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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":" Nelson Approves\nPROVINCIAL,\nNew Hospital Cost\nExpedited Action Can Save. Taxpayers\n$300,000; District Trustees Proposal\nBrings Series of City, Board Moves\n> Nelson Mayor and aldermen, sitting as a committee\nif the whole council. Friday night accepted a proposal from\nCootenay Valley Hospital Improvement District that costs\nor construction of a new hospital be shared on a 45-55 basis.\nThe Council took the action on a resolution from\nlie hospital improvement district delivered to Mayor Joseph\nlary and Aid. Arthur Poster by Secretary C. P. Perry of\nIrrierald and Trustee M. C. Donaldson of Salmo on a special\nNelson    Thursday\nisit    to\night.\nBecause a heavy saving for both\nity and district property owners\nan be assured if the financial pre-\nIminaries for the project are ex-\niedited, both Kootenay Lake Gen-\nral Hospital Society and City\njouncil arranged further special\nneetings to be held in the next few\nlays. The hospital project can qual-\nfy for financing under an old form-\nila of grants whereby government\nssistance covers two-thirds of cost\nnstead of one-half if estimates are\neceived by the provincial treasury\noard by Fall. The saving is, a pos-\nible $300,000.\nCity Council will hold a special\nlession Tuesday noon to ratify its\nsommittee action of last night. In\n!he meantime a call will go out\nto hospital board directors for a\nipecial meeting Sunday morning to\nprepare a request for grants to go\nto the special Council session.\nREQUEST GRANT\nThese are the actions that must\nfollow if a bylaw is to be presented\nto city ratepayers by October 29:\n(1) KLGH Society directors by\n\u25a0esolution must request City Coun-\nil for a $270,000 grant to cover the\nity's share of the proposed $600,000\nxpenditure by city and district,\n\"his $600,000 would be the local\nhare in a $1,800,000 project, federal\nnd provincial grants covering the\nialance.\n(2) City Council must decide upon\nlie kind of money bylaw it will\ntilt before property owners and\nuthorize its preparation.\n(3) City solicitor will prepare the\nlylaw text.\n(4) City Council must hold anther special meeting iogiv$ it first\nnd' Yecond*reading.\n(5) 'The bylaw must go to Vic-\noria for check and approval. To\nixpedite this matter Mayor Kary\nvill likely take the bylaw to Vic-\noria to avoid back and forth deal-\nngs through the mail.\n(6) After Victoria's approval the\n;ity Council must hold a third spe-\ndal meeting to give third and final\neading.\n(7) Within a minimum of 10 days\nihd a maximum of 30 days the\nnoney bylaw must be submitted to\nhe city property owners.\nThe division of costs represents\na compromise by both city councillors and Improvement district\ntrustees. The projects organizing\ncommittee had suggested a 60-40\ndivision as a starting point for\nnegotiations. At a meeting with\nCity Council August 9 district\ntrustees proposed a 60-60 division\nof cost.\nOn August 26 after a committee\nof aldermen conducted a study of\n'assessment, hospital usage and\npopulation figures, City Council\nproposed a 67.5-42.6 split.\nMonday  night district trustees\npassed a resolution putting forth\na 45-56 division. Because of a delay In communicating this Information   to   Council,   two   trustees\nmade   a  special   visit to   Council\ncommittee Thursday night to present a copy of the resolution.  It\nwas on this proposal that Council\nin committee acted  Friday.\nFURTHER INFORMATION\nThe trustees resolution stated:\n\"On motion \"by M. C. Donaldson\nseconded  by  C.  M.  McNown that\nowing to further information in re\ngard to hospital usage and assessment values being obtained a fair\nand equitable division of the costs\nbetween the city and the district\nwould be 45 per cent for the city\nand 55 per cent for the district and\na certified copy of this resolution\nto be presented by the chairman to\nthe city immediately.\" The resolution was certified: \"I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true\ncopy of a resolution in connection\nwith the division of costs between\nCity of Nelson and Kootenay Valley\nHospital Improvement District passed by the trustees at their meeting\nin Nelson, August 30, 1954\u2014Signed,\nC. P. Perry, secretary.\"\nBoth hospital district trustees and\nCity Council members Thursday\nand Friday expressed their willingness to do everything possible to\nmake modern hospital care available to the citizens of Nelson district on a fair and equitable basis\nof cost.\nChats Quite a\nBit With Duchess\nOn 22-Mile Drive\nBy KING8LEY BROWN JR.\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nHALIFAX (CP)\u2014 It's funny what\ndifference a driver can make in the\nsuccess of a tour by royalty. In this\ncase, by the Duchess of Kent and\nher 17-year-old daughter, Princess\nAlexandra.\nFor instance, Queen Elizabeth\ncomplained mildly to a reporter\ncovering; hertour as a princess in\n1951 that she never found out\nenough about the country she was\ntravelling in. When in Newfoundland she had a driver from Ontario.\nS. Sgt. Art Campbell of New\nGlasgow, N. S., made the difference\nThursday when he drove the duchess arid princess the 22 miles from\nShearwater naval air base around\nthe harbor and Bedford Basin to\nGovernment^ House in downtown\nHalifax.\nDESCRIBES  CITY\nThe former army tank driver\n\"chatted quite a bit\" with them. He\ntold them all about the historic\nHalifax tltat an earlier Duke of\nKent built into a fortress and the\nAngus L. Macdonald bridge being\nbuilt between Halifax and the town\nof Dartmouth.\n\"They said the bridge was the\nmost enormous thing they'd ever\nseen,\" said Campbell. \"They\nthought the Mount St. Vincent\nconvent at Rockingham was Namp\nHill Hospital but I told them it\nwasn't.\"\nArt admitted ruefully, however,\nthat he didn't mention how the\nDuke of Kent of 150 years ago had\nbuilt the round Prince's Lodge at\nnearby Rockingham for his private\nmusic room.\nAnd he didn't get a chance to\nshow them the famed citadel that\nthe duke built so impregnable that\nthe French and later American\nforces never dared lay a cannon\nagain. They will visit the citadel\nSaturday.\nWater level Friday: 4.00.\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKQOTENAY-Cloudy with showers Saturday, thunderstorms. tCon-\ntinuing cool. Low-high Saturday at\nCranbrook and Crescent Valley 4J\nand 65. Sunday outlook: Decreasing cloudiness. ,\nNELSON, B. C, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING SEPT. 4, 1954\nNo. 115\nBoard Der\nSchool Site\nNelson School District Board of\nTrustees, impatient at a Department of Education delay in deciding if the present high school site\nis feasible, are demanding a decision by the end of next week. Construction of the new $700,000 building is being delayed waiting a decision.\nAt a meeting Friday night the\nboard decided to wire Hon. R. G.\nWilUston, Minister of Education,\npointing out the department has\nhad a survey of the situation before\nthem for two weeks and demanding\na decision.\nChairman George Mermet said\nafter the meeting that two weeks\nago this coming Monday in a telephone interview, Mr. Williston said\nt*\n?\n\/i\nthe decisloi. \"* -, i be made in\nfew days. \"We i 41 haven't got it.\"\n\"We may be saving money while\nwe wait but we aren't taking care\nof our children,\" he added.\n, Five weeks has .lapsed since the\nSchool Board met Mr. Williston at\nVictoria and were prpmised immediate action, board member W. S.\nRamsay pointed out. -.\nSchool Board plana to build a\nnew district high school bogged\ndown this Spring when\" a drainage\nproblem arose at the Fairview site.\nA survey by experts was conducted\non the site and 'turned \"in to the\ndepartment two weeks ago for the\ndepartment to decide if the site was\nfeasible or if a new one should be\nsought.\nGUNS BOMBARD\nQUEMOY ISLAND\nGunfire Follows\nCommando Attack\nOn Nationalist Hold\nHONG KONG (Reuters) \u2014 Communist China claimed today that\nits forces have inflicted heavy damage on the Nationalist held island\nof Quemoy with a \"violent bombardment\" by mainland guns.\nThe Communist New China news\nagency claimed that the bombardment Friday quickly wreathed Quemoy and nearby little Quemoy island \"in flames and- smoke\" completely silencing Nationalist guns\nand causing naval vessels to flee\nfor the open sea.     ^\nQuemoy lies Just off the harbor\nof Amoy, across the Straits of\nFormosa from Chiang Kai-shek's\nIsland fortress. The bombardment\nwhich the Communists said occurred Friday afternoon, follows a\nrecent commando-type operation\nagainst the island in which the\nCommunists claimed to have killed some Nationalists and captured others for Intelligence purposes,\nThe Nationalists Joday ^acknowledged the bombardment,, but played down the damage estimates.\nA dispatch of the Nationalist's\nCentral News Agency from Taipeh\nsaid three Nationalist soldiers were\nkilled and seven others wounded\nin the new bombardment.\nJustice Clyne to\nProbe Milk Sales\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The provincial\ngovernment has appointed Mr. Justice J. V. Clyne to investigate irregularities in the sale and distribution\nof milk in B.C.\nAgriculture Minister Kenneth\nKiernan said Friday he had learned\nthat producers \"are not all being\npaid the proper price for all the\nmilk sold on the fluid market.\n\"We will do everything in our\npower to see that producers get a\nsquare deal,\" he said.\nMr. Kiernan said Mr. Justice\nClyne has been instructed to inquire into prices paid to producers\nand \"any other matter pertinent\nto the production, supply and distribution of milk for the fluid market that he may consider advisable.\"\n5 Die in Northern\nPlane Crash\nJUNEAU, Alaska (AP)\u2014Five of\nsix persons aboard a U.S. Fish and\nWildlife Service pliyie died in a\ncrash on rugged Admiralty Island,\na rescue party reported from the\nscene Friday.\nAll the victims were employees\nof the government service.\nHe Did It in a Canoe ...\nCanadian Explorer Dampens Spirit\nOf Strait-Conquering U; S* Navy\nBy   BERNARD   DUFRESNE\nCanadian Press'Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014 A Canadian explorer Friday dampened the enthusiastic claims of the United States\nnavy that two American icebreakers were the first to crash through\nley McClure strait. He did it in a\ncanoe.\nEnglish-born Tom Manning, 42,\ncircumnavigated Banks Island in\n1952-53 with a 22-foot canoe, passing through the ice-clogged strait,\nthe toughest of two routes through\nthe legendary northwest passage,\nf he canoe was powered by an outboard motor.\nHe travelled in a west-to-east\ndirection, the same way as the U.S.\nIcebreakers Burton Island and\nNorthwind.\nMeanwhile, the Royal  Canadian\nNavy announced Friday it too Is\nmaking a bid to navigate the northwest passage. HMCS Labrador, the\nnavy's Arctic patrol ship, has joined the American vessels off the\nsouthern end of Melville Island,\nabout 900 miles south of the North\nPole.\nThe three vessels plan to sail for\nthe Pacific later this month, passing through Prince of Wales\nstraits, on the eastern side of Banks\nIsland. That is the longer but easier\nway through the northwest passage.\nDOUGHTY 8T. ROCH\nThe navy said that if the Labrador completes the trip to the Pacific it will be the first Canadian\nnaval vessel to navigate the passage.\nAlmost lost in the bustling act.\nivity for wiling \"first*\" in the Are-\nIIIIIIS'HIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIMIIHIIIIIII\nNo Paper Monday\nThe Daily News will not pub*\nllsh Monday, Labor Day. The\nnext regular edition will be delivered Tuesday.\nUMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nMendes-France\nShuffles Cabinet\n10 Appointments\nFill Gaps;\nTwo Posts Vacant\nBy CARL HARTMAN\nPARIS (AP) \u2014 Premier Pierre\nMendes-France reshuffled his cabinet Friday to fill gap* left by resignations in the wake of the bitter\ndispute over the European army.\nThe followers of Gen. Charles de\nGaulle, resigned almost three weeks\nago, declaring the premier had not\ngone far enough with changes in\nthe European Defence Community\nTreaty.\nThree pro-EDC ministers, resigned Friday in protest against Men-\ndes-France's refusal to back the\ntreaty in the National Assembly\nvote last Monday.\nMendes-France announced 10\nnew appointMenTS-in'Tiis' cabinet\nFriday night, bringing in two new\nfaces and moving eight other ministers to new posts.\nTwo posts were left vacant and\nanother apparently was eliminated.\n17-Year-Old Logger\nDrowns at Coast\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C. (CP)\nRCMP reported here Friday that\nFred Laird, 17-year-old logger, was\ndrowned Thursday on the Queen\nCharlotte Islands after being\nknocked into the water by a fall\ning log. The youth, an employee\nof the Kelly Logging Company, was\nworking on a log dump when a\nfalling log knocked him unconscious into the water at the company's Arrow camp. The body was\nrecovered.\nRole Under NATO\nCanada's Recommendation\nEarly Meeting Suggested in Letter   .\nTo Mendes-France; Would\nTake Part in Western Defence Talks\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014Canadian Ambassador Jean Desy\nFriday night handed Premier Pierre Mendes-France a\nrecommendation that West German participation in Western\nEurope's defence should be handled strictly within the\nframework of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.\nThe message contained two main\npoints:\n1.. A meeting of the North Atlantic council should be held soon,\neither at the level of a council of\nministers or of the permanent delegates of NATO.\n2.   The problem of German participation    in    European    defence\nshould  be  studied  in  the  framework of NATO and not at a meeting\nof eight  or three  powers outside\nof the Atlantic pact organization.\nA   Canadian   embassy   source\n\u25a0aid  the  message  was  sent  on\nCanada's Initiative although Canada has. been In continuing close\ncontact with London and Washington.\nBritain has proposed an eight-\npower conference at which the\nUnited States, Britain and the six\nEDC countries\u2014France, West Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, Belgium  and  Luxembourg \u2014 would\nmeet to discuss an alternative\nmethod of rearming West Germany\nnow that the European Defence\nCommunity plan has been killed.\nSHOULD  PARTICIPATE\nThe embassy source said that\nCanada felt that she should participate in the discussion of anything as important as the form of\nWestern defence now that EDC has\nbeen voted down. He pointed to\nCanadas land and air forces in\nGermany and France, as well as\nher substantial financial contributions to the defence organization in\nWestern Europe as further grounds\nfor Canadian interest.\nAt Ottawa Thursday officials of\nthe external affairs department\nsaid notes have been sent to all of\nCanada's 13 NATO partners in-\nforming'ihem of the Canadian position.\nTo Release Meyer\nBy DAVE MclNTOSH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014German SS. Maj.-Gen. Kurt Meyer,\nonce sentenced to death for responsibility in the mass shooting of 18 Canadian prisoners, will be released Tuesday from\nWerJ prison  in the British\nRecord Rain\nIn Vancouver\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 A record rainfall of .51 Inches showered Vancouver during a 34-mln-\nute period Friday.\nIt was the heaviest cloudburst\nsince July 20, 1929, when .44\nInches fell In a half-hour period.\nRainfall charts have been kept\nfor 56 years.\nzone of Germany.\nIt was learned authoritatively\nFriday that the 43-year-old onetime Hitler bodyguard will be set\nfree., nine years, five months and\ntens*).'J\"   \\  '   \u2022\"\nMeyer's original. death sentence\nwas commuted to life imprisonment and last Jan. 15 in the Commons former defence minister Clax-\nton announced this sentence had\nbeen reduced to 14 years.\nArmy officials estimated at that\ntime, that, with time off for good\nbehavior, the earliest possible date\non which Meyer could be freed\nwould be Sept. 7\u2014which falls on\nTuesday.\nMeyer was convicted Dec. 28,\n1945, of inciting his troops to deny\nquarters to allied soldiers in the\nbattle of Normandy and of responsibility in the execution of 18 Canadian soldiers who had been taken\nprisoner.\nThe Canadian war crimes tribunal found Meyer not guilty of ordering prisoners to be shot.\nGOOD BEHAVIOR REWARDED\nMeyer began serving his sentence\nMay 8,1945. Officials said that under\nBritish practice, sentences are usually subject to reduction by one-\nthird for good behavior while in\nprison..\nWhen Meyer's sentence was chopped to 14 years, the life term of\nGerman marine Sgt. Johann Neitz\nalso was reduced to 14 years.\nJTeitz; imprisoned at Werl with\nMeyer, was convicted of the at.\ntempted  murder   of FO.  Rudolph\nAnthony Roman of Regina, an\nRCAF pilot who bailed out of his\ncrippled bomber.\nWhen Meyer and Neitz are ire-\nleased\u2014the latter began his term\nJuly 22, 1945, and is scheduled to\nbte-freed! in ^November\u2014the eight\nGerman war criminal cases involving Canadians will have been closed.\nThickset, broad-shouldered, with\ncold, grey-blue eyes, Meyer often\ntold'his Dorchester guards he was\nconvinced he ultimately would be\nfreed to fight with the West in a\nwar. against Russia.\nHe was transferred back to Germany in 1951 on the grounds that\nhe was the only German war erim\ninal in custody outside Germany.\n7,500,000 FISH\nIN SALMON CATCH\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 The combined American-Canadian salmon\ncatch totalled nearly 7,500,000 fish\nFriday as fishermen waited for the\nAdams River sockeye run to reach\nthe Fraser River. The big run\nstarted 10 days ago. Prices average\nabout $2 a fjsh.\nUnited States fishermen had another record catch Thursday, with\na total of more than 500,000 sock-\neye. The bonanza was expected to\ncontinue Friday, bringing the differential between. American and\nCanadian fishermen to more than\n1,000,000 in favor of the Americans.\nHowever, parity is expected to be\nreached again when the fish start\ntheir run up the Fraser. It wasn't\nknown when the run would start\ntic is the record of the doughty St.\nRoch. the RCMP patrol ship.\nNow sailing from Halifax through\nthe Panama canal to retirement in\nVancouver, the St. Roch, skippered\nby Supt. H. A. Larsen, is the only\nship to have travelled from west to\neast and back through the Arctic\nocean, both times through Prince\nof Wales strait.\nManning, now writing a report on\nhis 700-mile trip around Banks Island for the defence research board;\nqualified his claims to being the\nfirst white man to pass through\nMcClure strait.\n\"If you consider a canoe as a\nvessel, then I guess I'd be the first,\"\nhe said. \"But there is no dpubt that\nthe American icebreakers were the\nfirst large ships to sail through.the\nstrait.\"\nUSED FOR THE FIRST TIME will be these removable walls in West Kootenay\nExhibition commercial display room in curling rink next week. When exhibition\ncloses, they will be stored in room! wider new ramp at West, end of arena. Booths\nare ready, \"seven days ahead of last-year,\" and giving finishing touches here are\nA. E. Blackwell, Jimmy Lowe and Fred Boatea of Civic staff.\u2014Daily News photo.\nWoman Diplomat\nArrested on\nSecurity Charges\n8YDNEY, Australia (Reuters)\n\u2014A vivacious French woman\ndiplomat has been arrested for\n\"grave\" security violations on evidence provided by Vladimir Pet.\nrov, former Russian Bpy chief In\nAustralia, It was announced here\nFriday.\nMme. Ro.se Mario Oilier, 46.\nyear-old widow with two sons,\nwas the first persons arrested as\na result of Petrov'i revelations\nbefore an Australian high com.\nmission.\nHer arrest at Noumea In the\nFrench colcfiy of New Caledonia\nwas announced by the high commission along with a statement\nfrom French ambassador to Australia Louis Roche.\nIn Paris, French officials revealed that Mme. Oilier iB already on\nthe way back to France by sea to\nface trial after being arrested at\nNoumea Aug. 22. They maintained\nthat she had only \"very secondary\"\ninformation in her possession as\nsecond secretary in the French embassy in Canberra.\nEVIDENCE DETAILS\nDetails of the evidence leading\nto Mme. Ollier's arrest were dis-\nclosed by royal commission secretary Ken Herde. It consisted of,\ntestimony by Petrov and his wife,\nEvdokia,-both of whom fled from\nthe Russian diplomatic.service last\nApril and sought asylum in Australia.\nPetrov said Mme. Oilier told him\nthe name of a ship carrying Australian arms aid for French forcel\nin Indochina at a meeting on\nChristmas Eve.\nNOT U8EFUL\nBoth the Petrovs testified that\nMme. Oilier was not a particularly\nuseful contact during the five years\nshe allegedly worked for Russia.\nMoscow's final estimate of her cam*\nin a cable to the embassy last February, oaying she had not furnished\n\"any information of interest.\"\nThe French ambassador's statement said Australian External,A*\nfairs Minister Richard G. Casey\npassed on a \"friendly warning''\nabout Mme. Ollier's activities last\nMay l'l. K said she was ordered to\nNew Caledonia pending further investigations and now will face trial\nin France.\nUBC ENROLMENT\n10,000 BY 1964\nVANCOUVER (CP) - In his annual report for the past academic\nyear, Dr. Norman MacKenzie today predicted that by 1964 the\nUniversity of British Colurhbia will\nhave an enrolment of 10,000.\nThe figure, based on recent school\npopulation studies, indicates that\nUBC may have 7000 under-graduates within the next five years.\nDr. MacKenzie said \"consider,\nable sums for capital development\nmust be made available . , . in the\nvery near future' if facilities are\nto keep pace with growing enrolment.\nHUNGARY, RUSSIA\nWIN EVENTS\nTURIN, Italy (AP) \u2014 Hungary\nand Russia each won two events\ntoday in the European swimming\nand diving championships to give\neast Europe 10 of the 11 titles so\nfar contested.\nGyorgy Scordas, 28-year-old Budapest office worker, won the 400-\nmetre men's freestyle in 4:38.8, setting a Hungarian record.\nWhile the Hungarian flag was\nstill flying, Scordas' countrywoman\nKatalin Szeoke, won the women's\n100-metre freestyle in 1:05.8.\nRussia won its victories in diving\nevents.\nRoman Brener took the men's\nthree-meter springboard title with\n153.25 points and Tatiana Karak-\nachjanz scored 79.96 points to win\nthe five-metre women's title.\nSentence 16-Year-Old\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Neil Young,\n16, who commandeered a taxi and\nfired four shots at a Chilliwack\ngarage operator was sentenced Friday to nine months definite and\none year indefinite in the young,\noffenders' unit at Oakalla Prison.\nHe pleaded guilty to two charges\nof carrying an offensive weapon.\nEvidence showed the youth fled\nfrom his home here following an\nargument with his parents, seized\nhis mother's .38 calibre revolver,\nhailed a taxi and forced the driver\nto take him to Chilliwack.\nC M & S Raises\nZinc Price\nMONTREAL <CP) \u2014 The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Co.\nof Canada Ltd., today increased tt$\nWholesale Bine price Ml ee-nt \u2022\npound, bringing prime western zte*\nto 11% cents a pound.\nThe move follows a similar pries\nincrease in the United States.\nGEN. DE CASTRIES\nIN PARIS\nPARI* (Reuters) \u2014 The release\nof Gen. Christian de Castries, herois\ndefender of the fortress of Dieft\nBien Phu, by the Vietminh Communist forces, was reported in Paris\nearly today.\nThe freeing of the hawk-nosed\ngeneral was reported from Hanoi\nin a dispatch by Agence France-\nPresse.\nDe Castries' release had been\npromised by the Communists in a\nprisoner exchange which began\nearly last week, but was delayed\nseveral times by the Vietminh.\nDivorcee Held for\nAttempted Murder\nDEVIZES, England (AP)\u2014A 40-\nyear-old divorcee today was ordered\nto stand trial on a charge of the\nattempted murder of Lord Vivian,\nLondon theatrical producer, after\nhe told a bedside court hearing he\ncould not believe now that she\nwanted to kill him.\nDrawn and pale, Lord Vivian was\npropped up with pillows to tell\nDevizes magistrates his version of\nhow he suffered severe abdominal\nand.wrist wounds the night of July\n30. Mrs. Mavis Wheeler, charged\nwith shooting with intent to murder and unlawfully wounding the\n48-year-old impresario, sat in an\narmchair a few feet away.\nLord Vivian's wife and son attended the hearing.\nDOLLAR  HIGHER\nNEW YORK (CP)-The Cana-\nHe was arrested by Chilliwack j dian dollar was 3-32 of a cent\nRCMP after firing four shots at a I higher at a premium of 3 1-32 per\ngarage operator while trying to get; cent in terms of U.S. funds today,\ngasoline for another car he had j Pound sterling up 1-16 of a cent\ncommandeered. ' at $2.80%.\nAnd in This Corner...\nVIENNA (AP)\u2014Gustav Haubert, convicted Australian embezzler,\nasked a Vienna Judge to let him serve his three-month Jail term\non an especially hard cot.\n\"Also reduce my meals to the barest minimum,\" he pleaded,\n\"I have decided to go Into a monastery after I leave Jail and I want\nto get In training.\"\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014Glenn C. Eller took advantage of police hos-:\npitality. Now he's serving a 10-day jail term. \u25a0'\u2022\nEller, 17, was one of the thousands who toured police facilities\nduring \"Know Your Police Week.\" Patrolman Scroggins noticed\nEller as he started to leave after a tour of a local station. In Eller's\npocket was a patrolman's night stick.\nPOCATELLO, Idaho (AP)\u2014Hailed Into court on a check-passing\ncharge, Ronald E. Sullivan waived preliminary hearing after arresting officers told Justice of the Peace Charles Hyde he was on parole\nfrom a forgery term at Washington's  McNeil  Island prison.\nHyde asked  If the defendant could supply $2000 bond.\n\"Sure,\" Sullivan  replied, \"I'll give you  a check.\"\nThe offer was refused. .1\n' '    \u25a0    '\u25a0   -'       \" ' \u2022' '    \" \u25a0'  ' '-\u2022\"\u25a0- \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0,.-.-\u25a0.   -\u25a0   V-....-.,    .   .