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'*',\",';-'\u2022\u2022 .. i    ; \u25a0;,*.\"\nU.S. officials said today the State Department has\nsuggested this to Premier Mossadegh of Iran as part of a\n\"blueprint\" foi1 resuming direct talks between the Iranians\nand the British on the oil problem.\nI The State Department is said to take the'stand that\nIran and, Britain should agree to start moving at least the\n' refined oil now stored in giant tanks on the Iranian coast\nI before they sit down to iron\nout their dispute.\nAbout 2,000,000 tons, worth $40,-\nM0,d00 on Western markets, Is Involved. The oil Includes high-grade\n'aviation fuel, gasoline, kerosene,\ndiesel OU and other petroleum products.\n;TAKE TIME\n* Emphasis now on a stop-gap arrangement is based on the belief\n'that even if there Is agreement on\n: a detailed plan of operation, this\n.would require weeks or months to\n.put into effect.\nIran's Premier Mossadegh checked out of ah army hospital here\nafter a six-day stay. He moved into\n'\u25a0\u2022 downtown hotel for further talks\nj with American officials.\n.Mossadegh was reported as Inclined to favor the stop-gap plan\n\u25a0for moving oil, provided it is under-\nstood that Iran gets, all the money\nfrom sales to tankers offshore.\nBritain's attitude was said to be\nconsiderably less enthusiastic. For\nthe last four months, Britain and\nother Western buyers have refused\ntq lift oil from Iran.\nBritain, however, recognizes the\nurgency ot resuming the flow of oil\nfrom Iran. Presumably, she might\ngo along if she felt that the \"blue-\npirnt\" for negotiations, of Which the\nemergency oil movement is a part,\npointed clearly to long-range arrangements Which she could accept.\nUJaisA. dbwelL\nNelson\nSaturday Monday\n....  7.62        7.70\nElection Not Far\nOff\u2014Anscomb\nDUNCAN, B.C., Oct. 28 (CP) -A\nBritish Columbia election is \"not\nvery far off,\" Finance Minister\nHerbert Anscomb told a meeting of\nthe Nanaimo Federal Progressive\nConservative Association Saturday.\nMr. . Anscomb, who Is also &.\u00a3;\nProgressive Conservative tarty\nleader, said poll captains are to be\nappointed immediately and that\nplans are being made tor a \"close-\nknit, active and extensive organization for the election.\"\nMr. Anscomb said that the special\nsession of legislature, prorogued on\nSaturday, was called for one purpose, to pass pension legislation. He\nsaid, however, the Opposition had\nsought consideration of other matters \"for purely' political purposes.''\nHe said that Coalition Government has accepted four of thi five\ninterim recommendations of; the\nLegislature's Hospital' Insurance Inquiries Board and the fifth is under\nconsideration.   '\nIn the, recent, gales and floods ih\nCalabria, Sicily, and Sardinia, 'i\nofficial announcement said today,\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY\u2014Sunny with cloudy\nIntervals. Winds light, Low and high\nat Cranbrook 25 and 40, Crescent\nValley 25 and 40, Revelstoke 30\nahd 40.\nNELSON, B.G., CANADA-TUESDAY! MORNING, OCTOBER 30, 1951\n5 Cents o Copy\nNo. 159\nl^^ined in\nEast ^oblems\n'..'    BY JOHN RODERICK'\nA    PARIS) Oet. 29 (AP)\u2014France\n'Is blaming the United States for\ncontributing Indirectly to troubles\nIn the Middle East and says American blundering may wreck the\nWest's defence plans for the area.\nThe official French line, as summarized fromtalks.with foreign office spokesmen, goes like this;\nThe United States has' lent encouragement to nationalist movements in colonial ahd semi-colonial, countries of the Middle East and\nNorth.Africa.   \u25a0 .. '* :...-'\u2022\u2022\nExtreme nationalists in Egypt\nand Iran were thereby encouraged\nto take.explosive*steps against Brl\ntain in the belief they would have\nU.S. backing. The French say this\nstrategy was muddle-headed.\nFrench views may be colored by\nfears that this sort of nationalism\nwill spread disastrously to their\nown North African colonies of Tunisia and Morocco. Right now they\nare deeply worried.\nMOROCCO SEEKS\nINDEPENDENCE'    .\nThe Arab bloc has premised to\nput Moroccan nationalist desires for\nindependence on the agenda of the\nU.N.   General   Assemhbly   which\nmeets in Paris Nov, \u00ab. The French\nwant U.S. support in this fight.   *\nIf Washington refuses to back\nFrance In North Africa, she will\nrisk alienating the'middle-of-the-\nroad   coalition   now   governing\nFrance, French spokesmen assert,\nThis coalition until now has been\nsolidly pro-American and in fa\nvor of European defence.\nFrance;' arguing  that  American\nstrategy was mistaken, says the Mo-\n--\u2014\u2014*. Tunisians and most of the\nst mi-colonial Moslem states are hot.\n.\\. y.,y. for'independence.\nFrance Says that any' Immediate\ngrant bf autonomy would elevate to\n110 Lose Lives in\nGales and Floods\nROME', Oct.29 (AP) 1\u2014 One hundred and ten people lost their lives power a venal\" apriority interested\nsolely hi self-enrichment.\nWORSE OFF\nThe masses whom the Americans\nTwenty Thousand Men Form Combined Korea Fighting Force\nHANDS SPRING to the salute as the Bag (right foreground) of the twenty-thousand strong, recently\nformed British Commonwealth Division Is run up beside the United Nations' flag In Korea. Men\nhorn Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and India make up the division, and representing the\nU.S. in the saluting group is the 8th Army's Lieut.-General James A. Van Flees (centre of the line).\nThe force was formed about a year after the first British fought in Korea. (U.S. Army Photo)\nwish, to aid would be worse off than\nbefore, impoverished 'under badly-\nadministered economic systems, it\nis argued.\nFinally,'at the end of this sombre\nroad they will be ripe for the\nplucking by Soviet Russia and her\nCommunist philosophy, tbe French\nsay.\nIf the MOroccan issue is .placed on\nthe U.N. agenda, France has promised she will not try to block 11 by\nprocedural, delays.\nMorocco, the French say, Is better\noff than any of the independent\nArab nations of the Middle East.\nInferior I.W.A.\nFavors\nStrike Action\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 20 (CP) -V,\nOfficials of the International Woodworkers of America (C.I.O.-C.C.L.)\nannounced here today that Interior\nwoodworkers are 91.2 per cent in\nfavor \"of strike action to enforce\nwage demands,        \u25a0\u2022    '\nThe. final figures of the poll were\nreleased with the announcement\nthat the next step would be a gov*\neminent-supervised strike ballot, i\nThe men are seeking the coast\nrate of $1.29% an hour as.recom\nmended by, a. conciliation board.\nInterior lumber operators have\nrejected the boards recommendations.\nFinal Results\nLONDON, Oct 29.(Reuters) \u2014\nThe final results of last Thurs\nday's British general * election\ncame In today, leaving Winston\nChurchill's Conservative govern\nment with an over-all majority\nIn the House of Commons of 18.\nThe last constituency to re-\n.port.was the Western Isles \u2014 the\nfishing Isles off. .the Scottish\ncoast \u2014 Where M. K, MacmHIan\nwas re-elected as a Labor mem\nber.', .,\u25a0\u201e.\n'\"\"Earlier today, the Argyll eon.\nstltuency In West Scotland re\nported the re-election of Conser\n. vatlve .Major Duncan McCallum.\nOnly \\>ne constituency now Is\n. without a representative In Par.\nIlament. That la Barnsley where\nthe death of the Labor candidate\nforced postponement of the\nelection, *\nReturns from 824 of 625 constituencies In the British election\nshowed the following party standing today:\nLabor  ;   294\n. Conservatives \u2022*.....  321\nLiberals  ...\u00bb       6\nOthers ..;     3\nDeferred  ...-.- ..'. -      1\nCanadian to Atlantic\nPact Defence College\nOTTAWA, Oct. 29 (CP) \u2014 An\nArmy ordnance officer, Lt.-Col.\nRobert T. Bennet, 33, of. Ottawa\nwas named today, as the first Can ad-\nian to go to the new Atlantic Fact\nDefence college in Paris. For six\nmonths, he will study with 50 other\narmy, navy and air force' officers\nfrom the 12 member countries in a\nschool set up on the orders-of Gen,\nEisenhower.\nIn Montreal Today . .'.. '        . - * r\nCheering Welcome in Northern Ont\nRoyal Couple; Quints Presented\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nThis LittlJ Heifer; ,\nWSfft'to . AftarMt  . . .\nTORONTO, (Oct 29 (CP) \u2014\u25a0\nThls'Httle heifer went to market ... '     X:\nBut   she   Jumped, from   a\ntruck and for 90 minutes eluded police, truck drivers and mo-'\ntorista In a bid. to stay off the\nbutchers counter.\nCars* owerved all over the\nhighway as she zigzagged,\nthrough all four lanes.'. She\ndragged one man down a steep\nembankment,     '\nIn the end they used a rope\nand two ohalns to drag her back\nIn the truck.       ~. .\nDEADLOCK FACES\nTRICE-SEEKERS\nUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nBATTAUONSNOT\nGOVT CONCERN\nEgyptian Minister\nClaims \"Not\nOfficially *^vyare\"\nCAIRO, Egypt, Oct'. 29 (AP) \u2014\nEgypt's Interior Minister, Fouad Se-\nrag El. Din Pasha said today he understands clandestine. Egyptian \"liberation battalions\" are \"being formed as a result of. nationalistic fervor\ngenerated by the crisis between\nBritain and Egypt \/   V\nBut Serag El Din said the growing\norganization \"is a national movement which does hot''concern the\ngovernment\" He\" side-stepped the\nissue by saying he* was not \"officially aWare\" of the movement,\nThe minister denied reports that\nthe Egyptian army is supplying the\narms to the underground organization. He said if the battalions are\ngetting arm?,, it. was,i>eing done\nsecretly;, $ccording,to,Egyptiari law\nno *pers6n \u00a3an etirry arms V'thout\nspecial permission. Such p^issiort\nH-gitanted'''to ' individuals on the\nmerits of each case, but hot to organizations. '\u25a0'.'\u25a0.,\nThe pro-government newspaper\nAl Misri said'several days ago'that\nthe* \"liberation battalions\", were be-,\ning formed and trained by Gen.Azls\nEl Misri,''.former commander-in-\nchief of the Egyptian army who was\njailed by British authorities during\nthe'Second World War pn charges\nhe. was planning to.Joln the. Axis.\nSUEZ CANAL ZONE, Oct.. 29\n(Reuters)\u2014In Cairo the Suez Canal\nCompany announced that a strike\nof Egyptian mooring boat workers\nand searchlight electricians for'ced\nit to stop night-convoy passage\" of\nthe waterway.\nNight navigation would be restricted to \/essels' operating their,\nown' searchlights, the' organization\nstated.' '\nIn Khartoum, the Sudan Constitutional Commission asked the U.N. to\nsend an international commission to\nsupervise Sudanese Constitutional\ndevelopment\n\u25a0 It suggested\", that the*U.N. group\nadvise' the Sudanese* on establishment- of a constituent assembly to\nexercise self-determination under\nU.N. supervision during or before\nDecember, 1953.\nBy JOHN LEBLANC    .\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNORTH BAY, Ont, Oct.-29 (CP)\n\u25a0 Britain's royal travellers came\narly and stayed late In North Bay\n)day.\nA stiff tall wind blew the plane\nearing Princess Elizabeth and\ntince Philip ipto this Northern\nIntario city a half-hour ahead of\nchedule. The visit was supposed\n0 last 30 minutes. It stretched to\n3 minutes before they took off for\nMontreal on the last leg of an 1100-\nille flight.\nThe big, blue-and-white sign set\np In this city of some 18,000 pop-\nlation read:\n\"Cheerio, Lillibet and Phil.\"\nAnd It was cheerio throughout\na three-mile toUr of streets lined\n.with cheering thousands from the\nsurrounding area. One eight-block\nstretch   was   lined   with   13,000\n1 school children.\n'.The Dionne quintuplets and 500-\npund Jack Garland, Liberal mem-\n;r of Parliament for Nipissing\u201e\n[ere presented to the Prince and\nrincess at the airport on their\nrrlvaL\nRE8ENT PICTURE\nMarie, Annette, Cecile, Emllle and\nvorine Dionne, now 17. spread out\nia line for the royal visitors, each\n':. whom spoke to the girls in\nrench. The Quints then presented\ngroup photograph of themselves\nthe Princess.\nMr. and Mrs. Ollva Dionne and\ne  quints' five-year-old  brother,\nClaude, also were presented.\nAfter the airport reception, the\nPrince and Princess drove into the\ncity. At the cenotaph, they received\nNorth Bay's gifts\u2014a beaver hat for\nPhilip and beaver mittens for Elizabeth\u2014and signed the civic register.\nBAD WEATHER IN\nPORT ARTHUR\nThe visit to North Bay was the\nthree-ouarter mark in a busy 14-\nhour day for the royal couple. It\nstarted in Port Arthur at 9 a.m. in\nbad weather. Sleet from the Southwest hit the lakehead city during\nthe night. Scheduled inspections qf\nGirl Guides, Boy Scouts and other\nchildren's organizations drawn- up\non the parade square were called\noff.\nFive thousand school children,\ngave the royal couple an ovation\nin Port Arthur arena. This was followed by a tour of a grain elevator\nwhere they saw the loading of a\nGreat Lakes freighter.\nThen they drove to adjoining Fort\nWilliam where they were presented\nwith an Illuminated scroll.    '\nIn Fort William Gardens, a new\n$1,000,000 arena, they were welcomed by 8000 children in a 15-mlnute\novation,\nThe royal couple spent 17 hours\nin the lakehead cities after arriving\nthere Sunday from Western Canada.\nBY JOHN LEBLANC\nCanadian Press staff Writer\nMONTREAL.   Oct.   29   (CP) \u2014\nPrincess Elizabeth and ber husband\ncame tonight to Montreal, a city\nfestooned and agog these last three\ndays with every.intent of outdoing\nanything and everything that Canada yet has offered In the way of\na royal welcome,  ,\nThe royal couple \u2014 the Princess\nand the Duke ot Edinburgh \u2014 came\ninto town by aircraft from the\nPrairie West and landed at Dorval\nAirport,' about 14 miles West of\nthe city proper at 4.27 p.m.\nAt 8.23 p.m., their car pulled up\nat the Windsor Hotel, where they\nwill stay, to the accompanying roar\nof thousands massed In Dominion\nSquare, directly across the street,\nbrilliantly festooned and lighted\nwith floodlights.\nThe crowd Jammed the square\nfor a solid block. Police guessed the\nthrong numbered from 50,000 to\n100,000.\nCity mounted police, their horses\nhooves painted silver, moved along\nWindsor Street which separates the\nhotel and the square\/\nThroughout most of the route\nfrom the airport, crowds were\ngathered.* ,\nIn the square, the throng was so\ndense that soijrie of the* more venturesome climbed statues. <' *\n\u2022 As their car moved slowly toward\nthe hotel entrance.' thr Duke tapped his wife un the shoulder, then\npointed to the decorated balcony a\nstorey, and* a half above ihe sidewalk on Windsor Street.\nThe Princess looked up through,\nthe glass top of their car and said\nsomething to her husband.\nThey entered the hotel and a few\nminutes later made a brief appearance on the balcony, waving to the\ncheering crowds,\nThen they withdrew to thi hotel.\nThere were shouts of \"We Want\nElizabeth; We Want Elizabeth.\"\nThe Insistence of the crowd was\nnot to be denied and both Princess\nElizabeth and Prince Philip, dressed In street clothes, appeared once\nmore, on the balcony. . \" *   -**\nPrincess Elizabeth wore a light\nbrown suit with a small hat td\nmatch. Both waved and smiled at\nthe massed thousands, turned\naround and went back Into.the hotel. ;;.';   \u25a0'\u2022;;'!..'\"'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nThe crowd kept up an lnslstant\nstream of shouts and whistles and\nfinally broke through police cordons. Police forced the crowd back.\nThe only official event Monday\nnight for the royal visitors was\ntheir attendance at a regular-scheduled meeting between New. York\nRangers and Montreal Canadiens\nof the National Hockey. League.\nA-Troubles-hooter.:'\nPAIjIS,\u00a3ct 29 (AP) \u2014 Like most\ndiplomats ' American Ambassador\nDavid K. Bruce fs a' iroUbleshooter.\nHe Is also a sharpshooter. At a diplomatic shoot yesterrjay at French\nPresident* \"Vincent Auriols Summer\nestate at Rambouillet, Bruce knocked down 70 pheasants. Auril got 41.\nDisagree on\nBuffer Zone\nMUNSAN,. Korea, Oct 80 (Tuesday) (AP)\u2014A new and long-drawn-\nout deadlock confronted Korean\ntruce negotiators, today unless they\ncan come up with an unexpectedly\nquick answer to the snarled question of where to draw a buffer\nzone. I      \u2022*'.\"\u2022\nSub-committees for the Commu*\niiists; and the United Nations command, scheduled another meeting\nfor 11. a.m. today.\nThe current series at talks, which\nbegan smoothly' late Thursday after\na 64-day suspension, appeared to be\nslipping rapidly Into the old pattern\nof uncompromising haggling.\nThree and a half hours of sessions\nMonday .at the; wayside village * of\nPanmunjom were described by the\nU.iN. command as \"fruitless.\"\nThe allies have, proposed a buffer\nzone Vk-miles Wide along the pre\nsent line of 'battle, contact, mostly well Inside North Korea. 1*he\nReds have demanded a zone of\nvarying width that would require\nallied troops to retire Southward\nfive'lo 15 miles. .\n., Monday's .sessions were\/reported\ngiven over to debate 'on-differences\nbetween the rival versions of the\nline of contact\" \u2014 where the\nshooting takes: place.'\nThe allied proposal would Involve\nwithdrawals by,'' the*:\u25a0 Reds from\nabout 200 square miles in the West\nand withdrawal from equivalent\nareas by the allies In*. East and cen*\ntral Korea.\nmm\nMonopoly\n$85,000 Levied for Bid to End Competition\nBy \"Disloyal, Illegal, Unjust Agreement\"\nMONTREAL, Oct.,29 (CP)\u2014 Five, match companies\nwere found guilty today of forming and operating a monopoly\ncontrolling the Canadian match, business ahd were fined a.\ntotal of $85,080 and costs.*\nThe fines, announced by Mr, Justice Valmore Bien-\nvenue in giving his 68-page judgment, were:   :\".   .\nEddy Match, Company, Ltd., $25,000; Valcourt Match\nCo., Ltd., $25,000; Commonwealth Match Co., Ltd., $15,000;\nCanada Match, Ltd., $10,0QP; Federal Match, Ltd., $10,000.\n\" \u25a0\"',.., The trial of the five companies,\nFresh Chinese\nForces Lash\nBack al Allies\nVICTORIA, B,C*.. Oct 29 (CP)-\nHialth.-Miriister. Tiirnbull today indicated he woujd remain in the\ncoalition cabinet.* despite the storm\ncaused by a rift;fcetween his office\narid; the- B.C, ..Hospital Insurance\nService Legislative Inquiry Board.\nOpposition leader Harold Winch\nhad called upon him to resign after\nthe board forced,publication of its\nrecommendations. Friday over Mr.\nTurnbiill's'objectiqns.\nThe' minister said today he had\ngiven no thought to resigning and\nrefused to comment further on the\nboard's principal recommendation\nthat the Government ease its policy\non fixed budget cuts for hospitals.\nWhen the report was released following a stormy government caucus\nFriday it was accompanied by a\nstatement from Mr. Turnbull criticizing the board.\nMr. Turnbull's refusals to make\nany more public statements on the\nissue followed suggestions'by some\nmembers that he had been asked by\nother cabinet members to refrain'\nfrom any public discussions of the\nB.G.H.LS..\nU.S. EIGHTH ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Oct., 30 (Tuesday) (AP) \u2014 Fresh Chinese defenders stiff-armed Allied tanks\nand infantry probing around battered Kumsong Monday and launched furious attacks of their own near\nthe central Korean road centre.\nElsewhere in Korea, U.N. forces\nforged, gains of less than one mile\non the Eastern and Western fronts.\nFour allied tanks prowled Into\nthe rubbled .norinansrland ,cjty\u201e of\nKumsong again* Monday, and ran\ninto heavy Red iportar fire, They\nturned'back toward the allied lines.\nAt least one new division of Chinese fighters has been moved into\nthe Kumsong area for a stiffening\ndefence.     ,     ,\nSoutheast'of Kumsong, the Com:\nmunists hurled three attacks at U.N.\npositions In fierce day-long fighting.\n70 Thousand Strike\nAgainst Congress\nQUITO, EWiedor, Oct 20 (AP) ,\u2014\n.Seventy-itlKiiOT)jfd^E;C;tfs^o,f\u00ab'-a-n\n.workers went Ona 24-hour'strike\nthroughout the. country today in a\nprotestjBgalrist\\Congresi.',';   .',\nThe Confederation of Ecuadorean\nWorkers-called-the' strike because\nCongress failed to adopt a program\ndemanded by the'union calling for\nchanges'in conscription laws, additional social security legislation,\nstrengthening of civil service, e\ngeneral increase in wages, price\ncofitrolq, and revisions in the income\ntax laws.' ' ', .   '.-. * \u2022 \"\nWife Douses Husband\nWho Pines for\nDesert and Dancer\nHOUSTON, Tex. Oct 29 (AP)\nGloria King doused her husband\nwith a * glass of water, today and\nstormed out of a district court room\nstill married to Sheppard (Abdul*\nlah) King III, ex-marine who pines\nfor the Egyptian desert and a belly\ndancer, Sarnia Gamal. '\nShe gave an explosive finish to\nan annulment petition hearing. The\naction ended almost before it got\nstarted, with District Judge Ewing\nBoyd setting a new date of Dec. 10\nto hear Gloria's petition asking an\nannulment On the grounds she was\nton . Intoxicated to remember the\nmarriage.\nShe soaked Sheppard on her way\nfrom the courtroom.\n\"Don't you think you've done\nenough of your darned yapping all\nover this town,\" she cried.\nBoyd'didn't ste the Incident, his\nview was blocked by four reporters\nwho shared the wetting.\nSheppard, who became a Moslem\nend took the rarhe Abdullah In order to marry Sarnia when he Is\nfree, snapped that he wouldn't be\nhere Dec. 10.\n\"I'm going back to the desert and\nthe Arabs,\" he exclaimed.\nSOCIETY BRIDE\nSEEKS ANNULMENT\nDETROIT, Oct. 29 (AP) \u2014 A\nweek ago Detroit's society pages\ntold ,of the marriage of Mary Jane\nBarrows and Robert*J. Rousseau.\nThe wedding was one of the bigger social affair? in Grosse Pointe\nPark.\nToday 27-year-old .Mary Jane,\ncrestfallen bride of nine days, sued\nfor annulment. She accused her\nhusband bf having another wife.\nAnd the woman who claims to be\nwife No. 1 said she would seek a\nwarrant charging Rousseau \u25a0 with\nbigamy.\nVirginia Budd-Jack Rousseau, 24\nbrunette, said she married Bob, 20-\nyear-old son ot a Detroit manufacturer, last July. A baby, Denis\nMarie, was born three weeks ago,\nshe said,\nVirginia said she first beard of the\nmarriage to Mary Jane Barrows\nwhen her mother read the Sunday\npapers.\n\"I heard mother call out in\nanother room to father: My God \u2014\nBobs gotten married.'\"\nHungarian Foreign\nMinister: Dies\nBUDAPEST, Hungary, Oct .29\n(AP)\u2014Budapest newspapers reported today, the death of Janos Gyong-\nyosi, Hungary's first foreign minister after*the Second World War.\nGyongyosl signed' the peace treaty\non behalf of Hungary in'Paris in\n1947. He resigned soon after. Under\nheavy criticism from Communists.\nTwo Die, Two Survive\nAir Crash\nPORT TOWNSEND, Wash.,. Oct,\n29 (AP) \u2014 Two persons were found\nalive and two others dead today in\nthe wreckage of a plane missing\nsince last night oh a flight from\nBellingham to Seattle.\nAll were members of a Seattle\nfamily.\nThe pilot of the craft Richard\nGeorge - Mortensen, S3, df Seattle,\ndied in the crash, as did his son,\nRusse!lf8.\nThe pilot's wife! 31, survived arid\nwas being brought to a hospital\nhere. The other survivor was a\ndaughter, Kathleen, 5.\non charges laid under the Combines\nInvestigation Act, began last April\n\" and ended May .Si).\"\nIn his Judgment His Lordship said\ntbe Eddy Company formed end operated an illegal agreement from*\n1927 to 1950, sought to eliminate\ncompetition arid \"not by accidept\"\nfound Itself alone In the wooden-\nmatch Industry.\nThe Valcourt Company, said His\nLordship, was incorporated to help\nEddy organize, operate and maintain control In the industry and\nserved, as intermediary in Eddy's\npurchase of other accused corporations. . . .* . ....\nCOVERED CANADA\nValcourt was In a special position,\nsaid the Judgment. The other companies aided Eddy, in forming and\nexploiting the illegal coalition. Tha\nalleged monopoly covered all Canada except Newfoundland.\n. In acquiring\/Canada. Match and\nFederal Match, the Eddy Company\nofficers took precautions 'to hide\ntheir. relations' with Canada 'Match\nand Federal,.said His; Lordship.\nThe Judgment, reviewed th j monopoly's operations In such matters\nas setting re-sale price? for jobbers,\nestablishlng'\"fighting brands\" in the\ntrade, controlling prices and giving\nspecial discpunts,,   *,.':'.\u2022;. (\nThrough such operations, said Mr.\nJustice Bienvenue, Eddy paid sub-\nstanttal dividends in. bad years and\n.good, and its .excellent financial\nsituation;was pot.surprising.'*  *\n; ,>Je said iha.tisitl^ Company.iuo-\n-\u25a0OTBdetPli*for\"mfiiSvjfrW, O'ftratlng\nthe monopoly.elther by Itself or\nwith   the   other  .companies,   It\n. sought to eliminate competition-\nthrough a disloyal, Illegal and unjust  agreement \u2014 by. Seemingly\n- hiaklng    competitors \u25a0 'disappear.\nThis was done ,by acquiring the\n: businesses.of competitors and absorbing them,'\nThree-other charges against tha\ncoiripanies have been postponed.\nThey ere expected to come UP at\nthe next term of the* court of king's\nbench. \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022.'.\nDuring the long trial* more than\n1200 exhibits \u2014 mostly correspondence and price lists\u2014were presented\nas evidence.\nMONTREAL, Oct 29 (CP) \u2014The\nCanadian Pacific Railway today reported gross earnings for the month\nof September at $35,970,028. Working expenses were $34,027,027. Net\nearnings were $1,943,001, a decrease\nof $2,983,267 from the corresponding\nmonth* last year, when net earnings\nwere $4,926,268.\nShipbuilders Seek\nHelp in Dispute\nHALII^X, Oct 29 (CP) \u2014 Two\nunion locals comprising 900 men today asked conciliation services In\ntheir contract dispute with Halifax\nShipyards Ltd. and the marine slip\nat nearby Dartmouth.\nThe locals of the Industrial Union\nof Marine and Shipbuilding Work-_\ners of Canada (C.C.L.) are asking\nthat the basic laborer's rate ba\nboosted from 97 cents an hour to\n$1.37 and the Journeymen's rate\nfrom $1.32 to $1.72.\nThe union also Is asking other\nconcessions, including Increased holiday benefits.\nUnion officials said they had talked with company officials for several weeks without coming to agreement Company officials declined\ncomment.\nR.C.M.P. Find Lost\nKamloops Youth\nKAMLOOPS, B.C., Oct. 29 (CP)\n\u2014 A search party organized by th*\nR.C.M.P. has found 17-yOar-old\nGordon Beecroft of Kamloops, unharmed after being lost overnight\niri the Red Lake district. West of\nTranqullle. .He had becorde separated from his companion while\nhunting on Sunday.\nNEW YORK, Oct 29 CAPT*Rebel\ndock strikers loosed their grip'on\nmilitary piers tonight promising to\nend a wildcat tie-up of vital defence\nshipments to army outposts.\nElsewhere stevedore pickets held\nsway on miles of idle non-military\npiers as the big strike went.into its\nthird week. A back-to-wbrk move\nall but Hopped during the day.\nAnd in This Corner * **\nBOZEMAN, Mont, Oct 29 (AP)\u2014When a policeman here ordered\nthe driver of a dilapidated roadster to turn on his headlights, he was\ntold! *    \u2022 .,\n\"I can do It officer, but every time I turn oh the lights my motor\n,   quits,\" '   '     .\nNEW YORK, Oct. 29 (AP)\u2014They called Chlco Lopez yesterday and\ntold him his wife had given birth.\nLopez heard the word four and, dazed, hung up the telephone\nreceiver.\nQuadruplets?\nHe couldn't believe It.\nHe telephoned the hospital.\nThis time there was an explanation.\nThey had told him he bad a new boy and said: \"You had three,\nso now you have four.\"      . |\n: ROCHESTER, N.Y., Oct 29 (AP)\u2014A telegram from the Department\nof Defence for Benjamin Epstein ordered him to report for-active\nmilitary duty with the Army.\nBen Epstein, whose last stint of active duty was with the army\nof the Czar of Russia around 1871, was puzzled. \u2022\nAuthorities at a home for the aged took the telegram and returned It to Western Union. It couldn't be for their Ben\u2014he's 103.