{"@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":"2023-02-09","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1951-11-02","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0425449\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" '\".\n\u25a0\u25a0'-;.,- \u25a0\",.;\nBritain Turns Off\nEgypt Oil Taps\nRevolution Possible as Result, \u2022\nSays Minister; Guerrillas Threaten\nI , CAIRO, Nov. 1' (CP)\u2014Egypt's Interior Minister, Pouad\nSerag El Din, said tonight British Shilitary authorities have\nbut off overland oil shipments from Port* Suez into Egypt and\nthe embargo may lead to \"troubles and revolution.''\nAt a Press conference where he-made his statement,\nSerag El Din askW that it be withheld from publication in\nCairo papers so as not to alarm the city's people.\nGasoline and kerosene continue to pour in by pipeline\nfroni the British-held oil heads in the Canal Zone, but all\n\u2022rail and 'road tanker ship\nment has been stopped,\" he\n?ja|d.\n\u2022ANTICIPATE REVOLUTION\nThe .embargo Win leave* Egypt\n-starved within a few days for diesel\naijd other heavy : industrial fuels,\nthe fiery, Nationalist contended. He\ncalled the situation dangerous and\nsaid the Government \"anticipates\nwidespread, revolution.\"\nA   British ' military   spokesman\nsaid the Egyptian Government is\n.becoming progressively ffibre len-\nI lent toward anti-British extremists.\nThere Were new Egyptian threats\n\u25a0 at guerrilla warfare. *\nGen. Azla El Masrl, former chief\n. of staff of the Egyptian army,\nsaid he Is training \"liberation battalions\" to-fight the British forces\nand also generally to \"defend\ntheir rights and to fight for a dignified life\/' .   .\nAzla   El   Masrl   was   Interned\nduring the Second Wdrld War as\nan axis sympathizer,\nTERRORISTS THREATEN x\n^Terrorists also stepped up their\ncampaign against Egyptians they\naccused ot \"collaborating\" with\nBritons and Europeans..In leaflets\ndistributed through the zone to contractors, traders and transport drivers, a \"vigilante\" group warned\nthat suspects will be \"tried''* and\nif found guilty publicly flogged-and\nbranded on the face with hot lions\nfor \"high treason.\"\nBritish authorities, mesyiwhile.\nacted swiftly to forestall possible\nterrorist attacks.. against servicemen's families. 'They announced)\nthst compulsory, removal, of many\nsoldiers' families to Britain fr*mj\nthe canal zone will start soon. They\nsaid families remaining will live\nin guarded compounds.\nSPLIT\nThreats of violence by, extremists coincided with reports of a split\ndeveloping amonG the Arab countries over Esynt's refusal to join\na Western-led Middle-East defence\nproject. :\"\u25a0*\u25a0'\u25a0:\nThere were strong indications\nthat some Arab countries are reluctant to, suooprt. the Egyotian\nposition reported outlined to them\nby the Egyptian foreign Office recently, ' *' . ,\n. Egyptian efforts to hold a seven-\ncountry Arab parley immediately\napparently have fallen through.'a\nChurchill Concocts Bitter\nPill lor Economic Ills\nBy FRASER WIQHTON\nLONDON, Nov. 1  (Reuters) \u2014\n* Winston Churchill, who asked and\nWon a doctor's mandate to remedy\nBritain's economic ills, is concocting a bitter, pill, It was learned tonight.   \"\u25a0\u25a0   '\u25a0\"'-*\n'Sources close to the-*,7J-year-otd\nPrime Minister said tonight he.will\nbrace the country for fresh hard-'\n, ships and sacrifices when Parliament-meets next week. '.;\u25a0,:...:\n*. They'said he plans to. confront\nlatjoiS'-now the opposition party iri\nthe House -of Commons\u2014with an\nimmediate. debate on the looming\n-ltaa9clal;:crt!iis..\n'\u25a0-' tte  .Conservative  :,GoyerVimimt;\n'\u25a0WITannounce<th\u00bb measures It proposes to close the gap between Bri\n* tain's income and the expenditures\nrequired fbr foreign purchases..\nTRADE .**..'.'.    .-:-\u2022\nR ..Waste In ' Government' depart-\n\u25a0 ments will be the first objective of\n\/Churchill's curative program.. But\nan even more urgent problem will\nbe the trade gap, now running at\nmore than \u26661,680,000,000 a year.\/'\nThough Britain has a bigger-'dot\nlar reserve than she had in 1949. it\nla; dwindling at-an alannlng rate.\n* Churchill's Government is pledged\nto pursue the \u00a34,700,ooo;o00 rearm\nament program, which* Involves\nlarge Imports from abroad.\nRlchardT'Butler, new Chancellor\nRadiologist Sees\nKing for Checkup\nLONDON, Nov. 1, (Reuters)\nDr. Qeorge'Cordlner, a radiologist\nand four \"other doctor's X-rayed\n* the King at Buckingham Palace\ntoday.\nThey cheeked the.condition of\n. the King's chest following his\nSept. 23 operation for lung resection.\nThe last medical bulletin, Oct.\n21 said the King was making satis-\n\u2022 factory progress and was able to\nget up for. a few hours.\nPROVING\n\u25a0LIBR.\nIH\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay*\u2014Sunny .today, beconv\ning cloudy by evening, continuing\nvery cold. Winds light. Low and\nhigh at Cranbrook, 5 below and 30.\nabove. Crescent Valley 5 and 35,\nRevelstoke 10 and 38.\nNSLSON.B.C., CANADA-FRIDAY MORNINa NOVEMBER % 1?51\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 162\n, With a bristling show of strength In.the'form of troops and naval\nreinforcements, Great Britain Is determined to hold her position-In\nthe Suez'area. While heavy units of the fleet stand by off the coast,\narmored cars (top) of the British Royal Dragoons engage In defensive exercises near Fay|d In the Canal Zone. Below, Bren gurt car-,\nrlers of the Royal Sussex Regiment spied over rough Suez terrain.\nThe Egyptian state council has approved a bill, on general mobilization of manpower and resources-of the country to'maintain Internal\nsecurity In this :emergency.\u2014Central Press Canadian. \"'\nof* the Exchequer, reported, to the\nCabinet today on the economic position as he found it on taking over\nfrom his Socialist predecessor, Hugh\nGaitskell, a few days ago.\nHe will open Parliament's economic debate\u2014provisionally scheduled for Thursday\u2014with a review\nexplaining the situation in full. He\nwill also tell his plans for restoring\nstability. '\u25a0}\u25a0 \u25a0-> .-'\u25a0\nGov't to Delay Action . . .\nCommittee To\n.. NEW , YO*RK;' NOV. 1 . (AP)',' \u2014\nMarathon negotiations between\nwarring tactions of A.F.L. longshoremen ended in deadlock early,\ntoday, sending the crippling East-\ncoast dock strike into its 18th day.\nAfter sounding an earlier note of\n.optimism during the 11-hour session,\nMerlyn S. Pitzele, chairman of the\nNew York state mediation board,\nannounced that the meeting had\nbrokeh up,\n\"Extraordinary measures must be\nconsidered\" to end the dispute, he\nsaid., * \",,;\n. The strike, by,dissident members\nof the International Longshore-\nment's Association; has*, paralyzed\nthe vast'port of-New York'and the\nBoston watetfront. Only military\nand naval cargoes have moved with\nany regularity.\n. The rebels are headed by John\n(Gene) Sampson, who is opposing\nthe leadership of I.L.Ar President\nJoseph P. ftyan,\nToday's meeting ended after Ryan\nrefused Sampson's request that the\nmen reopen contract negotiations\nwith the employers, .the New York\nShipping Association.\nThe current pay, with the new\ncontract officially ih force, is $2.10\nan hour, a 10-cent hourly boost oyer\nthe old pact. The wildcat dockers\nare demanding a 25-cerit-hourly pay\nraise.\nOTTAWA, Nov.'1 (CP) \u2014 The\nGovernment has decided to delay\ntemporarily introduction of* legislation in the commons against retail pricS-ffofing rod place-the cpn-\ntrbverfsUty-Issue before a special\ncommitted *of parliament. , ,\"\n\u2022Nptlce of:\u00bb -resqlutlon to.set up\ntho. commbn^eXato committee was\ngiven oh the tommbhs\/order paper\ntoday by Justice Minister \u2022 Garson.\nThis, he told' the commons later,\nWill give everyone who opposes or\nfavors the action a chance to present\ntheir views.    \u2022 '\nThe matter was broached by M.\nJ. Cbdwell, CCF. leader, who wondered whether'4hu resolution Would\nsupersede intimation in the speech\nfrom the throne that legislatioh\nagainst maintenance will be introduced during the current session.\nTO DRAFT LEGISLATION'\nMr.' Garson replied that lt would\ncomplement, not supersede it. What\nhe had in mind was to have the\ncommittee set up and during early\nstages present it with a draft of the\ngovernment's proposed legislation.\nIt appeared likely that the govern\nment will take no action until the\ncommittee completes its work. This\nmight take weeks.    \u2022 \u2022\u201e* ''...\u25a0'*\nDecision to set up the committee\nit was learned, followed appeal by\nmanufacturers and \"suppliers that\naction against the practice of fixing\nminimum prices on retail goods be\nheld up until the subject could be\nreviewed. Sopie believe the practice\ncover-15 per cent of all goods entering retail trade.\nPROPOSED PLANS\nAt the house opening, both; Mi1.\nColdwell and George Drew, \/Progressive Conservative leader, Bug-\nRailways Ask\nFreight-Rate\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWhat) No Sea Serpent in This Lineup?\nNEW YORK, Nov. 1 (AP)-Ju\u00bbt'ilke people, animals sometimes\ndo the strangest things. And Wednesday they outdid themselves In\na burst of headline happenings.   '\/\u25a0'-'\nAlmost everywhere you looked, animals were In the news;\nAn.Arkansas posse sought a leopard, two black bears, a polar\nbear,an'd six rhesus monkeys\u2014escapees from a,circus,.\n-Two bull moose, locked In horn-to-horn combat, started a big\nal r-'rescue - operation with elements of drama up1 In Alaska. The -\naudience Included a batch of wolves and ravens, with food In mind.\nOne moose stomped off Into the woods after wildlife agents separated\nthem, the other died of a broken neck. \u25a0   -,\nf Ten elevated subway trains In Philadelphia ran behind schedule\n. because a cocker spaniel took a walk for 20 blocks on the train\ntracks.' -'.:'?\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022 '\"...'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0!*'\u25a0    -A  X  ' . \u25a0  \u25a0 :        ,'*.\nA fox turned up the ether day In the Massachusetts State House.\nWednesday they caught him. , \u25a0\nNear Dedham, Me., a 300-pound bear and a truck collided. One\nof the vehicle's passengers,'Amos Wllsgn, grabbed an axe, chased)\nthe bear and killed It '\".-\"'X- A   \u25a0\nA dog named Sklppy,surprised the Roger Fossen household In\nMorris, Minn. Eight months ago the Fosjeiis moved to Morris from;..\nSeattle and gave Sklppy to a neighbor. Sunday there was a scratch,*\nIng at'the front door of the Fossen home. It was Sklppy\u20141800 miles\nf rom' 8eattle. ,      ','     ., \u25a0 \u25a0 * - \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022  . *'  \u25a0.\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0  \u201e    '.*    '.:\u25a0'.'::,\n'Twelve more dOgs made the hews In,Louisville, Ky. A grocer\nhad the dogs seized to cover Mrs. Margaret Hoagland'a $239 grocery.\n' bill.-'   \u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0 *\u25a0*.       ' v\" '.    \u25a0 , ' .    ,*'\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiii{iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiui\nUM  RAIIff AT       Holland Ratifies\n.11. DAUU Al(       Schuman Flan\nRED PROPOSAL\nAsk New Hike,to Offset 20 P.C. Defence\nSurcharge; Send Rates Up 10 P.C.\n'By, JOHN LEBLANC   V\n',. \/ .       C&nadiari Press Staff Writer  ',\n; .OTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP^The railways today applied\nfor. arnew freight-rate^increase Which \u2014 with what they\nalready were seeking\u2014would'-send up rates by about 10 per\ncent. . \u2022 ,'.    *-'-, ,;; '    :  \"V;*. *\u25a0 \u25a0,---,\nAn increase of between fiye^find sjx per cent wis asked *\n,to Compensate the companies, for the 20-per-cent'\"defence\nsurcharge\" on income tax iii'the. last Federal budget, ft would\nbe in addition to. a five-per-cent application now pending before the *Board of Transport\ngested that the house should haye\nthe. government's proposed legislation on hand when It considers the\nresolution which Mr. Garson intends\nto introduce tomorrow.'\nMr. Garson -said, the government\nhad considered that course, but had\n,b,\u00abe*& fliferJnfid\"iby'.JaWf-efid'^pai)),!*\nmentary officers that there was no\nprecedence for' Introductioh of the\ndraft legislation, \"and we rather\nshied away from 'making a precedent on this Occasion.\"\nThe committee will consist of 28\nmembers of the commons ahd probably about 12 senators. '\nCON8UMER8 ASSOC.\nAPPROVES\n' The question of resale price man-\ntenance and Inflation arose outside\nof the commons tob, in an exchange\nof correspondence between Prime\nMinister St Laurent and Mrs. W. R,\nWalton, Jr., national president of\nthe Canadian Association of Consumers.\nMrs. Walton wrote the Prime\nMinister, commending the government on its proposal to deal with\nretail price-fixing, and Mr. St,\nLaurent replied that he was pleased\nto learn, of the Association's approval, \u2022\nHp, said he would give .\"careful\nconsideration\" to a suggestion made\nby the Association, to-have the government call a conference of natldn-\nal-groups to discuss ways in which\nthese groups could help ease inflation. *\nCtlaie\/L 3bwsrf&.\n-Nelson \u2014 Wednesday 7.58, Thursday 7.62. ,**'.',.   . ', .\nUz V Phil Win Informal Acclaim of\nOf U. S. Thousands: See Ambassadors\n-\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0 ',-'.... :: -:-:'*r,** [\u25a0\nBy R. J\u201e ANDERSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\n.WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 (CP) \u2014\nPrincess: Elizabeth today droye\nthrough Virginia, the state named\ntor the virgin queen. '\u2022        <\n\u25a0 She drove with Prittte'Philip at\n60 miles an, hour through the state\nnamed by Sir. Walter Raleigh in\nhonor of the first Elizabeth. It was\nthe first and only state she will\nvisit on this 45-hour trip to the\nUnited States.\nFIRST PRESIDENT'S HOME\n\u2022 They visited Mount Vernon, hqme\nof the first American president, 18\nmiles down the Potomac River\nfrom Washington, and received the\nacclaim of Americans estimated in\nthe tens of thousands. The Princess\nthen paid' homage to America's\nhonored war dead In Arlington National Cemetery before swinging\nback across the Potomac for official\nreceptions.\nMEET AMBASSADORS\nAt the Canadian Embassy in ftock\nCreek Park she met the ambassadors ot the eight Commonwealth\ncountries, their wives and senior\nmembers of their staffs -before\nlunching privately at Blair House,\nthe temporary White House which\nis their home in Washington.\nj She then received 2000-odd guests\nat the British Embassy, the big \"do\"\nof her stay here, before entertain\ning at dinner for the President and\nMrs. Truman at the Canadian\nEmbassy.\nThroughout tne cold, windy day\nthe winsome Prince's and her husband moved easily and informally\nthrough crowds '.that at times\npressed within touching distance.\nNeither apparently' was disturbed\nby the constant clicking of cameras\n\u2014amateur' and professional \u2014 ftor\nthe gay shouts of \"Hey, Liz\" or.\n\"Hello, Philip,\"\nThere hadn't been anything like\nit anywhere on the Canadian tour.\nThe cops took a good-natured\nview of throngs pressing in from\nevery side at every official stop of\na 40-mile drive.\nBOISTEROUS WELCOME\nSo boisterous was the welcome\naccorded at Mount Vernon that it\nverged on rowdyism. There, a\ncrowd.of some 2000 was scattered\nabout the grounds of the farm\nhouse where George Washington\nwas born and where he' is buried\nbeside Martha Washington. They\npushed and shoved for vantage\npoints and swore at policemen\u2014the\nonly officlousness of the day was\nshown at Mount Vernon.\nThe day's drive was completed\nunder overcast skies and in chilly\ntemperatures.\nThroughout, the Princess appear*\nseemingly, not, noticing' the' cold\nwind for which her mink jacket\nwould  have  been' more  suitable.\nThe Duke was tahaVaJ.uniform.\nTO MOUNT VERNON ['\u25a0 ;\nThe. 30-minute drive to Mount\nVernon was Made at a mile-a-\nminute speed behind a' siren-\nscreaming motorcycle escort\nthrough countryside .still green in\nNovember, At Alexandria, seven\nmiles from Washington, the parade\nslowed to a crawl, to the delight\nof some 10,000 sidewalk - lining\nschool children and  boby soxers.\nIt was an Informal drive in contrast to Canadian practice. Entire\nhighways were not blocked off to\npermit passage of the royal motorcade as In Canada. In- Mount Vernon, the Princess and the Duke\njointly placed ,a wreath on the\nWashington tomb. They then walked down a yard-wide path, crowds\npressing in on both sides and\ncameras clicking, to re-enter their\nlimousine for the drive up to the\nWashington home.\nAnother crowd awaited the royal\nparty at the entrance to Arlinton\"\nCemetery where hawkers wi{h\nlittle Union Jacks apparenUy had\nbeen doing little business. They\nstood by the roadside with unsold\nbundles of flags and other emblems\nand only a few British flags were\ned in a teal blue suit and coat, waved by the spectators.\nPAY TRIBUTE\nIn a simple but impressive ceremony in the beautiful resting place\nof America's Unknown Soldier the\nPrince and Princess placed\nwreath upon the tomb, Then, as the\nPrince stqod at the salute and the\nPrincess at attention, a biigler'played the \"Last Post;\"\nFollowing the ceremony, the, royal\ncouple'returned to Washington directly to the Canadian Embassy residence for the reception for Commonwealth representatives. Here,\ntoo, spectators were thick on the\nsidewalks. They cheered the' visit\nors as they entered shortly after\nnoon and again when they departed\nat 12:50' p.m. for Blair House. - '\nRECEPTION\nThe last official function of. the\nday was the British Embassy re\nceptlon: A dense crowd milled\naround the Embassy long before\nthe royal party arrived \u2014 the\nPrincess still In her blue outfit and\nthe Prince in a navy blue suit He\nhad changed at Blair House during\nthe short stop for luncheon. *\nThroughout the day the Prince\nand Princess appeared relaxed and\napparently enjoying their taste of\nAmerican hospitality. This was par*\nticularly evident as they arrived at\nthe British Embassy where they\nmoved slowly along the lines of\nspectators, stopping frequently to\ntalk to persona in the crowd.\nBadWeqther . (\nReduces fighting.\n'  -    By WILLIAM  JORpEN    v:\n: .MUNSAN, Korea, Nov. 2 (Friday)\n(AP)\u2014United Nation's truce nego-\ntiators. balked' today at accepting\nthe Western limit of a Communist-\nproposed, buffer 4one across. Korea\nafter reaching \"genetal agreement\"\nwith the Beds :on where the. Shooting would stop.'      '  ,    ..\nWhile a U. N. command,spokesman said Thursday the two aides\nwere' in:general agreement on the\nEastern end of'the buffer zone \u2014\nfrom Kumhwa.55 air miles East to\nthe,'Kosong area\u2014the-West was\nstill'the,subject of dispute..'\n,'Still \\insbWed,,was.^psaesflon; ot\n'tH;*svKa\u00absohg\":aFeaK ftw * Rffd\u00bbh'eld\n*and\\ vital: because -it wmtrols* thf\nNorthern. approaches to Seoul.\n',' Both   aides   have   insisted   they\nSasi have the rubbled '.city\u2014and\nore' important\u2014its   Surrounding\nhigh ground,\n\u25a0V S EIGHTH* ARMY HEAD*\nQUARTERS, Korea,, Nov.!,-2 (Friday) (APJ\u2014 Cold rain'and snow\nflurries reduced \"the Korean fight*\ning lo patrol scraps Thursday as\nthe truce talkers at Panmunjom\ncame closer to agreement on a\ncease-fire line.: \u25a0 \u25a0, .\u25a0\" ' \u25a0     ; \u25a0.     . -\nDespite the weather, the U. S\nFifth Air Force flew 304 sorties,\nmostly Mainst supply routes in\nNorthwest Korea. \u25a0\nTwenty-four U. S. 'Thunderjets\nand 40 Russian-made Mig jets tangled for 10 minutes over Sinanju. but\nno damage was reported to either\nside.\nHounding out the war's Ijigg'est\naerial month, U. S. B-20 bombers\nWednesday, night dropped 100 tons\nof .bombs on Comjnunist positions,\nmostly near Kumhwa on tHa'cen-\ntral front\/Pilots reported several\nammunition dumps were exploded.\nKing Talal Pledges\nSupport lo Arabs\nAMMAN, Jordan, Nov. 1 (AP) \u2014\nKing Talal today'pledged Jordan's\nsupport to the Arab League,\nIn'his first Sp'eech front, the\nThrone, reed to ah opening\/session\nof-.Parliament by Premier. Tewfik\nPasha, the new Jordan monarch\nSaid:  .  \u2022  ' \u25a0 \u2022'\n\"I deelare our absolute suppoM\nand sincere. sympathy towards the\nnational* asoiratioris ofVthe Arab\nstates. My .'Government will do Its'\nutmost to; prove this support by\ncontinuing, to. cooperate fully within the charter of the Arab League.\"\nTalal becaine K'ng after the,assassination of his father. Abdullah,:\nwho did not always see eye to eye\nwith all: members of the Arab\nLeague. Jordan Is a member, along\nwith E?ypt, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq,\nSaudi Arabia and Yemen.\nTHE HAGUE, The Netherlands,\nNov, 1 (AP) \u2014 Holland1 has become\nthe first country tb ratify the Schuman Plah for pooling West. Europe's\ncoal, and .steel resources. Parlia-\nnient's lower! house voted approval\n62 to -8 last night\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nJUSTNOTiRIGHT...\n: VANCOUVER, Noy. 1 (CPf\u2014 ''\n.Beer parlors^here ire;'ab>tit as''\ncrowded at baseball' stadiums ,\n' In-January.,*.\/.   '  , \";'\"'\u2022'\nIn fact, nearly! all the 64 In\n.town are closed.up.tight.\nThis Isn't to aay that-beei1 hjs\nfallen from favor or-flavor or\nthat Canada's third city has Introduced prohibition\n'*,; Foiir hundred and thirty-one.\nmen went on strike.last week.\nThis has created havoc In the\njlranks of beer drinkers,\u00abrthose,\n;431'h(i8ri worK'at^our breiVfariii*\nIn Vancouver, Victoria and\nNe* Westminster. '.';\nThere Is io!me ;bottled beel-\nleft In the taverns which are\nEtUI open but It's pretty hard\nfor a man who Is used to quaf- '\nflng at 10 cents a glass\u2014even\nWhen the glass has an extraord-\ninarlly-slzed head\u2014to lay out 29\ncents for a bottle, which Is only\ntwo glasses, head and all.\n\"It's just not right drinking\nbe'r out of a bottle In a tavern,\"\none oldtlmer complained ai he\ncontemplated a \"no draught\nbeer\" sign In a' beer parlor\nwindow.\niiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nI.M.A. Supports\nForest Board\nVANCOUVER Nov. 1 (CP) - A\nproposal to establish a forest board\nin* British Columbia today drew\nsupport from;the Interior Lumber\nManufacturers Association.     |\nThe proposal was suggested by\nJ.,W. Baikie, President of the Truck\nLoggers' Association.\n\/\"The formation of such a board\nwas suggested by the Interior Lijm-\nber Maufacturers Association to the\nSloan Commission in its hearings in\n1945,\" S. M. Simpson, chairman of\nthe Interior Manufacturers said,\n\u201e\"It is bur opinion that the utmost\nin utilization and conservation of\ninterior British Columbia timber\nstands would be acheved if an administrative boafd were established\nWith jurisdiction over general forest\nadministration.\"\nCommissioners.\nTogether, the two hoists would\nadd about $45,000,000 to the annual\nhalionalfrelght biil.        *        1 ;\nAMENDMENT\nThe surcharge-tax application\ncame in the form of an amendment\nto requests made to the board several months ago for'higher 'rates to\nmeet the costs of wage increases\nand a short work week resulting\nfrom the general rail strike of Aug.,\n'1950.\nThe railways then asked a five*\nper-cent rate boost to coVer the\nwage increases and one of 14 or 15\nper pent \u2014 depending on how ihe\nhigher rates were applied \u2014 to\nmeet the cost of the short Work\nweek* In July, the bqard granted\na temporary 12-per-c*ent increase,\nleaving the test of the case to be\ndetermined finally at hearings to\nopen Nov. 12,\nThe railways now have asked to\nhave the proposed 14-15 per cent\nincrease amended to one of 17-18\nper cent. The higher figure Would\nbe for rates set in such a way that\ntheir, impact would be limited on\nmovements of livestock, lumber and\na few other primary products. '\nTO CONSIDERtyOV. 12'    . .        \u25a0\nThe -application * was tiled only\nlate today by the Railway, Association of Canada, and there was.no\n-immediate Indication  on  how -it\nHighway Accidents\nClaim Two Lives\nCALGARY, Nov. 1 (CB) \u2014 High\nway accidents today claimed two\nlives In,Southern Alberta.\nTwelve-year-old' Annie Dyck of\nBrooks, Alta., died of injuries suffered when struck by a truck just\nNorth of the. town, about 150 miles\nsoutheast of Calgary. . '\u2022 . ..-\u25a0\"-?\nMoses Jlmm John,* 21-year-old Indian of the Stbney Reserve at Morley, Alta., died in hospital after\nbeing struck by a car on the highway near Morley. He was changing\na tire chain ori his car at the time.\nwould be treated by the boardi\nHowever, it was expected the question would be wrapped up in the\nwhole rate case, 'to be considered\n(n, the Nov. 12. hearlhgB.\n-At -these sessions, the board also\nis expected to go deeply. Into, the\nquestion of shitting more bf* the\nfreight-rate load from the West arid\nthe Maritimes to central Canada.\nIn granting the temporary 12-percent increase July 4, it served hdtlce\nthat the award will be re-examine^\nto deal with these specific points:\n1. Easing the impact of higher\nrates on movements of primary commodities and long-haul traffic that'\nform a large part ot rail business\nin the outlying provinces.*\n2. Moving more ot the burden to\nlow-rate \"competitive\" traffic thai\nis concentrated most heavily in Ontario and Quebec. ,*,-''\nBoth* proposals- have beetii\nurged by the governments of eight\nprovinces \u2014 all except Ontario and\nQuebec \u2014 and they are in line with\nrecommendations of the royal commission on transportation that reported io the, Government last\nSpring;     . .'