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Warden Jerome\nMunie called off plans to storm the cell block with 60\nmed guards after the rioting prisoners threatened to hurl\n|e'hostages off a 50-foot tier. '--}\nTwenty state policemen were at the scene, and at least\njmore were en route to the prison near this Mississippi\nuer town 90 miles South of\nLouis.\nalter the rioting began at\nr.S p.m. the warden expressed\nthe convicts might manage a\n: outbreak from the old prison.\nbey told us they were going\n[ get out and burn every building\npre,\" Munie said. \"And they could\nHit too.\"    .\nater the 363 prisoners in the\nt cell block calmed down, and\n'warden expressed belief that\n- for a mass break had been\nBed.\n|They planned to grab the guards\n|d the keys and go over the wall,\"\nlid. \"We moved too fast for\nNow they are confused.and\nto wait until daylight.\"\nr DEMAND8\nMo Immediate' demands were\nde by the rioters. \"We don't in-\nl to do anything until morning,\"\nconvict- leader shouted to\nle. \"Theh we will talk about\n|\"We'r\u00ab  Just   sweating  it   out,\"\nMunie said. \"We're not going to\nendanger these officersV Jives.\"\nThe convicts were armed with\nstool legs and clubs. The warden\nsaid no firearms had fallen Into,\ntheir hands. \u25a0\u2022>\n8TRIPPEDOF VALUABLES\nThe seized guards and the lieutenant, Loren Stewart of Fairfield,\nHI., were lined up on the top tier\nof-the prison, 50 feet above a concrete ramp. They were stripped,of\nall valuables and their clubs taken\nfrom them. The guards at Menard\nordinarily carry no firearms.\nFrightened prisoners who wanted\nno part of the outbreak still were\nhiding in the darkened prison yard\nthree hours after the trouble started, the warden said.\nThe entire prison has about 2000\nInmates.\nThe rioting prisoners seized all\nthe keys to the cell house 'and hove\naccess to the hospital, mess hall and\nseveral shops in the area. Later they\nturned dut all lights and began\nshouting and breaking up things.\n\u25a0 17 Derailed Cars Halt Line Traffic,\nHospital Train Despatched to Scene\nVANDERHOOF.B.C, Oct. 27 (CP)-One man was\nled and four injured today when two Canadian National\n11 way trains collided head-on near here.\nThe smash-up, so. farf,unexplained, derailed 17 cars\n, halted traffic on the railroad's transcontinental line be-\npeeri Prince Rupert and Prince George.\n'\/John \u00a3owal, 63-year-old^, Prince George sectionman,\nI in the collision between %!freight train and a work train\natched Westifrom, Prince^ George yesterday to clear a\nslide.--'..     '\u25a0-. '\\-'- ' .22\nMured were^icENolaheuk, P. T. Krall??, Jack Holt\nJCL J.' .McDonald, all o_ Prince George.       \u2022 - -. ( & -\nKpK hospital train spqd to the scene to return the Injured\nPrince George. It was not immediately known when the\nwould be cleared. ^  -\nistilule In\nibon Tonight\nttdent of the Institute of Min-\n Metallurgy of Canada and\nutstanding figure in the min-\norld, will address members\n\u2014 Nelson branch at their an-\n, meeting and banquet Tuesday\nling.\nif. D. F. Kidd of Vancouver, who\nouring Kootenay branches with\necretary of the Institute, C.\nof Montreal, will be guest\nlor at the meeting in the\ni Hotel. Dr. Kidd, a doctor of\n\u201e, Is director of several B.C.\nj including the Mastadon zinc\nat Revelstoke and the High-\nBell at Beaverdell.\n   branch,  which  Includes\nno, Remac, the Slocan and Alns-\nth, was formed only last year\n1 the president and the secretary\n1 be the first Dominion executive\nlibers to visit From Nelson the\nonal officers will journer\"- to\nto. attend a meeting Wednes-\nend  then  go  to  Kimberley\ntiirsday.\nanada Exporters\nbarge U.S. With\niriff Violation\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nilGNIORY CLUB, Que., Oct. 27\n' The United  States  was\nged   today  by  the   Canadian\nrs Association with violat-\nthe   General   Agreement   on\ntfs and Trade signed In Geneva\nAssociation also criticized\ntier ot administration of U.S.\noms regulations as creating a\nfier to the sale In the U.S. of\ni goods of other countries.