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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Today's Exhibition Program\nThursday program for West Kootenay Agricultural end- Industrial Exhibition:\nGate* open\u20141:00 p.m.\n1:80 to 1:46\u2014Public parade by Kootenay Kiltie Pipe Band.\nProgram in Arena.\n2:00 -p.m.\u2014Opening ceremonies. Chairman, A, B. Gilker. Welcome to visitors by His Worship Mayor Joseph Kary. Introduction\nof H. W. Herridge, MP, by Chairman A. B. Gilker. Official opening\nof exhibitor* by H. W. Herridge.\n2:15\u2014Floor Show.\n4:00\u2014In front of Grand Stand, Musical Ride by Bonner's Ferry\nMarporettes.\n7:15\u2014Parade by Kootenay Kiltie Pipe Band.\nArena:\n7:15 to 7:30\u2014Concert by Kootenay Kiltie Pipe Band.\n7:30\u2014Floor Show.\nP.M. Names Nine\nST. LAURENT ANNOUNCES\nROUND WORLD TRIP\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Prime Minister St. Laurent will\nextend his Asian trip next January into a round-the-world\nflight, the first attempted by a Canadian prime minister.\nEmerging from a day-long cabinet session, the 71-\nyear-old government leader said that if it can be arranged\nhe may make stops not only in India and Pakistan, but Ceylon, Australia, New Zealand\nand some European points.\nHe said all his stops would be\n\"courtesy\" visits, to return calls\nmade on Canada by government\nheads in these countries. The prime\nminister may travel in the RCAF\nluxury liner, the C-5, used by\nQueen Elizabeth and 'Prince Philip\nin their Canadian tour in 1951.\nNAMES NINE\nPlanning for the opening of the\nfirst session of the 22nd parliament\nnext November, the prime minister announced the appointment\nof nine parliamentary assistants,\neight of them carried over from\nthe previous Parliament. The other\nwas the appointment of W. G, Weir,\nmember for Portage - Neepawa,\nManitoba, as parliamentary assistant to the prime minister.\nMr. Weir, a 57-year-old retired\nfarmer, was the chief Liberal Whip\nin the last House. Mr. St. Laurent\n- has been without a parliamentary\nassistant since 1050 when Walter\nHarris was elevated to the cabinet.\nA conspicuous change was the\ndropping of George Mcllraith,\nmember for Ottawa West, a's parliamentary assistant to Trade Minister Howe. The 45-year-old Ottawa\nlawyer, dean of the assistants, has\nbee nho'peful of a cabinet post, but\nso far no ministerial room has\nbeen made for him.\n' Mr. St. Laurent said Mr. Mcllraith requested that' his mime, be\ndropped, from   the   parliamentary\n\u2022''*KMt_^r-^-wiSie4'\\feSaK\u00abSf\n-more time \"to his Own private' practice.      \u2022\u25a0'-'\u25a0 \u25a0      h\nREAPPOINTED .'-'\nReappointed,   as    parliamentary\n\u2022 assistants are: \u25a0>['\nPaul E. Cote, 44, member for\n\"Montreal Verdun, assisting Labor\nMinister Gregg; Robert McCubbln,\n41, Middlesex West, assistant to\nAgriculture Minister Gardiner,; J,\nWatson MacNaught, .49, Prince,\nP.E.I., assisting Fisheries'Minister\nSinclair;  . J7 A.   iWhette,    60,\n* Compton-Frontenac,   assisting  Defence Minister Claxton;\nW. M. Benidfckson, 42| Ke'nora-\nRainy River, assisting to Transport Minister Chevrier; L. Lang-\nlois, 40, Gaspe, assistant to Postmaster-General Cote; Jean Lesage,\n41, Montmagny-L'Islet, assistant to\n' Finance Minister Abbott; and J. H.\nDickey,   39,   Halifax,   assistant   to\nProduction Minister Howe.\nParliamentary assistants get $4000\na year in addition to normal member indemnities of $4000 a session\nand $2000 tax-free expense allowance. '   - ,\nThere has been speculation that\nMr. Lesage may eventually obtain\na cabinetppst, but Hit. St. Laurent\ngave no Indication of what cabinet\nchanges he has in mind.\nThe list of appointments leaves\nthree parliamentary assistantshlps\nvacant. They are trade and commerce, formerly held by Mr. Mcllraith, national health and welfare\nand veterans affairs.\nLeslie A. Mutch, assistant to' the\nveterans affairs minister in the\nlast parliament, now is deputy\nchairman ot the Canadian Pension\nCommjssjion. Dr. W. A. McCusker,\nassistant to the .minister of Health\nand wsJl&re, was defeated in Regina constituency in the general\nelection.\nFire Destroys\nFreedomile Home\nAf Grand Forks\n-GRAND FORKS ^:\u201e'.llre\u00ab_saal>>;\n^l|55i_^feS}iift!4ii'!^'W--0'-i*\n'ray^Oveifingf burning'' -the 'framji\nstructure; ib the ground.- The hornet\nof Mc,, and Mra, Mike Barisoff,\nsituated abt^lt brie'mile south of\nGrand Forks y\/it, destroyed along\nwith most contents.\nMrs. BarisoH told RCMP she\nheard voices\" Outside shortly after\nmidnight and minutes later\nbottle of flaming gasoline crashed\nthrough the dining room window.\nThe Barisoffs; their son and daughter, who had been asleep In the\nhome, escaped uninjured,\nJUNEAU, Alaska (AP) \u2014 Some\nsoutheastern Alaskans face possible\neconomic distress this winter because of the poor salmon fishing\nthis summer,' Gov. Frank Helntile-\nman said Wednesday: ,-\u25a0'\nHe indicated he may ask that\nspecial trapping seasons be opened\nup to help out.\npr,\nPROVINCIAL\nn\ncpy<?\/\nLIBRARY\nSPaUg %tm$\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny Thursday. Little\nchange in temperature. Winds light.\nLow and high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley, 40 ahd 76.\nVol. 52\nNELSON, B.C.. CANADA-THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 10, 1953\nNo. 118\n148\nInfested; Polatka Closed\n\u25a0(___ teCMdrei. Taken\nKilties Ott Parade\nON BRITISH SHIP\n6 Grew Members, >\nKilled, 5 Wounded:;\nOff Hong Kong   \/I.\nHONG KONG (CP)--A Chinese;\nCommunist vessel opened fire on a\nBritish naval launch off Hpng Kong\nearly -Wednesday, killing six of tha\ncrew and wounding five others.\nThe 46-ton launch was carrying\nout its patrol duty as part of Hong\nKong's defence when the Chinese\nvesel attacked. There was. jab immediate indication whether the\nlaunch- was able'to return the fire.\n\u25a0The shdotlng occurred -in the\nPearl river, estuary 20 miles sOuth-'\nwest of this British crown itflohy.\nThe 1710-ton British destroyer Concord was . immediately dispatched\nto take the dead and wounded to\nHong Koi}g. .7 7\nVessels of the type attacked\nnormally carry a crew of 14 and\nare armed with one three-pounder\ngun or one 40-mm gun plus a 20-\nmm anti-aircraft gun;' \/\nThe. Concord was presumably at\nsea on naval exercises when ordered to go to the aid of the launch.\nShe herself was fired'on by Chinese\nshore batteries at the approaches to\nHong Kong in August, 1950,, but\nescaped damage. ,\nNOT FIRST TIME\nOn many occasions .mail boats\nand ships have drawn fire from\nCommunist artillery or machine-\nguns, when.they ventured'too close\nto the Communist-occupied islands.\nA possibility that two incidents\nwere involved arose from a statement of a Royal Navy spokesman\nearly Wednesday that a Hong Kong\ndefence force launch was fired on\nWednesday, afternoon.\nsori streets?^briefly; ovto\u00bb$ibbr Day as\nswmpetites'jfrdrttlare faraway' As \\Sct-.\nmontorj\/md.fcalgary gathered to' take;part\nin-the _4J:li;:a)jnual Piping aft'd- Highland\nfcra^igroup takp\ntime outvfrom ;ie\u201eiyite- to^ose; for a\npicture. \"Jhey. are left to' night Alex\nThonipsttn, Jacl| Stojil! ,and \u25a0 HScitor Muir,\na_ of'EiMontoni\u2014Alice' Stevensphoto. \u2022\u2022\nWAUGH EXPELLED ,\/--.\nFROM SOCIAL CREWT\n\u25a0uANCOUVER (CP) \u2014Archie\nWaugh, Health Minister Eric Martin's official agant in the June; 9\nprovincial election; ;has beeiv expelled from the Vancouyer-Burrard\nSocial Credit Association by James\nWardrop, president.\nMr.'Wardrop said the action was\ntaken because Mr. W&ugh \"acted\nagainst the interests of the . social\ncredit movement.\"\nTnrcf j^\nMUNSAN (CiP)-1 \u2014 welter of\/pro-1 explain why'3404 prisoners, \"includ-\ntests exchanged ^by the.;United ing, three.Canadians; were ijot re-\nNations ^ifeand,and ^ Gom-^.\u201ei\u00bb^S\u00ab0 b1^ ^tch\nmuniste added tension and growing\nill feeling today to the administra\ntion of the -iRorean inilitary' armistice.- -;,'.*;..:;-:.: \u2022 .   \u25a0;\nThe gravpsf: complaint was an\nAllied demajid .. Wednesday for\n\"prompt acttotf, by the Reds to\nMile Tunnel Jutnbo Pass Area Woiild\nEnd Big Bend Woes, Trekkers Ind\nBy 8TAFF REPORTER\nA thin wedge of the Selkirk\nMountain range, a little over\none mile thick, is all that\ndivides the Kootenays into\nEast and West.\nAnd a tunnel, driven\nthrough this wedge, would\nprovide the vital link sought\nfor a trans-Canada highway\nacross British Columbia.\nThis is the way Boyd C.\nAffleck, B.C. land surveyor\nand civil engineer, summed,\nup his three expeditions in\nF~*r\"h of such a route before\nthe Lardeau District Board\nof Trade.\nGuests of honor at the\nmeeting included 11 men\nfrom the Windermere valley\nin the East Kootenay who\nsuccessfully trekked from' Invermere to Lardeau via\nJumbo Pass. The trekkers,\nsponsored by and including\nWindermere District' Board\nof Trade members, left Invermere Sunday, morriing and\nmade contact on the Lardeau\nside Tuesday afternoon, just\n50 hours liter.    '\nA five-mile tunnel has already been,; found practical\nby a, railroad ih the Rogers\nPass area, on\u00ab of the alternates suggested for re-routing the Trans-Canada Highway.\nAim of the7 surveys was to discover   a  route  more   suitable   to.\npresent as a Trans-Canada link.\nTravelling with the party were\nAffleck, president of the Nelson\nChamber of, Commerce, Alex\nJacobs, draughtsman and member\nof the Lardeau Board of Trade, and\nGraham McMullin, Daily News reporter.     ,\nThe head water of Jumbo Cjreek,\nflowing east, and the head waters\nof Glacier Creek flowing west, run\nparallel to each other. It is between\/these two creeks that Affleck \/proposes a tunnel should be\nbuilt. And it was over the divide\nbetween these creeks, constituting\nJumbo pass, that the expedition\nmarched.\nThe engineer considers the vol\nley drained by Jumbo creek on\nthe east and Glacier on the west\nequally adapted to road building,\nHe feels that the relative simplicity of constructing a first\nclass highway up this valley\nwould offset the cost of tunneling through the thin mountain\nridge separating them.\nThe valley* are wide- and re\nmarkably  clear  of slide  eondl\ntiens and would provide an easy ,\nwater grade up to the- proposed\ntunnel portals.\nA road is already constructed\nabout 28 miles up Toby Creek from\nthe Invermere side. If the road\nwere continued, it would run up\nToby Creek, onto its tributary\nJumbo Creek, through, the tunnel,\nand down Glacier Creek into the\nLardeau valley.\nCATTLE DRIVE\nOldtimers claim that cattle were\ndriven from the East Kootenay\nthrough' Jumbo pass, around the\nturn of the century. The cattle\nwere to provide meat for railway\nconstruction workers in the Lardeau valley. The railway company\npulled out of the area and the steel\nwas never laid'. although' trestles\nstill remain. , ,\nAffleck feels, however; that a\ntunnel would provide possibilities\nthat a summit road would not.\nFor one thing,: a tunnel would escape any storms and maintenance\nproblems of a road over the top-\nSnow conditions in the Jumbo and\nGlacier valleys are believed to be\nlight,\nA tunnel would also sidestep the\ndifficulties that might be encountered in working a road up from\nthe creek level over the pass. The\nlevel of the creek In the vicinity\nof the- proposed, tunnel area is\nabout 6000 feet while the lowest\nspot in the pass is about 7200' feet.\nGOOD TRAIL NEEDED\nAffleck told the Lardeau meeting\nthat the first step towards making\nuse of his reconnaissance report\nwould be the completion of a good\ntrail over Jumbo pass. Although an\nexcellent trail extends up from the\neast about 38 'miles and one from\nthe west about. 20 miles,, six or.\nseven miles in the pass area itself\nare tough going.\nCompletion.of the trail, the engineer said, Is obsoliitely essential If \u00ab survey party Is to study\nconditions at the  pass In detail.\nHe emphasized' the recent trip.**\na preliminary only, ahd said extensive mapping of the area '\u00bb\u2022\nwelt as geological studies of rook\nformations must.be made.\nAffleck had previously made  a\ntrip with four other men up Hamil\nCreek from the Lardeau side exploring the- possibilities ,of   Earl\nGrey pass.        . '     '\u2022\u25a0'-:\nTho surveyor, .Jacobs,, and a reporter flew; over to ' Invermere\nfrom Nelson Saturday. They flew\nup Hamil crew and circled the\nEarl Grey pats an both tides observing the glaoler and tilde con\nditions    before   moving   on   to\nJumbo pats,\nThe plane alto circled over\nJumbo past. and flew up and\ndown Glacier and Jumbo creek\nbefore taking the'party to Invermere wherethey Jolne'dthe ex:\npedltion from that tide.\nTwo highways now cross the\nsouthern halt of the province, The\nsouthern Trans-Provincial can be\nimproved by adding another ferry\nto assist the M.V. Anscomb in\nclearing traffic which approaches\nfrom Lethbridge. \u201e'\nThe other existing highway approaches the', province from Calgary and follows the Columbia\narourid'the i,''_ig; Bend\". \"\nThe meeting while discussing this\nroute brought up the possibility of\na power dam at Mica Creek at the\nextreme north end of the Big Bend.\nThis would flood a large portion of\nthe Trans-Canada highway and\nwould necessitate relocation.-\nThe route is snow bound east of\nRevelstoke during the winter\nmonths in addition-to taking an\noverly long;*lweep north when\naccessible.'  '..  y\nDiscussion centred on another al.\nternative to the present Big Bend\nroute which would shorten:-it but\nnot eliminate.it. Roger's pass, abandoned by the\" Canadian Pacific\nRailway' because of slides' \"and\navalanches and a steep grade,\ncould be the site of a road if the\nMica Creek dam were built.\nThe. CPR built. the . Connaught\n-tunnel, five 'ifiiles in length,' to\navoid' Roger's pass which- had over-\nfour miles of; snow sheds to-protect, the right-of-way. If 'this\nroute. were adopted, it.-. is i presumed that a tunnel might have to be\nbuilt' also to avoids the slides of\nthe-heavy snow, belt country.\nwhich ended Sunday.\n'We now demand that you. return\nthese people to us or -account to\nus for. each of these individuals,'\nsaid Maj.-Gen. Blackshear Bryan,\nsenior Allied member of the mill\ntary armistice commission.\n\"Here is the list. We expect\nprompt, action.\"\nBryan disclosed .that the Allies-\nhave, been compiling the list since\nlast Saturday when i the Korean\nprisoner exchange, was winding up.\nThe list contains names of 944\nAmericans, 2410; South Koreans,\nnine Australians, three Belgians,\ntwo Colombians, five Turks, one\nGreek, 19 Britons and eight South\nAfricans in'addition to.the three?\nCanadians,\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The government has put the bulk of its of\nfice workers on a year-round, five-\nday week and promised a similar\nstep-in the next few months for op\ncrating staffs. 7\nThe change from the present 5%-\nday week affects. about 60,000 out\nof tho estimated 85,000 office work,\ners employed by the government.\nThere are about 45,000 employed\non the operating staffs who work a\n44-hour week. Operating staffs\ninclude postal, customs and' some\ntransport department workers.\nThe announcement of the change,\nmade-following a cabinet meeting\nWednesday at which the decision\nwas reached,' said the five - day\nweek has been so. widely adopted\nby business \"that the. government,\nmust'follow suit.\"\nThe average '38.2 hours worked\nweekly by most federal civil servants will remain unchanged.\nAbout 40 minutes will be added to\ntheir daily work period.. \/\nDOLLAR HIGHER      Th\nifraW*QRK.(CP)^The Canadian\ndollar was 1-16. cent.higher\u25a0 at a\npremium of 1% per cent in terms\nc:*' tiM. fiihds Wednesday. Pound\nsterling.down Vs cenf-at $2.08%.\n-:MbN_U5A_: (CP) - The U.S.\ndollar Wednesday closed at a discount of 1 11-32 per cent in. terms\nI of Canadian funds, off 1-32. Pound\nI sterjihg $2.76\u25a0\u2022 1-1-16,-off 5-16.\nInto Welfare Care\nfreedomites Board Coaches Quietly;\nAll Face Charge of Contributing\nPERRY'S SIDING. \u2014 A big moving van shuttling\nlike a ferry back and forth on a dusty country road Wednesday afternoon started' 148 -!S6ns of Freedom off to'a hfijrv\ndestination; They were bbtflid for Burnaby'and hearings in\na specially established provincial eourt.. '\u25a0 ;v     s\nThe men and womeny.ef \"Polatka\" -village \u2014 the teiit\ncamp which sprang up alfftbst overnight at Perry's Siding\nlast week and became depopulated 'with' almost as dramatic\nsuddenness. Wednesday\u2014- Tuiill face charges of contributing\nto juvenile delinquency.\nSixteen other Pffl'atka women remained, behind to\nassist' Provincial Welfare Department personnel in caring\nfor over one hundred .chiil- '\nBy IAS FRASER      -\nBONN. (Retiters)' \u2014 Chancellor\nKonrad Adenauer today annouhced\nhe will retain the post of foreign-\nminister .in; his new government,\nbut one of his. chief lieutenants1\nsaid he' wouldn't.\nThe behind.-the-scene*, conflict\nburst into the open on the eve of\nan executive ineeting of Adenauer's\nChristian\/Dejnocrats to discuss the'\nnew. cabinet The party scored an\noverwhelming' victory ih .the par-\nliamentaor, elections last- Sunday.\nHetarich'von BrentanO, Christian\nDemocratijfc leader in parliament,\ntold a group of foreign newspaper\nmen'this morning that the 77-year-\nold chancellor had decided to hand\noyer the foreign ministry to another man. Von Brentano, 49, a\nIaw,yer and Adenauer's chief\nspokesman in the international\narena, led the reporters to believe\nthat he would be the map.\nI But even as von Brentano was\ntalking, Adefiauer's press office announced the 'chancellor had no intention of giving, up the foreign\nministry.- The announcement said\nAdenauer could not contemplate\nsurrendering\" the post in view of\nthe \"clear request\" by the elec?\ntorate last Sunday for him to continue the direction of foreign\npolicy.\nNeither Adenauer nor von Brentano withdrew from their contra-\ndictory positions, , '\nThe showdown is expected to\ncome today when inner-party dissension against Adenauer's \"one-\nman rule\" will be fully debated.\ndren of the arrested parents.\nThree, railway coaches that had\nwaited at the. Perry's Siding \u00abmce\nmorning received their passengers\nfrom the police-escorted truck, first\n77 men, then 7J women.\nTO N?W DENVER\nT^ro hours, later buses filled' with\n103 children and their new guardians moved in the opposite direction to Mew Denver. Their tempore\nary home will be the sanitarium\nbuilding there. \u2022\nThe' entire movement w,at quiet\nand orderly. Spectators were\nbarred'from the area temporarily by a blockade while the\nexodus wat under way.' Some\nwatched with binoculars, patting\nmotorlstt Idled by. When the\nblockado ended a crowd gathered.\nThirty-five RCMP constables\nwere moved into the area to shepherd out the arrested Freedomites.\nThe loaded coaches will arrive\nin-VancOUvr tonight. Charges will\nbe heard In a provincial court to\nbe established at Oakalla prison\nfarm.' \u2022\u2022 ,' .'\u2022*-\nMoat of the Polatka Freedomites\nhad come, September S and since,\nto the tent village from Kfestova\nWftere tiflij-fljstts had,l?\u00abie|(f burned\n.Over the last several months. Others\nwere from Glade, Grand Forks,\nShOreaires and other BlOcan V?l-\nley areas. The village,, comprising\n39 tehta Jwhen it was first estdb-\nlished, numbered 70 by Wednesday.\nGUARDED SINCE  TUESDAY\nOfficers had guarded the area\nsince Tuesday, and the' inhabitants\nwere more or less in custody from\nthat time.\nTuesday- afternoon, two Sons of\nFreedom were arrested and charged\nwith, contributing to juvenile delinquency.--\"They--were given an-\neight-day, reuaand at Nelson We'd-\nriesday.\n\"We 7 did our best to 'avoid\ntrouble,\", an RCMP spokesman said\nWednesday. \"They had been warned that if nudism; brought any complaints, action would be taken.\"\nRCMP guards were set up to keep\nunauthorized persons from the tent\nvillage'grounds Tuesday night and\nWednesday, When loading of pris\noners was under way, a small crowd\nof Sons  of I Freedom from other\nparts' of the Valley, gathered outside ,\nthe fenced area, and attempted to\nspeak with friends and relatives,\nbut the situation remained quiet.\n_ Freedomites . were fully clothed\nand the entire operation was \"extremely orderlys'] bystanders aaid.\nDuring the day; however, the Sons\nstood about in the-nude- as they\nhave done since the establishment\nof the Polatka ,village7' -\nTENTS STORitftii' ' \u2022 .\nTents, If not removed by relatives,\nwill be dismantled by RCMP, stored and labelled. Freedomites took\nwith them 'some of their personal\nbelongings. The truck, shuttling;\nthem to tho waiting coaches was,\ndriven by a oivllian.\nAlong the 35, nitles of dusty highway between Perry's Siding and\nCrescent Valley, Doukhobors' stood\nin groups, some making their way\ntoward the tent village. At Crescent\nValley near the bridge, about 100\nstood discussing the 7'rUmors\" ot\nthe mass arrest. \"They .were all\ndressed up 'and looked as though\nthey were go|ng somewhere,\" a\npasser-by .said.f , ' .   .,\nSCHOOL HELD V : \\ \/t \u00ab?\n'-SofcApI\\-,at \\-Pen<y!\u00ab - Siding-, Coitj\n'tinuea'-fWedhesdayvas \"usual\/ The'\nchildrlh wire 'dismissed -at the\nluiich hour and resumed classes\nuntil-three o'clock\u2014the, usual closing' time. ,\nAt Victoria, Attorney - General\nRobert Bonner said.he did not\nknow how. long the government\nwould have custody of the children, but pointed out th.eir parents\nfaced criminal charge\/and, if found\nguilty, would face prison terms.  .\nIn that case the children would\nbe oh government hands \"for quite\nsome time!\"\nThe Attorney-General did not\nknow- when the 148 arrested would\ngo on trial' but trials were generally \"disposed of as quickly as possible,\" - ' '' \" \u25a0\u25a0 Q   .\nHe said he did not know if tho\nFreedomites :would . ;be'; tried in\ngroups but said evidence rarely\nallows a \"mass trial\" and it was the\nright of arrested persons to haye\ntheir cases heard individually.   .\nPresent Victoria Planning\nLocal Option\nSites New Liquor Bars\nlax. Defence Cuts\nCANBERRA - (Reuters) \u2014 The\nAustralian government Wednesday\nhanded a $270,000,000 gift to the\ntaxpayers and sharply cut the defence budget.\nIn announcing the 1953-54 budget to the House of Representatives\nTreasurer Sir Arthur Fadden said\nAustralia had ^checked dangerous\ninflation trends and was heading\ninto a new era of prosperity.      '\nThe tax cut program will:\n1. Slash income taxes. ..\n2. Wipe out the^ sales tax ori\nmany items and reduce the tax on\nother goods by as,much as  two-\nthirds. \u25a0 ;,.   %\n3. Whittle down corporation\ntaxes.\n4. Abolish the entertainment\ntax. \u2022   , '     .,'\u25a0..\nThe biggest item in the' budget is\nfor \u25a0 defence. But the $450,000,000\ndefence budget will be nearly $34,-\n000,000 less-then last year.  \u2022\u25a0 '\u25a0>\nDespite the budget trimming, the\ntreasurer said he is planning on\nkeeping the country In the black\nby .$485,000 during the year. \u25a0 He\nfigures revenue will be $2,200,000,-\n000 while expenditures will total\n$2,199,515,000.\nVICTORIA (CP) -'\u2014 The Victoria\nTimes says In a newspage story\nWednesday that British Columbia's\nnew liquor laws are expected to\ncontain a tough local option clause\ngoverning location ' of additional\noutlets. ,\nA tentative draft of the new legislation will be presented to a government caucus next Monday, one\nday before the house opening.\n\u2022 The caucus could result in major\nchanges to the proposals already\nprepared.\nUnder the local option provision\nthe system would operate in. the\nfollowing manner:\nJ there are any existing licences\nin an area they will not be interfered with \u2014 provided they are in\ngood standing. This provision will\nmean many existing beer parlors\nand club's will have to carry out\nextensive alterations to bring their\npremises up to new higher standards.\nThe plebiscite plan comes into\neffect on consideration of \"additional\" outlets'\u2014 whether liquor\nstores, beer parlors to be known\nas public' houses   or   hard liquor\nlicences in hotete and restaurants\u2014\n.in areas where no such.licences\nnow exist.\nIn Victoria, for example, there\nare now no liquor'licences In: restaurants. Therefore,, an application\nfrom a restaurant for\" a licence\nwould have to be advertised.\nEX-QUEEN\nSEEKS DIVORCE\nCAIRO (AP) \u2014 Egypt's raven-\nhaired ex,-queen Narriman today\nfiled suit for divorce charging\nformer king Farouk with adultery,\nmaltreatment, mental cruelty and\nestrangement. She asked for alimony amounting to $14,350 a month.\nThe 19-year-old former queen has\nbeen living quietly at her mother's\nvilla at suburban Haliopolis since\nshe left the ex-king last March and\nreturned to Egypt. Farouk and\ntheir child, the infant former king\nFuad, II, are ih exile in Italy.