*\"''',\nPending the November \u2022 hearing!,\nthe 12-per-cent interim' increase will\nyield about $54,000,000 a year.' It la\nthe third major, hoist since the war,\nfollowing one of 21 per cent in 1948\nand another of 20 per cent granted\nin three instalments during. 1949\nand 1950.'.\n$60 1&^\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1!(CP).- A'pension of $00 a month for. Canadians\n70 and pver was advocated today In\nthe commons by Stanley Knowles,\nCCF. member of Parliament for\nWinnipeg North centre.\nThe 43-year-old (Minister of thi\nUnitarian Church of Canada spoke\nbefore members gave second, reading ;\u2014 approval in principle \u2014'to a\nhip authorizing payment of $40 \u2014\nmonth pensions to those 70 ahd\nover, starting January next.\nMr. Knowjes said that $40 a month\nwas insufficient .to provide Canada's\naged with a decent standard of living! The amount was the equivalent\nof $33 in 1949 when the existing\npension paid to .those 70 and, over\non a means-test basis, was. Increased\nto $40.\nHe said tbe. inadequacy of the\nproposed pension and the method\nof financing the payment: were both\nopen to criticism. The financial proposals* also were criticized by\nspokesmen far other opposition\ngroups. .\nLIBERALS FAVOR\nTwo Liberals indicated they\nwould favor higher pensions. George\nCruickshank' (L\u2014Fraser Valley)\nsaid an individual could not live on\n$40 a month, He could not see why\ncorporation taxes could not be increased to provide higher pensions,\nJames \"Rooney (L\u2014Toronto St.\nPaul's) also said he favors pensions\nof $60 at the age of 60.'\nH. W.  Herridge,(CCF\u2014Kootc\n. nay West) said the legislation rep-\nbuilding adequate security for tha\npeople of Canada. But he agreed\nwith Mr. knowles that the pension should be Increased.\nOwen'Jones   (CCF\u2014Yale)   and\nAngus Maclnnis (CCF-r-Vancquver\nEast)  supported Mr. Knowles. demand for higher payments.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 (CP)\u2014Two\nweeks ago, collection boxes Were\nplaced in two of Vancouver's*\nbiggest department stores to get\n$2500 In donations for Christmas\npresents for Canadian soldiers\nfighting-in Korea.\nThe total to date: $108.\nCoast Man Admits\nHallowe'en Hoax\nVICTORIA, B.C., Nov. 1 (CP)\nEdward* Smith, 34, confessed today\nhis story of acid-throwing Hallowe'en-masked youth's was a hoax,\nSmith, his face pitted and scared,\nconfessed to police that his Injuries\nwere self-inflicted. But his motive\nwas not disclosed.\nHe reported Saturday night that\nhe had been stopped by three youths\nnear his home. He said they asked\nhim for a 'handout and on. being\nrefused, squirted the contents Of a\nwater pistol in his face.\nPolice investigation showed his\nfacial disfigurement was caused by\ncaustic soda and lye. It was first\nreported he had suffered sulphuric\nacid burns. - .\nSmith,is under police guard in\nhospital. A public mischief- charge\nwas laid against him today.;\nMissing Flyer Found\n; NORTH BAY. Ont, Nov. 1 (CP)\n\u2014Flyer Bruno Vannler of Sturgeon\nFalls, Ont, was rescued today after\nbeing missing in the Northern Ontario bush for seven days.\nA ground party broke through to\nhim and took him to a lumber\ncamp a few miles from his wrecked\nplane.\nLUCKY SOLDIER. . .\nCAMP  BORDEN,  Ont,  Nov.  1 \u2022\n(CP) - Maj. E.-J*. Hershey's luck\nholds good.\n.In 1932, when he was nearly killed\nin a gun battle with the Yukons\nnotorious \"Mad Trapper\" good luck\nsaved his life.\nYesterday, 19 years later, he woo\n$140,000 in the Irish Hospital Sweep-\n\"Yes, I've been fortunate,\" he said.\nMaj. Hershey: said he will use\nsome of the money to educate his\ntwo children, Donald, 15, and\nSheila. 12.'\n\"Doc\" Joseph Cyr to\nFly Back to Canada\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP) \u2014 The\ncontroversial naval officer who\nsays'he is Joseph Cyr la being\nflown home from service off Korea\nto face allegations that he Isn't\nCyr at all.\nAnother medical officer, Surgeon\nLieutenant   David   Willoughby   of\nToronto', is flying out to Korea to\ntake    Over\"   the    medical    duties.\nresented an historic step towards aboard the destroyer Cayuga.\nAnd in This Corner *;;.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 (CP)^-Blll 8t John, a University of British\nColumbia student has returned empty-handed from three grouse\nhunting expeditions.\n' Yesterday he got one without firing a shot.\nHe was passing a sign board on the campus when'a willow grouse\ncame roaring at him In a power dive. It just missed him and struck\nthe sign board, dropping dead at his feet\nRIVERDALE, N.J.,' Nov; 1 (AP)\u2014Three teen-agers walked Into\nMagistrate* Herbert Irwin's court last night and took seats in tbe rear\nof the iobm.\nThey sat quietly as various cases were heard. After a while, Irwin\nbecame curious and asked an* attendant to find out what the boya\nwere doing. ,\n'    They quickly answered \u2014 lt was Hallowe'en apd they wanted an\nIronclad alibi in case police began roundlhg up pranksters.\nDAUPHIN, Man., tfov. 1 (CP)\u2014A poacher's nightmare that began\n. Sunday In Riding.Mountain National Park when 28 Mountlei In scarlet\ntunics descended on three hunters leading meat of an elk Into a car\nhad a sequel today In police court\nThe hunters\u2014 Dawson Slsson, James McKlllop and Robney Dewar,\nall of Dauphin \u2014 were convicted of unlawfully hunting game In a\nnatlohal park and fined a total of $250 or two months In Jail.\nThe Mountles, headed by an Inspector and decked out In their ,\nNo. 1 uniforms, were en route to Rivers, Man,, for the visit of Princess\nElizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh when they came upon the hunting party South of Dauphin  All eight of the Mountle's cars stopped\nand the police piled out around the hapless hunters. '-\"\nBONN, Nov. 1  (Reuters)\u2014The Federal Parliament's restaurant\n< chief, -Paul La Roche, today ordered 1000 specially-rolled eight-inch\ncigars, labelled Churchill and packed in boxes bearing pictures ot the\nBritish Prime Minister, for sale in the Parliament Building. One box\nwill be sent to Winston Churchill as a gift\nTORONTO, Nov. 1 (CP)\u2014There's no romance In a number, says\nB. K. Sandwell, editor emeritus of Toronto Saturday Night\nThat's why, he told the. Canadian Good Roads Association convention today, he thinks each highway ought to have a name.\n. The Queen Elizabeth Way \u2014 Toronto to Niagara Falls \u2014 Is attractively named, but there's no romance In \"Highway No, 1\" or \"Hlgh-\nwaV Wa. 2.\" lui tald.\n TT\"\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 1951\nTONIGHT-SAT.\nCOMPLETE SHOWS: 7s00 r *:00\nHOTBiGO0\nand COLD STEfcL\nAn EDWARD SMALL PntbcHeiT\n\u00ab, BARBARA HALE-RICHARD GREENE\n..   \\W\\ml\\      Carl Benton Reid-Wiim Bishop\nRon Randell\nLatest World News \u2014 Cortoon: \"TROUBLE INDEMNITY'^\nSpecialty: :'-Vi\n\"A Friend at the Door\"\nTeresa\nis\ncoming to\nNelson\n* VANCOUVER (CP) .-* A bandit\nwho walked Into a confeotionery\nstore here left: puzzled and without loot after getting absolutely no\nanswer from the attendant: to his\ndemands for money. The.;clerk recently ainvpd nom China* and\nspeaks no English.\nr\nm SLEEP\nSLUGCISH?^\nKere's SURE RELIEF\nOei relief from constipation\u2014lnd|.\nSoitlon. Positive results from\nfRUIT-A-TIVES proved *-bjr' tens ol\nthousands. PRUIT-A-TTVES contaJr\nwtracto of (ruin und'herba.   *\nMany Attend\nLO.O.F. Banquef\nNATAL, B; C. \u2014 Delegates'from\nCreston, Cranbrook, Kimberley,\nFernie and Michel met recently ft\nthe I.O.O.F, hall at Fernie for their\nSemi-annual meeting bf district Association of Odd Fellows. President\nS,,DeLuca. of Key; City Lodge,.Cranbrook, acted as chairman, supported\nby past: presidents of the district,\nW. Thomson of Mt, Fernie Lodge\nand L. Lowe.pf-Michel Lodge. At\nthe close of the Meeting a banquet\nwas served by SJt.. Fernie Lodge\nwhich some 60 delegates attended.\nB. Wiastanley of Michel Lodge,\ngave an interesting ahd educational\ntalk on his recent trip to the B*rltt\u00abh\nMes. He w8s given a vote of thanks\nfor,his fine, address.-     !\n.Chairman DeLuca thanked Mt,\nFernie L'odge. pn behalf of the dele-,\ngates for the splendid banquet.\n'EDMONTON ' (CP) \u2014 . Alberta\nphysicians hoV.ored Dr. Peter M.\nCampbell,of Lethbridge at a ceremony .here on completion of 60\nyears' practice!'in the West. A\ngraduate of Queen's University at\nKingston, Ont., he came to Alberts\nin 1900.   -.-.. .    * -      .\nv REVIVAL SERVICES\nBETHEL TABERNACLE, 7C8 BAKER STREET\n. .'\u25a0' with-'   * * .\",\nREV, HOWARD CARTER OF LONDON, ENGLAND\nPreacher, Lecturer, Bible Expositor\nFRIDAY, NOV, 2 AT 8 P.M.   \"\nSUNDAY, NOV. 4 AT 11 A.M. AND 7:30 P.M.\nA CORDIAL' WELCOME AWAITS EVERYONE\n_  \u2022 \u25a0 -'\u25a0     . \\     \u25a0  '\nElected for\nRural Areas\nWalme Colburn of Casino was\nelected school rural attendance representative * vfhen residents of' the\nCasino area Ijeld their annual school*\nmeeting,    \u2022'\u25a0'\n' The session heard.reports on activities of the board ot School Trustees of Trail district No. li. True-\ntees E. B. Broadhurst and Ai: S.\nMawdsley, with SecreteTry-'&easurer\n8, Smith were present,\nLast week, resident* of the\nGenelle-China Creek arid Birch*\nbank-Oasis areas met, with the* for*\nmer electing H. J, Crockett and the\nlatter, \u2022 T. Q\u201e Milne, as -are* repre*\nsentatives. .-,\/*'\nThe representatives elected in the\nvarious rural areas, in the district\nWill meet later in the year to elect\n* rural trustee.\nVANCOUVER, Nov, 1 (CP) - A\none-third expansion in capacity of\nPort Alberni's plywood plant was\nannounced today oy 3. M. Hoffmois-\nter, President, of MacMillan & Blo\u00bb.\ndel Limited.\nIt |s expected that the enlargement program, now well advanced,\nWill be completed early in 1851;. New\njobs for about 100 employees, men\nand. women, will be created at Port\nAlbernl by the step-up in plywood.\nmaking eapacity,. , . \":*\"'.\n\/Prior tp the development of me\u00ab.\nger plans for.the MacMillan it Bloe-\ndel operations, the latter organization had announced, its- intention to\nbuild a plywood, plant at Port A1-'\nberni. As merger arrangements progressed this'projeot was incorporated In the plan' fo Increase .-the ca-\nOre-Filled Truck\nCrashes Through\nCity Garage Ramp\nMore than seven tons of lead\nconcentrate loaded in a Trail-bound\ntruck crashed through the Beacon\nMotors romp. at 701 Boker Street\nThursday afternoon.\nDriver Roy Webber of ,N\u00bblson\nhad just driven on to the ramp,\ntowing in a disabled ear, and was\nabout to start up again when the\nright rear end of the truck crunched through the flooring, Mr. Webber received bruises when he fell\nacross the cab, striking his neck\non the door.\nOnly recently new supports wore\ninstalled under the ramp flooring.\nOf the IVt tons of..toncentrata,\nabout two spilled, out of the truck.\nBeacon Motors' propane gas line\nwas brbken and .the Fire Depart;\nment stood by for a time lit case\nfire broke put. The leak was temporarily plugged, Gasoline leaking\nfrom the. truck also caused a-hazard:\nThe truck, owned by R. j. Lovett of Retallack, was hauled, out\nof the hole and the,spilled concentrate* cleared away by shoyellers,\nThe load was taken to Trail Thursday nighj by E, Fletcher. .'.-':\u25a0\n' Damage tq the truclj was not be*\nlieved to be extensive, .'-.'\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 1 (CP) '\u2014\nTtvo Vancouver seamen who slipped\nunder the Iron curtain'at, Darien,\nManchuria, and slipped back out\nagain four hours later arrived home\nWednesday aboard the .Canadian\nfreighter Argovan!\nMautice Embra and' Stanley\nSavage related that when their ship\nreached the Red harbor late In June\nthey decided to go ashore despite\norders from port officials that\nforeign crews are hot allowed to\nleave their ships, -\nThey, said they mingled with a\nwork1 party leaving the docks apd\ngot by the gate guard by flashing\ntheir seamen's identification cards.\nEmbra continued:\n\"We noticed many,bomb:shelters\nscattered throughout the town anjl\nmachine gun emplacements at every\ncorner., The windows of Ml build-\nings were criss-crossed with tape as\nthough' anticipating bombing raids.\nMonth of Year\n, October seems to be* the wettest\nmonth of the year for Nelson. Some\n3.93 inches of rain fell during October, 1951, more than during any\nmtath since '.October 1050, when\n6.72 inches fell.      '.,,,!\nThe mercury dropped \u25a0 to 5 23:3\ndegrees Oct, 31, a- sign of Winter\njust around the - corner. Maximum\n'emperatures was reached at 67 on\nOctober 5, The average for the\nmonth 43.32 degrees, * compared to\n45.2 for.the same moflth last.year,.\nThe Crescent Valley.fadio>range\nstation recorded 60,5 hours of .sunshine for October,. 1851. Last year\nfor the same month, 00 hours were\nwere'recorded,,*.\nTWO CHIMNEY FIRES    A\nTwo calls went out to the Nelson\nTire Department within two hours\nThursday night. No* damage result*\nod' from either fire.\nA chimney fire..duetto bvpr*-\nheating was. reported at the home\nof Mrs, Julia Lissa at 120 .Victoria\nStreet at 7:15 p.m. The second call\nto 338 Baker' Street, occupied by\nH. Acheson and G. McConnell,\ncame at. 8:38 p.m. when a newly\npainted stove pipe began to smoke,\nT\"- i   -MiTn- Ai  ' 'Tii\n4\n4\n-\u2014-i\u00bb\u2014\u25a0*yfy\u00bbffi\nSPORT COATS\nGenuine DONEGAL or HARRIS\nTweeds, in easy fitting two button\n(Leather) models, finished with three\npatch pockets and back vent.\nDONEGALS. ''    M ^;50\nEach    \t\nHARRIS.\nEach  .....\n\u00bb42!\n\u00bb45\nr**>+-*m\u00bbmm*m9-m.m*.m*m\u00bb*,*^M\nSLACKS K\nA great selection bf quality Slacks,\nfrom* the ever popular CORPS to the\nfinest Venetian finished gabardines\u2014\nfeat6red also is a complete range of\nEnglish worsteds in excellent patterns.\nStyled with or without pleats, some\nwith welted seams,- all with zippers.\nPriced ,. SO-2S $1COO\nper pair.      O     to\n$25\nm\nSPORT SHIRTS\nJust In, and very suitable for Fall\nwear. Made of spun rayon and gabardine, all are fast dyes and very\nwashable, Colors are most attractive,\nIn-greens, blues, greys, browns \"and\nplenty of wines. Sized Small, Medium,\nLarge and Extra Large.\nPRICED EACH:\n.CO     $(-.9S     *\u00a3\u2022\"\n*c.\n-BROGUES\nby Ritchie\nThe all weather shoe which is almost\na \"must\" to a man.\nSmooth leathers in Masterbullt quality or Martin's grain finish In Handcraft quality. Sturdily made \u2014 easy\nto fit.    . ''a'\n$ir.ai      $i\u00a3.Bo\nPer pair __\u00ab_ IJ        and   IO\nGODFREYS\n, Phone\n270\nBo*\nAlbertu :H)iyood-::'i^\nMeiahs Increased Jobs\npaclty and payroll of the Alberni\nplywood mill.,Much of the machinery that bad been, ordered for the\nBloedel plant will bo Installed In\nthe enlarged alply operation.\nAdditional facilities include a new\ncontinuous-feed drier, a new hot\npress with automatic loading and\nunloading ahd an addition to glue'\nroom .capacity.\nIt is expected that the supply of\npeeler legs for the port Albernl\nplywood plant will be substantially\nincreased by reason of.the merger\nby H. B. MacMillan Export Company and Bloedel Stewart & Welch\nLtd, At the same time, the Bloedel-\nbuilt pulp mill at Port Alberni will\nbenefit from the supply of chips and\nsalvage logs from former MacMillan\noperation*. \u2022*,..\u2022>,\u2022'\nSee Lurid Red Posters in Darien\n\"Displayed on $very building In\nthe port were large.posters preaching hate tor the U.S. There were\nposters ot Uncle. Sam astraddle a\nchest of gold and surrounded by\nskeletons, Posters of Uncle Sam on\nhis knees and a Chinese Communist\nrunning a sword through his body.\n\"We. were able to talk to a few\nRed Chinese soldiers but the Russian soldiers would have nothing to\ndo with us, even to accepting a cigaret. The Chinese* spoke confidently\nto us ot\"ultlmate victory' over the\nwestern Powers.\n\"When we tried to get past the\ngate at the docks we were arrested.\nRussian officers told us we were\nbeing charged as spies,\nl \"... Next morning we,, were told\nthat as we had never been there\nbefore and were apparently Unfamiliar with local orders we would\ngo unpunished,\"\nHair Too Long! Shoes Got Holes?\nKinauction Supplies Ihe Answers\nROYAL LOCK\nARRIVES FOR\nTRAIL GIRL\nThAIL', B. C\u2014The treasured souvenir of a look of Princess Elizabeth's hair, awaited patiently by\nseven-year-old Sharon Tutt, arrived this week. It was curled Into\na ringlet Inside a transparent plastic case ready for Its honored place\nin the haDpy girl's scrapbook beside a picture of the sender. Miss\nDoris Stenmark, who was. appointed io dress the Princess! hair during the Royal Visit in.Victoria.\nWhile 'vldltlng her brotherrin-faW\nand sister in Trail, Mr. and Mrs.\nr3am. Craik, Miss Stenmark heard\nof Sharon's sdrapbook of pictures\npf 'the Royal Family. She decided\na bit of Royal hair would complete\nihe collection.\n'Sharon's classmates In grade two\nhere were greatly excited when\nthey first heard of the gift and\nnow she has displayed it to oaeh\ngrade In the Sunningdaie School,\nNatal-Michel School\nPlans Outlined\nNATAL, B.C, \u2014 A public meeting,\nsponsored by the Michel-Natal\nParent-Teachers Association, . was\nheld in the Union hall at Natal re*\ncently.\nThe main topic was the discussion\nof the by-law to be voted on Nov.\n15, for the new schools required in\nSchool District No, 1, with special\nInformation relative to' the proposed\nbuilding program for Michel-Natal.\nA. L. McPhee of Fernie, chairman\nof the board of trustees for School\nDistrict No, 1 addressed tho meet*\ning, giving details regarding the ex*\ntent ot the proposed building and\nfinancial arrangements for the raising .of .the necessary funds, This\nmeeting was of vital Interest to all\nthe householders in the area, especially to the ratepayers,: It Is\nhoped that by November, 15 every\n'person in the Michel-Natal district\nthat Is entitled to a v.te will take\nadvantage of li for the betterment\nof the community.\n300 to Attend\nSocred Convention\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Nov,\nI (CP)\u2014Three hundred delegates\nare expected, to attend the B. C,\nSocial Credit League's. Convention\nhere tomorrow and Saturday.\nGuest speakers will be David Ure,\nMinister of Agriculture, for .Alberta,\nand Rev. E. O. Hansell, M-P*, Na\ntlonal President of the S.C.L.\nTwo of the resolutions to be tak\nen up are one asking the Govern*\nment to take immediate steps* to\nnermit feed.'to be shipped free Into\nthe province and one-opposing the\nfive-year driving liceftce fee and\nasking that \"we return to. the an\nnuai licence fee at the end of the\nperiod,\"\nII TABLES AT\nJOYMAKERS WHIST\nFirst at Joymakers progressive\nwhist Thursday evening at the\nEagles Hail was Mrs. J.'.-F, Colman\nand Mrs, D. Johnston, There were\n11 tables In play.\nTaking second for the ladies was\nMrs, Harry Johnson with third going to Mrs, T. Clem. Men's second\nprize went to B. Hille end third to\nA. S. Read.\nAlbert Smith was master ot ceremonies. Refreshments and a dance\nfollowed. '\nWould you like a meal ticket, a\ngallon of antifreeze, two haircuts,\nor your shoes repaired?\nNelson Kinsmen had them all of\nthese to offer at their 12th annual\nKinauction of the Air Thursday\nnight at the Capitol Theatre. CKLN\nradio listeners were enthusiastic\n\u25a0bidders. .'     .\nMaster of Ceremonies, t. H.\nNuyens, W. A, Duckworth, in charge\nof auctioneers, and auctioneers, H.\nA, D. .Greenwood, Laurie Lefeaux,\nAllan Barton and Carmen Hancock\npiloted the radio show with other\nKinsmen working behind, the scenes\nto make it a success.\nEntertainment for the first Kinauction under the chairmanship of\nJack Stewart was provided by guest\nartists Joyce Goodwin, Pat Scott,\nDick Stephens and ,Mort Browne.\nBen Monteleone was piano accompanist. The Kinsmen . choir and\nladies choir were in attendance.\nKinauction of the Air began In\n1840 when Kin Kooft Karnival, an\nalt minstrel show was held. It went\nover so well that the Idea of having\nan auction of old articles was hit\nupon and at the suggestion of Kins-\nman Hume Lethbridge, then radio\nstation manager here, it was staged\nas a radio show. The program was\nused to gain funds for Milk to Britain with merchants contributing\ngoods. In 1946 and '47 an audience\nwatched, but 'in 1948 only the radio\naudience participated apd'has. been\nrun In this manner ever since.\nVernon end Vancouver have followed the Nelson Kinauction plan\nand Trail Kinsmen this year will\ncome to Nelson for the final broadcast for prompting on their .own\nshow to be held in December.\nProceeds of the Kinauction series\nwill,, boost the finances for the\nClub's Lakeside Park bathhouse\nconstruction project\nDoe Preservation\nTough on Forests\nWASHINGTON, *Nov, I, (AP) -\nDeer hunters are gentlemen, they\nwon't shoot a Ihdy deer, and that's\nbad, says the National Wildlife\nFederation.\nThe Idea that It's not the thing to\nshoot a doe has \"resulted in more\n.waste venison and over-browsed\nforests than any other factor In\nbig game management,\" the Federation said in a statement today.\n\"In Wisconsin for example\" said\nthe Federation, \"teeming herds of\nwhlietails did almost irreparable\ndamage to the range year after year\nwhile sportsmen shouted down all\nsuggestions that they must start\nshotting females in Order to check\nthe Increase. They thinned out the\nbucks every Fall but the does kept\non having fawns,\"\n\u25a0 The buck law \u2014 shooting only\nmale deer \u2014 Is all right for starting Small herds, but continued too\nlong is wasteful and biologically\nunsoifnd, the conservation group\ncontends. ,    ,\n*\u2022*  .    ,~-        -     \" \u2022 ..   '\nTroops Stand Up Well\nTo Latest Atom Blast\nLA8 VEGA8, Nev\u201e Nov. 1 (AP)\n\u2014United 8tates Army troops were\nexposed today to an atomic blast\nfer the first time,, and carhe off\nwithout .casualties   and   with\nknowledge, whloh  May   prove\n\"greater than anticipated.\"    -\nOfficial   confirmation * ot . the\ntroop's participation in today's blast,\nwhich was sp strong tJuUt Wicked\nstore windows (n this elty more\nthan 78 miles away,  came from\nMaJ>Oan. William 5. Kean, commanding the Army's Third Corps.\nIt was the first time In the current series of tests that the concussion has been felt In Las Vegas,\nalthough blows of window-breaking force reached here from two\nblasts In  a series ot five last\nWinter,\nA\" picked' group of soldiers was\nIri the field to test the force of the\nexplosion, from \u00ab few miles awiy.\n* ' *    \"   ,'   * \u25a0'       \u25a0   \". m   '\nDubbed Exercise Desert Rock,\ntoday's joint Army-Atomic Energy\nCommission manoeuvre was designed to test''whether nuclear\nweapons can tie used' successfully\nin support ot ground forces,\nDuring'the night, the A.E.C.\nbariped air traffic at two 'levels\nbetween here and Albuquerque,\nN.M., to clear the path for;'the\nplane or planes coming in for the\nbomb drop.\nThe A.E.C. had promised that the\ntroops would be far1 eridugh from\nthe centre of tbe explosion to prevent casualties, Unofficially, it was\nreported that Tuesday's bomb,\ndropped from 81,000 feet, landed\nWithin 200 yards of the ground\ntarget,      ,\nFrom the size of the eloud, today's appeared to have been the\nstrongest in the present series of\nblasts. , ,\nInquiry Into Death\nOf Chinese to Be\nHeld Next Week\nInvestigation by police haa revealed little new in the death of\nWong Chee, Nelson resident since i\n1847 and part owner of a- Baker\nStreet cafe.\n' An inquiry Into the death wilT\nbe.held Monday or Tuesday of next'\nweek. Dr. F. M, Auld, Nelson cor-;*,\noner, Deported.\nWong Chee was found Wednesday-\nmorning hanging by a rope and'\nscarf fl'om a crossbeam behind a\ncafe on Vernon Street\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nBuy, gelli Trade the Classified Way\nRecovery of Moral Standards\nImportant lo World\u2014Silverwood\nThe need to \"recover our moral\nstandards\" was emphasised in an\naddress by Rev. Canon W. J. Silver-\nwood to Kiwanis Club at the Hume\nThursday night.\n, In a world \"swamped by conflicting standards\" where men said, \"If\nWe can get away With that, then\nwhy shouldn't I,\" Canon Silverwood\nsaw the reason for juvenile delinquency.\nThe young people saw what older\npeople were getting away with, and\n\"there in a nutshell is our problem\nin Juvenile delinquency,\"    * ' .* ;\nHe recalled Einstein's reply to the\nquestion as to what was wrong with\nthis generation, was that \"it has lost\nIts moral stamina and stability.\"   -\n\"We are living In an age of moral\nconfusion,\" the speaker continued.\nOlder people per-lved this'difference. They had found it hard to do\nright They were sustained by a\nstrong social opinion, -,\nToday's problem was complicated?\nby the fact that discovering what is\nright was baffling. This was 1 new\nage of ethical liberty.. The world\neconomically was off the gold standard, and ethically, morally, also\n\"went off the standard\" a long time\nago. People were trying to live\nwith an uncertain moral currency.\nHe told of the university student\nwho, asked by his professor why\nhe had gone into a notoriously corrupt business, said he needed the\nmoney and there was no longer any\nEDMONTON BUS DRIVERS\nVOTE TO <3d ON STRIKE\nEDMONTON, Nov. .1 (CP) - Edmonton's, bus driyers have voted\n\"overwhelmingly\" to strike, Labor\nMinister J, L. Robinson announced\ntoday. \u2022. \u25a0   ,;:. \u25a0'',\nThe city's 500 transit employees \u2014\ndrivers and barn employees \u2014 have\nvoted on the issue of a strike to win\na 16-cents-an-hour wage Increase\nawarded by an arbitration board.