\nROCHESTER, N.Y., Oct. 20 (AP)-A bird in the hand is more\ncomfortable than one In the mouth. ,\nAt least that's the way Mrs. Michael Allen of Rochester felt yes-e\nterday after she saw a small grey bird flit into the mouth of her\nfour-year-old son, Michael.\nA doctor treated the boy, who said the bird had pecked him twice\nbefore retreating.\nRICHMOND, Ind.. bet 29 (AP)\u2014jack Metcalf, 18, answered \"yet\"\nonce too often In elty court today.\n:.   The Richmond youth was picked up on a charge of not having a\ndriver's licence. s\nCity Judge Andrew Herllts asked Metcalf a series of questions,\nand each time the answer was \"yes.\" The Judge wasn't satisfied that\nMetcalf was paying attention.\n\"You must think I look stupid,\" the Judge said.\n\"Yes,\" answered Metcalf.\n\"Perhaps I do,\" said Judge Herllts, \"but you can't say so In court\nto my face.\"\nJudge Herllts sent Metcalf tc Jail for contempt of court The Judge\ndidn't set a definite Jail term.\n ammm\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30, *19\u00bb1\nLast Times Tonight\nShows ot 7.00-8.29\nmm DURYEA c\u00bble STORM\n'RISE MUSICAL -\nN YOU'RE SMILI\nmm\nADDED BIG SURPRISE MUSICAL \u2014\n\"WHEN YOU'RE SMILING\"\nStart! Wed. \u2014 John Payne       Rhonda Fleming\n\"CROSS WINDS\"\n  Color by Technicolor\nANTIGONISH, N.S. (CP)-Open-\nlng of three new five-storey brick\nind steel wings of St Martha's\nHospital here increases the capacity\nto 230 beds, excluding infants, mak\ning It the third largest hospital in\nNova Scotia.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILV\nAnnouncement\nDear Customers:\nWe wish to Inform you that the\nNakusp Bakery has changed hands\nthis 17th day of October 1951, and we\ntake- this opportunity to thank our\nmany friends and customers for their\nkind patronage and appreciated business during our eight \"years' business in\nNakusp, trusting you will 'continue\nyour business with the new proprietors,\nMr. E.Anderson qnd Mj\\ S. Waterer,\nformerly of Nelson.\nSigned,\nMR. AND MRS. WM. BARCLAY\nNAKUSP\nCity Will Return to\nTransport Business\nThe city is buying five B.C, Electric buses at a cost\nof $1750 each to take the place of interior Stages {Nelson)\nLtd. service which ends Wed-\nCouncil decided to buy. the buses\nat its Monday night meeting on\nrecommendation of Aldertnen Joseph Kary and Robert Rlesterer\u2014\nwho are In Vancouver with two\nNelson mechanics.\nB. C. Bracewell, deputy minister\nof municipal affairs,' has also approved the purchase of the ^-passenger B. C, Electrio buses.\nTotal expenditure, Including such'\nitems ai insurance and licences, and\nthree per cent sales tax, will be in\nthe neighborhood of $10,000.\nEXPANSION SEEN\nAid. Arthur Foster, chairman of\nthe transportation committee, hailed the step as a move toward expansion of city bus service.\n\"With a change at schedule and a\nchange In route, we could get greater efficiency than we've aver had\nbefore.\" he said.\nHe suggested that points outside\nthe city limits, such as Mount St\nFrancis, might be served on a limited basis, along with people leaving\nlarge public gatherings such as hockey ctowds.\nAid. S. J. Newell thought bus\ntransportation   might. be   made\navailable to Rosemont residents,\n\"BUYING WRECKS\" 1\nAid.* Alex Sutherland was of the\nopinion that only three buses were\nrequired, and hoped; the city was\nhot buying \"wrecks.\" \u2022'\u25a0'.*\nrive buses were needed, Alder,\nmen Newell end Foster said, owing\nto the fact that the buses were of\nlesser capacity than Interior Stages\nbuses. The extra buses would be required for auxiliary use or for spare\nparts. \u2022\nAid. .Newell said the city would\nnot be buying \"lemons\", as its delegation was well-qualified to inspect\nthe buses. B. C. Electric was disposing of them in favor ot trolley\nbuses,\n\u25a0An application from David Hale\nfor position of city bus service manager, was referred to the transportation committee.\nThe city operated 'street' cars In\nNelson until June 1949, when Inter,\nior Stages (Nelson) Ltd., was given\na franchise for city bus service, The\ncompany, however,.'was forced to\nback out this Fall, operating costs\nexceeding revenue.\nNelson Qirl to \"Flay\"\nFor Royal Pair Today\nA Nelson girl will have an excellent view ot princess Elizabeth and\nPrince Philip while the royal couple\nare In Montreal today,\nRosemary Flemlrig, daughter ot\nMr, and Mrs. Rosa Fleming,'Fair-\nview, will be playing the violin\nIn McGill Chamber Music Orchestra when their royal highnesses vis*\nit Moyse Hall.\nMiss Fleming is on the nursing\nstaff of Royal Victoria Hospital.\nEight Offices to Fill .\nCitizens Already Looking Wilh\nKeen liiferesf fo Elections Here\nPre-election activity* on thn P*rt\not at least two Nelson organizations\nhas focusaed attention earlier than\nusual in the December civic elections.\nStiff competition, particularly in\nmayoral and aldermanic fields, is\nindicated. '\nMayor N. C. Stibbs Is ending his\ntwo year term and aldermen whose\ntwo years are up are Alex Sutherland, S. J. Newell and Joseph Kary,\nTerm of police commissioner A.\nT. Richards Is also expiring, and on\nthe board of trustees of Nelson\nSchool District terms ot Dr. A. K.\nGibbons, chairman, and George Lat-\nta and Fred Pratt of Blewett are\ncoming to an end.\nAlthough no one has yet been\nnominated for these n\"in*s, thare\nhave been Indications that they\nwill be keenly contested.\nThe. new Civic Action Association, which boasted 200 names on\nits roll the night bf its first meet\ning earlier this week, Is receiving\ncitizens' suggestions for a program\nof community betterment, and will\nprobably put' 'candidates In the\nfield.\nNelson Junior Chamber of Commerce Is working for a record vote,\nprincipally by asking people who\nhave paid poll and\/or road tax and\nhave lived in Nelson since Jan. 31,\nto register on civic voters' list. They\nare not registered automatically, as\nare property owners.\nBARGE EXPLODES KILLING\n3 WHEN FREIGHTER HITS\nBUFFALO, N.Y., Oet \u00bb (4P)~\nThe Great Lakes freighter Penob*\nsoot tonight rimmed an oil barge\nNew j\nSwiss Discovery I\nF\"99\"\nfor Eczemas, Boils,\nPsoriasis, Leg Ulcers\n.Discoverer of\nF\"99\"\n\u25a0JHE DISCOVERY of one of the main eaiisea\n* of skin diseases will bring new health\nand happiness to thousands of people suffer-\npSLSI? gefemas, Boils, Leg tflcers and\nPsoriasis. Science has establiSied that the\nlack of unsaturated fatty acids in nutrition\nreduces the natural resistance ot the body\nand leads to skin disease. As this precious\nsubstance-^o essential to skin health\u2014is\noften completely absent in modern food, the\nnumber of skin sufferers in all civilized\ncountries has a tendency to Increase every\nyear.\nTliese art two of the numerous certified* photographs\nopen for inspection it our laboratories.\nRemarkable Discovery *\nA Swiss chemist, Dr. W. Schmltz, succeeded'\nafter 10 years of research work In extracting\nfrom pure vegetable oils an unsaturated fatty\nnpfri   llrifh    n    \/..inn,...*.....!,...    U'.IM J    ... .\nacid with a concentration ef 90% and thero-\n\"     \" \" \"'*\"\"   Thanks to this very high\nAuthentic Photograph of left\nleg of Mr. Ernest Fauich on\nJuly tit, suffering from Leg\nUlcer for 12 years, before '\nbeginning the F\"99\" Treat-\nnilnt.\nAuthentic Photograph \u00bbl left\nJM of Mr. Ernest Fouseh on\nSeptember 27th. The Lea\nUlcer was completely cleared\nup after 13 weeks of f \"W\nTreatment.\nfore named F \"99\". \u201e.\u201e\u201e\u201e., w \u201e.\u201e v\u201e, ,\u201e,.\u201e\n&\"\u25a0}\u00bb, wWch* was never attained up to now,\nF\"99\" Is so readily absorbed Into the blood\n,ttSau' ,th?,t lt hM \u2022\u25a0 decisive biological\nactivity in the treatment of skin diseases. Its\nremarkable efficiency has astonished even\nSkin Specialists of international reputation.\nNatural way to clear up skin troubles\nF \"98\"' is not a synthetic drug but a concentrate of natural nutritive substances. It\nis absolutely harmless and may be given\neven to infants without any hesitation.\nAS its* iisnw lugeesti, tht r \"\u00bb\" Two-way Trwtmeiit\n&lntirn?&.fc*.E,!ulM <* \"tW Md externally (ointment),\nsVnmF.ZF. \u00b0}?<m\">1 treats the external symptoms,\nt \"99\" capsules give the body the power to suppress tha\ncause to combat successfully Eczemas, Boils, Lag Wears\nana aven Psoriasis. To many thousands of skin sufttrers'\n\u00abU over the world, r \"99\" Two-way lYaatmint has\nalready proved Its tremendous value,\nHpw to use F \"99\" Two-Way Treatment\nSMS?*,\"\" \u2022I'\";\"\" -\u2014\u2014-\u00a3 :,'\u00ab9\" Capsules and Ointment\nLer Vltm \u201e, \u201e,.,,.\nPeorlMIs,\n\u2022 If In doubt consult your doctor.\n\"\u2122E .'HI capsulaa and Ointment\n-y\u00a3 , W; \u00a3??\u2022\"!?\u25a0 and Ointment\n'\"capsules and ointment\nIllustrated F \"99',' Booklet\ncontaining all the interesting facts\nconcerning this remarkable new Swiss\nDiscovery which brings new hope to all\nskin sufferers, can be obtained free of\ncharge from any druggist. Diva-Labor-\naMries, Dept. 621, P.O- Box 116, Victoria,\nB.C.\nF\"99M\nTwo-Way Treatment\nfor Skin Diseases\nNow available at all Drug Stores J\nunder tug tow In Buffalo Harbor\nand the  barge  exploded. Three\nmen were dead and seven missing.\nThe captain of the Penobsct and\nhis helmsman were known to have\nbeen burned to death in their flaming pilothouse after backing the\n.vessel away from tha, barge. An\nunidentified; member of the tug\ncrew also was known to have been\nkilled.\nThe. seven missing all were on the\ncrew manning the tug and barge,\nThe rest of the 35-man crew of the\nPjnobscot were reported safe.\nFlames were reported leaping\nmore than 200 feet in the air. The\nglow could be seen for miles across\nthe city.\nTHOU8AND8 OF 8PECTAT0RS\nPolice reported that thousands of\nspectators jammed the waterfront,\nshore. They Issued warnings to all\npersons to stay clear of the area.\nCoast Guarc. patrol boats took\nsurvivors off the burning vessels\nand were met at the shore by ambulances.\nThe Coast Guard said the collision\naccurred shortly after 9 p.m. Tire\ncompanies ir.* the area raced to the\nharbor to lend what assistance they\ncould to fire boats.\nThe Coast Guard said the barge\nwas believed to be the Morania,\nThe type of cargo being carried\nby the vesesls wa not known. But\npolice reported that the violence of\nthe explosion indicated almost certainly that the barge was carrying\na heavy cargo of gasoline Or Oil,\nThe Coast Guard placed the scene\nNorth of tha main harbor area and\nthe principal grain docks.\nWithout Power\nNovember It\nNelson will, be without power for\nthree hours on November 11.\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting Company, as part'of its transmission line expansion into East\nKootenay, will ba stringing lines\nacross and above city'f -power line\nWest bf Nelson on that date.1 Power\nmust be cut off for safety reasons.\nHouses and businesses \"will be\nwithout electricity from 1 to * p,in.\nThe city is going to advise Canadian\nPacific Railway, Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, cold storage plants\nand similar operations of the off\nhours.\nBackloR.CA.Fa\nA well known Nelson lad, VI. 3.\n(Bill) Holland Is off to the armed'\nforces for the second time.\nA veteran of the Second World\nWar when he was Pilot Officer in\nthe R.C.A.F., Bill has re-enlisted and\nleft for Calgary R.C.A.F. headquarters on October 25.\nSecond son of Sgt. and Mrs. Joseph Holland of Nelson, he was born\nand educated here. He was particularly active in sports, especially\nhockey, before hiS first enlistment,\nHe entered training for the Second World War in 1942, winning his\nwings in Saskatoon at the age of 19.\n(ify Voting\nDales Set\nAccident' Victim\nBuried, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK; B. C.-Wuheral\nservices took place at St Mary'a\nChurch here Saturday for Peter\nBoyda, 22, son.of Mrs. Pauline Boy-\nda of Cranbrook, who was instantly\nkilled at Sandspit, Queen Charlotte\nIslands, Wednesday when a line\nblock on a trackslde chaser struck\nhim on the head. He was born and*\ngrew up in Cranbrook, and had\nbeen employed by Northern Pulp.*\nwood Ltd. at Sandspit ~for the past\nyear. ,     , \u2022\nSurviving him are his wife and\nlittle son, Peter, at Kelowna; two\nbrothers, Ed and Steve Romanick, In\nCranbrook, and seven slttars,\nCourt of Revision\nSits November 15       \/\nCity Council: Monday night was\nappointed as a court of revision te,\nsit November,IS at 10 a.m.\nThe court will review the voters'\nlist, for which registration doses\nWednesday. ,\nNelson civio election dates will\nba Dec 13, 14 and IE, following\ntha procedure set up last year,\nCity Counoll decided Monday\nnight ',\nAdvance polls will be from 12\nnoon to 8 p.m. Deo. 13 and 14, and\nelection day will be from 8 a.m.\n;\u25a0*\u2022 to 8 p.m. Dec 15. Returning of-\nfleer will be City Controller W. A,\nGordon and his assistant will be\nCity Clerk Reeve Harper.\nCivic Centre\nPump Bought\nInstallation of an automatic temperature control for an ?lr pump at\nCivic Centre at a cost of $150 was\napproved by City Council Monday\nin adopting recommendations of its\nFinance Committee. \u25a0 ' ' \u25a0\nThe decision is subject to approval\nof John Inglis Company.\nCouncil also confirmed-awarding\nof city .property insurance for $187,-\n300 to Robertson, Hilliard and Cat-\ntell Realty Company of Nelson at\na premium of $1247 for three years.\nAll \"private buildings\" have been\nplaced oh a dwelling policy which\ngives extra supplemental protection\nagainst windstorms, hail, lightning,\nand so on.\nPayment of progress billing No, 1\nin the sum of $11,935 from John Inglis Company for Civic Centre pipe\nand fittings was authorized.\nApplication from Nelson-Creston\nTransport to buy or rent the city's\ncar barns was laid on the table.\nGENERAL EXPENSES\nNOT DEDUCTIBLE\nOTTAWA Oct. .29 CCP),-General\nexpenses incurred by men in public\noffice cannot be deducted for. Income tax purposes, the Income-Tax\nAppeal Board ruled in a decision\nmade public today.\nThe ruling was made in appeals\nby Hubert Badanal, mayor of Fort\nWilliam, and by F. J. Mitchell, Edmonton alderman. Mr. Badanal\nsought to deduct $940 from his 1949\nsalary of $2000 for expenses incurred in connection with the chief\nmagistrate's\" post\u2014including monthly broadcasts to citizens on the state\nof the city's business,\nMr. Mitchell sought to deduct $730\nfrom his 1939 income for the same\nreasons.:\nThe Income Tax Appeal Board\nfound that the act does not allow\nsuch deductions and therefore dismissed both appeals, but not with-'\nout sympathy.\nBoard chairman Fablo Monet observed In tha case of Mr. Badanal\nthat the section of the act denying\nsuch claims \"is drastic in its effect\nand occasionally works a hardship,\n\"but nevertheless I have to apply\nthe law as I find it and have no\nalternative in this case but to dismiss the appeal.\"\nScrap Owners Sought\n\u00bb Aid. -Alex Sutherland suggested\nat Monday night's Council meeting\nthat dirt from the new forestry\nwarehouse excavation might ba\nused as fill for Civic Recreation\nGrounds extension.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs said efforts\nwere being made to locate owners\nof scrap In the extension area. When\nthe scrap was removed, filling work\ncould be carried out\n#'RI1Z\nACPMP\nWELL-APT\n.ETE CHOICE OF\n1INTED AND FULLY\nSERVICED APARTMENTS AND\nHOTEL ROOMS \u00abt MODERATE\nJolrnHXrane RATES Meaager\nAMCOUVER BC\nfor\nBake now for Christmas. You'll be ahead by comparing, checking and buying from Liberty's Low Prices and largest selection.\nBe Economy-wise. Shop Today and Save.\n5lbs.\u201e\nCreamof 24 lbs...\nIhe West.   .    49 lbs.\nAll-purpose. __98 ||,s>\n..35e\n$1.65\n$3.19\n$6.10\nWalnuts\nShelled! 8 oz.\t\nRaisins'\n' Australian; tb\t\nGlaced Cherries\nWhole; 8 oz. ......\t\nMixed Peel\nNabob; 16 oz. .'.\t\n\u00a5 PASTRY FLOUR>- 5 lbs. 35c\nFREE HAT WITH VALUE SIM WITH EVERY PURCHASE WHILE THEY LAST\n35'\n25*\n$V\n35*\nif Fresh Eggs\njf Spaghetti\nif Macaroni\nif Noodles\n^Cheese\nif Margarine\nCurrants\nCleaned; \u2022 ,.\t\nVanilla\nNabob, Pure; 4 oz. ,V\u201e\nPineapple Rings\nGlace;\t\nPitted Dates\nLotue.'Lb, pkgs.;\t\nA Medium In carton.\nStarts Wednesday, Doz.\nCattelll.\n5 Ib. box\nCattelll.\n5 Ib. box\nCattelll.\n14 02. _\nBujnt'.\nGoldenloaf.\nDelmar.\nCanned Meats Special\n36\"\n47*\n45'\nSPICED BEEP:\nMayfalr. 12 Oz.\t\nBEEFSTEAK CASSEROLE.\nAustralian Boston'. 16 oz.\nBRAISED STEAK:\nGoblin. English. Ii oz.\t\nLIQUID HONEY:\n24 oz. ...\nJELLY POWDERS;\nNabob. \t\n2pkts.29c\n2 lbs. $1.09\n3 lbs. $1.19\nMiscellaneous\n_ 59*\n3,., 25*\n_19*\nFANCY PUMPKIN:\nGarden Elf. 28 oz..\nOVERSEAS\nPARCELS\n. Order Today.\nOnly2'\/jweekileft.\nLast and Final Week - Canned Food Sale\nCANNED VEGETABLES\nWhole Green Beans. Size 2,\nRoyal City. 15 oz. Cose.\t\nCut Green Beans,\nBulman's. 15 oz. Case\t\nTomatoes. Royal City.\nChoice. 28 oz. Case ....\nPeas. Royal City. '\nSize 4. Fancy, 15 oz. Case\nCarnation Milk.\nCase  ..... ......\nMixed Vegetables, No. I.\n6 pf each. Case .\t\nRoyal City Peas and Corn, Peas, Beans,\nCorn.\nJUICES AND FRUITS\n; Apricots:\nAshtoh. 20 oz. Case.\nPeaches:\n9JM\n*C'30\nGlen Valley. 15 oz. Case \u25a0.   J\n_*3J0\n$9.80\n$9.88\nGrapefruit Juice:\nAdams. 48 oz. Case\nOrangei Juice:   \u2022\nAdams. 48 oz. Case _\nBlended Juice:\nAdam's. 20 oz. Case\t\nMixed Juices:\nNo. T. Six of each. Case...\n6 Hunt's .Tomato Juice, S Adam's Orange,\nt Blended, and I Grapefruit Juice, 20 oz,\nfflonorcfis\nt\/tSo.mam<^fensotMB\n%20,000\nWORTH OF PRIKS'\nSEND 70UR NAME AND^ADDMSS WITH BOX tOPS OR LABELS\nFROM ANy OF THESE COLGATE-PALMOLIVE PRODUCTS TO\nCOLGATE MONARCH CONTEST, PARIS, ONTARIO.\nVel\nLge..\nPkt,\n40c\nSUPER SUDS       -T(V\nGiant pkg.\nPalmolive JJ*       ^Q*\nSoap, reg,3 for Jm*r\nPOTATOES FOR WINTER\n10 lbs. 43c - 50 lbs. $ 1.90 -100 lbs. $3.65\nNETTED GEMS \u2014 Wo expect price rise on this Item.\nWHITE WARBAS.. .   25 lbs.95c\nORANGES\nJuicy 288s. QC^\nVA dox in bag. .. a? J\nPINK GRAPEFRUIT\nFlorida,    \u00ab%       *y f-ti\nlarge ...... &m for JLj\n3mk $iuuitwbuuL Qualify. Tftaak\nBaby Beef Liver        -lb.80c\nPork Tenderloin \u2014 _Jb. 9Sc\nLean Beef Brisket lb. 45c\nLean Minced Beef   lb. 69c\n\u00b0ai\u00b0j\u00b0!*:\u00b0g==a==*g''\"'    .   .   . \u25a0 i i '\nBe Sure - Shop ond Save at the\nThe LIBERTYm\nOrder Your Turkey for\nChristmas now.\n$1.00 down, balance at\nyour own budget.\nMail orders accepted. Prices effective all week.\n \"^^\nmam-\nmmmmm\nRubber\nFootwear\n\"For All the Family\"\nSEE OUR SELECTION\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\nBBS Baker .St'\nElect G. McLean\nPresident P.-T.A.\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-The October meeting of the P.-T.A, was held\nin the Lucerne High School Oct, 25,\nwith the President, T. Bohahi in\nthe chair..\nThe following were elected to office for the coming year:\nPresident, G. McLean; Vice President, Mrs. W. W. Maybank; Secretary-Treasurer, Mrs. N. Miller; Pro-\n*gram Chairman, F. B, Tessman;\nWays and Means Committee, Jfl.\ni Dalhie; Publicity Chairman, Miss \"l.\nNare; Social Convener, Mrs. H. T.\nButler; representatives to Community Club, Dr. S. C. Robinson and\nMrs. W. W. Maybank; Magazine\nChairman, Miss Joy McPhail; Membership Chairman, Mrs. T. Bohan.\nMiss Ruby Dunn, P.H.N., and Dr.\n8. C. Robinson outlined the possibilities of a dental clinic in New Denver. A committee was set up to investigate all the possibilities of the\nproposed scheme.\nClaims Voice Told\nHim to Starve\nTo Death in Woods\nBEELLINGHAM, Wash., Oct. 29\n(AP) \u2014 A Los Angeles man who\nspent five days without food last\nweek in the Mount Baker woods\n\"because the Lord told me to park\nthere until I starved to death\" was\nheld under observation in jail here\ntoday. \u25a0 . '\nSheriff's Deputy .Claude Carlson\nIdentified the man as Clary Albert\nSmith, 39, of Los Angeles.\n,.;,''Carlson told this.story;,\n* Smith, dejected after losing 'his\nrural mall carrier job in the Los\nAngeles area, drove steadily until\nhe heard a.\"voice\" direct him to\ndrive into the Mount Baker woods.\nThis he did early last Monday.\nHe covered his car with brush then\nsat in the car. He got out occasionally to get water from'a nearby\n\u25a0*&tr. He kept warm with about six\nlayers ot clothing.\nSmith is being held for relatives.\nOrganizer lauds\nCancer Branch\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u2014Provincial:\nfield organizer of the Canadian Cancer Society, whose objective is public education concerning cancer and\npractical assistance to those under\ntreatment for. the disease, Mrs. Thelma \"Dawson heartily congratulated*\nthe Cranbrook branch, which was\norganized a year ago with William\nHume President. Cranbrook's annual canvass for this purpose was doubled* to $1500 by the organization\nthis year.. . <\nWhile in. the district Mrs. Dawson\nattended a meeting of Kimberley\ndistrict people, and effected organization of the Kimberley District\nUnit of the Society, the 72nd unit\nnow operating in the Province.\nFBS Secretary at\nDistrict Meetings\nCRANBROOK, B. C. \u2014 Annual\nmeetings , of the various district\nbranches of the Foreign Bible Society have taken place recently at\nrallies addressed by Rev. J. A. -H.\nTingley, Provincial Secretary of the\nSociety. He outlined the purposes of\nencouraging more reading and study\nof the Bible, and means of widening\nits distribution.\nThe Cranbrook meeting elected a\nnew President, Rev. J. T. McNair,\nand named. Mrs. T. E. Roulston Secretary, Linton Lundy Treasurer, and\nMrs. F. H. Constantine, R. O. Jones,\nHarry Hollands and T. Hardy Directors.\nBurial Service for\nCranbrook Child\nCRANBROOK, B. C-Ill foi- several months, Sylvia Elaine Adams,\nnearly three years old, died* at St.\nEugene Hospital Oct. 25. She was\nborn in Cranbrook Nov. 23. 1848,\nonly daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Adams. They survive her in\naddition to a brother, Richard, at\nhome. '\u25a0\u2022.,*'..   * .   , \"\nLieut. Austin Miller of the Salvation Army, formerly stationed in\nNelson, officiated at funeral services at McPherson Funeral Home\nSunday at 3:30 p.m., and burial was\nin Westlawn Cemetery.\nTO SELL GOLD\nON FREE MARKET\nKIRKLAND LAKE, Ont., Oct. 29\n(CP) \u2014 Lake Shore Gold Mines\nLtd., said today it will sell its total\nproduction for the rest of the year\noh the free market.\nThe decision will make the company Ineligible for federal cost-aid\nunder the emergency gold mining\nassistance act\nLORLIE, Sask. (CP)\u2014Two horses\nran in pursuit when they spotted a\nraiding coyote leaving Bert OldOus'\nchicken pens with a hen in its\nmouth. The coyo'te dropped the hen\nto make .its escape.   '\u2022,'\u2022\u25a0'\nAt Ainsworth Camp .. .\nWestern Seeks lo Step Up Output\nLaunches Drilling, Housing Programs\nMaximum production from the\n- company's 100-ton lead-ztqc mill is\nthe first objective of Western Mines\nLimited. Tha new company has taken immediate action to Increase production and has launched anexpan-\nded exploration and development\nprogram. \"'.\nAcquisition earlier this month by\nWestern Mines Ltd., of the former\nAinsmore Consolidated property,\na, producing silver-lead-zinc mine\nadjoining Yale lead and Zinc mines\na( Ainsworth, is expected to quickly\nimprove the output record of this\noperation. Prior to the entry of the\npew compafly into the .picture, the\nmill had been operated 'about 40\nper cent of capacity, handicapped\nby a limited development program,\n\u2022 In spite of this restriction, the property was able to show.an operating\nprofit each month.* Large tonnages\not good grade ore are reported to be\neasily available.    '\nFirst .step in the. new program\nwill be completion of a major ventilation raise between the No. 9 and\n5 levels, which will greatly improve\n\u201e underground efficiency, This and a\n.second raise between the two levels,\nwill permit additional working faces to be made immediately available. It is expected that the ventilation raise will have been completed by the end of November and\nthat the mill will be at a capacity\nby the end ot the year. As soon as\nthe 808 ventilation raise is completed, a second shift will be added to\nthe present underground crew.\nUnder direction of H. L. Hill,\nconsulting engineer, an extensive\ndiamond drilling program has been\nlaid out to increase ore reserves on\nthe lateral and vertical extensions;\nOf the Florence vein. This drilling\nprogram will also test other known\nparalled veins in the productive formations. The principal objective'of\nthe newly initiated exploration pro-\ngramjs development bf sufficient\nnew ore to justify enlargement of\npresent milling capacity. In the\nmeantime, estimated reserves are\nmore than sufficient to met rquire-\nments of the 100-ton plant fOr several years. . -    ,\nTwo new underground diamond\ndrills have been purchased. One of\nthese will be used to test the walls\nof the areas now being mined for\npossible additional ore sections, and\na larger machine will be used to test\nfor new ore at depth and parallel to\nknown ore bodies.\nA new D6 caterpillar has heen ordered and will be used to improve\nand maintain mine roads to ensure\ncontinuous operation during the\nWinter months. It will also be employed at surface stripping on parallel veins. \u201e\u25a0\nThe managemeht has already\nstarted on a new housing project at\nthe property to provide additional\naccommodation for mine crew and\nstaff. In the meantime,* a plan will\nbe put into effect to subsidize board\nand transportation for employees\nliving off the property until accommodation is available.\nMining, Metallurgy Institute Branch\nformed Here; H. E. Doelle Chairman\n'Formation of a Nelson branch of\nthe Canadian Institute of Mining\n\u2022 \u2022\ntW\nHEEP\nawa4e l^etpteidecC\nII you don't sleep well\n\u2014if night* are inter-\nniptedbj'restlessness\n\u2014look to your kidneys. If jW kidneys\nire out of order ond\nfailing to deans* lh\u00bb\nblood of poisons and _-\neitess \u00abcids-jour rest is likely suffering\nloo. Then ii the time to use Dodd'o\nltthw Pills. Dodd's help jour kidneys get\nrid of trouble-nuking poisons and acids\u2014\nhelp restore then to normal action. See\nhow much bettor you rest \u00abt niriit-bow\nmuch brighter you feel in tbomornuii. Got\nand use Dodd's Kidney Pills todsy.     uj\nis\nDodds Kidney Pill\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILV\nBuy. Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nand Metallurgy has been com.\npleted.\nHenry E. Doelle was elected\nchairman, Dr. A. G. .Pentland, vice-\nchairman end VL. M. Killeen, secretary-treasurer. \u25a0    ''\nThe executive by areas;\nJohn W. Bull, Kaslo-Ainsworth;\nW. Hamilton, Lardeau; Dell- Wilson, New Denver-Sllverton; Walter\nAtkins, Salmo; Thomas Mansell,\nNelson; J. J. Strelt, Remac; John\nMcintosh, Retallack-Sandon.\nOrganization of the branch followed a visit here several weeks\nago of Oliver Hopkins of Toronto,\npresident of the Canadian Institute,\nand Gerry Gerow of Montreal, secretary, prior to the annual Western\nmeeting of the Institute at Calgary\nThe group met at Gerlgh's Saturday night to complete details and\nplans to hold the first of monthly\nmeetings Dec. 1.\nThe Institute promotes Interest\namong mining men, and distributes\ntechnical information and knowledge in development of mining\nand metallurgical engineers, There\nare about 30 branches in Canada.\nThe Wynndei  Memorial   Hall  was officially\nopened and turned over to the community Friday.\nLittle Georgle Huscroft was given the honor of\nunveiling the  bronze  plaque.  