\nlie charge of violation of the\nal Agreement came In con-\nBon with existing American\nbrt quotas pn Canadian dairy\nts   \"especially   aimed   at\nissey Visits   ,'\ninnipeg   \" c\nMPEG, Oct. 27 (CP)-Gov-\n-jeneral Vincent Massey ar-\n| at Winnipeg at 5:04 p.m. CST\n| e threat-day visit to the city.\nwas met at the -Stevenson\n- R.C.A.F. station  by  Lieut-\n-R.  F. \u2022 McWIlliams, Premier\nlas Campbell, Mayor Garnet\nrer, heads of the three ser-\n*r and honorary aides-de-camp.\nIter inspecting a guard of honor,\nMassey and his party left im-\nfediately for a private dinner at\n[verhment House.\nT$b3\nM9;\n;o*\u00ab\n\"JJO^\nVol\n\u00ab]\u00a3$\u00bb\u00bb*\nn\nly tearebf f^ ;;4'., 1952\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014Cloudy In the valleys\nin the morAlng, otherwise mostly\nclear. Little change In temperature.\nLight winds. Low and high at Cran-\nbrook and Crescent Valley, 25 and\n58; Revelstoke, 87 and 50.\nNELSON, B; C, CANADA-TUESDAY MOHNING, OCTOBER 28, 1952\nNo. 150\nGaglardi Sets W. Arm\nSpan at $2.5 Million\nSTAGING THE FIRST military spectacle o.\nIts kind since the Island was defeated In World\nWar II, more than 4000 Japanese troops pass Prime I\nMinister Yoshlda's reviewing stand as they mar.ch\n, through the streets of Tokyo, the parade heralded\ntha   Inauguration   of  the   110,000'man   National\n\"'. Safety, Corps, .considered the embryo of a future\ni Japanese army. Navy units also made an appearance.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nNelson Qets Second Qrand Piano\nTo Accommodate Larger Festivals\nlabor Board\nWon't Nullify\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nLove Knows; No\nLocksmiths\nPISA, Italy, Oct. 27 Reuters)\n\u2014Nature solved the problem of\ntwo love-lorn pigeons today but\nleft Giovanni Jtlstorl wondering\nhow to square things with a\nPortuguese friend, who split up\nthe pair nine months ago.\nThe Portuguese took the male\npigeon home with him, leaving\nthe female brooding andjnelan-\ncholy. But tonight she was cooing blissfully \u2014 iter boy friend\nfluttered in after\" a 1500-mile\nflight from Portugal.\n\"She Is happy again,\" sighed\nRistori. \"I don't want to part\nthem again. I must discuss the\nproblem with my Portuguese\nfriend.\" * - '\nIIIIIMMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nUNEMPLOYMENT\nIN CANADA\nSTILL DECREASING\nOTTAWA, Oct 27 (CP) \u2014 Unemployment In Canada continued\nto decrease during September, the\nLabor Department reported today.\nIn its monthly survey, the Department said there were 142.8Q0\nregistered unemployed at Oct 2\ncompared with 147,800 Sept. 4, and\n134,800 Oct 4, 1051.\nLarge-scale development projects\nIn Labrador, Northern British Co\nlumbia. and other undeveloped\nareas'were creating many new Jobs\nfor the record working force of\n5,400,000, said -the department -.\nEstablished -industries-, were expanding and Increasing their staffs.\nEmployment in aircraft- and- shipbuilding had increased by approximately 50 per cent over last year.\nThe record grain crop In the West\nalso provided additional Jobs.\nWASHINGTON, Oct 27 (AP) -\nThei National Labor . Relations\nBoard refused by a two-to-one Vote\ntoday to nullify the labor agreement between the Northwest Mag-\nnesite CO. and the Mine, Mill and\nSmelter Workers'. Union. (Ind.).,\n1%e United Steelworkers of America (C.LO.) had asked the board\ntb - knock out, the contract on. two\npoint?, 2. .-,\u2022',. -,,-. \u25a0\u25a0,;\u2022*..':-;'\n..\u00bbi;\u00abmWim'i tjw'.. Ch_rwe_a_i;\nWash., \u00abrm entered the agreement'\nimproperly because the\" steelwork-.\nere-; Union had given notice that it\nsought bargaining rights' tor part\nof the employees. The board held\nthat the notice was not received\nby the. company before the contract with the rival union had been\nrenewed.   \u25a0'-\u25a0\nTTie other point of dispute \u2014 and\nthe one on which the board members divided\u2014was over the legality\nof the union shop clause in the\ncontract\nThe' contract provided that,the\nunion shop should be created \"If\nand when\" the Mine-Mlil-Smelter\nunion, abided by the labor law\nrequirement for- filing union records and non-Communist affidavit.