{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-01-23","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1948-10-21","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0423947\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Woes\nSwell; Troops\nInd Miners Battle\nWives Join Fight; Troops Pour\nInto Cool Mining Area;\nReds Call for Further Walkouts\n' \" By ROBERT C. WILSON\n;'   PARIS, Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Sixty to 80 truckloads of troop\nilriforcemet-tsiwpre sent.into the coal mine area of South-\nIhfral France, to quell violence .tonight as France's'strike\noubles.grew.\n1   Fifty persons were injured when 1200 factory workers\nid striking miners fought with police and troops at St.\ntonne.**'  . ' <?j  ':\ni Miners* wives joined in the attack and five of them were\nriohg the 32 finally arrested. \u2022\nr.  From 6000 to 10,000'troops already, were in the area\nifpre- the additional  troops*\nSre sent tonight.,  '\nMeanwhile, rail traffic along the\nyiera was disrupted by a 24-hour\ngibhal strike- ordered by' Com\/\nnnist-unions' as a demonstration qt\ninpathy with the miners whphav*.\nin but 17, days! ;'- * '. ;,' <\nCommunist: leaders of.the Con*-\naeration. 'Generate ' du * Travail\n(led for_ ah-,unlimited general\nf&e \u00a3 \"the Tarn Department,\nkrtheast of Toulouse, which has\n, ,000 Inhabitants. \u2022 \u25a0 \", .\nffCarinaux,! in that department,\n.eral hundred miners' halted a\nlice train en route to Carmaux to\nse control of a, .power plant serv-\n\" mines. - i.. - \u25a0*\u25a0 { \u2022 -\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0{\u25a0 \u25a0-,..-\nlommunist labor bosses ordered\nlihandlihg\" dockets to refuse to\noad incoming coal, most of it\nleJican! ' .';*,'..'\nAntl - Communist -newspapers\niredlct'ed a subway strike Would\nIt Par Is Monday.\nMINFORM-BACKED\nSn'Parlsi Robert Lacoste, Minister\nIndustrial Production, bitterly\nacked Communist labor leaders\n' ordering maintenance, workers\nwalk but, saying \"action as ex-\nme at that waa not even taken\nilhstiifh\/e. Germans, during th?\nu^iatlop.\"'\nlaaton Palowakl,', No. 1: aide to\no. Chaflea Do Gaulle, attacked\n- Government's handling pf the\nlation and said losses caused by\nstrike1 already were\/'equal to\n^twentieth, of: the benefits *e-\nred tinder the Marshall Plan.\"\n> Government, has charged .that\nstrike was ordered and financed\ntbe. Cojnlnfonh \u2022:' (Communist\nirnatlonal Information Bureau)\nipset the recovery plan.\nBan's Ehd Expected\nTo Halve Cost\ndf Some. Vegetables\nFRU^tbWER\nvj-NCouyia^-bet 20;\u00ab3P> \u2014\nBudget blues for .housewives here\nwill be somewhat muted with.tha\nlifting of import barriers on some\nvegetables and fruits, dealers predicted today.\nConsumers' food bills should take\na considerable drop within a\" few\nweeks, they aald.\nI First inroads into the ban waa announced in Ottawa by Finance Minister Abbott, who aald such action\nwas made ppsslble by Improvement\nin tha Dominion's dollar .'reserves.\n' Wholesalers said the first vegetables' to be admitted friom the United States would probably be tomatoes and lettuce. With the field crop\nalmost done here, the new.supply\nwill cut the price almost ln halt.\ni They hailed the move as a \"step ln\nthe right direction.\" .  :\nA release of California citrus\nfruits, expected toward the year's\nend,' will mean, lower prices. and\nhigher quality. Imports of these\nfruits were restricted and the quality poor. .   ,\nLettuce will be admitted early In\nNovember, .along With tomatoes. At\npresent \"tag-ends\" ofr lettuce ate.of\npoor quality, and sell .at 12 to 13\ndents a head. New supplies will not\na\\ifeet .prices, dealers.aald,,but. the\nquality, will-lmprove. \u25a0 \u2022' ;-..'.-.:.\nGrape fanciers will get a break,\nand celery will be'plentiful.\nTJ^Sgff&^.fS^^'iApy-A\nSfFflJifc Governor Thomas Dew-\nNew .York, if .elected Ptesi-\nfewould-jgo'to Europe before in-\nuratidn'.'Was ca]Jed,.\"she.er specu-\non\" by an aide today. It was\n\u2022ned the .Republican candidate\nno such plan at this time.\n-rSwas President Truman's turn\n;'a day'of campaign silence after\nrey's quiet 'Monday at Albany,\np. \u25a0\" , ;j- \u25a0'\u25a0'-\u25a0\u25a0\nWhlle;the President worked at\nie White House, Dewey turned\nftention bkbk \u201e,t)o -hla candidacy\nf: entraining for his major speech\n\"New York tonight Both men\nIII scour the populous region\nom Chicago to New York next\n_.'eek fdr votes In, a fast eam-\nalgn wind-up to the tyoY. 2 eleo-\non..-. 1    .     \u2022   .\nhe report ..of a Dewey pre-in-\nural appearance in Western Eur-\nwas published by' Columnist\n_. O'Donnell In the New York\nIy News.,He said it waa being\ned on Dewey' advisers for Its' ef-\non Russia jn the \"battle of\nt;es.\"      \u25a0   :. , \u2022\nBT EFFORTS\ntuirian .'pbllsheel up.'a whirlwind\nedule for Saturday \u2014 four\neches on a-flying: top. to Penn-\nrtnla. He will talk in Scranton,\nkesbarre and Johnstown, and\nke a major address at Pittsburgh\nurday night Then he will hustle\nk' to 'Washington' and leave by\nSunday night for a week-long\nlewey, leaving Monday, will trail\niman to Chicago, Cleveland, Bos-\nah(i New York. The fiejubllcan\nnlnee will climax his campaign\n.ewj York Saturday night, while\niman is making his last mwn\n>eirance at Si Louisi **\nruman's Monday appeal In North\nolina to Democrats to return to\n\"Standard'Vparty fold brought\nther. thrust from J. Storm Thur-\nnd, States Rights 'presidential\nnlnee., He said, in a statement\nt Truman \"failed to defend his\nrayal of the Democratic Party.\"\ns States-Righters broke away be-\nse of Truman's civil rights pro\nm.\nJICKIES ... By Ken Reynolds\n'Two hundred and three\nundsl These scale I got with\nNewa Want Ad are too accural\"\nVANCOUVER, Oot. __:<CP)  \u2014\nPrivateer' Jlines Limited announced\ntoday it would suspend operations at\nits gold- thine at. Zeballos, on- the\nyTest Coast of Vancouver Island,\nearly next month.'\nI The shutdown, predicted 'by company officials' in September, is reported due-to rising operating costs.\nAn official said that even the\nFederal subsidy on gold production\nwas insufficient-Inducement.\nU.N. MUST SOLVE\nBERLIN\nCRISIS SAYS DREW\nI NEW YORK, Oet 20(CP) - The\nRussian blockade ot Berlin \"raises\nbasic issues between the \u25a0 great\npowers which must be settled .\nby the United Nations,\" George\nDrew.'Said\" tonight:\nThe new leader of the Progressive\nConservative Party in Canada was\nOne of the speakers at tonight's\nclosin gsession of the New York\nHerald Tribune Forum.\nIn his 15-minute speech- on \"the\nrecord1 ot   the   United   Nations,\nDrew   emphasized   the   Berlin\nproblem.   . i,\n\"Now that such a serious but very\n(dear issue has been placed before\nthe United Nations, its solution\nmust be the collective act of tbat\norganization unless Russia removes\nthe cause,\" he declared.\nGovernor Thomas E. Dewey of\nNew York, Republican candidate for\nthe United States presidency, and J.\nHoward McGrath, Chairman of the\nDemocratic National Committee,\nwere other speakers. General theme\nof the session was \"goals for leador-\ns'hip in the world crisis.\"\nDewey declared that the United\nStates must act decisively \"to make\nthe free nations more powerful\nthan tbe forcea making for war.'\"\nNo Power to Stop\nInstallation of\nSteel Towers\n' VANCOUVER, Oct 20 \"(CP) \u2014\nChief Justice Wendell B. Farris said\nin Supreme Court today that he had\nno power to issiie an injunction to\nstop installation of steel towers! on\nBoundary Road for the British Columbia Electric Railway Company,\nHe\\made tbe statement in dealing\nwith an application from six residents of the area who are among a\ngroup opposing the' towers, being\nconstructed to carry high tension\ntransmission lines from the power\ncompany's Bridge River project tt\na sub-station in Burnaby.\nThe Chief Justice said Section 107\nof the Public' Utilities Act bars him\nfrom interfering with the Commission order by Injunction or other\nprocess.\n\u00ab5f\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Clear Thursday. Wind\nlight. Little change in temperature,\nHigh at Cranbrook 65, Crescent\nValley SS.\nCapl. Jame* rilzsimmons, Pioneer\nKootenay Steamboat Skipper,\nFormer M.L.A. for Kaslo-Slocan, Dies AS SAFEGUARD\nCaptain James Fltzslmmons, pioneer Interior navigator and former\nMJL..A. for Kaslo-Slocan, died Wednesday in hospital at Revelstoke\nafter a brief illness.\nHis name was wen known and\nhighly regarded throughout the\nKootthays.; --\u25a0 ..;'\u25a0\u2022\nHe was retired by the Canadian\nPacific Railway __. 1935 after 39\nyears of active service on the railway company boats in the Interior,\nduring which he became' captain of\nthe steamers Minto and Bonnington on the Arrow Lakes.\nCaptain Fitzsimmons became a\nfamiliar figure through his steamboat service, his associations with\nRevelstoke, Arrowhead, Nakusp,\nNew Denver and Nelson, and In tbe\npolitical field of the Province.\nELECTED 1928\nHe represented the Kaslo-Slocan\nriding-in tiie B.C.,Legislature from\n1928 to 1933, being elected under\nthe Conservative standard.       '-. ,\nIt is almost 52 years ago that\nCaptain, Fitzsimmons left his. native province of Prince Edward Island to go.West and his first stop\nwas at Revelstoke where he worked\nfor a short time in a camp there.\nLater he moved to where South Slocan is now situated, but vttiere the\nfirst' camp bf this west Kootenay\nPower and Light Company was ac-;\ntlve.    '\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0  : -i'V-l-i \u25a0\u25a0'\":\u25a0 -  .'\u25a0\nThe tales of the Yukon and the\nallurement of. gold. Caught, the\nfancy of Captain .Fltzslmmons, and\nalong with several others he took\nthe bail North. He was proceeding\nup the Arrow Lakes on a boat of\nwhich. Captain Gore was master,\nand he chanced to enter conversation-with tbe, captain.\nAsked If he had ever had any\nexperience on boats, Captain Fltz-\nelmmona stated he had seen service on   boats  on  the  Atlantic.\nCaptain Gere offered him a position on tho boat, and-the Mr.\nFltzslmmons of those days, decided to throw aside all  Ideas of\ngoing to tho Yukon In favor of\nthe preferred work.\nHe started to work on Feb. 1,\n1897 as a deck officer. In July, 1903,\nhe had been promoted to master on\nthe. steamer Procter which piled\nTrout Lake. The last position he\nheld was master of the Minto on tbe\nArrow .takes.     \u25a0:\u2022'.-\u25a0\n\u25a0 In between the years -1908 and\n1935, he served continuously as master on the different steamers of\nAGREEMUST\nBUILD FORCES\nCAPT. J. FITZSIMMONS\nthe Inland service, although the\ngreater part of the time he was on\nthe Arrow Lakes. There he was a\nfamiliar and cheery figure In days\nwheh' the boat \u25a0 service held a romance and position that has long\nsince'been usurped.\nHe was in charge of the S.S. Bonnington on the Arrow Lakes every\nseason during the Summer months\nand the channels, sandbars, currents\nand other factors that the navigators had to contend with, were an\nopen book to him. He also served\non Kootenay Lake for a time.\nThe esteem in which he was held\nat the time of his retirement was\nevidenced in letters he received\nfrom the Assistant; General Manager of Western Lines, C.P.R, and\nthe Superintendent of Nelson Division. \u25a0\u25a0(.'\u25a0 . \u25a0> :,\nFORCEFUL SPEAKER    '.\/\nDuring his years in the Legislature Captain Fitzsimmons aligned\nwith highway construction, mining\ndevelopment and state health insurance. He advocated the coinage\nof silver dollars by the Dominion\nGovernment a move that was later\ntaken. He was a forceful and ready\nspeaker, and was at one time a\nnominee for the Revelstoke riding,\nbut did not run.\nFuneral services will be held at\nRevelstoke Saturday.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nGEfS 21 DUCKS\nWYT^m\/O SBOTS\n. -VEBlroN. B;fc,.06ti 20<CP)\n--Hunter'HowardThornton Is\nrecovering; today from-the shock\nof exceeding his bag limit in the\nfirst'tjwia^iota.. V,\n\"\u25a0' BSrali<l^;r'tfie*^#2Se^-\nOkanagan Lake, he pulled down\n, <m__i.'rising flock,\u25a0 filled, twice,\nand then sought shelter' as the\nducks rained down on him.\n* He! got 21.--i  .-\u25a0'-.\u25a0\nPolice   agreed -there   wasn't\nj much to,do about a man who\n1 exceeded bis limit that way.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n60 On\nOTTAWA, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014Arrangements for Newfoundland's entry\ninto confederation! as a 10th province are being discussed daily at\nclosed meetings between Canadian\nGovernment and Newfoundland\nrepresentatives.\nNo information on the discussions\nis being Issued, but both sides say\nthat progress is being made. One'\nof those participating ln the discussions said, today that the talks\nwhich .began Oct 6 likely will extend until the end of this month.\nHe described tbe talks as a detailed examination of all the problems Involved in the union of the\n450-year-old island . colony iwlth\nCanada, Newfoundland has. presented a brief outlining what changes\nthe, island would like made in the\ntentative terms of union offered by\nthe- Canadian- Government a - year\nl^go. - \u25a0'\u25a0\nDIES AT MEETING\nVANCOUVER, Oct 20 (CP) \u2014\nAndrew , G. Frame, 54-year-old\nToronto delegate to the Western\nCanada Beauty Trade Congress convention here, collapsed and died today during a luncheon meeting.\nHe was Secretary of the Allied\nBeauty Equipment and Jobbers'\nAssociation. \t\nEast Zone Police\nGel Arms\nBy DONALD DOANE\n. BERLIN, Oct. 20 ,(AP).-^Gil<t!\nwore being handedout to Moscow.*\ntrained police throughout the\nEastern Zone today and antl-\nCommunists said Red rebellion lit\nKorea ahould be a warning to\nGermany.\n\"Korea offers a parallel of what\nwould happen In Germany. If the\nWestern powera should accept\nRussia's proposal that al! occupying forcea withdraw from Germany,\" said Franz Tausch, Chief\nEditor of the newspaper Sozlalde-\nmokrat.\n\"The putsch In Korea le a warn,\nlog to American policy,\" added\nJacob Kaiser, Chairman of the\nChristian Democratic Union, a\nConservative Party.\nBelieve 33\nDead in Crash\nPRESTW1CK, Scotland, Oct 21\n\u2022 (Thursday) (AP)-A- new York\nbound Royal Dutch Airlines\n(K-L-M) Constellation crashed\nInto a field near honj early today\nand thirty-three persons were un\nofficially reported killed.\nK-L-M officials Issued no statement on the casualties, but other\nauthorities fixed the death list at\nthat number. Seven were reported\nto have survived the flaming\n\u25a0 crash. \u2022     \u2022 ' '\u25a0\nAmong the survivors were five\nmen and two .women. All were\nseverely Injured,\nCHARGE FAILURE TO\nPAY AMUSEMENT TAX\nVANCOUVER, Oct 20 (Cp) -\nCharges of failure-to pay amusement tax were laid in.police court\ntoday against Hilker Enterprises\nLtd., and Hilker Attractions Ltd,\nThe counts, laid under the Excise\nTax Act; Involved about $5000.\nStates of India,-   -\nEire Only.Likely\nChanges in Union .\nCONCLUDE TODAY\nBy JAMES MeCOOK\n... Canadian Press Staff Writer ....\nLONDON,   Oct  20   (CP)-JCom-\nmonwealth   Prime   Ministers   expect to. hold the final plenary session of their 10-day conference tomorrow with every indication that\nthe association of free nations will\nbe continued and strengthened.\nThey discussed  defence' at\nlength today-and a communique\nsaid  they  have  reached  \"agreement that the danger of war must\nbe  met by  building  up armed\nforces   In   order  to  deter  any\nwould-be aggressor and that freedom must be safeguarded hot only\nby. military   defensive  measures\nbut also by advancing social ahd\neconomic welfare.\"\nIt Is understood representatives\nof   all   Commonwealth   countries,\nincluding  Canada's  representative,\nLouis St.'Laurent, toOk'part In'the\ndiscussions. '\nST. LAURENT RETURNING\nSt Laurent' told The' Canadian\nPress that the discussions have been\nmarked by harmony. ahd - understanding. -,,\nHe expects to leave for Canada\nby air Friday night Prime Minister King, who has been confined\nto his bed for nearly two weeks,\nwill probably sail for j Canada\nnext 'week.\nIt li understood Mr. King has\nmade substantial progress towards\nrecovery of his health ahd has\nbeen a key figure In conference\ndiscussions.      i r:\\ ,\"\nThe only anticipated change in\ntbe present * Commonwealth : structure ls^Eire's proposal to sever the\nlast links with the Crown and become in fact a sovereign independent republic.   '\u25a0:\u25a0)\u25a0\nThis has posed a problem for con-\nfutional experts who are ponder-\nways in which Eire citizens Can\ntreated as non-aliens and how\ntrade and other agreements with\nEire can be maintained if the country leaves the Commonwealth.\nINDIA  IN   COOPERATIVE\nMOOD- ;\nInformed' sources aald the difficulty might be overcome by each\nCommonwealth country individually entering into its own agreement\nwith Eire for.speclal recognition.   \"\nPrime * Minister, Nehru as, representative of the new Dominion of\nIndia has shown readiness to cooperate with' the CommohweilQi'Or-\nganintion. reliable sources said.\n~   :In'di3# decision on the future\n_ _ atioh- still has' teBs made-end'\nher Government has passed a resolution in favor of a sovereign independent republic. Changes, in terms\nsuch as*elimination,'of \"British\"\"in\nBritish Commonwealth* of Natiotts\nwould help 'reihoye objections by\nsome sections of opinion in India\nto the -present association.:\nThese, spurces\"said that, fcdla\nCould by law declare her status to\nbe that of-a \"sovereign* independent\nstate\" and still retain her Commonwealth ; association.\" The, word '\"re'\nSublic\" If used would Indicate that\nidih had severed- her association\nwith the Crown, now the common\nlink ..that joins- . Commonwealth\ncountries. if\nIt   Is   understood  that  advice\nSlven by Prime Minister King and\nt. Laurent In Informal chats with\nother Commonwealth leaders has\nbeen against any radical changes\nIn : the  form, of Commonwealth\nstructure although a revision' of\nterms and titles might be approved to facilitate free association.\nNehru told The Canadian Press\nthat he had enjoyed a chat with\nKing in his hotel room and hoped\nto see him again. Tonight Nehru\nchatted with St. Laurent at Canada\nHouse.   .   , ..\nTonight Prime Minister Attlee In\nvited more than 60 guests to a dinner in honor ot the Commonwealth\nprime ministers. British Cabinet\nministers and ' Winston Churchill,\nleader of the Opposition, were invited.\nTo\nFreer Tourist. Travel in Canada\nOTTAWA. Ocfc 20: (CP) \u2014 Theon record in fa^Or et a, _yatem of\nDominion-Provincial Tourist Conference decided today, to urge the\nFederal Government to consider all\nmeans of - making tourist. travel. to\nand within Canada as free as .possible.   ..    .;.-'  ,.r \u2022 ..\u25a0.\u25a0:\u2022;\u25a0   ,.;:.--..-;\u25a0..-...\nAt the- concluding' session of a\nthree-day convention, the delegate's\ndecided not to urge ln a resolution\nthat.the 15. per cent Federal Transportation Tax be abolished. The\nmajority of delegatea felt that.,a\nconvention of Government officials\nshould not. dictate: ta\u00a3 policies to\nany., government.   . ,\nThe convention, which brought\ntogether representatives of the Dominion, the Provinces, and the major transportation companies, went\ngrading of tourist accommodation\nacross the country.\nAnother resolution urged all'governments to consider sponsoring\nschool essays as a means of Interesting children In the tourist trade.\nDelegates also- stressed 'the \" need\nfdr encouraging the conservation of\nfish and game resources.\nE. G. Rowebottom, British Columbia's Deputy Minister of Trade\nand.Industryj'presented the tax resolution as Chairman of the Resolutions Committee. The resolution\nsaid the 15 per cent tax on transportation tickets jras \"discriminatory\" and was discouraging tourist\ntravel. The tax was imposed during\nthe war to discourage travel.\nMen Trim Poundage:\nBetter, Says Prof.\nBOSTON,:Oct 20 (AP) \u2014 When\nit comes to taking oft excess weight\nmen have It all over women.\nAnd that's a woman's opinion!\n- Miss Adelia BeeUwkes, Michigan\nUniversity nutritionist finds men\n\"more business-like\" about reducing.\n\"They nearly always see a physician and follow his advice,\" she aald\nin an interview at the American\nDietetic-Association convention.\nBut the girls are suckers for \"dangerous reducing pills\" or trick diets.\nThe roly-poly ladies aire:always\nlooking for Some magic way to lose\n15 pounds in one week, reported\nthe attractive Ann Arbor professor\n\u2014\"they forgist how many years It\ntook to make them bverweglht\" -\n. Miss Beeuwkes,. who Js slim \u2014\nbut not scrawny\u2014disclosed no saf(\nspeedy formula to retain the girlis\nfigure. .  ...        .   .'.-.;',\u2022   ,-. ,\u201e\u2022\u25a0 I\nThe (}nly sure way, she said. Is to\ndiscipline the sweet tooth by avoiding ' whipped creem;**can^r, bar\u00bb\npastries.andigravy,. r       -,.,..\nTRIMS GOING UP\nVICTORIA; Oct 20 (CP)-Cost of\nhaircut'and shave ln Greater\nVictoria willberboosted to 73 cents'\nend 50 cents, respectively,.starting\nNovember-1..Effective On the same\ndate is the price of 50 cents for\nchlldren'a haircuts.\nAt the present time haircuts' for\nmen cost 05 cents. A shave' costs\n35 cents and children's haircuts are\n40 cents.\nDRAFT NEW BERLIN\nPLAN FOR UN.\nU.K., CANADA\nBUSINESS TOPS\nANGLO-AMERICA\nAil-Out Drive\nDoubles Exports to\nCanada in 8 Months\nIMPORTS CUT\nBy JAMES MeCOOK\nCanadian Press Staff Writer \u25a0\nLONDON, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014Britain\ndoubled Its exports to Canada ln\nthe first eight months of 1948 compared with the same period in 1047,\nBoard of Trade figures released today .show.   . :.:':.\u25a0:   .'\u25a0:\nReflecting tbe. drive for a better\nbalance of trade with the'dollar\ncountries, exports so far this year\nto Canada are valued at more than\n\u00a343,500,000 ($174,000,000) compared\nwith more than \u00a326,500,000 ($106,-\n000,000) for the same period in 1947.\nImports from Canada.so.far this\nyear -are. lower at \u00a3151,000,000 as\ncompared with \u00a3153,500,000 iri the\nsame period last year.       ,<\nThe- total -business transacted\nbetween Britain and Canada la\nhigher than that between \"Britain\nand the United States, the Board\nof Trade report, shows. In the first\neight-months of this year ,the\nUnited Kingdom exports to the\nUnited States were valued at\nnearly \u00a344,000,000 and Imports at\n\u00a3125,000\/100.\nTotal 'Briiishexp'orta for September were \u00a3131,000,000 \u2014 \u00a3500,000\nmore than In August and \u00a314,700,-\n000 less than in the record month\nof July. September's exports were\n132 per cent of the total for the\nsame' month In 1938. The export\ntarget for the year is 170 per ceht\nof 1938.\nImports for September totalled\n\u00a3109,400,000, the lowest since February and \u00a34,400,000 less than\nAugust -The biggest cut was* ln\nfood, drink and tobacco. Fewer raw\nmaterials were imported but more\nmanufactured; gobds'.Were brought\nin,,,.largely* unbleached: piecegoods\nfrom Japan for, finishing and reexport.\n,. Britain^ September adverse balance bf trade was, \u00a333,100,000, a\nreduction of \u00a36,000,000 from August\nPilot's Course for\nAuxiliary Members\nOTTAWA, Oct 20 ^CP) \u2014 A new\nplan whereby- selected membera of\ntte-R.C_A.R Auxiliary will be given\na-'one-year pilot's, course at Cen-\ntralia,-! Ont,' was announced at Air\nForce Headquarters today.\nUnder the plan, for which- the\nfirst course of 17 embryo pilots\nalready have been chosen,. the\nAuxiliary Force members will first\nbe posted to the R.C.A.F.'s School\nof. Aviation Medicine in Toronto for\nmedical tests and a course in service procedure. Thej., will then go\nto Centralis to begin' flying tran-\nIng, ranking thee as flight cadets\nwith'officer rates of pay.\nLittle Six' New Formula Wins\nWest Approval; Rumor Resolution\nHas Conditional Vishinsky Okay\n\u25a0   -\\    . \u2022   . ,\nPARIS, Oct. 20 (GP)\u2014A new formula for settling the\nBerlin crisis was submitted to the Big Four powers tonight\nby the six \"neutral\" members of the Security Council. Canada\nis one of the six.\nAuthoritative quarters sdid the new resolution appeared\n\"eminently .satisfactory\"; to the Western powers. Russia's\nApdrei Vishinsky promised to send the draft to Moscow for\nstudy.\nOne neutral esource said Vishinsky had approved the\nresolution conditionally,, but there was no confirmation of\nthis from;;the Soviet delegp.\"\ntlon or from any other-source.\nWestern   'sources,   while\nSome\nagreeing that the plan offered\npossible   way  out,  were, c'auttoiis\nabout Its chances of success.\nThe resolution was reported to\nrecommend that Russia lift the Berlin blockade, within 48 hours after\nthe Security Council approved the\nproposal. The Western Powers, on\ntheir side, were asked to agree to\na meeting- of the Council' of .Foreign Ministers on Berlin and-the\nwhole German problem immedlate-\nIy,,after the .blockade: is lifted.\n-   (See also story on page 3.)   -\nOne neutral source said the fram-\ners of the proposal were hopeful of\nwinning Soviet support by making\nthe 'polhts', recommendationa- and\nnot submitting them as demands on\nthe big power*.        .;..':'\nThe main difference between the\nnew proposal ahd the previous neutral-power plan is that Russia WiU\nbe asked to lift the blockade before\nthe Bid Four Foreign Ministers\nmeet Under the earlier plan tho\ntwo steps were to have been simultaneous. \" \u25a0';.\nInformed quarters said the resolution would make the following\nspecific recommendations:\n- 1. An appeal to the four powers\nnot to take any decision or make\nany move which might lead to war.\n2. A call to Russia to lift her\nblockade of Berlin's Western sectors\nin all its phases-toad,: rail aha\ncanal. ''.-\"'    ,- 'i.-.-r--., .-\u25a0\u25a0   ' '\n3. Provision that the four powera\nimplement their agreement that the\nRussia-zone mark is to be the sole\ncurrency in Berlin under four-\npower control.       '.'...\",\u25a0\" \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.-\u25a0.\n4. A provision that the blockade\nbe lifted within 48 hours after Council approval of the resolution ahd\nImmediately afterwards the Council of Foreign Ministers should meet\nto discuss Berlin and Germany as\na whole,\nInformants said the \"neutral six\"\n\u2014China, Belgium, Argentina,- Syria,\nColombia and Canada\u2014approved\nthe wording of the resolution at a\nmeeting this afternoon.   \t\nJ. Donnelly, in\nSenate 35 Years, Dies\nOWEN SOUND, Ont; Oot (0\n- (CP) --Senator J. J. Donnelly,\nDean of the Canadian Senate,\ndied today In his 82nd year. He\nhad'beeh'a;member, of: the.Bin-\nate .for 35 years and held .'office\nlonger thaiiVany, eth'er member;, .\n* He was.' appointed' to ;the: Red\nChamber ih 191S. at .the* same time\nas the late E. fr Smith;'\"wlib died\nlast week In-Winona .after, resigning\ntibia, the Senate.,'\n. Senator Donnelly, i-rtehded the\nlast session of the .fibnatft but had\nbeen ill- at 'his Home- at? nearby\nPinkerton for1, the last-three wee^cs.\n- :He 'was ;\u25a0\u25a0. elected, to: Represent\nSouth Brueet'-as a 'Gdnservatlv^i\nMember of Parliament In* 1904,1908;\nand 1911. Ittji^yate.life.Jiecphduct-\ned an extensive lumber lmsteess.\nOf Irish stock, Senator Donnelly'o\nparenta settled In Bruce County ln\n1855. He was bom in a log cabin.\nOn his 80th blrthdayhe appeared\nin excellent health and was descrlb-\neiies one,of the most active members of the Senate. He waa Chairman ,Of the National' Resources\nCommittee of the Senate,\nHe.\u201el_, JWr-vlTOd^lBr \"\ndaugtit&a aSJ flvs \u00ab0i__,\n\\ \u25a0   '\u25a0\u25a0 ' -  ?a-r;7*.   -.-..\nOTTAWA, Oct m(6P)i-.Pra.\nBressIve Conservative, representation In-the Senate was narrowed\nto 20 today by the death of Senator J. J. Donnelly In Pinkerton,\nOnt The Liberals, hold -tt of the\n96 seats and 13 aro .vacant.\nPAYS FOR MEAL, GRABS\nCASH WHEN TILL OPENS\n) vAi>coiJvi__t,'Oct; apitepj\"\u2014.:\u00bb\nblond, well\"Aessed youth today^\nescaped with nearly $100 cash from\nNighthawk Cafe In the East End\nDistrict in a daring \"grab and run\"\nrobbery 'within a stone'a throw pf\nthe police station.\nMrs. Jerry Salter,- cafe cashier,\nsaid tbe youth gave her- $2 to pay\nfor his meal and grabbed a handful\nof bills when she opened the tilt\nWarns Thousands to THe\nAdvance Slightly\n\u25a0 Egg nrlces have advanced two\nthree cents, bringing the prlB'a.\nGrade A large eggs in Nelson\nabout 65 cents a dozen.-\t\nThe supply1 is still short, wholesalers said Wednesday., Butter abo\nis below, normal, local supplies filling the .demand until shipments\nfrom New Zealand and .Australia\narrive around the end of ths\nmonth.\nBeef and lamb are plentiful but\npork remains on tbe abort list owfig\nto Prairie harvesting.,. : ;\n! Oranges' and. bananas were the\nonly fruits' received during the\nweek. Imported - tomatoes, grapes\nand lettuce are expected after Nov.\n\u00a3\u2022--\u25a0   -'.-\u25a0-\u25a0'\nA car of grain and grain products,\nconsisting of whole grains and\nmashes,-, was sent out' from Nelson.\nA carload also came in, as well aa\ntwo car's.bf flour and feed.   .\n4-I^YR.OT\nIN BORDEAUX\nDr. Ralph Bunche, U.N. Palestine mediator, spoke yesterday before the United Nations Political Committee, Sitting on either side\nare Interpreter\n3it 20 (AP)-Tbe United\n_is Political Committee voted\n' to delay Its debate on Pales-\nRussian bloc delegates objected,\ncontending there was a move afoot\nto defer action until after the Presidential election in the United\nStates, Jbv. 2. The\u00bbUnlted. States\ndelegation made no reply.\nA 'Mexican resolution calling for\nthe big Powers .to get together and\nsettle their differences was given\npriority ahead of the Palestine question. The vote was 34 to 11, with 10\nabstentions.-     \u25a0    '\u25a0    \u25a0\nMeanwhile, the 58-member Social\nCommittee decided to take up im\nmediately the plight of. 472,000 Pal\nestine and Arab refugees. The So\nviet bloc also opposed this. \u25a0.-.\nAlexei Pavlov of Russia objected\nto interrupting the Committee's debate on human rights to hear Dr.\nRalph Bunche, acting Palestine mediator, and Sir Raphael Cilento,\nUnited Nations Palestine Relief Director. Russia was, voted down 38\nto 3. Eight countries abstained.\nBunche warned that thousands of\nArab refugees would die of exposure unless they received immediate\nMONTREAL, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014Complaints bf bad food, cold cells and\nlack bf blankets touched off a four-\nday riot in Montreal's Bordeaux\nJail; the Gazette said: today * Ih a\nnewspage story.\nThe story said an estimated 650\nprisoners demonstrated for four\ndays and nights and guards.'.were\nkept on 24 hour duty.\nDr. Zenon Lesage, Governor ot\nthe jail, denied there had been any\ndemonstration, but the-newspaper\nsays unimpeachable sources Claimed the Hot was precipitated by the\nfirst cold spelt '::\u25a0:  :'\nThe story credits a prison official\nas saying \"the complaint bf cold i_\nmade too often not to be legitimate.\"\nOvercrowded conditions and lack\nof work for the inmates who would\nrather labor and keep warm than\nstay In their cells and freeze, were\nsaid to be other factors In the uprising,.