His father,  Lltfut.\nDennis Huscroft was killed overseas April, 1945.\nLieut Dennis Huscroft at 10 was the youngest\ncaptain in the Canadian Army In Canada, serving\nwith the Rooky Mountain Rangers, In order to get\nto the front lines he reverted to the rank of lieutenant and was with the Canadian Scottish In Holland\nwhen he was killed at the age of 21. ,\nThe plaque reads:    '\nWynndei Memorial Hall\n1951\nErected by the community to the memory of\nthe men who gave their lives, and those who\nserved In the Second World War.\nMay we be worthy Of their sacrifice.\nThe Canadian Legion color party Is shown\nhere at the \"last post\". On stage are, left to right,\nGeorgle Huscroft, his grandmother, Mrs, George\nHuscroft, Pat Smith, Ed Hulme and Jaok Firth,\nPresident. At the piano Is W. Grelg.\n. \u2014 H. M. Buckna photo.\nKootenay Ores Supplying Qrowing\nUS. Demand, Rotarians Are Told\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30,1951 \u2014 3\nwmm\n<Trotter\"\nBuys Home Near Kaslo\nMIEROR LAKE, B. C.-A man\nwho has travelled.to every corner\nOf the globe erecting, servicing and\nselling excavators for a big Milwaukee, Wk, firm, has retired to\nMirror Lake. ,\nBill Arthur's plans originally were\nto set up a dude ranch in Wyoming,\nscene of his early days as a bronco\nbuster, but this little community,\nSouth of Kaslo, took hia fancy.\nMr. Arthur retired Aug. 8 after\n! years as service engineer for the\nUnited States firm. Of his 25 years\nin foreign service, he was home for\nChristmas just twice, and was frequently out of the U.S. for tbnse or\nfour years at a time.\n,81s first export assignment was\nHttjuba in 1926, and this was followed by five years in Canada, Hoi-\n1 KB*Turkey, Greece, Francs, Bel-\n\"-'\u25a0 giitfin, Italy ond Switzerland. '\nFORCED OUT\nLater Mr. Arthur went on to Iraq,\nIndia and Africa, then to Puerto\nRico, Trinidad and the Canal Zone,\nand assignments kept him in Chile,\nArgentina, Brazil and* Bolivia until\n1848.:.\nHis recent trip waa to' Thailand,\nJapan and Hawaii. ,\nMARRIES RUSSIAN <\nIn Belgium on March 28 of this\nyear Mr. Arthur married Catherine\nErmolinsky, a Russian girl of noble\nbirth, whose father was a general in\nthe old Imperial Army and served\nas aide-de-camp to Grand Duke\nConstantine Romanoff, first cousin\nof the Caar.\nThe couple have bought a home\nwith 30 acres four miles South of\nKaslo, and are now \"busy getting\nsettled)\" according to Mr. Arthur.\nSASKATCHEWAN OIL\nPRODUCTION GROWS\nREGINA, Oct. 29 (CP) \u2014 Hje\nLloydminster Petroleum Association said today that 934,850 barrels\nof oil were produced in Saskatchewan in'the first nine months of1951\nProduction for the same period\nlast year totalled 760,000.\nBEXLEYHEATH, England (OP)\n\u2014Beer was only two pence a pint\nwhen Lanna Burch took over as the\nproprietress of a local public house\nyean ago. She has just retired at\nthe age of 78.\nAnnouncement\nI would like to announce that I am going to carry\non the Commercial Printing Business formerly operated by my late husband H. M. .Whimster. v\nI would like to say at this time that I have secured\nthe services of W. (Bill) Stern, who was associated with\nMr. Whimster for some years, to act as manager-\nprinter. ,\nTo cur friends and customers who have been\nso loyal in the past I would like to express my sincere thanks and would appreciate your continued\npatronage.\n(Mrs.) Jeanne I. Whimster\nSome Arrow takes Students Sjiow\nSmall Interest in Cameron Plan\nNAKUSP, B. C. - The annual\nmeeting of the School Board of District No. 10 was held Oct. 26. V. C.\nSmith was appointed to take the\nchair for the meeting, ahd the newly-appointed Secretary, Sam Hep-\nworth, was in charge of the books.\nThe elected representatives and\ntrustees for.the areas were as follows;\nNakusp rr) Peter Hurry, Charles\nSisco, E.B. Black.\nArrow Park\u2014W. Mole, J. McCormack, W. Taylor, W. J. Claridge.\nEdgewood-Needles-Fau<juiei>-Mr.\nHardwick,* W. Craft, J. Farrer, ahd\nMrs. Yeld.\n* During the year 12 meetings of\nthe Board of Trustees and two meetings of the district representatives\nwere held.\nThere continues to be some Increase in the attending population.\nAt Nakusp it waB necessary to reopen one of the old classrooms to\nhouse elementary grades. At Needles one of the rooms housing Division II is crowded and some extra\naccommodation is planned tor the\ncoming year.\nNow that electricity is to become\navailable to the schools in the\nSouth section, it will be necessary\nfor the Board to obtain the necessary funds to provide installations.\nEstimates are being secured, and\nthe work will be carried out just as'\nsoon as possible. Mr. Claridge said\nthe Board is also looking into, the\nmatter ot improved sanitation for\nthose schools not now served.\nImprovements in the playgrounds\nhave been carried out each, succeeding year with the funds available. The Glenbank building and\nsite have been disposed of. Arrangements are* in hand for the removal of the old Edgewood school,\nand preliminary arrangements have\nbeen made which will enable the\nBoard to dispose of other unwanted\nbuildings.\nRegarding secondary education:\nWith enforcement of the Cameron\nPlan, the Board decided to provide\nsecondary education in the district.\nThis was done, said Mr. Claridge,\nbut results were not altogether satisfactory. With the passing of time it\nwas noted each year that the tendency of pupils to become disinterested in further schooling increased.\nWhen they reach Grades 9 and 10,\nApparently the facilities failed to\nprovide* that measure of interest\nnecessary to keep at sohool those\npupils who are not aiming at purely,\nacademic courses.\nThe solution would be, it was\nthought, fo consolidate the High.\nSchool groups for the whole, district.\nThis presents difficulties, but is receiving some study. The teaching\nstaff of the district now numbers 19,\nThis year the position of bus driver and janitor was combined.\nDuring the past year, Mr. Claridge continued, the Board was able\nto secure the services of a firm of\nprofessional appraisers. A complete\nappraisal of district properties was\nmade. Total replacement value is\n$293,949. depreciation value $247,849.\nInsurance to the value of 90 per cent\nof the depreciated value, less exclusions, is carried. A lengthy discussion followed regarding the heating\narrangement of the elementary\nschool. A qualified engineer is to\nbe engaged to go into the matter,\nRepresentatives voted by acclamation were Peter Hurry, E. B.\nClark and Richard Blythe.\nA vote of thanks was extended to\nC. H. Horrey for his faithful work\nas Secretary-Treasurer. Also a vote\nof thanks was given to the board\nof representatives and Trustees.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\n\"Unquestionably, we are developing a large potential ore reserve in\nand around our own community,\nand reserves of lead and zinc which\nmay possibly replace depleting reserves of the United States,\" Dr. A.\nG. Pentland, geologist at the Sheep\nCreek Mines told Rotarians at their\nweekly luncheon at the Hume,\n\"1 feel this extremely important,'1\nhe said, \"not only to ourselves,* but\nto the nation as a whole,\"\n\"In order to understand the Importance of mining, we must understand the world situation. There are\nthree*things necessary for the success of a nation: 1. abundance of na*\n\u25a0 tural resources; 2. the know-how\nand energy to develop them, and S,\na readily available market,\"\n* First among the minerals essential to a (strong nation, he said, were\niron ore and coal. Also of great Importance are the minerals used In\nmaking toughened steel, among\nthem vanedium and tungsten.\nOf second importance are the base\nmetals, copper, lead and zinc.\n\u25a0 Consumption of base metals in\nthe United States was one-third\ngreater now than it was in 1940..\nWith its resources depleting, the\nU. S. was importing incredibly larger quantities from Canada. For ex.\nample, Dr. Pentland said, \"in 1940,\n34,000 tons of zinc were exported to\nthe U. S. .from Canada. In 1950, the\nUnited States imported 179,000 tons,\nLead shows an even more striking\nincrease, with 8000 tons exported to\nthe U. S. in 1940 and 118,000 tons\nin 1950.\" v\nHe also mentioned the mines in\nthe district, stating that, nearly all\nshowed an appreciable amount of\nore reserves and a voluminous flow\nof ore to the mills.\nGuests at the luncheon included\nA. E, Jukes of Vancouver, Mr. Marr\nof Spokane, Jack Piper of Kamloops\nand D. Dinsmore of Vancouver.\nWADENA, Sask. fcP)\u2014Ole In*\ngulsrud, 88, can tell you the day\nof .the week for any date in 1885\nat a glance. He saved his calendar\nof that year that he brought' whan\nhe travelled as a young man from\nNorway.\nEVERYTHING\nYOU EVER\nWANTED\nIna Range\n. 0 X-Ray Window Oven\n\u2022 Waist High Broiler\n# Automatic Lighting\n0 Automatic Oven Control\n0 Simmer Speed Top Burners\nIn a Cooking Fuel\n.0, Clean .\n\u00a7 fait\n0 Odorless     \u2022\n0  Reliable \u2014 Always\nSee the Best Selection of Rocketgas Ranges in Town\nLive in Town - or in Country- You Can llse Rocketgas\nMoffat Ranges, Priced From ...... .___i_i_  $181.75\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n5X3 Baker St.\nPhone 1555\nTha ona quiel-running snow ond mud\nlira\u2014tracks tlfectively en\npacked snow or ice.\n\u2022No more racing your engine .;;rocking Hie ear;;;or\n-    digging snow from under the wheels.\nThe Dunlop \"Extra Grip\" Tire takes you out of even heavy\nsnow or mud with on easy, sure-footed traction that saves wear,\ngas, strain and effort.\n*    Winterize your cor or truek now with Dunlop \"Extra Grip\" Tires.\nTheir exclusive solf-deaning, double tread, designed for hlghtraction.\nwill also ghm you smooth riding performance!\nAvailable in all popular sizes for domestic and Imported cars and trucks.\nSpecially designed tor Canadian winter driving.cortdillom\nSEE YOUR DUNLOP DEALER TODAY\nDUNLOP WW TIRES\n MM\nm*\nwmmmmmm\nI \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30, 1951\nChicago Woman Is Noted Pediatrician\n;,TORONTO, Oct 29 (CP) \u2014 Dr.lot the American Academy of Pe.\nPotter of Chicago, author, lecturer and research worker, is a busy\n\u25a0woman. She took a \"busman's holliday\" to take part in the convention\ndlatrics here.\nAs an author, Dr. Potter has written live books\u2014she showed her\nfifth, still in dummy form, at the\nconvention. It' is called \"Pathology\nof the. Fetus and newborn\", and\ndeals with problems of childbirth\nand how to keep mothers and chil-,\ndren alive when trouble strikes.\nThe great pyramid of Cheops In\nEgypt covers nearly 18 acres and\nis :450, feet high,;   -,,.* :'*.*. ;\nWANTS PERMANENT s\nSHIPMENTS AID       ,\nlOTTyVWA, Oct 28 (CP), - Percy\nWright (C.pj. - Meifort) asked\nthe Government in the Commons\ntoday to make permanent Its policy\nof subsidizing the shipment of feed\ngrain from the Prairies to Eastern\nCanada and tbe Pacific Coast.\nTO EXPAND\nTORONTO, Oct, 29 (CP)\u2014Bromp-\nton Pulp and Paper Co., whoUy-\nowned subsidiary Of St. Lawrence\nCorporation,' plans a $15,000,000 expansion program at Red Rock, Ont,\nto more than double present capacity.'   '\u25a0\u25a0 ' : -\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\n^%%poiirtfor\nEDWARD'S\nCOFFEE\nNo finer coffee packed. Rich\ncoffee tastes better, and Edwards Is always rich coffee.\nDrip or Reg. $| .02\n16 or. can r.~\n^QUICKOATS\nBreukfost takes (he spotlight this week at Safeway! We've eorraled the\nbiggest herd of .breakfest bargains you've seen in many a day... breakfast\nideas, too, to help you add new interest and variety to the morning meal.\nCome rope ia your share of tbe savings these \"wake-op\" values offer.\n'!\nNOB HILL\nCOFFEE\nVacuum packed quality\u2014plus\npaper bag thrlftl Rich, hearty\nflavor. Ground to order when\nyou buy.\n16 oz. bag i 98\u00abJ\n2 lb. bog. $1.93\nAIRWAY\nCOFFEE\nMild and mellow\u2014the world's\nmost popular coffee flavor.\nRoaster fresh, \u2014 Ground to\norder when you buy.\n16 o*. bag ... '. 94^\n31b. bag _.._ $2.78\nRobiij Hood or Quaker.'\n5 Ib. bag -_. J\t\n43c\n* PANCAKE FLOUR \u00ab*-22c\nJELLY POWDERS\nEmpress. Assorted flavors.\n3!4* oz. pkt. ;.\t\n3 fr 27*\n* MEDIUM EGGS\nFresh, in cartons.\nDo*. _..\u25a0\u25a0.,.. ..;..\u25a0\u25a0\n62c\nJELLYBEANS\n16 oz, cello bag, each .\n43'\n'Peaches. Choice; 15 oz. can 2 for 43*\nMonica Red Plums fff&*6*t '$1*\n$amA., WlaJtmnLadsL\nStrawberry Jam \\f\u00a3S?L*!L 1.25\nOrange Marmalade R'sozs7;\u201e 69*\nCannsuL WIUL\nCanned Milk K^\u201eaniCam8,!\u00b0? 16*\nCA8E OF 48 TINS \u2014 $7.46\nWhole Milk Powdered j^n\".. 77*\ngantwL QjuksA.\nGrapefruirJuice^T   2\nGrapefruit Juice S^STf\nPineapple JuicefustraUan:\n\u2022 20 oz. can,\nTomato Juice2?0TscanFancyi. 2\np-1- Sugar Belle Fancy, Sieve 4;      \u00ab\u00bb\n,\"a\u00bb 15 oz. can,  Z\nCut Green Beans L?,adr?T5Et 2\nPumpkin \u00a3a0rfcnanEU*.\nfor, 29*\n320\nfor 29*\nfor 39*\nfor   39*\nfor  33*'\ntBaldtuf, Tk&ck.\nCut Mixed Peel Wood)andii\nWalnuts Light pl?ces:\n16 oz. pkt..\n16 oz. cello .\n33*\n69*\nSeedless Raisins fflfi  91*\nAustralian Currants M \u00ab. bag 24*\nTJtuxyrftcwswuL\nFluffO' ie .oz. carton  \u201e.\nPeanut Butter ^v0ezrIyc;Sn\t\nTomato Ketchup \"einz\n13 oz. bottle\n36*\n94*\n30*\n79*\nEmperor Grapes ^-2 lbs, 27c\nPOTATOES\nLethbridge Gems.\n100 Ib. sack\t\n$3.45\n\u00b1 Sunkist Oranges\u2014- 2 lbs. 25c\nLettuce LT;.!\u00b0?lH?d.si 17* Cabbage fi^\"       8*\nCelery &Cri!p..stalk8i. 15* Green Peppers &b.  19*\nCarrots ftp?Snap'4ib.. 25*' Onions ftt^' 3ibs. 25*\nTomatoes [76rted',Feldi 25* Turnips iT1, Gpod C6ok'rsi 5*\nCello wrapped. V%%.\nEach\t\n38c\nSirloin Steak\nPork Shoulder\nOr ROAST.\nBlue Brand\nlb. 98c\nSmoked.\nPicnic style. Tenderized.\nlb. 53c\nFresh Ling Cod iTll5^:.... ^37*    Fresh Salmon%&\u00a3*#_ 59*\nLeg Pork, Roast %*'\u2022 69*\nBlade Pot Roast Beef S6^ 84*\nStanding Rib Roast Beef \u00a3\u2022 **' 92*\nLeg of Lamb Roast S\"orWhoIe|   93*\nLamb Shoulder Chops Lb 85*\nVeal Rib Chops\u2122 1*          92*\nPork Shoulder Roast i^Lb!cnl0+ 49*\nBreakfast Sausage ir\"!.,  55*\nGarlic Rings uj  \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e, ... 62*\n.Bologna It'Z\u2122\"* _....\u201e..  54*\nBrisket Boiling Beef ^ *r,nd;.    45*\nPRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 30fh-31st\nWe Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities\nCANADA SAFEWAY LTD.\nSAFEWAY\nOCT. 31, THE GOBLIN NIGHT, famous for supernatural visitations, would lose Its terrors If it did not have Its false faces and leering pumpkins, Spooks and ghosts of Hallowe'en are.eagerly awaited\nby David and Candls Hart of Yorkton, Sask., seen Investigating what\nmakes their king-size pumpkin \"tick.\"\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nHeavy Dose of Work, Travel, ls-\n\u2022 Lana Turner's Cure for Trouble\nBy'BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Oct. 29 (AP) \u2014\nLana Turner, whose marriage to\nBob Topping recently\" blew up,\nplans a heavy dose of wor)c and\ntravel to forget her troubles.\nThe famed former sweater girl\nseemed unusually gay on the set of\nher current film, \"The Merry Widow.\"', ' : ,\n'From now on, it's nothing but\nwork and travel for me,\" I,,ana said.\nWANT8.EPIC '     :\n'I'd like to make a really smart\ncomedy,\" she remarked. \"That's\nwhat the public wants and it's too\nbad that there aren't more of them.\nAfter that, I'd like to do a real epic.\nI'd love to play the role of Helen of\nTroy.\"\nLana takes off for Europe imme*\ndiately after the finish of her picture. She'll see all the sights and\nsend for her daughter if conditions\nare favorable over there.\nLana is sporting a trim chassis\nthese days, but she said it's work\nand not diet that has taken off the\npoundage, i     '\n\"I'm lucky In that I don't like\ndesserts,\" she said. \"They just don't\nappeal to me and so I never have tb\nput myself on a rigid diet.\n\"Besides, I think all the fuss\nabout actresses' weight is over-done\nin Hollywood. I think most men\ndon't want girls who are sklrtny.\"\nScientists Seek\nMirage Solufion\nTORONTO (CP)-The National\nResearch Council Is scanning Lake\n\u2022Ontario from nearby Scarborough\nBluffs iii an effort to make lake\nshipping safer.\nIn a two-year project expected to\ncost $100,000 the Council is seeking\nthe answer to the problem of radar\nmirages.\nRadar mirages are Images reoelv*\ned on the radar screens of lake ships\nof objects which aren't really where\nthe screen says they are. Like ord*\nlnary mirages, the images are \"re*\nflections\" of distant scenes.\nTo find out what causes the mir*\nages, research workers have their\nown 2000 pound radar set in a box\nthat slides up and down a cableway\nfrom the level of Lake Ontario to\n200 feet above it.,\nA movie camera takes a picture\nevery 30 seconds on the radar\nscreen, recording what the invisible\neye sees over the lake.\nAt the same time recordings are\nmade of temperatures, humidity and\nother weather data.  ..\nWhen all the facts are put together, the researohers hope to know\nwhat conditions cause radar* mirages and what to do about it.\nThe theory is that radar waves,\nbeing in the* very short 10,000 megacycle range, act somewhat like light\nwaves. If the radar beam gets\ncaught between two layers of air\nover the lake, lt will bounce along\nbetween them for as far as 100\nmiles, and send back a record of\nthe object 100 miles away.\nNormally the beam used by ships\nextends only 20 miles or less.\nWhen the . National Research\nCouncil has all its facts, figures\nand findings completed, they will\nfill a' manual for guidance of ship\nradar operators, and remove the\nelement of chance from radar safety.\nBOURNEMOUTH, England (CP)\n\u25a0Beatrice Scott, 62, was placed on\nprobation for a year for stealing\n214 books from a public library.\nShe explained:, \"If I saw a book I\nhad not read I just took it.\"\nSPRINGHILL, N.S, (CP) - John\nBombaci thinks anything;* can be\ngrown in Nova Scotia that can be\ngrown in his nativ*.* sunny Italy\nHe grows tobacco,, peanuts, ground\npeaches, almonds, grapes, water,\nmelon, lettuce, broccoli, egg plants\nand snake cucumbers, He also.has\na spattering of castor oil plants.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nNew Denver\nNEWDfeNVER, B.C.\u2014Mrs. T. M.\nLeask, Mrs. H. T. Butler. Mrs. J..H.\nMcDonaugh, Mrs. ,0. McLean and\nMrs. W. W. Maybank attended the\nEastern border conference of the\nB.C. P.-T.A. Federation and Washington Congress of Parents and\nTeachers at Nelson.\nMrs. John Taylor of New Denver\nIs a patient in SlOcan Community\nHospital.\nOlaf Sollle, who was a patient in\nSlocan Community Hospital, has returned to his home in Sandon.\nMrs. Janet Leask of Silverton is\na patient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nA. Nicholson has returned to his\nhome in Sandon after being a patient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nMrs. Harry Boudier of Zincton is\na patient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nMrs.' M. C. T. Percivall, who has\nbeen a patient in the Sacred Heart\nHospital at Spokane, has returned to\nher home in New Denver.\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Since Chief\nJustice W. E; Farris announced\nthat judges won't recognize improperly-dressed lawyers, the legal\nfraternity has been brushing up\non the proper legal dress. It includes a black waistcoat, \"dicky\"\nor white shirt, wing collar and tie,\ndark striped trousers, black shoes\nand black robe.\nNEW, MIRACLE\nELECTRONIC EAR\nHIDES DEAFNESS\nCHICAGO, (Special)\u2014An amasing\nnew electronic hearing aid which\nhides deafness and transmits even\nwhispers with startling; clarity, has\nbeen revealed by a noted Chicago\nelectronic scientist.   \u2022 \u25a0     .   .\nHe disclosed that this miraculous\nnew discovery haa rendered old-\nstyle hearing aids obsolete almost\novernight, and brings new hope to\nthe 16 million persons in the United\nStates who are hard of hetiring.'\nHe reported that this electronie\near enables tha deaf to hear without any button showing in the ear\nand without dangling battery wires.;\n\u2022' To acquaint the hard of hearing\nreaders of this paper with this hew >\nmiracle electronic ear which hides\ndeafness; full details are described^\nin a fascinating booklet, \"New Dis- ?\ncoverles to Help the Deaf Hear.\"\nIt will be sent free in a plain wrap-\nper to anyone who requests it. Ad- *\ndress: Electronic Research Diree-\nmr,,??,lt5.ne Hearing Aid Co,, 1450\nW. 10th St., Dept, .tic Chicago 8,\nDI, A postcard will do.\nJoL-n-JwL &hopL\n\u00ab63 WARD STREET\nNELSON,  B. C.\nFast Frequent Service\nWinnipeg      \u2014    5 hrs. 50 mins.\nToronto \u2014 10 hrs. TO mins.\nOttawa \u2014 12 hrs. 25 mins.\nMontreal       \u2014 12 hrs. 10 mins.\nNew York    \u2014 13 hrs. 50 mins.\nConnections to the Maritime*\nFly the family for half fare.\nInquire about T.C.A.'s\nfamily fare plan.\nSee your-Travei Agent or TCA Office.\n666 Howe Street, (Opp. Georgia Hotel)\n'Phone TA 1211 :.\nTMMS-CANAOA\nINTEINANONAl      .     TaANS.ATUNTIC\nIIAN1CONTIHINIA1\n \u2022\n-rw*%**m.\n\\d&*\n\"li Pays to Buy Quality\"\nWomen's\nWe Moderns\nBy Valley\nN , Win*.calf leather pumps,\nInstep strap, Box Toe.\nCuban'heel.\nAA-B widths.* Sizes 5 to 9,\n$12.50\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS  IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902'\nColon, Materials\nChange in Shoes\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CP) -\nChanges in the women's shoe\nfashion picture for next Spring, as\nseen at the Canadian Shoe and\nLeather Industry's fashion show\nhere today, are chiefly in colors,\nmaterials, and lasts.\nThe shell pump, the pump with\ncutouts, overlays and pipings, and\nthe sling pump in all Its variations\nare featured for Spring. Experts\nsay all kinds of sandals should be\nImportant. The stripping and naked\nshoe types remain in the picture,\nand following the closed-up trend\ni for early Spring, the open-toe,\nelosed-back, and the closed-toe\nopen-back will become strong.\nThere are still platform soles; mostly in quarter-Inch heights, for\nthose who prefer them.\nj\/uLto&i\/dtf\nMEN\nKaslo Couple Married\nAt St Paul's Churchr\nKaslo will be the hom,e of Gerald Bennett Cummftig\nof Kaslo and his; bride, the former Helen Jean Carpenter, who\nexchanged marriage vows in St. Paul's United Church Monday at \"2:30 p.m.\nThe bride is the elder daughter of\nMr. and Mrs, Claude Carpenter of\nKnslo, and the groom'Is the son of\nMr. Charles Cumming.\nNAVY SUIT\n' Foij the ceremony, performed by\nRev. A. L. Anderson, the bride selected,a smart navy suit with white\naccessories for contrast. Her cor\nsage of red roses was sprinkled\nwith lily of the valley,\nA grey suit with navy accessories was worn by Miss Leona Riley,\nbridesmaid * Her corsage was of\npink and white carnations.\nMr. Lawrence Bond supported\nthe groom. \u25a0\u2022\u2022'*,',\nA reception was held at the home\nof the'bride.\nNorway had 22,000 tourists from\nthe United States in 1950, - double\nthe previous year's total.\n(HhsMr lAfL (jDiik\nIf you iftt a bee, you could,\nas bees do, use your wings as\na fan to cool the house. But\nwhile bees are busy ventilating, they can't be gathering\"\nhoney. So hives with aluminum roots (ten to fifteen degrees cooler) make bees more\nefficient Some day aluminum\nhouses may do the same for\nhousewives. \u25a0\nAluminum is an ideal insulator for hives\u2014 and homes.\nThis is one of a dozen reasons\nwhy the demand for aluminum\nis growing'so rapidly, and why\nwe are building new plants\nand powerhouses to make more\naluminum. Aluminum Company of Canada, ttd. (Alcan).\nDOU CLOTHES\n'9301\n1 DOU.\n14-\u201422*\nCHRISTMAS  IDEA!\nEvery well-dressed doll needs a\nVolunteer Uniform for work in the\ndoll-hospital! And this wardrobe includes so many more pretties \u2014 a\npinafore, a party-dress, a skirt,\nblouse, and lingerie. Make them all,\nMommy, to give your little girl a\nvery Merry Christmas! Pattern 9301\nfor dolls 14,10,18, 20, 22 inches tall.\nFor yardage requirements, see the\npattern. '   *\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives per\nfeet fit. Complete, illustrated Sew\nChart shows yqji 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, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B.C,\nNelson\nSocial.\nBy MRS M. J; VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Miss Pat Hunter, of the staff\nof St. Paul's Hospital in Vancouver,\nwho has spent the past month at\nthe home on Nelson Avenue ot her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Hunter, returned by plane yesterday.\n\u2022 A. W,Wilkinson of Parksville,\nV.I., has arrived in Nelson to take\nup his new duties in .the local\nbranch of the Canadian Bank of\nCommerce.\n\u2022 Mr, and Mrs, Roy Pollard, Silica Street, have returned after a\nweek in Victoria.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs,. Ernie Lescultta\nand their two children, Darlene and\nDale, of Trail; were in Nelson Sunday en route- ta Ainsworth to visit\nMrs. Lescuitta's brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Olson. They\nwere accompanied by Mrs. Lescult-\nt%'s mother, Mrs. A. Ling.\n\u2022 Jimmy Madden, Madden Hotel, has returned from a business\ntrip .to Natal.\n\u2022 Mr. Campbell, Nelson Avenue,\nwith his niece and Mrs. Mary Jordan, motored' to Trail yesterday.\nThey were accompanied by Mrs. Pat\nNorris who has been visiting at the\nCampbell home.\nFor Fluffy\nPopcorn Here\nAre the Tips\nWith Hallowe'en upon us, the time\nis ripe for making that treat which\nis as much' a part of the witching\nnight as jack-o-lanterns-vpopcorn.\nA long handled popper, a large\nbowl, melted butter or margarine,\nsalt\u2014in no time the bowl Is full of\nfluffy white popcorn which disappears almost as quickly.\nWhen a large quantity Is required, it's better made in the kitchen\nand a heavy. cooking utensil can\nsubstitute for the popper. Here are\npointers, on obtaining white, tender popcorn with few if any unpop-\nped kernels.\nPut a thin layer of oil over the\nbottom of the heavy cooking utensil\nPlace over a medium heat and\nadd the corn as soon as smoke\nstarts to come off the oil.\nDon't overheat the oil or you'll\nhave tough popcorn.\nDon't let the oil get low or the\ncorn w*Ul scorch.\nKeep canned popcorn well covered with a tight-fitting lid or plastic cover as the popping qualities\nof corn are Impaired by moisture,\nresulting in unpopped kernels.\nMOLASSES POPCORN BALLS\nVt cupjnolfsses\nV% cup syrup\n\\Vs tablespoons butter\n6 cups salted popped corn.\nCombine the molasses, syrup and\nvinegar; cook, stirring occasionally\nuntil a small amount of mixture\nforms a very hard ball when placed\nin cold water (270 deg. F.). Remove\nfrom heat, add butter, and pour over\nthe popped corn; cool slightly. Butter fingers lightly and mold corn\ninto balls; cool on greased surface.\nYield: 6 to 10 balls.\nSunshine Bay\nSUNSHINE BAY, B.C.\u2014Mrs. Albert Fletcher, who spent several\nweeks with her parents, Mr, and\nMrs. J. Sewell, has returned to\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Abe Dosenberger\nand Mrs. J. McMullin have returned\nfrom \"Vancouver where they visited\nMr. and Mrs. E. Coleman.\nMr. and Mrs. Joe Suotte of Kimberley <visited Mr. and Mrs. G. A,\nSuotte.\nEmily Klmbrough\nCompares Blue Bonnet\n-It's Her Favoritel\nKeep party snacks fr*sfi\nw,th Hand-e-wrap\nII  HEAVY  WAXED PAPER |\nYou csn prepare party dainties hours ahead y\u00abt strvt\nthem crisp and sparkling fresh. Simply cover party\nsnacks with Hand-\u00ab'-wrap to keep them Fresh, moist\nand appetising as the moment you made them.\nKeep Hand-e-wrap handy In your kitchen!\nMetal Cutting Edge,\ntears quickly, easily.