\nWATER LEVEL8\nTuesday     7.72\nWednesday    7.75\nAnd in This Corner...\nL08 ANQELE8 (AP)\u2014To a traffic engineer, the higher hemline\ndecreet by stylltt Chrittlan Dior 1\u00ab a tafety factor.       ;\nBurton W. Marth, Washington, D.C., safety director here for the\nnational, convention, of the American Automobile Association, said\nTuetday that only'24 per cent of pedettrlan deatht Involve women.\nThe raited hemline, he tald may reduce thlt percentage even\nmore. He dldirt explain whether he meant that male drlvert would\nkeep a tharper eye peeled, or that the gait now can scamper with\nmore agility. .\t\nWEBSTER, Mass. (AP) \u2014 A sevtn-year-old Webster boy got\ntwo surprises Tuesday night. He. became curious about a fire alarm\nbox and pulled the handle. The town fire whistle began to blow.\nFiremen found him still staring at the box when they ari-ived. Surprise No. 2 came along in the person of his,dad, a fireman, who\nquickly-got to tha seat of the problem.\n-\n PS\"P\"I\nj'^'O'i^'V-ofP'S'i:\n\u2022 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 10,1953\nUST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Showiot 7:00 - 9.00\nIMMOtt wicked\n\u25a0\u25a0InrnY at t    -\n<hw via   ,\ntfcitmr\nbmfttherini\nWau_ui__ ___ ___.\nWIVWs^Ww \u25a0\u2022 HIV\nMTMll\nADULT ENTERTAINMENT ONLY\nstarts Friday: \"Arrowhead'\nColor by Technicolor\nTHE\nn\nShowing Tonight - Fit'.- Sat.\nStarting at S p.m. and 8:40 p.m.\nSaturday 8:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m.\nMtiVCtiUBHNtt. MILLER\n10 MILES\nEAST OP NELSON\nDRIVE-IN\nTHEATRE\nCRANBROOK, I. C.;\nCOMINO\nSapt.M-_l-S2\n\"Linielight\"\n\u2022how Times\n7:80 p,m. and CM p,m.\nMA New Year\n57l4,Open$\n- Jewish New Tear-the year 8714\n\u2014started sundown Wednesday and\nitt celebration will end sundown\nTrliay.\nThe first day of the New Year\nis ushered in amidst self examination and (elf criticism. It marks\nthe first holy day in the cycle of\nmost solemn days in the Hebrew\ncalendar. The sounding of the\n\"shofar\", according to tradition,\ncalls the Jewish people to the ser-\nHunters'\nFootwear\nBy Dominion Rubber\n\"LAURIER\"'LEATHER TOPS\nin blue-bar quality, 12\" oil tan\nuppers, metal arch support,\nshockproof   Insoles. Pair\n$1445.\n\u25a0THE HUNTSMAN,\" 12\" top in\nolive drab, with snug fitting\nflexible ankle, laced closure at\ntop, metal arch,- semi-cleated\ncrepe outsole. Pair\n$10.50\nG0DFREYS'\nPhone   \u2014   270   \u2014    Box\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\n\u2022HOWINO  TONIQHT  ONLY\nGroucho Marx, Mario Wilton\n','GIRL IN EVERY PORT\"\n,'(\u25a0   ' \".\"\"\u2022  WUi  ''.\"\"\u25a0';'\n\u2022Unlay Clements\nElena verdogo\n,\"jjrr JO;-!'\n\u2022hows at 6:30 ind 9 p.m;\nNote; Paynlta Thurt. this week.\nTRAIL, \u2014 About SO representatives from various organizations in\nTrail and district Including members of the City Council, met Wednesday afternoon to discuss ways\nand means of finishing the \"kid\nrink.\" -.-..-\nWith steel up and concrete finished $99,000 has been spent to\ndate. Some $25,000 or $30,000 are\nrequired to get the kids' rink in\nshape for this winter's skating.\nThe various representatives will\nreport back to respective organizations and the Projects Society will\ncontinue the drive to finish the\nrink as soon as possible.\nvice of God.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014. Samuel\nBronfman, president of the Canadian Jewish Congress, . Wednesday\nexpressed hope in a new year's\nmessage that peace In Korea', \"Is\nsymptomatic ot the general re\ntaxation of tension In international\naffairs.\" He asked Canadian jewcry\nto pray \"that this local armistice\nshall become more extensive, more\nprofound and lasting until true\npeace enriches all humanity with\nits ineffable pleasures.\"\nSmiling winners of the Kootenay Kittle Plpi\nBand's annual piping and dancing, competition\nare shown here after receiving their awards. The\nInter-provlnolal competition drew crowds to the\nClvlo Recreation Grounds. Shown here are Marlene Qelr, Gall Haden, Louise-Hogarth, Mary\nLidne Daub, Gavin Davis, Betty Mills, Shirley\nHarding and Mary Nallaon.\u2014Alice Stevsni photo,\n\"Best\nEx as\nAlmost overnight the\" Nelson\nCivic Centre has become \"The Show\nWindow of the Kootenays.\" The\nbadminton hall, the arena, and the\ncurling rink have been transformed\nand are now -Jampacked with all\nthe color and beauty the West Kootenay can offer.\nThere's something about this annual West Kootenay -Industrial and\nAgricultural Exhibition that's\nMrs. Shepherd\nLaid al Rest\nFuneral services for Mrs. Margaret Shepherd, former Silverton\nand New Denver resident, were\nheld in', the Thompson Funeral\nHome Wednesday..A riumter of\nNew Denver, Silverton and Nelson\nfriends attended\/,and there was a\nprofusion ot floral tributes. .'\"\nStanley Chrlshop officiated at the\nservices. Pallbearers, were James\nDraper, Q. A. Forsyte, Lindsay\nCarter, Henry Simmons, J. M.\nWatson and Reginaid Jones.\nNew Sidewalks\nForCasllegar\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Plans for\" about\n300 feet of new sidewalk construction were made at the Castlegar\nVillage Commission meeting this\nweek.,\nThe sidewalk on the north side of\nPine Street is to be extended from\nthe Bank ot Commerce to the fire\nhydrant In front of Waldie'i store,\nand on Columbia Avenue, a new\nsidewalk Is to be built from Pine\nStreet to Wood Street,, .7\n, Public Works Commission Bert\nCherrlngton said he would1 have\nmen begin tho construction of forms\nfor the walks as soon as possible.\nThe village's current water line\nextension program, is virtualy completed. However, waterworks com*\nmlssloner Harry SommerS'reported\nsome 3000 feet of hew line has been\nlaid on'-the Mlscavlteh, W. Plotni-\nkoff and Kootzhln subdivisions.\nCommissioners Cherrlngton ahd\nVictor Jenks will represent Castlegar at the UBCM convention in\nVancouver, Oct 28,29, and 30, it waa\ndecided.\nThere was some discussion on a\nparking problem In the village at\npeak business hours. Loading zones\nhave been marked out on Columbia\nAvenue, for businesses needing\nthem and it was agreed these aggravate the problem somewhat. Yet,\nloading zones with their no parking\nprovision's, are essential to the'\ntown's commerce, it was also agreed.\nThe possibility of clearing a parking area on lot four at Main Street\nand Columbia Avenue, is being Investigated,\n$100 FINE ON\nIMPAIRED CHARGE\nFor being in charge of a motor\nvehicle while his ability was impaired with alcohol, Walter Pozni-\nko of Nakusp was fined $100 in\nCity Court Wednesday. He pleaded\nguilty before Magistrate William\nBrown. Poznlko was apprehended\nby City Police Sunday morning on\nVernon Street.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED,\nNELSON MARINE SERVICE\nCITY WHARF \u2014 PHONE 1489 \u2014\nWISH TO REMIND YOU THAT THEY WILL    \u2022\nHAVE THEIR GOODS ON DISPLAY AT THE    -\nWEST KOOTENAY EXHIBITION HERE IN '\nNELSON   v\nBe Sure te Visit Their Booth ond See Their\nMoulded, Boats and\nEvinrude Motors\nInquire at the 'booth for details,\nstrictly Canadian, The food we eat\nand the crops we grow are on display along with the handicraft and\nmechanical devices that make up\nour culture.\nAll the little things used from\nday to day and some that we don't\nare lined up and tagged in their\nindividual places; some -ore there\nfor competition, but all are there\nto be seen end admired.\nIn the East of the arena is a\nmassive display of flowers while\nthe farm'' produce occupies the\nother end. Huge pumpkins, golden\nhoney, fresh fruit and vegetables\nare all in their place.\nWednesday night a steady stream\nof people moved in with their offer-\nings. A flower arranged here, a\nlittle' water added to a vase, and\nalways someone asking an official\nthe direction to the proper booth.\nBEST YBT\nThe _oor managers were on their\ntoes. Everything seemed to be moving in an orderly, fashion in what\nthe, executive call \"the best Exhibition yet.\" A few days ago they felt\nthat entries would  be  less  than\nusual, but Wednesday night they\nwere happy to report that there\nwere more exhibits than ever.\nThere' was too much to tee all\nat onoe, too much to grasp In, a\ncasual walk through the building,\nIn the ourllng rink there were\nfoilr rows of booths In the procesi\nof   construction   by   commercial\nconoerns, Boats and engines and\nrefrigerators were  only a  little\nof the. displays that ran the full\nlength of the rink. Ladders were\nshuttled back and forth as first\none and then another would find\nthe next step In construction Just\n. out of reach.\nThe majority of the commercial\ndisplays were just a shape of things\nto come and the hammer and saw\nvied with the, paint brush in the\nlast-minute race to get the .job\ndone.\nBRIDGE BUILT\nIn the recreation, hall, one of the\nmost eye-catching displays was a\nmodel of a bridge across the West\nArm at Nelson. The masterpiece\nwas about tour feet long and constructed almost entirely of toothpicks painstakingly glued together.\nA fine looking crane made from\nan Erector set and a model of the\nNelson ferry were also well done\npieces of work.\nA booth featuring hand-made\nwoolen nrtlelea for the Red Cross\nIs located Just Inside the door of\nthe hall. But the longest, hardest\nwalk In the world Is the one down\nto see the art and handicraft at\nthe other end. You have to go\npait all that home-made fudge\nand   pastry   with   the   \"Do   Not\nTouch\" sign,\nExhibition judges are: Section A,\nfruit,'Ted Swales and E. C Hunt;\nSection B, vegetables, Mr; Swales\nand Mr. Hunt; Section C, field.products, Mj. Swales' and Mr. Hunt;\nSection D.-'flOwers-and pot-Tplants.\nF. W. H. \"ChantOr, 'Mike -.Robert,*\nand Mrs. Burrard Smith; Section\nE, honey, B. B. Clark; Section E,\ndairy products, H. O. Borch; Section F, home canning, Mrs. Jean M,\nPhillips; Section G, home cooking,\nMrs. D. Jamieson; Section H, arts\nand. crafts,  Mrs.  Wilson,  Mrs.  J,\nTeague,  Miss  C.  Horton,  Mrs. R.\nWhite, Mrs. W- Ramsay and Mike\nRoberts.\nTo bring out\nthe flavour\nIn coffee\nodd a pinch of\n\"WTO\"'Soil\nto the coffee\nbefore perking.\nfojwnsriL\n132 PIECE\nDINNERWARE\nCOMPLETE\n$\n38\nENSEMBLE\n95\n..English\nDlnnerware -\n8 Saucers\n8 Cups\n8 Plates 8H\"\n8-Pl\u00bbtes W'\n8 Soups\n8 Fruits\n1 Platter 12\"\n1 Salad Bowl\nHere Ib What You Get:\n1 Cream\n1 Sugar Bowl\nSilver Cutlery\n8 Knives\n8 Forks\n8 Teaspoons\n8 Dessert\n(Soup) Spoohi\nGlassware  \u25a0\n8 Water Tumblers'9 oz.\n8 Fruit Juice 8 oz.\n8 Sherbets\n8 Sherbet Plates\n8 Swizzle Sticks large\n8 Swizzle.Sticks small\nNEW AKRIVAL8I\nTola Icing Sets with \u00a3 tubes _\nTela lelng Sett with 12 tubes\n$1.75\n$3.95\n42 Assorted Tubes for your choice \u2014 -0\u00a3 \u00aboch\n7   ; : Your Independent Hardware Store   '..,...\n\"FRIENDLY  SERVICE\"\nPhone 21 446 Bakci St\nThe Weather\nVANCOUVER (CP) .-. The disturbance which brought gale force\nwinds to the northern coastal\nwaters of British Columbia Tuesday\nnight has moved inland and dissi-\nei.. Winds' are diminishing in\nthose areas Wednesday evening.\nHowever, another active depression\ndeveloping 750 miles southwest of\nthe Queen Charlottes is expected\nto move northeastward in the next\n24 hours bringing rain and southeast gales to the northern B, C.\ncoast Thursday afternoon. Southern\nareas of the coast and interior regions of the province will enjoy\na sunny day.\nTEMPERATURES  Min. Max. Prec\nNELSON...\u2122... 43. 71 -\nSt.  John's   86 67 .02\nHalifax  82 69 -\nMontreal  ;, 47 66 \u2014\nOttawa  : . 44 ,   66 -\nToronto 43 74 \u2014\nPort. Arthur-..,.: 40 64 _ \u2014\nWinnipeg ,..\u201e, _.\n. 50\n80\n44\nBrandon ._..._._.\n-\u25a0.'\u00bb\u2022'\n77\n.08\nThe Pis \t\n750\n69\n.19\nRegina\t\n. 49\n.76\n\u2014\nSaskatoon  ,\n..46\n71\n_\nPrince Albert \t\n. 45\n71\n\u2014-\nNorth Battleford ..\n.44\n73\"\n_-\n. 48\n74\n\u2014\nMedicine Hat\t\n83\n83\n\u2014\n51\n77\n\u2014\n...42\n73\n\u2014\nisdmonton   \t\n.46\n69\n\u2014\nKimberley \t\n.88\n78\n\u2014\nCrescent Valley \u2022\u2022..\n, 44\n75\n\u2014\nKaslo\t\n4R\n72\n_-\nGrand FOrks \t\n. 45\n81\n\u2014\n83\n77\n\u2014\n52\n68\n\u2014\n, 54\n74\n\u2014\nVictoria ;.....\n50\n73\n\u2014\nPrince Rupert\t\n.. 51\n61\n,89\n42\n68\n.64\nPortland    \t\n51\n\u25a078\n\u2014\nSan Francisco \t\n54\n75\n\u2014\nLos Angeles\t\n55\n74\n\u2014\n. 55\n84\n\u2014\n78\nT\u2014\n60\n76\n\u00ab-\nPony Champions\nIo Be Decided\nTonight at Queen Elizabeth Port\nthe Pony League of Nelson wll\nclose its 1958 season for the Legior\nand tho Orphans' will play theji j\nfifth and final game for the championship.\nThe league, newly formed thli,\nyear, has seen some top notch bal\nb\u00bb these teams end the K.C.'s, wht\nwere eliminated from the playoffi\nearlier.\nAfter the Legion captured tht\nfirst game of the playoff, the Or. '\nphans came back to win the nex'\ntwo, the second one by default\nTuesday evening the Legion evened th? series with a 7-4 win, thui\nextending the series to the full distance of five games.        *\nIt .is expected Don Ball' will ge\nto the mound for the Legion agalnsl\nWayne .Waters for the Orphans.\nEXHIBITION SPECIALS\nTHURS. - FRI. - SAT AT LIBERTY\nCANNING TIME:\nPEARS, Bartlett \u201410 lbs. $1.25\nPEACHES   F^stone Vs.  Approx. 16 lb. crate ._ $1.89\nPEACHES, Hales or Elbertas   L0W^RKIT\nJELLY GRAPES, Concord \u00ab*.\u00ab*\u25a0__:\u2014 85c\nPICKLING ONIONS -*~-^_ Ib. 21c\nORANGES >'\u00abhMi ^ \"\u2022\u00bb -\u20145 lb. bag 45c\nFRESH FROZEN FOODS\nPEAS, Cedargreen, 21\/_-lb. Family pack 85c\nLIMA BEANS, \"\u00ab*\u2022\u00ab\u2022\u25a0\u2022 * \u2014    43c\nPEAS, Choice \"\u2022*\u00bb\u2022\u00ab \u00ab\u2022: * \u2014\u2014 26c\nREDDI-WHIP CREME, Tin . . . . 58c\n'.\u00bbji---i * m.\n\u25a0'flzWi-'.Z-*\nJoA. ih, (P&nnif-fjOliJL\nSliced BACON lb... 59c\nMUTTON STEW lb. 10c\nPORK RIBLETS lb. 20c\nCooked HAM lb. $1.00\nMeat Pies 5 \u2014 2 for 25c\nHamburger \u00bb __ 3 lbs. $1\nFancy Red Silverllno. 7% oz.\nSOCKEYE SALMON 34c per tin; 3 tins for $1.00\nSwift's PREM    l for 93c\n '. \\ 7     i. \"; i' i   i ;*_, ,\u20147  ii  ;-, i- 1\t\nLimited Supply- Limit 1 Deal to Each Customer\nSHOP EARLY PLEASE \u2014 AGAIN YOUR FAVORITE\nNABOB TEA BAGS\n60 Tea Bags FREE\nDELUXE\nORANGE\nPEKOE\nWITH PURCHASE\nOF 60 BAGS\nAT REG. PRICE\nMedium to Small WHITE POTATOES\n\/ \u25a0\u25a0' 'y  \u25a0. ,,\u25a0\"'\u25a0'.-'\nTHURSDAY ONLY WHILE THEY LAST .10   IBIS*   \u25a0__\u25a0\u00a3\u00a3\nJavex\nSpecial\n64 oz. _\n39\u00ab\njLIjBERx If\nFOOD STORE\n________\n<:.(:'\u25a0!:\n'\n SCHOOL\nSHOES\nBy SAVAGE\nSMARTLY .STYLED\n-    DEPENDABLE SERVICE   '\nAll Size*      '\nB, C, and D Wldtho\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n653 Baker St\nPhone 895\nHIGHWAY PAVED\nIN GRAND FORKS AREA\n\u25a0'GRAND FORKS'\u2014a\" two-mile\"\nstretch of highway forming the part\n\u25a0ot. the \"big loop\" South of terand\nForks has been' paved. Heavier\ntraffic on the section made repairs\nnecessary.'        ' <\"*\nMrs. Bateman Rossland Fair Aggregate Winner\nROSSLAND \u2014 Jhe Turnbull Trophy for high aggregate winner at the Rossland Fall-Fair was won by Mrs. P.\nA. Bateman. '.. 1\nThe Golden City wound up its fifth annual fair Wednesday after two days of keen competition., The City of\nRossland Cup for high aggregate by. boy or girl under 16\nyears was won by Michael Keffer.   7        '\u25a0\/;.'\u25a0' ..'\nMrs. V. Bonde won in the sewing and Jmitting class,-\nJ, E. Craig of Trail in the vegetable section, Mrs. Bateman'\nthe.household arts, George Bourchier in fine arts, and'\nMichael Keffer in' the junior class,handicraft. _>. Johnson'\nand Georgianna Dyson tied for top place in the handicraft\nsection.'\nHerridge Trpphy winner in the flower section was<\nstill to be announced.\n1 Winners, in order, were:\nHOUSEHOLD ARTS\nCanned Fruit and Vegetables:\nPeaches\u2014Mrs. W. Maskin, first;\nMrs. R. Langman, second; Mrs. P.\nBateman, third.\nPlums\u2014Mrs., Flegal, first; A. W.\nEwirig, second; Mrs. W. Markin,\nthird.-  .\nPears\u2014Mrs.  K.   Bruneski,   first;\n351 BAKER ST.\nCORDIALLY INVITES ALL FAIR FANS TO VISIT\nTHEIR BOOTH AT THE FAIR GROUNDS.\nMODERN PLUMBING is a.featura with\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\nMrs. P. Bateman, second; Mrs. Pat\nHeaven, third.\nRaspberries\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven;\nfirst; A. W. Ewlng, second; Mrs. N,\nSubasic, third.\nStrawberries^-Mrs. A. W.^Ewing,\nfirst; Mrs. C. Therrlen, second; Mrs,\nP. Bateman, third. 7' -\nCherries\u2014Mrs. Flqod,. first; Mrs,\nK. Bruneski, second; A. W. Ewing,\nthlrar . .    -,\nApricots\u2014Mrs. J. F, Buckingham,\nfirst; Mrs. J. B.Page, second; Mrs.\nP. Batetaah, third. ft\nCollection of Five Fruits\u2014A W.\nEwing, second; Mrs, Pat Heaven,\nthird; Mrs. W. Marken, special. _\nPeas\u2014Mrs. p. A. Bateman, Mrs.\nPat Heaven, Mrs. P. C. Berry.\nCarrots\u2014Mrs. P. A. Bateman,\nfirst; Mrs. A. W. Ewing, second;\nMrs. Fat Heaven, third.\nBeans\u2014Mrs. P. A. Bateman, first;\nMrs. Fat Heaven, second; Mrs. G.\nNash, third.\nTomatoes \u2014 Mrs. W. Marken,\nfirst; Mrs. P. A. Bateman, second;\nMrs. K. Bruneski, third.\nCollection Five Vegetables\u2014Mrs.\nFat Heaven, first; Mrs. P. A. Bateman, second; Mrs. P. C. Berry,\nthird. \u25a0   ,\nPICKLES\nDill\u2014Mis. G. Coflin, first; J. E.\nCraig, second; Mrs. M. Conci, third.\nGreen Tomato\u2014Mrs. J..L.Spring,\nagj\nStalk Psnl-P.il btklag Isiiaal\nwM lilirtn laiifHir \u2022\u2022Inn\nNO BUTTONS OR UVMt\nWtISM IOCKI MIAN\nQUALITY CONSTRUCTION\ntmm \u2022 SMART \u2022 SECUM\n\u00ab*k ONfofwnSSR'SeOMWHI\n^ UNE FOR EVERY HOW USE\n<*h. WITH THE INSIDE \"KNO*\nV THAT DOES THE JOS\"\n<*,. DlilCNW FM IA\u00ab DOORS,\n^ idui fm onKtmiuiiom\nUMHI \u2022 IMAM \u2022 SteUM\n40% ON FUEL if ll\nNEXT WINTER\nALL THESE and MQRE\nDon't forget to visit our booth at tho\nWEST KOOTENAY AGRICULTURAL AND\nINDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION\nSEPTEMBER 10 \u2014 11 \u2014 12\n|1\n\u2014    Lumber Company   \t\niONE        'Everything tot the Builder\"        PHONE\n1180 602 Baker St.    Nelson, B.C. 1181\nfirst; Mrs. J, T. Townsend, second;\nMrs. Gilbert Kay, third.\nMustard\u2014Mrs. A. Snuggs, Mrs.\nPat Heaven, Mrs. P. A, Bateman.\n\u25a0Mixia Sweet\u2014Mrs. P.; C. Berry;\nMrs. C. Coflin, Mra J. T. Townsend.\n' Cucumber Relish\u2014Mrs! C. Coflin,\nMrs.. Pat Heaven, Mrs, P. A. Bateman,      : y':. : 777      , ,;\nBeets\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven, Mrs. E.\nParks, Mrs. J. E. Craig.\nOnions\u2014Mrs. Pat Heav\"en, Mrs. 6.\nCoflin, Mrs. Sandulescu.     \"--\u25a0'.\nCollection of Five Pickles\u2014Mrs.\nJ. Townsend Mrs. Pat Heaven, A.\nW.-Bwilig;.' y :7:;. >'\nJAMS\nApricot\u2014Mrs. N. Subasic, Mrs. X.\nS. Tobey, .Mrs. Pat Heaven.\nHuckleberry\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven,\nMrs. W. Marken, A. W. Ewing.\nPlum\u2014Mrs. N, SubasTc, Mrs. P. A.\nBateman, Mrs W. Marken.'\nRaspberry\u2014Mrs: E. S T,obey, Mrs.\nE. Bourchier, Mrs. J. T. Buckingham   ;      '     , ' -'.-\". t\nStrawberry\u2014Mrs. J. Buckingham,\nA. W. Ewing, Mrs. E. S. Tobey.\nJELLIES\nGrape\u2014Mrs; Pat Heaven, W. E.\nFlanagan, Mrs. P. Bateman.\nCrab Apple\u2014Doris Ross, Mrs. C.\nCoflin, Mrs. A. W. Ewing.\nRed Currant\u2014Mrs.   N.   Subasic,\nMrs. P, Bateman, A. W. Ewing.\n.Black   Currant\u2014Mrs.   J.   Spiers,\nMrs J. E. Craig, Mrs. P. G. Berry.\nMarmalade\u2014Mrs.   Pat   Heaven,\nMrs P. Bateman, Mrs. S. Penney.\nHOME COOKING\n7Angel Cake\u2014Mrs.  A.  R.  Dahl-\nstrom, Mrs. G. W. Nyman.\nSponge Cake\u2014Mrs.' E. S. Tobey,\nDoris Ross, Mrs.' G. Dyson\nChocolate Cake\u2014Mrs. E. S. Tobey,\nMrs. P. Bateman, Mrs. J. Spiers.\nWhite Butter Cake\u2014Mrs. A. Law-\nton, Mrs. Sam Irvln, Mrs. D.-Blsset.\nSpice Cake\u2014Mrs. P. Bateman,\nMrs. Fat Heaven.\nDate and Nut Loaf \u2014 Beverley\nBerry, Mrs. O. Nyman, Mrt _. F.\nRice.\nLight Fruit Cake\u2014Mrs. Jeffer-\nson, Mrs. L. L. Prough, A. S. Ewing.\nDark Fruit Cake\u2014Mrs. F. Bateman, Mrs. J. Phillips\nJelly Roll\u2014Mrs. J. Townsend,\nMrs. P. Bateman, Mrs. A. Hale.\nShortbread\u2014Mrs. P. Bateman,\nMrs A. Lawton, Mrs. L.< L. Prough.\nRolled oat cookies\u2014Mrs. N. Subasic, Mrs. W. Sandulescu, Beverley\nBerry.\nBaking powder biscuits\u2014Mrs. W.\nSandulescu, Beverley Berry, P.\nBateman.\n, Rolled cookies\u2014Mrs. E. S. Tobey,\nMrs. P. Bateman, Mm. W. C. Flanagan.\n.Drop  eookies\u2014Mrs.   G.   Nyman,\nMrs. L. L. Prough, Mrs. C. Coflin.\n.Butter tarts\u2014Mrs. L. L. Prough,\nMrs. W. \u2014 Flanagan, Mrs. P. Bateman. \u2022\nMacaroons\u2014Mrs, Pat Heaven, Mrs.\nP. Bateman, Mrs. W. E. Flanagan.\nC~p cakes\u2014Mrs. P. Bateman, Mrs.\nM. E. Nixon .Mrs. Pat Heaven\nMatrimonial cake\u2014Mrs. W. E.\nFlanagan, Mrs. D. F. Rice, Mn. N.\nSubasic.\nBran muffins\u2014Mrs. P. Bateman,\nMrs. E. S. tobey, Mrs. P. Palmer.\nRecoratlve leing for party cake\u2014\nMrs.   W.   Sandulescu,   Mrs.   J.   T.\nSmith, M. FlageL\nPIB8\nApple\u2014Mrs. S. Penney, Mrs. L. L.\nPrough, Mrs. 3. Phillips.\nRaisin\u2014Mrs. P. Bateman, Mrs. L.\nL. Prough, Mrs. D. Bisset\nPumpkin\u2014Mrs. _-. L. Prough, Mrs.\nP. Bateman.\nLemon\u2014Mrs. A. R. Dahlstrom,\nMrs. P. Bateman.\nAny other yarlety\u2014Mrs. it. Subasic, Mrs. L; _ Prough, Mrs, P.\nBateman,\nCANDY\nMrs. 3. S. Spiers, Mrs. Pat Heaven,\nMrs. J. 1. Townsend.\nBREAD     '\" -\nWhite-^Mta. Gilbert Kay, Mrs. S.\nPenney, Mrs. J. S. Spiers.\nBrown\u2014Mrs. Gilbert Kay, Mrs.\nJ. ?. Spiers, Mrs. T. A. Fauman;\nWhite bread buns\u2014Mrs. J. S.\nSpiers, Mrs. Gilbert Kay, Mis. 9.\nBrown bread buna\u2014Mm. J. S.\nSpiers, Mrs. Pat Heaven, Mrs. (Sil-\nb'ertt _ay. .\nCinnamon bi_s\u2014Mrs* w. Sandulescu, Mrs. S. Penney, Mm. Sam Ir-\nvin.\nBest loaf baked from Purity flour\n-Mrs. Gilbert Kay, first.\nSweet buns baked from Purity\nflom\u2014Mw. W. Sandulescu.\nBlue Ribbon tea biscuit competition\u2014Mrs. J. Henderson, Mrs .P.\nBateman, Mrs. D. Btoset, Mrs. W.\nSandulescu.\nSpecial for women's organizations\n\u2014St, Paul's WA, Fruitvale, first;\nCWL, second; Fourth Avenue Circle\nSt. Andrew's United Church, third.\nCanada Packers special pie\u2014Mrs. N.\nSubasic, Mrs. J. Phillips, Mm. P.\nBateman.\nCake\u2014Mrs. P. A. Bateman, Mrs.\nW. Sandulescu. \u2022\nFLOWER SECTION\nAsters\u2014A. Wood, Mrs. J. J. Oul-\nlinane, P. Bateman.\nDahlias, poms\u2014W. Palmer, A.\nWood, Mrs. M. E. Nixon.\nDahlias, any other variety\u2014W.\nPalmer, A. Wood, Mrs. E. R. King.\nDahlias, best display\u2014W. Palmer,\nP. C. Berry.\nDahlias, _ best single\u2014W. Palmer,\nP. C; Beriy, A. Crossley.\nGladiolus, single spike\u2014H. F.\nHutchison, first and special; Betty\nWood, Mrs. M. C. Nixon.\nGladiolus, three spikes\u2014A. Wood,\nP. C. Berry, Beverley Berry.\nGladiolus, 6 spikes\u2014H. F. Hutchinson, A. Wood, Mrs. M. E. Nixon.\nMarigolds\u2014Mrs. C. Coflin, P. C.\nBerry, Mrs. E. R. King.\nNasturtiums, single\u2014J. E. Craig,\nA. Crossley, Jack Ross.\nNasturtiums, double\u2014Mrs. Pat\nHeaven,;1. E. Craig, Mrs. E. R. King.\nFansle*-P. C. Berry, A. W. Ewing, P. Bateman.\nPetunias, single\u2014Mrs. C. Coflin,\nMrs. Pat Heaven, P. C. Berry.\n; Petunias,    single    ruffle\u2014P.' C.\nBerry, S. H. Hayden.\nPhlox\u2014Mrs. Blench, A. F. Hubner, Mrs. L. L. Prough.\nSnapdragons \u2014 A. Wood, Mrs. 3,\nJ. Cullinane, Mrs, M. E, Nixon.\n-     -'\nCarnations \u2014P. C, Berry, P. Bateman.\nStocks \u2014 Mrs. J. J. Cullinane, A.\nWood,, A. W, Ewing.\nZinnias \u2014 Mrs. Blench, P, Bateman, P. C. Berry;\nRoses, bowl t- J. E. Craig, H. H.\nToogood, Castlegar, P. C. Berry.\nRoses, best single bloom \u2014 J. E.\nCraig, W. H. Toogood, Castlegar,\nBeverley Berry.-   7      \u25a0.'...-'\nSweet.Peas; six spikes, four colors, four-containers \u2014 Mrs. Pat\nHeaven, Chess Edwards, Mrs. W. N.\nWpodhouse.\nSweet Peas, bouquet \u2014 Mrs. Pat\nHeaven, Mrs. L. L. Prough, P. Bate-\nman.- \u25a0  : \u25a0  \u25a0'.,...'.'\/,       i   :'!.\"\nChrysanthemums \u2014 A. Wood, S.\nEdwards, Mrs. E. R. King. '\nDining Table Decoration\u2014 A. w;\nEwing, A. Wood, Mrs. G. Dyson.\nCollection Cut Flosren \u2014 A.\nWood, P. C, Berry, Mrs, Hugo Lindquist. 7 \u25a0\nDahlias, ball \u2014 Mrs. Blench, Mrs.\nS. Magnuson, P. .Bateman.\nPetunias, double \u25a0.\u25a0*- A, Wood, P.\nBateman.- \" \u25a0'\u2022  \u25a0     '\u2022 \u25a0-.--\u25a0   '    .\nCollection Houseplanta \u2014.P. G,\nBerry, A. W. Ewlng.\nCollection Fern rf A. W. Bwteg,\nP. C. Berry, Mrs. M. E. Nixon.\nCollection Cactii \u2014 P. C. Berry,\nMrs. V. Bonde, Castlegar, Mrs. A.\nW. Ewing.\nFuschia \u2014 P. C. Berry, Mm. R.\nZanussi, A. W. Ewing.\n' Fibrous Begonja \u2014 P. G. Berry.\nThree Tuberous Begonias \u2014 P.\nC Berry, AW. Ewing, Mrs. L. L.\nPrough.\nThree Geraniums \u2014 P. \u00ab. Berry,\nA. W. Ewing. ,-;       *\nAny Other Flowering Mouse\nPlant \u2014 P. C. Berry, Mrs. Subasle,\nA F. Hubner. 1\nAny Other Non-Flowering House-\nplant \u2014 P. C. Berry, S. Wise, A. W.\nEwing.\nSEWING AND KNITTING\nSECTION\nFilet Crochet Doily \u2014 Mrs. Rosso, Florence ProBser, Virginia Mo-\nline.