\nTbe story adds:\n\"Jail authorities were said to be\nstudying the possibility the riot may\nhave been started by friends of\nDonald Perreault, charged with\ntbe, slaying ofr two Montreal policemen in a bank holdup here Sept\nrelief. He applied for an- over-all,**\nrelief program to alleviate the des-' \"Prisoners had apparently learn-\npeTate plight of nearly 500,000 Inno- ed through the grape-Wnb mat Percent victims of the Palestine con-|reault was being brought to Bor-\nfllct\" \u00bb\u2022 Ideaux.\" \u25a0    ' \"'>,,..\n\"\"iii     i i\u00ab-\n_____________\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 21, INI-\nSINCLAIR LEWIS'GREATEST\nN0VEL..THE LOVE STORY\nTONIGHT THRU SATURDAY\ni\nShows at 7:00\u20148:59\nON THI SAM! PKOOKAM\nLATEST NEWS\n\"   CARTOON\n\"THE TRUCE HURTS\"\nAn appeal against conviction on\na dangerous- driving charge, was\nwon byrKai\"W. Jensen in County\n. Court a,t-Nelson -Wednesday after\na two-day hearing. The appeal'Was\ngranted by His. Honor Judge K P,\nDawson, on grounds pf insufficient\nevidence.  .- \u2022    ,.-,--\nMr., Jensen will now filo an application through the office of the\nCommissioner of Provincial Police\nfor, return of his driver's licence,\nwhich was temporarily suspended,\nHe will also be returned the fine\nhe paid.\nRepresented by L. S. Gansner,\nMr. Jensen Combatted conviction on\ncharges that arose from a: collision\n, four miles North pt Crestbh.;r\nC. H. Irving was solicitor -fct the\nCrown.\nKills tenant1\nOver Radio Program\nRAVENNA, 0., Oct. 20 (API-\nfarmer who prefers comedian Jack\nBenrty to a \"give-away-prize\" pro-\n-gram on-the.radio shot and killed\nhis* tenant, Sheriff George Shields\nreported today.\nIn fact Shields said, it waa an argument over those programs that\nled J. A- McDonald, a 76-year-old\nwidower, to shoot Jackson W* Bailey, BB, yesterday. .-\u25a0-'\u2022\nFor his part, McDonald Insists thc\nshooting, was accidental. Shields' office said a charge will be filed\nagainst him today,\nURGES KIMBERLEY\nPARENTS TO\nANSWER QUERIES\nKIMBERLEY, B.C, Oct 20-F. P.\nLevirs, District High School Inspector, was guest speaker at the recent\nmeeting. of the Kimberley. P.T.A.\nStating that the pre-school years\nwere the most important he urged\nparents to surround their children\nwith \"good books, music and art;\n-answer truthfully all questions the\nchild asks in his search to satisfy his\ncuriousity.\" -.-<i\nHo also stated that the social\ngraces of the \"child entering Grade\nI were a direct reflection of the\ntype, of home from which tbe child\ncame. -. \u25a0  ', ,\nAt the preceding business session,\nthe following committee chairmen\nwere elected:  * \u2022\nFine Arts, Mrs. M. Moll; Parent\nEducation, Mrs. P. H. Barrett; Library \"and' Publications, Miss A.\nHurd; Film and Radio, A. Glover;\nPre-School, Mrs. 'T. Wilson;. Study\nGroup Committee, Mrs. L. H. Garstin; Historian, A .Watson. Membership'now stands at 214.\nThe Ways and Means Committee\nwill feature a \"Hobby1-Show\" during the first week in December, the\ncommittee in charge including Mrs.\nP. Adlard, Mrs. J. Lukas, Mrs. M.\nMoll, Mrs. A. Richards and Mra. A.\nGordon.\nFor Citizenship\nApplications of bine District men\nand women for Canadian citizenship\nwere approved by Hia Honor E. P.\nDawson,\" in a County Court session\nhere. The application will now. be\nsent to Ottawa for final approval.\nEva Budvesel, of Nelson, Matsugi\nHera of New Denver, Fanny Kales-,\nnikoff of Appledale, Mr. and Mr?.\nJames Maloff . of Tarrys, Steven\nPdkay of Creston, Italo Persello of\nProcter, Takeshi Uchida of New\nDenver and Erna HelOne Wolfrum\nof Wynndel, were recommended, by\nJudge Dawson aa new citizens of\nCanada,    , \" \u25a0 \"\u25a0'\nMrs; Budvesel, a Nelson housewife, came to Canada in 1836 from\nher home In Czechoslovakia. Mother\nof four children under 21, she was\nborn lh Villta, Lubella, Czechoslovakia On Qct. 20, 1904.       \u25a0'\u2022\u25a0, i\nBom.In Japan and coming .tp\nCanada from the United States, 70-\nyear-oldi' Mataugi 'Hara of New\nDenver lived in Rosebery from\nDecember, 1943, until November of\n1847 when he moved to New Denver.\nMrs...Fanny Kalesnlkoff, wife of\nSam Kalesnlkoff, was born in 1885\nin the province of Tif lis, Russia, She\ngot her first glimpse of Canada\nwhen ahe arrived at St. John, Nova\nScotia,.in 1899. In 1936 she moved\nwith her husband to Appledale,\nMr. and Mrs, Maloff, both born\nat Kars, Caucasus, Russia, arrived\nin Canada at Quebec Port, ln July\n1910. Mr. Maloff la a farmer at\nTarrys. -\nSteve Pokay of Creston Immigrated to Canada In June, 1928\nfrom Hungary.\n:; Italo Persello, C.P.R. section foreman at Procter, was born in Basi-\nliano, Udlne, Italy in 1912, He lived\nat Tye from 1943 to 1947, when he\nwent to Procter. -\nTahashi Uchida, born in Yoma-\ndamuro, Japan in 1900, entered Canada at Victoria in 1918 and since\nthen has lived at Vancouver, Ocean\nFalls and New Denver.\nErna Helene Wolfrum moved to\nWynndel in 1983 from Camp Lister,\nwhere she had lived since 1930.\nMrs. Wolfrum waa born In 1898 in\nBerlin and ih September, 1930\narrived; in Montreal.\nFather Smith Is\nKimberley Assistant\nKIMBERLBY, B.C., Oct M-Hev'\nFather Lawrence Smith of Boston,\nMass., has arrived in Klmberley to\nbe assistant to Rev. Father F. Monaghan, Parish J.rleSt of the Sacred\nHeart Parish.r.Father Smith was recently ordained in Boston.\nRebekahs\nEntertain\nThe Weather\nSynopsis\u2014Rain is falling in the\nPrince George and Northern Carl?\nboo regions and over Northern Vancouver Island. However the system\ncausing this precipitation continues\nto weaken and, very little rain la\nexpected over B.C, Thursday,\nNelson     32    55     \u2014\nMontreal   .'. -    30    46    \u2014\nToronto    . :_\"   34    45    .01\nNorth Bay       29    40    Tr\nPort Arthur  __...    30    45    \u2014\nKenora u      \u2014    52    \u2014\nWinnipeg      40    60     \u2014\nBrandon  _.     28    58     \u2014\nThe Pas      33    52     \u2014\nRegina   .\u201e r ._    27    59     \u2014\nSaskatoon _    24    61     m\nPrince Albert ...-.   . 22.   54    4-\nNorth Battleford \u25a0__.  26    8_j    fif\nSwift Current     27    64*   **-\nMedicine Hat .._ .23\nHula-GirlTie\nLovett\nWASHINGTON, Oet .20 (AP) \u2014\nRobert Lovett Under-Secretary of\nState, a man who loans to the conservative in dress, showed up at a\npress conference today wearing a\nhula-giri tie.       \u25a0   \u25a0   ,'- ,\nTht neckwear was presented to,\nhim recently by Gen. Walter B.\nSmith,- United States Ambassador\nto Russia,,-who had read in the\npapers that r Lovett always wore a\nsingle-color pale cravat\n'Smith aSked Lovett If he would\n.wear a brighter tie If Smith bought\nhim one. In an unguarded moment\nLovett said yes.\nLovett wore the result today but\nfold friends- never again. He said\nthe row of dancing girls under his\nchin distracts htm from his work.\nRead the Classified Columns Dally\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON DAILY\n.V    At 10:30 a.m. \u2014 Except Sunday .\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135     Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nHeld lor Former\nKoolenaian\n\"..-'.   -.-rr.. \"-..-\u25a0'.     -*.\/.,\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct 20 V Fu-\nneral services were held here oh\nMonday'for James' Shaw Fergus, 42.\na former Klmberley resident who\ndied at Macleod, Alta., as the result of an accident. >    \u25a0\nThe ' servloe was conducted by\nthe Canadian Legion, the Rev. B.\nC. Henstock officiating. ft,\"\nPallbearers were Alex Caldwell,\nTommy Caldwell, W. Raynor, Billy\nFergus, Hugh Caldwell and Sandy\nLivingston..\nMr. Ferguson was born at Kilsyth, .Scotland, end came to Klmberley os a young man. He later\nwent to TraU, before engaging ln\nfarming in southern Alta., he was\na veteran of World War 2.\nUnmarried, Mr, Fergus ls survived by two brothers, Alex Fergus\nand W. M, Raynor, both of Kimberley, ahd by two si^tera, Mrs. V-\nCaldwell, Kimberley, and Vtn. M.\nPllklngton, Nelson; Lancashire,\nEhgland.' * Vi'Yi A''.\nMany Attend\nLast Riles for\nKimberley Lady\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Oct 20 -\nMany friends gathered on Oct. 14,\nat the Klmberley funeral parlors\nfo pay tribute to Mrs. Emily Marie\nBennett, who died at McDougall\nHospital following a short Illness\nThe service was conducted by the\nRev. G. A. Affleck and Interment\nwas in the family plot ln the local cemetery. ,\nThe hymns sung, both favorites\nof Iho deceased, were \"Lead Kind'\nly Light\" ahd ''Abide WlthMC\". \u2022\nPallbearers were H. Nordlund,\nJ. .Sims, M. Beduz, F. Skribe, D.\nJones and F. Carlson.\nOver 65 Rebecca members, Odd\nFellows and Theta Rho girls attended a banquet held ln the I.O.O.F,\nHall Tuesday night Inhotior of Mrs,\nIna Atkinson of Summerland, Assembly President of the Rebecca\norder\nThe hall and tables were beautifully decorated with Antum flowers. The honored guest' was pre'\nsented with a lovely corsage by the\nNoble Grand!       \u2022'      \u2022'.    .\nFollowing the banquet lodge\nmeeting ,was held, and an address\nwas given by the President. Several\nother speeches by visiting'membera\nfrom Vancouver apd Trail were\nheard, \u2022\nt Supper was again served to close\na successful evening.    :       \u25a0\u25a0>,-'\nCommittee In charge was Mr?.\nJohn Wood, convener, assisted by\nMrs; A. H. Whitehead,. Mrs. F. Andrews,. Mrt, Walter Fisher, Mrs.\nMargaret Perry ahd Noble Grand\nMrs. L. T. Bealby.       r>\nHOCKEY SCORES\n'   By The Canadian 'Press\n0,-f.Ai 8ENIOH   :     H\nHamilton 3, Toronto 2\nO.H.A. JUNIOR\nWindsor 6, Guelph 1\nStratford 6, Oshawa 0 .\nQ.8.H.L\nShawinlgan Falls 3, Quebec 4\nSherbrooke 3, New York 2\nP.C.H.t.\n.'. Seattle 5, Lot Angeles 2\nWESfERN.CANADA JUNIOR\nLethbridge 1, Calgary 5;\nAssociation To\nTaxidermist\nLeaves District\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 20-In-\nternatlonally known as taxidermist,\nentomologist and collector ot fossils,\nC. B. D. Garrett has left this district\nfor Horseshoe Bay where he will\nmake his home.\nHe has lived in East Kootenay, at\nCranbrook and Fort Steele for over\n40 years, His collection ot the district's indigenous insects is recognized os unparalleled. In his taxidermy business he has mounted\nheads and speciments of the game\nln this last stronghold of big game\ncountry which have topped all North\nAmerican, entries at international\nshows.   .:-\nIn his research on fossils a trllo-\nbito which he discovered in. the\nFort Steele fossil beds at the road\nJunction was a new specimen-and\nits scientific cognomen Incorporates\nhis namej. '\u2022)\nCRANBROOK, B.q.,r Oct. 20-^Or-\nganizlng its Fair program of group\nwork In the various arts and crafts,\nthe Arts and Crafts Association will\nput its-last year's work on pointing, woodworking, leatherwork and\nmodelling on display In the Knights\nof. Pythias Hall the afternoon and\nevening of Friday, Oct. .22. Newest\nart added to the display will,be\nprojection during the evening at\ncolor films taken in the district.\nThe Association provides instruction and assistance for any craft\nfor which there la sufficient enrolment, and is assisted in this by the\nUniversity Extension Department\nOther Association interests' \u00bbre\nmusic and drama, and each year it\nsponsors performances here by outstanding' 'musicians and drama\ngroups.  _..,.\nKlmberley Skiers\nName Bloomer\nS3\nLethbridge\nCalgary ......_,\t\nEdmonton \u00bb\nKamloops\t\nPenticton\t\nVancouver   \t\nVictoria   \t\nCranbrook   \t\nCrescent Valley\nKaslo ,\nPrince Rupert ..\nPrince George ..\nSeattle  .................\nPortland   \t\nSpokane  _....\nChicago\t\nSan .Francisco ..\nLos Angeles \t\nNew York    ' 45\nWhitehorse      27\nTr\n53   , .04\n43     -\n10 Years on Charge\nOf Manslaughter\nBRANTFORD, Ont, Oct. 20 (CP)\n-Edward T. Hill, 50-year-old Mohawk Indian, today was sentenced\nto 10 years on a manslaughter\ncharge arising from the death last\nAug. 6 of May Maracle, who lived\nwith him ln his shack at the nearby\nSix Nations Indian Reservation.\nThe woman'a body was found in\nHill's bed, huddled beneath the bedclothes. She had been beaten to\ndeath.   \u2022\n- During the three-day trial which\nended last Friday, Hill'wept freely\nas evidence was presented,\n.Highlight of the trial was reading\nof a statement Hill made to police\nthe day after the woman died. In\nthe statement Hill said he and the\nwoman had quarrelled after drinking wine, and \"I slapped her up.\"\n' Hockey Rooster\nClub\nSolicitt Your Support ,::\nIn Its Efforts to Put on on\nAUCTION\nPHONE YOUR  CONTRIBUTIONS TO 64B\n* Trueks Will--Pier\u00bbti^^ -\nW$UPN)RT YOUR HOCKEY CLUB\nSale Saturday, Oct. SO\nFind Father\nNot Guilty Because\nOf Insanity\nPRINCE ALBERT,, Sask.* Oct. 20\n(CP)\u2014A verdict of'not fjuilty on\naccount of insanity was returned\ntoday by the King's Bench Court\nJury trying Albert James Allan, 20,\non a charge ot murdering his three\nyear-old son David Sept. 20, 1040.\nMr. Justice G. E, Taylor, who told\nthe jury this was the only verdict\nthey could hava rendered on the\nevidence, ordered Allen kefct ln jthe\nPrince Albeit Jall-at the1 pleasure\nof the Lieutenant-Governor. Allen\nwill eventually be committed to the\nSaskatchewan Mental Hospital, it\nwas indicated.\nIt took the jury 40 \u2022 niinutes to\nreach a verdict. J. M. Cuelenaere,\ndefence counsel, urged this decision,\npointing out the defence did not\ndeny that Alien had slain his child.\nEvidfence was brought in by Dr.\nD. G. McKerracher of Regina, Saskatchewan's Commissioner of Mental Services; Dr. R. J. Well, formerly\ncllinlcal director Of the Mental Hospital at North Battleford; and Dr,\nG. P- Nelson, formerly Superintendent of the Mental HospitaL\nAll three tejtifled that Allen's\nmental condition at the time bf the\nslaying was such that he would not\nthink ne was doing wrong. .\nAlien was tried ahd found guilty\nJune 9, when Mr. Justice H. V.\nBigelow sentenced him to hang\nSept. 9. The Court of Appeal ordered a new trial on the ground\nthat the jury had been misdirected.\nChinese Reds,\nStrike New Blows\nPEIPING, Oct 20 (AP) \u2014Chinese\nGovernment forces reeled today, be\nfore new blows on scattered fronts\nfrom Communist troops.\nNew threats to Talyuan, capital ot\nShansi Province, and Kwcieui, capital of the inner Mongolian Province of Suiyuan, were made by surging Red armies.\nChangchun, Manchurlan capital,\napparently haa been lost for the\nGbvernment And a national spokesman finally admitted that Government forces bad evacuated Chefoo,\nShantung province port city.\nTO TELL FRANCE'S\nSTORY ON FOUR\nIN REFUGE HERE   ;\nOTTAWA, OCt. 20 (CP)\u2014France's\nside ot the complex story of the\nfour alleged Vichy collaborators will\nbe given to-the people of Quebec\nProvince tomorrow by the FreAch\nAmbassador, FranciSque Gay.\nHe will . make France's case\nknown through a Press conference\nto be held at 4 p.m. in Montreal's\nWindsor Hotel. The Conference has\nbeen arranged by the,French Consul-General in Montreal and Mr.\nGay will travel there tomorrow.\nThe four men, all of whom bave\nbeen granted asylum in Canada\ndespite charges of collaboration\nwith .the wartime, government of\nVichy France, are living in Quebec\nProvince,\nPolitical sources here regarded as\nunusual\" the Ambassador's action\nin travelling outside of the capital\nto hold a Press conference on a\nsubject of interest of both Governments.\nThe four are Dr. Georges Montel,\n40, a surgeon now lecturing at\nLaval University in Quebec; Julien\nLabedan, 33-year-old Interior decorator and cabinet maker living ln\nMontreal;' Andrew Boussat 45, a\nsurgeon working for a drug firm,\nand Jean Luis Hue;\nTeachers Groups Seek Ernest Adams,\nSpokane Artists for Nelson Billing\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Oct. 30 -\nWith the Kootenay Zone meet slated\nfor Kimberley thia season, local ski\nenthusiasts this week organized in\nanticipation of a busy and successful\nyear.   . . '\nThp following officers wera elected for 1048-49:   .: ,\"\u2022\nHonorary President, E. Stiles;\nHonorary Vice-President, R. Ford;\nPresident P. Bloomer;. VlcerPresI-\ndent S.'Wormington; Treasurer, D.\nJackson; Secretory, Miss Lucille\nJongs; Directors, Miss Irene Wanuk,\nR. Hammond, O. Sicotte, A. Price,\nB. RinalaV\nMembership committee, L. Coulter, J. Jacobson, O, Jacobson, K. Anderson;. Publicity Director, O. Sicotte; Junior Representative, H, Pearson; Zone Committee Chairman, P.\nGallpen.   h   ,       \/\nUnable To Escape\nSinking Barge, Is\nOnly Survivor\nANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct 20\n(AP)\u2014The lOne survivor of a gale-\nhattered barge disclosed he ls alive\ntoday because he was unable to get\naboard a dory which carried four\nOthers to their deaths.\nThe man, G. A. Skarbo, 42, of\nSeattle, was rescued today from an\nIsolated beach on' which the barge\nfinally grounded. He was picked up\nby a bush pilot and flown to\nCordova. From there he told his\nstory by telephone to Milton Odom,\nPresident of the . Anchorage Cold\nStorage Company, which had the\npower barge, under charter.\nSkarbo' said the 105-foot barge\nlaid to for three days in the protec.\ntion of Cape Spencer before heading\ninto the treacherous waters ot tbe\nGulf of Alaska \"on a beautiful day.\"\nA storm caught the craft and\nopened its seams.\n\"We all expected the barge to\nSink within, 10 minutes,\"' Skarbo\nsaid.   \u2022'.-'\u25a0;\nThe five crew members started\nto abandon ship Immediately after\ntending an SOS..Skarbo was on\ndeck lowering the dory. He was sup-\nposed to get aboard but it got\naway without him. He saw the dory\nswamp Immediately, He released\nthe one life raft on board but he\ntold Odom the waves were toe\nUgh and the men had no chance to\nsurvive. \u25a0\nSkarbo aald he had no choice but\nto remain on the crippled barge. Aa\nlt drifted In the storm, he saw a\nCoast Guard PBY which sighted\nhim at sea.. Sunday at 7 a.m., tho\nbargo washed ashore.\nFour huge breakers swept over\nthe barge as it slid onto the beach.\nSkarbo said he clung to a hoist on\nthe bow and saw the , remoini\nsuperstructure of the craft wasl\naway. He escaped with a wrenched\nankle. ...\nA navy oommander during tho\nwar, Skarbo was pilot of the barge.\nSki Pa_at5 arid\n\u2022Jackets\nHeavy wateriepellant\n, -    Melton Cloth\nSuitable for curling.\nHOUSEDRESSES\nFINK'S\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nCM. & S. Workers\nBuy $220,000\nBishop Holds\nKaslo Services\nTADANAC, B.C,i Oct ?d-i-Pl\u00ab;\nchase of $220,000 worth of Canads\nSavings Bonds by employee's of thc\nConsolidated Mining and Smeltlhf\nCompany at, Canada Limited wai\nreported at the end of the thlrc\nday of sales. . -   '\nTo date less than half the person:\nnel at the Trail and Warfleld planti\nhas been contacted by the corps o\nsalesmen organized to make thc\nbonds available. ' .:\nLast year's total subscription b;\nComlnco employees at tha Trai\nKimberley and Calgary operation\nwaa $-.9,880.\t\n26 Years al\nTraiir Passes \u25a0$\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 20 \u2014 Mrs. Mar\nStewart, a resident ot Trail for tb\npast 28 years, died today at he\nhomo, 1BS7 Second Avenue, Trai\nat the age of 75 years. -\nMra. Stewart was born In Abet\ndeen, Scotland, ln 1873 and fror\nthere, came directly to Trail\nSurvivors are one aon, Jamil\nBruce ot nail and two grand\nchildren.\nSAYS BEEF CONTRACT\nTO END NEXT MONTH\nVANCOUVER, Oct 21 (Thursday) (CP)\u2014The News-Herald said\nin a front page story today that\nmeat distributors in Great Britain\nreport the Canadian-United Kingdom beef contract will not be renewed nnxt month.\nAdmits Authorship\nNANAIMO, BC, Oct^ao (CP)\u2014\nMIrko Vltkovitch, Nanaimo coal\nminer, today testified ih Assize\nCourt that he had authored an\narticle branding Dr. Mladen Qulnio\nZorkin. a, \"Eustache,\" the Yugoslavian word for a Gestapo agent\nZorkin, an anti-Communls} lecturer how residing here, has charged\nVltkovitch with criminal libeL\nVltkovitch told the. court he wrote\nan article which-appeared, May 8\nin Novostl, a Yugoslav paper published . In Toronto,-The article, a\nreport on a Nanaimo meeting,\ndirectly charged Zorkin with having been a \"Eustache,\" (Gestapo)\nwho led enemy forces through\nYugoslav villages, butchering and\nburning. The artlcla also charged\nthat Zorkin waa residing here to\n\"break unions.\" - ,,\n' Vitkovltch, who claWied he formed, his opinion about Dr. Zorkin\nfrom articles which had appeared\nln the Toronto periodical, said,he\nhad no direct information mat\nZorkin had personally mudered and\nburned. \\   ,\nAs the trial adjourned until tomorrow morning,. the accused said\nhe believed all the crimes he attributed to Zorkin were true. He\nsaid he would not recant, nor was\nhe ashamed or sorry he circulated\nthe report. ,.\nWhen asked if, he was a Communist or a supporter or* contrbutor\nto Communism, Vitkovitch declared\nflatly he -was not a Communist.\nSection Foreman, W. Melneczuk,\nRetires After 45 Years Nelson Service\nKASLO, B.C., Oct 20\u2014Bishop V.\nP. Clark conducted the service held\nin St. Mark's Anglican Church at\nKaslo last Sunday evening assisted\nby Rev. M. C. T. PercivalL\n.After the service a reception waa\nheld at the home of R. Hewat.\nOn ' Monday morning Bishop\nClark conducted the communion\nservice in the Anglican Church.\n80,000 Immigrants\nEnter Canada in '48\nOTtAWA, Oct 20 (CP)-Nearly\n00,000 Immigrants poured into Canada In the first eight montha of 1048,\nthe Department of Mines and Resources aald today, indicating that\nthe total .would probably swell beyond 100,000 by the end of the year.\nThe actual total was 70,338, compared to 32,808 in the same period\nOf 1847. A breakdown showed that\n31,191 came from the British Isles)\n11,916\" from Northern European\ncountries auch aa Sweden, Holland,\nGermany, Franca and Switzerland;\n5023 from the United'Statea; 31,201\nfrom a largk number of other countries that range all the war trom\nAustralia to Armenia.\nOfficials . had no breakdown of\ndisplaced persona for thla year, but\nsaid a total of 40,725 have arrived\nsince tho end of the war. ,\nCOP'S ALL GREEN LIGHT\nSYSTEM SETS\nCOMMISSIONER PUZZLING\nMONTREAL, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014Assistant Police Director Thomai Leg-\ngett has the perfect solution for\ntraffic problems:\n\"The Ideal traffic light aystem for\nthe majority of motorists u the one\nwith all green lights.\"\nThat's what he told Montreal's\nMetropolitan Commission ln mock-\nbitter comment while the city's\ntraffic situation was under discussion. He was a bit stunned when a\nCommission member asked in all\nseriousness:\n\"Have local automobile clubs\nsought thia system?\"\nParent-Teacher Association, ln\nconjunction with the Music Teachers Association of Nelsoh, at a\nmeeting Tuesday night decided to\ncontact Spokane music artists and\nErnest Adams of Vancouver tor\nNelson bookings; \u2022-\u25a0   i :\nThe two Associations are attempting to arrange a musical billing for\nNelson, Mr. Adams ls presently appearing in Toronto with Sir Ernest\nMacMillan's orchestra.\nMrs. D. Carney gave a report on\nthe progress and preparation being\nmade for a community carol singing candlelight concert to be held\nln the Civic Theatre Dec. 12. She\nstated four schools were to be represented, Hume, Central, Junior\nHigh and St. Joseph's,.also many of\nthe service clubs.   * ;-'-* :\u2022'\nMrs. J;'J. Carney, President told\nof an extension\" course available at'\n111 I'M\nand   BRO-SES\nHealing,So_|htag_dil Aotll-Dtlc. Dr. CblM'l\nOintment bring, quick relief. Retnllf Size\n69c. Uconomy Sire. 6 ilia*, es much 42,23.\nA healer for over 50 yetts,. *-..:-\nDr. Chase's Ointment\nU.B.C, The six-week course ls ln\nagriculture and homemaklng.\nNEED RADIOS\nF.B. Pearce stressed the need for\nadditional radios ln the schools and\nappealed for two used radios.\nHe also spoke briefly Of petty\npilfering In the stores by small\nschool children. J. C. Coventry of\nthe Retail Merchants Association'\nasked that a Committee meet with\nthe Retail Merchants Association in\nthe near future to \"see if this .could\nbe checked\"\nThe meeting was, a reception for\nnew teachers and Mrs. Margaret\nHarrop thanked the Association\/ for\ninviting the teachers to the meeting. She also extended an invitation\nto attend the meeting of Nov: 4,\nopening night of the annual district teachers' convention, when the\nMinister of Education, Hop. W. T.\nstralth, will apeak at m Capitol\nTheatre.        .\u00ab,,    ,  (1-  \"\u25a0 ,\"\nt. W...S. Jobbing bfJtheiFllbi Council\nspoke briefly oh use of films for\neducational purposes and' later,\nshowed a film entitled \"Your Children and YoU.\"\n,Mrs. E. G. Kettlewell, Program\nConvener, introduced each new\nteacher. ,.,\nA social half-hour was held.\nSection Foreman William Melneczuk worked his last day with the\nCanadian Pacific Railway Company\nTuesday. Wednesday he started his\nvacation and will be placed on the\nRailway Company's pension, payroll Nov. 1. \u25a0\nOf Ultranian nationality, he came\nto Canada from Austria in March,\n1903, and found work with the railway company as Sectionman at\nWinnipeg. He came to Nelson in\nDec. 1903, and since then has worked as Sectionman and Section Foreman at various points in Kootenay\nDivision. While a-Section Foreman\nat South Slocan he found time to\nrun his fruit ranch. ' *\nGARDEN8 WIN AWARDS\n\"BUI believes there is dignity ln\nwork, well done,\" said a fellow\nworker Wednesday.\n'A monument to his enthusiasm\nand efforts are the gardens at the\nNelson station.'.' He started these\ngardens in 1939 and since 1934 has\nbeen a steady winner of prizes\nOffered by the Canadian Paciilc for\nthe best gardens.\n'His retirement to him is not a\nrelease.from work but a chance for\na bigger and better garden,\" it was\nalso remarked. Many years ago he\nbought a few lots and a house on\nChatham  Street. The  trees  were\nand Mr Melneczuk is now going to\nfinish the garden ho has in mind\nBesides .being an expert in floriculture he is also,a \"keeper of bees.\"\nMr. Melneczuk in his capacity as\nSection Foreman in a terminal yard\nwas. called u\u00a3on, with his men, to\ndo many jobs only remotely connected with the work of track maintenance,   v.-..','- ,\n\"In all these jobs bis first consideration was the safety of his men,\nhe was especially protective of\nyoung school boys working with\nhis section gang,during the Summer\nholidays,\" it was commented.\n\"Bill was sure to be present at\nall meetings oi value to railway\nemployees and alwaya had something to contribute.\" -   .'.\nHe is proud of the fact that both\nhis sons voluntarily enlisted with\nthe. anped forces. His eldest, son,\nPeter, serVed with the R.G.A.F.,\nwhile Victor served with the Armoured Corps and was wounded.\nplanted early to a well formed plan\nNORTH D.P.s\nSATISFIED t\nSUDBPRY, Ont, Oct 30 (OK \u25a0\nDisplaced . persons, working 1\nNorthern Ontario- are well satlsfle\nwith the living quarters supplh\nthem, local officers of the Nation\nEmployment Service aald today.\nOnly the occasional complaint li\nbeen received and men who wor\ned ln the bush last Fall are retur\nIng to the lumber camps thla ye!\nthe officials said. f\nMost of the D. P.s in the Nor\nprefer bush work to other forms\nemployment\n_*\nW\u00ab'v\u00abMad\u00ab.\nNelson's Fintst\nCleaning...\n-even;\nFINER!\nThat's Why Mori;\nPeopU Are\nUsing\nJonella\nServices\nThan Ever Before\nHavo YOU Triad It\nLately?\nPHONE 1042 NOW\nJonella\nCleaners\nCLOTHES AR]\nRECREATED\"\ntmmM,mMm\u00bbm'mAmAAa*+0t*mmm\u00bbMi\nSEE   OUR   ADVERTISEMENT\n'???\\y'?At-\\'H   THE\nSATURDAY EVENING POST\nOCTOBER   23   ISSUE \u2014 PAGE 108    ,\nWILLIAMS MAYFLOWER\nWILLIAMS VAN LINES LTD.\n_____\n'\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\n \u25a0I\nI\n&^>\nBiscuit Workers\nFavor Strike\nVICTOHIA, Oct 20 (CP) \u2014 Employees of the National Biscuit'and\nConfection Co.; ttd.,' Vancoiiver,\nhave overwhelmingly voted In favor\nof strike action to support their\nclaim for maintenance of V union\nsecurity \u2022 clause uj' their collective\n;agreeipent  ... .-\nThe result, of the vote, according\n: to the Labor Relations Board  Ip-\nday.'was 112 .for. strike action ahd\n39 against. One hundred and fifty-\none of the 171 employees eligible\nI 'voted.\n.The employees-voted to enforce\nthe recommendations contained In n\nminority report of'a. recent conciliation board. Herbert Garg'rave, C-\nP-f, member of the legislature for\nMackenzie, in hjs minority report\n''recommended no change in the 184.\n' contract which provided that every\nemployee Joining the company after\nj June 1, 1847, must become a union\nmember as a condition of emplby-\ny.-ment .  \u25a0   -.-;   .~ ,' .\nThe majority report signed by\nA. M. Harper and Ian Cameron, both\nof   Vancouver,, recommended\" the\nPreliminary Hearing\nFor Mrs. Perreault\nPostponed to Nov. 4 ,\nMONTREAL, Oct. 80 (CP)\u2014Preliminary hearing of Mrs. Christine\nPerreault, 56-year-old mother ol\nDouglas Perreault and charged with,\nbeing an accessory after, the fact in\nthe fatal ahooting of two constable,\nin a bank holdup, was postponed today, to Nov. 4.\nHughes to Test\nFlyinq Boot Nov. 15\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 20 (AP) -\nHoward Hughes Says he will test\nhis $25,000,000 giant plywood flying\nboat with taxi runs NoV. 15, and\nWill fly it about a month later\nMillionaire Hughes took the aircraft, the world's largest aloft brlef-\nly last.Fall In an unscheduled flight.\nmaintenance- of membership clause\nbe; replaced by the Hand formula\nwhich provides that all employees\nmust pay dues to the union although\nthey do not become members of the\nunion.       'A\nThe strike vote was'sup'ervlsed by\nStuart Williscroft of the Labor Relations staff.  '\nReports Conflict\nQiifcP.\n\u25a0 ^or CBristmas \u25a0 -\nWe are Jiappy to be the\nFIRST IN NELSON to offer\nour public, our CHRISTMAS tAY-AWAV PLAN.\nA small deposit is all that\nis required to hold any of\nthe Jnahy alluring: styles\nwe have to-offer.\nWe Will gift* yrifip any of\nthese purchases on request\nIn attractive YULE colors.\nDROP IN FOR GIFT SUGGESTIONS MEN. ..YOU\nTOO .WILL BENEFIT\nFROM DEE'S CHRISTMAS SHOPPING SERVICE;\nLingerie\n\u2022 Blouses\nNegligees\nHosiery\n.     ; and\nALL THE LOVELIEST CLOTHING\nDEAR TO YOUR LADY'S HEART\nWINNIPEG, Oct 20 (CP)-Gov-\nernment action It expected to follow If reports due to be released\ntomorrow -substantiate, In* part at\nleast charges that D.P.s are living In unsatisfactory surroundings\nIn Manitoba.\n. WINNIPEG, Oct 20 (CP)-Agri-\nculture Minister D. L. Cartipbell of\nManitoba said today the report of a\nProvincial group which yesterday\ninvestigated conditions at the Emerson, Man., displaced persons'* camp\nwill vindicate his Department's contention that the D.P.s are not living\nin \"squalor, dirt and misery.\"\nThe report not yet completed, Is\nexpected to be released some time\ntomorrbw.'\nAnother report, being prepared\nby Federal Investigators who also\n.visited, the camp yesterday, .Is. believed to.be less favorable in its\nappraisal of conditions. This report\nwill be forwarded tO Arthur MacNamara, Federal Deputy Labor Minister, at Ottawa.