecause it is their premium money, part of which\nis invested for them by life insurance companies,\nwhich makes it possible to build many such useful\npublic' works. Not only roads and bridges, but\nelectrical power stations, waterworks, stores,\nhomes, office buildings and industrial plants are\nbuilt with the help of life insurance dollars.\nSo here's to the life insurance policyholders!\nWhile they provide financial security for their\nfamilies and themselves, they also help to make\nCanada a better land to live in!\nAT YOUR SERVICE!\nA trained life underwriter- representing one of the more than\n50 Canadian, British and United Slates life insurance companies\nin Canada -will gladly help you plan for your family's security\nand your own needs in later yean. Rely on him I\nThe Pelly River flows 330 miles\nto the Yukon River from near the\neastern boundary of Yukon Territory.   '\nTHE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA\n\"It is Good Citizenship fo own Life Insurance''\nUS2I.\n_\n\u25a0\u201ei... ......\n_\n_\n\t\n <%SS\nmiSt Pays^ToyBuy\/Qmlity\"\n|     & CO.\nGigantic\nCONTINUES\nWatoh Our Windows for\nNew Dally Added Lines\n\u25a0 Come  in  end  ehoose\ne pair (or two) of these\nbargain priced quality shoes\ntoday.\n0%. Sauna, Itihsskh.\nV76O\nLAUNDRY 'JAMA BAG\nPop laundry or PJs in\u2014zip up!\nPrettiest way to keep nursery or\nchildren's room neat and tidy! Perfect for yoar nylons and lingerie,\ntool Easy!\nPattern 700: Embroidery trans-\n. fer, pattern parts for washable\n|\"angel doll\"'laundry or pyjama bag.\nSend TW_MT---Tv_! CENTS in\nW __i_B (stamps eannot be accepted)\n' % this pattern to Nelson Daily\n''\"-flm flat&teM-D\u00bb9t, 288 Baker\n- -' \" ' ' \u25a0\" \u2022\"-PATTERN\nand AD-\n! Ten, yes TEN\nto crochet,\nIn \u00a7ie Ijauea Wheeler Neegleeraft\n. Hus meny n\u00ab*e patterns to\nsend far \u2014 ife\u00ab tor gifts, bazaar\n-oi \"'\nSOT.\nvepi^'SS -\nsew, embaSS**,\nTiiereis\nQyro Fashion Show Premews\nLatest in Fabrics. Styled\nFashion conscious Nels6nites had a preview of Winter\nstyles\u2014from pyjamas to evening wear\u2014at the Gyro sponsored annual fashion show.\nFrom, tiny tots, to styles for the\nmatron, with the accent on practicability and beauty were shown\nduring the afternoon and evening\nat the Hume Hotel.\nAmong the many tartan suits\nshown was a New York model,\nwith batwing sleeves and all-pleated jacket and skirt. The permanent pleats accentuate the figure\nand give freedom of movement to\nthe wearer. Smoked pearl buttons\nfastened the jacket down the front.\nWorsted boucle was another leading attraction with latest fashions in orlons and doeskins. A.\nnyro-tweed afternoon dress wit-\nflared skirt and shimmering taffetas was among the \"tea and evening wear\" styles.\nPYJAMAS\nIn the pyjama fashion, comfortable garments combined with style\nwere shown. A stunning gold\nduster over red mandarin pyjamas\ncaused much comment, as did a grey\nglazed gold print duster. Ski py-\njams, tops in comfort and style,\nwith fireman red knitted cuffs at\nwrist and ankle were among the\nnight.clothes styles shown.\nStoles, mostly plaids, were the\nchoice for daytime wear. Green\nplaids were most popular and one\nstunning red-grey-navy check worn\nwith red accessories, looked chic.\nIn the children's section, outdoor\nplayclothes of nylon and orlon,\nwaterproofed for protection against\nplaying in the snow were shbwn.\n\"Oft to school\" featured Peter Pan\ncollared white blouses with tartan\nall-round. pleated skirts. For the\nyoung man, grey flannel trousers,\nmaroon blazer and white shirt set\nthe place for back-to-school. One-\npiece and two-piece snow suits in\nthe latest orlon-nylon materials\nwere modelled by pre-school aged\nchildren.\nFor party wear the children\nmodelled a blue nylon dress with\nflouncy skirt, Peter Pan collar and\npuffed sleeves and a pink puffed-\nsleeved frock with embroidered\nfront.\nModels for the fashion show were\nMrs.v Jean Emory, Mrs. Dorothy\nHopwood, Miss Jo Anne Hopwood,\nMiss Shelagh Hopwood, Mrs. Iris\nHooker, Mrs. Leo Gorman, Mrs.\nEvelyn Stromstead, Mrs. K. W.\nDixon, Mrs.' Ollle Williamson, Mrs.\nCathy Gare, Mrs. Sheila Mann, Miss\nColleen Hyssop, Mrs. Pat Stallwood,\nMrs. Esther Korkln, Mrs. Jean Neil,\nMiss Marylin Brown, Miss Lorraine\nGilker, Miss Caherine Argyle, Mrs.\nRuth Allen, Miss June Kelly, Miss\nBarbara McCandlish, and Miss\nShirley Mae Smith.\nThe fashion show was chairman-\ned by Dave Greenwood. Commentary was written by Mrs. Marge Lip-\nton and commentators . were Mrs.\nHelen Catley and Mrs. Vi Harold.\nMrs. Dave Greenwood was in\ncharge of all table arrangements\nand reservations.\nFlowers and decorations were\nprovided by the Gyrettes and the\nGyros poured.\nEncouraged by the good turnout\n(the Hume Silver Room and lobby\nwere well filled during the two\nshows). Nelson Gyros are looking\nforward to a similar show next\nyear.\nMrs. Stromstead and Mrs. Anderson were in charge of the models.\n0ASA&, ItfL UMtk,\nWtwucutmvdui\nFive Attend Bride\nOf Te R Kosiancic\nThe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate was the scene of a pretty wedding when Thomas Frank Kosian-\ncic took as his bride Marjorie Hazel Doerksen at-a double ring ere-\nmony officiated by Father McGill-\nvary.\nThe bride, given In marriage by\nher father was lovely in white satin\nredingote with lily point sleeves\nover a gown of nylon net and silk\ntaffeta. Her finger-tip veil of em\nbroidered nylon net-was held in\nplace by a halo of lily of the\nvalley. The only jewellery worn\nby the bride was a pearl necklace\nand earrings, a gift of the groom.\nShe carried a crescent-shaped bouquet of white carnations and yellow roses with satin petals.\nThe bride was attended by Miss,\nJoanne Wysk, as maid of honor who\nwore a mauve nylon net formal\nwith a halo headdress of net and\nflowers. Her colonial bouquet consisted of yellow shasta daisies and\nsnap-dragons.\nMiss Shirley Kosiancic, sister of\nthe groom and Miss Eileen and Lillian Kosiancic, coflsins of the groom\nMiss lifcu-garet Kosiancic yas flower gW. They wore Identical gowns\nof mauve and yellow Swiss-dot organdie with matching head-dresses\nand oar-rled contrasting colonial\nbouquets of shasta daisies and lace.\nAttending the groom was Mr.\nKenneth Doerksen of. the RCAF,\nbrother of the bride, as best man.\nUshers were Mr. Raymond Kos-.\niancie, brother of the groom and\nMr. Edward Guenard, oousi-n of\nthe. bride.\nFAU. FLOWHtt\nImmediately after the ceremony\na reception was hel'd at the home of\ntha bride's parents, The spadfeus\nrooms were decorated with white\nThe use of Java*\nia everyday clean-\nfi    ing,   ia   kitchen,\n^J^     laundry and bathroom...\nhdpt protect\nyour family's heskh\nKEEP\n3 BOTTLES\nHANDY\nJavex  does  so\nmany  routine\nhousekeeping\nchores so easily,\nso well and for such tittle cost\nthat smart women keep 3 bottles\non hand,  1  in die kitchen,\nlaundry and bathroom.\nIN 4 HANDY SIZES\nJN-IO!\n20 EASY WAYS\nBUT! SWEET! CLEAN!\nSEE THE    '\nWEDNESDAY\nPAPER\nFOR\n4 BIG PAGES\nOP STORE-WIDE\nBAY\nDAY\nSAVINGS\nstreamers and bells and bouquets\nof gladiolus and asters.\nThe bride's table covered with\na madiera embroidered oloth was\ncentred with a three-tier wedding\ncake, flanked by tall tapers in silver candlebra and bouquets of pastel sweet peas. Father McGillvary\nproposed a toast to the bride which\nwas responded to by the groom^\nThe best man proposed a toast to*\nthe bridal attendants.\nTelegrams of congratulations and\nbest \\vishes Were read by the best\nman.\nThe bride's mother wore a grey\norlon dress with red and black accessories with corsage of red roses.\nThe groom's mother wore a blue\nsilk taffeta dress with wine and\nblack accessories and a corsage of\nred roses.\nMOTOR TOUR\nFor going-away the bride chose\na biege wool gabardine suit with\naccessories of light and dark mauve\ntopped by an orchid corsage.\nThe happy couple left on a\nhoneymoon by motor to various\npoints in the United States. Upon\ntheir return they will reside at\nCrescent Valley.\nOut-of-town guests were Mr\nGeorge Topllss, grandfather of the\ngloom, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McColm,\naunt and uncle of the bride of Victoria. Mrs. Josephine Kosiancic and\nsons Eugene and John of Rossland,\nMr. and Mrs. V. J. Kosiancic, parents of the groom and sons Lawrence and Jack, Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nKbsiancic, Mrs. Ida Cunningham\nand Mr. H. Parker, all ot Cuespent\nValley, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hunt-\nof Bonnington,\nProbe Info Beef\nPrices Ordered\nWASHINGTON (AP) - The\nUnited States government Saturday ordered an investigation to\nfind out whether the price spread\nbetween beef on the hoof and on\nthe retail counter is too great.\nAgriculture Secretary Benson,\nwho ordered the inquiry, said he\nhad received reports of a \"widening of the spread between prices\nfarmers receive for their cattle\nand the cost of these at retail.\"\nBenson noted that the labor department's bureau of labor statistics reported a six per cent increase in the retail price of beef\nand veal from July to August. This\nincrease, Benson said, came at. a\ntime of abundant supplies and generally low cattle prices and has\nbeen of concern to both farmers\nand consumers.\n4'\n__ l*V-ft40\n8EW-WRAP-Q-I\nYou're beautifully dressed in\n1-2-1 . . . just walk in, wrap and\nbutton! Joy to sew \u25a0_\u00bb no fitting\nproblems! Cinch to iron\u2014it opens\nflat. As a bonus of charm, bind-the\nnovel pockets and bodice with contrast color. Make the shorter version, too, for a cobbler apron.\nPattern 0364: Misses' sizes 12, 14,\n18, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 takes iVt\nyards 35-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENT9 (S5c)\nIn coins (stamps.cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson News, Pattern Dept., Nelson.\ns8i\nTomato Aspic Supplies\nNecessary Vitamins\nyymmgyiysiSm:\nTAKING another look'at new clothes as trends\ncommence to crystallize, we note the gradual appearance of the high-waisted or Empire look especially in\nconjunction with column-slim lines. Hannah Troy uses\nthis approach to a handsome afternoon dress, a combination of a high-rising gray tissue flannel skirt and a,\nbrief, sleeveless bodice of re-embroidered Alencon type\nlace.. \u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0\nEt F* Herman Weds\nBeatrice Saunders\nBALsFOUR\u2014Of interest in Nelson and Balfour was\nthe marriage of Beatrice, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. HV Saunders, and Edwin F. Herman, son of Mr. and\nMrs. T. Herman of Nelson.\nThe ceremony was held m St.\nMichael's and All Angel's Church\nin Balfour with Very Rev. T. L.\nLeadbeater officiating.\nGiven in marriage by her father,\nthe bride looked charming in a\ndusky rose taffeta afternoon dress\nwith grey accessories. Her hat was\nfeathered in pearl grey and she\nwore a pearl necklace, gift of the\ngroom, and carried a white prayer\nbook with pink roses.\nMrs. K. Chandler, sister of the\nbride, was matron ot honor and\nwore a green metalic taffeta after-\nnon dress with white, accessories.\nNews o_f the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line-black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nTrail Rhythm Swlngjetera,\nPlaymor, Friday.\nRotary Luncheon, Monday, Sept. 28,\n12:15 p.m., Hume Hotel.\nOBDBR YOUR FIREWOOD NOW.\n4-FT. SLAB OR CUT. PH. 330-L.\nTry an ice cream sandwich at\nWait's News Depot.\nDR. BROCK (Chiropractor). S- yrj.\npraolicai experience. \u2014 Phone 860.\nSmart Winter wear for girls, and\nboys. \u2014 EBERLE'S JUNIOR SHOP.\nSpecial buy on shell vests. Reg.\n$6.00, now $2.98, at Jack Boyce.\nHunting and Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyce Men's Shop.\nNew shipment of everyday hand\ntowels. Priced at 09c pr. at\nSTERLING HOME FUROTSHBR-S\nTrade your old tires at\nSUPERIOR, MOTORS\nTire Department\nB.C.  AND   HOLLAND   BU1.B8\n'     FOR FALL PLANTING.\nSRIKELLE'8 FLORISTS\u2014PH. 18f\nChild Health Centre and Preschool Immunization Clinic today.\nChurch of Redeemer Hall, 2-4 p.m.\nMagiKoter \u2014 Truly fine painting\ntool. Holds pint of paint. $5.95.\nBURNS  LUMBER  COMPANY\nJust received\u2014A shipment of the\nmost attractive hats ever shown.\nADRIAN MILLINERY.\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney Service\nPhone 154I-L.\nREMEMBER\nExcelsior Club of St. Paul's Church\nBazaar will be held en Sat., Dee, t,\nH BUTTERFIELD eant fix lt,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly don* and fully guaranteed  at\nreasonable prices.\nW YOU HAVE SCRAP METAL\nTO SELL, COLUMBIA\" TRADING\nCOMPANY IS THE PLACE. \u2014\n902 FRONT STREET.\nNELSON ART CLUB\nTuesday, Sept. 29th, 7:30 p.m.,\nRoom A, Civic Centre.\nNEW MEMBERS WELCOME\nN e Is o n Commercial Training\nSchool, 701 Front St. Enrol Thurs.,\nOct 1. Between 7 and 9 for Mon.\nand Thurs. Evening classes.\nReplace those broken window\npanes now. We carry window-glass\nItt- all standard sizes, and cut to\nyour measurements. HIPPERSON'S\nFor Sale\u20141842 Chevrolet \u2022 Sedan.\nGood condition. Complete with\nradio, u'nder-seat heater, defrosters\nand 2 new-tires. $495 cash. Phone\n1480-R.\nHolland Bulbs for Fall planting.\nLarge assortment. Select yours\nnow. MAC'S FLOWER 8HOP \u2014\nPhone 810.\nCans for your canning. 2 and 2Vs\npound size, Inside enamelled and\nplain. Burpee can sealing machines.\nHIPBERSON'S.\nIn closing out business, offer\npractically no\/w, very latest model\nRemington Electric Adding' Machine. Eight column, direct subtraction, etc., etc. Real bargain. Box\n5154, Dally News.\nOood selection of used Bedroom\nSuites and used Washing Machines\nnow in stock.\nWe buy and sell new and wad\nftUBteR..\nHOfoE   F-flNlTUlJE   EXCHANGE\n413 Ha- St.\nWINDOW CM-ASS AND PUTTY\nWe carry a complete range of\nstandard sites in single and double\nstrength glass. We can cut to your\nindividual requirements. Also wood\nand steel sash putty at\nT. H. WATERS A CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St \u2014 Phone 156 \u2014 Nelson\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to extend our most sincere thanks and appreciation to\nDr. Morrison and to the nurses ot\nKootenay Lake General Hospital;\nalso to ihe private nurse, tor their\nkind attention to our mother, Mrs.\nF. W. Carmichael, during ber reeent\nillness.\nThe Carmfchael fmatly.