{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-02-09","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1951-10-17","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0425524\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" British Rush\nTroops Into Suez\n- 17 Killed in Anti-British Rioting;\nEgyptian Premier Urges Calmness\nCAIRO, Oct. 16 (CP)\u2014Britain tonight brdered more\n| men into the Suez to back up troops in action against Egyptian rioters as the Middle-East powder keg spluttered on the\n[ verge of detonation.\nThe British general in the canal zone, where 17 were\nreported killed in the rioting, broadcast a hurried message\nj to his men: \"Be ready to protect yourself ... if the Egyptians\n[try to force us out we shall\nHP\nPROVIN\nLIBRARY\nvictoria; R.c\nO^l\nI'resist.\nThe British garrison at Ismailia,\nI, In the, centre of the zone, were in\naction.today against Egyptian riot-\nJlers who looted and burned a Bri-\nj itish canteen there. Egyptian police\nfielded the rioters,. the, Britons said.\n: A regiment' ot Egyptian troops\n|*inoved on' Ismailia' tonight. The\n^Egyptian War Department said\n[they would \"aid police to restore\nfiorder \"\ni OPEN FIRE\nBritish Army authorities an-\nIVnounced that British troops and\n['Egyptian police opened fire when\nlarge crowd today attacked a\nI British camp.in Port Said, at the\n| head of the Suez Canal.\nA communique said that a \"small\nj hufmber. bf rioters\" were killed or\n[wounded and one British soldier\nI injured in today's incidents.\nEgyptian officials at. Ismailia said\nI; seven Egyptians were killed and 74\n[injured there and that four more\n|'Egyptians had been killed in riot-\n| Ing at,Port Said. A Cairo newspaper\n[put the total dead at -17,: including\nI two Britons, and said at least 80\n[had been wounded. I\n[PREMIER URGES PEOPLE\nEgyptian Fiemier Mustapha El\nI Nahas Pasha Issued a statement to\n| newspapers urging the people to re-\nI main calm.\n\"Some incidents have occurred\n|,\u00a7rid\/I am sorry that these happen-\nled,\" the statement said. \"I am ask-\nJlng you tn remain calm, because\n| what happened could stand in the\nI way of our .national* aspirations,* ow-\nI ing to the deeds ,'of irresponsible;\n[persons.\"\nAcross Egypt spread .1 new w.ivl\n[ of anti-British parades and demon-.\n[Jetrations celebrating Egypt's, formal*\nIscrapplng of the treaties she held\nwith Britain providing for station-:\ning of British troops in the country. \u25a0*'\u25a0 -,'     \"-* '.**\u25a0  >:    \u25a0'.\n;But Britain claims Egypt cannot\ntear up the treaty.\nNEW CONSTITUTION\nTonight the Egyntian House and\n^Senate, voted. the final.\"yes\" without a single, \"no\" proclaiming Farouk King of'iEgypj and *jh\u00a3 Sudan\nEni.px.mii>nsrtor a new constitution to unite tiat territory with\nEgypt. This follb_wed last night's\nvote to break the British treaties.\n1 In Egyptls two main cities, Cairo\nand Alexandria, tens of thousands\nshouted ar.d sang through the\nstreets, cheering what they considered to be the end of the British\nhoM on their country.\n\"Forty were Injured In Alexandria\nand 50 were arrested but there was\nUtile serious violence..\nThe British Army statement tonight said Ismailia was quiet after\na day.of rioting.\nThe Lancashire Fusiliers tonight\nset up temporary headquarters in\nIsmailia and an Egyptian regiment\nStood by. in case of further trouble.\nCUBAN RED LEADER\nESCAPES ASSASSINATION\nHAVANA, Cuba, Oct, 18 (AP) -\nAnibal Escalante, Cuban Communist leader, escaped assassination to-\njay. The fact that he rode in the\nfront seat of his chauffeur-driven\nlimousine probably saved his life.\nFour gunmen In another car'poured\n19 bullets into the back part of his\ncar. Escalante and his chauffeur\nivere untouched.\nSAYS HOUSING\nOBLIGATION MET\nCCF. Challenges\nWinter's Statement\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16 (CP)\u2014Reconstruction Minister Winters told the\nCommons today that the Federal\nGovernment has lived up to its obligations in the housing field. His\nstatement was immediately challenged by a member of the CCF.\nMr. Winters said that 344,000\nhousing units were completed in\nCanada in the four years from 1947\nto 1951 and another 85,000 likely\nwill be completed this year.\nSpeaking in continued debate on\nthe Sppech From the Throne, he\nsaid the Government \"by adjusting\nits policies to meat conditions, has\nlived up to its obligations, with the\nresult that it has guarded against\nundue .increases in ihe cost of\nhouses.'*:*\n\"It has enabled people to complete* houses, they had started, and\nit has enabled Canadians to building capacity and materials (available for* the* purpose.\nENCOURAGE HOUSING\n*\"Ahdinow it has taken additional\nsteps to carry out its intention to\nemphasize housing in .defence production areas and* -to* encourage\nhousing generally.\"\nAiistair Stewait fCCF-Winnipeg\nNorth Cenf.'e) reiki flip Minister's\nstatement was :n 'uilu travesty of\nilil Iruth-J'.-In 19*15,. the GWrn-\ninent had promised huusing for\neverxahe at, a few dollars a month,\nbut* people now had to pay $65 to\n$86 ia'month for* a few rooms; No\nprovision was made for. persons\nXvith the average income of,$45 to\n$46 a week,.: \u2022*\nThe-Government could have prohibited the construction of houses\nworth more than ^$15,000 to make\nmore materials available for low-\ncost housing. It could also have facilitated the: down payments .fo^\n*petsonsJ'withtIto>\u00bbMhcOfiS^:?'':'\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0 '\u2022'\u25a0 ''\u25a0'\nCOMPLICATIONS\nMr. Winters outlined* the step3\ntaken by the Government at various\ntimes to encourage home construction He saidif It had not been for\nthe complications arising out of the\nKorean situation, it was reasonable\nto suppose that housing starts\nwould have maintained an annual\nra'ie of more than 100,000 unite.\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Cloudy Wednesday.\nLight snow flurries Wednesday morning. Cold with frost tonight Winds\nlight Low and high at Cranbrook\n20 and 33; Crescent Valley 28 and\n45. Revelstoke 28 ahd 39.\nVol. SO\nNELSO& B.C., CANADA-^YEDNEStyVY MORNING, OCTOBER 17. 1951\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo. 148\nLow-Cost Housing\nInterest? Coast\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 16 (CP) - A\nmass low-cost housing development\nmay be promoted In Vancouver.\nAid. George Miller announced\nMonday that two unnamed Vancouver men indicated they are Interested in starting a development similar to one in Seattle.\nWith Mayor Fred Hume, Aldermen Miller and Archie Profctor inspected the 3500-home Mountlake\nTerrace project where assembly line\nproduction methods enable builders\nto offer , two-bedroom, concrete-\nblock homes for $5999.\nThese sell for $350 down and $30\na month under a 25-year mortgage\nunder the U.S. Soldier Bill of\nRights.\nRAWALPINDI, Pakistan, Oct.'16 (Reuters)\u2014Liaquat\nAli Khan, 56, soft;spoken lawyer who became prime minister\nof the world's largest Moslem state, was shot and killed today\nby an assassin. ......\nTwo bullets smashed into the Pakistan prime minister's, chest as he rose to address an outdoor political meeting. He died soon afterwards in hospital.\nHorrified spectators turned on the gunman and killed\nhim. Eye-witnesses said  he\nMILITARY STRATEGISTS, whose Job Is to 'consider all possibilities In the event of conflict between Russia and the West, are\nconsidering the problems involved In a Russian attack on the North\nAmerican continent via Alaska and the British Columbia coast\nPersons who know the terrain there, scoff at the thought of an\narmy marching overland, but military experts point out'ihat Russia's\nSiberian air force Is rapidly building up, the submarine fleet'of the\nU.S.S.R. Is the largest in the world, and that a sudden attack could,\nIn theory, extend far Into the continent before effective resistance\ncould be mustered.\u2014Central Press Canadian.      *\nRussia Sides With Iran;\nMossadegh Rejects Plan\nNEW YORK, Oct. 16 (AP) \u2014j Ales Bebler, Yugoslavia, teamed in\n, Russia lined up with Iran to.nlght a placating move but it was doom*\nagainst U. N. Security Counoll\naction In the explosive Iranian-\nBritish oil controversy and fore-\n cast a Soviet veto on compromise\nproposals calling for resumption\n,  of oil talks.\nSemyon K. Tsarapkin, acting. Soviet delegate, lashed out at any Security Council'decision in the case\nshortly after 'Iran's aged premier,\nMohammed Mossadegh, slammed\nhis open hand down on the Council\ntable and rejected a British proposal, or compromise amendment put\nup by India arid. Yugoslavia.\n. Tsarapkin denounced' \u00a3 British\nresolution befbrt the Council as\nan intervention in Iran's internal\n'affalrt;snd-'objected '\"also.'tb.*.the;\ncompi3iii(ilfee\"aiiientjW'e\u00abt\"1tbssed,1W'\ntoday. His strong language forecast\nthat he would cast a veto on the\nresolution in a vote 'which Council\nPresident* Joao Carlos Muniz hopes\nto take-tomorrow.\nTHREATENS TO GO HOME\nStrong language prevailed in the\nstarted with a threat to go home to\nTehran if Britain again refuses to\ndiscuss \"legitimate differences\" In\ntheir oil dispute and suggested the\nSecurity Council members might as\nwell go home also.\nSir Gladwyn Jebb, Britain, countered with a, spirited defence of\nBritain's conduct in the oil controversy and appealed to Mossadegh to\nlook to the future.   -\nTsarapkin capped the days developments with his denunciation of\nany action by th^ Council. '\nDespite Jebbs appeal, the Iranian\nitjade it' clear to* the Council for\nthe second straight day. that he is\npreparecj to discuss only two ques-\ntons:       ...\n(1) How much money does Iran\nowe for compensation for the\nnationalized Anglo - Iranian O i 1\nCompany and\n(2) The sale of oil to Britain.    -\nSir Benegal N. Rau, India, and\ned as far, as Iran was concerned\nby Mossadegh's curt rejection.\nMossadegh made a final appeal\nfor the day, his third* speech In the\nCouncil this session, .for the dele-*\ngates* to take, nonaction. Jebb reminded Tsarapkin of the treaty\nunder which the Anglo-Iranian Oil\nCompany operated and asked what\nwould Tsarapkin's position be if\nSoviet-dominated Romania would\ncancel an agreement with Moscow.\nJust before the Council adjourned at 6:24 p.m. (EST) until .10:45\na.m. tomorrow, the United - States\nindicated a favorable attitude toward the resolution* and the; compromise proposals! The Council\nhofsasj-to: conclude,.\nthe \"o&eAib&tpB&W?\nVANCOUVER, Qcfc 16 (CP) - In\n_   \u201e   . -   Vancouver at this time M year, the\nSecurity Council today. Mossadegh, odds are 2 to 1 in favor of rain 6b\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16 (CP) \u2014 Several\nopposition members joined in- the\nCommons today,in; urging the gov*\nernment to, give* Canada's .veterans\na better break at this session of par-\n^to.cWlude.consider\u00bbUop.*Mjfemept. , _-,f' ,.*,' '..   .,.*'-\n\u25a0   ' Several bespoke their disappoint\nment that no mention, of veterans\nproblems had been made in the\nspeech from the. throne, arid SUg:\ngested.that a veterans.committee be\nappointed and j that basic pensions\nrates be Increased.\nGordon' Churchill; newly-eleet*\nHume Taking No\nChances on Rain\nany given day.   \u25a0\nMayor Fred Hume tonight decid\ned riot to play the odds for Satur.\nday, when Princess Elizabeth and\nPrince Philip reach here.'\nHe telephoned Mayor Garnet\nCoulter of Winnipeg and arranged\ndelivety of a transparent plastia\ntop for the car in which they will\ntour Vancouver streets.\nThe top was .used today ih chilly\nWinnipeg.\nCommits Suicide\nSANTA BARBARA', Calif., Oct\n16 (AP)\u2014Max C. Fleischmann, 74,\nformer head of the Fleischmann's\nyeast empire, shot end killed him*\nself today at the home of his wife\nin nearby Carpinteria. He was the\nson bf Charles Fleischmann, a Hungarian emigrant who invented a\nprocess of compressing yeast which\nrevolutionized the baking industry.\nWinnipeg Whoops Up Western-Style\nWelcome for Elizabeth and Philip\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG,;, Oct. 16 (CP)-West-\nirners whobpedit lip: for their,royal\njuitors today in a high, wide and\nlandsome welcome.\nFrom the wheat fields:: and*5 truck\narms of the flat Prairies and from\nbe homes of their biggest city,\nhey came out to throat up a bois-\nerous reception that ran like wild-\nIre along 17 crowded miles of Win-\nlipeg's streets.\nIt was a Western-style, heartwarming display that thawed the\ntnifing chili of a bitter North wind\nweeping through more than 200,000\nlersons massed through the city for\n'rincess Elizabeth and Prince\n'hillp.\nSHEERING HUMANITY\nThe crowds not only roared. They\nmashed through police lines time\nnd again. They loped alongside the\noyal car, Inches away, trampling\nach other in a tangle of cheering\numanlty. The parade had to stop\nme and again while sweating po-\nce 'cleared new paths.\nWhile the demonstration lacked\nie numbers of Toronto's half-mil-\non last Saturday, it was perhaps\nie most ear-shattering and up-\nDarious of the Canadian tour to\nsite, giving the Prince' and Princess\ntaste of what the West can turn\nn in the way of hospitality for\n'siting royal folks.\nFor in this \"Gateway to the West\",\n\u25a0 was the couple's introduction to\n12-day Bwing through the Prairies\nid British Columbia, where some\n! the heartiness of the frontier\ndays still i wries ilown to the.pres-\nent.\nTOUCHES OF .\".NOW.      :    *   -\nOn their drive? through Winnipeg .in the biting cold flecked.by\noccasional touches of: snow^ *the\nPrincess and her husband rode for\nthe first time in a limousine with\na transparent plastic top. Up to\nnow, fn the mild weather of the\nEast, they always had driven in an\nopen car. sometimes perched atop\nthe back seat. .\nProtected by the plastic, the\nPrincess shucked off her mink\njacket to appear in a robin-red coat\nwith a perky matching hat. It looked like the same ensemble she wore\nat Ottawa last Thursday. Her accessories were black.\nThe. .Prince was wearing his lieutenant-commander's navy uniform,\nwith- greatcoat.  .\nOn this ninth day of what has\nbeen a fast-moving, strenuous tour\nthe Princess appeared refreshed\nafter an afternoon and evening of\neasy Informality with the mill-\nworking people of kapuskasing In\nthe Northern Ontario bush. The\nthree-hour flight from Kapuskasing,\nwith the big royal plane soaring\nhigh enough to avoid the worst of\n60-to-65-miIe headwinds, apparently\nhad not tired her.\nPHILIP CO-PILOT      '\nPhilip was In the co-pilot's seat\nwhen it landed, .next to Sqdn. Ldr.\nStewart Cowan of Winnipeg, the\npilot\nAt the airport, where 5000 people\nhad been standing in the blustery\nthe royal couple stepped into the\ncustomary reception frofa a military\nguard of honor, Justice Minister\nCarson, Lieutenant - Governor Mc-\nWilllams, Premier Campbell and\nMayor Garnet Coulter.\nAs the royal procession headed\nthe 5% miles to the couple's hotel\nquarters, lt rolled slowly through\nthe semi-circular drive of nearby\nDeer Lodge veterans' hospital,\nwhere wounded former servicemen\nwere drawn up. outside, some in\ncots and wheelchairs.\nIt was down the broad reaches\nof Portage Avenue, widest street in\nCanada, that the police and military\nguards and outriders began to have\ntheir troubles. The crowds stampeded, hemmed In and overwhelmed the' police and ran out into the\nstreets to trot alongside the cars as\nthey moved at a slow pace.\nPRINCESS RECEIVES CHECK\nBy the time the. couple got to\ntheir hotel, they were 40 minutes\nbehind schedule and they had to\nrush to a luncheon where Premier Campbell presented the Princess\nwith $5000 from the provincial government for her special charities.\nThe prince and princess ate plain\nlunch featuring roast beef and prepared by chef Harry Swain who\nhelped in the preparation of food at\nthe same hotel during the 1939 visit\nof the king and queen.\nTRIBUTE TO CANAOA\nAfter lunch,' the royal couple attended the reception'at the parliament buildings where the princess\ndelivered her first Western speech,\nsweep of the wind for a long time,'It was a tribute to Canada and to\nthe West for giving freedom of life\nto settlers from European countries,\nmany' of whom live in and around\nthis city of racial mixtures.\n'II have been pleated and Inter\nested to learn how you.have .at*\ntraded to your city and the tun\nrounding   prairies   people   from\nmany European countries    who\nhave found here the freedom of\nlife they yearned for. In thlt free\nand   noble   country,  they   have\nfound a home and in return they\nhave  brought with then)  much\nthat hat enriched the nation.\"\nMembers of the legislature were\npresented to the pair ih the legislative chamber 'before they left for\nthe drive through the flooi area.\nBUFFET DINNER\nIn the evening, the visitors had a\nbuffet dinner at government house.\nWild duck was the main course.\nThe royal couple, delayed during\na busy day by exuberant crowds,\narrived half an hour behnid schedule at the white brick residence of\nLieutenant-Governor R, F. McWil-\nliams.\nAbout 60 guests including leaders\nin Manitobas chinch, court military\nand civilian life were presented and\nthe lieutenant governor made a\nshort lnfdrmal address.\nOnly two reporters and one photographer were Invited to see the\nroyal couple arrive. A cordon of police surrounded the building and\nformed a lane to\" the nearby civic\nauditorium where the couple and\nmany of the guests were to attend\na command performance of the Winnipeg ballqt . .   *       \u25a0\nNOT GUILTY\nVANCOUVER, Oct 15 (CP) \u2014\nA Vancouver motorist got religion\nmixed with law In police court\ntoday when he was up on a charge\nof \"falling to give the right of way\nto a pedestrian.\"\n;-'.! \"I' waive the reading of the\ncharge and enter a plea of not\nguilty,\" he said.\nAsked   If   he   understood   the\nmeaning of the charge, he said:\n\"Certainly. Falling to give the\nright of way to a Presbyterian.','\no was convicted.\nUrges Higher\nVels Pensions\ned Progretslve Conservative member for Winnipeg South Centre,\npleaded the cause of the veterans\nin his maiden speech to the chamber, suggesting that \"pensions be\nraised as tho value of the dollar\ndepreciates. *      -\nIf something was not done, he\ntuggested, \"the Canadian  nation\nwill have broken faith with its\nveterans.\" Pensions were a \"grave\nIssue\" with  Veterans across the\ncountry. They were aroused  by\nthe lack of government action.\n:,\" Canada   could   not   expect   her\nyoung' men to volunteer for danger\nand risk if only neglect'was to be\nhis  reward  after  performnig ' his\nduty. '.  .\n\"Surely for the national interest\nif for no other, we should see that\nour veterans are looked after,\" he\nsaid.*\nStanley Knowles (CCF-Wlnnipeg\nNorth Centre) urged the government to institute an across the board\nIncrease in disability perisions and\nother war veterans allowances. \u201e\nAlistair Stewart (CCF-Winnipeg\nNorth) said Canada had a'moral obligation to its .veterans which it can\nnot shirk.' A few years ago, the\npensions legislation had been the\nbest of its kind; but its value had\nsteadily deteriorated.\nClaim Would Lose on\nTelephone Switchover\nVANCOUVER, Oct 16 (CP) \u2014\nGordon L. Frost, general * commercial manager for B.C. Telephone\nCompany, \u25a0 said today the company\nwill lose revenue immediately If\ntoll-free telephone service is extended to North Vancouver, West\nVancouver and Richmond.\nHe was testifying -before the\nBoard of Transport Commissioners\nwhich is hearing the company's application for a 10 per cent rate\nincrease.\nD. E. McTaggart, counsel for Vancouver, asked , Mr. Frost: \"So I\nunderstand the company is promoting* a losing proposition?\"\n' Mr; Frost replied that although*\nthe company' would immediately\nlose money with the switchover,\nboth subscribers and company\nwould benefit in the long run.\nPROPOSE8 SENATE\nSTUDY. OF LEGISLATION\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16 (CP) - A proposal to establish several \"investigating committees\" to make a close\nsenatorial study of major Government legislation was made in the\nSenate tonight by tbe Government\nleader. Senator Wishart Robertson.\nImmediate approval of' this re\nform of the working habits of the\nUpper Chamber was blocked Senator J. H. King (L\u2014British Columbia) took exception to waiving a\nrule requiring two days' notice for\nsuch motions and adjourned the\ndebate until tomorrow.        j\nTERRIFIC LICKING\nFOR RED JETS\nGround Fighting   -\nFast and Furious\nBy  JOHN   RANDOLPH\n~    U. 8, EIGHTH ARMY  HEADQUARTERS,     Korea,     Oct.   17\n* (Wednesday) (AP)\u2014The Red Air\nForoe Tuesday took Its Worst Jet\nlicking of the war In air combat\n\"that'matched  the   savagery of\nground fighting along  most  of\nthe Korean front *\nThe* Fifth Air Force* said U. ,S.\nfliers shot'dowil nine Russian-built\nMigs and damaged five others in\ntwo hot engagements;over Northwest Korea. It reported only* one\nF-86  Sabre* Jet damaged  hu the\n^swirling  engagement * between* *70\n;U. S. and more than 150 Communist\n'jets * \"*'*     '**      ' '**\nOn* the ground, U. S. and South\nKorean, infantry drove to within\nabout: four miles of Kumsong but\nthere ran .into furiouij resistance\nfrom what appeared to: be the Reds'\nmain 'defence line. There also was\nsevere fighting in Eastern and\nWestern Korea'... * .     .\nThree Allied divisions In the centre gained about six-tenths of a mile\nbefore .North of ,the 38th parallel\nA briefing officer estimated total\nChinese casualties in four days on\nthis sector at nearly 4500.\nIn the West, the U. S. 1st\/Cavalry\nDivision * threw itself * once more\nagainst; three miles of Chinese-held\nridge positions Northwest of Yonchon, some 35 miles North of Seoul.\n( Allied .and Red artillery duelled\nall daylong and into the night on\nthis sector.\nCoasf Aldermen\nCleared of Blame\nVICToklA, B.C, Oct. 16 (CP) -\nVictoria aldermen were cleared today pf blame for the \"unforgiveable\nbehavior\"\"af Harrison Hot Springs\nlast.week*      .\nMayor tPercy George, retiring\npresident of the Union of B.(j. Municipalities, told City Council.he was\n\"very proud\" of the Victoria delegation to the union's convention at the\nFraser. Valley spa.\n\"Your delegates acquitted them*\nselves admirably and presented Vic*\ntoria's case, very.- well,\" Mayor\nGeorge told Council, \"They paid\nstrict attention.to duty and I never\nmissed ope of them at any of the\nbusiness sessions.\"..\nMayor George and other Victoria\ndelegates said they have been feeling the stigma of a cdnvention resolution which branded- as \"unforgiveable\" the conduct of \"some delegates and their guests.\"\n. .The resolution' was passed the\nmorning the convention broke up,\nafter some revelers allegedly had\nhawked morning newspapers\nthrough the halls of the convention\nhotel at 4 a.m.\nChurchill Flails\nAt Foreign Policy\nLONDON, Oct. 16 (APi\u2014 Winston Churchill tonight accused the\nLabor Government of groveling\nabroad to win votes at home in the\nOct. 25 general election.\nGroveling does not express the\nconviction of the British nation, the\nConservative leader said emphatically.\nWhile the Conservative big guns\nhammered at what they contended\nwas Labor's failure iri foreign affairs, the Socialists stuck to home\nmatters.\nPrime Minister Attlee spoke seven times today in Worcestershire\nin his whistle-stop campaign tour.\nHe said his Government had effected a better and more adequate\nfood distribution than any Conservative Government and that Brians are healthier .today than they\never were before. lL\nwas torn to pieces.\nFANATIC\nHe was identified merely\n\"Rafiq,\" a member of the Khaksars,\na fanatical Moslem movement. The\ngroup was thought to have died out\nsince the partition of India,and\nPakistan, ' but during ^the war its\nleadership was suspected of Fascist\nsympathies.\nNews of the killing was broadcast\nover the state radio to this nation\nnf 82,000,000, created in 1947 when\nthe British left India and the subcontinent was partitioned.\nNO DISORDER\nThe cabinet convened an emergency session in Karachi, the capital. Orders were issued forbidding\ngatherings of more' than five persons and prohibiting the carrying of\narms .but no disorder was reported.\nMessages of condolence poured in\nfrom all over the, world. The King\ncabled froni' his sick-bed in London\nto expressssorrow. at the* \"dastardly\ncrime.\" '\nLiaquat, a Moslem, was-long a\nconciliatory influence; in'the.'iemv\nbittered; relations with, neighboring\nIndia. '   .