\nThe investjgations were ordered\nfollowing published reports that .the\nD.Fi were living in unrealthy and\ngenerally unsatisfactory conditions.\nH. R. Richardson, director- of\nthe Manitoba Farm Help Service,'\nI who accompanied Provincial Inves-|\ntlgatbrs on their inspection* trip\nyesterday, said the tour disproved\ncharges that filth, squalor and generally unsatisfactory conditions prevailed.   '\n(The' Winnipeg Tribune, which\nprecipitated the investigation Monday with a story charging , the\ncamps were unsatisfactory, said the\nreport r ,of Federal , investigators\nwould substantiate charges -that\nsanitary conditions were unsatisfactory, food storage and. living quarters did not conform with regulations and health safeguards were\nnot generally observed.\"),\". ' -\nMembers Of the Federal group\nwere C. It Hudson, Assistant Regional Superintendent; William\nDuncan, Regional Employment Officer; J. P. Krlstjansson, Employ-.\nment Advisor; and Fred McGuin-j\nness, Regional Public Relations Officer,-all with'the National Employment Service. Their report w(jl be\nsubmitted to Arthur MacNamara,\nFederal Deputy Labor Minister.\nAtom Control Plan\nPARIS, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 Western sources said today they\nexpect one of the \"little s|x countries will ask. the Security\nCouncil Friday to recommend lifting of Russia's Berlin block'\nade. Canada .is a member-'of this group,\nA resolution to this effect is understood to be already In\ndroit. '.:,  . ;\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. \u25a0'\u25a0.;>\u2022-\"\"\" \u25a0\nThe informants said they understood the plan was to eall\nupon the Council simultaneously to stress the need for an early\nmeeting of the Big-Four Foreign Ministers Council to settle\nboth the Berlin and the all>\u2014-\u2014rr\u2014\u25a0\u2014;\u25a0.' . .\u2014\u2014\nGentian questions.'     .-..;\u25a0\u25a0       |delegates made no secret of their\n* However,\nCounoll delegate, Alexander. Par\nodl, was reported to have expressed uneasiness about having any\nr-     ...-    *\u2014...u.. bope that a resolution would Com*\nFrance o    Security frbm the neutral_-<:_nada, Argentina,. China,. Syria,. Colombia apd\nBelgium. ,;;\nresolution   on   the   Berlin  crisis\nsubmitted to the Security Coun-\n, ell at all. .\"'.j'\nSuch a mOve, Parodl was reported\nto have told his American and British colleagues, would only have the\neffect of slamming one of the last\ndoors between East and West.\nThe informants; said the.Frenchman'made It clear he was speaking\nfor himself father than for his Government '-'\u2022'   .''.;\"\"' \", \"- . \u25a0   \u25a0''     ,\nThe'Security Council, which yes\nNO DEL\/yV ,\nWestern sources said some Sort of\nmove in the Council cannot be delayed long after Friday's meeting\nwhich might produce a resolution.\nAfter yesterday's Council sessior\non Berlin, Soviet delegate Andrei\nY. Vishinsky conferred for-half an\nhour with,Juan A. Bramuglia of\nArgentina, Acting Council Chairman\nfor the Berlin discussions Neither\nwould Say what thOy talked about,\nbut there was speculation that Vish-\nGppateL\nA SATISFIED CUSTOMER.OUR AIM\nMackenzie Kinq\nCom-iti Alona Fine\n',. LONDON, Qct :20 (CP)\u2014Further encouraging word came this\nmorning from the bedside of\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King\nof Canada, confined to his Dorchester Hotel aulte with an ailment\nof the blood circulation. \u2022\u25a0\u2022'-''\nHis staff, reported that the\nPrime Minister Had \"another very\ngood night's rest\" and Is \"coming\nalong fine.\" There was still no official wordr however, as to when\nhe will be allowed to get up,but\na staff member said \"It looks like\njust a matter of days now.\"       .\nterday heard the United States insky had given Bramuglai a copy\nCharge that Russia was,tightening;of a Moscow White Paper for infor-\nthe Berlin blockade even as the matlon of the neutral delegates..\nCoiinclUtook up the case, convenes I The Russians' White Paper con-\nagain on the Issue Friday. \u25a0 , Itained 14 documents on the. Berlin\nTlj'e British, American and French' case.\nAtomic Dispute to Canada, Big Five\nPAfilS, Oct. 20 v(CP)-The .United\nNations voted today to turn the\natomic energy disoute over to Canada; and the Big\" Five with instructions to try for agreement oh basic\nprinciples.      :     ,\nThe' 58-member political committee first rejected a Soviet proposal\nwhich- would have outlawed thc\natom bomb simultaneously with set-\nting up of an atomic energy control\norganization.    r.\\ \u00bb;.'      !\nThe resolution adopted,.sponsored\nby Canada, approved the majority\nreport, of the United Nations Atomic\nEnergy Commission, based on United States control proposals. It called\nfor the countries to Sign a treaty\nsetting up an International control\nagency with full powers to punish\nviolators of atomic control, full\npowers of inspection, and full powers over, the development of-atomic\nenergy from the time the raw materials leave the ground to final\nstages.      \"\nThe vote to turn bapk the dispute to the United States, Russia,\nBritain, France, China and Canada was taken on a Canadian resolution. The roll-call vote was 41\nto 6, with 10 delegations abstaining and one absent ' .\nOn the basis of this vote, the Canadian proposal is assured of easily\nwinning  the  necessary  two-thirds\n.majority approval In the full gen-\n'eral assembly,.all of those countries\nare represented In the Political\nCommittee.\n\u00bbThe acti.on climaxed long East-\nWest debate., . ,,'\" I\nThe Russian proposal.to outlaw\nthe bomb had, been -foredoomed to\nfailure.. Western delegates had denounced it.\nThe resolution was voted paragraph by paragraph and then adopted as a whole.'\nThe defeated Soviet' proposal\nwould have; directed the Security\nCouncil and the Atomic Energy\nCommission to; '\n\"Prepare a draft convention on\nprohibition of atomic weapons and\na draft convention on the establishment of effective, International   control   over  atomlo  energy;\nboth the convention on prohibition\nof atomic energy, to be signed and\nbrought Into operation simultaneously.\" \u2022':\u00bb:':' ,      ;\u2022\nEI Salvador Sought to amend, the\nCanadian resolution to make it endorse the majority report,of the Atomic Energy Commission in principle.\nTransport Minister Lionel Chevrler turned down the El Salvador\nsuggestion saying that \"the amendment ls not .acceptable, to' the Canadian delegation.\"\n_^vrt'yv\u25a0M^\u25a0y>|v\u00bb'^\n\"A Hot Time in\nnelson TONIGHT\nEveryone's Going\"\nPresenting inlfyrson i\nAL DONAHUE\nand His Orchestra\n* Dancing\n\u00a5 Floor Show\n\u25a0   j      ' '\n.**'Fiinfor ALL v;?\nTHIS IS YOUR-OPPORTUNITY tpsee and hear\nAL DONAHUE and Kis orchestra, stars \"of screen,.\nradio and recording fame, and , .. featuring'\nLOVELY,\/EXOTiC Miss Margaret Brown, direct\nfrom the \"FLORENTINE GARDENS\" revue jn\nHollywood.  .\u2022'.    s     \u2022 A 'V'\nThe smooth stylings of AL DONAHUE* have\nrated him as one'of the first teri of the nation's\norchestra leaders.\nThis it tho GREATEST MUSICAL ATTRACTION\never to be presented in; the. City of Nelson.\ny0^0f\nThursday, October 21\nThe NELSON FIREMAN'S Annual BALL\nDancing 9:00\u2014.1:00 A.M, \u2022 Tickets On Sale at the Door\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nB.C. ECONOMY\nREACHES NEAR\nFULL CAPACITY\nMining, textile\nWorkers Employment\nDown Slightly\nFARMING UP   .\nVICTORIA, Oot 20 (CP)\u2014Tho\nProvincial Bureau of Economics\nand Statistics today reported tho\neconomy of the Province wai operating at, or near full peacetime\ncapacity.\nLatest employment figures show*\ned- 426,000 persons gainfully employed at June 5, ah Increase of 12,-\n000 over the saitie. date of 1047; Unemployment at 10,000 was close .to\nan Irreducible minimum.\nComparing July, 1948, with July,\n1947, employment in mining arid, ln\nthe manufacturing of textile prod\nlicts was down slightly, in transportation It Was down moderately,\nwhile in manufacturing of iron\nand steel products lt has declined\nappreciably. The Bureau blamed\nthe loss in iron and steel manufacturing to . the reduction in shipbuilding. ...\nOn the favorable side, employment was up substantially In logging, construction, manufacturing\nof lumber products, pulp and paper,\ngeneral- manufacturing, communication, services and trade.\nDespite loss from floods, the cash\nIncome from the sale of farm products for the first six months of this\nyear was $42,000,000, up $10,000,000\nover the total for the corresponding 1947 period. Higher prices were\nthe cause of some of this Increase.\nGold production during the' first\nhalf of the year showed a gain ot\n53,238 fine ounces over the corresponding period of 1947.\nCoal production, expanded\ngreatly during July and August,\nby the end of August had almost\ntotalled the production for the\ncorresponding period of 1,947, de-\n. spite the strikes In January and\nFebruary. :\u25a0*.,.'\nConsumption Of electrical energy\ngained 12 per cent in July over, the\nprevious July. \"\nA slight decrease In timber scaled\nsince, February has been; recorded.\nRetail furniture, jewelry \u25a0 and\nmen's clothing: sales were down\nlast July from July, 1947, but the\nremaining 11 classes of stores all\nshowed increased sales for the same\nperiod, with an average of 31.1\npoints for all. stores.   \u25a0.\nWhile Canada has'experienced a\n,10;8 per cent Increase in the dumber > of foreign cars entering the\ncountry during the first seven\nmonths of this year, compared with\nthe same period of last year, B. C.\nsufered a decline of nine per cent.\nThe volume of exports passing\nthrough B. C. ports also moved in\nthe,opposite direction to the whole\nof Canada, tbe Bureau said. Coihv\nparing the 'first half of 1948 with\nthe corresponding period of 1947,\nexports through B. C. ports decreased by 14.3 per cent while tor Canada as a whole thSy increased by\n5 5 per cent. Imports however,\nshowed Increases just over one per\ncent tor both B.C. arid the whole of\nCanada.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 21,1948 \u2014 f\nThreatens Counter\nAction\nFor Defamation.\nVICTORIA, Oct: 20 (CP)-A counter actlOn for defamation is threatened by Alderman Waldo Skillings\nagainst Charles T, Hamilton, Arena\nconsulting-engineer. Is was learned\ntoday.\nThe Vancouver engineer has de*\nmarided a retraction of statements\nallegedly made by Alderman Skillings in connection with construction of the Arena. ,\nMr. Hamilton asks that the retraction and an apology be published ln the Victoria and Vancouver newspaper as well as the official publication of the B. C. Engineering Society. '--\u25a0\u25a0 --.-':',;'.\n.Otherwise court action may be\ntaken, as the engineer feels statements attributed to Alderman Skillings have damaged his (Mr. Hamilton's) professional reputation and\nhaye caused him to suffer severe\nfinancial loss. ':\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nAlderman Skillings. said Tuesday\nhe would fight any action Mr, Hamilton might start, and it was learned\nthat he, through his solicitor, George\nGregory, has Informed Mr: Hamilton's solicitors 'that' he may take\ncounter action against the engineer.\nBomber Lands 2\nOfficer Deserters\nNo Decision on Cease-Fire Order\nReached by Jews; Objective Reached\nTEL AVIV, Oct 20 (CP) - The\nNegev battle front was officially\nreported to have flamed into new\nviolence tonight, more than 24 hours\nafter the-United Nations Security\nCouncil ordered that firing cease.\nA spokesman for the Israeli Army\nconfirmed thai fresh fighting has\nbroken out Air and ground acti.on\nbetween Israeli and Egyptian forces\nwas renewed as the Israeli State\nCouncil met for four hours without\nreaching a decision on whether to\npass the cease-fire Order on to Jewish troops.' '      .'*'*.\nThe Israeli. Government received\nthe order today. It appeared the\nJewish Army already hard' accomplished its major objectives.\n(Egypt also received official notification of the, cease-fire order. Premier Mahmoud Nokrashi Pasha told\nnewspaper men ln Cairo \"Jewish\naggression\" continued this morning.\nHe said the United Nations order\ndid not fix any' deadline, .and he\nunderstood this would be set by the\nacting mediator, Dr. Ralph Bunche.)\nThe Israeli Air. Force last night\nagain bombed Gaza in an attack described 'as \"heavy and successful.\"\nJewish planes also struck Beershe-\nLithuanian Refugee\nShip Docks iii\nBrazil for Supplies\nRECIF8, Brazil, Oct 2ft (AP)\u2014A\nsailing ship carrying 66 refugees\nfrom Eastecn Europe to Argentina\nput iii here yesterday for food supplies. Arvids Bertins, Lithuanian\ncommander of the 75-ton craft, Elza,\nsaid they were fleeing from \"dangers of Communist expansion ln\nEurope.\"\nTo Enter Vancouver'\nAldermanic Race\n.VANCOUVER, Oct 20 (CP) -\nBert Showier, President' of the Vancouver Trades and Labor Council,\nwill enter the aldermanic race in tbe\nCivic Elections in December, he announced today. \u25a0-.,.'.\nHe will run as an Independent\nLabor candidate.\nba, El Arish, Majdal and Bict Jibrln.\nAn informant said Jewish Infantry is \"consolidating Its positions\"\natop captured heights controlling\ntwo key roads ot Southern Fan-\ntine. ; -.'\u25a0 , . ,:   :.ri7i\u201e\nOne road leads to the Negev and\nits 25 Jewish settleinents. The clearing of this road was a declared'objective of the Jewish attack which\nbegan last Friday. The second road\nwas the Egyptians' own supply\nroute to their front South of Jerusalem, the Beersheba road, which the\nJews appeared to have breached\nwidely;\nAn  Israeli military spokesman\n\u2022aid the flight of civilian Arabs\nfrom the port city of Gaza, a major Egyptian troop base and seat\nof the   Arab   Palestine   Government, apparently is continuing.\nUnofficial observers here believe\ntbe Jews have obtained both the\nmilitary  and  bargaining  positions\nthey had wanted on the Negev issue. \u25a0      '\u25a0  '   .\nThe move was accomplished so\nquickly  that   the   United  Nations\nTruce   Commission   is  now   faced\nWith an accomplished fact and the\nJews are in a position to bargain\nfor assurances of a guaranteed open\nsupply  route,  br  else  hold  their\nnewly-won control points,       '\nBOMBING HEAVY1    ..*\/[ ,\nHAIFA, Israel, Oct. 20 (Reuters)\u2014\nUnited Nations observers in Palestine reported today'that strong air\nbombardment by* both Jews arid\nArabs was going, on In the Negev..\nDutlng the. night they counted 67\nbombs dropped ln live Jewish areas.\n\" Other observers reported that\nthree Israeli corvettes shelled the\ncoast at Majdal, 14 miles North of\nGaza, yesterday. Majdal hospital'was\ndestroyed, it was stated.\nApprove Ont. Health\nDepartment Plans\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014The Federal Government has approved Ontario Health Department plans for\nthe expenditure of $350,000 on the\npurchases of X-ray equipment 'under terms of the national health\ngrants..     ,*'\nA Health Department official said\nthat' Iri the $30,000,000 grants off err\ned last June by the Dominion to the\nprovinces there was a sum which\ncould be used for the purchase of\nnew hospital equipment.\nEach province was offered a grant\non a per capita basis, Before collecting, however, they have to submit\nto the Federal Government plans on\nhow the money will'be spent-After\nthe plans have been approved, the\nprovinces are free to draw on the\nFederal grant\nTWO\nCASH PRIZE\nWINNERS IN\nNELSON\n\u2022;. Arep\nMRS. E. B.DOUGLAS\n913 Third St.\nMRS. C. B. BRADSHAW\nR.R. No. 1\nEvery week there are two cash\nprize winners in the Nelson\narea on        :'\u25a0'-'.:'\nMALKIN'S MELODY\nMONEY TIME\nListen In\nEVERY THURSDAY\nCKLN\u20149:45 p.m.\nTry VOUR skill for cash prizes.\nVIENNA, Oct 20 (AP) \u2014 A\ntwin-engined Russian bomber with\ntwo officer deserters from the Soviet Air Force landed at the United\nStates Air Base near Llnz Oct 9,\nAmerican sources said, today.\nThe plane and orie member of Its'\ncreiy\u2014a sergeant\u2014were returned 'to\nRussian'custody. Two officers yho\nsaid they were fleeing the Soviet\nUnion were given refuge in the\nUnited States' zone of Austria. The\npilot and navigator of the plane\nSaid they were trying to escape for\n\"political reasons\" for. riiore than a\nyear, the United States sources reported.\nThe craft took oft trom a base in\nthe Ukraine on what was supposed\nto be a routine training flight The\npilot said his maps did not extend\nbeyond Llnz....\nHe brought his plane down on the\nfirst airfield he saw after reaching\ning the United States occupation\nzone of Austria, the informants said,\nThe sergeant'was quoted as saying, he did riot know the pilot's\ndestination .until the plane was In\nthe air..\n24 RACE HORSES\nDIE1N .\nSTABLE FIRE\nVictims Rbted as\n\"Fair Horses\";\nLoss Over $100,000\nGROOM MISSING\nCHICAGO, Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014\nTwenty-four race horses perished\nlast night Ih afire of undetermined origin that.;destroy.ed as'-''''\nat Hawthorne race track i* \"\"* \u25a0\nurban 8tlckney. . ,.\u25a0.;:\u2022:.\nThe Coroner's office said it Baft\nreceived a report that ari unidentified groom is missing.\nOwners and track officials estimated the loss at more than $100,-\n000. A meeting at the race tract\nended Saturday. A spokesman for.\nthe track said several of the horses\nlost in the blaze were scheduled to\nrun at nearby Sportsmana Park.' .\nGrooms led several horses to\nsafety but the terror stricken animals bolted and .dashed back into:\nthe flames.\nHenry Johnson, a stable watchman, said the. dead horses were rated as only \"fair horses,\" and that\nsome probably, had been retired\nfrom the track, \u25a0-.. <\nAt least a few horsea war*\nknown to be safe, but they wOrs\nroaming the countryside and a final\naccounting of the loss could not be\nmade until all were rounded up.\nConsider Ramparts\nCloser to River\nIn Fraser Diking  A'-'A\nAGASSIZ, B.C., Oct M(CP)^-A\ndemand that the Iraser Valley Dili*!\ning Commission build ramparts closer to the river bank ls under consideration today;\nAn 11-man Committee from Chilliwack and Agasslz said the present\nplan will leave 1100 acres exposed\nto yearly flooding. ; *\nThe .Diking Commission had \"regretfully\" reported that a dlka\nwould not be feasible.on the site\nselected by the Committee. .-rj\nHarold Clarke of Chilliwack, B.\nC, Chairman of the new Committee,\ntold a recent meeting the Commission based Its decision on the word\nof an engineer trom Eastern Canada. \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-,\"\u25a0\nThe expert took orie trip'up the\nriver, and did not seek advice from,.\nmen who have known the locality'\nfor 25 years, Clarke said.\n\u2022:*a\nRich in the Canadian tradition are rooms panelled with\nWestern Red Cedar. This native Canaoftn: wood is\neven more interesting''when, alt edge-grajiij?revealing\nthe full grace and beauty of line in the natural cedar\ngrain.\nLONG , BEACH, Calif., Oct 20\n(AP)\u2014A police officer questioned\nRudolphus Hill, 28, about a scalp\nwound he received today which required 17 stitches to close.\nDetective Inspector C. O. Bennett\nsaid Hill, a sailor from* the U. S. S.'\nOberipn, related that his girl friend\ncaught him talking with another\ngirl and that's how he received his\nbattle scars.\n\"Do you want to prosecute?\" asked Inspector Bennett.\n\"Oh no, Sir;\" replied Hill \"I'm\nhappy to know that I affect women\nthat way.\"   .',,:*,'\u25a0\nNelson\nElectric Company\nYpUR GENERAL ELECTRIC DEALER\nPresents   ,\nYour Hit Parade\n' - . The. songs'you: make famous'   ,\nFriday Evening\u20146:00-6:30\nover'-- '- . -    '''.   .\nCKLN\n14\" No. 2\n18c Sq. Ft.\ny4\" No. 1 or No. IA\n20c Sq. Ft.\n\u2022'DriHome''\nRed Cedar Shakes\n(Double-Course Sidewalls)\nDOUBLE-COURSING\n\"DrIHome\" Double Wall construction consists of two courses\u2014an\nundercourse of low cost, unstained Cedar Shingles and an outer-\ncourse of \"DrIHome\" Stained Processed Shakes. These Shakes are\nsquare-butted and re-Jointed to ensure parallel side edges. Double-\ncourse construction permits an exposure of 12\" to the weather far\n16\" Shakes, and 14\" to the weather for 18\" Shakes. At these ex-'\npoiures, one bundle of Shakes with one bundle of undercourse\nshingles covers 60 square feet of. wall area. Two of each cover*\na square..- -..'-... \u25a0,\n$16.50 Square\nBURNS\nLUMBER \u00a3 COALCO.\nCu&yluncj y fJie btaic\/zi\n602  BAKER ST.- NELSON.BC\n 4\u2014 NELSON DAllY NEWS, THURSDAY, QCT. 21,1948\nMARK 2STH YEAR OP\nNORTH  COMMUNICATION\nOTTAWA, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014 Today\nft- the 25th birthday of a radio\nnetwork that ls one of the Import*\nant segments in Canada's efforts to\niopen her Northland.   *\nIt ls known officially as the\nNorthwest Territories and Yukon\nRadio S^stehl and: it is operated by\nthe Army's Royal Canadian Corps\n;6f Signals.\nIt has grown from a crude and\nalmost abortive initiation at Dawson City ln 1023 into a 20-station\nSetup which provides Northern out-\nposts with communications, news\nand radio programs similar to those\nheard in other parts of the Dom\ninion.\nWedding Fit\nFor g Pebuf ante\nDETROIT, Oct. 20 (GP)\u2014Martha\nBarracco, 24, daughter of a Detroit\nfactory worker, will be married this\nSaturday amid splendor that would\nbo envied by a debutante.\nHer original gown of white duchess satin, designed by her mother\nand 'made ln New York', has a 10-\nyard train sprinkled with medallions of beads and 17 yards of veiling, and weighs 40 pounds. The\nbride, four feet 11 Inches tall;\nweighs 100 pounds.\nThe bridegroom, William Gandol-\nfo, 22, ls a downtown clothing store\nisalesMan. ;\nIran has a history that goes back\nat. least 1400 years before the Chris-\nGaf quick results with a \"Want Ad\", tlan era,  .'... _\nIn i ted\n'  Stores  \\\nYOUR GUIDE  TO SAFE BUYING \/\nBetter Food, Lower Prices\nAlways at Your\nUnited Purity Store\nBAKER'S GROCERY\n. Phone Mi\nW. EVANS\nSouth' Slocin\nFAIRVIEW SERVICE\nPhone 60S >*\u2022\nCORNER STORE\n.    Pli'one'lIM\nPALMER & BARNES\n\u25a0     Willow Point  .-:,\nLOWERY'S FOOD MKT.\n;Phone.408      ;'\nTlie Doctor\n\u25a0By HERMAN N. BUNfiESEN. M.D.\n\"\u25a0-.\u25a0'     -\u25a0-''.,' -. \u2666\nPreventative Treatment for Those; That\nSuffer From Painful AAigraine Headache\nMigraine headache has been called\nthe most common complaint of civilized people. However, this may\nbe, migraine ls a frequent complaint\nshown by special studies to affect\nabout. eight outj of every hundred\npersons.' -  r; .\nMigraine, like asthma and a number ot other ailments, comes On in\nperiodic bouts. The chief symptom\nis one-sided headache, accompanied\nby irritability, sickness at the\nstomach, vomiting, and constipation\norr diarrhea, While the pain is usually confined to one side of the head,\nIt may shoot downward into both\nface and neck.\nATTACK FJENEWED\nAn attack of migraine can be\npromptly relieved by . doses of * a\ndrug known as ergotamine tartrate\ngiven either by mouth or Injection\nInto a muscle. The earlier in the\ncourse of an attack the preparation\nis given, the more rapidly is relief\nobtained. After the ergotamine is\nadministered, the patient should\nrest in bed for about two hours. It\nis better to remain in a dark', quiet\nroom and to take no food or liquids.\nAn ice-bag placed on the head is\nhelpful. .\nWhile an attack of migraine may\nbe cut short by this treatment, It ls\na more difficult matter to prevent\nan attack or to lengthen Intervals\nbetween them. Diet does not seem\nto be a factor of particular importance in this disease, atlhough\nthere may be a few, migraine victims who are allergic or sensitive to\ncertain food. In such cases,- of\ncourse, the foods which Cause dlffl-\nEnjoy the matchless garden-fresh tomato\nflavour which has made Libby's Canada's\nfavourite health drink.   Libby's patented\n\"Gentle Press\" method of juice extraction makes all the\ndelectable difference \u2014 retains the sparkling flavour and\nhealth-giving vitamins of ruddy, sun-ripened tomatoes.\n, You'll enjoy Libby's matchless, fresh tomato flavour, and\na daily tuinberful will supply your full quota of vitamin\nC, about half your quota of vitamin A. Libby's is an excellent dietary source of both these vitamins which help to \u25a0    -\nmaintain appetite and promote buoyant health. It's a thirst-\nI     satisfying drink you'll enjoy anytime.\nAlways keep a few tins cool in the\n'. refrigerator and get in the habit of\n: helping yourself to Libby's!\no\u00bb.;*r .*-..-\nTOMATO    JUIC\nmay. McNEitt a n\u00bbY op Canada, limited \u2022 Chatham\nculty should be avoided..\nMost patients with migraine are\nintense, driving personalities, who\nuse up a great deal of energy during periods of strain and become\nover-fatigured. At bottom they suffer from feelings of Insecurity\nwhich drive them to seek perfection in all that they do. Their high\nstandards for themselves and others\nlead- to easy dissatisfaction' about\ntheir family, finances and personal\nlife. Thus,' these individuals are pre-\ndisposed to migraine both by their\nphysical and mental .make-up. In\norder to prevent the attacks, it is\nnecessary that the patient understand the underlying cause of.his\ntrouble, .\"\u2022\u25a0'. \"i\n; Treatment- Includes reassurance,\nsuggestions,' and reeducation. In\nother words, the patient must often\nalter his manner of living. He.must\nbe given details of the manner ln\nwhich he should conduct his work\nand the time he should take for re\nlaxatioij and rest..He must be taught\nto conserve his energy and not\nwaste It ln futile brooding and\nworry for here, as elsewheje, he\ndoes a-thorough job.r After periods\nof increased; work, he should have\nrest. and. recreation. ('\u25a0\nDuring the ilrst week of .this preventive, program, the patient may\nbe given phenobarbital, but this\ndrug should not be '.continued the\nsecond; week. The drug is used Only\nto aid.the,patient\".in,changing his\nhabits.   .        - \"\nIn(mahy instances, migraine disappears after the ages of '45 to 50.\nThis may occur because with increasing age. there is- a.- decline in\nnervous tension. However,' ih a few\ninstances,, middle age may bring\nincreasing difficulties In adjustment\nto Surroundings, with; the result that\nthe migraine becomes worse instead\nof better.'-   '*'   ,     -;\nSeek Blood\nDonors in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C, Oct, 20\u2014BloOd donor\ncampaign got under way here today\nas the Trail Branch of the Canadian\nRed Cfoss Society began laying\nplans for the blood clinic due Nov\n2 and 3.\nTrail Branch President R. E.\nHawkes expressed the hope the 1948\ncampaign-would draw more'donors\nthan last year when 568 people ln\nthe Trail area donated.\nMr. Hawkes pointed out thai\nB.C.'s weekly need for blood Is 050\npints. In' the province- there is a\ntotal bt 30,000 registered donors.\nThe. free transfusion service is ln\nits second year of operation and ls\noperated by the B.C, Division of the\nCanadian Red Cross in cooperation\nwith 52; hospitals.,-        .    '<\u25a0:\nThe Trail-blood drite got under\nwa,y formally when'Mr. Hawkes\nbroadcast a radio appeal to the\nresidents of Trail to pledge their\ndonations. \u25a0 '.\n1 By R. Q. JOY\".\nTwenty members frohv Salmo\nLodge, Knights.ot Pythias, journeyed to NelsOn to assist Nelson\nLodge No. 35 Initiate two candidates\nfor thi rank of Knight. After the\nceremony, refreshments were serv\ned.'.; ,r * !-* .. .,-*', .-,*\u25a0 .\nv Two J>r three cars of Nelson Lodge\nmembers went to Castlegar Wednesday, night to take part in the initiation of five Knights there.-\nHospital To Take\nFirm Stand in\nCollection of Debts\nA firm stand will be taken by\nKootenay Lake General Hospital in\nthe: collection of outstanding accounts; \u25a0\nThis was decided at thi meeting\not the Board of Directors, and a request made to the public to cooperate in the collection program.\nThe action has been necessitated\nthrough'the Increased cost of maintenance. , ' ;.\u25a0      .\"-'\u25a0;\nMiss . Marjorle Whltmore, nfew\nSuperintendent, reported' at tho\nmeeting, her first since she assumed\noffice, that she had in three weeks\nbecome . fairly familiar with the\nhospital administration methods and\nstaff. She said she would strive for\ngood doctor-patient-nurse relations\nand the betterment of the hospital\nin the community.\nInstallation' of a mobile X-ray\nunit, ordered for the hospital some\ntime ago, has begun.\nNag fbr Company\nCosts-8''Shillings' \u2022\"\nLONDON. Oct, 20 (APJ-A bobby,\nattracted by strange noises, peered\ninto Wally Fa'rey'\u00ab' window. Although sober, he saw a horse.\n.That is why Wally. was fined 40\nshillings ($8) ln court today for\nkeeping a' nuisance,\nWally, about 60 and a bachelor,\nsaid ho was too tired tq take his\nnag to the. stable several blocks\naway and, besides, the horse was\ngood company. The horse ls named\n\"Can He Go?\"\nAn unfeeling, magistrate ruled\nthat indeed he,must go.\nMEASLES POSTPONE\nOPERATION.\nTORONTO,  Oct 20  (CP.-One-\nyear-old Lquise Brown, flown ln a\nchartered plane from Didsbury,\nAlta., to Toronto to have a piece of\ncoal removed trom her lung, now\nhas contracted measles,' authorities\nat- the Hospital for Sick' Children\nreported, today. .\nThe operation was scheduled tor\ntoday, but was postponed because\nthe Infant has been transferred to\nthe hospital's infectious ward.   ;.\nThe baby Is believed to have\nswallowed the coal a month ago. The\nCanadian Legion and; the Canadian\nRed Cross ln Alberta'supplied the\nfunds to enable the baby and her\nmother, Mrs. Roy Brown* to be\nflown here, the only place ln Canada where the delicate operation\ncould be performed.    .},   , \u25a0\nFalconry was carried into England by the Teutonic conquerors..\nRoyal Family\nAttends Wedding of\nHousehold Member\nLONDON. Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Princess\nElizabeth clad in an olive green maternity dress, turned but with the\nRoyal Family today for the wedding\nof two members of her household.\nPrincipals in the ceremony at St,\nMargaret's Church in Westminster\nwere,. Elizabeth's lady-ih-walting.\nLady Margaret Egertori, fifth'daughter of the late Earl ot EUeemere, and\nthe Princess' private Secretary, John\nColville.. r \u25a0; _   ..-'\u25a0 \"\nMT. and Mrs. Winston Churchill\nalso attended. Colville was Church\nill's Secretary before accepting the\npalace post less than two years ago.\nHe and his bride met.fbr the first\ntune then. *'-PvC,'\nPrince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh,\naccompanied. Princess IJlizabeth oil\nwhat was probably her last public\nappearance . before the expected\nbirth of their child neit month;\nPrincess Margaret was a bridesmaid. .-\"        . '      - '*. *\nTha King in morntqg coat, was accompanied by the Qiiien. ih a clarJ\net velvet dress with an off-the-face\nhat Queen. Mary wore, a powder\nblue coat with grey fur collar.\nThere were approximately 2000\nguests. Hundreds of -uninvited\ncrowded the streets outside for a\nglimpse of the Royal Family.   .