\n$ave -food Waste - save food -fasfe\nAccept an invitation from Emily\nEimbrough. Compare Buns Bonnet\nMargarine \u00bbith anu spread at any\nprice. lake the author and lecturer,\nyou'll love Blue Bonnet's fresh, sweet\nflavorIjRich nutrition! Real economy I\nBlue Bonnet Is Canada's fine\nSuality all-vegetable margarine. Use\n;lue Bonnet in cooking, on vegetables, as a delicious spread. Buy\nBlue Bonnet and get \"all three\" \u2014\nFlavor! Nutrition! bconom-e-e!\nBlue Bonnet Margarine is sold In\ntwo types\u2014regular economy package\nwith color water, and also in the\nfamous Yellow Quie bag for fast,\neasy color.   . bt-is\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30, 1951 \u2014 S\nChoose Your\nUpholstered Goods\nAS A RESULT of its recent drive, the :\nUnited Women's Missionary Society of\nTrinity and St. Paul's United Churches\nexpects' to ship about 400 pounds pf good\nused clothing to Toronto at the end of\nthis week for overseas relief. This will be\nconsiderably more than was sent after\nits last semi-annual campaign. Mrs. R, A.\nGuster, community friendship secretary,'\n^nd Mrs. J. C. Chambers, President, are\nshown here packing some of the contributions of members and Other Nelson worn?\nen. Last-minute- gifts of heavy, warm\nclothing may be given to any W.M.S.\nmember.\u2014Alice Stevens photo.\nNews of the Day\nRATES; 30o line, 40o line black face type; larger typo rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nLook for the latest and smartest at\nADRIAN  MILLINERY,\nBingo Tomorrow night\nCathedral Hall.\nOet your hunting and fishing license at Jack Boyce's Men's Shop.\nArrived\u2014Cry Bak falters' Jackets.\nSizes 38-4*1. $7.05. \u2014 WADES'.\ni        i.\nMore miles jer foot on shoe repairs at TONY'S REPAIR SHOP.\nTHE ANNUAL SCHOOL MEETING IN THE 8L0CAN SCHOOL\nDISTRICT NO. 8 FOR THE WIN.\nLAW'ATTENDANCE AREA WILL\nBE HELD AT 8MB P.M., OCT. 30th,\nIN THEWINLAW SCH00LH0U8E\n-THE ANNUAL REPORT WILL\nBE RECEIVED AND, REPRESENTATIVES ELECTED.\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY   ALL  THE  WAY.\nIf it's worth owning, It's worth\nInsurlAg. See BLACKWOOD AGCY\nA new shipment of handbags just\narrived. ADRIAN MILLINERY.\nSILVER 8LIPPER CLUB members\u2014Tickets today and Thursday\nat Taylor's Dry Goods,\nTelescope sights and mounts for\nany kind of a rifle.\nJACK BOYCE MEN'S SHOP\nZero; small and large sizes. The\nperfect soap for washing wool.\nTOT-N-TEEN 8HOP '\nBears'   Caulking   Compound \u2014\nHandy gun container\u2014ffflo.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nAlways fresh films of any size at\nVALENTINE'S. And don.'t forget,\nexpert developing service, too.\nWINDOW GLASS\nWe have a complete range of\nstandard sizes In single and double\nstrength. We can cut to your individual requirements.\nT. H. WATERS A CO, LTD.\n101 Hall 8t.     Nelson,     Phono 16B\nDoor Mats, Snow Shovels, Weatherstrip, etc.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable reoalrs\nat moderate prices.\nFor a present, a set of good china\nIs.always appreciated. .    \"\nMo A Mo (NELSON) LTD.\nEmbroidered, quilted satin bedspreads\u2014$24.50.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nYouths' hockey skates and boots,\nsizes 10 to 2.\u2014Fine quality Samson\nboots, combination last, with hard\ntoe and steel shank. $10.00 pair.\nHIPPERSON'S.   .\nELECTROLUX\nCLEANER8 AND POLISHERS.\nPHONE 1108 OR 6S3\nBelieve it or not\u2014Neptune Moss\nwill grow without soil or water! \u2014\nGet it at COVENTRY8' FLOWER\nSHOP \u2014 PHONE 962.\nIf Butterfield can't fix it, throw\nit away. Watch work promptly done\nand fully guaranteed at reasonable\nprices.\nThe best values In good quality\nin warm Winter wear for girls and\nboy\u00bb are at\nTHE CHILDREN'8 8HOP\nDon't forget Ukrainian C.W.L.\nBazaar Thurs., 2:30 p.m., at the\nFarmers' Market. Bingo In the eve\nning, 523 Vernon Street.\nFOR . SMARTER 8HOE8 FOR\nNATURAL WALKING, BUY 'NAT\nURAL BRIDGE'. AAAA TO EEE,\n$15.00,. AT FINK'S.\nCITY TAXt \u201424-HOUR SERVICE\nPHONE 990 OR 4\nBILL   BOUEY   AND\nLOU* CHOQUETTE,  PROP8.\nClothes hampers, wicker clothes\nbaskets, folding elotheshorses, ceiling dryers, folding ironing boards,\nironing board nads, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nHALLOWE'EN MASQUERADE\nCan. Legion Hall Oct. 31st. Prizes\nfor best costumes and comic, also\ndoor prizes. Mickey McEwen's or\nchestra. Dancing 9-1. Admission-\nLadies 50c, Gents 75c.\nWABA8SO   PERCALE  8HEET8,\nVERY SLIGHT IMPERFECTIONS\n8UB8TANDARDS OF ,13.95 QUA*\nLITY. SIZE 81x100. <9.95 PR.\nTAYLOR'S DRY GOODS\n'\"\" RON PHO\u00bbE   1485\nARMSON'S Coffee Shop and\nRoundup Room\n\u2014 Special Today \u2014\nBaked Swiss Steak\nEsoalloped Potatoes\nDelnor Green' Peas\nPineapple Cream Pie.\nNOTICE\nNelson Civic Action Association\nwants YOU to suggest names of\npossible candidates for Public Office at the coming Civic Elections.\nSend your suggestions to the Association, .Box 385, Nelson, B.C.\nOna only \u2014 Kemae Oil Burner,\nused 4 months; selling at \u00ab-pr!ce.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.        **','.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL.ST.        PHONE 1680\nTHE ANNUAL SCHOOL MEETING IN THE. SLOCAN SCHOOL\nDISTRICT NO. 8 FOR THE VAL-\nLICAN ATTENDANCE AREA\nWILL BK HELD AT 7:00 P.M. OCT.\n30th, IN THE VALLICANSCHOOL-\nHOU8E. THE ANNUAL REPORT\nWILL BE RECEIVED AND REP\nRE8ENTATIVE8 ELEQTED.\nAlligator Still\nPurse Favorite\nPAIJIS, Oct. 29 (Reuters)\u2014Bronze\ncopper and silver are the smartest\nshades for handbags this Winter,\nwith alligator skin continuing a\nfavbrlte for general utility wear.\n' With black as popular as ever, the\nnew season's colors for purses stress\nlight brown, gold and toast tones\nwhich may Be carried with almost\nevery other color. Clear bright\ngreens and deep burgundy lend\nvariety. There Is no radical change\nin the shape of handbags.\nEsquimalt, the name of the Cana*\ndian Navy's Pacific coast base, Is\nan Indian word meaning \"gradu\nally shoaling waters.\"\nAT\nFrom our large stock of covert\nJ\/umnanL\nRecipes. . .\nFor Treat\nTry Shrimp\nPatinequets\nBy MARGARET CARR\nThe sound of a French name on\na recipe often bears the promise of\na real culinary .treat, Definitely\nsuch Is the case with Shrimp Filled\nPannequets.     _ ',-\nIhe name Pannequets means simply \"little pancakes\"\u2014the base for\nthis unusual lunchtlme or late evening specialty. In the French tradition, these pancakes are tender,\nvery thin and rich with egg. Each\npancake is rolled around an unusu*\nal and very delicious shrimp-egg\nfilling, delicately seasoned with on*\nion and flecked with bright green\nparsley.       , '_\nFinal gourmet's touch Is the coat.\nIng of corn meal before the pannequets are browned in the oven.\nPiquant lemon butter Is used to\nbaste the pannequets while they\nbake'and later to pour over them\nat the table.*\nServe your Shrimp Filled Panne*\nquets with pride, for.your success\nas a master .food artist Is assured,\n8HRIMP FILLED\nPANNEQUETS\nCrepes \u2022 ,\n3 eggs, beaten; Vt cup milk, V> cup\nready-mix for pancakes.\nFilling\n2 tablespoons fat, 1\/8 cup finely\nchopped onion, ,8 ounces cooked,\nshelled shrimp; 1 teaspoon salt, Vt\nteaspoon pepper, 0 eggs, unbeaten,\n2 tablespoons finely chopped parsley.\nCoating\n1 egg, beaten; Vt cup water, H\ncup corn meal, Vt cup melted butter, Vt cup lemon juice.\nTo make tha crepes, combine\nbeaten Cggs and milk. Add ready-\nmix, stirring until smooth; For each\ncrepe, place % teaspoon butter in\nsix-Inch frying pan. Heat until butter bubbles. Pour In two tible-\nspoons batter and roll pan until\nthe .bottom Is coated. Bak* until\nbrowned on underside. Turn and\nbake. Keep crepes hot on a baking\nsheet In warm oven.\nFor the filling, melt fat; add on*\nion and shrimp and cook slowly for\nfive minutes. Add seasoning, eggs\nand parsley. COok slowly, stirring\nconstantly until eggs are thickened\nbut still moist. Put a heaping tablespoon of filling at edge of each\ncrepe. Roll up jelly roll fashion.\nFor the coating combine egg and\nwater, Then dip each crepe in egg\nmixture, then in corn meaL Place\non baking sheet. Combine the melted butter and lemon Juice. Pour\nover filled crepes and bake in a\nmoderately hot oven (400 degrees\nF.) for 10 minutes. Serve at once,-\nWear Pearls\nTo Bed for\nAdded Lustre\nLONDON, Oct. 20 (CP) - \"Is it\ntrue that it will Increase the beauty\nof my pearls to sleep in them, or Is\nIt Just an old wives' tale?\"   * h\nAn odd question, but one that\njewelers are frequently being ask*\ned nowadays as fashion has brought\npearls \u2014 real, cultured and imitation \u2014 Into such wide popularity.\nThough a traditional belief, lt Is\nnone the less true. Not only can\nyou wear your pearls when sleep-\ntag, but you can bathe with them\n\u2014 either in the sea or in the bsith\ntub. The old custom has a sound\nfoundation in scientific fact.\nReal pearls contain oil which\ntends to dry out as 'time goes by.\nBy contact with the human skin\nthey have the power of absorbing\noil from the pores and replacing\nthat which is lost. In many cases\nthe oil from the skin enhances a\npearl's beauty and it gains in lustre,\nACID HARMFUL\nIn tht case of cultured and 1ml*\ntatlon pearls, a leading London\nmanufacturer who Is also a pearl\nexpert had' this to say:\n\"Human contact puts a natural\ngloss on the stone, in just the same\nway as an oyster does, and very of*\nten the pearls look better after 20\nyears than when they are new. They\ncan easily be cleaned by washing in\nsoap-suds and the only thing which\ncan harm them is any kind of\nadd.\" .\nWhen we're 'having. guests tor\nluncheon we like to serve a large\nsalad bowl that we can prepare an\nhour or so before serving and yet\nhave all the fruits looking band,\n\"box fresh, Golden canned cling\npeach halves, pale green honeydew\nmelon balls, whole berries, juicy\nplums, pitted and stuffed with\ncream cheese and. frosted grapes\nmoke a very colorful display. Pass\ndressing separately.\nL\nPhono an\nFuel A Transfer\nNolson, B.C.\n\u2022DESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor to J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 203    *\"'  NELSON, B. C.\nLOVELY HATS\nto     '\nALL STYLES. AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nSHRINE BALL\nFRIDAY. NOV. 9th\nA. T. RICHARDS\nFinance Chairman\n\"The $64 question! \"How oan\nthe Shrlners give so much for so\nlittle  at  their   Second   Annual\n8hrlne Ball\". . \u2022 * \u2022\nAFEWDROPS\nONAWETCLOTH!\nAdd 9\\ few drops of Jcmr to 4i#\nWW QOHp QOQ B MCOIKIS, WfrKMn\n\u2022eovring, rinb, drata boards,\ntub*, toilet \\xrtM, at poreelata\ncomas fpantAng* ivato tfoo %Wstytty\nwhits ond\nJ8V6X s^ssF*\nat your eeocan-\nM 4 COKVEWENT SOS    ._\nluscious HONEf BUN ftlNS\"\nQuick fo make\nwith the new\nFast DRY Yeast\no Hot goodies come puffin' from\nvour oven in quick time with new\nFleischmann's Fast DRY Yeast I No\nmore spoiled cakes of jtastl No mott\nlsst-minute trips \u2014 this new form of\nFleischmann's Yeast keeps in your cup*\nboard! Order a month's supply.\n\u2022\u00bb\u201ei\u00bb \u2022**\nDELNOR\nFOREMOST    IN    FROZEN    FOODS\n\u2022 Scald.# c milk, % c granulated\nsugar, V\/i tsps. salt and Vt c\nshortening; cool to lukewarm.\nMeanwhile, measure into a large\nbowl H c lukewarm water, 1 tsp.\ngranulated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle with 1\nenvelope Fleischmann's Fast Rising Dry Yeast Let stand 10 mins*\nTHEN stir well,\nAdd cooled milk mixture and\nstir in 1 well-beaten egg and 1 tsp.\ngrated lemon rind. Stir in 2 c\nOnce-sifted bread flour; beat until, smooth. Work in 2 c (about)\nonce-sifted bread flour. Knead\non lightly-floured board until\nsmooth and elastic. Place in\ngreased bowl and grease top of\nHONEY-BUN RING\ndough. Cover and set in warm\nplace, free from draught Let rise\nuntil doubled in bulk. Punch\ndown dough and roll out into an\noblong about 9\" wide and 24\"\nlong; loosen dough. Combine 'A\nc lightly-packed brown sugar\nand K c. liquid honey; spread\nover dough and sprinkle with H\nc broken walnuts. Beginning at\na long'side, loosely roll up like a\njelly roll. Lift carefully into a\ngreased &'\/,\" tube pan and join\nends of dough to form a ring.\nBrush top with melted butter.\nCover and let rise until doubled\nin bulk. Bake in moderately hot\noven, 375\u00b0, 45-50 minutes. Brush\ntop with honey and sprinkle with\nchopped walnuts.\n  \u2014    *\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30, 1951\n: MONTREAL (CP) - Eight-year-\nold Douglas Mackay was seriously\nInjured when he fell from the roof\n, ot a shed. He climbed up there because a neighbor's wife asked him\n(M) help find, her cat\nFOI SIMPLE\nYOU CANT BEAT\nBUCKLEY'S MIXTURE\nWithdraw Low Rates\nFor U.K. Parcels\nOTTAWA, Oct. 29 ~(CP) \u2014 Special, low postage rates on Canadian\ngift'food parcels to. Britain are being wiped out, effective-next Jan, 1,\nThe post office department said\ntoday the .United Kingdom postal\nadministration' has decided to withdraw the reduced rate for gift food\nparcels.\nOn and after next*Jan.. 1, the regular parcel rates of $2.50 for 20 lbs.,\nwill apply. The special gift parcel\nrate is $2 on a 20-lb, parcel,  .   *\nBritain pointed -out that the special rates were originally introduc-\nCanadian and US Cars Eagerly\nSought by New Zealand Motorists\nBy J. C. GRAHAM\nCanadian Press Correspondent\n.WELLINGTON, N.Z. \u00abCP)-Cara\nfrom Canada and the United States\nare so scarce and eagerly sought\ned to give concessions to commonwealth mailers similar to those* enjoyed by the American public.because of.the economic cooperation\nagreement With suspension of E.C.\nA., the basic reason for the gift parcel reduction nO longer existed.\nin New Zealand that 8000 to be im\nported this year are being rationed\nout to essential users under extremely strict conditions.\nOwing to the dollar shortage,\nscarcely any North American cars\nhave.been imported In recent years,\nWhen the Government decided }o\nmake dollars available for 3000 cars\nthis year, it stated care should be\ntaken to ensure that ho black mark-\neting took place.\nConditions under which the cars\nwill be allotted ensure they go ta\nthose most in need of them. A total of 2000 will be made available\nto persons who. chiefly use bade\nroads, with preference' for those\ndrivers using the worst roads.      '\nBuyers must be essential users,\nsuch aa back-country, farmers,\ncounty engineers, employees,\nclergymen, stock and station agents,\nmeat, dairy, sawmill ahd mining\nexecutives, antf commercial travellers or others in similar occupations\nThe remaining 400 are for taxi-\ndrivers, but if they, have had a\nnew car since 1045 they qualify for\nthe imports only in exceptional\ncircumstances.\nEach purchaser must sign a cov\nenant not to dispose of the ear In\nless than two years except at cost\nprice, less depreciation.        ,\nIf such a car Is sold by the original purchaser, the new owner must\nalso qualify for priority purchase\nand Is also barred from selling\nagain in less than the unexpired\nbalance of the original two years\nterm at more than cost price plus\ndepreciation.\nNew cars are so scarce in New\nZealand that those less than two\nyears old, Of any make, can be sold\nat Hundreds of dollars.above the\nnew-car price even if they have\ncovered 20,000 miles or more. Pre\nwar North American cars still bring\ntheir original purchase price.\n*MR. MARCEL TREMPE....\nMr. Trempe, I understand you are a regular purchaser ot\nCanada Savings Bonds. Why do you buy them ?\nThey're all for my boys, later on.\nDid you buy your bonds al work ? I mean from deductions\nfrom your pay?\nNo, I bought them from, my bank. I- transferred\nthe money from my savings account into Canada\nSavings Bonds. I always work to a budget for the\nsake of my family; that is, so much is for living\nexpenses, so much for clothinjj, and so much for\nrecreation and vacation, and so much for savings.\nI think Canada Savings Bonds provide the best\nway to save. I paid cash for my bonds and they\nare there, safe, for when I need them.\nDo you figure they will come in handy in case of sickness\nin Ihe family, or perhaps to help you in your old age ?\n' Not for me. I have the hospital plan for sickness\nand accident protection, and the old age pension\nplan, too. No, I have all that. My Cqnqda Savings\nBonds are all for my boys, for their education.\nThe interest from the bonds will help \"with the\nexpenses of ordinary schooling, and then; the\nbonds themselves will provide the money for, the\nboys to go to university. I want them to have the\nbest, and with the bonds, I am budgeting for\nit now. \u25a0\u25a0*'\"\u25a0'..'        . .,.*'\na a a a a * a * a a a a ************* ae* * a a a\na\na\n\u00bb\n*\n*\na\n. NOW BITTER THAN EVER\nCanada Savings Bonds\u20146th Series\u2014mature In 10 years\nand 9 months from date of issue and bear ten 3'\/t%\ncoupons. The first coupon covers 1 year and 9 months and is\npayable on August 1 st, 1953; subsequent coupons come due\nAugust 1st yearly thereafter until maturity. If cashed before\nAugust 1st, 1953, simple interest is paid at 2% per year,\n* calculated monthly. If held to maturity the overall yield Is\n* equivalent to 3.21% per year. The limit for holdings in any\na one name is $5,000 in the 6th Series. The bonds are cashable\n* at full face value, plus interest at any time at any bank\n* in Canada. They are registered in the-owner's name. They\n* are non-assignable and non-transferable.\n******..\u2022*.*****************\u00bb*.*\n*Mr. Marcel Trempe, of,'91,: is the\nfather of three small'boyt of preschool age. Mr. Trempe arid his\npretty brunette wife live: in .. a \u2022\nsmartly, furnished upper flat at\nJ 651 ta\/o\/e Sfreef, a pleasant\nsuburban avenue in Trois Rivieres,\n' Quebec. Mr. Trempe is a laboratory\ntechnician 'working on production\ncontrols in the Wayagamack paper-\nmaking planl, a job he has held for\nten years. He is one of more than\na million Canadians who save\nregularly wilh Canada Savings\nBonds,\ny\nCANADA\nBONDS on sale NOW\nAT INVESTMENT\nDEALERS. BANKS\nAND THROUGH\nTHE PAYROLL\nSAVINGS HAH.\nTHE WINNER and new champion, Winston Churchill, Is cheered\nby London crowds as ballot counting revealed the Conservative victory over Labor. Churchill was personally popular even In ridings\nwhich returned Labor candidates.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nTo Build Up Navy\n. '    By ROGER  BARJERON\nPARIS (Reuters)\u2014France is trying to build up her navy from\nsecond-rate force to a fleet capable\nof protecting.the 40,000-mile coast*\nline of France and the French union.\nThe French Navy was smashed\nby the Second World War\u2014more\nthan one-third of the fleet was\nscuttled at Toulon In 1042, Follow*\ning the liberation, shortage of money and lack of a consistent policy\nhampered reconstruction of the\nfleet '\nMANY OLD SHIPS\nToday, the Freilch Navy \/totals\n348,000 tons, but many of the 272\nships are old, often in need of repair.\nTheir varied gun calibres raise\ndifficult ammunition problems,\nwith stock of different size and type.\nEvery foreign vessel needs a spe-\ndally trained crew with little scope\nfor interchangeability.   '\nThe cruiser Duguay Trouin, regarded in its younger days as one\nof the best craft of its type, is nOw\n25 years old. The Navy's best cruisers, the Montcalm class, are 15 years\nold. \t\nThe French Fleet Air Arm is In\na similar position, with American\nHellcat and British Lancaster aircraft filling the gap. Flans for expanding the air arih envisage 400\nnaval support planes, plus hell-,\ncopters, on active service by 1054.\nStressing that rising costs, particularly tor steel, are hampering efforts to restore the French fleet, the\nNavy Ministry official added: 'What\nis now being done is only a fraction of what should be done, but it is\na beginning. It will still, be years\nbefore we get back to our. pre-war\nstrength,\"       ,-\nSculptor Sees Life\nWork Demolished\nANCASTER, Ont., Oct, 20 (CP)\u2014\nElizabeth Bradford Holbrook, one\nof Canada's leading sculptors, saw\nmost of her life's work, go up In\nflames last night. Fire destroyed\nher studio-barn here and all her\nequipment and,' most of her work *.\nwere\" lost, Only a few books, busts\nand a pet crow were saved.\nAmong the busts lost was one of\nEmmanuel Hahn, former director\nof the Ontario College of Art. It\nhad been judged Mrs. Holbrook's\nbest work and had just been returned from Quebec where it was displayed.\nNearly 10,000 schools In Britain\nare registered listeners .to dally\neducational radio broadcasts..\nCAN ALWAYS* BE CASHED AT FULL FACE VALUE PLUS INTEREST\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nClassified'Ads Get Speedy Results\nWood Valiance\nHardware Co. Ltd.\n: Baker St\nPhone 1630\ni \".\nttinpisM\nproduct of ie\nBRITISH\nGOLIINBM\nDISTILLERY\nCo. Ltd.\nBO\nEXPORT\nCANADIAN WHISKY\n-    BUTIUlO UATimo\nAND lOTTlIO IM BOM -\nUltOllt THI SUHftVlltQI Of\nWI CANADIAN eOVHtKUf\"\n\u25a0U^%\/ail,^S)iMij%\nmtt* WIltUIMITlt . it\nI\nW\n>|1\n*********\n''H\/m\nt \u2022 * \u2666 *\u2022'\u25a0\u2666 *\u25a0\u2022\nTHE BRITISH COLUMBIA DISTILLERV CO. ITO:\nNIW   WESTMINSTER,  I.C.\nThis advertisement is not jbiibiished or.displayed'     . -;.;\u2022\u2022\u2022< j\nby Ihe liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columb^\n [Fire Fighters Union\nioing to Arbitration\nInternational 'Association of Fire\nFighters,  Local. 045,  advised  City\npouncil Monday night it was pro-\needlng to arbitration because of\n|he \"unfair dismissal of Captain W.\nMcDonald.\"..'\u25a0\n'\u25a0''The letter, received and filed by\nCouncil, said the union was pre\ntared to name Its representative\nIvhen Instructions were received\nfrom Victoria. ..yi\n.'Utter in'tne meeiihg\u2014 attended\nBy 13 persons-*-^. Alex Sutherland declared minutes of a meeting\n{ii the committee of the whole, on\nhe fire department situation should\nhave contained details of a proposal received from the firemen.\nIt was important for future, refer*.\nf nee, he said.\nMayor N. <S. Stlbbs reminded the\nBlderman there was no motion and\nhat he should have moved tbe proposals be placed in the minutes if\npe wished to have them recorded.\nWhen Aid. Sutherland Continued\n* criticize the minutes, the mayor\nkuggested he was Inferring that the\nChair had not properly conducted\nIhe meeting.\nSilenced by mayor\n,Ald. Sutherland told the mayor he\nwas correct in this assumption and\nlis Worship declared:\n\"Then you are out of order and\nhere will be no further discussion.\"\nAid. Sutherland insisted he had\n|\"a couple of more things yet,\" and\nmayor said he would \"come\nback to you later.\"\nGiven the go-ahead later, Aid\nSutherland asked how many vol\nunteers the fire department had\nand If the city had a department\nthat measured up to the B. C. Fire\nUnderwriters' requirements. He\n\"had It from the superintendent\nat Vancouver\" that It did not. He\nhad-been told eight \"paid\" men\nwere required on a partial, volunteer department, but he had\nfound eight \"trained\" men were\nneeded. He had also understood\nthe applications for firemen's\nposts would be before council before they were hired. But this\nhad not been so. The regular men\nhad. been taken out and eight men\nput In their places.\nMayor Stlbbs told th aldeVman\nhe had received his answers at\n* previous council meetings. When\nAid. Sutherland denied; that, the\ncouncil moved that eight men be\nhired, His Worship sharply re-\n: minded him of the resolution\npassed by council, authorizing\nFire Chief Q. A.. McDonald to organize a partial volunteer depart*\nment, The resolution was passed,\nafter receipt of a letter from the\nunderwriters stating the.fire Insurance rate structure Would re-\nmain unchanged If two men were\n; constantly on shift and a fire\nchief and 3d properly trained vol.\nunteers were provided.\nSEES CHALLENGE\nAid. Arthur Foster suggested that*\nthere was no point in renewing oft\nrepeated arguments over the situation. The eight men had been given\na.chance to submit applications', but\nhad declined, therefore nothing further could be done. He suggested\nthat after another month, the Fire\nUnderwriters be asked to > send\n'representative'here to Inspect tho\ndepartment This would give them\nnn opportunity to see the situation\nat the hall and, would be \"a chal*\nlenge to all concerned.\" It gave the\nnew men time to be shown around\nand what they were to do.\nAid. Sutherland suggested infor-.\nmatlon had been withheld from the\nunderwriters. He had made it a\npoint to see that they got it during\nhis visit to their office in Vancouver.\nWhen Mayor Stbbs said he thought\nthe officials should have come to\nNelson if they had cause for alarm,\nAid. Sutherland charged the mayor\nwas \"not concerned\" over fire pro-\ntection for the city, and this led to\na new wrangle on this point. -\nAid. Sutherland also demanded to\nknow on whose authority two storage tanks adjoining the gas plant\nhad been moved from a \"safe\" position to a \"hazardous\", position.\nMayor Stlbbs reminded him the\ntanks were moved a year* or -two\nago and termed it odd that he had\nnot noticed them until now. Aid.\nSutherland was a member of council when' the tanks were moved,\n-by  0  i  Ndeist  sell\nAid. Sutherland then recalled he\nhad objected to their removal but\n\"was just ruled out of order. Some:\ntimes memory of people is conveniently short\"; \u25a0   , \"..'\n\"Not as conveniently short as\nyours sometime is,\" shot back Mayor Stibbs, and the argument halted.\n\"teT Hikers\nGel Home Before\nSearchers Back\nTwo Nelson youths, Robert Alexander Go.d, 17, of 201 Morgan\nStreet, and James William Nutter,\n18, of Hall Mines Road, hiked a little\nfarther than they planned on a\nweekend jaunt. After being Ih the\nwoods a day longer.than planned\nand being the object of search par.\nties' efforts, the, two reached' home\nMonday afternoon.   .\nThe hikers actually arrived home\nbefore the search parties, organiz*\ned by R.C.M.P., got back to Nelson\ntt 8 p.m.,; '\u25a0\u2022 ..... , \u25a0\u25a0<(    .\nThe boys, had planned a weekend\nhike up Silver King Mountain\nstarting' Saturday afternoon, but\nwhen Monday morning, came and\nthe boys had not yet arrived home,\ntwo parties began the search,\nThe boys hiked farther than they\nplanned, they explained, and when\nit became dark-Sunday night they\ndecided to spend another night In\nthe woods,\nCanadians To Serve One\nYear in Korea; Moral High\nOTTAWA, Oct 29 (CP) \u2014 De-\nfence Minister Claxton said today\nconditions In Korea \"are far from\ndesirable\" from the human welfare standpoint but that the morale of Canadian troops Is exceptionally high.\n\"We hope,\" he told the Commons\nIn reply to statements about the bad\nI conditions under which the 25th\nI Brigade Is living, \"that all our com-\nImitments there will be \u00a3nded as\ntoon es possible.\"\n.'; The conditions were such that the\nmen would be asked to serve only\none year before a replacement Is\nprovided.\n'RECREATION\nFACILITIES LACKING\n1 There was no way to compare\nKorea With Western Europe and the\nlast war. No recreational centres In\nlarge cities could be established. No\nnon-military groups such as the Salvation Army were operating with\nany army in Korea,\n* ;The armies, instead, were using\nterVices personnel. Th$ number of\nCanadian welfare officers and other\nranks was as great per capita as the\nWelfare agencies had provided in\nEurope. There were six'officers who\nlooked after welfare matters In the\nbrigade, all with staff. They were\nSided by 13 chaplains.\n\u2022 Recreation centres were set up\nunder canvas where possible.rEach\nbig unit had a welfare officer with\ni; canteen wagon equipped with clg-\nirettes, chocolate bars, cakes, books\ntnd other things.