\nMntdiul of the p.) sib'litv that tin\nuneasy peart* may be upset, India's'\nleaders hastened to ,serid condolences. Prime Minister. Jawaharlal\nNehru paid tribute. to ...the. fallen\nLiaquat in one moving '. message,\ndeclaring \"in this moment of sorrow all differences are forgotten.\"\nForeign Minister Sir Mohammed\nZafrullah Khan, a possible choice\nto succeed Liaqyat hs prime;min-\nister, hurriedly prepared , to come\nhbme from' United Stations head-\n.quarters' in New'York. Pakistan has\nnod?puty prime minister so it Is\n.uncertain .who will succfed-Jiiaquat.\nFEAR MOSLEM-HINDU RIOT\nIn Bombay, India, trtick loads of\nheavily-armed police began intensive patrols for fear that false reports might set off Moslem-Hindu\nriotiftg. False, reports that' a Moslem assassinated Mohandas K, Gandhi se;t, off murderous attacks\nagainst Bombay's 400,000 ' Moslems*\nin 1948. ',. '\n* Liaquat's body was flown tonight\nto Karachi from this West Punjab\ntown 40 miles' from the Kashmir\nfrontier. He will he buried tomor\nrow with state ceremonial. A month\nof mourning was decreed throughout'the country.'   i'\u2022:.'\nThe prime minister was addressing a meeting of the Moslem\nLeague, to whose work he has devoted his life. He rose, assembled\nhis notes, and had jitst started to\nspeak when the shots were fired.\nLiaquat fell to the ground, An\nEnglishman standing, nearby * was\nthe first to reach him.\nThe killer headed for the, street\nbut the, crowd swarmed over him.\nLIKE GANDHI'S DEATH\n^Liaquat's fate was tragically Ilka\nthat of Gandhi, architect of the Indian state, who was shot dead in\nNew Delhi by a Hindu extremist\nLiaquat, a graduate of Oxford\nUniversity, became prime minister\nof Pakistan at its birth Aug. 15.\n1947. . '        \u25a0\nAs the right-hand man of the late.\nMohammed AU Jinnah he had.\nfought for 20 years for the creation\nof Pakistan, and he came here as\none of an army of 6,000,000 refugees.\nHe had been born and brought up\nin India\/descendant of an ancient\nIranian family which migrated to\nthe .sub-continent: 500 years ago.,    .''\u25a0;,\nJirihah became governor-general\nof Pakistan, with Liaquat prime\nminister but In,reality second-in-\ncommand until Jlnnah's death ta\n1948. \u25a0\u25a0**\nNURSED PAKISTAN . \/\nj Liaquat nursed Pakistan through\nmany pressing difficulties, including relations with India and the dispute over Kashmir, which lies between the two countries, and parts\nOf which both occupy.\nHis assassination came seven\nmonths after he. had announced dis-\nektierfchr-.a-pl6t*.al]mfed*'\"tocreatA\n\u2022commotion In the'country by. violent means\" in which the Pakistani\narmy was involved. Fourteen persons, including the secretary of the\nPakistani Communist party and\nsenior officers of the armed services, were arrested.\nHis widow is a force In Pakistan.\nShe championed the independenc*.\nof women is Moslem' country,- tell^*.\ning.them they couldnot.be \"a drag\non society.\"   .\nIn 1950 they toured*the* United':\nStates and Canada together.   .       fff\nArchbishop,\nChaplains to\nTroubled Korea\nVANCOUVER, Oct 16 (CP) \u2014\nMost Rev. Maurice Roy, Archbishop\nof. Quebec and bishop of the armed\nforces, left here today on a flight\nto the Orient\nHe will carry more than 100\nletters and personal messages to\nCanadian .troops in Korea and\nJapan,\nThe 46-year-old Archbishop was\naccompanied by the senior Roman-\nCatholic chaplains of the services:\nRev. M. P. Mclsaac, of the fleet;\nGroup Capt Rev. Leonard Costello,\nR.9.A.F.; and Ht. Rev. Col. C.-E.\nBeaudry, Army, all of Ottawa.\nThey expected to be in the Far\nEast about three weeks.\nReject Tax Increase\nWASHINGTON,'Oct. 16 (AP) \u2014\nThe House of Representatives rejected 203 to 157 a compromise $5,-\n732,000,000 tax increase bill today in\na stunning upset that left key lawmakers questioning whether any\nrevenue measure at all will be passed this year. The bill would have\nraised individual income taxes $2,-\n333,000,000 a year, and made other\nbig changes in revenue law.\nTOO Planes Search\nFor Strato-Freighter\nWESTOVER ' AIR FORCB\nBASE, Mass., Oct 16 (AP) \u2014 A\nthird weak SOS was picked up\ntonight as more than 100 planes\npressed their searoh for a huge\nWestover-mound Air. Force Strat?\nofrelghter and Its it-man crew,\nevidently ditched In the Atlantic\nWestover said the latest call\nwas picked up at 5:30 p.m., EST,\nsome 190 miles Southeast of Nov*\nScotia and 390 miles East of Boston, The signals were So weak'\nthe nature of the call could not\nbe exactly determined.\nWestover tald that 53 planes\ncontrolled by tho 5th Air Rescue\nSquadron at the Massachusetts\nbase had covered 148,000 square\nmiles of the 198,000 assigned to It\nIn the search without turning, up\nany trace of the missing.craft\nwhich left Lages, The Azores,\nearly Monday morning.\nTRIBUTE TO LIAQUAT\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16 (CP)- Sena-\ntors, like members of the House of\nCommons earlier, stood with heads\nbowed for a minute in silence tonight in tribute to the assassinated\nPrime Minister of Pakistan, Liaquat\nAli Khan.\nGood Start To Bond Campaign\nBy HAROLD  MORRISON\nOTTAWA, Oct, 16 (CP)\u2014Graham\nTowers, today reported \"surprisingly good results\" on, the first day\nof Canada's sixth postwar saving\nbonds campaign.\nIf this keeps up,\" the Governor\nof the Bank of Canada said in an\ninterview, \"we shall go over the\ntop \u2014 sell more bonds and surpass\nany previous saving bond campaign\nsince the war.\"\nPAYROLL-SAVING8 PLAN\nCampaign directors reported unusually high demand for the new\nbond series through the payrolls-\nsavings plan.\nCivil servants and armed forces\npersonnel grabbed about $1,500,000\nworth \u2014.purchasing in one day\nwhat they bought in 10 days in 1950.\nOne power and paper company\nin New Brunswick broke previous\nrecords. Throughout the campaign\nlast year, its employees purchased\nonly $129,000'. This year payroll\nsales totalled $170,000 in the first\nday.\nAnother large Industrial company at Edmonton completed its\nemployee survey Monday, report\ning a 20-per-cent Increase ta applications  and  a  40-per-cent  increase in total sales.\nSOLDIER8 BUY\nEvfen the boys In Korea are buying bonds. Canada's 25th Brigade\nresponded with applications for\n$4000 worth of the bonds during\nthe first day.\n\u2022\"Part of the reason for the Increased sales, of course, is probably due to generally higher economic activity throughout the\ncountry,\" Mr. Powers said.\nThere appears to be an increased\ndesire to save. By saving more, you\ngain greater control of your future.\"\nLast year, with a ceiling on purchases of $1000 a person, the bank\nsold $283,873,000, worth of bonds to\n960,895 persons. This year the ceiling\nhas been raised to $5000.\nSaving-bond sales reached a postwar high in 1946 when $534,295,000\nworth were sold to 1,248,444 persons.\nThe celling then was $2000.\nPart of the money the bank\nhopes to raise through current\nsales will go toward paying off\nabout $1,700,000,000 worth of bonds\ndue during the current fiscal year.\n ^M\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17, 1951\nUST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Complete Shown 7:00 - 9:00\nBette Dqvis - Barry Sullivan In\n\"PAYMENT ON DEMAND\"\nSTARTS THURSDAY\nIN THE PHILIPPINES\nC\/I\/\/C\nBlewett Parents Want Road Fixed;\n\"Dangerous\" for School Bus Travel\nBlewett parents plan to \"march\n\u2022 on Nelson\" this Saturday to pro-\ntest tht \"dangerous\" condition of\n' the Blewett road.\n\u2022 A  delegation  will  Invade the\nDistrict   Engineer's   office   early\nSaturday,   to   request   Improvements for tha  road  which  was\n: considered \"dangerous for school\nbus travel.\"\nFred Pratt, representative of the\nBlewett attendance area, Tuesday\nnight told a meeting of the Board\nqf Trustees, Nelson School District\nNo. 7, of the action planned. \"The\npeople don't want shoveMeaners\nor chair warmers, they want ao-\ntlon,\" Mr. Pratt said,\nThe decision was made Monday at\na meeting of the attendance i area\nwhich reelected;, Mr., Pratt, as rep*\nresentative.\nIVom Blewett ilso enwc* tht jiuj-\nlestion that (lie srhonl there bt\nused for tiv: small children,,, rather\n\"M\ncoming\nto\nVancouver\nvia\nI Hera at the Sylvia\u2014ovarloob-\nl ing English Bay \u2014 there's\nglorious scenery to enchant\nyour eye\u2014superb food to\ndelight your taste\u2014friendly\nservice to make things pleasant Whether you \"dine in the\njjcy\" or prefer to cook In your\nown 'self-contained suite,\nyou'll enjoy life at the Sylvia.\n-   IMaf the ohlliwa. OapoMo toby-\n..-',  eitttof **r*U\u00bb U proviaoa, and\nroads art protected.\nI      HOTEL   SYLVIA\n:'  1114 Ollford Unit        PAtlllc 9321\nS Million) C. lylt      Mantgleg Director\nthan transporting them back and\nforth to Nelson. B. E. Hyndman\nadvised the Board that if 20 grades\n1, 2.and 3 pupils could be f.-und\nin the area, it would be possible\nto use the school.\nExtra municipal meetings in\nLongbeach and Balfour elected\nTrustee G. R. Sargent, and Jeffery\nGold, respectively, as representatives.\nThe Board Tuesday night recommended the appointment of two\ndistrict health officers, Dr. F. M.\nAuld for Nelson district school, and\nDr. O. R. Callbeck for Salmo district schools.\nIt turned down a request from 24\nSenior High School students for\nuse pf the school gyro for teacher-\nchaperoned square dancing, and\ndecided to set .tip regulations for\nthe.rental'of school buildings .for,\nnulilir icnviticf\n'iho bowl h cK* tludvlim the\npossiblity ,:*,.of. 'obtaining insurance;\ncovering u'lilaceinent nf broken\nwiniinw. in City MihoiiH\nOLD FOLK T(\nSEE FILMS\nKootenay's old foils loni\/jiil -tin\n\"go to the movir.i\" rlpht In* their\nown parloi -\nNelson. Film Council '1\/111 show,\nfilms tonlgla 'it'Minnit' St.tPranci:\nInfirmary. The showings v.-lll be\nonly a \"trial\", bur if thn rr*,pi nse\nis good, they will III rlj be * on\ntjnued during the\" Winter months.\n:' Over 70 Nelsonltee Tuesday night\nsaw six films, depicting everything\nfrom \"a day in the life of a Welsh*\nshepherd\" to a cartoon. Names Of\nthe films, screened in' the Cathedral\nHall, were \"Stephen: Foster Melo-\ndleB,\"'. \"Tha $hort Way Home\",\n\"Dog, Sheep, Mr.' Bo-Peep\", \"Daredevils on Ice,'* \"Scottle Finds*,*'. a\nHome\" and *'Ey\u00ab Witness.\"\ni \u2022\u2022 *' *\nUnderground Drilling\nFor Copper Ridge\n.Latest diamond drill hole to be\ncompleted at Copper Ridge Silver\nZinc Mines Ltd., has further con*\nfirmed widths and grade of the ore\non tha 150-foot level, tht company\nreports. Hole No. 32, one in a series\nto outline the orebody at this hori\nzon, penetrated mineralization for\na total width of 33.8 feet\n979 Visits Made\nIn Helson-Salmo\nHealth Survey\n* One hundred homes in Nelson\nand Salmo were visited by public\nhealth nurses as pert of a nationwide sickness survey.\nThe work, along with general\nschool services, was carried out by\nPublic Health Nurses, who made\n979 visits to 70 homes in Nelson\nand to 30 In Salmo in the year-long\nsurvey,\nThe purpose of tht survey, the\nnurses said In a report received by\ntht Board of Trustees, Nelson\nSchool District No. 7 Tuesday night,\nwas to give a picture of the health\nof the nation in all types ot families, both rural and urban.\nThe three public health nurses\nare Miss Jean McVicar, Miss Nancy\nLee and Mrs. M. J. Barwls; they\nwere assisted In the Nelson school\nprogram by Mrs. Alberta Murphy.\n1404 TO CLINICS  >\nChild Health Clinics drew 893\nInfants and pie-school children to\nthe Nelson clinic, and 711 to ones\nheld at 10 district points. A total of\n739 home visits to infants and preschool children were made. ,.\u25a0'\u25a0.\nIn the school health program,\ngrade three children In Nelson and\nKaslo were given audiometer tests;\nsenior matriculation students of the\nNelson High School were given\nchest X-rays, and a tuberculin testing survey was done in the Riondel\nSchool.\nThere were 38 cases of measles,\n40 cases of mumps, M of chicken-\npox and 23 of scarlet fever reported\nduring tht year. New regulations\nreduced some isolation periods, the\nreport read, and in cases of mumps,\nrubella and chicken pox, quarantine for contacts was eliminated.\nAn Immunization program for\nsmall pox, diptheria, whooping\ncough and tetanus was carried out\nIn nil schools arid clinics.\nHealth education was 'another\npart* of- the public health nurses'\njob. Films were shown and pamphlets distributed, ahd during National Health Week a window display was made by the practical arts\n.students of the Junior High.School,\nA 8POT.OF \"CANADIANA\" wat In\t\nthe Royal couple's visit to Brantford, Ont, when\nPrincess Elizabeth shook hands with an Indian\nehlef In full regalia, from nearby Indian reserve.\nof Their Highnesses on their whirlwind tour ef\nSouthern Ontarlo^-Central Press Canadian,\nAn emergent communication\nof Nelion Lodge No. 23, A.F.\n& A.M., will ba held Thursday, Oct, 18, at 1:15 p.m., In\nthe Lodge room, for the purpose of attending the funeral\nof our late W. Bro., Herbert\nM. Whimster whose funeral\nservice will  bt held  In  St.\nPaul's United Church at 2 p.m.\nVisiting   Brothren   art   cordially Invited te attend-\nBy Order of tht\nWorshipful -Master,\nJ, A. Bracken,\nSecretary.\nIter'Ileal Home Comfort\nuse\nNorthern-Wyoming Coat\nQfon oFWMm*m$a fan\nof Satisfaction\nFor IMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nPhone 889\nCold and Hum l.\nConvicts Revolt\nMOUND8VILLE, W.Vn., bcl 16\n: (AP)\u2014 Mort than a thoirand cold\nnnd hungry convicts, revolting\ni because of what they tald was a\n; dirty cook and not enough cloth*\nInn, mllled;around the big exer\ncite yard of the Wett Virginia\nStitn Prlton tonight\nAbout 200 prlionen, armed\nwith knives and broken scissors,\ntried to storm tha prison com*-\n?mIssary but were driven back by\n\"rapid firing of the guards lining\nthe big gray walls. Tha prisoners\nhave not oaten since noon.\nAnother group trltd to break\nInto the power plant, but were\ndriven off by mere gunfire,\nThere were no casualties re<\nported.\nTht warden said a three-man\ngrievance committee appeared\nbefore him today te pretest certain conditions In tht prlton.\n\"Tht men complained that one\nof the eeokt wat not staying\nclean,\" he said. \"I told them that\nwould be taken cart of.\n\"They alio tald thty were net\ngetting enough tlothlng, and I\nadmitted that wat possibly true,\nbecause wt de net have enough\nfunds \"available for olothes.\"\nThe Meundsvlllt Prlton, built\nto accommodate 900 convicts, hat\na regular population of about\n1800.\nBus Bogs Down\nIn Highway Mud\n' Stalled in a boggy section of the\nnew construction area on the N.el-\nson-Nelway road,, a bus containing] Italian   prisoners   of   war1: except\nover 30 Neknn delegates to a Girl i those sentenced or being prosecuted\nRussia Says\nSent Home\nPrisoners of Wos\n* UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.; Oct.\n18 (AP)\u2014Russia has told the United* Nations that* it haa;sent; back;\nhome  all  German,...\u2022-Japanese'^ and'\nNewspaperman Asked\nTo Stand as Candidate\nTORONTO, Oct. 16 (CP) \u2014 Roy\nH. Thomson, 57-year-old President\nof Canada's largest group of dally\nnewspapers, has been asked to stand\nfor nomination as Progressive Conservative candidate in Toronto's\nBracondale riding in the Nov. 22\nOntario general elections.\nThe announcement was made today by Ed Brown, chairman* of the\nBracondale P.C. Association.\nMr. Thomson said he was \"con*\nsiderlpg\" the suggestion. The nomination convention will- be held\nThursday.\nMr. Thomson's financial Interests\ninclude nine daily newspapers, re*\ndip stations and a national mage*\nzlne.\nJhsL Wsaihsihm\nTOWLER\nFUEL & TRANSFER\n889\nNELSON\n526 STANLEY STKHT\nNELSON\nHalifax \u201e\nMontreal ......\nOttawa .\u201e...,-,.\nToronto  ,.,\nNorth Bay ...\nPort Arthur .\nKenora \t\nWinnipeg .....\nBrandon _._,\nThe Pas \t\n37 47 49\n43 68 \u2014\n47 68 \u2014\n41 69 \u2014\n85 \u00ab8 \u2014\n41 70 -\n43 62 rr\n30 40 Tr\n32 41 .05\n28 34 Tr\n24 28 .20\nRegina      22 26 .06\nSaskatoon .......j. ~    17 24 \u2014\nNorth Ba'ttleford     18 21 .05\nSwift Current  - -  IB ?1 .07\nMedicine Hat  -..    17 26 Tr\nLethbridge      16 21 A\nCalgary   _.....     15 21 .04\nEdmonton      20 24 \u2014\nKamloops  - . 86 43 \u2014\nPenticton        S8 .47 \u2014\nVancouver  \u201e 32 53 \u2014\nVictoria  :.     41 55 .06\nKimberley   ..'.  26 32 .12\nCrescent Valley \u201e-    86 47 .11\nKeslo    .T...    34 42 .10\nPrince Rupert     38 48 M\nPrince George _.,     10 33 \u2014\nGrand Porks      36 48 .14\nSeattle    89 54 .46\nPortland      46 60 .01\nSpokane  , \u2022    38 43 .27,\nChicago    53 76 Tr\nSan Francisco      53 .65 \u2014\nLos Angeles ....\u201e'....,.. \" 58 70 \u2014\nNew-York    __..*    54 73 ' \u2014\nWhitehorse      12 23 \u2014\nGuide  district  meeting  at  Salmo\n'i\/i. in id un fur iivei .in l*iiiu, motorists returniiiK to- Nelson early\nWi'dni sday rnornini   n ported\n<1 i'.ti shovel roscurd tin Im,\nwliii h  irrived hen   it 12 'V,-i ,*,*\nThi bin, became stalled about\nH'.IO p.m.,.Tuesdoy, when it slowed\nliei*di!*.i*,of i passenger cor, also\nstuck in tho mud.\n\"Tough gmn'g\" was Un** rtcberlp-\nnon i ivrn iliwwt conditions on the\nstretch vhe'ie toiiiliuemm is under\nwaj hii,!,.iiiuli of Nol,un Rain nf\nih., Inst several days had created\nihe tlif.Viilt conditions.\nSnow was falling South of'Apex\nand Ymir, while it had piled;up\nover* two Inches Tuesday at th{!\nEmerald Mine.\nSURPRISED TO\nSEE FINE BALLET,\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 16 (CP)~Surprise was expressed by Princess\nElizabeth tonight after viewing the\ncommand performance of. the Winnipeg Ballet Company.\nBefore leaving the Princess personally congratulated Gweneth\nLloyd, founder and director of the\nballeti for the fine performance\nstaged by her troupe of. dancers,\nThe Princess said she was surprised that such a fine group of\ndancers existed in Canada. The\nDuke said the\" dancers must really\nlike their work to exert themselves\nso much.   .\nPrincess Elisabeth and Prince\nPhilip made their brief stage door\nstop before leaving for a waiting\ntrain to Regina. Both said they'd\nlike to come back to Winnipeg.\nPRINCE88 8HY\nMiss Lloyd said sht found the\nPrincess to be quite shy. \"I did\nmost of the talking,\" she said.\nThe.royal couple entered Winnipeg's vast civic auditorium on the\ntraditional red carpet and made\ntheir way slowly to the royal box\ndirectly in front of the stage. They\nwere followed by Lt.-Oov. R. P.\nMe Williams and Mrs. MoWilliams.\nThe box like most of the auditorium was richly decorated with\nflowers. It gave the building a hothouse atmosphere In contrast with\nthe blustery Manitoba weather outside, o\nStop Making World\nOver in Own Image\nHARTFORD, Conn., Oct. 16.(Al>)\n\u2014Gov, Thomas E. Duwiy of Mewj\nYork tonight called. on?Amerlca<to*\nshift its propaganda(line andu begin\nchampioning *\"Asia for :the Asians\n\u2014not for the Russians.\" In >n address prepared for the Connecticut\nState Bar Association he said \"we\nmust stop trying to make the world\nover into our own image.\". A\nREADY FOR EMERGENCY\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16 (CF) ~ The\nSenate tonight adopted a motion\nproviding for immediate recall of\nits members should an emergency\narise while it is not sitting.*.\nPHONE 144 FDR CLA88IFIED\nfor wur crimes. IV Hussi.m dtnto\nment, n ni to Hu U W (Vi I, we i\nmade public today by Serretnry-\nGenoral Trygvq Lie: Estimate's on\nIhe numbei nf \"pnsopeis still be-\nliev.ii ,0 hn in Ru-il.in hmidi\nronfied from ,',00,(100 iipvuhU  ,   *\nInjured Loggers\nFlown to Coast\nVANCOUVER, Oct, 16 (CP)-Two\nmen, both injured in logging accidents, were flown to Vancouver for\nhospital treatment within three\nhours today.\nInjured were: Walter Pellx, Lli-\nlooet Lake logger, and George Ross\nHunter of Squamlsb, employed in\nhis brother's timber hauling firm,\nJohn Hunter and Company.\nDetails of both accidents were\nsketchy, but it was reported that\nFelix was struck on the head by a\nfalling tree. Hunter suffered head\ninjuries in another accident while\nhauling timber to a Squamish mill.\nFirst mercy flight plane was dispatched by Associated Air Taxi.\nPilot John Boat landed at Squamish and returned en hour later with\nHunter.\nAt the same time, a B.C. Airlines\nJane was winging North to Lillooet\n,ake, about 93 miles North of Vancouver, to take Felix to hospital.\nAn employee of Fleetwood Logging\nCompany, Felix was picked up at\nthe company's lakeshore operations\nat the Northwest end of the lake.\nDrop Attempt To\nShift Europeans\nNAPLES, Italy, Oct. 16 (Reuters)\n\u2014Government*^delegates* from* 27\ncountries'tonight abandoned an attempt to in rate an international\n'machine**;'to\".shift millions of Europeans tow their crowded home-\nliinil'i       i ...\n^ tn face' of determined Awrlmi\niotii,ril hi i> cent liii't' term com\nmitraents, the,conference ended. .\n'I he c'onfen nun w'ns called by tin.\nInternational Labor Office, which\npresented 'a: $100,000,000-plan to resettle. IT.OOO.OM ,.Europeans- in * Western uotmtiii'ri in the next fivt* ycair..\nSUPPORT U. S.\nCanada and Australia, fnllowlnf\n>he United Stales as ihe higcejl\neurient all inbon of Europeans,\nsupported .the-.-tl. S. stand.\nThe Canadian delegation Is headed by C. E. S. Smith, Canadian director of immigrations  '. '\"'.\nThe United States would have\nbeen called on to bear the largest\nshare of the cost of this plan, intended to ease population pressure\nin Itply, Austria, Greece, Western\nGermany, Holland, Malts and Trieste. \u25a0 \u25a0\nRobert West, immigration adviser\nto the U. S. Secretary of State and\n\"leader of the American delegation,\nsaid the United States intends a\n\"step-by-step approach, by which\nwe mean doing first those things\nclearly Indicated as practical -measures.\n\"We must consider this conference as one stage.\"\nFalse Alarm Set Off\nNelson Fire Department was\ncalled out Tuesday nfght at 9:30\nby a falsa alarm at Fifth and\nCottonwood Streets box.\nA Treat\nFor You and Your Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelion\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nNew Contract\nIs Sought\nHospital Workers\nMembers of tha Hospital Employees' Union are asking board ot\ndirectors of Kootenay Lake General Hospital for a new contract\nThe employees are seeking \"substantial increases\" in wages, C. H.\nHamilton, acting chairman, told the\nboard at its meeting Tuesday night\nin the Nurses' home. -\nThe board's labor relations committee will meet before negotiations get under way.\nTht board wat advised by W. J.\nLyle, hospital finance manager of\nthe B.C Hospital Insurance Service, that tht service is wilting to\nmake an advance on outstanding\ndebentures ,of the city on which\ntht hospital pays four per cent a\nyear, repayable over three and a\nhalf year?. The matter was referred to the executive with power\nto act.\nH. J. Wltchell* reported on the\nrecent meeting of West Kootenay\nregional hospitals at Kaslo.\n. Tht board expresed regret at the\ndeath of H. M. Whimster, hospital\nsociety president for about five\nyears'and a member of the board\nfor many years. \"He did a great\ndeal for thlt institution,\" Mr.\nHamilton said.\nIdentifies Evidence\nIn Coast Murder Case\nVANCOUVER, Oct 16 (CP)\u2014Elmer Parker,, in Assize Courd today,\nIdentified his mother's signature on\na will naming the man accused of\nmurdering her, as beneficiary.  ;***\nParker appeared as witness for\nthe Crown at the trial of Erie Bal-\ntare, :63-ye8r-old.carpcntervaccused\nof murdering Mn*. Mnt.v Parker.\n59, July 28.\nMr, Justice A. O. Macfarlane;\nruled that thn .'idi'nlitlcnllon was\nadmissable.\n; Harry Rankin, Balt.ire's defence\"\ncounsel, asked the identification be;\nkept away, from the jury, on* the\ngrounds:Vthat-.ItjdW ;notfestnblishi\nthe document as being a will.\nThree witnesses testified tn the\n'uulluff nf Mir.. Pari er'j_ -Imily\nalter hearing screams.\nScientists Disappear\nLONDON, Oct, 17 (Wednesday)\n(Reuters)\u2014The Daily Mail reports\ntoday that two British scientists\u2014\ni an avowed Communist\u2014have\ndisappeared'.abroad with their families. The newspaper says the missing men art Dennis O'Connor, 25,\na Communist, and William Campbell. Both were engaged .with the\nNational Institute of Medical Research.\nAS PRESIDENT ef tht Nelson\nParent-Teacher Association, Mrt.\nJ. J. Carney hasn't any time on\nher hands between now ind Saturday when the sixth annual Eastern border conference of parents\nand teachers la held In Central\nSchool. She hat been devoting her\ntime to the conference arrange-\nments for months;\nBody Found Off\nBealby's Point\nBody of Dakar Fridolf (Fred)\nLofstrom, middle-aged Bealby Road*\nresident, was found Monday floating in .West Arm waters 18 feet\nfrom shore of Bealby's Point\n-*It *is**believed :Lofatrom accidentally walked into the water early\nMonday inoiuin\/, while it was still\ndark.