\nName on Bedroll\nBrings\nCouple Together\nCALGARY, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014A name\nprinted oh a bed roll today led to\nthflreunion of. a Blairmore, Alta.,\ncoal-miner and his Czechoslovakian\nwife after 24 years of separation. '\nr Personnel at the Calgary Miinlcl;\npair Airport noticed a woman wandering aimlessly about the Ad-\nministeration' Building shortly after\na plane arrived today. She was unable to speak one word of English,\nbut carried a bed roll with the\nname \"Joseph Shlska, Blairmore,\"\nprinted on it.    '\nAirline, officials put through a\nlongdistance telephone call to Mr.\nShlska at Blairmore. Sure enough,'\nhe was expecting his wife to arrive\nfrom Czechoslovakia\u2014\"but not -Just\nyet\". \u25a0  .,. r,j -. \u25a0;'\nMr. Shlska made up tor missing\nthe plane's arrival with a.fast 100-\nmile taxi trip to Calgary' to meet\nhis'wife. ;\nAlthough his wife' was only 18\nyears old when he left her in 1024\nto come to Canada to make a new\nhome,' Mr. Shlska hesitated only\nmomentarily before refcognizihg her.\nOnlookers could not understand a\nword ot the pair's greeting, but\nthere was no mistaking the warmth\nof it, I \u25a0\u2022 ''   \u25a0\nrjr:; By GABRY CLEVELAND MYERS, 'PhD.\nParents Are Told That Jealousy Is at\nThe Root of all Their Child's Troubles\nY6u may often have been; very\nmuch discouraged' over the table\nmanners ot your child at1,' hoifiej\nthough you. have'heard that .he has\ngood manners away from home.\nAlso you may suppose your child\nIs' vtry naughty, and. disobedient at\nhome, though you have heard frequent reoprts irom schbol and elsewhere of his good citizenship.   >..\nOf, aibby 8% years old and two\ngirls 4%-and 2%, the mother writes:\n\"The teacher at school aays .he is\na very good boy ahd does everything he is told.; fit home neither\nhis dad nor I can. get him to do anything unless we force him to and\nthen he whines and cries so much\nthat it is making me a wreck . .'.\nWe have, told \"him we care very\nmuch, for him and would like for\nhim to be a nice, boy so we could\nbe proud of him and that If he is\ngood the girls will be good, too. He\nIs given an allowance every week\nand allowed to go to other chUr\ndren's homes and their mothers say\nhe is a little gentleman .and doesn't\ncause trouble. Dr. Myers, why isn't\nhe' like that at home? We 'simply\ncan't tell him'No' else there, is a\nscene.\"    r; ,   , ll   '\nRARE OCCASION*\nHere, in substance, is how I wrote\nthis mother: No doubt he feels' he\ndries not stand so well in the family\nas his younger sisters do. Just be\ncause of their age you have rare\noccasions to-command them to help\nabout the house. Your failure to get\nhim to help without constant arguments and emotional conflicts and\nthe constant scenes over your oft-\nabortive attempts at ** restraining\nhim make lt appear to him that he\ngets many more rebukes and pun\nishments than they do. His feelings\nthat, he does not share with them\nan equal amount ot approval stirs\nUp jealousies ih him, rendering him\nmore stubborn and disobedient.\nPlease, never again appeal to him\nto do right for the good effect on\nhis sisters. It's no use to tell him\nyou love hhn as much as you.love\nthem. Set the stage during the next\nseveral inonths so he: will discover\nfor himself that you: do.'\nSHOW SATISFACTION\nFirst you and Dad should express\ngreat satisfatcion over the good reports yoU hear- of his behavior at\nschool and elsewhere, and in ,the\npresence of the younger, child and\nyour adult friends, being very careful to avoid suggesting that he\n\"should be just as good at home.\"\nFigure out the few'definite things\nhe must or must not do' at home and\nways of enforcing your control over\nhim without arguing. When he must\nbe' punished assign him to sit\nwhere you can see him without\namusement for exactly. 4% minutes.\nHave no feelings ove.r his whining\nand crying. Resort to physical pun-i\nIshment only if he refuses to stay\nin the chair for' the full period. I\nam enclosing my bulletins, \"jealousy,\" and \"How to Teach Child to\nHelp at Home\" (to be had by any\nother person In a Stamped .envelope).\nConsider the scores of less essential matters about which you will\nquit bossing him. Find ways of having more good times with hire), in\nwhich matters Dad can do much.\nWelcome hia friends to your home.\nEmploy reason and patience. Seek\nways of winning his cooperation\nahd companionships; Generously\ncelebrate successes in him.\nBAKED HAM\nBetter\n7 wfth\nat.'\n^\u2022\u00bb'*4'\nViii-mmMv^\nPURITU\nHallowe'en is coming round again)\nWhen your doorbell rings, be ready\nwith this grand Purity Pumplun pie .\ni -. -. made with Purity Flour \u00bb'\u2022' \"\ncourse! Here's a. melt-ln-your-i\n; pastry recipe.\n\u00ab\u00b0f*_K_ ai\u00ab\"! \u00ab -Till \u00bb\u2022\"**\nRemember,' Pfirily Phttri specially\nmilled\/rem finest bard wheal\u2014a k\nbest \/er HI your baking.\n\u00ab00 HEED 0NIT ONE FlOin\nPURITy\ni . II Inn j-nii tbe famous PURITy COOK I\nj    BOOK with it! 075 recipe) developed ia the I\n\\    Purity Flour Kitchen. Send to your nearest .\nI    Purity (lour Mills' office-St. lotto, N.Ri I\nj    Montreal. Que.; Ottawa.Ont.;Toronto,Out., I\nWinnipeg Man., Calgary, Alta.t Vancouier, S\nB.C. 1\nI\nCity Produce.;:\nMJW-J\nMOST AMAZING RESULTS EVER GIVEN\nMODEL\u2014 Picture (top) of\nL|me Crest King, light Brahma\ncock,.was the model for the U.S.\n..-cent poultry centennial.stamp\n(below). Cook Is owned by,HarW\nvcy C. Woodj Newton. N. J.-'\nSl_j_i-__i_-__i__r\n________\n \"It Pays to Buy Quqllty'-\nBlack Calf\nand V\nWine,\nCalf\nSizes5to9.\nWidths AA and B.\n12\n50\nR* ANDREW\n&C0*\nLeaders In Footfdshlon\nEstablished 1904\nSAINT JOHN. N. B. (CP)T-Atotal\nOt 44S persons applied r for night-\nschool classes at the vocational\n\u25a0chool here this season, lt was announced recently.\nBEAUTY BOUND\n. let ono of our superb permanent wsives make you lovely to\n- look at \u2014 -your.- hair easy to\n\"'.' manage.\n'ACTOR'S\nf-      BEAUTY PARLOUR      .\nNelson Social\niQSIq\n'. \u2022 Mr. and Mr*. Wi.-'D.-Morton,\n507 Carbonate Street, have as guests\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Morton bf\nGillespie, Sask., also' Mr. ahd Mrs.\nE. W. Bariisley of Lbrlle, Saslf.,\nand-their daughter, Joanne.   '\n\u2022 Mr. apd Mrs.. I. G. Nelson,\nHume Hotel, have returned from\nspending a tew days in Spokane.\n\u2022 B. VS.. Westbury,- who has\nspent the past few.- months at his\nCrawford Bay. home, visited Nel-\naon at the'weekend. Mr. ^estb'ury,\nWho-has spent many, years.In' )ils\nnative .land, England, will sobnVbe\nreturning.r '\u25a0\u25a0* >. ',.rr, \"' .\nBy Mrs. -M. J. Vi&neux\n' \u2022 '. J..\"' Whellams of .Sheep, Creek\nhas left for \u2022 Vancouver' where' he\nwill.'attend the funeral of his sister, Mrs. Jimmy Anderson, pioneer\nresident of ,Kwlo.'\nr \u2022 Mr.; and Mrs. Charles M, Belt-\nner, Stanley Street, have returned\nfrbm praham's .^Landing,- Arrow\nLakes,, where they visited Mrs. Belt-\ntoer's mother and sister, Mrs. J, Williams and Mrs..Jr Hall respectively.\n. e-Mr.;'and Mrs. John Tawse of\nCedar. Point visited friends in NelsOn Tuesday'.' -     .  -,   '    '.'...,\nOysters and,ducks have brought\nculinary fame,'all' over the country,\nand', both are especially good this\nyear. Today is duck day with our\nspace dedicated to wonderful recipes\nfor that most wonderful eating, succulent, satisfying duckling.\nDuck with orange may bean ordinary combination but not when you\nroast it with this orange and onion\nstuffing. Remove and wash giblets\ntrom a 5 to 0 lb. duckling, dressed\nWeight. Push back skin around the\nneck of duck and cut off neck. Cut\nthe wing tips and remove pin feathers with tweezers. Wash duck thoroughly, inside and out, withhold\nwater. Dry catefully. -\nDAY OLD BREAD\nCut1 enough dajfcold bread Into Vt\nInch cubes to make 2 c. (about 8\nslices). Peel and separate Into sections enough oranges to make 2 c.\nhalved orange sections; about 4,medium oranges. Combine bread cubes,\norange sections, one c. coarsely diced Bermuda onion,- 2 tablespoons\nmelteifat,.% tsp. salt, 14 tsp. oelery\nsalt and j tsp. pepper.\" Mt|c well,\ntossing lightly: with -kitcheh fork.\nLightly fill bo'dy. cavity.of duck\nwlth the stuffing\/ Insert several\nsmall poultry, pins from one side\nof vent to the other. Lace opening\nwith light twine.  *'\"     ,,.)\nPlace duck breast side up on a\nrack Into a shallow baking pan\nabout .10x14 Inches, and not more\nthan 3 inches deep, Place in slow\noven'(325.F.) and cook U4lto-2\nhours until in meat thermometer\nplaced in the stuffing records an\ninterior .temperature of 185-F, Cook\ngiblets and make gravy it desired.\nPUKES- TOUT\n. TISSUE\nfax Hah quillty paper\nJ*. .:\u00abow.F__Ul'_\u00a9ft.\n. -Strang, s.ioitent, and*\n\u2022conomtcsl.\nHAND-E-WRAP\nIdeal home-lite heavy\nwaited paper . . hundreds of tun In lh*\nhome. Conveniently\npacked In handy \"teat-.\n1 -off\" package with metal\ncutting edge.\nNOOK-NAPS\nNeatly folded paper table\n\u2022apltlni... attractive pattern\n\/... tnt them tt every meal...\n\u2022eve waihlng and money.    .\n\"8!!\u00abJM_ \u00a3\n\"\"ERNA\nJIFFy TOWELS '\u25a0'v ,..'\nKeep s rail In Ihe kitchen .'.. and In\nyoirr bedroom. Excellent for drying handi,\nwipln'j  or  durtlng . ..highly  ablotbent.\n..-'\";    FAOAL TISSUES\nSpecially dciigned for convenience,\nfolded and packed for easy  in*.\nSoft, extra iltong . . . Ideal for\nremoving make-up.\nPUREX QUALITY PRODUCTS\nAlfCEDENHOFF\nLEFT-OVER DUCK\nIf. left-over duck proves a problem, ten it-Into'a-downright asset.\nOne c. finely diced left.pver duck,\nor, eyen one, c. diced cooked giblets\nIs the prime ingredient in a recipe\nfor a tangy, satisfying - main dish\ncasserole for 6,'-Cook .8 oz,: broad\nnoodles in boiling salted water until\njust tender. Drain and'add.2 tbsp.\ndyck fat, tbsp.' poppy seeds,.Vt tsp.\npowdered rosemary and Vt' tsp. salt.\nMeanwhile, cook one c. finely diced, onion over moderate heat in 4\ntbsp. duck rfat for rt>out 5 mih.,; or\nuntil golden brown. Add one quart\ncooked sauerkraut and one c. diced\ncooked giblets or left-over duck\nmeat, mixing? thoroughly, Place 1-3\nof the noodles in bottom of a well-\ngreased baking dish, 10-i6x_, inches,\nAdd halt sauerkraut-duck:mixture,\nthen another layer of noodles, and\nthe rest df the sauerkraut mixture.\nTop with . rtemaining noodles.\nSprinkle with paprika, to give the\nfinal magyar touch, to a dish with\nHungarian qvertones..,Bake in moderate oven (350 ,F.) untll noodles\nare lightly browned, about 30 mins.\nThe casserole should be* served immediately. \u25a0    ..-.\u25a0'.'\nProcter* * *\n..PROCTER, B.C.-Mr. and.Mrs. S,\nR.;Moore pf Victoria are visiting\nhere, guest's of Mrs. Moore's sister-\nin-law,1 Mrs.M. J. MacDonald,: apd\nalso guests of Mrs. Moore's nephew'\nand niece, Mr. and Mrs. F. Bonaccl.\nMrs. J, McMullin and son Graham left by motor for\/Vancouver\nwhere they will spend a week's\nvacation visiting. Mr. and .Mrs. E.\nColeman,   ..' ,; \u2022.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Heighten had as\nguests for a few days, their son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. .and Mrs. J.\nHeighten, and their granddaughter\nPenny, all of. Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Bonaccl and\ndaughter Virginia of Nelson visited\nJ. Bonacci's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. Bonaccl..\nMr. and Mrs. W. Elulk have as\ntheir guests, Mrs. ElulVs parents\nfrom Grindrod.,,\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C. \u2014 The\nmonthly meeting of the St, Stephen's Women's Auxiliary was held\nat' the home of Mrs.' C. R. Tipple\nwith nine members and one visitor\nattending. Following a devotion\nperiod, a Visiting Committee's re.\nport was given by Mrs. May Crel'\nlin.\nShe will be succeeded In the current month by Mrs. S. E. Thomlin-\nson. Church linen had been attended to by Mrs. George W. Teir. The\nNew Wqfs To Have\nCjioice of Hair-Do,\nBuy Own Girdles\nBy RUTH COWAN\n.LACKLAND MR FORCE BASE,\nSan Antonio, Tex.; Oct 20 (AP)r-\nThere'aa mild-revolution In the affairs of the first'100 women enrolled'at the opening session of ,the\nUnited States Air. Force training\nschool here.\n. They're being issued white undies,\nwill be permitted to choose their\nown hair-do and buy their own\ngirdles;  \u25a0     .,\u25a0 -   '\u25a0-.'\u25a0 '-\nSolemnly the United StatesrAir\nForce announced today that .\"women's Air Force.underclothing is no\nlonger the gruesome olive drab of\nwartime manufacture,\"\n.Instead it .is White with-a dainty\nborder. That is a male press relation officer's, description' of, these\nitems as yet unseen by this- reporter. \u25a0 ,'-, \u25a0\u2022-;.' ,-\"'\n, These recruits here from all sec.\ntions.of the United State's are truly\ncivilian rookies. They've had no\nprevious military service.\nBut. after they are in'.awhile\nthey'll hear what veterans of the\nWomen's* Amiy Corps .thought o;l\nthose olive-drab-panties and slips\nhanded out as general Issue during\nthe Second World War.. This termer\nwar correspondent recalls \"gruesome\" as a mild adjective,\nWhen the Wl-A.Cs were organizing, during the war the Anpy lilt\nupon a good, recruiting drawing\ncard. It issue'd hard-to-get girdles;..\nBut the. WA',F.s won't get them,\nSays the Air .Force: \"Research ha_\ndetermined that women like to buy\ntheir own.\" - \u25a0< ,'\nThe W.A.F. will be well clothed.\nShe'll get 43 separate items of cloth'\ning and equipment.        \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\nFruitvale..; ;\nFRUITVALE, .B. C-Mrs. Alfred\nDilllng returned from a slk weeks'\nholiday visiting relatives at Fargo;\nN. D. .    \"     -.-.   \u25a0'\nPat Succee returned from a holiday at Saskatoon, Sask. Mrs. Succee\nand daughter wilt'be Bpendihg the\nWinter with her. parents.,..'.\nMrs. Donald.Shorting Was a bus\niness visitor to Colville, Wash. '\n-\u25a0Mrs. Walter Veltch .returned from\nthe Presbytery meeting' atr Crestoh,\nwhere she represented Fruitvale-\nTrail Church. ,   ,   i - \u201e   -,\nMrs. Dougas Burt was hostess to\nthe Friendly Club. There were eight\nmembers present After a short bus-\"\niness period, therrevening was in\nforni of a social in honor of Mrs. V.\nGraves' birthday. Mrs. Burt Wdn\nhighest points, in the, games, while\nMrs. J. DeBruyn won the weekly\ncontest. Mrs. Cole assisted Mrs. Burt\nin serving .refreshments. Mrs,\nGraves was presented with a gift\nfrom the members. Those present\nwe're Mrs. Victor Graves, Mrs. T.\nQuaite, Mrs. T, Moon, Mrs. F. Cole,\nMrs, A, Graham, Mrs. L. Wade, Mrs.\nJ. DeBruyn, Mrs, Douglas Burt.\nThe next hostess\"will be MrsTF.'\nM Smith.\nmeeting concluded with prayer and\na delicious tea was.served by the\nhostess assisted by her sister, Mrs.\nG. W. Teir. The President welcomed Miss Erna Meinardus as a\nguest member.-Present-were Mrs.\nStanley E. Thomllnson, Mrs. May\nCrellln, Mrs. George W. Teir, Mrs.\nNeil C. Tattrle, Jr., -Mrs. Julia\nJones, Mrs. N. O'Reilly, Mrs.: ,C. R.\nTipple, Miss Lena Meinardus end\nMiss M. H Butlin.\nEarliest writings about soy beans\ngo back to the time the Pyramids\nof Egypt were being built\n(MIVERLIAF\npfrFeCTtOH \/ty SWOOPS\nDate-Bran Muffins- Good as Cake!\nTake no sugar\u2014no shortening\nDATE-BRAN MUFFINS\n2 mini Kellogg'!\n \u201e,. less\n.    -Bran- 1 oup rifted flour\nim oup molasses 1 teaspoon aode\nPH.eupa milk }_ teaspoon ,aalt\nW cup chopped datea-\nAdd Kellogg's All-Bran to molasses\nand milk and let soak for 15 minutes.\nBeat egg and add to first mixture*\nAdd sifted.dry ingredients and fruit.\nFill greasi'd.'muffin pans two-tbirda\nfull and bake in -moderate oven\n(400\u00b0F.) about 20 minute?. Makes 15\ntender, b-flt-you-ever-tasted muffins.\nThese Iusbious, spicy muffin? areas\nlight and tender as your proudest\ncake, But-that isn't all! They also\nhave a pleasant tcxture-eonlrast thanks\nto the delicate toasted shreds of\nKellogg's AU-Bran... and they have\ntho mouth-melting nut-tweet flavour\nonly AU-Bran can give! Get Kellogg's\nAUjBrah from your grocer today and\ntry them. P.S.-r-Donyorgell Saturday\nis Muffin Dayi ..\nWhat tqAQo if Hubijy\nSlips on Anniversary i\nCHICAGO (AP)\u2014Lady, does your\nsmall son run' around* with his\nshirt-tail, hanging out?\nYOu can put a stop to that very\nquickly. Just sew a piece of lace\non the lall of his shirt and he'll\nkeep it out of sight.\nAire you trying to get your weight\ndown to'120 pounds'\/ Here's a trick\nthat will.help.,Cut out a picture of\na girl.who is as slim as you'd like\ntefbe, Paste it on the ice box door.\nIt will halt -yoii' in yOtir ttfacks when\nyou .have a yen for snacks.\nDOes' your; husband, forget to mail\nthe letters, your write?, Ther'e's j a\nrepiedy, for that - Just i tie' ra, long\nstring around the envelope. When\nhe puts it ln his pocket the trailing\nstring will serve as a reminder.1   !\nPerhaps he can't even remember\nyour birthday. You can overcome\nthat fault {with a couple of vege-\ntables. Spell Out the date with peas'\nin the mashed potatoes on the dinner table several nights before the\nanniversary., '. ' \u2022   !\n-These are examples of feminine\ningenuity.-brought to, light]on';the\nradio prpgrani \"pint, Hunt\" \"Womeii\nwrite but their suggestions arid, submit rthem fbr judgment. Authors of\nthe,best ideas win prizes,    -  'A   '\u25a0\nThe show-.'has received, ho. far,\n750,000 solutions to. as^ many problems that confront housewives. Most\nof .them are practical. Some are\namusing tdo.\nCURE FOR CRYING\nr One mother had a child who wept\nwithout cause. So she gave him a\nfcotted'plant and told him to-water\nIt- with his tears. This placed the\nlad in a situation .that was more\nsilly than sad and his sobs turned\nto smiles.- \u25a0:\n\\ Another woman had some sound\nadvice on how to keep children who\nplay across the street out \u25a0 of. the\npaths, of automobiles. Just give the\nkid a whistle. He will blow it when\nhe is ready to come home. Then you\ngo out ind guide him. through the\ntraffic'   . ' '   ,.'   :\nA lady didn't need a laboratory\nto Work out a method of making\nsure she didn't leave her. apartment without her key. She used\nsound effects. She. Ued a bell on\nthe key and put It iri her purse. Now,\nwhen she is stepping out, she shakes\nher purse.' If it tinkles, she knows\nthe key is.inside.-, -;.     \u25a0\u25a0\nDoes a dripping faucet drive, yon\nwild?. Tie a piece of string to the\nfaucet, The water will run down it\n|n silence until the plumber arrives.\nSuppose the- ceaseless tlck-tick-\ntiqkoit aclock annoys somebody in\na sickroom.' Cover1 the clock with a\nglass bowl. The patient can see the\ntime but he can't heartt go by.\nNobody knows how many fountain pens have been borrowed.and\nnever\"returned. But there's a way\nto .'scotch :that, Keep the cap.'* The\nliarty'who his the writing end will\nnbticel that1 something is .missing.\nThat will jqg his .memory.       '-'\nThis, Idea exchange has been\nbperatlng, for ,two, years.. The top\ntips-are broadcast five days a week\nover. the Columbia Broadcasting\nSystem network at 2 p.m. C.S.T. arid\noriginate in a Chicago studio.\" Winners to date have walked off with\n$600,000 worth of merchandise;\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nSmartly styled\nLarge Size Dresses\n:      In all colors       > :\nRAINCOATS\nSizes 12-20      '\n$22.50 - $37.50\nFASHION FIRST LTD.\nIVOOTENAY Valley Uairy\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\n' IS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 21,1948 \u2014 S\nSouth Slocan * *\u25a0*\nSOUIH SLOCAN, B.  Cr\u2014A.  B.\nMacrone is a patient in Kootenay\nLake;General Hospital* at Nelson.\n.Mrs. B. Bodgeper apd- daughter\nGail visited Mrs. Holden on the M.\nV, Ahscdmb., -  .',   \\ -.\nMrs. E. Westman entertained the\nRed Cross work circle at her home\nWith Mrs. G. F. Baker as co-hostess\nfor- refreshments. Those present\nWere Mrs. WI C. Motley, Mrs. E.\nGordon, Mrs. J. Murray, Miss M.\nMurray, Mrs. G. Tlndale,. Mrs. B.\nBodgener, Mrs.* Troyan, .Mrs. F.\nScott,,Mrs. J.iD. Yeatman. V\nAirs. Blair Bodgener was a hostess\nat a charmingly arranged tea at her\nhome when guests were Mrs. E.\nWestman, Mrs. Joe Dows, Mrs. S. F.\nBaket,;Mrs. W< Wilson, Mrs. F. Garrett) Mrs. C. Johnson, Miss H. Hanson of Vancouver, Mrs. D. 3. Davlg\nand Mrs.. P. Mclvor. '' ' .\ntester *?*?*.\nCAMP LISTEB, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. S. Flagle and family of Kim.\nberley were visiters at the home\nof-Mr;, and Mrs. S, jtopp. ..   .\nMiss Eva Huscroft, who is teach.\ning school at, Ehone, B.C., visited\nhbr parents,. Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nHuscjroft, and family.'  ., ri,..,..\nGborgO and Lyle Wocknltz left\nfor Klrhberley where, they will be\nemployed.1  . ;, \u25a0;..\n' Mrs.  W.  Lindhorst  of  Huscroft\nvisited her  son' and  daughter-in-\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nFreeman Furniture Co<\nThe Home of Furniture Values\nPHONE .115 - NELSON. B.C..:|\nTrade in Your\nOld Furniture\non New\nBUY ON OUR BUDGET PUN'\nOpen Until 9 P.M. Saturday\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nT\nGLEN BAIN, Sask. (CP)-Poul-\ntry* stocks ln this Southwestern\nSaskatchewan district, have been de-.\"i\npleted by inroads of coyotes in thc\nlast, several months. Farmers plan\nto hunt the marauding animals this\nWihter., \u25a0 ,-. \u2022\niaw, Mr. and Mrs. Hans Lindhorst'.\nof Creston.';    ..-' ',\nMr. and Mrs, T. C. Montgomery\nof Creston visited Mrs. Irene Mc- r\nKee. : .*;\u25a0''\nMiss. Nellie. Huscroft of Cranbrook visited her'parents, Mr. arid\nMrs. Charles Huscroft.       ' .;\nAfter visiting her home in Camp\nLister, Miss Bernlce Donaldson left j\nfor Vahiouver. '\nMr. and Mrs. Doug McKee and\nson Jim of Klmberley visited theh:\nparents, Mr, arid Mrs. Joe Wockriitx\narid Mr, and Mrs. D. J. McKee.,   :\n\u00a9\u2022nation\nv\n\u00bb digest; ttmd, because r.akln'?It\"sr\nNo wonder that w^ b.Ues\nf^ are getting Carnation Mill\n\"Prom Conteitttd.cows\".\n(drnalion g\nM\n\\-\nllMttll\n-..>rrvs.>irtftvri\u00ab'\u00bb>:!\nPRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 21, 22 and 23\nNelson's Independent Merchants\nHOME OWNED\nHOME OPERATED\n* Sultanas\n* Peas\nBUILDING HOME PAYROLLS\n*\u2022*\u25a0     .-.. . *._-' - ..\nAustralian; Per pound _\nNabob Fancy, No. 3; 20 ox. tin\nII Vanilla Extract\n* Tea Bags\nNabob; 4 oz. bottle\nDeluxe, 60s; Each\nI7c\n23c\n43c\n75c\nCake Flour: Velvet; 5 lbs.\nCocoanut: Martin's; 8 oz.\npkg.\nMarmalade; Nabob, Special Pack;\n24 oz. jar .___  _________\n47c\n27e\n39c\nPopping Corn: Jolly Time; 8 oz. tin 23c\nMilk: Eagle Brand; Per tin .._.__\nSalt: Windsor; 2 lb. ctn.; 2 for _\u201e\nSalt: Windsor; 5 Ib. sack ... i\nStrawberries: A.M. B.; 20 oz. tin ...\nCut Wax Beans: Bulman's; 20 oz.\nCorn Flakes: Kellogg's; 8 oz. pkg..\n29c\n21c\n15c\n35c\n17c\n15c\nDog Food: Champion; 15 oz. tins; '\n2 for,________-_\u2014 __J._l:29c\nTomato Juice: Libby's; 48 oz. tin _. 35c\nMolasses: Nabob; 28 oz. tin  39c\nLight Globes: 40w, 60w, 25w; Each 15c\nWriting Pads: Leg6' -oen  19c\nChore Girls: 2 for _,_. .___  19c\nCough Syrup: Buckley's, Small btl. 40c\nEnos Salts: Large bottle ..  98c\nlisterine; 7 oz. bottle ____  59p\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nTHESE MERGHAte ARE ANXIOUS TO SERVE YOlj\nFairview Cash Market\nPHQNE 295\nBennie's Grocery\n. PHONE 1236   '\nTalbot's Grocery\n\u2022   SOUTH SLOGAN\nStangherlin's Grocery\n; PHONE 709-L\nHilltop-Grocery\nPHONE 983-X\nFairway Meat Market\nPHQNES 1177-1 ittt\n-    Maple Leaf Store\nCrescent Valley\nC. D. Bedwell\nGeneral Merchant-PROCTER, B.C.\n \u00bb'iw\u00abL!\u00a32\u00a3\u00ab\u00bb   ? Questions?\nEstablished April 22, 1001\n. British Columbia'*\nMost Interesting' Newspaper-\n'\u2022    Published every morning except Sunday by tht\nNEWS  PUBLISHING   COMPANY,   LIMITKD,\n266 Baker St., Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Office Department, Ottawa.\n.     MEMBER 'OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nV,, THEl AUDIT'BUREAU-OF CmCU__AT10li|&\n. -WlibNESDAY, .OCTOBER 20,1948   .''_\nThe Cost of Living Survey\nl;>: A door-to-door survey-to determine the\n..spending habits of Canadian'families ls now\n-under way.r'\\Vhen it,ls obffipleted and tha\nfindings are analyzed it w|ll.serve as a basis\nfor determtalh& the ,Soundnes|J of the Do-\n'minion Bureau of Statistics' cost'of living-\n'index. ; V\n, During and since the war jQje lnd-j_ has.\nbeeii subject'to many criticisms. .For the\nmost part; thesti complaints.have charged\n, that the index has failed to measure the full\n\u25a0extent that'prices h_,v'e climbed. With the,\npossible exception bf rents,, however, the\ncriticism; has been largely unfounded, arid\n.Is due to misunderstanding as to, the real\npjirpose of the lnd.x.    ;\nThe Index does hot, as 1^. name implies\nto some, represent the-sum total of the cost\nmt living,; Rather, It Is a consume* price index. I. measures the' change ih the retail\nprice of various goAJs and service* ;______.\nenter into an average wage-earner's cost of\n^living. Further, it measures the price increase? in the manner they influence the.\n.family's cost of living.\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\".\n\"' The present index is based on the spending pattern of Canadians before the war. A\nsurvey wa^ made in 1938 to determine how\nj; Canadians spent their money attd what per-\n:ce!ritage of it was spent.bn food, B-wlteftftiel\nand light, etc' Wlthr this information to gitfde\nit; the5 Bureau of Statistics selected key articles in. each group. By keeping a close\nwatch on the trend of these key prices, it\nhail been able to measure the price increases\n\u25a0as they affect the family budget.;\n\u2022The purpose of the present survey is to\ndetermine if the pattern expenditure has\n,, changed since 1938. Are Canadians, for example, spending more of their income on\nfood and less on clothing or home furnishings? This is important. Food costs have' increased much more than home furnishings.\nIt follows,'therefore, that if families are\nspending more on food than in the base'\nperiod, the cost of J^vihgyinight noy be somewhat higher since the food dollar buys less\nI than the home furnishings dollar.\nWhile it is possible there have been some\nchanges in the pattern of spending, it is unlikely that they will make any important\n\u2022difference in the index'figure. For while\nmore money is probably being spent on food,\n.the present index does make some allowance\nfor this.      ''.*,'\u2022\u2022 -   -\n. ' Rent may be giyen more irAportance in\nthe new index since the present table does\nnot make full allowance .for the housing\n\u25a0 expenses of families that have moved since\n;the war started^This, however, wilt'prob-\nably be the only major change.\nLooking Backward\n.-\u25a0\u2022 25 VEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally Newa of Oct. 21, 1923\nMiss Elizabeth McKinnon, a teacher at Procter,\n- spent the weekend In Nelson at the home of her\nmother, Mrs. L. McKinnon, Victoria Street..\nj       Whist and dancing were enjoyed by many last\nevening, held by the Great War Veterans' Association In the Armory. Prize winners were Mr- and\n, Mrs. F. Durham while' half prizes went '.to Bruce\nHill and Mrs. William Lacy. ., '   v.-'\nW. Br Klnnear ot Trail yas in Nelson for a short\nr.-vlsjt over the weekend;   . ,.',';\n'     .        40 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally Newt of Oct 21, 1901\nGeorge _5. Coomb of Calgary, Travelling Passenger Agent for* the Canadian Pacific Railway, Is in\nNelson on an inspection tour through the District,\nJ. X- Bealby delivered an address, \"Shakespeare\nas a Man,\" at a meeting of the Saint Paul's Young\nPeople's Association yesterday.'\nThe annual meeting of the Nelson Liberal Asso-\n' elation was'held last evening. Officers elected we're\nDr. G. A. B. Hall, M.P.P., Honorary President; F. J.\n' Deane, President; E. Ferguson.' Vice-President; D.\nProudfoot, Secretary; and.John Hamilton, Treasurer.\nPress. Comment\n-SWEET REMINDER\nThe essence of education ls that the educated\nperson shall be able to'get along with other people\nand live in harmony with others. Passing examinations and the acquisition of degrees do not assure\nthis capacity. '.'\u2022 '\u2022\u2022 '   *\u25a0\nGraduates tare n#,. of course,, dumbells; they\nare smart yoi|flg people w(th a goal In view and\ntheir feet-set on tne path of progress. But there is\nno harm In reminding them that after all they will\nhive to. earn their living from among the ranks'.of\nother people,-and that tact.and .sweet reasonableness\nare.two ot the'.essentials of success.\u2014London (Ont.)\n. Free Pressr\nTpE WONDER OF IT .  ;   ,\n\"It ls found'*that Japan is 1829 feet off the posl-r\ntlon indicated on standard maps.\" But in view of\nevents of the last few years\/the wonder is that she's\non the map at all.\"\u2014Ottawa Citizen.       \u2022\nOpen to any ruder. Names ot persons asking\n-.-   questions will not ho published.   There Is ne\n' charge for this service. Questions WILL, NOT BE\nANSWERED BY MAIJ, except when there Is   ,\nobvious necessity for privacy.\nMrs. 3. E. S., Nelson\u2014Is sugar still rationed in Eng-\n'     land.-.\nX*    '\nJ. T. S\u201e Trail\u2014Is there any disinfectant that can bo\nused around the kitchen and pantry that will\nkeep away mice? What is .the best method of\n. * getting rfdof these mice? ,i ' '   '.'..*\nMouclde, sold lit most stores, Is an effective\n. poison that may be used in the home. Mouse traps\nbaited with cheese are also effective. Keeping a cat\nitrouhd the home will soon help to rid your place of\nWe*, -\nInterested, New Denver\u2014Would you kindly supply\nme with some of the latest speed records?\nThe following records are those listed in tho\n1948 edition of the World Almanac. They may haye\nbeen broken iri the past year, .   ,\n-' ' Vfpieli iutomobile speed record, 1B4T\u2014John R.\nCobb, at .Bonneville, Utah, 394.108 m.p.h. \u25a0'.;\n- '   1947 World' swimming record, men's tree style-\nAlan Ford, U.S.A., 100 yards, 49.7 s.\n'' World's bicycle raclng'record\u2014L. Lawson, United States, one-quarter mile, 0.23 4\/5.    \u2022-.\nWorld track, and field records, International\nfederation, as of Nov. 1, 1947\u2014Men's 100 yards,\nClyde Jeffrey, U.S.A, ,9.4s.;: .. '*,';'.\n- Walking, two miles\u2014Verner Hardma of Sweden,\nUrn.   '\u25a0' '\u25a0   ;\u2022'. ,;\"-\"-\nON THE SIDE\nBy I. V. DURLINO  . ' \u25a0' ,\n\u25a0'.\u25a0' An astonishing number of women In their late\n70s ond early 80s haye been getting married lately;\nhaving church weddings, too. Also honeymoons.\nAmong the recent elderly blushing brides is Alice.\nLemar. Alice, onceastar of the London music halls,\nls now 79. Sho introduced and popularized that ditty\ntitled \"Her Golden Hair Was Hanging Down Her\nBack.\" \u00bb:'\nHORSES AND WOMEN\nThe color psychology experts claim the wearing\nof something red by a female puts a male ln a lovable mood. That it \"brings out the wolf in a man.\"\nWheh this claim was first reported in thia department some Feminine subscribers tried wearing red.\nMany reported excellent results. Anyway, it has\ncome to tho attention ot our Horses and Women experts thot on argument between an executive and a\nsecretary, .which.resulted In therifoung woman losing her job, started when the boss complained that\nshe wore, red blouses too often. He said looking at\nthem gave* him a headache. -\nBRjEFLY\nIn the United States there are 59,310,000 people'\nwho own or sl\/arc the Ownership of dogs,. So lt you\ncan think of a hew kind of dog biscuit your fortune\nis made.  \u25a0 .'\u25a0-.'' - *    ,\nGENE'S GREATEST. I'\u25a0.....    -. >-.-\u2022\nGena'Tuhhey says Jimmy Wlldeijformer British\nflyweight champion, Is. the \"greatest fighter\" he\never saw. I never saw Wilde fight. All I know' is that\nWhen he was at-his peak, he came to' the U.S.A. and\nPancho .Villa,, the \"great 'little Filipino battler,.\nknocked him wt ln seven rounds: !'\u25a0-\u2022'\u25a0 r '.- V, ., -\nREBEL8   . \u25a0 '\u25a0.-\u00bb;   .;.(, \u2022\"    -'    ' '\"\u2022   .-.-.'\nin Brazil If a citizen thinks the telephone terv\nIce la .bad ho mounts a soapbox on a corner and\nmakes a speech about It. He does likewise If he\nwishes to protest about.the'street oar service, the\nhigh cost of living or any other state of affairs that\ndispleases him. It Is a procedure which very often\ngets results. This brings to mind that some years\nago there was an organization In Manhattan called\n\"The Association of Telephone Users.\" This was\nulte a.battling organization. It ran the telephone\ncompany ragged, and many of the Improvements\nIn service now enjoyed by New York City telephone subscribers are due to the efforts of this\ngroup of determined rebels.. -\nA8KINQ\nQueries from -clients: Q; Who wrote the song.\n\"Your Lips TeU Me No, but -There's Yes, Yes in\nYour Eyes\"? A. Couldn't say. If you^had asked me\nwho wrote ''Just'Because She Made Them Goo Goo\nEyes,\" I could have told you. Q. Soyou're a student-\n. of the Bible? Then tell us the longest verse In it.'A. I\n'don't claim to be., a student of the Bible, though I\ndid take a course in college ori \"the Blbje as literature.\" Anyway, the aniwer to your question It Esther. 8-9. '\nVe\nrse\n\u2022'    ,    ,    NOELI.r    ''\nWait not till storms assail,    \u25a0 .',. \u25a0' . \u25a0\n-But how, while the teeming 'harvests flow,\nCry N'oell Before\" the colors fall,\nBefore the charitable, patches show.\n.     ' (   ' '\u25a0 -  \u2022       ..;'\nNow, while to calm days and nights,\nThe new seed quickens In the land:\nNow,- while the task) are half delights,\nBid the guests come with open hand.\nWhat blasphemy Is this, that.talks of war?\nOnce the crop's in, the cattle stalled?\nTrue, men demented slam tho doors -    r\nR^her than have their conscience, galled;\nBut manl Earth's plenty, Earth endows: \u2022\nBeat, then, your bombers back, to ploughs.\n*'.'-;\u2022     -     -G. A. BUTLING.\nA POPULAR DECISION\n'. No one will quarrel with the decision to exclude\nthe general public from: the London Denial-Trade\nExhibition, Considerations of security -can hatdly\nhave underlain the Isolationism of the organizers.\n. Unlike other engines of destruction, dentists'\ntools, once they are perfected, caflhot be-kept on\nthe secret-list. Either a dentist posseses (say) a telescopic mouth gag or he does not. If he does, he does\nnot Jtiep it in a safe under some Innocuous code-\nname; he rams It between our jaws'with a remark\nabout the weather. It cannot have been a misguided\ndeslr* for secrecy which has denied the ordinary\ncitizen entry to this exhibition; .It is much more\nlikely'to have been rthe realization, courageously\nfaced, that the ordinary citizen would far sooner\nspend a night In- the Chamber of Horrors than 10\nminutes ln an exhibition devoted to. the triumphs\nOf dental engineering.\u2014The Times of London.\nWaAiimWMM.\n.FOR A DOLL WEDDING\nWhat a thrilling gift fdr>py little\ngirl, doll-own.rl A lovely-bridal\ngown and headdress plus complete\ntrousseau ot slip, negligee and panties for her dolll       .'\".-     i\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, Illustrated\nSeW Chart shows you every step.\nPattern 9466 is available tor dolls\n14, 16, 18, 20, 22 inches tall. For\nyardages, see pattern.\nIBBBIlHI\nNews.of the Day\nRATESl 22c llne, 27c llne black face type) larger,type rates on\n;.  request Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\n0_M_____J_______^^\nSet your Xmas gift subscriptions\ni, WAIT'S NEWS.,-     _.'\nFresh chopped suet, lb.\u201420c\nAT FAIRWAY MEAT MARKET\nTAKE THE FLEETLINE DANCE\nSPECIAL TO PROCTER FRIDAY.\nMore smart winter hats have just\narrived at ADRIAN MILLINERY\nPhono Skilton. 01, tor Beatty Service. Repairs to all washers. -\nWork Shirts, Gloves, Overalls, Pants.\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S SHOP'\nBulbs  for  your  spring  garden.\nBeauty treatment. Gbod selection at\n....   ,:* VALENTINE'S ;'.   \u25a0\nCorsages styled to suit your gown\n,.:   '\u25a0'.'-    PHONE 982     '   H\nCOVENTRY'8 FLOWER 8HOP\nthough' insurance In sound; companies la sound business See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY.    .\nA useful thing tp have on a trip\nis a car coat-hanger. Available at\nCUTHBERT MOTORS LIMITED\nHOCKEY\nReserved seat sale Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.\nGood selection of Fall Planting\nBulbs. Order yours today from\nMAC'S GREENHOUSES. PH. 910\nBring thot valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nMETAL KITCHEN BTOOLS IN\nGREEN, BLACK' AND RED.\nPRICED $3.96 AT GREENWOOD'S.\nRemember your corsage for the\ndance tonight. Phone 910 or call at\nMac's Greenhouses;    ''\nNew  shipment ot  Sparton  and,\nPhilco Radios. \u25a0' .    -.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nJ. R. Watklns for quality Spices\nand Extracts. Call Spencer C. Col-\nma'i, 208 Anderson St.\nNew shipment of Kray sock wool,\nall shades. -39c oz. at. -\nThe CHILDREN'S SHOP, 682 Biker\nSUTHERLAND'S\nFor Watch Repairs.\n491 Baker Street, Nelson\nj Joymakers whist, modern and old\ntime dance. Refreshments, Cards,\n8:15; dance: 11:00 p.m. Members 40c,\nvisitors 50c'\n\u2022 .   \u25a0  . FRIDAY OCT. 29th\nST. PAUL'S CHOIR CONCERT\nDID Y O U. KNOW KOKAN-__S\nLODGE Is open for Dinner Engagements and .Afternoon Teas, under\nNew Management? Phone 678-R-i\nfor Reservations. \u25a0'    ..'.','\nDon't wait until snow . flies to\nrepair those broken windows. Do it\nnowl We have all standard sizes of\nwindow gloss, and cut to your\nrequirement?. EPPERSON'S. \"   \u2022*\nWe: sell absolutely tho best Typewriter carbbri obtainable. If you are\nnot getting the results you feel -you\nshould with what you are now using, let us know. Wo will give you a\nsample to use. Satisfy yourself Before buying. D. W. McDerby; .\"The1\nTypewriter and \"*Adding Machine\nMan,\" 336 Ward St.,\/Nelson, B. G.\n..',r \u2014__i'.\nWould you like to hear an inter.\nestlng explanation of Christian Science? Then come to' a FREE LEC\nTURE TONIGHT entitled \"CHRIS\nTIAN SCIENCE: ITS ASSURANCE\nOF GUIDANCE TO MEN\".;.by\nQeOrge Channlng ot the Board of\nLectureship of The Mother Church,\nThe Firit Church Of Chriet, Scientist in Boston, Mass., at the CAP!\nTOL THEATRE AT S P.M.        ;:\nCARD OF THANK8 . Ji \u25a0\nMrs. T. F.* Burley r of;: Silverton\nwishes to thank her many friends\nfor their kindness in her recent\nbereavement; also for the many\nbeautiful. floral tributes, with special thanks to Dr. Robinson and tho\nnurses of the Slocan Community\nHospital at New Denver fpr their\nkindness and. attention given to her\nlate husband.       .     ,\n. OVERWAITEA LTD.\nAPPLE JUICE: 48 oz.  .,  \t\nAPPLE JUICE: 20 oz., 2 for ...\nHONEY: 4 lb*. ...;.\t\nTOMATO JUICE! 48 or.,:...:\t\nGINGER SNAPS: Lb.\t\nCHOCOLATE ECLAIRS: Lb.\nPORK and BEANS: Aylmer, 20 oz\u201e\njfor  : r '29e\nMILK: Per case  _.....__...._..!\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\nFLOUR: 98 Ibt '.....: _..,.. SB;08\nFLOUR: 48 lb*. _        *2M\nFLOUR! M lbs;    $149\nOVERWAITEA LTD.\nPHONE 707,\n.   .       FUNERAL NOTICE    '\nFuneral services for the late Mrs.\nMary Stowart, will be held Friday,\nOct. 22, at 2 p.m. from the Knox\nUnited Church, Trail. Rev. D. W.\nMore will officiate. Interment will\nbe in the Mountain View Cemetery.\nClark's Funeral Chapel in charge;\nMake a date now to attend the\nPresto Pressure, Cooker' demonstration at our store ori October 25th\nand'26th, HIPPERSON'S, ; :\nRUBBER DOOR MAT8 -Also\nRubber Stair Treads\u2014from 60c to\n$2.60. BURNS LUMBER \u00ab COAL\nCO.\nPHONE US FIRST ,\nWe will give you .spot cash for\nthat old table, bed, stove, chair, etc,\nPHONE 391-NELSON EXCHANGE\n[ X. swnXci y V Uu'ttV\nSTAR MEDALLIONS\nMake nine star rnedallioi)s, Join\n'them for a Constellation Chair Set!\nOr, if you'd rather, make a spread,\ncloth or scarf!     '   .   ,    ,\nStar * Medalliohs.\u2014eosy,''., speedy\ncrochet. You'll use them many ways.\nPsttern 730; .directions. . . \"\u2022\nLaura Wheelers (improve^ pot-\ntern makes needlework so simple\nwith its charts, photos and concise\ndirections.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor - each pattern to Nelson Dally\nNews,, Pattern Dept;, 266' Baker\nStreet, Nelson, B. C. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME\nand ADDRESS.\nTHEY'RE, NEWI SIX PYREX\nFLUTED CU8TARD CUPS IN ATTRACTIVE PACKAGE. SOLD IN\nTWO SIZES AT GREENWOOD'S.\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n' T n?ve\"r knew lt to fall.\" If we\neat onions for Sunday dinner and\nPa don't bother to shave rand dresa\nup,' we have a house full o\" com\npany.   * ,.'.,-.  '.   \",\nATTENTION BADMINTON\n'   CLUB  MEMBERS\nThere will be no badminton on\nThursday Oct. 21sC\nCURLER8 ATTENTION\nMembership list closes Oct. 25th.\nLists at Wood Vallance, Bush's,\nCabinet   Cigar   Store,   or   phone\nSecretary at 786-L-2. -,.'\u2022'-.\nNOW IN,STOCK'\n\"ALLRIGHT\" Step Ladders\n. Strong Construction\nReasonably Priced\nNELSON  WOODWORKING CO.\nOpp. Daily Newi '.   .-.- Phone 11S0\nParsonages To\nBe Tax-Free\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP) \u25a0'- The\nGovernment announced .tonight it\nplans, to amend the income,, tax law.\nto make it clear thot clergymen\nneed not pay tax on the Value of a\nmanse or parsonage provided tor\nthem by tho church. > i\nA statem_nt1ssued. jointly by Fls\nnance Minister Abbott and Revenue Minister McCann said the\namendment will be introduced In\nParliament at the time of tbi next\nbudget.  '\" '.   a,,   -   -\nThe statement noted that clergymen are not now paying this tax.\nSuggests Camps for\nHarried Mothers\nLONDON, Oct. 20 (AP) \u2014 Rest\ncamps for overworked mothersSvere\nproposed today by Lord Beverldge,\neconomist,   '\"(\u25a0'\u25a0-,'\n\"A housewife and mother may it\ntimes be Just as much ln need of\nrehabilitation to do her job as \"a\ncrash-shocked airman,\" Lord Beverldge declared ln a sociological report.       . '\nEasing the harried .mother's burden ls one of the social tasks which\nshould be taken over by private\nagencies, said Lord .Beverldge.\nSAUrsSAlllfcS\nXPERIENCE and stability in your\nexecutor take on increased value in\nview:of the unexpected develop-'\nments to-.be met with today. You\ncan count Qn the permanence and competence;\nof this trust;company to protect yovtr interests\nif difficulties should arise in the future to complicate the administration of your estate.\n:\u2022' V '   THB\n. CORPORATION\nIF. II. Motrat. Mgr., Pender tt Seymour Sti,, I'oncotiver\nIST'D.    188!;    1'SIItJ.DHI    WBST    1902\n\"Do I have to have other than\npersonal recommendations to get\nthciobJ\"\nNelson - Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C, MUIR\nPhones:   Nelion 77;  Roiiland 171;  Trail 1001\nConnections tor:\nSALMO -  KASLO  -  CRESTON  -   NAKUSP\n\u25a0\u25a0 -<&.      r.\u00ae      **\n\u00bb\u00ab\"'S%-^\ntt   t*S\nffl\nM\n\u2022 \u00ab\u00bb \u2022 I.\n#\u2022\u2022\nInstead of worrying about tomorrow, start saving todayl As the\ndollars mount up, worries fade. And\nwhen you buy Canada Savings\nBonds, the dollars mount up fast.\nCanada Sayings Bond.s make saving-\neaiy.\nThey pay a good Tate of interest for\nan investment that.can be cashed at\nfull face value at an)? lime. '\nON SALE NOW at inveifmenf dealers,\nhanks or your Company's\n\u2022 Payroll Savings Plan.      . '-,,\n$\u00a3*$&\nfttt\nC-1M\n3\" SERIES\n r-.tr.\n\/ill Fight Threatened\nlou rt Action\nVlCTORUiOc't 20 (CP)- Aid.\naldo Skillings said' today, he will\n\u2022ht court Action threatened . by\nlarlesJT.Hatnilton over statements\ni (Aid. Skillings).allegedly made\nconnection with' construction of\ne rjlemorlal Arena. \u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0]\nAid. Skillings laid a rumor ls be-\nt .circulated tp the effect that'. Mr.\nsmllton, Consulting Engineer in\n,e building it the rink,' haa com'\nmeed an action against him for\nifamation arising from remarks\nlid. by Aid.' Skillings. at a City\nluncll .meeting Sept, 13.\nHe' said that he\" has received, a\niter from solicitors of Mr. Hamuli asking him to. retract what he\niegedly laid and.to apologize.\n\"f have placed the, matter'in the\ntods of my solicitors?-said Aid,\nfilings.  ;: yj' . \u25a0 i-] \u25a0    ' {\nUse the \"Classified\"  and lave.\nr.c.n. squadron\nVisits Hawaii\nPEARL HARBOR, Qct 20 (AP)-^\nThe first Royal Canadian naval\nsquadron to visit Hawaii since.the\nwar steamed into Pearl Harbor iaf,\nday'. \u25a0'\u2022:..\n* The squadron was led by the 9000*\nton cruiser Ontario, Canada's second largest naval vessel. With it\n.Wore the destroyers Crescent, Athb..'\nbaskan and Cayuga and. the frigate\nAntigonlsh. ,   \u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   \u2022'    \u25a0 . \u25a0}\n.The squadron and its' commander,\nCapt. J. C.-Hibbard; were; greeted\nbj;,.-Capt. W. S * Hayerk, Assistant\nChief ot Staff, Hawaiian Sea Frontier,, British- Consul L. H,, Ifwetall,\nand Duke Kahanamoku, Honolulu\nSh,eriS.    ,;';.\/   '.''-.:    \u25a0    ..   I *\n. WINNIPEG (CP)-A decrease\"pi\n^5,per, tient In'thetcivlc voters' list\n' as compared with 1947 was reported\nIhe're rrtently.r'The rdrppv has. been\nattributed tb residents moving, to\n'suburban districts.... '\u25a0\";,'.'\"    .r-'r-r'\n\"Do ybu love me more ffian anything e\/se\nV in the whole wide world?\"\nWhy sure, Darling! Except, of\nnirse, there's honey-golden ,..\"\nrtaoney.Goldeii, efit I knew It-*\nblonde! I'm going home to\nlotherl\". ,' ,'\n\"Hey, wait a minute! I mean\noney-golden, malty-rich, oh-so-\nronderlul Post's Grape-Nuts\nKwn' *..    \u25a0'.'\u25a0 \u25a0;:\njfjh, that'a dlfferentl\"\n\"Suro  they^re   different!   That\nfamous Grape-Nuts flavor ls different from any other cereal flavor;\nin the world.\" ,  ,<;,\n\"I know, Iknow\u2014because they're\nmade from two grains instead ot.\none.\"   '  '.     ; \u25a0'\u25a0'    .    \u2022    ''\u25a0'    '\n\"Sure\u2014and loaded with carbohydrates and minerals and other\nfood essentials.\"\n\"You win. Gd ah^ad land have\nanother-bo'_ilfi4-*aiid'I think I'll\njoin yqui'! ,.\u25a0'\u25a0'     ,...'\n^l^OTrRRIVAX^BrMton Bddy of New York's Bronx\nZoo holds newly-arrived Meller's chameleon from East Africa.\nTie creature his a prehensile talNBs hands md feet m djvlded,\n-   V   wlth'three clawsoaone side sndtwo onthe otter.,  >\u25a0.-\nBattle for Berlin Is Battle\nFor Europe Claims Berlin Editor\niii|_Myi.iuiiiii\u00abi-__Wiii,ui.'.i.'JM..uuvi,.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 21,1948 \u2014 7\nCoffee-Guz__ling\nRats'Thrive A'A        .;\nITHACA^ N. Y., Oct. 20,.(AP) -\nCoffee gets a clean hill of health as\nit nutritious beverage Jn eifperl-\nments on.long life of white rats\nmade public.today at CornelUJnl-\nverslty\"' i ' '     \u25a0\nRats which ;\u00abp tKplr lives had\nnothing to drink except coffee \u2014\nnot even wateij-^-lived as long and\nwell as animals that never tasted\nthe stimulant\n. In fact,- a goodly proportion of\nthe female rats lived \/longer than\ntheir expected average. The con-,\nelusion was that the coffee-drinking\nmay have had a* favorable effect on\ntheir'longevity.\n\"There was a \"difference between\nrat and some tnimwl-cAffee drink.\ners. -The rats had' onljjr what the\nscientists called a \"low level\" of\ncoffee Intake. The rats took as much\nas they wanted tq satisfy thirst* Rats\noutdo humans-ln the ability to tell\nby.taste most anything that isrpois-\nonous to* them.''\nLUCK OF THE IRISH *\n. GLENGARte., Cork, Kite (CP)-\nA sleepwalker here fell 30 feet from\nhis hotel-window\u2014and only,-hurt\nhis leg.'.   \u2022;   -, ...-    '       rr\nBy RELMAN MORIN.\nAssoolotod Press News Analyst\n.   (For Dewltt Mackenile)\n\"If you. give up Berlin, you give\nup Europe,\" the German said. \"It\nIt as simple is that. :i'f ',.:*;'  _*\u2022* \u2022'.,\nHa It a Berliner),'* member of\nthat group of newspaper men Who\nhave been In the United Statet\nstudying    Amorloan   newspapers\nand their methods., . \u2022.-\nHis reasoning, I think, Is worth reporting, as a counterpoise to the-ar-'\nguments of many Americans who\nbelieve the United States blunders\nterribly by clinging*to her peiUcUs\ntoehold' ln Berlin;   .\nThey lay the Unlted'Statei'should\nhave pulled out, because:    '  .'.\/<\" :\u25a0\u2022\n1. Berlin is untenable, strategically; the air lift can be stopped Just as\nthe trains were stopped.    :\",,    ,\nBy staying, the United States\npermitted the Importance of the city\nto be ballooned to such proportions\nthat .they cannot afford tp quit 'Berlin, and the Russians cannot afford\nto let us stay there.\n3. Thus, the Americans in Berlin\nare) lh fact, at the mercy of the'RuSr,\nsian Army, and the United States,\nas a whole, may be dragged into war\nby \"the actions of any trigger-happy\ncorporal,\" and over an issue that is\nintrinsically unimportant to America. ,'.-\u25a0-..- '\u2022-'.' r.S- ':-. ';...'--.\nGERMAN AN8WER\nNow comes the answer of the\nGerman editor!\n\"In the first place, lf-yqu'get out\nof Berlin\u2014suppose you wlthdrawjto\nthe' Anglo-American zones of occupation in the West-r-tilen youmerejy\ntransfer the point of friction.\nzonal border with the Russian's. The\nincidents and the causes of tension\nwould quickly begin to appear\nthere.\" .;   ,     ,'..'-   .;., -.\nBut, he said, a result of vastly\ngreater consequence would accrue\nIt the Americans pulled back.\nHe estimated that less than one\nper ceht of the German people, even\nthose who live in the Russian zones,\nare. Communists or oven Commun-\nistically inclined, at this point\n\"Statistics, of course, would show\na much hlghei- proportion. But you\nmust remember that, for a German\nliving in. the Russian area, it ls much\nwiser to pay lip service to the Russians and their ideas than lt is to\nopenly speak one's mind..   .   -\nThroughout the rest of Germany,\nthere are millions of other Germans\nwho not only pin their hopes bit the\nWestern Democracies but have put\ntheir lives on the line by taking Jobs\n-such as his\u2014under the Western\nMilitary Governments. ' ,.*\n\"It is not difficult to picture the\nfate of these people if all Germany\ncomes under Russian control.\"\nTo a lesser degree, the same was\ntrue of 'all Western Europe. Again,\nhe argued, ji includes those \"satellite\" nations that are now In Russian hands.   '\u25a0\u25a0\nIn short, to one Berliner, the battle for' Berlin ls the battle for\nEurope.\nCHARLOTTliTOWN (CP)-Riiral\nyoung people have been exhibiting\na better quality at Canadian farm\nfairs than adults, C. S. Scrantbn,\npoultry fieldman of'tho Agriculture\nDepartment's Poultry Services\n'.'You would still have a common Branch, said here.\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP) .\u2014[girls with Indecent calls. Ayres of-\nAfter his girlfriend broke off their fered ln police court to apologize\nengagement because he worked on'4,,eal* ?'_>h* phoned girls person-\na night shift, Frank Ayres, 22, wasially-'butthe magistrate would npi\nsaid to have turned \"bitter towards,agree'\nall women,\"\/ \u25a0>> .-\u2022'    :   .. -\u2014 -,-\nHe was Jailed for two months on I   Egyptians and Syrians used glass\ncharge  of \u25a0 pestering  telephone as a glaze for beads 5000 years ago.\nMake SHORT WORK of Housework\nBERRY BENDER\nFATAL fO BIRDS?\nBEND, Ore:, Oct. '20 !(AP)\u2014What\nwould lead 16 birds to fly into the\nsame plate glass window to their\ndeath? ' -.'\n: That j was the question puzzling\nBend residents, here today., ,..\u201e\nOne,theory: The birds all had\nbeen eating overripe and frosted\nberries\u2014perhaps fermented'. berries\n\u2014 from mountain ash trees at- a\nnearby church yard and were drunk.\nGENERAL O ELECTRIC\nYour Authorized\nGE Dealer\nyV'iVA:       y-'A'-r.    yA'A-'AyA'y-iiV'iA^vV$'$yy''A?vy^A'-: ':i :?A:.\" AAA' }?<\u25a0\u25a0$'\"-aa ,:-\nMajor and Table Appliances\nOil Furnaces\nand\nCommercial Refrigeration\n. We ore the Authorized G.E. Appliance Re-\n4  pair Depot for all G.E. appliances, regardless\nof where purchased. \u2022\nNew Reduced Prices\nIn Effect\n-.. \u2022 -'\u25a0':\u2022\u2022 'V - \u25a0.. \u25a0'       \u00bb l'\\ }  *\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized G.E. Dealer ' '\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0?\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nPHONE 260 NELSON, B.C. 574 BAKER ST.\nm\n: y\n,11.\n:y\n1\n________________\u25a0\n 8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 21,1948\nSeamen Contract\nTalks Continue\nMONTREAL, Oct 20 <CP)-Con-\nclliation proceedings between Canadian Seamen's Union (T.L-C.) and\nthe.Shipping Federation of Canada\naimed at a new contract are continuing in Montreal, a shipping official said today. Meanwhile, the old\ncontract which expired Oct 15 automatically remains in force.\nRaoul Trepanler of Montreal was\nappointed conciliator by the Federal\nLabor Department when.the Union\nand Federation representing owners\nof 140 deep-sea ships were unable to\nagree on details of a new contract\nThe shipping official said-the!bid\ncontract would remain in* force until\nthe conciliation proceedings had\nended. \u2022\u25a0-.\u2022\u25a0   \u2022\nChristopher Wren was the-architect who designed London's famous\nSt. Paul's Cathedral. 't'\u25a0'\u25a0-.\nBrightens your Furniture\n. * Brightens your Home\nA Waelfy shopping ani Information unlet lee today's women \u25a0\n\u2014 MONTREAL, Oct. 21st\u2014Here's a medicine^,\ncabinet \"must\" if ever I've, seen one! Something\nnew and wonderful in first aid dressings! Called\nDALMAS . . . it's ideal for bandaging cuts and\nblisters on hands or feet. Made of a paper-thin\nsubstance .'. . that's washable, waterproof, smooth, \u2022\ncan't' fray, stretches all ways rand is flesh-coloured,\nDalmas Dressings are inconspicuous and comfortable. They're*just what you've been looking for to\ncover cute and scratches, fbr you can apply them\nin a jiffy .. . then, because they're Vraterproof\u2014\nwash dishes\u2014peel potatoes\u2014just as if you'd never cut yourself at all!\nAsk your druggist for Dalmas Firet Aid Dressings to-morrow I\nllMm's A Toiro Treat In Stir* tor your family I, Four recent taste-,\ntests, two among dietitians, showed an overwhelming\npreference for HEINZ CREAM OF TOMATO SOUP\n\u00abver ita nearest competitor I, So why not give your\nfamily the taste-treat of this favourite brand?, . . .\ntry this tested recipe! ...... \u00bb'\n*-   -. TOMATO TOICATBLLI\nS eups cooked rice\n1 Ib.'saussse meat, browned and drained\n2 _ft-_r_n. onion, finely chopped\n1 10-oz. can Heinz Condensed Cream of Tomato Soup, undiluted\n3 tablespoons grated cheese\nArrange rice and sausage m-at ln alternate layers tn a greased cas-j\nMrol-T'Sp-lnltle each layer with Chopped onion. Pour In.Soup and\nsprinkle toi with grated cheese. Bake in a moderately hot oven (375\n\u00abfcg. T.) tor 30 minutes. Serves 4 to 8.\nWt X Good Idea to plan in advance for Hallowe'en celebra-\nJutt St-ly-Hro\nCoy. 'Til\nChristmas!\nyrhy not islig.\nlest a special\ngift from tht\nfamUy and to tht family this\nyear ... a rug\u2014a chair\u2014a table\n... something for your home that\n\u2022veiyone will enjoy? Gifts.'like*\nthis aren't bought with pin-money\n. . . best way I know to provide\nfor this payment is to open a\nSavings .Account at the BANK\nOF MONTREAL nowl The\nfriendly staff at your nearest\nB of M branch will gladly help\nyou open a Savings Account If\nyou already have an account you\noan start putting in money right\naway towaad your Family Christmas Gift I In fact, you'll find\na BofM Savings Account wonderfully helpful all year'round!\nWhat A Wonderful Way To Start\nTht Dayi Sit down\nto breakfast with the\nfragrance of just-\n\u25a0 made CHASE &\nSANBORN COFFEE to whet your\nappetite . . . and its\ntivid, lively flavour'to wake you\nup in a jiffy I Yes, folks who like\nREAL coffee make a breakfast-\ntime habit of Chase & Sanborn.\nIts honest-to-gbodness flavour is\nthe answer to its ever-increasing\npopularity. Just try itt .. . discover for yourself why so many\nfolks say ... \" Chase & Sanborn\nis REAL coffee!\"\ntions. And\nho re's a\n* flavour trick\"\nwith SHIRRIFF'S FLA-\nT-ptrttING EXTRACTS AND\nFOOD COLOURS that's bound\nto be the life of the Hallowe'en\nParty I Tots and teen-agers will\nbe thrilled by Taffy Apples fla*\n.\u25a0.bured with Shirriff's True. Peppermint And a dash of Shirriff's\nRed or Green Food Colour-will\nmake those yummy apples twice\nas exciting! Do the same .with -\nPopcorn Balls using Butterscotch\nflavouring for variety and -just\nlisten to those delighted kids! So\nshop now for Halloween, ~; and,\nremember\u2014with Shimff's.tri:help\nyou, you'll never beat a loss for\nthrilling desserts\u2014candies\u2014cakes\n_or puddings I ''\u00ab'-'-\nHero's A Beauty\nTip that's) fashion-\nwise _** .and\nbudget - perfect!\nPeggy Sage's\nFASHION. PINK\nSet with Lipstick\nahd Nail Polish...\"\n1.75 value\" for only 1551 You'll,\nwear Fashion Pink constantly; for\"\nit's loveljr with eveQtthing ..from\nsuits to. silks; And you'll love it\nfor its flattery ... for .Fashion\nPink \"Shimmer\" Lipstick,\u2022 with'\n\"Sheer\" or \"Regular\" Nail Polish to match will make you feel\nyour lovely best ... groomed to\nperfection!    'Ask' for\nprettiest\nPeggy Sage's Fashion Pink ISet\nat better, stores everywhere.-;\nWant Smootfto. Gravies . . . smoo-bth sauces? \u2022 Then\nBENSON'S CORN STARCH is just what you've been\nlooking fort It makes-the most marvelous gravies and\nsauces to melt in your mouth! Clip and save this sauce\nrecipe ...it will be a favourite! v..\nWHITE SAUCE . . . (Basic Recipe)\nbutter er other fat Sash pepper\n, Benson's Corn Starch       Dash Worcestershire Sauco\n1 tmn. salt 3 cups milk c \u25a0-\nMelt fat In saucepan; blend In Benson's Corn Starch and seas-  .'\nonlngs.  Let bubble over very low heat lor 3 minutes.   Add        '\nmilk slowly and cook until smooth and thick, stirring con'.        *\nstantly. ,\nSo Much Mon\nTime THlRlt\nAnd what a\nwonderful thing\nthis is when\nyou're holidaying in beautiful\n\u00ab\u00ab6.\nfn Octo-wr** CWIfy Weather your\nyoungsters' games\nof hide and seek\nare most often\nplayed indoors ...\nand more often\nthan not they're\nhard on your\nfurniture. But don't worry about\nstains on your best upholstery\nwhen ENERGINE will clean\nthem up in a jiffy I Yes, Energine\nis a good thing to have around.\nIt's \"death\" to grease stains and,\nat the same time, so wonderfully\ngentle with fabrics of all kinds...\ncleans dresses\u2014hate \u2014handbags\n\u2014rugs ; . -. without leaving telltale rings I That's why I urge you\nfo keep Energine op your handiest shelf\u2014at home or in the\noffice. It helps keep furniture and\n\"clothes spot-free and looking like\nnewi ,\nBermuda! More time tb bask in\nthe warm Bermuda sunt... mora\ntime to sail and bathe. You can\nfly non-stop to Bermuda by\nT.C.A.\"North Star\" ekyliner, iii\nless than five hours from Montreal, slightly over five hours from\nToronto. And what a wonderful\ntrip I . . . you'll be more than\npleasedjwthe TRANS-CANADA\nAIR LINES hospitality ... deli-'\ncious, complimentary, hot meals .\nserved aloft\u2014cards\u2014coc_#tils\nand the friendly service of attentive stewards and stewardesses.\nAnd\u2014remember\u2014when ybtt'rq\nplanning your Bermuda Holiday\n... T.C.A, fares are low .. .found\ntrip from Montreal, 1163 ...\nfrom Toronto, J162I _\nA Brisk Walk In Th* Autumn Mr... then home to\na steaming cup of creamy-rich cocoa\u2014that's my idea\nof a fine shortcut to a warm senpe of glowing contentment. But\u2014I insist on my cocoa being BAKER'S\nCOCOA I A rare blend of carefully selected cocoa\nbeans \u2014 and o\/i-so-skilful roasting \u2014produces Baker's\nsumptuous flavour and its glorious, red-brown colour.\nThis explains the better results you get when you use\nBaker's Cocoa in all cocoa recipes, too, Have a package of Baker's\nCocoa doing active service in vour kitchen .. .its uses are many and\nealitjying.\nVoted Most llfcofy Ts Succeed with the man-in-your-life . . . these\nnewsmaking socks of C-I-L nylon I He'll bo\nthoroughly impressed by them and so Will youl For\nthey're made of nylon staple\u2014-that, brand new\nfibre from which are being made the most wonder\nful sweaters, socks and suitings. It's light snd fluffy\n\u2014warm and comfortable. And, oi course, it has all\nthe beloved qualities of nylon\u2014extra strength,\ntoughness and abrasion resistance so the socks wear\nand wear! What's more, shrinkage worries are ended,\n\u2022ven after repeated washings. Look for these nylon' staple socks . .*\nwith the famous C-I-L nylon signature ., . \"I'abrie made of C-I-L-\nNylon Staple\"!* '..\u2022*-*'\u25a0 \"'.'   .\nBARCLAY ON BRIDGE\nBy Shepard Bare-ay\n\"The Authority on Authorities\" .\nDUMMY EMANCIPATED\nAT LAST the dummy Is realty\nIn the game. He has been eman-\n'clpated by the new Laws, which\ntook effect officially pn October 1,\nand now has many rights he did\nnot have before. It gives him an\ninterest In the game, and provisions regarding him follow the\nsame common sense lines as the\nwat of the new regulations.    .-,'-\nAs before.'tho dummy is supposed to lay down his hand after\nthe opening lead, then refrain\nfrom'comment and taking .any\nactive part in the play., But un>\nless he forfeits his rights, as he\n.does by looking; at any card in\nany other player's hand, he is allowed to give or obtain information as to fact or Law, question\nany player regarding a revoke,\n' draw attention to any irregularity, or try to prevent one, such as\na lead out of turn, by calling the\nplayer's.attention to tlie fact that\nhe Is apparently about to commit\none. '    '\u2022\u25a0 '\nIf the dummy, however, should\npurposely see any of tho cards of\nthe declarer or either defender,\nand thereafter is the first to draw\nattention to a defender's irregularity, the declarer may not enforce any penalty; If he warns\ndeclarer not to lead from the\nwrong hand, either defender may\nspecify tho hand from which the\ndeclarer shall lead; if he is the\nfirst to ask the declarer If a play\nfrom his hand is a revoke, and\nthc card In consequence is withdrawn,, either defender may require the declarer to substitute\nhis highest or lowest correct card.