\nHIGH MORALE\nMr. Claxton said reports indicate\nthat veteran officers have never\nseen a formation with higher morale. Only today army headquarters\nreceived a letter from the 1st Commonwealth Division's commanding\nOfficer, Maj.-Gen. A. J. H.. Cassels,\nlaying the Canadians are \"magnificent and always ready for anything ... and I am not just saying\nthis to please you.\"\nBill Boss, Canadian Press correspondent who had been in Korea almost a year, said while home on\nleave that the troops' morale was\noutstanding and that \"the Patricias\nbad an esprit de corps so real you\n(buld touch it... The Patricias are\nIhe finest thing the Canadian army\nhas ever created.\"\nTROOPS FIT\nArchbishop Roy of Quebec, a vet\n(tan, pronounced \"the troops fit In\nall departments \u2014 training, equip\nintent and morale\u2014and termed the\n,25th Brigade equal to anything the\nCanadian Army had produced any.\ntime, anywhere.\"\nIncluded in the welfare and en\ntertalnment which have been pro-\nvided were:\n; 1. Snorts equipment.\n\\ 2. Current motion pictures are\nthown six days a week tq the troops\nVhen not in action, Iri addition,\nfilms of special interest, such as the\nprey Cup football final and the\nCanadian Open golf tournament\nbave been sent.\ni 3. Tape recordings of CBC programs of special interest are re-\nbroadcast over the Armed Forces\nRadio Service.      ,\n4. Reading material provided by\nthe Canadian Legion is distributed\nmonthly on the basis of 30 books,\n15 digests, 40 different current popular magazines for each 100 men.\nLarge numbers of Mclean's magazines and the Montreal Standard\nire supplied free by the publishers.\n(.Twenty free cigarettes per man\nare Included In the dally ration and\nthis is supplemented by gifts of\ncigarettes from -organizations and\nprivate' Individuals. ' In addition,\nfriends, relatives and civilian org-\nanizations are sending gifts of cigarettes, tax and duty, free, to individual soldiers.   \"\n6. Army; welfare officers distribute regularly gifts from Canadian\norganizations and private Individ,\nuals.\nNEWS .\n7. A thousand words of news are\ncabled daily by The Canadian Press\nfor the forces' edition of Japan\nNews, one copy of which is provid*\ned for each five men. This is pro*\nvlded as a national service at a\nnominal compilation charge. The\nCanadian Press also airmails feature copy three times a week. The\nBrigade publishes a tri-weekly mimeographed troop sheet giving local\nnews. The Commonwealth Division\npublishes a daily mimeographed'\nnewspaper which includes Canadian\nnews provided by The Canadian\nPress. The Canadian Press.news is\nbroadcast daily over stations of the\nArmed Services Radio Service^\"\n8. The Canadian forces have the\nuse of recreational facilities provided for the American and for other\nCommonwealth forces, including the\nCommonwealth leave centre' at\nTokyo. \u2022 ' :j\nNelson Chosen\nForRXitf.\nFilter Station\nNelson has definitely been chosen\nas the centre for a filter station\nin this area. Squadron Leader C.\nHoseason was in Nelson last week to\ntry to establish a location in which\nto house theicentrei.\nSeveral buildings were viewed,\nbut no definite decision'has been\nmade. The centre will be mahned\nby 10 permanent. Air Force personell\nand requires 800. volunteers to work\nIn the district, \u25a0\nS\/L Hoseason, Officer in Command of the Ground Observers\nCOrps for British Columbia, spent\nsome time here earlier thi; month,\nchecking the possibility of establishing She centfe.   ' .\nNine Pay fines\nAfter Raid\nA total of $175 In fines was levied\nagainst seven men in City Court\nMonday by Magistrate William\nBrown. The seven were apprehended In a raid by City Police Saturday night. All pleaded guilty to\ncharges of being found in a* dis.\norderly house without a lawful ex.\ncuse and each was fined $25. The\nmen were H; Buderick,, Joseph\nSkrobacz, Alex Makortoff, Thomas\nJones, John Lawrence, Joseph\nCameron and Stanley Jermaln.\nMrs. Ann DeRoy, charged keeping a bawdy house at 612 Lake\nStreet, w^s fined $200 by Magistrate\nBrown. Laura Knight, charged with\nbeing an Inmate, was fined $100.\nBoth womeft pleaded guilty.   ,\nGarages Looted at\nCascade, Rock Creek\nA garage at Cascade and one et\nRock Creek were broken into late\nSunday night or . early Monday\nmorning.\nThieves escaped with $50 from\nthe cash register and several tires\nfrom the garage at Cascade.\nAt Rock. Creek, 19 miles South of*\nGreenwood,' the robbers removed\nthe cash register from the service\nstation, and finding the electric\ndrawer difficult to open, abandoned1\nit near the river. Most of the other\nloot stolen from the garag- was also\nrecovered.\nR.C.M.P, Investigating the. robbery\nbelieve both crimes to have been\ncommitted by the same parties. I\n4 Arab Countries\nWilling to Join\nMid-East Defence\nBEIRUT, Lebanon, Oot 29\n(Reuters)'\u2014 Lebanon, . Syria,\nI Iraq and Jordan are willing to\nenter a Middle-East defence organization ts proposed by four\nWestern powers. Informed sources' said here tonight\nBut all four Arab countries\nare preoccupied with Egypt's\nrefusal to Join. They are searching for a means of avoiding a\nclash with Cairo.\nEden Pilches\nInto Foreign\nOffice Tasks\nLONDON, Oct 29 (CP) -Anthony Eden swung into action today\nas Britain's new Foreign Secretary\nWith a zest matched only by his: 76-\nyear-old chief,' Winston Churchill;\nwho hammered out details of his\nConservative Cabinet. \u25a0\n'Eden, 54, came to quick grips\nwith ihe Iranian oil crisis, the Egyptian troubles .end Western defence\nproblems.\n, He .summoned' Sir Francisf Shepherd, British ambassador in Tehran,\nfor talks* aimed at reopening negotiations on the future of ihe Anglo-\nIranian Oil Company, now Idle under Iranian control.' He also;\n\"1. Decided that he personally\nwould lead the British delegation\nto the General Assembly of the United Nations, opening in Paris Nov.\n6. \u2022;'...'\n2; Discussed with Walter Gilford\nand Rene Massigy, U.S. and French\nambassadors\/here, the pfogram for\nhis Western policy talks in Paris\nwith State Secretary Dean Acheson\nof the U.S. and Foreign Minister\nRobert Schuman of France. . \u25a0\n3, Called in his advisers to study\nthe Sudan's appeal for appointment\nof a. .U.N. .advisory body iri Khartoum following Egypt's proclamation, of' Farouk as King of the Sudan. '\n4. Arranged for t new British note\nto Egypt1 which may suggest fresh\navenues for ending.the crisis over\ntbe Suez Canal and Sudan.\nSynopsis\u2014Cloudy skies In: the Interior will clear Monday night producing low night-time temperatures.\nSunny skies will follow Tuesday.\nNELSON., -.;....\u201e\n30\n47\n.32\nHalifax   ....\u201e\u201e\n37\n46\n.69\nMontreal ,...\u201e\u201e..\u201e\u201e..\u201e\n33\n38.\n.02\nOttawa . \u201e\u201e._.\u00ab\n2D\n'34\n.01\nToronto \u2022\u2022 ._.\u2014....\n34\n47\n\u2014\nWinnipeg ...i.\t\n29\n36\n.09\n28\n31\nTr\nCalgary ,.,..,\t\n24\n26\n.32\nEdmonton \t\n25\n30'\n.03\nKamloops  ...._\n37\n44\n.12\n35\n48\n.20\n40\n60\n.02\n42\n54\n;.i5\nKimberley .:. ~.._\n32\n39\nCrescent Va\\Jey ..........\n32\n\u25a041\n.36\nKaslo .: .\u2022...,;..\u201e.'\u201e_\n34\n\u25a0 41\n.36\nSpokane  ....,........';..._...\n36\n46\n.07\nWhitehorse\t\n19\n24\nTr\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30,1931 \u2014 7\nJ2$t\nInsulation Bid Made\n* A bid from Arctic Insulation and\nRoofing: to insulate Civic Centre\nattic with four-Inch blown rock\nwool at a cost ot, $1050, 'was .referred by City Council Monday\nnight to Civic Centre Commission\nfor a report.\nCollege Rookie\nWins O.R.F.U.\nScoring Title\n.TORONTO, Oct 29 (CP) - If\njobs In big-time football beckon Invitingly to Mel Hawkrlgg when he\ngraduates from McMaster University in Hamilton next Spring, it\nwon't be hard to find the reason.,\nThe slight 20-year-old halfback\nwon. the Ontario Rugby' Football\nUnion individual scoring championship* in bis first season in senior\ncompany, winding up the 1951 scheduled campaign with a dazzling 35\npoints Saturday,\nStatistics' compiled by The Can*\nadian Press', show that the 162.\npoupd Hawkrigg, who comes from\nthe Toronto area, scored 70 points\nin six games on 13 touchdowns and\nfive converts. He had a lot of help\nfrom his teammates in his final rush\nSaturday. They fed him the ball at\nCity Electrical Men\nAsk Negotiations\n: International Brotherhood of\nElectrical Wrokers, Local 1003, has\nserved notice it wishes to terminate\nits present working agreement with\nthe City of Nelson end to open\nnegotiations for a new one.\n. The formal notice, (two months\nnotice is required), was laid on the\ntable by City Council Monday night.\n\u25a0', LOS ANGELES, Oct 29 (AP) -\nDetectives worked today to crack\na mystery surrounding Identity of\na woman whose nude body, crammed in an ancient truhk, was found\ndiscarded in a weed patch.\nCouncil to Attend\nCenotaph Ceremony\nCity' Council Monday night .ac*\ncepted invitation of the Canadian\nLegion to attend Remembrance Day\nceremonies at the cenotaph; Mayor\nN; Ci Stibbs was askeo^to briefly\naddress tlje gathering.\nHEADS ADVERTISERS GROUP\nWILLIAMSBURG,' Va;, Oct 29\n(CP)' \u2014 A. L. Cawthorn-Page of Ottawa today was elected president of\nthe Life Insurance'Advertisers A<i-\nsoblation* at its annual meeting\nhere. \/ ,\nCawthorri-Page; manager of puh-\nlicatjons for the Canadian Head Office of Metropolitan Life Insurance\nCompany, is the first: Canadian president of the Association since it\n;vas formed in 1933.\nREAD; THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nPackers Strengthen\nKELOWNA, B.C., Oct. 29 (CP) -\nStu Robertson, who started out the\ncurrent puck campaign with the\nNew Westminster Royals of the\nP.C.H.L, now is working out with\nKelowna Packers of the O.S.A.H.L.\nPackers Intend to use him here\nThursday i ntheir game against the\nW.I.H.L. Nelson Maple Leafs If he\nis reinstated as an amateur in time.\nAdditional strehgth at centre ta\nexpected by the Packers this week*\nwith the arrival of Joseph Fat Kai-\n, 21-year-old from the defunct\nDenver club of the U.S.H.L.\nevery sporlng opportunity In their\ngame against Windsor Royals.\nHawkrigg went into Satuaday's\ngame 14 points behind Johnny Chur-\nosteckl of i Sarnia '\u2022 Imperials,'-(he\nO.R.F.U. scoring leader last season\nChorostecki, a place-liicki.ig defensive half, boosted his total by\nsix points to 65 for the season, But\nHawkrlgg's closing rush gave him\na ,15-pOlnt edge in the final figures.\nIhli advert'ienwnl\"\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb noi published m\n*>P>edby the Liquor Con wl BoSf %\n\u00ab\u2022 the Government of British Columkl.\nScience Progresses\nFor 50 ysara wa havo uied Hills\nwhite labloti\u2014acfltyliallcyllc add\n\u2014for relief of pain. Today thli\nfamiliar paln-klllar If available In\na new form without tho disadvan*.\ntaget of acidity. Insolubility and\nbitter taste. It Is called 'plsVltlN'\nand Is sold at druggists evory.\nwhere.\n\u25a0DISPRIN' l> available In Bottles\nef M tablets or Handy Pockot\nFolders of B,\n\"Headache?..take a Dispriti\"\nWhy DISPRIN? Because DISPRIN Is soluble and substantially mulral.\nWhen taken In water os recommended, it enters the stomach as a\n(rue solution and not as undissolved particles. II Is therefore less liable\nto cause stomach dlsjomfort.   >\nDISPRIN Is readily absorbed. Because It definitely dissolves (not merely\ndisintegrates) DISPRIN permits speedy absorption Ond gives fast relief.\nDISPRIN Is palatable. Even children will hike tt readily.\nDISPRIN\nSAFE   SPEEDY   PLEASANT   \u25a0\n. \":\u25a0.\u25a0\"'\u25a0..'. r6l MIN RELIEF   .'v'' v ...*\u25a0  -.     *mMaa--!>r->\nBY THB MAKERS OP 'DSTTOt' ANTISEPTIC... R ECKITT j, COLMAN (CANADA) 1IMITED. PHARMACEUTICAL DIVISION, MONTREAI\nTrail Resident\nDies Here\nMiss Winnifred Thomson, 54, resident of Trail for the past three\nyears, died at Kootenay Lake Gen-\neral Hospital Saturday evening.\nBorn in London, England, she*\ncamb to Canada in 1900 and resided\nin Montreal before coming to Tra'l.\nIn June, 1051, Miss Thomson entered Mount St. Francis Infirmary.\nFuneral services will be conducted in Trail.\nWoodworking. Shop\nGranted Licence\nApplication from Frank Amoroso\nfor a business licence for a wood*\nworking shop was approved Monday\nnight by City Council, subject to\nthe applicant meeting' bylaw re.\nqulrements. .'*\nNew Parking Meters\nTo Be Installed Soon\nFifty new parking meters will be\nInstalled as soon as the public works\ndepartment is free to do the work,\nMayor N. C. Stlbbs told Council\nMonday night\nHe was replying to a query from\nAid. Alex Sutherland as to when\ncongestion of traffic parking In the\n500 block of Vernon Street would\nbe relieved.\nParking meters are slated for this\nblock. \u2022     .\nSovernor Urges Gyro Expansion,\nDaily Conduct of Friendship Aims\n\"Although wc are a club ot only\n5034 members we have what no\nother club has. We are truly International.\"\nDistrict-Governor of Gyro District\nNo. 8 Dr. S. M. (Steve) Schmaltz\nof Lethbridge stressed this point in\na short speech at a Nelson Gyro\nClub ladies night held to honor the\nexecutive of this district in the\nHume Monday evening.\nDr. Schmaltz.pointed out that no\nother club divided its districts with\nno regard to the American or Canadian border as five out of tbe nine\nGyros'have. If there were more\nmembers and they had the true\nspirit of Gyro internationalism, he\ncontinued, there would be no major\nproblems such as those aroused by\nKorea and the Iron Curtain.\nMr. Schmaltz reminded Gyros of\ntheir responsibilities. They should\nnot be Gyros from one meeting to\nthe next, but Gyros continuously.\nExpansion was Important now, he\ncontinued,  the  organization  was\nsmall as compared to others but\nGyros beiieved in friendship <ln the\ntrue sense and should expand and\ncement good relationships in all\ncommunities.\nThe Gyrettes were also to be\ncommended for their help to the or.\nganlzation,. Mr. Schmaltz said. .\nOther executive guests were\nDoran Robinson Lieutenant-Govern*\nor from Wardner-Kellog, Idaho, and\nV. E. (Vic) Meech, secretary-treasurer from Lethbridge, both gave\nshort addresses. -       ;':'\nEntertainment took the form of\nthree piano solos, \"Tales From the\nVienna Woods,\" \"Under the Double\nEagle\" and \"El Bacio,\" rendered by\nMiss Enid Prime. A dance brought\nthe evening to a close.\nRepresenting Spokane club at the\nmeeting was Past President Jack\nWatson.\nDistrict 8 executive along with\ntheir wives are on an official tour\nof the district and will be In Trail\ntonight for a Joint meeting with\nTrail and Rossland Gyros.      ' \u25a0 '; *\nI'm one of the Aircraft Technicians\nithat\u00a3ive it a 'DI' (daily inspection) and keep\nit in top flying shape. We take personal\nIf pride in the vork that we have been\nffltrained to do. Our aircraft are ready to fly\nm in defence of freedom.\"\nMORE MENfll; NEEDED NOW IN\"THE R.C.A.F. TO  TRAIN AS\nAIRCRAFT TECHNICIANS\nAERO-ENGINE * INSTRUMENT \u2022 RADIO-RADAR \u2022 ARMAMENT * AIRFRAME\nThese men have an important job in the operation of Canada's ex*\npanding Air Force.\nAs a skilled R.C.A.F. Aircraft Technician, you will gain valuable\ntechnical and training experience\u2014receive good pay\u201430 days annual\nleave with pay\u2014and a pension to be earned.\nVou will play your part in defence against aggression. You will serve\nCanada\u2014and yourself 1   '\nR.C.A.F. Recruiting  Unit\n545 Seymour Street, Vancouver, B.C.\nPhone: PAclflc 6736 or TAtlow 2822\nPleasi mail mi, without obligation, full particulars regarding\nenrolment requirements and openings now available it tbe R.C.A.F.\nNAME (Please Print)\t\nSTREET ADDRESS ;\t\nCITY...,  PROVINCE\t\nEDUCATION (by grade and province)\t\n  AGE.\nI\nCAF-7J    I\nI\nSEE THE RCAF CAREER\nCOUNSELLOR AT THE\nADDRESS IN COUPON\n- OR MAIL THE COUPON\nROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE\nTT\n aaamm\n&?l0mt:9altlj JfatttB     Stronger Than Fear\nEstablished April 22. 1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMost interesting Newspaper\nPublished ever; morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING ..COMPANY, LIMITED,\n286 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPost Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER'OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHB AUDIT BUREAU Ot CIRCULATIONS\nTuesday, pctober 30,1951     '\u25a0*\nPublic Address\nSystems for Trains\nUntil the coming of the electronic\nage, stationmasters announced the departure and arrival of trains with their\nown stentorian voices, some of them\nmighty and famous. They competed\nwith the din of locomotives, the clamor\nof hurrying travellers, the shouts of\nnewspaper boys, and all the other uproars of a busy railvvay station..\nToday, in larger terminals, the sta-\ntionmaster talks quietly into a microphone. His voice penetrates to the most\nremote parts of the station. There, is\nscant excuse for any passenger missing\na train because he did not hear the announcement. *' \u2022\"   .\"'.'\u25a0\nWe wonder why the advantages of\nelectronics, which operate so successfully in the stations', have not been utilized more inside the trains? Since the\nearly days of North American railroading, the trainmen have walked through\nthe aisles of coaches, calling out the\nname of the next stop. Often the advice\" of the trainman is drowned out\nby the clatter from switches underneath, whistles or bells, the cries of a\nbaby, or the combinediVoic.es of passen-: ;*;\ngers in the car.\nWhy not address the passengers\nthrough loudspeakers in every coach?\nThe microphone voice has peculiar.\npowers of penetration. The use of the\nmicrophone and loudspeaker has been ;\nadopted with success in the best of\nUnited States trains. It is an improvement Western Canadian . travellers\nmight well look forwaid to in the trains\nof our own country. \"*      .\nFor Your Town\nCan you honestly say each nightfall: \"Today I have done at least some\nlittle thing to make'my home town a\nbetter place in which to live\"?\nAutumn Meditation\nLeaf by leaf the glory of the Autumn Is\ndeparting. In swooping,' graceful swirls, they\ndrop helplessly from the twigs and branches\nthat held them safely through Summer gales\nand rains. Lightly they lie upon the earth that\nfed them, the playthings of the breeze and\nthe replenishment of the living soil. With their\nsilent death dies the secret of the verdure, the\nalchemy of light into nourishment. In their fall\nis the year's farewell to growth, the handing\nback of the borrowed riches of the Summer.\nThrough, the quiet, misty air the sunlight\nflows softly over the landscape, touching it\ngently as if in sadness for the fading of its\nbeauty. Now all is peaceful, mild and friendly,\nquite unaware of the bitter cold and rudeness\nof the coming Winter. The air has its special\nAutumn flavor, tinged with wood smoke and\ntbe brown smell of dying leaves. Through the\nnight the wind moves softly, cool with contentment and hushed* in the intimacy of darkness.\n1 These are the days when the open fields\nand hills call to.the walker. It is good to get\naway from the tempers and tantrums of a\nsavage world into the forgetful peace of nature. Across the valley's view the russet\ncontours of the lifting hills are touched with\ncontrast* by .the vivid red of sumachs and the\nrich tones ol Ihi oiks The open furrows\nsr . d I i bru\".ii cu.li to the sky. The silent,,\nwjods tc ,iii irititiRi' to ihe urgent. Here soli.\nI \u25a0 b ig in nmunion with the origins of\n| .and iiu-I uilion finds rest for the soul.\n.   \"-    -'I'monto Globe and Mail.   '.'\"\u25a0\nPeople can be io scared by a single word\nthat they die of fright The word la cancer.\nIf its terror has fastened upon you, consider\nthe case of Lieutenant Commander Edwin\n'Wilier Rosenberg, of the U.S. Navy, as told\nby A, E. Hatchnor in the Reader's Digest,\nRosenberg, a dyont Lutheran, had always\nfound strength in prayer. His faith and prayers\nwere so much stronger than the official predictions of hie imminent death that he cured\nhimself of cancer\u2014or was cured\u2014however you\nwishto take it\u2014not once, but four times. Rosenberg had successive cancers' ot the groin,.,\nkidney, neck, and again the groin.\nBut from first to last, he refused to be\nBeared by the word. \"The way I see it,\" he \u2022\nsaid, after the doctors had found the kidney\ncancer and given him two weeks, to live, \"hope\nis a thing for me to determine, not medicine.\nWhat the hell's this fear that gets Into everybody the minute they hear the Word cancer?\"\nWhen tha doctors had left him, he bowed-his\nhead .and prayed. ,.-,...'*\nHe kept on praying. And In three monthl\ndoctors marvelled at. X-ray plates which'\nshowed that the cancer had disappeared.\nAfter* the third one came in his neck, Rosenberg prayed some more. It was contained,'\ndiminished, finally obliterated. The fourth\nwas again in the groin, Rosenberg reinforced\nthe medical treatments, as he had before, with\nhis own stout weapons of prayer and faith. .\nToday he is cured and back aboard a destroyer. Reinstating himself in active duty-\nno cancer patient ever had before\u2014was a\nstruggle perhaps secondary to licking the\ndisease. But to lt Rosenberg brought to bear\nIlls big guns of prayer and faith, Through his\n\u2022persistence, a, Bill specifically designed to\nrestore him to the Navy career he loved was\nsigned by President Truman last August.\n\"People have begged me to give them the\ncancer cure I used,\" Rosenberg says. \"I have\nwritten every one of them: believe in yourself\nand in the Lord; that is the cure, if you want\nto call it that. The man who gives up hoping\nis a victim: the man who hopes can conquer.\nAt the Naval hospital hundreds, came into the\nwards ready to die, scared by a word\u2014cancer.\nIf they didn't know how to pray I prayed.\nwith them and helped them to learn. Pretty\nsoon they Had built up. their morale, and\ncancer was just a disease. Some of those men\ndid die, but many of them lived, perhaps because they had grown stronger than their\nfear.\"\nNew'Industries   .\nDuring the first eight months of 1851, in\nnew-industries have .located in Windsor.*.TKatf\nmost of them are as yet small is no disparagement of their value. Most Industries are small;;\nat their inception. Some of this city's major\nIndustries were little ones when they established here.\nThe perfect Industrial setup is to have\n* some large plants, with a large .number of\nsmaller ones. The more varied their character\nand output1 the better, thus to' absorb the impact of any recession that might hit One of\nthem.-T-Windsor Daily Star.\nVerse\nAutumn\nA haze on the far horizon,\nThe infinite, tender sky,\nThe ripe, rich tint of the cornfield,\nAhd the wild geese sailing high\u2014\nAnd all ovej upland and lowland\nThe charm ofthe goldehrod\u2014\nSome of us call it Autumn,\nAnd other call It God.\nFROM INCO.\nThe Life You've\nLived TODAY\nCan you say tonight in parting with the day\nthat's slipping past,\nThat you helped a single person of the many\nyou have passed?\nIs a single life rejoicing over what you did\n.      or sal,d, .,,.\".\nDoes one whose hopes were fading, now with\ncourage-look ahead?\nDid you waste the day or lose lt, was lt well\nor poorly spent?\nDid you leave a trail of kindness, or a scar\nof discontent?\nAs you close your eyes in slumber, do you\nthink that God would say,\n\"You bave made the world much better for\nthe life you've lived today\"?\nFROM INCO\nGatineau Estate of the late Mi. King has\nbeen left exactly as it was, and that, says the\nOttawa Journal, \"is as it should be. If any\nattempt is made to formalize the scene, to\nerect iron rails, or too many signs, install\nbenches or sell ice cream and hot dogs, the\nattraction of the place will be lost forever.\"\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot persons\nasking questions will not be published.*\nThere, Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOt BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy,.\nM, R\u201e Nelson\u2014Please print names and addresses of firms that purchase Christmas\n,   'trees In Nelsoiuareal :\u25a0''\u25a0'\u2022' .\n'.'   Can another reader help us with this?\nI B, Nakusp\u2014Please list all the countries of\ntbe British Empire, and-particulars.\n. . The Commonwealth and Empire consists\nof the Kingdom of Gieat Britain and Northern\nIreland, the self-governing Dominions, the self-\ngoverning. Colonies, and the Crown Colonies\nand Protectorates. Its total area Is 13,008,782\nsquare miles, and its estimated population in\n1044 was 530,008,000. The countries are as follows: England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland; Canada, Union bf South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, India, Pakistan, Ceylon,\n: Sbuthern Rhodesia, Malta,... Channel Islands,\nGibraltar, Isle of Man, Aden and Perlm, Baluchistan, Cyprus, Federation of Malaya, North\nBorneo, Sarawak, Singapore, Basutoland, Be-\nchuanaland, British Cameroons, Gambia, Kenya, Mauritius, Nigeria, Nyasaland, South-West\nAfrica, Northern Rhodesia, St. Helena and\nAscension Isle, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, So-\nmaliland, Anglo-Egyptian Sudan, Swaziland,\nTanganyika, Togoland, Uganda, Zanzibar, Bermuda, British Guiana, British Honduras, Falkland Islands, Trisda da Cunha, Bahamas, Barbados, Jamaica, Leeward Islands, Trinidad\nand Tobago, Windward Islands, Nauru Island,\nNorfolk Island, Pacific Islands, Papua and\nBritish New Guinea, -Western Samoa, Cook\nIslands, New Hebrides, Australian Antarctic\nTerritory.\nJust CUriouS, Appledale\u2014Should velvet material be washed or dry-cleaned?\nIt would be safer to have it dry-cleaned.\nOf course, if it is only a question of reviving\n'the surface, hang lt over a bathtub full of\nsteaming water and leave it until dry, If lt is\n'stained,   however,   dry-cleaning   would   be\nwiser.\n:,-\u25a0' * '\nP. D\u201e Thrums\u2014Manse give me correct address\n\"     of Radiant Health Products. My letter to:\n.\u201e , Ultra was returned, stating they have removed from the address to which I sent it.\nAs ibh film is not listed in two leading\ndirectories, we, would suggest you write again,\nsending the letter to the Postmaster, Toronto,\nand asking him to forward it to the right\n\u2022quarter,\nViews\nProm the\nNews Fronts\nBy J.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Oct. 30,1941\nMrs, T. E. Homersham won the Opening\ngame of the Sharp Cup competition In. Nelson\nLadies' Curling Club play from Miss Grace\nLaughton 13-4.\nRev. Foster Hilllard dedicated the newly\nrenovated Isolation hospital in Nelson before\na large attendance.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson Dally News, Oet, 30,1923\nA. Mcintosh, foreman, and William Greg-\nson, paymaster arid timekeeper, with a crew\nof 12 men will commence building in Nelson\na new C.P.R. steel barge' first to be built by\nthe Canadian Vickers, Ltd., on B. C, lakes.\nMayor and Mrs. J. A, McDonald hsjd as\ntheir guest their daughter, Miss Gertrude McDonald, B.A., who teaches at Castlegar.\n[They'll Do It Every Time\n*W**r*4m.tf*s*mtmm ,\n3y Jimrity Hatfo\nIT IS BEAUTIFUL-*J\nBUT F MAQ4ME\nWILL PARDOri ME~ 1\nrrs\/iRJURTeeM,\n\/WKXJ SHOULD]\nREALLyWSARA ,\nSIZE SIXTEEfJ-OfO,\nt)H-ANB6rfTEEH~)\nTHE 90 SHOE FITS\n!UWKE5>l*a4ME-\nCAKMt-L.GVJFOIWlA    *\nTrain Newsroom\nResembles Cage\nBy JOHNLEBlAnc v\nCanadian Press Staff Writer'\nABOARD ROYAL TOUR PRESS\nTRAIN, Oct. 28 (CP) \u2014 Life aboard\nthis fa'St-travellihg newsroom* has\nall the elements of a journalistic\nsquirrel cage.**       \u25a0\nIn some ,4000 miles of moving Just\nahead of or behind the royal train,\nanywhere from 80 to 150 persons\ncovering the tour\u2014the number varies from day to day\u2014are in a continuous race' to beat deadlines, train\nschedules\u2014and each other.