\nR.C.M.P. at noun Monday,an-\nswercd a call from Leonard Johnson who discovered the body, and \u2022\nit was later iceovered. Police and\nDr. F. * M. Auld, coroner, are investigating rau'p of tht* drowning,\n\"'.Lofstrom livid one quurter Of \u2022\nmill' Ei it of diy Iinlu\n:'s;He is siuvlvr.'i by a sister In\nCreston.\nASPIRIN\nRELIEVES\nPAIN-AND  DISCOMFORI 01\nCOLDS\nv, mi etna fasti m\n \"ii\nLast Day\nFOR LAST YEAR'S\nSEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nTO PICK UP THEIR TICKETS\nM*\n82    PHONE    82\nTO INTRODUCE\nKOOTENAY BLEACH\nWE WILL DELIVER TO YOUR DOOR\nFOR 60(\nPLUS EMPTY\nGALLON JUG\nReg. 83e\nAN IMPERIAL GALLON OF\nKOOTENAY\nBLEACH\nJUGS WANTED\nAGENTS WANTED\nKOOTENAY JANITOR SUPPLY\n510 KOOTENAY ST. PHONE 82\nARSON\nTHE MARCH\n,\"\" '*'\u25a0 Yes, mote smokers eveiywhcre'\nate discovering how mild and fresh a\ncigarette can be when they, stnoke Sweet\nCaps, either Plain End or Cork Tip.\nFRESH...and    DEFINITELY    MILD!\n V\nd3&\nFOOTWEAR\nRUBBER\n\"For AH the' Family\"\nSee Our Selection\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhono 895\n553 Baker St.\nMrs, Delong\nNamed Area\n\u25a0 Mrs. Violet DeLong of Upper\nI Granite Road was elected representative 'of the extra municipal attendance area of Nelson at a meeting\nI held in the Central School Monday\nI evening. '\nThe functions of attendance area'\nI Representatives are to approve\nI school budget' expenditures, to au-\nI thorize procedure toward the bor-\nI rowing of money, to consult the\n[School Board on any educational\nmatter concerning the area they\nI represent, to authorize a special\nI levy for school building purposes\nland to authorize the levy of a'min-\nI iroum property tax and a special\nI school tax to non-owners of real\nI property in the rural and muni-\n[ cipal districts.\nAttendance representatives will\nI also be elected at Willow Point,\nLongbeach, Balfour, North Shore,\nI Blewett, Erie, Salmo, Sheep Creek,\nI Ymir, Harrop, Procter, Sproule\nI Creek and Taghum.\nI Cominco Workers\n] Invest $28,950\n. TADANAC, B. C, Oct. 16-Com*\nI lnco employees at ,the Trail oper-\nI ations bought $28,050 worth of new\nI Canada savings bonds on the payroll\nI deduction plan in the first day of\nI the drive.\nThe average sale was $260..\nM. R. Landucci; coordinator for\nIthe contact men .taking orders for\nIthe bonds in the plants, said that\n,although total sales for the first day\nare lower than for last year, the\naverage sale is $68 dollars higher.\nPlant contact men will continue to\nsign up bond buyers for the remainder of the week.\nNew Riondel a\nModern Community\nModern\u2014from its new kitchen\nand cafeteria style dining room to\nits gleaming new equipment \u2014, is\nthe word for the mining camp and\ncommunity springing up around\nthe workings of the famed Bluebell mine.\nNew. dwellings are rising as\nquickly as bulldozers can clear\nstreets, and 30 children are attending school in a building constructed\non the latest design.\nThe mine, one of the most famous\nin- British Columbia's mining history, is being revived by the Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited ip a\n$12 million program.\nAlmost 400 people are living at\nRiondel, some of them single men,\nbut many .married with families.\nDormitories, c a f e t e r,l a.,, warehouses, 'wash and clothes' drying\nhouses, machine shops and powerhouse ail have been constructed. A\nnew crushing mill, both jaw and\nball' type, is to be built just up\nfront the lake shore.\nA first-aid station, supervised by\nJohn McGillivray, is housed in one\nof the old buildings, but new\nquarters are planned.\nThe history of the' silver-*ftad-\nzlnc property on the East shore of\nKootenay Lake, directly opposite\nAinsworth, goes back to 1825. It\nhas been developed periodically by\ndifferent concerns since then, and\nin 1048 the CM. &-S. took over.\nNews of\nlllth Battery\nOrders for week of Oct 17:\nOrderly Officer, Capt. J. Eccle*\nstonj Orderly sergeant, L-Bdr. E\nHeroux; canteen orderly,'Gunner\nT. White.\nNext for , duty\u2014Orderly officer,\nLieut P. Busfield; orderly sergeant,\nSgt. K. Anderson; canteen orderly,\nGnr. E\/P. Anderson. '\nRoutine \u2014 Training parade, at\n10S0 hours, Oct. 17. ;\n*The Alaska Highway enters Yukon\nTerritory at mile 620 and crosses\nthe boundary into Alaska at mile\n12?1,\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE-\nWithout Gdomel-And You'll Jump Out al\nBed in tbe Morning Kirn' te Go\nTho liver should pour out about 2 pinto of\nbile juloe into your digootivo tract overy day.\nI irthubileunotQowingfrealy.yourfbodmay\nnot direst. It may just decay in the dimativo\nI tract Then iu bloats up your etomnch. You\n(|et constipated. You feel aour, mink and tha\n, world looko punk.\ni It taken thooo mild, gentle Carter'a Llttlo\n'Liver Pilla to set those 2 pints of.bilo flow-\n* ing freely to make you feel \"up and up.\"\n\u25a0 Get a package today. Effective in making\n\u25a0 bilo flow freely. Ask for Carter'a Little Unr\n\"  HUa. SU at any draratore.\nWomen's Groups\nAl Funeral for\nMrs. Whitehead\nQueen City Rebekah Lodge and\nWillow Point W. A. were represented at funeral service.in St. Saviour's\npro-^athedrai Tuesday afternoonfor\nMrs. Isabella Whitehead, long-time\nresident of Willow Point who died\nin Mount St. Francis infirmary. ,\nVery Rev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean\nof Kootenay, officiated, and hymns\nsung were, \"What A Friend We\nHave in Jesus\", and \"Nearer My God\nto Thee.\"\nThe attendance was large,-and\nmany floral tributes were displayed in Thompson Funeral Home. .'\nPallbearers were A. Barnes, J. T.\nBrown, C. Healey, A. Moore, G.\nPalmer ari9 C.' Wfird.\n\"Interment was in the family plot\nin Nelson Memorial Park.\nMemorials Dedicated\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17, 1951 \u20143\nE. Kootenay Teachers Elect Murray\n\\ Members of the Waters, Blackwell, Boyes and Bruce families\nwere the donors of this oak communion table to the First Baptist\nChurch of Nelson. It. was dedicated to the memory of Mr. and Mrs.\nHenry Waters and their daughter, Mrs. Florence Bruce who joined\nthe church in 1907. '\nIn memory to Mrs. Blackwell, a member from 1901 until her\ndeath In 1938, a matching oak chair was dedicated.\u2014Vogue photo.\nGolden Slipper to Develop\n35 Base Melals Claims in Slocan\nPUBLIC Relations Officer for\nWest Kootenay-Boundary teach*-\ners who will hold their annual\nconvention In Nelson Thursday,\nFriday and Saturday Is Miss Rose\nRamsden. She Is also secretary of\nNelson District Teachers' Association.\u2014Art 8tevens photo.\nOxford, EnglarilJi (CP) - Criticism of bureaucracy by C. Kent\nWright, town\" clgfk of London's\nStoke Newington district: \"Centralization has two great dangers \u2014\napathy at the circumference and\napoplexy at the centre.\"\nCranbrookiles To\nSee Royal Couple\nCRANBHOOi'., B.C., Oct. 16 -\nPlans are in progress for o Cranbrook) delegation to journey to\nBanff to see ihu Prim-ess and\nPrince.\nIf a minimum of 'XI ppopla apply,\na\/charter 24 hour. bus. trip will\nundertake the ;195i miles Thursday,\nSchedule calls for Cranbrook departure at 8:30 \"a.m.;, lunch at\nRadium to arrive in Banff in afternoon in time for the brief ceremonies of welcome at 6:45 p.m,\nfollowing which the bus will make\nthe return journey to arrive\nCranbrook by 7:00 a.m. Friday.\nWith uncertainty of current\nweather conditions it seems unlikely many private cars from* this\nSouthern section of East Kootenay\nwill make the journey northward\nto main line points where the royal\ncouple are making scheduled stops.\nThe Golden Slipper Mines Ltd.,\nIs to develop large silver-lead-\nzinc holdings In the Slocan.\n* It will vyork eight crown granted and 27 located mineral claims\nsituated on the East side of Carpenter Creek, reaching from\nThree Forks along the West side\nof Payne Mountain and adjoining the famous Sljversmlth mine\nat Sandon.\nReconditioning of the Mercury-\nRedress-Dum Dum group is under\nway, Robert Crowe-Swords, President, said Monday* night. New installations, including the latest\ndrilling equipment, is on its way to\nthe mine. Both the Mercury and\nRedress claims have yielded high\nvalues in silver-lead-zinc ore,* Mi*.\nCrowe-Swords said.\nGeological  and . engineering, re-,\nports made by  Charles  V.  Starr,\nmining engineer, induce thi  vim\nbeinj, miliud ai the AUouiid by I tin\ntenay- Bolle   Rold   Mmi*s   extends\ninto the. Silver BellrMercuryground\nwith liic possibility that the silver-\nlead vein of the Payne mine may\nalso pass through these claims,\n\"SUBSTANTIAL\" VALUES\n,Mr. Crowe-Swords reported that\nseven other outcrops indicating\nveins carrying \"substantial\" b\nmetal values have been found extending across the Golden Slipper\nholdings, while a conditional water\nlicence has been obtained on Payne\nCreek for power and cooling purposes.\nThe holdings are situated directly\nopposite the Slocan Monitor, Violamac and Slocan Base Metals, and\nadjoin the Minneapolis, Gene and\nMadison properties to the South.\nThe area is free of encumbrances,\nMr. Crowe-Swords said, the Golden\nSlipper having \"no outstanding\ncommitments or options on any of\nits claims.\" The Company is considering the acquisition of five\ncrown-granted and one located\nclaim South of the Richmond-Eureka mine, through, which the, Rich-\nrainid vein extends.\nShan's have been completed and\n(humps si aiigul by tic bolden\nSlipper, a Company .incorporated\nby letters patents,- for\"35 Slocan\nclaims. Head olfice is at Vancou*\nver. The 'Golden: Slipper .formerly\noperated gold properties in , the\nNorth,\nOption on\nHorcross Group\nIo New Company\nPrivateer Base Metals Limited has\nbeen assigned the option on the Star\ngroup, eight base metals claims V\/t\nmiles, from Ainsworth.\nOwner is Henry Norcross of Nel*\nson, who will receive $29,000 and\nshare's eqUal to one-sixth of the\ninitial share capitalization of Privateer Base Metals, Ltd.\nSale of tbe idle Zeballos mill on\nVancouver Island provided that sufficient ore is proved for mill feed\nfrom the Star mine or from other\nnearby operations was also approv.\ned. i   -\nThe move is one step the Com*\npany is taking in turning from gold\nto base metal?. Its formerly rich\ngold at Zeballos has been idle since\n1048. Deciding that profitable gold\nmining was not likely in the near\nfuture, tbe Company sent a consulting engineer, Henry L, Hill, to look\nover the Star property.\n\"PROMI8INQ\"\nDiamond drilling showed a \"prom-'\nIsing property\", Mr. Hill reported.\nNo. 2 hole encountered 10 feet of\nore of 20 per cent combined lead-\nzinc values. The fifth and sixth holes\nwere \"satisfying,\" but assay results\nwere not available.\nA tunnel has already been driven\ntowards the limestone replacement,\nthe face being in ore. I\nDavid H. Norcross had worked\nth' mine for two Summers, and\nwith limited facilities and finance,\nhas better than cleared wages for\nhimself and his partners.\nPrivateer Mine Ltd. will receive\n1,000,000 shares* for the, option, or as\nmany shares as is approved by the\nsuperintendent of brokers.\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 16 \u2014j of the Creston, Cranbrook, Kimber-\nAnnual   East   Kootenay   Teachers jiey,  Golden,  Windermere   Valley\nconvention  here  at, the weekend1\nand Fernie-Michel school districts\ndrew registration of 235 teachers,j.    .,    ..       , ,   ,,\napproximately 90 per cent of those J\"*8 *ree-day program of which\n'William Haynes of Cranbrook was\nchairman. Executive is president\nand an elected representative from\neach of the sub-locals. '\nW. J. Murray of Michel-Natal\nschool was elected president when\nthe East Kootenay local oi the B. C.\nTeachers' Federation had its annual\nmeeting, with Thomas Gautiei of\nCreston vice-president, end longtime secretary-treasurer Adam Robertson of Creston. reelected. Federation vice-president R. R. Smith ahd\nassistant secretary Stanley Evans of\nVancouver were official visitors at\nthe meeting and spoke on teachers'\nB.C. Guide Trainer\nAl District\nMeet in Salmo\nMiss Kae Boult, newly-appointed\ntrainer for B. C. Girl Guide Association, will arrive in Nelson today,\nMiss Boult will be at the Memorial Hall at noon to Inspect the j pension plans and credit unions.\nP.-T.A. Brownie Pack. ,     |   Speaker at the public meeting that\nIn the evening, a meeting of the: opened the convention was Dr. Geofr\ndistrict group leaders and Associa-jfrey Andrew, executive assistant to\ntion members will be held in Salmo, the president of the University of\nwith members from Nelson, South | British .Columbia. Sectional meet-\nSlocan,  Willow  Point  and  Ymir ings were in Mount Baker and Cen-\npresent.\nThe Salmo Association will be\nhost to the group in the community\nhall.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\ntral-Schools, and proceedings Included a banquet'and dance in Mount\nBaker school cafeteria and auditorium.\nNext year's convention will be at\nFernie,\nStuffy Kose?lfaspyThroat?\nUP'OOWN RELIEF\nBlG6-Oz. Jar\nFather and Sons\nCharged With\nCommon Assault\nA -father and two sons, .charged\nWith common assault, appeared in\nProvincial Court Tuesday before\nStipendiary Magistrary William Evans.\nThe charge arose when on Monday\nErnest J. MacLeod, resident engineer of the Consolidated Mining and\nSmelling Company, was allegedly\nforcibly ejected through a \u00ab fence\non the Cominco power line right- of-\nway near Blewett, by Lewis KateK\nnikoff and bis two sons John and\nAlec.\nA request by the prosecution for\na remand until Oct. 22, was granted.\nThe\"three men were released upon\nentering into a recognizance in the\namount of $100 each,\n[Bruce Arlidge, of Nelson appeared\ni on behalf of the accused.\nRecover Body ol\nDrowned Nan\nEDGEWOOD, B.C., Oct 16\u2014The\nbody of Michael (Micky) Porteous,\n22-year-old who was drowned Sept.\n28 when his boat overturned, has\nbeen recovered fro* \u25a0 the Arrow\nLakes.\nThe body was afloat off Page's\nPoint, between Edgewood and\nNeedles and was picked up by the\nElco crew. The, boat was making\nup log booms.\nThe Elco made a trip to Deer\nPark and brought the drowned\nman's parents to Needles, where\nfuneral services were held Sunday.\n# Here's the thrifty way to help\nyour whole family to skin beautyr-\nakin comfort! Get the big 6-ounce\njar of greaselesa, medicated Noxzema Skin Cream\u2014now only 9S4\n\u2014and save Vi over smaller sizeslf_\nYou'll use it dozens of ways!\nAs an all-purpose beauty cream;\nNoxzema helps skin look lovelier\u2014 .\nquickly. It helps heal blemishes,;!\nminor skin irritations. It's soothing\nfor burns, chapped hands, befors-\nnnd-after shaving, for baby's skin.\nStock up nowl Get Noxzema at any\ndrug or cosmetic counter. Save Vsl\nWaterworks Dept.\nSupplies Glacier\nCity waterworks' department in*\nstalled 1225 feet of eight-inch main\nand seven hydrants for, Glacier\nLumber Company in\", September!\nThe work was carried out at the\n\u2022company's expense.\n\u2022 Eight man days of work were put\nin'iat * Civic Centre* where* new\npipes' have been laid. A car of six-\ninch pipe for main renewals was\nunloaded, and boulevards were\ndrained for Winter, Two new services were installed and one renewed.\nPMONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n0T$M#mm'$<m\/s*$wt\nSea&ram-s \"V.O.\"       Seagram's \"83\"\nSeagram* Crown Royal \\\nSeagram's King's Plate     Seagram's Special Old\nNakusp Teachers \u2022\nAttend District Meet\nNAKUSP, B.C., Oct. 16-T-Nakusp\nteachers who attended the Arrow\nLakes district meeting of teachers\nwhich was held at Fauquier Saturday afternoon were Miss M. Kirk,\nMiss B. White, Miss S. Stuart, Miss\nV. Doerksen, Miss Ruth Ulmer,\nHugh Bolstad and Lloyd Friedman.\nFirsf Blizzard\nHits Sandon\n\u2022 SANDON, B.C., Oct. K-Thorp's\nno trace of it today, but Monday\nSandon rested- ijnde.* .a blanket\nof snow,\n\"Sunday mi'hi thi \"irim'i fi,,i\nblizzard hit* this mining community 3492 feet high in the\nmountains of the Slocan Valley.\nBut rain fell Monday, and Tue -\nday the snow* disappeared.\nSTW.\nany\nSMITH BROTHERS J\n4YIMIR\nAlternative Given\nChurch on Lights\nCity Council Monday night gave\nthe Blessed Sacrament Church in\nFairview an alternative in its request for free power for light standards at its property.\nIt endorsed recommendation of\nA. C VanSacker, -electrical superintendent, that the church operate\nthe lights from the rectory at the\nresidence rate of three-quarers of\na cent. No churches are at present\non flat rates.*\nFILM COUNCIL\nPLANS WINTER\nFILM SHOWINGS\nThe Nelson Film Council will\nContinue its program of public film\nshowings throughout the Winter as\na result of tbe popularity of the\nLakeside Park showings this Summer.\nThe first showing was held Tuesday evening in the Cathedral Hall.\nFlans were also discussed at an\nexecutive meeting to senior citizens\nand shut-ins.\nOSLO (CP) \u2014 A glaciologist of\nTWYFORD, Berkshire, England I the Norwegian Polar Institute has\n(CP) \u2014 A record which may be discovered that the Nigard Glacier\nunique is claimed by 98-year-old in the Jostedal Valley, in Western\nArthur Hedges, who has sung in Norway, has shrunk MOO feet in\nchurch choirs in different parts of length and 210 feet vertically dur-\nBritain for 86 years. | ing the last 15 years.\nFANCY QUALITY*\nTOMATO JUICE\nGrown and Packed In B.C.\nfottl lamitu* diAttwtd lAu&tub Qua&tu.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili I\nTaft Candidate for\nRepublican Office\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (API-\nSenator Robert Taft (Rep. O.) announced today he is a candidate fori\nthe Republican Presidential nomin-.j\nation.     ;; ...:*J*\n\"I am going to run because I be- ]*\nlieve I can conduct the only kind\nof a campaign which will elect a\nRepublican to office,\" the Senator\ntold a press conference.\nA statement, said he would enter\nthe Wisconsin Presidential,primary\nand also accept the bid * of Ohio\ndelegates to the* nominating convention next year.\nU. S. Hospital Train\nIn North Korea\nTOKYO, Oct. 16 (Reuters) - A\nUnited States Army hospital train\nentered North Korea last Friday\nfor the first time since the* December withdrawal, it was officially\nannounced yesterday.\nStUMf Ma $a\u00a3t*\nK yo\u00ab mow to another \u2022%\nchooae North American III ifai.\n:; Expert packing and pfupor\nequipment to keep farnitwna\nfrom shifting \u2014fragile pieoei\nfoora being damaged.\nVttiform raUt-\u2014\nQommmH m tar uilmm\\\\\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\nPhon* 33\n7T9 Baker St.  Nelion, B.C.\nIiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiilliiiiiiiiliiiiiiiliii\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nLast Day\nToday\nFOR LAST YEAR'S\n,     SEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nTO PICK UP THEIR TICKETS\nFAMOUS STYLE SHOP\n1339 CEDAR AVE. TRAIL, BC\nCLOSE-OUT\nSale\nWe invite our many friends and customers in Nelson\nand District to visit us for the last time in Trail.\nHere is your chance to augment or buy complete\n< WINTER WARDROBE and CHRISTMAS GIFTS\nat terrific savings.\nSAVE UP TO 50%\nSALE STARTS THURSDAY\nOCT. 18 at 9 A M.\nLEASE and FIXTURES FOR SALE\nFamous Style Shop\n1339 Cedar Avenue Trail, B. C.\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT; 17, 1951\n,'Nwvs of ifit I)ay\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line eiaoK face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\n\u25a0Wed., 8 p.m., L.A. to F.O.E. Special entertainment. Eagles invited,\nNew Fall gloves have just arrived\nat ADRIAN MILLINERY.\nHot   peanuts   and  hot   buttered\npopcorn anytime at Waits,\nDon't wait until after the tire,\nINSURE NOW- Blackwood Agency.\nCororta and Regal tubes; alio V-\nIMaster Papers at VALENTINE'S.'\nBINGO   TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC  HALL\nWomen's Institute meeting Friday,\nOct. 19, 2:30 p.m., at Civic Centre;\nB-r-r-r! Cold winds are calling\nfor warmer toggery- Snug ski-pants\nand coats, woolly underwear, sweaters and skirts are headliners at\nTHE CHILDREN'8 SHOP.\nGet your hunting and fishing license at Jack Boyce's Men's Shop.\nBring that valuable timepiece-to,\nCOLLINSON'S fo.* reliable reoairj\nat moderate prierr.\nExpert dry deaninij,: repairs and\nalterations at TICKNER TAILORS,\n461 JOSEPHINE ST., PHONE 107.\nWhy not give us a call: to Increase\nyour fire Insurance protection today?\u2014C. W. APPLEYARD. .   ,   -\nTHORNDYKE DICTIONARIES\nARE NOW IN STOCK\nMANN'S DRUG STOR1-*.\nRevereware';wiU last as-wellSas\ngive finest cooking pleasure.! See-\nit at Mo & Mo (NEL80N) LTD.\nNeed an oil heater? See the new\n; Fawcett oil heater for: real heaii:*\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nr Inn I'll of Hu* Redeemer*'\nMmiloy II* '*\nFamily, Service,   II a.m'.-.\nA gem . ii ,*\u2022* filnr oi [he Nplson\nGarden Club will be h\"M Oct. IP\nin lb    \u2022\" <  mow    -i :, mi .i m\nWauiril tn rrni--S:in.']l nou-n or'\n.Hit'     ill) IH      k.l      I III.I   II      Mill    1\t\ntion. Box 2355, Daily News';1.\"   '\nELECTROLUJ\nC'.irAr.'EnS AND I'D! I' '.Cil.\n,   .\u00bb PHAtlE   Htt.1  OR.M'.;     -\n>.'lp ,,ll\"i    ll    \"I II\",    i     '  ,        Hli .11\ndenniip    Ijifbl wi>inlit,\\ cpnypiiic.nl\n.i ,.,  i,!*   1  ui,   ,.ii-n,...i * \u201e r\n. * iiiT't'i:n:,un'.-..,t.\nIt Butterfield can't fix It. throw\nh i>vw. v.iuii wmi: mwnniiy 'lone'\nami fulls guaranteed at, ' i.roi.blf*\nprices.     . X ,    . *\"      \/   .__\nr'li. Plastic Wuyrt-Kimlln'lilc\nputty, hardens lnm wn.nl \u2014 Tin'45e\n\u25a0- Largi- titbi  25c ,r'\n'DURIH  LUMBER  CO.       .\n*' Cliimrieysrstoves, furnaces*cleaned; 'chimneys!topped; thimbles* applied; hot and* cold air ducts,cleaned by vacuum,*\u2014 Pounder's,Chimney Service; Phone 1541-L.\n *\u2014\nJust leceived fioin Florida - A\nlarge selection of foliage plants; 75c\nand $1.00 each.\nMAC'S FLOWKI     .; OP\n\u25a0 . \u25a0   Next to the Civic Theatre\nSee the new car washing mop.\nExtra large size with good length\naluminum handle to screw on your\ngarden hose. $3.00 each.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nPatients In the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can havs tho Dally\nNews sent to them every morning\nPhone 144, Circulation Dopt., Daily\nNews.\nHere Js your chance to save dollars oh our Fall Clearance Sale..\u2014\nCoal and wood heaters sold at 20%\noff. \u2014 We buy and sell new and\nused furniture.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.        PHONE 1560\nNOTICE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that\nPeter John Hlookoff Is no longer\nconnected with. Nelson Sales &\nService Limited or P. P. Hlookoff\nk. Sons Ltd., and has np authority\nto enter Into any transactions for\nor on behalf of the said companies.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral services for the late\nHerbert Marlatt Whimster will be\nheld from St. Paul's United Church\nThursday at 1 p.m. ReV. A. L. An-\ndersontjvIU officiate and.interment\nwill he in the Masonlc.plot of Nel;\nson , Memorial Park.\nFUNERAL NO-ICR\n1miiiip.i1 services 'en the Int\nOsk'a'i Fred Lofstrom will Kb hold\n,frampre B'hompsnnwFuneral* Home\nThursday ai 10:30 a.m. Hev. Vernon\niturid.of* Evangelical* Mission Cov*\npirmi Chm-rh will officiate and in*\ntorment I'nil be'in Nelson'Memoris'\nP'ul,       -   \"   * *    -\n.~fCrawford Ba;f;\n^CHAWFOHD BAY, B.-C.-An evening'party wis hold for \u00a5\"p-yntnd\nUi mt\/ in the home of Mr. ipipI Mr,,\nW ,1 Mtimly vhrn many fiiimrt*,\niMtlwud to wish Mr. Bi ,iHy farewell Games, o Bible Qui:, and singing won: enjoyed iiy tin- guests. Ihe\nhonoree was presented'with a jion\nand pencil set from the C'hm rh A\u00bb-\nsembly.* , '   \u2022 ^ * ,\nMi iiul Mil I. ii Ma:i,,pur ai\nLulu Island have returned ,to -their\n:home*after visiting Mr..McGregor's\nsister arid brother-in-law, Mr: and\nMrs. W Beatty. On the return trip\nMr., and Mrs. McGregor were accompanied by Maynard Beatty who\nhas gone to Vancouver to attend the\nPentecostal Bible School there':.\n^Improved posture and an elemen\ntary knowledge of better body, me*\nchanics can do a lot for that \"tired\nfeeling\", that  lines  the face  and\ndims : the sparkle that Is: *the key\nto* attractiveness.\nLast Day\nToday\nFOR LAST YEAR'S\nSEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nTO PICK UP THEIR TICKETS\n..V-   ton   SCOTIAHD'S   lA.'OORITI   SON\nJOHNNIE\nWALKER\n5COTCH WHISKY\nIORM   1820 \u2014\nSTILL   GOINO   STRONG\nreal good\nScotch\nDistilled, Blended and\nBottled in Scotland\nContents 26H ok.\nJOHN WALKER & SONS ITD;, SCOTCH WHISKY DISTILLER!