\nA card In any hand is played\nwhen named as the one its owner\nproposes to. play, unless its designation Is changed practically in\nthe same breath. A card hi any\nunfaced hand' is played when it\ntouches the table face upward\nafter being detached from the\nother cards with'apparent Intent\nto play; a defender's card so detached Is also played as soon as\nhis partner sees Its face. A card\nIn dummy or any other faced card\nIs played when touched unless for\na purpose other than play either\nmanifest Or mentioned. A played\ncard may not be withdrawn ex*\ncept ln compliance with Laws\ngoverning irregularities. >\n. If a defender prematurely leads\nto the next trick before hla partner .has played to .the current\ntrick, or plays out of rotation before his partner, has played, the\ndeclarer may require his partner\nto play his highest or lowest card\nof the led suit or, if unable to\nfollow suit, then a card of another specified suit except that if\ndeclarer haa played from both his\nholdings, either defender may\nplay.before his partner.       '\nAny lead out of turn may be\ntreated as a correct lead,'and\nmust be If the other side plays a\ncard before attention 1s called to\nthe 'Irregularity, If the declarer\nexposes his hand after an opening\nleftd by the wrong defender, and\nbefore dummy has spread any of\n'his hand, the dummy becomes the\ndeclarer. If either, defender requires declarer to retract his lead\nout of turn, the wrong card is\nreplaced and If declarer has led\nfrom the .wrong hand he must\nlead.from the correct hand apd,\nif he can, a card of the same suit\nA defender's drawing attention to\ndeclarer's' lead- out of turn is\nequivalent to requiring Its retraction.\n', If the declarer requires a defender to retract his lead out of\nturn, when it is declarer's lead\nthe card led becomes a penalty\ncard, and when It is the other defender's lead | the declarer may\ncither forbid the lead of that suit\nand allow the card to be picked\nup br else may treat the card as\na penalty card and allow any to\nbe led. A' lead or play slmultan-\neousijjr with another's proper lead\nor play is deemed to be subsequent, and if a defender leads or\nplays two or more cards simultaneously, he may play either and\n. the other becomes a penalty card.\n;,   :\u25a0- \u00ab*-*'*\u25a0\u25a0*\nTOMORROW\u2014Exposed and\npenalty cards\/ a defender's improper exposure of his hand, and:\nrevokes by the declarer or defenders. \u25a0''.-.'\u25a0 .\nNARROW ESCAPE FOR CHILD CAUGHT IN\nDERAIL; TRAIN STOPS JUST IN TIME\nREGINA, Oct-20 (CP) - Two-\nyear-old Freddie; Atherton; plays\nwithr his toy'; engine, looks at pictures - of r trains and - says he' likes\nthem..\nBut when he goes for a walk.wlth\nhis psrents near the railway line,\nhe draws back and says: \"I'm scared^ de\nMommle.\"       ' .-,-\n1 About - a month - ago, Freddie\nwandered, from his home to play\nIn a field'near a railway line.\nHe and two playmates'saw a\nhorse on the other 'side of, the\ntracks.    , ' - '\u25a0'\u00bb'  .'\nFreddie ran up the embankment\nto the tracks just as a.train was\napproaching.1 Signal operators in\nthe nearby, tower had just set the\napparatus In. motion to close' the\nderail mechanism to allow the train\ntb p'ass.-.thrcni'glu  '    < '.. \u2022_,, '.* ;,\u2022.\u2022'\nAt the ..moment \u25a0 the .mechanism\nwas el.6singjdn the track, Freddie\nplaced-his hand.'dawn.to.cllfyb oVer-.\nHis hand wasrcaught. The train\nkept coining. '    .\/-. \u25a0\nFreddie began to cry and his\nplaymates, screaming; ran to pry\nhim .loose. His mother, watching\nfrom their home hurried to .the\nscene.   ,\nShe, too, tried to get him loose.\nNeighbors gathered. Then an unl\n\" mtlfled youth ran toward the signal tower. \u2022\nHe yelled; \"A kid's caught in\nthc derail!\" The operators moved\nquickly.\n* The signal was thrown- against\nthe approaching train and the engine ground to a stop a Short distance; from. tl>e.child,-\nWhen yiali hand was released,\nFreddie .Was taken to hospital\nwhere it Was found the fingers were\ncrushed but the '.bodes rwere 'hot\nbrokeii.      -'.    \u25a0   -\"-,-::\u25a0\u25a0. ,':\u25a0;-\u25a0\u25a0\nFreddie Atherton' apprehensively\neyes his fingers, on'which the fingernails now are . growing back,\nwhen he goes near tho.'tracks now.\nand he says; \"I'm scared Mommle.\"\nDEATH FOR BUCK\nMARKET GOLD SALES\nSHANGHAI, Oct. 20, (AP)\u2014 Tha\nChinese Government today warned\nIt .would sentence to death \"anyone\nfound buying or selling gold or\nforeign currencies in the black\nmarket\" \u25a0 -. i MN\/gll\nPolice Trereiiig \u25a0   $>.<;\u2022\nReport of; '\nWoman Screaming\nK_TCHENER,:Ont; b.qt i20 (CP)-\nThe case of the missing woman took\na new turn today, with almost continual police ,*. questioning of William Stuart.       \u2022 -.        ,-,'\u2022\nStuart, held on a chargei of public\nmischief In connection with the. disappearance Sept.-13 of Mrs.' Emma\nPohl, was questioned' for the-second\ntime after police were-informed a\nreceipt bearing the woman's signature was ft forgery. ....'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n.Stuart, questioned for more than\n20 hours rby police, was reported to\nhave broken into uncontrolled fits\nof sobbing this afternoon .When con.\nfrbntedby-hls brother John,.brbught\nfrom -Gait by .Kitchener pplice.   -.\nAmong innumerable jrunibrsi police were, running down (was a rer\nport that-a woman's screams were\nheard coming from a nearby woods\nShout five weeks ago A man and\nwoman Were supposedly seen in the\narea previously.. , ,--\nWALE8 ON CELLULOID\nCARDIFF, Wales ,(CP)r\u2014 .Wales\nIs becoming popular as a background for United.Kingdom films.\nWith, the release.of films';now in\nADMITTED FOUR BECAUSE\nFELT THEY'D BE ASSET:\n'-'\u25a0 EDMONTON, Oct 20 (CP)-He-\nsources Minister MacKinnon said today the Government had handled in\na routine way the admission to Canada of four French citizens accused\nof wartime collaboration with the\nGermans.     r\nMr. MacKinnon said. they were\nadmitted because \"as is found- ln\nmany cases,\" it was believed they\nwould be found of value to Canada.\n- The minister said Immigration authorities had no. proof that the men\nwere convicted collaborationists.\nMONTREAL, Oct, 20 (CP) \u2014\nJulien G. Labedan, one of the four\nFrench' \"political refugees\", admitted to Canada by a special order-\nin-council of the Federal Cabinet,\nhas lost his job in Montreal, it was\nlearned today. .   --'.''\u25a0\u25a0'.\nA notice,of dismissal was- given\nhim by his employer Monday. An\nexpert cabinet-maker and interior\ndecoratbr, Labedan had been employed by the Stoll Furniture Company here since last June.\nproduction film-goers all. over the\nworld will glimpse its rugged scenery, listen to its miners singing, and\nget an insight into the grimmer side\nof pit life. \"-\nBespits the stern warning, seer\ntrading in U.S. currency' remaini\nbrisk. The gold yuan, China's ne\ncurrency, was quoted at nine to r\nU.S. The official rate is four to on\n. The crackdown wai announced 1\nMai. Gen. Chiang Ching-kuo, si\nof President Chiang Kai-shek.,\nGood Omen lor\n': \u201eBy The Canadian Press\nStock markets qo'ntinued their\nOctober advance Tuesday as trading rqlled along at a,steady clip.\nWhat traders ^consider a\u00bb good\nomen\u2014upturn .inCprices 'as volume\nexpands\u2014was evident in the two\ntrading days to date this week.\nEavorabW corporation .news has\n\u2022helped \"the improvement These 'to'\nprovementj' in1' particular*; groups\nwhen corporate neWs was received\nmight be attributed to short-term\ntraders. :\u25a0\u25a0'\u2022 -.- \u2022' - ,.\n\u25a0 Many observers maintain that the\nmarket must obtain the confidence\nof -the public .before the present\nsteady climb can be accelerated. -\nMonday was a strong dayin New\nYork, with volume exceeding 1,000,-\n000 shares but: some observers, it\nappears that the public did not\nmove into the;market yesterday as\naction was fitful and volume was-\nexactly the -same. However, the\nslow rise continued.\nIn Toronto,' 'trading climbed\nsteadily yesterday to 1,246,Q00\nshares, highest since early September and the industrial component\nof the exchange's index showed i\ngood gain over the two days. Spe\ncl'altles were'in-the Ihnelight in\nTuesday's trading with several Issues touching new highs.\nGrain markets showed a slightly\neasier tone. Cotton futures .closed\n35 .cents a bale higher to 15, cents\nloWer. \"'-,_-.    -:'.\nFamily Ties to\nBe Strengthened\nBn Welfare Plan\nOTTAWA, Oct\u00bb20,'(CP) \u2014 The\nCanadian Welfare Council ls taking\nsteps to strengthen .those family ties.\nE. E. McEwen, Secretary of the\nRecreation Division, Canadian Welfare Council, announced today that\nan institute on family recreation'\nwill be held in Montreal next March.\nIt is designed to.counteract the.tendency of community recreation programs to pull families apart\nBy working out designs for recreation of families as Units, and promoting these through community\nbodies and parents, the section hopes\nto Increase recreation of a sort that\nwill help weld famllies.more closely\ntogether.        , .   ;.\nAtlantic No. 3\nKeeps Up Struggle\n-EDMONTON, Oct 20 (CP) \u2014\nThere's still a flicker of life in Atlantic No. 3.\nThe Rogue *Well of the Leduc\nfield, which made life miserable for\noil men over a six-month period\nwith its uncontrolled production and\nfinally erupted In flames for three\ndays last month, now is. passively\nresisting efforts to seal it off permanently. ':.\nOil workers have tried repeatedly\nto plug the well with cemdht in the\nhope. Of stopping, circulation of oil.\nEvery time they drill out their\npti!gis,'they find the oH still flowing, \" \u25a0*;\niCompany officials haye long since\nabandoned hope of bringing the\nwell into production because of its\n.unruly performance since it sprayed\noil and gas over a wide area, last\nMarch. Later, ground faults, developed and the area was* saturated\nwith surface oil. setting the stage\nfor.the spectacular fire whltfi' broke\nout last Labor Day.'\n' Now officials will be'happy to\nchoke off the well permanently and\nget oft with production in the rest\nof the rich Leduc field.\nFRENCH SURGEON\nWANTS TO STAY\nIN CANADA\nTb^jONTiQ. Oct 20 (CP) \u2014 The\nGlobe and .Mail, in a telephone interview \\vJUx _3r. Andre Emmanuel\nBoussat, ohe of the central figures\nin Canada's \"immigrant collaborators\" case,'today quoted the 45-year-\nold French surgeon as saying he\nwished to remain in the Dominion,\nbecome a citizen and work hard.\nppe bf: four French -immigrants,\naccused.of being;Nazi collaborators\nbut permitted ito remain in- Canada,\nDt.; 'Boussat' said \u2022 in the interview\nthat * the'-, \"legitimate\" French Government had' no interest In extradition of the quartet. The accusations\nagainst them \"probably came from\nMaurice*'Thorez, French Communist leader.\"' \"<>' i . '\n; \"'\"Were, you a collaborator?\" Dr.\nBoussat was asked.\n\u2022 .-'fAbsolutely not,'V he replied.\n\"How did these accusations originate?!* ',,, \"ff    ..\n\"The Communist considered all\nantirCommunists to be collaborators,\" Dr. Boussat said.\nAsked if he would follow the ad\nvice of Francisque Gay, French Ambassador in Ottawa, tbat the four\nmen return to France to defend their\nhonor, Df. -Boussat replied. \"All\nwant to do is remain here, become\na Canadian citizen and work hard;\nI don't want to take any part in\npolitics.\"'\" \u00bb\nIGNORANT OF PLOT      '\nTOKYO, Oct. 20 (AF)-President\nSyngham Rhee of South Korea landed here safely today for a courtesy\ncall on General MacArthur without\nknowing, about a dynamite plot\nagainst his life ln Seoul. ,   ,,\nSeoul's police chief, Kim Tal Sun,\nwaUed until Dr. Rhee reached Tokyo in MacArthur's -.plane \"Bataan\"\nto tell of the discovery of 60 pounds\not dynamite planted under the road\nleading from the presidential mansion, fit .was detected before Rhee\nleft fot'^bkyo this morning.\n '&m\nigers Nab Boxla\nitle, Win 3 Straight\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\n3'anadlan Press 8taff Writer    .\nToronto, Oct. 20 (CP) -j a\ntry book final stretch drive to-\njht gave Hamilton Tigers their\nibnd Canadian senior lacrosse\nle when they defeated New\nsktmlnBler Adanacs 12-8. Tigers\nott.d Adanacs, defending.chain-\n...faster wan\n''  *^r  <r-    *''y\"   .\nZip .... and the handy new\nllette Blade Dispenser deals\nt a Gillette Blue Blade, un-\napped and ready for your\ntor. Edges are protected pertly. THe ; Dispenser costs\nthing eitra. You pay only for\nblades,   .i    \"'<\nplons, the first two games and\nroared baok to take the Jiext\nthree.\nAdanacs rap Tigers into the\nground in the first two games,' 11-0\nand 13-11, with flashy last quarter\ndrives, and lt appeared to be all\nover until Hamilton started to roll.\nThe Tigers checked the speedy\nWesterners to a standstill to take\nthe third game 12-7, made it 9-7 In\nthe fourth and climaxed their comeback with a spine-tingling victory\ntonight ' ' i,. ;'\u2022 :   ,  .\nTIE UPCHAMP8 '     ,      >\nThey spotted Adanacs a four-goaf!\nfirst-quarter lead and then< to tho\naccompaniment of roars frpm the\nlargest crowd of' the series1 \u2014 7750\u2014\nwhipped, in four goals to Adanacs\none in the second quarter and out-\nscored the plucky champions by a\nfour-to-one margin in the third.\nThe crowd expected a New Westminster outburst In the (final 15\nminutes, but the Eastern champions,\nplaying a steady, heads-up game;\nbottled Adanacs up ln their own\narea and whipped ln four goals in\nless than four minutes tb put the\ngame,on Ice. .       !\nAt the final whistle, the partisan\ncrowd rose to Its feet and sheered\nthe . newly \u2022 crowned    champions\nwhile  Lyle  Barr of  Vancouver,\nPresident of the Canadian Amateur -Lacrosse   Association   presented tho Mann Cup to playing\ncoach Jo$ Cheevers. Tigers, who\nwon the. Cup   In  1983 .gathered\naround' their.  24-year-old; goalkeeper whose brilliant play was a\nbig factor In their triumph.\nTigers, whose average age is 27,\nwere given little chance in pre-\nserles betting against their younger\nopponents but they made up for\nthis with their heavy body checking. They \"laid Into\" Adanacs with\nhard checks and slowed them to a\nwalk..-.      '''.'\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0'.\nMerv McKenzie, on the Tiger\ndefence, paced Hamilton, to their\ndeciding game, victory with three\ngoals. Tommy Love and Blain McDonald each scored two and George\nMasters, Al Doyle, Joe Cheevers, Al\nPowers and Bill Isaacs accounted\nfor the others.' \u25a0 : i,\n, Arnie Fergusson led Adanacs with\na two goal effort Others were\nnetted by Sam' Kabatow, Darryl\nPopham, Whltey Severson, Ralph\nMourn, Ralph Douglas ' and Frfed\nDouglas.\nSASKATOON, Oct 20 (CP) -\nLethbridge Maple Leafs scored their\nsecond, victory ta three. Western\nCanada . Senior Hockey League\ngames tonight when they topped the\nhapless Saskatoon Quakers 5-3 for\nthe Saskatchewan team's, fifth\ndefeat in as many games.\nockey Tickets\n\"horo Aro Still Stfmc Choice Seats Available for\nSEASON TICKETS\nIS Games $16.00\nTICKET SALE DAILY\n10:00 A.M. \u2014 6:00 P.M.\nCIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\nLeaf guardian\nPrime favorite - ot Nelson fans for\nmahy a season is back- in his old\nstand, between,tho goal pipes of the\nNelson Maple Leaf Hockey Club.\nSeaby, work horse of past seasons,\nthis year has a promising stand-in\nin youthful' Jimmy Heuston.r Lineups for Saturday night's..Western\nInternational Hockey. League curtain-raiser for home fans has. not\nyet been announced. I h\nSeaby has been in Nelsoh' since\ntjie 1937-38 season. . '\nGarden Throws\nind Jacobs\nmmihhL\nBy .GAYLE TALBOT\nNEW YORK, Oct. 20 (AP)\nPowerful Madison Square Garden\nthrew its corporate strength squarely behind Mike Jacobs today'ln the.\nlatter's gathering struggle to retain\nhis boxing monopoly against the\nchallenge Ot the Tournament of\nChampions. '-'..\n'Ned Irish, Garden Vice-President,\nsaid today Jacobs' 20th Century\nClub would be backed, ta its battle\nagainst any opposition \"to the limit'\nof the Garden's resources \u2014 which\nare considerable.\"   .    *'\nBy coincidence (or perhaps not)\nthe pledge came the day before the\nrival Tournament pf Champions\nholds Its first indoor show tomorrow\nnight at Jersey City between Tippy\nLarkin and Charley Fusari.\n8HOT IN ARM\nThe occasion was a luncheon in\nhonor of Harry Markson, just appointed managing director of the\n20th Century in an obvious effort\nto inject new life- Into an outfit\nwhich has been .somewhat moribund since Jacobs, himself, became\nill two Winters ago.   \u25a0\/\nMarkson, getting away fait said\nhe was launch Ing an' elaborate\n' scheme to Import a shipload of\nthe most promising fighters In\n'. Europe.    ,    .\nOne reason for the sudden burst\nof activity Is believed to be the\n- report that television and radio\n-Interests, representing big money,\n\u25a0 are, on the point of buying eon-,\ntrolling  -Interest    In   the   noW\nTournament of Champions.\n\"We probably * could, get along\nwithout boxing\" Irish said. \"That is,\nso far as revenue is concerned. But\nit means a great deal to the Garden\nlh prestige.' And the man we want\nto promote fights in tbe Garden ls\nMike Jacobs,\"\n'   JER8EY fclTY, Oct 20 (AP) \u2014\n\" The  Toiinament 'of   Champions,\nnewest threat, to   Mike* Jacobs'\nfight empire, opens in ambitious\nWinter program tomorrow night\nwith   h   Tippy    Larken-Charley\nFusari   10-round   scrap   at   the\nJersey City Armory.\n.Unable to locate in-New York\nbecause no sizable arena was available, the, T. ot C. drew up .plans\nfor a series of Indoor shows at the\n43,000-capacity Armory.  The ohly\nother bout announced io date will\nsend   Ray,  Robinson,   the   welter\nchampion, against Steve, Bellolse in\nan over-weight scrap Dec. 2..\nRobinson has said he will' give\nthe Thursday winner a crack at his\n147-pound crown.;' *,        '\u25a0\nStrikes and Spares\nMIXED LEAGUE, 'i \u25a0'  ;,\nNELSON MACHINERY\u2014D. Johanson 305; H, Miller 622; T. Steeves\n212; M. Browne 434; J.rGentles '\"\nTotal\u20142062.\nJONELLAS NO.' 1 \u2014 L. Jeffery\n395; N.' Beresford 427; M. Maco 331;\nH. -Jeffery 431; B. Beresford 368;\nlow score 369. Total-:-232i.\nJONELLAS NO 2-T. Bittman\n407; J. Belanger 452;JG. McCulloch\n'440; Cartwright 403; E. Bringsli 514;\nlow score 612. -Total\u20142828.  ,\nMAD HATTOiRS-G. Macrone 675;\nB. Daynard 554; D. Norfield 550; P.\nPaleck 570; R. Ro\u00abs.66f|. Total\u20143018.\nSPIERS\u2014M. Bringsli 352; M. Haggart 419; L. Woods 625; low score\n276; low score 276. Total\u20141948.\nDEMONS \u2014 K. Forbes 421; H\nForbes 283; J.. Morgan 559; H. Morgan 399; E. Bereau 383; low score\n78. Tbtal\u20142.23.\nMUSTANGS-B. Kelly 821; L.\nGri 452; M, Potter 445; B. Moore\n458; low score 498. Total\u20142674.\nB.T.O.'S-A. Kelly 407; J. Was'\nsick 377; J. Brown 498; B, Phillips\n554; V. Delucrezio, 550; low score\n147. Total\u20142533.    ,\nVAN DE CAMPS-C. Beresford\n326; F. Gill 489; L. Koehle 582; F.\nBeresford 689; G. Gill 503. Total\u2014\n2589.      .  \u2022\"\u25a0'\u25a0 ,-\u25a0\u2022   \u25a0-,.\nFLYING SAUCERS\u2014J.. Morris\n469; A. Hinton 303; D. Ward 467; E.\nHughes 345; J. Butler 543; Ibw score\n450. Total-2577. fTfS-' -\nCARRIERS \u2014'P^ Myers 536; A.\nMyers 588; I, Myers 456; G. Phillips\n457; low score 406; low score 156.\nTotal 2599.\nBOMBERS\u2014I. Nadeau 534;- M,\nPeters 456; G. Nadeau 430; C. Peters\n5J3; M, Irvine.485.*Total-^2458.\nDON BLACK OUT\nCLEVELAND, Oct 20 (AP)\u2014With\na grin that looks a lot like old times.\nDon Black,.Cleveland Indians pitch-\ner, says he'll be released from hospital Sunday> He has been, ln bed\nnearly six weeks with a brain haemorrhage suffered during a game with.'\nSt. Louis'Browns. *'   > !\nDon't sell the Nelson Maple Leafs\nshort on the showing ot tbe first\ntwo games at Spokane. On the play\nit was six to one, halt a dozen'to\nthe other in the first game, and in\nthe second match .Nelson had a\nwide margin ot play. True, Nelson\ndidn't' win either, but both were\nwlthlti their grasp. -\nBill Sneider, ' former Nelson\nwinger, did, some fine sniping to\nturn the tide In.the first endoun-\nter. He has. a fast low shot for\nthe corner,, and It's a weak spot\nfor any goalie.\n-McBride, Rouse and Sneider are\nthe Spokane Flyers', punch line.\nThey are shifty. And this man Rypien Is good, too. Hughio Scott Is\nalready in top speed, but Seaby beat\nhim on the' two chances when he\ngot through alone. Petrucci, high\nscorer of last year's Spokane team,\nlooks sluggish yet, ond was unimpressive in both games. But he will\nbear watching before' long.\nNadeau is being used on the wing\nInstead of defence. Curillo is back\nIn Nadeau's old position. Ha looks\nmuch like Blackett but is more aggressive. Scoop Bentley has had\nlittle practice to. date, but is undoubtedly the mainstay of the Spokane defence. When they are a man\nshort out trots Scoop'Uke Horatius\nat the bridge. Hamilton Is the other\nguard, a six-foot-three-inch . stripling. He has managed that growth in\n19 years, and should be quite a boy\nwhen he gets through growing.\nThere were two main reasons for\nNelson losing the second game,' First,\nthe fefereelng is'definitely not of\n.the best, for the two Spokane officials have little experience, and\nthey are inclined to be inconsistent.\nHowever, disregarding that angle,\nthe Leafs could still'have pulled the\nfat out'of the fire if they had minded the defensive chores. Goals were\ncoming fairly, easily arid the boys\ngot point-hungry, and.left the back\nchecking to the othert-fellow. -Al-\nways a bad idea, .tbr.it. is never\ndone ss well,      ,\nVICKERS OFF TO\nGOOD 8TART\nBill Vlckers, away to an .energetic\nstart this year, looks more like the\nman Who scored four goals against\nTrail in a playoff game; and'was\nsetting Haldane up for some fine\nplays. Willy was roaring ln on Kneeshaw like a migratory Jackrabbit\nout for Spring exercising. Bill was\nas slow as a furrow horse in the\nfirst game, but in the second he\nlooked more like the fattest man* in\nthe League.\nKilpatrick did some smart playing,\nand with Roy Allen ond Johnny\nFargher made an impressive line:\nAllen-tahgled With\" McBride- thd\nthey rolled on the ice long enough\nfbr Roy to mutter: \"Huhl-A pro 1rbm-\nthe Coast, eh? 'Think yOU're: going\nto teach us something.\", Fargher had\nhis picture in the Spokane program\nwith his hair all nicely combed. If s\na fact You could hardly recognize\nhim. He thought he was the prhjia\ndonna of the evening, and at one\nstage managed to sit ort Sonny Bar-\nchyn's lap. He stayed, much longer\nthan Sonny wanted him, a faint\nMona Lisa smile haunting bis lips.\nNeil- McClenaghan got Nelson's\nfirst counter and it was a proud\nmoment for the newly risen junior.\nNesta Ragon, another one to become of age, got a smart one in. the\nsecond.game. Ne stepped out bf a\nmaelstrom of human bodies, grabbed a loose puck and Calmly picked\na high corner on Kneeshaw.- Bill\nToshack is likely to be a favorite\nwith the Nelson fans. He is- fast,\ntakes and gives with equal abandon, and altogether is a most businesslike performer. Fred, Nelson is\na good acquisition to the defence.\nHe can hit hard; and he breaks fast.\nBuffaloes Set Back\nNative Sons 5-1\nCALGARY, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014.Calgary Buffaloes romped to a decisive\n5-1 victory over the highly favored\nLethbridge Native Sons tonight in\nthe Alberta debut of the' newly-\norganized 'Western Canada Junior\nHockey League, ' i ''   .\nBruins Lace\nr n\u201e * vaA:\nBOSTON, Oct. 20 (AH)^-Boston\nopened their 25th National Hockey\nLeague home season tonight by\ndrubbing Chicago Black Hawks 8-3,\nbefore a near capacity crowd.of\n13,000 at the.Boston Barden. Ed\nSandford and Grant Warwick each\nscored twice as the Bruins kept\nGoalie \"Sugar Jim\" Henry under\nheavy tire from start to finish.\nFirst;period\u20141, Boston, Warwick\n(Crawford, Sandford) 3:03; 2, Boston, Sandford 11:42.\nPenalties\u2014Nattrass (2), Babando,\nEgan, Gadsby, Flamon, .Pierson.\nSecond perlod^-A- Bdrion, Pierson (Ronty, Smith) 7:52; 4, Chicago,\nConacher (Bentley) 12:05; 5, Boston, Peters (Egan) 12:26; 6, Boston,\nSandford (Babando) 13:05; 7, Boston, Smith (Pierson, Ronty) ,17:13.\nPenalties\u2014Nattrass, Dumart, Gee,\nHenderson.\nThird period\u20148, Boston, Kryzan-\nowski (Schmidt) 8:44; 9, Chicago,\nBentley (Gee) 12:41; 10, Chicago,\nConacher (Bentley) 14:07; 11, Boston, Warwick (Sandford)  18:06.\nPenalty\u2014Pierson,\nBetter Golf\n;  -By SAfe'SNEAD.' \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 21,1948 \u2014 9\n\u25a0t-.t_.iua mrs\nTOO \u00abOOM-\n-AUilklC,\nSUM\nWalker Wins\nKlmberley\nGoHTltle\n\u25a0 I \u2022    \u25a0  r        > v    ... 1\nKIMBERLEY, B, C,,-0ct. 20-The\nBingay Cup, emblematic of the\nmen's golf championship ta the\nKimberley Club,, was won by F.\nWalker, runner-up being- G. Bowman. , *,.\u25a0\u2022 \":\nFlight winners were F. Fergie;\nfirst; R. Harris, runner-up; F.\nHolmes, second; A. Graham, runner-\nup; W. L. Clark; third; H. Coombs,\nrunner-up; P. Burnett, fourth;' N.\nAtked, runner-up; E. E. Gullle, fifth;\nD. Taylor,, runner-up; P. Bloomer,\nsxth; and J.' Wightman, seventh.\nNow Just what causes the golf\nball to hook and slice? The most\nastonishing'revelation, I think, of\nall-' the astonishing facts which\ncame to light in the scientific researches was the revelation that a\nforce not heretofore known to exist in relation-to. the golf swing\ncauses the ball to Veer off its direction . line. This force is the, power\nbi the clubhead; as generated within the clubhead and the manner in\nwhich you cause this power- to be\napplied to tbe ball. This phase of\nthese researpl.es* requires on indiv-\ndivldual .discussion, which will be\ngiven in subsequent articles,- because of its importance in what\nmust become ait entirely new range\not golfing principles. Meantime, I\ngive you this promise: Electrifying\nknowledge about stroking.the golf\nball will reveal itself if you practice\nthe principle of- evert',pressure\nthroughout the forward swing, because perfect acceleration Is the\nonly possible meshs by which-the\nenormous clubhead can be generated; and perfect acceleration results from even pressure.\nOFFER\u2014Placing the ball forward orback of a center line between your feet for different shots\nis explained in a monograph called\n\"Relation; of Ball to Stance\"; Just\nenclose a 4c stamped, self-addressed\nenvelope\" fbr reply, plus 4c to cover\nhost of handling. .    \u25a0\nKimberley's First\nBoxing Card\nKIMBERLEY, B;C, Oct. 20-The\nstage Is set tor the first Winter\namatetir boxing card at McDougall\nHaU Friday, featuring a bout between N. Osofeet Kimberley, and\nH. Natche\", battling logger-from\nCreston. -r '\n'Good supporting bouts have also\nbeen arranged; including .one by the\ntwo youngest boxers to the Kootenays,' the  Frederikson   twins   of\nTrait-.!';., I')'!.' \u2022 -*      . ;   .\nAdded features are a ballanclng\nact.by \"Bill\" Wilcox, physical dlrec\ntor; blindfold boxing ond a number\nof musical'selections.      \u25a0 *'\u25a0\u201e\u25a0    --,..\nH. Stanton is promoter of the affair ahd hopes to select some of the\nboys to meet Murdo Morrison's Trail\nboxers later in.the season.\nA number of cards will be held\nduring the year when tbe Dynamiters are on the road. Proceeds of\nFriday's meet will go toward purchase ol boxing equipment  j\nOn July 1 the local boxers realized the sum of $131 from a big\ncard, which was donated to the\nMayor's Flood Relief Fund.'  . .\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES    -\nAtrial Larder r, , *.\u201e*,\nAnglo-Hurpnian  *;_.\u201e._.'..\u00a3.:.'\nArmistice - .\u25a0...r.r._..j___,_.-_ *.\nAubelle    _..\u201e.\u201e.;..\u201e__*__. .\nAumaque   ..,...,\u25a0\u2014 \u25a0\u25a0&\u00a3_,.\u201e*i.\u00ab_\nAUnor -. .- .__._;..*____..\nBase Metals Mining   .........\nBevcoiirt ...i.\"....^._\nBoycon         ,*-\u00bb\u201e. \u2022\nBralorne -  :__\u00ab___; t-\nBroulan  ..r...._...v...._.\u2122_^u~. .\nBuffalo Ankerite ..u._^i'i.*..A'\nBufadison\n.18%\n8.65\nmvt\u2022\n.12-\n.18\n8.30\niflVt\n. .20\n.03H.\nT.20\n.30\n-.05.   ,\n.19    .\nBuffalo Red Lake .__...._._     ,09\nCastlerTrethewey. '\u201e.i^___    1,70   i\nCentral Patricia  __*...:~.~    L25   .\nCentremaqu* ...'., ..... '\u25a0*.     SXVs\nCochenour\"*.' 4.._.j._ - 2.05   '\u2022\nColpmac .Yellowknlfe \u2014 .05V4\nConiaurum Mines          SO\nConsolidated M & S ...... 121.00   '.\nCdnwest !. \u201e.    1.12\nCrolnor   ...,..._  ^ \u2022   .4iy\u00ab\nDelAite \/... ...._.__    1.23\nDickenson Red Lake ...._._      .57 .'.'\nDiscovery r..........^Ji   '  SB\nDiversified    _-.._      .40\nDpme Mines . **-*- i,-'ft,n;,   15.00\nDonalda    \u2014\u2014 -. \u25a0    .6H4\nDuquesne\nBRITISH RUGBY\nLONDON, Oct 20 (Reuters)-Re-\nsuits of rugby matches-played in\nthe United Kingdom today!: '-s!-f' \"\nRUOBY UNION \u25a0   .'\nCOUNTY CHAMPIONSHIP   *\nHampshire: 26, Sussex 11.\nNorth Midlands 9, -East Midlands\n17.      \u25a0    . ...*\u25a0 \u25a0       .-\u2022 .-\u25a0-,\u2022-  -.-\nCOUNTY MATCH\nEastern Counties 21, Kent 3.\nRUQBY LEAGUE\nAUSTRALIAN TOUR\nWiginJO Australians IL  '\nfights\nBy The Associated Press: -\nHARTFORD, Conrt.-WilUe Pep,\n127%, Hartford, outpointed Johnny\nLarusso, 134, New York ,10 (non-\ntitle).\nLOS ANGELES\u2014Enrique Bolart-\nos, 135, Mexico' City, stopped\nJohnny \"Honey Boy\" ' Williams;\n136%, New York, 7. r :;    ,':.'\u2022: :...'\nPORTLAND, Ore. \u2014 Joe Kahut,\n186, Woodburn, Ore., outpointed\nJoey Maxim, 183, Cleveland, Is.\"\nJERSEY CITY, NJ.'\u25a0\"- .* Rocky\nGraziano, 183%, New York,.vahd\nDom Youbella, 165, Poughkeepsle,\nN.Y., boxed ..-round exhibition.\n^p#\nOptical Service\nin Spokane\nWashington Optical\nEyesight Specialists\nDR. D. C. MURPHY and ASSOCIATES\nPhone MAin 3537\nONE DAY 8ERVICE\nSPOKANE, Wash.\nCorner Sprique and Wall\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Uquqr'C6htro{\n;' \u25a0;\u25a0'   .     Boerj or by the Government of British Columbie.    ...  '\nThere's a \"holiday-cruise\" atmosphere about jronr     \u2022*.\ntrip to Europe by 'White Empress.... a full week\nof relaxing comfort afloat... pleasant companions -.\nii; traditional Canadian Pacific courtesy and\nservice.\nAUTUMN SAILINGS from Montreal and\nQuebec to Liverpool hy the^ completely reconditioned 20,000 ton Empress of Canada and Empress '\u25a0\n<^ France-  Tint  class   return  accommodation\navailable. V\n'        Nov. 6 ___.EMPRESS OF CANADA\nNov. 13 ...EMPRESS OF FRANCE\nNev.87 EMPRESS OF CANADA\nWINTER SAILINGS from SAINT JOHN and\nHALIFAX* to LIVERPOOL\nD\u00ab_ '\u2022;.....,..EMPRESS OF FRANCE\nOee. M. ...EMPRESS OF CANADA\n-.-':       Jan.-5...,.....EMPRESSiOF FRANCE\n'From Halifax ono day loloi\nr-. :.-.   . *     FlntCla\u00ab\u00ab......i._.\u201e.....$8iOup\n'\"'TcmM..\u00bb....\u00bb\u2014.-\u00bb...$15Jup   -.\n' Frequent sailings by Canadian Pacific's passenger-\ncarrying freighters Bcaverford and Beaverburn. tt\ndates on request. .       .        ..-'r'\u25a0\nFirst class fare $220.        ,   .\nFull Information From Your Own Travel Agent or\nG. E. COSTELLO, Canadian Pacific Steamships,\nr Canadian Pacific Station, Vancouver, B.C. . \"\n&MJUn9ad\n^Ess:\ny9cc^y_r_?s^_v?c_rss3rsx^\n-East Amphl  .,;,*\u201e ,-\nEast Malartie ______\nEast Sullivan ._\u201e\u201e,__,\nElder  :._'..\t\nEldona  ....;.\". .'; _\nFalconbrldge Nickel .\nFrobisher ..: .-. r,\nGiant Yellowknlfe _\nGod's Lake.Gold ......\nGold Eagle ...:.' !__:\nGolden Arrow .