-\u25a0\u25a0   ,:<\u25a0\n\u25a0\n\u25a0M\n\u25a0M\n \u00abP*PGfPP\u00abW!PWP\u00bb^\n2\u2014\u25bafELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 19S4\nLAST TIMES TODAY\u2014Complete Shows 2 - 7 r 9\nTHE GREATESt HUMAN\nDRAMA EVER TOLD!\nSUNDAY MIDNIGHT PREVIEW\nWILD, WICKED,\nWONDERFUL\nPARIS...\n...ail her loves,\nladies and tasty\nSTARLIGHT Drive-In\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\u2014Shows 8:00\u201410:00\nm joan Iawford\nvia? W \/     \/\n:<m .      (j.1; the woman who loves\nMutants sr\n* 1      HAYHFN '\u25a0 MrRAMRR\nTkUCOLOR   .\n10  MILES EAST  OF  NEL80N\nMONDAY and TUESDAY\nShows at 8:00 and 10:00\nQUEEN OF THE WILD MESABI!\nHERBERT J. YAlEi K- '\"i'-\nWOMAN OF THE\nNORTHCOUNTRY\n. .   TRUCOLORi,,^;,,,,.,\nRlllll       .    ,   HOD   - .   . . I0IIN MH.,   .\n\"-HUSSEY-CAMERON AGAR STORM\nX REPUBIIC PRODUCTION\"\nPlus 4 CARTOONS and  SHORTS\nFREE COKE WITH EVERY HOT DOG\n., i   \u25a0 \/\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0'. ; \"' \\ '\"'\nFour Parades Part of\nGala Highland Games\nminimum:\nAll Soars 60\u00ab\nTax Inc.\nNOTh Evening performance itart* at 6:30 on Monday,\nTiiMday and Wednesday\nBoon 6:00\nThree great\nlove stories\nin MG-M's\nspectacle!\nMUX)0ta\u00a3\u00abw\u00abI\n\u00bbpt\u00bbfcll\u00bbBJfa|l\nThe poigmat low tatf of .\npat Roroifl ind ths lim tU\n\u00abtop\u00abte lift fix bin.\nMlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSt,\nIN\nTHE HEART OF CASTLEGAR\nLast Times\nTonight\nHumphrey Bogart\nand  Kathirlna  Hepburn\nIn '\nAFRICAN QUEEN\"\nSHORTS\nShowing 8:10\u201410:10\nCARTOON\nGALA SUNDAY\nMIDNIGHT SHOW\nGates Open 12:01\nScarlet kilts will swirl and the\n\u2022klrl of tha bagpipes will be heard\nIn Nelson this weekend as the\ncity turns holt for a touch of\nScotland\u2014the 15th annual Highland Games.\nBands and dancers from as far\naway as   Edmonton  along  with\nTrail, Kimberley, and other district entries will be here for the\ngala competitions.\nFor those who love a parade, and\neveryone does, there will be three\nparades oh Monday, the day of the\ncompetitions, and one Sunday, followed by a band concert at Lake,\nside Park Sunday afternoon.\nBands will start arriving for the\ngrand Labor Day event Saturday\nFirst to arrive will be the Edmonton Girls Pipe Band and the Edmonton Boys' Pipe Band on the\nnoon train. They will parade from\nthe CPU station to the Canadian\nLegion.\nThey  will   be  followed   by   the\nKimberley Pipe Band later in the\nevening.\nBEACH PARTY\nAll bands and dancers in town\nSaturday night will attend a bang-\nup beach party at Taghum being\nsponsored by Kootenay Kiltie Pipe\nBand which sponsors the Highland\nGames.\nMonday three massed band parades will be held. The first at 9 a.m..\nthe second about 1 p.m. and the\nthird at 9:30 p.m. Six bands are\nexpected to participate.\nAnd over all the festivities and\ncolorful Scottish dancing, Fred\nDanyer will alt as Chieftain, appointed by Kootenay Kiltie Pipe\nBand  executive.  He  will  act at\nmaster of oeremonles and present\nprices.\nPrizes will be medals for all amateur dancing, drumming, and piping\nand cash prizes for open competitions. Bands will also get cash\nprizes and there will be a prize for\nthe youngest competitor.\nWhen the competitlops wind up\nthey w(ll be followed by a big\ndance in the Civlo Centre.\nProgram for Sunday and Monday\n(all times are approximate):\nSUNDAY\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Mass bind parade from\nHume School to Lakeside Park followed by a band concert.\nMONDAY\n9 a.m.\u2014Registration of contestants, massed band parade to Civic\nCentre Recreation Grounds.\n9:30 a.m.\u2014Dancing competitions.\n1 p.m.\u2014Giant massed band par\nade.\n2 p.m. \u2014 Opening ceremonies.\nMayor Joseph Kary has been asked\nto open the program.\n3:30 p.m. \u2014 Pipe band competitions, giving out prizes.\n9:30 p.m.\u2014Massed band parade to\nCivic Centre followed by dance.\nThe games' have been a Nelson\ntradition since 1921. according to\nField Marshal Ken Forbes, who is\nin charge of the competitions. He\nreminisced Friday night, recalling\nthat the games were first held sponsored by Clan McLeary, were\ndropped just before tha Second\nWorld War, and were picked up\nafter the -war. about 1947, by Kootenay Kiltie Pipe Band, which has\norganized them since.\n ,.,-, r~:m. ry- ^.\nColors Presented lo Legion Here;\nImprovements Made, Tourneys Next\nIt was presentation night at the\nCanadian Legion Thursday as the\nQuene's colors were presented.\nThere was as well a presentation\nto past president Norman Brown-\nChairman of the entertainment\ncommittee, Spence Newell, presented the Queen's colors to the branch\non behalf of the entertainment committee. Very Rev, T.-L. Leadbeater\nofficiated at the short ceremony\nwitnessed by 27 members of the\nbranch.\nReeve Harper, acting on behalf\nof the members of the branch, presented Norman Brown with the past\npresident's medal and a lapel pin\nin recognition of his work during\ntwo years he was president of the\nbranch.\nIt was announced that the next\nWest Kootenay Zone\/ Conference\nwould be held in Grand Forks Oc-\ntober 16-17. Delegates chosen were\nW. H. Burns, president, Jack Brind\nley, secretary-manager, and C. Y.\nHouse.\nTOURNAMENTS  800N\nSpence Newell reported that all\nThree-Day Extension . . .\nWednesday Is Deadline\nFor Exhibition Entries\nShow Starts 12:01\nMONDAY and TUESDAY\nShows at 8:10 \u201410:10\n\"Blackbeard the Pirate'\nStarring\nRobert Newton - Linda Darnell\n8HORT8 \u2014 CARTOON\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nThe deadline for entries In the\nWest Kootenay Exhibition, set for\ntoday, has been extended to Wednesday afternoon.\nThat means that Nelson and district residents will have up to the\nlast day before the big Exhibition\nto enter products of home and handicraft, farm and industry.\nEntrlei in the various competitive\nsections have come flooding Into\nthe Exhibition office in Civic Centre in the last day or two, and all\nsigns point to a record entry.\n\"It looks as If we'll go way over\nthe lop in entries if they keep\ncoming in at the present rate,\" Mrs.\nJ. C. Eckmier, secretary, said Friday.\nThe office will be open all day\ntoday, and on Monday, Labor Day.\nfrom 2 to 5 p.m.\nColor h\nTECHNICOLOR\n\u25a0TAftft!H\u00ab\nTaylor * Deborah Kerr\nLEO CENN end PETER USTINOV\nAUTO-VUE\nDRIVMN\nTRAIL,   B.C.\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT\n\"THE  GREAT  SIOUX\nUPRISING\"\nWith\nJeff Chandler -  Faith  Domerque\n'ROBINSON  CRUSOELAND\nStan   Laure!  -  Oliver  Hardy\nCARTOON\nAlso\nWith\nSchool opens officially Juesday,\nSeptember 7. This is usually a day\nfor registration of pupils and preparation for a full day of instruction\non Wednesday.\nAll schools in the Salmo-Ymir\narea will be in session on Tuesday.\nSeptember 7. Buses will operate on\nschedule. In the remainder of the\nschool district buses will not operate on September 7 as this day is\nrequired to complete new construction. All buses will operate on Wednesday, which will be a full day\nof Instruction.\nAll pupils entering grade one for\nI the first time who were not pre-\nregistered in June and all students\nI now to School District No. 7 (Neb\nwill   register  on  Tuesday   at\nfreaking   into   a   service   station 'the school which they will attend\nVafe    and     drive-In     snntjk     bar ' All   teachers  will   be  on  duly   on\nCharges have not yet bc^n laid.    ,7utf'iay.\nQuestion Juveniles\n\\ NORTH VANCOUVER (CP) -|\nTwo   Juveniles   were   being   ques-\n\u25a0 tioned  Friday in connection  with j\n\u25a0 the theft of $5000 worth of industrial diamonds from a drilling company   earlier   In   the   day.   RCMP j\n\u00a3fiaJd    the    youths    have    admitted; son)\nSchools fo Open\nTuesday Morning\nUnion Members to\nRally Here Today\nMembers of Nelson district labor\n''lions will meet in the Civic Centre\nill here today to hear federal and\n.ovincial government representa-\nves speak. In the evening they will\ns.ttend a dance.\nAmong speakers invited are Hon,\nW. D. Black, MLA for Nelson-Cres-\nton; Hon. Robert Sommers, MLA\nfor Rossland-Trail; H. W. Herridge,\nFederal MP for Kootenay West;\nLeo T. Nimslck, MLA for Cranbrook; James Byrne, MP for Kootenay East; Randolph Harding, MLA\nfor Kaslo-Slocan and Harvey Murphy, international representative of\nMine. Mill and Smelter Workers of\nAmerica.\nFUNERAL HELD\nFOR PROCTER MAN\nFuneral service for William Sokoloski, 34-year-old Procter man who\nwas killed in a mine accident at\nBralorne, was held at the Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate\" Friday morning, Rev, Father Monaghan officiated, and interment was in Nelson Memorial Park. There were\nmany floral tributes, and many\nfriends attended. Rosary was recited Friday evening at the Thompson Funeral Home.\nPallbearers were _ D. Hale, B.\nDonaldson, B. Parkins, K. McDonald, O. Bedard and C. Fitchett.\nThe Weather\nNELSON   76\nLethbridge     49\nCalgary     46\nEdmonton'   46\nDOCTORS TO  VISIT  80VIETS\nLONDON (AP) -Nineteen British' Kimberley         46\ndoctors left London by air for a j Crescent Valley     45   62   .01\nthree-week visit to Russia Friday\nThe trip is sponsored by the British Society for Cultural \"Relations\nwith the U.S.S.R.\nKaslo  ' SO 68 .22\nGrand Forks     50 S6 .01\nKamloops'      51 63 .02\nPenticton        55 71 .06\n6\u00bbt. g>atmmr-0 Prn-CHatljp&ral\nDean\n(ANGLICAN)\nThomas L   Leadbeater,\nD.D\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n9;2(1 a.m -Willow   Point    (Mattins.)\n11:00 a.m.\u2014 Holy  Communion\n7.20 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer.\nCify Power Plant\nWorker Dies, 49\nKnud Kristian Christiansen, an\nemployee of the City power plant\nat Upper Bonnington, died Thursday night at Kootenay Lake General Hospital. He was 49 years old.\nBorn in Copenhagen, Denmark,\nhe emigrated to England and lived\nthere for a short time before coming\nto Canada at the age of 22. He came\nto Nelson almost immediately, and\nworked for the late A. H. Green,\ncontractor, and the Powell Lumber\nCompany. He had been an operator\nat the city plant for the last 13\nyears, and made his home there.\nHe married the former\" Elsie\nHawes of Nelson September 9, 1939.\nHe was a member of the old Nelson\nStamp Club and Nelson football\nteam, and besides his interest in\nphilately and sports, he was a hort\niculture enthusiast.\nSurviving him are his wife, one\nson Bryce, at home; his father, bbe\nChristiansen, in Copenhagen; two\nbrothers', General Obe Jortz and\nHolga Christiansen, both in Copenhagen, and one sister, Mrs. Elizabeth\nAndersen of Veljle, Denmark.\nNine Enter\nBrewery (up\nTournament\nNine women will tee off on Nelson Golf and Country Club greens\nSaturday seeking the Brewery Cup.\nThe annual Labor Day tournament\nwill last through Monday.\nLast year's champion Mary Jur-\niloff, now living In Calgary, will\nnot be on the green to defend her\ntitle.\nSaturday (first draw)\u2014Mr\u00bb. L. S.\nBradley vs. Miss Dorothy Wallace.\nSunday, 10:30 a.m.\u2014Miss Nora\nWoods vs winner of Bradley and\nWallace. 10:35\u2014Miss Betty Freeman vs. Mrs. Bernlce Hesketh;\n10:40\u2014Mfss Joan Sutcllff vs. Mrs.\nK. McGregor; 10:45\u2014Mrs. Garland\nvs. Miss Joan Russell.\nwork authorized to be done at thel\nlast general meeting has been convT\npleted with the reading room readyB\nfor occupation, the storeroom cowf\npleted and the bowling alley; read\u2122\nfor use. New linoleum hat bean\nlaid in the dart room and the llghtfl\nimproved.\nOn the entertainment front, it iJ\nexpected that the dart, cribbagel\nsnooker and billiard tournamentf\nwill get under way shortly.\nA dance Is to be held SeptembeiB\n17 with the admission being a boaT\"\nlunch provided by the ladies. Thes|\nwill be raffled off during the couru\nof the evening.\nThe Legion .smoker will be hel<j|\naround  the  seventh  of Novemb\u00ab\nwith the annual Remembrance Dad\nbanquet taking place on the llthl\nThe question of television for thf\nLegion was again raised and it wai\ndecided to let the executive loolj\ninto the matter regarding cost ana\nreporting back at the next generaj\nmeeting.\nA letter from the Red Cross Sol\nclety thanking the Legion memberl\nfor their aid with the blood donor|\nclinic was read.\nPHONE 889\nTov\/ler Fuel\n& Transfer\nSTARTED YOUNG\nDon Pedro CaMeron, 17th-century\nSpanish dramatist, produced his\nfirst play at age 13,\nInstructor Sought\nFor Flying Club\nPlans to open a West Kootenay\nFlying Club have bogged down\nwhile the group looks for a qualified instructor.\nA trained instructor who could\nsupply two training planes, is what\nthe organizing group is seeking.\nThe group, with G. F. LeFlufy\nof Trail. Ralph West of Castlegar\nand Henry Stevenson of Nelson,\nrepresenting their areas, will look\nfor an instructor during the winter\nmonths and hope to open the club\nin the spring. Centrally\" located\nCastlegar (Ralph West) airport will\nbe the training field.\nSome applications to join the\nclub have been received, Mr. West\nexplained, and \"we could have lots\nmore members\" had an instructor\nbeen available.\nOne instructor had been considered but had only one plane, Mr.\nWest said.\nThe club, when organized, will\nbe open to anyone interested in\nlearning to fly. Lessons would include 30 hours' flying time -at the\nend of which, the student should\nbe ready for his pilot's test.\nREV. US. VAN MOSSEL . . .\nwill preach his last sermon at\nFirst Presbyterian Church here\nSunday. He Is leaving Nelson for\n8askatoon where he will become\nminister for Parkview Presbyterian  Church  Sept,  12.\nEnrollment Too\nLow for Business\nCollege Here\nA Trail business college that in\ntended to open a Nelson branch this\nFall, changed its mind Friday when\ntoo few applications were received.\nThe college, Cook's Business College, had planned to open a permanent college on Baker Street\nhere with one complete course giv\nen each year.\nE. Cook, who took applications\nfor three days in the lobby of the\nHume Hotel, said \"insufficient enrolment will keep us from opening\nthis year, but we will try again as\nwe hope to establish here.\"\nThe college would have been a\nbranch of Trail Business College\nestablished in 1934. Mr. Cook felt,\nin setting up a college here, it\nwould have \"filled a need of the\nNelson  district.\"\niiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil\nART NEEDLEWORK]\nBY  \"PENELOPE\"\n\u2022 PETIT POINT\n\u2022 NEEDLE  POINT\n\u2022 EMBROIDERY\n\u2022 8TAMPED CLOTHS, eto.\n\u2022 TRANSFERS\n\u2022 JEWELLERY   FINDINGS\nHobby House\n542 Baker St Phona 1792\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll|\nTHREE\nGABLES 4\nHOTEL\nPenticron, B.C.\nModern, Comfortable\nAccommodation at\nReasonable Rates\nBEDROOMS WITHOUT  BATH |\nSingle $3.00 - Double $4.00\nWITH   BATH\nSingle  $4.00   -   Double  $6.00\nTwin  Beds and  Bath $6.50\nCoffee Shop\u2014Free Parking I\nVariety Nire\nTONITE\nWestern and Modern Tunes\nFeaturing the Popular\nCALL\n1106\nUnited Trucking & Storage Ltd.\nSTANLEY ST., NELSON, B. C.\nDAILY   FREIGHT\nFRUITVALE\nNELSON  - CASTLEGAR\nSERVICE TO\nSALMO\nTHAU,  \u2022   ROSSLAND\n-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0   \u25a0    '-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0\nJ\n \t\n__      __   _     .        , __       _       .       .\u2014.\u2014\n'^HS\nGala Labor Day Weekend\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4,| 1954\u20143\nOldest in Scotland, the University\nOf St. Andrews was founded in 1411.\nG. H. JONG\nlehlnen Herb Remedied\nFor All Ailments\nJ40 YEARS' EXPERIENCE IN CANADA\nCorner 6th Ave. and lit 8t I,\nCalgary \t\nA   TREAT   FOR   YOU\nAND  YOUR   FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelson\nSAFE MOVING\nis a SCIENCE!\nLet our trained, courteous,\nprofessional movers \"take the\nload off your mind!\" Tour\nfinest furniture, dishes and\nother possessions will be\nscientifically packed and\nhandled with the utmost tare.\nPhone for estimate.\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 33\nrrrfF\nAnnounced at Fair Opening . . .\nChampion Lake To Be\nDeveloped Next Year\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Announcement\nthat Champion Lake, near here,\nwill be developed next year as a\nrecreation spot, was made by Hon.\nR. E. Sommers, Rossland-Trail MLA\nand minister of mines, lands and\nforests, as he opened the 40th annual Fruitvale Fall Fair.\nThe first step will be the building\nof a good road to the lake, and\nthen the B. C. Forest Service will\ndevelop the site into a picnic playground, the minister said. The local\nRatepayers' Association has been\nurging the development of the site\nfor years.\nMr. Sommers, introduced by\nCarleton Haines, chairman of Fruit-\nvale's Village Commission, spoke on\nthe   important  role   fairs  play  in\nPost Office\nTenders fo Be\nCalled This Year\nTRAIL\u2014Tenders for Trail's new\nfederal government building likely\nwill be called before the end of this\nyear. This would provide a start on\nconstruction next spring.\nPaul Smith, local architect, has\nreceived sketch plans for the building which have been approved by\nthe various departments which will\noccupy it. He has been instructed\nto proceed with the working drawings as soon as possible.\nMr. Smith estimates that there ii\nat least three months' work'on the\nplans before tenders can be called.\nThe building will be erected on\nthe corner of Spokane Street and\nPine 'Avenue, immediately across\nfrom the city hall. It will contain\napproximately 29,000 square' feet of\nfloor space on two floors and the\nbasement.\nMain entrance is to be off Spokane Street, with a lane behind the\nbuilding between Pine Avenue and\nthe present lane. This will lead to\na covered unloading area for the\npost office.\nThe basement is to contain 10,000\nsquare feet of floor space. It will\nhouse the unemployment insurance\ncommission office, public works and\na lunchroom.\nFirst floor will have 11,300 square\nfeet. K will project over the truck\nloading area. On this floor will be\nthe public post office space, a night\nlock box lobby, post office work\narea and the postmaster's office.\nThe second floor, with 7400 square\nfeet, will provide for the customs\noffice, a reserved area and janitor's\napartment.\nA call\nto remember\nThere i\u00ab no more wholesome and pleas.\ning drink than good Scotch Whisky\nand  there is no finer  Scotch than\n\"Black  & White\".  Blended in the\nspecial \"Black & White\" way it is\nScotch at its best. Remember to ask\nfor \"Black & White\" next time you\ncall for Scotch.\n'  BUCHANAN'S\nBLACK&WHITE\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nDhe SecldiS in tAe Blending\nBy Appointment\nto ths lata King Goerge VI\nScotch Whiiky Oilfillers\nJames Buchanan & Co. Ltd.\nDistilled,  Blended  and  Bottled   in  Scotland\ncommunity life, and the interest\nthat their competitive aspects fostered.\nAttendance was poor at the fair\noperiing, partly owing to the weather, and partly because\" many\nFruitvale people were at work, but\nis expected to pick up today.\nENTRIES DOWN\nEntries this year are about one-\nfourth of what they generally are\nin practically every department.\nDisplays are in the old school.\nDisappointment at the lack of interest was expressed by Douglas\nKnowler, Farmers' Institute secretary, in his remarks at the Fair\nopening ceremonies.\nA midget ball game was played in\nthe afternoon at recreation park,\nand the first game of the six-team\njunior baseball tournament was\nplayed between Rossland and Fruitvale. ,\nFruitvale girls, pupils of Mrs.\nShaw of Trail, performed excellent\nHighland dancing.\nA dance at night was well attended.\nToday's events will be highlighted\nby the crowning of the Fair queen\nin the afternoon. The ball tournament will continue, and there will\nbe boxing and wrestling matches.\nAnother dance is scheduled for\nLabor Day.\nW. G. Meinardus\nDies in Slocan\nNEW DENVER\u2014William George\nMeinardus, a long-time resident of\nNew Denver, died at his home here\nThursday night He was in hjs 82nd\nyear.\nBorn at Sparrow Lake, Ont., he\nhad lived in this province since\n1912.\nSurviving him are seven sisters,\nMrs. Miles O'Reilly, Miss Lena\nMeinardus and Miss Erna Meinardus in New Denver; Mrs. B. Y.\nMcBride and Mrs. T. G, Hill in\nBracebridge, Ont.; Mrs. H. G. Reilly\nin Atlanta, Ga., and Mrs. C. L.\nWemp in Ferndale, Wash.\nPrivate funeral service will be\nheld here. Sunday.\nFun-Pocked, Three-Day Celebrations\nStart1 Today for Kinnaird, Fernie\nLabor Day celebrations and fairs will hold sway this\nholiday Weekend in a dozen Kootenay-Boundary cities,\ntowns and hamlets.\nIf the weather is bright, it will be one of the biggest\ncelebration weekends for years, with 'combined attendance\nreaching well into the thous-\nWoman, 29, Dead\nAl Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Mrs. Edna Mildred Jensen, age 29. of 400 Lindsay\nStreet, Lower Blarchmont, was\nfound dead of a gunshot wound\nabout  4 p.m.  on Thursday.\nThe body was found* in a bedroom\nof her home by her husband, Jens\nNicholas Jensen, when he came\nhome from work.\nAn inquest was opened Friday\nand adjourned after viewing of the\nbody.\nCastlegar Fair\nPlans Advanced\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Plans for the\neighth annual Castlegar and District Fall Fair, to be held at the\nCoronation hall September 17 and\n18, were furthered at a meeting in\nthe Legion hall. All preparations\nfor the annual highlight of the Fall\nseason, sponsored by the Canadian\nLegion branch and its Ladies' Auxiliary, are progressing satisfactorily.\nFall Fair booklets have been distributed and are available at most\ndistrict stores.\nThe challenge and memento cups\nwhich are awarded annually to top\nexhibitors at the Fair, will be on\ndisplay soon as well as donated\narticles.\nCONTENTS 1614 OUNCES\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nDuke Sampled\nKaslo Cherries\nKASLO \u2014 Kaslo cherries, out:\nstanding for their size and flavor,\ndelighted His Royal Highness, the\nDuke of Edinburgh, when he visited\nVictoria during his re'eent tour of\nCanada.\nThey \"were sent to the capital by\nCapt. G. A. West of Shutty Bench,\nand an acknowledgement of the gift\nhas been received from Government House. The letter from J. G.\nCromack, secretary, reads, In part:\n\"Coincidental with the commencement of the luncheon at Government House for His Royal Highness,\na crate of very beautiful cherries\nwas delivered . . . from Silver\nHeights   Cherry   Orchards,   Kaslo.\n\"The cherries were served at the\nluncheon, their flavor and texture\nbeing admired and enjoyed by His\nRoyal Highness and all present.\n\"The Lieutenant-Governor and\nMrs. Wallace keenly appreciate your\nkind thought and generous gift.\nThey send their warmest thanks.\"\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nands.\nThe major focal point of attention\nwill be Fernie, which is celebrating\nthe 50th anniversary of Its incorporation as a city, in addition to its\nannual Labor Day events. <\nFernie's big \"do\" starts tonight\nwhen 100 pioneers will be guests of\nthe city at a reunion dinner. They\nwill be people who lived in Fernie\nbefore its incorporation. Sunday\npreliminaries in giant baseball and\nfootball tournaments will start, and\nan amateur boxing card is in store\nfor Sunday night, with the Fernie\nLegion Band in attendance.\nExpectations for Monday's par-\nade of floats and other decorated\nvehicles, are that it will be the best\nyet. It will precede the annual soap\nbox derby, and later semi-finals\nand finals of the baseball and football tournaments will be held, along\nwith sports events. A band concert,\nfireworks display will also take\nplace, and dances and carnivals will\nalso be part of the celebrations.\nCRANBROOK RODEO\nCranbrook Lions' Club fifth an\nnual rodeo in Moir Park at Cran\nbrook Labor Day has attracted a\ngalaxy of chuckwagon racers, rid-\ners, steer decorators and other cowboy performers in the championship\nclass.\nNo fewer than eight chuck\nwagon outfits from Alberta and the\nUnited States will be on hand, and\nthe East Kootenay's Gordon Earl\nNorth American all-round champion\ncowboy, will fly in from riding en\ngagements in the States to compete\nfor some of the $1200 prize money.\nOther rodeo features will be a\nchuckwagon dinner, a jamboree to\nnight, and a cowboy ball Labor Day\nnight at which trophies will be presented.\nAt Golden Sunday and Monday,\nball teams from Revelstoke, Kimberley, Windermere, Edgewater,\nNorthern Construction and Golden will compete In a tournament\nfor $200 first, $100 second and $50\nthird-place prize money. The\nKinsmen Club Is sponsoring the\ntournament, and Golden Rod and\nGun Club will sponsor a barbecue. There will also be a mid\nnight frolic.\nPROCTER  SHOW\nProcter Labor Day will hold its\nlong-promised carnival, combined\nwith a flower show and tea, and a\ndance at night, all under sponsor\nship of the Procter Community Hall\nSociety, in its drive for funds for\na new hall floor.\nThe flower show, the first endeavor of its kind, will be an annual\nevent if it is a success. The carni\nval will feature side shows, con\ntests, refreshment booths and fun\nfor all ages.\nLabor Day sports have long been\nheld at Slocan' City, and will. be\nagain Monday, but under the new\nsponsorship of the Kinsmen Club.\nIn addition to children's and adult\nsports, a costume parade, amateur\nwater skiing, senior and Little\nLeague baseball and women's soft-\nball and a horseshoe tournament,\na 28-piece band will entertain the\ncrowd. There will be a 'wind-up\ndance at night.\nSalmo Knights of Pythias will\nagain sponsor Labor Day celebrations in their town. Sports events\nand men's and women's ball tournaments will draw holidayers to the\ngrounds.\nChildren's sports will be held\nfrom 9 to 11 a.m.\nThe Softball games will start at\n9:30 when Sunningdale will play\nWest Trail in women's; 11:00\u2014Salmo vs Shaver's Bench (women's);\n11:00\u2014Passmore vs Trail (men);\n12:30\u2014Salmo vs. Nelson Transfer\n(men); 12:30\u2014Nelson Royals vs\nRossland Royals (women's). The\nwomen's final will be played at\n3:30, and the men's final at 2 p.m.,\nand the men's semi-final at 5 p.m.