\nCARD OF THANK8\nWe wish to thank all our friends\nand neighbors for their many acts\nof kindness, messages of sympathy\nand beautiful floral tributes received during our recent bereavement.\nWe especially wish to thank Mrs.\nJamieson, Mrs. Stucklberger, Mrs.\nFlorence Briggeman and Roy Coleman.\nLouis Wine and sons, Marvin and\nCarl;\nMr. and Mrs. C. Schwartzenhauer,\nLouis, Carl, Arthur and Walter;\nOttilia and George Briggeman.\nIN  MEMORIAM\nBROWN\u2014In loving memory of\nmy dear wife and mother, Sarah,\nwho passed away September 27th,\n1952, who now rests side by aide\nwith our darling son, Harold, died\n1840.\nA wonderful wife, mother and aid;\nOne who was better God never\nmade;\nA wonderful worker so loyal and\ntrue;       '\nOne in a million that, wife, .was\nyou,\nEver   remembered   by   husband\nand father.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMacDONALD\u2014Funeral services\nfor the late John Edward MacDonald will be held from the Thompson\nFuneral Home at Nelson Tuesday\nat 11 am.'The Rev.' G. W. Payne\nwill officiate and [interment will\nbe in Nelson Memorial Park.\nHer dainty hat was of angora and\nshe wore a corsage ot gardenias.\nThe bride's mother chose a grey\nlace dress with grey accessories\nand the bridegroom's mother a grey\nblue afternoon dress with white\naccessories.. Both had corsages of\nroses. Organist was Mrs. M. Well-\nwood.\nFollowing the ceremony, a dinner\nreception was held at the Tillicum\ndining room. The bride's table was\ndecorated with candles and centred\nwith a three-tier wedding cake.\nDean Leadbeater. proposed the toast\nto the bride and the- groom responded.\nFor her going-away outfit, the\nbride chose a beige suit with brown\naccessories. They will travel to\nSpokane and Vancouver.\nOut-of-town guests included Miv\nand Mrs. R. H. Saunders of Banff,\nMr. and Mrs. Allen and daughter\nIsobell of Trail, Edward Herman\nof Wallace Idaho; Mr. and Mrs.\nBennellack and family, Mr. and\nMrs. Eric Neilsen and family, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. B, Stevens of Vancouver, and Mrs. Ada Rife of\nCloverdale.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 28, 1953 \u2014 S\nPythian Sisters Honor\nChief at Castlegar\nNelson Pythian Sisters motored\nto Castlegar Thursday evening to\nattend a banquet and meeting of\nKootenay Temple to mark the official, visit of Grand Chief Vera\nMesher.\n\u25a0 The Pythian Sisters who attended\nwere Grand Treasurer Mrs. E. Bereau, Mrs.-G. Davis, Mrs. C. Clark,\nMrs. M. Swanson, Mrs. Clements,\nMrs. Walmsley, Mrs. B. Hipperson,\nMrs. L. Gray and Mrs. B. Perdue.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n3 DAYS LEFT!\nTo Get Your\nTwo-Pieco Chesterfield Suit*\nFor Only\nKARACHI (CP) - More ol the\nmodern all-steel lightweight railway carriages ordered from France\nhave arrived in Pakistan. Pakistan\nnow has received about one-sixth\nof the total order of 235 of the carriages, including air-conditioned\ncoaches specially insulated against\nhot weather.\nWI SPECIALIZE IN A\n2-DAY SERVICE\nMen's and Ladles'\nSUITS $1.2S\nDM8KS\n1-pc-e., plain $I.2S\nPANTS ond\nSKIRTS   60c\n*    Just\nPHONE 288\nEmpire\nCleaners\naiba>^\n\u25a0 \u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'\n\u25a0\nBy MARGARET CARR\nTomato Aspic, or a well-seasoned tomato jelly, is a grand accompaniment for cold meats, and adds\nboth color and flavor to a platter\nof salads. And it plays an important role, adding valuable minerals and vitamins to the diet and\nhelping to balance the meal.\nHere's a good recipe for a well-\nflavored tomato aspic \u2014 one that\nmay be used as the foundation for\nmany appetizing salads and cold\nmeat accompaniments. Raw, shredded or chopped carrots, celery,\ncabbage, cucumber or radish or\ncooked diced green beans, peas or\nasparagus can be added to the\naspic ta any desired combination.\nDiced pickles or olives may be\nadded, too, as can flaked fish. .\nQuickest way to make tomato\naspic mixture is to use canned tomato, juice, although right now\nwith tomatoes still in good supply\nyou'll prefer to use fresh tomato\njuice. To make the aspic a little\ndifferent, combine tomato, juice\nwith tomato sauce. The high seasonings in the tomato sauce are especially suited to salads that are\nfeatured with meats or fish. Chopped chives are an appetizing addition to the tomato mixture.\nAn attractive way to serve the\ntomato aspic is to mould it in either\none large or ta individual ring\nmoulds. TJnmold the ring or rings\nand fill .\"the centre with creamy\ncottage cheese. .Another combination for the ring mould might be a\nwell-seasoned salmon, tuna or\nshrimp salad.\nTOMATO A8PIC\n4    cups fresh cooked (or canned) tomatoes\nr-8 cup chopped onion ,\n1 bay leaf\n2 whole cloves\n1 teaspoon salt ,\n2 tablespoons brown sugar\n2 tablespoons unflavored\ngelatin\nVt cup cold water\n3 tablespoons lemon juice.\nCombine, tomatoes, onion, celery\nleaves, bay leaf, cloves, salt and sugar. Simmer 20 minutes; strain.\nThere should be 31-3 cups. Soften\ngelatin in cold water; dissolve in hot\ntomato mixture. Add lemon juice.\nPour into oiled 5 x 8-inch loaf pan\nor ring mould. Chill until firm\nUnmold. Garnish with watercress\nand lemon wedges.\nTOMATO ASPIC WITH\nCHICKEN SALAD .\n2 cups cut-up cold, cooked\nchicken\n1    cup coarsely chopped celery\n.Vn cup coarsely chopped pecans\n1 tablespoon lemon juice\nSalt and pepper\nVs cup mayonnaise\n2 or 3 hard-cooked eggs, cut up\n1 recipe tomato aspic, chilled.\nToss together chicken, celery, pecans and lemon juice. Add salt and\npepper to taste. Mix mayonnaise\nin lightly. Carefully fold in eggs.\nChill. Serve on slices of aspic or in\nthe centre of a tomato aspic ring.\nA real boon to the homemaker\nwith limited time at her command\nis the canned tomato aspic now\navailable at some stores. It ean be\nserved in a great variety of ways.\nand ti gels without refrigeration.\nBecause it contains citrus pectin,\nthis new tomato aspic stays firm at\nroom temperature. It may ba served\n\"as is\" right out of tha ean, oar K\nmay be melted and pombtaed with\nother foods, and then regeled bt *\nmatter of a few minutes.\nNelson Social\nPHON8 144\nL. C. Rows has returned to his\nhome to Detroit after visiting his\nsister, Mrs. S. C. Couch and family\nof Nelson Avenue.\n\u2022   \u2666   *\nMr. and Mrs. John Wright of\nThornbury, Ontario, have returned\nto their home after visiting at tha\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Kent\nof Nelson.\nSS      \u2022      SS\nFROM CAPITAL ,. . . Robert '\nTalbot, Deputy Superintendent of\nChild Welfare, of Victoria, ta visiting old friends, Mr. and Mrs. A. 3.\nHesse, 224 Baker Street, during 8m\ncourse of a business trip here.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. H. H. Miller, .161\nDaniel St., Trail, B.C., announce\nthe engagement of their elder\ndaughter, Nina Joy, to Gordon L.\nDonaldson, son of Mr. and Mri.\nW. Donaldson, of Sunshine Bay,\nB.C. The wedding will take placa\nin Trail on October 24th.\nBackache\nFor col*\nRheumatic Palm, Getting 8pl_j__, a ,\ndensity urine, InlMttns i>s__sJm. Ut Pstnss,\nMid loss of energy due to Kidney and _____\ntroubles, try Cntox. sjuiclt, complete mat.\nfaction or money bade. Don't suffer anoMM\nday without aiaus your dngsut tee Cprea\n,*.\u00ab\"\"\"\n\u2014\u00ab.rcn FINISHES I\nPERFEC'<W .   Velvet\nfiles*   \u2022\nThe name MONAMEL\nll justly famous for\nsuperb quality and\nbeautiful lasting results.\nAdd to this the advantage of three separate\nand different finishes, \u201e\nplus the infinite variety Q'\nof 132 exciting Custom\nColon and It's no wonder\nthat MONAMEL Is\nWestern Canada's most\npopular finish.\nnek yo_ur favorite eolor\nIn any ono of MONA.\nMEL'S Una finishes\u2014\nSatin, Gloss or soft,\nflat Moneutel Velvet.\n<97St,vou'   \/\nTfltmateat\n>     DEALER\n;USTO\u00ab\u00bb\nCOLO**\nBurns Lumber Company\n602 Baker St.\nPhone 1180\n_____\n o#>S0\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 26,195S\n'\nNewspaper Advertising Pays Off,\nSays Leading Fuller-Brush Man\nHARTFORD, Conn. (CP) - A\nwell-known, Canadian-born U. S.\nIndustrialist aald Saturday that a\nsingle newspaper want ad and a\nmagazine want ad which grew out\nof it Increased his business from a\nfirst-year $8500 to one with current\nannual.sales of 950,000,000.\nThe Industrialist Is Alfred C.\nFuller, founder end chafrmen ot\ntha board ot the Fuller Brush\nCompany, Hartford, Conn., and of\nthe Fuller Brush Company Ltd.,\nHamilton, Ont,\nThe newspaper want ad appeared\nIn the Syracuse, N.Y., Post-Standard Dee. 14, 1909, and was followed\nby a solicitation from the old\nEverybody's Magazine for another\nwant ad, which he inserted. Since\nthen the company has used newspaper wants ads regularly. The occasion of Fuller's statement Was the\nplace in the museum hall of the\ncompany's home office In Hartford\not photostats of the two original\nwant ads.\nCANADIAN BORN\nFuller was born In Nova Scotia,\nsear Grand Pre, in 1885. His ances\ntors were of Mayflower descent and\nwent to Nova Scotia's Annapolta\nvalley in 1760. The Fuller family\nhome there is still maintained by\nhim at part of a 1000-aore form for\ndairying, cattle-raising and apple-\ngrowing.\nFuller said: \"This little Syracuse\nwant ad was the turning point for\nthis company.\"\nCARRIES ON\n\"It was so succesfsul. I .used\nothers and the company has kept\non using newspaper want ads ever\nsince to bring us dealers. That single\nwant ad started the conversion Of\nour company from a one-man show\nto a continent-wide organisation,\nand our policy of using want ads\nhas resulted In $490,000,000 in sales\nsince that first one was printed.\"\nThe Fuller Brush Company n6w\nhas a total of 6800 dealers, 1000 In\nCanada. The Canedlan company\nwith Its main office In Hamilton,\nhas branch offices in Calgary, Edmonton, Halifax, London, Moncton,\nMontreal, Ottawa, Quebec, Regina,\nSaskatoon, Sherbrook. Que.. Toronto, Vancouver and Winnipeg.\nBroadway Signs Up lorne Greene-\nPapular (BC Actor, Newscaster\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Lorne Greene,\nfan-liar figure In' Canadian radio\nand theatre, haa been signed to\nflay the male lead in a Broadway\nplay opening In December.\nMr. Greene will star with Keth-\narise Cornell In the Howard Llnd-\ntar-R-Ssell Crouse play, \"The Pros-\neott Proposals.\"\n. Hjs, signing to the part stems directly from his second appearance\non tho New York television program, \"Studio One.\" Mr. Greene appeared Monday night In the production bf George Orwell's \"1984\" and\non Tuesday was approached by the\nproducers of \"The Preseott Proposals.\" On Wednesday he flew to New\nYork for a reading bt the role, and\na contract wet signed Thursday.\nLUOKY ANNIVERSARY\n]_e signing came on the anniversary of his Introduction to Canadian radio. On Sept. 25, 1939, he\njoined the staff of station CBO, Ottawa,  following   graduation   from\nFor a\nfriendly\nLamb's\nNAVY RUM\n\"A staunch,\neld friend\"\n____.\nThis -Bvertuement te nor ptrolished\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by th* Government of\nBritish Columbia.\n~r~\nfWp\"*\u2014 -        \u25a0 '*f?,y\n-flM\nQueen's University, Kingston, Mr.\nGreene received his early dramatic\ntraining with the Queen'a Drama\nGuild.\nIn the seme year ha was brought\nto Toronto by the CBC to reed the\nnational newsbroadcasta on a Dominion-wide network.\nAPTLY CAST\nIn \"The Preseott Proposels\" Mr.\nGreene will play the part of a newscaster on a national radio program.\nThe pley ia expected to open on\nBroadway Dec. 14.\nGermany Revives\nNational Anthem\nMAINZ, Germany \u2014 (Heuters)\u2014\nAll verses of the German national\nanthem, banned at the end of the\nSecond World War, will be taught\nto children in the West German\nstate of Rbineland Palatinate on\norders of the state's ministry of\nculture.\nA ministry spokesman said Saturday the anthem, \"Deutschland\nUber AUes,\" Its history and its\nmeaning will be taught again be\ncause parents and teachers have\ndeclared their . children, should\nknow the words.     .\nAt present West G'ermany'a official anthem is the third verse\nonly. It does not contain the ex\ntreme nationalistic sentiments of\ntbe first two verses.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nNew York,\u2014 Dr.-Max Einhoorn,\n92, a specialist in disorders of the\nstomach and  intestines.\nMontreal \u2014 Dr. Eudore Dubeau,\n78, a leader in the Canadian dental\nprofession and dean and director\nof  studies  at the   University   of\nMontreal.\nToronto\u2014Rev.   R. E.  McAlister,\n73,  one of Canada's pioneer Pene-\ncostal preachers.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED   OAILY\nRIGHTI There's money when you need it by mail now from\nHFC\u2014Household Finance Corporation of Canada. To make\n\u2022 loan... just clip and mail the attached coupon for complete\ninformation without obligation. Loans ara made promptly,\nwithout delay.\nThia new service brings Household\n, \u25a0 Finance's friendly, courteous service\nto everybody. By far the most people\nwho borrow from a consumer finance\ncompany use HFC So, borrow the\nright way . . . borrow the money\nyou need from HFC ... by mail I\nHOUSEHOLD FINANCE\n\u25a0A Ut ID IT 71 IU11 DP 1XM1SSKI\n118ft Cedar Avenue\nSecond Floor Telephone 1809\nTRAIL, B.C.\nT. H. Scowzroft. Manogor\n CUP THIS C0UP0H WW I\t\nRussiansUr^\nNew Degl for Farms\nCHERYL LYNN JOHNSON, who Is only 18.doys.old, was born\nwith a gaatrlo uloer whleh Fltaslmons Army Hospital surgeons at\nDenver, say li extremely rare In an Infant The baby, shown with\n1st Lfc Lorraine Klaslnskl, army, nurse from Leavanworthj Kan.,\nwas reported recovering nicely after an operation, She Is the\ndaughter ef A\/1C and Hrs. John B. Johnsen, of Mlllerevllle, Ky.\n  \u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nI    Household Plnanc. CsxporaUoa of Canada\n!    1186 Cwta Avenue, Troll. B.C\nPlease tell me wttSoul sblttatton bow I can gat a I\n- loan by man.\nS    Atoll\u2014\nj    AUnss-\nI    Ctr\t\n_.__--,\nBy WILLIAM  L. RYAN\nMOSCOW (AP) \u2014 A new deal\nannounced Saturday for Soviet\npeasants dramatically underlines a\ncampaign by Prebiler (Jeorf I Mal-\nenkov'l government to focus the\nattention of Ihe entire Soviet Union on agriculture.      *;\nThe peasants are getting several\nbreaks by decree. Chiefly, the government will pay them mortj for\nthe milk, butter, cattle and poultry\nthey tell from their private.holdings and, effective in the second\nhalf of 1004, it will out tho quotas\nof meat, milk, egga and wool they\nare requlreifto deliver to the Stat..