\n- Open Crochet Dolly \u2014 Mrs. R. 6.\nBell, Florence Prosser, Mrs. Vie\nBonde, Cas-egar.\nCrochet Table Oloth, not under\n80 inches \u2014 Mrs. Vic Bonde, Mrs.\nM. Grubisic.\nCrochet Table Cloth, under 80 inches \u2014 Mrs\/ W. H. White, Nakusp,\nVirginia Moline, Mrs. T. Shinkaruk.\nCrochet'Chesterfield Set \u2014 Mrs.\nJ. Plotnikoff, Virginia Moline, Mrs.\nC. Sanders.\nArticle with Crochet Edge \u2014Mrs.\nJ. Plotnikoff, Mrs. Walter Marken,\nCastlegar, Mrs. Vie Bonde, Castlegar.\nNovelty Crochet Article \u2014 Virginia Moline, Mrs. Peroy Elmes,\nMrs. Viv Bonde.\nTatted Article \u2014 Mrs. R. C. Ben,\nMrs. T. FiBher, Mrs. W. E. Flanagan.\nHousehold Linens-\nEmbroidered Pillow Cases \u2014 Mrs.\nF. Cullen,   Mrs. Molly   McLaren,\nGail Patterson, .;\nEmbroidered Lunch Cloth \u2014 Mrs.\nC. Wanless, Mrs. Vic Bonde.\nEmbroidered Tea Cloth\" \u2014 Mrs.\nVic Bonde, Evle Miller, Mis. S. Dyson.\nCutwork, white \u2014 Mrs. C. Win-\nless, Mrs. Vic 'Bonde, Mn. J. L.\nSmith.\nCutwork, colored\u2014Mrs. ,y. Bonde,\nMrs. Percy Elmes, Mrs. S. Wanless.\nPetit Point \u2014 Mrs. R. C. Bell,\nMrs, J. Simra, Mrs. Ray Miller.\nCross-Stitch \u2014 Mrs.   V.   Bonde,\nMrs, R. Miller, Florence Prosser,\nClothing\u2014 ...\nGirls Dress, plain Mrs. J. L.\nSpiers, Mrs. W. Marken, Castlegar,\nMrs. E.-S. Tobey. -.\nGirls Dress, fancy \u2014 Mrs. W. Markers, Mrs.- A, Miller, Mrs. Violet\nVeysey.\nLadies Dress \u2014 Mrs. L. A. Freeman, Mrs. E. S. Tobey, Gail Patter,\nson. ...\nFancy Apron\u2014Sybil Nyman, Mrs.\nF. W Bye, Mrs. J. Plotnikoff.\nPlain Apron\u2014Mrs. A. C- Patterson, Mrs. J. Plotnikoff, Mrs, Vie\nBonde. '\nChild's Pyjamas\u2014Mrs. _. Wanless,\nMrs. E, S. Tobey, Mrs. A. J. Popple-\nwell.\nChild's Garment made from Worn\nGarment\u2014Mrs'C. E. Seefeldt, Sybil\nNyman, Mrs. Owen.\nChild's Garment made from Worn\nGarment, Class A\u2014Mrs. W. Marken,'Mrs. J. L. Spiers,\n-Article made from Flour Sacking\n\u2014Mrs. Vie Bonde, Mrs. 3. Plotnikoff, Mrs; P. Bateman.\nHouse   Dress   made of material\npurchased   from   Columbia   Dry\nGoods\u2014Mrs. Ray Miller,  Mrs.  P.\nBateman,.Mrs. L. A. Freeman.\nKNITTING\nLadies' Sweater, designed \u2014 Mm.\nR. P. Mann, Mrs. F. McGuire.\nLadies' Sweater, plain \u2014 Mrs. W,\nMarken, Mrs. G. Wanless.\nLadies' Sweater, patterned \u2014 Mrs.\nPeggy Ashford, Mrs. A. Hale, Mrs.\nPta Heaven.\nMan's Sweater, designed\u2014Mrs. X.\nErickson, Mrs. R, P. Mann.\nMan's Sweater, plain \u2014 Mm, , F.\nMcGuire,\n(Contliwed on Pw W*\nSuzanne Lamport\nPuts on Blue Bonnet\n-Vote* It\nsaime Lamport preftBiTO_OHB\u00bbr\nMargarine to any spread at any price!\nShe enjoys it all the time. And juke the\ndaughter-of Toronto's famous mayor,\nyou will love the fresh, sunny-sweet\nflavor of this de fee cpality margarine\nYou - appreciate tho nourishment of\nDb ImxE Bhjb BoilN-T, too. No other\nspread is richer in year-round Vitamin\nA. You'll like its convenience \u2014 four\ngolden-yellow quarter pounds are\nindividually wrapped in pure aluminum\nfoil. They're ideally shaped to go light\nfrom package to plate! Take a tip\nfrom women who can afford the beet\nand buy the best: ask for D_ Loss\nBlue Bonmei Margarine nest time\nyoushopl bt-83\n\u25a0\u2022, \u25a0','.\u25a0\u25a0 \u00ab_PW3\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. TO, 1953 \u2014 S\nMore fun for breakfast with\nI,'.-.  . i (   W*%'     \\\u00a3\nWith bran fo help keep you regular)\n{toasted m Kellogg's radiant owem)\n(exc\/usi'va ftavomrtg devokped bfr'W, K. *fftiqgj\nPrices Effecfivo\nSeptember 10-11-12\nGhohse, Cr.de \"A\"\nS lbs. average ..\u2014\n iy8c\nVEAL RIB STEW   lb. 35c\nGround Beef-3 lbs. $1.00\nSIRLOIN TIP      -7sf\\\nOVEN ROAST fe.\/UC\nPORK OVEN ROAST\nlb. 52c\nShoulder.\nAH cut* _\nROUND STEAK Mt- lb. 58c\nBEEF LIVER -\u2014 Ik 50c\nBEEF KIDNEYS\u2014lb. 22c\nVEAL ROAST STL lb. 55c\nPOT ROAST83^^lb.45c\nPURE LARD.*\u2014 lb. 19c\nSIRLOIN  \u201e_.,\nCut from\nT-BONI   y\u00b0u\"9'\nsteer \u25a0\nRIB basf^:\t\nlb. 35c I EASTERN KIPPERS lb. 43c\nFree Delivery\nOn Orders\n$3.00 or Over\nPhones 1177\nond\n1178\n\u2022\nA\n BatablisDdd April 2B. lUDil\nBritish Columbia's\ntyosl \/nleresting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY  LIMITED,\n?6B peker Street,   Nelson,   Brttlah Columbia-\nAuthorised aa Second, Class Mall,\n.    Poat Gfflee Department Ottawa.\nMEMBER OP THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTUP AUDIT BWIff*U Ot CIRCULATIONS,\nThursday, September 10, 1959\nFreedom to\nDiscipline Ourselves\nOver the last half century or more\nour hopeg for a better world have revolved hiainly around material advances. We have pressed this technological quest to the point where nothing seems beyond man's capacity \u2014\nnothing physical or material, that is.\nWe can level mountains, irrigate deserts, fly faster than the speed of sound.\nReflecting this rage'for tecnnolog-\nical asfy.nce, our colleges and liniyer-\nsitiei Jjave tended'more and',more to\nemphasize technical skill rather than.\nthinkWg\/ability.'. 7,   '   -1' , \u2022\nAnd'^wherf has it all fcyougHt: us?\nIt h'\u00abi'brought us te where we'Jlve\ninieai'-that tljiis incredible energy.at\nmanVcoriiiriand will beeome the means\nof destroying civilization, as we know\nit.     v'-v-;\"7,..;..    , - ,\"'\n. Clearly'sontething is missing. That\nsomething' can- hardly \u25a0 be still - more\npower, still newer technological advances; Tho something we lack ll\ndiscipline, the capacity to govern ourselves and to control the power that\nis already ours. And does not the essential failure of modern education lie in\nthe fact that it hat forgotten this age-\nold truth, that man is free only when\nhis power and knowledge, ire properly\ndisciplined?\nThe outcome of the cold war is\nlikely to hinge upon our recognizing\n--or failing to recognise\u2014this truth.\n' Our struggle with the Soviets is often\npictured as ranging the forces of freedom against the forces of tyranny. If'\nonly the choice were thlt simple-\nthere would be no uncertainly of the\noutcome.\n, But when it comes to carrying out\nany program made heeemry by the'.\ncold wir, we find thit it inviriibly\nrequires subordinating personal interests to the national interest. Invariably it calls tor giving up something to preserve the freedom we\ncherish. \u00ab\nThe choice we face is not, then, me\nof freedom versus slavery. Our choice\nis between the freedom to discipline\nourselves and the slavery thit others\nwould impose upon us.\n\u2014Bernard Birueh.\nStratford\n2500 Miles South   ;\nThlfle, Greenland, la aome 3600 miles\nnorth ol Stratford, Ontario. But the other day\nsomeone up there wrote tor tickets to Strat-\nford'i Shakespearean Festival, which opens\nthla summer.\nSo spreads the name of Stratford boqouae\na few of its citizens had a dream which war a\ngood one, and the ambition to make it true.\nThe Festival is-well an its way. Tom\nPatterson, Its general manager, reporta that\ncontributions from Stratford resident! art\nrunning well above tha highest, hopes, And\nmany other Canadians and Canadian businesses are.chipping in to make this ambitious\nscheme a success.\nA few months from now, In the eljty's\ngreen park along its Avon River, Tyrone\nGuthrie, noted British producer, will direct\ntwo Shakespearean plays. Starring will be\nAlec Guinness. The female leads will ba\nplayed by Irene Worth from the Old Vie; The\nsupporting cart will be Canadians. This Is\ntheir chance to work with groat names of\ntoday's theatre.\ni    The. project doss not come down from\nabove. It is not tha creation of any govorn-\n. m\u00bb\u00abt. , - - .;\u25a0\n\u25a0 '\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 It is tho Imaginative-and excellent project\nof citiMna of\u00bbcity.\nAnd that makes it doubly Important. For\nculture can never coma down from above, It\nroust spring from the rootJ.*-The, Financial\nPort.\nNo Politics\nThe only way government-owned\nenterprises can possibly be operated\nwith a degree of efficiency is to hire\nsomebody to run them, and, so long\nas his over-all performance retains\nt public, respect, let him run the show\nand let him fcave total immunity from\npolitical pressures. That principle is\nbasic.\nCanada's few publicly-owned enterprises \u2014 Canadian National Railway, Polymer and Chalk River, among\nthem\u2014have a pretty good and certainly a pretiy clean record. An important part of the reason for.that\nrecord is that their managements have\nbeen allowed to manage, and have not\nbeen beholden to the politicians.\nWKo Got Promoted?'\n. 7 'lit hai often occurred us to comment,*\nlays the Canadian Mining Journal, \"on a curious and'sometimes mildly annoying manifestation of modern professional' public selaUdni-\nas evidenced by the ton of so of press announcement releases that cross our desk In-\nthe course of a year. .\n\"A great deal of the paper involved quite\nnaturally concerns promotions ot personnel\nwithin various organisations, end those al-\nmost Invariably conju>Q up a picture m our\nmind of the Joa Doaks who hai sweated and\ntolled away a number of years In fell firm's\ninterest and has finally attained wolcomo\nand concrete recognition in tha form fit pro,\nmotion to a better Job,\n\"Of course it is good to sea old Joe getting\nMs place in tha sun, hut whore li tha emphasis planed In the release? Only slightly\nexaggerated is this, ai a general form: \u2022\n\"Mr, 3, Cadweiladar Trelinghulitn, pros,\nident and,general manager of tha Act Rook-\ndrill and Stump Puller Manufacturing Company, announces the appolntmont of Mr. .3.\nDoaks ai isles manager for tha oompany'i\nproducts In tha Hsnkln Inlet area, Tha company, according to Mr, Frellnghulsen, ll the\noldest manufacturer in thli combined field,\nand are wall known for their 'Vacuo-Special'\nrock drills which utillit suction rather than\ntha old-fashioned compressed-air method ot\npowering, and the 'Dolly Dimple' Una ot\nstump pullers which havo recently been Improved by the incorporation 61 a plastic cover\non the handle. This appointment is in keeping\n_ _ _. policy \u2014 service \u2014 \u2022\u00bb \u00ab\u00ab eus-\ntoipers \u2014  (To Jditor! A photograph of\nMr. Frellnghulsen Is enclosed herewith, and\nwe would appreciate \u2014 \u2014 \u2014, ate,)\"\nPress Comment\nOATS AND MICE\nThe Society ,of Prevention of Cruelty to\nAnimals has come out with the announcement\nthit mice are bad for tha health ot eats,\nSeemingly this la nature's way of preserving balance since It has long been established\nthat cats aren't conduclvo to tha longevity of\nmice.\u2014Port Arthur Ncws-Chroniclo,\n.TO 8ILINGE AN ANNOUNCER\nMany a radio listener will envy tha opportunity offered to doctors In' Oklahoma City\nrecently. A radio announcer there went Into\nhospltel for a minor operation, and was (Ivan\na light ladative prior to administering a local\nanaesthetic, Tha sedative apparently triggered\nsomething In the announ\u00ab\u00bb-'j \"inbeonselous,\" -'\nfor he want Into a long and loud commercis'.\nThe doctors listened politely for a time and\nthen did what every radio fan would like*\nto do at aome time or other. They used ether\nto silence the announcer-\u2014Cornwall Standard-\nFreeholder.\nYour Horoscope\nBranch out and start new projects, and\na busy, active year is likely to be yours. Beneficial changes and travel are well signified.\nBorn under their auspices, s child is likely\nto have excellent analytical faculties and go\nfar in life.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\n-   ' Opin to any reader. Names ot persons\nasking questions will not be publish!*; .\nThere ii no charge for this eorvioe,\nQuestions WIU   NOT. BR   ANSWERED\n, BV MAll\/snoent where there Is obvious\n_ naoeiilty fas privacy,\nMr*. A. S\u201e NellonHWll you give mt tha\naddress of someone who'makes elder-\n'   downs Pad with goow-featheri?\nPerhaps ether readers can help?\nE. J. P., Socan City\u2014Pleaso let me know\ntranslation of Chegwln  (Cornish,, and\nLlenfalrpwllgwyngyllgogeryohwyrndrob-\nwyll-Uandlslllogogpgoch,\nWa are Indebted to Mrs, King, Nelion,\nand to Mr, T. E. Jones, South Slocan, for the\ntranslation of Llanfair P.O. as It Is telescoped\nIn Wales! \"Church, Mary, a hollow white\nhosel near to. the rapid whirlpool, church\nsaints, pave red-\" Mr, Jones adds further!\n\"It le a small village in Angles*! which li\nceiled Llanfair P.G.'for short,\" He also addst\nChegwyn Is used In Wales to .describe the\nsteep ildt ot a mountain.\"\n\u2022M. 1\u201e Nelson\u2014Please print address of person\nor persons who eover bed comforters,-\nMrs, Amoroso, 518 Sixth Street, Nelson,\ndees this type of work, . ,  '\nHeader, Nelson\u2014Where Is the nearest handicraft ahop?       ...\nCaatlegar. Write Lakeside Hobby Craft,\nKarl Bolph, Castlegar, B.C.\nInttrtlted, Trall-r-Where can r get folders or\n- books en travel in Franco, railways, buses,\n\u25a0\u25a0;.'.\u25a0 vete.T   .    ,\\' 7    .,.,\u25a0..--    v\n- Wr|to to French National Railroads, Sto.\n439-Kings Hall, 1291 St. Catherlne'e Street\nWart, Montreal, P,Q,\nJC:'Xs. 0., Trail-When wai tha first edition\nof Roget's Thesaurus first published? ,\n' Roget's \"Thesaurus of English Words and\nPhrases\" was originally published In 1863. An\nedition revised and extended by D. C. Brown.\nlng, M.A, (Olasgow), B.A., B. Lltt, (Oxon)\nwai published in 1852,\nFarmer-Trappers\n(Timmini Press) >\n\u2022 Encouragement for farmer-trappera Is\ncontained in la statement by Hon, Welland S,\nQemmell, Minister of Lands and Forests. The\nOama and'Fisheries Act ot Ontario, which Is\nadministered by this department, hai been\namended recently to provide them grtater\nprotection and improve their opportunities\ntor building up and harvesting stocks of fur-\nbearing animals on their own lands,\n- Under new regulations, each farmer-\ntrapper will be assigned hla own specific trapping number, This number will ba; perma.\nnently stamped on hla traps so that they may\nba readily identifiable. Trapping numbers\nwill ba Issued by local conservation officers\nwho will also provide the farmer-trapper\nwith a report form on which, at tht tnd of\ntht trapping laaaon, ha will record the number ot pelts.taken during the season,   ,\nThe idea of marking the traps la to protect the farmer-trapper from illegal encroachment by unauthorised parsons, Any traps sat\non his land thereafter may be easily checked\nand identified either #by the farmer-trapper\nhimself or hii local conservation officer. The\nannual report! will assist fur management of.\nfleers to plan tht perpetuation ot better trapping throughout tho-areas concerned.\nParking, and Shopping\nAnnouncement comes from ont city after\nanother, of big shopping centres' far on the\noutskirts being developed at costs running\nup into tvtn eight figures.\nWhy this changt In shopping habit? Why\nleave the downtown section of cities which\nhavt been built up over tht ytart at great\ncost In construction and heavy tax costs in\norder to go out to the city edge to create new\nproblems of public works, public utilities and\ntransport?\nThe answer is that the cities didn't foresee tha automobile becoming tha transportation Juggernaut that It has grown to be in\nthe pist 10 years, Had cities foreseen city\ntransportation in 1033 they would, it they\nhad had sense, have provided wide business\narea streets with plenty of off-street parking.\n\u2014Lethbridge Herald.\nFrom an\nOldtirner's\nNotebook\nhe -mountains pear\n>yR.G,JQY^:\n- Historian, Nelson tnd- Olstrlot\nOldtlmlre Association\nBeing interested in David Thompson's travels in Canada and south bf\nthe border thought I would like to\nread his narrative and it was suggested to me that 1 get the book by\nErmine White of Missoula College,\nMontana.\nWith his narrative s a photostatic\neppy of. part of the original Thomp.\nson records, Of course, I looked up\nKootenay Lake and Arrow Lakes.\nThompson wrote he eanie up by\nBonners Ferry to Kootenay Lake,\nknown by the Indians as Flatbow\nand McOUlvtray River (later the\nKootenay River). Duneah MoOM-\nveray was 'a noted Hudson Bay factor often mentioned in Thompson's\nnarrative.   \u25a0     \u2022 .\nIn my frequent journeying! to the\nLardeau contry In my old motor-\nboat, Thanet, my partner and I often\nremarked about thi\nKaslo. ,\nIn my recent conversation with P.\nE. Archer of Kaslo, his son Volunteered the information that he had\nclimbed'Mount Lokl several times\nand on the summit was a bottio containing his words, Archer, Jr, had\nused- an aneroid barometer that\nshowed.on one ascent Lokl's height\nat 8900 feet high, When.Wsvld\nThompson was exploring Kootenay\nLake ho spoke of mountains that\nwere -aproxlmately 6000 foot high\nand one topped by a cone which\nwould make it 7000 feet,  '\nI hove - often theorised thai\nThompson went down Kootenay\ntake to where Nelson Is now situated and finding that the Kootenay\nriver has several -falls, rapids, -eto,,\nturned .around, went back, passed\nKaslo to the Lardeau, up Lardeau\nriver, where Beaton now la, and on\nto tha Arrow Lakes up \"to' where\nRevelstoke now stands and thence\ndown the Columbia,\nRECALLS WHOPPER\n\u2022 LUNENBERQ, N, S. (CP) -Capt.\nWilliam D, Penney, 83, recalls the\nsummer of 1933 when he caught 30\nAtomic Committee\nViilt*S. Africa\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa\n(API\u2014A delegation from tha joint\nUnited States congressional committee on atomic energy has arrived\nto investigate the availability of\nsupplies of raw materials for atomic\nenergy. South Africa is an Important source of audi materials.\nDrop Duck and\nGeese Bag Limit\nOTTAWA (CP) -\u00bb LImltl on the\ntotal number of ducks and geese\n'that can -bt shot by a hunter during\nany one season have been dropped\nthis year from tht migratory blra\nregulations, the . resources department said Wednesday.\n\"Season bag limits were removed\nthis yetr because- thty bad been\nfound to be unenforceable and unnecessary,\" the announcement Eoid.\n8 A.M. te 5 P.M.\u2014WATCH\nTHE 11 M.P.H, SCHOOL\nZONK.\nMake Life Easier!\ntuna-with a harpoon.and hand line.\nMost were around 009 pounds but\none was too big to weigh. Capt.\nPenney says that fish nearly pulled\nthe scales off the wharf,\nj^and work co many\ndrolnid on MIMy Blue Tswtli, '\nHunt), an sjrttd evlikly, (tnl'ly wtth nil obioitint Milady\nlive, tresis.\nKllrliiri <l\u00abiMJ|t \u2014 iliw Tnwit, am Itfut tar doim \u00abf\nthon,!_. Mllshha lis\". wMtwi, er wing wHh tlunim,\nnollshn or. nop.\nHsutsheM |uhiHsB <\u2022\u00bb ht MiiwHs't er tnMlM stain*\n\u2022<\u2022\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0 htnsfv ttlimm ct MDstfy Mn hwili In tnw WW\"\"\n\u25a0ta*\u00bb * m'lfM *m et mnrsWi,\nI0O%puw instant coffee\nIJ GMMHTEE HTTER\nnU WITH eiOHl CBFFEE\nLeva of bustle ii not industry.\u2014Soneca.\nIf you have great talents, industry will\nImprove them; if modeata abalitles, industry\nwill supply their deficiencies,\n\u2014Sir Joshua Reynolds,\nThcyll Do It Every Time\njNOOTfrr TrWT OX1LD CAST FB0W\nHERE TO LAKt SUCCESS-\n7UHH-UM! MOT\nrLtM8EREH0U-H\n- NOT WN\u00ab ' \u25a0\nENOUGH EITHER?\nI V*NMA\nToday's Bible Thought\nLearned men agree that tha subconscious mind is divine In wisdom\nand character, but do not know\nhow to tap this wisdom and guidance, John teaches that FAITH la\nthe key,\nBorn not of man ner the will\nof the flesh but of God.\n\u2014John 1113.\nOuni disdL\nMabe glrla in my tfeie- had too\nmuch pride, but,I know I'd o'been\naettln' in the parlor yet if Pa had\nstopped out 111 front and' honked\nfor me.\nHOLIDAYS ARE OVER.\nWATCH THE 13 M.P.H.\nZONES.\n\u25a0\u2022\"'\u25a0'*\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\"- \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0::>-;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\n \u2014\u2014_-\u2014\n^vz?\nYour Headquarters for\nSCHOOL\nNationally Advertised Lines\nLai'y Bones, Gerberich. (by\nLeckie), Savage, Cotes, Delli\nColli, Ritchies, Canada\nWest, Grab.\nR. AKDREW\n* CO.\nEstablished 1902\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nSCHOOL CHILDREN ARE\nON THE STREET AGAIN.\nWATCH THOSE 15 M.P.H.\nZONES.\nOver 500 Attend St Francis Tea\nNelson Social\n..-....'\u25a0' \\ \u25a0\u25a0 PHONE 144 '\nA Nelson woman has returned from a holiday in England and Scotland. ; 'TT   ~.\nLome, have left for Victoria where\nthey will,attend Provincial Normal\nSchool.\nU.K. TRIP ,.. Miss Janle Stevenson, 701 Hoover Street; returned\nWednesday, via Canadian Pacific\nRailway, from a holiday in Scotland and England. Miss Stevenson\nsailed from Southampton , in the\nS.S, Scythia, .\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nEN ROUT11 . . . Miss Sheila\nKearns is visiting her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. F. Kearns, Fourth\nStreet, en route from -Edmonton to\nVancouver where she will attend\nUniversity of British Columbia.\nTO NORMAL SCHOOL .\nBeverley Irwin  and her\n., Miss\nbrother\nBe Sure and Visit McTier's\nDistributors Special Booth\nat the Fair and Sample the\nImported Specialty Lines\nWe Carry in Stock\nLOW  WEEKEND  SPECIALS\n* Veal - Pork - Beef\nMinced, nice for\nmeat loaf\n3 \u201e_T\"\nit Breast Veal\n 25'\nif Veal Steaks - Roasts\nShoulder.-        . ,     -.; \u2022-\u25a0,. % ' \"\"'\nLb.    .r:;.'\u00bb   \u00bb'g *_*:\u25a0>\u25a0& #\u2022-, \"\u25a0:\u25a0\nic Pot Roasts-Boneless\n _49*\nRound bone.\nLb.\n^ Salmon Trout\nHalf or whole.\nLb.\n49'\n4s:4..s.^jj.;.sj,j.5.ii..s;,jrs,.s^ilsjs;;i.SiSBy\u00bb.si;.\nHew season skirts at new\nlow prices tor so much\nfashion. Make your Selection\nnow for those school days\nahead. Ideal for casual\ncampers wear.\nChoose from all wool worsteds,\ntartans, tweids, gabardines,\n100% pun wools by JACQMAR,\nUnlsie, Orlons, American gabardines, plo-n-plo, etc\n$6.95 to $29.50\niQBjbu  Ladies* Apparel\nTHE FASHION CENTRE     \u2022\"   '\nPHONE 775 535 BAKER ST.\nEASTERN TRIP ... Mrs. O.\nDullum has returned from a trip\nto Winnipeg and Eastern points.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRETURN .,. Mr. and Mrs. E. H.\nBradley arid young son Ian, ot Edmonton, who were visiting Mr.\nBradley's brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. F, E. Bradley, 1519\nStanley Street, left Wednesday for\ntheir home.'\n...., *   \u2022   \u2022\nCALIFORNIA TRIP ... Mr. and\nMrs. S. Korbln and family, Kootenay. Street, have returned from a\nholiday in San Francisco and Sacramento, California.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFROM EDMONTON . . . Flight-\nLieutenant Robert Cumming, RCAF,\nof Edmonton, Ib a guest of Mr. and\nMrs. C. F. Kearns, S14 Fourth Street,\n\u2666 *   \u2022\nCOAST HOLipAY ... Mr. and\nMrs. George Kaiway and family,\nVictoria Street, have returned\nfrom a month's holiday in Vancouver, Victoria and Seattle.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nTO PENTICTON . . . Mrs. A. 'J.\nBurnside, who has been visiting\nher sister-in-law, Mrs,.H. M. Whim-\nster, Third Street, for the summer,\nhas returned to her home in Pen7\nticton.\nTJiacker-Temple\nVows Pledged\nMr. and Mrs. Roy Temple have\nleft to reside in Victoria after then-\nwedding in Pentlcton August 31.\nThe bride is the former Mary Rose\nThacker, who annually operates the\nNelson Summer Figure Skating\nSchool. She is from Langford, Victoria Island.\nFour Baptized\nAt New Denver\nHEW DENVER-rLorna Gall, 16\nmonths, and Iris Kathleen, five\nmonths, daughters of Mr. and Mrs.\nPercy Cutler, were christened at\nSt Stephen's Anglican Church here.\nAlso baptized were Larry William\nBate and Louise Susanne Bate, children of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bate of\nCastlegar. A reception was held at\nthe hom* of Mr. and. Mrt, Cutler\nafter(ttSsjeremony. \u00ab;, $j $;.*?\u25a0;\nFarewell Party\nFor Members\nKASLO \u2014 A farewell party for\nMrs. K. A. \"Humphry ana Mrs. J. 3.\nClark was held at St Andrew's\nUnited Church Manse. Mrs. W. B.\nMcintosh assisted by members of\nthe Service Club was hostess. Mrs.\nClark is leaving soon for Kamloops\nand Mrs. Humphrey for Rossland.\nA number ot interesting games\nhighlighted the evening's entertainment and when refreshments were\nserved, the two departing members\nwere each presented with a gift.\nMoyie. Notes\nMOYIE\u2014Mrs. Harry Strand and\ntwin daughters Sally and Judie\nwere guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. Mat-\ntison.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Conrad of\nKimberley spent the weekend here.\nMr. and Mrs. George L. Smith of\nKimberley and sons Joseph, Bob\nand Victor and daughter Gladys\nvisited at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. A. Smith.\nMr. and Mrs. Bill Clark of Calgary, Alta., were'guests of Mr. and\nMrs. L. GraveU.\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Warren and\ndaughters Doreen and Myra of Calgary, and their son-in-law and\ndaughter Mr. and Mrs. Wally Cottle\nwere visitors at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. R. A. Smith.