\nThe Edmonton City,Council has offered a 14-cent increase, to bring\nthe hourly wage to$1.40. ,\nThe vote figures were not immediately available.\ndifference between right and wrong\nanyway,\nWhen people became uncertain\nabout moral standards, the whole\ndemocratic, Christian process came\ntumbling'down.\nHISTORY SHOWS WAY\nHe felt the world seldom learned\nanything from history. He recalled\nthe shocking things he had seen\nduring the First World War. He\nwent back to the downfall of the\nRoman Empire. What had happened\nthere would happen here, for the\nmoral life of that nation had been\nabsolutely rotten. .  '\",.\nArnold Tpynbee, Cambridge professor of history, had said the \"moral'gilts are disappearing out ot our\nday and generation.\"\nIf moral standards were dead,\nthen \"we'could not be blamed tor\nanything.\" To say \"we lie, steal and\ncheat\" because . \"we, are not to\nblame,\" was precisely what would\nbe said of idiots.\nBut \"we decidedly are responsible people,\" and \"if we can be\nblamed', then there are moral standards.\"       r--.;.'.-:\nIf there was no difference between right and wrong, a belief he\ndescribed'as cheap moral anarchy,\nthen \"we must be idiots.\" Everyone\nwas certain there were standards,\nespecially when they were victims\nof their denial,\n-    .Science, never catch ai catch\ncan, and which had to be sure of\nIts findings, was riot intolerant,\nwas always willing to see thef\n\"other fellow's  view.\"  A  little\nmore of that attitude, a little more\ntole'ranoe would bring a return to\nhigh standards. The pride of every\nscientific laboratory Was Its standards, \u25a0 :\u25a0:'\u2022>.' - \u25a0'    \u25a0\nSome might.say morals were\n'  like art and not like Various well-\nknown  beautiful. bulWlngs\u2014and\nhad. standards, harmony, proportion and morals too. Wherever one\nwent he found satndards of technique, form, precision,\nIncredibly, only realm left to be;\ncontrolled by man's whim, fancy\nand caprice was the most important\nof all-\"human behavior. ' \u2022, y\nWIIXI'B WlTHERSPOON\nwas. a gamfcleri yoit know,\nthe kind of guy who'd bet   .\nonanything.     ...    \"-,* '\u2022**-       j\nWillla told Mra. Vitherapoon,   J\n\"No sense putting in the antfc   \u25a0\nfreeze yet.  I'll  bet this mild\n* weather keeps up till January.\"   \u25a0\nToo bad about Willie. Or .1\ndidn't you hear? Split radiator,\ncracked block\u2014damage $285.\nMORAL\nHave your Shell Dealer Install\nShellzone permanent Antl-Freese\ntoday or first thing tomorrow\u2014the\nsupply psay noirlasl. Shellzone\nwhen Installed by your Shell\nDealer, carries a guarantee,\nIn writing,for winlcHong trouble-\nfree cooling system protection.\nSHAVES F8R LESS MONEY!\nCanadian Exports to\nUnited States Down\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP) - For\nthe first time In almost two year;\nof Healthly monthly climbs, Canada's exports to the United States\ndropped slightly during September.\nHowever the decline was quickly\nabsorbed by increased shipments te\nBritain and most other countries,\nresulting In s net advance of II per\ncent lh Canada's total domestic experts,\nThe Bureau of Statistics today\nreported shipments to the United\nstates during September at $136.-\n730,000, down $8,000,009 from September last year.\nHew 3-Way Wonder Shave give* fastest, smoothest\nshaves over known... anil protects your skin front razor hurl!\nAny way yen shove, new Medicalod\nShave gives bitt results ever!\n\u2022 Here's a now Idea In shaving that\ntakes up where-other shaves leave off.\nNo matter how you shave -3-Way\nShave will mean mora speed and comfort than you thought possible. It's ,\ngood for your skint\nt\nPrepares whiskers, skin. Softens\ntotightsVwhiskers. Providss lubri-\neettni 81m, protects tender skta.\nPainless Shaves. 3-Way Hum's\nmedicated formuli has a built-in\nSein preventive to'-loathe skin.\nlum in comfort fbr the first Umel\nIfs medleated-Holps beil Invisl-\nble reior demige you (ft wltli every dose shave. Grooms your skio.\nHera's bow you use 3-Way Shave.\nIf yau shavo with a brash and\nlather, apply 3-Way Shave first-\nthen lather over it What-a difference! Shaving will be quick,\nsmooth, painleear-no smarting.\nIf you're a brushless shaver, use\n3-Way Shave exactly like your\npresent brushless. Notice how\nmuch foster, more comfortable It\n1st 'And how grand your face foeis\nafterwards.\nAnd attar shaving, either way, apply 3-Way Shave on your face and\nnib it In. It's medicated, to soothe\nand protect your skin ... keep it\nla tip-top condition.\nlest shave of your life\u2014or your\nmoney baekl After you heve used\nthe jar, If you don't agree 3-Way\nShave gives the best shave you\never had... return It to Noxzema,\"\nIbronto,' end your money will be\nrefunded. But you'll agree It's the\nbest shave everl Oet your big money-saving jar of Noxrema's new\n3-Way Shave ... ten ounces for\nonly Wt... todayl\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0Mft\/\u00ab4M7\"B|\n\u25a0 Got your jor or tub* today.     U j\nI    At all drug, dept. and lyn-\n,     dicato stores.\n\u25a0 BIG 10 0Z. ECONOMY I\ni JARFORONiY$94 SI\n\u25a0\nI     A  PRODUCT  OF  NOXZ1MA\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0M\u00ab|\n WOMEN'S\nHIGH HEEL\nDress Sandals\nPlatform Soles\nBlack Suede'' Black Calf\nBlack Patent\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n653 Baker St.\nTransportation,\nWater Supply Are\nSchool Problems\nAt attendance area meetings held\nlat* Vallicah, Winlaw and Appledale\nlin the Slocan, representatives were\n\u25a0 elected by local ratepayers.\n|*f: *Yallicari representative: T. D; Ed-\nI gat wes elected at a well-attended\n\u25a0meeting when reports were read by\nItfife Secretary-Treasurer Paul Bar-\nIber and School Inspector E. E.\n|Hyndman. .        ;\nAt Winlaw, T. D, Hacking was\nI elected attendance area representa-\nI tive. Ratepayers discussed trans-\n|j>ortation problems a.nd It .was de-\nI cidcd to send a delegation of. five\nBpersons to the next meeting to re-\nTquest extension of tti'e present bus\n[lines.   - \u25a0'.. .*\u25a0\n'At the Appledale and Perry Sid;\n[.tag meetings, F. J. Murphy, was\n[ elected representative '.for Apple-\nI dale, and Don Hird representative\nI'for Perry Siding. Reports of the\n[.board were read and discussed by\n1W; E. Graham and Inspector Hynd-\nhijah. The. need* for improved water\n|i supply was emphasized' at the\n['Perry Sidipg meet.   :\n|i ' Every   English,  monarch   since\nI William the Coriqueror in 1066 has\nbeen    crowned    at    Westminster\nI. Abbey. '.*\u2022:,\nYour best paint buy...\nBEAUTIFUL\nWALLS & CEILINGS\nSurvey of Coal Mining Problems\nUnderway in Crews Nest Area\n, FERNIE, B. C.The Dominion Coal'\nBoard whose function is to assure\nadequate supplies of coal for national Uses, distributed to the best\nadvantage, recently made an official\nvisit to this area which produces\nmore than half the Province's whole\nannual output, ')\"'\"'\u25a0'..\nFor some of the Board it was a\nreturn tp a former home, Wilbur\nUren, Chairman, was in the party,\nW. C. Whittaker as Commissioner\nfor the Western Canada Bituminous\nOperators Associatipn, and Board\nmembers P. Streeter of St. John,\nN.R., Major-General S. Renaud of\nOttawa and Ian McLaren.\nImportance of coal as top source\nof heat energy in industry, despite\nstrong competition from other fuels\nahd hydro-electric energy, is being\nemphasized   through*   the   whole\nCrow's Nest Pass,\nSpecial coal mining- problems of\nmountainous district present unique\ndifficulties and their solution is now\nbeing studied through Federal surveys in tbe local field. Northern part\nof the field has been thoroughly\nexamined by. a geological survey directed by Donald Norris, and the\nsurvey is now moving into the Pass\narea. Further study of ground pressure phenomena in Coal* Creek area\nof Fernie coalfields will be conducted by engineer Herbert Zorychta\nwho has been doing similar wdrk\nin Nova .Scotia. Findings will be\nturned over to the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal Company to oveqeome Interference in operations from this |\nsource which has handicapped production somewhat in certain locations. \u2022\nCreston District Scout Cub\n'   i \u25a0'\u25a0:'      ' ' '       '  ' \".\/\u25a0 -\nLeaders Enroll for Course\nCRESTON, B,C.-The first preliminary course for Scout and Cub\nleaders of the valley, to be held In\nCreston got off to a good start with\nrepresentatives from Creston, Erickson, Canyon, Lister and Wynndei\nattending a meeting at the United\nChurch basement and the Kootenay Hotel under'the supervision of\nEric Jacks, District Commissioner,\nassisted by. Joe Turner, Kimberley,\nDistrict' Cubmaster and. Bill Mer\nFarland, Wynndei Cubmaster along\nwith J. :V\u201e Scrivener, Field Commissioner for the Interior. .      -\nOn Sunday a church para'de was\nheld to the Presbyterian:'Church\nwhere, Rev. N. G^ Robertson's seri\nmon dealt with youth training, An\noutdbor session was held' at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. J. Hall, Jr.'\nThose enrolled are Tak Tayota,\ndistrict executive; S. White, district\nTreasurer;' \"Del Becker; * Assistant\nScoutmaster, First Deer Lodge\ngroup; Jim Gilders, committeeman,\nWynndei; Art Bufch, District Pre'sU\ndent; Jack Hall, Scoutmaster; First\nEriqkson Troop; Joe Wylie, District\nSecretary; Stan Lawrence, committeeman, Erickson; Mrs, Ray Rags-\ndale, Assistant Cubmaster, First\nDeer Lodge Pack; Mrs, H. Demchuk,\nchairman, Ladles' Auxiliary, First\nDeer Lodge group; Mrs. A. Marzke,\nFirst Deer Lodge Group; Mrs.'Clara\nMillner, Chairman,''';' First pier\nLodge Group; Miss E. Millner; first\nDeer Lodge group; Mr. R, Ragsdale,\nCubmaster, First Peer * Lodge\nGroups Jack Page, First Creston\nTroop; \"Mrs. M;. Lawrence, First\nErickson Committee; Mrs. Leona\nKostiuk, Chairman jirst Erickson\ngroup Committee; Mrs. Mable Patterson, Assistant Cubmaater, First\nErickson ,Cub Pack; Miss Hazel\nGreenwood, Cubmastety First Creston Cub Pack; Miss G. Bradley, Assistant , Cubmaster,. First Creston\nCub Pack; Mrs. Marjorie. Hall, Cubmaster, First Erickson Cub Pack.\nAl Riondel; Ainsworth Asks Addition\nChairman of the School Board\nI John Cochrane and Inspector E. E.\n| Hyndman reported to the ratepay\ners in the Kaslo area at meetings\nheld at Mirror Lake, Kaslo extra*\nmunicipality, Shutty Benffih and\nAinsworth, ' ',-';\nt Attendance area representatives\nelected were Mr. MacDonald for\nShutty Bench, Mr. Handferx fpr\nAinsworth, Mrs. Jar dine for Kaslo\nextra-municipal area and J. Cochrane for Mirror Lake.\nAinsworth ratepayers requested\nan addition on the present building\nand extention of play facilities. Mirror Lake requested that an unused\nschool be set in -a permanent post*\ntion to be Used for community pur*\nWindermere Tree\nLOOK FOR STANFIELD'S  MARK OF QUALITY\nIhere's no substitute for quality!\nStanfield's Underwear has been first choice with\n' Canadian' families for more than 60 years.\nIt keeps its softness through countless\nwashings. Won't shrink, climb or bind.\nAsk to see Stanfield's Underwear. It's made\n-   ih separate shirts and longs or\ncombination models for warm,\ncomfortable winter wear.\nStanfield's\nUnderwear\nWarm;;. Durablo\nSTANFIELD'S LIMITED\u2014TRUBO, N.S.\nAt the Riondel meeting, it was\nexplained to John Cochrane of the\nKootenay Lake School Board that\nincreasing population would pipb*\nably necessitate a shift system in\nthe class rooms there. It is expected\nthat 30 new pupils will be arriving\nin the near future.\nWilliam h. jackson, b.a.\nduties of 'district probation officer\nB.S.W. .;.. who. has taken over,\nfor the \u25a0'\u25a0 territory including Nelson,\nTrail, Rossland, Slocan and possibly\nKaslo.    , ....,.-'..\nHe will work in close harmony\n'with the'eourts. Mr. Jackson's work\nconsists of compiling pre-sentence\nreports when called-upon by the\nMagistrate \"or court judge. The re*\nports deal with the social back*\nground of the accused,and are sub\nmiffed at a judge's or magistrate'^\nrequest to assist them in the disposition of a case.\n\"Juvenile, court program is more\nflexible,\" Mr. Jackson states. \"With\nadults, a probation officer, is never,\ncalled until guilt has been established.\"      '    ' '\u25a0;-,      \u2022\u25a0\nHis work, in \"connection with the\nAttorney General's Department, follows the line of \"treatment rather\nthan punishment of. the acotlsed.\"\nMr. Jackson arrived here in'September -from Vancouver where he\nhas. been, in, provincial probation\nwork for.the past, year,   :v:\n*       \u2014Vogue* Photo.\nN Denver Starts Study\nFor New Civic Centre\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 The need for a community\nrecreational centre was highlighted in discussion at the\nregular, quarterly meeting of th6 New Denver Community\nClub ih the Bosun Hall. It was suggested that the club should\nthoroughly investigate the possibility of constructing a centre\nin the near future. A study will be undertaken immediately.\nF. Angrignon, chairman of the hall committee, reported that a'janitor was needed for the hall,and pointed out\nseveral things requiring repairs. '-\u25a0: X \u25a0 \u25a0\nK.P.Grand\nChancellor Visits\nCreston Lodge\nCRESTC-N, B.C. - Wild' Rose\nLodge, No. 39, Knights* of Pythias,\nmet with 'Lome Irvine, Grand\nChancellor pt the domain,of British\nColumbia, who was on an official\n\u25a0visit. \u00bb.*-\" ,'v    \"  \u25a0 \"*, -\nFollowing the business session;\nthe Grand Chancellor gave a short\noutline of the aims 'of the Grand\nahd Supreme Lodge, for the ensuing\nterm.      . . \u25a0:\".\nVisiting from Kimberley to meet\nthe Grand Chancellor on his first\nvisit to East Kootenay was Mark\nBeduz, Grand Vice-Chancellor, who\nalso gave a short talk to the as*\nsembly.       -v *\nThe meeting concluded with the\nlodge and the Blossom Temple\nLodge having ah enjoyable social\nand supper.\nINVERMERE, BIG.*\u2014Despite rui,\nmors that the Christmas tree industry ih the area surrounding liver-\nmere and Athalmer'. was to shut\ndown for the season due to the depredations of the looper a few years\nago, the local office of J. Hofert.re-\nports *no change of plane.\nThe harvest this year is less than\nprevious years and a smaller cutting crew and yard staff has been\nemployed; but.the industry will conF\ntinue as scheduled for this season.\nDepredations of the looper cause\nsome needles to'fall off when the\ntrees are cut but this year's needle-\ngrowth is free of the damage and\nthe Christmas tree industry is likely\nto Increase again next year.\nAt Edgewater the Christmas tree\nharvest for G. H. Kirk is showing\ngreat activity.\nTrail Pythian\nLodge Founder\nDies al Nelson\nWillow Point resident faj seveA\nyears, Mrs. Elizabeth Spooner, wife\nof William Spooner, died 'at the\nKootehay Lake- General Hospital\nThursday afternoon following a\nlengthy illness. ,*>;.'\nBorn '\". in, Walsall, Staffordshire,\nEngland In 1878;' Mrs.Spopner came\nto Canada and Greenwood- ih 1908.\nProm there. she moved to Trail,\nthen Lewistown, Pennsylvania, in'\n1923, returning to Trail in 1926.\nShe lived there until coming to\nWilloW Point, in 19\u00ab >      \u2022\nMrs, Spooner wets one of the\norganizers of the Pythian Sisters\njiodge. fit Trail and was. first Past\nChief. She was* an active lodge\nworkef.    . ..*'\nBesides her husband she is .survived by one 'son, James William\nof. Fruitvale; one . daughter, Mrs.\nM'; F. Mien Of' Vulcan, - Alberta;\nand one brother in England.\nFuneral services will be held in\nTrail Saturday'\nZero Weather Stops,\nCranbrook Wafer Flow\nCRANRROOK, B. C. - Weather\nvagaries launched a several-hour\ndrought through the city Thursday.\nCleaning.work at the reservoir was\nunder wey;'j|iaviijg started early in\nthe week and a sudden temperature\nplummet to five below aero Thurs-\nday'inornlhg unexpectedly Iced up\nthe temporary intake. By mid-\nmorqing the city water system had\nqyifc -,\"supplying. Hasty measures\nwere taken to remove the ice and\nservice resumed by the afternoon.\nThe nightingale sings at all hours\nof the-day and night, but only the\nmale bird sings. '-\u25a0\u2022'\u2022,\nC. A. AbboH Once\nSgt. S. Service\nOf Cranbrook\nR.C.M.P. Moved\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - Sergeant\nSamuel Service, R.C.M.P. sectional\nsubdivisibnal non-commission officer ih charge of this district for the\npast three years, hes been transfer*\nred \/to Chllliwack subdivision. He\nis1 a .veteran former Provincial Po*\nlice, officer, and was in charge of\nAlberni district before coming; here.\n. Sergeant: G. A. Brablzon, In\ncharge of Penticton division has\nbeen transferred \"here to succeed\nSergeant Service.'He is also a for*\nmer, Provincial Police officer, of\nmany years standing, and was stationed here at one rime prior to the\nchange' in policing of the Province.\nThis subdivision includes Michel-\nNatal, Fernie, Invermere, Radium,\nCreston, Kimberley ahd Cranbrook.\nGunless Nimrod\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 1951 \u2014 3\nOtrawa-B. C. Partnership .,. .\n277 Building Lots for\nTrail in $230,000 Plan\nOTTAWA (CP)-A 83-acre area\nat Trail, will be developed for housing purposes' under an agreement\namong the Federal Government, the\nProvince' of British Columbia and\nCentral Mortgage and Housing Corporation,\nResources Minister Winters, making the announcement today,, said\n277 lots will be' developed in: the\nTrail area known as Merrys Flats\nat a cost of about $230,000 and will\nbe sold at about $500 each..\nThe project includes construction\nand installation of sewers, water\nlines, roads.and street lighting. The\nwork will be undertaken by the\ncity on behalf of the Federal-Provincial partnership \u25a0 and the lots\nwill* be sold by Central Mortgage\nand Housing Corporation as work\nis completed.       '.**\u25a0 '.'.-\nReelect Wynndei\nRecreation Society\nGoverning Body\nWYNNDEL, EC-Directors,J. J.\nFirth, R, Smith, E. Hulme, A. Davie\nand H. Mclnnis were reelected to\nthe' executive at the annuel meeting\nof the Wynndei Recreation Society,\nCommittees appointed were W,\nAbbott, sports; Slim Haines, entertainment and one director to be\non the committee to convene dancea.\nAn offer to rent part of .ball park\nwill be accepted if satisfactory with\nCo-Operative, Fruit Growers; It was\ndeemed advisable to add to the directorate, and: motion of notice to\ncall extraordinary' meeting was\nmade, Secretary *-gaye receipts arid\nexpenditures since the balance\nsheet.\n\"The rug donated by Mrs. Greig\nand won by* Miss Patsy Rollag.\nbrought in $90.75, while the auction enhanced the coffers by $374.76.\nThe first aim of the new director\nboard will be the installing of heating system and this'is hoped will\nbe done within the next month. A\nvote ot thanks was given the directors* for their work:\nA salute of 62 guns is fired at the\nTower of London on anniversaries\nof the birth, accession and coronation of the king. \u2022*\u25a0\nDies at Vancouver\nWord of the death of his brother,\nC, A., Abbo.tt, of. Vancouver,- East\nkootenay pioneer, was received* by\nG. B. Abbott, 2013 Stanley Street,\nThursday. Mr. Abbott plans to\nleave for the Coast Friday to attend\nfuneral' services.\nThe late Mr. Abbott, a native of\nEngland, was an oldtimer of Cranbrook, where he lived from 1900 to\n1011. He moved from Cranbrook to\nEdmonton and on retiring recently,\nmade his home at Vancouver.\nBesides his brother, here, he Is\nsurvived by another brother, Bert,\nin the Peace River; two sisters in\nthe old country; and two nieces,\nMrs.. Emil Dey of Cranbrook, and\nMiss Angelina Abbott, school teacher atMcBride, B.C. .\nLight in Lardeau\nSchools Sought\nLARDEAU; B.C. \u2014 Mr. Jeffery\nfor Lardeau and Mrs. Florence\nGreenwood for Howser were elected school attendance area representatives by local ratepayers\" at\nschool-meeting held in the Lardeau\narea. .'\u25a0:'.' - .  *\n. Kootenay Lake Board ot Trustees\nwas presented by Ralph Carson and\nE. E. Hyndman, School Inspector;\nLighting in the schools at Meadow\nCreek and Lardeau was sought by\nthe ratepayers who also discussed\nthe possibility o'f .transporting high\nschool pupils tq, KaslO upon completion of the new highway.\nFORT FRANCES, Ont., Nov. 1 -\n(Op)\u2014A 14;yeai-old boy and his\nsling-shot, and i parking-meter\nhitching\" post will likely be long\nremembered by a party of United\nStates hunters: who have returned\nto their Illinois homes from this\nNorthwest pntarlo district.\nThe boy and his sling-shot drew\ntheir attention when they returned\nfrom a hunting sojourn in the Ken*\nora area. .\nAt Sioux Narrows the tourists\nstopped the young boy and asked\nwhere he had shot the four partridges he was carrying. They discovered there was no shot in the\nBirds. '\nThe boy demonstrated: ',..\nHe -drew\/ a- sling-shot from his\npocket, aimed and precisely dotted\nan \"I\" on a nearby signboard. .\nThe Americans next surprise came\nwhen they attempted park on\nbusy down-town Fort Frances\nstreet.\nr'Si*ying a\" vacant parking meter\nzone they began to head In before\nthey could wiggle their car into\nposition a horseman rode up, jump\ned from the saddle and tied his\nmount's rein to the parking meter.\nThat's , North country, sur\u2014Jt's\nmighty rugged yet\nBuy, Sell, Tra'dd the Classified Way\nCivic Action\nAssociation\nCAPITOL THEATRE\n8 pm.-MONDAY NOV. 5\nPurpose of this meeting is to hear\ncivie affairs speakers and for tho\ncommittee to receive your suggestion! . . .\nIf you are a voter you are invited\n.to participate;\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin\nCIVIC AFFAIRS ARE YOUR AFFAIRS\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nEFFORT IS A PREREQUISITE TO PROGRESS\nCivic\nthe\nTONAME FIFTH\nCOMMISSIONER\nAppointment of a fifth\nCentre Commisioner to fill\nvacancy created by the death of\nH. M. Whimster will be made at\nnext Monday's City Council meeting, Mayor N. C. Stlbbs has announced.\nMr. Whimster died Oct. 15, just*\ntwo weeks after his appointment to\nthe Commission together with H.\nFarenholtz, Dr. C. E. Bradshaw, J,\nJ. McEwen, and E.C. Hunt.\nFive Schools Planned.\n$336,800 School Building Program\nUp for Kimberley Area Endorsement\nAI50 IN\nTEA BAGS\n1\nw Canterbury grves you\nsuchjk\u00a9 tea.\u201eat Canterbury's price!\nFINE tea like this doesn't just \"happen.\" Canterbury comes from the world's finest tea gardens...\n\"pick\" ot the flavor-filled yo*ng leaves. And yet,\nbecause we import direct, you save on every package.\nFINE tea...less money...TIMD FOR CANTERBURY!\nat\nSAFEWAY\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. \u2014 A $336,880 school construction'program for\nKimberley school district has been prepared and approved to.go before ratepayers In December. , j\nKimberley city ratepayers wlll.be asked to endorse the Issuance\nof $94,000 In VA per cent 16-year debentures, and rural ratepayers wilt\nbe asked to endorse similar debentures for $179,000. Remainder would\nbe paid by the provincial government.\nMajor part of the program would be. construction of a school at\nChapman Camp to replace the one burned last January. Since then\nthe 200 pupils have been accommodated on a temporary basis In\nalready overcrowded Kimberley city schools. Other Items are schools\nfor Lower Blar.chmont, and McDougall Townslte In Kimberley area,\nand rural schools for Sheep Creek and Wasa.      -     ~\nIn Tuesday's ballot of city ratepayers sweeping majority was\ngiven a $38,000 bylaw to provide Kimberley with a fire truck ahd\n.pumper unit, hose, other equipment and a shelter as basis for the\ncity's own fire department\nStorage Tanks Built\nAt Lake Windermere\nINVERMERE, B. C. \u2014 The Shell\nOil station Recently built at Athalmer has been* completed this week\nsaid turned over to Ian Weir of\nWeir Motors, Invermere who has\naccepted tbe agency.\nThe unit consists of three storage\ntanks two of which are for No. 2\ngasoline'and diesel oil hold 21,000\ngallons and stand 35 feet high. The\nsmaller tank for No. 1. gas holds\n7000 gallons. '\nOther, products are stored'in the\nspacious warehouse -which includes\nthe loading platforms, storerooms\nand a small office.\nGas will be brought from Calgary\nby both truck and tank car as required. The station is situated\nNorth of the B.A. Oil station close\nto the Kootenay Central Railway\ntrack,\nInstallation has been done by\nStewart and, Slade Construction Co,\nLtd, General Contractors and Engineers of White Rock. Gordon\nStewart and Lloyd North have spent\nsome weeks in Athalmer on the project. .\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n58^\nsax600\nxI6\nSuperior\nMotors\nPhone 75 Vernon St.\nThe Post Office Opposite Us\nHOME, AUTO MERCHANDISE VALUES\n3Plf\u00ab      .\nSCREWDRIVER \/\nSET       \/\nAREALBAR6AW. $f\\MnM$$TmS(\nLAST!\nm\nTHIS\nSMART\n8 PIECE\nKITCHEN\nJO 01 SET\nstum\nFO* TUB\nHtPSt\nMONKEY\nWITH BANANA\n3 PUCE\nunify?\nshop imy ATT\\t*$ion*md saw\n wmmum\nmwawmm\n4\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 1951\nSALMON ARM, B.C., Nov. .1\n(CP) \u2014 An appeal of the, judgment\nof Mr. Justice H, S. Wood in the\nSalmon Arm School case will be\nlaunched by R. A. McLeod, father\nof three 6chool-age children,\nMr, Justice 'Wood, Oct. US, rejected an application of writ of\nmanadamus by McLeod, which\nwould have ordered the Salmon,\nArm School Board to open its\nschools to 010 Municipality of Salmon Arm, students,\nThe students were barred when\nthe municipality turned down a bylaw for additional money for sohool\nTINY-TARTAN-CLAD Edmonton laities added a colorful touch\nas they stood eagerly awaiting arrival of royal couple at Parliament\nBuildings.