\nThe agricultural campaign li full\nof meaning for both the Soviet\npeople and the people outside the\nborder.\nThe government has marshalled\nImposing forces in an effort to ram\nthrough on schedule Malenkov's\ndemand that consumer wants must\nbe fully satisfied within two or\nthree yeari.\nIMPORTANT DRIVE\nIt would be difficult to over.\nemphasize the importance Of this\ndrive, It Is Important for the\npopularizing and lOlidfylng of the\nMalenkov government. The goal Is\na prospering Soviet' Union whose\ninternatlonaUauthorlty would grow\nas Its well-being increased internally. Possibly the government\nlooks to the time when the country\ncan serve as a model In propaganda for the Communist system.\nWhile ho brake wai applied to\nindustry, lt li acknowledged that\nthe pace bf Soviet lndustrallzatloh\ninterfered with agriculture. Mow It\nIs proclaimed that the Industrial\nbase achieved permits ths country\nto turn ill attontlon to the needs\ndf consumers and to meeting the\ndemands of agriculture.\nThla.appears to be the most determined and concerted Internal\ncampaign the Soviet press ever\nhas embarked upon, in all papers,\nlong editorials daily pound home\nthe menage ot the central committee of the communist party\nratlyi both city and village to\nthe cause ot Increased output,\nTug Salvaged In\nRecord Time\nVANCOtrV-fl (CPX \u00ab\u2022\" A SD-fftOt\ntug that sank In the North Arm of\nthe Fraier river wai hauled to the\nsurface less than ia houn after the\nwent to the bottom.\n\u25a0 Two crew members were esleep\naboard the ID-ton Camalong when\nshe broke her moorings and swept\nunder a log boom. They barely had\ntime to escape through an emerg-\nhatch before the Vessel slipped below the surface.\nA diver put slings on the craft\nand the was pulled to the surface,\npumped out and towed to a shipyard for repairs. '\nNewfoundland Fishermen\nQuit as Cod Prices Drop\nBy HAROLD HARWOOD\n.ST, JOHN'S, Nfld. (GP)\u2014For.the\ntint time In 490 years Newfoundland Jlshei-mun hSVe quit flailing.\nprices offered by expdrtera for\naalt cod thla fall dropped so low\nthat the fishermen could not meet\ntheir expenses. More than 6000 of\nthem slopped fishing last week,\nafter an announcement that the\nCanadian government would 'hot\ncome to their aid with price support,\nMoit of the men are self'em-\nployed members of the Newfoundland federation af fishermen, e\nsprawling union with 240 locals\nscattered through the province and\ne total membership Of flooo. Mem-\nberihlp passed 10,000 last year but\nshrank when men began te quit\nfishing for mere financially re\nwarding work,\nThe federation Itself refused ta\nendorse the fishermens' action, but\nthe'protest movement spread from\nvillage to village and messages\npoured Into headquarters from\nlacal secretaries stating that an\ntheir awn initiative they had quit\nend hauled up their boats.\nfive thousand to flOOO men were\ninvolved in the action, according to\nP. J. Antle, financial secretary for\nthe federation. A few locals however, are continuing fishing pending the outcome of negotiations\nnow being conducted between fishermen, exporters and government\net St. John's. But most locals have\nquit fishing,  add a few have also\nrefused to ship their fish.\n. General secretary   C.  M.  Lane\nbt the federation has -advised\nagainst refusal -to ship, urging the\nfishermen to sell their fish for\npart payment On the understanding that final settlement will, be\nmade after pl'lCe negotiations conclude.\nAllied Bombers\n\"Attack' Norway\nOSLO (AP)\u2014Oslo caught an aer.\nlal attaclf Saturday as British, American and Danish jets piled In on\nthe defending Norwegians and Canadians in NATO's \"Operation\nHeads Up.\"\nA major portion of Denmark's\nJet strength was In the saturation\nstrike.\nIn bright, clear weather, radar-\ndirected Norwegian F-84S and Canadian V-SU swarmed up from\nOardermoen fighter bale near Oslo\nto meet the attackers. Air raid sirens walled up and down Oslo fjord\nas radar detected the Invaders\nmoving Into .this area at high altitude,\nNorway continued to be under attack Saturday and Sunday. Today\nDenmark goes on the defensive,\nclassipiid Ads get results\nKAU THE PRICE!\n( But only Half the story)\nA-40 SOMERSET\nThe delivered price of the Austin\nA-40 Somerset is an honest price.\nThat low figure buys you a complete new car. There are no extras\nto buy.\nThe quoted price includes such\nfeatures (usually priced extra) as\nfoam-rubber cushioning, wear-\ndefying, soil-resisting genuine\nleather upholstery and an air-\ncor-ditioning heater that will give\nyou living-room warmth all\nwinter. It also includes directional\nsignals, non-stall electric windshield wipers, plus a powerful\n12-volt electrical system.\nBut that's only half the story.\nThe other half is the satisfying,\nable way your Austin performs\u2014\nat savings as high as 501 on each\noperating dollar.\nTry an Austin on the road. You\ncan see through that wide,nothing-\nin-your-way windshield. You can\nmatch traffic at its toughest\u2014and\ncruise smoothly at highway speeds\nin day-long comfort. And you can\nbe sure of Austin service wherever\nyou go. These are reasons why\nmore than 80,000 Canadians now\ndrive Austin.\nFOR THE IDEAL ANSWER TO THE HIGH COSf OF MOTORING, SEE\n80S BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1135\n:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.-.   ';,\u25a0-.'\u25a0.\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0' :,\u25a0\u25a0-.. .:'..\u25a0  .... .7- \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\u2022\n\u25a0  ---'\u2022\u25a0\t\n -\n eW,~WITl-W5TOl*a\u00abf?\n\/:\u2022\u25a0\"\u25a0\nLeafs Capture West Kootenay Title\nBefore 600 Happy Home Town Fans\nThe West Kooteney Baseball\nChampionship, after evading Nelson\nlor the past few years, came back\nto Nelson Sunday.\n. Nelson Maple Leafs earned the\nsilverware when they dumped Trail\nSmoke Eaters 7-2 in the third and\n(Inei game before some GOO joyous\nfans at tha Civic Recreation\ngrounds.       >\nTrail took the first game when\nthey came back with five runs in\nthe eighth to stop the Leafs and\nDon McKlnnon 5-2. Nelson evened\nthe series when Les Hufty chucked them to a 5-1 victory.\n, For the Leafs Sunday it was\nagain Les Hufty, star right hander,\nwho turned the tide. Up until today's all important game Les had\na 12 won and five loss record and\nSunday he gave up U hits but kept\nthem well scattered.\n' Although outhlttlng the Leafs lift Trail couldn't get untracked as\nErnie Gare in left field for the\nLeafs played his greatest game of\nthe season. On two occasions he\ncame up with spectacular catches.\nMuch credit for the Leaf victory\nwent to Joe (The Kid) Posnlkoff,\nfor with one on in the second frame,\nhis towering triple over the head\nof Howie Palmer in centre field\nstarted the Leafs on the road to the\nchampionship.\nTrail, though dropping the title\nthey held last season, went down\nlike champs although playing under a handicap. Two ot their star\nplayers, Ken Nlcol and Doug Ger-\nanaizo, were sidelined for the series. Nlcol broke an ankle In a recent game in Fruitvale and Geran-\nazzo a broken thumb In the baseball tournament.\nYOUNG CRONIE CALLED\nTo fill in for the Smokies, manager Louis Demore called up 15-\nyear-old Al Cronle to play third\nbase and a nice job he did. He elso\nconnected for two long fly balls\nthat Bill Haldane gathered in at\ncentre field.\nAfter Posnlkoffs long poke in\nthe second frame, giving the Leafs\na one-run lead, Les Hufty singled,\nscoring Posnlkoff. At this point Bob\nKoehle, playing for Bob McNabb\nwho is in Idaho on his honeymoon,\nlifted a high pop up on the first\n\u2022base line. With both Sonny Hackett and Pete Boisvert standing\nnearby, Ray Hamilton came down\noff first calling for the ball. Hamll-\nton, instead of gathering In the easy\nout, dropped the ball, Gars walked\nand then a passed bayy by Hackett\nsent the Leafs Into a four run lead,\nas two more runs crossed the plate,\nTrail got one run back In their\nhalf ot the second, (they tossed to\nsee whloh was home team and Trail\nwon the toss) when Hamilton walked, Julie Biiesky single and Palmer\nwaa safe when Hufty fumbled. With\nthe basei loaded Hamilton acored\non Al Cronle'a high fly to centre,\nTrail, In the third, started a rally\nwhen Ken Stanton and Jim McDonald singled. Ernie Gare came\nthrough with his first great catch\nin the game when he chased a fly\nball hit by Hackett and snared it\none handed at the knees while still\nrunning.\nIn the fourth, Trail cut the Leaf\nlead In half when Palmer singled\nand then, after working his way\naround third, came home when Bob\nKoehle dropped a pop fly hit by\nLou Corrado. With Corrado on second, Gare came through again with\na beautiful running catch of a ball\nhit by Stanton.\nThe Leafs tucked the game away\nin the fifth as Gare singled and\nBiiesky muffed a perfect double\nplay ball. Herb Lovett then blasted\na pitch through the legs of Cronle,\nscoring Gare, and then Hamilton\nwith his second error of the day\nallowed Swede Larson a safety with\ntwo more runs being counted.\n.From here on out the Leafs play\ned airtight ball.\nErnie Gare led the Nelson batters, collecting two hits, while\nHowie Palmer led the Trail attackers, hitting three for four. Biiesky,\nStanton and McDonald each collected two safeties.\nLes Hufty, in winning his 13th\ngame of the year, gave up 11 .hits,\nstruck out five and walked one.\nPete Bolsvert gave up only six hits,\nstruck out seven and issued one\ntree pass.\nLineups:\nTrail\u2014Lou Corrado, Ken Stanton, Jim McDonald, Sonny Hackett;\nRay Hamilton, Julie-Bllesky, Howie\nPalmer, Al Cronle, Pete Boisvert.\nNelson\u2014Bob Koehle, Ernie Gare,\nFrank Hufty, Herb Lovett, Swede\nLarson, Bill Haldane, Marsh Sev\neryn, Joe Posnlkoff, Les Hufty.\nNelson 040 030 000\u20147   6 2\nTrail  010 100 000\u20142 11 4\nUmpire, Red Wasslck, Ferguson\nand Tounsend.\nStrikes n'Spares\nDot Norfleld and Marg Laughton\npaced the bowlers In Variety Club\nSJay,    capturing    the    individual\nonors.\n'Norfleld took the singles event\ntvltha 229, while Laughton captured the aggregate honors with a 581.'\nThe Mad Hatters copped the team\nelngles with an 887 and the Rum\nDums the aggregate with a, 2372.\nThose scoring the 200 singles\nwere Ella Farenholti with 208,\nBilly Moore with a 208 and a 204,\nMarg Giles 210, Gladys Schneider\n21J, Marg Laughton 223, B. Sutherland 205, Gladys Olund 206, Gwen\nMacrone 216, Mary Arnot 211, and\nMarg Whitelock,201.\nIn the Men's Commercial League,\nBill Horner took the high singles\nwith his 326, while Bob Bennett\nwon the aggregate -honors with a\nT46. Bennett had singles of .202, 242\nand 302. Horner came through for\na 710 aggregate.\nThe Queen's team captured both\nthe singles and the aggregate with\nscores of 1217 and 2832. Only two\nplayers were over the 600 mark\u2014\nDon Iceton with 647 and George\nBelyk 639.\nThe following night scores were\nthe lowest recorded this season.\nDon Iceton kept his 240 average\nIntact when he led all. bowlers for\nthe aggregate honors with a 722.\nBill Hille took- the singles honors\nwith j! 275.\nFor the ladles, lt was Bea Mills\nwith singles of 245. 197 and 219 for\nan aggregate of 661. Team honors\nwent to the Orange Crush crew\nwith a single of 1003 and an aggregate of 2932.\nBowling In the 600's were Syl\nBenedetti. 606, Bill Hllle 630, Al\nLlness 634.\nROYALS TAKE WINGS 8-2\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Montreal\nRoyals turned back Rochester Red\nWings 8-2 Saturday night to grab\na 3-0 lead in their best-of-seven\nGovernor's Cup final playoffs.\nThe Royals need only one more\nvictory to clinch the series. The\nnext two games also are scheduled\nto be played here.\nCOMPLETE\nMECHANICAL\nREPAIRS\nBy   Factory   Trained\nMechanics\nSUPERIOR\nMOTORS\nYour Dodge De Soto Dealer\nOpposite Post Office\non Vernon Street\nBudget Plan available on all\nSales and Service\nFurillo Tops\nBat Averages\nThe 1933 major league baseball\nseason .ended .Sunday .and there\nwas hardly an eyebrow In the land\nralsedat the two victors. New York\nYankees and Brooklyn Dodgers\nwere expected to win the American\nand National League pennants and\nthey did\u2014with emphasis.\nThe Yanks, who took their fifth\nstraight flag under Casey Stengel,\nfinished 8U games ahead of Cleve\nland Indians. The Dodgers, under\nChuck Dressen, had a 13-game\nbulge over Milwaukee Braves,\nThe batting races weren't decided until the final day\u2014a day\nwhich saw Boston Red Sox defeat\nthe Yankees 2-1; Detroit Tigers\nstop Cleveland Indians 7-3; Chicago\nWhite Sox edge St. Louis Browns\n2-1 in 11 innings and Phlladelnhla\nAthletics whip Washington Senators 9-2 in the American League.\nIn the National League, the Dodgers whipped Philadelphia Phillies\n8-2; Milwaukee nipped Cincinnati\nRedlegs 8-2; Chicago Cubs edged\nSt. Louis Cardinals 3-2 and Pittsburgh Pirates downed New York\nGiants 6-4.\nCarl Furlllo, Dodger player who\nhasn't played since Sept. 6 because\nof a broken finger, topped the National League hitters with a .344\naverage, two points better than\nRed Schoendienst of the Cardinals\nwho hit two-for-flve Sunday.\nWashington's Mickey Vernon,\nwho hadn't had a .300 season since\n1946, topped the American League\nhitters with a .33f, edging Cleveland's Al' Rosen who batted .336.\nRosen batted three-for-flve and\nVernon two-for-four Sunday. RoBen\nled the' loop In home runs with\n43 and runs batted In with 145.\nWith a few minor exceptions, the\npennant races finished pretty much\nas expected. The big surprise, of\ncourse, \"was Milwaukee where the\nBraves, seventh last year In Boston,\nclimbed to second place and set. a\nNational League attendance mark\nof 1,826,397 In the process. Braves'\nEddie Mathews, another surprise,\ncame up with 47 home runs to top\nthe NL in that department.\nBoudreau To Lead\nSox 2 More Seasons\nNEW YORK (AP)\u2014Boston Red\nSox signed manager Lou Boudreau\nto a new two-year contract Sunday.\nThe former Cleveland star shortstop, is finishing his second year\nas manager of the Red Sox.\nLast year the Sox finished sixth\nin the American League. This season he raised his youthful team\nto fourth.\nTerms were not announced.\nNOTICE\nHOCKEY\nSEASON TICKETS\nLoaf year's season ticket and contract ticket holders\nmay pick up their tickets from Sept. 21st to Oct.'l at\nthe Civic Centre office.