\nMr. and Mrs. George McDougall\nand daughter Margaret of Calgary,\nAlta., were visitors at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. R. Saunders.\nLarry Williams of Parson, B.C.,\nvisited with his parents,, Mr. and\nMrs. G. Williams.\nMerl McKiel of Calgary spent\nthe weekend in Moyie, the guest of\nMr. and Mrs. A. H. Warren.\nRonnie Lundquist of Cranbrook,\nspent the weekend with his mother.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Grtuiskill and\nchildren of Westminster, B. C, were\nthe guests of Mr. and -Mrs, _. J.\nSylvester.\nMrs. A. N. Shaw of Cranbrook\nis spending a holiday with her parents Mr. and Mrs, Gus William and\nher - little, daughters Laurene and\nMable Ann Shaw.\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO\u2014Mrs. C. G. Bowker of\nNelson spent a few days here.\nMrs. A. Carney, Sr., left for Vancouver where she plans to reside.\nMrs. Keith Conway tnd daughter\nDonna of Vancouver are visiting\nMrs. Conway's parents, Mr. and\nMrs. A. M. MacLanders.\nMr.^tnd.Mrt. 3. .Onishko'left for\nSelkirk, Man., whert they plan to\nreside. '.''\u25a0\u25a0\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL\u2014Mr. and Mrs, J. J.\nFlynn of North Vancouver were\nguests of A. Fletcher.\nMr. and Mrs. Stan Jeffrey of\nNelson are spending' the holiday\nwith Mr. and Mrs. M. McGregor.\nMore persons than ever before\nattended the Mount St Francis tea,\nsponsored by the Uphill Circle assisted by several other serviict clubs,\nThe residents of the Infirmary\nhad a \"wonderful time\" and member! of the Circle reported the\nturn-out wat larger than that of\nlast year when over 500 attended.\nTea waa terved on .the lawn, and\nbake and apron'tables were well\npatronised. <\nMany guests wet'e in to see J. M.\nLudwlg who, has resided at Mount\nSt. Francis for a yetr. Mrs. Margaret Longhurst, who\" has lived\nthere for the past three years, thoroughly enjoyed herself. She commented on behalf of the residents:\n\"we'itre all having a grand time.\"\nThe guests were met at the door\nby Sister M. Patrick, Superior, and\nMrs, Joseph Kary. The tea was\nmade by Miss Gloria Vlngo and was\nserved by Mrs. E. Dawson, Mrs. W.\nSturgeon, Mrs. E. A. Mann, Mrs.\nLeo S. Ganser, ,\nPARTY PLANNED\nNEW DENVER \u2014 St. Stephen's\nAnglican Church Women's Society\nplanned a party for Little Helpers\nThursday at a meeting here. Mrs.\nAda Levy was hostess. Refreshments were served at'the end ot\nthe meeting.\nKaslo Students\nEnjoy Parly\nKASLO \u2014 Miss Gloria.Greens-\nword was hostess to about sixteen\nschool mates ut a pro-school party\nat tha home of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. C. H. Greensword. The lawn\nwaa specially decorated for the' occasion including many colored\nlights. The highlight ot entertainment was a treasure hunt, when\neach boy was given a paper bag and\nlist, accompanied by a girl as partner. The list comprised of 1 pants\nbutton, 3 raislhs, 1 dog biscuit, 1\nscaler ring, number of Leonard\nSmith's truck licence, 8 sweetpeas\n(flower),! pinch of snuff or tobacco, 1 carrot, 1 pair of suspenders, 1\nred button, 1 burned match,' 1\ngladlolia (flower), 1 cookie, 1 copy\nof Nelson Dally News (any date), 1\nChristmas card, 1 bread wrapper\nand number of Charles truck\nlicence. The first prize was awarded to Lance Miller ahd partner, second to Keith Yoxall and partner and\nthird went to Gerry Rossman and\npartner. Many other original games\nformed the program c\" a very successful party.\nThe human body among other\nchemical components has enough\nsulphur for about 2,200 matchheads.\n45*\nBOILING\n\u25a0 ^',-FOWL'\nFreshly dressed;\nPer lb. ,\t\nCOD\nFILLETS\nlib. pkg. JO*\nEach 1  JO\nBABY BEEF\n'   LIVER\nPer Ib 39\nBACON\nSQUARES\nSmoked. \u25a0 ''AC*\nPer Ib. _____ TV\nCdRNED\nBEEF\nMild. Boned ond _LCI*\nRolled. Perlb *T>\nFRESH RED\nSALMON\nPerlb. _.... 55\nSPECIALS IN BLUE STEER BEEF\nPOT ROASTS BRISKET\nAny cut, per Ib. .... 40#   Boned, Rolled, Lb, 35#\nROLLED PRIME RIBS      STANDING RIB ROASTS\nPer Ib .- est   Per' Ib .  55*\nYOUNG MUTTON\nSPECIALS\nLEAN BREASTS\nPer Ib. ...\t\nLOIN CHOPS\nPer Ib \t\nLEG ROASTS\nPer lb.\n15*\n45tj\n45*\nSHOULDERS\nWhole or half. Lb. 25*\nSPECIAL IN\nCHOICE VEAL\nRUMP ROASTS*\nPer Ib. ______.;_: 59#\nROLLED SHOULDERS\nPer Ib. _____\u201e._ 59*\nSHOULDER ROASTS\nand Steaks. Lb. .... 49*\nLEAN STEWING\nPer Ib 27*\nShoulders of Choice Young Lamb\nRolled on request, per Ib. 39c\nFreshly Harvested\nCorn\nPer dozen  J Jf\nHamburger and\nSausage Meat\n3        $1.00\nlbs.-   I\nGood\nHOT ROASTED CHICKEN\nSATURDAY MORNING\nPhones 527-528\nFree Delivery\nNELSON DAILY N$WS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 10.1953 \u2014 $\nBe As Modern As Tomorrow!\nBe Sure It's TYNAN'S\nfrom jMmat&\nSee KANT SAG CONSTRUCTION\nin Action at Booth No.1\nWin Absolutely Free\na beautiful\nHOSTESS\nto the lucky holder!\n\u00bbe+e^a9a*e^e++ + m\u00bb*\u00bbW*m.\u00bb>+e+'++++m+-\nAsk Mr. GRANT TYNAN\nwho will hem attendance all about\nTYNAN'S KANT SAT\nat FREEMAN'S Booth\nin the Fall Fair\nLister Notes\nLISTER\u2014Mr. and Mrs. David\nHowie of Vernon were visiting their\ncousins, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Sinclair.\nMiss Alice Curtis, former school\nteacher here and Miss C. Worsley\nand Don Campbell, all of Invermere,\nwere visitors at the tome of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Bird.\nMr,' and Mrs. F. Dodgson and\nchildren left for. their home in Kinnaird they had been visiting here\nwith Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Millner.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Mertz of Calgary visited Mr. and Mrs. H.\nDemchuk.\nMiss Elizabeth Millner left for\nGolden where she will teach school.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Skerik of Smith-\ners and Mr. and Mrs. Morris of Vancouver visited Mr. and Mrs. W. J.\nSkerik and family.'\nEdward Doneke returned from\nVancouver, he was a guest of his\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Lang.\nMr. and Mrs. Pete Sherstolietoff\nand daughters,  Louise  and  Olive,\nwere   visitors\nSpokane.\nto   Calgary    and\nL\nPhono 889\nTOWLER\nFuel s% Transfer\nNelion, B.C.\nTHE IDEAL COMBINATION FOR\nBACK TO SCHOOL WEAR    .\nSWEATERS\nby     \u25a0\nLANSEA,, WOL8EY, J.ADY ANNE,\nGRAND'MERE\nWools  and  Lambs'  Wool\nIn All Regular Sizes.\nPULLOVERS\n$5.95 to $12.95\nCARDIOAN8 .\n$7.95 . $15.95\nSKIRTS\nSelect a beautiful plaid or plain in a\nwide choice of materials in all regular\nsizes.\n$7.98 to $25.00\nV^\"' ef\n*\u00bb4_\u00bb\u00ab I**\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\n*****\n.   : \u25a0 -\"..\u25a0.\n : ; ;\t\n : , \u201e___\n .\nsv#>\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 10\/1953\nas\n:i\n\"\u00ab\nSt\nSCHOOL CHILDREN ARE\nON THE STREET AGAIN.\nWATCH THOSE IS M.P.H.\nZONES.\nFREE\nLECTURE\nentitled\n\"God's Abundance\nAvailable Through\nApplication of\nChristian Science\"\nby\nArthur C. Whitney\nC.S.\nof Carmol, California\nMember of' the Board of Lee.\ntureihlp Of The Mother Church,\nTht Pint Church ef Christ,\nScientist,, in Boston, Matia-\n\u2022huatttt. ' ...\nSUNDAY\nStpt. 13,1933\nCIVIC\nTHEATRE\nAuspices of\nFirst Church Of Christ, 8olpntlet\nNelson, B.C.\nPEAD THE CLASSIFIED DAIL?\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Wty\nN.S. Handicrafts\nBuild Up Profits\nHALIFAX (CP)-Backtd hy'a\nbrisk promotional campaign and\nits appeal to. tht average North\nAmerican's Invetereate partiality\ntoward! the homespun. Nova Scotia's handicrafts industry hit won\nI profitable (pot in the province's\neconomy.\nThe department of trade and industry estimates there aro from MO\nto 600 looms In Nova Scotia, many\nof them purchased on government\nloan'. Twelve pottery workers\nspend most'of their time at their\ncraft'and 80 to 90 persons are engaged men Or less permanently\nturning out silverware.\nHundreds of. families hvtreage\nabout $200 a year producing handicrafts on a part-time basis.\nMASS DISTRIBUTION\nPromotion'consists mainly in the\nmatt distribution ot printed ma-\ntereial and display of handicrafts,\nat exhibitions. An estimated 14,000\npersona viewed exhibits of tweeds,\nupholstery,\" knitting and hooked\nruga at the Central Nova Scotia\nExhibition in Truro recently.\nMary X. Black, provincial director of handcrafts, says more, and\nmore i persons, are buying, then\nproducts and an increasing number\nli alio engaged- in tho business.  '\nMarkets Oro provided by tourists\nand the many Nova Sections who\nhave developed.a taste for handcrafts In their homes. Tourists are\nselective in their buying, .usually\nseeking small articles costing less\nthin,*!,. . :7  n      \u25a0 '\nWIAVINO MO\u00bbT rfOPUtAR\nThe handcrifta division eertds its\nstaff of 10 to centres throughout\ntht province .where groups of six\nhave got together to seek instruction. Upwards of. 800 perabni attend\nhandcrafts school etch year.   - -\nThere ia roolp only\" for students\nwho intend to market their predict!. -,     \u25a0\u2022 ;rjf;. (':-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0;\nWeaving la v tha m\u00abit: popular\ncraft, with maklhjf Of silver Jewelry.\nHandcrafts ire marketed largely\nthrough gift shops and roadside\nstandi;:-; ..-     '\u25a0'\u2022,-;::' ,. ...'\u2022\nOfficials say there is itill a sub-\natahtial problem of increasing the\nmarket ahd placing It on a itable\nbasis.   ''.'-\u25a0     -,- .;\nMONT1UW1,, Sept lC*h-You Wiawae h\u00abr\nholding roses'\u2014hut \u00ab>t cleaning pots and .pais.\nYet Betty Fatkia'Scours \u201e00 pete, and pans a\nyear (i good average for toy hOuMwifef). But\nUi hands art toft and .beautiful, thanks _,\nJERQflNS tOTION. Diter)Htt help Batty to\nCl\u00abap all thOet pbta ind pans \u2014 aid Jetgent keeps\n-her hand* lovely is spite of deterge-\u2122 After every\nchore, aha smooths pure, -whit* JergCns Lotion^n,\ny. Bemg lilnild, Jergaas doesn't merely \"coat\"- tht ekiii. It \u2022',\npenetrates to help replace softening moisture. (It his two ingrCditaf\ndoctors use for softaping.) This ia why more woriion use it than illy\n5ther hand care. Ba a good housewife and an attractive woman...Uso\nergons Lotion \u2014avoid detergent hands. Just ISO, 37o, 85o and tl-15.\nWt Baek-To-Sehool Again for AU the Youngsters.- And I hope I'm\nSot too late to give you a tip about back-to-sehool\nelothei.   When you're making or remodelling your I\nchildren's   Clothes   for   busy   School-days . ,  . uSe J\nHQHTNING  FASTENERS   for   convenience   aid\niafety. Convenient?   Yes, Lightning Fasteners, make\nretting dressed ahd undressed easy for any youngster.\nYou sea, Lightning is the iipper with the famous\nOutomaJfe lock. They're wink-quick to un-sip when. J\nyou   want  to ...  yet  when   they're   iipped-up \u2014\nLightning Fasteners stay put. AOd mother, just think I \u2014when your\nyoungsters' clothes are finished with Lightning Fasteners, you can forget the ch6ri-of.constantly replacing buttons.   Ask for Lightning'\nFasteners io*...'. in t wide variety of colours and eisea.\nfee Just Had a really exciting*\nflavour   experience\u2014 i cup\nof   the   NEW\nIN8TANr\nO H A i E. ,\nSANfioft;\nCOFFEE. Did ._\nyou know? \u2014__-*!\nit's  100%   reel'-    <\nCrtipe \/Oily ft A taeorlte with\nmost Of vs. Whit a tttit it is to\nBpooii into that ifish-taating royal\nlooking jelly. And if your jellies\nare made with CERTO FRUIT\nPECTIN, thi Mt will be right,\nthe flavor ind consistency dtli-\ncious. Results.With Certo, are al-.\nways so sure, if you follow the\nrecipes exactly. YOu'il sie a fine\nrecipe for grape jelly ih the booklet, that's under the label Of each\nbottle of Cert*. Other gra*d\nrecipes, too. Ahd doing jams ind\njellies the CertO way, ftelns you\nsave 2\/3 the time Of the former\nlong-boil method... and get up to\n50% more jam Or jelly from the,\nsame amount of fruit.\n\/ Can't Think Of A Better Month\nto think about\nbetter break,\nfaata .. . than\nthe back-to-\nsehool mouth\no f September.\nAnd, euro\nenough \u2014it't\nBetter Breakfast Mopth. Well that means\nbreakfasti with hot \"CREAM OF\nWHEAT\" as tht main attraction.\nI don't hied to tell you that a\nhot breakfast it better for you\n... tad \"Cream of Wheat\" Is\nsuch a delicious way to begin tht\nday. Good for you, too. It gives\nyou quiok-ttirting food energy,\nplus iron for good rod blood, and\ncalcium tad phosphorus for diets\ndeficient is those element*. Make\nevery month Better .Breakfast\nMonth, diva your family a quick\nstart for the day with the cereal\nthat's both mitritloui and tasty:\nhot \"Crttm Of Whtat\".\nreel\ncoflee \u2014 made\nby a ntw pro-\nCess that keeps the flavour and\naroma of freshly grpufld toffee.\nYes\", even the very colour and\nUxture is the same. But there's\nthat wonderful \"Instant\" convenience that you ''like so wall. New\nInfitaat Chase & Sanborn Coffee\ndissolves like magic in hot or cold\nwitef. Add it's extremely economical. It eaves me up to 40e a\npound compared with regular\nCoffee. I'm sura that 0069 you've\nsarnpled its marvelous real-cojjee\nflavour, you'll want to make il\nyour regular eOftii.\nIt's JUcn With The Flavour of\nCanada's best tomatoes . . . plus\nthe extra touch of \"magic\" that\nthe Heini chefs add. No wonder\nHEINZ TOMATO KETCHUP\nis the \"one and only\" with \"n)0st\nfolks. And now'a the time to' stock\nup on it. Yejjjiow the \"New Pack\nParade\" ot Heina famous Tomato\nProdiiota is at your grOcef'i,\nTlieri'a Heihs Cream of Tomato\nSoup (Hoi-s putt in tht cream\n\u2014 yrjti add only water!) HelAt\nChili sauce (makes plait dishes\ntaste special I) and Heina Tomato\nJuice (a delioious iouree of _ita*\nmine A and C). All these and\nHeina Ketchup are ttade of the\nfinest tomatoes you've ever tatted\n\u2014 frith packs* by Heina for your\nenjoyment all year round.\nOnto Upon A Time, my washing used to have a yellow tinge. I'd\nscrub tad rub, with no success. Then I remembered\nsomething from my school-days . . . that seven\ncolours comblrio to make whits* \u2014 ind one of them\nii blui. So, of'course, I said to jayetlf,, the answer\nto the problem of my yellow wash \u2014 is Blue. You\nknow you must rimo your wash to get the clothes\nclean. Then simply put a dash of Blue in the\nwater \u2014 to get them really while. Your sheets,\nshirts sad table linens will fairly sparklet What's\nmore, Blue is kind to fine fabrics \u2014 won't harm\n' them in the least. And it colts just.a few pennies\na month ... a sound Investment I\nYet, for tht whitest wash, nit RECKITT'S BLUI!.\nSCHOOL Mm\nl^i^Sway'\u00ab tow prices on\nccxmW#JPJJ I jeal saving*\n.very item add OP torww,w\nPrices Effective\nSEPT.10 to 12\nPORK^BEANS\nTastt Tells,\nCh. Quality.\nIn Tomato\n^   :-'    '     \u2022    \u2022\u25a0 \"     '      '  \u2022 \u25a0  i \u2014\n : .\n \u00a7^mi^m>..    I .    L   J .\n\u00a3><\/$?\nKing of Jordan in\nLondon for Surgery\nLONDON (AP)-I-,*te,en-ytar.\nold King Hussein of Jordan has arrived by plan* from Amman (or a\nsinus operation.\n8 AM. to5 P.M.\u2014WATCH\nTHE IS M.P.H. SCHOOL\nZONK.\nBABY'S CRY\nIS NOT\nALWAYS TEMPER\nDISTINGUISH tat-wt rotor t\u00bbWs snroj\ntusfn \u00bb_ iit\u00bb of ~TOp\u00ab; Th\" \"r\u00abta ew\"\nihould havo lnrt\u00bb\u00bbt'attwtiosi. Ii It I,\n_s_isd br tho dlitnu duo to aa. on ths\n\u2022tomaoh or bo-ili or thai, oommoj\ntslsoatt-s -Ms*. _T BsAj-'i OwniToMitt.\nAi out On\u2014'Io raothtr M\u00bbor_,-'-s\n\u25a0nd to bo \u00bb worry watt to OM wbou\nmy b\u00bbhr had an npKt opoll. surttd a\nwsulMOT. Wall \u00bbat nwblam waa aolyad\nwhan mr al.Kr aald. '01- Babj'a Own\n\u201ebleto.' And durinf taousini tlma-when\nbablta aro fevolriih, raatleas, duo to\nlmaularto or hayo \u00bbn uraat tamjur-\nBaby'a Own Tablota not only rollaja\n\u2022aoiently, but do ifnulokly, I wouldn't ba\nwithout thara.\" .,    .,\n-dually affoclivo for oonitlpatlon.\ndlsoatlva npnta, and other rolnoij Intuit\ntroubloa auob aa th. rs\u00bbUa\u00bban\u201ei and\nfratfulhau ru-tins from IrrsMfulnritJjat\nS-   thing. No \"aleapy\", ott*-no dull tat\nsat, Oatapaokan today at yOnrdmglUt\nTaschereau Sees Neither French\nLaws Nor English for Canadians\nQUEBEC (CP)\u2014A Canadian ay*\ntern of laws\u2014different from thtt) of\nEngland, or Ifrance\u2014m\u00bby grow out\nof the country's dual culture, Prat,\nident Andre Taschereau of the Canadian Bar Association said Wednesday, f\nIn a presidential address prepared for delivery before POO dela-\ngates to the S5th annual 'meeting\nof the CBA, Mr, Taschereau said the\nQuebec civil code' was predomhv\nantly of French origin, while Entr-\nfound a bull tn English common\nhvw.. ' ''7-: *\nUNAN8WERGD QUESTION\n\"Art we on the' way In Canada to\ncreate a new system of laws of our\n'own. own, dlfferentf rem those pt\nboth England and France, which\nwill be mostly Canadian, though\ninsipred by two great systems of\nlaw? This.question I dara not answer,    -       - >   ' '\n\"But it is commonplace among\nlawyers to recognize that no (yt<\n.- \u201e~m_a in tern of lew can be static and that the\nlish common law was praetltwd ta , , 1*2 to j,e:m|ld, ,0J\u00abX ta.\nthe other Canadian provinces.      , W.-.W\"! .     . ..'\".  >u\\ .\"\"? \"\nMr. Taschereau was Introduced\nby Geniral 3. A. Clark of Vancou.\nver who, speaking in French, aald\nMr. Taschereau had fulfilled his\npromise when he was elected presi-\ndent last year to devote all hi\u00bb time\nto CBA and work toward greater\nnational unity.\nThe BB-year-old Quebec lawyer,\ndiscussing origin of Quebec's French\ncivli laws, said he understands\nsome rulings by the Imperial Privy\nCouncil in Canadian cases were inspired from civil law, while others\nam\ndividual and not the .individual for\nthe law.\"     '\u25a0'\u25a0'.'..\u25a0\nMr. Taschereau urged lawyers to\nmake a serious study of compera-.\ntiva law \"in particular because of\nthe fact that closer relations are being established between this civil\nlaw provirtce and the common law\nprovinces as a result ot the tremendous economic development of our\ncountry.\"\n\"It would be futile to ask a common law lawyer who will not practice in this provlnoe to become an\nauthority In civil law, or a civil law\nlawyer to become an expert in\ncommon law.\n\"But my suggestion li that each\nlawyer in Canada, should, In the\nInterest of his client and ot tht profession as a whole, have at leakt a\ngeneral idea of the principles ot\nthe ether.\"\nMr. Taschereau said ha wished\nthe CBA would make a'useful contribution to that end.\n' After a b rlef introduction in\nFrench expressing his view that\nCanadians art heading for greater\nunity, Mr. Taschereau said in English that \"unity in diversity\" ihould\nba the motto of Canadians.\nIt was felt at one time the CBA\nwas a menace to French laws since\nto many people tha purpose ot the\nassociation was to promote uniformity of legislation throughout\nCanada.\nFEARS DISPELLED\n\"This fear has been dispelled forever through the magnificent work\ne! the conference of commissioners\non uniformity ot legislation.\"\nTracing the origin of Quebec's\nThousands of people are enjoying a completely new, high\nstandard of automatic heat at\nvery low cost bacausa of Com-\nbustkmeer. amailng Invention\n\u2022-tht Automatic Respirator.\nIt la the only stoker air control\nthat la fully automatic. It de-\nteete... then mcamreo out tht\nvreeUe amount ot air required\nby tha fire-bed for complete\neombuetton at all times. __\u2022\nTRA heat energy it extracted\nfrom every pound bf coal. Fuel\naavinga art exceptional. And\nbeat of nil\u2014there is no fuss or\nbother with dampen or shutters such M old-fashioned stokers havt in their wind-box.\nFor tht most economical, comforting automatic heat avaslablo\nbt sure ta set Combsut_n__\nTowler Fuel & Transfer\n526 Stanley St.\nPhone 889\nFormer Fernie\nMan Returns\nAs Entertainer\nLONDON (CP) - B. C. Hllliam,\nBritish enteretalner who. started bis\nshow-business career in Calgary,\ntl returning to Canada for a coast-\nto-coast tour.\nHllliam Is to. g|vt a series ot\npiano lectures starting Sept. 28 in\nVancouver, scene of many ot his\nearly j triumphs, and Struggles, and\nending in Halifax just before\nChristmas. His' vttlt is sponsored\nby Frank Crawshaw, British artist\nwho has toured Canada four times\nsince the'Second World, War with\nhli \"one-man theatre\" act.\nHllliam, known in his Canadian\ndays a \"British Columbia Hllliam,\"\nemigrated to Canada in 1010. Lured\nto Calgary, by encouraging letters\nfrom a British friend, he spent his\nfirst three nights playing the piano\n\u2014$5 for playing at a Reciprocity\nrally, $5 for playing at an antl-\nReciproclty rally and $8 tor performing at an amateur show.\nMOVED TO FERNIE   ,\nLater he went to the mining town\nof Fernie, B.C.. where ha pounded\ntht keyboard as an accompaniment\nto the silent movies ot the time.\nIn Vancouver he worked on a newspaper, appeared in plays end had\nhis own music school. He served\nin the Canadian Army during the\nFirst World War.\nWhile in Vancouver Hllliam set\nto music a number of poems by tht\nIndian poet, Pauline Johnson. One\nof his songs it entitled \"Here's a\nHo, Vancouver!\"\ncivil laws, Mr. Taschereau salt}\nthey now were a blend of French\nand English laws.\nLaw of evidence wu mostly English, as was procedure before tht\ncourts\u2014such as examining and\ncros-examintng witnesses. Otherwise, much ef tht eOda ot procedure\nstemmed from an ordinance ot tho\nking of France In 1667.\nCLASSIFIED. ADS GET RMULTg\nBuy, Sail, Trad* the Classified Way\nNapkins\nfor lovely table\nsettings...\nMade from three thick'\nnesses of soft Cellulose\n... they drape and foli-\nlike fine linen.      \u00ab*_,'\nShort Training for B\u00bbC.\nChartered Accountants\nVICTORIA (CPl-Unlverilbr of\nBritish Columbia and the B, C. Institute ot Chartered Accountants\nhave taken a precedent-shattering\nstep that will elmlnate a year from\nthe training required for prospect\ntive chartered accountants,\nPat Dunn, president of tht B,C,\ninstitute has announced that B.C.\nstudents registered with the In.\nBtltute will be rtcognltcd as chartered accountants at the same\ntime they attain their bachelor of\ncommerce degree at UBC, without\nduplication of studies,\nMr. Dunn told delegates attending\nthe Silt annual meeting of tha Canadian Instlute of Chartered Accountants here that the new plan\nwill become effective in Mty, 1091\nAt present a B.C, student must\nspend three years as an articled\nclerk in a charter accountant's office after graduation. A prospective\nchartered account may also take\nPremise Improved\nService to\nB.C. Gulf Islqnds\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Aisurance of an\nImproved B.C. coast service to the\ngulf islands for the winter season,\nwas given representatives ot tht\nCulf Islands Improvement Bureau\nby CPR officials here following a\nmeeting of tha two-bodies.\nWilliam Manson, vice-president\not the CPR's Pacific region, told\ntht delegation the Princess of Albernl, on her Wednesday trip from\nVictoria to Vancouver would call\nat South Pender, Saturnt and Hope\nBay on her return Friday would\nmake stops at these same ports in\naddition to calls at Mayne and Gal-\nlano Islands-\nIn addition ,the PrineoBS Noroh\nwill leave Vancouver each Wednesday for calls at -tllano, Mayne and\nGanges and return to Vancouver.\nPort Washington on North Pender\nIsland would bt Included in this\nservice whtn tht wharf there is\ncompltttd.\nTht delegates were assured the\nCPR officials had given this wholt\nproblem considerable study and\nwere only prevented in continuing\ntha former service because of the\ntremendous increase in operating\nosts and no improvment in the\namount of traffic.\nRail officials explained it was\nImpossible to operate the Princess\nElaine into gulf island port* while\nenroutt between Vancouver and\nVictoria and make the transcontinental train conections each day.,\nMr. Manson also assured the association delegates'he would be delighted to meat with them again the\nend of October to discuss plans for\nsteamship service into tht gulf islands for next summer.\nGulf island delegates present\nwere: Capt. I. G. Denroche, Goliano;\nJ. Campbell, Satums; Mrs. Grace\nHume, South Pender; J. B. Bridge,\nPort Washington; G. H. Haynard,-\nMayne; Gavin Mount, Ganges.\nfull training In a chartered accountants office.\nPAID FROM START\nUnder tht ..new stt-up, students,\nnominated by the institute will be\narticled to a firm immeidatoly' and\nwill bt paid from tht start of their\nuniversity, course.\nSuch students will attend UBC\nonly for one winter and will receive the balance of their training\nIn special spring and summer sessions. During the rest ot the year\nthty will receive practical experience In accounting and auditing\nand will study lor lnstltutfexamln-\n\u00abtions.\nTht arrangtmtnt wu made\nthrough Prof. E. D. MacPhee, di.\nrector of the school of commerce\nat UBC.\nIt is believed to bt tht first\ntime that a student will be able\nto become a bachelor of commerct\nand a chartered accountant concurrently. ,\nOF WIDE INTERIST\nCommenting on tht \u00bbtep\/Prof.