\nBecause train schedules don't al*\nlow* it, the train correspondents\nrarely see the full royal program.\nHoweyer, in the case of an organs\nlzatlon such as the Canadian Press\nwhich has bureaux or correspondents at every point the royal couple\nstops, men are on the spot to record the royal doings all the way\nand provide a first-hand story it-\nter the train correspondent has left.\nOnce aboard the train and after\nthe immediate story has been cleaned up, the correspondents engage in\nthe daily wrestle with reams of\nmimeographed matter dealing with\ntomorrow's .program and its arrangements.\nThe two telegraph companies-\nCanadian National and Canadian\nPacific\u2014have set up a chain of extended cpaclty across the country\nfor handling the output from the\npress train and from other correspondents filing copy from the royal\nstops.\nsThe post office, too, 'operates In\nfull swing on the train. A miniature post-office Is set up in the baggage car and handles most of the\ntypes of business a regular one does.\nMail Is picked up from tha correspondents at a mall box in the\nwork car of the train. In turn, correspondence addressed to the train\nis routed by the post office department to the nearest stop and is delivered In remarkably short order.\nReduced Rates on\nSome Korean Mail\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP)-Speclal\nreduced rates will apply on certain\ncategories of mail for Canadian\nforces serving with Gen. Elsenhower's Western European army, the\nPost Office announced today.\nThe low rates on parcels and air\nmail letters will be effective for\nwhatever points in Europe Canadian Army and Air Force personnel\nmay be stationed.\nEffective immediately, parcels for\nthe Canadian forces in Europe will\nget a special concessionary postage\nrate of 13 cents a pound, up to a\nlimit of 10 pounds. They must be\naddressed with the number, rank,\nunit of the serviceman and sent to\na C.A.P.O, 8050 or 6051 care of the\npostmaster, Montreal,\nOrdinary parcel rates to Europe\nire worked on a complicated scale,\ndepending on the destination of the\nparcel, but generally work out at\nmuch more than 15 cents a pound.\nThe department also said that the\n10-cent Canadian air letter, also addressed to C.A.P.0.5050 or 5031, care\nof postmaster, Montreal, may be\nused on letters to any Canadian\nfortes on the continent of Europe.\nOtherwise the 15-cent Canadian air\nletter must be used.\nPart of Canada's 27th Brigade already is en route to Germany. An\nphonf wa cn6 \/\u2022\u25a0 a<.o,~,.-~ H*C*A.F. fighte* squadron to form\n\u2122m. TrJ*Z c\\^ZEW*y\\l110i *\"\u25a0**** **\" WUUeaVe\n,   . .     40 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Nelson.Dall'y News, Oct 30,1911\nNext Spring the Taylor Milling and Elevator Co. will build in Nelson the largest\nwheat elevator in B. O, as well as a gristmill\nfor grinding grain in transit. ,     ,\nL. Bureau, a Parisian banker, was so delighted with Nelson apples.that he ordered\nsome cases of Spitzenbergs frOm the Kootenay\nFruit Growers' Union to be shipped to friends\nih Paris. \u25a0**\n..\"   >  Your Horoscope\nThe year ahead may bring you a good\ndeal of gain\u2014some unexpected. Use your original ideas. A remarkably keen intellect Is,\npossible for the child born under these vibrations, and success seems assured.\nI It's Been Said\nExecutive ability is deciding quickly and\ngetting somebody else to do the work.\u2014J. G.\nPollard.\nM, ROBERTS, JR.\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nThe.Western, Allies, by seeking\nthe cooperation of Israel in the formation of a Middle East defence\nsystem, are Inviting her to-replace\nrecalcitrant Egypt In the original\nplan and thereby: Increase pressure\non all the Arab states.,\nThe policy of going ahead\/With\nthe plan without Arab support\nSeems at first glance,like trying to\nflOat in space. It needs a bridge\nbetween strategic military requirements and the Arab nationalism\nwhich must be dealt with in some\nmanned. Trying to defend those who\nspurn your efforts certainly offers\nsome complications. If the program\nremains on that plane, little can be\naccomplished.\nThere are oracks, however, in the\nArab wall of resistance, which has\nbeen erected primarily' against Bri-\ntain, but which also' involves the\nUnited States because of her position in the Arab-Israel dispute.\nSEEKS NEW LOAN\nEgypt, caught on the crest of a\nwave of defiance of Britain, rejected the proposal out of hand. Syria,\nalthough not formally approached,\nindicated similar feelings. But Jordan, which is British subsidized, has\nchosen this occasion to seek a new\nloan, and has the best army among\nthe Arabs. She seems likely to go\nalong in a\u00abplnch, *\nLebanon seems to lean toward\nthe West. Saudi Arabia is oil rich\nand somnolent at the moment. North\nAfrica is In virtual revolt.'against\nFrance. Iraq wants fewer, not more,\nties with Britain, and Iran is completely on the loose.\nThe Arabs are still technically at\nwar with Israel, A new defence setup aligning this most military of\nall the countries with the Western\nAllies would almost seem to be a\nfreeze-dut. Turkey, the United\nStates, Britain, France, Australia,\nNew Zealand, South Africa and Israel\u2014Indeed a strange lineup for\na so-called Middle East command.\nBut politics throughout the Arab\nworld are volatile. The winning side\nhas stron'giappeal. If the Allies display a firm determination to hold,\nthe Middle East, even if it takes on\nsome of the appearances of occupation, a lot of Arab leaders are going\nto consider the advantages of collaboration.\nKnight Tells Commons . . .\nDuty Removal Would\nEncourage Reading\ni\/5nAJX*i \u00bb*'\u00bb.,WW.-\u00ab\u00bb. ft. in the national interest for the fed-\n!\u00ab21 .-\u25a0^\u25a0'E\"~8\"k*t0t?n) M,d 1rW Government to proceed now to\nand that there should be some ai\ntree of equalization of educations\nopportunity to all Canadian chll\ndren.\n' \"This Implies In no way . r. an;\ninterference with the jurlsdictloi\nover* the education of its youtl\nwhich each province enjoys\"\ntoday In the Commons the Gov.\n\u2014.  ... \u2014 w.  \u00bb,,\u201e uwv. ucviBu me uesi momoa to subsidize\nernment'ehould encourage serious general and high aohool education\nZTJ'JtT*^ r,mov,n\u00bb mm*te**\u00ab-. ** mm. of cdu\nduties ori good books.\nSpeaking during resumed debate\non the speech from the throne, the\n39-year-old former Saskatoon sohool\nteacher said the Government should\nstart on establishment of a national\nlibrary. He also suggested an extension of Federal aid to education.\nMr. Knight said taxei and duties\nnow pushed the cost of good books\nbeyond the reach of tha average\nCanadian. University students also\ncould HI afford to pay the Imposts\non necessary reference books.\nHe referred to the report of the\nMassey Commission on Arts, Letters\nand Science and congratulated the\nGovernment for having made a\ngrant of $7,000,000 to Canadian universities. This was in line with a\nrecommendation of the Commission.\nNATIONAL CONCERN \u25a0 '\nThe grant, an acknowledgement\nof the fact that the quality of education is a national concern, would\nhelp to provide better teachers fon\nthe junior schools where the bulk\nof Canadians receive their education.\nHe added;\n\"It is my opinion that lt would be\nToday's Bible Thought\nThat Is a challenge that eternity\noannot exhaust We can make progress every day,\u2014Be ye therefore\nperfect, even as your Father which\nis in heaven is perfect.\u2014Matt. 3:43.\n(hnt LWaL\nit- IS\n. Maybe the Lord loves people\nmore than He loves His other creatures. The boy that parents'love\nmost is the ornery one that causes\n'em the most worry.\nNudists Say Suits\nContaminate Water..\nLONDON, Oct 29 (AP) \u2014 United\nBritish nudists today laid down the\nbare outlines of a five-year plan to\nreplace the swim suit with the\nbirthday suit.   -\nTheir final objective Is legal nudity on the open seaside,\nAs a start, the British sun bathing\nassociation\u201430,000 strong\u2014will seek\na ban on-the use of suits in any public swimming pool in the United\nKingdom. The stated reason; such\ngarb contaminates the water.\nThe 3000 delegates to the association's annual convention here agree\nto demand a weekly nudist night at\nevery pool as an opening wedge In\ntheir campaign,\nMost of the pools\u2014known here as\n\"public beths\"\u2014i. a mn 1>; town\nand county councils,\nThe nudist delegates also voted\ntoi\n1. Form a nudist chapter in every\ncounty of the British Isles.\n2, Launch a pressure campaign\nagainst police seizure ot nudist magazines on obscenity grounds.\nThe weather today was somewhat\nchilly and the delegates came fully\nclad. ,*.,\u2022;.-:\"\nEach was Identified by a badge\nconsisting of a metal bear (bare,\nget. It?).inscribed with the motto\n\"Exposure With Composure.\"\ndevise the best method to subsidize\ncation might be Improved generally\nHEKIN LEG PAIN!\nAre your leg patna like e knife drtvta\nthrough tho fle\u00abh?*Do they make It han\nfor you to straighten your leg? Thousand\nrecommend Templeton'a T-R-C's fo\nquick relief of piercing, stabbing Sdatl\n  pain. You too, can get relief wlthT-R-C'f\nPHONE   144  FOB  CLASSIFIED   Mc, *U5 at drug counters...'        Mil\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nHearing Aid Authority\nTo Hold Free Clinic Today;\nand Wednesday\nOCTOBER 30-31\nat\nFor 20 years MR. E.\nC. G 6 R LI N G has\nhelped thousands to\nhear again. He Is a\nwell known, highly\ntrained specialist In\nfitting difficult cases.\nHUME HOTEL\nNELSON, B.C.\n9 a.m. \u2014 \u00ab p.m.\nYou are cordially invited\nTo come In and discuss\nYour hearing problems.\nNo cost! No obligation! Find out\nhow you ean hear without a\nreceiver button in the ear.   .\nNo One Need Know You're\nHard of Hearing\nWith the New\nPHANTOMOLD\nTrade in your present hearing aid on a new BELTONE.\nTerms Can Be Arranged.\nDON'T MISS THIS OPPORTUNITY\n* ' r\u00b0 \u00bb2?\u00bb,Xl?2t your, heaHn9 loss is ar|d what the\nBELTONE can do to help you hear again.\nBELTONE SELECTOMETER\nTolls which one of 144 different fittings you need.\nu. SEE THE FAMOUS\nNdW Tiny\nFREE\nV~ OMF.IIMir UI\n\"0H0.PAC\nONE-UNIT HEARING AID\nVoluoble Booklaf on Hew te Ovanome Dsolnon, for all who nil.\n\"\/ Get Along Fine\nOn My Party Line*,.\nBY SPACIIVG\n* M\u00a5 CALLS\"\nWhen! you have a number of calk to mate it's thoughtful\nto leave a good break, between each one. That way, others\non the party line can complete their calls and leave you free\nfrom Interruptions. Other little courtesies like hanging up\ngently when the line is In use . . . keeping calls reasonably\nshort . ... and releasing the line quickly in an emergency,\ngo a long| way towards helping everyone enjoy smoother\nparty line service.\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE COMPANY\n '\n^^^;\nO\/LifuL'\nSiPORTSJM-\nwith Gerry Reynolds '.'\".''.'\u25a0\n\u25a0 ,., By, all odds,' this Western International Hoekey League\nrace should be just a formality when you consider that all\nfour teams were included in the playoff* picture before the\nboys laced up a skate this Fall*\nBut if the regular season play\nstrikes a lot of fans as being merely a long warm-up for a few hectic weeks of playoffs, then there\n'ore scores of players who don't\nseem to realize it. '\nThe    season    is  scarcely  two\nweeks old yet the fans have already   been   treated   to   several\novertime games and a mldseason\npace that promises a better-than-\never brand of hockey for the entire* season.\n. ! Undoubtedly the  highlight of\nthe   young   season to date was\ntrail's terrific comebaok against\nNew faces around the circuit this\nyear remind us that, quite a few\nfamiliars of last year are doing their\npiickchaslng elsewhere or else have\nhung up the blades.\nFred Hergert of the Leafs and\nSandy Sanderson of Kimberley fall\ninto the latter category .. . Fred\nis back at his railroad job in Cal-\ngarj> . .'.-Apparently out of hockey\nare ex-Leafs Roy Allen and Jack\n8teele . .. Roy now lives in Creston and is apparently restricting\nhis services to coaching in the Creston Valley Hockey Association,\nDon Haley is playing with New\nKamloops, Down 6-1 at the end[*York   Rovers   this   season   while\nof the second, the Smokies got\nup off the floor to score four unanswered goals In the third and\ncapped it off with three* more In\nthe overtime to steal It 8-5,\nEddie Wares' Maple Leafs have |\nalso stamped themselves   as   just\nabout   the   scrappiest   outfit   on\nblades this season. Hampered by\nInjuries . and   job   committments\nthat have kept four  to  five key\nplayers out of the lineup from the\nstart,    the    undermanned    green-\nshirts   have   so far made up in\nhustle and the old college try what\nthey lack in depth. They outplayed\nKamloops by a wide margin here\nlast week only to lose it on lack\nof finish and a couple of bad breaks\naround the net Saturday night, lt\nwas large gobs of figh't that carried\nthe boys to victory over the \u25a0 B.C.\nchampion Nanaimo Clippers.\nIt's an easy thing for coaches and\nmanagement to take an attitude of\ndisconcern over whether or not the\nteam is playing hockey in October\nor even January, just so long as\nthey're in high gear by March.\nFortunately, most teams realize\nthat if losses are regarded lightly\nIt soon shows up at the gate and\nthat, of course, is a solar plexus\npunch to team operation in these\nhighly -commercialized sporting\ndsiys.     :* ' -,\nNelson fans have shown a remarkable loyalty to a losing team in\nIbast seasons and will continue to\nsupport them just as long as the\nboys show a will to win. If the\nearly-season promise is fulfilled,\nthere won't be many empty seats at\nthe Arena this Winter.\nTINY TOTS\nSKATING\n$1.00 Season Ticket\n2.30 \u2014 4.00 p.m.\nCHILDREN\n4.08 \u2014 6.00 p.m.\nAdmission 10*\nRed Matthews, Leaf centre of last\nyear, is playing with Nottingham\nPanthers in the English League as\nare Ray McNIven and Doug Mo-\nDonald of the 1950-61 Dynamiters.\nOut of the W.I.L. but still very\nmuch in B.C. are Bill Hryciuk who\nis back With Kamloops Elks after\na season with the Dynamiters . . .\nDanny McDougald to Nanaimo\nClippers from the Smoke Eaters\nalong with Bill Snider of the Spokane Flyers . . . Incidentally, McDougald was reported seeking a\nspot with Edmonton Mercurys,\nworld amateur champs,two years\nago, who will return to Europe this\nyear to defend the title retained\nlast Winter by Lethbridge Maple\nLeafs.\nJ0TTING8 .. . Nelson Pro-Rec\ninstructor Harry Kelly came tip\nwith a suggestion the other day\nwhich might help boost district\nPro-Rec back to the high standards\nof a few years ago. He would like\nto see a year-end display in Nelson\nwhich would have classes from\nother Kootenay centres combining\nwith the Nelson group. Uniform\ntraining exercises for all classes\ncould be arranged, he believes,\nwhich would make possible a large\ndisplay under one instructor\nUnlike Trail's reaction to the 'no\nsmoking' edict at Cominco Arena,\nNelson patrons are co-operating\nwholeheartedly at the Civic Centre,\nManager Jack Morgan reports.\nSurprisingly enough, the ladles\nhave disregarded the rule more\nthan tne men but even at that the\ncooperation is practically 100 per\ncent .... Red .Mountain, skiing\nhotbed in the Kootenays, can take\na double bow for this year having\ntwo alumni named to the Canadian\nOlympic Ski Team. Although from\nBanff, team member Gordie Mor*\nrison learned to ski on the Red\nslopes and still takes in every big\nmeet there. .Trail's George Merry\nwas named to the team as spare. A\npromising Rossland product, young\nGene Dyson, was also in the running for a team spot, just missing\nby a rating or two.\nLeaf s Edge Penticton\n'\\M\nBritain in I960 had 124,455 \"tern*\nporary\" dwellings, most of them of\nthe pre-fabricated type;\nHarwoodl Rye\nWt advertisement Is hot publishes et displayed by the Liquor Control\n\u25a0: '**:.' ' *   Bond or by the Government <J British Columbia.\nThe most beautiful. Tow-cost\n;    asbestos shingle\nJohns-Manville\n\"has ever developed!;'\nDurabestos\nWhat do you consider of first\nimportance in a roof? Weather\nprotection? Fire safety?\nBeauty? Permanence? If you\ninsist on allot these qualities\nyou will wisely choose Johns.\nManville Durabestos Roof\nShingles.\nJ-M Durabestos Roof Shingles\nare made of asbestos and cement. They are completely\nweatherproof; they can't burn,\nrot or wear out; rigid, they\nwon't curl in high winds.\nAnd with their distinctive\ngraining, staggered butt lines\nand appealing colours, they\nbecome truly a roof of rare\nbeauty and \"a joy forever\".\nREE I For literature on Durabestos Shingles, see your J-M\ndealer  or  write  Canadian\nJohns-Manville, Dept N-13,\nTJCII 199 Bay St, Toronto.\nJohns-Manville Bnnninsnff**1\u2122^\nArctic Insulating & Roofing Ltd.\nAPPROVED APPUCAT0R8 FOR THE  KOOTENAYS\nPHONE 955 NELSON, B.C.\nNelson Machinery Co. Ltd.\n214 HALL. 8T. PHONE 18 NELSON, B.C.\n\\\nNotch 2nd Straight\nRood Vfetoiy,\nStopping Vs 3-1\nPENTICTON; B.C., Oct 29 (CP)\n\u2014 Eddie  Wares'   Nelson   Maple\nLeafs chalked up a 8-1 victory\nover youthful, Penticton tonight\nIn an Inter-league;game here. It\nwas Nelson's second \"win In three\nstarts during\u2014their ourrent road\ntrip.\nThe visitors took a 1-0 lead in.|\nthe first period when Smith scored\nfrom Appleton,\nWillie Schmidt, the sparkplug ex*\nPacific Coast pro, tied the count at\nthe 15:20 mark of the second period\nwhen he charged through the Nelson defence and scored unassisted.\nSeveryn put the Leafs out in front\nwhen he broke away and pushed it\nby McLelland In the Penticton net\nin the third period.\nWith a minute and a half to go a\nsix-man attack backfired on Penticton and Appleton flipped the\npuck into the open net from just\ninside the blue line. i\nNelson moves on to Vernon tonight for a game with the Canadians,\nLineups:        *\nNelson \u2014 Goal, Rodzinyak; defence, Barefoot, Gare, Gilhooly, Appleton; forwards, Maglio, Harms,\nSeveryn, Smith, McClenaghan, R,\nKoehle, Pasquolatto,* Drobney,* Crothers..'     .\"..\" .\"\".VA..'\nPenticton\u2014Goal, McLelland; defence, Johnson, Montgomery,* Hanna, Gilmore, Rucks; forwards, Kil-\nburn, Krowchuk, Gibson, Dumond,\nDavidson, Schmidt, Robson.\nSUMMARY i\nFirst period \u2014 1. Nelson, Smith\n(Appleton) 6:29.\nPenalties\u2014Barefoot, Dorbney, Mc\nClenaghan, Gare, Hanna, Montgomery,\n\u2022 Second period \u2014 -1 Penticton,\nSchmidt, 15:20. '\nPenalties\u2014Appleton, Harms, Gare,\nSmith (2), Davidson (2), Gibson,\nliilburn.\nThird period\u2014S. Nelson, Severyn,\n8:59; 4. Nelson, Appletoh (Crothers)\n19:14.'\nPenalties\u2014Gare, Johnson (2)* and\nSchmidt\nHow They\nStand\nWESTERN INTERNATIONAL    '\nP WL D F A Pet,\nTrail    8   8   0   0 42 16 1,000\nSpokane ......   7  4   3  0 33 28   .571\nNelson    8   3  5   0 23 28   .375\nKimberley .. 5 0 5' 0 12 38 .000\nPACIFIC COAST\nP W L D F A Pt.\nNanaimo   I  4   1  Ut U'1\nKerrlsdale      S   1   4  0 14 28   2\nOKANAGAN\nP WL DF APt.\nKamloops    T   S   S   030 23 10\nPenticton .'.'\u201e.' 5  3   2  0 20 22  6\nVernon   5  2  3  0 18 19  4\nKelowna    <   2  3  0 15 17   4\n(Includes inter-league games)\nLast'night's scores:\nNanaimo 1, Kerrisdale i X\nNelson 3, Penticton 1     '\nMrs. L. Markin\nHeads Castlegar\nBadminton Club\n' CASTLEGAR, B.C., Oct, 20-Mrs.\nL, Markin was elected President of\nthe Castlegar Badminton Club for\nthe 1951-52 season at a .reorganization meeting here.\nOthers named to the new slate\nwere William Kerraiff, Vice-President; Miss VI Miros, Secretary; E.\nEniiis, R, Hardy and Mrs. J, Co\"uch,\ndirectors. Mr. Kerraiff will 'represent the club for Trail and district\nmeetings. ...\nSeason play will get under way\nTuesday evening in the new high\nschool auditorium where three\ncourts will be available. Last season,\nmembers had to content themselves\nwith one while playing* In the Coronation Hall,\nThe club Is looking forward to a\nbig season and hope for a doubled\nmembership with the improved facilities. '\nSpokane Plans\nExtra Jaunt\nThrough Okanagan\nKELOWNA, B.C., Oct. 29 (CP) \u2014\nAn additional game Involving the\nSpokane Flyers of the Western International Hockey League and all\nfour, clubs of the Okanagan Senior\nAmateur Hockey League has been\napproved, it was announced tonight.\nSpokane now will make two appearances in each of the ttg.A.H.L.\ncentres instead of. one as contained\nin the original schedule.\nDates for the Flyers' additional\ngames are, at Penticton,' Nov; 8; at\nKamloops, Nov. 7; at Vernon, Feb.\n7, and atjKelowna, Feb. 8.        '.\nIsraeli Skiers May\nEnter '52 Olympics\nTEL AVIV, Israel, Oct. 29 (AP)\u2014\nIsrael sports leaders have taken an\nimportant'step to pave the way for\nthe participation of a ski team In\nthe 1952 Olympic Games at Oslo,\nNorway.N ' \u25a0.'\nThe two big local sports'organizations, Maccabi, which is. ndh-parti-\nsan, and Hapoel, of the -Socialist\nSports Workers Movements, have\nagreed to form a national Olympic\nsub-committee to field a Joint application for the Oslo games.\nMost of Israel's top skiers are immigrants from Canada, Switzerland,\nAustria, Czechoslovakia and Germany.\nManchester, 35 miles from the sea,\nIs the fourth largest port In Britain,\nbecause of the Manchester Ship\nCanal.\nLdTSOFTIME\nBy Alan Mover\n:,,...\u25a0 \u25a0   itm\nMAUt?g\u00a3lt'ft\nconnouyX\n- W y\u00a3\/i\/p-\nOLD WINNER.. OF\nTHE M.S. WOMEN'S   -\u00ab,\nNAT\/ONAL SIH6LES T\/TLE,\nCAN LOOK     *\u2014*    \u2014 '\nFORWARD\nIpALONS\ncareer:\nAT THE\nrem*'\n\u25a0Sip's even\n7?)OU6\/L\nSUB'S SINCE\nREACHED\nA THE\nJPIAANCEP\nAseopiTt\nRichard One Short of 300 . . .\nCanyens Whip Rangers 64\nWings, Leafs Play 2<2 Tie\nBy The Canadian Press\nWith Canada's royal visitors as\nspectators,    Montreal    Canadiens\ntroiinced New York Rangers 6-1\nat Montreal Monday night while\nDetroit Red Wings and Toronto\nMaple Leafs played to a 2-2 tie\nIn Detroit.\nPrincess   Elizabeth   and   Prince\nPhilip followed the play at Montreal\nForum with keen interest\/Floyd\nCurry highlighted the contest with\na burst of, three goals in the'second\nperiod.'*.\nMaurice Richard fired a pair for\nhimself, bringing his season total\nto seven and* his National Hockey\nLeague service total to 299.. ,\nThe royal couple, along with 14,-\n048 customers, appeared to enjoy\nthe game immensely, particularly\nPhilip who applauded as the goals\nwere scored.\nKen Mosdell accounted for Canadiens''first goal; It came 15 seconds\nbefore the first period ended and\nerased the one-goal lead set up earlier by Reggie Sinclair * of the\nRangers. \u2022   ,, '\nThe game dragged frequently but\nthe * tat surplus of Montreal goals\nkept the crowd worked up with excitement, ',', .\nPrincess Elizabeth followed play\nIntently but Philip was more demonstrative.   He   seemed    highly\namused when Don Raleigh of the\nRangers was sent tumbling almost\nover the boards by Ross Lowe,\nand   again   when   Richard 'and\nSteve Kraftcheck almost came' to\nblows Just before the game ended.\nCurry's  stunt  of  scoring three\ngoals in one period wAsn't a record.\nThe feat was accomplished a number Df times last year, including\nthree times by the Canadiens.\nThe Rocket was one of the Canadiens scoring three goals in a period\nlast season.\nCurry's. first goal came when he\ntipped in Mosdell's shot. His second, 10 minutes later, followed another Mosdell shot which struck defenceman Jack Evans. Curry was\ntrailing on the.play and had a wide-\nopen short shot. Late in the period\nhe got' his third. The puck was deflected past goalie Chuck Rayner\nby Kraftcheck's stick.\nRichard's first goal at 13:38 of the\nlast period was an easy shove-in\nafter Lach's passout from the\nboards. In the final minute he took\nanother Lach passout and back*\nj handed the puck past Rayner.\n' -Max Bentley's goal with eight\nminutes left brought Toronto their\ntie with the first-place Red Wings\n'before 12,217 fans,\nllie deadlock caused the Wings\nto lose one point of their lead. The\nsecond-place Montreal Canadiens\nclimbed* within two points of them\nby their victory.\nThe \"tie snapped Detroit's four^\ngame winning streak, and came\nfrom the only club which has beaten\nthe'Wings in their seven starts'this\nseason. Toronto was a 3-2 victor\nhere two weeks ago.\n\u2022 Th\u00a3 Leafs took a 1-0 lead early\nIn the second period on Jim Thomson's long try which was deflected\nin by Sid Smith.\nThe Wings evened it three minutes later when Tony Leswick outfought goalie Al Rollins for Alex\nDel Vecohio's rebound, poking the\npuck home' from close range. Later\nin the stanza Del Vecchio set up\nGlen Skov at the corner of the net\nwith a perfect pass, Swov converting it for a 2-1 lead.\nBentley's equalizer also was a\ndeflection goal. Bill Juzda made the\nshot from near the blue line, Bentley turning it over Terry Sawchuk's\nshoulder. . \u25a0\nThe\nScoreboard\nMARITIME MAJOR    '\nSydney 6, Halifax 3\nGlace Bay 0, Saint John 2\nWESTERN CANADA JUNIOR\nRegina 5, Calgary 2\nLethbridge 11, Moose Jaw 4\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nBrandon 5, St. Boniface 4\nKimberley Pilot Resigns\nRALPH REDDING\nNew Dynamiter Pilot\nRalph Redding\nSucceeds Knowles\nKIMBERLEY, B. C\u201e Oct 29 \u2014\nRoss Knowles has resigned as\ncoach of the Kimberley Dynamiters, club officials announced here\ntoday. He will be succeeded by\nRalph Redding.\nKnowles, who came to the club\nthis season from Fort William, resigned his post Sunday evening after a disappointing Western International League start that saw the\nDynamiters drop their first five outings.\nRedding, who had been mooted\nearlier this season as successor to\nLyall Swaney, is no stranger to\nKootenay sports fans, having been\nconnected with the Dynamiters both\nas a player and coach fqr several\nyears.  \u2022\nThe club also announced the signing of Louie Seoco, Trail' Smoke\nEater of last season, in a move to\nstrengthen the team,   j\nU.S. HUNTERS GET MOOSE, RAM,\nGRIZZLY, 2 EJ.K NEAR FT. STEELE\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 29 \u2014\nMost spectacular hunting bag of\nthe big game season for this area*\nhas been brought out of the Coyote\nCreek area between White Swan\nand Fish Lakes Northeast of Fort\nSteele after a 16-day hunt. Hunters\nwere Mr. and Mrs. LaBoyteaux and\nMr, and Mrs.. Connolly of Walnut\nCreek, Calif. The five-man pack\nand guide crew was headed by Jimmy White of Fort Steele.\nTrophies brought out were'a bull\nmoose, a ram, a grizzly, and two\nelk. The party also reported seeing\naround a hundred head of elk, 25,\nsheep, ten moose and a half dozen\nother grizzlies.      ,\nWillie Good on\nRBIsBut\nFlunks Ps and Qs\nBIRMINGHAM Ala., Oct.' 29\n(AP)\u2014Willie, Mays, Negro cen-\ntrefielder for the New York\nGiants, probably won't be going\ninto uniform after all. ,\n. His draft board meets tomorrow to consider the result of his\npre-induction examination here\nlast week. An authoritative source\nwho could not be quoted by\nname, said Willie probably would\nbe classified 4-F.\n. ThiS source says Mays, a 20-\nyear-old high school graduate,\nfailed to pass his aptitude test\nMeeker Scores\nIn Commons\nSpeech Debuf\nOTTAWA, Oct 29 (CP) - Howie\nMeeker, a man more at home on a\nhockey link than behind a desk\nin-parliament, today made his maiden speech in the Commons and\nwas given a round of applause by\nhis colleagues.\nHe lost little time in swinging to;\nthe attack. He criticized the government's policies with respect to\npensions for veterans and the cost\nof living.     \u25a0 *\nThe 26-year-old rlghtwinger with\nToronto Leafs in the N.H.L., was elected June 25 as Progressive Conservative member for the Ontario\nconstituency of Waterloo South.