\nNelson Cricketers\nCapture Third\nStraight Contest\nA large number of spectators at\nthe Civic Centre Grounds Saturday\nwitnessed a tine game between two\nstrong cricket teams ot Nelson and\nTrail. Trail brought twelve players\nand It was agreed to play 12 a side\nwith Walt Bailey turning out for\nthe Nelson club in addition to the\nteam previously announced. Nelson\ntook the game by a score of 84 runs\nte Trail's 61, thus closing the season\nwith both clubs winning 3 games,\nCaptain Bowen won the toss for\nTrail and decided to put Nelson\nin to bat first, the local team opening batsmen being Adcock and Middleton. 8-ball overs were played,\nand It Is thought tfiat this will be\nstandard practice In future seasons\nas it speeds up the game and Is'\nalso standard throughout the other\nCanadian clubs of which there are\nwell over 100. Highest Nelson scorers were Snell (21), Young (19)\nFerrow (10) and Middleton (9).\nBailey hit the only 6 of -the Nelson\ninnings with a nicely timed straight\ndrive over the north fence. Trail\nused 7 bowlers of whom Haldane\nproved most successful, taking 4\nwickets fqr 31 runs in 6 overs.\nBourchier and Higgins opened the\nbatting for Trail, but-with 84 runs\non the board to their credit, Nelson's opening bowler, Young, main\ntained an aggressive attack through\nout the remainder of the game. In\nthe first over he claimed the wicket\nof Higgins who waa caught by\nSnell with t run on the board. Top\nscorers for .Trail were Markland\n(20), BOwen (16) and Bourchier\n(12). Farrow took a very difficult,\nalmost acrobatic, catch to dismiss\nBourchier off ' Young's bowling,\nwhen that batsman looked well-\nsettled to make a high score. The\nlocal club used 3 bowlers, Young\ntaking 8 wickets for 20 runs In 8\novers, and Snell 3 for 17 in 5 avers.\nFarrow, who has been bowling well\nIn the last few games, unfortunately\ncould not get settled down and\nbowled 3 overs tor 22 runs before\nbeing replaced by Snell.\nThe Nelson club has done well\nduring their first season to reintroduce the sport of cricket in the\narea, and the last half of the season\nsaw a \"greatly Improved team. The\nfigures show that In the first 3\ngames, Nelson scored a total of\n171 runs against Trail's 821, but the\nlast 3 games produced a turnabout\nwith a total of 237 against Trail's\n151. Over the entire series the rate\nof scoring has heen 48 runs per\nhour, with a total of 880 runs made\nIn the 6 games.\nFollowing this final .game the\nNelson Cricket Club was hqst to\nthe Trail Club at a social held in\nthe Memorial Hall. Mrs. Rushby,\nMrs. Middleton and Mrs. Young\nserved refreshments provided by\nthe club.\nSixth Qdf Crqww\nFbr John LeschiiJc\nBASEBALL SCORES\nSunday\nNATIONAL LEAQUE\nSt. Louis   200 000 000\u20142 10 2\nChicago  000 100 02x\u20143   4 1\nMizell and Rice;' Minner, Klipp\n'stejn (9) and McCullough, Garag\niola (9). W-Mlnner.\nNew York ...:...:.. 100 002 001-4 9 1\nPittsburgh     200 010 012\u2014. \u00ab 2\nDark, Gomez (2), Corwln (9) and\nCalderone; Hogue and Sandlock.\nL\u2014Corwln.\nMilwaukee   000 422 000\u20148 18 2\nCincinnati   110 000 000\u20142   7 0\nSpahn and St. Claire; Baczewski,\nWehmeler (4) Perkowski (7) King\n(8) and Bailey. L\u2014Baczewski.\nBrooklyn  201 001 040\u20148 14 0\nPhiladelphia .... 010 000 010\u20142   5 0\nMeyer, Loes (4) Wade (9) and\nWalker; Roberts, Lindell (8) Drews\n(8) and Burgess. W\u2014Loes, L\u2014Roberts.\nAMERICAN LEAQUE\nDetroit  300 120 000\u20147 8 1\nCleveland    002 000 100\u20143 9 2\nAber and Swift, Batts (6) Feller,\nHoutteman (8) and Ginsberg. L\u2014\nFeller.\nChicago    090 000 010 01\u20142 9 1\n_', Louis   001 000 000 00\u20141 7,1\nPierce and R. Wilson; Pillette\nand Moss.'\nPhiladelphia .... 100 040 211\u20149 IS 1\nWashington  000 911 000\u20142 10 2\nColeman and Murray;   Stewart,\nMasterson   (6)   and   'Grasso.   L\u2014\nStewart.\nFirst-\nBoston    000 000 002\u20142 7 0\nNew York   000 000 001\u20141 3 1\nHenry, Klnger  (9)   and   White;\nFord and Berra. W-r-Henry.\nSaturday\nAMERICAN  LEAQUE\nBoston   000 100 000 01\u20142 8 0\nNew York .... 000 001 000 00\u20141 7 1\nChicago    003 000 300\u20146 9 0\nSt.   Lpuls     010 000 020-3 6 0\nDetroit    000 000 102\u2014 3   8 1\nCleveland   204 400 20x\u201412 12 0\nPhiladelphia .. 005 002 040\u201411 13 0\nWashington    . 001 001 000\u2014 2   7 3\n. NATIONAL LEAQUE\nBrooklyn .'.  000 100 000 0\u20141   8 1\nPhiladelphia . 000 100 000 1-2   7 2\nNew York   100 030 001\u20145 11 0\nPittsburgh  000 300 000\u20143   6 0\nSt. Louis   100 002 000\u20148   S 0\nChicago  000112 OOx\u20144 11 1\nMilwaukee   .... 000 204 001\u2014 7 13 2\nCincinnati ...... 040 200 04x-10 15 1\nCOLUSA, Calif. (CP) \u2014 William\nCunningham, 58, who played with\nNew York Giants In the World\nSeries three times, 1921, 1922, 1923,\ndied Saturday of a heart attack.\nCunningham broke In with Portland, played a year with Boston\nBraves, coached Chicago White\nSox, and retired last year after\ncoaching baseball at the Unlver-|\nslty of San Francisco.\nJohnny Leschuk, Nelson's gift to\nthe golf world, came through triumphantly Sunday afternoon to\ncaptdre the Nolson Golf and Country Club championship and the\nApployord-Lowe Trophy.\nFor the gum-chewing, bespectacled Leschuk, It marked hla atxth\nchampionship this season, with\nboth this one- and the Kootenay\nOpen being the Important ones. Besides these, Johnny came second\nonce and fourth In another to give\nhtm an' Impressive record for the\nyear.\nIn gaining hla one-sided victory\nSunday, Leschuk had to beat Jim\nAllan, holder of the trophy last\nyear. For the first nine holes Allan\nput up a game bettle, only to fall\nInto a lapse In the final round that\nsaw htm missing shots that ordinarily he would have made.\nLesohuk's victory was revenge In\none sense, for It waa Allan who held\nthe upper hand last year in this\nsame event when he won\\on the\nfinal hole.\nLeschuk, playing like a veteran,\nhad his chip shots working to perfection, with the ball landing only\nfeet from the cup time after time.\nAllan never did take the lead in\nthe 15-hole game, but on many\noccasions evened up the game. After\nplaying nine holes, Leschuk was\none up, but from there out Leschuk\ntook the lead with victories on the\n11th, 13th end 14th holes. By taking the 15th he was left four up\nwith only three to go, and this\nspelled the end ot a great season\ntor the 22-year-old Leschuk.\nWhen asked what contributed\nmostly to his winning ways this\nseason, Leschuk remarked that it\nwas practice. In fact, said Johnny,\n\"I put In three hours oh the course\nbefore going out. for the match\nSunday.\"\nIn play for the McBrlde Cup for\nmen over 69, R. L. McBrlde capr\ntured his own trophy when he beat\nJ. D. Kerr on the 17th hole.\nThe game was well played\nthroughout with both goiters fighting lt out to the wire. With McBrlde\ngaining the 17th hole, lt placed him\ntwo up with only one hole to be\nplayed.\nWINS CONSOLATION\nThe fight for the consolation\naward in the over 50 championship\nCIVIC\nCENTRE\nSCHEDULE\nArena\nMONDAY \u2014\n4:00- 6.00-FREE CHILDREN'S\nSKATING\n6:45- 8:30\u2014Senior Hockey\nTUMDAY -\n4:30- StftV-Hockey School\nForwards; Midget\n6:30- 8:30\u2014Senior Hoekey\nWEDNESDAY -\n4:30- 5:30\u2014Hockey School\nDefencemen; Midget\n6:30- 7:45\u2014Senior Hockey\n8;13-10:15-ADULT SKATING\nTHUMDAY \u2014\n4:00- 6:001-CHILDREN'S\nSKATING\n6:45- 6:30\u2014Senior Hockey\nFRIDAY -    .\n4:0fl- 5:30\u2014Hockey School\nForwards; Bantam\n5;80- 7:45\u2014Senior Hockey\n8:15-10:00-ADULT SKATING\nSATURDAY -\n10:00-12:00\u2014CHILDREN'S\nSKATING    \u2022\n1:00- 2:00\u2014Hockey. School\nForwards; Bantam\n2:00- 3:00\u2014Hockey _chool\nDefencemen; Bantam\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Hockey School\nForwards; Midget\n6:00- 8:00\u2014Senior Hockey\nSUNDAY - -\n10:00-12:00\u2014Senlor'Hoekey\n3:00- 5:00-ADULT SKATING\nRecreation Hall\nMONDAY -\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Girls' Pro-Rec\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Senior Girls' Pro-Rec\n6:00- 7:00\u2014Basketball\n8:00-10:00\u2014Ladies' Pro-Rec\nTUESDAY-   ..\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Boys' Pro-Rec\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Senior Boys' Pro-Rec\n7:30-10:00\u2014Men's Basketball\nWEDNESDAY \u2014\n4:00- 5:30\u2014Senior Girls' Basketball\n5:30- 8:30\u2014Ladies' Basketball\n8:30-10:30\u2014Men's Basketball\nTHUMDAY -\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Girls' Pro-Rec\n8:00- 6:0O-Senion Girls' Pro-R' -\n8:00-10:00\u2014Ladles' Pro-Rec\nFRIDAY -    .\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Girls' Pro-Rec\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Senior Boys' Pro-Rec\n6:00- 7:80\u2014Besketball\n7:30-10:00\u2014Men's Pro-Bee\nSATURDAY \u2014    \u2022\n9:00-11:00\u2014Girls' Basketball\n2:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Badminton\nmatch proved to be high calibre\ngolf, with Bill Anderson forced to\nplay an extra hole before taking\nHerb Peacock .'out.' It was a fight\nall the way. \u2022' \u25a0 .\nA winner In the first flight was\nstill undeclared after Sunday's\nplay, with Arnold Sherwood and\nLeigh McBrlde reaching the final.\nThe match will be played later this,\nweek along with the women's club\nchampionship for the Ruth Armstrong Rose Bowl.    \u2022\nMary Jurlloff, winner -of the\nwomen's Kootenay Open, Will face\nMrs. Jean Young fpr the trdphy\nwon last year by Miss Jurlloff.\n. Miss Jut-off reached the finals\nwhen she ousted Helleh Sloan in a\nwell-played match. Mrs. Young also\nreached the finals with a well-earned victory over Mrs. H. Peacock.\nIn other games, Jack Young\ndowned Bob Jarrett to take the\nsecond flight championship and\nMarshall Stedman beat Bert Top-\nham for a third flight victory.\nNext Sunday will mack the closing of the golf season when all\nplayers wjll gather for a round of\ngolf and the presentation of the\nprizes for the.season.\nThe event will see two-ball foursomes played before the prizes are\ngiven out.\nThe prizes will be for all the\ntournaments run off, with the exception of the Kootenay Open, held\nLabor Day, when prizes for that\nevent were given. ,\nHoekey School\nFor Nelson Kids\nNelson Midget end Bantam players wjll get their chance for some\nearly season Instruction starting tomorrow when the Civic Centre will'\nBponaor a hockey' school for the\nboys. ,     \u2022 '\nThe school will last all week and\nwill see WUlle Schmidt, new coach\not the senior hockey club, giving\nthe boys instruction with the assistance of Jimmy1 Lowe.\nThe first session will get under\nway Tuesday afternoon with the\nMidget forwards getting the nod.\nWednesday will see the defencemen\nget their chance.\nThe following day the Bantam\nforwards will hold their first workout, while Saturday will see both\nthe Bantam forwards and defence-\nmen along with the Midget forwards getting further lessons In\nthe art of the game.\nBeliveau Makes\nFine Start\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014Big Jean\nBeliveau netted a pair of tallies and\nfigured In two others Saturday\nnight as Montreal Canadiens routed\nCleveland Barons of the American\nHockey League 5-2 before an exhibition game crowd of 8340.\nCoach Dick Irvin teamed the\nstarry centre with Maurice (Rocket) Richard and Eddie Mazur.\n.Mazur, Eddie Litzenberger and\nBernle (Boom Boom) Geoffrion\ncompleted the scoring for the National Leaguers. Fred Glover and\nFred Shero counted for the Barons.\nc9^5\"s7\nNIlfON DAILY K\u00abW\u00bb, MONDAY, SIPT. 28,1953 \u00ab.;!\n6-5 Odds Favor Yanks\nBy JACK HAND\nNEW YORK (AP)-Allle ' Ray\nnolds and Carl Ersklne appeared\na sure bet-for Wednesday's world\nseries opener at Yankee Stadium\nas New York Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers finished their regular\nseason business Sunday,\nStrong support for the home-run\nconscious Dodgers narrowed the\nodds close to even money with the\nYankees still a slight 6-to-5 favorite to win an unprecedented fifth\nstraight world series.\nImpressive trials by Reynolds,\nEddie Lopat and Vic Raschl during\nthe last week set the Yank pitching routine. Manager Casey Stengel's veteran ''big three\" probably\nwill handle the first three games.\nManager Chuck Dressen of the\nDodgers was expected to follow\nErsklne with the crafty lefthander,\nPreacher Roe, in the second game\na| the stadium, shifting to rookie\nBob Milliken or Russ Meyer for\nthe Ebbets Field  opener  Friday.\nTwo games at the stadium, three\nin Brooklyn and the last two back\nat the stadium will be the schedule\nunless one club wins four before\nthat time. Most baseball.experts\nfigured it would go six or seven.\nGame time is 1:05 p.m. EST except\nfor Sunday when lt will be 2:05 p.m.\nDodger hopeB soared on word\nfrom Carl Furillo, the rightfielder\nwho broke a finger on his right\nhand in a Polo Grounds fist fight\nwith Leo Durocher, Sept. 6.\nAfter taking batting practice for\nthe first time in Philadelphia Sat\nurday night, Furlllo reported, \"111\nbe ready.\"\nAll the statistics; except past aeries results, lean heavily in the\nDodgers' favor. Six of the eight\nstarters, pitchers excluded, had\nhigher batting averages than their\nYankee rivals, position by position.\nBaseball Standings\nBy The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAQUE  (FINAL)\nW   L. Pet. GBL\nBrooklyn  105   49   .882\nMilwaukee   - ....   92   62   .897 IS\nSt. Louis     83   71   ,539 22\nPhiladelphia     83   71   .539 .22\nNew York    70   84   .455 35\nCincinnati   68   86   .442 37\nChicago      65. 89   .422 40\nPittsburgh     50 104   ,325 53\nAMERICAN LEAGUE (FINAL)\nW    L   Pet. GBL\nNew York    09   52   .656\nCleveland       92   82  597    SVi\nChicago      89   65   .578 ll_\nBoston      84   89   .549 18\nWashington      76   76  .500 23ti\nDetroit     60   94   .390 *7>Vi\nPhiladelphia  - 59   95   .383 41%\nSt. Louis     54 100   .351 48_\nRangers Edge\nRoyals 3-2\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. (CP)\n\u2014New York Rangers needed all\ntheir bjg, league talent Saturday\nnight to turn back New Westminster Royals 3-2 ia a bruising exhibition hockey game.\nThere are immediate openings for\nmen fo ire'm es skilled technicians\nin these aviation trades:\nAERO-ENGINE   RADIO -RADAR\nELECTRICAL   ARMAMENT\nINSTRUMENT    AIRFRAME\n0*1 the 'flen' from the men you know in the Air\nForce. Or hove a chat with Ihe RCAF Career\nCounsellor at the address in the coupon \u2014or mail\nthe coupon today Is\nTARGET:\n\u2022 *  *   \u00bb\nFREEDOM\ny'--').V'<'\/#>,   '\n\/ \/ -: \/: y\/f,x\nThe jet engines of RCAF\nSabre Fighters take in th\n... compress it... mix h with fuel... igofa *...