\u2014Central Press Canadian.      \"\u25a0'. -\nOHawalo Start\nComparing Costs\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (CP) \u2014 Gov-\n\u25a0 ernment staisticians early next year\n' hope to start compiling a complete\nanalytical comparison of living costs\namong major cities in Canada.\nThe aim of the Bureau of Statistics is to be able to say Whether,\nfbr example it tosts more to live in\nToronto or Montreal, Halifax or\nVancouver, or other large regional\ncommunities.\nCurrently, the Bureau publishes\nretail price lists for 35 cities on\n\u25a0 a monthly basis, but the listings Include only foodstuffs and coal.\nThe montnly Labor \u2022 Gazette listings can tell you, for Instance, that\nin July the cost of sirloin steak\nwas $1.33 a pound at ChicoutimI,\nQue., and 95 cents a pound at Saskatoon.\nMilk sold for 16 cents a quart at\nCharlottetown and 29 cents a quart\nat St Johns, Nfld\u201e and coal $24.85\na ton at Toronto; and $29 a ton at\nTimmins, Ont.\nBut the Bureau finds it difficult\nto say whether for example a bedroom suite costs nnore at Vancouver\nthan at Halifax, or whether a suit of\nclothes is more expensive at Ottawa\nthan at Regina.\nIt gathers figures: which it uses\nto compile monthly point changes\nIn regional * cost-of-living indexes,\nbut these are not considered sufficiently refined for public use on a\ncomparative basis,     *\nNext year the'Bureau hopes to get\nstatisticians and legmen on the job\n. of making a detailed cost-of-living\ncomparison, principally to help\nmany business men answer such\nquestions as to whether they should\npay branch employees more, at Van\ncouver than Montreal, because of\ncost-of-living trends.\nMeanwhile, the Bureau's attention\nIs focussed on the more Immediate\njob of preparing the general cost\nof-llving index for September. This\nlikely will be ready tomorrow,\nThe index, in August, stood at a\npeak 189.8, after increasing .9 pointB\nfrom 188.9. The Index Is based on\n-1935-39 prices equalling; 100.\nThe index increase was the smallest since last April and gave rise fo\nreports that at lats a period of\neconomic stability had been reached.\nFirst use of radio In a sea rescue\nwas in 1909 when the liner Republic and freighter Florida collided\nwith six dead.     \u25a0 \u2022*'.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLA88IFIED\nHEIRS TO $11,000\nESTATE SOUGHT\nCHICAGO, 111;, Nov. 1 - Possible\nbrothers or sisters' or more,likely\nnieces and nephews* of this late\nJames Harris and his wife, Eliza*\nbeth, nee Boyd, are being sought\nin southern British Columbia, today\nto claim a $13,000 estate to* which\nthey are unknowingly *the heirs,\nWalter C. Cox, probate genealogist, 208 S. LaSalle St., Chicago, who\nspecializes in tracing missing relatives to settle estates,is .directing the\nhunt with the aidof only scant\nclues.\n\"Information in the effects of the\ndeceased,\" Mr. Cox said, \"indicate\nthat, Mr. and Mrs. Harris' relatives\nare living somewhere in southern\nBritish Columbia, where they ere\nbelieved to have been married in\nabout 1890.\nExplosion Blasts\nKiddies' Parade\nPITTSBURGH, Nov. 1 (AP) - A\ngala Hallowe'en celebration turned\ninto terror .a; four gas explosions\ninjured 29 persons and* cast flaming debris over hundreds of parading mummers and spectators.\nTwenty persons were taken to\nhospital. but nine were released\nlater. Three were reported. In\ncritical condition.\nThe earth-shaking blasts let go\nin the basement of a confectionery\nstore and dwelling house.in a South\nHills district where a Hallowe'en\nparade reached, the end of. Its\nmarch. t-   \u25a0\nFire Chief James T. Coslett said\na broken gas main in Max Davidson's confectionery store set off the\nexplosldns.' They were felt four\nblocks away. ;\nCoslett estimated property damage at .$20,000, A roaring fire broke\nout after the first blast and gutted\nthe two-storey building.\nBetween 200 and 300 children\nwearing masks and gay costumes\nalready had fallen out of the parade\nand were at a recreation lot across\nthe street when the blasts started.\nEscaping gas hampered fire fighters for a time, One fireman waa\nknocked off the roof of the building by the second blasj.      '    ,\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 The sidewalk\nwas crowded so Fred Sargent stepped into the gutter, where he picked up a glittering dbject. He received a \u00a3140 reward for finding\na diamond bracelet lost by Lady\nViolet Astor.\nMake Your Printing\nMatter Part of Your\nBusiness \/ \u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nDid It ever occur to you that you need\ndistinctive printed ' matter for your\nparticular business? Type faces give'\nyou this outstanding distinctiveness ...\nond these can be supplied by our\nmodern Printing Department.\nWith a combination ot modern type\nfaces, ond first class workmanship,\nyou con be assured that you vyill get\nprinting that will 'TALK\" for your\nbusiness. .\nCALL  144\nWe will be pleased to discuss your printing problems\nand submit tentative layouts.\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nCommercial   Printing   Department\n\"If lfs Printing You Need \u2014 Consult Vs\"\nSalmon Arm Man Carries on War\nnurposes. Salmon Arm elty and the\nGovernment. for the unorganized\nterritory provided their share of\nthe required funds and their students, are attending school,\nMcLeod's intention to appeal was\nannounced today by his counsel\nnonnld   S.   McTavlsh   of   Salmon\nArm.' ' :   '\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\nLEEK, England (CP) \u2014 The pet\ngoldfish .at a school In thli Staffordshire town, was left alone\nwhen fire broke out }ii part of the\nsohool. After the blaze was extinguished Sammy was found happily\nswimming in his warm water bowl.\nChurchill Orders\nAtom Speed-Up\nLONDON, Nov 1 (AP) -* Prime\nMinister Churchill has Ordered a\nbig,speedup of Britain's atomic\nenergy program with the elm of\nexploding a test atom bomb In\nabout six months, an infofmed\nsource said today. <\nTo that end Churchill named\nLofd Cherwell, 85, his .wartime\nscientific adviser, to take over the\natomic energy research'and production. Lord Cherwell \u2014 nominally paymaster general In the new\nCabinet \u2014 Is making his home at\n11 Downing Street, next door to\nthe Prime Minister. The House\ntraditionally, is used by Chancellors\not the Exchequer,        \u25a0\u25a0'(:'\nChurchill, as leader of the Opposition In the old Parliament, repeatedly urged the, Labor Government to press ahead with, its own\natom - bomb production program.\nCherwell's job, willbe to take-off\nall the red tape wraps which the\nConservatives think have slowed\nBritish atomic work to a snail's\nP\u00abce,\nGuernsey, most'westerly of the\nChannel Islands, was given autono*\nmous government by the Duke of\nNormandy in 912 A.D.\nHallowe'en Prank\nCauses Death\nARDROSSAN, Alta., Nov, 1 (CP)\n\u2014A* Hallowe'en prank led to the\ndeath of 11-year-old Douglas Klnch\nlast night. \u25a0\u25a0>'\n'With a group of boys, Douglas\nwas trying to pull the rack off a\nfarm wagon. He slipped, the rack\nfell on his head, apd the boy died\nin an ambulance en route to Edmonton, R.C.M.P. reported..\nArdrosson Is 15 miles East of Edmonton,\nMeoIcINMat sirtuwR\nBY MEASLES EPIDEMIC\nMEDICINE. HAT, Alta.,'Nov. 1\n(CP) \u2014 An outbreak of measles\nInvolving close to 125 school children is causing local health authorities some concern, The epidemic li\nmostly of red measles.\nCheque books were first issutd\nto depositors in British banks In\n1781.\ncosts so little\nis so easg to seive\nPHONE 144 rOR CLASSIFIED\n*MR. SAMUEL C.UWIS...\nDo you own your form, Mr. Lewis?\nYes. I took over it from my mother about 25\nyears ago.\nDo you like {arming?\nYes. I sOre wouldn't be at If If I didn't.\nDo you believe in saving?\nOh, yes.\nHow do you savo?\nMainly by Canadg Savings Bonds. I buy several\nevery time they are on sale.\nWhy do you buy these Bonds?     ''\nI can lay my hand on them whenever I need money.\nWhy do you prof or thorn to other forms of investment?\nI consider them safest. I could invest my money in\nother ways that would' bring in morel at greater\nrisk, but I want to be sure of a safe investment\nand a steady revenue.\nHavo you cashed any of tho Canada Savings Bonds\nyou bought?\nYes. I did once because I needed some extra\nmoney to buy a new tractor.\nHow do you pay for tho Bonds?\nWhen they're on sale, I take what spare money\nI have from'my bank account and buy the bonds\noutright.\nDo you plan fo buy some mora this Fall?\nYes.\n\u2022( NOitl BETTER THANMVER '\u2022\n.Canada Savings Bonds\u20146th Series\u2014mature In 10 yeors J\n. and 9 months from date of issue and bear len 3 Vi% coupons. ,\n\u2022 The first coupon cover) 1 year and 9 months and Is payable \u2022\n*t on August I st, 1953; subsequent coupons come due August I st \u2022\n\u2022 yearly thereafter until maturity. If cashed before. August Isl, \u2022\n1953, simple interest li paid at 2% per year, calculated *\nmonthly. If held to maturity Ihe overall yield Is equivalent to *\n3.21% per year. The limit fpr holdings in any one name Is *\n$5,000 In Ihe 6th Series. The bonds are cashable al full face \u2022\nvglue, pigs interest at any time at any bank In Canada. \u2022\nThey ar\u00ab registered In the owner's name. They are non- \u2022\nassignable and non-transferable. \\ *\n*Samuel C. lewis, 46, Is a farmer \/fv-\nfng near Kars, Ontario. Born on a\nneighbouring farm, h* was educated\nin a rural school and married Mar.\ngaret Hyland, also of Kars. They have\non 11-year-old daughter, Joan. Mr.\nLewis has a 700-acre farm and 20\nhead of cattle. He sWpi milk to\nOttawa. A brolhir livt In London,\nOntario, and. another brolhtr and a\nsfiler in Ottawa.\nCANADA SAVINGS BONDS on ,\u00ab\/e\nATINVISTMSNT\nDIAUOtS, BANKS\nANO THROUGH\nTHI PAYROLL\nSAVINGS PLAN.,\nCAN ALWAYS BE CASHED AT FULL FACE VALUE PLUS INTEREST\n '2W\nAN Alt RUBBW PUUOVER\n\u00bbOOT, \"SHEAMINO\" ilNEO,\nHEAVY CREPE OUISOIE. WARM\nAND COMFORT- ' 'U'v*.\nABIE   FOR   WIN. $%, jt.4S\nten Wear: .\n\u2022 ^     -\nR* Andrew & Co*\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n*   Established 1902'    '\nPhone 533\nNelson, B:C.\n579 Baker St.\nMoms*Chestney Vows\nExchanged iri Victoria\nThe marriage in Cherry Bank Hotel in Victoria of Vera\nFaye Chestney and Alexander Douglas Morris is of particular\ninterest in Nelson.\nPreferenlial Tea\nPreferential tea of B.C. Iota chapter,\nBeta Sigma Phi, was held at,tbe\nhome of Mrs.', C. H. Chatfleld.\nMrs. C. D. Pearson and Mrs. Elva\nKettlewell presided at the tea table,\nand servers were Miss Edna Steed,\nMrs. Jean Emory, Mrs. Kay, Howard,\nMrs. Dale. Fleming, Mrs. Florence\nAllardyce, Mrs. Kay Powell .and\nMrs. Esther Stallwood.-;\nFRENCH MOTHER >\nOF 22 AWARDED\nHQYMILLB, France, Nov. 1 (Reuters) !\u2014 Mrs, Jeanne Vernieuwe, 62,\nmother of 22 children, was awarded\nthe Cross of the Legion of Honor\ntoday by the chairman of the National Association of large, families.\nMrs, Vernieuwe, a policeman's wife,\nwas married -at 18.    >>.'\u2022'.'\nLOVELY HATS\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nfOA\n^i        TO\nL\nPhone 889\nTOWLER\nFuel & Transfer\nNelson, B.C.\nWhenYonrlUCK\ntins to Ache\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\nk, PILLS ,A\n*e%Zkt\/UCAua-\n^**\u00a7Ww BstkielieUefteaAitle\nX^StWi.--- ariiiary irritttioa ind\nKidder<&oomfMti \u00abndforo\u00bberhills an-\ntuiy Dodd'l Kidcey Pills h\u00bb\u00ab helped brinj ;\nrelief from buluche by slimuUting Ihe\nkidaeyi. Gel Dodd's Kidney Pills it uijr\ndnif counter. Look for Ihe blue boi with Hie\nrod bind. You an depend onDodd'i. t\u00ab0\nJha(iloM4\nMEN\nThe groom is the son of Mr. and\nMrs. R. B. Morris of Nelson, and the\nbride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G,\nC. Chestney, Gordon Head, Victoria,\nis instructress of the Nelson Figure\nSkating. Club.\"\nThe ceremony was performed by\nRev. Dr. A. E. Whitehouse in the\nmain lounge of the hotel. The\ncouple stood before the fireplace\nwhich was banked with green fern\nand white carnations.\nWOOL8UIT\nThe bride wore a smart suit of\nwhite wool with navy accessories,\nand carried a cascade bouquet of\ndeep red roses.\nMiss Joan Chestney who attend\nher sister wore a forest green two-\npiece ensemble. Her yellow roses\nand scatter ohysanthemums were in\nattractive contrast to her suit.\n' The groom's brother, Jack Morris,\nwent from Nelson to-be best man.\nSIT-DOWN SUPPER;\nAfter the ceremony a sit-down\nsupper, was served in the dining\nroom which was also beautifully\ndecorated with masses of carnations\nand chrysanthemums, * A three-\ntiered wedding cake centred the\nbride's table, and the toast tb the\nbride was proposed by Dr. White-\nhouse.\nMr. and Mrs. Morris will make\ntheir home in Jlelson where * the\nbride is resuming another season as\nNelson Figure Skating Club-pro*\nfesslonal.   *\nGoodwill Tours No Cure for Poor -\nMovies, Says Popular Joel McOea\n.MARGERY L. YOUNG\nMargery L. Young, Ifelson girl\nwho .graduated from the Royal Co*\nlumhtan Hospital'and New Westminster'this April, recently passed\nher Registered Nurse's examination\nand is now nursing at the Kootenay\nLake General Hospital. ,;\nMiss: Young attended Junior and\nSenior High Schools in Nelson coming here from Revelstoke in 1842.\nShe was active In social affairs.during her last year rhere and is the\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ross F.\nYoung, Granite Road.\nGijl Senior\nCampus Officer\nELLENSBUHG, Wash,, Nbv.il.\u2014\nThe Off-Campus Women's Organization of Central .Washington College\nin Ellensburg, publishers of \"Who's\nWho at Sweecy\", named Miss Joan\nBrown of Kootenay Bay, B.C., as\ntheir senior representative to the\nboard of directors of 0:C.W. Miss\nBrown is the daughter of H, C,\nBrown of Kootenay Bay.\n, The British Columbia Girl has\nbeen active at Central in the Do al\nDo, a folk dSnce'club, and a student\norganization, of Christian church\nmembers, besides Off-Campus\n\u25a0women. 1.   -   ;\nMiss Brown is majoring In English\nat; Central, with a minor atudy In\nscience, *..* \u25a0' *\u25a0 '\u25a0 1'     ,\n\"Who's Who at Sweecy,\" the publication on which Miss Brown will\nwork this year, is a compilation of\nnames,' addresses and phone numbers of students and faculty at Cenr\ntral Washington College.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV: 2,1951 \u2014 S\nson\nlal.\nTabooed in Paris\nPARIS,, Nov.   1    (Heufers)\nFluffy hair and flowing 1 manes are\non the black list in Paris this season.\nFor \"general wear, short 'or\nniedlum-length bobs are most popular. But whatever the individual\nstyle adopted, a Small, neatly-shaped\nhead is'the main requisite.\n'Hair styles, generally this Winter\nwill show a trend toward directoire\ncoiffures. Lavish sculptured effects\nare featured for evening, wear by\nleading hairdressers.     -\nThe hair is,of fen parted in the\ncentre or high on one side, and\nswept back in-loose, waves into a\nhigh chignon draped with jewelled\ncombs, tiaras or velvet head hands.\nFront hair is often fringed forward\non the cheeks and forehead In bangs\nor \"beaux catchers.\"\nDirectoire effects are also stressed\nfor short hair, or may be achieved\nwith the addition of a false switch.\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Nov. 1 (AP) -\nJoel McCrae say's goodwill tours\nWon't revive the movie business.\nOnly better pictures can do the\ntrick.\nMcCrea has been- a movietown\nresident since 1914. He is' one of\nHollywood's most respected citizens.\nHere is his analysis of the film\nindustry's ills:\nBUYERS MARKET\n\"We're in the same position as an\nauto manufacturer who had turned\nout inferior cars during a wartime\nboom. Sure, he sold his products'\nwhen cars were scarce and people\nwere eager'to buy something. But\nwhen cars are no longer scarce,\npeople start to say, 'I think twice\nNew Denver\nNEW DENVER, 8. C\u2014Mrs. John\nTaylor who was a patient in the\nSlocan Community Hospital' was\ntransferred to the Trail-Tadanac\nHospital in the J. Draper ambulance\nand was accompanied by her son\nand daughtec-tnJaw^Mr. andvMrs.\nH.L. Taylor. .'\nMr. William fcrown who was a patient in. the Slocan Community Hospital, returned to his home in Nelson. .    .\".,;   .-,',.'\u25a0,   .    .\nMrs, .b. J. Santano and baby\ndaughter have left the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital for their, home\nin Silyerton;;\nMrs, T.' M. Leask who was a patient in the Slocan Community Hos*\niptal has returned to her home in\nSilverton,\nMrs.* W. Mott, R.N., has rejoined\nthe Slocan Community Hospital\nstaff.\n\u25a0'faWbrf^^\nEver tried'to move a pianrf\nYou know how heavy it is \u2014\nand how it's apt to mark the\nfloor. Things will be different\nwhen they make pianos of lightweight aluminum. Already one\nfirm has started making aluminum 64-key portable pianos,\nDuring Akan's fifty years in\nCanada,so many new uses have\nbeen found for aluminum that\ntoday wc operate 12 plants in\nvarious parts of the country\nand the industry provides employment for thousands\u2014and\nthat's not counting all the\npeople who work for more\nthanlOOOCanadian companies\nwhich shape Alcan aluminum\ninto all sorts of forms from\nfish tags to airplanes. Aluminum Company pf Canada, Ltd.\n(Alcan).\nbefore I'll buy that car again; look\nhow I got stung, before.' .\n\"And so it is with, the movies.\nPeople got tired of poor entertaln-\nment: Anjl so 'they atarted shopping\nfor. other forms of amusement.\n\"Sending Hollywood people out\non tours may help our public relations. But \u2014 I may get shot for\nsaying this \u2014 It can't help' the movie\nbusiness. The only thing that can do\nthat is better, pictures.\"        '.';,,\nHow do you do that?\n\"I'll tell\" you one way,\" he said.\n\"Stop trying to 'see how .many Pictures you can turn out. The major\nstudios brag that they will produce\n52 pictures or some otherv amount\nduring the year. '\n\"They, should.stop trylng.to make\nenough pictures to meet schedules.\nInstead, take a little more care with\nthe ones that are made.\"\nBazaar Success\nUkrainian Catholic Womenls\nLeague Thursday afternoon made a\nsuccess of their annual bazaar. They\nsold bread, pastry, preserves, sewing, fancyworlt and other articles\nat the Nelson Farmers' Market to\na 'crowd of women tea guests.\nMrs. J. Ludwig, Mrs. P. Wirstiuk,\nMrs. F. Hunter and Mrs. A. Lobay\nwere in charge both of the sale\n'arid bingo social field in the Mar*\nkef Thursday evening.\nFounder of War\nRelief Work Dies\n\u2022STOCKBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 1\n(AP)\u2014Mrs. Nina L. Duryea, 82,\nfounder of the Duryea Relief Organization in France during the\nFirst World War, died today after a\nlong illness. She set up the relief\ngroup when the First World War\ncaught her travelling in'' France.\nSeveral foreign governments'awarded her decorations for her work.\nSirdar Notes ;\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs, L.\nE. Beavls and P. Leonard of Hope\"\nwere the guests of Mr. and Mrs,,R,\nHeap for a few days, while .'duck\nhunting, A- ...,\".;\u00ab\/,:'\nOscar Ofenr of Kaslo visited\nfriends in Kuskanook and Sirdar\naccompanied by Jack Jarbeau.\nMrs. F. DesRossier and Mrs, Cecil\nFlett of Cranbrook visited' their\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Kollman,\nMews of the Day\nRATES! 30o line, 40o line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt payment\nPlastic rimmed glasses In brown\nslip ease. Phone 1580.    -\nMore hats have just arrived.\nADRIAN MILLINERY\nKINETTE DOLL AND BAKE SALE\nTomorrow, 1:30, Sterling Furniture.\nSanca Notes\nSANCA, B.C.\u2014Mrs. I. Foster has\nreturned from a visit to her brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nAbbott at Chapman Camp.\nMrs. C. Koch is home from a visit\nwith relatives in Calgary and Nan-\nton,  Alta,\nMrs. G. F. Moore of Cranbrook\nvisited her parents Mr. and Mrs, J.\nP. Saxby-Hawkins after attending\nthe P.-T.A. Convention in Nelson,\nMeet Sadie Hawkins at Procter\nHall, Nov. 8.\nDon't wait until after the fire,\nINSURE NOW. Blackwood Agency.\nWynndei Notes\n.WYNNDEL, B. C.-rMelvin Barton\nand Bud Ludor of Lethbridge, Alta.,\nare guests of Mr. and Mrs. O. Rollag.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Hess of Leth-.\nbridge attended the opening of the\nWynndei Hall.\nPte. Carter of Canadian Army\nwas guest, of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nSchade.\nC. O. Ogilvie, L. Benedetti and 0.\nSteiner. were visitors to Cranbrook\nfor a hunting trip.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Craven and Betty\nLou who have spent the past month\nat Grayburn, Sask., have returned\nhome,\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor to J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293    '    NELSON, B. C.\nSpecial\nILY\nAstral Refrigerators\n2 ONLY\n(SLIGHTLY IMPERFECT)\nA-l MECHANICALLY\n$100.00 Each\nWhile They Last-\nRobert Simpson (Pacific) Ltd,\n566 BAKER STREET PHONE 1490\nLook for the latest and smartest at\nADRIAN MILLINERY\n2 room house for rent No children. Phone 582-L-3.\nIf It's a curling broom you need,\nwe have them. Well made, professional quality. \u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nTelescope sights and mounts for\nany kind of a rifle.\nJACK BOYCE MEN'8 8HOP\nWomen's basketball meeting tor\nnight at 8 o'clock at the Civic, all\ninterested please attend.\nWe doctor shoes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save their solesl\nTONY'S REPAIR 8HOP\nPlastic   chair   and   chesterfield\ncovers at $3,95 and $5.85.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nBring that valuable timepiece te\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable reoairs\nat moderate pricei\nLarge  assortment of cacti  just\narrived. \u2014 50c each.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\u2014PH. 910\n'Station Wagon Coat?, boys'\ngirls'. Size 3 to 6.\nTOT-'N'-TEEN 8HOP\nand\nLADIES\nY'mr Spirella corsetiere Is Mrs. A\nJohnson. For appointment Ph. 48-R.\nLaux Spax \u2014 For Spatchling.\n5 lb.>pkg. -'$1.10'\nBURN8 LUMBER CO.\nELECTROLUX\nCLEANERS AND P0LI8HERS.\nPHONE 1108 OR (53\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix lt,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done, and fully-guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.\nRENWICK'S   PORTRAIT  STUDIO\nA dozen portraits as Christmas\ngifts, Make your appointment now.\nPhone ^465. >\nThe best values in good quality\nin warm Winter wear for girls and\nboys are at\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nATTENTION LADY CURLERS\nCurlers and prospective  curlers\nare invited to attend Open House\nat the curling-rink Nov. 5, 6,8 and 9\nCITY TAXI-24-HOUR ^SERVICE\nPHONE 990 OR 4   '\nBILL  BOUEY  AND\nLOU CHOQUETTE,  PROP8,\nTomorrow \u2014 3-8 p.m. Trinity\nHall, United W.M.S. homecooking,\ncandy and white elephant sale.\nAssociate members please bring\nMite Boxes. Tea 25o.\nL.\n%wtfec^\nSHOWERS HONOR,\nKIMBERLEY MISS\n.KIMBERLEY, B; C\u2014Mrs*. Earle\nBlundell, nee Ann McLaren, was\nguest*, of honor at a number, of\nshowers prior to* her marriage, on\nOct. 27.\nMiss- Muriel Sanche entertained\nat a miscellaneous shower for the\nbride, ,-The home -of Mr.s. A. Huber\npf Lowes, Blarchmoht was the\nscene another    miscellaneous\nshower, and MrS.-R. Faforo entertained at-a kitchen shower.    ,';\n.Her. fellow .^0f!ters..a\u00a3|he'.;\u00a3Hu|j!'-\ngafKered\"at the4i6me of Mrs; J. lid-\nban-to present her with a beautiful\ntrili'ght lamp and'a'rug,;*' :'\u25a0'*\u25a0   .* .\nSouth Slocan W. A.\nHears';.':'\nDiocesan Report\nSouth slogan, b; a - The\n43rd annual report pf Kootenay Diocesan Woman's Auxiliary was read\n:by Mrs. .Stone lit a**meeting of St.\nMatthewV W.A. at the home of\nMrs. James. * r- '\u25a0' ' *.*., p.*.\n.Bible reading was given by Mrs.\nMaynard, and readings taken from\nthe Living Message were given by\nMrs. Bird and Mrs. Gilker;\nBOTH CROCHETED\nTwo adorable vesta to crochet \u2014\none in all-over pattern stitch In\ntwo colors of 8-ply fingering yarn.\nThe other in waffle stitch in one\ncoiotottp^ifiaitiA.' ,*\nfioth vests are easy, crochet. Pattern '558; crochet directions ih two\nsizes: 32-34 and 36-38.\nSend * TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\ncoin \"(stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, Nelson,\nB.C. Print ''plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. ;     .   ] -\nSuch a colorful roundup of Christmas ideas! Send twenty-five cents\nfor our new Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalogue. Choose patterns for\nyour .Christmas gift-making from\nthe \u2022 gaily, illustrated toys, dolls,\nhousehold- and* personal .accessories.\n.And a Free Pattern is printed right\nin the book. *\nLost \u2014 Black leather wallet at\nCanadian Legion Wed. night con-\nstaining sum of money also membership card for O. Tedrlck.' Finder\nreturp to L^ion for reward\nWash your car, windows, outside\nfurniture, etc., with a Dixon Auto\nWasher.  Screws on  garden  hose,,\ncleans quickly and easily.\nHIPPERSON'S\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces cleaned; chimneys topped; thimbles applied; hot and cold air ducts cleaned by vacuum. \u2014 Pounder's Chimney Service; Phone 1541-L.\nWe invite you to come In and\nsee the new Christmas merchandise\narriving daily at BUTTERFIELDS'\nJeweller.