\nfor officers.\nTha-union had not complied at\nthe time the contract was signed.\nIt did later.\nIn step with, the growth ot the\nKootenay Music Festival which last\nyear doubled in size, Nelson Music\nAssociation has purchased a second\ngr-mdjjiaBo.\nThe 'piano,, which arrived trom\nCalgary last week is in the Capitol\ntheatre where it will be used for\nconcert purposes, President Ross\nFleming reported to the annual\nmeeting of the Nelson Association\nMonday night\nWith the continued growth of the\nfestival, made' more certain by\nlaunching Celgar Development\nCompany activities which will\nbring new Industry and population\nto the district and other advancing\nlocal industries, Mr. Fleming anticipates need for two halls to accommodate the next festival at Nelson,\nand therefore the need of two\npianos. The musie; competitions\nWhicjfc once. took, only rtWo. dayji\nstretched Into six days last Spring1\nat NeSoiv_.erKCBrJled)   r    '\u2022     ,'\nTTie hew piano, which'-has been\nhalf paid.for through the donation\not one person, will give participants\nall the advantages of larger festivals. It will' allow two-piano works\nwhich have previously been lacking\nat Nelson festivals. Concert classes,\nWith one piano-taking the accompaniment will also be possible now,\nMr. Fleming pointed out These\nclasses, where the other piano or\nan orchestra take the accompaniment while the first piano takes the\nLiberals Plan For\nGeneral Election\nC.P. Express Uses\nRadio-Phone Gear\nOn Pick-Up Trucks\nVANCOUVER \u2014 Canadian Pacific Express in Vancouver has\nbeen quietly, experimenting for\nsome time with radio-telephone\napparatus Installed in a number of\nits pick-up and delivery trucks, to\ndetermine the best means bt improving service to and from shippers and trains. It Is the first\nknown instance jn Canada where\nelectronics are playing a major and\nvaluable role in service of this type-\nCompany officials at Vancouver\nare high in praise ot the apparatus\nwhich, although experimentally installed in only eight units of its\ntruck fleet, has already notably\ncut down unnecessary mileage due\ntp cancelled calls, thrbugh \"on-the\nfly\" transmission ot revised orders\nto drivers.\nDock Workers to\nHold Stop Work\nMeet Wednesday\nVANCOUVER, Oct 27 (CP) -\nWorkers.lining grain ships in port\nof Vancouver will hold a \"stop\nwork meeting\" Wednesday unless a\nwage contract Is signed before then.\nThis action was threatened today\nby executives of the-International\nLongshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union, Local 507,. after a \"flat\nrejection of union demands by three\nstevedoring firms. '..\nhourly raise; plus pension plan and\nThe union Is asking a 20-cent\nwelfare contributions for 300 grain\nlining- division workers. Basic rate\nla now $1.89 an hour.    \u00ab\n\"Under the stop work plan,\" said\nInternational representative John\nBerry, \"there will be Bo shifts\nworking from 5 p.nt'. Wednesday\nuntil the following mbrnirtg.\"..\nThe meeting would delay work\non ships: in port being readied for\ngrain cargoes, Today there were\neight being prepared lor this type\ncargo_\n111111111iMi11111111111m111m111mm.mil\nBeetles in the\nSoup Is Not Gobi .    *\nBERLIN, Oct.- 27 (Rei_.ter8)\n\u2014Putting beetles in comrade\nhusband's soup Is a cause for\ndivorce, an East German court.\nhas decided. \",'\\\";i\"\u2022'\".\nThe East Berlin Zeltung to-\nday quoted'the case .of Fedor\nMeier, 52, who' for 20 years,,ol\nhis married life has been, a pas- -\nslonate . beetle-collector. \u2022 His\nwife.Ella* did not share Me at- .\ntachmeht to- Insects. J   \".,  .*,  ,\n'\u2022:   The  boxes  of 'beeUeskaiid\ncockroaches\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 hanging  ,pn   the\nwalls  of her. home  were\" a\n'. nightmare, the,pa'pereaid.\"'' .'\u25a0'\n'One' day she put a fistful of\nFedor's -^peW\/i\"'- hisox\"-tail\nsot_pi\"-\"et; lest .youeshall. have\nenough of your ^beetles,\" she.\n. said. .     \u2014(-:    \u2022\u2022   ..... v,,\nThe eourt awarded Fedor. a\ndivorce,' the   paper   said   and\n-quoted the. unrepentant Ella as\ntelling, him \"You can how be\nmarried to yodr beetles.