\nexpand it... send it rashing oat the tailpipe xrUh the\ni      power of 5,000 horses... impel the tintttt\nforward to sonic speeds.\nThe men who Took, after such powerful, modern\nengines ire experts.\nRCAF equipment is tops: RCAF Aircraft Technicians\nare tops too\u2014tops in trsining \u2014 tops in performance\nof duty!\nIt's the same for Aircraft Technicians in all branches.\n\u25a0' r-\nI\nI\nI\n. I\nl\nI\nI\nDECIDE, NOW TO WORK ON JET POWER!\nJOIN THE AIR FORCE TODAY!\nR.C.A.F. RICRUITINQ UNIT     '\nPOST OFFICE-BUILDING,\n.-LETHBRIDGE, ALTA \u2014 PHONE 6146\n1\nPlease mall to me, without obligation, Jell 'particulars regarding   \\\nenrolment requirements and openings now available in tbt RCAF.   I\nj   NAME (please print).\n(Surname)\n(Christian Same)\nSTREET ADDRESS-\nCITY __.\t\n_.... PROVINCE...\nj   EDUCATION (by grade and province)........\n. AGS...,\n\"*-\"-   I\nYOU MUST SI SITWIIH 17\nAND 40 AND HAVE ORADE S EDUCATION OR SITTER.\nI CAF.33-8     j\ncinaclian Air Force\n-UVVs\nFor further information, contact the Motile Recruiting Unit at the Canadian Legion, Oct. 15, 16, 1953\nmmmmmmmmmm\n_____\n\t\nsa^A-j^ss\n e \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 28, 19SS\nQk>5&\n1 PTRSQN-TO-PTRSON WANT ADS\n\\    TOR QUICK RESULT'S I\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nCITY Or CRANBROOK\nHELP WANTED: MALE\nMANAGER FOR THE\nMEMORIAL ARENA\nApplications for the position of\nManager for the Cranbrook Memorial Arena are hereby Invited.\nApplicants to state salary expected, qualifications, and previous experience if any. Duties will commence about October 18th. and will\ncontinue to March 31st, 1094.\nApplications will be received by\nthe undersigned up until 5:00 p.m.,\nOctober 2nd, 1953.\nRoger N. Chester,\nCITY CLERK.\nRELIABLE MAN WITH CAR TO\nmanage established Fuller Brush\nbusiness. Permanent. Earnings\nwell above average. Apply or\nwrite S. F. Thompson, 307 Robson St., Nelson.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nLOCAL REAL ESTATE AND IN-\nsurance office requires stenographer, October first or sooner.\nMust have shorthand. Experience\nnot essential but preferred. Please\nstate qualifications in application.\nBox 26, Nelson, B.C.\n6FFICE tiLERK WITH TYPING\nand  some  knowledge  of book-\n' keeping preferred. Permanent. \u2014\nKootenay Valley Co-Op. Dairy.\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED IMME\ndiately. 612 Carbonate Street.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFORMER HIGH SCHOOL TEACH-\ner gives lessons of French language. Tele, 230-R from 12-4.\nDRESSMAKER. ALTERATIONS A\nspecialty. Phone 1678-L.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST-BOY'S 2-TONE- GLASSES\nThursday night Uphill secilon,\nReward. Prone 596-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nAS8AYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nAGENTS WANTED\nDistributor\nFOR LIFE TIME.BATTERIES\nSee Mr. Church, factory representative, at Hume Hotel,\nSeptember 29.\nPROGRESSIVE AUTOMOTIVE\nDISTRIBUTORS\nMEN ARE MAKING UP TO $300.\nper week with our fast-selling\ncomplete range of novel signs,\nadvertising specialties and gifts\nfor year 'round selling. Established firm. Give particulars of experience and lines carried. Confidential. Write Box No. 326,\nWestmount P.O., Westmount, P.Q.\nWATKINS DEALER URGENTLY\nrequired for Nelson to serve and\nsell many satisfied customers who\nare'now waiting for the Watkins\nDealer. Applicant.must have car.\nCredit can be arranged. For full\nInformation write or wire The\nJ. R. Watkins Co., 1010 Albernl\nStreet, Vancouver.\nBUILD SECURITY FOR YOUR\nfamily! Yet.be independent. Possibilities at every door you\nknock. 290 guaranteed products\nto'Sell, full or part time in a protected territory. Ask for details\ntoday. FAMILEX, Dept. 8, 1600\nDelorlmier, Montreal.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 290 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C, Phone Pacific 6357.\nFOR SALE \u2014 BEDROOM SUITE,\nchrome plated kitchen aet, six-\nmonths-old;-Easy washing machine, all for $125.00. Phone 77; Bill\nGriff is.\nELECTRIC HOT WATER RADIA-,\ntor, 12 coils, 1000 watt, good make,\nnearly new, $25.00. Also strawberry 'cultivator and harness,\ncheap. Chanter, R.R. No. 1.\nFOR SALE\u2014G.E. WASHER WITH\npump, under 3 yra. old, $100.00;\ndinette extension table with 4\nchairs, $20.00. Phone 805-Y.\nWILL TRADE 30\" McCLAHY FUR-\nnace for 16, 18 or 20\" furnace.\nPhone 214-Y. 1013 2nd Ave., Box\n1389, Rossland, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014BABY BUGGY AND\ncrib, bassinet, good condition.\nApply 816 Carbonate St. or phone\n473-R.\n'\u25a0GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF I\nBEER LICENCE '\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\non the 17th day of October next,\nthe undersigned ihtend to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for con-\nsent to transfer of Beer Licence\nNo. 10023, issued In respect of premises being part of a building known\nas the Civic Hotel, situate at 70S\nVernon Street, in the City of Nelson, Province of British Columbia,\nupon the lands described aa 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 Augustlna\nHerbrik to Oscar Esalas Beck and\nDagny Octavia Adella Beck of 1411\nHamilton Street, New Westminster,\nBritish Columbia, the transferees.\nDated at New Westminster, British Columbia, this 14th day oil September, 1053.\nOScar Esaias Beck,\nDagny Octavia Adelia Beck,\nApplicants and transferees.\nFOR SALE: VEGA TABLE CREAM\nseparator; Victory canning machine; stove drum, player piano\nrecords. Magee, Gray Creek.\nWILL TRADE 16-FT. CLINKER\nboat on trailer for small house\ntrailer. Apply Grandview Cabins\nor write A. Sawyer, Box 131\nIF YOU ARE INTERESTED IN\nearning $300 or more per month,\nhandling Health and Accident\nond -iconic Protection Insurance,\nwrite Transportation Insurance\nCo., 5280 Dunbar Street, Vancouver, B.C. Experienced salesmen\npreferred, but others considered.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nv ETC., FOR SALE\nE. W.' WIDDOWSON sfe CO., AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH.  S. fctiMS, HOS-liAND. B.C.,\nAssayer. Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. K. COATES, STE. NO. 8, 373\nBaker St., Nelson, Phone 1118.\nB.C. Lands. Surveyor.\nS. V. SHAYLER, P.O. BOX 262,\nKimberley; Phone' 54:\nB.C. Land Surveyor. Engineer,\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor;; Engineer.\nMACHINISTS\nBENlNE'tt._LII*ti*6\"\nMachine Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor, rewinding. Phone 593. 324 Vernon St.\nFOR QUICK SALE, ON KOOTE-\n. nay Lake, at Procter* B.C.\u2014Store\nbuilding   with   living   quarters;\nlight and water. $1800 cash or\nnear   offer.   Apply   F.   Bonacci,\nProcter, B.C.\nFOR SALE - 1-4 ROOM HOUSE,\nfully modern; 1-3 room house,\nfully .modern. Apply Wm. A\nHenke, Procter,\nFOR SALE\u2014NEW 5-ROOM HOME\non Vt acre upland, .1 mile from\n\" Nelson, on Ymir Road, Phone\n476-R-l or apply 60 Ymir Road.\nFOR SALE - BUILDING  LOTS,\n' 60X120, outside city limits, one\nblock from bus. Phone 1099-L or\ncall at 208 View Street\nSEWING MACHINES\nSINGER CAN REPAIR- YOUR\npresent machine at reasonable\ncost For tree estimates Phone 44.\nSINGER SEWING CENTRE\n339 BAKER ST. - NBLSON. B.C.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n\\\n51. Female\n' aheep......\n52. Exchange\n(colloq.)\nDOWN\n1: Equivalent\nto oral\n(Zool.)\n2. Reg*et\n3. God of war\n4. Divider\n5. Depart\n6. Grampus\n7. Eager\n8. City in.\nFrance'\n11. Bangs\n12. Sault St.\nMarie\n(local,\nname}\n14> Drag with\neffort\n19. Snare\n21. People\nof\nthe\nOrient\n22. To\nlook\nafter '\n25. Set\nof\nboxes\n(Orient)\n27. On the\nocean\n30. Embrace '\n31, Title ot\nformer\nRussian\nrulers (pi.)\n34. Divine law\nofthe\nRomans\nHraiaaia uaaran\nB_l   -IE.-!     ESSE\nmn ansMt-Hi-B\nMan lanifciHW\n@[__,H        _I:1HH\nBHBDsQ   f-HB\n[_i?isran_ia3 aa\nKDH      _r_H   U_i\nHanUB   HEl-IH-l\nii.n-inci rarcraiarc\ntW&mMW\nSssturtliy'i Answer\n35s Sharp\n37. Flightless\nbird   \u25a0\n40. Believe\n(archaic)\n42, Enough\n(poet.)\n45. Before\n47. Resort\n48. Like\nI\n1\nI\nI\nw\n__\n57\nACROSS   .\n1. Macaws\nOrtt.)\n5. Aim.\n9. Heil   .\n10. Revelry\n11. Soaks In\nwater\n13. Not hot\n15. Measure\n(Chin.)    '\n14. iinnamee*\nmeasure\n17. Antelope\n(AiM   ,\n18. .Emmet\n20. Chamber\n33. Specific\ngravity\n(abbr. I\n24. Girl's nam.\n26. Narrow\ninlet.\n(geol.)\n28. Slope J\n20.Insert\n32. For   .\n33. Paradises\n34. Music note\n36. Seaport\ncity\n(N. Afr.)\nSS. Associate\nchartered\naccountants\n(abbr,)   v\n89. Perform\n41.Shoshonean\nIndian\n48. Lloyd's\nregister\n(abbr.)\n44. Certain\n46. A state\n(U S.)\n48. The five\nbooks of\nMoses\n(var.)\n50. Cute off,.\nas the\ntope\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Herc's how to work It:\nAXVDLBAAXR\nte L O N O F ELL O W\n~One letter simply stands for another. In this example A la used\nfor the - three L'a, X for the two O'a, etc.' Single letters, apo's-.\ntrophies, the length end formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram quotation\nireorwi  TVs  wp>hflw   sraf'_*-\nFIP      T      CTUX.TU8HZUQK_._UQ\nHKMMFLWHJWF    C T-U X    T    O F V V X-\niKwwrt\nSaturday's Cryptoquote: I HAVE A TROUBLE OF MY\nOWN, A WIFE WHO PREACHES IN A GOWN AffP Uft\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES -\nSpecial low prices. Active Trading Co. 938 E Cordova St, Vancouver.\nBLONdE'OIL SPACE HEATER.\nUsed one year. $45.00. Phone 48-R\nbefore 10 a.m. or after 9 p.m.\nCHESS   WART   REMOVER\nLeaves no scars. Your Druggist\nsells CRESS. \"\nFOR SALE \u2014 TREE-RIPE FREE\nstone peaches; also small, ripe\npeaches. T. 6. Ludgate, ph. 482-X4\nRIPE BARTLETT PEARS, $1.80\nbox, while they last. \u2014 Phone\n462-L-2, North Shore\nFOR SALE\u2014WESTINGHOUSE RE-\nfrigerator. Cheap for cash. Phone\n1793-Y.\nFOR SALE-BABY'S CRIB, GAS\ncook-stove, radio, gramaphone,\nsmall cabin cook-stove. Ph. 1759-Y\nBARTLETT PEARS, $2.50. ALSO\nLabrador puppies. Phone 462-L-2.\nNorth Shore:\nCOAL HEATER IN GOOD CON-\nditlon, $19.00: Phone 1267-X.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY\nFOR SALE - FIVE-FOOT COM-\nmercial deep freeze, six-foot\ndouble decker dairy case, cash\nregister, scales, 1951 GMC half-\nton truck; all in A-l condition.\nPhone 1548-L, Trail.   C   -\nFOR RENT-A STORE SPACE, 31\nx 34 feet; large warehouse adjoining. Good location. Optional\nwith or without grocery stock and\nfixtures. Phone 1549-L, Trail,\nFOR SALE -POOLROOM BUS-\nlness, In Trail, with fixtures. Good\nrevenue. Reasonable. For particulars write 2108 Riverside Ave,,\nTrail, B.C.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS\nHARRY HOWARD SUTHERLAND,\nDECEASED\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that\nall persona having claims against\nHarry Howard Sutherland, deceased, late of Nelson, B.C., who die-\nthereat on the 21st day of September, 1953, are required to file particulars thereof with the. undersigned solicitors for the executrix\non or before the 31st day Of October,\n1053, after which date the Executrix\nwill proceed to distribute the assete\nof the said deceased among the\npersons entitled thereto, having regard only to the claims which shall\nthen have been filed as above required,\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this 24th\nday of September, 1958.\nGARLAND Is GANSNER,\nP.O. Box 490, Nelson, B.C.\nSolicitors for the Executrix..\nMACHINERY\nNATIONAL MACHflUlRt CO.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR; MINIM),\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMSKT\n' Enquiries Invited\nrsranvtlle Island Vancouver 1. B.C.\nPERSONAL\nMICRON1C HEARING A--S3\nWrite PO Box 30. Nelson. B.C.\nWaWaMBA sVftTOi-.1 fflffl m\nsurance Co.. D. L. Kerr. Agent\nalmm afl-fs, m-rnm ap-t\nDepot! Clean rooms and reasonable ratles Vanconver,H B.C\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS1\n1\nWANTED - CLEAN COTTON\nrags. Must be 12 -inches square\nor more. Daily News.\nWANTED \u2014 16; 18 OR 20\" FUR-\nnoce. Phone 214-Y, Box 1389, 1911\nSecond Avenue, Rossland, B.C.\nCLASSIFIED AP\u00bb \u00abET RgsiUtTj\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS... i\u00abe on na\n(Pacific Daylight Time)\nF\n1\nMONDAY, SEPT. 28, 1958\n7:00\u2014News \u25a0'\u2022\n7:05\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:i5\u2014Sporta News\n7:20\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n8:00\u2014News .\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sports News\nthOO\u2014Morning ^Devotions\n9:15\u2014Earl Warren Show\n10:00\u2014Saddle Serenade\n10:15\u2014Newa\n10:20-Morning Visit\n10:30\u2014Story. Parade\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Shut-In Show\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\nll^S-^Consumers Corner -\n12:00\u2014Noort Special\n12:19\u2014Sports Newa\ntt-ZO^New.\n12:80\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:99\u2014Chatting With the Listeners\n1:00\u2014Man in Your Kitchen\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\nl:30-r-Fairview Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014Family Theatre\n2:80\u2014Trans-Canada\n3:15\u2014Saored Heart\n3:30\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n4:15\u2014Maxino Ware Sings\n4.30-Stai-uck Valley\n4:45\u2014Roundabout\n5:00\u2014Report from Parliament \u25a0)\n5:05\u2014Pacific News  .\n5:15\u2014Int. Commentany\n5:20\u2014Behind the Newa'\n5:25\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n8:00\u2014Dennis Day Show.\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014Newa\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte\n8:00\u2014Presenting\n8:15\u2014Canadian Musie\n8:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:30\u2014Cafe Continental\n10:00-News\n10:15-Provincial Affaire\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:00-NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTUESDAY, SEPT. 29,1953\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:45\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\nff: 10\u2014Here's BUI Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Femous Voices\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15-Hi\n10:45\u2014Invitation to Walte\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:30\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014Newa     .