\nKILMARNOCK, SCOTLAND\nNakusp Notes\nNAKUSP.. B.C.\u2014Mrs. J. Faulk-\niner laft tor Fort Fraser where she\nwill visit her parents, Mri and Mrs.\nGeorge Belsham who are celebrating their golden wedding anniversary. \/ \u25a0\nMr, and Mrs. G. Price and Mr*\nend Mrs, S. M. Grant were weekend visitors here.\nKrug Campbell of California and\nMr. and Mrs. E. Alberhart of San\nLeandro,   California,  were visitors\nat Pine Lodge for a few days. ,\n\u25a0 Mr. and  (Hrs.  Carl  DuMont of\nHunters Siding have taken up residence in Nakusp,\nMr. and Mrs, K. Maynard and\nfamily of Crescent Valley were recent visitors at Pine lodge.\nTerry Ward and- Ron Almack of\nPenticton who have been guests of\nMr. and Mrs. L. Brbwn left Monday for their home.\nMr. 'and Mrs. Gordon Hempseed\nleft Monday for two week's holiday\n'to be spent in Nelson, Trail and\nCastlegar and other points.\nMr. and Mrs. Don McCusker and::\nfamily spent the holiday weekend\nguests of Mr. McCusker's parents.\nMr, and Mra, H, H, McCusker of\nVernon. .   .    j\nMr. Leslie Baird, Walter Henke\nand Mrs, M. Baird, returned from\nMerrltt, B.C. where they visited\nMr. and Mrs. Gordon Baird over\nthe weekend. .\nMiss Betty White, Principal Nakusp Public School, Hugh Bolstad,*\nPrincipal of  High  School, . Lloyd\nFriedman. J. M. Logan, Arrow Park,\nattended the West Kootenay and\nBoundary Principal and Vice-Principals Association meeting at South\nSlocan. - ''      ,   ,\nA meeting of the \"Cubs\" was\nheld on Saturday\/ afternoon with\nBrian Hempseed and Douglas Hor-\nrey in charge. The bdys voted their\ntroop leaders, Dale Morehouse,\nBruce Horrey and Daryl Henke.\nMr. and Mrs. W, Ned Smith and\nfamily have moved Into the home\nknown as the \"Parkinsons Place\"\nWoman Mayor Plant Sweeping Changes\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16 (CP)-Sharp\nchanges in civic administration were\npromised Monday by Mayor Charlotte Whitton In her Inaugural address as the capital's civic head.\n' Miss Whitton, the only woman\nmayor of a Canadian city, outlined\nsweeping programs for municipal\nreform and development,\nHer proposals Included an immediate conference with Federal officials on payments due Ottawa In\nlieu .of taxes and for development\nof city services; a new zoning 'code\nto cover the entire city; revamping\nassessments with Provincial guidance; stringent controls on civic expenditures and conferences on tht \\\nfinancial position of the Oattawa\nTransportation Commission and the\nOttawa Hydro Commission.\nTo freshen a wilted veil, press It\nbetween two sheets of wax paper.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n*MR. OWEN E. RIDDLE...\nDo you belie vo in saving, Mr. Riddle ?\nOh, yes. Sure I do. You never know what's going fo\nhappen. In case of sickness, you have money if you\nsave. You don't have to depene on r-iarity or\nanything like that.\n. And what do you think of Canada Savings Bonds ?\nThere is one thing about those savings bonds.\nWhile you can get more out of other things im\ninterest, you can always get your par value out of\nthe bonds. '\nDo you buy Canada Savings Bonds mainly as a protection\nagainst emergency?\nThat's one of the main reasons. This spring work\nwas slack and I had a bad throat, but I had money\nin the bank and the interest from these bonds. It all\nhelped. I didn't have to go into debt or anything\nlike that. I don't like going into debt.\nFor what other reasons are you buying the Bonds?\nWell, we're not getting any younger. In the building trade there's no pension. Even with the old age\npension one doesn't know if one will live to that\ntime. One likes to be independent. In the spring of\nthe year you can pay your taxes In advance. That's\nwhat I did with my cash and interest on the bonds\nand saved four per cent. It's not only sickness. The\nother day. the boiler went on the blink and cost\n$56.80 to repair. You have to provide for things\nlike that. It's better to be able to pay oul of your\nsavings than to have to borrow.\nHave you cashed any of your Canada Savings I   .\nNo. Just used the interest.\nf By- what method do you pay for tho Bona   '\nI (lay cash for them at the bank.\nDo you plan to buy Canada Savings Bonds again this year ?\nYes, if I'm working. I always have. You see you get\nalmost double the interest on them that you do on\nyour savings in the bank.\nNOW BETTER THAN EVE* I\nCanada Savings Bonds\u20146th Series\u2014ipature In 10 years .\nand 9 months from date of issue and bear ten 314% *\ncoupons. The first coupon covers 1 year and 9 months and is *\npayable on August 1st, 1953; Subsequent coupons come due ,\nAugust 1st yearly thereafter until maturity. If cashed before '\u2022\nAugust 1st, 1953, simple interest is paid at 2% per year, *\ncalculated monthly. If held to maturity the overall yield is \u00b0\nequivalent to 3.21 % per year. The limit for holdings in any ,\none name is $5,000 in the 6th. Series. The bonds tore cashable \u2022\nat full face value, plus interest at any lime at any bank in *\nCanada. They are registered in the owner's name. They are *\nnon-assignable and non-transferable. \u00b0\n\u2022Owen E. Kiddle, 56, Is a plasterer\nwho lives at 726 3rd ove, W, Calgary, v\/ilh his sister. He is in business\nfor himself. A native of Eastbourne,\nSussex, England, he came to Canada !\u25a0\nwith his parents in 1912 and milled\nin Calgary. His father was a plaster- %\nIng contractor. After working with\nA his father for two years, he obtained\nemployment with th* CPR and mrvtd\nas second cook and chef on dining\ncars and, for a time, as brakeman.\nHe worked with the CPR af various\npoints from Montreal lo Vancouver.\n'He farmed briefly and returned to\nplastering in 1920 and has since\nmade this his occupation. His hobbies\ninclude cement carving, water color\npainling, and dahlia growing. H*\nwon 8 championships last year at\nIhe Calgary Horticultural Show wWi\nhit dahlias, tome of which measured\n14 Vi inches across. Mr. Riddle is on*\nof more than a million Canadians\nwho save regularly with Canada\nSavings Bonds.\nCANADA\nBONDS on sale NOW\nAt INVESTMENT\nDEALERS, BANKS\nAND THROUGH\nTHI PAYROLL\nSAVINGS PUN.\nCAN ALWAYS BE CASHED AT FULL FACE VALUE PLUS INTEREST\n  \u2014. \u2014\u2014\n\\d&\\\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nB. F. GOODRICH\nQUALITY RUBBER\nFootwear for all the Family\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nEstablished 1902\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nIt's sometimes difficult to sew\nheavy cotton material because the\nneedle of the machine catches in\nthe fabric.: To prevent this^ try\nrubbing a silver of dry soap along\nthe line that you intend stitching.\nWatch tor Our\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT  MARKET\u2014Phone 832\nJhntL>ffM4\nWomen\nLO.D.E, Gets News\nOf Victoria Chapter\n. A former regent of Kokanee Chapter, Imperial Order\nDaughters of the Empire, told members at their monthly\nmeeting Tuesday in W.I. room about Royal Roads Chapter\nin Victoria of which she is a ~\t\nmember.\nMrs. C, F. McHardy, who left\nNelson to live in the capital at the\nend of last year after 49 years here,\nsaid the 16-member chapter was\none of several in Victoria. These\nare responsible to *. a' municipal\nchapter.\nThe group meets bi-monthly in\nthe evening at members' homes. Its\nchief project at the moment\nafghan-making, Mrs. MdHardy said.\nTO RAISE FUND8\nDuring the business session, mem*\nhers of Kokanee chapter discussed\nways and means of raising funds.\nReports were read from provin*\ncial headquarters dealing with\nschools and Commonwealth and\nEmpire projects. Reports of the\nchapter's various committees showed much activity, and included\nmention of the fact, that 19 new\ncitizens had been welcomed.\nRushing Party\nHas Novel Theme\n\"A Children's Party\" was the\ntheme of the annual Fall rushing\nparty of Iota chapter, Beta Sigma\nPhi sorority,: held at the home of\nMiss Edna Steed.\nThe rooms were decorated with\ngay balloons, stuffed animals and\ntoys which carried out the motif\neffectively. :\nGames, contests and refreshments\nwere under convenership of Mrs.\nKay Powell and. Mrs. Dale Fleming.\nMUSTARD PICKIES\n: 1 qt. forgo encumbers eubod\n1 ql. small tuetimbers whole\n1 qt. illvtr-sklnitsd onloni\n. 1 qt. green tomatoos, chopped eoaM.A\n2 red sweet pepper* chopped fine :*'\n1 qt. wafer 1\/2 cup soil:.:\n6 tablespoons Cotmon't mustard\n1 tablespoon turmeric 1 cup floor\n2 cups sugar J qts. vinegar\n1 largo cauliflower broken In small\npleeej     ,\nWash vegetables and let stand\nin' brine solution for 24 hrs.\nBring to boil in same solution.\nDrain. Mix remaining ingredients and cook antil thick.\nStir in pickles \u2014 heat thoroughly\u2014seal in sterilized jart.\nYield-6qts.\nColmans\nMUSTABO\nCK323\nBazaar Discussed\n\u25a0 NEW DENVER, *B.C., Oct. 16 \u2014\nFinal arrangements for their an*\nniial bazaar and tea were discussed\nby members ot New Denver Catho\nlie Women's League at their meeting at the home,of* Mrs. .Agnes. KeU\n^all. CoiumiiiLi repot Is. wore p'limi\nPLAN CONVENTION ROLE\n.'\u25a0 Arrangements for catering folia\nParent-Teacher Association convention luncheon were made by the\nExcelsior Club Monday night. Mrs.\nW. G. Johnston presided.   <;;\nRefreshments were served by\nhostess Miss Eileen Mackenzie with\nco-hostesses Mrs. R. Bruce and Mrs.\nW. G. Johnston, assisting.\nVDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRI8T\nSuccessor to J. 0. Patenaude\nPHONE 298 NELSON, B. C.\nL\nTOWLER\nFue,l A Transfer\nPhone 889 A.   Nelson, B.C.\n\u00a9NSALE\nts ii'.'e ^SSmi&SfSamW. .XU\nMRS; C. F. McHARDY\nNakusp W. I. Gets\n$19 From Party\nNAKUSP, B.C., Oct 16\u2014 A card\nparty. 'held by Nakusp : Women's\nInstitute at the home of Mrs. A.\nE. Fowler, president, brought in $19\nfor Institute funds: \u2022 \"\nNine tables, were in play, and\nbridge winners were Mrs. 0. J.\nHarper and H. Bolstad,,. and whist\nwinners were Mrs. Carl DtiMoat\nand George Baird.\nNew Denver L. A.\nInvites Guests\nNI'W IlteNVlM, HU, Oct 10 -\nM s a t Riil inson of nriiibcr-\nship committee; suggested at meet*\ning of jthe Slocan Comrtiunity Hospital Ladies'. Auxiliary at the-home*\nof Mrs. A;* L. Levy that each member bring a guest to the November\nreeting.\nCommittee reports were given,\nand Mrs. John Tiylor will vuil for\nOctober.\nChantilly\nLace Gowns\nTrail Bride\nTRAIL, B.C., Jet 16 - A beautiful gown of imported Chantilly\nlace was chosen by the former\nAnna Hamberg for a double-ring\nceremony in East Trail United\nChurch in which she became the\nbride of Colin Donaldson. Rev. D.\nW. More officiated.\nThe bride's parents are Mr. and*\nMrs. Victor Hamberg of*Kimberley and the groom is the son of\nMrs. C. Donaldson of Trail. They\nwill make their home in Salmo.\nThe bridal' gown.'. featured if\nprincess bodice and lily point\nsleeves, a Queen Anne collar and\na small -train, and was enhanced\nby a* finger tip veil which fell in\nsoft folds from her Juli'et cap. Her\nsingle-strand pearl necklace was a\ngift from the gropm. White gladioli,\ncarnations and white freesia were\nentwined in her bouquet\nMAID IN PINK\nMiss Doreen \"Gibbon, her only\nattendant, wore a pink nylon gown\nwith a fitted bodice and a full skirt\nThe gown had small shoulder straps\nand her small cape was designed\nwith a Peter Pan collar. A band\nwhich formed her headdress and\nher mitts matched her gown, and\nshe carried a bouquet of blue\ncarnations.\nMr. William Thomson supported\nthe groom, and Mr. Dan Armitt and\nMr. Pat McCabe perfo>med ushering duties. Baskets of Fall flowers\nflanked the altar, and Mrs; Nople\nsang with Miss Ann Laurie as\norganist\nMr. William Jones of Salmo, the\nbride's brotheV-in-law, proposed\nthe toast to the bride at a reception\nin Masonic hall. A . three-tiered\nwedding cake set in white tulle and\ninset with pink carnations centred\nthe bride's table, which Was decorated with four tapers and twA bouquets of Fall flowers. Servers were\nMiss Francis Bryon, Miss Dora\nMalitinl, Miss Helen Finn, Miss\nBlanche Hess and Miss, Ingrid\nHanelt\nTQ PORTLAND\nBefore leaving for Portland,\" Ore,,\njtheir honeymoon destination, the\nbride donned a tan suit with brown\naccessories and a corsage:. of red\nroses and pink carnations.\n' riul-of-town guests were Mr ilil-\nmer Hamberg of ,Kimberley, Mr.\nand, Mrs. A.' Nelson of Fruitvale,\nand Mr. and Mrs. W. Johes and Mr.\nKenneth Haight and his son.Gary\nof Salmo.\nYule Bazaar Arranged\nSOUTH SLqC\u00a3N, B.C\u201e Oct 1ft-:\nPlans'for a Christmas bazaar were\nmade by members of St. Matthews\nWoman's Auxiliary at their meeting at the home of Mrs. A. Muir.\nA Bible reading was given by\nMrs. Rogers.\nThe water marie left in a bowl of\nflowers may be removed by soaking the bowl in sour milk overnight,\nby, 3jmvul UJhsskh.\nVARIETY\nfor every metiu\nECONOMY\nfur carry purse\nCLOVER LEAF\nFancy Red Sockcya\nFancy Red Cohoe\nFancy Pink Salmon\nCI-0YER LEAF\nGLOVER LEAF...Canada's Largest Selling Seafoods\nBRITISH COLUMBIA PACKERS LTD., VANCOUVER, B.C,\n^      _       _ S.Z-31\n***m*m*m~*m^%m**lm4mm\nNelson\nSocial'. . .\n.    . By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u00bb Mrs. George Lee Warner of\nAlert Bay arrived by plane Monday\nand is slaying with her brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. ana Mrs. Reginald H. Dill ot the North Shore,\nwhile here for the* funeral of her\nfather, George A. Hunter.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. Graham pf Vancouver\nand Mr. and Mrs. A; J. Lindsay and\nchildren are in the city at the home\nof Mrs. Graham's brother and- sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. A. H,\nWhitehead, Hendryx Street, to'attend the funeral of Mrs. Isablela\nWhitehead.   \u25a0'-.\u25a0;        ., - -\n\u2022 A. G. Gelinas, Victoria Street,\nbas returned from a couple of weeks\nin\" Spokane, '\u25a0:\"\u25a0\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Bradley,\n911 Josephine Street, have taken up\nresidence at 1322 Josephine Street\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Richard (Dick)\nWhitehead, who spent several days\nin Nelson owing to the serious illness, of the former's mother, have\nReturned to their home in Yakima,\nWash.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Roger Bell of\nVancouver have arrived in the*city\nMr. Bell has been transferred to the\nlocal branch of the Bank of Montreal from the.coast city.\t\n\u2022 Frank Beresford, Qeorge Kir*\nby, Jerry Gullivan, Robert Phillips,\nand Walter Valin motored to Colville Recently where they attended\na Lions' zone meeting.\n\u2022 Mrs. M. C. *'T. Percival has\nbeen discharged from Kootenay\nLake General Hospital and left this\nmorning for further medical treat*\nment at Spokane.\n'       . \u25a0'*'..\nEngagements\nMr. .and Mrs. J. T. Almony wish\nto announce the engagement of\ntheir younger daughter, Mary Lillian, to David William Sutherland,\nson of Mrs. D. A. Sutherland, Kimberley, B.C. The wedding will take\nplace iri the near future.\nDirt and'moths are not.the only\nenemies'of the fine floor coverings.\nInefficient cleapsing can be equally\nharmful. Be sure that your vacuum\ncleaner is properly adjusted.and\nworking correctly.\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nB&atcherferia\nPHONE 827\nSaucuSufe saysi\nTry HP with oil\nMeat Dishes\nYou'll Agree that.\nIt's Delicious!\nm\nFOB FLAVOUR\nWflfH \"m% '\nmx^mtitj\nToday\nFOR LAST YEAR'S\nSEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nTO PICK UP THEIR TICKETS\nBABY'S FIRST GIFT\nGive this to a Mother-to-be! A\nsweet picture for Baby's room, embroidered in easiest stitches. When\nBaby comes, write in data, eriibroid-\ner in outline stitch.\nThis gift will be loved! Pattern\nC731 has transfer of panel 11x14\ninches, Frame or line.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENT8 in'\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, 268 Baker\nStreet Nelson. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS\nSuch a colorful roundup of\nChristmas ideas! Send twenty-five\ncents for our new Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Catalogue..Choose patterns for your Christmas gift-making from the gaily illustrated toys,\ndolls, household and personal accessories. And a Free Pattern is\nprinted right In the book.\nU^FRKHER\nBRANFMKK?\nOf coursel Then look for the\nexclusive Kellogg guarantee:\n\"Doable your money back if\nyou don't agree Kellogg's Bran\nFlakes are fresher!\" (Send\nempty carton to Kellpgg's Dept\n4-A, London,, Ont.)\nLOVELY HATS\nALL STYLES AND COLORS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nUfcntCRKPER\nN&ER FWKKJ\nEverybody dbeal Get Canada'* biggest\nend crispest bran - flakes. Get that\n\"bran-new\" feeling! Get Kellogg's!\nC.WX. Raps\nUti'Christian\nBroadcasts\nOTTAWA, Oct. 18 (CP) \u2014 The\nCatholic Women's League of Canada\ndecided today to ask a parliamentary investigation of what it terms\nanti-religious broadcasts over CBC\nnetworks.\nA resolution, approved by the league convention here urged that parliament act to ensure that religion\n\"shall not be attacked\" over Canadian radio stations. .\n\"The resolution mentioned Dr.\nBrock Chisholm and Dr. Owen Cameron as broadcasters who had made\n\"open.attacks upon the basic principles and. doctrines of Christianity.'\nIshbel Hutton of Ottawa was reelected national president. Delegates\nalso returned Mrs. F. Drake, Regina,\nfirst vice-president; .Mrs. James\nFreeman, Riverside, Ont, ' second\nvice-president; Mrs.- F.-A. Bussieres,\nSilJery, Que., .third - vice-president;\nMrs. Herman Stevens, Calgary,\nfourth vice-president and Mrs. >J.\nMadeline Clay, Victoria, fifth vice\npresident\nAdd shredded eabbage or finely\ncut celery to canned tomatoes; simmer and season with salt and a little\nbutter or margarine. Serve in individual sauce dishes (to be eaten\nwith a spooh) and top with crisp\nbuttered croutons.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17, 1951 \u2014 5\nTHE MATTRESS BUY OF THE YEAR\nYours at\nthen yw mtr\n.BRAN HAKES\nMore delicious, tool Jtjst the light\namount of extra bulk to help keep\nyou \"regular.\" Ask for the big\neconomy size of Kellogg's Bran\nFlakes-Ofodayl    <\n1951 OVERSEAS\nCHRISTMAS and\nNEW YEARS' PRICE LIST\nTO   ENGLAND,   SCOTLAND,   and   WALES\nALL PRICES QUOTED INCLUDE PACKED, READY TO MAIL, AND       -\nDECLARATION MADE OUT\nPostage Extra \u2014 Up to 10 lbs., $1.00;   to IS lbs., $1.50;   to 20 lbs., S2 -30\nBE SURE TO SEND IN CORRECT ADDRESS, IN FULL\nPLEASE ORDER EARLY\nPARCEL NO. 1\nShipping Weight under 10 lbs.\n1 lb. Sweetmilk, powdered *. -\n2 pk. Delinar Soup Mix\nVz Ib. Christmas'Candies\n1 pk. Dry Apricots, 12 oz.\n1 tin Heinz Pudding\n1 tin rich Christmas Col e\n1 Spork\n1 lb. Canned Butter '    as mm*  *m\nVj lb. Sockeye Salmon v.* 9^?\u00ab\u00a95\nVz Ib. Burns Cheese\n?vl*\n2\n\\Vt\nX\nX':\\\nVz\n'Va\n1\nw\ni\nPARCEL NO. 2\nShipping Weight under 10 lbs.\ntin Heinz Plum Pudding\nlb. Canned Butter\ntins dehydrated Vegetables\nIb. Mixed Nuts\ntin Jellied Chicken, 7 oz.\ntin Sweetmilk, 16 oz.   '     '\nlb. Burns Cheese\nlb.* Sockeye Salmon .'\nIb. rich Christmas Cake\nMeat Paste aS'mmn      a\npk. Egg Powder S^.OC\nlb. Cube Sugar\ni\nPARCEL NO. 3\nShipping Weight under 15 lbs.\n2 lb: tin Maple Leaf Bock Bo:en\nVz Ib. Nabob Orange Pekoe T o I., ii\n1  Ib. Milko, milk powder\nVz Ib. Sockeye Salmon \"\n1  lb.' Conned Butter\n1 |b. Crisco *\n1 lb: Cubs Sugar\nVi lb. Bums Cheese\n1 lb. rich Christmas Cake\n-1 Ib. tin Burns Lard\n1 Libby's Corned Beef     tW'-Tm. *.**,\n1 Heinz Pudding 90*30\n1 Egg Powder\nPARCEL NO. 4\nShipping Weight under 15 lbs.\n* I* iin Swift's Half Chicken, 2 lbs., 2 oz.\nVz Ib. Bums Cheese\n1  pk. Milko, powdered milk\n1 lb. Canned Butter\n2 lbs. Cube Sugar\n5 pk. Hot Chocolate        .\n12 oz. pk. Evaporated Apricots\nVz lb. Glace Cherries\nVz lb. Christmas Nuts\nVz Ib. Sockeye Salmon\nVz lb. Nabob Tea\n. 1  Ib. Raisins A -   -   ^\nVz lb. Mixed Peel $*7\u00ab98\n1  Egg Powder M\n{PARCEL NO. i\nShipping Weight under 15 Ibi.\n1 - Ib. rich Christmas Cai a\nVz Ib. Sockeye Salmon \"  ;* \u2022 \"\nVz lb. Nabob Orange Pekoe Tea        .*'\n1 tin Boneless Turkey, 7 oz.\n1 pk. Monarch Cake Mix\n1 pk. Egg Powder\n1 Ib. tin Butter\n1 Ib. Cube Sugdr\n2 Ib. tin No. 1 Honey\n1 tin Heinz Plum Pudding\nVz lb. Christmas Nuts      m, -   -   m '\u00a3.\n1   Ib. Crisco 9^*60\n1 tin Spork . M\nPARCEL NO. it\nShipping Weight under 20 lbs.\n* 71  tin Whole Chicken, Swift's, 314 \\h-,.\nVz lb. Nabob Tea * ,.   Y .\n2 Delmar Soup Mi *      '    , ,    .''   ,\n1 pk. Monarch Cake Mi'-*    -\n2 Jell-0\n1 tin Cranberry Sauce\nVz Ib. Mixed Christmas Nuts\nVz Ib. Christmas Candies\n3 Candy Canes\n1 tin Creston Maid Raspberries '\nVz Ib. Goldenloaf Cheese\n1 Ib. tin Butter A ^_- \u2014 \u2014\n1 lb. Rice $^f.55\n2 Ib. tin Honey \/\nAny above can be assorted and separate parcels made up. Our packing charges for this\nservice is 35c. We suggest apples listed below for delivery in time for Christmas.\n: Order mutt be in before November 18th\nOVERSEAS APPLES\nExtra Fancy Delicious, junior box   _\nExtra Fancy Newrons, junior box   _\nDELIVERED TO ANY ADDRESS IN THOSE COUNTRIES LISTED ABOVE.\nCut out and keep for reference     \u2014     Mail Orders Accepted\nEng., Scot., Wales    N. Ireland\n-     $3.85 $4.10\n$3.85 $4.10\nLIBERTY\nPHONE\n1192\nJJ( m^'^^^mt^^^g^\n l&tlBtttl\"-fttttj! NpUJfl A^afet herons ? (3lipctTOri<i ?\nA   Establ^.d April \u00a3 1902 ..,5J^^A*!\/!S!?^.!!': .-\u2022 \" ^'U^lU^lp ' \u2022\n:l\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Nevfapapet\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n268 Batter Street, Nelion, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\n.Post Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRSSS AND\n-THE AUDIT. BUREAU OP CIRCULATIONS\n| Wednesday, October 11, 1951\n*   Peace Bulwark\nA document of -probably historic\nimportance to the peace of the world\n.ha? been drawn up by the 14-nation\nCollective Measures Committee of the\nUnited Nations. This is a blueprint of\npossible action by the world community in resisting aggression against one\"\n* of its members.\n&*'; The fOO-page report is the*resutt of\n'inonths of study by three subcommittees apd their staffs as well as the main\nI committee. It has been hammered out,\nfthe Christian Science Monilor points\nout, under stress of proposals for, a\nI strategic embargo or blockade against\nlcom,munistChina and under shadow\n;| of possible attack in Europe by the\n* Bed Army. , '\nI The \"report does not advocate any\n| startling new measures to the way of\nf economic boycott or other collective\n- pressures for peace. Possibly its great-\nf.-ftrt virtue is in the fact that it as-\n| sembles   and   correlates   procedures\n* which are more or less familiar, at.\nH, least In discussion, and some of them\ni in practice,-and sets forth an approxl-\njjj mate timetable for their use.,\n* This schedule begins with political\n1 actions, such as appeals by fee U.N. to\nI offenders, severance Of diplomatic re-\n.. lations, possible suspension or expul-\nI sion from the U.N. or its agencies, and\nI refusal^ to recognize changes brought\nsv \"about by threats or force (the Stimson\n5 doctrine).\nAnother category of measures is\nt economic. They grange from selective\nI embargoes on arms and strategic ma-\n| teriais through embargoes on imports\nfrom ap offender's territory to possible\nI severance^. a}l commercial relations.\nFinally, there are military sanctions\n| which grapple with the, requirements\n1 fji collective defence. These include\n\u25a0'asking nations to- earmark units' for\n- UN., call, invoking regional alliances\nsuch as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization to act for the U:N., and providing for military headquarters.\nSome of these categories may overlap. Once listed, most of the actions\nlook fairly obvious. But it is not so\nobvious that the things would be done\nwithout concrete planning.   The side\nWith a plan for meeting adverse con-\n: trngencies gets further than the one\nthat waits to improvise, whether the\n* test be a football game, a Parliamen-\n| tary debate, or a war. -    - * ,.\nAs the report says, \"The more-prob-\nf] able it is that collective action will be\n. resolute and effective, the less prob-\nI able it is that there will be resort to\n' force.\"\nDissatisfaction with the Peron regime In *,\nArgentina has resulted In' an attempted coup\nto overthrow the administration and,' apparently, to assassinate Dictator Juan Peron\nand hli wile, Eva. It l\u00a3 an ironical twist ol\ncurrent history that those largely responsible\nlor placing Peron in power now would like\nto get rid ol him. ... -\u25a0'\"-'\nIt was in 1948 that, the \"revolt ol tha colonels\" seized power from President Ramon S.