\nMacPhee said: \"I feel that what w*\nare doing in B. C. will be of real Interest not only here but across the\nDominion.\"\nEarlier Tuesday, Prof. MacPhee\ntold soma ISO delegates that chartered accounts in the future will\nneed to consider helping companies, not only in tht financial audit,\nbut also in management problems.\n\"Management, in every phase, of\nIts operations, is recognising the\nneed for advice and suggestions on\nhow to do a better planning and\ncontrol job,\" he said.\nSome progressive chartered accounts had taken on that work and\nothers should prepare themselves\nfor it\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SIFT. 10, IMS \u2014 7\nViscountess Astor in 1919 became\nthe first woman to sit In tht British\nHouse of Commons.\nLakt Superior, largest of the five\nGreat Lakts, Is a little ovtr MO\nfeet higher than sea level. \u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0.\n-ke- NABISCO SHREDDED WHEAT\n(100% VWio\/e Wheat Including the bran ant! wheat gem)\nALWAYS BUY\nTHI BIST*-\nTht trot Solltne. Thin ot a woftr\n... delightfully criip ...specially\nblended far lightness and froih,\nlino flavor, btlra lompllng with\nsoups, chttit and sprtan.\n\u00abngHjft GntMtf\nBISCUITS and CANDIES\n.I*.,,:,  -:*-.:_-,:\u25a0\nTHURSDAY    -    FRIDAY    -    SATURDAY\nBoys' Shirts and Shorts\nAnother shipment of this popular\nunderwear has been received \u2014\ncotton rib undershirts and \"brief\"\nstyle shorts with elastic waistband.\nSizes small, medium A Q\nand large. Each  \u201e _ ..T1 Jr\nSave! Boys' Slacks\nWe made a special purchase of gabardine and hounds-\ntooth check slacks, smartly styled ^  >\u2022\nfor boys: All with self belt in grey,               ^B\u00bb\"\"\nbrown, blue. Sizes 6 to 16                \u25a0\u25a0\nBoy*' T-Shirts\nClearances from our higher\npriced lines. Regular 1.00 and\n1.75 T-shirts in this grouping -\nmany fancy striped designs.\nSizes small, medium | \"*C\nand large     I %m\\t\nBoy*' Suedine Shirts\nSmartly styled play or school\nshirts   in   sarifprlted   suedine.\n\"\\ \u2014 <tjht cheeks for boys\nages S to 12. \u00ab   \"Jft\nPriced at  _     I \u2022 # 7\nFLANNELETTE BLANKETS\nReg. 7.S0. Only a few of these high qu aliiy blankets will he on sale this weekend. First quality American cotton woven into a finely napped _\u2022 _\u00bb ^\nblanket, to give warmth without weight. Large double bed f%*00\nsize 80x90. Sale Price' ,       ^_T\nOnly 3 Days Left!\nThe Bay's Annual\nMade-to-Measure\nSUIT\nSALE\nYes! Only 3 doyt are left to\ntake advantage of this\nwonderful offer!\n2 Piece Suit\n$45\nExtra Trousers $14\nSee the suit lengths on display \u2014 feel the. fine weight of\nthese 100% wool' fabrics \u2014\nchoose the fabric and style\nyou wish \u2014 all measurements\nare guaranteed.\nLADIE8I You Ctn Have a\nMade \u25a0 To \u2022 Measure Suit Tool\nMany Ntw Stylesl \u2022 <_\u25a0 A _\u25a0\nOnly ..;.. ^>*TD\nEASY BUDGET TERMS\nUNBLEACHED TERRY TOWELS\nGood quality towels that are so handy a round the house.\nSize 18\"_32\". Multi-stripe design, S-le Price \t\n4*.$1\nM--.N,i~D....w.*r._ SPECIAL! BATH TOWELS\nYes! The new nylon denim now In\npopular regular cut blue denim work\nptnta \u2014 the addition of nylon doubles\nthe wear \u2014 and they are double-\nstitched and bar tacked as 1 _A\nwell. Sites 30 to 42  let*\nMen's Olive Dreb Shirts\nRepeat offer! Neatly tailored shirts,\nsanforiied shrunk to retain their fit.\nFully cut for comfort and s\\ **] Q\nbetter wear. Sizes 16-17Vi.   si,. I *\nHere's real value for the homemajcer No. 1 seconds from the famous \"Dundee\nMills.\" Buy several of these and save dollars. Slight flaws should not affect wear.\nColors of yellow, red, green, blue, aqua.                 \\ CO\nSize 20x40. Sale Price _ , .   .0*\nTEA TOWELS\n300 only all linen tea towels that are oh!-so-thirtty. All first quality towels imported direct from England. Pull 17x32 si ze. Colors of red, green, blue JJ d*|\nand yellow in the popular check design    3 for *P I\nMisses' Trench Coats\nSpecial school-again value in misses' illrweatte\ntreneh-coats. Good-looking water repellant gahtrclitti,\ncrease resisting celanese lining, double-breasted all-\npurpose styling. Wonderful value at this extra epecUl\nprice. Mostly navy but .browa, <_\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'__':^__-\ngrey and teal included. Sizes 10 \u25a0 JM\u00bb99\nto 20. Sale Price        e% 9kjf\nORLON BLOUSES\nJust In ... the new miracle fabrie... Orion I Tub-\nioned into the cutest little sport* blouses. Absohrt_rjr\nno ironing necessary \u2014 and a dream \u25a0*m^-' _i_t'\nto wash! Short sleeves, sports collar, \u00abK\u00abfrS\nwhite and pastels. Sizes 12 to 30 _     ^B\n;\nMen's Cheeked Flannel Shirt. SALE   OF   BROADCLOTH\n51 Gauge Nylons\nSheer, lovely for the new Fall\nseason. First, quality 81 gauge,\n15 denjer in Amberglint \u2014 a\nwarm beige shade.\n6 Sizes \u00bb to U. _,.._\n.87\nSanforized checked flannel work or\nleisure shirts \u2014 strongly sewn and\nwell cut. Regular shirt styling. As\nsorted check patterns.\nSizes 15 to 17\t\nMen's Runners\nJust the thing for back-to-school.\nMen's canvas runners, uppers are of\na heavy black duck with heavy tread\nrubber soles. \u00bb|  QQ\nSizes TA to 11. Sale, pair   _,.77\nBoys' Runners\nQuantities are limited on this extra\nspecial clearance. \u00bb\u00bb  sCQ\nSizes 3, 4, 5 only. Sale, pr.   _,U7\nMen's Nylon Anklets       >\n100% spun nylon in beautiful diamond\npatterns'\u2014 a sock to wtar and wear,\nin a-perfect weight for the tall\nmonths \u2014 and a host ot 1 \"> O\ncolors. Sizes WVt to 12    I ,<_,7\nOnce again we are offering first quality broadcloth millends at low, low prices. A\nfull 36\" width in colors of blu*, wine, yel low, pink, green and brown. s\\\\Q\n2 g9      Sale Prise, yard\nKIDDIES' LINED JEANS\nSueded Rayon Gloves\n\u25a0 Classic \"Simplex\" styling In a\nmedium weight sueded rayon\u2014\nso easy to wash, and wonderful\nto wear. White and popular\nshades. Sizes 6Vi to 8. <\u00a3l\nSale Price     ^> I\nSALRWOOt\nWool prices art rising so here's a\nvalue you cant afford to mis*.\n3 ply baby wool and Mgulsar\ntattting wool \u2014 nylon rttetneta.\nWhite and many colors. \u00bb)A\n1 ounce ban  _ \u00ab__7\nSpecial! Silk Squares\nGenerous size pure silk squares la\nmany   beautiful   geometric' and\nfloral designs. Buy several\nat this low prlcei -.\n.79\nStock up now and save on these Fall-essential lined\njeans. 100% sanforized blue denim and plaid lining,\nboxer style,, 4 pockets, bar tacks, and a really good\nroomy, cut. Big value for parents -_^ -^\nwho shop NOW! Boys' have zipper. MJ*Q*\nSizes 3 to 6x       Am\nKiddies' Trench Coats\nCord Boxer Longs\nKiddles' quality corduroy boxer\nlongs at September savings price.\nFully cut from pinwale corduroy,\nhard-wearing, washable, ih navy,\nred, and blue. m  -f A\nSites ato 6 ;    l.\/y\nRain and cooler weather ahead go make the most\nof this low sale price. Reversible boys' pr girls'\ni double-breasted navy trench-coats,\nwith snug plaid lining. Brown and\ngreen also available. Sizes 4 to 6x. \u201e..\n$49\nBoys', Girls' Long Sleeve\nSweaters\nManufacturers' clearance of sub-\nstandards. - but they're dtftir *\"\na\nPlate Glass MIRRORS\nSee your rooms in a new light. First quality double hand\npoured mirrors of plain or floral hand cut design with two\nyear guarantee, plus moisture resisting backing.\n*12\"xl2\" 5.95 16\"x26\" _. Tp;95\n7\n:\nto spot! Long sleeve pullovers In\nheavier weight yarns suitable for\nFall and Winter, Plains, two tents,\nand bright stripe;.\nSizes 4 to 8. ...\nBt Sure To Sat The\nBAY'S DUPLAY In tht\nWESt KOOTENAY EXHIBITION\n\u2022 NEW 1964 HOOVER CLEANERS\n\u2022 KENWOOD BLANKETS\n\u2022 A.M.C. APPLIANCES\nMATTRESS SPECIALS\n,212 .oil, spring filled\nmattress at  \". :.'.;..\n29.95\nQuality box springs\ncomplete with legs. .\n1.59\n3950\n14\"x22\"\n20\"x20\"\n7.95 18\"x26\"\n9.95 22\"x28\"\n11.95\n16.95\n8lmmonn quality brand mattresses, springs and beds are available at tht Bay's -Homo Furnishing\nDepartment. Slats 3'.\", 4' and 4'o\".\n\u25a0___,_\u25a0_\u25a0_\u25a0_________ :\t\n ^p^fflpMsn\nkm NELSON DAILY NEWS,\nTHURSDAY, SEPT. 10,1,953\n8.A.M. to 5 P.M.-\nTHE 15 M.P.H.\nZONES.\n-WATCH\nSCHOOL\nMore Comfort Wearing\nFALSE TEETH\nHere ll 1 pleasant way to tovcrcom\nloose plate discomfort FASTEETH. \u00bb\nimproved powder, sprinkled on upper and\nlower plates holds them tinner so that\nthey feel more comfortable. No gummy,\ngooey, pasty .taste or feeling. It'a alkaline\n(non-acid). Does not aour. Checks '\"plate\nodor\" (denture breath). Get FASTEETH\ntodav at any drug store...\nVAUmrmatthhillsni \u2022\nNetd MONEY for bills?\nGet a\nNIAGARA\nFRIENDLY\nLOAN\n(lOWor more\u2014you'll find\na Niagara loan can bo <iiiick\n, ,:'\u00bb convenient\u2014and you\ncjioom the payment plant\nOn loans to $1500 yon get\nprotective life-insurance\u2014\nat no acta cost!\n\"OH MV IESS FOR WANT\nWUtNDlY lOAMj\nS\nMonlhly\nPayment\nNo. of\nray mint*\n\u00ab\u00ab*.\u00bb\n1)1.00\n14\ntoo\u2014w\n60.00\n\u00bbp\n-0.16\n49_o\nW\n5-8.0J\nso.oo\nt$\n278 fertN bt ODD MoUNtl\nlillAGARAJ\n560 Baker St.\nPhone 1610\ntoM-tmMnt IVsnpsi\" - s\u00ab- \u201e\u00ab<-.\n290 Children Entries at Fruitvale Fair\nGail Patterson Wins PTA Trophy\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Miss.Gail Patterson won the PTA\ncup in the children's section of the Fruitvale Fall Fair, winning by five points over Miss Lucy Webster. Miss Webster\nheld the cu pfor the. past two years. Bonnie Campbell was\nrunner up.  ,   ! \u2022\n, Judge in children's section of 290 entries, was Mrs. S.\nC. Colman of Nelson. She said that quality in this section\n''was good\", had been well arranged, and that entrants\nshowed keen competition.\nJack Gladdish's ayrshire milch cow won top honors\nin that.class _nd won a 200-pound dairy jation prize donated\nby the Fruitvale Feed and Seed Co. Mr. Gladdish also won\nithe best ayrshire heifer contest, while J. Thompson and\nRuth Wilson's entries also took firsts in heifer prizes. Following are fair winners;\nBeans, waxed\u2014Mrs. D. Morrls-\nsette, Fruitvale; Mrs. M. Dovey,\nFruitvale.\nBeans, greenr-A. J. Webster,\nFruitvale; Robert Kidd, Fruitvale.\nBeans, pole\u2014A. J. Webster, Fruitvale; J. Pargeter, Fruitvale.\nBeets, globe\u2014A. Campeau, Fruitvale; Lillian Peitzache, Fruitvale.\nCabbage, conical\u2014Mrs. M. Dovey,\nFruitvale; Mrs. P. Berukoff, Fruitvale.\nCabbage, fall or ballhead\u2014Albert\nFryer, Montrose, A. Campeau,\nFruitvale.\nCelery\u2014Mrs. P. Perukoff, Fruitvale.\nCauliflower\u2014Robert Kidd, Fruitvale; Mrs. P. Berukoff, Fruitvale.\nCarrots, short\u2014Mrs. M. Dovey,\nFruM-ale; Mrs. P. Berukoff, Fruitvale,\nCarrots, Intermediate \u2014 Robert\nKidd, Fruitvale; A. Campeau, Fruitvale.\nCarrots, long\u2014J. Porgeter, Fruit-\nvole.\nCorn\u2014Albert Fryer, Montrose, J.\nPargeter, Fruitvale.\nCuumbers, grown in open\u2014Mrs.\nP. Berukoff, Fruitvale, W. S. Harrison, Beaver Falls.\nCucumbers, pickling \u2014 Mrs. D,\nMorrissette, Frultvalt; Mrs. M. Dovey, Fruitvale.\nLettuce, head \u2014 A. J. Webster,\nFruitvale, Mn. P. Berukoff, Fruitvale. .\nOhions, yellow or brown\u2014A. J.\nWebster, Fruitvale; Albert Fryer,\nMontrose.\nParsnips\u2014Robert Kidd of Fruitvale; J. Parteger. Fruitvale.\nPeas\u2014A. 3. Webster, Fruitvale;\nRobert Kidd ot Fruitvale.\nPumpkin, pier-Robert Kidd,\nFruitvale; J. Pargeter, Fruitvale.\nSquash, gran hubbards \u2014 W. S.\nHarrison, Beaver Falls; Robert Kidd\nFruitvale. .\nVegetable manrow\u2014Robert Kidd,\nFruitvale.\nTomatoes, green\u2014Mm. M. Dovey,\nFruitvale; J. Paregter, Fruitvalo.\nRadishes \u2014 Mrs. P. Berukoff,\nFruitvale; Mrs. M. Dovey, Fruitvale.\nRhubarb\u2014Mrs. M. Dovey, Fruitvale; J. Paregter, Fruitvale.\n- Best collection of vegetabela\u2014H.\nA. Fryer Montrose; tie, Mrs. P. Berukoff, Fruitvale and Robert Kidd,\nFruitvale.\nPotatoes, white \u2014 H. A. Fryer,\nMontrose; A. J. Webster, Fruitvale.\n; Potatoes, red\u2014J. Pargeter, Fruitvale.\nPotatoes, netted gems\u2014A. J. Webster, Fruitvale; .Robert Kidd, Fruitvale.\n' Potatoes, early\u2014A. 3. Webster,\nFruitvale; J. Pargeter, Fruitvale.\nPotatoes, late \u2014 A. J. Webster,\nFruitvale; Robert Kidd, Fruitval.e\nTurnips\u2014J. Pargeter, Fruitvale;\nRobert Kidd, Fruitvale.\nApples, delicious\u2014A. J. Webster,,\nFruitvale; Lillian Peitzsohe, Fruitvale.   ,\n' Apple collection\u2014A. 3. Webster,\nFruitvale; Lillian Peitzsche, Fruitvalo.\nCrabapples, red\u2014W. E. Harrison,\nBeaver Falls; Fred Dann, Beaver\nFalls,: ,;\nPears, Bartlett\u2014Fred Dann, Beaver Falls; Robert Kidd, Fruitvale.\nPears, Flemish\u2014Fred Dann, Beaver Falls; A. J. Webster, Fruitvale.\nPears, AOV \u2014 W. S. Harrison,\nBeaver Falls.\nPlums, red\u2014Pent Dann, Beaver\nFalls; Mrs. D. Barclay, Fruitvale,\nPlums, prune\u2014Mrs. D. Barclay,\nFruitvale.\nPeaches\u2014W. S. Harrison, Beaver\nFalls.\nRaspberries \u2014 Mrs. P. Berukoff,\nFruitvale; Mrs. II. Dovey, Fruitvale.\nStrawberries \u2014 Mrs. M Dovey,\nFruitvale.\nBlackberries \u2014 A. J. Webster,\nFruitvale.\nBest collection ol fruit\u2014Mrs. M.\nDovey, Fruitvale; A. J. Webster,\nFruitvale.\nFASHIONS\n(LOCAL MANAGEMENT)\n40.44\nTRIM ond TAILORED\nor SHEER and DRESSY\n$6.95 - $7.95\nJhs, i_c_- d\u00a7. Jm&ndhf. SsJwica.\nWHERE YOUR CLOTHING $ GOES FARTHER\n449 BAKER ST. PHONE 874\nBest market display\u2014A. J. Webster, Fruitvale.\nAsters\u2014Colin Roger, Fruitvale;\nMrs. C. Veysey, -Fruitvale, Helen\nAnderson, Fruitvale.\nCarnations \u2014 Mrs. M. Dovey,\nFruitvale; A. H. Fryer, Montrose.\nDahlias, AOV\u2014Mrs. M.'Dovey,\nFruitvale; A. J. Webster, Fruitvale.\nDahlias, pompoms--Mrs. C. Veysey, Fruitvale; A. J. Webster, Fruitvale,\nGladioli, vase or basket\u2014Mrs, C.\nVeysey, Fruitvale; Mrs. M. Dovey,\nFruitvale; A. H. Fryer, Montrose.\nGlads, one spike\u2014A. J. Webster,\nFruitvale; Mrs. C. Veysey, Fruitvale; Mrs. M. Dovey, Fruitvale.\nNasturtiums, plain\u2014Mrs. C. Veysey, Fruitvale; Mrs. J. Sadler, Fruitvale.\nNasturtiums, double \u2014 Mrs, C.\nVeysey, Fruitvale; Mrs. Pat Heaven,\nRossland.\nPetunias, single\u2014Mrt. C. Veysey,\nFruitvale; Mrs. M. Dovey, Frultvalt.\nPetunias, tingle ruffled\u2014Mrs. C.\nVeysey, Fruitvale; Mm. M. Dovey,\nFruitvale. '\nPetunias, double\u2014\u2014rs. C. Veysey,\nFruitvale; Mrs. M. Dovey, Fruitvale..\nPhlox\u2014Mrs. C. Veysey, Fruitvale;\nMrs! M. Dovey, Fruitvale.\nSnapdragons\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven,\nRossland; Mrt. C. Veysey, Fruitvale.\nStocks\u2014Mrs. C; Veysey, Fruitvale; Mrs. M. Dovey, Fruitvale.\nSweetpeas \u2014 Mrs. Pat Heaven,\nRossland; Mrt. M Dovey, Fruitvale.\nMarigolds\u2014Olaf Shellard, Fruitvale; Edith Paterson, Fruitvale.\nZinnias\u2014Mrs. C. Veysey, Fruitvale; Olaf Shellard, Fruitvale.\nCollections of perennials\u2014Mrs. C.\nVeysey, Fruitvale; Mrs. M Dovey,\nFruitvale.\nCollections of summer annuals-\nMrs. C. Veysey, Fruitvale; Mrs. M.\nDovey, Fruitvale.\nBest potted plantt\u2014A. J. Webster,\nRobert Kidd, A. H. Fryer.\nRoses\u2014A, J. Webster, 3. Pargeter.\nChildren's Garden Club \u2014 Fruitvale Garden Club.   1\nApricot jam\u2014Mrs. M. Dovey, Mrt.\nPat Heaven.\nBlack currant jam \u2014 Mrs. M.\nDovey. 1\nPlum Jam\u2014Mrt. Pat Heaven, Mrs.\nM. Dovey.\nRaspberry jam\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven,\nMrs. D. Morissette.\nStrawberery jam\u2014Mn. M Dovey,\nMrs. D. Morissette.\n\/Collection of jams \u2014 Mrs. Pat\nHeaven, Mrs. A. C. Paterson.   ,\nApply Jelly\u2014Mrs. M. Dovey, Mrs.\nD. Burt.\n, Red currant jelly\u2014Mrt, M; Dovey. \u2022\u25a0\u2022\u2022--'\nBlaek currant jelly\u2014Mrs. M. Do-\nvoy. \u2022\"  -\nGrape jelly \u2014 Mrs. Pat Heaven,\nMrs. D. Burt\nCollection of jellies\u2014Mrs. M. Do\nvey,. Mrs.. A. C. Peterson.\nApple sauce, \u2014 Mrs. M,- Dovey,\nMrs. Pat Heaven; . _>l.-,   -A\nMarmalade\u2014Mrs'. F, M, Smith,\nMrs. Pat Heaven. 7 f ft\"\nApricots, canned\u2014Mrs. A. C. Pat;\nerson, Carmen Rogers.'\nCherries, canned\u2014Mrs. D. Morissette, '\nRaspberries, canned\u2014Mrs, Fat\nHeaven, Rossland; Mrs. P. Steats,\nFruitvale.\nP' ea c h e s\u2014Mrs. D. Morissette)\nFruitvale; Mrs.. Al Wright, Fruitvale. ' -   . 1\nPears\u2014Mrs. A.; Wright, Fruitvale;\nMrs. Pat Heaven, Rossland.\nPlums\u2014Mrs. P. Berukoff, Fruitvale; Mrs. J. Sadler, Fruitvale.\nStrawberries\u2014Mrj; D. Morissette, Fruitvale; Mrs, M. Dovey,\nFruitvale.\nSweet-mixed Pickles\u2014Mrs. Pat\nHeaven, Rossland; Mrs. D. M, Morissette, Fruitvale.\nSour-mixed Pickles\u2014Mrs. D, Morissette, Fruitvale.\nMustard Pickles\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven, Rossland; Mrs. D. Morissette,\nFruitvale.\n'Pickled Onions\u2014Mrs. D. Morissette, Fruitvale; Mrs. A. Wright,\nFruitvale.\nDill Pickles\u2014Mrs. D. Morissette,\nFruitvale; Mrs. Pat Heaven, Rossland.\nGreen Tomaio, Pickle\u2014Mrs, D.\nMorissette; Mrs. A. Wright.\nPickled Beets\u2014Carmen Rogers;\nLillian Peitzsche, Fruitvale.    .\nTomatoes, canned\u2014Mrs. D. Burt,\nFruitvale; Lillian Peitzsohe.\nBeans, canned\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven;\nMrs. D. Morissette.\nSwiss Chard\u2014Mrs. D. Morissette;\nCarmen Rogers.\nCorn, canned \u2014Carmen Rogers;\nMrs. Pat Heaven.-\nCauliflower, canned\u2014Mrs. Pat\nHeaven; Mrs. A. Wright.\nPeas, canned\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven;\nLillian Peitzsche.\nOrganizations Display\u2014St Paul's\nW 0 m a n's Association, Fruitvale;\nFruitvale Legion Ladies' Auxiliary.\nNEEDLEWORK\nBest Child's Blouse\u2014Mrs. A. C.\nPaterson, Fruitvale; Mrs. M. Sadler,\nFruitvale.\nBest Cotton Dress, ladles:Mrs. A.\nJohn, Trail; Mrs. A. Paterson.\nBest Cotton Apron\u2014Mrs. A. C.\nPaterson; Mrs. M. Sadler.\nBest Playsuit\u2014Mrs. M. Sadler.\nBest Child's Dress\u2014Mrs. A. John;\nMrs. D. Morissette.\nBest Article made rfom Floursack\n\u2014Mrs. M. Sadler; Mrs. D. Morissette.\nKnitted Socks\u2014Mrs. P. Hepburn,\nFruitvale; Mrs. Pat Heaven.\nKnitted Mitts or Gloves\u2014Mrs. Pat\nHeaven.     ,\nKnitted Sweater, plain\u2014Mrs. Pat\nHeaven,\nKnitted Sweater, pattern\u2014Mrs. A.\nJohn.\nAny other knitted article \u2014 Mrs,\nA. John; Mrs. Pat Heaven.\nBaby's Babyset\u2014Mrs. A. John.\nCrocheted Centrepiece \u2014 Mrs. J.\nSadler; Edith Paterson, Fruitvale.\nAny other crocheted article \u2014\nMrs. F. M. Smith, Fruitvale; Mrs.\nM. Sadler.\nTatting\u2014Mrs. S. Maclsaac, Fruitvale; Mrs. A. C. Paterson.\nSet of Potholders\u2014Mrs. A. C.\nPaterson.\nEmbroidered Bureauscarf \u2014 Mrs.\nF. M. Smith.\nColored Embroidered Pillow\nCases-7-Mrs. F. C.Cullen, Fjjultvale.\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40e Una black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nHunting and Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyct Men's Shop.\nDown proof Wabasso ticking at the\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nSee the new Fall Hats and handbags\nAT ADRIAN MILLINERY\nGuns For Rent.\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S SHOP\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.\nBartlett pears $3.00 a box. Plums\n3c a lb. Delivered. Amsden, Phone\nS50-X-8.\nTrade your old tires at\nSUPERIOR  MOTORS\nTire Department\n1   RACK  OF  DRE8SES\nREG. $11.95 \u2014 SALE S4.9B\nIRENE'S\nUSE FLOWER8 TO PUT YOUR\nBEST FOOT FORWARD.\nCOVENTRYS' FLOWER SHOP\nBig shipment new Fall sweaters\nfor girls and boys, all sizes. Good\nvariety styles and colors,\n.    EBERLE'S JUNIOR SHOP\nChildren's  Thermos  lunch   kits.\nStrongly  built metal cases,   with\nThermos bottle, boys or girls style.\nHIPPERSON'S\nTHE CHICKEN INN\nSteak and Chicken our specialties.\n4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\n210 Vernon St \u2014 Phone 308-Y.'\nIf  BUTTERFIELD  out  fix  It,\nhrow it tway. Watch work prompt-\n>y  done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices\nGLYPTAL \u2014 General Purpose\nCement \u2014 for General Repairs -y\nTube \u2014 28c.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nStart the Fair right by attending\nthe opening Joymalcers Whist; modern and oldtime dance tonight.\nWhist 8 p.m., Dance 10:30.' Good\nMusictUsual prices.      .   '\nDancing at the Playmor\nSaturday Nlte 9-1\nFor Your Hunting Requirements\nWinchester, H. & R\u201e Remington,\nand Cooey Rifles and Shotguns\nDOMINION AMMUNITION\nWOOD VALLANCE HDWE.\nST. SAVIOUR'S PRO-CATHEDRAL\nSunday School Opening\u2014Sept. iath\n9:45 a.m. Primary, Junior & Senior\n11:00 a.m. Nursery (2-4 years) and\nBeginners (4 and up)\nNew Students will be welcome\nJust Arrived\u2014New shipment bedroom suites. Priced $129.50 and up.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nHOME FURNITURE  EXCHANGE\n413 Hall St\nEmbroidered Pillow Cases, white\n\u2014Mrs, A(,C, Paterson^:,-.,. . 7 :, *   <\nOutwork\u2014Mrs. F. Cullen.\nCrochet; Tablecloth\u2014Mrs. J. Sadler; Mrs. Hose Fried, Trail.\nStuffed Toy\u2014Mrs. C. H. Pjstertori;\nJusly;_telli.:Parks,7 \u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 -,'''.'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\".\nQuilt\u2014Mrs. L. Charlton, Fruitvale.\nCushion\u2014Mrs. P. Berukoff.\nBest by Lady over'70 years\u2014Mrs.\nL. C. Charlton; Mrs. P. Hepburn.\nMonarch Knitting Co. Special\nAward\u2014Mrs. A. John.\nAngeltood\u2014Mrs,' J.' Rothwell,\nFruitvale; Mrs. D. Morissette.\nChocolate Layer Cake, iced\u2014Mrs.\nH. Matsen, Fruitvale; Mrs. S^ Mo-\nIsaac.\nWhite Layer Cake, iced\u2014Mrs. S.\nMaclsaac; Mrs, A. McDonald, Fruitvale.:' .       ..'\nChiffon Cake\u2014Mrs, J, Rothwell;\nHelen'Anderson, Fruitvale.\nDark Fruit Cake\u2014Lillian Peltt-\nsche; Mrs. S. Jefferson, Fruitvale,\nLight Fruit Cake\u2014Mrs. S. Jefferson; Mrs. A. Wright.\nJelly Roll\u2014Mrs. A. Wright; Mrs.\nM. Divey, Fruitvale.\nDate and Nutr-Mrs. J. Rothwell;\nMrs. D. Burt, Fruitvale.\nGingerbread \u2014 Helen Anderson;\nMrs. A. Wright\nDoughnuts\u2014Mrs. A. McDonald;\nMrs. J, Sadler.\nShortbread\u2014Helen Anderson:\nMrs. H. Matsen.\nOatmeal Cookies\u2014Mrs. A. Wright;\nMrs. D. Morissette.\nGingersnaps\u2014Helen Anderson.\nDrop Cookies\u2014Mrs. M. Dovey;\nMrs. J. Rothwell.\nRolled White Cookies \u2014 Lillian\nPeitzsche; Helen Anderson.\nTartlets\u2014Mrs. A. Wright; Mrs. A.\nMcDonald.\nMince Tarts\u2014Mrs. A. Wright; Mrs.\nA. C. Paterson.\nApple Pie\u2014Mrs. J. Sadler; Mrs.\nD. Morissette.\nJ,emon Pie\u2014Mrs. D. Morissette;\nMrs. H. Matsen.\nRaisin Pie\u2014Mrs. D. Barclay; Mrs.\nA. Wright.\nWhite Bread\u2014Mrs. A. Matsen;\nMrs. A. Wright.\nBrown Bread\u2014Mrs. A. Paterson;\nMrs. H. Matsen.\nWhite Buns\u2014Mrs. H. Matsen; Mrs.\nHelen Anderson.\nBrown Buns\u2014Mrs. A. Wright;\nMrs. Pat Heaven.\nCinnamon Rolls\u2014Mrs. J. Rothwell; Mrs. D. Morissette,\nBran Muffins\u2014Mrs. A. Wright;\nMrs. S. Jefferson.\nCandy\u2014Mrs. Al McDonald; Mrs.\nPat'Heaven. ,\nMatrimonial Cake \u2014Carol Moon,\nFruitvale; Mrs. J. Rothwell.\nMacaroons\u2014Mrs. Pat Heaven;\nMrs. S. Jefferson.\nCup Cakes\u2014Mrs. S. Maclsaac;\nMrs. A. Wright\nSpiee Cake, $5 worth of Wat-\nkin's Products by T. Cumming \u2014\nMrs. D. Barclay.\nBest Packed Workingman's Lunch\n\u2014Gaii Paterson, Fruitvale; Mrs. D.\nMorissette. \u2022\nMagic Baking Powder , Special,\nBest Layer Cake, Iced \u2014 Mrs. A.\nWright. ,       _'    . ,\nBlue Ribbon Tea Biscuit Special\n\u2014Mrs. J. Sadler; Mrs. R. Webster,\nFruitvale; Mrs. S. Jefferson; Lillian\nPeitzsche.\nHOBBIES\nLeatherwork\u2014Mrs. Lindley, Trail-\nTadanac Hospital.\nFabric Painting\u2014Mrs. D. Sims,\nFruitvale.\nPainting\u2014Mrs. Rozella Webster,\nFruitvale.\nScene, Photography\u2014Lois Anderson, Fruitvale. \u2022'\nChild's Picture\u2014Mrs. D. Moris-\nsetts.\nAnimal Picture\u2014Lois Anderson.\nCeramics\u2014Mrs. F. Slmms,  Beaver\nFalls; Mrs. Lindley.\nCHILDREN'S 8ECTI0N\nTrophy (the1 PTA Cop)\n14,15, and 16 Years old-\nWhite Bread \u2014 Lucy w\u00ab\u00b0\u2122f'\nFruitvale; Karen Peitzsche.-Fruit-\nBiins\u2014Luey Webster; Gail Pater-\nBran Muffins\u2014Lucy Webster, Gail\nPaterson.\nRolled Cookies\u2014Karen Peitzsche,\nGail Paterson.    - .. \u25a0\nDrop Cookies\u2014 Karen Peitzsche,\nGail Paterson.\nLight. Cake, Iced\u2014Lucy Webster;\nMarsha Williams.\nBiscuits\u2014Gajl Paterson, Shirley\nHarding.     \u2022\nWe are prepared to take oh any\nbuilt-up or asphalt roofing job.\nSide wall shingles and shakes. All\ninquiries promptly attended to.\nD. B. Merry Lumber Co., Trail\nAPPLICATORS\nMend chips or cracks in refrigerators, bathtubs, sinks, or any porcelain surfaces with .Magic Porcelain Glaze. Stays white, will not\ncrack or chip, quick-drying; only\n40c bottle. - HIPPRSON'S.\nWe wish to take this opportunity\nof giving our heartfelt thanks to\nall our friends and neighbors who\nso very kindly and promptly succeeded in putting out the fire in\nour absence.\n\u25a0 \u2014Fred and Joyce Tompson.