\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast.\n12:55\u2014Five.to One\nl-.OOr-The Concert Hour\n2:15\u2014Presenting\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matineo\n3:15\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014Yesterday's Favoritee\n4:15\u2014Club Date\n4:30\u2014North tor Adventure\n4:45\u2014Music for Children\n5:00\u2014At Home With the Lennlcka\n5:25\u2014International Commentary\n5:30-UN Today\n5.45\u2014News and Weather\n5:55\u2014Have You Heard?\n6:00\u2014Cue for Fun\n6:30\u2014Through South Africa\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Leicester Square\n8:00\u2014A Word In Your Ear\n8:15\u2014The Face ot the Land\n8:30\u2014Crime is Our Business\n0:00\u2014Champions of Sport\n9:30\u2014Songs From the Showa\n10:Q0\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Molly Bobak Speaking\n10:30\u2014Here Comes the Band\n ______\u00a3_.\n '\u25a0\u25a0>._______\n-:' T- \"7.. '-\n<*j..\npmoftiMsotiMifM?\nFOR QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nn'aiwi   _wi inaiisvn\nDeadline fee Classified Ads. >,I u.m.\nP\u00ab<HqW\u00abSBsTl-l-lll_Si\u00bbU'IS----.-'J !']\u25a0'-11 I'lWI'eiHiwi\nPhone 144\nROOM AND BOARD\nTWO YQWa WORKING GIRL?\ndesire room and beard. Box 6581,\npelly-News,        '     .\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYClsiS,   BICYCLES\nUsed Car\nLot\n.   Opening .\n600 BLOCK -VERNON ST.\nJUST BELOW THE NEW\nCEMENT WALL\n1932 Chevrolet Coupe\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1948 Plymauth Sedan\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1947 Ford Coupe\nOPENING\n% .    SPECIALS!\n1952 Austin Somerset\nOnly $1479,00\n1930 Austin Devon\nOnly S875.00\n1949 Ford Pickup\nOnly \u00bb7!0.00\nALSO\n1946 Pontine Sedan\n1950 Austin Devon\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1936 Chrysler Sedan-\n1937 Ford Fordor\n1934 Ford Fordor\nCOMMERCIALS\n1952 Studebaker Plekup\n1950 Ford Pickup\n1949 Ford Pickup\n1949 Thames Panel\n;tm Panel\nCASH, TERMS AND TRADES\nJoe Langan, Manager\n; ' 600 Bioek Vernon Street\nNelson, B.C..\nIMMEDIATE\nDEW VERY\nNEW AUSTINS\nCREAM, GREY, FAWN\n1953 Packard Clipper\n1953 Austin Convertible\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1952 Chevrolet 6-Posseng\u00abr\n1951 Studebaker Sedan   (\n1951 Monarch Coupe\n.   1950 Standard Vanguard\n1950 Mercury Fordor\n1950 Chevrolet Deluxe\nSedon\n1951 Austin Devon\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949 Austin Devon\n1949 Mercury Coupe\n1948 Dodge Sedan\nCOMMERCIALS\n1951 Mercury Pickup\n1949 Austin Panel\n1951 Austin Pickup\nTERMS and TRADES\nAUSTIN SERVICE and SALES\nEMPIRE\nMOTORS\n803 Baker St.   Phone 1135\nNELSON, B. C.\nITS fDBRBJ TUB NORTON TIA-\ntherbed\" Dominotor. Come in and\nsee thli famoua motorcycle, the\nholder ot the Isle of Men TT at\nKootenay Motorcycle Salea and\nService, Box 350. Castlegar; phone\n2601 \"The Shop of Friendly Servloe.\"\ntygfo nwc\u00ab - m w**,\n$3750.00; 1951 L-F172, $6300.60; 1946\nKS7w\/Van, $1300.60; 1947 K$7-\nW\/dack, $1100.00; 1952 L110,\n$1656.00, SaSt Kootenay Equipment Co., Ltd., Cranbrook, B.C.\nFbft sA_i-'5i auSt'In WBBaJ.\nExcellent condition. $1100.00. \u2014\nPhono 1110-Y.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOrOKeYGI.ll,  UCVCIM\n(\u2022continued)\nFall Clearance\nof\nUsed Trucks\n'51 Ford Vi-ton like new\n\u2014$1295\n'49 I.H,C, KBS8\u2014$3600\n'49 Dodge M-\\ ton\u2014$975\nSPECIAL\nYOUR CHOICE\n'5PFORD W TON\nor\n'50 CHEVROLET V. TON\n$950 Eoeh\nInspect These Trucks gt\nCENTRAL\nTRUCK\n& Equipment Co.\ntoi rnoNT 8T    phoni m\nnelson \u00bbc\n*mm ss-ssiis.*- *.\u00bb\u00bb.s\u00bb\u00bbisr'i.ssi's- m.m.,\u00bb __-\nRENTALS\nWANTED - NELSON BUSINESS\nman urgently needa two or three\nbedroom furnished house or apt\nelose In by Oet. 1st. Bert reference. Phone isa\u00ab:-y,\n\u25a0straw,\n:nt\ncentral bachelor apartment with\nnon-drlnklng gentleman of good\ncharacter. Apply Sex 6418, Daily\nNews.\ntions tor achool teacher. Private\nbath, breakfast. Box 7163, Nelson\nDaily News.\nBOTOggroro nsmrm\nrent, Winter rates. General heat,\neleetric stoves. North Shore Mote]\n- Phone 1684,\nm mrpwm *m or a\nduplex, Oct. 1. Call 513 Hall St.,\non second floor, after 1 o'clock.\nFOR RENT - 4-ROOM-D COT-\ntage by month. Apply Baker's\nGrocery. IMjUeatty, Avenue,.\n-fbU_*rt__l\u00abI\u00bb*t.,'\"ROd\u00ab- ITOB\nyoung ladles er a eouple. Close In.\n719 Stanley Street,\n2 BUSINESS GIRLS- WOU-D LIKE\nan apartment eloae In. Apply Box\n6020, Daily News.\nf6r MWP-.ITGHfHoU-lK_t!t>.\ning, room. Phone <W3-t_\nH-WaSKWHtlO BOoM Foft\nrent \u2014'Phone 396-Y.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SURPLUS. ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nfear from the Appleby Poultry\narm, 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\nstock In White Leghorns, White\nRocks. New Hampshlres and\nCrosses. Catalogue on request\nFftOM FAMOUS EGG LAYING\nstrains R.O,P. Sired Neew Hamp\npullets, vaccinated against Newcastle and bronchitis. 10 wks. old\n$1.20, 12 wks. old $1.50. any\nquantltlei. Kromhoff Farms, RR.\nNo. 5, New Westminster, B.C.\nPhone Newton 60-L-3.\nFOR SALE - TWO EXCELLENT\ndairy cows, Just freshened; also\nyoung Guinea fowl and geese.\nApply D. BOyle, Box 97, Trail\nFOR SALE - HEAVY LOGGING\nteam harness end spreaders. Delivery by request T. P. Woods,\nWhonnock, B.C.\nAYRSHIRE BULL FOR SALE. 18\nmonths. Apply Alec Maloff, Blewett, B.C.\nTOR SALE-lMoNTH-fiLB P0C\n.  lata. New Hamp., White Rock. -\nPhone 1789-R.\njroft _A__-bA__\u00a3. COW ARC\nhorse hay. Ed Kllgren, Creston.\n1ST .iWtAK-B 1W_ FoftP\nsedan. Good-motor, tires. Phone\n803-X.\n'48 sfuDEBAK_R.' (3666 <5d!T.\nditlon; over-drive, radio, heater,\netc. Cash sale. Phone 205.\nClassified Advertising Ratea:\nISO per liflo first Insertion and\nnon-consecutivo Insertions\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first Insertion\n48o line for 8 consocutivo Insertions\n$1.56 line for month (28 conso.\ncutlve Insertions)   Box numbers lie extra   Covers  any\nnumber of insertions\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc.\u201420c per Una,\nfirst Insertion.  16c per lino\neach subsequent insertion   .\nALL   AB6VE   RAtES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Ratess\n(Net Mere Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week,\n.' in advaoee       M\nBy carrier, per year $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom;\n.one menth ...\u201e\u201e.\u201e... $ i,h\nThroe months .\u2014_-\u2014..      148\nSix montha            7.80\nOne year 16.00\nHal) in Canada, outside Nelson-\nOne month  1,00\nThree montha - \u2014..   2,78\nSix montha ....    8.S0\nOne year   .. 10,00\nWhere extra postaqe Is required.\nabove ratea plus oostaqe.\nu.l gssgsssssjsssssissg\nI ss I '\"si in \u00bb \u00ab\nCLAMIHID DISPLAY\ntmmgp]g*o*mm*etm\u2014gg rjtagg _ _-*'\u25a0\"'\u25a0\"\n\u00bbP-w_i-\u00bb\u00bb^#<p-f>\u00bbia-s\u00bb mmap m * \u00bb_f mm timet* mptm m \u00bb.\nClearance Sale\nof used\nSinger Sewing Machines\netpemmmt mmmmmmiee9mmat>*mimi0*rahmikm \u00bb\u00ab#<\u25a0.\u00bb#\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\nSPECIALS\nReverse Stitch Portoble Electric\n$120.00\nCobinet Type Electric Machine\n$95.00\n*t*it**1*+ *t\\ -\u00bb \u00ab\u25a0 \u25a0\u00bb\u2014ate***'*\nTwo Slightly Used SLECTRia\nPORTABLES at\t\nHAND-OPERATED PORTABLE\nat \t\nTwo Oeqd ROUND BOBBIN TREADLE 3Q jlfl\nMACHINES et     \u00ab\u00abt\u00abM\nOne TFEAPLB MACHINE 29.50\n69.50 \u201e\u201e\u201e 79.50 '\n21.80\nand 49.50\nALSO\u2014Several sligh'tly marked, new eoblnet ele-trie\nmodel* at generous discounts\u2014used for demonstrating,\nFootball Scores\nBy The Canadian Praia\nSaturday\nWIFU\nEdmonton 18, Calgary I.\nSaiketohewan 18, Winnipeg 18.\n\u2022ll Four\nToronto 18, Ottawa If.\nMontreal IS, Hamilton 80.\nORPU\nBrantferd 0, Sarnie 82.\nIntercollegiate\nMoMaster 12, McGlll 13.\nIxhlbltlen\nWestern I, Varsity H.\nBalmy Beach 10, Queen's $0.\n(ait\nHoly Cross 18, Dartmouth 6.\nWest Virginia 17, Pittsburgh 7.\nWlllrem Mary 6, Navy 8,\nClemson 14, Boston College 14.\nArmy 41. Furroan 0,\nPrinoton 20, Lafayette 14, \u25a0\nAmherst 7, Brown 6.\nColumbia 14, Lehigh 7.\nPennsylvania 13, Vanderbllt 7,\nCornell 27, Colgate 7.\nYale 31, Connecticut 0.\nWisconsin 10, Penn State 0.\nMaryland 52, Wash Lee 0.\nMassachusetts 34, Bates 12.\nNew Hampshire 27, Upsala 13.\nSyracuse 42, Temple 0.\n\u2022\u25a0\u2022 \u2022     Midwest\nMarquetto 31, Cincinnati 7.\nMissouri 14, Purdue 7.\nNebraska 11, Illinois 21.\nMichigan $0, Wash 0.\nNorthwestern 88, Iowa State 0.\nOhio State 30, Indiana 11.\nMichigan State 11, Iowa 7.\nNotre Dame 38, Oklahoma 11.\nWichita 18, Tulsa 10.\nSouth\nDuke 18, Wake .forest 0.\nMississippi State M, T.nnelsse 0.\nMississippi 21, Kentucky 8.\nTexas 41, Vlllanava 13.       .\nFlorida 0, Georgia1 Tech 0.\nGeorgia 16, Tulane 14.\nGeorg. Wash 14. VMI 13.\nN. C. 12, N.C. State 7.\nAlabama 7, Louisiana State 7.\nWest\nWyoming 17, Montana 7.\nColorado 20, Arizona 14.\nStanford 7, Oregon 0.\nSouthern Cal. 17, Minnesota 7.\nCalif. 16, Oregon State 0.\nOklahoma A. M. 7, Arkansas I.\nHouaton li Texas A. M. 14.\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (AP) - Results of\nRugby League gamea In the United\nKingdom:\nBatley 21, Dewtbury 10.\nBradford N 28, Bramley 6.\n\u2022Doheaster 8, Huddersfleld 28.\nFeetherstorte R 20, Hull 7.\nHalifax 14, St. Helens 3.\nHull Kingston R Belle Vue R 10.\nKelghley 17, York 14.   .\nLeeds 27, Oldham 10.\nLiverpool C 12, Castieford M.\nRochdale H 13, Swlnton It.\nSalford 14, Workington I.\nWakefield Trinity it, Hunslet 10.\nWhitehaven 8. Warrington It.\n.  Wldnes 8, Barrow 18.\nWigan 17, Leigh 7,\nLONDON (Reuters \u2014 Results of\nRugby Union games In the United\nKingdom;\nGuys Hospital 8, Blackheath 18.\nHarlequins 6. Leicester 0.\nLondon Irish 32, Middlesex H. 0.\nLondon Welsh 16, CatfOrd B 8.\nMerchant Taylors 3, London S 37.\nRichmond 14, Bedford 8,\nROsslyn Park t, Waterloo 8.\nSaracens t, Liverpool t.\nAbergven 14, Cheltenham 0.\nBath 14, DevMiport Services 0.\nBirdenhead P 0, Manchester ll.\nBirmingham 17, taint -arts 6.\nBridging 11, Exeter 6.\nBrldgewatcr 10, Somerset P 0.\nCardiff 21, Pontypool 0.\nCoventry 33, Sale 8.\nCross Keys 8, Newbridge 3.\nGloucester 11, Bristol 3.\nGlamorgan W 14, Sydney 5.\nMaestlg 13,1 Pontypridd 0.\nNeath 6, Llar.elly 0.\nNewport 11. Swansea 0.\nNotts 11, Wasps 8.\nN'hamoton 24. Portsmouth S 3.\nNuneaton 22, Saint Thomas' 6.\nSoccer\nLONDON (CP) - Soccer results\nSaturday In the United Kingdom;\nENGLISH LEAQUE\nDlvltlen I\n\u2022Aston Villa l, Sheffield V t.\nBurnley 1, Newcastle U I\nCardiff C 0, Arsenal 3.\nCharlton A \u00ab, Liverpool 0,\nHuddersfleld C 2, Middlesbrough 1.\nManchester c 1. Portimouth 1.\nFreeton N X 1, Rotten'W 1, ..\nSheffield w I, West srortwlosfl.\nSunderland i, Blackpool 1,\nTottenham Is Manchester U 1.\nWolverhampton 8, Chelsea 1.\nDivision II\nBury 1, Poncaater R 1.\nEverton 3, Derby e 2.\nFulham 3, Nottingham, t X.\nHull C 2, Srentford 0,\nLeieeater C 4, Plymouth A 1.\nLincoln C 2, Leeds U 0.\nNotts C 1, Bristol R 3,\nOldham A 1. Blackburn R 0.\nRotherham U 2, Swansea T 1.\nStoke C 1, Luton T 1.\nWest Ham U 1, Birmingham 2.\nDivision III. Northern\n, Barrow 4, Grimsby T O.\nBradford C 1, Aecrlngton S 1,\nChesterfield 9, Carlisle U O,\nGateshead 0, Barnsley 0.\nHartlepoola U 1, Darlington 6.\nMansfield T 3, Stockport C 1.\nScunthOrne U 0, Port Vale 2.\nSouthport 0, Chester 1.\nTranmere R 1, Halifax T 0,\nWorkington 1, Bradford 1.\nWrexham 1, Rochdale 0.\nYork C 0, Crewe Alex 3.\nDivision III, Southern\nBrighten 1, Ipswich T-1.\nBristol C 4, Aldershot 0.\nColchetter U 1, Walsall 1-\nCryatal P 3, Swindon T 1\nNorthampton T 1, GUlingham li\nNorwich ,C 1, Newport C 0.\nQueen'e PRO, Exeter C 0.\nReading 1, Leyton 0 1.\nSouthampton 4, Shrewsbury T 2.\nSouthend U 1, Mlllwall 1\nTorquay U 1, Coventry C 1.\nWatford 2, Bournemouth 3.\n-COTTI8H UAOUB\nDivision A\nAirdrleonlana 2, Hearts 1,\nCeltic 3, Aberdeen 0.\nDundee 2, Clyde 0.\nEast Fife 4, Felkirk 1.\nHibernian 4, Hamilton A 1.\nPartlck. T 1, Queen of S 1.\nSt. Mlrren 3, Ralth R 0.\nStirling A 2, Rangers 0.\nDivision B\nArbrOath 2, Morton 1.\nCowdenbeath 6, Alloa 1.\nDumbarton 4, Dunfermline A 4\nKilmarnock 0, Albion R 1.\nMotherwell 3, Ayr U 4.\nSt. Johnstone 8, Forfar A 1.\nSteOhousemulr 2, Queen's P 1.\nThird Lanark 8, Dundee U 1.\nIRISH LEAGUE, CITY CUP\nBangor 1, Crusaders 2.\nCUftonville 3, Diatellory 4.\n\u2022 Derry City 2, Ballymena U 0.\nGlontoron 6, Ards 0.\nLlnfleld 3, Glenavon 1.\nPortadown t. Coleraina 1.\ntetjJwliuier\nBattles Ml.\nWWrttWKMCPl-A young Winnipeg swimmer who last year won\nthe men'a amatow two'mlla awim\nat the. Canadian National Exhibition in Toronto te looked today in\nhe toughest battle of hll life, far\nfrom w awlmml\u00bb8 pool,\nawiokon with polio in July, Hart\nOavenney, sfr\u201e II, II In an Iron\nlung at Kins Qgorft hospital here\ngamely trying; te throw off par-\nalysla affecting melt of Ms body.\nSon ef provincial recreation director. Hart Dovennoy, young Hart\ntook naturally te sports, When he\nstarted awlmmlng at the YMCA\npool at nine, hla ability waa spotted\nby veteran coach A, H, Pop Sid-\nwell\nUnder SWwell'a guidance, De-\nvenney trained hard and at 14 was\ntaking a good share et awards at\nplayground tnd winter competitions,\nIn hla first two years at the\nUniversity ot Manitoba, he captained the swimming team and set\ntwo records in competition. He\nmade a bid for Canada's Olympiq\nteam -but missed by a slight margin\nin time trials,\nWhen he won the two-mile swim\nat the CNE, the city of Winnipeg\npresented him with a ring as a\nCanadian champion. Devenney said\nthen he had no Intention ef tum\u00ab\ning .professional but had hla eye on\nthe 1094 British Empire Games In\nVancouver, '\nLast year.- while attending . University of Toronto, ht broke two\nIntercollegiate meet records, winning the UO-yare, free style In\n2:14.7 and the 440-yard free-atyle\nIn 4iSJ flats The Toronto re'ay\nteam, with Devenney at anchor,\nwon the medley relay.\nHe was one pt six Invited te\nYale University te train with fat-sue ooaoh Bob Kippus. On his\nreturn to Canada his training carried him to the top in Manitoba\nohamplonshlps.\nA week later-, en the eve of the\nCanadian championships here, Devenney waa stricken with polio.\nMedioal authorities, who havo\nworked around hla Iron lung tor\nmere then two months, say he is\nliving in hope and battling Ilka a\nchi mplon te regain hla health.