\nDon't you forget that anniversary\nor   birthday   because   she   won't.\nRemember with choice flowers and\nher favourite chocolates.\n\u25a0 VALENTINE'S\nELECTRIC POWER WILL BE OFF\non the North Shore ,East of'the\nQuestion Mark Saturday afternoon,\nNov. 3, from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.\nCity of Nelson.\nOne 8 cu. ft. Refrigerator; used.\nA real bargain. \u2014 We buy and sell\nnew and; used furniture..\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST. PHONE 1560\nRubber floor tile in many attractive colors. Tile apd linoleum laying expertly, done,\nT- H. WATERS A CO. LTD.\n101 Hall St., Nelson, B.C., Phone 158\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSPECIALS\nPYREXWARE CASSEROLE\n99e\n6 PYREX CUSTARD CUPS 69e\nMe & Me (NELSON) LTD.\nRE\n:\/yo\nTHE ANNUA SCHOOL MEETING IN THE SLOCAN SCHOOL\nDISTRICT NO. 8 FOR THE CRESCENT VALLEY ATTENDANCE\nAREA WILL .BE HELD AT 8:15\nP.M. NOV 3RD. IN THE CRESCENT VALLEY SCHOOL HOUSE.\nTHE ANNUAL REPORT WILL BE\nRECEIVED-AND   REPRE8ENTA-\nTHE  CLASSIFIED   DAILYItIVES ELECTED.\n0JIBAL Up, fcJtfri\n.By MRS* M- 3'. VIGNEUX\n1 Mrs, George Telford, 214 Silica Street, who has spent the past\nfew weeks visiting at the home of\nher.' son-in-law ahd: daughter, Mr.\nand'Mrs..A. Etheridge in Calgary,\nhas'.returned. \t\n\u2022' Mr.and Mrs, George Turner,\nStanley Street, have.returned from a\nmonth spent in Montreal, New Ybrk,\nChicago, and various eastern cities,\nOp three different occasions they\nwere' fortunate in having slose up\nviews of their Royal Highnesses the\nPrincess Elizabeth and Prince\n?WJip.*'   -' '  '   ,  '\n\u2022 The Hon. Mrs, H. Perry Leake\nWho has been at her home in Balfour was guest of Mrs. M. J. Vign*\neux; Silica Street\n\u2022 Members of the circle of the\nCathedral ot Mary Immaculate met\nat tha home 507. Carbonate'Street\nof Mrs. Folsy Wednesday when Mrs.\nMartin Robichaud and Mrs. A. Ling\nwere the winners of the prizes.\n\u2022 Mrs. R. L. McBride, Hoover\nStreet, returned this' Week from a\ntew weeks spent in Medicine Hat at\nthe home of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Colin Molr then\nin Calgary where she had a splendid\nview of their Royal Highnesses and\nin Edmonton visiting at tbe home ot\nMr. McBride's brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. George McBride.\n\u2022 ' Mrs. Hlookoff, formerly of\nNelson and her sister, Mrs, William\nHumphrey now of Vancouver have\nreturned after a few days spent\nvisiting relatives in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. Cavalier 1807 Stanley\nStreet entertained members of the\nAve Maria circle of the Cathedral of\nMary\" Immaculate at her home.\n\u2022 Ronald Telford who vlftted at\nthe home on 214 Silica Street of\nhis mother, Mrs. George Telford,\nand brother, H. Stuart Telford, has\nreturned to the coast\n\u2022 Mrs. John Horleck, Gordon\nRoad, has left to visit her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs, Len\nLlghtburn, at Mission City.\n.WeHpye a\nNice Selection of\nInlaid\nLinoleum\nReasonably priced.\nAttractive colon.\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n19-Yeor-Old Girl\nIs British Pilot\nLONDON, Nov. 1 (CP) - One of\nthe newest recruits the youngest\npilot in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve is 19-year-old Barbara\nPicket of London, who saved hard\nto earn the money for flying lessons.\nBarbara decided she wanted to be\na pilot a few years ago but she was\nnot earning much money as a typist\nand needed \u00a3120 to pay for flying\nlessons. She cycled to work to save\ntrain fare, went without new clothes\nand took holiday jobs to earn more\nmoney.\"Eventually the day came\nwhen she had enough to pay for a\nflying course.  ,\nFROM FACTORY TO ^OU\nBABY CHENILLE\nBEDSPREADS\n$5.25 Each\nLowest price In Canada. Beautiful first quality, completely tufted, no sheeting showing. All\ncolors, double or single oedilzes.\nNew centre patterns In flowered\nor solid designs. Sent COD plus\npostage. Immediate money-back\nguarantee; Order one, you will\norder more. NEW ADDRESS:\nTOWN & COUNTRY MFG., Box\n1496, Place D'Armes, Montreal,\nQuebec.\nIll II Hli III\nRanniger*s\nSpecial\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nONLY\nPeanut\nBrittle\nThe Butter Kind\nIf you haven't tasted Rannlger's\nPeanut   Brittle   you    haven't\ntasted peanut brittle.\n30c the .1\/2 lb.\nEstimated'cost of freeing the U; S.\nbattleship Missouri from a Virginia\nmudbank in January, 1950, Was\n$130,800.\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nWe are now-receiving orders for\noverseas parcels, Closli\nmailing Nov. 21. Please do not\nort\n>g<\nleave this to the last minute.\nMeet your friends at\nRanniger's,\nWhere Candy is a Specialty\n\u25a0 not a side-line.\nRANNIGER'S\nCandies Ltd.\n466 BAKER ST.\nNelion, B. C.\nIIIII Hli II\n9264 J2-I7\nHOLIDAY DARLINGI\nRICHES! Jr, Miss, here Is everything you've longed for in one easy-\nsew pattern! A blouse with new\nbeautiful puffed sleeves, Glamour\njumper can be short or full ballgown length. A darling little drawstring bagl Everything's easy,\nskirt's full circlel\n.Pattern 9284 in Jr. Miss sizes 11,\n13, 15, 17. Size 13 jumper, 5.yards\n39-inch;.:blouse, Vk yards.\nfeet fib Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart shows you every step.   '\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS .(35c)\nin coins* (stamps can not be accepted) for this pattern, Prin* plainly\nSIZE, NAME, ADDRESS, STYLE\nNUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Dally\nNews, Patiern Dept. Nelson. B.C..\nCAMERA FANS\nThe  Nelson  Doily  News  Photo  Editor  is\ngathering  pictures for the  1952 Pictorial\n* \/\nEdition.\nIF YOU HAVE PICTURES\n^\nOf scenery, sports, industry and community\nactivities from anywhere ih the Kootenay-\nBoundary that you would like fo see published\nin the popularannual edition, you are invited\nto submit them now. Negatives or prints that\nare glossy arid sharp are best for reproduction. All will be'returned to you.\nSEND YOUR PICTURES\nTO THE PHOTO EDITOR\nNelspn Daily News\nNELSON, B.C.\n EstabUshed April 22. 1902\nPtlthh Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished.every morning except Sunday by the\nI. NEWS. PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n1 26B Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia''\n\u25a0   Authorized aa Second Class Mail\n[?,       Post Office Department, Ottawa\nI \u25a0, MEMBER OF THI CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nI        Friday, November 2,1951 .\n* *. ; \u25a0\nAdd This to the Price\n| Of Cars and Highways\n:. The figures that came from Victoria\n.the other day are enough to tnalte any\n-\u2022driver ponder the possible outcome of\n; his, acts on the highway. The Govern-\n1 mint's Motor Vehicle Branoh has an-\nnounced traffic deaths in July, the\ng latest montli for which compilations\nywere complete, were up 100 per cent\nover July of 1950.\nThe automobile gives man convenience, speed, efficiency iri travel; it\nalso gives him a tremendous responsibility. Apparently too .many drivers\n\u00a7a\u00ab neglecting that responsibility. Here\nis the result: Accidents are up 45 per\n| cent, injuries up 70 per cent, property\ndamages are up.60 per cent to the dig-\ngraceful ceven months' total of $2,-\n751,518.\nGranted, some of all this was the\noutcome of unavoidable accident, but\ntoo much of this toll was the price we\nare paying for thoughtlessness, selfishness and discourtesy that seems to be\nbecoming part and parcel of our. road\n. mariners-\nTime to Add Industry's\nContribution\nTo Atomic Development\nSome    way    should    be    found\npromptly to harness the skills mid (Jib\nenterprise of privrtc industry into Cm-\nada's atomic energy program.\n*.*\u2022     Why? Because atomic energy for\n., peaceful purposes is a lot closer than\ni we had been led to believe. The Finan-\nI clal Post reports the new developments\n1 are \"very excitingandimportant prac-\n, tical results are imminent.\"\n\"It will surprise many that there are\n- presently close to one million persons\n\u25a0 In the U.S. who are directly and indirectly connected with the atomic pro-.\n,.jjram. .*\u25a0\u25a0._.\n'}% \"For the submarine alone, there are\n.2500 contracts and sub-contracts presently outstanding. The submarine program Is by far the most advanced, and\njthe first atomic submarine engine is\n^promised for delivery within tWo\nlyears.\n\"Of special interest to business is\n: the arrangement whereby eight lead-\nI ing U.S. public utility and chemical\n; firms have agreed with the U.S. Atomic Kriergy Commission to do special\nstudies on the practicability of build-\n* Jng and operating reactors for the pro-\n\\ duction of fissionable materials and\npower.\"\nBut in Canada the whole atomic\n.energy business is still clasped in the\narms of government. True, says the\n.^Post,.the National Research Council\nhas fostered industrial interest in isotopes. True, it has fostered research in\nuniversities.\nNevertheless, industry has not yet\nbeen brought into the picture, and\n'there are several new factors which\nSuggest this should not longer be de-\n'layed.\nWe are now moving ahead rapidly\nwith the new Ace uranium mine at\nBeaverlodge, SMk-' The raw' material\nor atom fuel supplies are substantial.\nPlana are now being drawn for Canada's first production reactor to manufacture, pltrtbriium at Challc River. ;\u25a0*\u25a0'\nShortly an announcement is expected on a new uranium refinery to\nenlarge and improve the type of facilities now provided at Port Hope,\nWhat Canada must be certain to\nayo{d is that we become merely a provider of raw materials for atomic energy and that we \"let all the industrial\napplications and developments take\nplace In the United States.\nThere Is real danger, declares the\nPost, of Canadian Industry assuming a\n\"branc,h plant\" relationship to large\nfirms now carrying the ball for America, rather than having this country\nhold its own or even take the lead in\nsome of these developments ourselves.\nTo date, our atomic work has been absolutely first class. The challenge now\nis to keep it so.\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\n' Letters may be published over a nom\nde plume, but the actual name of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor a*\nevidence of good faith. Anonymous totters\noo In th* waste paper basket\n\u25a0 Help Wanted        >\nTo the Editor:     .,\nSir\u2014I hasten to be helpful. The Action\nCommittee might find the following of service\nIn their quest for civio talent:\nHELP WANTED, MALE OR FEMALE\n.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0:'\u25a0., The City of Nelion will shortly require the\nservices of the following!\n1 Mayor. *\n:    l* Aldermen.\n3 School Trustees.\n**    1 Police Commissioner. *\nApplicants for the position of Mayor may\n, be of either sex, but must possess tha necei-\nsary property qualification.. They should be\n\"       ecn the ages of 30 and 09. Experience in^\n'*civic affairs is desirable  but not essential.'**\nCandidates should, however, he reasonably\nIntelligent, possess common sense, and have\n\u2022'some knowledge of business practices. At tha\npost is one. ot great responsibility, honesty of\nthought, word and deed' Is essential. Good\nmanners, tact, and ability to meet the publlo\nare also desirable, ai well as a forward-looking outlook. The post carries with lt a imall\nhonorarium, but the successful Meyor can b*\nassured of muoh personal prestige,\nALDERMEN\u2014This ii an excellent opportunity for the civic-minded man or woman to\nlearn to conduct City business. Ai a email\nmonthly salary il paid, you can earn as you\nlearn. Applicants should possess the usual\nqualification, be young and energetic, with a\nsincere desire to be of service to the community. Honesty, ability to cooperate, and' good\nmanners are essential.\n- SCHOOL TRUSTEES\u2014This Is a splendid\nchance for those interested In education to be\nof service to the community. Applicants should\npossess the usual property qualification, Wives\nof property-owner! are alio eligible. Candidates should be young, preferably with children of school age, and reasonably conversant\nwith modern educational ideal. They must\npossesi Intelligence, common sense, and a desire to get things done. In view of the need\nfor new schools, it il desirable that lome energetic woman be on the Board. The position\ncarries no emolument but gives great satisfaction to those really Interested.\nPOLICE COMMISSIONER-Not a ipee-\ntacular job, but one requiring patience, sympathy, and understanding of human nature, A\ncandidate who possesses these qualities aa\nwell as a strong sense of justice will find the\nwork interesting and rewarding.    ,\nApplication should be made in, all oases\non the prescribed form obtainable from the\nCity Hall, and which, on completion, must be\nreturned not later than noon of Dec. 10, 3051.\nSYNIK.\nNelson, B. C. \\\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any nadir. Nimsi ef etrieni\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere  II  no  charge  for   thli  service.\n. Queitlom WILL NOT  BE   AN8WSRBD\n. BY MAIL exoept whire there 11 obvious\nMMMlty-fer priviey.\nH, S., Olivtr-Whtt li Prince Oharlei' correct\nsurname? And please give namei of the\nlargest cities in B. C\u201e acoording to population.\nPrlnoe Charles' surname would be Wind-\n\u2022ior, Tbe 10 largest cities In B. C. are; Van-\neouver, Victoria, {J\u00bbw Weitmlniter, Trsli,\nNorth Vancouver, Nanaimo, Kamloops, Nelson,\nPentloton, Vernon.        .\nHostess, Nelson\u2014Please, reprint reelpe for saffron cake. . .. ; *\nEight and three-quarters, pounds ot flour,\nhalf pound mixed peel, two nutmegs, half\npound lard and butter, quarter pound ,yeaifc\nsalt to taste, three and half pounds currants,\none pound sugar, three pints milk, or.encfcgh\nto make moist, one pound eultanas, half ounce\nsaffron. Put saffron In warm water in one-\npound jam jar and leave to steep overnight,\nPut little milk in bowl and add yoast, place\nflour and other ingredients In pan end olx,\nwarm remains of milk, pour saffron Into milk\nand add to cake, add yeast when moist and\n* mix all together very well. Dough should be\nrather soft than hard; taking care not to chill,\nPlace pan in warm place, wrapping-It up so tl\nto keep it warm overnight until risen, then\nbake In slow oven about one and a half hours,\nThis is a well-tried English recipe.\nH. G. A. t., Victoria\u2014Would appreciate If you\nwould tell me Just where I could contact\nKing Farouk, How would I address a\nletter to him? '*   .\nAddress envelope to His Majesty King\nFarouk, Royal Palace, Cairo. It will be read by\nsecretaries before being passed to someone in\n' close contact with tha King, who will hand lt\nto him if it should pass the Intervening barrage of examiners.\nH. J. P, Fruitvale\u2014Will you please tell me\nhow to send a long to get words and mualo\ncopyrighted? Has the long to ba printed\nor would pen and Ink be sufficient? What\n,,    lithe fee?\nAccording to the Act, musical works an\n\u25a0 defined as any combination, of melody or\nharmony, or either of them, printed, reduced\nto writing, or otherwise graphically pro'ducod\nor reproduced. Tha Department oi Patent!\nand Copyright, Ottawa, will supply complete\nInformation.\nIt's Been Said\nKnowledge is the eye of desire end can\nbecome the pilot of the soul.\u2014Will Durant\nI want to travel, I'vo never been anywhere except from one witness chair to another.\u2014David E. Lilienthal, resigned Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\nProm Tht Nelion Daily News, Nev, 2,1941\nA children's fancy dress party was gives\ntt the Hums by Mrs. Flnk'i Circle of St. Saviour's Church, when Mn. Q.'A. Corbie greeted\nthe 100 or more children as Mother Hubbard,\nCongratulation! to the St, Paul's Church\nfor what it has accomplished In the past SO\nyean, and to the pastor, Rev. Foster Milliard,\nwere extended'on behalf of the Nelson Ministerial Association by Rev. C. A, Storey at\nthe congregation's anniversary supper.\nIS YEARS AOO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Nev. 2,1SM\nFirst Trail Troop of Boy Scout* tnd their\nlocal council celebrated their first organization anniversary. B. A. Stimmel, President ot\nthe council, presided.\nMrs. A. N .Winlaw has returned from\ntwo months spent In Ontario and on the\nprairie.\n40 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Nov, t, 1911\nJohn T. Black, Chief Provincial Constable,\nla visiting the Lardeau on official business.\nN. J. Dunlap, general foreman for tht\nB, C. Telephone Co. In Kootenay, has been\npromoted to the Vancouver office of the company.\nThe total enrollment of the Nelion public\nschools for October wai 870 pupils.\nTHE STRENGTH OF.WEST OERMANY\nThe Communist attitude In West Germany\nli ot particular interest *at thli time, when\nthere la still muoh doubt among North Atlantic nations as to the value ot a West German military force. The intense Communist\neffort to wreck any German contribution\nWould seem to suggest the conclusion that, In\nde.ciding to make use of Wait Germany'! military strength, tht Western nations htvt done\nthe right thing.\u2014Montreal Gazette.\nTheyH Do It Every\/Time;\n'-\u25a0miHHIlHMiH.il\nFnON YEARS AQO\ntOfWETTE MADE MOM\n\/K>ra\u00bbariworv-\nEvERyTH\/NSMlHE   >\nhouse m oo rrom\nFRXSTEMTOSTWO-\ntnyjHarfo?] Today's Bible Thought\n* Bgj *      A     MMAk    A.m.hU.A    tha     Ctiuntv\nA mob destroyed the County\nCourt House In Cincinnati, because\nt oerttln lawyer perverted truth by\\\nfalse witnesses. Ethical lawyers will\nnot accept oases resting on false-\n' hood.\u2014Buy the truth and sell lt not\n\u2014Prov. 23:23.\ndtint IHfit\nIt ain't ambition that makes Fred\nfly around like he wai tryln' to do\nfour men'a work. Ht's Just tryin'\nto keep a jump ahead of his conscience..\nFrom an\nOWtfwerY\nNotebook\n\"TbyR,Q.jdV^~\nHIBTOMAN, NBLBOJi AND\nDISTRICT OLTIMEItS ASSN.\nTht following was taken from a\nbroohure, prepared by this district's\npromoters In its tally dayil\nBalfoun This -is t small place it\npresent: but It ll In t section Where\nsome land available for garden and\nfruit culture may bt hid. It is IB\nmiles Salt of Nelson on tht rlvtr\nahd just at tht lake outlet, very\npictureaquely situated and has\nmany things to command it to the\nattention. We believe It will it some\ntime hot far distant be looked to ti\na moit deslreable residential centre,\nthe alght being an attractive ont,\nAbout ont half front! tho river; the\nrtmtlnder the lake tnd its proximity tp the smelter tt Mlot Bay affords an opportunity to live here\nand at the same time bt engaged\nih business there, if ont should so\ndesire.\nThere li telephone connection\nwith the other places named herein,\nt post office, a good trail to Ainsworth eight \/niles distant and it li\naccessible and central, besides having open navigation during the entire year.\nSeveral mining claims are being\nworked near here and the prospects\ntrt flattering to tht ownors. Mr,\nGallup keeps in excellent hotel it\nthli point.\nTo reach Balfour one can tike\nthe Columbia* river steamers via\nRevelstoke or little Dalles to Robson, tnd by rail and steamer again\nor train to Bonnon Ferry, and,\nsteamer to destination.\n\u25a0 C. W. Busk, M.A. Alloc. M, Inst.\nC.E. (Eng.) M.Can. Soc. C.E, ind\nP.I\u00bbS. for B.C. Surveyor of Crown\nLandi, Wert Koottnty District and\ntil kinds of land ind1 mining surveying carried out by contract or otherwise Telephone In office,' Address,\nBslfour, B.C.\"  >\n. THE U.N. SOLDIER In the foreground cltmpi\nhli hands over hli tin ind screws his flee Into\nt grimace ai a ricolllm rifle blasts away it a\nCommunist position In Korea. Other memben of\nthe gun enw mm ne lets sensitive to noise than\nhe. Reds, on the receiving tnd, find the sound leu\ntroublesome thin the fury of tht bursting missile,\n\u25a0 \u2014Central Preu Canadian.\nHarriman Takes\nPlane (o U.K.\nWASHINGTON, Nor, I (AP) -\nW. AvtrtU.Hirrlman, tht ntw foreign lid boss, loaves today for London for talks that might produce\nplam for more assistance to Britain,\nHt told I prill conference ht will\nconfer with leaden of the new Conservative Government and ii ready\nto conaider any proposal to help Britain meet heavier economio pressures.\nHarrimm disclosed plans for the\ntrip if ter taking over as director of\ntht new Mutual Seeurity Progrim\nwhich lnvolva administering S7,-\n483,400,000 in economic and military\nlid to friendly countries.\nBritain long ago wis cut off from\ndirect ecnomlc ltd but hai been\ngettjng help in carrying out its rearmament program, Harriman\n\u25a0tressed that he would \"consider\"\naid or any other question the Conservative leaders bring up. I\nIran's Closure\nHits Iraq Purse\nBy HAIQ NIOKOLBON\nBASRA, Iraq, Nov. 1 (Reuters)-\nTht Iranian oil situation has had\nrepercussions on her next-door\nneighbor, Iraq, *\nBefore the crisis which brought\nwork in the oil field! of Kyiiitan to\na standstill, Iraq received a certain\namount ot oil from Persia. That loss\nhis now beeh made good by supplies obtained from elsewhere,\nBut Iraq's main loss has been fI\nnancial, Now that tankers art not\ncalling at Abadan, site of the world's\nbiggest refinery, the port of Basra\ndirectorate Is losing revenue et a\nrate of over $2,800,000 t year.\nPROVIDE BIO REVENUE\nTht stream of tankers Which in-\ntared the Shatt El Arab empty and\nleft full of crude tnd refiped oil\nwere taken to md from Abadan\nind Bandar Nashur by the directorate'! plloti, The duts paid by the\ntankers constituted the main part\nof the directorate'! revenue,   -\nIraq hu no worrlei lo far ai her\ndomestic oil needs are concerned,\nBefore the crisis in Persia, Iraq obtained from her own wells roughly\nthree-quarttri of her Internal requirements,* The remaining quarter\nwas supplied by Inn.\nTht two pipe-Iinei from Iran Into\nIraq ire now closed and the extra\noil which Iraq requires hos to bt\nimported.\n, But since the Persian oil industry became in almost helpless cripple, there hi! been encouraging\nnewi top Iraq. The Bagdad government hai reiched new ind more\nadvantageous agreements with the\nforeign oil companies operating in\nthe country.\nThe Basra Petroleum Company\nhas made known that Its rich Zu-\nbilr field! in Southern Iraq will\nstart producing later this year, and\nthat the first exports of crude oil\nwill go out early in 1952.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nSt. Laurent Gives Consideration\nTo Mrs. Walton's Economy Letter\nOTTAWA, Nov. 1 (OP) - Prime\n_ Minister St Laurent hli taken\nunder consideration tht polilblll-\nty of calling a conference cf various national groups to dlicun\nways of emng Inflation.\nThe request for such t conference was made by the Canadian\nAssociation of Consumers, following Its annual meeting here list\n' month,\nIn i series ot letters made public\ntoday, Mrs. W. R. .Walton, Jr., the\nAssociation's National President,\nsuggested to Mr, St, Laurent that\nsuch a conference would help streis\nthe gravity of inflation on Ihe Canadian economy.\nMn, Walton's letter to Mr, St.\nLaurent, dated Oct, 25, laid the As\nsociation wanted tha conference ts\nconsist ot representatives of Industry, trade, labor, agriculture ahd\nconsumers' for the purpose \"ot\nexamining ind clarifying tht responsibility of any group In today'.\ninflationary prices,\"\nThe Association would wmt tht\ndelegates to study means of giving\nprotection and relief against inflation' to pensioners and marginal income groups. Tht living standards\nOt these groups were .being \"rapidly\nforced below minimum health requirements, particularly where food\nand lodgings ire concerned.\"\nThe Prime Mlhliter'i office dli-\nolosed Mr. St. Laurent'! reply, dated\nOct. 28; in which he \"carefully\nnoted\",the request ind promised to\ngive it ''careful coni)dtratlon,\"\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nI NEW YORK - Dr, William Landon Harris, 80, pioneer In tht use\nof radium for medical purpoiei tnd\nauthority on caesarlan sactlon surgery.\nWINDSOR, Ont. - John Frederick Reid, 89, former Conservative\nmember ot the Ontario Legislature\nfor Windior-Sandwlch.\nTORONTO - Rev. Phllo K. Day-\nfoot, 93, believed to ba Canada's\noldest Baptist minister.\nVANCOUVER - Col. William\nMelghen, 78, brother of the former\nCanadian prime minister and noted\nCanadian prison authority.\nNORTH SYDNEY, N.B, -! John\nS. MacDonald, 78, veteran Cape\nBreton newspaper mab,\nWORCESTER, Man, - Professor\nAlbert E. Bailey, 80, world traveller\nand an-authority on religious art.\nMONTREAL \u2014 Dr. Donald' S,\nMcEachern, 47, aonior neurologist\nat tha Montreal Neurological Institute and president of the Canadian Neurological Society.\nWheat Flour\nProduction Declines\nOTTAWA, Oct. 81 (CP) - Cans-\nIan production of wheat flour declined during September to 1,797,-\n624 barrels, t four-per-ccnt drop\nfrom the 1,863,088 barrels In the\ncorresponding month a yelr igo,\nThe Bureau ot Statistics reported\ntoday that during the tint two\nmonths of the current crop year,\n8,497,193 berrtli were produced,\ntwo per cent below tha 8,668,020\nbarren in September, I960.\nYour bf>t paint buy.\nFOR\nBEAUTIFUL\nWALLS & CEILINGS\nV\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Clawlfltd Wis\/\narrive on time\ngoo've got to get\n\u25a0 'ijjirii^\nSeats on tb* }0 yard line and we malt at tbe gate!\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nWhen you buy your Exide battery\nyou buy starting assmancs .. .yon\nbuy more than 60 years ofexperiente\n... and yon buy service, too .' \u25a0\u00bb .