\nATTENTION CANADIAN LEGION\nAND LADIES AUXILIARY\nMEMBERS\nMembers are requested to meet\nat- the Canadian Legion Friday at\n1:45 p.m. for the purpose of attending tht funeral of our late comrade\nWilliam Taber,\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nTABER\u2014Funeral services for the\nlate William taber will be .held\nfrom the Thompson Funeral Home\nFriday at 2 p.m. Rev. G. W. Payne\nwill officiate. Interment will be in\nthe returned soldiers' plot, Nelson\nMemorial Park....    \u2022\t\nRaisin Pie\u2014Karen Peitzsche, Gail\n\u25a0Paterson, .    ,. j-    ,: ,,\nApple Pie\u2014Anna Pargeter, Karen\nPeitzsche. \u00ab .- \u25a0\"\nCandy\u2014Anita Pargeter, Leo Boil-\nlard.   .\nBiking, Aget 11, 12,18 years-\nBread, white\u2014Bonnie Campbell.\nBuns\u2014Bonnie Campbell,\nMuffins \u2014 John Wright,   Carol\nMoon. .\nRolled cookies\u2014Bonnie Campbell,\nCarol Paterson.\nDrop cookies\u2014John Wright Carol\nPaterson;   .-\nLight cake, Iced\u2014Pamela Borrow,\nBetty Anne Peitzsche.\nBiscuits-- John Wright; Bonnie\nCampbell.\nApple Pie\u2014Bonnie Campbell, Dorothy Green.\nRaisin Pie\u2014John Wright Bonnie\nCampbell,\nCandy\u2014Betty Anne Peitzsche, Pamela Borrow.\n8 to 10 years old\nRolls\u2014Joan Harding.\nRolled cookies*- Louisa Borrow;\nJoan Harding.\nDrop Cookies\u2014Bill Steats; Colin\nRogers.\nLight eake, iced\u2014Colin Rogers,\nFay Moller.\nBiscuits\u2014Colin Rogers, Joan Harding. ;\nCandy\u2014Joan Harding, Louise Borrow.\nBest apron, in\" age group. 14 to\n16\u2014Gail Paterson, Lucy Webster.\nKnitted articles\u2014Lucy Webster.\nEmbroidery\u2014Gail Paterson, Lucy\nWebster.\nCrpchet-Llllie   McNutt,   Shirley\nHarding.\nMachine-made garment\u2014Gail Paterson, Karen Peitzsche,\nBest darn on worn host\u2014-Lucy\nWebster, Gail Paterson.\nCross-stitch\u2014Gail Paterson.        \u00bb\nSoap carving\u2014Gail Paterson, Lucy Webster. '\nStuffed toy\u2014Gail Paterson, Lucy\nWebster.\nPlasticine model\u2014Lucy Webster,\nLillle McNutt\nWater color picture\u2014Lucy Webster, Karen Moller.\nDrawing, pencil\u2014 Gail Petersen,\nLucy Webster.\nFinger-painting\u2014Gall  Paterson.\nPoster of fair \u2014 Lucy Webster,\nShirley Harding.\nWild flowers, pressed and mounted\u2014Gail Paterson. \u2022\nHobby\u2014Lucy Webster.\nBouquet of wild flowers\u2014 Gail\nPaterson, Lucy Webster.\nDoll furaiture^-8-10 years\u2014Colin\nRogers.\nBird house; 8 ; 10 years\u2014 Colin\nRogers.\nAirplane model\u2014Colin Rogers.\nPlasticine model\u2014Louise Borrow.\nStuffed toy \u2014Fay Mollfer, Joan\nHarding.\nPlaster of parts model\u2014Doreen\nMauchlin, Carol Moon.      >\nAge group 11, 12, 13\u2014\nStuffed toy\u2014Carol Paterson, Myr-\nna Nelson.\nSoap model \u2014 Bonnie Campbell,\nCarol Paterson.\nBird house-Neil Williams, David\nJohn.\nDam \u2014 Carol Paterson, Doreen\nMauchlin.-,', ,,     \/\nMachlne-mada   garment\u2014Doreen\nMauchlin.    \u25a0\nApron \u2014 Carol Paterson, Bonnie\nCampbell.\nEmbroidery\u2014Carol Paterson.\nKnitting\u2014Bonnie Campbell.\nCrochet\u2014Bonnie Campbell.\nShellwork\u2014Bonnie Campbell, Colleen Kenny.\nBouquet wild flowers\u2014Carol Paterson.\nPressed wild flowers \u2014 Bonnie\nCampbell.\nPressed wild flowers, 8-10 years-\nJoan Harding, Colin Rogers.\nBouquet wild flowers \u2014 Betty\nStoats, Joan Harding.\nTINY TOT8, under 7 years-\nRolled cookies\u2014Darlene Wright;\nLorraine Morissette.\nDrop cookies \u2014 Jennifer Rogers,\nJanet John, Trail.    ,.\nMuffins \u2014 Lorraine Morissette,\nDarlene Wright'\n\"Cup cakes\u2014Darlene Wright Jennifer Rogers.\nModel\u2014Faye Borrow, Donny John,\nTrail.\nBouquet wild flowers\u2014Lorraine\nMorissette, Janet John,\nWhite Grade A Eggs\u2014 Mrs.S.\nJefferson, A. Campeau.     .\nBrown Grade A Eggs\u2014W. S. Harrison, Beaver Falls, A. Campeau.\nRABBITS\nBest doe\u2014Olaf and Gilbert Shellard, Colleen Kenny.\nBest buck\u2014Olaf and Gilbert Shellard; Colin Rogers; Claf and Gilbert\nShellard.\nBest, doe with litter\u2014Carol Paterson.\nPOULTRY\nCross-bred pullets\u2014Nels Moller;\nJohn Wright, Ronald Lewis.\nA. O. Breed Pullets\u2014W. S. Harrison, Beaver Falls; Charles Stocking, Montrose, Nels Mollar.\nBest cockerel\u2014NelsMoller, Charles Stocking, Montrose.\nCross bred', pen\u2014Nels Moller.\nAny other breed pen\u2014Charles\nStocking, Montrose; Nels Moller.\nTurkeys\u2014Myron Nelson.\nGeese \u2014Carmen Rogers.    \\\nBantams\u2014Clayton McNutt Gary\nMdjTutt Richard E-ndersby.\nArchery Champion\nCaptures B.C. Title   ,\nVANCOUVER HOP) -Stanley\nBrooke, former Canadian archery\nchampion, captured the {B. C. title\nrecently when he emptied a quiver\nof six arrows Into the bulls-eye.\nIn the women's division, Ivy\nCraig was first Canadian champion Kay Pavellch second and Flo\nMoore third. All are Vancouver women.\nHOLIDAYS ARE OVER.\nWATCH THE 15 M.P.H.\nZONES.\nAltar, Bound?\n\u2022k Wedding Gowns\nit:' Bridesmaid Dresses\nEverything for the Bridal Party\nHas Been Personally Chosen\nby Mrs. Arthur erf\nARTHUR'S\n,     BRIDAL SALON\n'Kuhn Bldg., Spokane\nBring the\nChildren...\nOn your visits to\nSpokane, stop at .the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane.\nTo better serve our\nguests, children under 14\nstay \"free with their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire:. . .\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Porfctng ot our Front .\nDoor\/\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSilver Grill\nHOTEL\nEVAPORATED MILK\nDelta Milk, the partly skimmed\nevaporated milk specially prepared for Infant feeding, \u2022 la\nalso protected by new Golden\nLined Vacuum Sealed Cant,\nWestern Canada's Largest\nSelling Evaporated Milk\nA sorry lad is schoolboy Bill*\nWho chews his lunch so glumly;\n\"With sandwiches as dry as sticks,\nWho wouldn't?\" he asks dumbly.\nBut Mary's mom, with wise foresight\nIn Hand-e-wrap preserves 'em.\nHer sandwiches stay fresh and moi'st,'\nA school-miss sure deserves\nHand-e-wrap\nHERVV HRXID PAPER I\nIt's smart kitchen economy to\nwrap your meat, fish ond\nvegetable,, in heavy, double-\nwaxed Hnnd-e-wrnp. No other\nproduct so completely preserves\nfood flavor and prevents waste.\nBandy Metal\nCutting Edge.\ntears quickly\nand .easily.\n'y\n...\n_\n\t\n =?r-S>\nMilliken Gives Dodgers 6-0 Win\nBy Thi Canadian Prtu\nBob Milliken didn't allow a hit\nfar S 1-3 Innlngi of relief hurling\nand   Paawtt   Rtttt   olubbed   a\ngrand clam homer at Brooklyn\nDodgers edged oloier te the National Ltagut pennant with \u00ab 6-0\nvlotory over Cincinnati  Rodlegs\nWednesday night-\nNew York Yankees kept pact in\ntha   American   League   aa   they\npounced on Billy Pierce for seven\nhits and as many runs in the fifth\ninnlng^to go on to a 8-3 decision\nover Chicago White Pox.\nThe Dodgers increased their first\nplace margin to 18H games, moving\nanother game ahead of Milwaukee\nBraves who lost 2:0 to Philadelphia\nPhillies when Stan Lopata blasted\nPhone 7$\nCollision Repairs   \u2022\nPaint Jobs\nDamage Estimates\nSuperior Motors\n(Nolion) Ltd.\nDodge \u2022 DeSoto peeler\nOpp. Pott .floe on\nVernon St.\nt two-run homer In the eighth\ninning. -V\nTht Yankees maintained their\nnine-game niargln over the runner-\nup Cleveland Indians who defeated\nBoston Red Sox on Al Rosen's '40th\nhomer of the season,\nThe Dodger triumph'also was\nmarked by a first-Inning single by\nDuke Spider which made it 23\nstraight games In which tht Dodger\noutfielder baa hit safely\u2014tho long:\nest such record In the National\nLeague thus far this season.\nBut lt was Milliken, who got into\nthe game without the usual bullpen, warmup, who stole the show.\nHe didn't allow a hit. He let only\none man reach bate and he retired the last 24 batters in order,\nMilliken waa rushed Into the fray\nafter Johnny Podrai, the starting\npitches-, wrenched his knee duoklng\na line drive tingle by Ted .Xlus-\nlawski, Podres already had given\nup a single,\nEddlt Ford went the dlstanoe for.\nthe Yankees to register his 17th\nvictory as Pierce went down to his\n10th defeat, The Yankees wera held\nhltless for foun innings before they\nexploded In the fifth,\nThe decision reduced to nine\n\"the magic number\" tor mathematical certainty of the pennant, despite Cleveland's triumph In Boston-\nFor tha Dodgers the figure now\nIs two.\nRighthander Mike Garcia of the\nIndians, now a 17-game winner,\nblanked Ted Williams at tht plate,\nThe Boston alugger had hit safely\nIn all 15 of the prevloua games he\nhad started in left field.\nQarela limited tho Red Sox to\nseven hltl In combining with Rosen\nto give the Indians their JOth win\not their last 23 starts.\nRookie 'Marlon Frlcano pitched.\na four-hitter and veteran Pete Sutler batted in three runs with a-\ntriple and homer a* Philadelphia\nAthletics romped over the Detroit\nTigers 7-1 In the second game of\nan American Ltagut twl-night\ndoubleheader, Ralph Branca scattered seven Philadelphia hits aa\nthe Tigers won the opener B-2 with,\nthe tid of homers by Jim Delslng,\nJohnny .Bucha and Steve Souchock.\nMickey Vernon'i double with one\nout in. the 12th Inning scored Eddie\nYost to g(ve Washington a 8-1'victory over St Louis Browns in the\nseoond game of a twl-night double-\nheader. The Browns won the first\ngame 2-0 behind Don Larten'8 live-\nbit pitching,\nBob Miller pitched a three-btt\nshutout In. the Phillies' win over\nMilwaukee: It wai the seventh defeat for Warren, Spahn at the\nBraves' ace lefthander made hit\nthird bid for hll :0th victory.\nDon Mueller and Bobby Hofmap\n\u25a0tarred at bat for New York as\nthe Giants whipped St, Louie Cardials 8-3. Mueller collected three\nsingles and a double, and Hofirmn\nbatted In four runs with, a homer\nand tingle,   .\nRalph Klnor's three-run ninth-\nInning homer, hia 31st of the season, carried Chicago Cuba to an\nB-7 victory over Pittsburgh Pirates\nIn the only day game in tht majors,\nThe victory was tha Cubs'''sixth\nstraight.\nLions Take One-Game Lead With\nros\nA booming triple by Don McLean\nind s single off tha. bat of Ernie\nWah produced tht winning run In\ntht final Inning to give tht Lloni\nof tht Nelion Little Leaguo ,a one-\nJama edge over the Gyros In the\nInali at Queen  Ell\u2014both  Park\nWednesday evening.   -\nThlt was the first of' a three-\ngame series for tht ltagut championship, Tho lecond game will bt\npiayed Thursday.\nj The Gyros In the tint two framei\nstarted well on their wqy to a win\nWith a three-run outburst.in the\nfirst followed by two more in the\nitcond, Dave Fartnholts-got away\nto \u00ab poor start, giving, up two hits\nand walking thrai batters In tht\nfirst which accounted tor the throe\niruni icortd.\n\u2022 Again tn the itcond Farenholtr'\ncontrol wai looio, Ht g'avo up i\nwalk and thin I trlplt to Don Ste-\nys-.\nWANTED- TO RENT\nITOIJtOOM\nUNFURNISHED HOUSE\nAPPLY\nKootenay Foreit Products\nNELSON, I. C.\nPHONE iaoo\nLocal SALES & SERVICE Dealer\nCentral Truck & Equipment\n702 Front Street\nNelson, I. C,\n-\u25a0\".'J   r.\nFOR THE WORLD'S EASIEST SHAVES\nUSE THE WORLD'S SHARPEST BLADES\nBlue Blades\n$o Eaiy-thovlna That Tough\nBeard It No Problem At All\n\u2022 Ytar after yaw Gillette Blue\nBlades are first choice of shaving\nmen everywhere. Theft btctuso\nno other kind ll as ihtrp, it \u00abtay-\nsharaig, ii longdating.\nFor extra convenltnet buy thorn\nIn tho Gillette diapenitr that tips\n'em out unwrapped rotdy for use,\nand hts a built-in compartment\nfor safe disposal of und blades.\n20 blades 41.00 \u2022 10 MttflifOe\nin improvto ilium dnnnius\nRtnlw package I blndii 25c\njook>^'l''feel.11'\"'',|)e,.'1,1'\"useGill\u00abttoBliieB.|dd(':\n\" wilh the sharpcs? edgos ever honed\nvenion, who later icortd to give\ntht Gyros a flvt-run load.\nTht Lions picked up t run tn\nboth tht third and fourth framti\noff Bruct Bliktman, who began\nto weaken. Tht fifth inning was a\nbig\" out for tht Lions. Four mm\ncrossed the plate to glvi them the\nlead for the first time In the'game,\nNINH TO BAT\nIn thla frame the Lions picked\nup three hltl, including Zrntt Wih'e\ntrlplt, Those, along with two costly\nerrors, led to the parade of runs-\nAll nine men ctme to the plate In\nthli frame before Blakeman could\nput tht firt out,\nIn the lilt of tht fifth'tho Gyros\ntvened the gome when Waynt Bck-\nitrom led oft with t triple- He later\nleored when Frederlokson tingled.\nAfter Don McLean and limit Wah\ncombined to produce the winning\nrun, F a r t n h o 111 stnglthandtdly\n\u2022topped the Gyros in tholr last'bats\nwhen he fanned the first two batten, Thtn after walking two men\nhe jot Stevonson to bounce out\nfrom thi catcher to' first base,\nFarenholt! struck out nine and\nwalked seven, while Blakeman\n\u25a0truck out thru ind iiiuid two\nfret passes,\nThe CJyroi camt up with five\nerrors compared to only two by\nthe Lloni,\nLineups;\nLions\u2014Loughton, Dili Skipplt,\nD. Livingston, Don McLean, Dennis\nDehham, Ernie Wah,. Dave Feren-\nholts, Bill Berdlnl, MocLelland.\nGyros \u2014 Don Stevenson, Weyije^\nBckstrom, Wayne Cameron, C.'\nFredrickson, Bruce Blakeman, Bill\nIfistr, Htrb Rodgtn, Bob Mc-\nCandllih, David Borch, Don Mc\nFactum.\nLiom  ; \u201e.,. 001 1\u00ab-1  t i\nGyroi  ;.<-  3S0 01C--S  \u00bb  \u00bb\nBASEBALL SCORES\n\u25a0y Thi Cintdlan Prut\nAMERICAN LIAQUI\nClevtlind 000 000 080\u20148 I 0\nBoston  '..., 000 000 001-1  T  1\n. Garcia ind Hegan; Henry ind\nWhite. HR; Cleveland \u2014 Boien,\nFirst:     -\nDetroit    001 005 200\u20148 14, 0\nPhiladelphia ., 000 020 000-S  11\nBranca and Bucha; Byrd, Fino-\nvlch (7), Kellner (8) and Aitroth.\nL \u2014 Byrd; HRi; Detroit\u2014Souchock,\nBucha, Delslng,\nSecond:\nDetroit    000 000 010\u20141   ^   1\nPhiladelphia ... 000 Ml 04X-T 10   1\nGromek, Htrbert (8) and Batts;\nFrlcano ipd Murriy. L \u2014 Gromek;\n;HR: Philadelphia - Sudor.\nFirst:   ,\nSt. Louii  000 100 001-J   \u00bb   0\nWashington   ... 000 000 000-0   B   0\nLarsen and Mom; Stobbi and\nFitzgerald,\nSecond:\nSt. Louis   000 000 000 100-1 14   0\nWash 000 000 000 101-2  8  0\nTurley ind Mosi; Merrero, Dixon\n.(111, Sima US) and Grasio. W -\nSlma,\nChicago     000 020 001-3   8   2\nNew York WO 071 Olx\u20149 11   I\nPierce, Dorliti (5), Keegan (8)\nand Wilson; Ford and Berra. L \u2014\nPierce; HR: New York-Mantle,\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn  ........ 100 050 000-8   \u00bb  0\nCincinnati     000.000 000\u20140   2   1\nPodres, Milliken (1) ind Campanella; Podblelan, Smith (8), King\n\u25a0(\u00bb) and Sominick. W-Mlllikln, L~\nPodblelan; HRs: Brooklyn\u2014Snider,\nReese.\nPittsburgh    201 120 OlO-'f 19   2\nChicago    000 400 103\u20148 11   2\nPettit, Face (4) and Janowlci;\nMinner, Leonard (8). Simpson 40)\nand McCuUough. WHJimpion, L--\nFace; HR: Chicago \u2014 Ktner.\nPhiladelphia .. 000 000 002\u20142 8 2\nMilwaukee   000 000 000-0   1   1\nMiller and Lopata; Spahn and\n\u2022Craridall; HR: Philadelphia \u2014 Lopata. .\nNew Vork 100 211 201-g jg  j\nSt. Louis   000 010 200\u20143 11   4\nKoslo and Westrumi Staley,\nChambers (6), Erautt (7), Presko\n(8), White (8) and Rice, Yvan (8).\nL - Staley; HR: New York-Hof-\nman. \u2022\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nToronto 5, Montreal 0\nRochester 8, Syracuse 1\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SIFT. 10,1953\nNortftan Larsoti Dynamiter Coact\u00a7\n?Tp %<cceed Johnny Adjtzener\nUndefeated Argentine heavyweight, Edgardo Jose Romero, In\ntht. Uil for t itjlei tf bouti, tenet a long \"eft to the Jaw of Andy\nwalker of San Franoleco as ht pounds out a 10-round decision In\na bout at Reno, Ney. It wai Romero's 23rd straight pro bout with-\nout a Ion, He welghl jjO poundi,\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nKIMBERLEY-Norman Larson\",\nformer Notional Hockey League\nplayer, hai been fiamcd to euoceed\nJohnny Aehtzorter as coach, of the\nWmherley Dynamiters for the cd'm-\nIngttgKftl    ' t*> ,--\nLarson \u25a0 signed j in as a ; player-\ncoach and will see action on one\nbf -the Dynamiters' attacking, lines.\nHe was born at MooSe Jaw 32 years\nago and played junior hockey with\nthe MoOse Jaw Canucks, graduating\nto the senior Moose Jaw Millers\nWhen only 18 years ot age, While\n{joying vthero he waa on the same\nlie as Elmer Lach and Tommy\nCooper. \"\nj The following year Larson made\ntho grade in the NHL with the\nNew'York Americana, where he\nplayed for two leeaont baton the\nAmericans disbanded, Hi was sold\nto the Horshey Bean of tht American League ind also saw action\nwith Springfield, He moved west\nto Calgary four years ago and played tor the Calgary Stompeders, Ho\nfinished last season playing in, tht\ni\nMclndoe of Nelson\nRod Mclndoe of Nelson wtlked\noft with the Pollock Trophy at the\nInterior British Columbia (rip\nshooting championships in Kelowna\nLabor Day,\nThe ovont, held alternately at\nKelowna or Pentlcton, driw Urge\ncrowds ot spectators ind contestants.\nIn the class A singlei ivtnt Mc-\nIndot shooting with a single barrel,\nfound himself 'pitted agalnit\nother shooters. After missing his\nfirst ihot, Mclndoe went through\nthe four sections of 28 birds each\nwithout a mill to find himself tied\nwith two other contestants for flrat\nplace.\nIn the playoff fer the  trophy\nMclndoe with the  ehipa   down,\ncleanly blasted 25 birds Into\nfragments, while hla ppponents\nPaul Rlvard Of Vernon and Ken\nBlagbourn of Oummorland each\nmined ont birds'Meindot alio\npicked up a eash prim and\nJacket\nMclndoe, proaldont et tht Nolson\nTrap Shoot Club, said a small shoot\nwould be-held Sunday at the CPR\nflats and that an open Invitation\nwas out for anyone interested In\ngetting their hunting eye In shape.\nMany hunteri are expected to .take\nthe opportunity to line up their\nguni up for the oomlng hunting\nseason.   .\nPlans are also under way to .hold\na large shoot next month with contestant! fron) aU over tht district.\nFund for Injured\nBall Players To\nBe Given Start\nNelson fastballers in an effort to\nlid players receiving Injuries whlli\nparticipating in the sport, ire about\nto start a special fund for tht pur-\n'POII,\nBob Simpson,' manager ot the\nTransfer team in the Nelaon ind\nDistrict Faitball League thli summer, aiid Wednesday that a gamt\nwould bt playtd Tuesday to start\nthi fund,\nOldtlmen ot Nelion fastball will\ntake on tha league chtmplon Humes\nIn an exhibition match at the Recreation Grounds In the evening.\nPlaying for the Oldtimeri against\nthe high powered Humes will be\nDennis Ball, Alex Forworn, Jesse\nSeaby, Len Bicknell, George Ben-\nwell, Chum Schumacher, Bob Morton, Frtd Graves, Al Thlesiln, Hoy\nAnderion ind Ray Jones,\nCLASSIFIED ADS Qlt RESULTS\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON (Reuters) - Results of\nsoccer games Wedneiday In the\nUnited Kingdom;\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nDivision 1\nBolton W 2, Sheffield W 1.- \u2022\nHuddersfleld T 1, Manchester C1.\nManchester U. 2, Middlesbrough 2.\nPreston N E 2, Charlton A 0. .\nW. Promwich 2, Newcastle U 2. \u25a0\nDivision II\nBirmingham C.8, Luton T 1,\nDerby C 2, Blackburn R 2-\nLincoln C 8, Oldham A 1,\nDivision III, Southern\nBourntmouth 1, Coventry CO, ,,\nBrighton 3, Southend U 2,\nExotor C 0, Bristol C 1.\nIpswich T 8, Ollllngham 1,\nNorwich C 2, Colchester U 1,  \u2022\nRaiding 4, Watford 1,\nDivision III, Northern   :\nBradford C 1, Barrow 0.\nDarlington 1, Cheater 0,\nGrimsby T 2, Aecrlngton 0.\nWrexham 9, Trmmere R o,\nFERNI&T-Thi innutl EiitKoott-\nnay Open Golf Tournamont will bo\nheld at Fernie Friday tnd Saturday.\nMedal play In both the-' men'i and\nladies' events will bt over 88 holes.\nThi men will be divided Into tour\ngroups, handicaps for each group\nbeii)g sat as follows: Championship\nflight, 0 to10,\"A flight, 11 to 1T.B\nflight,, 18 to 24; C flight, 25 and up,\nTht ladles'. handicaps for thru\ngroups, are;: Championship, 0 to 12;\nA. flight, 13: to 24; group B, 25 and\nup.7The tournament, originally\nscheduled f pr Kimberley, was transferred, to Fernie due tp numerous\nteurnaments. scheduled thlt year In\nKimberley.   f,,;.\n. MWmtEAL (CP) - C \u2022 n \u00ab d i'i\nDavis Gup . tennli team want\nthrough Its paces Wedneiday at\nthe Mount Royal Tennla Club\nunder tht watchful eye of Laird\nWitt, non-ploying captain of thi\nCtnadlih ttam.\nOkanagan League with the Kamloops .Elks.\nLarson plays either!right wing\nor centre and Is noted for his ability around his opponents' net He\nImpressed this writer as very level\nheaded and, hit acquisition should\ncertainly help the Dynamiters. He\nis married and has \"two children.\nBoth he and his family are expected in Kimberley within 10 days.\nThe Dynamiter executive has\nasked to have the ice ready by\nSept, 25. When the Fall Fair moves\nout of the Areria this weekend the\nmaple floor will be' lifted and the\nJob ,ot ice making will be under\nway,\nNOT CHASING  HYS80P\n.The executive chairman, Chris\n\"Soreniori,  alio   announced Dynamiters definitely are not interested\ntn getting Lee Hyssop unless Hyssop himself decides to leave Nelson. Hyssop at present Is working\nin Kimberley, where he has been\nsent for about six weeks by his\nemployers, the B.C. Telephone Co;\nWord  hat also been  received\nfrom Saskatoon that Cal Hockley,\nwho has been'attending the New\nYork   Ranger  school,   has  been\nheld over for furtherworkouts\nwith the Rangers. Another Kimberley boy, Les Lltlty, lift Wed-\nnesday'for Saskatoon where he\nwill   work  out  at the  sohool.\nShould Lllloy return, ht will, no\ndoubt, Una up with tht Dynamiters thlt earning season.\nholidays are over,\nwatch the is m.p.h.:\nzones. --:-::'\nNAVY RUM\n\"A staunch\neld friend\"\nThli advertisement is not publishes)\nor displayed by thi tdtjuor Control\nBoard or- by tho Government of\nBritish Columbia. ?1\n1 i in in      mi     a\nIN SPOKANE\nThe Victoria Hotel\ntfwIiK1ST AND WAU.\n;: AiiNfiWLY DECORATED\nAn Ideal family hotel right down town.\nReasonable) rotei.\nUNDER  NEW MANAGEMENT\nSPOKANE'S\nDOWNTOWN\nSHOPPING >HOTBL\nBe olese te everything In\ndowntown 8pokane at the\nhotel that has every convenience \u2014 delightful\nmeals In the Coffee 8hop\nand Dining Rooms, took-\ntails In the beautiful\nDonkey Room, nightly -I\ndancing In tho Pioneer\nRoom- When you're itop-\n, \"Inn   'or   shopping,   In\nLlpokihe MM\",\nIhe Cfitilul\nCOEUR D'ALEKE\nHOTEL\n?28N.How;\nSCHOOL CHILDREN ARE\nON THE STREET AGAIN.\nWATCH THOSE 15 M.P.H.\nZONES.\nSave Time - FLY\nYou Cm tavt many hourt \u2014 ofton dtyi \u2014 whtn\n\u00abou PLY to.your destinations whorovor It may\ne, Plying time from Oaitltgir to\nVancouver 2    hrs.  28.05\nSeattle 3    hri.  37.00\nWinnipeg SViJ^JMU\nHonolulu 12    hrs. 196.05\nLit thi Canadian Pacific Airlines agent help\nyou plan your entire trip. He will provide complete through ticket service no matter where\nyou want to go, Phono 804 Nolson for Infermi-\ntion and reservations.\nFamily Parci Ccmmtnolng Oet 1\nAt RUNES\nWEST KOOTENAY AGRICULTURAL\nAND INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION\nGAMES\n\u2022 RIDES\n\u2022 MIDWAY\n\u2022 EXHIBITS\n\u2022 FIREWORKS\nSPORTS\nGRAND OPENING 1 p.m. THURSDAY\nWITH MR. H. W. HERRIDGE, M.P., OFFICIALLY OPENING THE GATES.\nGATES OPEN 10 A.M. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSooson Tiekoti $1.00 Single Admlulon HO\u00abi Childron Over 12 \u2014 25\u00a3\nAll School Children Free from 1 a.m.-5 p.m. on Friday\nBONNERS FERRY MUSICAL RIDE FREE EVERY AFTERNOON IN FRONT OF THE GRANDSTAND\n^^^^ \u25a0 \u25a0 -^\n Phone 144\nSMEDBAL \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nHans Smedbal of Slocan City at\nthe Slocan Community Hospital,\nNew Denver on September 8, a son.\nWANTED - APPLE PICKERS TO\npick 40 to 46 thousand boxes.\nGood crop and good accommodation. Commencing. Sept 10th.\nBhagu Singh) Phone 6018, Box\n145, B.B, No. 3, Kelowna, B.C. :>'\nWAN-5D - M-AT CUTTER AND\nCounter Man. Please state where\nlast employed. Apply L. S. Maf-\nfioli, Quality Meat, Market, Fer-\nnie, B.C.\t\nWANTED-YOUTH 16 TO 18 YES.\nfor office automotive wholesale.\nApply in- person. Taylor is Wil-\nton Sales Ltd., 511 Vernon St.\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED\nflotation mill operators. Write\nBox 387, Nelson, B.C.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWANTED - TYPIST; SHORT-\nhand not necessdry, must be.accurate and careful. Apply Box\n6412 Dally News.\nDff\u00b0\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 10,1953\n\\ LLYmli-H .11m\n1 -PTRS0N-T0-PERSON WW ADS\nDeadline fer Clauified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nWANTED \u2014 GIB- OR WOMAN\nto do light housework by the\nhour. Write Box 5420 Daily News.\nHOUSEKEEPER WANTED FOR\nelderly couple at once. 612\nCarbonate St. ! \u25a0\nWANTED-HOUSEKEEPER FOR\nelderly lady. Phone 490-L.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n___&\nDepartment of Public Works\nKaslo-Slocan District\nARROW PARK FERRY\nWINTER SCHEDULE\nEffective immediately the following Ferry Winter Schedule will be\nin effect:\nSUNDAY TO FRIDAY (of each\nweek inclusive) \u2014 7:00 a.m. to 11:00\np.m.\nSATURDAY ONLY \u2014 7:00 a.m.\nto 2:00 a.m. (Sunday Morning)\nFerry will be on call.\nM. STRUVE,\ni District   Engineer.\nNew Denver, B.C.\nSeptember 8, 1953.