\nSix men's softball teams are entered in the softball tournament\nthat is to be the main event at\nthe three-day Labor Day celebration af the Kinnaird park. Entries\nare also coming in steadily from\nall parts of the area for the $100\nhorseshoe tournament that will be\nanother feature of the celebration.\nThe fun-test begins thjis afternoon. At 3 p.m. the Montrose soft-\nball team meets the Castlegar Junior Cubs in the opening game of\nthe $250 softball tourney. Following this contest, Castlegar All-Stars,\ncoached by Cyril Bell, will meet\nthe Crown Point Hotel team from\nTrail. There will be a novelty attraction tonight, along with the\nvaried midway, in the form of an\noutdoor \"jitney\" dance at the park.\nMusic will be supplied for this\nevent by Ted Gergley's orchestra\nfrom Castlegar.\nSunday afternoon, the $100 horseshoe tournament will get underway\nat 1 p.m. At 3 p.m. the third game\nof the softball tournament will begin with Kinnaird Aces pitting\ntheir softball prowess against Tor-\nrison's D Shift team from Trail. The\nthree winning teams will then participate in a draw to determine\nwhich of the three will have the\nbye into the final. The other two\nChides Senator ....\nTrade Board Feels\nPass Not \"Unsound\"\nWindermere Board of Trade has to   Revelstoke,  including   the   pos-\nteams will then play the semi-final\ngame.\nA program of children's races will\nbe the opening event Labor Day\nfrom 9:30 to 1 p.m., after .which\nwill be the finals of the horseshoe\ntournament. The softball tournament final will begin at 3 p.m.'and\nwill be a nine-inning affair. The\nprevious games will all be seven-\ninning tilts.\nA major attraction Monday afternoon will be a band and variety\nconcert by the Trail Maple Leaf\nBand and the midway, lunch\ncounters, and children's rides- will\nalso be in operation.\nThe three big days will come to\na close Monday night with a Labor\nDay ball in the Kinnaird Improvement Society hall.\nThe weekend is being sponsored\nby the Kinnaird Athletic Association. Members of this organization\nare rushing to completion the various booths and stands needed and\nhave taken steps to ensure there\nwill be lots of parking space for\nalmost any number of cars. Dust,\nusually a problem at big celebrations, will not be a problem here,\nKAA executive officers say, The j\nball field has received extensive\nimprovements and will be in top\ncondition. Neutral umpires have\nbeen secured for the games. A\nbandstand, which the Association\nhas constructed? for the band and\nvariety concert Monday and the\njitney dance Saturday, is to become\na permanent fixture  at the park\nIn Trail, a Labor Day sports\nprogram sponsored by the Trail\nAthletic Association will be held\nfor youngsters under 15, with parades, races and contests. Points\nwill be awarded to winning children representing playgrounds,\nand at the end of the day points\nwill be tabulated and one playground will be declared champion of the year, receiving the\nTAA trophy.\nIce cream, pop and other treats\nwill be given to  every child attending.\nTRACK  MEET\nA day-long program of sports\nevents has been lined up to make\nRossland's first Labor Day celebration in many years an. outstanding\nsuccess.\nThe big day will open with a\nchildren's costume and bicycle parade led by the city band to the\nball park, where track and field\nevents will get under way. This\npart of the program will be divided\ninto three sections, with races for\nchildren up to 12 years, junior track\nevents for the 12 to 15 year olds,\nand open events for 16 years and\nover. These open events will take\nthe form of an official meet, with\ntimes and distances being recorded\nand silver and bronze medals\nawarded to winners of the top three\nplaces. Track teams are expected\nfrom Nelson, Trail, Grand Forks\nand several other Kootenay centres.\nThe afternoon will feature a program of novelty sports for adults,\nincluding log sawing, log chopping,\nhorseshoe pitching and tug of war.\nOf interest to ball fans will be\nthe games to be played by the Rossland Midget All Stars against Trail\nMidget All Stars, and the Rossland\nJunior Capilanos against Fruitvale\nJuniors.\nRefreshment booths and concessions will be open at the ball park\nthroughout the day, and the city\nband will be on hand to supply the\nmusic.\nA lacrosse game featuring B. C.'s\ntwo best teams has been arranged\nfor the evening, when the Rossland\nRedmen will tangle with the Nanaimo Jets. The third game in the\nB. C. finals is scheduled for Monday night, but should the series not\ngo the full three games, the same\nteams will play an exhibition game.\nTo complete the day's activities,\na monster dance will be held at\nnight in Mine-Mill hall.\nRossland's Labor Day is a real\ncommunity effort, with all the organizations co-operating in planning and handling the events.\nResidents of the Arrow Lakes\ndistrict will converge on Arrow\nPark today for its Agricultural Society annual fair, and Labor Day\nEdgewood's annual Fall fair will\nhold sway in Legion hall there,\nchildren's sports, log sawing and\nscaling contests and a midway being principal features.\nPLANE RIDES\nIn the Boundary country, the big\nevent will be Greenwood's Labor\nDay celebration. There will be races\nof all kinds, a spectacular fireworks\ndisplay and dance at night, and the\nPenticton City Band will lead a 1\np.m. parade and give performances\nthroughout the day.\nA special attraction will be plane\nrides from Greenwood's new landing field. The library will be\nopened, and historic pictures of\nPhoenix and Greenwood will be\ndisplayed.\nobjected to a criticism of the Jumbo\nPass^ as an alternate route for the\nTrans-Canada Highway.\nIn a letter to Senator James H.\nKing of Victoria the Board chides\nhim for saying in an Edmonton\nJournal quote that the route was\n\"unsound\".\nThe Board points out that the\nproposed tunnel to pierce the summit of the pass should not dismay\nhim, \"for there are many mountain\ntunnels in the world both for roads\nand railroads.\"\nThey  point  out  to  the  Senator\nsible mile-long tunnel, will be com\nparable to the per-mile costs of\nconstruction being incurred by way\nof the Kicking Horse Pass.\"\nThe Board also maintains \"snow-\nremoval- savings will be considerable.\"\nOnly qualified persons who have\nbeen through the pass, the letter\nstates, since the route has been\nconsidered as a Trans-Canada possibility, are District Engineer of the\nDepartment of Public Works R. F.\nMurfitt of Golden and civil engineer\nat Nelson Boyd C. Affleck, both of\nRobson Group to     . ..\nHold Play School        |\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 A suggestion^\nthat a play school be opened Sep-jj\ntember 14 was made at the monthly;\nmeeting of the Robson Community\nCo-operative Play School Assocla^\ntion at the home of Mrs. Fowler, j\nTo raise money for equipment ref\nplacements and supplies, the group*\ndecided to hold a children's and\nmothers' tea with a bake table anrf\nfish pond some time this month. }\nthat the \"original per-mile cost of . wnom walked through the pass last\nthe Jumbo Pass route from Banff\nNew (ominco Post\nFor J. H. Sailer\nSeptember. Mr. Murfitt's report to\nthe Minister of Public Works did\nnot describe the pass as \"unsound\",\nand, \"if it had, the department\nwould scarcely be sending a top\nengineer to make a reconnaissance\nthis year.\" Mr. Affleck's report described the pass as \"very promising,\" the Board explained to the\nSenator.\n\"We know that you will agree\nthat the possible routes for the\nTrans-Canada Highway through\nBritish Columbia must be carefully\nexamined by qualified personnel\nwhose, decisions must be presented\nto the people of Canada without\nbecoming enmeshed in prejudiced\npronouncements and enshrouded by\ncareless, unsubstantiated statements\nof opinion,\" the Board said in its\nletter.\n\"\u00bb\nGRAVE  DECORATION\nA turban cut in stone, symbol of\nthe Moslem faith, is usually found\non graves in Moslem countries.\nVancouver\n(From  Castlegar)\n2 Hrs. 20 Mini.\n$45\"25\nRETURN\n(17-Day Limit)\nPHONE  204\nCanadian 0cuU(te\nAIRLINES\n4 coHmaos at a aMHimrna b\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIKIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMII\nWelcome Canadians\nFRIENDLY\n*v\\\nCO\n^\nHOTEL\nRoomt With Bath $3.00   $3.50\nWithout Bath $2.00   $2.50\nSpokane W. 213 Riverside\niiumimniiiii imniiiiiiimimmu\nJ. H. SALTER\nTRAIL\u2014The appointment of J. H.\nSalter to the newly-created position\nof general superintendent, chemicals and fertilizers division, was\nannounced Friday by R. D. Perry,\ngeneral manager of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company\nof Canada, Ltd. In his new position,\nMr. Salter is directly responsible\nto the manager of the division,\nE. A. G. Colls:\nIn making this announcement,\nMr. Perry stressed the remarkable\ngrowth which has occurred in this\npart of the company's business over\nthe past few years. Plants are now\nin operation at Trail, Kimberley\nand Calgary which turn out more\nthan 700,000 tons annually of high\nstrength chemical fertilizers, and\nplans for expansion are under\nactive review.\nMr. Salter was born in Woodstock, Ont. He attended the University of Toronto where he obtained his B.A.Sc. degree in metallurgical engineering in 1934. He\nstarted with Cominco at Trail in\nJhat year, first on the smelter yard\ngang. Following service as a junior\nanalytical chemist, Mr. Salter became a junior research engineer.\nDuring the war years he worked on\nseveral chemical and metallurgical\nprojects, including the heavy water\nplant. In 1946 he became assistant\nto the manager of the personnel\ndivision. In 1949, he was named\nassistant manager of the division,\nand two years later was appointed\nadministrative assistant, the post he'\nhas held until the present time.\nMr. Salter is a member of the\nAssociation of Professional Engineers of B.C. and the Canadian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy.\nCommunity work at Trail has included the Chamber of Commerce\nand service on the Trail-Tadanac\nBoard of Park Commissioners. He\nis married and has two daughters\nand lives in T;nnnnc.\nATTENTION\nALL WEST KOOTENAY UNION MEN AND WOMEN\nLABOR\nRALLY-DANCE\nNelson Civic Centre\nTONIGHT, Sept. 4th\nRALLY 2 P.M. \u2014\nSpeakers Invited are: Hon. W. D. Blalk, Hon, Robert Sommers,\nFederal  MP Herrldge,  MLA  Leo  Nimslck, Federal   MP James\nByrne, Randolph Harding, MLA, Harvey Murphy.\nThere will also be several speakers from organized labor.\nBIG DANCE STARTS AT 9 P.M. \u2014\nPrloe 60c Per Person. Good Music and Plenty of Refreshments.\nYou Are Cordially Invited To Attend a\nPUBLIC MEETING\nSponsored by the\nNelson BahaVs\nSILVER ROOM, HUME HOTEL\nON TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7th, 1954\nAt 8:15 p.m.\nSUBJECT:\n\"ONE GOD, ONE  RELIGION\"\nSPEAKER: ,\nMRS. FLORENCE MAYBERRY\nof Santa Paula, California\n8COTTI8H BARD\nRobert Burns, the Scottish poet,\nwas only 37 and broken in health,\nwhen he died in 1796.\nNELSON DISTRICT\nSCHOOL OPENING\nSALMO-YMIR AREA\nSEPTEMBER 7\u2014School buses will operate on schedule for both secondary\nand elementary pupils.\nNELSON AREA\nSEPTEMBER 7\u2014School buses will NOT'operate on this day for pupils of\nNelson City Schools, Willow Point, Balfour, Harrop, Procter, Bonnington.\nSEPTEMBER 8\u2014School buses will operate on schedule for all schools in\nDistrict No. 7.\nRegistration of New Pupils\nPupils new to this School District are to register on Tuesday, Sept. 7,\nat the school which they will attend. All pupils entering grade one who\nhave not been preregistered should register on Tuesday. <\nJ. S. LIVINGSTONE,\nSec't'y-Treasurer, S.D.  No. 7,\nNelson, B.C.\n \u25a0^.:-v ,\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,.,     '.;  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.-:..,,. \u25a0'!\u25a0\u25a0,;\u25a0 -..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0      .'       \u25a0        . 1 ! ' ' ! * '\n\u25a0   \"'\u25a0I'  '      '.\n\u2022\n^::'.''':'-;',,'.'v':1;\"--r.'\n. \"    \u2022   \u25a0\n\u00a31\nyih\nmmi\nJtomt lathi Jfows\n. Established April 22. IUU2\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n3R8 Bilker Street.  Nelson.  British  Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail.\nPost Office Department. Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nSaturday, Sept. 4, 19S4\nW.ill You Survive\nThe Holiday?\nOne Canadian will be killed In a\ntraffic accident every two hours\n'round-the-clock over the Labor Day\nweekend, according to a forecast by\nthe All Canada Insurance Federation.\nThe Federation says chances of highway accidents are greater in good\nweather and during daylight hours\nthan at night or in poor weather. The\nreason, they said, is that most accidents are caused by carelessness \u2014\noften because motorists are lulled into\na feeling of false security when driving\nconditions are favorable.\nHere are this holiday weekend's\ndriving dangers:\n1. Most accidents occur because a\ndriver does not see what js coming\u2014or\nbecause he sees it too late.\n2. The average driver requires about\nthree-quarters of a second to move\nhis foot from the accelerator to the\nbrake, an operation which takes up\nmore than one-third of his stopping\ndurtanca at 40 miles per hour. At 30\nmiles per hour, the minimum stopping\ndiitance is 73 feet\u2014at 50 miles per\nhour, 160 feet.\n3. Most accidents involve drivers of\nfive or more years' experience.\n4. The majority of traffic accidents\noccur on straight roads.\n5. The force of impact with a fixed\nobject at 40 miles per hour is the same\nas if a car had fallen from the top of a\nfour-storey building,\nBetty's Weekly Letter to:\nDear Jane:\nIn this day of, expecting much, It was\na treat to sread in the \"News, about Mrs.\nStangherlin. Mrs. Stangher\/in has told the\nCity Council that she is willing to do the\nwork if they will supply the material. She,\n\"with the help of friends and neighbors, is\ngoing to lay a conciete sidewalk . . . according to City measuiements and standards.\"\nSomeway that takes me back to the time\nof the quilting bees, and the barn-raisers; to\nthe days when schools, churches and community halls were built by community effort;\nwhen we didn't expect to have everything\ndone for us.\nIt's easy to lose this spirit in the efficiency\nof bulldozers, cats and tractors. The pendulum\nteems to have swung far over. But I for one\ngot \u00bb nice warm feeling when I read about\nMrs. Stangherlin, and I wondered if that old\npendulum might be heading back the other\nway again.\nIt's bad enough to picture ourselves about\n1084, products of the car age, as flat-bottomed,\nbroad-beamed and spindly-legged creatures.'\nCan't bear to think of how we will look if\nwe insist on \u2022 spoon-fed age.\n*.      *      *\nDo you think, Jane, there is the barest\npossibility that we might be playing this game\nof hospitality to royalty just the wee-eat bit\ntoo heavily . . , the luxury air-liner, the\nluxury coach, the two floors of a luxury hotel,\nthe \"pastel mink cape from the Canadian\nFederation of Mayors and Municipalities . . .\nOfficials refused to say how much It cost.\"\nJust so I won't be too prejudiced, I'm trying\nnot to look at my own moth-eaten fur piece.\n. *      *      *\nI wonder why It is, at a time when\naccording to our press \"Alcoholics cost U.S.\nindustry more than one billion dollars a year,\"\nand when \"Alcohol makes wrecks of homes\nand lives,\" why we still consider It. mid-\nVictorian, prudish, and even outlandish, If\nanyone injects the little thought that the\n. really smart way to get at the root of this\nnational calamity would be to leave the stuff\nalone in the first place.\n*      *      *\nAnd does your heart ache just a little\nbit for France these days, Jane? Do you\nthink we should call her too many names\nbecause she doesn't want Germany re-armed?\nAfter all, we have helped Germany re-arm\nbefore, and while it may not be so hard for\nus to forget what happened then, it must be\nvery hard for the French to forget ... the\nFrench who have been Invaded by the Germans three times in the past 80 years.\nBETTY BLYTHE.\nTo Build and Destroy\nI watched  them  tearing  a  building\ndown,\nA gang of men in a busy town;\nWith a ho-heave-ho and a lusty yell\nThey swung a beam, and the side wall\nfell,\nI asked the foreman, \"Are these men\nskilled,\nThe men you would hire if you had\nto build?\"\nHe gave a laugh and said, \"No, indeed!\nJust common labor is all I need.\nI can easily wreck in a day or two,\nWhat builders have taken a year to\ndo.\"\nI thought to myself as I went my way,\nWhich of these roles have I tried to\nplay?\nAm I a builder who works with care,\nMeasuring life by the rule and square?\nAm I shaping my deeds to a well-made\nplan,\nPatiently doing the best I can?\nOr am I a wrecker, who walks the\ntown\nContent   with   the   labor  of   tearing\ndown? ,,\n\u2014Unknown.\nPress Comment\n'STRANGER THAN SCIENCE\nIn Oklahoma the state mental health director has discovered that He detectors Just\ndon't work on full-blooded Indians. Maybe the\nIndians, poor, benighted fellows, were just\ntelling the truth. Truth may be stranger than\nscience.\u2014Vancouver Province.\nDEPRECIATES ROBBERY\nCriminals no doubt will have noticed that\nCommissioner Nicholson of the RCMP is proving himself a fine marksman In Blsley shooting. It's getting so that robbing a bank seems\nhardly worth the risk\u2014Ottawa Journal.\nROAD TO  OTTAWA\nWe can't help wondering how the American tourists feel when they drive over a road\nsuch as the highway connecting Johnstown\nand Ottawa, and realize that this bumpy cow-\npath is the road to the capital city! Of course\nA  MAN'S  SIGNATURE\nThey say that a man's signature reveals\nhis character, and perhaps it does. But it can\nalso fail to reveal or even give a slight hint of\nhis name!\u2014Ottawa Citizen.\nRESOURCEFUL SCIENCE\nScience  is  resourceful.    It  couldn't pry\nopen the Pullman windows, so it air-conditioned the train.\u2014Brandon Sun.\nYour Horoscope\nYou and your associates win success\nthrough your corrfbined efforts, it is indicated.\nPush all business affairs. Look for a clever,\noriginal, inventive and Independent individual\nIn today's child.\nDISPUTED BOUNDARY\nThe Labrador-Quebec boundary Is still\n' unsurveyed, although the legal description of\nthe line has been laid down in a Privy Council decision. Premier Smallwood raised the\npoint at the official opening of the Sept lies\niron ore development and proposed a meeting\nwith Premier Duplessis to arrange for actual\nline to be run. As property becomes fantastically more valuable In that area, delay in determining which province it lies In becomes a\nmore serious disadvantage.\n\u2014Charlottetown Guardian.\nSUNDAY, SEPT. S\nYou may expect a happy and successful\nyear, but are advised to be discreet and tactful. Today's child may show a straightforward,\nphilosophical and independent spirit,\nthere are other routes to take\u2014but this one Is\nin common usage in this part of the country,\nand while persons who know it might keep\n\u2022 from breaking springs on their cars, strangers\ncould find It more than a bit hard to endure.\n\u2014Brockville Recorder and Times.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader, Names ot persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY, MAIL except whirl there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\nReader, Nelson\u2014What Is the altitude of Ng1>\nson? Cranbrook?\n1763 feet and 3018 feet, respectively.\nInterested, Trall->-When did Hawaii become\nproperty of the United States?\nHawaii, as Independent kingdom with\nindependence guaranteed by Great Britain and\nFrance in 1844, had a revolution in 1863 and\nformed a republic In 1894. The republic asked\nannexation by the U.S., which was voted in\n1898. The U.S. assumed the Hawaiian national\ndebt of $4,000,000. The territory of Hawaii was\nestablished June 14, 1900.\nW. A., Castlegar\u2014What is the road mileage\nbetween. Seattle and Vancouver?\nIt Is 289 miles.\nF. R., Nelson\u2014On what date is Thanksgiving\nthis year?\nOctober 11.\nHousewife,  Nelson\u2014Please  print   recipe   for\ndill pickles.\nCover cucumber of medium size with\nclear water. Next day drain and wipe dry.\nPack in fruit Jars, using plenty of fresh dill\nbetween. To each half gallon jar add two small\nred peppers, two bay leaves and two thin\nslices of horseradish root. To six quarts of\nwater add one pound rock salt. Heat mixture\nto boiling point; add one quart vinegar. Pour\nat once over cucumbers, covering them well.\nSeal tight while hot Dill pickles will keep In\ncovered kegs or crocks without being sealed.\nWhen Towns\nMust Move\nIt Is. perhaps, not surprising that the\nOntario Hydro's town-planning scheme for\nthe new communities which will replace those\nbeing flooded by the power development dams\nh.is not been more enthusiastically received,\nlr a matter like this, no plan could satisfy\neveryone. For one thing, the issue is complicated by the intense emotional interests\nInvolved. People whose roots go back to the\nearliest white settlement of this province are\ngoing to be torn from their environment, and\nat this moment few of them have any idea\nwhere they will be and what they will be\ndoing two or three years from now. The\npcisonal element cannot be overestimated.\nThere is another group which has been\nhoping to profit from the situation, through\nspeculation, or through a belief that they are\nentitled to a substantial Improvement in their\nliving arrangements as a result of the move.\nThere can be little sympathy far these people.\nThe best they should .expect is equivalent\naccommodation, or a reasonable average price\nfor property purchased. Public opinion\nthroughout Ontario will strongly support\nmeasures to squeeze speculative profits out\nof this project, and protests from people who\nfall to make such profits may well be disregarded.\nBut of far greater importance than either\nof these causes of discontent, is the fact that\nthe Hydro evidently did not bring the people\nof the area into active relationship with the\nplanning program. Living in the shadow of\nthe possible seaway these people have probably done more thinking about their future\nplans than any other group in Canada. They\nhave themselves hired highly competent town\nplanners, whose talent was not drawn into\nthe Hydro's scheme. There -\"is still time to\nrectify this unfortunate failure, and obstinacy\non the part of Hydro with regard to location\nof townsites, layout and other such factors\nwill be fatal to success.\nFor. the plans themselves, there seems to\nbe more than a shade of truth in the charge\nthat the town layouts are textbook plans.\nThey do not appear to lend themselves to\norganic growth. The most definite criticism\nIs that they do not relate the towns to the\nriver on which their inhabitants have always\nlived. There is no indication of harbor or\ndock development, and the placing of Highway 2, between most of the new townsites\nand the river will unquestionably cut them\noff from ready access.\n\u2014Toronto Globe and Mall.\nRoom For\nOne More\n. . . f. B. Feb re's\nIt's Been Said\nThere is but one way to tranquility of\nmind and happiness, and .that is to account\nno external things thine own. but to commit\nall to God.\u2014Epictetus.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\n>-*       By Jimmy Hatlo\nTry to keep a child occupied\nin the house, aud nothing\ninterests mlm-he wants out\nThen comes bbdtime-WOVV\/\nsomehow all of a sudden- h\"s\near a \/Million! things to do\/?\nJUT WHY CANT\nI600UT,.MOMMy?j\nTHERE'S N0TWIN6\nTO DO IM \"WE\nMOUSE- WHY\nCANT I.MOM?\nToday's Bible Thouaht\nExcept a man be born again He\ncannot see the kingdom of God,\n\u2014John 3:3.\nWe must cease to be animals and\nglorify the spirit. The technique is\nsimple. We must say to Him who\nknocks, \"Come in.\" Faith accomplishes this miracle. But we must\nwatch and pray as well.\nARTICLE IV '-...;\nWhen Mra. Rose called, her book\n\"Room for One More\" she did so\nbecause in her own case she found\nit easy to add another to the children she already had. As one of my\nfriends with a large family remarked, .\"When there is another\ncoming along you think, 'However\nshall we manage with this?', but it\nseems to make very little difference\nwhen it does come.\" Mrs. Rose did\nindeed turn down one child, but\nher husband folt that she was wrong\nand she herself seems to have regretted being \"sensible\".\nThere are, of course, advantages\nIn a foster child entering a family where there are children. The\nfoster parents already know\nsomething of the way to treat\nchildren, and tha children of the\nfamily help to educate the newcomer, but even In a chlldlasi\nfoster family children thrive If\nthe foster parents put their hearts\nInto the work. Every homi needs\nthe two parents, and foster homes\nneed both father and mother\nworking together In harmony.\nNot all people have the same preferences. 8ome foster mothers like\ntiny babies, and as soon as these\nget past the helpless stage give\n.them up and take others, while\nothers Ilka small boys, and there\nare some who Ilka and are good\nwith adoleioents, Mrs. Rose tells\nof one woman who took only dull\nchildren, and, by leva and. pa.\ntlence, made them, reasonably\ngood school pupils, much to the\nsurprise and Interest of the neighbors.\nSome foster children live and\ngrow up in one family, while others\nare only In the home temporarily\nuntil their parents can take them\nagain. Fortunately there are some\npeople who like change and are\nhappy to give the child shelter and\ncare for the time being.\nPERFECTION UNLIKELY\nIn these days of experts, the child\nexperts and the psychologists have\ncombined, quite unconsciously perhaps, to give the parents a sense of\ninadequacy. Far too many parents\nfeel that they should apologize for\ntheir shortcomings, real and fancied. Human life is not based upon\nperfection. That is something that\nwe hope to arrive at in some distant time, and seldom do. If the\nparents are sincerely anxious to\nlove and help their children their\nmistakes do no serious harm. Indeed the! children have to learn to\nadapt themselves to a difficult\nworld where even the best and\nkindest of parents make mistakes.