\nfriendly \"know-how\" service from ai\nman whose aim is to help you get the\nmost out of your battery! See yow\nExide Dealer today. He is one man\nwho includes your battery in every\nroutine service check-up.\nEXIDE    BATTERIES    OF   CANADA    LIMITED,\nToronto Canada\n I*\u00bb;\nV   KOOTENAY    r \u00bb\n^\n^\nr\n1.   Triangle    r\nBy ERIC BISHOP\nf\nFor the benefit of Its sports fin readers, the Nelson Dally News\nhai arranged commentaries from each of the three Kootenay centres\nIn the Western International Hockey League. This hew service lo\nlaunched today with a column by Eric Bishop, well known writer of\nTrail, Other columns will follow regularly by Larry Ritcllffe, recent\nwinner of a Journalistic scholarship, of Kimberley, and by Gerry\nReynolds, Dally News sports writer. -\nLEG-WEARY LEAFS LOSE 6 2\nTHAU, \u2014 Despite the risk of a\ndrop In circulation the Daily News\nhas asked me to bang out a column\n' every Tuesday and Friday. I wil)\noblige, not because ot any monetary\nreward, but simply'for the money.\nAs this morning journal *?oos\nKootenay-wlde, I must be impartial. But then, I' always have been\nhaven't I? After all, I don't want,\nyou choking qn your porridge on\na chilly morning because I have\nslighted your favorites and rambled\non about my home-town sextet, the\nSilver City Smoke Eaters.\nBut for a start, leave us look at\neach Western International Hockey\nclub in turn.\nTRAIL 8M0KE EATERS:\nGerry Thomson has under his\nwing the best sextet since THE\nSmoke Eaters of 1987-39. The migration of four Saskatoon Quakers and\nthree New York Hovers has given'\n* him a powerhouse. In goal he has\nthe starry Johnny Sofiak end\n\"Sofie\" Is guarded by the best defence, the |3mpke Eater, club 'hail\nhad, In* many a moon. But. it's up\nfront where Thomson's team really\nsparkles. They say a club Is built\ndown the middle and Gerry, the\nRotund One, is loaded down the\nelot'with workmen like Mike Shabaga, Bob Wiest and Frankie Turik.\nfin fact, at this stage of Ml sea-\nsop lt strikes me that none'of the\nother W.I.H.L. clubs will be a,ble\nto hold the Smokies' attacking lines\nas Thomson has three trios of near\nequal strength. Certainly you can't\nclassify one line as the \"first line\"\nor the '\/third line\".. To date, *Sha-\nbagB has Worked between Kenny\nCook and Bill Ramsden while\nWiest has pivoted Red* Staley and\nJohnny Rypien, Turik has worked\nWith Bobby Kromm and Gordie\nSinclair most of the time and Fearless Frankie is leading the league\nin scoring* with 16 points.\n*      *     *\nFlyers Comeback in Offing; Sully li Needed\n8POKANE FLYERS! v\nSouth of the border Roy McBride,\n\u2022Mr. Flyer, has been having hia\ntroubles. The injury jinx has fixed\nhim and able wlngman Doug Carrl-\ngan. But when they return\u2014 and\nMcBride will return to the active\n' ranks\u2014the Spokes will be just* as\ntough as ever. The Spokes have ex-\nTacoma Rocket Dougie Toole now\nand you can count on McBride'to\nsecure more help if the Flyers don't\nwin consistently.\nOur first impressions of'the\nSpokes wert: newcomer Red Tllson\nis a nifty centreman; Scoop Bentley\nhas slowed up and how, and goalie\nBev, Bentley,.goes.dciwn?. too much,*\n'Still' they 11 .never - lie. pushovers,\nKIMBERLEY DYNAMITERS:\nWith Ralph (The Fox) Redding in\ncommand of the Dynamiters now\nyou can count on the East Kootenay crew to get rolling, Ralph Is as\nsmart a pilot as you'll find heie-\nabouts ahd he'll 'get the' most out\nof what he has oh hand. And it's my\npersonal observation that' the ITim-\nberley roster has many a good performer. \u25a0    >\nTo my way of thinking all the\nDynamiters heed in order to get rolling immediately, is Sully Sullivan.\nThey can't do without him in Dyna-\nmitervllle and why he should W'\"'\nto sit on the fence until Christmas,\n.while the club of which Ih is \\ui\npresident stumbles abbut, is In-ymiri\nme. \u25a0\nespecially at;home:\n:. \u25a0   *.   +    +\u25a0\u25a0 '\nLeafs Need Scoring Punch to Make a Title Crew\nNELSON MAPLE. LEAFS:\nEddie   Wares'  crew,  which   re-\n| turns home today from a pretty suc-\n' cessful road jaunt, is a typical Nelion club, long on fight but not too\npotent in the scoring department*\n\/Coach Ware! Informed me prior to\n\"hitting the road, j^We'll be just as\n' gdSd as' any clilb' when we're\" sit full\nstrength.\". And Eddie has the best\nNelson club in years under his wing,\nIt appears as If his goal tending\nworries,  his   chief  weakness   last\nyear, are over, while his defence is\nbruising and willing.\nBut It's my. belief the. Leafs\nwill always give you a run for\nyour money, but they are one\nhigh scoring' forward away from\na championship threat. But have\nfaith. I've been wrong before.\nCUFF NOTES;\n... the two ex-Smokies,, Bruno\nPasquolatto, now with Nelson and\nLouis Secco, now with Kimberley,\nwill both up and leave if and when\nthe-Olympic-bound Edmonton Mer-\ncurys whistle their way . ..'. DSnny\nMcDougald, Smoke Eater star- of\nlast year, has been playing for Nanaimo since the* wars started with'\nout his release . . . meanwhile' ex-\nDynamiter Bill Hrycuik hadn't yet\nhad his way cleared to Kamloops\nthe last I heard . . . meanwhile.the\nTrail team has appealed Jackie\nShave's case to N.H.L, prexy Clarence Campbell ... it Seems Eddie\nShore won't let the li'l left wing\nreturn to amateur ranks ... Don't\nforget Spokane is at Kimberley tonight, -while tomorrow ithe Leafs\nentertain Trail while the Dynamiters travel to Spokane.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nMARITIME MAJOR\nCharlottetown 6, Glace Bay 4.\nMoncton 5, Halifax 4.\nQ.8.H.L.\nVaUeyfield 5, Shawinigan Falls :\nSHRINE BALL\nFRIDAY,.NOV. 9Hi\n\"Remember . . . It's Just one\nmore week before the annual\nShrine Ball I\" \u00bb\u2022\u2022\nSun Hours\nNov* 3<9\nFor the benefit of hunters, the\nfollowing are the official sunrise\nand sunset times for the week Nov.\n3 to Nov. 9 inclusive:\n,. ' Rise      Set\nNov. 3  ...':.    7.02      4.48\nNov. 4 ..: * 7.04      4.47\nNov. 5  .**;:    7.05      4.45\nNov. 6  '7.07      4.44\nNov. 7     7.09      4.42\nNov. 8   \u201e    7.10      4.41\nNov. 9      7.12. ,, 4.39\n' Hunting of migratory birds during the night is prohibited. For' the\npurpose of game regulations night\nin Nelson-Creston area is regarded\nas the period one-half hour before\nsunrise and one-half hour after sunset.\nKelowna Scores\nFour in 3rd as\nNelson Tires\nJkSLOWNA, B. C*, Nov. 1 (CP1-\n'The travel-weary Nelspn Maple\nLeafs absorbed their third straight\ndefeat in as many nights. making\nthe swing through, the Okanagan\nSenior Amateur Hockey league\nwhen they were dqvmti 8-J by\nKelowna Packers here tonight; \u25a0',\nThe Western International\nHockey League squad returned\nhome after the game with a One\nwin record in four tries ih inter-\nleague games, '\nKelowna'B viotory boosted the\nPackers into, a two-way tie for second place with the Idle Vernon Ca-*\nnadians\n, Held, to 2-1 by the end of the first\nperiod, the Packers opened up in\nthe third after 'a scoreless .middle\nstanza |o rap in four gods to Nelson's singleton. '\nLen Allen,and Tod Thurston,\nIn scoring their first tallies of the\ncurrent campaign, were two-goal\nmen'.fpr the Packers. Other Ke|-\nowns marksmen were Frank Hoskins and Jim Middleton.\nNell' McClenaghan and Bill\nHaldane counted for the Leafs. *\n. Leafiah netminder Boomer Rodzinyak was a standout for the los-\n,ers, booting aside 32 of the 38 Shots\npeppered his way. Kelowna goalie\nRoy McMeekln stopped 20 shots,\nNELSON\u2014Rodzlnyak, Gare, Gil-\nhooly, Appleton, Maglio, Haldane,\nSpveryn, Harms, Smith, McClenaghan, Wares, Koehle, Pasquolatto,\nDobni. '\u25a0 '\":-\nKELOWNA\u2014McMeekln, Penner,\nKuly, Carlson, \"Thurstoh,J HocKe,\nHergesheimer, Durban, Amundrud,\nMiddletbn, Hoskins, Allen, 'Robertson, Kaiser.\nSUMMARY .'*\u25a0 '.'\u2022!\".',\nFirst period\u20141, Kelowna, Thurston CAllen) 7.58; 2,\"Nelson, McClenaghan (SeVeryn) 13,33; 3, Kelowna,\nAllen (Carlson)'. 15.50.\nPenalties\u2014Dobni (2), Amundrud.\nSecond period\u2014Scoring none,\nP e n a,l 11 e a \u2014. Harms, Appleton\n(mlnpr and 10-mlnute misconduct),\nPasquolatto, Amundrud  (2), Carlson' (2),\",..\n\u2022 Third period\u20144, Kelowna, Hos-,\nkins (Kaiser, Middleton) 8.15; 3,\nNelson, Haldane (Pasquolatto) 9.21;\n8, Kelowna, Middleton (Kuly, Kaiser) 10.29; 7, KeloWna,\\Allen (Carlson), 11.48; 8, Kelowna, Thurston\n'(\u25a0Hergesheimer, Kuly) 13.00\n.'Penalties\u2014Koehle,y Gilhooly, Allen, Durban.\nYule Charities\nGain When Ball ,\nChasrips Honored\nNelson Peerless-9, West Kootenay\nSenior Baseball champions this\nyear, will be honored at a banquet\nthis evening,\nThe whole idea is the work of\nPet Kapak, sports-minded president\nof the ball club, who wants to see\nthe champions fittingly recognized\nand at the same time foster a worthwhile Christmas charity.\n'. Proceeds of a silver collection at\na public dance at the Civic Centre\nafterwards will go to a fund for\nChristmas parcels to be distributed\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nMount St. Francis Infirmary and\nthe Nelson Hostel fpr the Aged.\nNelson musicians. have joined\nKapak in theidea by donating their\nservices free of Charge.\nEarlier in the evening the team\nwill be guests at a banquet in the\nRoundup Room. Team members and\nexecutive expected to attend are\nGordon Richardson, Charlie Christensen, Les Hufty, Frank Hufty, Jr\u201e\nFrtnk Hufty, Sr\u201e Mickey Maglio,\nJoe Postnikoff, Don Kennedy, Carl\nLpcatelli, Red Koehle, Roy Anderson. Bill Wassick, Jim McNabb, Bob\nMcNabb and Harry Kennell. More\nthan 30 are expected to attend.\nEDMONTON, Nov. 1 (CP)\u2014Edmonton Oil' Kings tonight posted\ntheir* fourth successive victory of\nthe young Western Canada Junior\nHockey League season by defeating\nMedicine Hat Tigers 5-1.\nGood Hunting In Crows Nest;\nNatal Man Bags Fine Grizzly\nNATAL, B.C. \u2014 With the aid of\nthe heavy snowfall that has brought\nthe big game near the bottom of\nthe mountains in search of. food,\nthe Natal-Michel hunters are making up.for lost time as the game is\nbeing brought in more than when\nthe season first opened a month\nago.\nThe prize catch to date went to\nthe veteran sportsman  Ben Volpatti  who  shot  a  large  grizzly\nbear at a distance of not more\nthan 50 feet up the  Elk Valley\nIn the vicinity of Round Prairie\nsome 30 miles,West of Natal.\nThe bear at the time was feeding\non the remains of an elk which\nwas shot by hunters  a few days\nprevious. It was reported that the\nbear had dragged remains of other\nbig game and was at the time In\nthe act of covering the remains at\n3 Senior Hockey *\nSATURDAY\n3    TRAIL SMOKE EATERS 3\n3    NELSON MAPLE LEAFS J\n3 8;Q0P.M.\nTickets  on   Sale   Kootenay  Stationers \u25a0 *^P :\nFriday and Saturday 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. *^\ni         \\     i          i    i    ii   \u2022 i i ..\na   depth   of some   10   feet .when\nspotted.\nAccompanied by Quids Monti-\nmurro, alio of Natal, the two\nhunters were unable to move the\nbear which weighed some 800\npounds. The skin measured seven\nand one-half feet square. An exceptionally large head will make\nIt possible for entry In the an-'\nnual North American competition fqr big game trophies by\nBoone and Crocutt of New York,\nU.S.A. This grizzly bear Is regarded ai the largest brought\nInto the district since the season\nopened,\nAnother party consisting of John\nHalko and son Thomas of Spar-\nwood, Celester Gris and Oiando\nBatlstella of Kimberley returned\nTuesday evening after spending a\nfew days up the Elk Valley. They\nhunted near Aldridge Creek, and\nwere successful in bagging 'a bull\nmoose.\nBad roads up the\" Elk Valley\nforced \"the party to leave their car\nand moose up the valley. They returned beck to Natal by means of a\npower wagon. In the meantime\nGuide E. McGinnis has two hunting parties up the Elk Valley from\nacross the line. They have been\nhunting since Oct. 23 and intend to\nbag a grizzly before they break\ncamp for home. The Elk Valley,\nknown as the \"hunter's paradise\"\nis a favorite .hunting spot for the\nmajority of the local hunters.\nBOSOX BIG ENOUGH FOR BOTH? Now that Lou Boudreau\n(right) has been named manager of the Boston Rid Sox for a two-\n\\year term, tome observers wonder whether the oft-rumored sale or\ntrade of Ted Williams (left), outfield star, will be completed. It It\nreported that Lou and Ted'haven't been a happy pair as Red Sox\nteammates and some observers believe a deal for Williams may. be\nIn the making. Boudreau, who joined the Boston team aa a player\nlast season, took over the management from luckiest Steve O'Neill,\nwho remained as scout and Instructor of young, players. He signed\nat a reported minimum salary ef $65,000, to become one of the\nhighest paid baseball managers.  . '\n\"Old Poison\" Says Richard\nQatfbMiss Breaking Record\nHUMBERSTONE, Ont,,; Nov. 1\n(CP) \u2014. The man jVlio could care\nthe most \u2014 b?t* doesn't \u2014 says\nRocket Richard can't, miss cracking the National Hockey League's\nlifetime goal-scoring record before\nthis season ends. .\nNels (Old Poison) Stewart \u2014\nwhose 324-goaI total is what Richard is shooting at \u2014 figures\nRichard's name will go into .the\nrecord books ahead ot his before\nlong.\n\"From the blue line In, there\nIsn't any better than Richard,\"\nsaid Stewart, whose own reputation as a star In 15 seasons of\nplay was built, on his ability to\n..get the puck Into the net.\n. Now living, in \u2022 almost complete\nretirement* from hockey in this\nNiagara district town, Stewart said\nthe Montreal Canadiens' great right\nWing would have starred. in any\nhockey era. , '.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\n\"Today's game is'made to order\nfor him. He's got the brain. He\ndoesn't, back-cheek much \u2014 but\nthen, neither did,I. Some players\nhave to wind up, but not the\nRocket, He gets started on a dime,\nSky's the Limit\nIn Weekend\nGrid Clashes\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nIt'a 20 years since Canadian football inherited the forward pass from\nthe Americans, but there isn't a\ncoach in the country who has devised a fool-pr.oof defence against\nthe thing. This Saturday such a\nbrain-child would be mighty handy.\nFrom all Indications, balls, will be\nflying through the nippy November\nair as if attached to strings on senior football fields from frigid Edmonton to not-so-frigid Toronto and\nHamilton. These are the must games\nof the season.\nIn Edmonton, It's the start of.\nthe best-of-three  series for the\nright to represent the West In\nthe Nov. 24 Grey Cup final. And\nwith suoh fllngers as Saskatchewan   Roughriders   Glenn   Dobbs\nand   the   Eskimos   Frankie   Fll-\nchock, the 13,000-or-better prowd\nexpected at Clarke Stadium Is In\nfor a big aerial display.\nThe Eskimos need this one badly\nThe next two are scheduled for Re-\ngipa next Wednesday and Saturday.\nTomorrow's game probably will\nbe nothing but a small-sized air\nraid compared to the expected battles at Toronto and Montreal where\nthe Big Four officially ends its\nschedule.    Both    are    desperation\nis awfully strong and also bulls\nhis way In.\"\nStewart, almost as noted for his\nroluctance to check as foi' his scoring, skill,*, says'?he,;couldn't miss?*in,\nthe modern bratid of hockey.' A\"'\n\u2022\"All the play now is from the\nblue line in, You could take'a\nwheel chair in.\"\nRATES HOWE BETTER     \u25a0'*\"\"\nHe entered the controversy over\nhockey's .greatest modern right,\nwing by saying, that for all Richard's goal-scoring skill, Gordie\nHowe of Detroit Red Wings is a\nbetter two-way player and more\nuseful to a team. Howe, he thinks,\nis the Howie Morenz type.\n\"They don't come' like Morenz\n\"very often \u2014' about once In a century,\" he said when asked whether\nRichard was greater than the late\nStratford Streak, Morenz was named in a Canadian Press poll last\nWinter as the greatest hockey\nplayer of the half-century.\n\"He had everything \u2014 could rush,\nscore goals and back-check. You\ncouldn't put the Rocket in the same\nbreath as Howie\u2014and that goes for\neverybody else, including Bill Cook.\nNone ot them was in the same\nstable.\" .    '    .\nFirst Round Results of\nTrail Pre-Season Spiel\nTRAIL, B.C., Nov.4 \u2014.The 1951-\n52 curling season opened in Trail\nthis afternoon with the first four\ndraw's' being completed. The, preseason bonspiel continued until\naftes. midnight in , the opening\nsession*? Following are the results of\nthe first three draws.\nD. B, MERRY CO-TRAIL\nMERCANTILE PRIMARY  \u2022\nCOMPETITION\nResults:\n4 P.M. DRAW\nH. I. Beckett\nS. Maberi 11,0.\nton 8, J. D, Rae\nK. Broman 3; R,\nAnderson 9; W.\nyer 5. .\n6 P.M. DRAW\nA. E. Calvert\nW. Thomsen 12,\nWendel 12, A.\nBentley 9,  F\/\n8, G. Zerriman 6;\nH- Gill 5; A. Crich-\n7; A. Robinson 17,\nE. Stone 10, A. B.\nS. Ross 8, M. Saw-\n10, M. Gordon 6;\nA. Marshall 7; T.\nStevenson   7;   N.\nMcFash  8;   A.  G.\nStrikes n Spares\nSENIOR  LADIES\nDot Waterer set the -individual\npace this week with a-294 single and\na 743 aggregate while three others\ntopped the 700 mark.\nThey were May Stoutenberg 724,\nEv Macrae 715 and Lorna Speirs\n702. Other top aggregates went to\nIsabel Locatelli 687, Lou Kennell\n854,' Bette Maloney 645,. Diane\nChursinow 639. and Pearl Farenholtz 608.\nHigh team aggregate was recorded by the Stoutenberg team with\n2778 while the Waterer team scored\nthe high single with 1038.\nKoehle and Locatelli top the\nleague standings with 14 points\neach with a three-way tie for second between Speirs, Macrae and\nStoutenberg. All have111 points.\nMEN'S COMMERCIAL\nWednesday\n? Gil Johnson was 'tops in the individual bracket this week with a\nbig 680 aggregate while Gordon\nStewart took single honors with a\n282. Other top aggregates were\ntallied by Arvid Schneider with 659\nand Gordon Stewart with 609.\nBennie's were best in the team\nrace with a 1052 single arid 2935\naggregate. , .\nOccidental and . Machine Shops\ntop the league standings with 17\npoints apiece with Freight Shed\nsecond with 16,\nCheyne 12, E. Hill 4; P. Holmes 8,\nM! D. Desfirisay 4.\n8 P.M, DRAW\nH. Jordan 13, A... Robb 4; G\nPringle 9, ,R. M. Somerville 8; p!.\nQavrlik'6, T. D'Amour 5; A- M.\nChessser 8, L. Vanlondersel 7j R.\nRose 9, B. Wendell 5; R. P. Dock-\nerill 14, J, D. Younker 3.\nPRIMARY COMPETITION\nStarting Friday No. 2 at 4 p.m.\n4 P.M. DRAW\nW. P. Robertson vs *W. J. MiV\nburn; J. J. Cameron vs J. H, Salter;\nJ. Landuccl vs W. F. Robertson;\nRoy Stone vs J. B. Thompson; G,\nMorrison vs B. Merlo; W. S. Ross\nvs R. E. Stone. .\n6 P.M. DRAW\nW. Thomsen -vs A. E. Calvert; N.\nBentley vs F. Wendell; P. Holmes\nvs A. G. Cheyne;. S. Maber vs H.\nT. Breckett; A. Robinson vs A.\nCrlchton; R. P. Dockerill vs R,\nRose.\n8 p.m. draw ;\u25a0'*\u2022*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'.:\nG. Pringle vs H. Jordans; winner Stuart-Ortner vs winner Hill-\nBrothers; winner Robertson-Mil-\nburn vs winner Cameron-Salter;\nwinner Lemoel-aMrtin vs winner\nNiven-Bainbridge; winner Rao-Ross\nvs winner Lepage-Ross; Chesser vs\nGavrilik.\nSECONDARY COMPETITION\nWest Kootenay Power ahd Light\nCompany-T, Eaton Company\nH. Marshall vs,M. Gordon; L.\nMcFash vs A. Stevenson; M.\" De-\nBrisay vs E. Hill; 0. H. Gill vs G.\nZimmerman; K. Broman vs J. D.\nRae;\"M* Sawyer vs A. B. Anderson.\nContinuations of draws will be as\nfollows;\nFor the pre-season spiel\u2014Saturday 4, 6, 8, and 10 p.m., Sunday 3,\n5, 9 p<m\u201e Monday, Tuesday and\nWednesday will be 6, 8 and 10 p.m.\nDodgers May Lose\nNewcombe to Draft\nBROOKLYN, Nov. 1 (AP) \u2014 The\nBrooklyn Dodgers said today that\nDon Newcombe big * righthanded\npitching star, has been ordered to\nreport for a pre-induction physical\ndraft examination at the Newark,\nN.Jc induction centre next Wednesday.\nThe club said the 26-year-old\nNegro had been reclassified from 3A\nto IA as a married man without a\nchild.    '\nIn Toronto, lt'i aB ,or nothing for\nthe 1960 Dominion champion Arg\nonauts and judging by the huddles\nCoach Frank Clair is having with\nhis quarterback-passer Nobby Wir\nkowskl, ,the league-leading Ottawa\nRoughriders are in for a busy aft.\nernoon before the sell-out 27,000\ncrowd.\nThe Riders haven't won a game\nagainst the scullers this season but\nthis has been a tough year on the\nfootball handlcappers as form or\nrecords haven't meant a thing, It's\nbeen a matter of which club was\n\"on\" at any given time.\nA similar 'situation prevails at\nHamilton where the taut Tiger-Cats\nare raring to maul the relaxed Mon*\ntreal Alouettes.\nThe Cats, In a second-place tie\nwith Argonauts two points behind\nOttawa, probably will have \u2022', one\neye on the scoreboard for the quarter results of the Toronto game arid\nthe other cocked skyward for aerial\nshots from quarter Bernie Custis,\nThe Als, out of the play-off picture,\nbut acting as tame as caged lions,\n(ask Argos after last weekend) will\nhave deluxe passer George Ratter*\nman primed for his farewell to Canadian football' before returning to\ntheU.,S.    .\nCustis has been tossing them\naround in practice this week and,\nunless Coach Carl Voyles |s kidding\nthe onlookers, Custis will take to\nthe air.\n3-WAY TIE P08SIBLE\nThe Big Four could finish in a\nthree-team tie if Argos defeat the\nRiders and Tiger-Cats beat Montreal. If that happens, the Big Four\nexecutive will call a huddle to decide the best means of untangling\nthe situation. The constitution\ndoesn't give the procedure in such\na case. AAA.\nThey probably will follow the\npattern set In the Western Canada\nConference\u2014awarding first place\non a polnts-for-and-against average\u2014and then, have the cliib wait\nuntil the other two clash in a sudden-death semi-final. The final, as\nusual, will be a home-and-home\ntotal-points series.\nThe Ontario Rugby Football\nUnion- home-and-home total-points\nplay-offs start Saturday night at\nToronto with the all-Canadian Sarnia * Imperials favored to ' knock\nBalmy Beach kicking. The Beaches\nshed Coach Art West a day before\nthe league wind-up last week and\nsince then seven players have\nwalked out in protest against the\nmove.\nN8LSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 2,1951 \u20141\nRichard KOs Juzda\nBut Leaf Rowdies Win\nBlock Hawks,\nBruins-Also\nPost N.H.L Wins    J\n\u2022       \/\nBy the Canadian Press\nToronto's rugged Maple Leafs\nbattled to an explosive 4-2 victory\nover Montreal Canadiens last\nnight to Jump within a point of\nDetroit Red Wings, National Hockey League leaders.\nDetroit helped things along by\nlosing 3-2 to the scrappy Boston\nBruins. In the contest for the cellar\nposition, New York Rangers lost out,\ngoing down 4-2 before Chicago\nBlack Hatvks.\nChicago now has eight points, one\nbehind Boston and Montreal, tied\nfor third place.\nThe game at Montreal was-a slam-\nbang business that blew sky high\ninto a wild melee late in the second\nperiod. Blood was spilled In the\nbrawl which cost contestants two\ngame misconduct penalties and six\nmajor penalties.\nTwo of the Leafs goals were scor\ned by Captain Ted Kennedy and the\nothers by Sid Smith and Harry Watson. Canadien goal-getters 'were\nFlody Curry and Ken Mosdell.\nHot-tempered Maurloe (Rocket)\nRlohard, still after tils 300th goal\nof his N.H.L. career, blew up with\nthe greatest noise In the second\nperiod. For fighting with R6rri\nFlaman and Bill Juzda he drew a\ndouble major and a game rajs*\nconduct penalty and sat out the\nremainder of the  game, In  tha\ndressing room.\nFlaman pulled down a single\nmajor and a game misconduct, Butch\nBouchard of Canadiens and Juzda\nreceived* majors. Later Ken Mosdell\ngot another for drawing blood by\nslamming Gus Mortson of Toronto\ninto the boards.\nAt one point Richard bounced\nof the penalty box to fight with   \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\"\nJuzda after the latter made some\nremark. A terrific right over the\neye knocked the Toronto player\nout\nBRUIN WIN CONVINCING\nBruina won their convincing victory on an early final-period goal\nby Duncan Fisher after Detroit\ncame back twice ,q tie lt up. Other\nBoston scorers were. Milt Schmidt\nand Vic Lynn,, the latter whacking\na tremendous 65-foot shot which\nsailed past Wing Goalie Terry Saw-\nchuk'a right ear. Brilliant shots by\nTed Lindsay and rookie Benny\nWoit accounted, for the Detroit\nmarkers.\nNew York took a first period lead\non a counter by Don Raleigh, who\nalso scored the Rangers other goal.\nThen Doug Bentley brought the\nHawks from behind just after the\nsecond period opened with two\ngoals, each assisted by Al Dews-\nbury. .\nGeorge Gee made it 1-1 for the\nHawks. Bill Mosienko banged in the   >\nfinal shot after the Rangers pulled\nGoalie Chuck Rayner out of the*\nnets in a futile attempt to knot the\ncount.\nSawyer Signs 3-Year\nContract With Phils\nPHILADELPHIA, Nov. 1 (API-\nEddie Sawyer, the one-time college\nprofessor \u25a0 who managed Philadelphia Phillies to their first National\nLeague, pennant since 1915, signed\na new three-year, contract today\nand promptly announced that, except for two stars, his players are\n\"available for a profitable deal.\"\nThe'exceptions, Sawyer said, are\npitcher Robin Roberts and outfielder Richie Ashburn, both of whom\nhad a great season despite the Phils'\nslump to fifth from their 1950 pennant pace.\nWatson Quifs\nCompetitive\nCurling\n' WINNIPEG, Nov. 1 (CP) \u2014 Ken\nWatson who three times has piloted\na Manitoba rink to the Dominion\nCurling Championship announced\ntoday he is quitting competitive\ncurling. It means the end of the\nfamous curling partnership with\nhis'brother Grant.