\nAGENTS WANTED\nYOUNG MAN WISHES EMPLOY-\nment as sales clerk or bookkeeper, 3 yrs. experience or will\nconsider either. Apply Box 5556,\nDaily News.\nMIDDLE AGE LADY, WILLING\nto mind children while mother\nworks. Box 5440 Daily News.\nMARRIED WOMAN DESIRES\npermanent work Apply Box 5694\nDaily News.\nFEMALE EXPERIENCED GRO-\ncery clerk desires work. Apply\nBox 5421 Daily News.\nWILL TAKE CARE OF CHILD IN\nmy own home while mother\nworks. Phone 584-X-3.\nWANTED  -  HOUSEWORK   BY\nthe hour. Box 5559 Daily News.\nDRESSMAKER - PHONE 1676,-L.\nAlterations a specialty.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED - 2 BLACK COACH\nBantam Pullets. W. C. Cleave,\nKaslo.  ?_\nWANTED -^ CLEAN COTTON\nrags. Must be 12 inches square\nor more. Daily News.\nCHRISTMAS CARD AGENTS\nFlash \u2014 Boxed Christmas cards\nassortments, and novelty-everyday cards that are truly beautiful.\nSee these magnificent cards and\ncompare. Would be difficult to\nfind any nearly as nice. Most\ncomplete variety of Christmas\nand everyday gift wrapping, applique gift wrapping ensembles\nstationery in beautiful gift boxes,\netc: Also religious cards. You will\nb- delighted with our 48 hours\nservice. Everything sent prepaid.\nSpecial discount on quantity\norders. Send for wholesale price\nlist immediately, or special\nsample album' ot personal and\nbusiness Christmas cards. Established 1812. N.*IJewton Walpert,\nSuite 203, University Tower\nBuilding, 860 St. Catherine St, W.,\nMontreal, Canada.\nRENTALS\nWANTED \u2014 NELSON BUSINESS\nman urgently needs two or three\nbedroom furnished house or apt.\nclose in by. Oct. 1st Best reference. Phone 1364-Y. .7     ,\n1 MODERN HOUSE FOR RENT\nout of town close to school, good\nlocation, reasonable rent Box\n5679 Daily News..  ,\nROOM TO RENT - CLOSE IN.\nBoard or breakfast later.' Respectable business man or travel-\nler preferred. Phone 966-Y.\nFOR   RENT  -  HALF . BLOCK\n' from Baker  St.  store  building\nwith living quarters. Apply Box\n4922 Daily News.\nYOUNG COUPLE 1WITH TWO\nchildren under.two, require furnished house, middle October.\nBox 5419 Dally News,\nWANTED TO RENT - HOUSE\nor apartment close in by CP.R.\nemployee, no children. 614 Victoria St. Mrs. N. Murray.\nEASY EXTRA MONEY IS YOURS!\nSell,Name-On Christmas. Everyday assortments for highest commissions. Over sixty sales-tested\nitems, terrific customer appeal.\nUnequalled Christmas values in\neluding 25 card Prize Assortment,\nGold'n Christmas, Velvet, Madonna, Duets,. Surprise, Currier\nand Ives, Canadian Scenes, Appealing Everyday, religious, hu-\nmurous cards, Personalized cards,\nstationery, napkins, Gift Wraps,\nKiddies' Christmas. stockings,\nPop-up books, Bible stories, paint\nbooks, ribbons, gift cards. Write\nfor complete catalogue, samples\nNOW. Print name, address clearly. Name-On Stationery Company Limited, Depfi B2, Room F,\nYonge Street Arcade; Toronto.\nFOR RENT - 3 ROOM FURNISH-\ned house outside city limits. Mrs.\nWatson, 318 Observatory. Phone\n126-L.\nTWO ROOMED SUITE, GROUND\nfloor, 'private entrance, fireplace,\nTelephone 339-L,...\nBEDROOM. IN QUIET HOME. \u2014\nCentral, business lady or gentleman. Phone 1267-X. '\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear from the Appleby Poultry\nFarm, Mission City, B.C. Wqha-e\nover 7000. extremely healthy and\nproperly conditioned Breeders oa\nour Own farm. Our baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock in Whito Leghorns, White\nRocks, New Hampshirea and\nCrosses. Catalogue oh request.\nFROM 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\nquantities. Kromhoff Farms, HJt\nNo. 5, New Westminster, B.C.\nPhone. Newton 60-L-3.\nFOR SALE \u2014 TWO MONTH OLD\n.calf for ..vat- Two milking cows\nfor sale, just freshened, first calf.\nApply Mr. P. G, Konkin, Slocan\n\u25a0City, B.C.     - \u25a0'\u25a0-.-\u25a0    1\nFOR'SALE - $4AVY. _OGt.tN_\nteam harness end spreaders\/Delivery by-request.F. P. Woods,\nWhonnock, B\u2014\u25a0\nONE HOLSTEIN BUt_ 15 MONT*\nold, Reg. Symons, Peterson, B.C.\nFOR SALE =5 JERSEY COW. A#\nply J. A. Makortoff, Taghum, B.C\nMACHINERY\n__S\n2-* ROOM HOUSES AT EUPH-\nrates Mine 9 miles,out ot Nelson.\nBox 408, Nelson.\nHOUSE AND CABINS, FULLY\nfurnished, to rent at reasonable\nrates. Balfour Auto Court.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS' FOR\nrent. General heat, electric stoves.\nNorth Shore Motel Phone 1684.\nNEW FOUR-ROOM HOUSE NEAR\nachool. Rent: $35, month. Mark-\noff s, Slocan Park.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. BUSINESS\nman preferred. Apply 410 Victoria St.    .\nFOR RENT - ROOM AND BATH\nfor 2 girls with breakfast and\nlunch. Phone 718-Y.\nSMALL 2 ROOM APT. FOR RENT.\nUphill district. Phone 1790-R.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent. Phone 396-Y.\nWANTED - GIRL'S    FIGURE\nskates, size 10. Phone 369-R-2.\n%\nc\nL\nD\nSEWING MACHINES\nSINGER CAN REPAIR YOBS\npresent machine at reasonable\naost For fred estimates Phone 41.\nSINGER SEWING CENTRE\n339 BAKER ST. - NELSON. B.C.\nSUMMER RESORTS\nCRESCENT BEACH\nAUTO COURTS\nAll ideal holiday resort Modem\nfurnished cabins. Sand beach,\nboats, fishing. Tent and trailer\naccommodation. O n Kootenay\nLake, 10 miles East of Nelson, on\nHighway 3. Write RJL 1, or phone\n471-Y-l.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n42. More\ninfrequent\n48. Look '\naskance\n14. Female\nDOWN\n1. Comic\nverse\n1. Region\n3. Hint\n4, Type\nmeasure\n8. Of small\nvalue\n6. An age\nT. Musical\nlnetruMem\nJ. Three,\nat cards\n9. Frothing\n11. Anger\n13. Stylish\n15, Keel-\nbilled\ncuckoos\n18. Scoff\n19. Beach\n21. Poem\n33. Unit of\nwork\n84. Wind,\nftoweii\n25. Guardian\n27, Cavern\n29. Elevations\n(golf)\ntl. Senior\n33, Indian\ndean\n84. Implement\nPWIW1\nfestertUy's Aui-tr\n8S. Old\nmeasur*\n(Fr.)\n37. Certain\n39. Born\n40.Marbl*\n42.Mus!o\nnote\nACROSS\n\u201eA_s_\n6. Stone\nax\n\u00bb.Fut_to\nmeeting:\n10. Beautiful\nmaiden\n(Moh.\nParadise)\n12. S-shaped\n.. molding\n18. Middle\n14, Moslem\ntitle\n16.ExcIan_>\ntion\n18. Hole of    '\naneedle\n17. Personal\npronoun\n18. Cuts\n20. Characterised\nby Irony\n22. Warmth\n28. Requirel\n(obs.var.)\n27. Horn\n28. Merriment\n29. Point\naimed et\n$0. Pass a\nrope throui\n\u2022 hole\n(naut)\n82. Pronoun\n83, The eye: in\nsymbolism\n86. Sheltered\ntide\n87. Coin\n(Peru)\n88. Makes\ncircular\n40. Fish\n41. One to\nwhom'a\ngift is t\nmade\nDAILY CRmOQUO__\"-Here's how to worit tt:\nAXYDLBAAXB\nIsLONG FELLOW\nOne letter simply stand* for another, in thlt exampfc A Io usee\nfor the three L'a. X for the two O't, etc. Single letters, apos.\ntrochlea, the length and formation of the words \"are all hint*\nEach day the code lettert ar* different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nWGJ    -MZ    AYMMT,    W-KCJ    N6YLRJH\nY.t_   LJB   MKAJ    UMITT1-T    I <3 W   IA\nWGJ    6QKLT-TNGKMMJS.\nYesterday's Cryptoquotet NOTHING IS SO DANGEROUS\nAS AN IGNORANT FRIEND. BETTER IB IT TO HAVE A\nWISE SNEMY-LA FONTAINE \/\n\u25a0\u2022''\u25a0-\u25a0' \"V^'\nfl\n\\\n*\ni\nr\nt\n1\n%\n1\n%\ni\nn\nIT\nt\nik\nf*\nIS\n^\nIt\n17\n\"T\n%\nIS\nVt\n^\/A\n^\n%\ngh\nao\n21\n^\nzz\na\u00bb\n24\nzs\n26\n%\nv>\na\nIS\n%\nti\nt\n%\n%\n^A\n\u25a0io\n31\n^A\n3-\n3}\n3\u00bb\n35\ni\n30\n%\n37\n38\ns\u00bb\n%\n40\n41\n%\n<tz\n8\nti\n$\n44\n|\nm\nFOR   RENT \u2014 LIGHT   HOUSE-\nkeeping-room. Phone 405-L.\nPERSONAL\nMichbiiiic hearing Jto*.-\n__________________\nWAWANESA MUTUAL fOffl Bf-\nsuranca Co., D L. Kerr, Agent\nwarn wm, o\\\nDepot Clean rooms and reason\nable rates. Vancouver. B.C\nALANO CLUB, ALCOHOLICS\nAnonymous meet Tues. and Fri.\n425 Baker St., Nelson. Write P.O.\nBox 388.\t\nYOUR SYSTEM NEEDS IODINE\u2014\nNova-Kelp can help supply it.\nAvoid and relieve deficiency disorders like Anaemia, Constipation, Piles, Nerves, by starting to\ntake Nova-Kelp Tablets today.\nThree economical sizes, at all\ndruggists.\nRamp Body ond\nFender Works\nDEALERS FOR ,\n. BRADEN and. TULSA\nTRUCK WINCHES\nFOR EVERY APPLICATION\nI to 50 Tone Capacity\n.   Nelson, B.C.\nPhone-185 \u2014 866 Josephine St\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nat\nNAttONAL MACHrNffltt -ST\nDMT\nSAfl\nGONTRAC\nEnquiries invited\nGranville Island, Vancouver 1, BX.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2500 WATT, Ht\nvolt A.C. generator, like new,\n$175.00 with V belt and flat belt\ndrive. Creston Electric, phont\n149, gjejton. B.C.\t\nFOR SALE - _(JUV*_t WU\ncylinder hoist, heavy doty tab\nframe Ptoon>lMl-Y,-v.   V-\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM SHARWO.\nSingle-housekeeping room. Phont\n329-L.   \" .'.\u25a0\u2022'.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR BUSS\nness lady. Phone 568-R.\nLOST AND FOUND\nBROWN MALE CHINESE P__i\n- at Waneta, Sunday, Answers to\nthe  name   of  Mr.  _w.  Pleast\nnotifor A. Burgess, Ymir, B.C.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET REAUiLTS\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... -to on m am,\n(Paclfio Daylight Time)\nTHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 19M\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Wake up, Nelson\n7:15\u2014Sports News\n7:20V-Wake up, Nelson\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Wake up, Nelson\n7:45\u2014Mel Buerge Motors Show\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sport News\n9:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:15\u2014Earl Warren Show\n10:00\u2014Riders of the Purple Sage\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Visit\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Invitation To The Walts\n11:00\u2014Musical \u25a0Minutes\n11:15\u2014Hcmemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Consumers Corner\n12:00\u2014Liberty Special\n12:15-City Tire Sports\n12:2(H-News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Chatting With the Listeners\n1:00\u2014Man In the Kitchen\n1:1)5\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Falrview, Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014Famiiy Theatre\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:80\u2014Afternoon Vaeie-at\n4:15\u2014As Tunes So By\n4:30\u2014The Magic Kayak\n4:45\u2014Pacific Newt\n4:35\u2014Report From ParManj\u2014st 1\n6:00\u2014At Borne With the 7 '\n5:25\u2014International Commentary\n5:30\u2014Behind the News\n5:35\u2014Spotlight On a Star\n5:50\u2014Newe\n6:00-Hit Parade\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup.\n7:30\u2014Salvation Army\n8:00\u2014The JeHersonian Eteritagt.\n8:30\u2014Musical Program\n9:00\u2014Thursday Playhouse\n9:30\u2014Popular Organ Musie\n9:45\u2014This 'N That\n10:00\u2014News\n10:13-Midwee_ Review\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup,\n10:45-7_tarlight Ballr-dom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:00-NSWS Night Cftp\t\n.CBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER! l,1 1953\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's   Broadcast\nMarine Weather\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura -Limited\n9:45\u2014Famous Voices\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15-Hi     \u25a0\n10:45\u2014Invitation to tho Walti\n11:00\u2014A Man and His Magic\n12:15\u2014News    '      ,\n12:25-rShowcaes\n12:30\u2014Farm , Broadcast\n12.55\u2014Behind the News\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\nand\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Mattneo\n3:15\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:30\u2014Programe Resumt\n3:45\u2014B.C. Roundup\n4:15\u2014A Trip to the-Moot\n4:30\u2014Sleepytime' Storyteller\n4:45\u2014Music for Children\n5:00\u2014Settler's Choice\n5:25\u2014International Commentary\n5:30-UN-Today\n5:45\u2014News'and Weather\n5:55\u2014Have You Heard?\n6:00\u2014Bill Goou Sports\n6:15\u2014Barney Potts Show\n6:30\u2014Ballad Time\n7:00\u2014News \u2022\n7:15\u2014News Roundup'\n7:30\u2014Waltzes\n8:00\u2014Musical Fill\n8:30\u2014Songs of My People\n\u2022:0O\u2014International Concert\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Academic Freedom\n10:30\u2014Sports Pagt\n ssp$\nntvv f ni ifiv\nPfRSOMO-PttSON WANTM\nFOR QUICK RESULTS'\nPhone 144\nDeadline lot Classified Ads- -5 p.m.\n144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nWatch This Ad for Arrival\nOf More\nNEW AUSTINS\nIMMEDIATE   DELIVERY\nNew Austin Somerset\nWindsor Grey\n1953 Austin Convertible\n1952 Ford Fordor\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1951 Studebaker Sedan\n1951 Monarch Coupe\n1950 Standard Vanguard\n1950 Mercury Fordor\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Austin Devon\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949 Ford Fordor\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1940 Chevrolet Coach\n1938 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Ford Pickup'\nOnly 6000 miles\n1951 Mercury Pickup      >\n1949 Austin Panel\n1951 Austin Pickup\nComplete Stock to\nChoose From\nTERMS and TRADtS\nAUSTIN SERVICE and SALES\n. EMPIRE\nMOTORS  '\nPhone 1135    803 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY. HOUSES. FARMS\nETC., FOR SAW\nFair Special\n40 ACRE FARM NEAR\nBLEWETT\n6 acres cultivated, Balance\nstanding timber- 3 houses, barn,\n2 chicken houses, 2 cows, 1\nhorse, and some hay. Water\npiped into all houses.\n$5000\nSOME TERMS\nAaencies Limited\n554 Ward St. Box 570\nPhone 135 or 820-Y\nFOR SALE \u2014 ON-SILVER KING\nRd., 4 room bungalow with bath,\nelectricity and hot and cold\nwater, 15 acres, 7 acres cleared,\nover 50 fruit trees. New house\nand 5 other buildings. 1500 foot\nirrigation pipes, 5 tons of hay, 1\nhorse 1000 lbs. with harness and\nfarming equipment. Vs mile outside of city limits. .Quick sale.\nApply Box 31, Nelson, B.C.\nFARM FOR SALE - 2 HOUSES,\none new stucco, full basement.\nHot and cold water, electricity.\nBarn, chicken house. 50 acres\u20145\ncultivated and irrigated. Nelson-\nCastlegar highway. Glade. B.C.\nApply Pete Tarasoff.\nFftOfWTY, HOUSES, FARM*\n'ITC\"HM.MUK\n(qpntliiHtiii\nFOR 8AU5-- 8\u00abENCBB WOOD\ntnd coal range with' high closet.\n104 Richards Street, Phont 139-L3\nFOR   _\u201e_*'-i'-.-tf   HWMNi.\nrifle, hew, $00; one floor waxer,\n815, Phone 1507J.,\nFOR SALE - OIL SPACE kj-Vf-\ner, 1 year old. Phont OSB-L-J\nalter 5 p.m. \t\nCREAM   ENAMEL   FULL    SIZE\nbed  with spring,  (12.00.  Phont\n247-L.\nCOLEJilA'tf \"H-ATER,\nseason,  $50.00,  also\n$10,00. Phone S86-L,\n'USED 6NE\ncook stove,\nFOR SAL_-\u00abMEDIUM~SIZE DUO*-\nTherm oil heater in good condl-\ntion, \u25a0 $85, Phont 1099-L.\nCRESS CORN'SALViPFOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist Sells Cress.\nFOR SALE \u2014 COAlTriEATER IN\ngood condition, 824 Baker Street\nB\nEACON'S\nETTER\nUYS\n1952 AUSTIN DEVON '\n1950 OLDSMOBILE SEDAN\n\u2022\"WSOTORB -CUSTOM FORDOR- '\nExtras.\n1948 PONTIAC TWO-DOOR\nTORPEDO\n1849 METEOR TUDOR\n1048 FORD FORDOR\n1948 MERCURY CLUB COUPE\n194T PONTIAC SEDAN\n1948 MERCURY 8EDAN\n1950 G.M.C. PICKUP\n1851 MERCURY PICKUP\nBeacon Motors\n701 Baker Street\nITS HEREI THE NORTON TEA-\ntherbed\" Domlnator. Come in and\ntee thlt famous motorcycle, the\nholder of the Isle of Man T.T al\nKootenay Motorcycle Sales and\nService, Box 350, Castlegar: phone\n2801. \"Tht Shop of Friendly Ser-\nvice.''\t\nOFFERS TO PURCHASE 1049\nPontlac .sedan delivery -will be\naccepted at the ' Singer Sewing\nCentre, 339 Baker St. This car has\nonly been used in our business\nand has been kept in the best\nof mechanical condition.\nTRUCK FOR . SALE AT YMIR\nGarage, Ymir, B.C. International\n10 wheel drive, year 1945, mileage 6000, capacity 5 tons, winch-\na-frame, good condition.\nr95T-POOTIAC~POWER \" GLIDE\nsedan, air conditioner, excellent\ncondition. Cheap for quick sale.\nApply Dally News Box 5348.\nCREDIT NOTE AT .PARKVIEW\nMotors. What offers? Phone\n1453-R.\t\nFOR SALE \u2014 1940 FORD CON-\nvertlble reconditioned motor, new\ntop, $650. Phone 734-R.\n1931 PREFECT * SEDAN \u2014\" NEW\ncar condition. Will take Model A\nas part payment. Phone 658-L-3.\nFOR\" SALE \u2014 >36\"CHEVrC0UPE\nradio and heater. Apply 613 5th\nSt.\nFOR SALE - 7 ROOM HOME (3\nbedrooms) and,utility room, on 3\ncorner lots near school on bus\nline. Full basement, automatic\nstoker, hot water heating system,\nand fireplace. Box 1467 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE \u2014 15 ACRES OF LAND\n2 houses, one 4-room and one 5-\nroom. Tractor and equipment,\npressure water astern, and light\nplant Write Mr. W. Ramsbottom,\nPerry Siding, B.C.\t\nFOR SALE \u2014 BY TENDER, ALL\nbuildings and 290 acres of land\nLot 9037, Marblehead, B.C, Send\nbids to Alberta Granite, Marble\n&   Stone   Co.   Ltd.,   Edmonton,\nAlberta.\t\nWELL-CONSTRUCTED HOUSE\nwith Income. Good location,\n-handy to -achool! and :bus- Automatic heat Nice grounds. Self-\ncontained 8 and 5-room suites.\nAppointment only. Phone 335-X.\nBf*latin lailg \u00a3fctna\nClassified Advertising Rates:\nISo ptr lino first insertion tnd\nnon-consecutive Insertions\nlie line, per consecutive insertion aitor first Insertion\n' 41c line for 6 consecutive insertions\n11.56 line for month (28 consecutive Insertions)   Box numbers  lie extra   Covert  any\nnumber of insertions\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc--20c per line,\nfirst insertion-  16c- per  lint\neach tubseciuent insertion\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\n(Not Mori Thin Listed Hire)\nBy carrier, per witjt,\nin advance  80\nBy carrier, per year 115.80\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month    $ 1.28\nThree months     I.TI\nSix monthi   7.50\nOne year             15.00\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOnt month       ....    100\nThree monthi ...__..___   1.73\nSix monthi '.    8.50\nOnt yetr   _ 1(00\nWhere extra pottage Is raqulrtd.\nabove rites plus postage.\nFOR   SALE   \u2014  SMALL   FARM,\nhouse   and   outbuildings.   Fruit\ntrees.   On   main   highway   near\nv Taghum. Apply Box 5112 Daily\nNews. -\t\nFOR~SALE \u2014 12 ACRES DEVE-\nloped farm. Large house. Terms.\nApply M. Arishenko, R.R. No. 1,\nGrand Forks, B.C.       '\nFOR SALE - BUILDING LOTS.\n60x120, outside city limits, one\nbl6ck from bus. Phone 1099-L or\ncall at 208 View Street.\nFOR SALE - 1-4 ROOM HOUSE\nfully modern; 1-S room house,\nfully modern. Apply Wm A\nHenke, Procter.        \t\nFOR SALE \u2014 SMALL NEW\nhouse. Beach frontage, $5500.00\ncash. Rhone 404-R.\nTWO CHOICE LOTS ON BUS\nroute. Fruits and garden. Phone\n185-R-l, .\nFOR SALE\u20142 LOTS ON NELSON\nAv<\u00bb  Rnx 4783. Dnilv News\nLOTS F6R SALE ON SIXTH ST.\nApply P.O. Box 151, Nelson.\nTORONTO ST0CK!\n(Closing Prices)\nMINM .\nAcadl* UftMum   .18\nA\u00bbMe\u00bbrt Y K       M\nAfjon   ....\u00bb K~t.      .11\nAnpiltiot  , _      .27\nAumaque \u201e.,\u2014...     .14\nBarymin .......\u2014,..-.., ,~   1.41\nBast Mtttll  ..       .22\nBevcourt '       .33\nBobj*   .: \u201e : 40\u201e\nBoymtr Gold.' 10\n~   ' 3:75\n.11\n2.32\n.62\n.17\n.3J\n8.90\nBralorne\nBrewls R L .....\nBroulan  \t\nBuffalo Ank .\nBuff Can  \t\nCaliffan  \t\nCampbell R L\nChestervilli   82\nChimo G  -    1.48.\nCochenour     1,05\nLittle Long Lac\t\nLouvicourt '.. .;,.\u201e\u201e.,\nMacasst' 7 ';. ,,\u201e;i\nMacLeod: Cock ......\nMadsen R L ....\nMagnet ,. ' .\u201e..,..;,.._,\nMa%Uc Q F,.:'...~:..\nMareug.'-Q .......,,....-\nMclhtyro Pore ....\nMcKenrie R L\t\nMonttt.\u201ei.'...-..7..-..7,\nNew Bldlamaque\nNew Cdlurittt\t\nNew SftlOrt\t\nNtw Liind ,...\nNtw Larder 17 .....\nNew Mylainaque .\nNib   ,...\u201e.;\t\nNonndi' ~\u2014\nHiftUUng  -\u2014\nNoritatttlt ..\u201e\t\nNorUi IBM\":........;.\nOslsko .\n_ .\u00ab\u00ab '\n_. .13.\n_ 1.67  '\n... 1.W \u25a0\n.. 1,80\n.,.. .11 .\n\u201e. 1.80\n 13\n_. 85.00\n... .8114\n._ .46\n~ \u201e$\n_. 46-4\n- -m\n_ . m\n.... s.lo\n_ M%\n_. .11\n.... W-W\n... \u00ab8\n_ . 3.TB\n.\". \"\u25a0'\u00bb\n_ ,4!'\n_ .14\n..' 1.80\n\u201e.. 33.00 ,\n1, 3.13\n 14\n... .32%\n... .60\n_ .11%\nSan Antonio  _  . 1.78>\nSherrltt Gordon  , 1.18 \u00ab\nSilvermlller  .82\nP\u00bby\u00bb\u00bbsttr\t\nI Welti* Crop\t\nFllCtr Develop ,\nPreston X S\t\nQuebec Lab \t\n(Jueenston \t\nR\u00bbdlore  \t\nRoche. L L.\nCons Golden Arrow\nCons Discovery\t\nDelnite \t\nDettt R L\t\nDomt   \t\nDontldi ...\u2014\t\nDuvty\n.80\n2.10\n1.11\n18\n16.50\n.62\n.37\nEast Mtlartie .'.    1.8\nEastern Metals     1.43\n_lder Gold 46\nBstellt   \u00bb    .86\nEureka       .63\nFalconbridga      18.00\nFrobUher _    S.00\nGiant Yel      6.88\nGod's Lake _    1.02\nGoldcrest       .22\nGold Eagle  10\nGolderf Manitou'     2.01\nHardroek 18\nHarricana 18\nHeath ...,.'     .11\nHollingtr     .'. 1 13.28\nHomer Y K .:        25\nHudson Bay    41.00\nInspiration  \t\nInt Nickel\t\nKarr Addison\t\nKirk-Hudson Bty\nKlrkland Like ......\nLabrador    \t\nLake Dufault \t\nLakeshort      6.43\nLtmtqut  _c     4.30\n.16\n.38\n.33\n.16.\n6.80\n.35\n!S_\n1.22\nTeek Hughes     2.01\nThompson_und    \u201e,\u2014      .18\nTorbrit  _.\u00bb___      .W\ntlnion Mining        -19\nUnited Keno _.,     7.80\nUpper Canada ,.     1.20\nViolamac ,...,....    S.98\nSllarico\nSlscoe ,-.'.'\t\nStadacona  \t\nStarratt Olstn\nSteep Rock .\nSudbury Cont\nSurf Inlet \t\nSylvanitt\nGerman Election\nWalte Amuelt\nOILS\nB A Oil\t\nCalmont  ,;,.j\t\nCentrtl Explorw\u00ab \u25a0\u2022\nChemical Research\nDalhousie\t\nFederated Pete ........\nHighwood Sr\nImperltl Oil ..\nPacific Pete .\n10.63\nWinnipeg Grain\nWTONiPJIO  (CP) - Winnipeg\ngroin closing prices:\nOttt:No.l fted.e'lH.' .--'1    \u2022\nBarley: No. 1 feed71.08y\u00bb.\nDividends\n\u25a0y tht Ctnadlan Press\n.Canadian   Bank   Commerce,   80\ncants, Nov; 1, record Sept, 80. \u2022   \u25a0\nBrack Silk B ,.,.\t\nBuilding Product!\nBurrard A\t\nC4n Cement \u2014\nCtn Brtwerits\t\nC(n Celanest \t\nCtn Dredge ..,,\nCan Oil \t\nCtn Ptc Rly\t\nCont M - S ,\t\nDlBt Seagram\t\nDom Foundries\nIVs\n87%\nIVs\n80\n2oy4\n38\u00ab,\n49\n13H'\n23%\n25M:\n26%\n13%\n10V4\nDom Sttel te Coil B\t\nDom Store*  15%\nDom Tar & Chem   7%\nDom Textiles  8%\nDom- Magnesium\nFamous Players .\nFtnny Farmer ...\nSord A' \nlatineau\t\nGatineau 3% pfd .\nClan Steel Wares .\nlltfi\n21\n28%\n63W\n21%\n105\nW-,\nGrtat Lakes    18%\nGypsum Lime .\nImperial Oil \u201e\t\nImperitl Tobtceo \t\nInt Metals ..-*..\nInt Nlektl \u00a3\t\nInt Pet*\t\nKelvinf tor' \t\nLoblaw A \u25a0\n33%\n30%\n10%\n33%\n3S%\n21\n20\n42%\n7%\n23%\n28%\n70\nFQR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA88AYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE   W. WIDDOWSON \u201e CO.. AS-\nsayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH   S.  ELMES.  ROSSLAND,  B.C.,\nAsssiyer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. R. 'CoAtfiS. St_: n6. 8. 373\nBaker St.,  Nelson,  Phone  1118.\nB.C. Lands Surveyor.\nv. -shayim\n\u00a5\nP.O. BOX 252.\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB.C. Land Surveyor, Engineer.\nJ6VD C kYW&till, 218 -6ftE ST.\nNelson, B.C  Surveyor, Engineer,\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITEb\nMachint   Shop    Acetylene   tnd\nelectric welding, motor rewinding   Phone 698. 324  Vernon St.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE - 1947 MERCURY 110\nH.P. Ford factory marine conversion. Hardened sleeves,\nchrome plated rings. Accessories\nall new. Box 451, Castlegar, B.C.\nTYPEWRITERS AND ADDING\nmachines, special clearance, 600\nAll Standard Model typewriters,\nregular price $175.60 up, now only\n$39.50. 'Latest Remington and\nUnderwood Noiseless Standard,\nregular price $825.00, specially reduced to $69.50. New Royal Port-\nablet now-$88.80 (twelv* months\nto pay). Lightning Desk Model\nAdding Machine, adds to $99,-\n999.99, subtracts, only. $19.85. Each\nfully guaranteed. Deposit $5,00,\nbalance C.O.D. Order today while\nsupply lasts. Crown Equipment\nCo. Ltd., 1011 Bleury, Montreal,\nQue.\t\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., 280 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pa-\nciflc 6357.\t\nNEW GOOSE AND D~UCK\nfeathers for sale. Only breast and\nbody feathers with natural down\ncontents. No wing or tail. Goose.\n$2.00 per lb. Duck $1.80 per lb.\nP. S. Gross. \u2022 Pincher Creek,\nAlberta.\t\nFOR SALE - A.M.C. 8.3 CU. FT.\nrefrigerator as new. Mason &\nRiach piano, Singer sewing machine, 12 doz. quart jars, coal and\nwood heater. 708 Baker St. or\nphone 886-Y.\t\nCOLEMAN OIL HEATER, MED-\nium size, used 6 months. When\nnew $125.00. price $6'*. Phone\n1570-X or call at 012 Observatory\nSt\t\nI IfE - FITTINGS TUBES -\nSpecial low prices Active Trading Co.. 93.1 E Cordova St.. Van\ncnuver\n~AC-\n\u2022 By HAROLD KING\n. PARIS (Reuters)\u2014trench Dullness men fear that tha Adenauer\nelection victory will mean lubstan-\ntial United States financial support\nfor West Germany\u2014and comequent\ntough competition for Frtnce.\nThe result of the.West Germtn\nelection has caused much apprehension in French industrial as\nwell tl political circles. The Germans are regarded al having proved themselves 0 solid tnd reliable\nelement in Europe 'from the U.S.