\nMr. Meeker, wounded i nthe second world wat, said that if the session ends without some increase in\npensions for veterans, all members\nwill be charged with turning their\nbacks on the, veterans. The veterans\nwere not asking for anything they\ndid not deserve.  ..' .       '** 1\nHe had thought, he said, that\nthe National Hockey League had\nthe best'pension system In, Canada. But his mind was hcanged after, he came to parliament He\nhad found out that a Judge who\nmakes about $9000 a year ean retire on a pension of an equal\namount without contributing any-1\nthing.\nWhile the government did that\nfor judges, it treated veterans as\npoor relations.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30,1951 \u2014 9\n18 *Poiinder Brings\nHis Season to End\n,   .      By SPORTSMAN\n\"I'm not going fishing any more\nthis season,\" Des Littlewood of Nelson said with a tone of finality Sunday night.\nThe 18-pound Kamloops he had\nrelieved Kootenay Lake of earlier\nin the day was, in his opinion,\nreason enough for \"resting on my\nlaurels.\" '.\nDCs was trolling with E. W. Ko-\npecklln the latter's boat, about a\nquarter of a .mile from the dolphin\nwhen his line streaked Out. The\nKamloops employed the fairly common tactic of heading straight for\nthe boat and then straight down,\nbut in 15 minutes angler Littlewood,,\nwho's a veteran of Coast waters,'\nhad'his prize tamed.\n\"It sure looked good coming Into\nthe boat,\" he said enthusiastically.\nHe waa using 25-pound test line\nslnd 20-pound test leader, with a\nplug,\nC. A, Brady of Procter Slapped\nthe big one on the scales, and measuring tape went to 36 inches in\nlength and 10 in depth.\nThe two lost a cpuple ot others,\nso from the looks of things, Sun-.\nday was a pretty decent day on\nthe lake.\nGet Quick, Easy\nShaves Every Time With\nStrikes n Spares\nMIXED COMMERCIAL\n(Thursday)\nStan Grill'paced the field last\nweek with a big 765 aggregate while\nLes Hood copped high single honors\nwith 202. May Stoutenberg was best\nfor the ladies with a 274 single and\n658 aggregate.\nOther top - aggregates were Les\nHood 7^, Harry Kennell 693, Bill\nMcCubbin 670, Lou Gagnon 660, Al.\nHerchuk 642, Jean Koehle 642, Betty\nApostoliuk 641, Bill Day 640, Bill\nKlochek 634, Archie Macrone 624,\nBob Wright 603 and Jo Day 600.\n..Team highs were' registered by\nSeven Up with a 1040 single and\nWright with a 2971 aggregate.\nSad Sacs took over top spot in the\nteam standings with 24 points. New\nGrand is second with 23 and Palm\nthird with 20,\nMIXED COMMERCIAL\n(Friday)\nDoug Hall took all the individual\nhonors last week with a 312 single\nand 751 aggregate while Ev Macrae\nfollowed closely with a 295 single\nand 743 aggregate to pace the ladies.\nOthpr ton aggregates went to Carl\nLocatelli 747, Buzz Ball 683, and\nWalter Clarkson 645.\nTeam highs went to Orange with\na 3017 aggregate and Superior with\na 1060 single.\nGOVERNMENT LEAGUE\n, Ray Gill's 645 was good for high\naggregate last, week with Harry\nForse tallying the niBh single with\n254, For the ladies it was May Year-\ndy with 247 and Flo Gill with' 550.\nFlying Eagles and Chipmunks are\ntied for top place in the standings\nwith 16 points, followed by the\nEager Beavers with 14.\n\u2022 Shaving's a, breeze, quick, easy\nand refreshing with today's super-,\n. keen Gillette Blue Blades, Precision-made for your Gillette Razor\n\u2014double-edged foreconomy\u2014shey\nlastfarlongerthan ordinary blades.\nFor extra convenience buy them\nin the handy Gillette pispenscr.\nGHAHOB8LAOES\nG\/usrrs\nDispense*,\nour corns\nVSiVBlADB.\nMSOES    .\nou>6cade\\\n20  GILLETTE  BLUE BLADES\nIN DISPENSER WITH\nUSED-BLADE COMPARTMENT\n-Blud*;   Conventional   Dispenser 5(K\nBroadstalrs, seaside resort in\nKent, England, is close to the'spot\nwhere the Danes first landed in\ntheir invasion of 449 A.D.\nm\nMOVING\nIQte    FROM\nHouse to House?\nTown to Town?\nProvince to Province?\nCall ARROW VAN & STORAGE LTD.\nto handle your moves.\nA R R O W, with their experienced\nemployees, and modern, clean vans,\nhave established a very popular\nreputation across the continent.\nWhen it's time to move, let your first\nthought be ARROW VAN & STORAGE\nLTD.\nPHONE\n1106\nARROW\n212 STANLEY ST.\nVan & Storage Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nNew-Engine Performance\nwith\nGEMitff\nFACTORY REBUILT\nCYLINDER\nASSEMBLIES\nRestore original pep ;;; power: 11\nand operating economy to your car or\ntruck with a Genuine Ford Rebuilt\nCylinder Assembly ... rebuilt in the\nfactory to exacting specifications I\nNEW-ENGINE GUARANTEE '   ,\nmonciRcu\n1100 DEALERS FROM\nCOAST TO COAST\nfllCRCURY\n WHEN AH riRES, START\nA-MMNINVvmiAH.\nFIRES A6IN-SADI*\nSTARTS A-RUNNINVT*\nTH'ONE SHE KETCHES\nWILLEEHERH'iS&WD.\n-AND SO SADIE CAUGHT A\nHUSBAND. THE OTHER SPINSTERS\nGOT TOE IDEA-AND MADE \"SADIE\nHAWKINS MY\"AN ANNUAL AFFAIR.\nWHUTISVORE )  IT IS AS\nPREDICK-SWUM <  FQULOWS-\nMAMMOSE?     '\nAnD-EVBPW VBAR-OU*\nMAMMOSE MAXES HIS\nPREDICTION 1t> DOGPATCHlS\n. LEADING BACHELOR     .\nwaass _\np}&m\n\u2014-S&SmLS''\n\/teiNtiTHEy&WGoaD&nEP\/iaDN-T\n[HeADMSfoeH count on mr\/mmty\nSWEET OP ->OU, adm the SAME\nDASWOOD wi\u00ab\u00a3V TOR tie.\nMV UMBRELLA\/\nYOU BORROWED\nrr hwmme\nLAST SUMMER\nFOR BEING NICE >*\nt io that euy ^jjl\nill\nfirf^jHS\nPw\ni\n1$\nmm\nV   10-80\nOROT THIS SPRAy.' NOZZLE^ \"\nMUST BE PLLK3SED UP\/>^ \u2022\n\"y\u2122^\"\nm*tmKffMt**m*aa 3\n? JUSTUS ITHOU3HT, THE 5\nNOZZLfe VHV8 ON TOO TK9HT\/\ny \",,'*\u2022\nynwiriiy^i)iw>i\n\/\"*\u2022\nVI.\nU Hw\u00ab>*\nJIS6S-ARE VOU SURE\nVOU C4NT COME TO\nDINTy'S CLAMBAKE?\nTHE BUS IS LEAVING\nIN PIVE MINUTES!\nr-\\\nX\nTO LIKE 10*\nJERW-BUT\nMAGSIE\nORDERED\nME TO\nSPB*>THE\nTJAVAT\nHOME!\n_i_\nWEU.-THE B0H3 ARE\nON THEIR WAV-A9 L0N3\nAS I HAVE TO STAY HOME\nI MIGHT AS WELL REAOA\nBOOK-1 HEAR THIS ONE\n>\u00bb-, leveweooo-. *\ncs>\nSOI VOU'RE THE ONE WHO\nHAS MV BOOK! I'VE BEEN\nLOOKING AU. (VER FOR\ntrl GIVE ME THAT BOOK\nAND SET OUT OP THIS\nHOUSE BEROREI LOSE My\nTEMPBRI\nKIDNAPPED on the streets of\nLondon, Ont, Or. Olive Stewart\nwas forced to drive for 50 miles\nbefore she was released. A psychiatrist, Dr. Stewart said she\nused all her knowledge to talk the\ntwo men Into releasing her.\n..\u2014Central Press Canadian\nHAROLD O'CONNOR of Canning, Ont, answered the. door to\nfind Dr. Stewart telling her story\nof abduetlon and asking to telephone police. Soon 200 armed police were on the trail, but found\nonly the car which, the kidnappers abandoned a few miles away.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nTHE LETTERS \"U.N.\" glowing on the facade of the United Nations\nbuilding In New York were only part of the world-wide celebration\nof the United Nations' sixth birthday. Ceremonies of various kinds,\nwith high Government officials attending, took plaoe all over the\nworld, Including many nations who are not members of the world\nbody.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nALTHOUGH U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT hes clamped strict\nsecrecy on the luncheon conference between President Truman and\nIran's Premier Mossadegh, right, It Is believed Truman stressed the\nU.8.'s qverrhflng desire to start vitally needed oil flowing once more\nfrom Iran to the West, Later, Secretary of State Acheson conferred\ntwo and a half hours with the Iranian leader. Prospects for an.agree-\nment with Iran to resume talks with Britain were boosted somewhat\nby an announcement that Iran's chclef oil expert, Kazem Hassibi,\nhad been summoned from Iran to ativlse Mossadegh,\u2014Central Press\nCanadian. \".'*'.'\nDAILY CftO'SSWORD'\nACTOS8      5. Stops over ABeoosM\nhif*\"0      \u00ab\u2022*\u25a0*\u00bb' \u2022\"\u00bb\u00ab\nCMerganaer       crystal 23.U.&\n\u00ab.N\u00abeW<*       T.Oneofthe president\nataxfSt Great M. Man'a name\ngtatt -   Lakes 25. American\n\u00bb.Aim\u00ab6u        8. Wriggled Indian\neituary (colloq.) 27. Bank\nll.Ahen ll.Genuaof employee\n12. Frosting wild cattle 28. Open (poet.)\n14. Gold (Her.)  13. Cog wheels 28. North Amis. Declare        15. Mature erica (abbr.)\n17. Method of $1. Valley of\nlearning the moon\n18. Sleeveless 32, Banishment'\ngarment S3. Performed\n(Arab.) 35. Cries,\n19. Depart aa sheep\n10. Stray\n20. Music note !\n21. Hautboys\n22. Varying\nweight\n(India)\n23.Wheaten\nflour\n25. Soapy\nwater\n26. Perish\n27. Of tho\ncharacter\nofeound\nSO. Part of\n\"tobe*\n8L Packed\nagain\n34. City (Ala.)\n38. Greek\nletter\nST. Booth\n38. Quick\n41. Robust  '\n42. Elliptical\n43. River*\n(Befe.)\n44. Mark on\nakin\nDOWN\n1. Garment\n2. Concealed\n3. Old times\n4,Pcriodof\nUme\nHBEIH   BHIBB\nasss uaraa\nXHH   HtiHSks'-V\nHHao Hiaa His\n30\nia   lviziui   riEHlii\njnaasEH raan\nsek Biaa HI\n\u2022ihdhh aHESt\nHHfdH   EiaHQ\nHUHH   fcJUQD\nYwltrdtf. tinei\n38. Petty\nquarrel *\n39. Polynesian\ndrink\n40. Chum\n2?\n17    18    19\n-L\n1\n10*30\nDAILY CBWIOQUOIE-Here's boat to work It:\nAX YDLBAAXR\nIllONOPELlOW\nOne letter simply elands for another. \u00bb this example A n vied\ntor the three Va. X for the two O'e, rate. Single letters, apoa-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the word* an all hint*.\nBach day the code letters are different'\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nNPNt! OBX FONITtTA TJBW O 8 W.\nO\/ONQ PS TO' BT DPVKLXID, N I A\nQONQ     LBMP     BT     XOSW! \u2014 DBDU.\nYeataroay* Cryptoquato: ART TliOU OFSlCBRf OR ART\nTHOU BASE.  COMMON AND POPULAR 7-SHAKESPEARE.\nALTHOUGH PRINCESS ELIZABETH has gently discouraged\ncurtseying at most receptions, she will get the full treatment at the\nCanadian Embassy reception when the Royal couple visits Washington. Above, Capt. Frederick N, Cook, Australian Naval attache,\n-watches his wife, Bettle, practise a graceful ourtsey at their Chevy\nChase home.*-The Cooks will represent Australia at the reception.\n' \u2014Central Press Canadian\nREFRESHED after their three-day holiday, Princess Elizabeth\nand the puke of Edinburgh are re-crossing the Prairies en route to\nWashington on Nov. 1, Here they are at New Westminster, B.C., with\nMayor Jackson who met them at the station.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nTUESDAY, OCT. 30, 1951\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of Morn\n7:15\u2014Molson Stadium\n8:30\u2014News\nB:40\u2014Sports News\n8:45\u2014Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00\u2014News *\n9:01\u2014Western Tune Show\n9:30\u2014Concert Hour\n0:00\u2014News\n0:01\u2014Morning Devotions\n0:15\u2014Tel Oliver Show\n0:45\u2014Invltatlon'to the Waltz\n1:00\u2014News\n1:05\u2014Piano Prelude',\n1:10\u2014Dorothy Douglas   ..*\n1:15\u2014For You, Madame     **:S\n1:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n1:45\u2014Notice Board\n2:00\u2014News\n2:01\u2014Notice Board\n2:15\u2014News\n2:25\u2014Sports News\n2:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n2:59\u2014News \u00ab\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:01\u2014Carnival of Fun    \u25a0\n1:15\u2014Arrival at Dorval\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n:30-*-Carnival of Fun\n:00^-News  ;\n:01\u2014Easy Listening\n.15\u2014Pacific News\n:30\u2014One Lump or Two\n:45\u2014Solo Guest\n:59\u2014News\n:00\u2014Sunshine Society\n:30\u2014Adventures of John Tanner\n:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n:00\u2014News ,\/;'.'-,*'.\n:01\u2014Superman\n:15\u2014News\n:25^Sports News\n:30\u2014Family Theatre\n:00^-Doctor's Orders\n:15\u2014Here's Health\n.-SO-^avalcade of Melody\n:0O\u2014News\n: 15\u2014News Roundup\n:30\u2014Leicester Square\n;00\u2014Commodores.\n:15\u2014Nation's Business\n:30\u2014Jazz With Jim\n:00\u2014Negro College Choir\n:30\u2014Continental Varieties\n:00\u2014News\n:15\u2014Life'on the Last Frontier\n:30-Noeturne\n:00\u2014News Night Cap-\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY,\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10-B!11 Good  ,\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited\n9:00\u2014Departure for Washington\n, 9:45\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit ''     ,\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45-Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014B.C. Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\nl.-OO-i-Afternoon Concert\n1:45\u2014Cooking School of tbe Air\n1:58\u2014Women's Compty\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Strike It Rich .\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Program Resume\n3:30-Talk by Betty Marsh\n3:45\u2014Today's Guest\nOCT. 31, 1951\n4:00-Jlmmy Shields\n4:15\u2014Piano Pops\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins   '\n4:45\u2014Something In Harmony ;\n4:55-CBC News\n5:00f-Interna'tlonal Commentary\n5:10\u2014Etude\n5:30\u2014Have You Heard?\n8:45\u2014Question Box\n8:00\u2014Neighborly Newi .;\n6:15\u2014Intro to Wed. Night\n6:30\u2014Showpiece f\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup .\n7:30\u2014October ,; \u25a0;; .*,.*\u2022\n8:00\u2014The Four Seasons ,\"\n8:30\u2014Autumn * '\u25a0'-'\n10:00\u2014News - \\\n10:15\u2014Royal Tour. Diary s\n10:30\u2014To Be Announced :\n11:00-U N Today\n11:15\u2014Collectors' Items \"\n11:57\u2014Newa !.\n _____\u2014,\nim\n1 PERmwmmwANTM-'\na    FOR QO\/CK RESULTS \/\n\u25a0 i.:..:.\nPhone 144\nDcodllne for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nEDWARDS -\u2022 To Mr. and Mrs.\n: Donald Edwards of Remac at the\nKootenay  Lake General Hospital,\nOct 28, a daughter.\nTARRON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Frank\n* Tarron of Salmo, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, Oct. 29, a ion,\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED\nExperienced\nMiners'\nApply\nEmerald Mine \u2022\nSalmo\nm+jrmmmmm* .\nWANTED\nMINERS AND TIMBERMEN\n. APPLY:\nWESTERN EXPLORATION\nSILVERTON, B.C.\nWANTED \u2014 GENERAL HANDY-.\n, man for washing and polishing\ncars, repairing tires, etc. Steady\nwork. Peebles Motors Ltd.\nVANTED \u2014 YOUNG MAN TO\nlearn automotive stock room business. Apply in, person Peebles\nMotors Ltd.\nWanted - drrld* A'SsisMt,\nhalf-time, for typing, filing, etc.\nShorthand not required. Box 8003,\nDaily News.\nKen waiMd \"So1 &J6AN\"Aito\nburn right of way. Apply Storms\nContracting Co., McNabb Cabins,\nYmir Road. Phone 476-R-2.\nWanted\u2014experienced groc-\nery* warehouseman. Please write\nBox 8327, Dally News.\nWanted\u2014experienced wait-\nress. Apply New Star Cafe.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWOMAN WANTS JOB COOKING\nfor lumbar, construction or mining camp. Can furnish good references. Apply Box 6016, Dally\nNews.\nWANflb^SUSEtftfcMft'g m\nby capable woman. Box 6045,\nDaily New\u00bb.   .. *\nWANTED\/MISCELLANEOUS\nSHfl> US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid.-- ACtiv*-Trading- Ccimpany.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSK3\nand lengths. Larch poles. Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 450, Nelson, B.C.\nSHIP   YOUR   HIDES   TO   &   P.\nMorgan. Nelson. B.C.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE-COFFEE SHOP Business; stock, license, etc. Write\nMrs. J. Ferguson. Lardeau, B.C,\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nNOTICE ,\nAs and from November let, 1951,\nall electrical inspections required\nin the CHy of Nelson will b'e undertaken by the Electrical Energy Inspection Department, Government\npf the Province of British Columbia.\nIt will be necessary to obtain a\npermit for each installation from\nthe Inspector of Electrical Energy,\n411 Dunsmuir Street, Vanoouver,\nB.C., before commencing such installations, Application forms are\navailable at the Nelson City Hall or\nat the office of the District Provincial Electrical Inspector, Post Office\nBuilding, Trail, B.C., or from the\nVancouver office named above.\nE..C, Carson,\nMinister of Public Works.\nOctober 24th, 1931.\n\"*     ! TENDERS      ' ~\nTenders will be received by the\nBoard of School Trustees, Arrow\nLakes District No. 10, Nakusp, B.C.,\nfor the purchase of a 1942 Ford\nSchool Bus, 37 passenger, as is and\nwhere it (Cliff Sinclair's Garage).\nTenders to be in the hands of the\nSecretary-Treasurer by Nqvember\n10th. The highest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nWANTED-SMALL AUTO COU*RT,\nwell located. Owners' only. G.\nHughes, Rimbey, Alberta.\nBUSINESS AND   .\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nMine Accounting Service.\nPhone 1229-R-l, Nelson, B.C.\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\n& S. ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C,\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nauto wreckers\ndaVIJis\" Transfer and auto\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171. \u25a0\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR. W. HA.GGEN. Land Surveyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST..\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer.\nIN8URANOE AND REAL E8TATE\nMcHARDY AGENCIES LTD, IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK  DEALERS\nWt feu'* Oft SELL LlVESTOCK-\nContact H. Harrop; PhonellT.\nMACHINISTS\nBErtNilTS LIMITED\nMachine  Shop,  acetjlene  and\nelectric welding motor rewinding.\n: Phone 693 324 Vernon' St\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive Insertions.\n'He line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion.\n48c 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 ...  f  .05\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advanee          .25\nBy cartrier, per year 13.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month   .._. $ 1.25\nThree  months \u201e\u25a0       3.75\nSix  months       7..50\nOne year           15.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     __..,_     1.00\nThree  months    , ,., 2.75\n-Six months       5.50\nOne year           10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabova rates plus postage.\nSEE THE NEW A40\nOn Disploy at\nEMPIRE MOTORS\nNew Austin A40 Sedans\nNew Austin A40 Pickup,\nNew Austin Countryman   *>\u2022\n1951  Hillman Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan  '\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1950 Plymouth Coupe\n1950 Mercury Pickup\n1950 Ford Pickup\n1950 Ford 1 Ton Flatdeck\n1,949, Meteor,Sedan\nSPECIAL\n1949 Austin Panel\n$750\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\n'Standard Asbestos\nTORONTO STOCKS   METAL PRICES\nMINES (Closing Prloes)\n.....\/      .22V4\n      1,07\n.50  '\nAcadia Uranium -\nAkaitcho\t\nAmerican Y K.....\nAnacon    _\t\nAnkeno .....\nArjon \u25a0*..... .._..\nArmistice . \t\nAtlas Y K ,'..*. ...\nAumaque\t\nAunor     ; .._ \u201e.\nBase Metals\t\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS Boycourt\nETC., FOR SALE\nThe fireproof structured\nBuilding Board of\nCountless Uses!    , .\"'\nIt Is\n* Fireproof      '\n:f Easy To Saw\n* Easy To Nail\n* Can Be Painted\n*< .Flexible\nFLEXBOARD Is serving on\nthe farm, in the home and\nin industry..It cannot rot or\ncorrode and is fdtp\/bof and\nvermin proof.\nDISTRIBUTORS\nNELSON\nMACHINERY\nCompany Ltd.\nPhone 18\n214 Hall St. Nelson, B.C.\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES Of\nused equipment: \u00abtnlll, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire   rope:   pipe   and   fittings;\n\u25a0 \". cliaih, steel plate and shapes, Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phone Pa*\n\u2022 olfle\u00ab357.\nWBAREVER   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. , ,\n\u25a0Pot Sale*;\n6 ROOM MODERN. HOUSE\nFull basement, cement foundation; hot water heating. Nicely\ndecorated inside and out. One\nlot, centrally located Immediate\ngossesslon' This is one of the\nest buys we have   CRfffW)\nhad for some time    -POOVV\nF. A. WHITFIELD\n302 Baker St. Phone 312\nAt Your Service\nCar and Fire insurance\n30 Years' Real Estate Bus'lness\nFOR SALE\u2014IN CENTRAL DOWN-\ntown Kasld. Nicely furnished\nhome. Eight rooms. Suitable,for\nboarders or suites. Reasonable.\nApply ftlrs. K. Mcintosh, Kaslo,\nFOR SALE \u2014 MODERN HOUSfc,\nsmall fruit farm. Close to* Castlegar. Apply John Gall, Robson,\nB.C,  , , '\nfc\"OR SALE--4-RM, AtTTRAcWVE\nhome. Grounds landscaped. $4900.\nPhone 1223-Y. .\nNICE PLACE FOR SALE\u2014WRITE\nBox 281, Castlegar, B.C.\nRENTALS\n50 ACRE RANCH\nFOR RENT-SUITABLE FOR\ndairy and' pasture; buildings and\nfruit trees. Apply Box 6278, Dally\nNews,    \u25a0 ;\nFOR RENT-SEMI-FURNISHED 3-\n. room cottage with bath; hot ind\n' cold water. 3 minutes walk to Nelson Ferry. Apply Con Cummins,\nR.R. No. 1. Phone 738>L2.\nBobjo\nBonetal ..\".\t\nBralorne   \t\nBrewis R L ...\nBroulsn\nBuffadison\t\nBuffalo Ank\nBuff Can\t\nCallinan\n3.20\n.70-\n.16*4\n.10\n.15V4\n.20\n3.10\n.58\n.90   .\n\u25a0 .17 Vi\nNEW IfORK Oct. 23 (AP) \u2014 Spot\nnonferrous metal prices: Copper\n2414 cents a pound. Connecticut\nValley.. Lead 19 :ents a pound, New\nYork. Zinc M'i cents a pound East\nSt. Louis. Tin $1.03 a pound, New\nYork.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARV, Oct. 29 (CP) - Prices\nwere fairly steady in moderately\nactive trade on the Calgary Livestock Market today. Offerings were\n^q{J 1058 cattle and calves, mostly\nmedium to good stocker and feeder\nSteers, and stock calves, A fairly\nliberal run off truck was in sight.\n6.16\n.28\n1.45\n.11\n1.30\n.24 Vi\nCampbell R L _...    3.66\nCart Mai    . .....     .60\nCariboo Oold  1.36\nCastle Treth-  .    2.2B\nCentral Patricia  ........     .66 '\nCentral Pore _.      .19V4\nChesterville  -..:. 24\nChimo G ,_. _.,._     .17\nCochenour  \u201e_.,...._.\u201e.......    1.55\nCoin Lake    12V4\nConJaurum .._.-..___._._\u201e      ,63\nCons Beatty _.., __. .    .30\nCons MiS ,,.,..   174.00\nConwest  ....\u201e'\u201e.\u00ab...\u201e,....\u201e    3.40\nCroinor  _... ._..       ,28V.\nDiscovery   _ ..........      .32\nDome . .*.'..'. \u201e    18.25\nDuvay  .... \u25a0   .10^4\nEast Malartic     1.01\nEast Sullivan _. _    O.ao\nElder GOld   _      ,3414\nEldona  .._.'..._....     . .19-,\nEstella .\u201e._._._\u201e....      .20\nFalconbrldge       10.75\nFrobisher  \u201e\u201e_.',_.    3.75\nGiant Yel \u201e.\u201e..\u201e.    11.00\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\/TUESDAY, OCT.. 30, 1951 \u2014 11\nPrivateer Plans Larger Spring\nProgram for Ainsworth Properties\nA. H. Davis, 3. H. Forester and\nJ. A. McKay, directors of Privateer\nMine Ltd,, visited Ainsworth and\nmade a thorough examination and\nInspection of the base metal properties recently optioned by Privateer Mine Ltd.\nDavid H. Norcross, owner and op-\ntioner of the Star Mine claims, and\nNo butcher steer, were sold eariy. Si.K^li\"^^^'^^\u21220^\nButcher heifers were steady^ Cows\nwere about steady, bullB steady to\nweak. All classes of stocker and\nfeeder cattle continued in good demand at steady prices. Veal calves\nwere about steady.\nHogs closed 60 cents lower last\nweek 'at $20; sows steady at $17.75.\nGood lambs were s'eady at $31.50;\nbut good ewes were off 50 cents at\n$17.00 to 18.00.\nGood    to    near-choice    butcher\ndrilling operation, joined the party\nas guide and informant.\nThe directors were greatly lm-.\npressed by the showing of ore.^both\non the surface and in. the upper\ntunnel. They believe the properties\nhave great possibilities of becoming\na profitable mine. __\nA tunnelling operation is now under the consideration of the directors and should a definite decision\nbe made the ore would be stock*\nheifers \u2022 30.50 to 32.50; common to .'liled until Spring in order to avoid\nmedium 25.00 to 30.00. Good cows higher haulage costs and difficulties\n25.00 to 26.00; common to medium over Winter roads.\n24.50 to,26:50. Canners and cutlers It is.the intention to commence.\n16.00 to 22.00. Good bulls 27.00. to a'larger operational program as soon\n28.00; common to medlu.n 24.50 to as weather conditions permit, prob*\n26.50. Good stocker and feeder steers'ably next April. \u25a0:\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\n30.00 to 33.00; common to medium I   The following are the reports to\n24.00 to 29.00. Good, to choice veal\ncalves  32.00  to 36.00;  common   to\nmedium 28.00 to 31.00.\nGod's Lake\nGoldcrest\nGold Arrow'\n,35\n.10\n.1414\n7.45\n.12 V.\n.14'4\n14%\nWANTED HvilviEDIATELY-3-Rii.\nunfurnished suite for one person.\nReferences If required. P.O. Box\n324, Nelson, B.C.     .'*\nFOR RENT \u2014 A TWO-EOOMED\nhouse with running water, lights,\nfor $15,00 a month hear:Blewett\nStore. Apply at Blewett Store.\nDUO-THERM OIL HEATER, CA-\nnadlan sbrown squirrel (foet, Ideal\nfor repairs or as a child's coat,\nP.O. Box'27. Procter, B.C.\nGIRLS' WHItfE FIGURE SKATES\nand boots, Size 5, Model J Beatty\nwasher. 2-burner gas plate. Phone\n3B5-Y,\nURGENTLY REQUIRED BY END\nof Nov.\u20142-bedroom, unfurnished\n'\u2022 house in or near .Nelson. Please\nwrite Box 6303, Daily News.\nk)R BkM - LARGE, ,HEATED\nbedroom for one or 2 gentlemen.\n410 Victoria Street,  '.*\u25a0:\nSMALL, 2 - ROOM, ftlRNISHED\ncabin for rent; suitable for couple.\nPhone 1312-Y.\nWANTED\u20142 OB 3-ROOM UNFUR-\nnished suite by middle-aged couple. No children. Phone 1578.\nFOR RENT-PARTLY FURNISH*\ned cabin. Phone 364-X1.\n1947 Pontiac Sedan\n1946 Mercury I Ton\n1946 Studebaker Sedan\n1940 Ford Sedan\n1939 Mercury Sedan\n1938 Ford Coupe\n1937 Ford Sedan   .\n1935 Ford Coupe\n1934 Plymouth Sedan\n1931 Ford Model A\nTERMS AND TRADES\nEmpire Motors\nPhone 1135   803 Baker St.\n\u2666\u2022BURNER GAS PLATE, 18\"x30\"\ngrill with oven; also counter with\n13 stools and 1 6-ft glass show-\ncase. 509 Baker Street.\nFOR SALE\u20146-PIECE BEfDROoil\n. suite, 12-gauge shotgun, .303 rifle,\nand 1 setting saw; 120 bass Hohner\naccordian, Phone 326-R1.\nFOR SALE-1 6-TON COLUMBIA\ntrailer, bunk and sub frame. New\nrubber; folding pipe reach for\nlong and short logs. Apply J.\nFerguson, Lardeau. B.C.   -\nFOR SALE - '49 INTERNATJON\nal KB 2 Panel   Delivery    Low\nmileage, good rubber. Direct re-\nplies to Star Grocery,\nFOR SALi - 1947 OLDSMOBILB\nhydraomatic  sedan,  color   blue.\nThis car is in very good condition.\nApply Peebles Motors.      \t\n1942 FO*kD 2-b00R SE6AN.  A-l\ncondition. Price  reasonable.  Ph.\n799-R,  *\nMUST SELL 1936 FORD V4-TON\u2014\nPhone 451-Y,\nONE 18-INCH FURNACE WITH\ncasing. In good condition. Also\n10-inch eewdust burner. Phone\n1583-L.  *\nFOR SALE\u2014BOYS' CCM. TUBE\nskates and hockey boots, size 2.\nPractically new. Phone\nCHILDS' 3-PIECE WINTER SUIT,\nsize 4; boys' skates, size 12. Phone\n828-X,, \u25a0''\u25a0\/\u201e\nBO^'S* HOdkEY SftATES, SIZE\n13.* Like new. $4. 408-2nd St.\nPhone* 267-Y.\nMIXED WOOD FOR SALE - $15\na cord, delivered. Dick Kleef,\nPhone 387-L4, .\nPIPE - FITTINGS S TUBES SPE-\nclal low prices. Active Trading Co.\n935 E Cordova St., Vancouver.\nFOR RENT\u2014FURNISHED CABIN',\nsuitable for bachelor, Ph, 398-R3,\n1 SLEEPING ROOM FOR RENT\u2014\n705 Victoria 'Street. .*\nPERSONAL\nWAW,ANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN*\nsurance Co., D, L. Kerr, Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot* Clean rooms and moderate\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 Single, $2.60 to\n$3.00 doubles.  Vancouver.  B. C.\nADULTS I PERSONAL RUBBER\ngoods 25 deluxe assortment $1-\nbill. Tested, guarar\u00a3ed, fine\nquality. Mailed in piSn, seeled\npackage,   Including   free   Birth\n-. Control Booklet and bargain\ncatalogue of Marriage Hygiene\nSupplies. Western Distributors,\nBox 1023-PN, Vancouver,\nGolden Manitou\t\nHalctow  ,*. ...\nHardrock   ...\nHeva  _...\t\nHollinger .......XX __.._ 15.25\nHudson Bay .,_ _'.. ..... 63.00\nInt Nickel _  41.75\n.Toilet Que _...  .47\nKayrand .......i..*,.\u201e......_*..._. .14\nKenville : .v...:...........'.,...  .28\nKerr Addison   ....,......