\nBut too often parents have come to\nbelieve that their mistakes will be\nvisited upon the children and that\nthey are accountable for all the failures of the children. Nothing could\nbe further from the truth, but unfortunately these beliefs tend to\ndissuade people from becoming foster parents.\nThe best foster parents are\nsimple people, You may be surprised to learn that college-\ntrained mothers are often not\ngood because they tend to expeot\ntoo much from children, but\nsimple people not only do not\nexpeot so much from foster children but are much easier pleased.\nThis In turn makes the child\nhappy.\nA good foster momer is one who\nhas plenty of love in her make-up;\nnot just love for children, but love\nfor dogs and cats, trees and flowers,\nand everything. With this love will\ngo sympathy, understanding and\npatience, and a sense of humor. A\nsense of humor is not usually listed\nas one of the virtues. Perhaps it is\nnot a virtue, but It does serve to put\nall things In their proper perspective, to relieve strain and make the\nother virtues easier to accomplish.\nBut why worry? Children are\ndurable little people, and will survive all your mistakes providing\nyou love them. They will even take\na whipping as evidence of that love.\nSo If you are Inclined to be a foster\nparent, go ahead and try. You'll\nenjoy it.,\n(To Be Continued)\nEmigration and Trade Answers lo\nPreventing Bankruptcy in Japan\nthwi dhL\n'COM. lt\u00bb. K'M0 \"A\u2122*\" ITHWO^Tt, 1*\nSusan belter be glad all o' hers\nare boys. They may be harder to\nkeep out o' meanness but It don't\nhurt 'em ao bad if they get in.\nFound Dead With\nKnife Wounds\nHALIFAX (CP)\u2014James William\nNicholson, 53, was found dead in a\nyard at the nearby Negro settlement\nof Afrlcville early Thursday, the\nvictim of several knife wounds in\nthe chest.\nRCMP called in a police dog to\nhelp trace his movements before\ndeath, and city police took several\npersons into custody for questioning.\nIt was the seventh violent death\nin the Halifax area within three\ndays.\nRobert Hewbolt and Mrs. Edna\nEadle died of carbon monoxide\nnoisoning in a cottage at nearby\nWaveiley Tuesday.\nA young mill worker hacked his\nteen-aged wife and two children to\ndeath Wednesday with an axe and\ncommitted suicide by breathing\ncarbon monoxide fumes.\nTwenty-seven-year-old Leo' Oliver was found dead utider his car's\nexhaust pine. His wife and twn\ndaughters, Martha. 3, and Sharon\n2. were found depd on the no'-ch ol\ntheir home a quarter-mile away,\nEditor's Note: After six months\nin Russia, Canadian Press reporter Bill Boss last spring went to\nAsia on leave and as a private\nindividual. Back In Canada after\nseveral months in countries with\nwhich he became familiar during\nthree years as CP correspondent\nwith Canadian forces in Korea,\nBoss wrote four stories summing\nup his view of difficulties faced\nby the people of the area, and by\nthe West in its effort to halt the\ntide of Communism. These stories\nare presented by CP as Boss's\npersonal impressions. Today's the\nthir din the series, deals with\nJapan.\nBy BILL B083\nIt's beginning to look as though\ntoo much has been expected of\nJapan.\nCrippled by population and trade\nproblems, hamstrung politically by\nthe occupation's elimination of centrist elements, and now obliged to\nrearm despite constitutional provisions banning Just that and popular\nfeeling against It. the Japanese are\nhaving a tough time.-'\nThe Yoshfda government appears\nable to weather scandal and corruption, and, somewhat as In\nFrance, the other parties cannot\nfind sufficient common grounds to\nunite and throw it out.\nON DOWNWARD PATH\nThe result Is that Japan appears\nheaded down the road to economic\nand political bankruptcy, and in\nAsia that's just nifty for the Communists.\nHer population problem is tremendous. With 82,000,000 inhabitants, the four main islands now\nhold 15,000.000 more than they did\nin 1940. Tokyo alone, a city of 7,-\n000,000 adds annually a population\nequal to that of Vancouver.\nThere just isn't enough work for\neverybody. Japan lost all her former colonfes }n the war, has lost\nmost of her former trade markets\n(except Formosa) because of their\nhatred or their inability to pay, and\nis prevented by the United States\nfrorh trading with her natural business partner, the Chinese mainland.\nBritain and the United States |\nresist opening up their own domestic markets to her. or giving j\nher more room In their Pacific j\nmarkets.. United Nations spending\nduring the Korean war tided her\nover part of the hump, but that\nhas dried up. and she is being denied a chance to play the part she\ncould as a supplier in Korea's reconstruction.\nSEEK  BIG  REVISIONS\nU.S. aid has been insignificant.\nWhile increased aid now is under\nconsideration in Washington, this\nwould still be considered only a\nstop-gap by the Japanese. They\nwant major policy revisions enabling them to do real business,\nearn their own way and achieve\nsome solution thereby to their own\nproblems.\nRealistically, observers say there\nare only two answers to Japan's\nproblems:\n1. Wider emigration possibilities\nto North and South America for\nJapanese.\n2. Vastly increased trade, coupled\nwith greater access both to trade\nin the Pacific basin and use of Japan's technical assistance in programs to raise living standards\nthere.\nWashington recently was surprised when Japanese government\npeople spoke out more independently and said the administration was\nresurveying its foreign policy and\ntrade positions. Formosa, too, got\ndisturbed. Japan does $127,000,000\nbusiness annually with Chiang's regime, and has to take the risk of\nlosing that Into her calculations.\nRED ACTIVITY DANGER\nOver-population and trade deficits combine to depress the labor\nmarket, undermine trade union organization and open the gates wide\nto Communist activity. This has\nbeen negligible until recently, but\nthe government's pussy - footing\nabout feudal labor practices has\nprovoked reactions that could further this.\nFor two months this summer employees of five large factories operated by the Omi spinning mills\nstruck against old-fashioned conditions which saw them obliged to\npray twice dally, live in dormitories\nwithout access to neighboring communities, and have all incoming and\noutgoing mail censored. Without\nfunds, the employees finally re-entered the factories, their demands\nunmet.       ,\nRebirth of the army under the\nname of national security, force is\nnot popular. Experience during the\nwar culminating In the A-bombing\nof Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and the\nnear-panic caused by radiation effects In the latest H-tests. have\nmade the Japanese probably the\nmost anti-war people on earth.\nMIDDLE PARTIES OUSTED\nNonetheless 1045 Is too recent for\nthem to regain the trust of their\nformer enemies, who before restoring Japan's sovereignty crushed her\nmiddle parties, leaving only the extreme right and the leftists.\nConfounded bv their politicians\nand bewildered by would-be allies\nwho want them to arm but will not\nhelp them to live, the Japanese\n\"re too well mannered yet to parade\ntheir Impatience.\nOld ,T-ipf>n hands say tli\u00abv hnn\u00bb\nthe new d\u00b0moc^a\"c prpct^R w\"l\nbe combined soon enough with bet\nter living standards to give them a\nchance to survive. Otherwise Japan\ntoo will fritter away to the left.\nBritain Declared\nWar 15 Years ago\nLONDON (AP)-The 15th anniversary of Britain's declaration of\nwar on Nazi Germany slipped by\nFriday, hardly noticed as Prime\nMinister Churchill's government\ngrappled with the problem of building the defences of Europe against\na new threat to peace.\nA few newspapers\u2014one \"of them\nthe Communist Dally Worker arguing against German rearmament-\nreminded their leaders that this\nwas the anniversary of the fateful\nday when the \"sad, infinitely tired\nvoice'' of Prime Minister Neville\nChamberlain announced the outbreak of war.\n\"The politicians are still picking\nup the pieces,\" said the News\nChronicle.\nThe Liberal newspaper warned\nthat the lesson . the last bloody\ndecade taught is: It is a \"matter of\nlife and death\" for the western\npowers to get together and patch\nup their unity.\nThe Daily Worker, reminding its\nreaders that \"Hitler unleashed the\nSecond' Worjd War,\" called on Britain to \"reject German rearmament\nin any form, to demand new negotiations with the Soviet Union for\na peaceful solution to the German\nproblem,\"\nThe Daily Telegraph, Conservative, surveyed the war-torn history\nof this century \"with grief and\nanger,\" but said there is hope for\nfuture world peace.\nFOREST SERVICE\nHAS QUIET YEAR\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Cool weather and frequent rain has given\nthe B.C. Forest Service \"the quietest year we've ever had.\" Officials\nsaid Thursday only two fires were\nlogged in the Vancouver Forest\nDistrict, which covers the southwestern part of the province, last\nweek, Some 711 fires have been\nrecorded throughout the province\nso far. compared with more than\n1200 last year.\nBridge Wouldn't\nSolve Bottleneck\nVANCOUVER (CP) - A survey\nmade public Friday says a ; new;\nbridge over the Fraser River\" i)\nOak Street probably would not help\nsolve river-crossing bottlenecks or|\nthe lower mainland.\nThe survey, by provincial am\nmunicipal engineers, appears\nthrow cold water on the pro.vinclo\ngovernment's plans (or the Ob.\nStreet span and a four-lane super\nhighway to the United State\nborder,\nAsks Commission\nOn Immigration\nTEULON, Man. (CP) - A royt\ncommission to investigate the activ\nHies ot Canada's immigration d\u00ab\npartment was demanded here o\nThursday night by John Diefenba\nker, Progressive Conservative mem\nber of the Commons for Prince Al\nbert.\nHis demand followed a charge b;\na Canadian Bar Association sub\ncommittee of \"shocking\" procedure\npractices In the department's over\nseas offices.\nMr. Dlefenbaker said the charge\nmade a royal commission Investlga\ntion a necessity. If such had ao\nbeen ordered by the next sesslot\nConservatives would demand it 01\nthe floor'of the House.\nMr. Dlefenbaker spoke at a noml\nnation meeting at which Davl<\nVeltch of Petersfleld was nomlnate<\nProgressive Conservative candidal\nIn the coming byjelection\" in .Sel\nkirk constituency.\nBrigadier Still Held\nHONG KONG (Reuters) - Thi\nIndo-China Communists Thursdaj\nchanged their minds about releasmj\nBrig. Christian de Castries, th<\nman who woh world fame for his\ndefence of the French fortress o\nDien Bien Phu this spring agalns\na massive Communist siege. ]\nThe official Vietminh radio sail\nhe would not be released Thursda;\nas stated earlier. The broadcai\nblamed \"difficulties in communict\nUons caused by recent heavy rains\nThe radio had announced Wee\nnesday night that the 52-year-ol\nbrigadier would be handed over \\\nFrench authorities today togetfy\nwith several other French officei\nin the current prisoner exchang\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest   Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nBAHA'I   WOULD   FAITH\nBooks available. Phone 387-X 2\nFullv guaranteed repair service.\nCUTLER'S Jewellery, 611 Baker St.\nMrs. Hugh Greenwood, beginners\nin piano. Phone 1375-R.\nIt's here! The new Parker Ball Pen,\nat WAIT'S NEWS DEPOT\nRawleigh's  Good  Health . Products\nCall  292-L, Nelson\nFuller  Brush  Representative.\nDon E  Sergent - Phone 1335.\nFor Sale: Black Currants, Blackberries and Peach Plums. Mrs.\nBecker, 1418 Vancouver Street.\nACCOMMODATION    AVAILABLE\nAT SHALIMER TOURI8T COURT,\nAIN8WORTH\nDON'T FORGET CARNIVAL\nDANCE AT PROCTER LABOR\nDAY. Free ferry, refreshments.\nFLOWERS for the WEDDING . .\nCall at\nCOVENTRY'S  FLOWER  SHOP\nChildren's lunch kits complete\nwith genuine Thermos bottles. Two\npopular styles.  HIPPERSON'S.\nCHICKEN   MANURE.   DRY.\n$1.00  A  SACK, DELIVERED.\nPHONE   559-X-3\nFOR  EXPERT DUPLICATING\nPhone   B.  J.   Kelh,  378-R-3\nYOUR  MIMEOGRAPH SERVICE\nDance to the Melody Pals at\nWillow Point Crystal Hall, Saturday,\nSept. 4th.\nJeans for girls and boys.\nGood styles, all sir.es.\nEBERLE'S  JUNIOR   SHOP\nLuggage Trunks and Loose Leaf\nBinders and Brief Cases for your\nback-to-school needs at WADE'S.\nMARY   A.   HEDDLE,   R.M.T.\nViolin  Teacher\n1303   Hall   Mjnes   Road\nBoys' flannel shirts, long sleeves,\nsmart assorted plaids and designs.\nPriced at $1.80 and up. EBERLE'S\nJUNIOR SHOP.\nNURSES'  MEETING, TUESDAY,\nSEPT. 7, at the Nurses' Home.\nMotors, radiators, steam-cleaned\nHigh   pressure  Jenny  Service;.\nSHORTY'S REPAIR SHOP\n714 BAKER ST.\n10% off following used furniture\n6-piece walnut dining room suit\n2 chrome sets. 2 Winnipeg couche\nHOME   FURNITURE   EXCHANGI\nThe sports day that was cancelle\nJuly 1 will be held on Labor Da\nIn Salmo, sponsored by Knights o\nPythias.\nSpecial\nPanel doors No.  1 grade 2'0\"x6'6\nRegular $9.90.      Special 55.00\nNelson Woodworking Co.\n273 Baker St. Ph. 1151\n'Now in Stock \u2014 Aluminum foi\ncooking ware. Tart pans, pie plates\nbake pans, cook-n-freeze dishes, etc\nInexpensive and convenient.\nHIPPERSON'S\nMEDICINE CABINETS\nMetal    medicine   cabinets    wltl\ngleaming  plate  glass   mirrors   anc\nsparkling crystal glass shelves. Foul\ndifferent styles to choose from a'\nT.  H. WATERS  &  CO.  LTD.\nPhone 156 \u2014 101 Hall St. \u2014 Nelson\nNOTICE TO NELSON GOLF CLUB\n\u2022 MEMBERS AND ASSOCIATES\nCome and bring your friends to\nthe  monster Labor Day Dance to\nbe  held  at  the Club  House, Sat.,\nSept. 4, from 10 p.m. to 1.\nDANCING  TO\nLEFTY WHITE'8 BAND\nFor a Special Treat\nVisit the\nTILMCUM\nat the Balfour Ferry Landing\nOpen 8 a.m.  to  12 p.m.\nTillicum Tea Time, 1 to 5 p.m.\nHome-cooked foods a specialty.\nDining  Room,  Snack   Bar  and\nGift Shop.\nFor reservations,  phone  Balfour 0\nFLOWER8  FOR  EVERY\nOCCASION\nPHONE 187\nGRIZZELLES' FLORISTS\n\"Mainliner\" Suiting by Celanese.\nGood weight for skirts and suits.\nIt's  washable.  59\",  $2.95.\nTAYLOR'S  DRY GOODS\n8AVINGS AND PROFIT\nInvestors' Syndicate of Canada Ltd.\nJan S. M. Harts\nRR1   -  Phone   289-X 3  \u2014  Nelson\nHave   your   battery   checked   and\nrepaired by a bntterv specialist.\nARROW   BATTERIES\nPhone 898 or 77 70l Front St.\nCARD OF THANKS\nI wish to, express my sincere\nthanks to Dr. A. J. Beauchamp, also the matron and nurses at the\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nNelson, for their kindness to Mrs.\nJessie Margaret Gould. And also the\nfriends that loaned their cars and\nsent flowers.\nMany  thanks,\nBILL GOULD.\nIN    MEMORIAM\nPARKS: Suddenly Sept. 1, 1937,\nat Western Hospital, Toronto.\nI hope to see my pilot face to face\nwhen I embark.\nWife, MARGARET.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCHRISTIANSEN \u2014 Funeral services for the late Mr. Knud Krist'an\nChristiansen will be held Tuesday\nat 2 p.m. at the Thompson Funer-1\nHome. The Rev. Allan Dixon v '1\nofficiate, and interment will bi.e\nplace in Nelson Memorial Park.\n\u2014\n - \u2014\u2014 T-\u2014 : \u2014r\u2014\n,.  ..... ,j;.;hiv .;\u2022\u25a0.       '.\u25a0a...   j'.'V.    ..    r.., \u25a0    M;,        ...   .-       p    ,\u00bb.... ,:\u2022..   ...-,\nFAMOUS\nAptitudes\nWomen's Shoes\nFor Every Wear\nove soft leathers, in medium\nidge heels; available in lour\nles and five colors.\n$8.95\n,AA to  B widths \u2022 3'\/2 to 10.\nt. ANDREW\n& CO.\n1ADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEst. In 1902\nLaueneivMacBey Vows\nExchanged at Trail\nTwo well-known Trail\nmarriage here of the former\nWilliam Roland Lauener.\nThe bride is the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. C. W. MacBey, and the\ngroom's parents are Mr. and Mrs.\nW. L. Lauener. Ven. Archdeacon F.\nH. Graham, who had officiated at\nthe marriage of the bride's parents\nand her maternal grandparents, performed the ceremony.\nThe altar of St. Andrew's Anglican church was graced with white\ngladioli and the guest pews marked\nwith white bows for the wedding\nfamilies were linked with the\nHelen Elizabeth MacBey and\nfirst Hapttist OHjurrfj\n(Cottonwood and  Fourth  Streets)\nMinister: K. IMAYOSHI, 965-Y\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School '\n11:00 a.m.\u2014CHRISTIAN   AND   HI8   VOCATION\nCommunion  Service\nEvening   Service   will   be   a   combined   service   at   the\nPresbyterian Church.\nLabor  Day,  10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.\u2014Work Party at Church\nThursday, Sept. 9th, at 8:00 p.m.\u2014The  MeMASTER  QUARTET\nof McMaster University, Hamilton, Ont., will sing and bring\nan  evangelistic   appeal   at  FIRST   BAPTIST  CHURCH.\nAll Welcome!\nBETHEL TABERNACLE\n708 Baker St - W. J. Fletcher, Pastor\n9:45 a.m\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Worship Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic   Rally\n\"Children   Brought   Up   in   Sunday   School\nAre Seldom Brought Up In Court.\"\nRev. Fletcher\nSpeaker at\nBoth Services\n\u00a7t fattl's Uttttri. <%rrij\nStanley and Silica Streets\nMinister: Rev. G. W. Payne, S.T.M.\nDirector of Music: Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, B.A., A.T.C.M.\nSUNDAY, Sept. 5th:\n8unday 8ehool  commences Sept, \"12th.-\n11.00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nSubject: \"TEMPLI  OR TOMB\"\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Harrop '\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Procter\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Worship\nSubject:  \"GOING   FISHING?\"\nSrittttg HnxUb QHjurrl)\nJosephine and Silica Sts.\nMinister: REV. ALLAN DDCON, B.A., B.D.\nOrganist and Music Director: Mrs. C. W Tyler\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\n\"THAT WHICH  MAKE8 ALL THE DIFFERENCE\nIN  THE WORLD\"\n, Broadcast over CKLN\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Worship\nBooks of the  Bible \u2014 Eira  and  Nehemiah.\nJFttat f rabgtmatt fflljurrij\nKootenay and  Victoria Streets\nMinister: Rev. L. S. van Mossel B.A.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Farewell Service\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Salmo\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Joint Service with Baptist In Presbyterian Church\nCome and Worship\nitastmt\n802  Baker St.\nPastor:   ERNEST  V.  HANSON\nSUNDAY:\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning  Worship\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Service\nTHURSDAY.  Sept.  9th:\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Ladies' Aid at the\nhome of Mrs. W. O.\nMuirhead. Creek St.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Praye* Meetnig\nlira! Qlhurrh. of\n(fthnst \u00a3>ru>nitBt\nA Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ.\nScientist, in Boston, Mass.\nSunday Service \u2014 11:00 a.m\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n'     8:00 p.m.\nReading Room, 209 Baker St..t\nOpen Daily From 3 to 5 n.m.\nAll Cordially Welcome\nQlhurrtj of\nth\u00bb? iKpurempr\n(Anglican)\nFairview\nCANON W  J. SILVERWOOD\nMrs. J. A. Fraser, L.L.C.M.\nOrganist\n\"8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning  Prayer\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening   Prayer\nSUNDAY   SCHOOL\nBEGINS SEPT. 12\n8\u00bbaloattD\u00ab Army\n513 Victoria Street\nLieut, and Mra, H. P. Thornhill\nSUNDAY:\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\n%2:00 p.m.\u2014Directory and\nSunday  School.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Salvation Meeting.\nservice. Mr. G. R. John was organist.\nThe bride entered the church on\nthe arm j>f her father gowned in\n\u25a0floor-length white nylon tulle'with\nredingote of satin softly draped to-\nwards the back to form a slight\ntrain. The satin bodice was highlighted by a yoke outlined in seed\npearls and diamante and had long\nlily point sleeves. For \"something\nold\" the bride wore her mother's\nfloor-length veil embroidered in\nsilk. Her bouquet was of pink rose\nbuds and white heather which had\nbeen flown from' Scotland especially\nfor the occasion.\nPRETTY  TRIO\nJoan Rennie of Nova Scotia as\nmaid of honor and Madeleine Lau\nener, cousin of the groom, as brides\nmaid, were attired in identical\ngowns of old rose irridescent taffeta in floor-length with the bodice\nfeaturing off-the-shoulder necklines. Their large pink picture hats\nwere of matching material and they\nwore long white gloves. The attendants carried old fashioned bouquets\nof cornflower blue chrysanthemums.\nMadge Hopper of Montreal was\nflower' girl in white organdy embroidered in pink and blue flowers.\nThe two-tiered short skirt was\nedged with lace while the bodice\nfeatured a Peter Pan neckline and\nshort puff sleeves. Her hat matched\nher gown and her hair ribbons and\nsash were in the same colors as the\nbridesmaids' dresses. She carried a\nbasket of cornflower blue flowers.\nThe groom was supported by his\nbrother, Mr. John Lauener and Mr.\nRonald Wright and Mr. George\nMorrison of Vancouver were ushers.\nThe rooms of the bride's home\nwere decked with a profusion of\nsummer flowers for the wedding\nreception at which \"the maternal\ngrandmother of the bride,'Mrs. W.\nT. Fotheringham of Nelson and\nMrs. Oscar Lauener, aunt of the\ngroom, poured. The toast to the\nbride was proposed by Mr. James\nBryden.\nThe three-tier wedding cake,\ntopped by a pink rosebud in a small\nvase, rested on a separate table embedded in pink tulle and pink rosebuds.\nReceiving the guests with the bridal party were the parents of the\nbride and groom. Mrs. MacBey\nchose blue lace with matching shoes.\nShe wore a pink hat and gloves\nwith pink carnations en corsage.\nThe mother of the groom was\ngowned in a dress of black Swiss\nlace over aqua taffeta. Her black\nhat and corsage of white gardenias\ncompleted her attire.\nFor travelling the bride donned\na suit in blue and tan overcheck\nwith luggage tan shoes and bag.\nWith this she wore a beige top coat\nand brown hat. Her corsage was of\nTalisman roses.\nAfter a wedding trip down the\nOregon coast, the young couple will\ntake up residence in Vancouver.\nOur Father's\nBusiness\nSeptember is a time of \"Beginning\nAgain\". Schools re-open for the\nFall term. Organizations begin to\nconsult the executive concerning\nthe \"next meeting of the group\".\nPeople back from vacation bestir\nthemselves to phoning aroifnd to\nenquire how many of \"the old\ngang\" are back in town. The\nchurches go over the roll call for\nleaders, and the Sunday Schools\nsend a hasty order for the Rally\nDay supplies.\nA friend with whom I was talking the other day exclaimed: \"It\nwill be good to get back at the job\nagain.\" I believe he had in mind\nthe responsibility of singing in the\nchoir. All of which points up the\nfact that while people like to drop\ntheir chores for a breather once in\na while, deep down they find their\nultimate satisfaction in the acceptance of tasks and responsibilities.\nLet it be said here that there are\nno jobs of service and human stewardship giving more satisfaction\nthan the tasks done around the\nchurch, if they are done in a spirit\nof love, and with a sense of privilege, A group or class of youngsters\nafford an opportunity of leadership\nand an influence upon life that\nmany people pass up to their own\nloss. More and more these days,\nwith parts of Ihe world civilization\ndropping to pieces in our faces, we\nare conscious of the lasting joy and\nWED RECENTLY In the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual\nHelp In Trail were Constable John Andrew Douglas, RCMP, and\nthe former Barbara Anne Starklauf of Trail, formerly of Osoyooa.\nThe groom, formerly of Toronto, has been with Trail and Salmo\nRCMP detachments for the  last three years.\nSIGNING REGISTER after their marriage in Knox United\nChurch In Trail are Melvin Wenschlag and his bride, the former\nMarlene McVle, while Rev. A. J. Lawton of Rossland looks on.\nThe  newlyweds will  make their home  in   Lethbridge.\n\u2014Louis  Fryling  photos.\n(hrislensen-Porler Wedding\nLinks Trail, Nelson Families\nfull doaprl\n(Ehurrh\n812 Stanley St. Phone 1710\nPastor,   N.  Worth\nBelfast,  Ireland\nSUNDAY SERVICES:\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nMID-WEEK SERVICES:\nWednesday,\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer and Revival\nSaturday,\n8:00 p.m -Youth  Rally\nEverybody Welcome\nTRAIL \u2014 St. Francis Xavier\nchurch was the setting for a double-\nring ceremony when Rev. Father\nJohn Forrest united in marriage\nRosemary Teresa Porter, daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. Andrew F. Porter\nof Trail, and Charles Oscar Christensen, son of Mr. and Mrs. O. W.\nChristensen of Nelson.\nBefore the altar, graced with\nbaskets of vari-colored gladioli, the\nbride spoke her vows in a gown of\nwhite double,nylon tulle over satin\nin waltz length. The bouffant skirt\nposed over crinoline was accented\nby nylon pleating edged with lace\nfrom waist to hipline. A chantilly\nlace bolero had a stand-up collar\nand long lily point sleeves. Her\nchapel length veil of nylon tulle\nwas held in place by a satin bro\ncaded half hat of tulle pleating and\nlily of the valley. Her only orna\nment was a string of pearls, the\ngift of the groom. A white mauve\ntipped orchid with white rosebuds\nformed the bride's bouquet.\nMr. Porter gave his daughter in\nmarriage. Mrs. L, Venier was solo\nist, accompanied at the organ by\nMrs. G. Tognotti.\nThe bride was attended by her\ncousin. Miss Marie Matovich as\nmaid of honor and Miss Faye Cameron and Miss Ann Laurie as bridesmaids in identical gowns of waltz\nlength coral tulle over taffeta. The\ngowns were topped with a lace bolero and they wore lace mitts to\nmatch and white rhinestone bracelets, gift of the bride. Their headdresses were in halo style of blue\ndelphiniums and they carried fan-\nshaped bouquets of blue delphinium\nand yellow roses. Miss Linda Mc-\nGillvoray as flower girl wore a long\ndress of coral net over taffeta. She\nwore the bride's gift, a gold locket,\nand carried a \"basket of flowers.