\n\"Mr. Curler\" to Manltobans,* Watson and Grant are known throughout Canada for their curling\nprowess.\nJn addition to winning the Dominion crowns, Ken Watson has\nskipped rinks to Manitoba championships seven times \u2014 six of them\nconsecutive. Seven times he was\ngrand aggregate winner.\nKen said he would confine his\ncurling to club games this year\nand will devote much time to his\njob as chairman of the Dominion\nhigh schools committee of the Dominion Curling Association. He was\nthe originator of the Manitoba High\nSchools Bonspiel and has encouraged boys all over Manitoba to take\nup the game.\nNegotiate Transfer\nOf Ottawa Baseball\nFranchise to Newark\niNEW YORK, Nov. 1 (AP)\u2014Frank\nShaughnessy, President of the International League, said that it\nwould take at least a week before\nany decision is made on a possible\ntransfer of the Ottawa baseball\nfranchise to Newark, N. J.\n\"Negotiations are going on,\" said\nShaughnessy.\nLouis Baselice, who operated\nminor league teams in Peekskill\nand Foughkeepsie, is seeking to\nbuy the Ottawa franchise and shift\nit to Newark, one-time power in\nthe_ international as a New York\nYankee farm.\nBUFFS BEAT COALERS 10-7\nBELLEVUE, Alta,, Nov. 1 (CP)\u2014\nCalgary Buffaloes tonight notched\ntheir first victory of the young\nWestern Canada Junior Hockey\nLeague season, outlasting Crow's\nNest Pass Coalers 10-7.\nThe result left Calgary and Medicine Hat Tigers tied for last place.\nCoalers are deadlocked for third\nspot with Lethbridge Native Sons\nand Moose Jaw Canucks.\nRASCHI HAS OPERATION\nBALTIMORE, Nov. 1 (AP)\nDoctors today removed a troublesome cartilege from the right knee\nof Vic Raschi, New York Yankees\nbig righthanded pitcher. Desptle his\nknee trouble, Raschi had a 21-10\nrecord last season'.   ;-,.'\u25a0\nActive Basketball Season Seen for\nCranbrook; Hornets Have Full Slate\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - Full participation in East Kootenay basketball In exhibition games with Kimberley, Fernie and Creston senior\nB men's teams Is planned by Hornets who revived 'this sport here\nlast year. They played 12 games as\nvisitors last season losing only\ntwo, arid this year will be able to\nplay return games in Cranbrook at\nthe new Mount Baker Junior-\nSenior High School, i\nThey also plan to sponsor an\nexhibition game here when they\nwill play against the Iowa Ghosts,\nwho have a specialty Negro team\nIn trlek shots and shadow play,\nand want to meet the Hornets In\nmid-winter,\nGeorge Haras, li manager and\nteam member, along with Jerry\nDorrls, Derry Appleton, Hank\nSellers, Les Grant, Brian Clapo\nand Walter Sauve. They played\ntheir-first game of the season at\nthe weekend and beat the High\nSchool boys 49-16.\nBoth boys and girls at the high\nschool are organizing teams for\ninter-school  play,  and   th*   men's\nand women's Pro-Rec classes are\nalso considering team formation for\nThursday night basketball league\nschedule.\nFIGHTS\nBy The Associated Praia.\nBALTIMORE \u2014 Johnny Gre-\n>, 152, Montreal, and Don Williams, 146H, Worcester, Mast,, drew,\n10.\nMIAMI BEACH, Fla.-Charlle XI-\nvie, 157, Pittsburgh, stopped Bobby\nElliott, 149%, Louisville, Ky., 6.\nSPOKANE-Hank Thurman, 202,\nLos Angeles, knocked out George\nParmentler, 232, Kellogg, Idaho, 2,\nADULT\nSKATING\nTONIGHT\n8:15 \u201410:15\nAdmission 35\u00a3\n4tefe\nSlfUI-t\n.PAA1L\nYou always experience a I\nwarm feeling\nwhen you\nknow friends\nlike to come\nto your home. For time* fikt\nquiet evenings\nbeside the fire,\nbridge garnet\nand small unexpected parties, serve\na delightful\nwine... Paarl ^\nSouth African ^\\Tj^V\nMuscatel. Your family and\nfriends will delight in its superbly sweet taste, its pleasant\nbouquet. Muscatel is the perfect wine to serve at all times.\nInsist * on the finest . . ,\nask for Paarl.\nPAML -j\nCo>Op.\u00abraHvt Wine Growers\nAssociation ef Soulh Africa, limited\nPaorl, South Africa.\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or  by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nOPEN HOUSE\nAt the\nCURLING CLUB\nMONDAY - TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY\n7:00 P.M.-NOV. 5,6,7\nAll Interested Are Cordially Invited\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\n AN IRATE STEVEDORE Is restrained as he attempts to move In\non longshoremen who returned to work at a dock In New York City.\nIn the background are police who broke up a number of skirmishes\nwhich occurred when 200 workers crossed picket lines.\u2014Central\nPress Canadian.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES (Closing Prices)\n^cadia Uranium ......:..\u201e...':...\u201e .23\nAkaitcho ...\u201e.\u201e..:.. .*. _.*'. 1,03 ,\nAnacon    ..\u201e.\u201e.\u201e,;_ 3,30\nAmerican Y K ... \u2122 ..... .52\nAf ion  .      ;. . - .15%\nAumaque '.XX~~~r..X.i- i, .29,\nAurior ..' il-i- ....\u201e,..\u201e_ : 3.25\nBagamac .;...~- ..._u. .17: ,\nBaryniln  -.J.\u2122 .90\nBase Metal's ..... , X .58\nBelloterre :.._ 5.15\nBevcourt  ..  .60 '\nBobjo \u2022\u25a0.*.  _  .18\nBonetal    ..: .,_ .71\nBoymar Gold  .10\nBralorhe     \u201e\u201e.\u201e...  8.30\nBrewis R L \u201e.,.... *.. .21\nBroulah *\u2022.'.'  \u201e...*,  1.47\nBuffadison :  .10\nBuff Can   .21%\nCallinan    .... ,  *. .38\nCampbell R L _*.... 3.85\nCariboo Gold  \u201e...  1,35\nCentral Patricia ...Z  .63\nCentral Pore  ..._:  .19\nCetnremaquo  ,19\nCh'elSterville   ,;  .27\nCpchenour ...; \u201e\u201e...'.......__..\u201e 1.60\nCons Beatty _  ' ,26\nCons M & S ;...._. 176.00\nConwest'....:  3.65\nDetta R L 12\nDiscovery\t\nDome\t\nEast Malartic .\nEast Sullivan .\nElder Gold \t\nEldona\n18.00\n1?03\n10,00.\n.58\nLONDON (CP)-Slnce the Fes- -M\ntival of Britain closed, officials ore '\noffering for sale the husky doga ?'u\nwhich gave sled-pulling demonstra- V*\ntloris in a \"polar theatre\" at the *|\nmain centre on the South bank of il\nthe Thames.\nTombill  XXXX.\n-\u00a3\u00a3-.     .83\nTorbrit : :... \u201e\n-r t\nTrans Cont Res ....\u2122.\nUnion'Mining ........._\u201e\n..___      .12\n~~~\u201e   14.00\nUpper Canada  ........\n ,; 1.65\nVentures .._.\u201e\n\u201e-_   18.00\nWaite Amulet \t\n    12.75\nOILS\n.,\n     8.20\nAtlantic Oil' \t\n........    6.75\nEstella ..,      2.29'\nGoldale \u201e      .17%\nGold Arrow  XX     .14%\nColden Manitou __,   7.25\nHalcrow  \\   .12  \u25a0\nHardrock \u201e i... *   ,1ft\nHollinger  _     18.25\nHudson Bay '.. .  65.00'-,.-\nInspiration 38\nInt Nickel   43.00\nJollet Que X     .48\nKayrand         .15\nKenville \u201e      .28\nKerr Addison .'.'. . 17.75\nKirk-Hudson Bay      .72\nKirkland Lake ..: \u201e     .80\nKirk Townsite\nLabrador   \t\nLakeshore :.........\nLamaque-\nB.A.OI1 .*.'. X&.1\nCalmont\t\nCentral Leduc\t\nChemical Research  ...\nCommonwealth Pete .\nDalhousie     .......\nDavies Pete . \t\nDecalta \u2014-\u2014\nDel Rio :\t\nEastcrest\nFederated Pete .'.\t\nHighwood  .'. \t\nHome ,.'\t\nImperial Oil  \t\nInter Pete    .  _\nMacDougal Segur.\t\nMid Cont .......\u201e,\nNat Pete\t\nNew Pacalta \t\nOkalta        __....\u201e<.\nPacific Pete ,.\t\nRoyalite   ..\u201e_.'.,.\u201e.\ngoxana   \t\nTower Pete ...\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitiM,....\"  .......j    17%\nAlgoma Steel    49%\nAluminum  .'. .. 104%\nArgus ,   14\nAtlas St. ...: :.   21%*\nBell Telephone    38%\n. .p.UNRULY MOB8, termed \"traitors and-criminals\" by Egypt's\nInterior Minister, Fuad Serag Ed Din Pasha, staged antl-Brltlsh\ndemonstrations In Cairo and Alexandria on day set aside by Egyptian\n. government as day of mourning for 16 Egyptians killed recently In\nseries of riots and clashes With the British over Suez Canal zone.\nEgyptian police used tear gas to disperse the mobs,'who marched\nthrough the streets cheering Russia and shouting for Soviet support\nagainst the British, A British soldier Is seen standing at attention\nduring funeral of an Egyptian Christian killed In recent riot.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nMilk Subsidies\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 1 (CP) - Restoration of Government subsidies\non fluid milk throughout Canada\nwas Urged today by the Dairy\nDivision of 1 the International\nBrotherhood of Teamsters, (A.F.L.)\nThe action was urged in a resolution at the division's two-day convention which ends today,\nThe resolution said the subsidies\nare necessary to \"make available\nBuys 20,000 Shores\nOf Van Roi Stock\nTranscontinental Resources lias\nacquired 20,000 shares of Van Roi\nConsolidated mines, according, to a\nprogress report from W. B. Milner,\nPresident of T. R. The company estimates that Van Roi gross earnings will be over 20 cents per share\nannually. Milling commenced September 26. \/\n 18,\n..     8.00\n  11.65\n     5.75\nLeitch   _     1.01\nLittle Long Lac       .82\nLouvicourt  ..'       .43\nLynx \u201e       ,12\nMacDonald  :        .90\nMacassa \u201e..\u201e\u201e\u201e.     1,90\nMacLeod Cock  ,     2.92\nMadsen R L     2.16\nMagnet .       , ......      .46\nMalartic G F \u201e     1.92\nMclntyre  74.00\nMcKenzie R L        ,48\nMining Corp  19.50\nMoneta  \u201e       ,75\nNew Calumet      8.20\nNew Lund  I...    1.38\nNipiSsing  .*.     2.10\nNoranda  \u201e  83.50\nNormetals  _     5.10\nNorseman  ..\u201e      .12\nNorth Can     1.43\nNorzone '. ...     .18\nO'Brien     1.35\nOsisko '.        .95\nPaymaster  62\nPend Oreille     9.50\nPickle Crow _     1.80\nah adequate supply of fluid milk\nat a price* within the reach of all'\"\nThe union plans to send a delegation to Ottawa to support the\nstand. ,\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n2. Artificial\n\u2022body\nof\nwater\n8. Grampus\n4. Letter T '\n6. Boasts\n6. Mother\nof   \u2022\nApollo\nT.Paat\n18-Told a\nfalsehood\n19. Ancient\n20. Mineral\nspring\n22.* Scottish-\nGaelio\n23. Showy\n24. Discomfits\n25. Obtain\n26. Light\nbedstead\nauaci\nHBUGi\nanaaa\nHE1HMH\naoaao\ni'uUi!i;*isv\nUSHB   HU      SB!\nhh aaaaw m\\\nam HHinnEP!\nHHRGId\nbJHHHn\nwma>..Y.-j as\nat*] hhhhh aa\n2H3     r\nIE   HUH\njsaaniQ\nHBHrJH\nSHEIKH\nasm\n8. Asteraceous 28. Female\nplants\ny. Ravel\n11. Rents\n'inder\nlease\nlS.Hole-\nplercinj\npig\n80. struggles\nwith\n31. River\n(Ger.)\n32. Particle*\n83. Female\naheep - \"\nYesterday's Answer\n36. A girdle\n(Rom.\nAntiq.)\n38. Before\n39. Outcast\nclass (Jap.f\n40. Haul with\ndifficulty\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\nMA6SIE AND ME DAUGHTER\nWANT MS TO TAKE THEM\nSOUTH FOR A MOMTH--I\nCANT AFFORD TO SPEND\nTHE MONEY- AND ITOU5\nTHEMSO^\nANyTHlNG\nIMPORTANT\nIN THE MAIL\nTOIWP\njug\nJUST THIS LETTER FROM\nTHE OPERA ASSOCIATION-\nTHE SEASON OPENS     .\nTOMORROW NIGHT AUO\nTHEY ARE RESERVING\n* YOUR USUAL BOX-\nACROSS\n1. Native of\nScotland\nB. Bleat\n0. Burning\nlight\n10. Kingly\n12. A red\n, marble\n(Belg.)\n13,Make   ,\namends for\n14. Polynesian\ndrink\n15. Past     -\n16. Samarium\n(sym.)\n17. Turtle\nyellow\n20. Little girl\n21. Sick\n22. Fencing\nsword\n.23. Measured\n(var.)\n26. Crude\n27. In ted\n28.Distress\nsignal\n29. Rodent\n80. Asocial aet\n84. Part of\n\"tone\"\n35. Bovine\nanimal\n36. In what\nmanner\n\u00bb7.Wool-\nbearing\nanimals\n19. Choice\ngroup\n41.Battle\nformation\n42. Prickly\npears\n43. Plaoea\n44. Grows old\nDOWN\n. 1 Bondsman\nDAILY CRYFIOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nb L O N G F IUOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A la used\nfor the three L's.'X for. the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\n\u2022 KHKY      F.KIHK      ORIO      OTIT     Oil*\nQUYYUM     MRTLR     DUG     LIB     CU      Oil-\nC I D. \u2014 E Y I B N r T B.\nYesterday's Cryptoquote: Afrrtus WITH MB FROM MORN\nttU, EVE, FOR WITHOin1 THEE I CANNOT LIVE.\u2014KEBLR\na\nr-\n3\nV\n1\n5\nb\n7\n6\n%\n9...\n1\n\\o\nII\nA\ni\n13\nA\n|\nl\nis-\ni\n16\n\\i\n16\n19\n|\n20\n%\nI\ni\n21\nI\n22\n23\n24*\n25-\n%\n2b\nXT\ni\n28\ni\nI\n1\n2*\ni\n30\n31\n32\n33\n3*\n^\n3S-\n%\nl\n36\n37\n36\nl\n39\n4o\n41\nl\n42.\n1\n+!\n|\ntt\nM\nf<\n.    220\n48.50\n     1.50\nQuemont\t\n 45 .\n    25.00\n     2.65\nShawkey   .'.-.,...;\t\n       .13\n21.25\n1.60\n2.61\n1.05\n3.30\n.40\n.40\n.37\n1.69\n.24\nY60\n-25\n17.35\n41,75\n20.25\n.28\n.42'\n.   4.30\n.13\n2.75\n10.00\n18.00 \u2022\n.26\n.    .42\n.83\nBrazilian\nB C Electric pfd ......:.....\nB C Electric \u2014\t\nB C Forest \t\nB C Power A ...:.... -:\u2014\nB C Power B  :\u201e...,\nBtown Co.\t\nBruck Silk A\t\nBuilding Products \t\nBurl. Steel  \t\nCan. Cement\t\nCan. Malting ,\t\nCan. Breweries _\t\nCan. Canners\t\nCan. Oil \t\nCan. Celanese ............_._\nCan. Dredge\nCan, Pacific Rly\t\nCan. West Lmbr \u201e.\nCockdhutt\t\nC M & S ,. ,\nCons. Paper\t\nDom. Bridge\t\nDom. Foundries\t\nDom. Steel & Coal h\t\nDom. Stores        . ,'...i\t\nDom. Tar & Chemical .\nDoih; Textiles :..\nEddy Paper \u201e,\nFamous Players \t\nFanny Farmer\n26%\n79\n93\n8%'*\n80%\n5%\n14%\n21    .\n33  ;\n20%\n76\n51\n19\n32%\n26%.\n51\n49   .\n33%\n12%\n40%\n176\n39\n68%\n13%\n19%\n12%\n45\n13.\n24%\n17\n25%\nFleet Air       2.15\nSherritt Gordon ......... ..\nSigma -      1.\nSilvermiller _    1\nSilanco \u25a0.;..!.       ,\nSiscoe\t\nSladon Mai ...,..-\t\nStadacona  ,.\nSteep Hock _.   . 7,\nSylvanite, .,      1;\nTeck Hughes     2,\nFord A\nGreat Lakes \t\nGreat Ldkes pfd \t\nGypsum Lime    \t\nH. R. MacMillan A ...\nImperial Oil r~\nInt. Metal .....I...\nInt. Nickel \t\nInt Pete  \u2014\nLaura Secord\t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B  \t\nMaple Leaf Milling .\nMassey Harris \t\nM & 6 Paper  ,:....\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nNat. Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River .'\t\nRuss. Industries .........\nShea Brew.    .'\t\nSimpsons pfd .............\nSoutham\t\n52\n23%\n50\n29%\n27%.\n41%\n43 .,'\n43\n20%\n13%\n32%\n32%\n8%\n13%\n29%\n39%\n28%\n64\n27\n24%\n14%-\n94%\n17%\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nFRIDAY, NOV, 2, 1951\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning   '\n7:80\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Western Tune Show\n9:30\u2014Morning' Concert\n10:01\u2014Morning Devotions\n10:15\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n10:30\u2014Tel Oliver Show\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Piano Prelude\n11:10\u2014Dorothy Douglas\n11:15\u2014For You, Madame\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:00\u2014News .\n12:01\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News ' <\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast \/\n12:55\u2014From Parliament Hill\n12:59\u2014News\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1J45\u2014Christmas Gifts\n1:56\u2014Women's Compty\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Carnival of Fun\n3:00-*-News .\n3:01\u2014Easy Listening .\n3:15\u2014Pacific News\n3:30\u2014Pop Tunes\n3:45\u2014Solo Guest\n3:59\u2014News \u2022\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society\n4:30\u2014Sleepy Time* Story Teller\n4:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:00\u2014News\n5:01\u2014Superman\n5:15\u2014News.\n5:25\u2014Sports News\n5:30\u2014To Be Announced\n6:00\u2014Bill Good Sports\n6:15\u2014Christian Science'\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Report From Parliament Hia\n7:45\u2014Frankie Lane\n8:00\u2014Musical\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Burns Chuckwagon\n9:30\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n9:45\u2014Living in an Atomic Age\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Royal Visit Diary\n10:30\u2014Show Business,\n11:00\u2014News Nite Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nSATURDAY, NOV, 3, 1951\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good Sports\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Program Resume\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Songs Of the West\n:00\u2014Melody Time ,\n15\u2014Minuet\n:30\u2014World Church News\n:55\u2014Weather\n;00\u2014Opera Stars and Stories\n:06\u2014Come Into the Parlor\n30\u2014Folk Songs\n.30\u2014London Studio Melodies\n00\u2014Trans-Canada Bandstand\nOd-This Week\n3:15\u2014News\n3:35\u2014Weekend Listening\n3:30\u2014Saturday Pops Concert\n4:30\u2014Sports College\n4:45\u2014On The Record\n5:00\u2014Sports Page\n5:30\u2014Eric Wild Orch.\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05\u2014N.H.L. Hockey\n7:30\u2014Organ Music\n8:00\u2014Share the Wealth\n8:30\u2014Saludas Amigos\n9:00\u2014John StuKess\n9:15\u2014Armdale Chorus\n9:30\u2014Concert of Europe\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Trocadero Orchestra\n10:30\u2014Dancing Party\n11:57\u2014News\n i3o^\n1 PERmW-P*mN WANT APS'\n\\    FOR QUICK RESULTS\/\n,   Phone 144\nBIRTHS\nj**.\"' PERDUE \u2014 TO Mr, and ,Mrs,\n?peorge Perdue (nee Jean Tfibmpson\n(Ot Prince Rupert) of New, Westminister, B,C\u201e Oct. 29, a daughter, Mr.\nperdue Is the son. of Mr. and Mrs.\nJP. Perdue, 215 Gere Street, NelBOn.\n1 EDWARDS\u2014To Mr. and j Mrs.\nDonald Edwards of Remac, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital on Oct.\n28, a daughter.\nX. TARRON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank Tarron of Salmo, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital on pet. 29, a\nAioti, .\n\u2022WINKLER \u2014 To Mr. ahd Mrs.\n\/ Bernard Winkler of Ymir, at Kootenay Eake General Hospital on Oct,\n80, a daughter.\nFAMINOFF \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. J.\n: Faminoff of Winlaw at Slocan Community Hospital, Oct. 28,*a son.\nI   .ANDERSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\n|, Andre Anderson of New Denver at\nSlOcanCommunity Hospital, Oct. 29,\na daughter! ',\nHELP WANTED\nWanted\u2014experienced mine\nwarehouseman, Apply stating experience'and full particulars to\nP.O, Box 44,'Salmo, B.C.\t\nVanted-expbrIeiJced GROC-\nery warehouseman. Please write\n: \u25a0   Box 6327, Daily News,\nWanted\u2014experienced wait-\nress. Apply New Star Cafe.\n\"   SITUATIONS WANTED-\n. ACTIVE   PENSIONER 'WANTS\n'     light work, caretaker, watchman\nor what have you?, Box 6123 Daily\n& News.     : ' \u25a0\u25a0 :   \u25a0 \u25a0\nVANTED\u2014HOUSEKEEPER'S JOB\nby capable woman. Box 6045,\nDally News.       *\nj       LOST AND FOUND\nitoST \u2014 SMALL BLACK WALLET\nm Wed. nite, vicinity Stanley-Baiter.\nM Full   of  important  papers *and\nIdentification,   also   considerable\namount of money. Finder please\nturn in at Dally News. Reward,\nloST \u2014ON   NELSON-TRAIL.\nI  Highway Wed. one toy Pekinese,'\nj  reddish brown. Answers to name\n\u25a0 \"Tish.\" Reward. Call 4577 Brilliant\nLoST-BLUE-RIMMED   GLASSES\nI at Jr. High School. Finder please\n:   Phone 608-R-3. Reward. \u25a0\t\nj        PUBLIC NOTICE   ===\nTIMBER SALE X54723 ,\nI There will be offered for sale by\npublic auction in the office of the\nI Forest Ranger at Kaslo, B.C.,. at\n!? 1:00 pan., on Friday, November 16,\n.1951,* the Licence X54723, to  cut\n' 1,088,000 board feet of sawlogs and\nTy4000 lineal feet of poles arid piling\n\/on an area situated near Crawford\nCreek, Kootenay Land District.\nI ' Two (2) years will be allowed for\n.removal of timber.\ni   Provided anyone who i\u00bb unable to\nattend the auction in person may\nsubmit   a   sealed   fender,   to   be\nopened at the hour of auction and\ntreated as one bid.\nFurther particulars may be obtained from the Deputy Minister of\nForests, Victoria, B.C., or tha Dis-\ntrict Forester,. Nelson, B.C.\t\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA8SAYER8 AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES     ,\nMine Accounting Service. '\u25a0\n!    . Phone I229-R-1, Nelson, B.C.\nt W. WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\n\u2022 sayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson,\n. H. S. ELMES,. ROSSLAND,  B.C.,\n,  Assayer, Chemist; Mine'Rep. .,\nAUTO WRECKER8\nDAVIES TRANSFER ANp AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR W, HAGGEN. Land Surveyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\n,   BOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer.\ni   INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nUcHASDY AGENCIES LTD. IN*\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone-135.\nLIVE8TOCK  DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H Harrop; Phone 117,\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED *;\nMachine Shop,  acetylene  and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 .  324 Vernon St.\nJfoiamt iatlij Sfrttis\nClassified Advertising Rates;\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion,\n48e line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers lie extra. Covers  any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line;\nfirst insertion.   16c   per line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10 % FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription  Rates:\nSingle copy     ....       ...   $   .05\nBy carrier, per week.\nIn advance    \"        .25\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month    \u2122__.   5 1.25\nThree  months  .       3.75\nSix  months 7..50\nOne year    ._      16.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\n. One. month          1.00\nThree months        2.75\nSix months       5.50\nOne year         10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nfTCi FOP>SALE\n(Continued!\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co., D; L, Kerr,,Agent.\nALMER llOTEl* OPPOSITE OP.R\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\nrates $150 to $2.00 single, {2.60 to\n$.100 doubles   Vancouver, B  C.\npwPEreJR schooL; board\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately. Daily News Printing\nDept.. Nelson, British Columbia.\nADULTS 1 PERSONAL RUBBER\ngoods 25 deluxe assortment $1-\nbill. Tested, guaranteed, fine\nquality. Mailed -in plain, sealed\npackage, Including free Birth\nControl Booklet end bargain\ncatalogue of Marriage Hygiene\nSupplies, Western Distributors,\nBox 1028-PN. Vancouver.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\n.Krisulatin\nFor That\nEXTRA BEDROOM\nRUMPUS ROOM\nATTIC ROOM\nBASEMENT ROOM\nYou* wi 11 he Kiirpriied what\ncan be accomplished' with\ninsulating boqid at low enst.\n'-\u25a0\"Easy' To Handle '\nEasy To Apply\n*\"   -'   , DIK'lIKBTITORS     '    ,'\nNELSON '\n1[ACHINERY:\nCorhpany, Ltd.\nPhone 18\n214 Hall St. Nelson,'B.C.\nLOOK - LOOK\nIT'S HERE\nThe new non-sewing sensation. The liquid needle and\nthread. Mends socks in 30\nseconds without darning.\nPuts in kippers in one minute' without sewing; One\njar mends at least 50 pairs\nof so*. Sold only under\nmoney back guarantee.\n\u25a0 ''.>.'\u2022*' '\u25a0* :     '.'A-  -).a.-\"\nAsk for this proven product at,\nNOTIONS   DEPARTMENT,\nHudson's Bay\nCompany\n* ' *  NJSLSON, B.C.\nDEALERS. IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment;, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies;' new and used\nwire 'rope; pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\nWEAREVER   COOKWARE   SETS,\nslightly used. Box 333, Nelson.\n\"Nu-Llfe\" Stainless Steel double\nbottom waterless cooking utensils,\noffer a special trade-in allowance\non your old cookware. Box 333,\nNelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE - MALLEABLE IRON\ncoal and wood range? dressers,\nbeds, skates, kitchen table and\nchairs, etc. Phone 749-Y.\nMcCLARY CANADIAN COAL\nand wood range; also white electric range, automatic oven; boys'\nskates, size 4. Phone 132-X\nFOR SALE \u2014 1 JACKET.WATER\nheater, hot water tank, milk cool-\ner, cow stanchions, water bowls,\nBox 45, Fruitvale, B.C.\nFOR SALE - EXCELLENT COAL\nheater, large size. Phone 1331-X\nbetween 8 and 1,\n.(Continued In Next Column)\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE-6-PIfiCE BEDROOM\nsuite, 12-gauge shotgun, .303 rifle,\nand 1 setting saw; 120 bass Hohner\noccordian. Phone 326-R1.   \u25a0       '\nFOR SALE - CHURCH ORGAN..\nGood condition. Box 4382 Dally\nNews.   '   \u25a0 '   ,\nSILENT GLOW OIL BURNER -\nUsed 4 months. Can be seen at\n510 Nelson Avenue,\nCHILDS' 3-PIECE WINTER SUlf,\nsite 4; boys' skates, size 12. Phone\n828-X.\nMIXED WOOD FOR SAt* - |1*\na cord, delivered. Dick Kleef,\nPhone 387-L4\nPIPE - FITTINGS - fUBfiS 6W\nclal low prices. Active trading Co\n935 E Cordova St., Vancouver.\nWHITE CCM, FIGURE SKATES,\nsize 2, and men's skates, size 0%.\nI Phbne 1453-R after I p,m.\nA LARGE BROWN CRIB WITH\nmattress; * a single cot, and a\nwheelbarrow. Phone 368-R2.\nCRESS CORN SALVE-FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist Sells Cress,\nWHITE FIGURE SKATES, SIZE 2,\nPhone 352-Y after 5 p.m\nOLD-TYPE McCLARY RANGE -\nCheap. Apply 304 Delbruck St,\nDARK WOOD MANTLE CLOCK\u2014\nApply Bok 0120 Dally News.\nMICRO NIC SHARING A1DS.~\nWrite P,0  Box 39. Nelson. B,G\nRENTALS\nBUSINESS MAN COMING TO\nNelsoh about . November 15th,\nwants to rent furbished cabin,\n.apartment or house for the Win**\nter months, hat daughter school\nage. Reliable and responsible.\nPleaSe write Box 5462 , Daily\nNews and I will pick up replies\n*_, about Nov. 15th on arrival In\ntown. R. J. Roberts,\nCRESCENT BEACH AUTO COURT\n^FurniBhed eabips, Including automatic oil heater. Supply, own\nbedding only. $35.00 month. Phone\n471-Y1 or write R. R. 1, Nelson,\n'.'B.C., or rail.\n50 ACRE RANCH\nFOR RENT - SUITABLE FOR\ndairy and pasture; buildings and\nfruit trees, Apply Box 5278, Daily\nNews.\nFOR RENT\u2014SEMI-FURNISHBQ 3*\nroom cottage with bath; hot and\n\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 cold water. 