\",.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini\nOTTAWA, Oct 27 (CP) \u2014 The\nLiberal Party's top lieutenants,\nlooking to the next general election,\ntoday talked of stepped-up organization, lower taxes and abolition\nof radio licence fees.\nThe politically-important subjects\nwere in the forefront of matters\ndiscussed at opening sessions of the\nadvisory council of the national\nLiberal Federation, the high com:\nmand of the federal party in power,\nMajor action of the 235-merriber\ncouncil was the. adoption of a resolution .regarded by observers as\nputting tlje finish to the $2.50-a\nyear radio licence fee.,\nIn apparently paving the way for\nremoval ofthe radio fee, the council made no reference to television.\nsolo, have been held in Trail, he\ntold Members. Gifts to cover the\nbalance of the purchase have been\npromised.\nThe hew piano Is a Colonial grand,\nmeasuring five foot 10 inches. The\nfirst piano Is seven toot, Some $385\nis still owing on the first grand, Mr.\nFleming told members, though the\nsupplying company has been paid.\nDIRECTORS\nNamed to the board of directors at\nthe annuel meeting which was held\nIn the Women's Institute room at\nthe Civld Centre were Walter Kitto,\nMiss Mary Jarvls, Ross Fleming,\nFrank'Pennoyer, A. A. Pagdln, T. C.\nLambert, B. B. Crawford, C. H. Bur-\ngess, F. W. M. Drew, Mrs. T. C. Lambert, J. P. Horswill, Mrs. A. G. Boas\nand Benny Sutherland; The board\nwill meet in the near future to name\nt^e,festivalejteeBtlYe; '22.2' i\nJiiMr. Fleming, as: ptestdfjrt of \u25a0 the\nJ ttfoUp.'rWaHked' hiemberrsv . eepfielSlly''\nSecretary-measurer -'yrank pettr\nno^er and j his '..wiles'., fo^ their\nloyalty and hard work during his\nterm ;,of office.,\nFinancial. assets of the Nelson\nclub are about $4000, Mr. Pennoyer\ntold members in the financial statement: \"the.festival, bad' one of its\nbest years,\", he pointed out*\nrOUTHWOUNDED\nACCIDENTALLY\nVANCOUVER, Oct 27(CP)-A\n13-year-old i youth was seriously\nwounded when his own weapon\ndischarged on Salt Spring Island\ntoday.\nFlown to Vancouver for hospital\ntreatment was Richard Lakes suffering from a gunshot wound ot\nthe chest,' shoulder and head.\nThe weapon' discharged \\as the\nteen-ager laid it down while hunting.\nFORMER P.M. OF\nAUSTRALIA DIES\nW. M. (Billy) Hughes\nProminent\nPolitician Passes,-\nSYDNEY, Australia, Oct 27 (CP)\n\u2014William Morris '(Billy) Hughes,\nprime minister during the First\nWorld War and senior statemon of\nthe British Commonwealth, died\ntonight Hughes, 88, was Australia's\nmost colorful political figure.\nSeriously 111 tor several weeks,\nhe had suffered a chill shortly after\nhis birthday last Sept 25. Doctors\nsaid pneumonia and' a congested\nheart condition developed.\nHe was known as \"Billy\" up and\ndown the country. He had served\nIn the federal Parliament since it\nfirst met In 1901. At 85 he waged a\nsuccessful battle to win the Liberal\nparty, seat In a North Sydney district His career in Parliament \u2014\nboth state and national \u2014 covered\n58 years'.\nDuring the First World War he\nbecame, known a'B the \"Lloyd\nGeorge of Australia.\" Like his British counterpart, he was a native\nol Wales.\nIn 1918, while visiting Canada,\nHughes was honored by. being\nmade the only Australian member\nof the Canadian Privy Council.\nThe last surviving signer of the\nVersailles Treaty,-, he won the\nhearts of his countrymen-and ot\nmuch of the British public throijgh\nhis spirited arid eloquent leadership and his dogged defence 61\nwhat he considered Australia's\nrights during the Paris peacemaking.\nHie-latter brought tota Into noisy\nolaiheir'with'rpres-dent Wdodrtw\nWilson of the United. States, wljo\n.orie'e remarked that Hughee.was-,-\nlittle.' delegate-,:\u00a3om '-\"* r^mo!\nSouthern. continent with-\u2022population not more than that of New\nYork. . .'<-'-'.\nHughes raised himself to hie full\nheight and thundered, *_t represent\n60,000 Australian dead!\" :\n; There-was silence In the crowded assembly.'   \u25a0 \u2022\nHughes got what' he wanted at\nParis \u2014 Australian mandates over\nformer German possessions In the\nPacific. -   -'.;-.