\nviewpoint. Financial tld will follow, according to French industrialists, in tha shape of:\n1. A substantial U.S. government\nloan to West Germany;\n2. Big U.S. private Investments\nin German industry.\nSERVE  MASS MARKET\n\u2022Mil ETAOIN cmfwypet ETAOINo\nOne American business representee in Pari! said in an interview:\n'The Germans product cheaper\nthan the French, they provide good\ndelivery, times, and above ill thty\nprovide goods for tht mass marktt,\nwhich Franca does not\n\"It looks as if German competition is going-to bt tough on European exporters, especially as Germany may now provt tttrletive for\nAmerican capital investmint.\"\nThe French press reflects misgivings In political circles thtt\nWashington now will look to Germany as the main pillar of Support\nfor U.S. policy on the Contintnt.\nHeavy pressure Oh France to ratify\nthe European army treaty is expected.\nMaple Leaf Milling _\nMcColl Frontentc \t\nNat Ste'elCar\t\npage Htrattcy\t\nPowell River   -,   24%\nRun Industries  18\nShawlnlgan _ , :. 88%\nSicks flrtw  _ ,...\u201e. 24%\nSimpson* A __-. 13%\nSttel of-Canada  80%\nUnion. Gas of Can   30%\nUnited. Cerp_ \u201e  12%\nUnltM.Fuel A   58\\\nUnite, Steel  13\nWinnipeg Gas     0%\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 10,1953 \u2014 11\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prion)\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge .\nBralorne\t\nCahusa \t\nCariboo Gold ...\nEstella\t\ngiant Mascot ...\nighland Bell\nKenvllle\t\nPac. East Gold\nPend Oreille .\n       .85\n;.\u201e_..:. '8.70;..\n\u2014 03%\n      1.00' r\n..:.       .34 '\n       .84\n       .34\n i;     .07\n_.\u2122' ' .08\n     4.10\nPioneer Gold   ,.. ,   1.80\nPremier Border .\nQu&tslnp \t\nSheep Creak\t\nSilver Standard .\nUtica \t\nVan Roi\n.05%\n.17%\n.50\n.01\n.04\n1.85\n.27\nWestern Tungsten .....\nYale .r\t\nOILS\nAnglo Can _ _ 8.20\nA P Cons     _4\nCal & Ed  8.30\nCtl h Ed  8.50\nCalmoht  1.08\nCan Anaconda :.. .13\nMtroury-,....  \u2022 .10%\nCommonwttlth   4.0o\n|Homt       6.90\nNational Pete   2.10\nOkalta Com  \u201e...., \u201e,,.. 2,05\nPtciffc'Pttt .....;.:\u201e:....:\u201e\u201e_. 8,25\nRoytllte   13.50\nVanalta 20\nVulcan   .88\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Bit \u2014\nInt Brew B\t\n20.00\n4.45\nAustrian Claims to\nHave Oldest Stamp\nKLAOENrtrnT.-Aurtrtt'ICP) \u2014\nStamp-collector Ferlndand Malle\nclaims that he has found-the.wbrld't\noldest used postage stamp. Printed\nin two colors, the stamp bears a\nKlagenfurt postmark dated June 26,\n1838. It wm dtacorortd. recently,.In\ntht tttio 'of t hduse at: nearby\nOberevellach.    , \u2022\u25a0\u2022.-': -.-\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - Trtdia*\nremained quietly iteady for the\nsecond straight stssion. ~<\n'! Canadian stocks wert mixed. International Nickel were up % and\nDome Mines gtlned %. CanadUn\nPacific slipped % and Distillers\nSeagram lost %..\nTORONTO (CP) - Industrlall.\ntraded steady to higher toward, the'\nclose ot an uneventful session. Bast\nmetals were also firm but the rest\nfaded slowly.\nIndustrial support centred in\npapers and utilities. On the downside' were manufacturing companies and foods.\nMONTREAL (CP) -.Trading\nwas narrowly mixed during llg_t\ndealings. A\nUtilities were weaker while o|l\nother major groups showed fractional movements in both directions: ' '        '\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 An early\nperiod of quietness tended to result in slightly lower levels. Talk\nof new loam depressed gilt-edged\nissues by small fractions but t reversal of the trend shortly after\nmid-day help the.rest,\nTht Industrial section close*\nfirm.\nSCHOOL CHILDREN -AR*!\nON THE STREET AGAIN\/\nWATCH THOSE IS M.P.H.\nZONES. .'7,0\nFAIR SPECIALS!\nFAIR PRICES!\nFAIR DEALING!\nWith 33 yeqrs good reputation and thousand* \u2014 ye\u00bb, theuiandi \u2014 ef happy\nowner*. Each day of the fair we are offer-\n\" lng EXTRA SPECIAL VALUES \u2014 See our\ndisplay en the graundi and our Booth\nInsldo. Look at thete GOOD USED CARS.\nHIRE'S PROFIT FOR THE WOODSMAN1  .'\nCaterpillar RD-4 Tractor\nReatntly overhauled. Fitted with Atkirw electric chain\nsaw.arrangement, 5 H.P. saw head, , \u2666 _l_JL_j A\n_\u00b0#neh cutter,. 100 feet of cable _-   siaf OV\nHERI'8 ONI FOR THE FAHMERI\nJohn Deere Model \"M\" 2-Plow Tractor\nRecently overhauled. Complete with $| AAA\nhydraulics and lights. Snap ot _.\u2014___     IV1\/W\nTOOL OF A THOUSAND USES I\nJohn Deere Model \"MC\" Crawler\nTractor\nIn \"os new\" condition, this tractor has\nworked only two months. A terrific buy\nFARMERS' SPECIALS\nCockshutt Mower\nn good condition. An excellent buy\nat only .. _:__\u201e_ : \u201e__.\nHorse Drawn Hay Rake\ntkft, Frost & Wood \u2022'\n(n good tjhape ,\t\n\u20222400\n_*125\nFINNING TRACTOR\nft EQUIPMENT CO. LTD.\nNELSON CRANBROOK\nPhone 930 Phone 61\nBUILDING:\nMATERIAL\nJOHNS MANVILLI\nROOFING SHINGLES\nSIDING SHINGLES\nROLLED ROOFING\nFLEXBOARD   PLAIN\nOR TILE\n'   !\nSTONEBORD        3\nThe Fireproof WallboanTi\nW thick, In sheets 4'x\u00abG\n4'x7'-4'x8'-.-i'x9'    ,\nMASONITE PRODUCTS\nW'x4'x8' sheets, tempered\nor untempered and\ntempertile\nAluminum Roofing and '':\u25a0\nSiding 2\nCALL or PHONE       \"\n18 -i\nPhone 792-Y Evenlnsi\nNelson\nMachinery \\\nCompany Ltd.   T\n'If It't Machinery Tee Mutt,\nConsult Ui First111\n214 Hell St.     Nelson, B.C.\natid them's another Welcome for you...\n\" '   CALVERT HOUSE\nSTEEL REED HOHNER\ncordion. 21 keys, and light brown\ncheck sporta Jacket. Bargain. 723\nRobson St.\n(CunUnued in Next Column,\n_____________\nBulgaria Announces\nNew Farm Program\nVIENNA (AP)\u2014Communist Bulgaria's Premier Vulko Tchervenkov\nhas announced a new program to\nsupport colelctlve farming with direct financial aid, reduction of com-\npulsoyr crop deliveries, higher state\ncredits' and better pay for collective workers. The announcement\ncame in a speech broadcast by ra-\ndio Sofia which marked the ninth j\nanniversary of the \"liberation\" of\nBulgaria by the Red army.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) - Thl ctttlt\nmarket was strong tnd active today with 1089 cattle and.ealvts on\noffer, including 451 held over. Good\ngrass steers and heifers til weights\nwere 50 cents to SI higher for the\nwee_.\nHogs told Tuesday $1 lower tt\n'30, and sows $1 lower at $14.50;\n'ood :arrih3 18-la.W)\nGovl    butc   :-    -tp-.-i-s .   !750-10,\ncluYw'.u.i  to  uiiiii  10-17;   good\nbutcher heil.r.s 16,;a-18; common\nto medium 10-16; good light cowl\n9.50-10.50, common to medium 8,25-\n9.25, canners and cutters. 6-8; good\nbulls 10.50-11.50, commonj'to medr\nurn 8.50-10; good ntooltor and\nteeder steers 14.50-16, common to\nmedium 10.14; good to oholec veal\ncalves 13-20, common ti medium\n13-17.50.\nUNDER  S800-\n'48 Auitin \"8\" Sedan\n'39 Plymouth 4-Dr.\nRadio\n'38 Dodotv Coach\n'40 Ford Light Dely.\n'87 Pord Lt Dely,\nUNDER $700\n'41 Austin A40\nSedan\n'80 Prefect Sedan\n'40 Dodge 4-Dr.  \u25a0\n'48 Chtv. Lt, Dely.\n81298\n'47 KAISIR SEDAN\nFormerly owned by\none of Ntlion'i molt\notrtful drivers.\nThli etr Is worth\n$308 mors thin our\n8pielil Tig Today I\n$79 Chrysler Sedan\nLicensed  (not wrecked.)\nFISHING,  HUNTING,  SPECIAL,\n47 DeSOTO CUSTOM\n48 CHRYSLER ROYAL\nSEDAN\nL6w mileigt, radio, air cbndi.\nNew engine, new paint,' new\nbrakes. Radio, heater.\nWonderful value.\ntiontr, sett cover*, fluid drive.\n50 PLYMOUTH\nCRANBROOK SEDAN\n50 PONTIAC COACH\nSun vltOr, one owner.\nLow mileage.\nBeautiful car.\nAND OTHERS TO CHOOSE FROM\nGOOD U'CK TOR A SUCCESSFUL FAIR\nPeebim motor\nr\u00a7YSL[RPlYMnUTH-FARG0'>^TIRE5\nM'gL(.l09O   ^Acm-.B.C.    .\n\u25a0 .. j^mrwrnewimmmmmmmm^^       *<\n,'..Jfc. il.....,_.\n\t\n^^^^^^^\n m$\n12\u2014NELSON DA1LX NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPT. 10,1953\nINTRODUCING. . .\nMn Nod Bacchus\nMr. Bacchus is a pioneer of the Kootenays . \u25a0 \u25a0. *\nwith a facility for varying  interests ..,,\nHe has engaged in banking, fruit growing, '\nlumbering,'   forestry,   trail-building   and'\ntrapping. ...\nMr. Bacchus it the author of a\nbest-selling book\n\"You've Got to Show Me\"\nand Other Stories\nMr. Bacchus will be in our store Thursday, Friday and\nSaturday afternoon! from 2 to 4 o'clock,\nto autogaph your copy of his book.\nParents\nand Children\nWe would like to take 1+hs opportunity to thank\nyou tor your increased patronage during the\n\u2022ehooi opening.\nKOOTENAY\nand SPORT SHOP\n456 Ward St.\nPhono 362\n^BARRETT\nASPHALT\nSHINGLES\nThe only shingles with new\nkoslone and fullhne colours\nI      if Modern# frosted pastels\nIV Rich, full-bodied blends\nV Styles for every taste\nTAKE YOUR BUILDING PROBLEMS\n'  TO YOUR BARRETT DEALER\nBesides new \"iFROSTONE\" and\nFOIXTGNE coloured shingles, your\nBarrett Dealer has a complete line of\n'roofing, insulation and weather-proofing materials. He now bos Barrett\nInsulating Board, too.\nTHE BARRETT COMPANY, LIMITED\n1045 West Pender Street, Vancouver, B.C ___\n*Re& Trade Mark\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nCOMPANY  LIMITED     .\n39S Baker St. Phone 497\nBARBARA ENNIS .IS CROWNEP\nQUEEN of the East Kootenay Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition by last\nyear's queen Heidi Schnider.'The queen's\nentourage comprised Ruth Krebs, Isabel\nBirkein,, Queen Barbara, Miss'Schnieder,\nMarion Dreier, Ingrid Seel, and June\nYoung:\u2014W. A. Burton photos.\nHurricane fear\nThe Bahamas\nMIAMI, Fla. (AP) \u2014 A hurricane\ncontaining winds ol 95 miles an\nhour sprang up suddenly Wednesday near Turks Island, ,800: miles\nsoutheast of Miami, and offered an\nimmediate threat to the Bahamas\nIslands,\nGrady Norton,1 storm forecaster\nin the Miami weather bureau,' said\ntha: swiftly-developing disturbance\n\"Is in a bait position as far as\nFlorida is concerned.\"\nThe hurricane, fourth- of the season, is called \"Dolly\" for the fourth\nletter ih the' alphabet. It is in the\nembryo, stage \"but is developing\nvery faBt,!'Norton said,- \u25a0\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nBiiy, Sell, Trade thei Classified Way\nYouth Hurl In\nFall From Car\n- GRAND FORKS - TWo.yeaN\nold Mlohael Grltchln, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Grltchln of Fruitvale, Is\nIn Grand Forks Community Hospital with a broken leg and sev-\n' ere lacerations suffered when he\nfell from his parents' moving car.\nThe accident, oocurred near\nGreenwood.\nWorld Jews Observe\nStart of New Year\n. NEW YORK (AP)\u2014Jews all oyer\nthe world observed Rosh Hashana,\ntheir new year, starting at sundown\nWednesday. They uslhered in the\n'5714th year of their history with\ntraditional religious services,\nFAIR SPECIALS at\n(Continued from Page S)\nMan's Sweater, patterned\u2014Mrs.\nPat Heaven, Mrs, R. P. Mantis\nChild's Sweater, plain\u25a0\u2014 Mrs.\nPeggy Ashford, Mrs.. Pat Heaven,\nMrs. Owen. ...\nChild's Sweater, designed \u2014 Mrs.\nC. Wanless, Mrs. H. Erlckson,-Mrs.\nArt Sdao.\nChild's Sweater, patterned \u2014 Mrs.\nP. Bateman, Mrs. Fat Heaven, Mrs.\nP. McGuire. \u25a0    \u2022   \"\nChild's Knitted Dress \u2014 Sybil\nNyman, Mrs. 3. Lenard.\nBaby's Sweater, Bonnet and\nBootiea\u2014Mrs. R. Langman, Mrs.\nOwen.\nChild's Suit\u2014Mrs. Owen, Mrs. C.\nWanless,\nKnitted Socks, plain \u2014 Mrs, W.\nMarken, Mrs. Pat Heaven, Mrs. C.\nEdwards.\nKnitted Socks, fancy\u2014Mrs. W.\nMarken, Mrs. J. L. Townsend, Mrs.\nF. Cullen.\nKnitted Socks, plain\u2014Mrs. W.\nMarken, Mrs. P. Bateman, Mrs. J.\nr Page.\nKnitted Mitts, patterned ~ Trlrs.\nVic Bonde, Mrs. W. Wadeson, Mrs.\nM. Marken.\nDarned Socks\u2014Mrs: W. Marken,\nMrs. W. Sandulesou, Mrs. C. Wanless.\nChesterfield Cushion \u2014 Mrs. Vic\nBonde, Mrs. M. McLaren, Mrs. Gilbert Kay.\nAny other knitted article \u2014 Mrs.\nPat Heaven, Mrs. C. Coflin, Mrs.\nJ. Lenard. Class D, Mrs. J. Plotnik-\nkoff, Mrs. Vic Bonde, Mrs. P. Bateman.\nMonarch Knitting Co., Special,\nbest entry made from Monarch\nyarn\u2014Mrs. Pat Heayen.\nPatchwork Quilt \u2014 Mrs. Vic\nBonde, Mrs. R. E. Haymond, Mrs.\nW. Marken.\nRag Rug\u2014Mrs. T. Shinaruk, Mrs.\nC. Coflin, Mrs. Art Sdao.    .\nFRUIT\nApples, yellow transparent\u2014Mrs.\nPat Heaven, second.'\nPears, Bartlett\u2014Mrs. Vic Bonde,\nD. M. Elder.\nPears, Flemish Beauty \u2014 D. M.\nElder.\nPears, any other variety\u2014B. P.\nSutherland, D. M. Elder.\nPlums, blue\u2014D. M. -Elder, L. W.\nKeir. \u2022'\u2022\u2022\u25a0\"\nPlume, Damsons\u2014Mrs. T. Fisher,\nD. M. Elder, Mrs. Owen.\nPlums, yellow\u2014L. W. Keir, B. P.\nSutherland.\nPlums, Prunes\u2014D M. Elder.\nPeaches\u2014Mrs. Vic Bonde, Mrs.\nVic Bonde, J. E. Craig.\nGrapes\u2014W. L. Inkster:\nBlackberries\u2014M. COnci, D. M.\nElder. Mrs. Owen, i\nRaspberries\u2014Mrs. Hugo Lindquist, N. Subssic, A. F. Hubner.\nBest Collection of Fruit \u2014 D. M,\nElder, Mrs. Owed,  D.   M.   Elder,-\nspecial.\nFINE ARTS\nOil painting\u2014Mrs. A. W. Lambert,\nMrs. P.-Stone, Mrs. C. E. Seefeldt.\nWater color\u2014George Bourchier,\nMrs. W. Darby.\nPoster or tempera color-George\nBourchier, Mrs. W. Darby. Gerry\nJohnston..\nGraphic art\u2014George Bourchier,\nMrs. H. A. TJnruh, Mrs. A. W. Lambert\nDecorative panel\u2014George Bourchier, Mrs. W. Darby, Gerry Johnston.\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nPortraiture\u2014Mrs. M. Rembre.\nStill life-Howard Hayden.\nAnimals and pets\u2014Mrs. F. McGuire.\nLandscaper-Mrs. E. S. Tobey.\n12   snaps\u2014Elizabetn   Sutherland,\nMrs. P. Stone, Howard Hayden;\nP08TERS\nGrade school\u2014Roma Brown, Dd-\nanne \"Brown, Susan Beattie.\nHigh school-\u2014 Georgians Dyson.\nVEGETABLES\nPumpkin, largest-*!, E.' Craig.\nPumpkins for pie\u2014J. E. Craig,\nWally Hocking, E. Parks. j\nVegetable marrow\u2014P. C. Berry,\nA. Crossley, E. Parks. .\n.. Hubard .squash\u2014J. E. Craig.\nSquash, any other variety\u2014J, E.\nCraig, J. X. Craig.\nPotatoes, red\u2014P. G. Berry, A: F.\nHiibner. \u25a0 ,   ,   \u25a0 '\nPotatoes, white\u2014Mrs. Blench, L.\nInkster, Wally Hocking,\nPotatoes, netted gem\u2014A. Wood,\nMrs, M E. Nixon, Mrs, N. Subasic.\nTurnips, Swede\u2014Mrs. M. E. Nixon,\nA. F. Hubner.\nTurnips, white\u2014W. L. Inkster, ._.\nParka, Mrs. A. Snuggs.\nBeans, green\u2014A, Wood, P. Bateman, Lomar Keir.\n\u201e   Beans, wax\u2014Lomar Keir, 3. E.\nI| Craig, Mrs .Owen.\nBeans, scarlet runner\u2014B. P. Sutherland, A. Wood, A. F. Hubner.\nBeets--A. Wood, Mrs. P. Elmes,\nMrs. Vic Bonde.\nParsnips\u2014J. E, Craig, P. C. Berry.\nCabbage, conical\u2014E. Parks, Mrs.\nVid Bonde, A. Wood.\nCabbage, later-Mrs. Vic Bonde,\nE. Parks, W.'L. Inkster.\nCelery\u2014Sam Wise, J. E. Craig, W.\nL. Inkster. .\nCauliflower\u2014Mrs. Vic Bonde, W.\nL. Inkster, E. Parks.\nCarrots, short\u2014P. Bateman, Mrs.\nVic Bonde, Mrs. A. Lavrton,\nCarrots, long\u2014Mrs. Vic Bonde, W.\nL. Inkster, Mrs. A. Snuggs,\n. Carrots,   intermediate\u2014Mrs.   Vic\nBonde, Mrs. M. E. Nixon, A. Wood.\nCorn\u2014Mrs. Vic Bonde, J. E. Craig,\nLomar Keir.\nCucumbers\u2014J. E. Craig, J. E.\nCraig, M. Conci.\nTomatoes, ripe\u2014J. E. Craig, J. E.\nCraig.\nTomatoes, green \u2014 H. F. Hutchison, J. E. Craig, 'A. W. Ewing.\nBrocolli\u2014Mrs. S. Magnuson.\nOnions, from    seed\u2014Mrs.    Vic\nBonde, Sam Wise.\n. Onions from sets\u2014J. E. Craig, Lomar-Keir, Mrs.. Vic Bonde.\nPeas\u2014Sybil Nyman, E. Parks, Lomar Keir. \u25a0 .\nLettuce-r-P. C. Berry, B. Parks.\nRhubarb^-J. E. Craig, P. C. Berry,\nJack Ross.\nBest collection vegetables, 8 varieties\u2014J. E. Craig, P.  C. Berry,\nBevin Berry.\nJUNIOR CLA88, 10 to 16 yean\nCrochet \u2014 Elizabeth Sutherland.\nKnitting \u2014 Goldie Innes, Glerida-\nRaye Nyman, Gail Patterson.\nEmbroidered Runner \u2014 Patricia\nCavill, Carol Patterson, Beverley\nBerry.   .\nApron \u2014 Irene McGuire, Elaine\nMcGuire, Patricia Cavill, Carol Peterson, Gail Patterson.\nDressed Doll \u2014 Marie Rember,\nBlanche Burden, Betty.Jean Lam-\npard.\nSewing or Knitting by boy \u2014 M.\nKeffer.t Donald Bell, G. Townsend.\nGIRLS 6 TOO\nEmbroidered Centre Piece \u2014\nJoyce Owen, S. Owen\nDolls Knitted Scarf \u2014 Jo Anne\nLangman, Elaine McGuire, Shirley\nOwen.\nDarning \u2014 Jo Hutchison.\nCOOKING 9 to 12 Years\nWhite Cake \u2014 Michael Butorac,\nCarol Dahlstrom, Blanch Burden.\nApple    Pie \u2014 Marie    Rember,\nLouise Lindquist.\nCOOKING 13 to 16 Years\nWhite Cake \u2014 Beverley Berry,\nBetty Hocking.\nApple Pie\u2014 Beverley Berry.\nCandy, 9 to 12 years \u2014 Jo Hutchinson, Louise Lindquist.\nCandy, 13 to 16 years \u2014 Beverley.\nFINE ARTS Under 16 Years    \u25a0\n.   Oil Painting \u2014 Bill Jolliffe, Betty \"Wood, Alan Penney.\nPoster or Tempera Color \u2014 Bill\nJolliffe, Michael Keffer.\nGraphic. Art \u2014 ' Dale Matthews,\nBilly Anderson, Alan Penney, Terry\nHaymond.'\nDecorative Panel \u2014 Dale Mat-\n\"thews, Michael Keffer, C. Fiese.\nCrayon Work,   9 and under \u2014\nDonald Hearch, Brian Freeman, Jo\nAnne Langman.\nHANDICRAFTS 12 and under\nWooden Lawn Ornament \u2014 David\nFreeman, Bevan Berry.\nBird House \u2014 Bevan Berry.\nComer Bracket \u2014 Bevan Berry.\nSoap Carving \u2014 Carl Patterson.\nHANDICRAFT Up to 16 Years\nLeatherwork \u2014 Pat Blench, Irene\nMcGuire.\nModel Airplane \u2014 Robbie Telfer,\nGeo. Collett, Michael Keffer.    -\nBookends \u2014 Michael Keffer, Sevan Berry, Alfred Hayden.\nBird House \u2014 Michael Keffer.\nCorner Brackett \u2014 Michael Keffer.\nWood Carving \u2014 David Freeman,\nAlan Penny.\nWoodwork, any othe rarticle \u2014\nMichael Keffer, Dale Matthews,\nDavid Mitchell.\nShellcraft Jewellery \u2014 Betty\nJean Lampard, Margaret Rice,\nLouise Lindquist.\nShell Craft, any other article \u2014\nBlanche. Burden, Louise Lindquist,\nGoldie Innis. ,\nNovel Class \u2014 Hazel Sttunders,\nAlfred Hayden.\nModel Boat \u2014 David Mann.\nHANDICRAFTS 8ENIOR\n(16 years and over)\nLeather Wallett \u2014 Dorothy Johnstone, Mrs. C. J. Mitchell.\nKey Case \u2014 Mrs. F. McGuire.\nLadies Handbag \u2014 Dorothy\nJohnstone.\nLeatherwork, Any Other Article\n\u2014Mrs. C. J. Mitchell, Dorothy\nJohnstone.\nWood Turning \u2014 Bob Steffani,\nClyde Gordon.\nWood Inlaid Article \u2014 Clyde Gordon.\nWood Carving \u2014 K. Vennerasen,\nClyde Gordon.\nWood Whittling \u2014 Chas. Benson.\nAny Other Article in Wood \u2014 H.\nKeffer, Jim Driscoll, Percy Elmes,\nHousehold Article in Metal \u2014\nGeorgina Dyson.\nArt Object in Metal \u2014 Georgina\nDyson.\nWeaving \u2014 Mrs. Vic Bonde, Mildred Elmes.\nShellcraft Jewellery \u2014 Mrs. Lampard.\nShellcraft, Any Other Article \u2014\nMrs. G; Jones, Mrs. Lompard.\"\nClay Moulding \u2014 Mrs. Lompard.\nSoap Carving \u2014 Gail Patterson,\nAlan Penny.\n12 Hand-Tied Flies \u2014 Gordon\nRead.\nModel Aircraft \u2014 Geo. Collett.\nNovel Class \u2014 Cheis Edwards,\nBob Stefanni, Odd Aasland, Blackie\nSpatari.\nFigurine \u25a0 Painting \u2014 Virginia\nMoline; Georgina Dyson.\nFund for Greeks\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 Premier Bennett officially launched' a fund-\nraising drive for relief of the Greek\nIon|an islands, stricken with earthquakes recently.\nThe Premier presented GusChri-\nsos, chairman of the Greek Earthquake Relief Fund, with a cheque\nfor $1000 on - behalf of the people\nof -British Columbia.\nThe all-B.C. drive, also backed\nby Mayor Fred Hume of Vancouver\nwill continue to Oct. 9.\nThe committee was formed last\nmonth and hopes to establish .subcommittees in most' of the main\nB.C. communities.\nMayor Hume is \u2022> conducting a\ndrive in conjunction with the committee and arrangements are or\nhave been made with various banks\nin the province to accept donations.\nPremier Bennett said donations\nwill be tax-free.'\nSCHOOL CHILDREN ARE\nON THE STREET AGAIN.\nWATCH THOSE 15 M.P.H.\nZONES.\n\/.\n415 HALL ST.\nPHONE 1320\nies* Coats\nNew and exoitlng creations In fall and winter coats are here,\nYou'll find a complete range of sizes and colors-to ohoose from.\nOur prices are real values. \"\"\t\nPriced up from          .\u201e.\u201e\t\niuoo srutn,\n\u2022$35\nLadies' Suits\nWe have a fine selection of Wool Repp, Gabardine and Tweed*.\nCome In and-try these on,\nHALF PRICE\nDresses\nFor the thrifty shopper, we offer our-entire stock of Summer\nDresses, at 14 off.their regular prices. These are well known\nlines auoh as Hamptons, Wolorafts, and Park Lanes.\nOUT THEY GO AT SACRIFICE PRICES\nYi REGULAR PWCE Vi\n(pJwduaL (Deftatitm&nt\nOkanagan ELBERTAS\nNew At Their Peek\n18 lb. Case, No. 1 $2.29\nOKANAGAN HALES\n.55\nARROW LAKES VEDETTES\nNo. 1. Case     \t\n'2\nT\u00abksU  Dans-haa   Okanagan Elbertas.\n\u25a0 aoie readies Large, rlpe, 3 ib. basket\nBartlett Pears $TZl!tanl\u2122*^A:.\nCantaloup _\u00a3e;ripened; _...\nWatermelon _\u00a3\\ri,,e;. \u201e_\t\n. Italian Prunes \u00a3bk\u2122T:\nConcord Grapes\nFor jelly.\nBasket\n59*\n55*\n7*\n$1.89\n.,. 8$M\nes\nSunkist, sweet-and Juicy.\n8 lb. bag\nGrapefruit \u00a7**?\u00a3\t\nPickling Onions S\n3 tor m\n2 ibs 45*\nSpanish Onions $f ....,...\u201e        2ibs 25*\nRed Peppers __. :.,..' : 27*\nGreen Peppers Lb, \u201e  19*\nCom Golde.  Bantam.    1 2 cobs 69*\nLocal Potatoes 10it\u00bb. 35*\nCauliflower _J0W whit\u00abheads- J9\u00a3\n\u2022New Turnips Small whlte...., 2_- 25*\nNew Carrots Bmte ;,..,3,or 25*\n^Jioauuf. OicpvdmstnL\nCoffee _bf G!Mery.Brand: 99*\nTenderleaf.\n60's. Pkt. ...\nTea Bags\njelly Powders.SL\\^thJU!ce. 3Pk_.29*\n69*\npkts.,\n29*\n39*\n2 for 27*\nfor 35*\n49*\n39*\nBlended Juice _j*\u00a3\u201e-,-...;       2 for 35*\nTomato Ketchup \u00abbeS       2 __ 55*\nStrawberry Jam ^ar3651..!\"1':.: 59*\nOrange Marmalade ff^t BMt        69*\n39*\nI for 28*\n67*\n  77*\n1 free with\nCheecjA   Ihgersoll Baby Rolls.\nCUmttrnm.   Swift's Brookfield Garlic Flavored.\ncheese % lb. toU -\t\nCampbell's Soup rvttabie\nSpaghetti With Cheese _ftg?- 2\nCorned. Beef ^'im\t\nTomato Juice ^6W '.\t\nPeanut Butter ^ofjar3!8'\n\u00bb__\u201e B_,_,J_ .Gerber's or Heinz.\nBaby rpOdS All varieties.   \t\nLUX (Slant-Size Pkt\t\nTide\nGiant Size Pkt.\nTfUal (DsftcudtmnL\nFricassee Fowl ftbVe\naverage. Lb.\nHomade Sausage Lb\t\nTasty Veal Potties Lb\nFresh Cod Slices Lb\nFinnan Hoddic &nuine:\nEastern Herring fe\u2122.'\n39*\n39*\n39*\n29*\n47*\n36*\n481 Baker St.\nGROCERY\nH, A, D. GREENWOOD\nPhone 10\nSweaters\nfor Fall\nOne of these hew fall\nsweaters will come in\nhandy on these cooler\nnights. \u201e.\nSee our new selection \u2022\nof Cashmeres, Lambs-\nwool, and wool, made\nin Scotland\n\u2022 CARDIGANS\n\u2022 PULLOVERS\n\u2022 SLEEVELESS\n\u2022 ZIPPER COATS\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nPhone 31 Box 100\nSawn Lumber Output\nHigher in B.C.\npTTAWA (CP) - Production of\nsawn lumber rose substantially in\nthe first six months of this year\ncompared with a similar period\nlast year, the bureau of statistics\nreports.    ,\nBritish Columbia's output rose to\n1,934,887,000 board feet from 1,767,-\n224,000 last year. For the rest of\nCanada, output rose to 1,826,203,000\nboard feet from 1,562,087,000.\nJune production in B.C. rose to\n335,783,000 from 256,860,000 board\nfeet. Production east of the Rockies\nrose to 460,302,000 -from 423,387,000\nboard feet.\nProduction during the six-month\nperiod, with 1852 figures in brackets\nin the Prairie provinces: Alberta\n335,518 (320,352); Saskatchewan 53,.\n663 (63,383); Manitoba 30,860 (20,.\n638).\nFor All Vour Baking Needs Try\nELLISON'S\nVITAMIN B FLOUR\nThe flavor Is right Oh Sale at\nVour Grocers, or Phone 231,\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED e\\ REPAIRED\n,       RECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 FRONT ST.'        PHONE 68\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n\/        & IMRIE      7\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors    --\n676 Baker St Phona Ml\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTO.\nPONTIAC - BUICK    '\nG.M.C. TRUCK8\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 141\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral-Service*\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n-Mt- Kootenay St       Phone 3N\nHave Hie Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nf*-*__)\n603 Baker St\nMed. Art* BIK.\nPHONE \u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\nPhone M\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAsNINQ\nMedioal Arte Building\nSuite 206 Phono 141\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 827\n676 Baker St\n9\nFOR BETTER PICTURES\nTry the Famous English\nILFORD FILMS\nThe best pictures for less money.\nNo. 127\u201437o! roll\u20143 for $1.09\n120-620\u201452c roll\u20143 for $1.19\n116-616\u2014530 roll\u2014S for $149\nAt Your Rexall Storo\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34' Box 460\n)<f' CLASSIFIED AD3 GET RE8ULTS\n^^      -    \u2022    \"a*^\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_10","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\/1.0427840","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":"1953-09-10 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":"1953-09-10 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":""}]}