\nCastillo, whose administration was at least\npartially democratic. It was led by General\nArturo Rawson, -who acted ai President two\ndays before' the Peron clique threw him out.\nSince then, apparently, the \"colonels\" have\nbecome discontented with the manner In\nwhich Juan and Evita have pursued their dictatorial demagoguery. The \"colonels*' created\nfor themselves a political Frankenstein\nmonster.\nA large proportion ol Latin-American\ncoups ate the work of the military brass. These\nLatln-Americ$n \"military men don't, seem to\nunderstand democratic processes, or, if they\ndo, don't like them, *.    '      *\nThere cannot be real democracy in Argentina so long as the Perons are in power.\nBut lt mightn't help much if a rival gronp took\nover. If the Rawsons and'aides hadnl overthrown the Castillo Government in 1048, democracy might still have functioned, even\nthough not.too successfully. What la necessary\nis a mass uprising by the people, determined\nto have the rule In the hands of the people,\n, \u2014Windsor Dally Star,\nGold    \u25a0    .'\nThere Is Within gold a quality of\npermanent value which men have recognized from earliest times. Men trust\ngold fpr its afce-long record of lasting\nworth and from this basio fact has\nemerged the traditional role of gold as\nthe enduring symbol of economic security.\u2014Timming Press. -\nVerse\nBridge\nOf all the many card games\nI like bridge the best.'\nIt is a mental stimulant.\nAnd gives the body a rest.\nSome husbands make a fuss,\n'They think they're being gypped;\nThere's nothing to complain about, \u2022\nNever a meal Is skipped.   .\nY\nThere's good old Ed, a genial soul,\nWho takes lt on the chin;\nHe wipes the dishes, and as Ann leaves \u2014\nHe says, \"I hope you win.\"\nHe calls the children In from play,\nNothing more is said;\nThey meekly do as Daddy says\nAnd climb into their bed.\nBill is restless and peppery,\nFrom home he likes to stray.-\nHe takes time oft to golf and fish,\nBut Betty at home must stay.\n\"You .must not leave our children,\nThey need your constant, care;\nAll kinds of things could happen.\nAdmit, would lt be fair?\"\nBetty put up with thla-for Tears,\n'   Until the children grew lit;\nThen fdie asked her mother\nTo come and baby-sit, .\nForth she goes for a'game nf bridge;\nBill was hoppln' mid.\nHe Jumped into his ear,\nWent searching for hli Dad. '   \u25a0\u25a0'.*''.\u2022\"\u2022\nTo Dad he said, Til never know\nWh^ Betty wants to roam\nWhen she has everything she needs\nRight in our little home.\"\n\"Betty is a good wife,\nDon't be hard on her, son;\nYour mother would be alive today\nIf she had had mora fun.\"\nA thoughtful, wiser man was BUI;\nBack toward home he races,     i\nHoping to be restored\nInto wifely good graces.\nOh, of course thero are times\nWhen bridge provei pretty boring;\nEspecially when Susan Ann\n. Wants to do aU the scoring)\nMargaret wants to arguei\nSpread the cards and sort 'em;\nLook them over one by one,\nTo hold a long post mortem.\nIt's fun to raise Betty's bid '\nAnd watch her pretty face\nWrinkle Up into a frown '\nWhen Dummy lacks aa aoe.\nLike a general she makes plans,\nIn and out she darts;\nShe ends up with t happy smile,\nShe makes her bid, six hearts.    -\nAfter the game if over,\nWe gather around for tea.\nTo spend a social hour\nChattering merrily.\nRefreshed, relaxed, homeward, bound,\nWe alowly wend our way,\nReady for the duties\nOf another day.     '\n-A.O.K.\nOpen to any reader. Names of 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 prlvaoy.\n' r.. **' . \u2022 \u25a0'   .   '\nInterested, Tdail\u2014Where was Norma Shearer\nborn*, and in what year?\n, Norma Shearer was born in Montreal,\nCanada, In 1004.\nReader,  Nelson\u2014Who discovered  polonium,\n.  and when?\nPolonium wai discovered by M. and Mme.\nCurie In 1898,' *   ' >-\u25a0 ,\n\u25a0'\u2022'\u2022\u25a0    \u25a0 ;        ,- . i  *'. \/.\"'\nStudent, Trail\u2014Can you tell me the date when\nMexico's newest volcano broke out?\n\\ El Paracutln, Southwest ot Mexico City,\ngave first signs ol eruption in 1948; when a\nfarmer, DIonisio Pulldo, plowing, saw thick\n\u25a0moke issuing from a hole in his land. The\nnext day there were earth tremors and the\nhole was about 30 feet deep. Pulldo gave the\nalarm, and by 10 o'clock 'severe explosions\nwere going off about every four minutes, accompanied by showers of burning rocks and\ndebris which were flung Into the air, Two days\nlater there was a central cone from which red\nhot lava oozed; a year later the .cone was 2000\nfeet.high, and by 1946 El Paracutln had th'ree\nnew craters and a cone over 3000 feet high.\nFarmers had to leave their fields and soon\nonly the steeple ol San Juan Church appeared\nabove the debris. A'shlft in the earth's crust\nis blamed for the phenomenon.\nCurious, Nelson\u2014What nationality is Dr, Hugh\nKeenlyside?\nCanadian'son ol Ellis William Keenlyslde'\nand Margaret Louise Irvine, both Canadian.\n's   Looking Backward\n28 YEARS AQO '\nFrom The^ally News of Oot 17, 1928\nWalter S.S, Laurie ol Vancouver, Deputy\nGrand President at Fraternal Order of Eagles,\nInstalled 110 new members into Nelson Aerie\nNo. 22,  .:**',..*-\nMalcolm Mclntyre of Honolulu brought\n\"aloha\" greetings from Hofiolulu Rotary Club\nto Nelson Club Monday.\nViews    f First Periscope\nFrom the\nNews Fronts\n40 YEARS AGO\n* From TheiDally News \u00abf Oct 17, 1011\nWilliam Clutler has been appointed collector of'the Provincial revenue or poll tax\nfor the current year.\nH, E. Douglas of the Western Canada Investment Co. will leave soon on a tour of the\nKaslo-Slocan. '**\u25a0\u25a0.'\n\u2022 .Priceyof Jury Duty\nIn* these days of high living fcoitl,** earning! lost by working people while doing jury\nduty can pinch, and pinch hard. The fee of $8\na day meets the wage scale of only the'most\npoorly jaid workers today. Tha other! are out\nof pocket the differential between -that fee\nand their; dally wage unless employers come\nto their rescue.\nThis was done hi Kitchener the other day,\nwhen the City Council approved a gtant of\n$19 to make up the pay lost by a City employee while on Jury duty. It was a considerate act and .deserving ol imitation.\nJury duty is an important as well as compulsory function'for eligible citizens. The\n1 jury of one'* peers which ensures even-handed\njustice Is recruited in this way. No man rendering this essentialeervice, however, should\n.bathe poorer for it.\nJustice la not served by having injustice\nfollow in its train.\u2014Windsor Daily Star.\nit's Been Said\nWe should be os courteous to a man as\nwe are to a picture, which we are willing to\ngive the advantage of the best light.\u2014Ralph\n\u2022 Waldo Emerson.\nYotin Horoscope\nIf you have been working hard and your\nenergies are depleted, take time out for amusement The next year should bring you some\nfinancial gain. In spite of handicaps, the child\nbom today should win through courage and\npersistence. \u2022 '.','\u25a0\n( \u201e\nAn increase Is recorded in the flight of\npersons from Red satellite countries to Canada. Any good refugee will be welcome, but\nthe security authorities had Better make sure\nthat the Commies do not choose this method\nof \"planting\" a few extra spies and saboteur!.\n\u2014Brantford Expositor.'\nMicroscope Announced JHlS\nBy J..M. ROBERT8, Jr.\nAssoolated Press News Analyst\nAssassination continues to stalk\nfriends ol the West throughout the\nMoslem world. -,.'-.\nIt began in Egypt right alter the\nwar. It has. added to serious crises\nin Sjrla, Jordan and Iran. A king\nand lour premiers now head tha list\nof 13 important political assassinations, And Pakistan becomes a focal\npolpt of grave possibilities.\nPremier Liaquat Ali Khan was a\nconservatively moving figure in the\ndangerous situation between India\nand Pakistan. The first reaction\namong Indian officials was that his\ndeath might give the upper hand to\nfa-atloal Moslems who advocate war\nwith India over the possession ot\nKashmir.\nPRES8 FOR WAR\nThere are fanatics on both sides\npressing hard lor war. Liaquat' and\nGandhi died because, someone con*\nsdlered them too soft. And a war\nbetween India and Pakistan would\nleave the whole great sub-continent\nopen to Communist Infiltration.\nThese assassinations also send\ntheir waves throughout the Moslem\nworld, already seething. Fire is\nspread among the direct actlohlst in\nsuch places as Egypt and Iran, already involved in critical conflicts\nwith Britain, and Iraq, to which the\ntires of nationalism and anti-\nlorelgnlsm are Spreading.\nDI8C0NTENTED FOR YEARS\nThe Moslem world has long been\na colonial or semi-colonial area,\nlargely; dominated by France and\nBritain, with a brlet incursion by\nMussolini. From French Morocco on\nthe Atlantic to the Indian Ocean,\nthe area has been in upheaval and\nfull of discontent for years.\nThe\\ Arab ferment in' Northern\nAfrica and the Middle East is also\nspreading among-the black men ol\nmiddle and Southern Africa. Not for\nlong will they lag behind with their\ndemands for an end to white exploitation. Hundreds of millions of\npeoples, from Java to the Cape,\nacross halt a world, are being afy\nfected by tbe developments of these\ndays.\nWESTERN POLICIES\nTO BE TRIED\nWestern policies are going to be\nsorely tried. Will it be possible to\ndevelop jmd maintain policies of\ntolerant helpfulness as these peoples\ngrasp for things for whlcli'they are\nnote entirely ready? Or will the urgency of Western defence against\nCommunism, force the Western\nAllies into a. \"tough\" policy of using\nthese small nations Without regard\nfor their sensibilities or their future\nfriendship? . '\u25a0..-.. . , ,;\n>*i j .,',.'\"'\u2014*,;  'i.    A.\nDavis To Be Expelled\nFrom Switzerland\nLAUSANNE, Switzerland, Oct IB\n(AP)\u2014A Swiss Federal court today\nconvicted Charles E. Davis of political espionage in connection with\ncharges that he furnished p information to Senator Joseph McCarthy\n(Rep. Wis.) and' United States\nagents. Davis was . sentenced to\neight months in jail and ordered\nexpelled from Switzerland.\nBy HOWARD W. BLAKESLEE   .\nAssociated Press Science Editor\nSCHiaJECTADY, N.Y., Oct 16\nscope was announced jointly by the\nAmerican* Optical Company and\nthe General Electric Company.\nIt is made to look through three\nfeet ol concrete In the Knolls\natomic power laboratory, operated\nby General Electric here tor .the\nUnited States Atomic Energy Commission.    \u25a0 , i V .'\nThis microscope does its looking\nright in the areas where atoms are\nsplitting, and where the radioactivity at any moment may be greater\nthan the rays of all the radium the\nworld ever has mined. -\nDOUBLE-BARRELED\nThe new Instrument is really a\ndouble-barrel telescope, One barrel\nIs a system of lenses carrying a\nbeam of light through the concrete\nwall to the microscope slide.'The\nother barrel is for looking at this\nslide. Both barrels are broken in\nthe middle like periscopes. At this\nbreak the light reflects to or from\na lower: barrel.\nThis break, prevents the radioactive rays from going beyond the\nperiscope breaks, because these rays\ncannot bend like light *      .\nThe microscope in the hot radio*\nactive areh is set and .focussed by\nremote, control. It Is Intended tor\nexamining metals, - b'ecause , the\natom-splitting | rays actually alter\nthe structure of metals. This change\nis slow enough to be seen.\nMetals may get harder, more\nbrittle, or may conduct heat and\nelectrloity differently after , they\nhave been exposed to the rays,\n| TheyTl PoItE\nToda\/s Bible Thought\nHe even Ignores differences of\ncolor; He looks at the heart and Is\nnever deceived,\u2014There Is no respect ol persons with God.\n*        \u2014Rom. 2:11.\nLiaquaf All Khan\n13lh Victim\nBy The Associated Press\nThe assassination of Prime Min\nlster Liaquat All Khan of. Pakistan\nis the 18th killing of an Important\npolitical leader in the Arab'and\nMoslem world since * 1948.\nThe list includes:\nAhmed Maher Pasha, Premier of\nEgypt, Feb. 24, 1948.\nAmin Osman Pasha, former finance minister of Egypt, Jan. 5, 1948.\nMahmoud Fahmy Nokrashy Pasha, Egyptian premier, Dec. 28,1948.\nSheikh El Banna, Egyptian Moslem leader, Feb. 12, 1949.\nHusnl Zaylm, President of Syria,\nAug. 14, 1949, ,   .\nHusnl Bey Berazl, Prettier of.\nSyria, Aug! 14, 1849.\nAbdul Hussein Hazhir, former\npremier of Iran, Nov, 8, 1949,\nLt. Col. Mohammed Nasser, Syrian Air Force commander, Aug.* 1,\n1960.\nGen. All Razmara, Premier of\nIran, March 7, 1981. \u2022'.;\"..\nDr. Abdul Haniid Zanganeh,' former Education Minister ot Iran,\nMarch 25, 1951.\nRiad El Solh, former Premier ot\nLebanon, July 18, 1951,\nKing Abdullah of Jordan, July\n20, 1951.\nLiaquat Ali Khan, Prime Minister\not Pakistan, Oct 18, 1951,\nJail Sentence for\nBritish Deserter\nWOOLWICH, Kent, England, Oct,\nIB (AP)\u2014A court martial today sentenced John Biddle to two years in\nprison on charges of deserting the\narmy in 1940.\nThe court wasn't Impressed with\nBlddle's story that he deserted because varicose veins made his legs\nhurt when he had to march. He\nspent his* 11 fugitive years roaming\nthe country on foot as a peddler,\n-h\nAttempt to Identify\nFloating Wing-Piece\nVICTORIA, B.C., Oct, 16 (CP)-\nR.C.M.P. and U.S. Coast Guard officials are attempting today to identify a piece of airplane wing found\nfloating just off Trial Island Saturday afternoon.    .\nThe section of wing, now.in the\npossession of the' R.C.M.P. here,\n-bears several serial numbers on assembly parts. The whole section,\nabout six feet long, is of plywood\nand fabric and Is red in color.\nThe wing was noticed by crew\nmembers ot the tug Island Trooper\nas they were passing Trial Island.\nThe section of plane was caught In\nthe edge of a kelp bed.\nEstimated \"value of agricultural\nproducts in Newfoundland, including livestock, wfi $18,000,000 in 1950,\nNew Zealanders\n18 \u2014 *\n(Reuters*\u2014Prime. Minister Sidney\nHolland today assured Britain of\nNew Zealand's moral support In\nevery. action she might take on\nEgypt's breaking of the Anglo-\nEgyptian Treaty.   -,;\nAt tho same time, Australian Premier Robert Menzies said in Canberra he hopes King Farouk will\nexercise. his Influence with the\nEgyptian,'\" Government ta avoid\nhasty and ill \u2022 considered' action .\nwhich could hav.e the most serious\nconsequences,\" r?\nHolland told the New Zealand\nHouse of Representatives: \"Where\nBritain goes,'we go. Where Britain\nstands, we stand. We will support\nBritain in her attitude without any\nqualification and we will support\nher to maintain her rights'.\"\n50% Sask. Wheat\nCrop Harvested\nREGINA, Oct. 18 (CP) - Approxt\nmately 50 per cent of the 1951 Saskatchewan wheat crop has been har*\nVested.\nIdeal weather that prevailed during most of last week permitted\nfarmers to make rapid progress, the\nProvincial Agriculture Department\nsaid in a crop report\nIn spite ol the prolonged periods\nof unfavorable weather the grain\nin most areas is reported in good\ncondition. Indications are * that 85\nper cent of the wheat will grade\nNo. 4 or better.\nJohn Elllotson, English physician\nwho died In 1668 was one of the\nfirst British doctors to use the\nstethescope,\nThe French novelist Honore de\nBalzac produced 85 novels and* many\nmiscellaneous works over a 20-year\nperiod.\nNELSON\nSHRINE BALL\n'  NdV;9TM\nA. C. FOSTER, In charge, of\nlight and sound, says: \"The spotlight Is on the Second Annual\n8hrlne Ball.\" . \u25a0 \u25a0\u2666\u2666\u2022\nLast Day\n: FOR LAST YEAR'S\nSEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nTO PICK UP THEIR TICKETS\nOjIwLKaL\nJim' always says somethin* when\nhis wife has on a new hat or dress,\nbut it's because he wants to be\nthanked egain.\nThe Eddystone lighthouse in the\nEnglish Channel casta a beam of\n358,000 candle-power, visible for 17\nmiles.\nsts-Ma\nTbe British Colombia Distillery Company Limited bas growing demand for its products both at borne and in\ngready increased its facilities over the past few years world markets\u2014an expansion program that keeps pace\nand has built up its stocks to keep pace with the rapidly      with British Colombia growth and prosperity.\nThis odvertisement.Js not published or displayed by tho liquor Control Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n GUIDING TRAIL'S YOUTH 8PORT8 program\nthis year Is a busy 20-man directorate known as\nthe Trail Amateur Athletic Association 18 of whom\nare pictured here. \u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0'\nInoluded In the group are J. Morris, chairman;\nJ. Anderson; vice-president; J. Haywood, 2nd vice-\npresident; G. Jenkins, secretary-treasurer; D. Go-\nloubef,-sports director; R. Ramsden, welfare representative; T,.Mableson, R. Martin, J. Fulthorp, A.\nMclnnis, J, Wallace, B. Bnlllle, J. Ross. M. Bcwen,\n. B, Algar, jl, Reid, D. McKenzle, P. Stellga.\nMissing from picture are W.  Naylor,. sports\nconsultant and J. Ink, past president*\n-    \u25a0   ' v.    \u2014Photo by Louis Fryllng.\nTrail Edges Leaf s 3-2\n500Trail Boys Ready for Hockey\nUnder A.A.A.; Await Pool, Qytn\nNatal Girls\nBeat Fernie in\nFastball Till\nNATAL, B. C, Oct 16 \u2014 The Michel-Natal high school girls soft-\nball team, playing in an exhibition\ngame, took the measure of the Fernie High School girls to the tune of\n10-10 at the Natal ball park before a\nfair crowd, the game which was\nplayed on even terms for the first\nfive innings ended in a one-sided\nwin tor the Michel-Natal girls as\nthey scored. 10 runs while holding\nthe visitors scoreless.\nWith the' score tied at fl-9, the Michel-Natal nine exploded for five\nruns with the big blow of the inning\nbeing a grand slam home run by\npitcher Quorin who in addition to\npitching a steady game was the big\nnoise at the plate with three hits,\nThe winners, hit two homers while\nthe losers, connected for one round*\n' tripper. Both team; recently participated in East Kootenay schools\nannual softball tournament held at\nCranbrook, the Michel-Natal team\nreaching the finals.\n1 By LOUIS FRYLING\nThe'Tra{l Amateur Athletic Association was formed in 1010 for the\npurpose of co-ordinating all individual sports under one head and to\nprovide athletic Instruction and\ntraining for the young people Of the\ncommunity and to work for a suitable gymnasium, swimming pool and\nplaygrounds in the district In 1945\nthe organization incorporated under\nthe Government Societies Act It\nwas in this year that the T.A.A.\nJoined the local Patriotic'Society\ndepending competely on it for financial support \u25a0;.\nIt Is Interesting* to note that the\ngreatest period 6f prosperity before\nT.A.A. joined the Patriotic Society\nwas in the era when indoor track\nmeets were held in the old Fair\nbulldlng,or rink.\nUp till now -ho emphasis in sporting activities In Trail has been on\nIce. The Recreational and Projects\nSociety have in their next moves,\nplans for swimming pool and gym*\nnasium. The TAA Is greatly hinder*\ned In carrying out any sort of pro*\ngram by lack pf facilities along these\nlines. When the gymnasium planned\nfor, the Trail Memorial Centre is\ncompleted the T.A.A. activities will\nexpand to a new high in the recreational program ot the district\n. The Athletic Association Is male\nIng good use of the Ice. Right now\nthere are over 600 boys registered\nto play In their booster, hockey\norganization, which Includes\nteams from Pee Wee to Juvenile,\nEach team plays one game a week\n, and a bantam and Juvenile rep\nteam will be selected for the pro\nvlnclal playdowiu.\nGreat progress has been made in\nencouraging sport since, the organization adopted the policy, In-1946, of\nproviding a full time sport director.\nAt present, Dmitri P, Gbloubef is\nathletic director, with 11 part-tnne\nplayground directors and swimming\npool assistants, There were large\nattendances in the eight weeks of\nOperation this Summer.\n31 Starters for\nNewmarket Race\nLast Day\nToday\nFOR LAST YEAR'S\nSEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nTO PICK UP THEIR TICKETS\nLONDON, Oct 16 (AP)-Thirty-\none horses are expected to start\ntomorrow in the Cesarewith Stakes\nBt Newmarket the first leg bf British racing's Autumn \"doubled The\nsecond leg is the nine furlongs\nCambridgeshire Stakes at Newmarket Oct 81.\nAn Irish Sweepstakes draw is\nheld on the Cambridgeshire.\nPre-race betting suggests that 28\nof the probable starters are not\nreckoned to bave more than out-\nSide chance.\nthree of the field, Three Cheers,\nKelling and Heliophila, have beep\nconsistently supported in betting,\nThree Cheers, a three-year-old\ncarrying low weight ot 103 pounds,'\nis almost certain to start a firm\nfavorite despite the fact he has\nnever* run, the full distance ot the\n2V<i-mile CesSrewltch.\nThree Cheers was favored at 7-\nto-1, Heliophila 9-to-l and Kelling\n100-to-9.\nBig Crowd Sees\nSmokies Win 2nd;\nNelson Loses 3rd\nTRAIL, b. C, Oct. 18 >\u00bb Trail\nSmoke Eaters turned back a fighting band of Nelson Maple Leafs\n8-2 here tonight to register their\nsecond straight win in the young\nWestern International League\nseason,\nA near capacity crowd! on hand\nfor the Smokies' first home appearance, saw newcomer Bill Ramsden\nsink the winner at 7:32 of the third\nperiod, a tew minutes after Nelson\nhad tied the,count in coming froni\nbehind a 2-0 first period,deficit.\nIt was Leafs' third Straight setback in league play after they had\nknocked over the Smokies in an\nexhibition affair here last week,\nPLAY RUGGED .     .\nPlay was fairly even In the first\nperiod until Red Staley slipped one\ninto the Nelson goal at 8:41, and\nthe game was on in dead earnest,\nThe boys became a little rough\narid the rets had to interfere to\nprevent a fight, Four penalties were\nhanded out in the first stanza. In\nthe second session, determined to\neven the score, the Maple Leafs'\nturned on the heat and had a little\nbit of the' edge on the Smokies. At\n9:58 George Crothers banged the\nrubber into the Trail cage to make\nthe score 2-1 at, the end of the\nperiod. * ,\nFrom the beginning of the third\nboth teams played hard, Trail to\nWiden their small margin and Nelson to even the score, which they\ndid When Don Appleton got a goal\nat 2:15. -:\u25a0 V.  \u25a0-....-.\nWhen Bill Ramsden pushed Trail\nahead again at 7:82, the Smokies\nplayed a strong defence to main\ntain this lead until the end. Mickey\nMaglio of the Leafs was a stand'\nout who more than once came with*\nin an ace of scoring. Six penalties\nwere handed out in the final period.\nTrail\u2014Goal, Sofiak; defence, Rot-\nynskii Crough, Cronie, Hamilton;\nforwards; Rypien, Staley, Kromm,\nShabaga, Sinclair,' Wieat, Cobk, Turik, Ramsden.  >      ' '\nNelson \u2014 Goal, Rodzlnyak; defence: .Barefoot, Gare, Gilhooly,\nWares, Crothers; forwards: McCJen-\naghan, Maglio, F. Koehle, R, Koehle,'\nDrobney, Appleton, Smith.\nSUMMARY .-..*\u2022:\nFirst, period \u2014 1. Trail, Staley\n(Rypien) 8:41; 2, Trail, Turik\n(Weist, BypienV 11:43.\nPenalties rr Sinclair, Smith, R.\nKoehle, Cook.\nSecond period\u20148, Nelson. Crothers (F. Koehle) 8:55.\nPenalties \u2014 Hamilton, Gare, ~R.\nKoehle, Crough.\nThird period\u20144. Nelson, Appleton\n(Gare) 2:15; 5. Trail, Ramsden\n(Shabaga) 7:32.\nPenalties \u2014 Barefoot, Maglio, R.\nKoehle, Shabaga, Cook, Maglio.\nBILL-HALDANE\n. . . Out cf action for two weeks\nIs Nelson Maple Leaf left winger Bill Haldane. Haldane suffered a dislocated Moulder while\nIn weekend action against Spokane Flyers and spent Sunday\nnight In a Spokane hospital. He\nreturned to Nelson Monday night\nbut will be laid up until the end\nof themonth.\n' Two other Leafs required patching. Nell McClenaghan had '\u2022'*'\u2022\nhead wound, olosed 'with four\nstitches apd Fritz Koehle a similar cut over the eye with three\nstitches.      -   *\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17, 1*51 \u2014 7\nSemi-Pros Show\nWorld Series Stars\nHow It's Done\n- A\nHONOLULU, Oct. 16 (AP)\npickup team of servicemen and Haw\nailan semi-pros upset Lefty O'Doul's\nbaseball all stars 8-6 in a middle-qf-\nthe-night game that ended at 1 am\ntoday. '; <\nFifteen thousand fans waited until 11 p.m. for the game to start,\nPlane trouble delayed arrival of the\nstars, including major leaguers Joe\nand Dom, DiMagglo, Ed Lopat, Mel\nParnell and Ferris Fain,\nLopat, who won two world series\ngames this year for New York Yankees, gave up four runs in the only\ninning,he pitched.\nTuck Correa, veteran Hawaii semi\npro, struck out Joe DiMagglo on\nthree pitches In the Yankee Clip*\nper's trip to the plate. \u25a0*\u25a0\".'\u25a0\nNEVER A\nVfV\n\\ V.A\n* ;   ' *\n\/ y \u25a0\/ \": '\u2022   S\nW .X W       \"     *\n*    *>' \".  *' < \"\nVALUEmE w\/s\nALOW-PRICED\n10W PRESSURE TIRE\nby DUNLOP\nUnit of it \u2014 a new lav ' a. J V \/\nrestate, low-priced lire SIZE 6,70\/15 4-M.Y\nU.S.S.R. FOOTBALL\nFINAL TO BE\nREPLAYED\nMeNEIL INJURED\nMONTREAL, Oct. 18 (CP) -\nGefry McNeil, goal-tender for\nMontreal Canadiens, suffered\nseven-stitch cut in his forehead\nduring practice today but it Was\nhoped he will be ready for Thursday night's National Hockey League\ngame here with New York Rangers.\nMcNeil, who was hurt when\nstruck by Floyd Curry's skate during a pile-up in front of the goal,\nwas taken to hospital, An X-ray\nexamination showed no bone injury\nas at first feared. He is expected to\nleave hospital tomorrow.\nMOSCOW, Oct 16 (AP)V- The\nAll Union Committee ot Sports,\nRussia's'* highest athletic authority,\nropked the Soviet sports world today by ordering a replay of the\nfinal game of the U.S.S.R. football\nchampionship.\nIt is> situation similar to what\nwould happen in the' United .States\nif the Baseball: Commissioner ordered a replay bf the final Yankee-\nGiants game of the World Series.\nThe Soviet Army team had defeated the underdog Kalinin Club\n2-1 Sunday, for the annual football\ncup. The game closes the football\nseason.\nKalinin, an underdog all,the way\nthrough the season, fought its way\ninto the finals by beating everything in sight, including the mighty\nMoscow Dynamos, It didn't lose a\nsingle gairie. Army had won the\nbig league play and reached the\nfinals by.turning back all other\nclubs. Kalinin, not even in the big\nleague, 'met. AiJiiy ..Sunday.-      iX\nWith 20 minutes to play, Army\nled 2-1, but ih the final period\nKalinin drove home a goal But\nReferee Latyshev ruled ''no goal.\"\nHe said the ball had been out of\nplay. i\nFans protested. So did the Kal*\ninin team. Pravda took up thd\nmatter. Without taking sides, lt said\ngreat skill is needed in refereeing.\nToday the Press announced tersely\nthat the gams would be replayed.\nIt didn't specifically blame the\nreferee. \u25a0    \u2022 .\nFarni Systems\nRuining Baseball\nInquiry Told\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (AP) -\nLeslie' O'Connor,' for 23 years one\nof Commissioner KenesaW M.\nLandis' .closest advisers, sai^ today\nfarm systems are destroying organized baseball.\nO'Connor told a* House judiciary\nsub - committee that late Judge\nLandis never liked the farm systems. But, O'Connor said, \"Judge\nLandis did not oppose it as much\nas I do.\"    '      \"\u25a0'\u25a0\nUnder the term system, a major\nleague club owns or controls minor\nleague teams. The sub-committee,\nstudying whether baseball violates\nanti-trust laws,, has been casting a\ncritical eye on,the farms.\np'Connor said that the rules say\nno team can control more than 40\nball players. <'But by the farm\nsystem,\" he said, \"it actually can\ncontrol hundreds of players.\"\nHe contended that this isn't good\nfor the player,' the minor leagues\nor, in some cases, the major league\nclubs which go in tor farming,\n1 Here are some of. the objections\nO'Connor raised:\nBall players \u2014 under the farm\nsystem they're largely limited to\nthe organization with which they\nsign, It a second baseman Is signed,'\nand the ciiib happens-to have a\ngood - second baseman, O'Connor\nsaid the player may be put in \"cold\nstorage.\"'\nMinor leagues \u2014 They have been\nout, off from many sources of\nrevenue that they had before, such\nas sale of players. He said the farm\nsystem got its foothold during the\ndepression, and originally the idea\nwas that the majors would help the\nminors only 'until the emergency\nhad passed*'.\nO'Connor, now a Chicago lawyer,\nand also counsel for .the Pacific\nCoast League, admitted that any\nattempt to oancel the farm system\nentirely'would cause considerable\nconfusion. '\u2022   ,, ''\nSee Big Season\nFor Badminton\nClub; 70 Out\nWith turnouts of over 70 enthusiastic players at each of the first\ntwp meetings, the Nelson Badminton Club is looking forward to another banner year.\nReturning President Al Wilson is\nlooking for an even bigger year\nthan last when over 80 members\nparticipated and is particularly\nised with the junior players.\nLast year Nelson Juniors dominated\nboth East and West Kootenay open\ntournaments.\nIn anticipation of a larger, membership the club has been allotted\nmore time at the Civic Centre this\nyear.\nBruce Latremouille Was reelected\nVice-President with Freddy Thompson returning as Secretary. Laurie\nLefeaux , is Treasurer while the\nFloor Committee is composed of\nBob Collinson, Jim Ball, Stan Don*\naldson, Jack Newstead and Norman\nHughes;\nSCHOOL HOOP\nSQUADS PREP\nNelson High School sdfilor basketball teams have started workouts\n. tor the coming: season.      ...\nStudent Athletic Minister Roy\"\nGates is seeking matches with JTrall,\nRossland and Creston high' school\nsquads which Nelson played last\nseason.  '    '\nAbout 20 prospects are out with'\neach of the Bombers an the Bom-\nberettes for twice weekly workouts\nat the Civic Centre. Walter Elmes is\nagain coaching.\n.World Javelin record, 288 feet 2%\ninches, is currently held by Xrjo\nNikkanen of Finland.\n%\nREAL HELP^\nFOR INDIGESTION\nAND CONSTIPATION\nGet relief from conjtlpation\u2014tadi-\ngettlon. Positive remits from\nFRUIT-A-TIVES proven by tens of\nthousands. FRUIT A-TIVES contain\nwMctt of fnilta and horbo.\nDODGER TO BE DISCHARGED\nNEW YORK, Oct. 16 (AP)-^Bllly\nLoes, 21-year-old Brooklyn pitcher,\nexpects to be discharged from the\nUnited- States Army as a \"hardship\ncase\" within the next two days, his\nfamily said today.\nLoes, who signed for. a $20,000\nbonus three years ago, was Inducted\nInto the Army last February.,\nHis father. IS ill. Billy is the sole\nsupport of the family.\nSee Boudreau\nManaging BoSox,\nSale of Williams\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 16 (AP)' -\nThe Los Angeles Times Bays today\nit has learned reliably that Lou\nBoudreau will become the manager\nof Boston Red Sox, replacing Steve\nO'Neill.\nThe Times says Boudreau, manager of the Cleveland Indians from\n1842 through 1850, will make sweeping changes and might consider\nselling slugger,Ted Williams.\nBoudreau joined the Red Sox last\nSpring., O'Neill has managed the\nBoston club for the last'two seasons,\nHockey\nSeason tickets\nNOWONSALE\nTO LAST SEASON HOLDERS\nUNTIL TODAY, OCTOBER 17\nSeats may bt paid for In fuH or reserved for every\ngame by signing a reservo teat contract.\nSEASON TICKETS\n21 Games $21.00\nRESERVE SEAT CONTRACT $1.00 A GAME\n$3.00 DEPOSIT\nNEW SEASON TICKET HOLDERS!\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 18\/,has been reserved for\nyou to choose your tickets for the coming season.\nYou can assure yourself of good seats for all (League\nand Playoff games with season tickets or reserve\nseat contracts.\nBE A LEAF BOOSTER\nCivic Centre Office Open for Seat Sale\nDaily. 10 a.m.\u20146 p.m.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nMARITIME MXJOR\nHalifax 2, Saint John 5        \u2022\u25a0\nMoncton 2, Glace Bay J\nO.H.A. JUNIOR A\nBarrie 3,,Queiph 9 ,\nWindsor 2, Gait 3\nKitchener 9, St Catharines T\nP.C.H.L.\nSaskatoon 3, Victoria 8.\nNew Westminster 4, Vancouver S\nOkANAQAN SENIOR '\n. Kelowna 8, Vernon 3\nStrikes n' Spares\n\\X\n7**\nThink of it \u2014 a new lata\npressure, low-priced lire\nembodying all the famous\nDunlop features of .liability, road grip and sturdy\nconstruction plus the cushioned comfort  of low\npressure riding plus an entirely new 7.rib tread'\npattern for rugged strength and high mileage.   -\nNow there's a low-priced Dunlop Tire, to meet\nyour every need \u2014\n6.00\/16 4-ply - - \u2022 $23.20\n6.70\/15 4-ply - - - S28.80\n7.10\/15 4-ply \u2022 \u2022 - $32.60\nSMjMvHMRstDnispDeilirTtdsjMiiittaOlienttrak-banairiKil\nDUNLOP \u25a0 CAN ADA\n10-GAME TOURNEY\nLorraine DeGlrolamo came up\nwith most of the spoils in the dual\nOpen-Handicap test Sunday against\nmost of the top bowlers in the city.\nLorraine just missed the Charmed\n400 single on 'a lOth-frame corner\npin, ending up with a big 891 foi*\nhigh open Single. '\nAl Herchuk, who has achieved\nthe only perfect 450 in Nelson\nbowling records, carried off the top\nprize with an open score of 2395\nfor a 239 average. Harry Kennell,\nthe tourney's only scratch bowler\nwith a 252 average, came second\nin the open bracket with 2314 followed by Miss DeGirolamo at 2272.\nHerchuk's 2025 handicap total\nwas also tops with Lorraine's 2592\nrunner-up. Bob Hiddell was third\nwith 2560.\nMiss DeGlrolamo also tallied the,\nhigh open aggregate* for three consecutive games with 945 and this\nWas also good for the high any-three\ntotal. Her handicap total for these\nthree games was a lofty 1041, good\ntor still another first, '\nHidden score prizes went to Barney Jarbeau, Bob MacDonald, Bob\nRlddell, Diane Chursinow and Bill\nKlochek. .'\nOthers finishing In the 200 .class\nfor the 10 games were Joe Slkorski\nwith 2186 pins, Bill Horner \"with\n2097, Bob Rlddell 2080, Bruce Malcolm 2045, Bob MacDonald 2043,\nDiane Chursinow 2037 and Bill Klo*\nchek 2016.\nGOVERNMENT LEAGUE\nFloyd-Jennings was top man with\na 291. single and 722 aggregate\nwhile Mary Hardy led the ladles\nwith a 277 single and 662 aggregate.\nRunnerup was Lucille Lapointe\nwith 636.\nFlying Eagles lead the league\nwith nine points while Terrible\nTermites and Timber Wolves are\ntied for second with six points\napiece. Eager Beavers, Tamaracs\nand Chipmunks follow with five\npoints each.\nMIXED COMMERCIAL\nEve Macrae took ladles' honors\nwith a 309 single and a 643 aggregate while high for the men were\nDoug Hall's 296 single and 756\naggregate. Bill Rozinkin had a 291\nsingle and was tied with Dyne\nMacrae with a 651 aggregate runnerup.\ni Jonellas took team honors with a\n1086 single and 2880 aggregate. The\nOrange quintet are league leaders\nwith 18 pblntg while Superior and\nDodgers are tied for second with 14.\n8ENI0R LADIE8      \u2022\nIsabel Ldcatelli led the field last\nweek with a 286 single and 738\naggregate while runnersup were\nRose Brown with a 273 single and\nBette'Maloneywith a 663 aggregate,\nOther high individual aggregates\nwere scored by Dot Waterer 630,\nFern Porteous 619,' Lou Kennell\n616, Ev Macrae 605 and Rose\nBrown 603.\nMEN'S COMMERCIAL\n(Monday) '\nCompetition stiffened in the city's\nbiggest league this week with four\n700 aggregates and four 300 singles\nbeing registered!\nDyne Macrae took single honors\nwith a 349 while Harry Kennell\nhad a 317, Jerry Gullivan 312. and\nRudy Boates 801.\nKennell's 770 was the top aggregate with Keith Loewen had 759.\nDyne Macrae rolled 722 and. Rudy\nBoates 710 to complete the top four.\nIn the 600 bracket were Bob\nMacDonald at 691, Clyde Mills 865,\nKen White 653, Bill Horner 649.\nGil Johnson 649, Jerry Gullivan\n646, Jerry Pickering 628, Harold\nMayo 626, Bill Cartwright 623, Bill\nRamsden 622.\nLumber Jacks took all. team\nhonors with a 1229 single and 3269\naggregate.\nlllth Battery moved into top\nspot with 18% points while Parts-\nmen are a close second with 18 and\nVijos third at* 17.    .\nCALVERT DISTILLERS (CANADA) LIMITED\n\u00bb.*      AMHERSTBURG   \u2022    ONTARIO\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board Ot\n4      bv the Government of British Columbia.\n MR. RICHARD GREW, left, Acting High Com-\nmlssloner for Canada in India, and Shrl 3. Dutt,\nSecretary cf Commonwealth Relations and Minister of External Affairs of India, are seen signing,\nfor their respective countries, an agreement by\nwhich financial assistance will be made available\nto India by Canada under the Colombo Plan. Wit\nnessing the signing of the notes are: Mr. Harry\nJay, standing, left; Mr. Paul A. Bridle of the Canadian High Commission; Shrl B. C. Blattacharya,\nMinistry of Finance; Shrl S. N. Haksar, External\nAffairs Ministry; Shrl 0. K. Ghosh, Deputy Secretary, Finance Ministry, and Shrl fi. J.. Malik\nof Exeternal Affairs Ministry.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\n\u00bb\"\u25a0*'\u2022 firm**,    .p,.,-       <v*-.*f.'--T,\nf* ,       >.*.\u25a0.       : *;.,...*       \u25a0 ; \u2022*     -   - \"\nmcm\u00ae&8\u00aeiw\u00ae&tS\u00a3\nTHE GERMAN NEWS AGENCY PHOTO service which distributed the .above picture has described the strange gadget, complete with hooded ,\nman, as a \"hew sensational atom-smasher\". Said to\nhave been assembled by a German engineer In\nthe British Zone, somewhere along the Soviet Zone\nborder, the complex contraption looks more like\na telescope than a deadly machine of war.\n\u25a0  . \u2022- * ,\u2014Central Press Canadian\nSuccessor Appointed\nTo Cyclone Taylor\nOTTAWA' Oct. lSACP) \u2014New\nsuperintendents for Canada's. Eastern and Pacific immigration regions\nwere announced today by the Immigration Department, -\u2022\u2022\nW. A. McFaul, 43, has been named Eastern District Superintendent\nWith headquarters at Montreal, replacing H; U. McCrum, 63, now on\nretirement D. N. McDohell, 60, has\nsucceeded F. W.. (Cyclone) Taylor,\n66, one-time, hockey great, who lias\nretired as pacific District Superintendent with headquarters at\nVancouver.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nJ\nI\nG\nG\n5\nHERE COMES\n0HA3AW-PIO\nTHAT 6Liy *\nEVEUWOBK\nIN HIS LIFE?\n, lOOUTTHHiSO-\nTME80KB0WIMG\nMONEY FCOM\nFEOPLE\u2014I'M\nLEAWJ6 WOW.?\nHEU.0\nCHAGAW-\nHOWAES\nVOU\nTODAY?\nI'M <3LAG> VOU\nj   ASKED MS-THINSS\nARE NOT GOINQ\nVERY WELL WTTH\nME--\nI DON'T LIKE TO\n00 THIS\u2014BUT\nCOULD VOU\nLET ME HAVE\nTVCWTYCEWTS\nFOR SOME\nCOFFEE \"\nTWENTY CEM1S*\nWHY-VOiJ. KIM\nGET A CUP OF\nCOFFEE FOE\nTEN CENTS\/\nON THE AIR\n.'\u25a0\u2022..',..'    '.'\u25a0., \u2022'..\"\u2022\/ \u25a0\nCKLN PROGRAMS . . . imo on ihe dcal\n\u25a0 ^PACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER17,1951     -  \u2022 '\"\n7:00\u2014News 1:01\u2014Carnival of Fun\n1:30\u2014Wednesday Serenade\n1:59\u2014News\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:80-Strlke It. Rich\n2:45\u2014Why Prices Are Higi\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Easy Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Local Fill\n3:30\u2014Today's Guest\n8:45\u2014Pacific News\n3:59\u2014Niws '\n4:00\u2014Jimmy Shields Sings\n4:15\u2014Piano Pops\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:00\u2014News\n5:01\u2014Superman ;\n5:15\u2014News\nStflr^-Sports News\n5:30-rQuestion Time\n5:45\u2014Easy Aces\n6:00r-Dlnner Date\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Talk by Brockingtoh\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Let's Find Out\nONE OF TWO MISSING\nHUNTERS BELIEVED SAFE\n., NANAIMO, B.C., Oct. .16 (CP)-\nOne of two hunter's, objects of an\nintensive search by Royal Canadian Mounted - Police, is believed\nsafe. ' \\\nR.C.M.P.'called\/iff their request\nfor a police ranger and doge fcora\nVictoria after .Game Warden Frank\nGreenfield reported Steve. Walk-\nowski had been seen in the Black\nJack Mountain area.\nNo trace has been found of Harry\nEdward Vater who left his home\nSaturday.\n14 Yeors Jail for\nPart-Time Fireman\n\"TAhNTON, '-Somerset,. England. \u25a0\nOct 16 CAP)\u2014Roger A. Pearce, 23, :\na part-time fire tighter paid on. \u25a0\npiece-work basis', admitted today\nhe started 20 jobs for himself in\njust over a year.\nPolice witnesses estimated the\ndamage at more than \u00a320,000. Most\nof the fires were in bttrns, haystacks\nand schools. No one was killed or\ninjured.\nPearce pleaded guilty to arson'\ncharges and was sentenced to 14\nyears in prison.\nDAILT:e REWORD\nDOWN     It Agree\n'-1. English       1*7. Silver\nsurgeon     ,fcw \u00aboin \u00abt|\n2. Mischievow 18. Old\npersons,\nJ.F6ot. \"I-\n\\ m*\npart  .,\n4. Turkish\nweight\n5. A moat,\n(Fort)\n6. One of tho\nSociety\nIslands\nT. Piece ot\nland\n8. Chinese   ,\nbasic\nfood\nilnjurj\nEngHah\n(abbr.)\n19. Fool '\n22. Assent    .   .\nsilkworm\n28. Greek\nletter\n24.Honoraw\ntitles\n(Turk.)\n25. Appearanofr\n30. Holy\n31. Biblical cttj'\n32. Formed\n36. Baking\nchamber\n37. Conflict a\nHHUH\namats\nHBHi\nHUiay\nISiHEBE\nHuiHan\nnraiaar:\n-1 wntii:\nISSt!\nara   m\nHE\nna rjniF.\n*on*a3*r\nnanac\nanni <\u25a0:-.\nl'i:ir\nara    i:\n:i    ui-jr,\nhuigh\nMmEgr-*\nIVJKIV.Z\nHWSyil\ntlUPE\nKHifH\nCiBKfc\niJLiEE\n10-lf\nTtitirikr's Answer\nSS. Ceremonls**,\nchamber\n(Pueblo*\n40. Dwell;\ntt, Title'\n\u2022<*.\u25a0\u25a0\nruler \"i;\n(Tunis*\n43. Soak flax*,\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Limited    ,\n9:00\u2014BBC News,\n.9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014The Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Down Dairy Lane\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n11:15\u2014A Man and Hia Music\n12:15\u2014Calgary Tour\n1:45\u2014Putting on a Show\n1:56\u2014Women's Comments\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30-Strike It Rich\n3:0Or-Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Program Resume\n3:30\u2014Women's Talk'    v.\n3:45\u2014Pops Time -\n4:00\u2014Sunshine Society ;\u2022\nCBC PROGRAMS\nPACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1951\n4:30r-Dead Man's Island\n4:45\u2014Young Man With a Song\n4:55--News\n5:0O\u2014International Commentary\n5:10\u2014Stranger in Town\n5:30\u2014Arthur Godfrey\netfO-tfdhn and Judy\n6:30\u2014Wayne'and Shuster\n7:00\u2014News\n^.'lfS^-News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Eventidfe '.\n8:00\u2014Citizens Forum i\n8:45\u2014Quartet\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orchestra\n9:30\u2014Winnipeg Drama   '.\n10:00-rNews\n10:15\u2014Royal Tour Diary\n10:30\u2014Al Bollington Organ\n11:00-U.N. Today\n11:16\u2014Musical Program  '\n11:45\u2014Nightcap\n11:57\u2014Newa\nACROSS1\n1. Edge of\nwound,\"\n4, Often I      \"J\n(Poet)      i\n7. The best    :\n8. Australian\nmarsupial *\nE. Speaks\nimperfectly\n13. Remains\not afire\n14. Perform*\n15. Hissing\n,    sound\n16. Elevatior\nin golf\n17. Distress\nsignal\n30. Cravat\n21. Admission* \\\n24, Father\n26. Ruthenium\n(sym.)\n27. On account\n(abbr.)\n28. New\nTestament*)\n(abbr.)\n29. Devoted\n33. Resort\n34. Golden\n-    variety of\nthe We\n35. In what\nmanner\n38. Exclama-\n\u2022   tion'\n40.Volcanto\nrook\n\u00ab. Biting\n43. More\nmature\n44. Man's\nnickname\n45. Levels\n46. Period\nof time\n47. Spread\nSissstodrjr 10-,7\nDAILY CRYTTOQUOXE-Hcre's how to work It:\nAXTDLBAAXK   ;,\nisLONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ** seed\nfor the three I\/s, X tor the two O's, etc. Single letters, apes-\ntrophies, the length and formation of tho weeds are aU hints.  \u25a0\nBach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nD8K    KMKN    YLK    IIXBO    1IKI    DI)\nGXHO    XV    KHRYRHO    AXDg    MllKI\n'   GYDDKLN\u2014FZUEXEXZN    N M L Z K.\nYesterday's. Cryptoquoto:   WHITE PEACE BECOMES MEM\nCRUEL ANGER WILD BEASTS-OVID.\nDistributed fan *\u00bb\u00bbf natiats foiHMfitr\nV)\nf\nT\n2\ns\nl\n4\n5\"\nb\n^\/<\n%\n7\nB\nl\n*.-.,\n\u00abr\nH\na.\nI\nIS ,\n14.\n%\n^\n%\n*'\u2022\nWT\n%\n17\nIS\n19\n^A\n70\n1\nV4\nu\nZZ.\n23\n24-\n2S\n%\nZb\n%\n\"f\n^\n33\"\n29\n3o\n1\n31\n32.\n\\%\n^\n33\n%\niA-\n|\n3S\n3&\nS7\nia\n39\nm\n40\n41\n42.\n%\n45\n44\n%\n4er\ni\n%\n44.\n%\n47\n*\n%\n \u2022I\n\\Zb\\\n1 PtRSON-W'PiRSONWANWS\n\\    FOR QU\/CK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nPUBLIC NOTICE\n'   GRAY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. William\nGray,  Salmo,  at. Kootenay   Lake\nGeneral Hospital, Oct. 14, a daugh*\n\u25a0' ter.; ',..\u25a0,\u25a0'\nBEREkOFF-^o Mr. and Mrs.\nPeter Berekoff, Golf Links Road, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital*\nOct 15, a daughter.\nBP' DLJjiY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Gor-\nItdon;*Hradtey, Kootenay Bay. at\n\u25a0j'Kootenay take General Hospital,\nOct. Mi a daughter, stillhorh. (Vancouver; papers* please copy.)\nJORGENSONt-Tp Mr, and -Mrs,\nEarl jorg'ensen, 823 Victoria Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOct,; 15, a sen,   . '-. .,..'*\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0' \u25a0 *\nHELP WANTED\nr*l7ANTED-MECHANlC TO OPER-\n.; ate and maintain diesel driven\ncompressors   and   power   units,\nMust be able to repair mine equip.\n. went,* Welding end electrical ex.\n,   perience an asset but-not, essen-\n* ttal, Apply VioIaMac Mines (B.C.)\n'   titd:, New Denver, B.O,    -*.\n''WA^eD-MlNEWAND\n\"\u25a0'\u25a0\"-\u25a0 TIMBERMEN.\n,     -APPLY:\nWESTERN EXPLORATION,'\nSILVERTON, B.C,: .\n\u25a0\u25a0WASWfa.- bXPtiR:lli,KcE^\nstenographer. Permanent position\nto Suitable applioant, rate $187.00\nper month. Apply Superintend.\ni   ent's  Office,   Canadian   Pacific\nRly. Co.. Nelson, B.C.\nJ(Uy, L.O., weiauip, w,v.        .\n;3ltttL' iTOiiFS i*BDSD IMMEU-\n*    lately. Ideal working conditions\nand   wsies,   Apply   Greyhound\ni 'Cafe\/''   \u25a0'   \u25a0'\u2022'.\u25a0.. . ' *\".\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0      '' ,\nWAN^MV-^ffii *Oc\\ flfeNERAE\nhousework as mother's help. Private room. Write Box, 59, Bws-\ntad, B.C.  ._\u25a0. \u25a0 *'.    \u25a0.\u25a0;.**\nWXMtM? - Capable Middle.\naged housekapper, or ypUnger ior\ncouple. Apply Box 231, Klnnaird,\n*''   B.C. \u2022\u2022'\u25a0''\u25a0'     \".\u25a0..\u25a0\"'\u25a0':'.*.* *\u25a0     *   -    '.\nWAUWM\u00bb<J6K''*And tkaie;\ner to haul lumber and poles. S.\np. pond, Nelson, B.C.\n^jtpERIENCED   MIK-\nare. Apply Bmerald Mine, Salm\u00b0\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nIN THE MATTER OF THE\nESTATE OF WILLIAM HENRY\nDAWSON, DECEASED\nTenders will be received by the\nundersigned up to four b'clock in\nthe aftet-noon, October 2Bth, 1951,\nfor the purchase of lands and premises described as follows:\nLots 7,8 and 9. in Black 13, District\nLot 4596, Plan 1684, Kootenay District, belonging to the Estate ot\nWilliam.Henry Dawson. :\nTenders to be, addressed to or\ndelivered at the law office' ef\nMessrs. Clegg le Clegg, 068 Spokane\nStreet, Trail, British Columbia, on\nor before the 25th day of October,\n1951,\nThe highest or any tender will\nnot necessarily be accepted.\nDATED at Rossland. B.C., this\n12th day of October, 1051.\nCLEGG & CLEGG,\nSolicitors tor the Estate ot William Henry Dawspn,\" deceased,\nCITY* OF NELSON .\nCIVIC 'VOTERS LIST - 1051-82\nHouseholders and License Hold*\ners are requested to sob that their\nnames are on the current voters\nlist prior to October 31st.\nHouseholders who are exempt\nfrom Road. and Poll tax' must\nregister each year on or before\nOctober 31st.'\nProperty.owners and holders of\nagreements \\to purchase which are\nregistered in the Land Registry\nOffice are automatically placed on\nthe voters list,\nCorporations which are on the\nvoters list must file authority for\nits agent on or before October glut.\nC. W. B. HARPER,\nCity Clerk.\nCity Hall.'\nOct, is. 1951..  '.\u2022*.'\u25a0\nRENTALS\n50 ACRE RANCH\nFOR i RENT - SUITABLE FOR\ndairy and pasture; buildings and\nfruit trees. Apply Box 5878, Dally\nNews,   ';':'\u25a0:,.;'\nMACHINERY\nMORE POWER FOR\nYOUR MONEY\nWITH   *\ni8-YEAR-OLD BOY WILLING TO\nwork in garage to learn mechan-\n1   leal trade while working. State\n'    pay when answering ad. Write\nG. G. Markin, Rosebery, B.C,\nW.\" JteNfiibNfeh aIju  wiFt\nwould like Janitor work or position ot .trust Apply Box 5097,\nDaily News-    '.**\nIng, full or part-time, Box 5057,\nDaily News,\nWANTED TO RENT\u20142 OR 8 RM-\nunfurnished suite or small houSe\nby young couple, no childrert,\nmoving to Nelson November It\nBox 0479, Dally News;\nThe strongest,geared\npower for its weight\nin the woiid.\nThese machines are of\nrugged constructipn, precision built, light and\npowerful; , compact and\nportable. All tteel east\nand unbreakable.. Most\nuseful In mills,, mines,\nlogging camps, cqnstruc-\n. tion work\u2014^in fact, any\nplace where a power lift\nis unavailable.\nTHE ROIST WITH A\nREPUTATION FOR\nPOWER AND SERVICE\n'\/\nWrite for prices and literature to\n; Nelson Machinery\nCompany, Ltd.\n214 Hall St.       Nelson, B. C,\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n\/.'\u25a0\"   ETC., FOR. SALE\n, WANTED \u2014 '2- or 3 Bedroom\nHouse, close to schools. (3500.00\nto (3800.00 If. suited. Client will\npay all cash.\nOne and a quarter acres and\nsmall *house. 2 bedrooms and\ngood rentable cabin, Adjoining\ncity. One thousand C^Oftf)\ncash might handle... *P\u00ab\u00bb*VW\n\u25a0\u25a0; AND ' ;.,'\nSmall Home, very neat and\nclean. 2 , bedrooms, etc One-\nthird basement, cement floor.\nSituate on Silica St, \u00ab47<!n\nSome terms. ..,..'v...^.' *7\u00ab \u00ab,w\nOne of Nelson's better homes.\nStone foundation, cement floor;\nexcellent basement.-Hot water\nheat. Entrance hall, dining\nroom, living room with fireplace, 3 bedrooms, plus closed-\nin back porch with another\nbedroom: 3-piece. bathroom,\nground floor; also 3-poe;*plumb-\ning upstairs, Quiet location 2\nblocks from Baker <*i o Ann\nSt Some terms, .