\nGolden Manitou\nHard Rock Gold\nHarker Go.d .....\nKarriCana\t\nHeva Cadillac\nHollingcr   .......\nHudson. Bay M & S\nInt Nickel \u201e,_\nInt Uranium\nJack Waite ...,\nJoliet Quebec\nKerr-Addison\nKirklond Lake\nLabrador\nLake Shore Mines\nLamaque Gold ._\nLingman Lake ...\nLittle Long Lao _\nLouvicourt\nMaeasaa  ...\nMacDonald\nMacLeod Cockshutt. i\nMadaeh Red Lake   \"'\nMal'attlc-'Gold'I\", ..*.\nMcIntyre-Porcupine:.\nMcKcn_le Red Lake *.\nMcMarmac\nNegus  ...,.':.'...\nNew Bidlamogua ..__.\nNoranda     M >\u25a0 _ i\nNormetal       ' \u2022 \"tidpf\nOmnitron_ Ex\nPaymaster    \u25a0   aaKKfai.   . .so\nPerron Gold 3jfc.-,   -'2\nPickle Crow OoM S.0J.\nPowell Rouyn Gold ,~-^_      .10,\nReeves MacDonald _____   .2.30\nPreston East Dame..i,~i...\". J3Q,\nQueenston  \/ ,42..\n(Suemont ,;...:.i^_  liSrOO\"\nSan Antonio Gold ,r__    3.85\nSen Rouyn    *    .49\nSherritt Gordon ..._.     2.43.\niSladeh* Malartic  r.u .'... -   .24-\nStadacona   .:.'. , .,...     .61.\nSteep Rock  .....r..i^;\u201e.    1.^0\nTaku River Gold Mlnes>..      .26-\nTeck-Hughes Gold ......;.    2.53\nToburn Gold Mines ....._.,... .   .!>4\nUpper Canada \u201e......'..^.'_'   1.58\nSprinegr   ; ...__    1.50\nVentures: .'...,. ,_........'...-     6.00\nWalte Amulet ___\u00a3__.\u2022:    '.94\nWright 'Hargreaves  J___t_5   \"235\n6IL8,^\nBritish American  ... .   24.00\nBritish Dom*.. _. \u2022    il\nImperial ...\u25a0 ';*,;,'__\u25a0_.   19.25\nInter Petroleum..'....-' j .. , 13.50\nMid Continent  i\\   , .06V\nRoyalite  ,...:...: 4^\u2014' 26r00\nUnited ___________   ' .09-\nINDUSTRIAL8      <\nAbiilbi Power\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian Traction .\nBrewers & Dist _\t\nB C Power B ..........\nB CPUlp\nBurns and Co Class A ...__\nBurns and Co Class B\t\nCan Brew  .'.. i_\nCan Celanese ....._......_...__...\nCan Cement  \u201e.: i^HL.\nCan Ind Alcohol\nCan Malting\nCan Packers A ...\nCan Pac Railway\nCoast Copper \t\nCockshutt Plow '.\nCons-Paper ;\nDist Seagrams \t\nDom Textile\nFord ot Canada A .\nGatineau'  i\t\nGen Steel wares\nFanny Farmer _\nGypsum Lime ..\nHiram Walker\nImperial Oil \t\nImperial Tobaeco\nInter Nickel ._\t\nLoblaw A\nMassey Harris ...\nMcColl Front\t\nMoore Corp  \u201e\nPage Hershey ._.\nPowell River __.\nPower Corp ........\nShawinigan \t\nSteel rot Canada\nUnited Stel \t\n_____\n16.45\n43.50\n20.25\n14.00\n3.25\nJB2.50\n30.50'\n. 18.65,\n20.65\n.87-00\n21.13\n13.25\n47.00\n33.00\nW.45\n_*-.75\n12.50\n20.00.\nM.M\n11.25\n.75\n'.25\n14.25\n.7.00\n16.50\n.60\n19,15\n12.85 -\n30.25\n26.75\n22.65\n18.75\n71.00\n38.00\n43.75\n16.65\n23.75\n79.50\n;7.25\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINfit. (\nBayonije. \t\nBralbfne _..._.\t\nCanute\nCariboo Gold\t\nGrandvlew  \t\nHedley Mascot...._...'....\nHighland Bell\t\nKootenay Belle ...._._.\nPend Oreille\t\nPioneer Gold\t\nQuatsino _......'... ~\nReeves MacDonald .....\nSheep Creek \t\nSilver Ridge \u201e\nUtica :.;.:\u201e* \t\nOILS\nAnaconda __.;.\t\nAnglo Canadian .:\t\nA P Consolidated ,.\nCalgary & Edmonton.\nCalmont\t\nDalhousle\t\nEast Leduc\t\nGlobe  ...-._..._...... .'..\nHome .-..\t\nMercury J \u2014.\u201e.,!.\nNational .Pete \u201e.\nOkalta Com  ,\nPacific Pete ..._....._\nVanalta \u2122\u201eU\u2014.\nWest Leduc _\u201e..\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries\t\nUNLISTED MINES\nVananda '..\t\nWestern' Exploration ..\nV\n. ;io\n'7.20\n, .07\n1.20\n\":.20\n.34\n,-*._5\n\u2022\u2022 '.28\n* 5.60\n2.35.\n.10V4\n2.55\n1.40\n.00%\n.12\n.12\n2.70\n.2214\n6.00\n..50*\n.52 \u2022\n,31>A\n.70\n9.80\n',41\n-27\n1.42\n1.83\n.19\n3.25\nii\n ty\nTOD AY'S News Pictures\np..,...,...\n. *\"V\"--*~^\n        .  . '     \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0;- yi\n^1\n\\fAVAA.AAA''''':rjjBSttA\n,*>\u00bbi_  i                t^T\" '*dj^  ^-pJ\n4          *                     -.--._ *..'..\u25a0, \u25a0\n^BB \u25a0\n[    *              V            ' A_.r^             T\nH__-_______*^^J\n'S_^___Bn'\n\u2022 - A sad sight Is this one of the 44 whales which beached. Scientists havo never been able to de-\ncommitted suicide at Crescent Beach, Florida, termihe the cause of this type of marine trag-\nby swimming   Into shallow waters and  getting      edjf. ;.\u25a0'\u25a0.\nRememberingCanadian JPitirieersv\nVANCOUVER, B. C. \u2014 J. J.\nRobinson, a well known transportation figure. on the Paclflo\ncoast, has been appointed District\nTraffic and Sales Manager, Trans-\nCanada Air Lines, Vancouver, W.\nJ. Dilby, Traffio Manager of the\nWestern Region, announced. Mr.\n. Robinson was with T.C.A. here In\nearlier years;. and has recently\nbeen with the Company In Eastern\nUnited States and Canada. He re-\nfilaces J. E. Nlckion, who Is rnov-\npg to Toronto. \u00ab   ,\nSees Soviet Revolt\nOr Atomic War\n. r-Central Press Canadian\nSomething different In the way of cairns Is this one at Yorkton,\nSask., erected In memory of early pioneers of the district. Embedded\namong the native rocks are around 30 Indian stone hammers, said to\nhave been used by the Plains Indians In making pemmlcan, a mixture\nof dried buffalo meat, fat and native berries. The Inscription on the\ncalm Is framed with colorful stohe arrowpolnts and reads: \"In memory of those men and women who, In the early eighties of the nineteenth century, endured the privations of pioneer life and founded\nhomes hereabout.\" \"   \u25a0 ',: '.,-''.\nChurchill Warns\n'\u00bb   Third War Seems Near\n*. \u2014Central Press Canadian\n\u2022 The only alternative to atomlo\nwar Is revolution In Russia, according to Constantino Boldyreff\n(abov.e), powerful Russian rebel\nleader who worked with the U.8.\nMilitary Government In Germany\nIn World War II. Boldyreff ; be-\nlle'ves that'the great mass of Russia's 167,000,000 people are ready\nfor revolt. All they need Is leadership. He represents a worldwide Russian anti-Communist organization dedicated tb the overthrow Of the Stalin regime. The\n' organiiatlon, known as \"Naclon-\nalno Troudovoy Souz,\" has operated In the dark for 18 years, he !\nsaid.   , \u25a0        .. \u25a0     \u25a0:.\nLONDON, Ont (CP)-One resident here recently thought the hydro shortage had reached its.peak and\nofficials had pulled switches to ease\nthe load. When lights went out. in\nhis home, he telephoned City HaU\nto inquire. They told Him his fuses\nhad blown out.    --\u25a0\n-'.\u2022;' \u2014Central Press Canadian\nWinston Churchill, shown holding the key with which he recently opened the new headquarters of the 615th Squadron of the\nRoyal Auxiliary Air Force at Croydon airfield, London, warned that\na third world war seems to be \"remorselessly approaching\" and that\nthe only thing keeping the Soviet from overrunning Europe was the\nU.8. stockpile of atom bombs.\nTheyTl Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hallo\n\/jElXICOE~yOURETHE\nQf.LVONE I CAN TURM\nTO IN MV HOUR OF NEED.\nTHEMOKTSA&EIS DUE-\nTHE KIP IS SICK ANP M\/\nPOOR OL'MOTHER-IN- LAW',\nNEEDS GLASSES. CAM\nVOU LOAN ME TEN\nFISH TILL NEX'\nFRlPAy ? \u00a3&     ^\nTHAT SOUNDS\nFAMILIAR. I THINK\nI HEARD IT ON THE\nRADIO THIS MORNINS,,\nl&ITIDOfJSTIFTHE\nSOAP-OPERA Guy\nHAD A SCRATCH\nSHEET IN HIS\nPOCKET-\nI WARNED JELL*\/\nABOUT VERM_M~__JT\nNOW HE'S LEARNINS\nTHE HARD ^\/\u2022\u25a0^\n600M-BYE\n' FOREVERiNEXT'\n.FRIPAy NEVER\nCOMES\nTHE OLP\nLADV DOESN'T\nNEED GLASSES\nTO SEE THROUGH\nVERMIN. SHE-\nTHREW HIM.0UT\nOFTHE HOUSE\nYEARS A60\n:-::::%\nt\u00bbTX ISrt. KIHC WAT- Uk 8VWHCXTK1*^ WflMJTHCBTS HBKlVtly.\n__2__i\nLlSTENlN6 T6 IHE '\nOFFICE MOOCH TURN\nON THE WATERWORKS\ntMuvc\/ Am>A iipcf the\nwrwMr-10;. '\n*m60TWBMEDI\nCLEVELANP,\nOHIO\nOn the Air   i[\nTHURSDAY, Off. 21,1948\n;,' CKL..   *' '\nA   \u25a0 ;*;i.^'pN;'.THB,*biAt-\n7:00\u2014O.Canada,'.'-'. ...\n7:02\u2014-News-Summary\n7:07\u2014Sunrise. Serenade* .*\u2022\n8:00\u2014CBCNews '\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45-rMorning Devotions.     .\n9:00\u2014BHC News.   ;\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes.\n.9:80-rMoru!flg Concert\n9-59\u2014Time Signal   ,-..,.\n10:00-;Train lime*',\n10:01\u2014Woman's World\n10:15-rMldMornlng Varieties,\n10:45r-Nat Brandwynne .;\nH:00-r-MusicalVarieties\nli;lS\u2014L_s Brown\n'.'UfiiO-fPamouB Voices.,, , .\n12:00\u2014The Notice. BoaM   ,\n12;15-rPress News...\n12:30\u2014B.G. Farm Broadcast\n12:55^Interlude;'   ' \u25a0      .\u2022 '\u2022,      ,   .,\n1:00\u2014Old'-Favorites   .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<\u2022\u25a0\u2022.\u25a0'\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden Tells a Story\n1:45---Music tor Thursday\n2:00\u2014B: C.' School rBroadcast\n\u2022290-The Little* Show\n2:45-rWe_te_n Five\n8:0OJ-Ethel and Albert\n3:18\u2014Interlude '\n3:20\u2014Sketches ln Melody\n3:30\u2014Divertimento\n3;44\u2014Train dime \u25a0\n3:45\u2014SwiiigUme \u25a0   x     -\n4:00\u2014Tony the Troubadour\n.4:14\u2014Train. ,Tlme\n4:15-*-Afternoon Serenade\n- 4;SO-*rStorles of Adventure\n^^Easy** Listening.\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart Program\n.5:15\u2014Bob Eberly With John Gart\n5:30-^Peerless News\n5:45\u2014Organ-Reveries   \"\n,8:00\u2014Kraft Music Hall\nB:30\u2014Cavalcade- ot Melody\n7:00-CBC News\n7:18*\u2014Kfewij Roundup'.\n7:g0f-JSventid_     \u25a0\u25a0<-.:\n8*0\u2014The Nation's Business\n8:15\u2014Bob Mprrison Talk..\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Symphony \"Pons\"\n,8:15-Varslty Show    :,',    >\n'\u25a0 9:45-^Malkin's Melody Money Time\n10:00-CBC News   *.'.   .\n10:15\u2014For Your Information\n10:30\u2014Nocturne\"    .  .'.'. -\n.11:00\u2014God Save the King\n,    C J,A\"T    ':\n810 ON TH? DIAL\n7:00\u2014Peerless News\n7:15\u2014Breakfast for two\n7:35\u2014Fun at Breakfast\n7:45\u2014Hymn for the Day'\n7:50\u2014Breakfast for Two   i\n8;00\u2014CBC News-'  \"\n8:15\u2014Breakftst Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Ltd.\n9:00\u2014Music Workshop  '.   \u25a0   *\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n'9:30\u2014Good r Morning, Neighbor\n9:45VGood Morning Neighbor\nlOilS-^Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Singalong '   \\\nll:00-rMemorable Music -\n11:15\u2014Gospel Singers\n11:30\u2014Jumping Jacks\n11:45\u2014Hospitality Time\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Concert-\n12:30\u2014Press News     '  \u2022 .      \u25a0'\u25a0<..\n12:45\u2014Smoke Rings\nl:0O\u2014Moods in Melody\n1:15\u2014Classical Music\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden*\n1:45\u2014Commentary and Talk\n2:00tt-B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30ii-Musical, Program\n2:45\u2014Western Five\n3:00-rCJAT Goes Calling\n3:45-BBC News\n,4:00\u2014The Inside Story\n4:15-Jack Smith Show\n4:30\u2014Dance Bands\n5:15-rWagsteff Sportscast\n'5;2(HPress'News\n5:30-i-John and Judy\n5'.45r-S. S Marigold\n6:0ft-Kraft.Music Hall\n6;30\u2014Waype and Shuster   '\u25a0\n' 7:0tf-CBC  News   .\n7;1IH-News Roundup\n.7:30\u2014Eventide... '\n8:00\u2014Nation's Business.\n8:15\u2014Vocal Recital\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Symphony\n9:00\u2014Musical Program\n9:30\u2014Music of Manhattan\nlOIOO^CBC News \u00ab\n10:15\u2014News Analyst\n10:30\u2014Nocturne ..\n11:00\u2014Musical. Program\n11:30\u2014Peerless News\nTHE ANSWER, QUICK!\n1. What tby animal was named\nfor a United-States President? .\n2. Who discovered .the SL Law-\n\"rence River?     , . \u25a0 ,\n3. What'faniouir poet and dramatist was married to Anne Hathaway?\n4. Whb wrote a'book called North\nto the Orient? '\nBj'Froni what do we obtain turpentine?* ' ' -\nHOW'D YOU MAKE OUT? .\n,1. .The teddy bear for Theodore\nRoosevelt-'\n2. Jacques Cartier.\n\u25a08.iWilliam Shakespeare.   ,\n4; Mrs.- Anne Morrow Lindbergh.\n5J From: pine and other resinous\nwoOi    '\u25a0\nIT'S BEEN SAlft\n\u2022 The   pith   of  conversation   does\nnot .consist-in exhibiting your owrn\nsuperior knowledge on matters of\nsmall importance, but in enlarging' 3\nImproving and' correcting the  in-p\nformation you possess by the au- I-\nthprity Of otlfers^-Walter Scott   \u2022    iM\nIT HAPPENED TODAY\n;, \\lThe naval 'battle tor Trafalgar\nwas \u2022 fought between \u25a0 the French\nand English fleets on pet 21, 1805,\nresulting in\u25a0*. Adrtiirai Nelson's\ndeath and ,a\"-;g_eat victory over Na-\npoleqn Bonaparte. Oct; 2, 1746, the\ncharter bf Princeton.university was\ngranted. Samdel...Taylor Coleridge,\none'bf: the^'llnglish lake poets,\"\njvas born on this same date in 1772.\nYOUR FUTURE\nThi. is ti)R'perfect time to push 1\nall your affairs, but do not over-||\nwork- and'be .careful, Intellectual:\npursuits,' trtiVel, correspondence |\nand dealings with children are well\nsignified for you and gain is promised. Avoid nervous overstrain.\nMODERN MANNERS\nWhen - entering a  restaUrint\nhot*!..dining\" room, stand near the:'\ndobr until the:he^d waiter or host-;;\ness shows yojf'tb a seat\nAMHERSTi.N. S. (CP)-rThe Am- n I\nherat Board of. Trade is conducting il\na survey to determine the amount 21\nit- wairehiouBe space, available in the J\u00a3\nM-ritimei.\"* \u2022;''\u2022 ;ss\n PHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED \u2014 AN   EXPERIENCED\n\u25a0 instrument maintenance man who\n. is capable of organizing an instrumentation program In a large-per-\n' manent coast manufacturing plant\n... Salary,  comrtienslirate ' with  ex-\n.... perience, housing available. Reply\nWith full details to Box 8328 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SAI_- - WALNUT DOUBLE\n: bed, spring and mattress, walnut\nwardrobe, oak buffet, really.good\nchesterfield and various smaller\nhousehold articles. All in excellent 'condition, Reasonably priced.\nApply between 9-3 or after 6 p.m.\n519-A Hall St.\nWANTED \u2014TIMEKEEPER - TYP-\n1st . for   mine,   Invermere,   B.C.\n- Single with first aid experience\n: preferred.   Good  opportunity   to\n; learn mine' accounting. ARply in\n' \u25a0 writing stating qualifications, sal-\n' ary expected to Sheep Creek Gold\nMines, Sheep Creek, B.C.\nWANTED \u2014 YOUNG MAN TO\nwork On sales in Nelson for a\nlarge Vancouver firm. Experience\nnot necessary. Salary and commission basis. Apply Mr. .Tucker,\nRoom 60, Hume, between 9 and\n11 ajn.\nFOR S ALE -r^ BABY-BUGGY,\ngood condition, $20, Camera with\nflash \"attachments, $10. Fishing\nrod and tackle, $10. Apply P.O.\nBox 881, Castlegar.\nFOR SALE \u2014 CAST IRON PIPE\nfitting!-. 4\" bends, 8\" bends, 8\"J_i\"\ntees, 4\"x2\" tees.- Apply Sfc'y.\nRobson Irrigation District,. Robson,   B.C.\t\nFOR SALE - PAIR SIZE 12 MEN'S\nhockey shoes and skates, used\nonce, (7.00. Also one clean oak\nbarrel. Complete $3.00, 62_-6th St,\nWANTED^BOY AS AN APFREtf-\ntlce to printing and bindaty\ntrades, high school student preferred. .Here Is an opportunity to\nlearn a trade in a modern prlnt-\n- Ing plant. Apply to manager\nPrinting Dept Nelson Daily News.\nSTAINLESS STEEL BEATTY\nwashing machine for sale, $150.00.\n1 Write Mrs. A. Sutherland, General\nDelivery, Nelson\nREQUIRED IMMEDIATELY\u2014ONE\nwelder and 1 mine mechanic. Only\nmen with general mine experience\nneed apply. Phone or write Emerald Tungstqtt Mine, Salmo, B.C.\nWanted \u2014 travelling com-,\npanlon. Must bt good company.\nApply-No. 76, Hume Hotel.\nFOR SALE\u201425-20 MARLIN RIFLE.\nPump action, peep sight Bargain\nat $40 or near offer, Dr. W. Brock,\n576 Baker or Phone 969.\nFOR SALE-ROYAL QUIET DE-\nluxe portable typewriter. Just like\nnew. $65. Call at the Wardrobe,\nJosephine St.\n* Ranted \u2014 first class mech-\n\u25a0anic.Steady .job. Apply Central\n.Truck and Equipment Co.\nSTOVE LENGTH SLAB WOOD,\n$12.00 per cord. 2 or more cords\n$11.00 per cord. Phone 508-Y-2.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\ntRUCK DRIVER, SWAMPER OR\nwarehouse, man. Not \"afraid of\nworfc Chuck Clemens, Phone 864.\nFQR SALE - BEATTY WASHER,\ntwo tubs, bench and boiler, good\ncoridltlon. Pho|ie 745-Y-2,1 *\nttnU. SEW IN YOUR HOME OR\n,mine. Phone 584-R1. '\nODD JOB MAN. PH. 256-R. Carpenter,, heating plant, kalsomlning.\nFOR SALE - FAWCETT COAL\nand wood range with hot.water\njacket 1316 Josephine St\nFOR SALE - BOYS SHEEP\nlined coat, slice 14 years.' Phono\n277-X evenings.\nWANTED,  MISCELLANEOUS\n.SHIP US YtiUR SCRAP METALS\ner Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n118 Powell St, Vancouver, B.C\nFOR SALE \u2014 ONE TWEED COATJ\nsize 20, in perfect condition, $15.\nPhone 30-Y.\nMAN'S TUXEDO, SIZE 87, INFER-\nfeet condition. Also leather jacket\nsame size. Phone 732-X\nBHlP XOtft HIDES TO J. P. MOB-\ngan. Nelson, B.C\nWA'HTKD-2   PAIRS    CHILD-\nreh's skates, St_e 10-13. Ph. 1044-X\nFOR SALE-1 PAIR MEN'S CCM\nskates, size 11, almost new. Phone\n346-L-3.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\ntOB. SALE ONXOO'n-NAY LAKE\nStore building With living quarters. Light and water Installed.\nGood opportunity for...butcher\n\u2022hop, sore and Ice cream parlor:.\nApplysRobertson, HilUafd, Cattell\nj RealW Co.', 532 Ward St., Nelson.\nRENTALS\nfU&WJVf TO LIVE  AT THE\nB'Se'-wip  this  Winter.   Modern\ndilated  bungalows  in  Nelson.\nMitral   heat,   fully   furnished.\nfrinter'tates now in effect Phone\nRENT.-r 4.RQPM..H0U8R\n|ht  and water. -Acreage  and\nI , Jhiit trees if desired. Apply Miss\nr -.-.Mildred   Perepolkln,' Castlegar,\n5 B.C.\nWanted to rent \u2014 unfur-\nnished house or apartment Central. Excellent references. Apply\nBox 8300 Daily News. ....r;\n\u25a0bUSINESS.    LADY    .REQUIRES\n|  Small furnished apartment from\nearly Nov., Box 8126 Dally News.\nSfcDROOM WITH TWO BEDS FOR\nrent Suitable for business men.\nApply 410 Victoria St or Ph, 590-Y\nf OR RENT-LARGE FURNISHED\ncabin. Ferry Auto Court, Phone\n'\u25a0\". 387-R-l.    :'.*   *.-\u25a0'    ,-.-. ' -* -.        '\nCABINS AT WINTER RATES. P_t\nKokanee \u2022 Lodge,   878-R-l.   Now\nunder new management\nTORRENT- WELL HEATED\nbedroom, Phohe 778-X.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nCOLDEN COCKER PUPPIES FOR\n\u2022ale. 9 weeks old. Phone 905-R.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nTOR SALE - 18 FT. V-BOTTOM\nrun-about boat with 0V> H.P.\nChampion outboard engine $150.\nSee Wilson at Central.Truck &\nEquipment or Phone 896-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAS8AYERS AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nIT W.  WlDDOWSON & CO. AS\nsayers, 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\ns. s. BLMbs, msm&s, w &\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Represnt,\nW. G.-tfSOtoPSoN tt bo. - AS\nSayers St Metallurgists. All work\ngiven prompt attention. 1155 Pen-\nder $t. W. Vancouver, B.C\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nSTANDARD RECEIPT BOOKS, 4\nreceipts to page with duplicate\nsheets. Nelson Daily News Print-\ning Dept\nTHE NEW AUSTIN DEVON\n. SEDAN\n19.47 CHRYSLER WINDSOR\n'.\",\"'.... SEDAN:\n1948 FORD SEDAN'\n1947 DODGE SEDAN\n1946 FORD COUPE\n\u25a01946 JEEP\n1940 FORD COUPE\n1938 MORRIS SEDAN .\n1932 CHEVROLET COACH\n1930 ERSKINELT. DEL.;\nNEW REO 2V4-3TON TRUCK\n1947 AUSTIN 3 TON\nr i , 4-RUCK    .\n. \/PONY TRACTORS\n1945 CI1ETRAC TRACTOR.\nTERMS \u2014TRADES\nWE PAY CASH FOR\nGOOD USED^CARS\nEmpire Motors\n.   \"The Best Used Cars\"\n803 Baker St   '    Nelson, B.C\nFOR SALE\u2014LARGE OIL HEAT-\ner( 3 years old, in excellent condition. Ph. 471-R-S.\nJACK BOYCE GUN EXCHANGE,\nGuns for aale and exchange and\nexpert gun repairing,\nWANTED TO RENT BY BUSINESS\ncoUple, furnished suite. References. Phone 112.\nPIPE - FITTINGS .- TUBES, SPE.\ncial low prices Active Trading\nCo_ 916 Powell St.. Vancouver.\nBROWN STEEL BABY'S BED AND\nmattress, $16, Phone 1330-1.\nFOR SALE-GAS RADIANT AND\ngas water heater. Phone 339-Y,\nVIOLlN Ftlfc SALE. PHONE 827-R\nor Box 364, Nelson.\nPICK YOUR dWN WINTER AP-\npies. $1.00 a box. Pfr. 206-R-5,\nISALfi\nHbV-f'-tt-AtES,SIZE 3 FOR\nPhone 484-B-2 mornings.\nFOR   SALE - SET.    OF    flfl__f\nClubs, in bag, Phone 404-L.\nBRICK    LINED    HEATER\nsal. Phone 398-L,\nT5R\nBEDSTEAD  AND  PARKHILL\nspring for aale. Phone 871-p.\nMACHINERY\nMONARCH\nHAND POWER\nCement Mixers\nA Sturdy Mixer\nAn Edsy Maehlrn to Turn\nIN STOCK FOR,\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n214 HaU St Phone 18\nMining,  Milling  and  SawmiU,\nMachinery, Building and Contractors' SuppUes      \u2022\n\"If Ife Machinery You Want '\nConsult Us.\"' \u25a0        \u25a0\u25a0 i\nCHIROPRACTORS\t\nJ. COLIN MCLAREN, D.C, CHIRO-\npractlc XrRray, Splnography,\nStrand theatre Bdg. Trail. Ph. 328\n,   DIAMOND DRILLERS\nJ. A WON At DIAMOND DRILLING\nCoil Ltd, .Drilling and Bit Service: B6x 508, Rossland. Ph. 420.\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nHAGGEN    AND    CURRIE,   B. C.\nLand Surveyors, Mining and Civil\nj Engineers.    Rossland,    Kelowna,\nGrand Forks.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK,. 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C, Surveyor, Engineer.\nInsurance and real estate\nmchardy agencies ltd. in-\n\u25a0 surance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\n-MACHINISTS\n. SMtfNtWS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 5\u00bb3 324 Vernon St\n\"StBVBMSONlS MACHINE, SHOP-\nSpecicllsts in \"nine ancr'milrrwork.\nMachine work, light and heavy,\n;,708 Vernon St.. Nelson. Phone 98\nNATUROPATHIC   PHYSICIAN\n- G. A. SUMNER, D.C., NX).\n\u25a0Naturopathic Physician. Located in\n- the Eremenko Bldg.. Castlegar.\n' Hrs. 9-6. Evenings by appointment\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nAUTOMOTIVE        -\nWHIZZER\nPOWERED    ,\nWarrior Motorbikes\n; Four-cycle motor    '  ,,',\n<\u2022-     ...  Motorcycles\n;'\u25a0' 150 miles per gaUon\n. Stainless steel fenders\n. Balloon tires\nfull price \u2014$225\nImmediate delivery\nMotorcycle Sales\nLimited\nThe House of Friendly Service\n581 W. Broadway Vancouver\nIndian\u2014Royal Enfield\u2014Triumph\nHeavy Duty\ninternational\nMotor Trucks\n'        AVAILABLE* FOR'    .\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\n'\u25a0'\u25a0 l-iKBR-8 179\" W,B.\n1\u2014 KBS-8 197\" W.B.\n:' 1\u2014KB-8-F 197\" W.B.\nSee us tor details on these units.\nCentral Truck\n' & -Equipment Co.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1940 2-TON FORD\ntruck. Booster brakes\/extra front\nfender,, license plates.'What offers? Phone 72.\n1947 MONARCH FOUR DOOR SE-\ndan for sale. Low mileage. 1\nowner, excellent condition. Apply\nQueen City Motors, Nelson.\nFOR SALE \u2014 TO HIGHEST BID'\nder, antique car, buggy style,\ngood running order. Len Ander-\nson, Creston, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, PARMS\nImmediate Occupancy\nNew 8 room bungalow. Cem- -\u25a0\nent basement with 2 or 3 acres.\nAlso barn 16x20, garage. Water\nand   electric   light.   Beautiful\nview, on main highway. 4 miles\nvZn^T...._. $5250\nSix room fully modern home\nIn perfect condition on five\nacres. Born, poultry house\n20x50, Irrigation, also city water\nand   light. 1   mile   from   City\nK' 3^._:. $75oo\nResidence, 4 bedrooms, Hying\nand dining rooms,.-kitchen wired for electric range. Full cement basement, furnace, 3 corner\n$^*$\u00a3 \u201e $6500\nF. A. WHITFIELD\n302 Baker St.\nReal Estate insurance\nBEAUTIFUL STUCCO 8-ROOM\nhome in Fairview.- Hardwood\nfloors. Hot water heaUng. Cement\ndriveway into full basement Snap\nat $10,500. Phone 830 Or 383-X-2.\nFARM FOR QUICK SALE - 40\nacres, 7 acres cleared, Water and\nbuildings, 7 miles - from Nelson.\nBox 8184 Daily News,\nJUST OUT OF CITY LIMITS -\nComfortable 3 room house with\nouter buildings. Bargain price.\nSome terms. Phone 872-Y.\nSAVE MONTHLY WITH YORK-\nshire Savings certificates.! $7.00\nmonthly for 120 months gives you\n$1000 (iash.\u2014See Appl'eyards.\nHOUSE FOR SALE IN BUSINESS\nsection. Vacant soon. Box 8166\nDaily News.\nWANTED TO BUY - A FARM.\nWrite all particulars ln first Iet-\nter. Apply Box 8138 Dally News.\nFOR SALE - TWO CORNER LOTS\nCement   sidewalks,   boulevards,\nhedge, etc. Phone 413-L.\n3 ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE ON 1\nlot at Ymlr. Quick sale for Cash.\nApply F. MoikWa, Ymlr, B.C.\nWANTED-TWO BUILDING LOTS\nFairview srea. Phone 707.\nFOR SALE - TWO IDEAL BUILD-\ning lots in Fairview. Ph. 745-Y-2.\nTWO CHOICE LEVEL LOTS FOR\nsale on Third St. Phone 500-L-l.\nPERSONAL\nYOUR PIANO CLEANED, TUNED\nde-mothed $6. Halleran, 508-Y-2.\ni'Of   PRICKS   PAIU    FOR    AN-\ntlques. Phone 1032 ui 040 Baker St\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co D L. Kerr, Agent\nCHARLES WORMINUTON, COM-\nmerclal Photographer. Klmberley.\nWomen and men's portraiture.\n10 CENTS1 BIRTH CONTROL IN\nformation and catalogue ot hygienic suppUes. Write Western\nDistributors, 61-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries: 24 samples, $1.00, or 19 Deluxe assorted, $1.00. mailed ln\nplain, sealed wrapper. Finest\nquality, tested,' guaranteed. Bargain Catalogue free; Western Distributors, Dept -RN, 81-144 West\nHastings St., Vancouver, B.C.\n1935 LIGHT DELIVERY CHEV.\nfor sale. Cash $225. Apply 1525\nSlocan St.   '\nFOR SALE \u2014 1935 CHEV. SEDAN\nin fair condition, Apply D. Lyden,\nNelson Transfer.\nWlLL>AV SPbT CASH PoU\nlate model passenger cars, any\nmake. Queen City Motors.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1935 OLDSMOBILE\nsedan. A, Olson, R.R. 1, Nelson\nafter 4 p.m.\ntaw SHE used pAMs toft Att,\nmakes ot cars. Olty Auto Wreck-\ners. Box'24, Granite Road,\n1930 WHIPPET COUPE - FAIR\ncondition, good tires. Phone 1236.\nMAN'S BICYCLE FOR SALE-\nApply 814 Mill or Ph. 727-R.\nLOST AND POUND\nLOST \u2014 ON ROAD FROM YMIR\nInto Nelson, r leather -club bag,\npersonal effects. Has name peter\nBaragon, Nelson, B.C. Call Savoy\nHotel. Reward, i  \u25a0.\n\" AIR-COMPRESSORS\nALL SIZES\nFOR RENT BY\nDAY, WEEK OR MONTH\nCOMPLETE WITH\nCONCRETE BREAKERS,\nROCK DRILLS, STEEL\nDETACHABLE BITS, HOSE, ETC\nPURVES E. RITCHIE __ SON LTD.\n658 Hornby St., Vancouver, B.C.\nSAWMILL, WOODWORKING AND\nContractors equipment of all\nkinds. National. Machinery Co,\nLtd.. Vancouver. B.C.\nLOST \u2014 BETWEEN 518 SIXTH ST.\nand New Grand Hotel. Br. leather\nwriting case. Finder please phone\n1282-L. .Reward.\nTWO TRUCK TIRES LOST BE-\ntWeen South Slocan and Willow\nPoliit Finder please phone 77.\nReward.\nFOR SALE-NO. 11 STRAW OR\ncorn cutter, hand or power, 2\nhorse mower. Nick Dosenberger,\nR.R.I.-\nFOR SALE \u2014 1-50 H.P. 220 VOLT\n900 R.P.M. electric motor. Also\n.ammonia, compressor. WUl sell\ntogether, or separately. Kootenay\n,   Brewery, Phone 24. ,     '\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nwelding. Portable welding equipment for field work. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, 708 Vernon St,\nNelson, B.C.\nCATERPILLAR D6-6 CYL. LATE\nmodel, complete with Hyster\nwinch, cable angledozer, operator\nguard and new Carco arch. Bayes\nEquipment Company, Cranbrook.\nEDMONTON (CP)\u2014 A 2'-pound\npotato, almost circular in shape and\n5',ii inches in diameter, has been\ngrown by R. Pelkie. in his garden in\nEdmonton's North End.\nHdsmi Saily \u00a3.r_w\nClassified Advertising Rotes:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line tor 0 consecutive Insertions\n$1.56 line per month (26 con*\nsecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Cqvers any number of insertions. -\nPUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES,\nTENDERS, ETC.\u201420c per line,\nfirst Insertion, lOo per une each\nsubsequent Insertion.\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nSubscription Rated   '\nSingle copy   .          $   08\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance       .25\nBy carrier, per year      13.00\nMail ln Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month       $ 1.00\nThree*months        2.50\nSix months  ,....    4.50\nOne year         ,-*  8,00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne year  $12.00\nSix months $.00\nabove rates plus postage\nWhere extra postage Is required-\nOne month    _...'____-_._    1.00\nThree months  .     8.00\nMEN, DON'T TAKE RISKS\nBe safe. Guard your Health. Hygienic Supplies (rubber goods)\nmailed in strong envelopes.. Absolute secrecy without embarrassment First-class merchandise.\nPrice $1,00 per dozen, mailed one\nhour after receivng order. The\nGreb Trading Co., Dept. 255, 1275\nQueen St. West, Toronto, Ont.\nRecommend Wage\nIncrease for\nDrycleaning Workers\nVlCTOiklA, Oct'20 (CP)\u2014A'sev-'\nen-cent Across the board wage boost\ntor employees'ln eight Vancouver\ndrycleaning plants was recommended today in a majority report of a\nconciliation board;\nThe majority report w\u00bb signed\nby Clarence Darling, Chairman, and\nR. K. Gervln, nominee of the Laundry Workers International .Union,\nrepresenting the employees. Cari\nvon Har ten, memb.er nominated by\nthe companies, \"ur^ed** rilve-cettt\nan hour across the board wage boost,\nThe recommendation.' was contained in the report concerning the\nSanitary Cry Cleaning' and,' Dye\nWofk.ers Ltd. Eight boards, were, set\nup all With the same members. The\nfinding was suggested for all eight\ncompanies.,   .!     '..\"'\"'..'\u25a0' . '   \"-' \"'\nWhile tbe'Union had demanded\nthe increase, be made retroactive to\nJuly 28, the Board urged unanimously that it he dated from Nov. 1.\nThe majority report recommended\nthat all new employees become\nmembers of the union within 30 days\nfrom the commencement of employment Mr. Von Harten reOpmmend-\ned the continuance of the present\nprovision. -.-'\u2022\u25a0      \u2022. ,\nThe findings also dealt with the\nunion's demands for a 40-hour work\nweek, and other questions.      ' .\nDamage Action\nOver Baseball Game\nIn Court Wednesday\n1 VICTORIA, Oct,i_. (OP)-A damage, action for bread) of contract\nfiled by Joseph North against the\nVictoria Baseball Athletic Co. Ltd-\nWiU be heard in Supreme Court next\nWednesday.\nMr. North In his statement of\nclaim contends that the Athletic\nClub committed a' breach of contract when it refused to admit him\nto see a baseball game at the baseball park on June 8.\nHe alleges he bought two season\ntickets for himself and his wife for\na sum of $146.30. In refusing him admission, he claims the Athletic Club\nunlawfully revoked th^ Ucense\ngranted to him*.        'j   -\nPredicts Defeat\nAussie Labor\nOTTAWA, Oct 20* (CP)--Gord0n\nMenzles, how Opposition leader and\nformer Prime Minister of AustraUa,\nsaid today Australia's Labor Government had undoubtedly lost\nground within the last year and\nthat there was a general feeling the\nGovernment would be defeated in\nthe 1949 general elections.\nThe frank, handsome Liberal also\ntold a Press conference he believed\nin closer ties among countries of\nthe British Commonwealth. He saw\nno reason why a Canadian shouldn't\nbe, Governor-General, of Australia\nand vice versa. He was an advocate\nof continuation of Australian appeals to the Privy Council in\nLondon. His party also favored outlawing of Communists.        V\nMr. Menzles arrived by train for\na three-day. visit as guest of Australian High Commissioner Francis\nForde', ,'a fortt'er Labor Prime Minister and an old political toe. They\ngreeted one another by first names.\n- The visitor is-rounding off a trip.\nto Britain, Europe and the United\nStates that began in June to reestablish contacts aftpr seven years\nat home.     .