*......:._ IT. 15\nKirk-Hudson Bay 48\nLabrador  8.00\nLake Dufault .\/.  .65\nLakeshore ............................. i*10.8S\nLeitch 106\nLouvicourt;'...ri;.'\u201e'.i.v.;*.\u2122'.;b_.!->:,-'-..45\nLynx ....:.,* ............\u201e\u201e............\u201e_ .18\nMacDonaW     .. .90\nMaca'ba           \" 1111!\nMacLeod Cork      *           .. \" 'JO\nMadsen R I,                     . ? ir)\nMagnet                 . 51\nMalartic G F   1.00\nMclntyre        ..........-...:...:. 78.00\nMcKenzie R L' :.X:...:...XAX:.    .48\nNegus  ;'.\u201e... ....: .72\nNew Calumet  : .........  8 20\nNew Goldvue 35\nNew Jason  ,.11\nNew Lund ..:.  * 1.85\nNipisslng   1.09\nNoranda  83.00 .\nNormetals  L :__._\u201e.* 8.10\nNorseman  ,.:.-._..:.......... _.^ '  .11%\nNorth Can .  1.35\nNorzone  _.... ...  .15\nO'Brien ...._....;.,  1.31\nOslsko     .88\nPamour  .88\nPaymaster  ......_ __.. .62\nPickle Crow      * 1,90\nPlacer Develop  , ,. 48.00..\nPreston E D  ..._.  1.45\nQuebec Lab _.,  26.00\nQuebec Man .  3.20\nQuemont   25.00\nReeves Mao  6.00\nSan Antonio .    \u2022 2,50\nSert Rbiiyn _ .18\n.\u2014 i.Vk\n.  3.80\n,  1.37\n  .41\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG,'Oct. 29 (CP) - Winnipeg grain cash prices;\nOats, No. 1 feed, 94.\nBarley, No. 1 feed, 1.47%.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials 260.37 up 1.84.\n\u202220 rails ^O^ ur 1.00.\n15 utilities 45.16 up .03.\n65'Stocks 94.2,\" up .70.;      \u25a0    ' .,\".*\u25a0\nMarket Trends\ndate from the base metal properties!\nTiger\u2014Assay Dec. 1927, dry tonl\n2.2048,  gold ,015, silver  25.8,  lead\n54,55 per, cent, zinc 3.0 pen cent\nTiger - Assay Oct., 1081*\u2014Width '\n4 feet, ag. oz. 08, pb. 1.3,. nr. 7.4.\nGross value $34.00 per ton.\nStar Group\u2014Assay Oct., 1951:\nWidth    Ag. oz. Pb.% Zn.% G. Val.\n4.01 4.95    5.5      4.5      $41.04\n3.0' 2.25    6,0      8.5        55.04\n0.4' 7.20   15,0      7.8        89.44\n3.0' . 4.5     13.0\/ 0.40      51.35\n10.0' 5.0      5.0    15.0        80.00\nAlta. Crude Oil\nOutput Drops\nCALGARY, Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014Crude\noil production in Alberta dropped-\nsharply by.nearly 35,000 barrels in\nthe week ended Oct 22, the prov-'\ninclal Petroleurn and Natural Gas ,\n\u25a0Conservation Board reported at the\nweekend.\nDally average production for the*\nweek was 141,678 barrels, compared\nwith 178,427 In the previous week\nand 74,309 in the week ended Oct\n23 last year. ,\nProduction cam. from 2613 wells,\nan increase of seven.\nCan. Pacific Rly .\nCan. West Lmbr .\nCons. Paper ...*......\nDist, Seagram .......\nDom. Bridge ....;...:\nDom. Foundries\nDom. Steel & Coal B .......:.:. A   18% lower in forencon dealings. Stronger\nDom. Stores\nDom. Tar & Chemical .\nFamous Players .\nFanny rjimci\nFleet Air\nFoid A\nGatineau.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nCRESS BUNION SALVE - For\namazing \u2022relief. Your Druggist\nsells  CRESS. \t\nWHITE :CC.M. FIGURE SKATES,\nsize 2, and men's skates, size 9%.\nPhone 1453-R after 6 p.m.   \t\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nRaspberry Caries\n6 Young Cows .\n4 Geese\n1 Young Jersey Bull\n1 Collie Pup\n. Harrop\namtmam atamM*. 4++** *****P*\u00bb\nSEVERAL YOUNG FRESH AYR-\nahire cows for sale. All government tested. Aaply Fred Forch,\nRes  Meadows Spur. P.O. Salmo.\nCOW FOR SALE\u2014PHONE 606-X2,\nNelson, B.C,       -\nidR Sale-SMIng chicki!M,\n40c per lb. delivered. Ph. 608-U.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST, BETWEEN NELSON AND\nYmir, Saturday\u2014New spare tire\nfrom Chev. pickup. Reward. J.\nChernenkoff, Salmo, B.C.\nA LARGE  BROWN CRIB WITH\nmattress;   a   single   cot,   and   a\nwheelbarrow. Phone 368-R2.\nFOR  SALE -LARGE  KITCHEN\n\u2022 cupboard. Phone 1323-L.    \u25a0  v\nFOR SALE\u2014ELECTRIC MOFFATT\nrange, like new. Phone 1244-R.\nMiCROtfic Bearing aids.-\nWrite P.O   Box 39. Nelson. B.C\nFOR SALE \u2014 3 PAIRS SKATES,\nsizes 2, 5 and 6. Phone 1I32-L.\nMACHINERY\nWE ARE DISTRIBUTORS FOR\nTiton chain saws In 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 lob. For full particulars\nwrite KootenayTlton Sales and\nService, Cascade, B.C.\nCONTRACTORS  - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING\nSEND TOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nEQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nGranville Island M.A 1251\nVancouver, B C\nFOR SALE - 1 . POWER SAW,\nchains and parts, $175,00; 1 steel\nanvil, 175 lbs.; 1 forge with blower, $35.00; steel traps, 24 number\n4, 22 number 1, $15.00. Apply R.\nThomson, Arrow Park, B.C.\nWINCHES - CARCO TRACTOR\nWinches. Braden .Truck Winches,\nSingle and Double Drum Loading\nWinches. Bayes Equipment Co.\nCranbrook. B.C.\nClassified Ads Get Speedy Results\nShawkey\nSherritt Gordon.\nSilvermlller \t\nSllanco \t\nSIscoe\t\nSladon Mai\t\nStadacona\n33\n\"V.Wi\n39\n23%\nNEW   VORK,   Oct.   29   (CP)   -\nPrices rallied suddenly after a weak\nHeads B-A Board\nMilton S. Beringer has been elect-\nstart and in the closing hour issue'|d,,f.ai\u2122an.01 <*?, board of The\nafter issue swung to the advancing: ^\"sh American Oil Company Ltd.\nside of the ledger, I H= s\"ccelds Wl \u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb K' Whiteford\n\u201e , .     \u00b0     , .! who has been elected an executive\n,\u201eY\u00b0LTB,for the day was  'roundi vice-president and director of the\n1,80* ,000 shares. \u2022 Gui, 011 Corporation.\nCanadian.issues were mixed. Ca-     jfr, Beringer, who Joined British'\nnadian Pacific, Dome Mines and Dis- American 18 years ago, is also a\ntileirs Seagrams were all up Vt, In-1 vice-president and director of BA- .\ntejnational Nickel tiroppeu ',\u00ab and j shawinigan Ltd.; a new petrochem- ;\nMclntyre   and  Hiram   Walker  remained unchanged.\nioal company formed to manufacture acetone and phenol.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Prices partly\nregained earlier losses toward 'the\nsession's  close.  Industrials  opened\nijjy, 'weakly   then   turned   moderately\nj2y4 [Support appeared during the mid-\n44   J session.\n16V    Volume for  the* cay  was'about\n' *23% 2,300,000 shares.\n1 90 \"I    '\n61    I    MONTREAL   (CP)    -'Some  at-\n  .     ,     ||*|',   'UH\/Jl*,   II   Il'I'OVt'l\"   lU'iL   imill* ll.Mi\nI,en   Sit'il  Win '      U'    ''\"  ''\"'   '\"'   the BCPMal lie   Icon\nGoodyear\nGoodyear pfd\nGypsum Lime\nH R, MacMillan A:\nH. R. MacMillan: B\nImperial Oil\nImp. Tobacco\nInt. Metal ...................\nInt. Nickel\nInt. Pete   :::..XX.X.\nKelvinator        '\n11)0\n\"it A\n*;20Vf,\n27%\n. nvt\nA.m\n\u25a0    !>\"2\n41\nLaura Secord\nMaple Leaf Milling ,...';\u201e'..'\nMassey Harris\t\nM & O Paper\t\nMont. Loco ......:;.....,....,.:...\nMoore Corp. ..   X....X.....\nMcColl Frontenac '.\t\nN- , Steel Car        23% I dustrials.    oils    were\ntiriued lower. Trading volume was\n.moderate.\nChanges ranged to more* than, a\npoint in either direction.\nSenior metals and steels received\nconsiderable support to Improve a\nsagging morning price trend. Papers\nand miscellaneous industrials con-\n|l^.'tinued easier, utilities were slightly\nlO.Vi'i 'ower, while beverages and banks\nJO i displayed a small majority of losses,\n134 -\u2014\u2014\u25a0\n.8%*I- LONDON, -(Reuters) \u2014 Losses\nWt were widespread with short-term\n3(iy41 holders taking profits on recent\nU^ irises.\n2$yt\\   Declines ranging between a few\n37    pence and 1\/3 were shown in ln-\nfractionally\nAre yon modern or are\nydu still struggling with\nycjir,own management\nproblems?\nWrite...\nGeorge S.AWCommny\nCJvAmta- C^nejinwuAm\n* Woitorn Dlvlilon '\n311 Ol'ory Street, SIS Fronllsio J, Colli.\nEiiobllihid 111)\nPage Hershey *\nPowell River  \t\nRuss, Industries \u201e\t\nSimpsons A   .....................\nSimpsons pfd XXX :,\nSteel of Can.\t\nSteel of Can, pfd\t\nStandard Paving\t\nUnited. Steel\t\nWeBton George '\t\nWinnipeg Electrio com\n64\n27\n24%\n34%\n0314\n32y4\n33Mi\nim\n22%\nlower and British Government funds\ndeclined to the extent of Vi point.   |\nSteep Rock  ' .*.,.\u201e._.__    7.25\nSylvanite  ....,      1,27\nTeck Hughes ..........\nThompson-Lund ......\nToburn\t\nTombill ......*...:\t\nTorbrit  \u201e._.\nTrans Cont Res .......\nUnion Mining ........\nUnited Keno  _.\nUpper Canada .........\nVentures  ,\nViolamac       \t\nWaite Amulet ..;......\nOILS\nAnglo Can ;.: \t\nAtlantic Oil\t\nB A Oil\t\nCal St Ed\t\nCalmont    ....\nCentral Leduc \t\nChemical Research .\nCommonwealth Pete \t\nDalhousle  ....\nDavies Pete\nDecalta !\t\nDel Rio\t\nEastcrest\nVICE-PRESIDENT Of\nROYAL BANK NAMED       .\nMONTREAL, Oct. 29 (CP)\u2014James\nMcGregor Stewart ot Halifax, was\nelected vice-president of the Royal j\nBank of Canada here todey at a,\n87ft meeting of the board of directors,\n\"PROTECTION\nAGAINST INFLATION\"\nAik your Investment Dialer .\nfor Ihe above folder and\nprospoelui of\nCALVIN BULLOCK\ntw.\n, SUITE 1\nPhone 1095    560 Boker St.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nBralorne'       6.23\nCariboo Gold      1.40\nGolconda \t\nGrandvlew\t\nHighland Bell.\nGiant Mascot...\nInt. C & C .\nFederated Pete ._\nHlghwood  ...\nHome \t\nImperial Oil ....___\nInter Pete ..-*- -\nMid Cont ii*\nNat Pete    \u201e\u201e\u00ab\nNew Facalta ........\nOkalta  :\t\nPacific Pete\t\nRoyalite  _\nRoxana\t\nTower Pete ,\t\nUnited Oils\t\n.25\n.55\n.87\n1.00\n1.00\nKootenay Belle  XmX    1*14.\nPend Oreille\nPioneer Gold  .'.\nPremier Bojder\t\nQuatsiho      \t\nReives MacDonald .\nSheep Creek ...,\t\nSilver Ridge\t\nVan Rol\n10,00\n2.20\n.33\n.59V.\n8.25\n1.70\n.17\n.90\n1.30\n8.30\nWestern Exploration .'._.\nWestern Uranium\t\nOILS\nAnaconda _  ,18Vt\nA P Consolidated ,  5.10\nCalmont'  r... ,.. 1,55\nHome .'  17.50\nPacific Pete  10.25\nVanalta  .68\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta'Dlst            3.10\nAlberta Dlst. V.T.  3.10\nCapital Eststes  19.00\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \t\nAlgoma Steel .\nAluminum  \t\nArgus ._._.-\nAtlas St _\nBathurst Power\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrasllian .'.,\nB.C. Electric pfd .....\nB.C. Electric _..\nB.C. Packers B\t\nB.C. Power A\t\nBrown Co __.\nBruck Silk A\t\nBurns A :,._\t\nBurns B  .\nCan. Cement \t\nCan. Melting,\t\nCan. Packers B ......\nCan. Breweries \t\nCan.' Canners    \t\nCan. Car & Fdy ....\nCan. Car & Fdy A .\nCan. Oil\nCan. Dredge.\t\nCan. Marconi\t\n17%\n4814;\n103\n13%\n21%\n53 V2\n38%\n28    !\n79\n9214\n19%\n30%\nW>\n2014\n88\n39\n27 Vi\n\u25a0    51   '\n33%\n9V\u00bb\n32V4\n15,\nIT\n28\n50\n3.80\nTHE PAGE\nthat is read most thoroughly by young and old alike, every one a prospective\nbuyer or seller of everything from a 10-ton truek to*a tricycle, from a houseful of furniture to a tea let, or a herd of cattle te a pair of budgiet!\n\" ! '     '\u25a0\nYOU'LL FIND IT IN THE\nCLASSIFIED PAGES OF THE\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED SERVICE\n 12\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 30,1951\nFOR GIRLS ONLY\nAre You Aller&ic to Men ?\nYou Can Cure Yourself by Using\nHAZEL BISHOP\nLIPSTICK\nIt's* lasting\u2014Is not greasy\u2014easily applied\nAnd is available in six flattering shades,\nPink Real Real Red    '   Secret Red\nRed-Orange        Medium\/Red Dark Red\nTHE PRICE IS $1.75\nMANNS\nDRUG STORE\n: PEACE RIVER, Alta, (CP)\u2014The\nmost northerly storage propane gas\nplant in the world has begun operation at this centre of the Alberta\nPeace River district.\nCAMPBELL. SHANKLAND\n&1MRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St \u25a0 Phone 235\nHALLOWE'EN\nNovelty Dance\nWEDNESDAY\nLOADS OF NOVELTIES\nFUN GALORE! ADM. 750\nBeetles Grow Fat\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 29 (CP) \u2014\nCalifornia beetles imported to battle\nthe'growing ''Klamath weed\" menace are growing fat on the weed.\nSome 20,000 of the beetles were\nreleased last Spring in Okanagan\nand Kootenay areas and their eggs\nhave been found there, J. H, McLeod; of the Federal Insect biological control service,.said todayv\nAlso known as St. John's Wort, the\nweed moved into B.C. frdm United\nStates in recent years, to crowd\nforage plants from cattle ranges and\nstifle young trees In logged-off\nlands. '.*\nThe beetles have voracious appetites, but so far as known eat only\nthe Klamath weed.\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service.\nPhone 1302 446 Ward St\n. NEL80N, B. C.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE .\n815 Kootenay St Phone 361\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.\nIfyotlare Interested Ininsuldtion let us give you an\nestimate. Jf you can convince, us you can do it yourself,\ncKeaper'than we can, we will give you some advice on\nhow to db.it, for we Consider ourselves experts on insulating. Here are a. few of the things a good insulating job\nwill do for you;\n1. Cut your fuel costs from 30'to 50%.\n2. Give you greater comfort bath in Summer and Winter.\n'3. Save you money in decorating.\n4. Stops icing conditions and sweating walls.\n5. Lower your roofing costs. ,   '\nIf you would like proof of these statements,\n'\u25a0'.'\u25a0 fill out the form belpw and mail it to *.,.\nMIRACLE INSULATION\nCASTLEGAR, B. C.\nName\t\nStreet  \t\nCity or,Town  \t\nMost Convenient Time to Call \t\nPart of House To Be Insulated: Walls.\n. No.\n. Celling...\nNewfoundlander\nOne of Canada's\nleading Walkers\nBy GORDON  BARRON\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld., (CP) - Ferd\nHayward Is somewhat ot a phenomenon! in the Newfoundland sports\nworld. Like old wine, he seems to\nimprove with age.   \u2022*\nHis main Interest outside of working hours and family life is' walking\u2014the heej and toe variety, He Is\nacknowledged one of the top walkers produced in Newfoundland and\nis being drummed as an Olympic\nchoice. ...\nAt Elizabeth, N. J;, recently he\nplaced fourth in the National amateur athletic union's senior 30-kllo-\nmetre (about 18% miles) championship race. In the 41-mile marathon\nfrom Toronto to Hamilton.on Oct.\n21, ah attack of cramps forced Hay-\nward to quit when he had completed about halt the distance.\n, The lanky, blonde St John's man\nwho admits to being somewhere\naround the 40-year-mark, was a\nwinner from the start of his career,\nA member of the Newfoundland\nHiking Club, founded about 20 years\nago, Hayward placed second the\nfirst year he entered the 10-mile\nwalk. Before entering the race he\ntuned up on a number of 50-mile'\nhikes during his first year* as a\nmember of the club.\nFAST TIMES \u25a0     '\u25a0\nHayward has covered the 10-\nmile distance in one hour, 18 minutes on six seconds, eight minutes\nslower than the world record time\nset by J. F. Mikaelsson of Sweden,\nin 1945, In Newfoundland's 20-mile\nwalk this year he finished in two\nhours, 42 minutes. This time is only\n53 seconds slower than the world's\nrecord set by H, Olsson.of Sweden\nin 1943, The times have yet to.be\nofficially recognized outside the\nprovince. '\nHayward is chief engineer at a\nlocal brewery* but he neither drinks\nnor smokes. *. \u2022'' :\nIn 1950, he competed in his first\nwalking -marathons butside Newfoundland, At Guelph, Ont., he won\na record-breaking time. He had similar success at Elizabeth, N.\" J.\nDollars and dimes contributed by\nbusiness houses and individual admirers across Newfoundland, made\nit possible to enter these races.\nTwo months ago, the*. Evening\nTelegram, Newfoundland's.. oldest\ndaily newspaper, launched a marathon fund to send liayward.tb Chicago and Baltimore. Again the dollars and dimes rolled in. Hayward\nplaced fourth at Chicago. but the\nBaltimore visit was climaxed-with\na victory over top United States\nperformers. ..\nWounded Canadians\nRide Up Broadway\nNEW YORK, Oct. 20 (CP)-Flfty\nwounded Korean veterans\u2014include\ning two Canadians\u2014rode up Broad?\nway in 25 jeeps today and were\ngreeted at City Hall by Mayor Vincent Impellitterl.\nThe mayor pinned New York's\nmedal of honor on each of the men,\nand paid tribute to the Allied stand\nin Korea as the action that prevented dissolution of the United Nations.\nCpl, John Roy of Montreal.and\nPo. Thomas. Dawe of Vancouver\nwere trie' Canadians among the\nveterans,  representing  19 countries with troops fighting In Kor-\ni eo*\nThe men are touring the United\nStates to spur blood donations for\nthe armed forces and to help broaden public understanding in.the UN\neffort in Korea.\n, The umbrella bird of Ecuador,\nabout the size of a crow, has a\nheavy crest which can be .spread\nlike an umbrella, ' '> *   .\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St. Phone 63\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts  Blk.\nPHONE 25\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\n.       OUR TELEPHONE LINE\n182 BAKER ST    PHONE 1175\n\u2022 Special Selected ty\n\u2022 Royal Reserve\n\u2022 Old Rye\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed -by the Liquor Control Board or by the\n  . Government of British Columbia.\nTHREE SEA FURY FIGHTER8 .of 871 Squadron of the Royal Canadian Navy are seen warming\nup on the flight deck of H.M.C.S. Magnificent as\nthey await their turn to become airborne. Manning,\nthe chocks are men of the flight deok party. Air\nexercises have occupied a large portion of the\ntraining program being carried out by the.Magnificent and destroyer' H.M.C.8. Mlcmao In the\nMediterranean. \\ \u2022\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nCabinet Confers\nOn Sharp Clash\nVICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 29 (CP)-\nIn a front-page-story the Victoria\nDaily Times today says a delicate\nsituation i bas been created on the\nB, C. political scene, as a result of a\nsharp clash between' the legislature's special hospital Insurance inquiry board and the provincial cabinet     .\nLiberal cabinet . ministers, the\nTimes said, today are still conferring on the problem; and though no\nformal statements have been made,\nlt may lead to serious repercussions.\nFocal point is the attack made by\nHealth Minister S. D. Turnbull Saturday on a recommendation made\nby the inquiry board that cuts made\nby the B.C.H.I.S., in hospital bud*\ngets should be restored.\nSNOWDEN, Sask. (CP) - A\nstrange noise in a grain elevator\nhere turned out to be a skunk that\ngot caught on the conveyor belt\nfrom the elevator pit. Calm but\ngroggy, the animal rambled off\nwithout incident.\nPrincess Lawg\/is When Mayor Just\nMisses Whacking Her With Cjift\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nABOARD PRESS AIRLIFT\nPLANE OF ROYAL TOUR, Oct, 29\n(CP)\u2014Princess Elizabeth seems to\nbe warming to her reception by the\nCanadian people with every, lap of\nher long tour. \u2022 '\nPress observers who have travelled with her and Prince Philip for\nabout 5000 miles have sensed a\ngrowing animation in the Princess'\nresponse to 'her huge crowds, a\nquicker flash of her wide smile and\nan attitude of-being more at ease\nwith the people than when she arrived three weeks ago.\nIn the opening stages of the tour\nshe was friejidly and smiling, but\nshe seemed reserved arid self-coft-\nsclous at times. Then, the free-and-\neasy .Philip appeared to be taking's!\nhand occasionally to dispel any cer*:\ntainty On the Princess'part.       '\u25a0   .\nBut as \"the* gathering stream of\nCanada's welcome has poured Out\nthrough parts* of central Canada,\nacross the Prairies and1 on the\nPacific Coast, Elizabeth has cottort-\ned visibly to the obvious warmth of\nCanadians. She is more relaxed and\nrecetpive to'the welcomes, .\nTo those following the tour,, this'\nhas been particularly\" noticeable\nsince the series of visits among hundreds of thousands of spirited Westerners in the\" last fortnight and the\nthree-day rest she and.Philip enjoyed in, privacy on Vancouver Island last week.   \u25a0:\u25a0*'\nThe West's rlp-rbaring welcome\nwas an undoubted morale booster,\nand'the rest msut have bolstered\nher physically after an exhausting\ntransatlantic and transcontinental\ntrip. .\nAt all events, as. she headed today\nfor Montreal by plane iri a series\nof hops from Saskatoon, it would\nappear the East \u2014 and' Washington\u2014will see a more chipper Prln-\nCess than before.\nThat was evident from her first\nmajor appearance of the East-bound\n| trip\u2014at Edmonton\u2014where she turned up on a raw day beaming broadly and gaily. Then, on a drive to the\ncity, she reversed the tables on\nPhilip by pointing with lively interest at things that caught her eye.\nIt used to be the PHrice who took\nthe initiative in drawing her attention to the sights. At Saskatoon she\ngave about 10,000 the music of a\nRdyal laugh. That erupted when\nShe had to duck, as Mayor J. S; Mills\nalmost whacked her on the nose\nwith a case of silverware after presenting it to her. :'.<:.'\nAt Saskatoon, too, she probably,\nwqh over a bunch of servicemen\nby holding up a formal presentation\nof local bigwigs to step back and\nhhve the Commander startd the soldiers at ease from their etlff stance.\nAnd aiiother touch that may indicate the Canadian influence is\ncreeping up on Elizabeth is just\nbarely discernible. When she first\narrived, she used to make up sparingly. Now, she^s using it just a'bit\nmore heavily\u2014more tike her Canadian sisters. \u25a0   .    *      \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0. '.,\nATOMIC PLANT PROJECT\nHALTED BY STRIKE\nOAK RIDGE, Tenn., Oct. 29 (AP)\n\u2014Construction on a vital atoml.e\nplant defence project was halted today by an A.F.L, plumbers' strike!\nThe plumbers posted pickets In\ndefiance of orders\/of their international union president. And for\nthe third straight day, hundreds of\nother workers 'honored the picket\nlines.*\nThe Atomic Energy Commission\nannounced that the project was\nshutting down because of lack of\nworkers. *   \u25a0    i -\nThe plumbers walked off the jobs\nlast Tuesday in a jurisdictional\nsquabble with the Carpenters over\na work assignment.\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nWarren K. Cook\nKenwood\nOvercoats\nCanada's finest overcoat.\nWarmth without weight.\nIh the new colors for Fall.\n'69\n.50\nSTYLES .FOR BOTH\n'     LADIES AND MEN.\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical. Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\n.    G.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nOur Vijo Pancake Waffle Mis\nNow  Packaged   Iri  New  Sizes\nASK YOUR GROCER FOR A\nPACKAGE TODAY\nEllison Milling & Elevator  .'\u00bb\nCompany, Ltd.\nPhone 238 623 Front St.\nA\"   ...   jiKmisn.-        <\n'^W    \"\nWATCH REPAIRS\n?0 rEARS EXPERIENCE\nNELSON, B.C.\nBrilaln, Once Creates! Gambler,\nShould Turn lo Gambling Again\nBy FORBE8 RHUDE\nCanadian Press-Business Editor .\nWinston Churchill, as one might\nexpect, had the right thing to. say\nas he came back into power. He\nsaid: \" \u25a0.\n. \"We shall use the great strength\nof this cpuntry to bring about a\nrestoration of Britain's fortunes.\"\nFollowing this statement, people\nwill be watching to see whether he\nwill have a power of performance\nto match his genius of words.\nThis writer, back in 1948, happened to be' talking In London to\nan official of the Board of Trade.\nAnd he asked the official, in effect,\nin those difficult days, If Britain\nshouldn't be risking vast projects\nin various yiarts of the world. And\nthe officiafsaid: \"We would be risking those things if we had anythihg\nwith which to risk them.\"\nHe was talking of Britain's small\ndollar supply. They might throw\nit On the table' and win. But If they\nthrow lt on the table and lost, then\na]l was lost.       .' ,\nProbably not many of us would\nlike tq have the responsibility of\ndeciding whether or not we should\ngamble that way.\nBut it would seem to an observer\nthat Britain must gamble as she has\nilways gambled; and the fate of\n.e new government, and perhaps\nthe fate of Britain, depends upon\nhoW much informed gambling is\ndone In the next two or three years.\nThis writer is inclined to think it\nwouldn't be a gamble at all; that\nher only danger lies In being afraid\nto gamble. ,.\nBritain-used to be the leader of\nthe world. Her position Df power,\nmaybe, has Been taken by the United States, But so far, the United\nStates is only powerful. In leadership she speaks With an uncertain\nvoice. We miss the old leadership\nof Britain.\nIf Churchill can restore that voice,\nperhaps in his 77th year he will yet\nperform his greatest task. We don't\nknow. We can only watcfi and hope.\nSearch for Missing\nPlane; 4 Aboard\n. EDMONTON, Qct. 29 (CP) - An\nEastern plane missing with four\nmen aboard in Northern Alberta\nwas the object o( a search today by\ntwo Edmonton-based RCAF Dako-\ntas.\nThe missing Anson aircraft, owned by Spartan Aviation of Toronto,\ndisappeared Saturday on a 416-mile\nflight from Upper Hay River, Alta.,\nto Edmonton.\nThe Crystal Palace Exhibition of\n1851 at London had more than 6,-\n000,000 visitors and a surplus, of\nmore than $1,000,000.\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 82r\n676 Baker St\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the'   ,  ,\nNelspn Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 146\n\u2022\nMEMBER8of the Klnp'a Shropshire Light Infantry of Great\nBritain throw themselves Into a trench to escape withering mortar\nfire from enemy positions, after driving pommunlst soldiers from the\ntrench. The 20,000-strong Comonwealth Division drove strongly-\nentrenched Reds from a fOOO-foot peak North of ImJIn In this action.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nElizabeth Arden\nSPUN- CREAM\nPIN CURL\nPERMANENT\nWAVE SET\n*250\nRefills $2.00\nWe also havfe Hudnut, .\nHarriett Hubbard Ayer and Tonl,\nCity Drug Co.\n\"Nelson's Modern  Pharmacy\"\nPhone 34, Day \u2014 807.R, Night\n\u2022 BOX 460\nSlippers\nr..o..i.... .limbs \u00ab<\u00ab'\u2022 <\u00bb>*'\u00bb\u00ab\"r\nIf ,;'e\/oiri'iie*. BUck, mtl, rid, Utht\nblue, Stttn' ft***\nFor These Cold\nMornings\nSee Ihe selection of sherling\nlined leather slippers. Moccasin .slippers and leather\nslippers.\nALSO EXCLUSIVE\nOOMPHIE SLIPPERS\nComplete Size Range\nPhone 1114\n411 Baker St.\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING\n& HEATING\nCOMPANY LTD.\nA Complete Plumbing\nand Hegting Service\nPhone 666\n351 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nTUNE IN CKLN AT 6TONIGHtVoR\n\"Doctor's Orders\"\n\/    We Offer You a Complete\nDrug Store Service\nFEATURING NATIONALLY PREFERREp\nBRANDS OF PATENTS AND COSMETICS\nNELSON PHARMACY\nPHONE YOUR FORTRESS OF HEALTH RES.\n1203 433 Joiepnlne St \u2014 Nelson, B.C. 394-L\nBeat Winter to the Punch\n500\nGALLONS\nYes, even (hough reports\nfrom the sources of supply\nindicate that GLYCOL base\npermanent type antifreeze will\nbe scarce this' year. The Nelson\nTransfer Company, Limited,\nhas 500 gallons of this permanent type antifreeze in\nstock, to look after the requirements of Nelson and.District motorists. Beat Old Man\nWinter to the punch, drive in\ntoday to The Nelson Transfer\nand let their expert mechanics\ncheck the cooling system and\nhoses of your car or truck, and\ninstall permanent GLYCOL\nbase antifreeze and a Winter\nthermostat. The Nelson Transfer also carries a large stock of\nheaters, and defrosters, as well\nas block heaters, fpr your\nmotor.      '\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n35  PHONE   35\n*  The largest and most* completely equipped\ngarage in the Interior of British Columbia.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_10_30","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0425516","@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":"1951-10-30 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1951-10-30 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\/1.0425516"}