*... * \u25a0 *\u00bb\"\u00ab\"   '\nC.W.Appleyard\n&'Co. Ltd,\nReal Estate and Insurance\nFire, Car and General Ihsuranoe\nEstablished 30 Years\nPh. 209\u2014Box 26-332 Baker St\nInsurance Manaeer\u2014.'\nT. C, LAMBERT\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   PICYCLES\n(Continued)  .:\nl!i6iC,HBS'T-i't*i}tfiliffl)\"-BUN0:\nalow for Winter months. Apply\nMrs. Ian Campbell, R.R. 1, NelSon.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC\nDON'T\nTHESE!*\n3 Large Ayrshire Cows\n3-2-year-oid Heifers\n2 Only, Male Collie\nPups      .\"\nI He HARROP\nvi GRAPH SAtfNEN MILK GOATS\nfor sale. One due to freshen Feb.\nMrs. M. Jemberg, Procter, BC\nFor sAte'x-KoM-Vkkt.a'Lb\nLeghorn hens; $1.50 each for the\n.    lot, Phone 525-L1.     \t\n''fB*\"6XCt=d0W, #ft\u00abS*HBWlNGt\nOct.   25.   Apply.   South   Slocan\nShoemaker.\n\\twsm?mv toUtoG coy:\nApply Mrs. M. Bruno, Ymir, B.C.\nBOATS lind ENGINES\nFOR SALE-DAV CRUISER, 21\nft seml-V, 25 h.p. Universal marine engine In first class condition.\nReply V letter or can be seen at\nRiondel week days. John Sut*\nelilfe, Riondel, B.C.\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line -tost Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive insertion after first insertion.\n48c line tor' 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.58 line'per month (28 consec-\nUtive insertions). Box numbers He extre, Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (L50AL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc\u201420e per line,\nfirst insertion.   18c  per line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS.\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle copy ....  $  .0$\nBy carrier, per week,\n.   in advance      '   .25\nBy carrier, per year \u25a0-\u25a0\u201e.    13,00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne mqnth    \u2014.\u2122-,  $ 1,25\nThree  months       .3.75\n' Six months X     7..50\nOne year      - 15.00 j\nMail-in Canada, outside Nelson;\nOne month      ,\u00bb      100\nThree, months         2.75\nSix months  .\u25a0\u201e-..,\u2014.     8.50\nOne year        ...(.....      10.00\nWhere extra postage Is required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nWANTED-2 OR 3* BOOM SELF.\n. contained suite by young married\ncouple. Phone 350-Y,\nP WnTS B jjyHdtiSBCWmO\nroom for rent. Private entrance.\nPhone 998-X\nhouse, Nelson or vicinity, Contact\nR, Jordan at Kenville Mines Ltj.\n2 QR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE UBG\nehtly needed by member'of fire\ndepartment, and family, Ph, **\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nr*nt Apply 210 Vernon St. after\n5 p.m,\nBEDROOM FO\u00ab; RENT - CLOSE\nin. Phone 653-tt\nfor'.rent - 2 BflWciAitl*}.'\nApply 1004 3rd St,\nROOM VACANT FOR GENTLE*\nman. Phone I392-X.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAl, FIRIT IN-\nsurance Co., D, L. Kerr. Agent,\nXCiaB'MBTECtlWoSiTE CoW\nDepot Clean rooms and moderate\nrates, $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles. Vancouver. B. C\nattjWon' T8 a ti at BbAKft\nSecretaries, We have e large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order lm*\nmediately, Daily News Printing\nDept- Nelson, British Columbia.\nADULTS! PERSONAL RUBBER\ngoods 25 deluxe assortment Ill-\nbill. Tested, guaranteed, fine\nquality. Mailed in plain, sealed\npackage, '\u2022including . free Birth\nControl Booklet and bargain\ncatalogue of Marriage Hygiene\nSupplies. Western Distributors,\nBox 1023-PN, Vancouver.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u20141047 STE WART-WARNER\nSortable plug-in' battery radio,\nlack leatherette case. Reward\nfor information leading to return\nof same, Apply Box 5453. Daily\nNews.\t\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA8SAYE1W AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\n1839 RD7 CATERPILLAR TRACT-\nor, complete with Le Plants\nChoate, Hydraulic Angle Bulldozer\/and complete hydraulic\ncontrols, front and rear. All\nabove In very good condition.\nF.O.B. Lethbridge $5100,00, General Farm Supplies Ltd., Lethbridge, Phone ,4363.\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING   \u2022 \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 ,\nSEND YOUR ENQUJRWS JO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nr  EQUIPMENT\nCO.. LTD.      *   -\nGranville Island MA. 1251\nVancouver. B C.       *\nWINCHES - CARCO   TRACTOR\n\/ Winches, Braden Truck Winqhes,\nSingle and Double Drum Loading\nWinches. Bayes Equipment Co,\nCranbrook, B.C *     '.    .    ' . \u25a0\u25a0\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n1 NEW CUSTOM BUILT BOLT\naction rifle, birds-eye maple\nstock, Belgium Mauser action ,300\nSavage $125, Also: 1 used 300\nSavage, bblt action, walnut stock\nwith inlaid design, Lyman 57\nsights $05. Fishers' Paradise,\nQueen's Bay, B.C. Phone Bal-\nfour 2X.  .\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope; pipe and fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas Iron it Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt\u201e Vancouver, B.C Phone Pa-\ncific 0357.    .  \u25a0\nWEAREVBR COOKWARE SETS,\nslightly used. Box i333, Nelson.\n\"Nu-Life\" Stainless, Steel double\nbottom waterless cooking utensils,\noffer a special trade-in allowance\non your old coofyvare. Box 333,\nNelson, B.C.\n5755*5301 - 0s?msSt~m\ntub washing machine. Price $35.\nPhone 181-L-l between 12 and 1:00\nor after 5:30,\nFOh'sXLS-'Mctaja? \u25a0fcffiUtM'\ncoal and wood range. All white\nenamel and in good condition.\nPhone 1229-R1.\nFOH\"\"SALEi-M6CLARY JUBILEE\nkitchen range in excellent condition. Phone 139-L1\nard typewriter, 10\" carriage. D,\nSt.DenlS.\nWith Occupancy\nrrVE ROOM DWELLING on\ntriangular parcel of land, six\nlots, cut stone foundation,' root\nhouse and fuel shed. CCQAft\nPriced at     4KIOVU\nSIX ROOM DWELLING, good\nconcrete foundation, piped hot\nair furnace. Four, rooms down\nand,two up; three corner lots.\nMc.V\".t1a5::.. $5900\nAlso we haye.a very \"modern\nfive room dwelling with lake*\nfrontage, one mile CCQnfl\nfrom Nelson, .*.    \u2022PO*UU\nAND-   :   .,*\nOther City dwellings at\n$4606 and $4800\nT. D. Rosliitg\nReal Estate and Insurance\n588 Ward Street       Phone 717\nTHE BEST\n.       IN      '\nUSED CARS   ;\nNew 1951. Austin Sedan\nNew 19\u00a71 Austin Countryman     \u2022   *     i  ' \u25a0\n1951  Chevrolet Sedan\n1951  Hillman Sedan\n\u20221950 Pontiac Coach1\n1950 Austin Sedan.\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Meteor Sedan\n1949 Austin1 Pickup\n,1948 Austin A40 Coach\n1948 Chev. Sedan Delivery;\n.1946 Pontiac Sedan\n\u25a01942 Dodge Coach\n1941 Pontiac Sedan\n1941 Dodge'Sedan\n1938 Dodge Sedan,\nTHESE\nMUST\nGO!\n1941  Ford Panel $575\n1939 GMCPonel $475\n1935 Ford Coupe $400\n1935 Chev. Sedan $300 \u00bb\n1934 Ford Coupe*$300-:\n' ]TEIVv)S AND TRADES\nEmpire Motoirs\nPhone 1135   803, Baker St..\nfORONTOSTOCKS\nFOR QUICK SALE-1938.STUDE-\nbaker convertible coupe. Light\nblue, excellent condition. Phone\n1578-X or apply 912 Vernon Sti\nFOR SALE - ;\u00ab INTERN AT10N\n\u25a0al KB 2 Panel Delivery. Low\nmileage, good rubber. Direct re-\npiles to Star Grocery.\n\u202240 (JHflV-'4-DOOK SEDAN\u2014LOW\nmileage. Will tajte good '40-'42\ntrade. Phone 100.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nARROW LAKES, 18 MILES FROM\nCastlegai^Twenty acres, 8 cleared, Young bearing orchard,'most*\nly peaches, apricots, prunes, and\ncherries, Irrigated, excellent water system. All fenced. New four-\nroomed house; one mile to town,\nClear title. Ill health forces sale.\nS. Porteous, Deer Park, B.C.\nCOMFORTABLE MODERN PART\nly furnished 3 roomed bungalow\nand three lots for sale at Ains*\nworth. Compact kitchen, living\nroom and dinette combined, bedroom with closets, and bathroom.\nIdeal for a summer home, or\neasily rented the year round.\nPhone 2B8-L. Price $3300.,\nFOR. SALE - MODERN HOUSE,\nsmall fruit farm. Close to Castlegar. '\" Apply John Ggll. Robson.\n8.C\nA* Step Ahead\nIe Quality\nA Mile Below\nIn-Price \u25a0> ^\n1947 Mercury\nSedan\nRadio, heater,\nsunvisor.\n1947 Chevrolet .*\n\u25a0:'..';' Sedan        *.\nColor blue, heater,\ndnti-freere. '\n1950 Ford ViTon\n\u25a0\u2022..'. One owner>       \u2022\u25a0'*;\";\n*   \u2022        11,000 miles.\nMINES (Closing Prices)\nAcadia Uranium\":'\u25a0, *......'....\nAkaitcho \"..     .'....\u201e.,\u201eU\t\nAmal Larger    ..;...\u201e-w\u00bb...,.\nAmerican Y K ..,..\u201e.\u2014,\u201e...,\u201e\nAnkeno   \u25a0  \u2022'; X...,.Xr\nAr]on. X...'~~.\nArpilstlce ..,...\u201e\u201e\u201e,\u201e,\u00bb..\u201e\u201e.\u201e.:\nAubelle   ,^, ..\u2122 ~...\nAumaque   \u201e..\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e.\u201e,.\nAunor\".    \u201e.^,\u201e..,.\u201e\u201e\nBagamac    r*.\u00bb~~X~.\nBast Metal* ,;.,^.-~...........\nBevcourt      ,\u201e.^..X.\nBoWo      .\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0.\u2014\t\nBonetaJ         ,.\u201e\u25a0,__,,_,\nBoymar Gold  ,.\u201e..,\u201e\t\nBralorne      ....,\u201e.,..\u201e-_\u201e\u201e\u00bb.\nBrewis R L  A,^yXX-\nBroulin      ,.,.:.,\u201e,....\u201e,\nBuffadison   i~ \u2122\nBuff Can ...,.,...\u201e,\u201e\u201e\u2122J-.\nCallimsn      ..\u201e._\u2122,^\nCampbell R L  \t\nCan Mai         .......~\t\nCastle Treth     \u201e\nCentral Patricia ....'\t\nCentral Pore  \u201e ..\u2014._\nCentreniaque  \u201e\u2014,*.\u201e\nChesterville ,X~.\u201eX..,\nChimo G ,\t\nCochenbur   ..;......,\u201e.X..\nCons M &' S \u25a0\u201e'.\u201e \u201e\u00bb..'..,\nConwest  ; ,.,..\u201e,\u201e.\u201e\u201e.,\u00ab\u201e\nCrolnor \u201e,; -\u201e.,\u201e..\nDetta R L  ,...,.\u201e,.._.\t\nDiscovery :..,.; -.,.\t\nDome    ,   \u00ab\u2122......,.\nDonalda  \u201e.....,_..........,\nDuvay   , .,,*..,.\u201e\u201e.\u201e....,\nEast Malartic\t\nEast Sullivan ..,......\u201e:.\u2014\nElder. Gold ,...... ,*,....\u25a0,\nEidona  \u201e.,.\u201e..\u00bb\u201e.^,.\u201e\u201e\u201e\nEstella  m\u201e,..,\u201e.',\u201e\nEureka     .....,;\t\nFalconbrldge. ...,...\u201e.\u201e..\u201e.._\nFroWshcr   ,...\u201e..,.-.,.m\nGiarit Yei . x\nGod's Lake  ,......,,..\nGfildale     . ! ..\u201e...\u201e.\u25a0\u25a0\nGbldcrest . j ..,.,-.,..,\u201e\u201e\nGolden Manitpu \u201e...\u00bb.,...,\u00ab\nHalcrow   .'.* .....,.\u201e....._,\nHardrock ................._....\u201e.\u201e\nHasaga ,_..,.....,...\nHe*a; \u201e ,.,...\u201e...\u201e_....,...\u2122\nfiglliriger    .'\u201e,.\u2122...'.\u00ab..\u201e\nHudson Bay ..,..\u201e\u201e....\u201e.;.,.\u201e.\nInspiration   \u00bb.\u25a0\nInt Nickel :....\u201e,\u201e,,..\u201e.\u201e\u2014\nKayrand   \t\nJoliet Que*.........................\nKenville     .....\u201e\u00bb..\u201e\nKerr Addison ...,.\u2022\u2022\u201e..\u25a0..,..,\nLabrador      ....;.._\u201e\t\nLake Dufault  ,.,.\u201e\u2014\u201e.,\nLamaque - .....'...,....,.\nLeitch   \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLouvicourt    _....\u201e\nLynx  .       i\nMacDonald    \u2122\t\nMacassa   \u25a0 \t\nMacLeod Cock \t\nMadsen R L\t\nMagnet'    ,...\u201e...-.,\u2014\nMalartic G F \t\nMclntyre      ;.\t\nMcKenzie R L ,...\u201e..,.,..\u201e.\nMining Cor^ \u201e..,..,.\u2014....\nMoneta , , \u201e ,.\nMylamaque  _,.\u201e........\u201ei\nNegus  .     -,.~..,-,\nNew Alger \u201e.:..,\u2122_\u00bb.\u201e-h^\nNew Calumet ,._-,,..\u201e,......\nNew Goldvue ............._..\u201e.\nNew Lund :.. _.....-,.,..\nNoranda  ....\/.....,_. \u201e.'......\n. .23\n1.10\n.20 ,\n.38\n,70\n\\'.\u00ab\n.13 Mi\n.10\n\u25a0.20\n3.05\n..16\n.62\n. '0.'\n.18*\n.70\n.10\n6.25\n.24\n1.50\n.14\n.31*\n.45\n3.83\n.62\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 17, 19S1 \u2014 9\n1934 Chevrolet Coach.\nSpecial $249\n1937 Ford Pickup\nf 349\n1940 Fargo Pickup\n$595\nfor salb^VeIM ! catftbfWl-\nber lot on Forty-Nine Greek. 67\nacres, price $1000, Only ten miles\nout. S, P. Pond, Nelson, B.C,\n20 ACRES, 5 CLEARED; 4-ROOM\nhouse, barn and outbuildings; water. Apply N, Kovacs, Gen'J De.\nlivery, Nelson, B,C,\nPEEBLES\nJMOTORL\n\/CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH'\nyfMK60\\A~.a'v\u00b17ll\\CS '\u25a0\n?LtiA090 \"Nelsoii $.C.^J\nNormetals ...,\u2122~,.\u00bb,\u201e,^,\u2122\nNorseman  :...\u201e\u201e^\u201e......\nNorth Can .......,.\u201e\u201e^.\u201e,.\nNorzohe  ~,\u2122_,.,\u00bb\u201e\u201e-\nO'Brleh.... ..','..m.,\u201e_^.....\u201e\u201e\nO'Leary ,..........\u201e..\u00bb._......,\nOrenada\nOslsko ,..._,...,...\u201e..,.,.,-,.,.,\u00bb,\nPamour* ,.....,..\u201e..\u201e.\u00bb,~\u2122,.,.\nPaymaster \u201e'\u201e\u201e.\u201e\u201e\u201ew,.\u201e..\u201e,\nPickle Crow ..\u201e.\u201e-.-...-.\u201e\nPioneer ...Jsi ;_-,_.-..-.,\nPowell Rouyn m.w~,\nPreston E D \u201e.\u201e,....m\u201e^,\nQuebec Lab .....,\u201e.\u201e..\u201e..,_\nQuebec Man ....,.,.\u201e.,..-.-..,\nQueenston \u201e.,.........-..-,\u201e,...\nQuambrit' ....^....-.....^..\u2014..p\nReeves Utc-^mM,\nSan* Antonio .\u201e\u201e\u201e\u2014\u201e\u201e.-,\nSen Rouyn  w..\nShawkey    \u201e.. ,.\nSherritt Gordon \u201e\u201e-\nSllvermiller  ..:\t\nFOR SALE-4-RM. ATTRACTIVE\nhome. Grounds landscaped. $4500.\nPhone 1223-Y.     .,\nMine' Accounting Service.\nPhone 1228.R-1,* Nelson, B.C.\nB.  W   WIDDOWSON  Uf CO.  AS-\nsayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\na s. elme&\" ttdSstAMB. b;<5:.\n'Assayer. Chemist, Mine Rep,\n~ \u25a0\"BAuY6\"W\u00abfei>ktM-\n6aWBS 'tWWst'Eft\"'<Hlt)\" Auf6\nWrecking. Phone Rossland. 171, ,\nINGINSERS AND SUHVEYORt\nR, W, HAGGBN.\" Laiid Surveyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer.\nGrand Forks and Rossland.\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C.. Surveyor, Engineer\niNWNA'Ndfc TniTWaTIstaU,\nMcHAltBY,-\/;bElNfclH6,\"L11D.. BF\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135.\nLIVESTOCK   DEALER8 ,\nWI BUY OR SELL UVESTOCIF'-\nContact H Harrop; Phone 117,\nMACHINISTS\n\"   \"BENNETTS-LIMITED      \"\"\nMachine Shpp,  acetylene end\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 883 324 Vernon St\nFLOOR  FINISHING\neHE'SS->ART\"-\u00bb|sK!oVeR =\nLeaves no scars. Your Druggist\nsells CRESS.\nsWtJALE-1 COAL \"AND WOOD\nstove and 1 wood stove. Apply\n713 Victoria Street.\nFOR SALE-ITHICA FEATHER-\nweight 12-gauge shotgun; .new\ncondition. Phone 570-X evenings.\nFOR SALE-BLACK SEAL COAT,\nfull length.' Sise 16. Phone 4JU-L\nfor inspection. ,\nLARGE DUO-THERM OIL HEAT-\ner, used 1 season, Apply (24 Anderson St., or phone 1D4-R,\nMIXED WOOD FOR SALE -$18\na cord, delivered. Dick Kleef,\nPhone 3B7-L4.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES SPB-\nclal low prices. Active Trading Co.\n935 E Cordova St., Vancouver,\nGIRLS' WHITE FIGURE'SKATES,\nsize 1, Phone 1370-L,\nFOR SALE-LARGE DUO-THERM\noil heater, complete. Ph. 1402-L,\nGIRLS' WHITE SKATES. SIZE 2.\nPhone 210-R.       .\nMIC R 0 N I\"C TtBAWNO AlDS:-\nWrlte P.O Box 30. Nelson, BC\nFor Floor Sanding and Finishing\nPlease Phone 166-R-2\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC\nV.ACK COCOTR PUPS FOB\nsale. Phone 401-R3. Duff, Willow\nPoint,\nFOR SALE-CHOICE FARM LAND\nat Queen's Bay. S. P. Pond.\nHOUSE FOR SALE - FOR DE-\ntails, phone B28-X.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity. Top prices,\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St\u201e Vancouver, B. C,\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch poles. Glider\nLumber Co.. Box 450, Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED\u201412 OR 16 GA. SHOT-\ngun in good condition. Ph. 644-R.\nSHIP   YOUR   HIDES   TO   J.   P.\nMorgan. Nelson,' B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nFOR SALE-5-TON MACK TRUCK\nwith 6-ton Columbia trailer: sub\nframe, water tank and stake\nbumps. Ready to work. Trade accepted. Apply Don McCartney,\nFrUitvale, BC.\nHide lvus\/tteiiltY SEDAN \u2014.LOW\nmileage, Will sacrifice for quick\nsale. Financing can be arranged.\nPhone'l61-X3.\nFOR SALE - TRAILER; IDEAL\ntor hunting, etc.; also 30-06 rifle\n.with 'scope. Like pew. Apply H-\nFerland, North Shore Motel.\nMUST SELL 1038 FORD %-TON-\nPhone\u00bb'45l Y\n(Continued in next column)\nSiianco ' ...\nSladon Mai    ...\nPlacer Development ,\nSteep Rock  ,...,\nSylvanlte ....\nTeck Hughes ... :....,.\u201e,\nThompson-Lund \t\nTobUrn  , \u2014\nTombill  ,\u2014\nTorbrlt  \t\nTfans Cont Rel\t\nUnion Mining \t\nUnited Keno \t\nUpper Canada _.__-.\nVentures \t\nViolamac\n4lo\u00bbn pl\u00abni\net lewonsblt rates\nIACARA\nFINANCE COMPANY IID.\nUU11J m\\\\\\M mmm \u00ab mmm. mmma\n^^ mmtmrn*.\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1095  ,560 Boker Sf.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, Oct IS (CP) - Win-\nnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats: No. 1 feed, 88H.\nBarley: No, I feed, 1.37%.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials 274.SI off 1.36.\n20 rails 86.06 off .86.\n16 utilities 46.88 off .19.\n. 65 stocks 99.45 off .59.\nj READ   THE   CLAS'IFIED   DAILY\nI Buv. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nWaite Amulet ,_,\nOILS\nAnglo Can _\u25a0_*__.\nAtlantic OU \u2122\u2014\nB. A. Oil \t\nCalgary   &Edmonton .\nCalmont\n.'.  .20\n.16\n. .31'\n.IB\n,1,57\n181,00\n. 3.70\n, .34\n,.11\n, ,33\n. 19,00\n, .41\n. .WW\n, 1.03\n. 9.20\n, .59\n. -.20\n. 1.80\n. .88\n. 11.00\n. 3,05\n. 11,25.\n. .35\n, ,20\n. ,14\n. . 7.50\n, :W\n.. .16%\n. .85\n. .15\n.. 16.25\n,. 65.50\n...    .41\n.. 43.50\ni .16%\n.. .49\n. .80\n.. 18.00\n\u201e 8.35\n.. .71\n.. 6.30\n\u201e 1.08\n. .90\n. .53\n- .14%\n- .01\n: 1.94\n. 2.85\n.. .2.20*\n.. .36\n.. 1.98\n, 72.00\n\u201e : .50\n. 20,00\n, ,34\n\u25a0r        .10\n. .77\nJ, .11\n..    S.1Q .\n..; .37\n.. 1.39\n... 64.25\n.. 8.10\n,\u201e .11%\n,. .65\n- ,lv\n- 1.37-\n- .22\n\u201e;\u25a0'   .10\n...      ,82\nX     .81\n.,      .'66\n-.    1.62\n...    2,20\n.-    1.05\n.,     1.45\n-,    ,27\n...    3.45\n,..      .46 ;\n,- '2*5.00\n.    6.25\n.\u201e   3.S3 '\n,19%\n.13\n$.85\n1.40\n.25\n,78\n.48 %\n7.85\n1.30\n2.23\n.12\n.26\",\n.80\n1.95\n.65\n11,50\n14-.25\n1.63\n18.50\n1.00\n12,50\nMarket Trends\nNEW \u2022 YORK, Oct, }6 (Af\u00bb'. -\nThere Was a general decline.\nPrices fell back around 2 points\nat the most among leaders, and\nthere was only fractional support\nat best In major sections of the list\nCanadian issues were all lower.\nDonie Mines and. Hiram .Walker\neach lost %, International Nickel\nwas down 1%, Canadian Pacific Vt,\nMclntyre % and Distillers -Seagrams %\u2022\nTORONTO (CP) - Prices-Slipped\nsteadily toward- the session's close.\nMixed opening, support faded rapidly ln..,early profit-taking..\nVolume for the'day was about\n5,800,000 shares.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices dipped sharply towards the close.\nDeclines of a point and more\n.were spotted\"throughout the* list.\nSenior metals took the brunt of\nthe drop. Industrials, papers and\nsteels showed a number of major\nlosses. Senior oils edged fractionally lower,' while utilities' and\nbeverages were steady to a trifle\nweaker.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 News that\nBritish, troops were in action in\nEgypt underlined\u00bb an existing\nslightly easier trend.:':,       \u2022'\u2022';\u2022\nImmediate reaction was to mark\nleading oil shares 1-32 lower and\nto introduce a note of Ciiutnn ,:a\ntrading in all-sections and wnila\nawaiting further developments in\nsituation considered to have grave\npotentialities.\nColgory Livestock\nCALGARY, Oct 16 (CP) \u2014 Some\nclasses were higher,;, others lower\non the Calgary livestock market\ntbday. No strictly choice butchers\nwere available in the 350 cattleapd\ncalves on offer, -\nButcher steers were fully steady,\ngood butcher heifers 80 cents or\nmore higher fqr tlje wfek', Good\ncows were fully 60 cents higher and\nbulls steady to strong, Good stocker\nand feeder steers were 50 cents to\n$1 lower, and heavy stock calves\naround $1 lower* Vealers were,\nsteady.       ' \u2022\nHogs advanced 25 cents Monday\nto close at $33.50. SoWs were steady\nat $18. Good lambs brought $31,50,\ngood ewes $17.00-16.50.\nGood to near - choice butcher\nsteers 32.50-33.75; common to medium 27-32. Good to near-choice\nbutcher heifers' 31-32,50; common'.\nto medium 26-30,50, Good cows 26-\n27.50; common to medium 23-23.50,\ncanners and cutters 18-22,50, Good,\nbulls \u00a36.50-27,50; common to rd*&-\nturn 24.50-26. Good, stocker and\nfeeder steers 31.50-33; common to\nmedium 26-31. Good to choice veal\ncalves 33-36; common to medium\n26-32.        \u25a0\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES\nCanusa  ......: _..._..\u201e_\u201e\u201e\nCariboo Gold.\nint C & c ,\nB.C. Power* A\t\nBrown Co.\t\nBuilding Products.\nBurl. Steel .'.........\nBurns A\t\nBurns B\niOVs\n....      14%\n34\n....   '   20\n59\n...       41 ,\nCan. Malting        61\nCan. Packers B \u201e      33 ii\nCanadian Marconi     3.90\nCanadian West.Lmbr \u201e      11%\nCockshutt        39%\nC M & S       181\nCons. Paper \t\nDlst. Seagram \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom. Magnesium ..*.\nDom. Steel & Coal B .......\nDom. Tar & Chemical\t\nDom. Textiles  _\nKootenay Belle ..,.,\nPac Eastern Gold ,\nPend preille\t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Border ...\nQuatsino ,\t\nSheep Creek' u..\nSherritt Gordon ...\nSliver Ridge,\t\nSilver Standard......\nVananda \t\nVan Rol ui,\nWellington .\nCentral Leduc\t\nChemical Research*...\nCommonwealth Pete\nDalhousie\t\nDavies Pete ..,\u2014-,\u2014\nDecalta   _._...\nDel Rio .\nEastcrest\nFederated Pete,.\nHlghwood \t\nHome\t\nImperial Oil\t\nInter Pete \t\nMacDougal Segur\nMid Cont.\nNat Pete  .,.\nNew Pacalta\nOkalta\nRoyalite\nRoxena\n7.03\n6,35\nRl.85 ,\n14.50\n1.55\n2.69\n\u2022HO\n3,85\n.43\n.42 j\n.38.t\u00bb*\n1,62\n.30\n7.60\n.29\n17.00\n42.50\n31.50\n.32\n.52\n.   3.50\n,14\n2.80\n18,75\n.30\n29Vi\n13%\n.   13\n19%\n47\n13\n25',\n16\n28\n58 \"\u2022\n, 18\n100\n49%\n' 21%\n50 Vt\n30%\n29%\n29ft\n42%\n10%\n47\n2114\n16y4\n37\n13%\n82%\n32%\n14%\n31\n16%\n.   42\n29%\n29%\n27%\n< 26\n38\n34\n95\n17%\n36\n14\ni'9%\n23\nflniiip'eg. Elec com        38\nWinnipeg Elec pfd      100\nEddy Paper ...;...;,..\nFamous Players \u2014...\nFanny. Farmer :.\nFleet Aiy. ~\u2014-\nFord \\''XX...:?.X~\nGatineau X \u201e.\nGoodyear  .*_\t\nGoodyear pfd '.\nGreat Lakes ....:........\nGreat Lakes pfd\t\nGypsum Lime\t\nHR MacMillan A\t\nH R MacMillan B ...\nImperial Oil \t\nImp. Tobacco  \t\nInt Metal\t\nInt Pete \t\nKelvinator \t\nLake of the Woods .\nLaura Secord \t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B \u201e\nMassey Harris  \u201e.\nM & O Paper .*.\t\nMont Loco\t\nMcColl Frontenac ..\nNat Steel Car\t\nPowell River  :\nPower Corp  \u201e.\nRuss Industries -\nShawinigan  \u201e\nSimpsons A \t\nSimpsons pfd  ~\nSoutham   .\u201e,..,\nSteel of Canada*\t\nStandard Paving\t\n\u2022Union Gas of Can ...\nWesym George\nWinnip'e\n.08\n1,45\n.64\n1.31\nWestern Uranium .....\nOIL8 \u25a0\nAnaconda\t\nA P Cons  \t\nCalmont  __^_\nCommonwealth ._.__.\nHome ..,:. .........\u201ei\u201e\nMercury 1 \u201e\nNat P.ete\t\nOkalta Com .XXXr.\nRoyalite  \u2122^\nINDUSTRIALS\nAJti Dist  :\t\nCapital Estates -..,\nInter Brew ...:.\t\n10,50.\n. M0'\n.34\n'''  .55'\n1.72\n3,95\n. * 49%\n. 17\u00bb\n.20\n.68\n.08\n8.05\n\u25a019\n.56\n~1.9f\n8.00\n17.00\n.80\n3.20\n2.94\n80.00\n8.38\n20.00\n4.BO\nProposed Tuna Tariff\nLittle Canadian Effect\n, HALIFAX, Oct. 16 (CP) - Proposed levy on a three-cent-a-pourid\ntariff by tha United States on tuna\nImports will have little 'or no effect on local exporters, it was\nlearned today.\nThe House of Representatives\nMonday passed a bill for such a\ntemporary tariff on fresh and fret-\nen tuna from Canada and other\ncountries.\n\"Normally It might have a little\neffect but this year there just hasn't\nbeen any tuna,\" one exporter said.\nMuch.of the U. S. imports come\nfrom British Columbia.\nChief explanation was that the\nsmaller fslh on which the blueflns\nfeed didn't venture into inland waters until late this, Summer.\nIran Accepts Russ\nOffer of Sugar\nTEHRAN, Oct.; 16' (AP) \u2014 Iran\nMonday accepted a Russian, offer to\nsell 32,000 additional tons of sugar.\nThe sugar was offered by Russia\nas a supplement to their existing\nbarter agreement.\nLast Day\nfOR LAST YEAR'S\nSEASON TICKET HOLDERS\nTO. PICK-UP,THEIR TICKETS\nTower Pete .,_.\u201e._\u2122-.\u201e .46\nUnited Oils - .80\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi \u00ab*\u00bb^\u2122 18\nAlgcma Steal ._..-.....\u201e.. 80%\nAluminum \u201e.\u201e.\u201e.^\u2122^\u201e\u00bb~. . 114\nArgus   :,(5.^\u201e*,.,\u00bb..~^w., 14%\nAtlas St, jLXmm^mXm\u2014 * 33\nBeattle Pro*  \u201e\u25a0\u201e.. 11%\nBttl Telephone ,.\u201e r~~. 38%\nBrazilian          \u201e~_\u2122. 36\u00bbi\nB.C. Electric    92'\nB.C. Forest     1   , V 6'\nB C Packers A   ... ..:  20\nB.C. Packers B \u2122 19 .\n\u2022  V   '   .   \u25a0' _.