\nBest man was Mr. Frank Hufty\nof Nelson and Mr. Andrew Porter,\nbrother of the bride, and Mr. Chester Christensen. brother of the groom\nand Mr. George Butler were ushers.\nThe four-tiered wedding cake\ntopped with two doves holding rings\nwas the feature of the reception in\npeace that comes through association with that which abides \u2014 \"O\nThou who changest not, abide with\nme.\"\nYes, Jhis is the tim^of year for\n\"picking up the slack again\", for\n\"getting back in the harness\", for\n\"pulling up our socks\", or whatever\nexpression you wish to use to express the common thought. And, as\nwe sense the need for expenditure\nof effort, let us also realize that we\nmust continually be going back for\nrefreshment to the Real Source of\nall things; for He it is who \"restorr\neth our  snuls\". ,\n\u2014REV,   ALLAN   DIXON,,\nthe Masoniohall. The cake was embedded in white and coral tulle and\nflanked by tall blue tapers in low\nsilver holders. The toast to the bride\nwas given by her uncle, Mr. Steve\nMatovich.\nThe bride's mother was attired\nin a pearl grey two-piece dress of\nlace over taffeta. Her accessories\nwere navy and complemented her\nnavy hat. Dusty rose carnations\nformed her corsage. Mrs. Christen\nsen chose a two-piece silk dress off\na white background with white hat\nand accessories. Her corsage was of\npink carnations.\nFor her wedding trip to California and Nevada, the bride donned\na shantung dress of pale mauve in\nEmpire style. This was topped with\na matching duster lined with white.\nMauve shoes, white accessories and\ncorsage of orchids completed her\nensemble.\nMr. and Mrs. Christensen will reside in Trail.\nOther out-of-town guests were\nMrs. R. MacLanders, Sandon; Mr.\nand Mrs. Noble Gould, Ymir; Miss\nLorna Spiers, Kaslo; Mr.' and Mrs.\nLee Hyssop, Nelson; Mr. and Mrs.\nLes Hufty, Nelson; L. R. Strong,\nNelson; Mr. and Mrs. Frank1 Hufty,\nNelson; Bob MacDonald, Nelson;\nMr. and Mrs. V. Sorenson, Kinnaird; Ann Matovich, Nelson; Mrs.\nA. Wallner, Vancouver; Mrs. Hilda\nGross, Vancouver and Mrs. A. G.\nWooding.\nSuggests Reduce\nBy Waltzing\nOXFORD, England (AP)\u2014Prof.\nJean Mayer of Harvard University\nsuggested Friday that fat persons\ntake up waltzing in an effort to reduce.\n\"After our experiments on waltzing rats,\" he told the British Association for the Advancement of Science, \"the evidence was so convincing that I was tempted to write\nadvertisements for the dancing\nschools.\"\n\"If you diet properly\u2014and waltz\n\u2014you will lose more weight than\nby just dieting and not waltzing,\"\nhe said at a session devoted to the\nquestion of obesity.\nMayer came to his conclusions\nafter lengthy experiments on rats,\nincluding the waltzers.\nA number of rats were made to\ngain weight.\nWaltzing rats, he explained, are\na breed that\u2014for one reason or another\u2014waltz. They are born that\nway,\nNelson Social\nPHONE 144\nVISITING ... Mr. and Mrs. Wes\nT. Calbick of Nanaimo, lorrrierly\nof Nelson, have been spending a\nfew days visiting relatives and\nfriends In the district. They were\naccompanied by their son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mel\nBunbridge and son Ricky of Victoria.\nFROM VICTORIA ... Mr. and\nMrs. H. D. Dawson of Victoria, formerly of Nelson, are guests of their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. William S. Ramsay, 912 Kootenay Street, for two weeks.\n\u00ab   \u2022 ', *    i\nRETURN ... Mr. and Mrs. J. H.\nWhitfield and Gale and Johnnie\nhave returned to their x home on\nHall Street after spending the Summer at Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Murray's\ncamp on the North Shore.\n\u2022 #   *\nVACATION ... Mr. and Mrs. S.\nJ. Wallden, 512 Fell Street, have\nreturned from two weeks' vacation\nspent in\" Washington, Idaho, Montana, Regina and Lethbridge.\nTO CORDOVA BAY ... Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Preston and baby son\nhave returned to their home at\nCordova Bay after visiting Mrs.\nPreston's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Con\nCummins.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nTO VANCOUVER . . . Miss Jean\nSixstone, Hendryx Street, left Friday to spend the weekend with her\nparents at Vancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nBRIDAL SHOWER .. . Miss Betty\nApostoIiuk: bride-elect, was honored at a shower by staff members\nof the Bank of Montreal branch at\nthe home of Mrs. Lorraine May,\nCedar Street. The gifts were pre-\nHew Denver\nCouple Mark\nGolden Wedding\nNEW DENVER\u2014Mr. and Mrs. A.\nE. Carter were at home to a number of their friends on their 50th\nwedding anniversary.\nMr. and Mrs. Carter were married in Cranbrook, and resided in\nKimberley, Rossland and various\nKootenay points before coming to\nthe Slocan district in 1918. They\nhave lived in New Denver for the\npast 20 years.\nCards and messages of congratulations were received from their\nfriends, and a highlight was a letter of congratulation from Prime\nMinister St. Laurent.\nA toast was proposed by James\nDraper, and Mrs. J. L, Irwin, a\nbride of this summer, extended a\nspecial greeting to Mrs. Carter, a\nbride of 50 summers ago.\nTea was served.from a tea table\ncovered with an ivory and gold\nlinen cloth and centred with a decorated wedding cake. Vases of golden chrysanthemums and vari-colored | gladioli graced the living\nroom.\nTheir daughter, Mrs. Hermann\nClever, poured tea from a gold\nchina tea service loaned for the\noccasion by Miss Diane Clever, a\ngranddaughter, and was assisted in\nserving by Miss Clever and Gilbert\nClever, only grandchildren of Mr.\nand Mrs. Carter.\nREADY   FOR   BUSINESS\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld. (CP) \u2014 City\ncouncil approved a building permit\nfor a motel, first such application\never filed in Newfoundland. Officials say. they expect a surge of\nmotel applications when the trans-\nCanada highway is completed, perhaps in 1956.\nBickerton's\nStore\nCorner of\nCedar and Observatory\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nNEW\nSTORE\nHOURS\nWEEKDAYS\n8:3Q a.m. to\n5:30 p.m.\nWEDNESDAY\n8:30 a.m. to\n12:30 p.m.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nThere Will Be No Service In the\nEvening! on Wednesday\nor Sunday,\nPhone 1707\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1954\u20145\nsented in a gaily decorated basket.\nAfter games and contests, refreshments were served by Mrs, Mary\nDeGirolamo and Mrs. Lorraine\nMay. v\n\u2022   \u00bb   \u2022\nISLANDER . . . Mrs. Norman\nMacLeod of Victoria, a former Nelson resident, is visiting her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Dr. and Mrs. N. G.\nMacLeod, 806 Mill Street.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n0MU, lip. U)iik\n9248\nB-20;30-\u00ab\nLINES YOU LOVEI\nThis is it! The fashion-right casual\nyou, our readers, have named your\nfavorite! It's perfect for practically\nevery fabric \u2014 sew it in faille, Fall\ncottons. Note the novel scalloped\nbuttoning, bloused look of the bodice, easy skirt. Sew this now!\nPattern 9248: Misses sizes 12, 14,\n16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42.\nSize 16 takes 4Vi yards 39-inch.\nThis easy-to-use ' pattern gives a\nperfect fit. Complete illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIMY-FIVE CENT8 (35c)\nin coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nto. thi: pattern. Print plainly SIZE,\nNAME, ADDRE8S, STYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MAHIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., Nelson, B.C.\n1\n\u25a0       \\\nFREEMAN'S\nSemi-Annual\nCLEARANCE SALE\nContinue!\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\n4-Pleee\nBEDROOM\n.;\ni\nSUITE\nIn   Autumn   Leaf   mahogany.\nRegular $229.00.  | g;m  mm\nSpecial     10\/.\/\/\n-\nX\nJjwimpLn&\nDaughter of\nFormer Nelson\nFamily Married\nOf interest to Nelson residents\nis the wedding of Marion Barnum\nto F. W. Prausnitz at Fargo, North\nDakota.\nThe bride (s the daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. B. M. Barnum, 1148\nSt. Patrick Street, Victoria, who\nare former Nelson residents.\nThe groom is the son of Dr. and\nMrs. F. F, Prausnitz of New York\nand Fargo. He is assistant dean of\nJuilliard School of Music, New\nYork.\nPRODUCE FINE FUR\nSables, the animals that produce\nfine fur, are a type of Siberian\nweasel abput 18 inches In length.\nHave You\nChosen Your\nMusic Teacher?\nThere is a REGISTERED\nmusic teacher in your\ndistrict.\nConsult your regional secretary ol the B.C. Registered\nMusic Teachers' Association\n\u2014 Phone 376-L.\nCLASSIFIED  ADS GET  RESULTS\nScrambling\nNames!\nAre You\nEqually\nExpert\nat\nUnscrambling\nThem?\n'     THERE IS STILL TIME TO GET\nYOUR SOLUTION IN\nEither by Hand or By Mail\nDEADLINE ON THE SECOND SERIES OF THE\nNELSON DAILY NEWS SCRAMBLED NAMES\nCONTEST IS\nTuesday Noon, Sept. 7\nScrambled Names Contest\n\"SERIES THREE\"\nSTARTS ON\nTuesday, Sept. 7\nAnother Trio of Valuable Prixet Await the Winners\nPRIZES TO A TOTAL VALUE OF\n$1000.00\nMUST BE WON\nKEEP TRYING!\nIT MAY BE YOUR LUCKY-^Y NEXT TIME\nilliWy.\nwarn\n 1 - '\\ \" \u25a0.:\u2022 ! . ~\nw*\u00ab-f**<j>t ;.fc- \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0: i- \u00abv \u00bb\nippi-  j^fpwpwpf\n33*2\nv?j\n6\u2014NELSON DAjLY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT, 4, 1954\nDealer Can Help\nChoose Right Paint\nWhen you buy white paint for the\nexterior trim of your home, tell the\ndealer what materials were used In\nthe construction of the body of the\nhouse.\nThe self-cleansing type of exterior white paint can be used on the\ntrim of a house only when the body\nis also painted white.\nWhere the house is of unpainted\nmasonry\u2014or of a color different\nthan the trim\u2014use an exterior\nenamel, a trim and trellis paint, or\na house paint that has only a limited degree of self-cleansing.\nHOUSE PAINT\nSELFWASHING\nHouse paint is not recommended\nfor porch or garden furniture because house paint is made purposely to chalk gradually and thereby\n\"wash\" itself.\nCARE URGED      ,\nIN SPRAYING\nWhether Or not the materials used\nfor sprayinft and dusting are toxic,\nit is sensible to follaw all precautions.\nBefore sprays' are mixed, all the\nfine print on the container should\nbe read so that the chemical may be\napplied effectively as well as safely,\nA still day is the best time to\nspray or dust, so that the material\ncan be directed where it is needed\nand will, not drift to other plants\nwhich do not need it and may even\nbe harmed by it.\nInhaling should be avoided.\nAfter spraying, the equipment\nshould be drained In a safe place\nand rinsed or washed out thoroughly.\nTo arrange short-stemmed flowers like pansies fill a bowl with\nwater and stretch a mesh dishcloth\nheld in place by embroidery hoops\nover the top. \u00bb\nm*Ktl%\nOtff^\nd\n*8B\u00bb\nThis nltm-modern styled F-M Furnace Is\ndesigned to give the highest betting\nefficiency. It offers more than just ordinary automatic beat... it also conditions\nthe air, giving the advantages of moist\noutdoor air. The F-M Furnace is finished\nU attractive green and designed as a\ncompact unit that uses only a small floor\ntret. It is available in 5 sizes. Let us give\nyoa the complete story of the F-M Oil\nFired Warm Air Furnace.\nBennetts Ltd;\nJhsl WlothhtL diomiL\nIHA SMALL HOUSE DESIGNS \u2014\nhe interior layout of this new bunea-\niw' design leaves little to be desired by\nrallies for which two bedrooms are\niffident. Architect Bruce Bateman, of\noronto, has used a series of five living\n\u00bbm windows and an iron rail along\nle verandah to give the exterior an\nitractive appearance. The windows\nso ensure a bright and airy living\nom, which features a fireplace with\nle hearth and la well planned for\nmlture arrangement.\nThe kitchen Is of ample dimensions,\nflowing space for serving meals. The\n>ar entrance leads directly to the base-\n\u25a0 lent and Is handy to the kitchen. Good\nloset space has been provided in both\nedrooms while a linen closet is adjacent\na the bathroom.\nThe total floor area of the house is 871 square feet while the cubic measurement Is 18,000 cubic leet.\nxterior dimensions are 89 feet, 10 inches, by 23 feet, (our Inches. Working drawings lor the house, known\ni Design 129, may be obtained from Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation at minimum cost.\nPlans of homes In this series are available either as shown or reversed at may be required. Write to\nBuilding Editor, Nelson Daily News,  Nelson, B, C.\n324 Vernon St.\nNelson, B.C.\nUse Tools Carefully\nNever misuse a tool. A carpenter's\nhammer is not made for .breaking\nup concrete. A wood saw is not\nmade to cut through nails. A screw\ndriver is not made to open cans. A\nchisel is not made to be used as a\nscrew driver.\nHome Workshop\nKeep throw rugs from slipping\nby sewing preserving Jar rubberj\nrings to the corners.\nPattern Service\nyou\nbe so\nproud!\noud!\nremodelling   with Sylvaply can make\na wonderful'change.  It's easier than ever to\nhave the smart, modern kitchen you have\nwanted for so lonjj.   Cupboards,  counters,\n'drawers and shelves can all be made with rigid\nself-framing Sylvaply, made to fit your\npresent space just the way you've always\nplanned it.  You can have the warmth and\nbeauty of wood walls too, with Sylvaply or\none of the low-cost Sylvaply decorative\nplywoods.   Easy-to-saw, easy-to-nail, easy-to-\npaint, the smooth-sanded Sylvaply panels are a\nreal buy, whether you are doing the work\nyourself or having it done for you.   See your\nlocal lumber dealer, he'll estimate the cost\nof materials or recommend a reliable contractor.\nMany lumber dealers will show you how you\ncan have that new kitchen now and pay for\nit on easy budget terms.   You can work\nwonders with low-cost remodelling, start with\na bright new kitchen to add real value to\nyour home, do-it-younelf or have-it-dons\nyou'll save either way with Sylvaply.\nCANADA'S BUSIEST REMODELLING MATERIAL\nSYLVAPLY\nDOUGLAS  FIR PLYWOOD\nSold through lumber dealers coast to coast MacMILLAN & HOEDEL LIMITED\nif,\nk\nBurns Lumber Co.\n602 Baker St.\nNeison, B.C.\nPhone 1180-1181\nPattern simplifies making this unique modern planter-lamp,\nLamp and shade are made of stock size aluminum sheets and tubing.\nOrdinary hand toolr and simplified patterns permit everyone to\nmake  modern  aluminum furniture.\nThe simple design of this modern\nlamp makes a handsome addition\nto a table in the hall or behind a\ntjettee, the top of your TV set or\nfor use on your favorite desk,\nThis Planter-Lamp is nique in\nanother way \u2014 ifs one of the first\nof a series of Build-It-Yourself\npattern projects in which aluminum\nJohnson\nOutboard\nMotors\nNew\n1954 Models\n\u2022 \u2022\nThe World's\nFirst Really\nQuiet Outboard\nMotor\nSee Them Now On Display\nNelson\nMachinery\nCo. Ltd.\n214 Hall St Phono 18\nplays an important part and In\nwhich decorative designs can be\naoplied by hand or by electric\ndrill.\nThe shade is cut to exact shape\nof the full size pattern, from one\npiece    of    aluminum,     with    an\nordinary pair of shears. To further\nsimplify   construction,   the  pattern\nshows  exactly  where  to  fold  the\nshade in order to obtain the finished  shape  desired.  To  obtain  a\nprofessional looking, smooth rolled\nedge, directions show how to cut\n: and fold a*fc\" lip etige all the way\n1 around the shade. A pair of pliers\nj and a hammer are about the most\nj important  tools  required  for  this\ni step of construction.\" When folded\nj to proper shape,  the  ends of the\nshade   are   secured   by   a   narrow\ncrease, then pressed together with\na pair of pliers.  A new adhesive,\n1 which   is   applied   with   a   brush,\ni welds the two parts together per-\nj manently   without   the   need   for\nblow torch or welding machine.\nThe pattern contains complete\ndirections for installing stock size\nlamp fixtures.\n! The upright supports for this\nlamp are cut from stock size aluminum tubing with an ordinary car-\n; penter's saw. The wood base plant-\nj er is lined to provide a waterproof\nplanting box. All electrical fixtures\nneeded are stock size and are readily obtainable at most hardware or\nhousewares stores.\nThe pattern contains complete dl-\n', rections for making the decorative\ndesign on the shade. This is done by\nmerely fastening the pattern to the\nshade with Scotch tape and drilling\nholes exaltly where the pattern\nspecifies. Holes can also be punched\nwith a nail and hammer. This Interesting and attractive design is\nfyrther enhanced by painting the\nshade exactly as full size decorating\noutlines suggest. The banding effect is achieved by using varying\ncolor combinations that blend in\nwith the furnishing of your room.\nTo further simplify decorating, the\npattern suggests using adhesive or\nscotch tape to insure straight borders-\nThere are many Interesting pattern projects being developed which\nutilize the new products now on\nthe market.\nSend 75 cents in cash or money\norder (no stamps, please) for Planter-Lamp Pattern No. 541 to Pattern\nCareful Planning First Step\nTo Successful Home Ownership\nBuilding or buying a house involves sevne of the most Important\ndecisions a family Is required to\nmake. There are many aspects to\nconsider, pnd an error in judgment\non any one of them can upset the\nhappiness of a home which is entirely suitable in every pther respect? For example, a house may be-\nsoundly constructed, well designed\nand satisfactory from the standpoint\nof room layout, but,if it is located\nIn an area which does not have suitable school facilities-and other municipal services, it can be a complete failure, Similarly, if financing\nis too burdensome the family is\nheaded for trouble.\nUnfortunately, these things are\noften learned by experience. But\nmistakes can be avoided if a little\ncare and thought is given before\nany expenditures are made.\nWhen formulating thoughts for\nyour new home, or when considering the purchase of a completed\nhouse, individual family requirements for the basic living activities\nof eating, working, sleeping and\nrelaxation should be the guides insofar as the plan or room arrangement of the house Is concerned. The\ntype of house and style of architecture are important but a house must\nsatisfy family living needs if it is to\nhave any chance of success as a\nhome.\nAn assessment of the family's\npresent and future room requirements will ease the job of house or\nhouse plan selection. Then, to judge\nthe plan of a particular house, note\nfirst of all If there is a definite separation of the living and sleeping\nareas, and if the room sizes provide\nthe accommodation required. A\ntried method of determining whether or not an arrangement of rooms\nwill conveniently meet the needs\nof an individual family is to draw\nthe floor plan to a scale of one-\nquarter Inch 4o one foot and make\ncutouts of your major pieces of\nfurniture and equipment to the\nsame scale. By moving the cutouts\nabout on the scale drawing, it is\npossible to check furniture placement, circulation within furnished\nrooms, door and window locations.\ntraffic between rooms, the adequacy\nof room^sizes and shapes and many\nother details of living, and housekeeping.\nSince the kitchen is the work\ncentre of the house, it should be\nconvenient to the dining room, the\nservice entrance at the rear or side\nof the house, and not too far from\nthe front entrance. The kitchen will\nbe more efficient if it is possible to\narrange equipment and fixtures in\na refrigerator-sink-counter-stove series to facilitate preparation of food.\nThis can be accomplished through\nthe straight-line, L-shape nr U-\nshape kitchen layout. Generally the\nkitchen which allows space for a\nbreakfast table or nook is preferred,\nIf traffic is not through halls, ensure that traffic lanes will not interfere with the functions of the\nrooms they cross. Access to the\nbasement from the service door is\npreferable to interior basement access which requires traffic through\nthe house, particularly if there are\n-mall children In the family and if\nthe house is to be heated by coal,\nremiiring the removal of ashes.\nAdequate storage space is most\nimportant. Coat and clothes closets.\nlinen closets, a broom closet in the\nkitchen and additional storage in\nthe basement or storage and utility\nroom should be the minimum, Steps\nwill be saved in the bedrooms if\nthey are planned so that it will not\nbe necessary to go around the beds\nto get to the clothes closets.\nHere are additional points to\nkeep in mind: A window over a\nbathtub will prove unsatisfactory if\na shower fixture is Installed over\nthe bath; where there is a turn in\na staircase, a platform landing is\nsafer than winders, the trade name\nfor steps cut at angles to make a\nturn around a corner; very large\nground floor window areas facing\nthe street are no problem if you\nhave no objection to fishbowl living by day  and can afford large\ndrapes for evening privacy; the\ncation of window and door op\nings and heating outlets may\nallow flexibility of furniture pli\nment and may confine large pi\nsucji as the cheBterfield to one I\ntion; protected front and ser\nentrances are economical and\nto comfort.\nHtnlng, Savmtn, Logffnf\nand Contractors'\nEquipment'\n%ls Pre%r\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 About 3500\nCanadian girls are expected* to\nenter nursing schools across the\ncountry in the next few weeks.\nThe Canadian Nurses' Association\nsays 25 per cent of all girl graduates from high school annually enter the three-year course in 171\nschools of nursing in Canada.\n\"Nursing continues to be the first\noccupational choice of Canadian\ngirls graduating from high school\"\nsays Frances McQuarrie, nursing\neducation secretary of the CNA.\nGirls prefer nursing as a career,\nshe says, because they are \"interested in working with people rather\nthan with a typewriter or serving\nacross a counter.\nHELD IN HIGH REGARD\n\"Both the daughters and their\nparents tend to favor nursing because of the public's high regard\nfor the profession. But what we\nreally look for in a girl is the desire to serve, and a genuine interest In health improvement.\"\nOpportunities for nursing are\nwide and stimulating. Miss McQuarrie said that in addition to\nservice on hospital staffs, nurses\nare needed in public health, private\nduty, in industry and in remote settlement*.\nOpenings also exist in the World\nHealth Organization, the Colombo\nPlan, the international Red Cross\nand other organizations.\nAs for romance, Miss McQuarrie\nnoted that a large number of nurses\nmarry after a short time \\n the profession. \"As far as I know, there\nis no better preparation for marriage than a nurse's education,\" she\nsays.\nDept.,   NDN,   Quinn   Lumber   and\nBuilders Supply Co. Ltd.. 280 Mait-\nland Street, London, Ont.\nCopyright  1964\u2014Donald   R.  Brann.\n5 Important Features\nof\nFlintkote\nStatic\nAsphalt Coating\n1. No Danger of Fire\n2. No Special Equipment Needed\n3. Will Not Flow in Hot Weather\n4. Will Not Crack, Alligator or\nCarbonize\n5. Long Life ... Will Outlast Any Other\nForm of Bituminous Coating Exposed\nTo tho Weather.\nDEALERS   INQUIRIES   INVITED\nOn All Flintkote  Products for the  Kootenaya.\nTHE'\nK.W. Dixon Co. Ltd.\n301 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 1704\nLIMITED TIME ONLY!\n1\nFOR PRE-SEASONj\nINSTALLATION\nNow! Get the finest\nin automatic oil heat\nand SAVE dollars!\nOILOMMC\nFRPFI \"\"mat* on reP,ocam\u00b0nt of your proient\nri\\CC( oil or coal unit, 'Phono NOWI\nKQOtestay Plumbing\nand Heating Co. Ltd.\n351 Baker St.\nPhone 666\nBEAUTIFUL 54-INCH\nShirley Cabinet Sink\nPriced at Only $129.50\nFor Top Grade\nPLUMBING FIXTURES\nand SUPPLIES\nAt the\nLOWEST PRICES IN THE KOOTENAYS\nOur  Salesman   Is  Fully Qualified  To Advise\nYou How To Do It Yourself and How To\nComply With Local Plumbing Bylaws.\nColumbia Trading Co.\nQUALITY   GUARANTEED   AT   LOWER   PRICES\n902 FRONT ST. PHONE 1511\n __        :\n55^\/S\n48 From\nIn Labor\nkootenay golfers' attention\nfocusses on Nelson Golf and Country Club this weekend as an International entry opens play In the\nlong-established Labor Day tournament.\nDefending champion John Les-\nchuk will be on the greens to defend the Ken McBride Memorial\nTrophy and his Nelson open championship title. Forty-eight club-\n\u25a0wingers are entered.\n\u00bb Golfers from five Kootenay\ncentres and from Metallne Fails and\nSpokane are on the draw sheet\nNew Denver, Kaslo, Trail. Rossland,\nMetaline Falls. Spokane and Nelson\nwill be represented in the two-day\ntest. '\nPrizes will be awarded after winners are declared the afternoon of\nLabor Day.\nSecond flight:\n8:15 a.m.\u2014W. Wicken vs ,1. Sturgeon; L. Parlow vs N. Tattrie.\n7 Centres,\nDay Golf\n8:25 a.m. \u2014 M. MacLeod vs H\nKelly: F. Merriman vs G. Wilson,\n8:30 a.m \u2014C. Locatelll vs Q. For-\nsythe; W. Apostolluk vs J. Young.\n8:40\u2014G. Day vs Bud Greenwood;\nH. D. Forman vs C. McLean.\n' Championship:\n8:45 a.m.\u2014J. Leschuk . vs' W. S.\nRoss;  D. McLean  vs C. Garland.\n8:50\u2014A. Sherwood vs L. McBride;\nS. Angus vs J. Chesser.\n9:00\u2014G. Steed vs L. Alwell; J.\nWright vs A, Allan.\n9:10\u2014E. Dickson vs J. Allan; M.\nWellock vs T. Turkington.\nFourth flight:\n9:20\u2014M. Stedman vs J. Hood; D.\nColeman vs N. Smith.\n9:30\u20140. Brown vs M. Bodnaruk;\nB. Foster vs D. M. Samnle.\n9:40\u2014W. Day vs R. Brown and\nM. Cameron vs C. Penny.\n9:50 \u2014 T. W. Clarke vs Verne\nKneeshaw, and G. Wakeham vs Al\nFreeman.\n32-Mile Lake Ontario Swim . . .\nCanadian Girl To\nChallenge Chadwick\nTORONTO (CP) - A 16-year-old\nToronto girl, Marilyn Bell, will\nswim against Florence Chadwick in\nher attempt to conquer Lake Ontario.\nMarilyn's decision was announced\nFriday by her father Syd Bell. She\nsaid she decided to enter the 32\nmile cross-lake swim from Youngs-\ntown, N.Y., to Toronto Tuesday to\nuphold the honor of Canada against\nthe United States swimmer.