\nAUTO LOANS\nAt Niagara\nAre the fastest, simplest way to\nget ready cash in a hurry.\nNiagara Finance are Auto Loan\nSpecialists. On owner's signature you can get frbm $20 lo\n$1000'qulckly. And in a friendly,\nprivate interview arrange convenient repayment terms. There\nare many plans to choose from.\nFor 17 years this dependable\ncompany has given sound and\nhelpful loans, to thousands of\nsatisfied customers.\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY.LTD.\nEst'd. 1930\nSuite 1, 860 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone 1095 *\n. i i-kmiM i*f! ~r~^Jt.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR  SALE-ONE   REGISTERED\nHereford bull, 2*4 years,' gentle,\n. papers.   Wanted:    Dairy '\u25a0 cattle,\nfresh. \u00ab. G. Leltch. FHit-Vale,r B.C.\nFOR SALE-.\u2014r TEAM OF FARM\nhorses with harness and wagon.\nWeight   2500 '.lbs.   Price   $130.(10.\nJ. Jauncey, Wynndel, B.C.\nFOR SALE^-I COW TO FRESHEN\nsoon; 1 Western saddle and bridle.\nA. Miller, Box 521, Kaslo, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2 HORSES, 1600 LB.\neach. Sold single or as a team.\nE. H, Greivison, South Slocan.   *\nFOR SALE \u2014 TWO HORSE, SELF-\nseedlng  hay  baler. $300. Apply\nAlec Toil), Park Siding,\nHAMPSHIRE   PULLETS   READY\nto lay, $2 each. Phone 508-Y2.\nFARM. GARDEN ts NURSERY\nRocket Bombs\nJS&f\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 21,1948 \u2014 11\nBy STUART UNDERHILL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, Oot, 20 (CP)^-Rocket\nbombs can be used for prolonged\noffensive only if supported by\nstrong air forces to protect installations and supply Unes from enemy\nattack,-:;'; \u25a0\nThis is the deduction drawn from\nthe official report of Air. Chief\nMarshal Sir Roderlc Hill, who organized Britain's defences against\nthe flying bomb and rocket in the\nfinal stages of the war. The report\nwas published today. -   \u25a0;.\nMassed ' anti-aircraft batteries\nand speedy fighter .aircraft were used against the flying bomb until\nfrom one-half to three-quarters of\nall those approaching Britain' were\nshot .down. Operations against rockets were limited largely to trying to\nlocate tiring points and then attacking them fiercely.\n'Phone Totals\nOn Upgrade in\nKooL-Boundary\nThere were 2844 telephones in\nNelson at the beginning ot September, the B. C. Telephone Company's\nstatement of development shows. At\nAug. 1 there were 2842, at the beginning of this yeSr, 2715, and at the\nfirst of last year; 2470.\nThe Trail total stood at 3519, compared with 3503 at the beginning of\nAugust and 3074 at Jan. 1, 1947. An\nIncrease was also shown in Rossland, where the September total\nWas 752 against 741 in August, 672\nin January of this year and 543 in\nJanuary of 1947.\nTotal number of phones In other\nKootenay-Boundary centres at Sept.\n1, with the Jan,, 1947, figure for\ncomparison, follow: Balfour, 29, 20;\nGrand Forks, 330, 282; Greenwood,\n69, 55; Kaslo, 155, 116; Nakusp, 103,\n69; New Denver, 111, 8$.\nfotol installations of the Koote\nnay Telephone Company, Ltd., in\nthe East Kootenay, were 2142. At\nthe beginning of 1948 there were\n2052 and at Jan. 1, 1947, 1897. There\nare 748 phones at Cranbrook, 490 at\nCreston, 381' at Fernie, 482 at Klmberley, 65 at Michel and 46 toU stations.\nFRUIT TREES, ORNAMENTALS\nand Roses, See H. C. Carne, Agent\nLayritz Nurseries. Phone 312, Box\n\/ 37, Nelson, B.C\nFOR SALE\nPereverzoff,\nBAILED HAY-\nAppledale, ,..\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials\u2014186.51 up .33.\n20 rails\u201461.09 up .42.\n15 utilities\u201435.54 up .08.\nDANGEROUS QUACKS     ,\nDURBAN, South Attica (CP)\u2014\nThe urgent need for an Optometry\nAct to protect the public against\neye \"quacks\" was stressed by f\nmember of the South African Opti.\ncal Association., He .said shocking\nmalpractices were-belng conducted\nby persons with high-sounding tiUes\nwho had no qualiflcaUons.\nSeek Market for\nB.C. Fruit, Berries\nVICTORIA, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014Several possible outlets for British Columbia produced berries and other\nfruits, which before the doUar crisis\nwent to the United Kingdom in sulphur dioxide solutions, are being investigated by the Provincial Trade\nand Industry Department and at the\nmoment South Africa seems the\nmost encouraging prospect.\n' Trade and Industry Minister L. H,\nEyres said today that the Food Can-\nners Council of South Africa will\nmake tests on B. C. fruit pulp for\njam purposes. In the meantime R. S.\nO'Meara, Trade Commissioner for\nthe Province, is exploring possible\nmarkets ln Venezuela, Israel and\nGermany.\nContracts for fruit pulps were not\nforthcoming' this year from the United Kingdom, and as a result the industry in the Fraser Valley is faced\nwith a carry-over from last year\nand a surplus from this year.\nPlenty Steamed Up\nOver Cold Treatment\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 20 (AP)-\nWhen Mrs. Isabel Cotton thought\nher landlords were giving her the\ncold treatment she got plenty\nsteamed up \u2014 enough to file a $12,-\n,000 damage suit yesterday .against\nPaul and Ida Tresser.:'   -       _\nThe Tressers, she charged, 'tried\nto drive her out of the house by\ncutting down the heat in her room,\ndisconnecting all heat in the bathroom, nailing the bathroom windows open, and removing the bathroom shades, '\nMrs. Cotton said\"' she suffered\nbronchitis, Insomnia, and gall bladder trouble from the resulting chill\nand embarrassment.\nThe defendants, denying the\ncharges, said they gave Mrs. Cotton\nan eviction notice because their\nown lease had expired.\nJ Ust, a Baby Sitter\nATLANTA, 'Oct. 20 :(AP)-A 62-\nyear-old bridegroom sued his. 19-\nyear-old wife for divorce, claiming\nshe married him just to get a babysitter. '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\" . ? '\u25a0' \\ -\u25a0:-!,,   ..\nThe wife, Evelyn Capes. Ferrier,\nwhen advised of the suit yesterday,\nreplied, \"Pooh, looks to mc like an\nannulment Is all we need, and, good\nness knows, I'm willing.\"   . \u2022\nThe petition for divorce .by Louis\nFerrier said they were married Oct\n11 and that his wife took her six-\nmonth-old bany by a previous marriage on their-honeymoon\nFurther, Ferrier alleged,; she\" left\nMarket Trends\nTORONTO (CP) - Industrials\nroUed steadily ahead in heavy trading. Base metals continued their advance for the third successive day\nahd Western oils were also ahead as\nvolume was best, in more than six\nmonths. Golds held steady on mixed\ngains and losses with a few junior\nissues trading actively for moderate\nadvances.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Gains, from a\nshade to four points, were widely\ndistributed ln a long selected industrial list during Ught trading. Mining sales were also quiet, and the\nUst displayed a firmer trend.\nNEW YORK (AP)-Steel shares\nclimbed to 1948 peaks in a generally\nhigher stock market.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Prices were\nmixed in moderately active trading.\nOils were a feature with large gains\nshown in the'leaders. Base metals\nremained strong. Golds were unchanged as were industrials.\nMONTREAL (CP)',\u2014 Dominions,\nProvincials, Municipals and' Corporations continued featureless in\ndull trading. .       .   .   '-.-':\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The announcement ot a \u00a3100,000,000 new\nelectricity loan depressed the gilt-\nedged market. The loan is to be\nthree-per-cent 1947-77 at BOVt. All\ngilt-edged prices suffered heavy\nfaUs, losses ranged between Hth\nand %ths although there was very\nlittle actual selling.\nWAR DECLARED\nOKILA.RATS\nMasked Man Steals\n$4500 From\nBedridden Woman\nSILVERTON, Ore, Oct. 20 .(AP. -\nA nurse was slugged and a bedridden invalid robbed last night by\na masked man who took $4500 concealed in the woman's stockings.\nChief ot Police V S. Grossnickle\nsaid the nurse was Mrs. Anna Rice,\nwho suffered a two-inch gash on\nher forehead, and the invalid was\nMrs. Ike Worden, Silverton widow\nwho has been confined to bed for\nseveral months.\nThe PoUce Chief said the nurse\nremained conscious despite the blow\nfrbm a blunt Instrument' and ran\nout of: the house to summon a'neigh-\nbor. When Mrs. Rice returned with\nhelp a few minutes later, the bandit\nhad fled, after removing Mrs. Wor-\nden's stockings and taking the currency,\nThe cash was in 37 $100 blUs, one\n$500 b!U, and five 50s.\nProfessor, Acting\nDean Pictured\nCutting Caper\nVANCOUVER, Oct 20 (CP)-The\nVancouver Sun today .gave frontpage play, to a picture allegedly\nsuppressed In the university of British Columbia newspaper, the Ubys-\ntiy,\nThe photo was a shot af Acting\nDean Dr. H. J. McLeod, and Professor WilUam Armstrong cutting a\nrather sedate caper with Mary Mack,\nCanada's Sophie Tucker.\nThe trio are pictured doing _\nchorus-kick before a microphone at\nan engineering banquet.\nThe Ubyssey was published with\na blank space marked:\n\"We're sorry. We regret that pres.\nsure exerted by the Dean of Applied\nScience and,Acting President forced\nus to withdraw picture.\"\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 20 (CP)-Win-\nnlpeg grain quotations:,\nOpen   High   tow   Close\nOats:\nOct ..\nDec ...\n.78%\n.79%\n.77%\n.77%\n.72%.\n.73%\n.72%\n.73%\nMay ..\n.73%\n.74\n.78%\n.73%\nBarley\nOct. \u201e\n1.13%\n1.15%\n1.13%\n1,14%\nDec. .\n1.07%\n1.08%\n1.07%\n1,07%\nMay..\n1.07%\n1.08%\n1.07%'\n1.07%\nRye:\nOct. ..\n1.69%\n1170%\n1.87%\n1.67%\n1.68%\nDec. _\n1.70%\n1.71%\n1.68\nMay...\nL73%\n1,74%\n1.71\n1.71%\nFlax .\n...  r     .\nNov. _\n4.00%\n4.00%\n4.00%\n4.00%\nDec. ..\n4.01%\n4.01%\nMay ..\n4.04\n4.04\nCash Prices\nOats-2 CW. 77%; Ex. \u00bb CW. 74-\n%; 8 CW. 74%; Ex. 1 feed 74%; 1\nfeed 73%; 2 ieed-71%; $,feed \"\"\ntra_k,75%*!\nBarley-1 C.W. 6-row 1.35%; 2\nC.W. 6-row 1.35%; 1 C.W. 2-row 1,17-\n2 C.W. 2-row 1.07%; 3 CW.\nrow 1.23%; 1 teed 1.10%; 2 feed 1.07-\n%'; 3 feed 1.05%; track 1.08%; 2 C.W.\nyellow 1.15%; 3 CW. yeUow 1.14%. .\nRye-l.CW. 1.67%; 2 C.W. 1.67%,\n3 C.W. 1.62%; rej. 2 C.W. 1.53%; 4 C-\nShips Lett\nHigh nr Dry by\nPort Tides\nBy JOE MocSWEEN   -\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nWINDSOR, N.S., Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014\nThree Avon River ports, which\nhave water only about half the\ntime, are having a'busy year as export points for gypsum and fertilizer with an occasional load of-\nlumber thrown in.\nThe. three ports, largest of which\nls Windsor, are drained twice dally\nby a powerful 25-foot ebbing tide.\nTen thousand-ton freighters and\nother vessels are left high and dry\nIn'the riyer which flows into Mlnox\nBasin. \u25a0 .    ,\nShips in Windsor's slBter ports ol\nHantsport and Walton face a similar predicament. Despite this, the\nthree small towns' have cleared\nsome 300 ocean-vessels so. far this\nyear, mostly carrying gypsum, fertilizer and lumber.\nHome Lumber\nOTTAWA* Oct 20 (CP)\u2014Lumber\nprices in Canada are below export\nlevels because the Federal Govern- -\nment compels, producers to allocate\n40 per cent of their, production ta\nthe domestic market, the Prices\nCommission was told today.  , \u25a0\nWhy are Cahadlan prices lower\nthan export?\" H. A. Dyde, Com-'\nmisslo ncounsel, asked Henry Mack- 1\nIn, President,of the Canadian Western Lumber Co. of Vancouver. The\nfirm is a large producer and distributor of liimber.        v ;\n\"Because .the producers are obliged, tb supply 40 per cent ot their\noutput to the Canadian market\" Mr.\nMackin replied. \"They quote prices\non the domestic market which will\nearn them their export quotas.\nLIMIT TO SUBSIDIZING\n\"I might as well be frank irith\nyou. We. don't want this Canadian\nprice to get tod high. But we're not\ngoing to be a Santa Claus and sell\nour lumber fn the World markets\nbelow Baltic producers,\"\nHe declared,' howeyer, that tb*\nUnited Kingdom as well as Canada\nhad received Canadian lumber below world prices.\n\"There would be a limit to tb*\nextent to which the export market,\ncould subsidize the Canadian market\" Mrs, T. W, Sutherland of Vancouver suggested to Leon Koerner,\nPresident of Alaska. Pine.Co. VA.\n\"We have that feeling already,\"\nMr. Koerner agreed. \"Tiie export\nmarkets know they are subsidizing'\nthe domastl- f market,\"    \".\"\nThis had been a major issue during the last negotiations, with the\nUnited. Kingdom timber controller\nfor Canadian lumber, he said. Tbe\nBritish had objected to the fact that\nW.-1.58%; track 1.66%.\nFlax\u20141 CW. 4.00; 2 CW. 3.93; S producers were charging them mucli-\nCW. 8.84; 4 CW, 3:75;trsck 400,  -ragherprlMslhte'Can'Sdiari buyers.-\nTHREE-QUARTERS TON OF PRODUCE\nDONATED AS HOSPITAL DRIVE OPENS\nRanchers in the Procter-Harrop-\nQueen's Bay area donated about\nthree-qiiaters of a ton of produce\nWednesday to get. Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital's fruit and vegetable drive off to a good start.\nThis competes r favorably with\nfirst-day results of previous years.\nActually, between 15 and 16 hundredweight of Fall fruits and vegetables were left for coUection by\nthe truck. Carrots, potatoes, apples,\nsquash,, tomatoes, beets and parsnips were included. ,\nSome donations also came from\nNelson, and Salmo Valley resident*\nwho  may  contribute  Wednesday, r\nThursday or Friday. .   '\nSlocan. City and woynolnts will j\nbe visited today, and the fobsoi. \u2022'.:\u25a0\nand Blewett Road area Friday, last\nday of the drive...      ',\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS      d.Antlered\n1. Bird of peace     animal\n..Bubble 6. Block\n9. River (Russ.) 8. Wash\n10. Infrequent     7.Befor\u00bb\n11. Deposit\ntemporarily\n(siting)\n12. Across\n13. Colleagur\n14. Enemy ;\n15. Toward\n17. Earth as a\ngoddess\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 20 (AP)-\nRatsl Right in the middle of the\ndowntown section, Los Angeles has!\ndeclared war. on them. .   j\nSeems that rodents as big as your,\nforearm have been coming out at!\nnight by the score in Pershing j 18. Help.\nSquare, popular shrub-dotted park! 19.Exclanu_>\nin the city's heart. Their presence j\nwas verified by photographs taken\nby the Los Angeles .Times, which\nIssued the call to battle.\nThe opening gun was fired when\nCity Health Department crews set| S'-SSS\n300 traps \\yith poisoned bait, after   M-cebino\nthinning out shrubs and spraying'\nthem with cyahide. '     !\nThe result: Dead rats by the buck- i\netful.   \u25a0.:\u25a0\u25a0.; I\nFor bait the exterminators used\nsuch rodent delicacies as crushed\nwalnuts, apples and bacon;\ntlon\n20. To exact\n23. Anti-air-\n. eraftflre\n24. Hovel\n8. A large\ncoUar\n18. Mature\n14. Suitable\n16. Tree\n18. Skill\n19,ArabIo\nletter\nsi. Melt*.\nSt. Forth .\n23*Enthuslastlo\nfollower\n25. Turf\n26. Mandarin\n27. Metal or\nleather\n1 armor for\n. the head\n23. Slice\n29. Trickled out\n30. Border\n82. A premium\nSB^MIcrb-\norganism.\n$8. Plant of (\ncabbage)\nfamily\nl_i_.l-L._l    Ml.-Id.'\na_iai\u00a7-_ uHtiuii\n\u25a0   ______    aim\n81BU   EJUHE-HIIU\nUfcJUU   UHb\nUUiittM   irJ'-'UIiUlii\nhuu aacau\n,BHa________ raaffl\n'Hum     HUE\nBHUUU   l-JUUIIki\nHHiaUU!   BtlHULi\n\u25a0Testetdsy's Answer,\nH.\u00abw...\n,(So.*Am.)    '\n4O..0k>b\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARV, Oct. 20 !(CP)\u20141300\nbead ot cattle 'were held over with\n700 head of fresh cattle on offer today. Trade is active at steady prices\nwith cows steady at.the weeks advance.\nTuesday's receipts: 1706 cattle, 335\ncalves, 437 hogs, 214 sheep. Wednesday morning's receipts: 538 cattle,\n119 calves.\nHogs sold Tuesday at $31 for As\nat yards and plants. Sows, $20 live\nweight\nGood to choice butcher steers,\n$19.50 to $21; common to medium, 1\n$16 to $19.\nGood butcher heifers, $18 to $19;\ncommon to medium, $15 to $17.50.\nGood cows, $15.25 to $16; common\nto medium, $13 to $15, Canners and\ncutters, $10 to $12,50, Good bulls,\n$17 to 118. Good to choice veal\ncalves, $18 to $19; common to medium, $14 to $17.50. Good stocker\nand feeder steers, $17.50 to $19.\nGood lambs, $18.75 to $19.25.\nOMAK, Wash., Oct. M'(AE) -The\nOkanogan  Valley  mattered  local\nMin _,. . v,\u00ab_hv int.* \u201en ty,. hnnVv   manpower today like-It did during\nm^whfte'^nne^ffil'he M| and;-appealed fo?\nAl^nUti Iferged ,th.t[0t\u00abe *\u2022\u00bb A *\u00bb$\u00a3\nby.exhibiting.a.\"heedlersharp, dou-iioss an hour for some of theJarger\n)le-i\nble'-edged: dagger.\"\n-growers..\nmonkey\n16. Talk\n28. Consult\ntogether\n31. Chop\n32. Undeveloped\nflower\n33. Greek letter\n34. Mulberry\n35. Obtained\n36. Pal\n38. Bearing\n40. A cowl\n41. Beige.\n42. Otherwise\n43. Head cover*\nlngs    -\n(shortened)\n4., Obnoxious\nplant\nDOWN\n1. Twofold\n2. Verbal\n3. Differ      ;\n*   DAILY CBYFEOQUOTB\u2014Here's how to woik Ht'\n,( AXTDLBAAXR\n\\ Is LONGFELLOW\nOne letter Dimply stands for another. In this example A ia used\nfor the thrco L'a, X for the two O'a, etc. Single letters, apostrophes,- the length and formation of the words are all hints. Each\nday the code letters are'different        ,\n*\u25a0   A Cryptogram Quotation    ,\ntTDN     KAV3    KRTN    VDNN    MKfliJt\nBAL  MAF   CRP-P   UNLRTN   B L A O   iW A F !_\u2022\nJNPBSPP    NPJN    MAF    INNU-ATRU.'\nYesterday's CrytOquote: GOD IS BEST KNOWN JN\nKNOWING HIM.-ST. AUGUSTINE.\nNOT\n__________\u25a0\n__\u25a0\u25a0_________\u25a0\n 12 \u2014 NILSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, OCT. 91,1948\nHow Is YoUr Tooth Brush?\nI       A personally conducted survey of the bathrooms\nof Nelson reveal the following interesting facts:   '\n.-\u2022 52% of the brushes have broken or frayed bristles, capable.\nof Injuring gum tissues.\n\u2022 24% are discolored from Ions use or are so heavily packed\nwith old paste as to be unsafe to use.\n\u2022 41% are so matted or worn-out that they cannot possibly\nclean too.th surfaces,\n\u2022 If your tooth brush has been around long enough for you\nto regard It as an old friend then It's high time you gave.\nIt the \"brush off\" and Installed a new favorite.   \u25a0\nPROPHYLACTIC TOOTH BRUSHES\n:      M* and 50*    A\nSubject al\nGarden Club Meet\n-Planting of bulbs, tot. Spring\n\"flowering .and* indoor Winter\nblooming was the subject'of a talk\ngiven by J. H. Coventry\/to members\nof the Nelion Garden Club at their\nOctober meeting in'the Civic Centre.\nAfter a short business meeting of\ntier Garden CIub..Mr.. Coventry enr\ntertained the members with a lecture bn planting of bulbs for Spring\ngardens. The speaker said that no\n'garden could be complete without\nsome.of the beautiful flowers that\n, can be obtained by planting bulbs,\nsuch as daffodils, .narcissus and tulips. He explained that by choosing\nthe right .varieties the flowering period of the bulb garden could be ex-\n.tended. more than.\"six\" weeks. Mr.\nCoventry showed colored pictures of\n. varieties that .would ;glve best results. He explained the proper methods of fertilizing and planting the\nbulbs and warned .'against some of\n, the pitfalls that would be encountered.\n\u2022 -Flowering bulbs indoors In January, and February can be had by\n'jjifiytH-A Who .wishes..'The speaker\n.told whit Varieties to. obtain and\n\u25a0 how. t6 plant'th* bulbs in pots for.\nindoor flowering, \"It is Important,\"\nsaid Mr. Coventry,, \"that only large\nbulbs of forcing. size be Used for\nIndoor planting.\". -.- .,\n. ^The speaker, also.gave a short re-\nsume of the bulb producing industry\ntelling the comparisons between\nBritish Columbia grown bulbs and\nthe Holland products. He stated that\n.the B. C. industry had not yet reached the point where it\" could grow\nI tha - quantity,. the new varieties or\nthe quality, of rthe Holland Bulbs,\n, bjit he felt that .the time J was com-\n, ing when the British Columbia\ngrowers could compete successfully.\n'The Garden Club Garden Contest\nJudges have completed their, judging and results \"arid 'awards to the\nwinners will\" be announced at the\nNovember.meeting. *.\nThe hardness of the topaz ls almost equal to that of the emerald.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHOCKEY\nEQUIPMENT\n\u2022 SKATES     \u2022 STICKS\n.  \u2022 PUCKS   \u2022 PADS\nBADMINTON\nI RACQUETS\n|:   SHUTTLECOCKS\n\u2022~-       By Spalding\nBOWLING\n|   SHOES\n\u2022\"   , And the Latest\nBOWLING SHIRTS\n.Club prices on application.\nUNIVERSAL\nRULE BOOK\nFOR EVERY SPORT\nKOOTENAY\nSTATIONERS        I\n& 8PORT SHOP     \u25a0\n456 Word St.     Phone 362\nTGNGUETRIPS    .\nVANCOUVER,. Oct 20 (CP) \u2014\nProsecutor Gordon Scott tripped his\ntongue in court intending to ask\nMagistrate Mackenzie Matheson to\nsit as a Juvenile Judge. He miscued\nand came out. with:\n'Would Your Worship please sit\nas a juyenll\u00ab,dellnquent?\"\nThe Magistrate replied: \"I hive\nbeen asked to do a lot of things\naround here, but it's tbe first time\nthat one has been pulled on me.\"\nYES \u2014 Your New WaVe\nIs bound to be MORE STYLISH,\n. LAST LONGER and\n.   LOOK LOVELIER\nat the\nHA1GHTRU-ART\n\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab-_-\u00ab\u00ab\u25a0->\u00ab\u25a0\u00ab-_-\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab---_-____>\u00bb\nSuite 20S\nMEDICAL   ART8   BUILDINQ\nJ.A.C. LAUGHTON\n;. Optometrist\nROSCOE\nAND   ,\nFOURNIER\nGARAGEMEN\nSR* ClinW AUTO SERVICE\nPhone 122 Nelson, B.C\nLimit lo Extent Lumber Export\nMarket Could Subsidize Home Sales\nOTTAWA, Oct 20 (CP) \u25a0\u2014 Thlt produce*d a highly eatl\u00abact!_Ty lum-\n  \"' ber from West Coast hemlock. Until his advent in the field, hemlock\nwas ..regarded as unsatisfactory for\nlumber and usually used for pulp, j\n.'-Mr. Kberaer~\u00abst._. \"that hls-flrm,\nby drying-it carifully,' produces a\n.wood which sells, at least at the\nsame - price as fir and\u2014in its best\nprices.,-.-,\ngrades\u2014at' a   premium   over   fir\nprices.\"-'     ' ., .,'\u25a0       \u25a0'.\u25a0  \u25a0,,-\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nMr. Koemer's Company, his records showed, did $480,100 worth of\nbusiness in ,'1040 with a net profit!\n\u25a0of $11,854. In 1047 Its sales had risen\nto $7,228,692 and its net profit to\n$204,261;.\ncountry's practice of \"subsidizing'\ndomestic lumber-prices through export ' sales has definite limitations,\na witness and a member oi_the\nPrices Commission agreed today.\nEvidence throughout the Commission's current Investigation has\nshown that lumber sells in Canada far below the export prices,\nThe difference Is as much\u2014and\nsofnetlmes more\u2014than $20 a thousand feet\n\"There-would be a limit to the\nextent.to which the export mert;et\ncould subsidize the; Canadian market,\" Mrs\/ T. W\/ Sutherland 61\nVancouver suggested to Leon Koerner, President of Alaska Pine Co.\nLtd. \u25a0;-\u2022 \"iiA-'i\n\"We have that feeling already,\"\nMr. Koerner agreed. 'The export\nmarkets know, they are subsidizing\nthe domestic market.\"\nHe said he remembered \"\"Very\nwell\" that when the last British\ncontract was negotiated with the\n' British Columbia producers the\n; United Kingdom Timber Controller made a major Issue of this\nfact The British had objected to\n' the fact that the producers were\ndemanding a far higher price\nfrom them than from Canadian\nbuyers.\nHe said the United States'market\nIS so large, with Its, buyers scattered, tbat the same feeling against the\nCanadian practice does not develop\nthere.\nWitnesses records have Shown\nthat before tbe war there was a\nnarrow differential between domestic and export prices. The differences grew rapidly while Canadian \u25a0 prices were controlled.. Since\nthe end of price control the domestic price has risen,'but not to the\nexport level. .   .' \u2022\nMr. Koerper is a Czechoslovaks\nwho came to Canada after the Munich agreement. He told the Commission he entered the.British Columbia lumber Industry in 1940 and\nby treating it in a special way. had\nWaytof the W\u00abt\nSAN FRANCISCO, Oct 20 (AP)\u2014\nHong Leong had reason today to\nleflect. .upon the nays ot the inscrutable West      \u25a0 . .;\nTour gunmen held Up his establishment last night They got $500.\nHe.was beaten and tortured!\nThen he was arrested,-with two\nemployees? and freed only -alter\nposting $520 bail.\n...Police charged Leong, 43, wltb\nkeeping a lottery. '.'\nThe law stepped in after a visitor\nat tbe place complained he had lost\n$48.toi foe, gunmen.\nLadles, talk; It, over with your\nhusbands' then phone ui about\n- this dream home. ,\nSTUART AGENCIES\n'577 Baker St,' \u25a0-. Phone 980\n\"Have You Heard About the\n\"'.'\u25a0     Miracle of Insurance\",\nBCPERT WATCH\nREPAIRING\nWG.VALIN\nJEWELLER\n3B4 Baker St Phone 41\nWine and Blue Pumps\nSmartly styled cuban heel pumps in wine or blue calf, novelty\ngold ornament front .\nWine or Blue Calf Pumps\nClosed toe, cuban heel pumps,\"liovelty. perforations, all sizes.\nBlack Patent High Heel Pumps\nOpen'toe, platform sole..\nBlack Suede Ballerinas\nGold trim, ankle straps, baby doll toes.\nTHE BOOTERY\nSHOES FOR ALL THE FAMILY\nPhone 1114 .\"        411 Baker St\nLEADING All the WAY\nfor LOWER Prices and\nHIGHER Quality\nNabob Coffee\n1 lb. pkt. 59c\nSODA BISCUITS: Ch\nPremium;* -\u25a0\u25a0'\nlib. pkg, _:..:...;\t\nr TOMATOES: Nabob;\n28 oz. tins, 2 for\t\nTIDE: The new washing, miracle; Pkg,\t\nTOMATO SOUP: Red &\nWhite; 10 oz. tins, \\\n3 for. *\nQUAKER OATS: >\n48 oz. pkg     ,\nCAKE FLOUR: Velvet; \" W\nPkg. ,.*\nORANGE MARMALADE:\nNabob;        , VIA\n24 oz. jar.... *'r\nAERO WAX: No rubbing,\nself polishing; 336\nQuart 69c\nPint .\nORANGES:\nS.ze\"344.'s;'\t\nGRAPEFRUIT: P     IC*\nCalifornia  100's; _V   for JLj\nTURNIPS:\nKosiancic;  \t\nm 59*\n6,^25*\nPARSNIPS: A\nFresh;.* '__.. !_i\u2014-T1\nSPANISH ONIONS:   <j\nPOTATOES:\nNetted Gems; \u201e\nLarge, Mild;\nIbs.  2.J\nIbs.    19\nPHONES 1370-1371\nSUGAR BOWL MEATS\nLoin Mutton Chops - lb. 45c\nBreast of Mutton \u2014 % lbs. i\u00a7\u00a9\nLean Hamburger ~\u2014-- lb. JS\u00a9\nPrime Ribs w, ^\u2014Ife, <rf^\nSTAR GROCERY\nPHONES 10-11 F(. A. 0. GREENWOOO FREE DELIVERY\nTHE SUGAR BOWL\nR. JOT      ;,        ;:,r::FRE\u00ab DELIVERY , I\nKNOCKS\nJoy knows no bounds tt we 8AL.E into another week of\ndrastic reductions. Number* of satisfied customers throughout\nthe Kootenay District are now spreading the good word of the\nSSSfSSWL!.81;!?' \u2022?* *\u2122at savings to be had at the 8TERLING\nREDUCTioN8        too can BENEFIT by those 8TARTLINO\nf hi Co'urteay You Reeelva at the Sterling Furniture Alone, Is\nworth the Trip.\nThis suite Is \u00ab \"knock-out!\" It Is\n80 soft and comfortable you'll\nSWOON In It. Made In a solid\n-hardwood frame and covered' In\na fine, yet hardwearlng velour\nthat will keep Its \"newness\" for\nmany years to come. Two pieces\nare In a warm, rich wine-while the\nthird is In a matching green.\nRegular $229.50\nSale $169.50\nSTUDIO LOUNGE\nReg. $89.50 '\nSALE\n$59.50\nMIRRORS\nPriced From\n$3.65\nHome Furnishers\n441 BakerSt. Nelson, B.C. Phone 553\nTERMS J. H. MmMILLAN TRADERS\nFOR THAT COLD\nVlcks VapoRub\nVlcks Vatronol\n\u00abe\nWe\nVlcks Cough Drops  ISO\nBuckley's Bronchitis Mixture\n>    40c and 75c    .\nBuckley's White Rub S0o ud Me\nEphedrine Nose Drops  - 50c\nVlcks Inhalers  40o\n' At Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug Go.\nPhone 34.\nBox 460\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\n*MURPHY'S\nFor\nWallpapers \u2014 Kalsominej\nPaints \u2014 Varnishes\n745 Baker St. Phono 655\niiiiiiiiii|iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiii\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nCleaned and Recored\nRADIATOR REPAIRS\nJIM'S RADIATOR SHOP\n301 Ward St Phone 63\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiHiinui\nCAMPBELL, SHANKUND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\n.\" -Auditors\n660 Baker St. Phone 236\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE 8ERVICE\n515 Kootenay St.      '   Phone 38J\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES UNE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 11757-182 BAKER ST.\nELLISON'S ROYAL PATENT\nPASTRY FLOUR\nBEST FOR CAKES AND\n\/ PA8TRY\nGUARANTEED TO SATISFY\n\u2022Your Grocer Has It ,\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllll\n.\u25a0\u2022 -Get your- r       :,\nFALL AND WINTER WEAR\nfor girls'and boys at\nThe Children's Shop\n652 Baker St.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlill\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts BUt\nPHONE 25  ,\nGabardine\nSlacks\nNew arrivals in 3 colors.\nA \"just right\", pant for\nschool weqr.        .:\nHollywood Style\nSites 28 to 36.\nPer Pair\n$1395\nMall Orders Prepaid\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S SK>i\u00ab'\nLONDON (CF)\u2014Since the and ol\nthe war, Britain bas tound home*\nfor 250,000 refugees. Under the International Refugee Organization,\nBritain has received 70,000\u2014nearly\nthree times the number absorbed\nby any other coliatry.\nRELIABLE SERVICE\nAT REASONABLE COST\nSmedley Garage Co.\nReo Sales and Service\nHAVE YOUR FURNITUR1\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n.. \u25a0        j-t.-the .-\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n413 Hall St 1    Phono 1\u00ab\nistiiie's\nNow;Ha$^>   -\nN ice AssortiTieht of\nMr\nat\nSmartly styled.V\nTn attractive shades.\n'Sizes 12 to 20.*\n'A.\nHANDSOME FURNISHINGS FOR YOUR LIVING ROOM\n2-Piece\nAT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES\n1 ONLY \u2014\n2-Pce. Fulton r.\nChesterfield Suite\nWith a rich wine velour covering and all-over fern design in\ntan. Reg. $272.50.'Special\n$19950\n1 ONLY -12-PIECE\nBartz Chesterfield Suite\nThis is something' different in chesterfields.\nCovered in a very heiyy and attractive green\nfern tone on tone velour. This suit\u00a3 Is covered\n.not only on the showy, parts but under the\ncushions in the same fine material. Drop in and\nsee it for yourself. Reg. $284.50.:       .\nSpecial $1995**\nHARDWOOD\nKitch^Tobles\nAt greatlyXreduc'ed\nprices. Priced m. from\n.95\n12J\nBABY HIGH CHAIRS\nIn many different colors and designs, made of birch\nand maple finished in natural finish. This includes\none bumper ..pad with eadh chair, with or without\nmetaltrays. -\n$S-W&up\nONLY\nKroehler Suite\n.Here's a rp&l bargain. This\nis covered in a wine tapestry with chair to match.\nA life long suite and a real\nbuy. Reg. $272:50. Special\n$139.00\n1 ONLY -_- HARDWOOD\nTable and Chair Set\nIn natural finish, built for\nhard wear. Brown or red\nleatherette upholstered seat\nand well padded. Regular\n$69.50. ' 9CQ.SO\nSpecial   U^\n1        \u25a0 . '\u25a0\n1 Only \u2014 6-Pce. Maple Breakfast Suite\nFour very sturdy chairs, 1 large table with jaekknlfe leaf, 1 large\nroomy buffet with glass doors, cutlery drawer and linen drawer.\nReatilar $13955. %,\u201e\nSPECIAL *r- $99.50\nCHROME\nKitchen Chains\nMany colors to phoose\nfrom. Regular $16.95.\n.Special\n$11.25\n12\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1948_10_21","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0423947","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"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.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1948-10-21 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1948-10-21 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0423947"}