\nAussie Name Wheat\nFor Sherpa Tensing\nMELBOURNE (ReuterW \u2014 A\nnew variety ef wheat has been\nnamed Sherpa, after Tanning, the\nSherpa guide who conquered Mt,\nEverest with Sir Edmund Hillary\nlast June. The minister ef agriculture for Viotorlis, Cllve Stone-\nhim, aald recently the new atraln\nwaa produced hy the Victorian department of agriculture, It has a\nmuch higher yield than most other varieties,\nCount Peter Lacy, who died in\n1791, was an Irishman who became a field marahal In the Im<\nperial Russian Army.\nNCUQH OAILY NIWS. MONDAY, SBPT\/28, 19J3 \u2014 ?*\nBURNING WRECKAGE of a truck-trailer\n(top) ahd an automobile Involved In a head-on\norash, blooks the desert highway from Lea An<\ngates to Lai vegais Nov., In whloh 10 persons\n\u25a0ware killed, Including a wedding-hound young\neouple; The nooldont happened near Baker, Calif.\nThe burned body of en. ef the vlotlmi lies beside..\nthe  highway at far  left, top  picture. Tommy-!\nThempsan, a truak driver, mad. the plotures.\n-AP Wlrephoto,.\nSmelters Cut Down Production,\nMines Ease Up is Zinc Price Falls\nNEW-YORK (AP)-The effects\nof recetit declines in sine prices\nbegan to show up last week as\nsmelters curtailed output and some\nmines shortened their work week.\nCopper and lead markets, meanwhile, continued moderately active.\nThere were no changes In the\nprioes of major non-ferrous metals\nduring -the week.'\nThere was general agreement In\nthe trade that with nine at 10\ncents a pound, East St. Louis, smelters would be forced to cut output,\nand there were reports late in the\nweek that such action was under\nway. ..-:....\nAt the same time, the Amerlean\nZinc, Lead and Smelting Company\nreduced its work week from lin to\nfive days at iti Grandview mine\nin the Metallne district of northeastern Washington. And officials\nof several other mining companies :ln that area and In the Coeur\nd'Alene district ot northern Idaho\nindicated they were considering\nsimilar action.\nZine-dealings continued quiet all\nweek. The trade agreed that consumers were buying sparingly .and\nreducing their inventories.\nThe lead aaarket was stesdy, wit-\nday to day buying on a spot basis\nof only moderate proportions. Trade\nsources, aald buying for October\ndelivery waa mostly at the average\nprice for.that month.\nOne sourco said a number of\nconsumers Were holding off ordering Ootober metW, \"apparently in\nan attempt to assess their individual., huilneae outlook.\"\nIn Washington, the tariff commission announced that public\nhearing? will atart In November\non .whether lead, and sine imports\nare damaging or threatening to\ndamage the domestic industry. The\nBearings will consider an application of the national lead and zinc\ncommittee for relief.\nHungary Releasing   V\nAustrian Prisoners1\nVienna (AP) - Communist\nHungary has Informed the Austrian government that 66 persons\nwho have been held in internment\ncamps will be released and returned to Austria. An Austrian government announcement said Austrian\nauthorities have found that five\nara Austrian citizens. The remaining 61 are believed to be ethnic\nGermans with relatives in this\ncountry.\nGLASGOW.(CP) - An Englishman may show Scots how' to save\nmoney. Glasgow city corporation\nia considering appointing a Newcastle civil servant, E.T, Bruen, to\nre-organize its department.\n..,     . ..,\nMajor metal prioes:\nCopper: 28-80 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign, 30-36.50 cents, New\nYork.\nLead: 13,50 cents a pound, New\nYork; 13.30 cents* St, Louis. \"'\nZinc: 10 cents'* pound, Eait St.\nLouis; 10.50 cents, New York,  -j\nSilver: 85.25 cents an ounce, New\nYork; 74 pence! London.     .       J\",\n$11 Million Budget\nSurplus Expected\n1 OTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The government accumulated a surplus of 852,-\n846,000 in. August budget eecOunts,\nboosting the total for the first five\nmonths of the 1953-34 fiscal year to\n1283,293,000.\nTh* Surplus compares with only\n$1,792,000 in the corresponding\nmonth last year. However, a statement Issued by the finance department aald there were a let of do-\nfence bills which normally ahould\nhave been paid In August, but were\nnot paid until early September.\nThese payments will be billed\nagainst September's accounts.\n!\nLET OUR WANT\nADS WORK\nFOR YOU...\nLooking for something special in\nan auto... a home... a worker\nfor your business? Then read, and\nuse the Want Ads for quick results!\nRemember, no ether medium of fen le much for ao,\nlittle. Juat think \u2014 your meaaoge en a post card sont to1\noil our reader*, would cost you hundred* of dollar* \u2014\nyet, thie aome meaaoge In a Wont Ad, cost* you just o\nfew cente per word, dot action and result* \u2014 Use Nelion\nDally Now* Want Ad*\/ regularly.\nPaignton 0, Newton Abbot 8.\nPenetrth 3, Ebbw Vale 3.\nPlymouth A 18, HN Eng. Coll. 0.\nStroud 3, Aldershot Services 8.\nTorquay A 22, Ejtmouth 3.\nWeston-S-Mare 0, Abertlllery 27.\nEdinburgh Acad 5, Bradford 3.\nHerlpts Grads 9, Hawick 16,\nHilhead H FP 6, Wastonians 23.\nPHONE 144\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nClassified Advertising .Department\n^^^^\n : _. :\t\n dbfii\n.\n--.NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, SEPT. 28,1953\n\\\\fafcn a Feller's\n\u2022Stomach Needs\na Friend\nFALL\u2014The setjson of fuH.'lw-es--wh-^;.-s--d-_M \u00ab*\u2022\ntheir best- ond' In -infinite varieties'\nIf your digestive apparatus it not functioning norntaHy\nnow It the time, to start using.\na new relief ht liquid fwni\nfor stomach distress.\n$3.25 and $6.00\nDRUGS LTD.\n^indair^s Mission\n& Ct Salmon for U* K.\n.' OTTAWA \u00aba>)-rFlsherlet Min-\nteter Sinchd-? leaves Ottawa today\n*e\u00bb London in aneffort to persuade\ntile United Kingdom ministry of\niood to buy part of British (Solura-\nbials 1958. salmon paok.\nMr. Sinclair said in an interview\nthat he will stop in, London for a\nweek en route to the Colombo plan\nconference in New Delhi, India,\nfrom Oct. 11 to 18. After the conference, he also will visit Pakistan,'\nBurma Malaya, Siam, Indonesia, the\nPhilippines, Japan and Korea.\nThe fisheries minister's Far _ast-\nern trip will precede a Bimilar tour\nplanned by Prime Minister St, Laurent for early next year. The prime\nminister is expected to pay courtesy calls to Ceylon, India, Pakistan, New Zealand and Australia.\nTO CONFER IN LONDON\nMr. Sinclair said he wiH confer\nto London with offiolals of the British minstry of food and the British\nministry ot fisheries.\nCanada's large pre-war and wartime canned salmon market in the\nUnited Kingdom practically disappeared after the war as a result of\nthe United Kingdom's acute shortage-of dollars.\nSales of Canadian canned salmon\nto Britain last spring amounted -to\n205,000 cases valued at about $4,500,-\n000. There, were no sales in 1952,\n$8,700,000 wort* in. 1951 and only\n$50(10 worth in 1950.\nLoss of export markets' created a\nlarge surplus of twnned salmon to\nCanada earlier this year. Last Stay\nthe surplus w,as unofficially estimated at'BOOiOOO cases, but this was'\nepnaider-bly te-ueea by ftp 205,000'\neases exported to Britain and by domestic eons\u00bbmfl%!,\n0-RREt.T STOC'fcPI-B BIO\nOfficials  ot the  department\nfisheries here declined to\nthe size, of Hie current st!\nHtoweweOj they sain the MN\nmon  pack   on   fie   Paettto\nwould bjs \"quite ih\n*hB  dfcparfeenV;  aaid\nSgijb, 1. was o'&timateji\nforisffiig 'date\n., \",'\u00bb<*\ni MSB, 1940 and ItoO, but\nssssm|rrV|iiivHV\nFor Hamsleri\ni ttimtveo eppti \u2014 Annuel h_r.\nv*st labor movement from eastean\nCanada has been completed, Hie\nNational Employment Service Deported Saturday.\ni J. W. temple, Prairie regional\nsuperintendent for the Unemployment Insurance -Commission, said\nthere now are 1-700 workers bom\nOntario and Quebes harvesting in\nthe theee Prairie pjrovinees. No further tabor supply is needed.\nKAU future movement of harvest\nhelp this season will be confined\nto job-to-job transfers on the Prair-\n$\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\n: Apart from a week's holdup due\nto rain early in September, the supply of farm labor to the West has\nflowed smoothly, said Mr. Temple.\nReno Shaken By\nSharp 'Quake\nHBNO,-Nev. (AP) \u2014 A sharp\nearthquake shook Reno Friday and\npolice were flooded with calls reporting crashing sounds, explosions\nand rumbling.\nBut gamblers only paused, and\nthen continued their games.\nThe desk officer at Reno's new\ncentral police station said he\nthought,the roof was coming down,\nbut checks later showed little damage occurred anywhere in the immediate Reno area.\nThe quake was felt In Sacramento, Calif., about 150 mites west\nover the Sierra Nevada. Police\nthere received reports of rattling\ndishes and swaying lamp sords.\nA dealer at Harold's Club in Reno\ndescribed the shake as similar to\nthe tense moment at a ball game\nwhen somebody hits the ball\u2014and\neverybody draws in his Wreath and\nwaits.\nThe dealer said the club grew\nquiet for a moment\u2014some customers grabbed hold of tables to steady\nthemselves\u2014but when nothing further happened, the roullette wheals\nbegan to spin again and toe crap\nShooters went back to work.\nPipeline\nMtf_COf_, B.6. (CP) \u2014 Sixty\n' ;rs wafted off the Job at the\nluntam Oil Pipe Eine koue-\n:ct here Saturday'In pro-\n-*-wng|, against hiring of\nInsulation work.\nof   top   AFL   -sited\nof   Oarpenters   and\nm\u00abi said Bennett and\n \u00bb,      ,\u00abncpnwer     construction\nfirm, had -vfola^d an asjreement\nsigned Jjme S5 that they woui-nf\nhire or-nKtny labor for insulation\nwork.\n-Ompajw Mpreae-t-tiva Joseph\n'Olend am tbe union was.seeking\nto enroH to\/competent labor and\nthat lijis company refused to agree\n-to sjHeh avtion.\nThe project includes 18 homes at\nOreeeemt Heights, M at the pumping station and one superintendents residence.\nSwiss To Befriend\nShanghai. Refugees\nBfflRN, Switzerland (AP) \u2014 The\nSwiss government has decided to\ntake 40 of the several thousand\nEuropean refugees still-stranded in\nShanghai and keep -them-in Swiss\nnursing homes. Welfare organizations will take over care of the refugees and share file cost with the\ngovernment.\nNelson Church Observes AMiwersory\nSpecial Services,\nRedecordtiori job\nMark Celebration\nThe Mission Covenant Church ot\nNelson celebrated the, 20th anniversary of the erection of the pres-,\nent church' Sunday. The celebration was highlighted by the exten-\nsive redecoration which has restored the Baker Street . church\nbuilding to its original beauty.     .\nThe official organizing meeting\nof tbe' church yes held November\n29, 1030, at the home of Mr., and\nMrs, Eric Mastberg, 515 Hall Street\nRev. Sporrong, conference superintendent of the Mission Covenant \u25a0\nChurch of America, acted as chairman.\nOlof Johnson wat elected chairman and served in that capacity\nuntil January 2, ,1840.\nThe churoh was known as the\nScandinavian Lutheran Mission\nChurch or tht \"Scandinavian\nChurch\" to many, until May 1,\n1939, when it became a member of\nthe Mission Covenant Church of\nAmerica and changed its name to\nthe Mission Covenant Church of\nAmerica.\nRev. Karl Lingren, pastor of the\nchurch for 1-2 years, is still revered\nand honored by the members for\nhis pioneering spirit in laying the\ngroundwork ahd guiding the church\nin its beginning years. The church\nhas called six ministers to serve\nsince the termination of Rev. Lin-\ngren's pastorate. ,'\nThe Covenant Church, known ih\nNelson for its Spanish mission design, was. .designed by Leonard\nNelson. Mr. Nelson was also responsible for the designing of the\nchurch's unusually comfortable\npews.\nThe redecoration of the church\nIncluded the complete,painting of\nthe inside, new tile coverings on the\nkitchen and hall floors, restuccd\njob and painting on the . outside,\nnew water drains, and the roof repaired.\nThe conference superintendent,\nRev. Carl H.. Peterson, of Seattle,\nofficiated at the three services Sunday. A public service was followed\nby a tea held in the afternoon.\nPublic Utility\nCosily Io Run\nVANCOUVER ,\u00ab3P) \u2022*\u25a0 A public\nutility is like no ether form Of\nbusiness, Russell B. Potter-of the\nPublic Utilities Commission, told\nthe Municipal Engineers' Division\nof the B.C. Engineering Society\nhere.\nOrdnary competition among utilities companies is a costly proposition, the Victoria engineer said,\nand \"lt was obvious that certain\nbusinesses were more efficient if\nthey had a franchise or a monopoly\nin a given area,\"\n. Penticton was seleeted al the site\nof the society's 1954 convention and\ndelegates elected the following executive committee:\nF. G. deWoU, Vernon; George W.\nMeckling, Kelowna; P. Si-Herting,\nKamloops, and J. F. MiUloan, Tadanac Paul Walker of Penticton was\nnamed chairman. .\nNamed honorary secretary for fife\nwas A S. G. Musgrave, Oak Bay.\nUnited Fishermen\nJill\nJ win\nVAjN-OTVBR \u00ab3P0\u2014Officials of\nthe Seafarers' International Union\n(AFiL-TLC) report the union has\nenBsted \"weli over 1000\". former\nmemebrs of the United Fishermen\nand Allied Workers' Union-\nThe SIU has had three boats and\n14 men travelling the coast ever\nsince the TLC expelled the UFAWU\ntor adhering to a communist lead-\n\"e've taken the Glemtu local\n100 per oent,\" Norm Cunningham,,\nwest coast representative for the\nSIU, said today. Clemtu is a tiny\ncannery town north of BeUa Bella,\nB.C., and 1*. Cunningham said\nhis union had signed up every fisherman and shpreside worker in the\nunion. He did not know file exact\nmembership of the Clemtu local.\nIt was the second fishing local\nclaimed by the SIU during its current campaign. Earlier, the union\nsaid it had signed up the Quathiaski\nlocal on Vancouver Island. The\nclaim was denied by UFAWU who\nsaid only 20 out of 100 members\nwent over.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\n'  ,' llli\nWTNNftR   in  Neicnn  Wiah   C!ch nnl   nararlp   whirli    nrepprfprl\nVV XX-S1-S BID.    ill    1-SClOUll    Lllgll    Oi.ll UU1      Uttld\u2014C      Wllli.ll      |J1 CLtTS^cU\nannual track meet Friday went to House C students, some of whom can be seen\nabove as, they cavorted along Baker Stre et. The winning entry depicted the United\nNations organization. Just behind the group above were students dressed in red\nflannels, representing Red China.\u2014Daily News photo.\ntil\u2014    \u2014L11UU1 b\nMission Cdvenant Church redecorated for anniversary.