\nThe San Diego, Calif., distance\nstar is a two-wtey conqueror of the\nEnglish Channel. Miss Bell captured top place among women swimmers in the recent 26-mlle Atlantic\nCity swim.\nCNE officials have not discouraged the Toronto girl's entry, but\nemphasize no matter how well she\ndoes, she will not receive any cash\nprize. Miss Chadwick will receive\n$10,000 if she completes the 32-mile\nswim, but nothing if she fails.\nFollowing the announcement that\nSask. Girls Triumph at Discus\nBob Bazos Snares Two Victories\nAt Canada's Track, Field Meet\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Big Bob Bazos\n| of Toronto tossed two victories Frl-\n| day  as  competition  began  in  the\nCanadian interprovincial track and\nfield championships.\nThe six-foot, four-inch field event\n\u25a0tar bettered the Canadian discus\nm3rk with a throw of 157 feet. 8V4\nInches. His mark will not be a\nrecord,  however,  as Roy  Pella  of\nMINOR HOCKEY\nHEADS TO MEET\nIN TRAIL SUNDAY\nThe annual meeting of West Kootenay Minor Hockey Association\nwill take place Sunday at 3:30 p.m.\nIn the Board Room of the Cominco\nArena in Trail.\nThere are many important Items\ndealing with minor hockey in the\nWest Kootenays. including a new\nconstitution that'will be discussed\nat this meeting.\nFive delegates from each centre\nare expected. These centres in the\npast have been Nelson, Rossland\n,4Vand Trail, but anyone^ from the\nother centres interested in minor\nhockey in\" the West Kootenays has\nbeen invited J,p attend.\nGUNS\nWe Hove All the Latest in\nGuns and Hunting\nEquipment\nDrop In and See Our\nComplete  Selection\nJack Boyce\nTHE  MAN'8 SHOP\nProp.,  Fred  Whiteley\nSudbury, Ont., has topped the-Ca-\nnadian record of 157 feet, three\ninches four times this year\u2014once\nwith, a throw of 162 feet.\nFollowing Bazos were Stan Raike\nof Toronto with 152 feet, four\ninches and Russ Doern of Winnipeg\nwith  127 feet, 4 Mi inches.\nAll three topped the meet mark\nof 143 feet, three inches.\nThe meet is a wlndup of the\nOlympic Training Plan financed by\nthe Canadian National Exhibition\nand a group of Toronto business\nmen to increase Canada's chances\nin world competition. Competitors\ninclude athletes , from across Can\nada, here this week for training\nsessions under two noted U.S\ncoaches\u2014Ken Doherty of the University of Pennsylvania and Brutus\nHamilton of the University of California.\nwins Ravelin event\nBazos collected 'his second vie\ntory in the javelin throw. His mark\nwas 176 feet, seven inches, well\nbelow the Canadian record of 214\nfeet.\n..Three .youngsters made the women's javelin a Saskatchewan affair.\nShirley Couzeni of Moose Jaw\nwai the winner with a throw of\n123 feet, 5'\/2 Inches. Only six\nInches separated Marjorle Ash-\ndown of Invermay and Grace\nJasper of Saskatoon for second\nand third place. Miss Ashdown\ncame second with 109 feet, 6y2\ninches.\nBlonde Jackie McDonald of Toronto won the women's discus, Her\nthrow of 124 feet, Z\\{ Inches was\n'ess than eight feet from a Canadian record.\nMarie Dupree of Vancouver was\nsecond with 121 feet, 7^4 inches.\nThird was Miss Jasper with 117\nfeet,  11 inches.\nThiB is the Scotch '.Soft,\ngentle, golden-hued ...\nlight. Have you tried itf\nSince 1746\nWHITE HORSE\nof course!\nAwllabU in 26V4 \u00ab\u25a0 \u00b0\"d 1JA\nThis advertisement is not published ot displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n3 MORE SECONDS\nWOULD BE LIMIT\nSAYS LANDY\nSINGAPORE (AP)- John Landy1,\nthe world's fastest miler, said toda^y\nhe thinks the \"miracle mile\" of\n3.58 which he ran recently in Fin\nland can be clipped by another\nthree seconds.\nThat, he added, would be the absolute limit of human endurance\nThe 23-year-old Australian runner arrived here today by air en\nroute home from Britain.\nOf his defeat at the Empire\nGames in Vancouver by Britain's\nRoger Bannister he said: \"He was\njust too good for me that day. He\nis a great runner.\"\nLandy leaves by air Saturday for\nSydney, where he will start work\nas a school master. He said: \"My\njob comes first now. If I cannot\nfind time to train while I am teaching, I am afraid I will not be in-\neluded in the Melbourne Olympics.\"\nBATTING LEADERS\nBy The Associated Press\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nAB R - H Pet.\nSnider, .Brooklyn .. 497 110 173 .348\nMusial, St. Louis .. 509 J09 174 .342\nMays. New York 480 98 164 .342\nMueller, New York 527 76 176 .334\nKluszewski, Cine. .. 495   88 162 .327\nRuns, Snider, 110.\nRuns batted in\u2014Musial, 117.\nHits\u2014Schoendienst, St. Louis, 177.\nDoubles, Schoendienst, 35.\nTriples \u2014 Hamner, Philadelphia,\nand Mays, 11.\nHome runs\u2014Kluszewski, 41.\nStolen bases\u2014Bruton, Milwaukee,\n28.'\nPitching\u2014Antonelll,   New   York,\n20-3\u2014.870.\nStrikeouts\u2014Haddix, St. Louis, 158,\nAMERICAN   LEAGUE\nAB R H Pet.\nNoren, New York . 378 60 128 .339\nAvila, Cleveland . 480 93 158 .329\nMinoso, Chicago .. 492 108 160 .325\nFox, Chicago .. 553 98 178 .322\nMantle, New York 466 110 143 .307\nRuns\u2014Mantle, 110.\nRuns batted in\u2014Doby, Cleveland,\n109.\nHits\u2014Fox, 178.\nDoubles\u2014Vernon, Washington, 30.\nTriples\u2014Minoso, 17.\nHome runs\u2014Doby, 29.\nStolen bases\u2014Jensen, Boston, 20.\nPitching \u2014 Consuegra,   Chicago,\n16-3-.842.\nStrikeouts \u2014 Turley,   Baltimore,\n145.\nNANAIMO, B.C. (CP)\u2014Nanaimo\nCivic Arena Commission has rejected the proposed Seattle-Tacoma-\nKerrisdale-Nanaimo hockey league.\nNanaimo now will play the same\ntype of hockey as last year when\nthe Clippers were In the Victoria\nCommercial League.\nMiss Sell, would attempt the crossing, a jewelry store announced it\nwould pay Miss Bell $1000 it she\ncompletes the swim.\n-Yd. Swim\nTest Completed\nEighteen swimmers completed\nthe quarter mile swimming tests\nThursday under- Instructor Ed Kelter at Lakeside Park.\nFirst to complete the distance was\nKeith Holmes, who came in with a\ntime of 9:14, just one second ahead\nof Tom Smith. Three others, Mike\nBennett, Oene Kraft and Cliff\nSpiers were tied with a time of\n9:30. These were followed by Judith Godfrey, 10:20; Terry Moran,\n10:30; Lyn Derby, 10:36; Bob McLean, 10:36; Merrilyn Ure, 10:46;\nLydia Walton, 12:28; Brian Jerome,\n13:39; Ann Godfrey, 14:04; Neil Jerome, 14:09; Larry McEachern, 16:38;\nCarol Ann Locatelll, 17:16; Sheila\nMcGovern, 17:22, and Tanls Foxall,\n18:48.\nCastlegar Cubs\nTo Victoria\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 Castlegar Cubs,\n1954 Trail and district fastball\nchampions, are now on their way\nto compete with three other teams\nin the B.C. softball championship\nplayoffs at Victoria Saturday and\nSunday.\nThe-team has received a total of\n$334 in donations from community\ngroups and individuals to help them\ndefray their expenses while at the\ncoast.\nLIONS AT CALGARY\nFOR WEEKEND\nBy Th\u00ab Canadian Press\nCanada's three professional football leagues tackle a tough stretch\nof their schedules this weekend,\nwhile most other Canadians are enjoying the three-day Labor Day\nholiday.\nThe three loops have a total of\n10 games crammed into the weekend.\nBritish Columbia Lions, wlnless\nIn two starts, move into Calgary\nfor a game against the Stampeders\nSaturday night The Stamps, who\ndropped their first two games, took\ntheir next two and in the process\nscored 75 points. They didn't have\na point scored against them as they\nbeat the Roughriders 34-0 last Saturday and Winnipeg 41-0 Monday.\nThe Liona will be the underdogs\nagainst Calgary, but may surprise\nsome people in their clash against\nthe injured Eskimos in Edmonton\nMonday.\nNelson-Naramata\nCricket Cancelled\nMatch between Nelson Cricket\nClub and Naramata club scheduled\nfor Monday at Tadanac Park has\nbeen cancelled, Nelson skipper C.\nYoung said Friday night.\nThe game was cancelled when a\nnumber of the Naramata players,\nwho will be in Trail Sunday to\nplay a game, will be unable to sXay\npver.\nBritish Cricket\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Cricket results in Britain today: MCC 143 and\n225, Yorkshire 165 and 207 for four.\nYorkshire won by six wickets.\nCommonwealth 261 and 199 for\nfive declared, England 236 -and 202.\nCommonwealth won by 22 runs.\nLancashire 323 and 104, Sussex\n194 and 150. Lancashire won by 83\nruns.\nGiants Four\nGames Ahead\nBy The Associated Press\nNew York Giants pulled four\ngames ahead of Brooklyn In the\nNational League pennant race\nFriday night with a come-from-\nbehind 7-4 victory over the\nDodgers In the first of a vital\nthree-game series.\nIn the American League Cleveland  held  Its  3|\/s  game   margin\nover New York with, a 3-2 triumph at Chicago on Larry Doby's\nhome   run   In. the   seventh.  The\nYankees blasted Washington 9-2,\nNever ahead through the first _slx\nInnings, the Giants picked up one\nrun In the seventh on a surprise\nsingle by Hoyt Wilhelm, his first\nhit of the season, and added two\nmore in the  eighth on  four con\nsecutlve singles.\nHODGES HITS 37TH HOMER\nGil Hoages summed his 37th\nhomer for Brooklyn, with the bases\nempty, and Whitey Lockman hit\nLoes' first -pitch in the first inning\ninto the seats for New York.\nMilwaukee's persistent Braves\nstayed -iVi games behind in third\nplace with a 3-2 verdict over Cincinnati in 12 innings. Jack Dittmer's\nhomer in the 12th.was the winning\nrun after Del Crandall had tied\nthe score in the ninth with a bases-\nempty homer.\nFREE-FOR-ALL\nThe game was marked by a free-\nfor-all fight in the eighth inning\nand Jim Greengrass of the Redlegs\nand Johnny Logan of the Braves\nwere kicked out of the game.\nTed Kluszewski hit his 42nd ho\nn.er, tops in both leagues, In the\neighth inning with one aboard for\nthe Reds' two runs.\nThe Yankees overpowered Wash\nington, scoring five runs in fifth\nwhen an, attempted force play on\nMickey Mantle with two out failed\nTed Williams moved into fifth\nplace in the list of all-time home\nrun hitters with his 362nd in Bos\nton's 11-1 romp at Philadelphia. He\nmoved past Joe DiMaggio and now\ntrails Babe Ruth, Jimmy Foxx, Mel\nOtt and Lou-Gehrig.\nNEW YORK (CP) - Tommy\nByrne, the left-handed pitcher\nwhose wildness led New York\nYankees to trade him four years\nago, was repurchased Friday to help\nthe Yanks in the American League\nstretch drive.\nByrne was bought from Seattle\nof the Pacific Coast League for an\nundisclosed sum.\nBASEBALL SCORES\nBy-The\u00bbCanadlan Press '\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nCleveland   100 010 100\u20143   9   2\nChicago     001 001 00\u20142 11   0\nFeller, Mossi (7) Garcia.(7) and\nHegan; Trucks, Johnson (9) and\nBatts. W\u2014Feller L\u2014Trucks. HRs:\nCleveland\u2014Doby; Chicago\u2014Rivera.\nBaltimore ... 000 000 030 0\u20143 13 1\nDetroit'  300 000 000 1\u20144 10   1\nTurley, Fox (8) and Courtney;\nGromek and House. L\u2014Fox. HR:\nBaltimore\u2014Abrams.\nNew York  001 050 003\u20149 12   2\nWashington   ... 100 100 000\u20142   9   0\nByrd, Konstanty (5) and Berra;\nStobbs, Rascual (5) and Fitzgerald.\nW\u2014Konstanty; L\u2014Stobbs.\nBoston  ..      003 500 012\u201411 14   2\nPhiladelphia    100 000 000\u2014 1   4   5\nSullivan and White; Portocarrero,\nSima (4), Oster ,(7) and Astroth.\nL\u2014Portocarrero. HR: Boston\u2014Williams.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia  .. 100 202 002\u20147 12   !\nPittsburgh    000 000 .001\u20141   5   4\nSlmmonB and Burgess: Friend.\nThies (6) Lapalme (7), Hetkl (9)\nand Shepard. I.\u2014Friend.\nSecond:\nPhiladelphia    020 011 312\u201410 16   2\nPittsburgh   .    010 100 000\u2014 2   5   1\nGreenwood, Mrozinski (3) Ridzik\n(5) and Lopata; Littlefield, Law (7)\nand Atwell. W\u2014Ridzik; L\u2014Little-\nfield.\nChicago    000 000 013\u20144 11   0\nSt.  Louis    000 000 300\u20143   5   2\nMinner, Tremel (9), Davis (9),\nand Garagiola; Jones, Brazle (9),\nWade (9) and Sarni. W\u2014Minner; L\nBrazle. HR: St. Louis\u2014Grammas.\nMilwaukee 000 000 020 001\u20143 8 2\nCincinnati   000 000 020 000\u20142   9   1\nBurdette, Johnson (9), Koslo (9),\nJolly (11) and Crandall; Valentine,\nSmith (10) and Seminick, Landrith\n(8). W\u2014Jolly; L\u2014Smith. HRs: Milwaukee, Crandall, Dittmer; Cincinnati\u2014Kluszewski.\nNelson Athletes\nTo Rossland\nMeet Monday\nNelson athletes will be represented at the Rossland track and field\nevents Labor Day. Ten will make\nthe trip, under Joe Palesch, who\nwill take charge in the absen.ee of\nEd Kelter.\nTwo Junior girls, Marjory Elsener\nand Merrilyn Ure, along with six\njunior boys, Mike Horswill, Ken\nHalsey, Richard Bonderud, Morris\nDonaldson, Wayne W(aters and Ken\nPeerless, will be out to bring the\ncity honors in the junior divisions\nwhile in the senior events Joe Palesch and brother BUI will compete.\nIt is expected this .will be a tune-\nup for the athletes who will later\nthis month enter the Trail meet\nwhich will see competitors from\nthe Kootenays taking part.\nU.$. Wins Curtis\nCup Victory\nARDMORE, Pa. (AP) \u2014 Two\nUnited States girls with the good\nIrish names of Riley and Doran\nFriday sparked the United States\nto a crushing victory in the eighth\nCurtis Cup international golf match\nwith Britain's best.\nThe final count was 6-3 in favor\nof the U.S. girls. It was all over\nwhen plucky little Polly Riley of\nFort Worth and tall, attractive\nClaire Doran of Cleveland polished\noff their English opponents.\nMiss Riley piled up the biggest\nmargin in Curtis Cup history, 9 and\n8, against Elizabeth Price, the heroine of Britain's only Curtis Cup\nvictory in 1952.\nMiss Doi-an trimmed Jeanne Bis-\ngood 4 and 3.\nThat made the count five points\n\u2014enough to win\u2014for the U.S. before the British Isles team had captured a single match. The reversal\nhad taken all three of the \"Scotch\"\nfoursome matches Thursday.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1954\u20147\nAustralian Ace Upset\nOn Road to Tennis Semis\nBy WILL GRIMSLEY\nFOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) -\nYoung Ham Rlohardson of Baton\nRouge, La., playing the greatest\ntennis of his career, upset Australia's No. 1 ace, Lewis Hoad, In\na tense and bitter three-hour\nbattle Friday to gain the semifinals of the United States tennis\nCohampionshlps.  The scores  were\nLEO'S PROTEST\nDISALLOWED\nCINCINNATI (AP) - Warren\nC. Giles, president of the National\nLeague, Thursday disallowed manager Leo Durocher's protest of Wednesday night's baseball game be-,\ntween New York Giants and Cincinnati Redlegs. Cincinnati won 9-7\nfrom the league-leading Giants.\nCincinnati's Johnny Temple dashed from third base to the home\nplate in the third inning and was\ncalled out. Frank Secory, third base\numpire, however, upheld a contention of the Redlegs that he had called time before Temple tried to\nscore.\nDurocher then said the Giants\nwould play the remainder of the\ngame under protest.\nRoyals Out lo\nEnd Loss Run al\nSalmo Tourney\nNelson Royals, who haven't won\na game all season, will be going to\nSalmo Labor Day, looking for a\nwin.. They will be playing Rossland\nRoyals as part of a softball tournament planned for the day's festivities.\nThe Royals have played five\ngames this season, three against\nShaver's Bench, losing them all.\nPlayers will meet at the Ward and\nBaker corner about 10:30 Monday\nmorning for the trip out by cars.\nOK Hockey\nOpens Oct. 8\nKELOWNA\u2014The Okanagan Senior Hockey League executive has\ndrawn up the 1954-55 OSHL playing\nschedule for the coming season.\nThe season will open October 8\nwith Kamloops Elks at Penticton,\nwith Vernon at Kelowna the following night.\nThroughout.the 54-game schedule\nKamloops home nights will be Wednesday and Saturday; Kelowna on\nThursday and- Saturday; Vernon,\nTuesday and Saturday, and Penticton Tuesday and Friday.\nEach team will play 27 home\ngames. The schedule was unanimously approved by all delegates to\nthe meeting, held Friday night at,\nVernon.\nIt was agreed there would be an\nindependent referee-in-chief, who\nwill not take part in actual referee-\ning, but sit in the, crowd and watch\nthe refs in action. He will attend at\nleast one game a month in each\ntown.\nA motion was also carried that\nthere be a referee in charge, assisted by one local man as \"assistant referee\", whose powers will be\ndefined by the referee-in-chif.\nIt is believed -that the assistant\nreferee will have the right to call\nminoi; penalties.\n' 6-4, 7-B, 11-13, 4-6, 8-3.\nThree times in the third set, after\ntaking the first two, the 21-year-\nold U.S. intercollegiate champion\nsaw victory Snatched'from his grasp\nwhen the grimly fighting Hoad\nfought off match points.\nThen when Hoad finally won that\nset at 13-11 and took the next, the\nhighly-excited crowd of 13,000 despaired of the Louisiana boy's\nchances.\nBut 'Richardson, a diabetic who\ntakes insulin shots each day, found\nsome new strength from somewhere, cracked Hoad's service in\nthe sixth game of the final set with\ntwo spectacular backhand passing\nshots and went on to his greatest\ntriumph.\nAll other matches in the men's\ndivision were a round behind Richardson.\nDefending champion Tony Trabert of Cincinnati defeated the U.S.\nDavis Cup captain, Bill Talbert ,oJ\nNew York, 7-5, 6-3, 6-0.\n1\nmet Pal\nfor the kids.\n(AND riSIIIBMIN)\nEVINRUDE\nLlghtwln\nOUTBOARD MOTOk\nMarine Service\nCITY WHARF\n$190.71\nNELSON\nFoot of Hall  Street\nPhone 1459\nMARINE SALES AND\nSERVICE\nA SPECIAL RCAF OFFICER\nThe RCAF Recruiting Unit Will Be in Trail September 6th and 7th\n10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Canadian Legion\nand Creston, September 9th, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at Canadian Legion\nCanadian Cricketers Sail for Home\nBy RON EVAN8\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON. (CP) \u2014 Fourteen Canadian cricketers sailed for home Friday, their luggage bulging with\nsouvenirs of a wet but rewarding\nsix-week tour of Britain.\nThey carried bundles of rain-\nsoaked programs and score cards\naboard the Empress of Australia in\nLiverpool. But chief among their\ntrophies were the Btumps soiled\nThursday from the wicket at Lord's.\nThe Canadians carried off their\nprize after a three-run victory in a\nfinal two-day match against Middlesex. (\n\"It's always good to win the last\none,\" said team captain Basil\nRobinson, who saw the team off\nat the boat train. Robinson will\nstay at his Canadian government\npost In London.\nFOUR VICTORIES\nThe Canadians' four victories in\n18 matches were against Hamp-\nstead, a North Wales side, the renowned Marlebone Cricket Club,\nand Middlesex.'They dropped three\nmatches, to Yorkshire, another\nWelsh team and the touring Pakistan side. Eight matches resulted in\ndraws.\nRobinson said that the weather\nand injuries proved the main handicaps for the Canadians. Rain prevented play in three matches and\ninterrupted two more.\nRobinson was sidelined for two\nmatches with a spinal injury. Mel\nRilstone, Montreal leg-break bowler, was out for the last month and\nJohn Lucas, off-spin bowler also of\nMontreal, missed much of the tour's\naction.\nThis year's lour, firsit undertaken\nofficially by a Canadian team, was\nsponsored by the Marylebone Cricket Club which is reported to have\nfooted * bill for more than \u00a34000.\n\u2022\n\u2022\n\u2022\nLABOR DAY\nHIGHLAND GAMES\nCIVIC GROUNDS                      9 a.m.\nPIPE  BAND COMPETITION                 \u2022  PIPING\nHIGHLAND  DANCING                         \u2022  DRUMMING\nMASS BAND PARADE (7 Bands)        \u2022 MASS BAND CONCERT, LAKESIDE\nMorning and Afternoon                                PARK, SUNDAY, 2:30 P.M.\nDANCE\nCivic Centre Ballroom                  Labor Day Night\nFeaturing MICKEY McEWAN and His 6 Piece Orchestra\nMeet the Band Boyi and Girls, and the Scotch Dancers In Person.\nDancing 9-1 a.m. - Admission 75c\n'\n'' ,    '                         Sponsored by the Kootenay Kiltie Pipe Band\n 8\u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1954\nZ\nii.     -'\nB\nN\nE\nR\nH\nr\u2014\nC\nN\nR\nY\nL\nO\nN\nE\nR\nA\nN\nG\nE\nR\nB\nL\nQ\nN\nD\nS\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nJ-\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\ns\nA\nY\nW\nE\nR\nG\nG\nS\nCHUTES m N THE PlMtE, SIR, IK CASE WE\nNEED 'EM. BUT WE USUAIW FLY A STORM\nAT 80 TO SOO FEET. BBllINa OUT AT .\nTHAT ALTITUDE IH'A ISWHOT WMP^\/\nRMM.\nWSU...VOU SEE\nMetal Prices\nLead\u2014New York, .14%.\nZinc\u2014East St. Louis,..11.\nDIVIDENDS\nI (By The Canadian Press)\nImperial Bank of Canada, 30 cents,\nI Nov. 1, record Sept. 30,\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nSATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1954\n-(Pacific Daylight Time)\n\u25a000\u2014News\n:05\u2014Early Bird\n:30\u2014News\n:35\u2014Rise 'n Shine\n:00\u2014News\n:10\u2014Sports News\n: 15\u2014Hits and Encores\n:30\u2014Breakfast Bands\n:00\u2014Western Serenade\n: 15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n:30\u2014Stamp Club\n:45\u2014Robin Hood's Bike Contest\n:50\u2014Teen Tunes\n00\u2014Pops Parade\n45\u2014News\n00\u2014Pops Parade\n;00\u2014Today in History\n:05\u2014Consumer's Corner\n15\u2014Sports News\n20\u2014News\n30\u2014A Touch of Greasepaint\n:00\u2014Portraits in Sound\n:30\u2014Musical Program\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10\u2014Old Country Sports Scores\n3:30\u2014Sports College\n3:45\u2014Invitation\n4:00\u2014Now I' Ask You\n4:30\u2014Gino and Juliette\n5:00\u2014Sons of the Saddle\n5:30\u2014Post Mark U.K,\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014A Boon to Music\n6:30\u2014Prairie Schooner\n7:00\u2014Denny Vaughn Show\n7:30\u2014Saturday   Playhouse\n8:00\u2014Serenade  for Strings\n8:30\u2014Soiree a Quebec\n9:00\u2014Sunshine Club\n9:30\u2014Saturday Special\n1000\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Dance Time\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\nWOMAN PREFERABLY BE-\ntween 30 and 45 with pleasant\ndisposition and smart appearance,\n'for. clerical and reception work.\n-   Please apply in own handwriting,\nI stating age, previous experience\nand marital status, etc. Box 6021,\nDaily News.\nWANTED:- PENSION COUPLE,\nwoman good cook, and husband\nhandy with tools. Free board and\n^)wn cabin. Apply Arrow Lake\nLodge, Needles, B. C.\nSUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1954\n8:00\u2014Sunday Morning Music\n8:30\u2014Chamber Music\n9:00\u2014Overseas, News\n9:15\u2014News t\n9:30\u2014Concerto\n10:00\u2014B.C  Gardener\n10:15-4ust Mary\n10:30\u2014Songs of Praise\n11:00\u2014This Is My Story\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n12*0\u2014World Music Festivals\n1:30--Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014Stringalong\n2:30\u2014Portrait of a Woman\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05\u2014Ask the Weatharman\n3:12\u2014Weather\n3:15\u2014U.N. on the Record\n3:30\u2014Music I Like\n4100\u2014The People's Church\n4:15\u2014All Aboard tor Adventure\n4:30\u2014Once Upon a Tune\n5:00\u2014Hour of Decision\n5:30\u2014Canada at Work\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Summer Stage\n6:30\u2014Canadian Scene\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Little Symphonies\n8:00\u2014Sunday Concert\n9:00\u2014Sweet and Lively\n9:30\u2014Vesper Hour\nI0:00--News\nlO^S^-Portraits of Aspen\n10:30\u2014Music Diary\nl.':00-\"NEWS\" Night Cap\nMONDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1954\n30\u2014 Trans-Canada  Matinee\n15\u2014Siesta Time\n30\u2014Sacred Heart\n45\u2014News Bulletin\n48\u2014B. C. Roundup\n: 15\u2014Tempo for Two\n30\u2014The Pobble From Pluto\n45\u2014Children's Program\n00\u2014Wax Wagon\n30\u2014Road and Weather Report\n35\u2014Swap and Shop\n40\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n: 45\u2014Sports News\n50\u2014News\n:00\u2014Musicale\n:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n:00\u2014News\n:15\u2014News Roundup\n:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n:00\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n;:15\u2014Win's Showplace\n:30\u2014Adventure in the West\n:00\u2014Bob McMullin Show\n:30\u2014Let's Square Dance\n:00\u2014News\n: 15\u2014Club Date\n:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n:45\u2014Devotions\n:00\u2014NEWS Nightcap\n7:00\u2014Ntws\n7:05\u2014The Early Bird\n7:30   News\n7:35\u2014Rise V Shine\n8:00- News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Women's World\n9:00\u2014Warren's   Wigwam\n10:00\u2014Western Tunes\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Musical Program\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Musical  Program\n11:00\u2014Shut-in Show\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\nII 45--Consumers  Corner\n12:00\u2014Melody Ranch\n1215\u2014Sports  News\n!J 20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Today in History\n1:00\u2014Tops and Pops\n1:15\u2014Hollywood  Calling\n1:30\u2014Specialty Shop\n1:45\u2014Musicale\n2:00\u2014Pacific News\n2:15\u2014Musical Matinee\nCBC   PROGRAMS\nSUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 5\", 1954\n(Mountain Standard Time)\n8:00\u2014Sunday Morning Music\n8:30\u2014Chamber Music\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Songtime\n9:30\u2014Concerto\n10:00\u2014B.C   Gardner\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014Songs of Praise\n11:00\u2014Newi\n11:03\u2014Capital Report\n11:30\u2014Religious Period\n12:00\u2014Invitation to Music\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n2:00\u2014Stringalong\n2:30\u2014Portrait of a Woman\n3:00\u2014News\n3:05- -A'    the Weacf.erman\n3:12\u2014Weather Forecast\n3:15\u2014U   . on the Record\n3:30\u2014Music I Like\n4:00\u2014Sunday Chorale\n4:30\u2014Once Upon a Time\n5:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n6:00\u2014Summer Theatre\n6:30\u2014Canadian Scene\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014 Weekend Review\n7:20\u2014Our Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Little Symphony Orchestra\n8:00\u2014Winnipeg Sunday Concert\n9:00\u2014Sweet and Lively\n6:30\u2014Vesper Hour\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Portrait of Aspen\n10:30\u2014Music Diary\nMONDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1954\n00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n15\u2014Musical Minutes\n30\u2014News\n35\u2014Musical  Minutes\n45\u2014Morning Devotions\n55\u2014March Past\n:00\u2014News\n: 10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n:15\u2014BreiKijst Club\n:45\u2014Anything Goes\n:00\u2014BBC News\n: 15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n:30\u2014Laura Limited\n:45\u2014Music Shop\nIIU\u2014Mornina  Visit\n15\u2014Elwood Glover\n45\u2014Musical Program\n00\u2014A Man and His Music\n15\u2014News\n:25\u2014Showcase\n30   B C   Farm  Broadcast\n55\u2014Five to One\n00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n30\u2014Trans-Canadr  Matinee\n15\u2014Siesta Time\n30\u2014Closed Circuit\n45\u2014News Bulletin\n48\u2014B. C.   