\u25a0\nYou cannot do better than\u2014\nInvest Your Savings in\nCanada Savings Bonds\nCanada'guarantees the security of both principal and\ninterest... You can sell Canada Savings Bonds at any\ntime for what you paid for them, plus interest.\nDenominations: $50, $100, $300, $1,000 and $5,000.\nUp to $5,000 allowed per individual\nWe shall be glad to look after your order. Mail,\nphone or wire your order to our most convenient office.\nJames Richardson & Sons\n\u00abTABLI6H\u00abD   ,BT\nPacific Coast Offices:\nVANCOUVER\nVICTORIA\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WeDNEWAT, Ottt. tr, i\u00abi\nMIXED CEREAL \u2022 OATMEAL\nRICE CEREAL \u2022 BARLEY CEREA1\nIf\nI oi. Pkg.\n25*\n16 or. Pkg.1\n48*\nPolice Seize Truck\nCarrying Cigarettes\n^SHERBROOKE, Que., ,Oct. 16\n.(\u25a0J]?) \u2014 The R.C.M.P. today seized\n\u2022 \u2022truck carrying 494,000 Amer\/caA\ncigarets and arrested the driver at\nnearby St Hermengilde on charges\nof possessing smuggled cigarets.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n801'Ward fit. Phone 63\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\n, Accurately\nCompounded\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1176 - 162 BAKER 8T.\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302   ' 446 Ward St\n' NELSON, B. C.\nIndependent Sees\nHope in Winston\nLONDON, Oct 16 (CP) - Raymond Blackburn,'.the'only-Independent member of the House of\nCommons, says that he tyill not be\na candidate In Britain's Oct 28 gen\neral election.\n\"I do not wish to fight old\nfriends,\" said Blackburn, who was\nelected as a Labor member In February, 1950, and resigned from the\nparty in August the sameyear,\ni \u2022' In resigning, Blackburn called fbr\na National Government which he\nsaid should be Headed by Winston\nChurchill, Conservative Leader.\nIn a statement announcing his intention to remain on the sidelines\nin the forthcoming election, Blackburn said he still believes a National Government Is the best solution' to; Britain's difficulties. He\nsaid he will do all he can to hasten\nthe return of a strong government\nheaded by Churchill.\nBlackburn represented the North-\nfield division of Birmingham.\nSeventh Efforf\nMUNSAN, Korea, Oct 17 (Wed-\n. nesday) (AP)\u2014 Communist and\nUnited Nations liaison officers \u2014\n. still miles apart on conditions for\nresuming the   Korean  armistice\ntalks\u2014make a seventh effort to\ni day to break the seven-week dead\n\u25a0 lock. -. . . \u25a0 \"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0... .\nAfter six attempts, the two liaison\nteams seemed no nearer success on\nTuesday than when they began discussions one week ago,\nAnother meeting, however, was\nscheduled for 10 a.m.,. today (6 p.m,\nTuesday, EST) at Panmunjom, Communist checkpoint six miles East of\nKaesong.\nWhile the Reds conferred with al*\nlied officers fbr three hours and 20\nminutes Tuesday, the top UN negotiator, vice-admiral C Turner Joy,\nand Air Force MaJ.-6en. L. C. Crai-\ngie, another truce delegate, flew to\nTokyo. They .conferred with their\nboss,. Gen. Matthew B. Ridgjway.\nTheir departure raised immediate\nspeculation that hopes for a quick\nrenewal of the armistice conference\u2014broken off by the\". Reds on\nAug. 23r-are dimming.\nDEATHS\nMadrid, Spain\u2014Joaijiiln Chapa-\nprieW Tdrregrosa, 78, Premier of\nthe republic of Spain in 1685.\nChicago\u2014J. Herbert Smythe,\nveteran newspaper man who did an\noutstanding job reporting the Johns*\ntown, Pa., flood 62 years ago.\nAlbrighton, * England \u2014 George\nRussell, 94, veteran horticulturist\nknon the world' over for the lupins\nbe cultivated as a hobby.\nSmelter Qases Help\nIn Sulphur Shortage\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nWaste gases will soon be. helping\nto solve Canada's shortage of sulphur. \"        ,\nConstruction was started today at\nCopper Cliff, hear Sudbury, Ont,\non a plant which will take the\nfumes from the giant smelter of\nInternational Nickel Co. Of Canada,\nLtd!, and convert them into liquid\nsulphur dioxide, \"..\"':\n! This will be used In the manufacture of newsprint, sulphite pulp\nand other products which now depend on elemental sulphur Imported\nfrom the United States,\nEach, ton will replace and save\nthe importation of a haM-ton of\nelemental sulphur; and thus, ini*\ntlally, will replace 45,000 tons of\nelemental' sulphur, \u25a0 or nearly one-,\nquarter of Canada's present sulphur,\nimports. *   *,\u2022\nMore than 20 years of research\nand experiment by chemists and\nengineers of Inco and C.I.L., make\nthe plant possible. As far, back as\n1932 C.I.L. found that liquid sulphur dioxide could be made from\nInco's fumes\u2014but at too high a cost\nto compete with Imported elemental\nsulphur Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company; of. Canada, Ltd.\nhas for years successfully extracted\nsulphur from smelter gases at Trail.\nNext Step was to try out the product in the making ef paper at Fort\nWilliam, Ont, and, it is stated, it\nWas found to have technical advantages over elemental sulphur. Decision followed, to build the plant\non which work started today.\nIt will be the second plant getting\na basic'raw material, out of Inco's\nsmelter fumes. For some years C.I.L.\nlias been producing sulphuric add\nfrom them, and lt now plans to increase this production shortly by.\nmore than one-half. \u2022  ;\nFREEDOM LEGION  HELPS\nSELL EUROPEAN ARMY IDEA\nBy ROBERT PETTY\nHEIDELBERG, Germany, Oct 18\n(Reuters) \u2014 The U. S, Army has\nshown skeptics of the European\nArmy idea Its own Version of a\n\"freedom legion\" In action during\nthe manoeuvres which ended   Oct\nio;\nAbout 25,000 Germans, Poles\nBaits and anti-Soviet Russians took\npart in engineer battalions and as\ndoctors, dentists, drivers, cooks, mechanics, clerks and sentries; serving\nwith American forces.\nBehnid. the lines, an extra 60,000\nGermans supported U. S. troops in\nordnance* shops, motor pools, quartermaster supply points and army\nadministrative sections throughout\nthe American zone.\nLABOR SERVICE\nCOMPANIE8\nThe V, S. army has grouped-the\n25,000 Germans and refugees from\nRussia into \"labor service, companies\" or construction battalions whose\nmembers wear army uniforms dyed\nblue and American helmets paint-\nGyro Annual\nfloe Down\nFriday, October 19\nAT THE EAGLES HALL\nMusic by; \".',\nMickey McEwan's Orchestra\nREAL, OLD-TIME HOE DOWN\nLots of fun for everybody.  \u2022\ned blue. They carry U. S. weapons.\nThis, \"blue legion\" as it is unofficially called, lives In barracks un<\nder tight military discipline. Some\nof them, such as bridge building\nteams, wear regulation American\nuniforms distinguished only by the\nlabor service patch on tv,e shoulder.\nHATE COMMUNISM\nThe Blue Legion consists of hard\nbitten professional soldiers, both\nfrom. Gen. Vladislav Anders' war*\ntime Polish army and the'German\nWehrmacht These htimeless and\nbitter men of half a' dozen' nationalities have at least one thing in common\u2014a hatred of communism.\n'That is one reason why there is\nscarcely any friction in the legion or\nbetween the\" legion and' the' U S\narmy. ' .\"'\"'    \"'   .\nAmerican officers here Who share\nGen. Elsenhower's faith in the European army' idea point to the Success\nwhich the Americans, and also the\nBritish military, have had Jn.org&n-\nizlng Germans- in their occupation\nzones into semi-military formations,\nON THEIR FIRST SUNDAY MORNING In Canada, the royal\nvisitors Joined with 375 other worshippers'in a simple service at\nChrist Church, Niagara Falls, Highlight of the service, held at the\n86-year-old gray-stone Anglican church, was the reading of tha\nGospel lesson by Prince Philip. Accompanied by the rector, Rev.\nCanon A. T. Holmes, Prlnoess Elizabeth Is.seen leaving the church\nat conclusion of service\u2014Central Press Canadian. .\n%*'\nDANCING \u2014 9:30 TO 1\nAdmission:\nCouple $1.25\nLadies SO\u00a3 \u2014  Gents 78<\nDoctor Points To\nErrors in Story\nVANCOUVER, Oct 16 (CP) -\nOr. Ernst A, Hauser of the Massachusetts ; Institute of Technology\ntakes' exception to comments ascribed to him in connection with a\nNorthern British'Columbia clay\ndeposit for which curative properties are claimed.\nDr. Hausert Professor of Colloid\nChemistry at M.I.T. -and visiting\nprofessor of colloid chemistry at\nthe Worcester Polytechnic Institute,\nsays that statements made by him\nand by Dr. A. H. York of Chllliwack, B.C., in August, 1950, were\nUsed in a Canadian Press story of\nAug.' 4, 1951, as If they had been\nmade currently. Further, Dr. Hauser says that some bf the statements ascribed to him are wrong.\nIn the same Aug. 4 story, Tbe\nCanadian Press gave the impression\nthat statements attributed. to Dr.\nYork were made at the. time.\nFurther, the CP story erroneously\nreported that Dr. York had used\nthe clay successfully to treat mastitis in cattle in the Fraser Valley.\nDr. York advises that the report\nhe gave more than a year ago concerned only his successful work in\ntreating scour in pigs.\nDr. Hauser found it inexplicable\nthat the CP story did not mention\nDr. Panton's \"contributions in the\ntreatment of arthritis, ulcers and.\nother ailments with the use of this\nclay In Its refined condition\u2014and\nsometimes in combination' with\nother chemicals which make the\nclay even more reactive.\".(Omission\nwas due to necessary condensation\n\"of the dispatch.) .'\nCITEZENS'PUBLIC\nMEETING\nCAPITOL THEATRE, NELSON\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 22nd\n8 O'CLOCK\n*\/*\nThe purpose of this meeting ii te form\na civic action association designed to\npromote civic affair* and to arouse the\ninterest of, progressive, and public-\nminded citizens in the coming civic\nelections.\nALL\nINVITED\nVOTERS ARE    \u2022\nTO   TAKE   PART\nCanada to Confer\nWith Ming Sung\nOTTAWA, Oct. 16 (CP) \u2014 The\nGovernment is going to confer\nshortly with representatives*of the\nMing Sung Company, owners of\nseven ships flying the Canadian\nflag in China seas,. Finance Minister Abbott said today. ;\u2022;\nHe told the Commons he will\ngive'S further report.on the complex financial situation surrounding the ships after the conference,\nwhich has been requested by the\nChinese company. He expects to be\nable to report \"within a few days.\"\nReplying to Progressive Conservative members, Mr. Abbott recalled that the situation arose when\nthe company defaulted on payments\non a $12,750,000 loan extended by\nCanadian banks and endorsed by\nthe Government The money was\nused to build the seven ships in\ndispute.     . \u25a0\nThe Government has paid the\nbanks a $1,248,174 Instalment on\nprincipal due June 30 last and a\nquarterly interest payment of $86.-\n769 due Sept. 20 \u2014 both were defaulted\u2014and the banks now have\ninstituted legal proceedings against\nthe company at Hong Kong.\nHe told George Drew, Progressive\nConservative leader, that he Is not\naware that the company has taken\nany action to seize the ships, which\nthe crews have spirited into Red\nChina ports. They are refusing to\nmake return sailings to Hong Kong,\nhome port of the vessels.\nCivic Affairs\nAte Your Affairs\nRIO DE JANEIRO (CP) - Brazil\nsold Canada 126,606 bags of coffee\nduring the first five months of 1951,\nan increase of about 20 per cent\nover the corresponding period in\n1950, Brazilian Coffee made up\nabout 44 per cent ot Canada's total\ncoffee Imports.\nJudge Dismisses\nWilness Charges\n\/*\u2022\u25a0\"\". \u25a0    *'\u25a0       .-   V    ,\nMONTREAL, Oct, 16 (CP) - All\nsix remaining charges ot seditious\nlibel against members pf the Witnesses of Jehovah were dismissed\nby Mr. Justice Wilfrid .Lazure in\nthe. Court of King's Bench today.\nThe charges were-based on distrl*\nbutton* of the Witness, pamphlet,\n\"Quebec's Burning Hate of God,\nChrist,and Freedom.\"\n<The Court's action followed a 10-\ntnlntue hearing,of the charge against\nWilliam Neave, a Montreal member,\nThe dismissal was based on the\nSupreme Court ruling in another\nWitness case that the. pamphlet in\nquestion did not actually contain\nincitement to violence, which were\nnecessary if it were to come under\nthe heading ot seditious libel.\nIn giving his decision Mr, Justice\nLazure said he found no possible\nincitement to violence in the pamphlet, \"If that is the only, evidence\nthe cjowh has to offer, J have to\ndismiss this case without submitting\nIt to the jury.\"\nAccidental Death\nCaused by Cars\n. VICTOSIA, B.C., Oct'18 (CP)-\nAceidentai death was the finding of\nDr.,E. t. Hart, Coroner, following\nan Inquiry Monday into the death of\nElsie Irene Boel, 18, who suffered a\nbroken neck iri a fall from a horse\nSunday.\nR.C.M.P. said they had no def*\ninite proof that movements of cars\ncauseij Miss Boel's horse to shy and\nthrow, her to the ground on the Island Highway hear Langford.\nClaims Charges\nAgainst Size of\nPapers \"Unfair\"\nfipSTON, Oct 16 (A>> \u2014 Canadian and U.S. newspapers play an\nimportant role in telling readers\njust when, where and at what price\nthey can buy merchandise and\ntherefore 'it is \"unfair\" to charge\nthey are \"to big,\" R. M. Fowler,\npresident of the Newsprint Association of Canada, said today. *,'\nIn a speech to the Boston. Conference on Distribution, he absolved\nU.S, publishers of charges from\nabroad that Americans hog too\nmuch of the world newsprint\nsupply.\n' He pointed out that before the\nwar, Canadian mills made 'about\n3,300,000 tons of newsprint annually\nand shipped 72 per cent to the\nUnited States and 22 per cent over\nseas. This year, Canada wilt make\nmore than 5,500,000 tons of newsprint,, and will ship 67 per cent to\nthe United States and less than\nseven per cent overseas. \u25a0'\u25a0\n\"The reason for the change In\nnewsprint distribution,\" Fowler\nsaid, \"is that U.S: publishers were\nable to make their demands on\nCanadian mills for increased supplies effective,' while publishers in\nother countries, .often through no\nfault of their own, were unable to\nbuy Canadian supplies they wanted.\nThe monetary and exchange problems of overseas countries since the\nwar made it impossible for them to\nmaintain existing contracts.\"'\nPrincess Starts\nDancing Fashion\nLONDON, Oct;. 16 (CP) - That\nRoyal square dance at Ottawa's\nGovernment House seems,to have\nstarted something. .  -\nAn orchestra leader telephoned\nthe London offices of the Canadian\nPress today with.this plea:\n, \"Do you know any Canadian who\ncan act as a caller at square dances?\nI've been . swamped with requests\never since people: saw that picture\nof Princess. Elizabeth dancing In\nCanada.\"  ;.:*.*\nThe. orchestra leader, Frankie\nBaron, said if he gets the caller he\nplans to lename his band \"The Original '. Canadian Square-Hoppers.\"\nThe BBC said it also Is interest*\ned in promoting the square dance,\nCanadian style. A spokesman said\nthe British public always tends to\nfollow a Royal lead.\nA picture of a laughing, dirndl*\nskirted, peasant-bloused Princess\ntaking her check-shirted' partner's\narm at the dance was published on\nthe front pages of nearly every\nBritish newspaper last Friday. A\ncompanion photograph Showed the\nDuke of Edinburgh In jeans and\ncheck shirt ;,\nService Radio Shows\nOf \"Doubtful Value\"\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 16 (AP)\u2014\nThe Army and Air Force are dropping three radio shows that got a\nlow Hooper rating in Congress, All\nthree were Intended to whip up\nrecruiting. Instead, they whipped\nup Congressional displeasure.\" They\nare the * Frankie^ Lalne show, the\nBill Stern sportscast and the Game\nof the Week. Senators attacked the\nshows as of \"doubtful value\"\nEnvoy Commends\nFrench Service\nOTTAWA, Oct 16 (GP) \u2014 M.\nHubert Guerin, Ambassador of\nFrance, today commended the Canadian >Press servlce-lri-French to'\ndally papers of that language as \"a\nnew sign of the harmonious development ot Canadian culture,\" The\nservice. Started Sept 30 on a six-\nmonth trial basis, ' *.\nThe. Ambassador's statement said:\n\"The initiative taken by The Ca-\nadian Press to distribute, simultaneously, its riews services in English and French, is not only an important, decision but all the. more\nremarkable in that it la the first\nservice of this kind in the history\nof the great world news agencies.\nThis bilingual service will greatly\nfacilitate the task of niSny newspapers in Canada. Its inauguration\nis a new sign of the harmonious\ndevelopment of Canadian Culture.\nI am sure that It will contribute\neven more in the future.to its enrichment and*'progress.\"\nBX. Offers Rest\nTo Royal Couple\nr\nWARM\nCLOTHES\nSee us today for clothes*;\nthat keep you'warm,\n\u2022 Carat Mackinaw*  .\n\u2022 Quilted Jacket!\n\u2022 Wool Underwear -\n\u2022 Warm Topcoats\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nmmaammmmmaJmssmmmmm^mam\nLumber Operators\nAnticipate Third\nOf Grain Crop\nNon-Millable\nOTTAWA, Oct, 16 (CP)-Sehator\nThomas Wood ih\u2014Saskatchewan)\nsaid tonight it is estimated that 35\nper cent of this year's Prairie wheat\ncrop will be of hon-piiUable grade\nwith prospects of a carryover of\n175,000,000; bushels of inferior grain,\nThe farmers,.he toW the Senas:\nin seconding the address in reply\nto the speech from the throne,\nmight be. well-advised to take a\nlow price for this wheat and get\nrid of lt immediately, He recalled\nthat in 1928 such wheat was carried\nover two or three years, with the\nresult that when interest and carrying charges were paid \"farmers received little or nothing,\"       *   ..;\nThe low grades this year and last\nresulted from delayed Spring sowing and prolonged rains \u2014 and in\nsome cases show\u2014in the harvest\nweeks.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 16 (CP) -\nNorthern and Southern Interior\nlumber operators. Have rejected a\nconciliation board wage recommendation for woodworkers.\nOperators' representative; R. A.\nMahoney said that recommendation\nfor the compulsory .check-off of\nunion dues brought the rejection by\nthe employers.\nA strike, vote will now be taken\nby the Interior memberj of the International Woodworkers of America, (C.I.L.-C.C.L.).     '\nAbout 3500 woodworkers are\ndirectly affected, but a strike would,\n'hit a total of 7000 employees of Interior logging camps ahd sawmills.\nSTOCKHOLM <&>) - A totald\n166,300 men and Women enrolled\nIn 1950 in study circles conducted\nby the Swedish Workers- Adult\nEducation Association, an increase\nof 7000 over the previous year.\nAbout 28,000 were under 18 years\nVICTORIA, B.C., Oct 16 (CP)\nThe Victoria Daily Times today\njoined the Vancouver Province in\nproposing that, press coverage of\nthe Royal;holiday.on Vancouver\nIsland be kept to a minimum so the\nPrincess and Duke can really enjoy\nthemselves.        \u2022','.. *\nStuart Keate, Tune Publisher,\nwired Walter Thompson, Publicity\nDirector aboard the Royal Train,\nsaying the.Tlmes Is willing to forego personal coverage and limit Itself to only official pictures and releases during the three \u2022 days the\nRoyal pair will spend at Eaglecrest,\n'In view of heavy strain Imposed\non Their Royal Highnesses thus far\nwe feel our greatest contribution to\ntheir* happiness and enjoyment on\nthe B.C. visit would be complete\nfreedom of movement a*d action In\nthe true holiday spirit\" Keate wired.\n\"I feel sure our readers support us\n(n this gesture and would appreciate\nyour conveying It to official\nsources.\" *\nHave the Job Done, Right,\nVIC GRAVES\nMA8TER PLUMPER\nPHONE 815\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty*\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST  \u25a0 ^\nVISUAL TRAININGI \"\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nNew French Resident'\nFights Arab Redism\nBy CARTER L. DAVIDSON\nRABAT, French Morocco, Oct. 16\n(AP)\u2014Arab Nationalists In Morocco \"are preparing the ground for\nCommunism and my job Is to fight\nand defeat them,\" says Gen. Aug-\nustin Gulllaume, new French rest\ndent general,\nNorth Africa, he asserted' In an\nInterview, is the Southern flank ot\nEurope. If North Africa should fall\nunder Communist influence, all the\nnowerful armies being formed in\nEurope would \"be as nothing.\"\nGulllaume took over the top job\nIn the French protectorate of some\n8,000,000 Moroccan Moslems last\nweek. \u2022-;\"'*-;'**,>\nFrench officialdom in Morocco\nclaims no more than 10,000 Moroccans are members of Nationalist\nparties. \u25a0 Some such parties, claims\nhundreds of thousands of supporters, and an issue of the Paris Communist pacer, L'Humanlte, thundered that the Nationalist movements\nin Morocco represent nearly all the\npeculation of Morocco.\nFjench spokesmen point to such\nCommunist newspaper articles as\nproof of the link up between Nationalists and Communism.'\nMore Work, Same Pay\nSenator's Weapon\nTo Defeat Inflation\n'OTTAWA Oct'l6'(CR>-Senator\nThomas Vien (L\u2014Quebec) said tonight one thing Canadians must do\nto beat Inflation' is work harder\nfor the same.pay.\nHe told the Senate, that Imposition of price controls now will, \"do\nmore harm than good.\" The way\nto beat inflation is to reduce the\nanjount of money in circulation, and\nto encourage savings and moderation .'in purchasing.\nThere also must be an effort to\n\"promote a greater production per\nhour of labor and to increase hours\nbf w.ork without, additional pay.\"\nIn this the \"interests of the'\nworker, of the .emplbyers and of\nthe general public alike are at\nstake.\"* *    .\nSpeaking mostly in French, Senator Vien moved the address in\nreply, to the speech .from the throhe.\nIt' was the first sittlng-of the Upper\nChamber since the opening of\nParliament'a * week ago,      .**.'\nPopulation of Caracas, Venezuela,\nIncreased from 361,000 in 1941 to\n662,000 In 1050,\nEscaping Bandit\nCaught With Loot\nTORONTO, Oct 18 (CP) - Two\nmen robbed a North Toronto bank\nof more than $13,000 today: One\nwas captured with the loot a few\nminutes after the abortive holdup\nand the other a short time later at\ngunpoint in suburban North York.\nHoward Gait, 43,. of Toronto, said\nby police to have had the money\non him, was-taken into custody* at\nthe rear of the bank by a policeman who, with others, had sped to\nthe Yonge and Lawrence branch \"of\nthe Dominion Bank When a teller\ntripped an 'alarm as the bandits\nentered. .*',.*\u25a0\nE. J. Boyd of Pickering, who officers said drove, away from the\nscene of the hofailp in an automobile and switched, to a truck,\nwas japtured ffprth of the*, city\nlimits by police who forced the\nmachine into a ditch.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n'.  ft'lMMI '\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n676 Baker St Phone 238\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED    \u25a0\n',*,.',     '**\u2022***\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street *      ; Phone 141\nYour Grocer HSs Our New\nVIJO PANCAKE AND\nWAFFLE MIX\nPhone 238, or Call at\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCompany, \"Ltd,\n623 Front 8treet\nCUTLER'S\nJEWELLERY\nWATChf REPAIRS\n20 Years) Experience\nP.ROMR'jj SERVICE\nPRESCRIPTIONS\nACCURATELY\nCOMPOUNDED\n\"At Your Rexall Store\"\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone 34, Day - 807-R Night\nBOX 460\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\niiiiiiimimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiii\nDONALD E. HUNTER\nV'  OPTOMETRIST\nGilker Black\n542 Baker St.       Ph. 1527\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiliiiiiiiiliilllliiililii\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nTHOMPSON\n, FUNERAL HOME\n^\u2022Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515' Kootenay St Phone 361\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 327\n676 Baker St.\n9\nThe basking shark, or mackerel\nshark, which may reach 30 feet in\nlength, despite its sise la harmless\nunless, attacked.\nATTENTION\nCURLERS\nGENERAL MEETING\nto be held at the    \". .,*\nCITY HALL COUNCIL CHAMBERS\nOCTOBER 17 -=- 8 P.M.\nCURLERS AND PROSPECTIVE MEMBERS\nCORDIALLY INVITED\nBest Winter to the Punch\n500\nGALLONS\n\" Yes, even though 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 Mon\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 carrier a large stock of\nheaters, and defrosters, as well\nas block heaters, for your\nmotor.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\n.  The largest and most completely equipped\ngarage in the Interior of British Columbia\n35 PHONE   35\n*'\u00ab*\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_10_17","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0425524","@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":"1951-10-17 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1951-10-17 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\/1.0425524"}