\nCanadian Leaders Await Tariff\nDecisions With Rising Concern\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Canada has\nbeen showing considerable uneasiness in recent months over what\npolicies the United States government will follow in international\ntrade.\nThis feeling stems from two\nthings\u2014the apparent increase in\nactivity by U. S. groups anxious to\nlimit imports of Canadian agricultural, mineral and fisheries products and the prevalent suspicions\nthat the Republicans are a party of\nprotection.\nPrime Minister St. Laurent underlined the worry, in the minds of\nCanadian traders in recent speech,\nheard by Douglas' Stuart, the new\nU. S, ambassador to Canada.\n8T.  LAURENT'S  COMMENTS\nMr. St. Laurent said Canada\nwants to know where she fits into\nAmerican trade policy, adding that\nCanada does nqt want to be regarded as a \"marginal supplier to\nbe cut off fr.om U. S. markets whenever the going is tough.\"\nHis remarks are typical of the\npublic statements in recent months\nby members of his cabinet and\nother senior government officials.\nTrade Minister Howe made much\nthe same statements at the Geneva\nconference on-the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.\nThese statements come against a\nbackground of agitation in the U. S.\nagainst Canadian oats, ground-fish\nfillets, lead and zinc. Investigations\nare either under way or pending by\nU. S: tariff bodies on the effect these\nproducts are having on price support programs for agriculture and\nmining.\nA report of the W. S. tariff commission is expected in a few months\non its investigation into the effect\nCanadian oats imports has on U. S.\nprice support. Canada sold about\n73,000,000 bushels of oats worth\nabout $61,000,000 to the U.S. last\nyear.\nThis was an increase over the\n49,000,000 bushels worth about $44,-\n000,000 she sold the U.S. in 1951.\nThis year's exports appear to be\nslightly lower than in 1952. In the\nfirst six months, Canada sold about\n22,000,000 bushels worth about $17,-\n500,000 to the U. S.\nNEW ENGLAND FISH\nAgitation against ground-fish fillets\u2014fillets of cod, hake haddock\nand- pollock\u2014comes largely from\nthe New England states. Irf 1951, the\nU. S, tariff commission rejected demands that tariffs be raised against\nCanadian prodjucts.\nThrough GATT, the U.S. has\nagreed to a tariff on this product\nof hetween 1% cents and 2% cents\na pound. New England fishermen\nwanted this tariff dropped to pave\nthe way for a higher duty. A new\nhearing on this matter was started\nby the ariff commisison again in\nJune.\nCanada's exports to the U.S. of\nthese fillets totalled about $16,200,-\n000 in 1952 and is. about half tAat\nfor the first six months of this year.\nThe commission will start an investigation into lead and zinc mining, producing and consuming in\nthe U.S. this fall. The commission\nalso has ben asked to Include a\nspecial investigation of lead and\nzinc Imports to see whether tariff\nrates should be boosted.\nMETAL PRICES\nPresent tariffs on lead are about\n1 1-16 cents a pound and on zine\nabout 7-10 cent a pound. These are\nguaranteed by GATT but President\nEisenhower could withdraw them,\npaving the way for an increase, if\nthey were found to be seriously injuring the U. S.\nLast year Canada exported more\nthan $36,000,000 worth of lead scrap,\nore and pigs. In the first six months\nof this year, the export value was\n'about $12,000,000. Zinc exports last\nyear were valued at about $52,000,-\n000 and in the first six months pf\nthis year about $28,000,000.\nOfficials here say the U.S. has\nonly rarely withdrawn the tariff\nrates agreed to in GATT. But they\nalso recalled that the U. S. has imposed restrictions on the quantities\nof Canadian cheese and dried milk\nproducts that may be imported.\nThis action has been protested by\nCanada in several notes to the U. S.\ngovernment but the restrictions remain.\nUnited Stales Steel Chairman Hits\nOut al American Prophets of Doom\nBy WALTER BREEDE, Jft\nNEW YORK (AP) \u2014 Business in\nthe United States picked up in\nmany key lines last week, partly\nunder the stimulus of autumn\nweather. But the bright sheen of\nthe boom was dulled a bit by a\nflurry of production cuts.\nA lead and zinc mine in the Pacific Northwest changed from a six-\nday to a five-day week. Layoffs\nwere announced by producers of\ntruck tires, men's summer suits,\ntractors, stainless and alloy steels,\nautomobile headlights and navy\nfighter planes. Most cited falling\nprices, sagging demand or heavy inventories.\nTRADE INCREASES\nRetail trade showed a marked increase over the previous week with\nvolume also comfortably ahead ;6f\nthe year-ago level. Steel production showed a substantial gain stock\nprices improved end bank clearings\nset a new high for the year,    f\nThere was new evidence of a general easing up in the money market. Prices' of long-term government bonds climbed sharply while\nthe interest rate paid by the U.S.\ntreasury on its weekly offering\nof three-month bills sank to its lowest point in more than two years.\nTREA8URY SALE8  HALTED\nThe government halted the sale\nof its new series of treasury savings notes\u2014Introduced May 11 at a\nsharp increase in the interest rate.\nThe treasury said a new series will\nbe made Oct. 1.\nSavings notes are securities\nbought mainly by corporations and\nother large taxpayers as a method\nof investing money earmarked for\ntbe payment of taxes or reserved\nfor a limited time for other purposes. \/\nThe head of one of the biggest\nconsumer finance companies predicted more funds for lending\nwould soon be made available\nthrough manipulations. He did not'\nspecify them on the part of the\nfederal reserve board. This, he said,\nwould assure an' increased supply\nof credit for on-the-cuff buying of\nautomobiles, appliances and other\nconsumer items.\nGRIPE  FROM   BUILDERS\nLoudest gripe about, \"tight'1\nmoney came from home\" builders\nwho continued to complain about\nlack of mortgage credit.\nFrom other quarters came warnings that the significance of cuts\nand other soft spots in the economy should not be exaggerated.\nBenjamin F. Fairless, chairman\nof United States Steel, denounced'\n\"prophets of doom\" who\u2014he said\u2014\n\"have lost all sense of proportion\"\nin predicting a recession just because steel output is levelling off.\nOne of the mainstays of the current level of business is high employment. The U. S. commerce department reported that non-farm\nemployment in August totalled 40.-\n400,000\u2014a new high for that month\n\u2014:but,that the gain over July was\nthe smalelst since the end ot the\nSecond World War.\nLiving costs also set records\u2014up\n0.3 of 1 per cent on the government's Aug. 15 consumer price index. This rise will mean wage\nboosts of three cents an hour for\n1,300,000 railroad workers.\nSays Falemi In\nWomen's Clothes\nTEHRAN (Reuters)\u2014Former foreign minister Hussein Fatemi. has\ndisguised himself as a, woman, even\nto a facfr-coVering veil, in order\nto'evade arrest, police Said today.\nA police spokesman said Fatemi,\ndressed in women's flowing robes,\nhas been darting from one home\nto another In Tehran with onty\nhis eyes exposed' since\" Premier Fa-\nzolah Zahedi's forces began' hunting\nfor him last month.      -\nOn the day Premier Mohammed\nMossadegh's regime was overthrown, Tehran radio reported Fa-\ntime had been \"torn to pieces\" by\ninfuriated crowds. Reports since\nthen claimed he had fled to Iraq,\nEgypt and Syria.\nLife Sentence On\nTeen-age killer\nCANANDAIGUA, N.Y. (APV\u2014-\nFred Eugene McManus, 19-year-\nold confessed killer of five persons,\nwat sentenced Saturday to life imprisonment for the murder of-William Allen Braverman.\nThe Valley Stream, L.I., youth\nfaced the bench calmly and apparently without emotion as New\nYork State Supreme Court Justice\nH. Douglass'Van Duser followed\nthe recommendation of the trial\nJury-\nBut he smiled as usual for news\nphotographers as he was led quickly from the half-filled courtroom.\nThe 10 men and two women of\nthe jury Thursday, found McManus\nguilty of first-degree felony murder\nafter deliberating more than 13\nhours. -But they recommended life\nimprisonment instead of death in\nthe electric chair.\nHITCHED RIDE\nThe former marine, while AWL\nfrom Camp Lejeune, N.C., killed\nBravermen March 27 after he\nhitched   a ride   with his   victim.\nMcManus stole Braverman's new\nred convertible for a murder-scarred trip through the mid-west with\nhis 16-year-old sweetheart, Diane\nMarie Weggeland. She is now imprisoned as a wayward minor.\nMcManus' other victims were\nGeorge Bloomberg, 56, and his\nwife, Florence, 55, at Kennyville,\n111., March 28; and Mrs. Harriet\nHorsman, 48, and Mrs. David Beas-\nton, 43, at Spring Valley, Minn.,\nMarch 30.\nNan Back From\nDead of'14 War\nBy   KEN   BOTWRIGHT\nCHESTER, Eng. (Reuters)\u2014Fred\nWalker, 60, \"returned from the\ndead\" to his home and family here\n38 years after he was reported kill\ned in the First World War.\nHis homecoming was a miracle for\nhis relatives, who received a telegram back In 1915 notifying them\nthat he was missing, presumed\nkilled, on the bloody battlefields of\nFrance. Later they also saw his\nname carved on an honor roll of\nfallen .heroes.\nL08T MEMORY\nFor Fred Walker suffered from\namnesia from the time he stepped\non a German land mine at Loos,\nSept. 25, 1915, until his sister and\nbrother discovered him, ill, bearded\nand penniless,' at a local hospital\nearlier this week. He wandered\nabout Britain, unable to recall anything about his past\u2014except what\nhis mother looked like.\nAs he celebrated the 38th anniversary of his \"death\" at his brother's home, Walker tried to' look\nback over the nightmarish years\nwhich have elapsed since he sailed\naway to war as a youth of 22.\nHe said that after he was blown\nup by the mine, the Germans\ncaptured him. He was badly wounded\u2014his skull, one arm and one leg\nwere shattered. And his memory\nwas gone.\n\"After treatment in hospital, I was\ntransferred to a prison camp,\" Walker continued. \"There a Prussian\nNCO beat me over my injured head\n\u2014I still have two silver plates in my\nskull\u2014with his rifle butt for not\ndisclosing military information.\n\"I knew nothing\u2014not even my\nname and number\u2014until 1922 when\nI was taken to a military hospital\nin England. The hospital authorities\ntold me who I was and demobbed\nme in 1923.\"\nOFFICIAL SLIP-UP\nWalker didn't go home because he\ncould not recall having a home or a\nfamily and his mother who died\n20 years ago, did not learn he was\nback in England because of an administrative slip-up.\nBUILT NEW LIFE\nWalker tried to build a new life\ntor himself as, a forester, truck\ndriver and laborer. But mental and\nphysical illnesses caused by his\nwartime ordeal dogged him. He\ndrifted in and out of hospitals, lost\njoh after job,\nSix months ago, he found it impossible to obtain steady work. So\nhe became a tramp.\nThis week he shuffled into Chester, became ill again and entered\nhospital here.\nIn hospital, a scrubwoman saw\nhim and was excited by his face\nwhich reminded her of Walker's\nfather, whom she had known years\nago.\nShe reported her find to Fred's\nsister, Mrs. Margaret Doman, 49,\nand his brother Joe, 52, who hurried to the hospital and identified\nhim.\nU.K. Renews U.S.\nFilm Agreement\nLONDON (AP) - A new one-\nyear-agreement covering the quota\nof American films shown In Britain\nhas been drafted by representatives of the British government and\nUS. film associations, it has been\nreported here.\nDetails were not announced. American films imported into Britain\nare subject to yearly quotas limiting the number of films shown\nand the percentage of profits permitted to be taken out of the\ncountry by U.S. producers.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\n* Auditor!\n6TO Biker 8t  \u2022 Phont 285\nHave the Job Don* Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nYour Own Home Made Bretd\nIt Tattler Made From\nEllison's U-Bake\nBread Mix\nAsk Your Grocer or Cell 280\nELLISON MULLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nStanf ield's\nUnderwear\nfor Fall\nand Winter\nThis   eolder   weather \u2022\nmokes one think of warmer underwear. \u2014 Our new\nstock  is  now  in, union\nsuits or shirts and longs.\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STOHi\nPHONE 31 BOX 100\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n(03 Baker 8t.\nMed. AHt Blk.\nPHONE HI\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescription!\n-   -Phont tt\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOMI\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n519 Kootenay St       Phone SM\nHqigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 82?\n676 Biker St.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED - REPAIRED\nRECORINO\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 FRONT ST. PHONE 68 !\nPhone 34\nFor an Appointment to Visit\nMill Grace Cunningham\n(Beauty Consultant for\nHARRIET HUBBARD AYES)\nTHE DATE -- TODAY!\nts Stationery Go.'\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nPHONI34\napw\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Clgsslflad Wty\nDOMESTC GAS CLAIMS\nVANCOUVER ROOMER\nVANCOUVER <CP) \u2014 Domestic\ngas claimed another victim early\ntoday when Thomas Phillips, about\n55, was found'dead in his rented\nroom in downtown Vancouver.\nI. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC -BUICK\na.M,c trucks :\nBody and Paint Work a 8poolalty\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nIt tbt     \u25a0'    ,    : .\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Streot\nPhone 1st*\nwo cud roe\/ beuev\u00a3 \/\/>\n-THE LETTER E IS USED MORE OFTEN\nIN WORDS THAN ANY OTHER LETTER\nExperience, Experts, Speed, Efficiency\u2014\nThat's What We Have to Offer You\nWhether your ear requires a minor adjustment or a\nmajor overhaul, the NELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD.\nhai the manpower and equipment to look after all\n. your car's requirements.\nDON'T DELAY-\nSEE NELSON TRANSFER TODAY\nCOMPANY  LIMITED\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_28","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\/1.0427768","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":"1953-09-28 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":"1953-09-28 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":""}]}