Roundup\n15 -Tempos for Two\n30\u2014The Pobble From Pluto\n45\u2014A Child's Guidr\n00\u2014Current and Choice\n15\u2014Chansonettes\n:40\u2014International   Commentary\n45\u2014News and Weather\n55\u2014Have Vou Heard?\n00\u2014Int. Concert\n00\u2014News\n15-   News  Roundup\n:30\u2014Summer Fallow\n:00\u2014Chris Gage Show\n15\u2014Win's Showplace\n30\u2014Adventure\" in the West\n00\u2014Bob McMullin Shov,\n:30\u2014Let's Square Dance\nuu\u2014News\n15-Club Date\n30\u2014Music by Camarata\nTUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 4*54\n7:00\u2014Marme Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014 News l\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8 15\u2014 Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9-15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Inauguration of St. Lawrence\nPower Project\n1000\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Musical Program\n1C:45\u2014Mart  Kenney\n11:00\u2014A Man and His Musio\n12:15\u2014News\n12.25\u2014Showcase\n12-30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\nl:00r-Distinguished Artists\n1:45\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:15\u2014Today's Guest\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n15\u2014Siesta Time\n30\u2014Program   Resume\n45\u2014News Bulletin\n:48\u2014Yesterday's  Favorites\n15\u2014Barney Potts Show\n30\u2014Music Picture Lady\n45\u2014Sleepytlme Story  Teller\n00\u2014Current and Choice\n15\u2014At Home with the Lennicks\n40\u2014International Commentary\n45\u2014News and Weather\n55\u2014Have You Heard\n00\u2014Fighting Woras\n30\u2014This is Radio\n:00\u2014News\n15\u2014News Roundup\n30\u2014Leicester Square\n:00\u2014Anthropologist's Notebook\n:15\u2014Canadian?\n:30\u2014Music From the Pacific\n:00\u2014Let's Make Music\n:30\u2014Chllcotin Trails\nHO   News\n:15\u2014B. C. Coast Indians\n30\u2014Ragtime Rhythm\nACTUAL JOBS IN CANADA, U.S.\nS. Am., Europe. To $15,000. Travel\npaid. Write Emp. Info. Center,\nRoom C-93, 316 Stuart St., Boston.\nWANTED - SWITCHBOARD OP\nerator with clerical experience.\nApply Box 1482 Nelson Daily\nNews.\nCAPABLE COOK FOR CREW.\nWrite- or phone 6-F, Tourist Hotel, Sirdar.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nHOUSEKEEPER   WANTED    FOR\nelderly couple at once.\nWANTED: A DOORMAN. APPLY\nCivic Theatre, evenings.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nACCOUNTANT SEEKS OPPOR-\ntunity in Nelson, Experienced\nvarious fields. Sober, industrious.\nWell recommended. Box 6211,\nDaily News.\nSTUDENT WOULD LIKE TO\nwork for board and room. Phone\n1017-X.\nSPECIAL ESTIMATES ON NEW\nconstructibn, alterations and repairs. Phone 434-X-2.\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED: LADY TEACHER TO\nshare home with single business\nwoman. Phone 772L.\nWANTED   ROOM   AND   BOARD\nfor two gentlemen. Ph. 1498-X.\nGIRL    DESIRES    BOARD    AND\nroom. Box 1382. Daily News.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nFOR SALE: 7.5 EVINRUDE WITH\n16-foot boat, $150. Ph. 1688-L.\nfUitfuiAL^\nftu. <^\u00a3t*\u00a3& f\n;>;\nNOTICE TO CONTRACTORS\nSealed tenders will be received up\nto noon (P.D.T.) September 22nd,\n1954, by the undersigned for the\nconstruction of an office and stores\nbuilding at Lardeau, B. C.\nPlans and specifications may be\nobtained from the District Forester\nat Nelson, the Forest Ranger at Lar-\ndeau, or the undersigned upon a\ndeposit of $5.00 refundable upon\nreturn of.plans and specifications in\ngood condition within thirty dayj\nof the date of opening of tenders.\nTenders will not be considered\nunless made out on the form supplied and signed, and a deposit of\n10% of the tender is enclosed which\nshall be forfeited if the tenderer\ndeclines to enter into the contract\nwhen called upon to do so. Cheques\nof the unsuccessful tenderers will\nbe returned when the contract\nawarded.\nNo tender shall be considered\nhaving any qualifying clauses whatsoever, and the lowest or any tender\nnot necessarily accepted.\nTenders must be submitted in the\nenvelope marked \"Tender for the\nconstruction of an office and stores\nbuilding at Lardeau, B. C.\"\nC. D. ORCHARD,\nChief Forester and Deputy,\nMinister of Forests.\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section   161)\nIN THE MATTER OF Lot 4 of\nLot 6809, Kootenay District, Plan\n876.\nProof having, been filed, in my ,\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 22183-A to the above mentioned lands in the name of James\nRoss Hunter and bearing date the\n21st July, 1917, I HEREBY GIVE\nNOTICE of my intention at the expiration of one calendar month from\nthe first publication hereof to issue\nProvisional Certificate of Title in\nlieu of such lost Certificate. Any\nperson having any information with\nreference to such lost Certificate of\nTitle is requested to communicate\nwith the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON, B. C, thl\u00bb\n31st day of August, 1954. '\nG. A. STEWART,\nDeputy Registrar.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST: LADY'S WATCH, WHITE\ngold, at Lakeside Park or vicinity,\nWed. afternoon. Reward. Phone\n722-R-l.\nLOST: LADY'S GOLD BULOVA\nwatch at Lakeside Park Thurs.\nevening. No. 553290. Please phone\n599-L-l. Reward.\nFOUND:   LADY'S   WRISTWATCH\nat Park, Wed. Ph. 890-L.\nThe lively delicious flavour refreshes you and\nyou'll find the good smooth chewing makes most\nthings you do seem easier. Enjoy chewing refreshing,\ndelicious Wrigley's Spearmint Gum every day.\nfan-\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n2. Site of the\nTaj Mahal\n3. A heavy,\nhardwood\n4. From*'\n(prefix)\n5. Like\n6. Gather\ntogether\n7. Mountain:\ncomb, form\n8. Animal's\nfeet\n9. A stair\n10. Weird\n(var.)\n14. Is suitable\n16. Boring\ntool\n17. Two-toed\nsloth\n20. Lower legs\n21. Lofty\nmountain\n22. Larva\nof\neye-\nthreadworm\n24. Ornamental\nshrub\n25. Ancient\n26. River (Fr.)\n28. Highest\nmountain\nin Wales\n81. Pierce\nwith horns\n34. Tantalum\n(sym.)\n35. Precious\nstone\n\u25a1 idfcia   HGQB\nsHtaraaHHHHya\nua auu hdise\nDDQuJQ   ElulUHU\naaaa anna\nmua  HHUH  HI!\nUKJUWH   SHBElli\ncih aHQH Hiarj\nbosh Biiaa\nQCTHn   HUH   BH\nHQBHiiailHl'JUIHn\nHHHE3   HH00\nYesterday's Answer\n36. Spanish\npainter\n37. Haul\n39. Ireland\n40. line of\njuncture\n42. Wine\nreceptacle\n45. Cry of pain\n46, Father\nACROSS\n1. Indian of\nthe Queen\nCharlotte\nIslands\nti Woody\nthicket\n11. Monsters\n12. Harangue\n13. Tahltian\ngod\n14. Blossom\n15. Variety of\ndomestic\npigeon\n18. Enemy\nscout\n19. Inscribes\n21. Genus of\nthe lily\n23. Place of\nlearning\n27. Folds in\nthread\n29. Record\n80. Seaport\n(Sumatra!\n82. Man's\nnickname\n(poss.)\n83. A Waka-\nshan Indian\n35. Strange\n88. Marine\nfishes\n41. Public\nprocession\n43. Bind\n44. Famous\nmission\n(Tex.)\n45. Musical\ndrama\n47. Goods sunk\nat sea\nattached\nto a buoy\n(var.)\n48. Seraglio\nDOWN\n1. Horse's foot\nDAILY CRVPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXK\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A is usee\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, epos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOR    LOPL    YPHHF    MTLJ    PUT    HI1\nP    DPT;    LOPL   EWMRNRF    PL    ML    MB\"\nP     FP MTL \u2014Y I.H H R W.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: BY HARMONY OUR SOULa ARB\nSWAYED; BY HARMONY THE WORLD WAS MADE\u2014\nGRANVILLE.\nDiltrlblitMd  hv  Yin*  TTnnti.M-  IWJI..U\n1\n2\n3 .\n4\n5\n%\n6\n7\n8\n9\nW\nII\n%\n12\n13\nVA\nVA\n14\n15\n16\n17\n'^\n18\nfA\n'^\n19\n\u2022\n20\ni\nV\/A\nV\/A\n21\n22\n^A\n23\n24\n25\n26\n27\nW\n^\n29\n30\n-\n31\n^\n32\n^A\n'^A\nV4\n33\n34\nV\/\/f\nV\/A\n35\n36\n37\n^A\n38\n39\n40\n41\n4Z\nfA\n^\/A\n43\n44\nl\n*5\n46\n47\n''\/A\n48.\n^\u2014\n-\n ^^\u25a0^'\u25a0:\\^-n-^:----- \u25a0\u25a0'  \u25a0 \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0      ~~T ^T^\n !\t\n333.1\nQoods Exchanged for Vacation Money Here\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHIS WEEK ONLY\n1500 R.O.P. Sired Leghorn Hamp\nCross pullets, 10 weeks old, $1.10\neach.\n2000 R.O.P. Sired N. Hamp pullets, 15 weeks old, $1.50 each.\nVarious other breeds also available.\nKromhoff Poultry Farms,\nR.R. No. 5,\nNew Westminster, B. C.\nWE HAVE A QUANTITY OF\npartly grown cockerels to be\nra.sed for meat Heavy or light\nbreeds Also pullets of all ages in\n'white rocks, white leghorns, new\nHampshires and crosses. The\nAppleby Poultry Breeding Farm.\nMission City   B   C    \t\nFOUR LARGE LOGGING HORSES\nup to 1800 lbs. 1 riding horse at\nMrs. Murrays, South Slocan.\n10  DAIRY  COWS,  1   BULL FOR\nsale. Box 6002, Daily News.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nBARBER SHOP FOR SALE. TWO\nchairs, completely modern in every way. Ultra Violet Ray sterilizers. This is a beautiful shop,\noperating. $2000. Terms if necessary. Apply Randall Barber Shop,\n535 W. Georgia Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nIMMEDIATE OPENING: OFFERS\nideal investment for silent partner. Minimum returns 10 per cent\nover five to 10-year period. $9000\nrequired. Phone 82 or write Box\n6202 Daily News.\nSMALL GROCERY AND CON-\nfectionery business for sale Good\nlocation. Apply 1103, Hall Mines\nRoad.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE  '\nEXCELLENT SELECTION\nPRICED RIGHT\nPROPERTIES\nA PLEASANT SURPRISE\nLow priced bungalow on two\nlots, uphill; close to bus line.\nLiving room, kitchen with dinette, two bedrooms and bathroom. Part basement, foundation, furnace. If you can raise\n$2200, see Ut, <&4400\nFull price    ^HIUV\nPRICED TO BUY\nFive-room bungalow, two corner lots, uphill. Three bedrooms,\nfull basement, foundation, oil\nfloor furnace.\nOnly      \t\n..With tfMO-Down.\n$6500\nCOSY BUNGALOW\nNorth Shore, close to ferry. \u2014\nFour rooms, full bathroom, concrete foundation, part basement, oil fired furnace with hot\nwater heat. Low taxes and easy\njpriced'to buy- at  $6650\nIF YOU ENJOY\nGARDENING\nSemi-private location, uphill,\nnear bus line. Land equal to\nfour city lots all in garden,\nfruit trees, small fruits. Bungalow has five large rooms, three\nbedrooms with closets, modern\nkitchen, bathroom. Full foundation and basement. CfiQfiil\nCan be purchased at *)>\"*>\"\"\n.With $2000 Down, or $6500 Cash\nPRETTY AS A PICTURE\nNearly new five-room bungalow in Fairview. Full basement,\nfoundation, hot air furnace. See\nthis before you CIA AAA\n'buy. Price    \u00abPIU,VUU\nGOLDEN OPPORTUNTY\nTO OWN A FAMILY HOME\nExcellent Third Street location;\nthree level lots in lawns, garden\nand lovely trees. Spacious and\nbright rooms. Two bedrooms\nand bathroom down and two\nup. Full basement, foundation\nand piped hot air furnace, coal\nstoker. Tremen- $ f I 750\ndous value at        v * * '\" \"\"\nLAKEFRONT WITH LAND\nModern H4 storey dwelling on\n\u20224 acre with 100 feet lake frontage. Ideal country location, close\nt\u00bb ferry. Full basement, foundation, furnace. 11 O flftft\nSee this at ... * ' \u25a0*\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\nARE YOU A GARDENER?\nThree acre plot close to city\nlimits. Suitable for flower, fruit,\nvegetable garden. Greenhouses.\nAlso modern five-room dwelling\nand all'required C|i Sftft\noutbuildings Price*? \u25a0 ilJVW\nAnd Terms.\nMODERN PLUS\nRanch style dwelling on seven\nacres at Willow Point. Six large\nrooms, modern, automatic hot\nwater heating with oil furnace.\nFull   foundation   and   attached\nSET $15,000.\nFor Full Information on These\nAll Exclusive Listings  Valued\nby This Office,\nT. D. Rosling\nReal Estate and Insurance\n668 Ward St. Phone 717\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS I PROPERTY, HOUSES\/FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE j ETC. FOR SALE\n\u2022 umunueO'\nMILL STREET\nStucco Bungalow with 2 B.R.,\nbath, L.R. and kitchen (wired\nfor range), on main floor and\ntwo B.R. upstairs. Full basement and hot water furnace.\nLot 75 x 120; one $75110\nblock from bus line. \u00bb'\u2022\"\"'\n$2000 Down.\nSILICA STREET\nFour B.R. Home, with L.R.-D.R.,\nkitchen and pantry on main\nfloor and small building on rear\nPricf Te\u2122S'   .  .      $5500\nINNES STREET\nVery Nice Stucco 2 B.R. Home\non large corner lot, with partly\nfinished upstairs for 3 more\nrooms. Full basement, hot water\nfurnace, hothouse and good'gar-\nden with fruit trees. $g()00\nTerms. Price .    v\u00ab\"\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\nINNES STREET\nThree  B.R.  Home on 3 Lots,\nwith hot air furnace, full base-1\nment and gas range $6500\nwith tanks  \u00abk*\"\u00bbw\n$1200 Down and Balance\nas Rent\nSTANLEY STREET\nQuite New 3 B.R. Home with\nbasement and hot air furnace.\n?e\u00b0rrmsrIPri5c0eX!20'    $8500\nROBSON STREET\nOn bus line. Large TWO FAMILY HOME on four lots. Two\nfully equipped kitchens and\neight rooms. - $9850\nTerms. Price   f\"\nNORTH SHORE\nTwo acres and small S\u00bb17^0\nhouse. Terms. ?\u00abWOU\nOne and one-auarter acres 9\nmiles east with extra - good\nhome and small lake <Rfi^ftO\nfrontage. Terms.        \u00abP\u00b0<>V\"\nOne acre. Gyro Park. $950\nTerms. Price *v\nVA ACRES GRANITE RD.\n200 ft. highway with nice Two\nB.R. Home. L.R., bathroom,\nkitchen with range, and back\nporch. Insulated. Part basement.\nAll fairly new and in tip-top\ncondition. Fenced yard and\ndriveway. Workshop, garden\nand some fruit trees. Good\nbuilding site for more homes.\nUnlimited water sup- KCfiCJA\nply. Good value at . \u00abJ>OOdU\nTerms.\nCEDAR STREET-^CLOSE IN\nNice Two B.R. Home on small\ncorner lot. L.R. with fireplace,\nkitchen, bath, pantry and utility\nroom. ALL ONE FLOOR. Full\nbasement with hot C^nftfl\nair furnace. Price \u00abP\u00ab>U\"\u00ab\nTerms.\nAgencies Ltd.\nAgents for 'WA WANES A\nMUTUAL INSURANCE\nPhone 135, or Eves., 290-Y\nA REALLY NICE 3-BEDROOM\nhouse, recently built, 207 High St\nDouble plumbing, hot water heating, oak floors, fireplace, full\nbasement Attached garage. Phone\n338-Y evenings.\nFOR SALE AT BALFOUR 3-ROOM\nmodern cottage. Heatalator fire\nplace, glassed-in porch, lake\nfrontage. Apply P.O. Box 54. Trail\nPh, Castlegar 2336.\nUNFINISHED TWO-BEDROOM\nhouse, wired for range. Full base,\nment. Apply 709 8th Street Fair-\nFOR SALE: 4-ROOM HOUSE AT\nSheep Creek. What offer? Apply\nV. Jenks. Box 279, Castlegar.\nFOR SALE: HOUSE, CENTRAL,\n3 bedrooms, reasonable. Apply\nBox 1453, Daily News.\nFOR SALE: 3-BEDROOM HOUSE,\nnew bath. Has 3 lots on quiet location. E. C. Croft, Kaslo, B. C.\nFOR SALK - 3-BEDROOM HOME\nin good location. Phone 596-Y.\nVACANT.    MODERN    4-ROOM\nhouse, reasonable. 213 Victoria\nFOR SALE AT DEER PARK: 3\nacres, 7-room house. Good shop.\nLiving quarters, garden, private\nwater line, creek, fruit. Lovely\nplace, $6000. For particulars write\nD. D. .Tamieson. Deer Park. B.C.\n(Continued in next column)\n'Continued in Next Column'\nNflann lathj Jfaroa\nClassified    Advertising    Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutiv.e insertions.\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 0 consecutive insertions.\n(1 56 line for month (26 consecutive insertions!   Box numbers   lie   extra.   Covers   any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC    (LEGAL)    NOTICES\nTENDERS, etc  - 20c per line\nfirst   insertion   16e   per   line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL    ABOVE    RATBS    LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSubscriptions   Rates',\nvNot More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier per week\nin advance .30\nBy carrier $15 00\nUnited States, United Kingdom\nOne month        $ 1.25\nhree months  '.     $ 3.75\nSix months      $ 7.50\nOne year $15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson\nOne month   $ 100\nThree months  \u201e      $ 2.75\nSix months             $ 550\nOne year $10 00\nWhere pxtra postaae In required\nabove rates plus postage.\n1. ATTRACTIVE\nBEACH LOTS FOR SALE\nOn sheltered bay at Kootenay\nBay, 100 or 200 feet. Price,\ndown payment CIAA\nBalance $25.00 a month. * ' vv\n2. FINE HOME . . .\nFOUR BEDROOMS\nLarge living room, den', open\nfireplace. Oak floors, upstairs\nand downstairs. 3 garden lots.\nfo0c0a?iorne8pdr,ceal   $13,000\nVery good terms.\n3. SEVERAL HOMES\nON NORTH SHORE\nBrand new Rome, oil heated,\nwall to wall carpet, floor plan\nat our office, immediately oppo-\nsite local ferry.     $ | 4,000\nPrice\nTerms.\n4.     WELL LOCATED\nFAIRVIEW BUNGALOW\n3 bedrooms and modern 3 piece\nwhite bathroom, dining room\nliving room, bright kitchen.\nLevel lots in garden. tRQAA\nFurnace. Price $3\u00bbUU\nSome terms.\n5. GOOD FAMILY HOME\n3 bedrooms, must be sold. Price\n$5750\nreduced to\nGood terms.\n6.    4-BEDROOM HOUSE\n3   up.   Bathroom.   1   bedroom\ndown. Fairview jtf 250\nlocation. Price \u2022p*l*\u00abv\nGood terms.\nand\n7.      Va OF AN ACRE\nWillow Point. Road and lake\nfrontage 3 bedroom house, fire\nplace, cement foun- $5750\nSome Terms.\n8. COZY COTTAGE\nROSEMONT\nCorner lots \u2014 garden, fruit\ntrees. House newly renovated.\n2 bedrooms, modern kitchen\nwired for electric range; %\nbasement, concrete, and new\nhot air furnace. $5500\nInsulated. Price      .   v\u00bb\"\"\"\u00bb\nTerms.\n9. ATTRACTIVE\nVIEW LOT\n125 x 150. Concrete foundation\n20 x 40; North Shore. C I Aftft\nSome terms. Price     \u00abl\u00bb \u25a0 \"\u00bbuu\nReduction for Gash. .\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\nReal Estate\nFire. Car and General Insurance\nEstablished 41 Years\nPh. 269 - Box 26 - 392 Baker St.\nWANTED BUILDING LOT IN OR\nnear Nelson. Box 1445 Daily News.\nPhone 855-R.\nFOR SALE - 3 BEDROOM HOUSE\nwith full basement. In good location. Phone 465-L from 3:30 to 5.\nFOR SALE: LOVELY FAMILY\nhome, central location. Box 2036.\nDaily News.\nNEW 4-BEDROOM HOUSE FOR\nsale, some terms. Apply 1910\nKootenay St. or ph. 96-R-2.\n1-ROOM CABIN AT QUEEN'S BAY\n50 feet beach frontage. Apply Mr\nW  Esser. Balfour.\nBUILDING LOT FOR SALE. PH.\n659-R-3.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nWANTED:    GOOD    HOME    FOR\nCollie Dog. Phone 976-L.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,    BICYCLES\nSomersets\nNOW AVAILABLE\nIN ALL COLORS\n1954 Ford Custom\n1954 Chevrolet Bel Air\nSedan\n1954 Chevrolet Power Glide\n1953 Chevrolet Sedan\n1953 Austin A70 Sedan\n1953 Austin Somerset\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1952 Morris Minor\n1952 Vanguard Sedan\n1951  Ford Convertible\n1951  Meteor Sedan\n1951 Pontiac 2-Door\n1950 Chevrolet Coach\n1950 Ford Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Morris Oxford\n1950 Ford Prefect\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1948 Chevrolet Sedqn\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1941 Chevrolet Sedan-\n1940 Chevrolet Sedan\nCOMMERCIALS\n1952 Fargo Pickup\n1952 Mercury Pickup\n1950 Austin Countryman\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1   Used Pony Tractor\nCASH     TERMS     TRADES\nSPOT  CASH\nFOR LATE MODEL CARS\nREUBEN\nBUERGE\nPhone 1661    600 Blk. Vernon\nPhone 1135       803 Baker St\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE: 1948 PLYMOUTH SE-\ndan, excellent mechanical condition. Sun visor, spot light, backup\nlight, heater, push-button radio,\nback seat speaker, 5 practically\nnew summer tires, 2 very good\nwinter tires. Will take $300 down,\nbalance monthly payments. Apply\nBox 6306, Daily News.\n1954 FORD CUSTOM SEDAN, 6900\nmiles, new condition, $2100, or\nclosest offer. Sandstone white\nApply Daily News Box 6227,\n1951 MERCURY 3-TON WITH\nnew 5-yard dump box. Priced to\nsell. Ph. 879-L. See at 406 Richard St.\n(Continued in next column)\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nB\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES,     BICYCLES,\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP VALUES IN\nUSED\"\nand\n1952-STUDEBAKER\nCOMMANDER SEDAN\n1949  PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n1949 HILLMAN SEDAN\n1947 Chevrolet Sedan\n$375\n1951 STUDEBAKER\nVi TON TRUCK\n1952 THAMES\nEnjoy the Economy and Comfort\nof a New STUDEBAKER\nor HILLMAN\n' Service Ltd.\n213 Baker St.. Phone 1234\nLOOKING FOR A CAR, REASON-\nable. Here's a '48 Ford, new rubber, good mechanical shape, under\ncarriage perfect body a little\nrough. Terms can be arranged or\nwill take older car on deal. Phone\n443-R. \t\nFOR SALE OR WILL TRADE FOR\nlumber \u2014 four (3 to 5 ton) trucks,\nalso 1 TD9, 1 TDM, and 1 HD10\n(cats with dozers). Contact K. N.\nStewart Cardston, Alberta, Phone\n493 or 470 or write box 329.\n1951 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN.\nExcellent condition. One owner.\nMust be seen to be appreciated.\nSacrifice. Phone 1035-L. See it 806\nBaker Street.\nIF YOU ARE LOOKING FOR\nsomething to go hunting or fishing\nhere's a '36 Chev. light delivery,\ngood condition, new rubber. $130\ntakes it, Phone 443-R, .\n1938-'50 FORD SEDAN CHASSIS\n1938. In 1950 new motor, new\nhydraulic brakes Installed, complete rewiring done. P. E. Poulln;\nPhone 753-R.\nFOR SALE: 1950 PONTIAC 4-DR.\nSedan. Only one owner. Phone\n1648.\nFOR SALE: 350 C.C. TRIUMPH\nTwin Motorcycle. Ideal for school\nor work. Phone 465-R.\n1950 HILLMAN SEDAN, LIKE\nnew. No reasonable offer refused.\nPh. 659-L-l.\nFOR SALE OR TRADE - \"48 Mon-\narch sedan, A-l conditio^. Interested in English car. Ph. 1242-R,\n'39 PLYMOUTH, $225 CASH. PH.\nMUlef, 83, days.\nTEXROPE V BELTS\nALLIS-CHALMERS\nSingle Pulleys - Multiple Shelves\nFor Faotory, Dairy or Farm.\nQuick Shipment, Large Stocks.\nFor free catalogue write\nELECTRIC  EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nCalgary - Edmonton - Regina\nSaskatoon\nELECTRIC PORTABLE IMMER'\nslon water heater! Heats water In\nwashing machine, pail or dishpan.\nSturdy brass construction, 110\nvolts, guaranteed and C.S.A. approved. $13.50 C.O.D. Satisfaction\nor money refunded. Gauth Electric, 114 Gradwell Dr., Toronto 13\nFOR SALE: MAHOGANY BED'\nroom suite, Astral frig, small\nwhite enamel table, washing machine, drop leaf table and chairs,\nand several pieces of household\nfurniture. Phone 507-L.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1954\u20149\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nLEONARD FRIDGE, 7 CU. FT.\nUsed very little, See It a( West\nTransfer.\nFOR SALE: 3-PCE. USED BATH-\nrbom set, good condition. 7-ft. tub.\nPh. 142-6-L, 524 Hoover St.  .\nPEACH   PLUMS   3c   A   POUND.\nPick your own. Bring containers.\n\u25a0 G. A. Sicotte, Sunshine Bay, B.C.\n12,000 FT. GOOD USED LUMBER\nat almost half price. Phone 4543,\nCastlegar.\nPIPE  - FITTINGS\"  - WBlW -\nspecial low prices. Active Trading\nCo. 935 E Cordova St Vancouver\nCAR PARTS FOR SALE. '36 FORD.\nPhone 954-X.\nGOOD TOP SOIL NO ROCKS' OH\nsods. Hand-loaded. Ph. 794-R-l,\nGARDEN WHEELBARROW, RUB-\nber tire. 2.5 cu. ft., $10. Ph. 206-X-2\nM 1 C H O N IC HEARING AIDS -\nWrite P O Box 39. Nelson, B.C\nRENTALS\nSACRIFICE: 1 18 CU. FT. COOL-\nerator upright space saver home\nfreezer, 7 months old, like .new.\nWill take washer part payment.\nCost $750. Best offer over $450\ntakes. Box 6101, Daily News.\nFOR SALE - PORTABLE SAW-\nmill, edger, T-120 power unit. 8\nm. capacity, also 3 ton 1947 Ford\ntruck. Sell as one unit or separately. Al Maida, Phone 82, Nelson.\n35 M.M. RELOADS, GUARANTEED\nfresh. 36 exp. PX:78c, 3 for $2.10,\nCash or money order, prompt\nshipment Fettitt Photos, Castlegar.\nFOR SALE: JOHNSON O U T -\nboard, 5 h.p., as new. Cost $248\nplus tax, used six times. Quick\nsale $200. Apply P.O. Box 324.\nFOR SALE: GAS RANGE GUER-\nney, with harper burners. Two\ncylinders, regulator and tubing.\nPhone Kinnaird, 4221 or write\nBox 121,\nTRAbE OR SWAP\": i H.5 CU. IT.\nupright freezer. Holds 450 lbs.\nfood. Want bedroom suite and\nrefrigerator, or what offers? Box\n6102, Daily News,\nENNIS HEINTZMAN UPRIGHT\npiano, in excellent condition.\nSuitable for concerts. Write L. Q.\nDelmas, Box 97, Rossland or ph.\n33-L, Rossland,\nFOR SALE: 3-PfflCE ' CHESTER-\nfield suite, 6-piece bedroom suite,\n1 Beatty 1948 washer. Ph. 976-L.\nBINOCULARS, 6X30, LIGHT-\nweight, German make, $25. Also\n20X spotting scope, $25. Phone\n1362-Y.\n1954 PONTIAC AS NEW. WILL\ntrade. Phone 471-X-4.\nWANTED    MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancouver, B. C. Phone PAcific 6357.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nFOR SALE - l STUDIO COUCH,\n3 bookcases, 1 metal work bench,\n1 men's bicycle, sets of encyclo-\npedia, Phone 1215-Y, '\nWHITE ENAMEL QUEEN KITCH-\nen oil range with copper coil, $75.\nPhone 558.\n3 SASHES IN GOOD CONDITION,\n10x12 panes. 1\u20147'x4'10\"; 1\u20145'l\"x\n4'10\"; 1\u20143'5\"x4'10\". Phone 321-Y.\nCOLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES\nTechnical Books for sale. The L-J\nNews Stand, Trail, B. C.\t\n1953 MODEL G.E. RANGE, USED1\n'8 months. Very good condition.\nPh. 1437-Y, 1001 Latimer St.\nBEACH ELECTRIC RANGE APT.\nsize, fully automatic in excellent\ncondition, price $150. Ph. 1099-L.\nFOR RENT: 1 FULLY FURNISHED\n2-room apartment, 1 fully furnish.\ned 4-room apartment with private\nbath, -Strathcona Hotel.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING' 6R\nsleeping room, modern kitchen\nwith frig. Day, week, or month\n171 Baker St.\nWANTED TO RENT BY SEPT. 15,\nsuite or house, Nelson or North\nShore, by couple and teen-age\nson. Box 6136. Dally News.\nBUSINESS MAN RECENTLY\ntransferred requires 2-3-bedroom\nunfurnished house. Phone 900.