3 minutes walk to Nel*\n,  son Ferry.-Apply Con Cummins,\nR\"R. No. 1. Phone 738-L2.\nWANTED \u2014 SUITE OR SMALL\nbouse by Government engineer,\nwife and baby. Careful tehants,\nPhone 1160, Ext.\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY-3-RM.\nunfurnished-suite for one person.\nReferences if required. P.O. Box\n324, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR RENT \u2014 A TWO-ROOMED\n. house with running water, lights,\nfor $15.00 a month near Blewett\nStore. Apply at Blewett Store.\nURGENTLY REQUIRED BY END\nof Nov.\u20142-bedroom, unfurnished\nhouse in or near Nelson. Please\nwrite Box 6303, Daily News.\nWANTED - 2 OR 3 BEDROOM\nhouse by member of Fire Dept\nand family. Phone 80.\n2 BEdRM. COTTAGE FOR RENT\non North Shore. Furnished to re-\nliable party. Box 6360, D. News.\nZ-ROOM FURNISHED CABIN FOR\nrent. Phone 1312-Y.\n3 ROOM SUITE\u20141305 CEDAR ST.\nNo children.      ., ' ,\u201e,'\nBEDROOM   FOR   RENT.  \u2014  923\nVernon St.\n1 BEDROOM FOR RENT\u2014APPLY\n210 Vernon Street after 5:00 p.pi,\nFOR RENT-PARTLY FURNISH-\ned cabin. Phone 384-XL \u25a0\nFOR RENT-FURNISHED CABIN,\nsuitable for bachelor. Ph. 50B-H3.\nWANTED,   MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid Active Trading Company\n016 Powell St, Vancouver. B C.\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch poles, Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 450, Nelson. B.C.\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P.\nMnrnan. Nelson. B.C\nMACHINERY\nSKILTQOL\nPOWER TOOLS\n110 and 32 Volts\nFor Factory, Home and Farm\nWrite for free catalogue.\n\"ELECTRIC   EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTQ.\nCalgary - Edmonton - Regina\nSaskatoon\nWE ARE DISTRIBUTORS FOR\nTiton chain saws ih the following districts; West Kootenay, Slocan Valley, and Grand Forks-\nGreenwood. If you have a wood\ncutting problem, consult us, we\nhave a Titon Chain Saw for\nevery job. For full particulars\nwrite Kootenay-Titon Sales and\nService. Cascade. B.C\nNATIONAL MACHlMskV C6.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR; MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries invited.\nGranville Island, Vancouver 1, B.C.\nnrmCHiSb - C\/VHCO fRACTOR\nWinches. Brad'en Truck Winches.\nSingle and Double Drum Loading\nWinches Bayes Equipment Co.\nCranbrook. B.C\n(Continued in next column)\nMACHINERY\n(Continued'\nmem\nMODEL WN112-^395 CF.M.\nSemi-portable compressor\nwith electric or diesel\npower. This compressor Is\nlike new. Can be seen at\nour shop.\nV*-USED D4400'\nCATERPILLAR\nEngine Completely\noverhauled.\n1\u2014USED RD6 .CATERPILLAR\nTRACTOR\nwith cable angle dozer.\nI-4JSED CATERPILLAR\nNO. II MOTOR GRADER\nwith cob and scarifier.\n\u2022 Very good conditi-in.\nLower your drilling costs\nwith a joy package' of\n\"JOY\" tungsten carbide\nbits, \"JOY\" rock drill and\nair. leg.      '      .\nAsk for, a\ndemonstration,\nTractoT & Equipment\n.   Co., Ltd. ,\nNetyh,'B.C,'\nBox 119. , A -, Phone 930\nPROPERTY\/HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\n-Mid'Autumn*'\nTo Suit-Every Purse\n'    and Purpose\nNew Houses-r~\nACROSS THE LAKE\nClose to Nelson Ferry, Two\nbedroom bungalow, beautiful\nview, picture windows, automatic oil heat, utility room with\n,insulated hot water tank, laundry tubs. Large living room has\nmcteOlato!.Firepl,<:e'$8500'\n^Exceptionally   good* terms   on\nthis one.\nFAIRVIEW\u20147TH STREET\nTwo bedroom, bungalow, full\nbasement,-hot air furnace, hard-'\nwood floors throughout. Designed for additional bedroom\nand living quarters in basement.\nFinanced under N.H.A. this.\noffers   value   hard   to   equal\nMe1\"\".!\u00b0..pay:..:?, $9630\nSTANLEY, AT HART\nA whole city block with two\nmodern two bedroom bungalows. Can he bought in whole\nor in part. Investigate this one.\nGood fruit trees, chicken\u00abbrood-.\ner and run, flat garden space. A\ngood investment.   \u25a0\nREVENUE PROPERTIES\nProducing a net of 15% or\nbetter these are an''attractive\ninvestment to the man who\nmust have better than average\nInvestment Income to combat\nhigh prices.       .   .-\nA duplex on\nCarbonate for\nA triple* on\nSilica for \t\n$4750\n$8000\nEach has a vacant suite at the\nmoment , \u25a0       *\n. For these and other desirable\n.city and  suburban  properties\nSee\nR. D. P. GILbAY\nTHE* GILDAY\nAGENCIES.\n542 Baker St. Phone 1400\nReal Estate and Insurance Agent\nHOME\u20142 BEDROOMS, CLOSETS,\nlarge kitchen, toilet and shower,\nkitchen cabinets, insulation, no\nbasement. Now under construction in Salmo, ready in two weeks.\nFull price $2760. Terms if desired.\nBox 6130 Daily News.\nFOK SALE\u2014IN CENTRAL DOWN-\ntown Kaslo. Nicely furnished\nhome, Eight rooms. Suitable tor\nboarders or suites. Reasonable.\nApply Mrs. K. Mcintosh, Kaslo.\nFOR SALE - MODERN HOUSE,\nsmall fruit farm. Close to. Castle-\ngar Apply John Gall. Robson,\nB.C,\n(Continued In next column)\nLarge, very well built house.\nCement foundation, good basement, furnace. Contains 4-room\nsuite upstairs and one bachelor's, room. Revenue totals (50\na month. Ground floor Owner's\nsuite; good, accommodation. 2\nlots, 100x120. Close tb High\nSchool. Good terms. <J750\nRevenue Property, consists of\n2 good little houses with stone\nfoundations, ahd small cottage\nand shack and one partly furnished building 24x32. Revenue\nfrom rents, $47.50 a month, with\nhouse available for owner, \u2014\nClose to Nelson.- city water and\nlight.  Vi acre in garden and\nby?aU\u2014!....\u201e. $6300\nVery good Stucco Home; 4 bed-\n, rooms, etc, Cement foundation,\nasbestos roofing;.chicken'house,\ntool shed and 2 good garden\nlots. Some terms.      $6300\niMce .\nOne of Nelson's better homes.\nStone foundation, cement floor\nin excellent basement. Hot water heat. Entrance hall, dining\nroom, living room with fire-\nfilace, 3 bedrooms, plus Closed-\nn back porch with another\nbedroom. 3 - piece bathroom,\nground floor; also 2-pce. plumbing upstairs. Quiet location 2\nblocks from Baker CIO flHO\nSt, Some terms. ...,*''*\u00bb\"UU\nOne and a quarter acres ant\nsmall house. 2 bedrooms and\ngood rentable cabin, Adjoining\ncity. One thousand <t \u25a0}*><\u00bb A\ncash might handle. .: \"PwAUV\nAND\nSmall. Home, very neat and\nclean. 2 bedrooms, etc. One-\nthird basement, cement floor.\nSituate on Silica St. <i7\u00abl)\nSome terms     -PUtiV\n2-bedroom home, Bright kitchen, living room. Stove heated,\ngas laid on. Very good location.\n2 A-l garden lots. $1500 might\nhandle,) balance like \u00ab9ftfln\nrent Price .: .....,., JtfWV\nCW.Appfayard\n;  & Go. Ltd.,\n\"Real Estate and Insurance '\nFire, Car and General Insurance\nEstablished 39 Years   *\nPh 209\u2014Box 26-302 fiaker St\nInsurance Meneger\u2014\nT. C LAMBERT       **\n*-*rm++it*m\u00bb^mt~*ti^raa-m>mr-+~*m+mm*+*\nfor .a\" House?\nHere's Your Target!\nA close-in property with 3 bed*\nrooms and bathroom, plus living room, dining room and\nkitchen on first floor, and full\nbasement with hot water heat,\nOwner leaving town. C^Afl\nQuick sale  WOW\nLois of financial help may\nbe arranged*.\nTwo Wartime\nHousing Projects\nFor Sale\n1. Five rooms and bath on corner lot. Less for cash \"tfiJOfl\nand we can help you. 1\"\u2122\"\u25a0\"\u2022\n2. Three bedroom house, hardwood floors up and dpwn, Furn-\nacette and wired for electric\nrange. You should really see\nthis one. $3000 cash, and $37.00\nper month, including taxes,\nRobertson, Hi I Hard,\nCattell Realty Co. Ltd\nPhone 68\n532 Ward St.\nFor Sale\n6 ROOM MODERN HOUSE\nFull basement cement foundation; hot water heating. Nicely\ndecorated inside and out One\nlot, centrally located. Immediate\npossession. This is one of the\nbest buys we have 'tSCSfin\nhad for some time   vOUVV\nF. A. WHITFIELD\n302 Baker St        . Phone 312\nAt Your Service\nCar and Fire Insurance\n30 Years' Real Estate Business\nNICE PLACE FOR SALE-WRITE\nBox 281, Castlegar, B.C.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY ANP\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n4 GOOD DAIRY COWS, 1 FRESH,\n1 to freshen Nov. 11, 1 in Jan., 1\nin Feb. Also 40 Leghorn pullets,\n5 Vz mos. old, 150 Hampshires, 4\nmos. old. P. ZUblck, R.R. 1, Nelson, 17 miles East of Nelson.\n1 D02;. LAYING HENS FOR SALE.\nG. L, Baker, Longbeach, R.R. 1.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE-COFFEE SHOP BUS*\nlness; stock, license, etc. Write\nMrs. J. Ferguson, Lardeau, B.C.\nWANXED-SMALL AUTO COURT,\nwell located. Owners Only. G,\nHughes, Rlmbey, Alberta. .-\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM IN MODERN\nhome for young business man. $65\nper month. Box 6114, Daily News.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. %, 1951 ~${\nFOB\nIMMEDIATE\nDELIVERY'\n1951 Mercury Gars\nand Trucks    .\n1951 Meteors,\nEnglish Prefects\nand Consuls\nUsed Cars\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1948 Ford Coups .\n1948 Pontioc Sedan.\nGtfien.\n1948 Pontiac Sedan\nGrey;\n1948 Dodge Coach\n194? Ford Coach\n1947 Dodge\n5 passenger Coupe,.\n1940 Ford Sedan\n1934 Ford Secian    .\nUsed Trucks\n'1948 Mercury Vi-Ton\n1948 .tad'J4-Ton\n1948 Chevrolet %Ton\nFlat deck, new Winter tires, Deluxe cab.\n1947 Ford Va Ton Panel\n1945 Ford 3 Ton\n1940,Ford 7z Ton\n'1939 Chevrolet V4 Ton \"\nFlat. deck. .  .\n1938 Ford 2 Ton Dump\nBody and hoist.\n\"1934 Chevrolet Vi Ton *\n1950 Vincent H.R.O.\nMotor bike.       '    ' *\nMotors\nGenuihe Ford Parts Depot:    \/\nPhone 573-0 Nelson, B C.\nBETTER BUYS AT BEACON\nNew York Exchange\nCloses November 6\nNEW YORK, Nov, 1 (At1) - The\nNew York Stock and Curb Exchanges and all commo6.lt. markets,\nexcept the produce ?xcbr.nge, will\nbe closed election day, Tuesday,\nNov..6. '- *\nLivestock reports wii1 be Issued\nas usual. * .\nThir being an off-year for elections, many states will not observe\nNov. 6 as a holiday. The Chicago\nBoard of Trad^ and. 'ther markets\nin that city will be open, as will\ngrain, markets in the Middle West,\nSEETHt NEWA40\nOn Display at\nEMPIRE MOTORS\nNew'Austin A40 S4dans\nNew Austin A40 Pickup\nNew Austin Countryman\n1951 Hillman Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Plymouth'Coupe\n1950 Mercury Pickup\n1.950 Ford Pickup\n1950 Ford 1 Ton Flatdeck\n1949 Meteor Sedan'\nSPECIAL\n1-949 Austin Panel\n$750\n1947 Pontiac Sedan\n1946 Mercury I Ton\n1946 Studebaker Sedan\n1940 Ford Sedan\n1939 Mercury Sedan\n1938 Ford Coupe\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1.935 Ford Coupe\n,1934 Plymouth Sedan\n1931 Ford Model A\nTERMS AND TRADES\nEmpire Motors\nPhone 1135    803 Baker St.\nFOR SALE-1 6-TON COLUMBIA\ntrailer, bunk ahd sub frame. New\nrubber;, folding pipe reach for\nlong and short logs. Apply J.\nFerguson, .Lardeau, B.C.\n1942 FORD 2-DOOR SEDAN. A-l\ncondition. Price reasonable. Ph.\n709.R. Terms can he arranged.\n1946 WILLYS UNIVERSAL JEEP\u2014\nGood condition. Phone 1428-L.\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK, Nov. 1 (AP) \u2014 Spot\nnonferrous metal prices; Copper\n34Jt cents a pourfd, Connecticut Valley. Lead 19 cents a pound, New\nYork. Zinc 19% cents a pound East\nSt. Louis. Tin $1.03 a pound New\nYork.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials 264.02 up 1.67.\n20 rails 80.8*3 up .62.\n15 utilities 46.19 up .44.    ,\n65 stocks 95.67 up .70.\nTo Construct Oil    .\nProcessing Plant  ,\nBJDMONTON, Nov. 1 tCPi\u2014Plans\nfor construction of an oil processing plant in the Bonnyvllle aiea,\n150 miles Northeast of Edmonton,\nhave been announced by Tor American Oils Ltd. of Montreal. Construction is to start Immediately\noh the plant as well as on storage\ntanks, loading 'platform- and racks.\nI Tor American is carrying out an\nextensive exploratory and development program in. the Bbnhyville\nheavy crude oil and gas area.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES (Cloning Prices)\nBralorne *      6.40\nCariboo Gold :     1.40\nGrandview  .*. \u201e .    .51 \u25a0\nGiant Mascot     1.03\nHighland Bell 87  .\nInt, C & C      \\94\nKootenay Belle     1.12\nPerttl Oraille         9.25\nPremier Border 31V4\nQuatslno .. ,...;': .59\nReeves MacDonald \/....     6.25'\nSili-efRridge .:.,...,.....,;,:.::.?,.   .17:.\nSilver Standaid ..    2 78-*\nVanada JA:..r.,...X :\u25a0 M -\nVan Rol  ...        ,      \u201e  .87\nWestern Exploration    .. 1.30\nWestern Uranium*'.???;......?....    5.65*\nOILS    ,\nAnaconda ..A:^.CAXX. '.A: * * ?.15'?:\nAnglo Can 815\nA P Consolidated    . 50\nCalmont          165\nHome  .'.     1735*\nPacific Pete       ' 10''\"1\n'Vanalta *   . ..     . .V \u2022\nINDUS'! RIAL1-.     .\nAlberta Dis,t 3 Ml\nAlberta Dist VT,      \"   . >      :i 0.1\n.Capital Estates > -moo\nInter. Brew. 430\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 1 (CP)' -\nnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, 93%.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.38%.\nWin-\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n'MONEY FMRGENW:\n\"^uMu'Lil^, X^'-'S,';V\nop wH,Q00';\nSeeyoor Niagara Loan Man Today\nIAGARA\nFINAflCtCOMPANY LTD.\nHwimjwr tr iMornHftt. icurmQi\nmm*-QMnofl LTO.\nSUITE 1.       '*,\nPhone 1095    560 Baker St.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK; Nov. 1 (AP) - Recovery in prices continued for the\nsecond straight session under strong\nleadership.. ' . .\n. Gains ran to between .2 and 3;\npoints among leaders, and tuoyant\nprices were the rule in all majgjr.\ndivisions of the.,market'. X\nCanadian issues continued higher\nwith Dome Mines the oi.ly loser,\ndown M. International Nickel and\nMclntyre both gainjd Vi, Canadian\nPacifio was up Vi, D'istilelrs Seagram advanced %, and Hira* Walker gained Vi.. \u25a0 .\n*, TORONTO (CP) \u2014 Gradually\nstrengthening support pushed prices\nmoderately higher toward the Session's, close? ''\n' Papers, utilities, agricultures, con-'\nStruotiens and tefining oils showed?\na broad list of gains ranging from\nfractions to more than a point. Tex-*\ntiles held firm while steels, liquors*\nbanks, manufacturing companies\nand miscellaneous industrials turned\nmixe'd.\n: MONTREAL, (CP)\u2014 Prices continued to firm towards thB close\nin a followup of WedneFday's trend.\nTrading was slow.' .\n\"Gains outnumbered losses with a\nnumber' ot Issues .em ining unchanged. Changes were mostly of\nthe fractional variety.\nLONDON, (Reuters) \u2014 Bear-covering generally failed to provide a\nprop. Most sections closed with\nsmall new losses.       .    .\n.Covering by. short-term operators\nKave British Government funds a\nfirm tone at the outset, but gains of.\nVa had .generally been lost by the\nclose. Industrials inclined lower\ninthe closing stages.\n\u2022VANCOUVER (CPV \u2014 Trading\nwas active today with prices generally higher.\n\u25a0\u25a0; Oils and base metals prices\nranged higher throughout the day,\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Nov. 1 (CP) \u2014 Prices\nwere generally steady, though trade\nwas not too brisk, on the Calgary\nLivestock Market today. Offerings\ncontinued heavy, 2235 cattle and\ncalves, with nn strictly choice but-\nI'luMi available   1\np Butcher steers and heifers were\nfairly steady. Cows and bulls were\niffifalr demand at steady prices, the\n'odd,; choice, light cow bringing up\nto C25.50.. Good stocker and feeder\nsteers and*good stock calves were\nsteady, in-between kinds steady at\nthe week's decline of $1 to $3. The\nodd package of choice stock steer\ncalves brought $37.50 per hundred.\nVeal calves; were about steady.\n. Hogs closed steady Wednesday' at\n(128.50,. sows at $17.50. Good lambs\nwere steady at $31.00 to 31.50, good\newes at 17.00 to 18.00.\nGood butcher steers,32.50 to 33.50;\ncommon to medlu~i 24.50 to 31.00.\nGood to neaj-choice butcher heifers\n80.00 to 32.00; common to mediiirp\n24,00 to 29.00. Good cows 54.00 to\n25.00; common to medium 21.50'Ttb\n11.50, canners and cutter 16.00 To\n,20,50. Good bulls 25.00 to 26.00; common to medium 22,0\" to 24.50. Goofl\nitocker and feeder steers 29.50 to\n\u25a0<3.00; common to medium 22.00 'to\n\"9,00. Good to, choice veal calves\n53.00 to 35:00; common to medium\n24.00 to 32.00,\nOffer Share Discount\nTORONfo! Nov. 1 (CP)-^-A nW\nissue of approximately \"'9,700,000\nregistered shares of Imperial pjl\nLtd. for pro-rata offering to aU\nshareholders at, a discount below\nmarket value is being offered iiy\nthe board of directors, the company\nannounced today.       .\n:   KIM HOTSTARTS jjj\n\u00ab *     ' ',      \u2022   and\nHERMAN NELSON HEATERS\n' \u25a0;..:'*   also.-'*-.        \" *\nWelding Supplies, Stock of Welding Rods and Welding*\nMachines, made by the most famous name in the world,\nLincoln Electric\n\u25a0': '*'\u25a0\u25a0'\nThe Selkirks, Equipment Supply, Co., Ltd.-\n505 Vernon St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 1590\n* MORT BROWNE, Sales Manager      .    '\u25a0' . .''\nYou cannot do bettef than\u2014\u25a0*\nInvest Your Savings in\nCanada Savings Bonds\nCanada guarantees the security of both principal and\nInterest... You can sell Canada Savings Bonds at any\ntime for what you paid for them, plus interest.\nDenominations; $30, $100, $300, $1,000 and $5,000.\n, Up to $5,000 allowed per individual.\nWe shall be,glad to look after your order. Mail,\nphone or wi\u00bb your order to our most convenient office.\nJames Richardson & Sons\nKBTADL1SHGD   IB,\nPacific Coast Offices\nVANCOUVER\nVICTORIA\n 10 \u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 2, 1951\nA FULL HOUSE\nFrom cellar to garret\/\nOur itore is filling up with Fall and Christmas goods.\nFrom the dainty Faberge perfume\nTo the giant size. Liquid Petrolatum.   '\n, From the lovely little books of children's classics\nTo the massive $72:00 First Aid Kit.\nFor every drug store or stationery need, i\nFor yoiir toiletries or books,\nFor your medicine cabinet or. your Christmas gifts.\nIf it Is Wprth Hqvtig-\nWeCan Supply Ih\n* The Lebanese, Inhabitants of the\nRepublic ot Lebanon, are believed\nthe world's oldest trading com\nmunlty.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBUE'ANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St Phone 361\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&.IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker St\nPhone 235\nOur Ellison's Best FJour\nIs Available In Tea Towel Bags\nSizes 24s and 49s\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCo. Ltd.\nPhone 238 ...\n<<VV   AjtxJvX' xV.\n-v ^^^- \\\nWATCH REPAIRS\n20 YEARS EXPERIENCE\nN8CSON, B.C.\n\u2022Haigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\n        Salon\nI      Phone 327,\n\"PHONE 1\u00ab FOR-CLASSIFIED    |   676 Saker St\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nReturn Engagement\nBy Popular Demand\nCurly Berger\nAND HIS WESTERN BAND\nFROM SPOKANE\nSATURDAY\n9 to 1 \u2014 Adm. $1.00\nlllilllilllllllillllllliiilllilllllillllllllllll\nPrepare NOW for Your\nChristmas Cooking Needs\n#P\nW\nPYREX\nOven and Tableware\nCasseroles,. Refrigerator\nSets, Mixing Bowls,\nPie Plates, Etc.\nSunbeam'\nMixmaster\n$73 JS\nDoes lets of\nwork In the\nkitchen! \u2014\nbeats, whips,\n\u2022 mixes, stirs,\nblends.  Equipped with 2\nbowls. Detachable  mixer\nhead.\n\u25a0Pudding Bowls\nCookie Sheets\nCOMMUNITY PLATE\nCHESTS of SILVER\n42 Piece \u2014 $79.95\nMorning- Star of .Evening\nStar Patterns\ns\no\nu\nR\nD\nI\nS\nP\nY\nS\nENGLISH CHINA\nBreakfast Sets\nDinner Sets\nCups and Saucers\nTea Pots, Novelties, Etc.\nROASTERS\nEnamel, Aluminum, Black\nIron, etc. in -various sizes\nand shapes.\nChristmas .\nCake Pans\nIn sets of 3.\nRound or Square\nUniversal\nFood\nChoppers\nFrom\n$6.05\nCast Iron one-\npiece frame,\nheavily tinned.\nComplete with\n3 cutters\u2014fine,\njriedlum and\ncoarse, Capacity, 2 pounds\nper minute.\nWood, Valiance Hardware\nCOMPANY   LIMITED\nPhone 1530     Wholesale-Retail     Nelson, B.C\nSee Our\nCoronet\nCards\n\u2022 Personal\n\u2022 Excellent Selection\n\u2022 Distinctive A \u25a0 \u25a0'\nYOUR NAME PKINTBD ON\nYOUK CARD ADDS A\n^PERSONAL TOUCH.\nMake your (election\nearly at\nCity Drug Co.\n\"Nelson's Modem Pharmacy\"\nPhone, Day 34, Night 807-R\n.   '        BOX 460'    .\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\n\" VI8U\/VL TRAINING   \"'-v ,;\n. Medical Arts Building    '\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK,\nG.M.C.  TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nHAVE YOUR  FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n. at the-:    '?'\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street\nPhone 146\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER .\nPHONE 815   .*\nPhilco Radio\nSales ond Service*'\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302 -   448 Ward St\n... \u2022'., NELSON, B. C.\nPLEURY'S Pharmacy\nM \"A modern girl might male a\nm poodepok,\" says-Hanneh, \"if herS\nJlI kitchen was run by a steering     \u00a7\niffi-'f *   '' I\nMen:\nFormat\nS ma rf Appearance,\ntry our shirt service.\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\n182 BAKER 5T.   PHONE 1175\niniiiiiiii[iiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiil\nSleeping (hmforfforTwof\nGENERAL f| ELECTRIC\ntwo-control ,      \u25a0\nAUTOMATIC BLANKET\n. Here's automatic sleeping comfort for couples who\nlike different sleeping temperatures ... one G-E\nAutomatic Blanket with two Bedside Controls\u2014one\nhis\u2014one hers. Each can choose, independently, just\nthe degree of warmth each finds most comfortable\n;;. a. comfort-warmth that is automatically main**\ntained all night\u2014every night. .  \u25a0\nWith the light, washable G-E Blanket, you can\nsleep relaxed\u2014freed of the burden of heavy coverings. Made in three beautiful shades with satin-\"\nbound edges.\nNelson Electric Co.\nAuthorized\n574 Boker St.\n\\ Dealer\nPhone 260\n\u00a5\\}RNITrj\/tt\nMoney-Saving Specials\nCheck these and other opportune buys in quality furniture!\nGET THE FURNITURE YOU NEED, NOW.,. , AT LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES,\nON THE BEST POSSIBLE TERMS\n10NLY\n4 PIECE\n1 ONLY\n3 PIECE\nBEDROOM SUITE     BEDROOM SUITE\nBleached mahogany. 4!6\" bed, large 5 drawer\nchiffonier, 5 drawer vanity with plate glass\nmirror and vanity stool.\nReg. $178, Sale\t\nwiui    pmie    gltliiS\n$149,95\nIn Waterfall design. Honduras bleached mahog-\nany. 4'6\" or 4'Q\" bed,. 4 large drawer chiffonier,\ndresser with large sparkling plate glass mirror.\nRegular $169,50. (tl 3A   PA\nSpecial  $ I Sy.^U\n10NLY\n3 PIECE\nRestmore Matched  -\nBud Walnut\nBEDROOM\nSUITE\n4'6\" beiJ, Mr., and Mrs.\nDresser with 6 large' drawers.\nLarge 40\"x30\" plate glass\nmirror, chiffonier with 5 large\ndrawers.  Reg.   $249.50.   Sale\n$199.50\nA FEW\nSUPER SOFT\nSPRING-FILLED\nMATTRESSES\nWith, Flexolator. With Belgian weave' ticking. A few only to clear. Fire proof, acid proof\nIn all sizes. 3'3\",4'0\" and. 4'6\".    (4A ftp Formica top. -1-\nReg, $37.60. Sale  4>Z 7. 7 J Reg. $64.50. Special.\nCHROME\nTABLES\nuui,   aum   pruoi\n$49.50\nLINOLEUM REMNANTS 50  OFF\nGenuine Bargains! It's easier to pay the Home Furniture Way!\nHome Furniture\nPhone 1032\nNelson\n640 Baker St.\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\n.   Compounded\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 26\nYmir\nEVERY\nSaturday\nNight\nMICKEY McEWEN\n,    AND HIS\n\"MELODY MAKERS\"\nCome and Meet* Your\nFriends in Ymir\nDANCING 9 TO 1\n.   ADMISSION 760\nA FEW >\nSUITS\nLEFT\nMello-Fleece.\nEnglish\nUnderwear\nTtii\u00a3 underwear. Is made'\nto wear well, easy to\nwash, guaranteed to keep\nyou warm'.  '\nSuit $14.95   r\nEmory s ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED &  REPAIRED\n.* RECORINO\nJim's  Radiator Shop.\n301 Ward St. Phone 63,\nThis Is the Way\nToo Many People\nDo Their Insulating\nAvoid faulty Installation and disappointment by ;having  it done by'\nexperts at no extra cost.   -\n'...', If you are interested In insulation let us give you an\nestimate. If you can convince us you can do,it yourself,\ncheaper than we can, we will give you some advice, on\nhow to do it, for we consider ourselves experts on insulating. Here are a few of the things a good insulating job\nwill do for you; ' -: . , \u2022 ,\n\"1. Cut your fuel costs from 30 to 50%.\n2. Give you greater comfort both, in Summer and Winter.\n3. Save you money in decorating.  *\n4. Stops icing conditions and sweating walls.\n5. Lower your roofing costs. >,\nIf you would like prbof of these statements,\nfill out the form below and mail it to\nMIRACLE INSULATION\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.\n8treet .-. .. s\t\n..   No.\n;,'.',,?\nCity or Town       ........\n.V\nMost Convenient Time to Call \t\nPart of House To Be Insulated: Walls i\n. Celling.. \u201e.\nImmediate Delivery\non New\nChevrolet awd\nRocket \"88\"\nOldsniobiles\nUSED CARS\n1947 CHEVROLET FLEETLINE 2-DOOR $]\u00a3AA\nSEDAN. Heater __\u25a0    IOUU\n1937 NASH.\nPriced at __ :\t\n1949 PONTIAC 4-DOOR SEDAN.\n. .Priced at . __,\t\n_$500\n1900\nWEEKEND SPECIAL\n19SO .Plymouth 4-Door\nSedan $2000\nRADIO, HEATER\nUSED TRUCKS\n1949 MERCURY 1-TON PICK-UP.\nPriced at\t\n1949 MERCURY 1 TON PICKUP.\nPriced at \u2022_ \u201e\n'1300\n1200\n1949 FORD Vi-TON PICKUP.\nPriced at\t\n1940 CHEVROLET >\/2-TON PANEL.\n.       Priced at . !\n1937 FORD 14-TON PICKUP.\nPriced at\t\n'1450\n. '350\n'400\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\nPhone 35\nNe|son, B. C.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_11_02","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0425449","@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":"1951-11-02 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1951-11-02 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\/1.0425449"}