\nWANTED TO RENT, GAR A fit\n\u25a0vicinity Kerr Apartments. Apply\nSuite 109.\t\nWANTED BY QCT\\ 8, SmAlL\nhouse in or near Nelson. Box 6018,\nDaily News.\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 ONE OR\ntwo bedroom apartment, unfurnished. Phone 1200.\nFOUR ROOMS FOR RENT, PART-\nly furnished. Ph. 476-X-l, 52 Ymir\nRoad.\nFOR RENT: 4-ROOM* APASf-\nment, central, warm, partially\nfurnished. Ph. 1604-R.\nFOR RENT: LI(!rl\u00a5-HOWEKB*P'\nlng room. 107 High Street Phone\n1546-X.\t\nLight ffiJusOTMFSa ititfa\nfor   rent.   Gentleman   preferred.\nPhone 820-X.\nFOR   R\u00abNf:    ITjLtT   MODERN\nfurnished    cottage,    overlooking\n,  Lakeside Parte Ph.,421-R.\nrra'NisHED S-Hbott Suite, AL-\nso furnished single room with gas.\n140 Baker Street ph. 491-L.\nFor renT: EIBHt HotJIE-\nkeeping    room.    Also    sleeping\nroom. 917 Vernon St. Ph. 954-X.\nROOM TO RENT. WlLL B d A R D\nalso if desired. Ph. 7I5-L.\nFOR RENT: FURNISHED HOOSt-\nkeeping suite. Phone 405-L.\n(Continued in Next Column)\nRENTALS\n(Continued)\nHEATED, FURNISHED HOUSE-\nkeeping rooms. 719 Stanley St.\nLIGHT   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM,\nApply J05 Victoria St. i^.\nLIGHT   HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM\nfor rent. Phone 396-R.\nTHREE-ROOM CABIN. PH. 1271-L.\nLIGHT  HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM.\nPhone 812-R.\nLIGHT   HOUSEKEEPING   SUITE.\nClose in. Ph: 854-L, 213 Victoria.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. PH. 1759-Y.\n2-ROOM   UNFURNISHED   SUITE\n.for rent. Ph. 386-Y or 1511.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASBAYERS AND  MINE\nREPRE8ENTATIVE8\nE. W, WIDDOWSON \u00ab. CO.,\nAssayers, 301 Josephine St Nelspi\nH.   S.\n\u2022s, 301 Josephine St Kelson,\nELMES,   ROSSLAND,   KC,\nAssayer Chemist Mine Rep,\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nBOYD  C.  AFFLECK, M.E.I.C.\nB.C. Land Surveyor P. Eng. (Civil)\n218 Gore St.,   Nelson   Phone 1288\nRKrCOATES\nSul.   No. 8, 373 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone 1118   B. C. Land Surveyor\nS~~V\nSHAYLER   P.O.   BOX\nKimberley, Phone 54\nB. C. Land Surveyor, Engineer\n GRAVEL\t\nFLETCHER'S SAND'ANb CftTJSH-\ned Gravel. Whblesalo and deliv-'\nered. Phone 1677-R.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS IrMtTBB       .\nMachine Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewind-\n. tag. Phone 59$, .324 Vernon St   ;\n\u25a0   ii      Uiii^.M   ,l|   i    MS\u00abg*rf\nwoodworking\n georgWeHeA \".\nSash Frames and Cabinet Makmg\nPhone. 2586\nHillcrest Ave. \u2022\u25a0'  -Fruitvale, B. C.\nMissile Station In\nSouthern Ontario\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Tha Te*esjto\nStar says Thursday In a Windsor\ndispateh that conferences are scheduled to open soon betwean Canadian and U. S. officials on establishment of t screen of guided mtaiD'i\nstations in southern Ontario.        ,\nTha story says the miasila stations\nmay possibly be located at far north\nas Toronto. '->\nThe U. S. government already bat\nstarted construction on at least ont\nsuch guided missile station across\nthe St. Clair river from Windsor,\nthe story says, and plant art trader\nwar lor \"a considerable number ts\nthe basis for a screen for the Detroit-Windsor area.\"\nFOR SALE: EMPIRE COAL AND\nwood stove, excellent condition.\n210 Anderson St.\n(Continued in next eolumnl\nEACON'S\nETTER\nUYS\nHI OUS USED CJ0SSTOCK tUHMtB\nsir\u00bbtwine sr tin urrioraV s'e'i wuuirir\nouui\u00ab w mm suitwinw kusm\n\u2014\u2022 tl l \u25a0l.M.l'iU WWlWtMIMM  \u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\nSATURDAY\nSPECIAL\nDELUXE FORD\n.FORD TUDOR\nH FOR $375.00\nOUR USED CARS ARE THE FINEST IN TOWN\nSAVE UP TO 30% ON ALL DEALS\n701  BAKER STREET\nMERCURY - ENGLISH FORDS\nPHONE 578\nMETEOR\nEXECUTORS AND TRUSTEES FOI OVE\u00ab HALF A CENTURY\nPlanning\nEmployee Benefits\nf-ht views of different groups of employees can\ndiffer widely when it comes to choosing a Benefit\nPlan best suited to their needs,\nSome prefer a Retirement Pension Plan, some a\nProfit-sharing Plan, while others may want a straight\nSavings Plan. One group may wish to contribute,\nwhile another may favour a non-contributory Plan.\nThese and many other points will arise when you,\nget to grips with the problem of setting up a\nBenefit Plan for your employees.\nOut knowledge, experience and facilities aa Pension\nConsultants, and Custodian or Trustee for Pension\nand Savings Plans, are available, and could be of\nconsiderable value to you in dealing with this\nimportant problem.\nEnquiries are invited\u2014without obligation.\nROYAtTRUST\nCOMPANY\nC26 WEST PENDER ST., VANCOUVER\nGEORGE O. VALE, MANAGER\nMA. 8411\nLOW fffCCD TOO\nWo have Used Core that hoven't been USED UP. Oar\nUsed Cars are carefully inspected, Fully Serviced. THE\nFINEST SELECTION OF QUALITY USED CARS IN\nTOWN.\nGUARANTEED\n19S3 DODGE SEDAN\nColor: Blue. Beautiful Condition.\n1953 PLYMOUTH SEDAN\n'One Owner. 11,000 Miles'.\n1952 PLYMOUTH 4-DOOR\nRadio. Metallic Green,\n1950 CHRYSLER\nWINDSOR SEDAN\nOne  Owner.  A-l   Condition.\nUSED A-l TRUCKS\n1953 INTERNATIONAL\nPICKUP\n11,000 Miles. One  Owner.\n1950 FARGO EXPRESS\n-.   New-Paint. Heater.\n1911 AUSTIN\nCOUNTRYMAN\n15,000 Miles. A-l.\n1951 FORD 3-TON\nBody and Hoist Like Jfew.\n1952 CHEV. SEDAN\nColor: Maroon. Good Body.\n'949 METEOR COUPE\nNew Paint. Bargain Buy,\n1948 FORD TUDOR\nNew  Motor.   Good   Rubber.\n1951 MONARCH SEDAN\nIn Top Condition.\n1948 CHRYSLER ROYAL\nGood Body and Rubber.\n1950 LAND ROVER\nJEEP\nWffl Oo Anywhere.\n1947 DODGE PICKUP\nNew  Paint.  Good  Shape.\n1940 DODGE W-TON\nEXPRESS\nENGLISH CARS\n1952 AUSTIN SEDAN\n1951 AUSTIN 4-DOOR\n1951 VANGUARD SEDAN\nWE HAVE SEVERAL PRE-WAR MODELS\nCome In and See Them\u2014Give Us an Offer\nFEEBLE* MOTOR* no\n[JRYSLjRimMliUTH'FARGJpl^lMSj\n\u2014\u25a0*\u00bb\n Lii .\t\n1    \u25a0     '\t\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   -;\n 1fl*-NELS0N DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 4, 1954\n1 We Are Prepared For Tuesday's School Opening Rush\nI With the\nLargest Stock of\nWe Have Ever Displayed\nYou May Send Your Children\nTo Our Store With Every Confidence\nIn Our Staff.\nW AM W\nKiwanians Give\n$500 lo Society\nFor Handicapped\nA check for $500 was presented to\nthe Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children by Kiwanis Club at\nits meeting at the Hume Thursday\nnight.\nC. B. Garland, QC, vice-president\nof the society, received the check\nfrom E. W. Kopecki, club president. Funds were raised through a\npeanut sale drive.\n:,An interested onlooker was Kai\nW. Jensen, who has been active in\nthe society from its inception and\nwas the club's first representative\nin the group. He has been at Vancouver for about a year, although\nh\"'s home is still in Nelson.\nMembers also heard additional\ndetails of the Anglican Congress\nheld in Minneapolis early in August\nas related by Very Rev. T. L. Leadbeater. He had described the congress at an earlier meeting and\nthis time enlarged on the \"royal\"\nentertainment provided by the American hosts.\nHighlights were a visit to a beautiful stone church near Minneapolis.\nfirst built in the West, and to famous church schools in the same\narea; attending an outdoor presentation of the Gilbert and Sullivan\nopera, \"Yeomen of the Guard,\" and\nvisiting a swank golf club where\nthe delegates were dined on the\ngrand scale and saw a spectacular\nwater show.\nOn the serious side, he found the\ncongress stimulating for it brought\ntogether people from all over the\nworld, helping to \"bond people together\" in peace efforts, and the\nenthusiasm and vigor of American\nchurch people impressive,\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Cattle and\ncalves 700. Cattle market winding\nup steady with good weekend cleanup in sight;' good to choice butcher\nsteers and heifers selling readily a't\nfirm prices; cows and bulls fully\nsteady at week's advance; good\nstocker and feeder steers moving\nout at steady rates; good veal calves\nbarely steady.\nGood grass steers $17.50 to $19.\nGood to choice grain-fed butcher\nsteers $20 to $22.25; common to medium $12 to $17.\nGood grass helters $15 to $1&50.\nGood to choice grain-fed butcher\nheifers $19 to $21; common to medium $10 to $14.50.\nGood cows $10 to $10.75; common\nto medium $8 to $9.75; canners and\ncutters $4 to $7.50.\nGood bulls $10 to $10.75; common\nto medium $8 to $9.50.\nGood stocker and feeder steers\n$16 to $17.50; common to medium\n$10 to $15.50.\nGood to choice veal calves $17 to\n$19; comm6n to medium $10 to\n$16.50.\nGrade A hogs closed Thursday 25\ncents lower at $27.25; sows $14:50 to\n$14.75 liveweight, $18.65 to $19.15\ndressed.\nGood lambs $18 to $18.50.\nThe market will be closed Labor\nDay. but the usual facilities will be\navailable for livestock handling.\nDOCK FIRE BRINGS\n5 FIRE ENGINES\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Five fire\nengines, an inh-alator and the Vancouver fireboat -were called out\nThursday when fire broke out in\nthe sulphur cargo of the Danish\nfreighter Vedby. Three stevedores\nwere overcome by fumes and were\nrevived by the inhalator. The fire\nwas extinguished in about 30 minutes.\nMurder Charge\nCOLVILLE, Wash. (AP)\u2014A first\ndegree murder charge was filed\nThursday against a 68-year-old\nfarmer whose son was shot in the\nneck and killed near here Tuesday\nnight.\nThe charge was filed against Arthur Lotze, who has a Stevens\nCounty farm near Northport.\nHis son, Cecil Lotze, 35, was\nkilled during an argument over\nsome timber papers, Sheriff Beryl\nWarren said.\nThe sheriff said the father locked\nhis son out of, the house during\nthe argument, and Cecil was shot\nand' killed with a .22 calibre rifle\nwhile coming back in through a\nwindow.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG   (CP)\u2014Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, .7ffV*.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.14V*.\nTHE   CORPORATION \"OF\nTHE CITY OF  NELSON\nMUNICIPAL\nVOTERS' LIST\n1954-1955\n1. Householders, Licence Holders and the Spouse of an\nowner of land or land and improvements, are requested to see that their names are on the current\nVoters' List on or before October 31st, 1954.\nJ. The Spouse of an owner of land or land and improvements, in the City of Nelson, may have his or her\nname placed on the annual list of Voters by making\nthe necessary declaration under Section 7 of the\nMunicipal Elections Act as amended by Chapter 8\nof the 1954 Statutes of British Columbia. Forms may\nbe obtained at the City Hall.\n3. Householders are now exempt from payment of Road\nand Poll Tax but before their names are included\nin the Voters' List a new statutory declaration must\nbe delivered to the Municipal Clerk stating they have\ntendered the sum of Two Dollars to the Collector\nof the Municipality during the current year for the\nuse of the Municipality. Forms may be obtained at\nthe City Hall.\n4. Property owners and holders of agreements to purchase which are registered in the Land Registry\nbefore October 31st, 1954, are automatically placed\non the Voters' List.\nDated at Nelson, B.C.,\nSeptember 2nd, 1954.\nC. W. R. HARPER,\nCity Clerk.\nSTOCK QUOTATIONS\nThe Dally  Newt does not hold  Itself responsible in tha  event\nof an err;or In the following lists.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINE8\nAcadia Uranium  11%\nAmal Larder  14\nArea    37\nArmistice     16\nAtlas Y K  13\nAumaque    14%\nAunor         2.30\nBagamac\n.17\nBarymin       2.70\nBase. Metals 45\nBelloterre      3.25\nBevcourt   21\nBobjo    \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022     -23\nBralorne       3.35\nBroulan    -.-\u2022   1-50\nBrunswick     1025\nBuff Can   '. 15\nCaliffan  14%\nCampbell R L     9.10\nCan Mai  45\nCariboo Gold   -     .85\nCentral Patricia      .70\nCentremaque        .07\nCheskirk       05%\nChesterville   37\nChimo O     1-55\nCochenour       1.20\nCons Golden Arrow    26\nCons Mining Sc Smelting ..   28.00\nConwest    3.35\nCons Discovery      2.38\nDelnite          1.10\nDetta R L  12\nDome        17.50\nDonalda      .38\nDuvex    i 32\nDyno    1.11\nEast Malartic     2.87\nEast Sullivan      4.00\nEastern Metals  77\nElder Gold  75\nEstella    19\nEureka   94\nFalconbridge    18.75\nFrobisher    -   4.80\nGeco     9.50\nGiant Yel       8.40\nGod's  Lake   68\nGoldcrest    \u201e 13%\nGolden Manitou     1.85\nGold Hawk 30\nHardrock  12\nHasaga   19\nHollinger      17.75\nHomer Y K  24%\nHudson   Bay    46.50\nInspiration       2.20\nInt Nickel   46.75\nJellicoe      -     .18\nJoliet Que  '. 56\nKerr Addison   18.50\nKirk-Hudson Bay  71%\nKirkland Lake  41\nLabrador \u25a0    9.10\nLake Dufault      .68\nLakeshore    '.   6.00\nLake Wasa  26\nLamaque  4.00\nLexindin   10\nLingman (new)  \u201e 17\nLittle Long Lac   85\nLouvicourt   15%\nMacassa    1.99\nMacDonald  66\nMacLeod Cock     1.75\nMadsen R L        1.79\nMalarttic G F     1.75\nMcKenzie R L  43\nMcMarmac    10\nMining Corp  16.00\nMoneta  45\nNew Bidlamaque  36%\nNew Calumet 72\nNew Kelore 1 20\nNew Lund  19\nNew Larder U  95\nNew Mylamaque  14%\nNoranda  73.50\nNormetals     2.80\nO'Brien    75\nOgama         Jl\nPaymaster        .54\nPickle Crow     1.24\nPlacer Devel   29.00\nPowell Rouyn  66\nPreston E D     3.85\nQuebec Man  72'\nQueenston    25\nQuemont   20.00\nRadiore    1.09\nRoche L L  13\nSan Antonio       1.46\nSherritt Gordon     4.80\nSigma M         6.00\nSilvermiller      1.03\nSilanco  \u201e 14\nSiscoe   ....     .40\nSteep Rock     7.55\nSudbury Cont  19\nSurf Inlet  11%\nSylvanite           1.22\nTeck Hughes     2.39\nTombill    55\nTrans Cont Res  39\nUnited Keno       6.70\nUpper Canada     1.25\nVentures     18.85\nViolamac     1.88\nWaite Amulet   12.15\nOILS\nAnglo Can     4.60\nB  A Oil   26.8^\nCalgary and Edmonton   11.75\nCdn Atlantic     4.20\nCentral Leduc     1.52\nCentral Explorers     5.25\nChemical Research     3.40\nDecalta  61\nDel Rio     7.25\nFederated Pete     3.60\nHome   ....         7.20\nImperial Oil   34.62\nInter Pete   21.12\nKroy      1.19\nMacDougal Segur Ex  10\nMid Cont  48\nNat Pete     1.59\n    1.54\n    8.85\n  11.25\n 13'.\n    1.04\n22'\nDlst Seagram   31%\nDom Foundries  17\nDom Steel & Coal B   12V4\nDom Stores                   28%\nDom Tar % Chemical   9%\nDom Textiles   6%\nDom Magnesium   14%\nFamous Players  267\/a\nFanny Farmer   25\nFleet Air   210\nFord A  94%\nGatineau   25%\nGoodyear\"  138\nGreat Lakes   27\nGypsum Lime  ,  41%\nImperial Oil   34%\nImp Tobacco   9%\nInt Metals   37%\nInt Nickel   40%\nInt Pete   21%\nKelvinator   21%\nLake of Woods  32%\nLaura Secord   16%\nLoblaw B  63%\nMaple Leaf Milling  9%\nMassey Harris       v..  8%\nMcColl Frontenac   33%\nMont Loco    16%\nMoore Corp   30%\nNat Steel Car   27%\nPage Hershey   65\nRuss Industries   115%\nSicks Brew      28\nSteel of Canada   36\nStandard Paving   24%\nTaylor Pearson  9%\nUnion Gas of Can  41%\nUnited Steel   14\nWestern Grocers A  38\nWeston George   43%\nWinnipeg Gas   12\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - Pre-holiday\nquiet prevailed Friday, with prices\nrising into the late afternoon.\nCanadian stocks were, higher.\nMclntyre gained %, Hiram Walker\n%, Dome Mines % and International Nickel up %. Canadian Pacific\nand Distillers Seagram both were\nahead %.\nOn the American stock exchange\nRoyalite Oil was up Vt. Lake Shore\nand Giant 'YeUowknife each were\nup'%.\nw^mm^Si\n\"\/\/.. '\u25a0',' '\u25a0\u25a0      \u25a0 :\u25a0.      \u25a0\nP^PSff\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBeaver Lodge  42\nBralorne    3.50,\nCariboo Gold  85\nEstella     18\nGiant Mascot 48&\nGrandview   *. 16\nHighland Bell  42\nPac Eastern Gold  15\nPend Oreille        4.90\nPioneer  Gold       2.34\nQuatsino     I8V4\nReeves MacDonald     1.50\nSheep reek  68\nSilver Standard  73\nUtica ...\"       Vi\nWestern Exploration   40\nWestern Tungsten 65\nOILS\nA P Consolidated       27\nCalgary & Edmonton    11.50\nCommonwealth     4.10\nHome             7.00\nOkalta Com  _    1.50\nPacific Pete        8.90\nPeace River Gas     5.95\nRoyalite   11.00\nVanalta    21\nVulcan  25\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates    4.75\nInt Brew B       4.75\nMidwest Gas    1.97\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 George Drew,\nnational leader of the Progressive\nConservative party in Canada, is\nto lunch with Prime Minister\nChurchill Sunday at the Prime Minister's country residence in Chart-\nwell, Kent, it was learned Friday.\nMrs. Drew has also been invited.\nThe Progressive Conservative leader is winding up a fact-finding tour\nof several European countries.\n. TORONTO (CP) - The stock\nmarket romped ahead in fairly\nheavy trading toward the close.\nIndustrial gains outnumbered\nlosses, almost two to one, the gold\nindex was up a point, the base metal\nindex W4, points and the western\noil index just urtder a point.\nPapers, utilities, foods, refining\noils, financial institutions and manufacturers were- strong, and other\nindustrial groups mixed.\nWestern oil gains were all 10\ncents or less except for Pacific\nPete, up 25 cents, Great Plains\nwhich hit a 1954 high of $20.12% on\nreports of a well near Drumheller,\nAlta., and Sapphire with a 1954\nhigh of $2.80, which brokers attributed to optimism over its Wyoming\nreserves.\nSenior base metals climbed, ma\njor-fraction gains going to Hudson\nBay and Noranda. Juniors were\nnarrowly ahead, featured by Multi\nMinerals, which touched a 1954 high\nof $3.40 and reports of a good co\nlumbium find.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014A firm tone\nprevailed in dull trading.\nWalker advanced %, while Consolidated Paper, Aluminium and\nNoranda were each up Vz point. St.\nLawrence Corporation dipped Vi.\nPapers, beverages, senior metals,\nsenior oils and steels leaned forward.       \"\nA narrowly mixed tone ruled the\nmine seotion. Anacon moved up 10\nbents at $2.70, while Boreal and\nSullivan were pennies weaker.\nWestern oils were generally\nsteady in featureless dealings.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Stock markets are ending the week on a\ncheerful note although interest is\nsomewhat selective. Stores are\nagain very active, although mixed\non balance, while gold shares have\ngone ahead after an irregular start.\nCanadian Pacific has advanced, as\nhave other dollar stocks, in line\nwith the overnight improvement on\nWall Street.\nHigher Rent, Food Prices, Living\nCosts Up for Third Straight Month\nReturn Tuesday\nSAN FRANCISCO (AP) \u2014 Bruce\nBarber, director of immigration\nhere, said Friday Donald W. Henderson, 37, will be flown to Seattle\nearly Tuesday, then will be turned\nover to Canadian authorities at the\nborder station of Blaine, Wash.\nHenderson is wanted in Calgary\nfor questioning in the 1949 death\nof his fiancee. Yvonne Levesque.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The consumer\nprice -index made Its biggest\nmonthly jump in 2% years during\nJuly, rising by four-fifths of a point\nto 117, the; highest level of the cost-\nof-livipg barometer since January,\n1932.   \u00ab\n.; It was the third consecutive\nmonthly rise in the index,, and the\nsharpest rise since October, 1951,\nwhen the index also jumped by\nfour-fifths of a point, the bureau of\nstatistics reported Friday.\nIn the index, based on 1949 prices\nequalling 100, the jump was almost\nentirely due to higher food prices.\nHigher were potatoes, beef, lamb,\neggs, citrus fruit, tea, and most\ncanned goods. Only food prices\nshowing drops were other fresh\nvegetables and pork.\nRents and home-ownership also\ncontinued their steady rise. Other\nprice jumps showed for hospital\nservices in several cities.\n. Countering these were lower gasoline prices for 21 cities, mostly in\neastern Canada.\nTREND REVERSED\nLiving costs had been easing off\nearlier in 1954, but the trend was\nreversed in May when the Index\njumped by three-fifths of a point.\nIn June the index rose only by one-\ntenth of a point, and it appeared\nthat the rise would be short-lived.\nHowever, in July the big jump in\nfood prices, accompanied by the\nusual rise in rents, caused the index\nto soar to the third highest point in\nhistory.\nIt compared with the second\nhighest level of 117.6 in January,\n1952, and the peak of 118.2 in December, 1951.\n\u25a0 The food sub-index jumped by\n2.3 points to 114.4, a 10-month high.\nThe shelter column, which covers\nrents and home-ownership costs,\nrose by two-fifths of a point to a\nnew high cV 127.\nAlso up to a new high was the\nmiscellaneous column \"other commodities and services\", which edged\nahead by a tenth of a point to 117.7.\nHospital costs were up, and so\nwere newspaper rates in Ottawa.\nThe clothing column remained\nunchanged at 109.6, well below the\npeak of 115.2 in November, 1951,\nwhile the household operations column also remained unchanged at\n117.2, just nine-tenths of a point|\nbelow the peak of 118.1 last March.\nHowever, wholesale prices eased\nduring August, perhaps an indication of lower retail prices ahead.\nThe index of industrial materials,\nbased on 1935-39 prrces equalling\n100. dropped to 222.7 on Aug. 27,\nfrom 223.3 on July 30. The Cana-1\ndian farm products index, also based\non 1935-39 prices, declined to 206.9\nfrom 211.5.\nModerate declines for hogs, beef\nhides, raw rubber, raw sugar, tin,\nraw cotton, western wheat, domestic copper, iron ore and bleached\nsulphite   pulp   overbalanced   rises\nfor western oats, fir, timber, rosin,\nsteers and domestic lead.\nIn the farm index, the main weakness was* in the animal products\ngroup, which showed lower prices\nfor hogs, lambs, western calves,\neggs, poultry and\" eastern cheese\nmilk.\nPOWELL RIVER, B. C. (CP)\nPaul Beargard, 62-year-old prospector, was found Thursday night\nafter wandering aimlessly for five\ndays in this heavily-wooded mountain country on Vancouver Island.\nThe prospector, though'hungry,\nwas in good condition. He had been\nmissing since late Sunday when he\nfailed to return to base camp after\nprospecting in the area.\nMore than 20 men from the nearby RCAF base were shuttled into\nthe search by helicopter.\nHave the Job Done Right\/\nVIC GRAVES\n-MASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHAIGH\nTRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nPhono 327\n576 Baker  Street\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAiNINOj\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED &  REPAIRED\nRECORINQ-\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516  r-'RONI   8T. PHONE  63\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\nft CO.\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St Phone 236\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\nDistinctive Funeral Service*\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\n516  Kontena? St Phone 361\n'&*&\nMelton\nJACKETS\nFOR  FALL\nPro Style\n\u2014 Reversible\n\u2014 White piping\n\u2014 Snap fasteners\n\u2014 Knit collar and cuffs\nCampus Style\n\u2014 Regular collar\n\u2014 White piping\n\u2014 Knitted cuffs.\nWINE,  NAVY,  GREY,\nBLACK  and   GREEN.\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE '\nBOX 100 PHONE 31\nCLASSIFIED AD8 GET RE8ULTS\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or  White\nIt   Makes   Excellent\nHome-Made Bread.\nPHONE 238\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nGet a 14-Day Trial Tube FREE\n-   With Regular 69c\nANTIZYME\nTOOTH  PASTE\nStops the Major Cause of\nTOOTH DECAY\nCity Drug\nREXALL PHARMACY\nBox 460 Phone 34\nNe.lson, B.C.\nFrozen Food\nDISPLAY\nCASES\nSELF-SERVE\nCASES\nWELLS\nService Shop\nPHONE  1115\nOkalta\nPacific Pete \t\nRoyalite \u2022\t\nRoxana   \t\nUnited Oils     ...\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi   \u2014\nAlgoma Steel  41VL\nAluminum  :. 65V;\nArgus  -\u2022  I8V4\nAtlas St   13?4\nBathurst Power   52\nBell Telephone   44\nBrazilian         7%\nB C Electric 4%s  102 \u2022 .\nB C Forest       7V, !\nB C Packers B   1H4\nB C Power A   24\nBuilding Products  43\nBurns B   46\nBurrard A       BVi\nCan Packers A  40\nCanadian Breweries  25>4\nCanadian Canners   27%\nCanadian Car & Fdy A   23'\/e\nCanadian Celanese    20\nCan Oil    15\nCanadian Pacifie Rly _... 25%\nCockshutt   \u2022\nGET YOUR ENTRY IN\nNOW\nfor the\nWest Kootenay Agricultural\nand Industrial\nEXHIBITION\nSEPTEMBER 9-10-11\nHEY KIDS-\nENTER YOUR HOBBY\nFOR EXHIBITION\nAny Collection of Any Kind Is Acceptable\nCOMPARE\nBEFORE YOU BUY\n1952 Vanguard Deluxe Sedan\nAir conditioned, very low mileage.       MAOC\nBeautiful village green. Sale Price only    I w <rj\n1952 GMC Deluxe Pickup Vt Ton\nHeater, defroster, one owner, 21,000 miles. Looks\nand runs like new. $1 \/I \/I C\nSALE PRICE ONLY T_   ItT\"?\n1951   Pontiac Deluxe\n4 door sedan. Air conditioner. $\nOne owner. Only 23,000 miles\t\n1550\n1951 Austin A-70 Deluxe Sedan\nAir conditioned, lovely shape, low        5|rtQC\nmileage, good rubber. SALE PRICE l\\JjrJ\n1950 Pontiac Big Six 4-Door Sedan\nHeater, good rubber, good motor. A lovely looking\n _$1045\n1949 GMC Vs Ton Pickup .\nG.M. custom heater, lovely condition, good rubber,\nmotor A-l. $QQC\nSALE PRICE Qyj\ncar.\nSALE PRICE ONLY\nTODAY'S\n5***** SPECIAL\nOne-Brand New CAR TOP BOAT\n11'   6\",   V-Bottom,   Weight   110   lbs.\nPlus Nearly New Johnson 2% H.P. Outboard.\nAll for only $195\nCHEAPIES\n1935 Ford V-8 Coach\nHeater, licensed, seal beams.\nReady to go.    ONLY _..\n1941 Chevrolet Sedan\nNice clean car.\nONLY :\t\n5 H.P. EVINRUDE ZEPHYR\nA good outboard for only\t\n>90\n$245\n__$70\ni\nWiginton Motors\nLTD.\n281 Baker Street 231 Baker Street .[;\nPontiac - Buick - G.M.C. Trucks\n1\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_1954_09_04","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\/1.0428010","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":"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:\/\/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":"1954-09-04 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":"1954-09-04 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":""}]}