\u2022.; :k'-\nPlanes Seek\nMissing Hunter\nEDMONTON, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014The\nR.C.A.F. today dispatched a Norseman aircraft to Fort St. John, B. C,\nto take part in the,search for a\nhunter missing In the Dawson\nCrgek area of Northeastern British\nColumbia.   -    \u25a0'\nJoseph Mitchell, about 80, of\nDawson Creek has been missing\nsince Saturday morning near the\nKiskawinaw-River, 22 miles Northwest of Dawson Creek.',\nAralMsraeli l^pblem\nBefore U*R Ass\u00bbknbly\nPublic Works Minister Makes Surprise\nVisit to Council After Lardeau Tour;\n300,000-400,000 Cars Needed Yearly\nRev. P. A. Gaglardi, new minister of public works,\npaying a Surprise visit to Nelson City Council Monday\nnight, said he figured construction of a bridge across the\nWest. Arm* at Nelson^would cost at least $2,500,000.\nA representative of a company which is investigating\nbuilding a toll bridge here, will arrive in the next few days\nto make an accurate estimate.\nThe Cabinet Minister and Kamloops cleric talked with Mayor Joseph Kary and aldermen In the\ncourse of a whirlwind visit to the\ndistrict He came in Sunday, looked\nover roads, including the new Kas-\nlo-Lardeau road Monday, and is off\nto the Coast today by plane from\nCastlegar.\nDuring the' Council meeting,\nMayor Kary received, a telephone\nmessage stating the Minister would\nbe at the city hall In a few minutes. He arrived with H. T. Miard,\ndivisional engineer for the provincial department of public works.\nCouncil not only, talked toll\nbridge possibilities with Mr. Gaglardi, but asked him why Queen's\nBay could not be used as Kootenay Lake ferry's West landing rather\nthan Balfour.\nAlderman-T. H. Bourque pointed\nout that the trip^'to'XbotonMr. Bay\nwould take less time, and .so alleviate heavy traffic conditions, if\nQueen's - Bay were \"made the West\ndock.\nMr. Miard said the ferry can land\nat Balfour in all weathers, whereas\nit could npt at Queen's Bay.\nMr. Gaglardi said his government\nwould like to have two ferries in\noperation on Kootenay Lake, but\nhod \"hot the money for such, a\nseheme.'        ,;'.        '..:-:'.\u2022'\nOn iha) toll bridge proposition,\nMr. Gaglardi said that the Job of\nreaching a financial arrangement\naecepteble to the' wbple and the\ngovernment would not be an easy'\n\u00ab**_\"V.*sLA'.. \u25a0  i-\"'v\" \"* ;\"\" W*\n\"At an approximate cost of from\ntwo to three million dollars, and\nan interest 'ot five petlcehti 'there\nwould.have to be a*terrific amount\nof traffic for tolls to be low enough.\nfor the .travelling public.\"\n\"It. would- take a' lot of. tolls to\npay Interest, let alone the principal\" ; .'--,,..-\n\u25a0 He   esUrhated   that  traffic,   re\nquirements would be between 300,-\n000 and 400,000 vehicles a year.\nIn the last calendar year 323.000\ntrucks, cars and buses were transported by the ferry, Mr. Miard informed the meeting.\nThe public works minister felt\nCouncil might not have too much\ndifficulty In persuading the department of transport to strike\nKootenay River at Nelson off Its\nlist of navigable waters.\nIf the change were made, lt\nmight be possible to build a bridge\nat a lower level and a lower cost\nMr. Gaglardfs estimated cost is\non construction at the present ferry crossing. If a bridge were built\nto the West two miles of highway\nwould have to be built-to connect\nWith the North Shore Southern\ntransprovincial highway road link,\nhe reminded Council.\nWhile warning against over-optimism, the Social Credit Government official said: \"If construction\nis economically sound and financially possible, there need be no\nhindrance as far as I'm concerned.\"\nThe government was not In a position to undertake construction at\nthe present time.\nMayor Kary and Mr, Qaglardi\nannounced that a representative\nof the  Interested company will\nbe In Nelson this week to estimate the cost \u25a0     \/\nMr. . Gaglardi, would  Wj-Re. .net\nkflfitmllment when isfced If his government would snare In cost of\npaying off a toll bridge. He was\nasked if it would pay cost of operating a ferry for a period of years,\nlast year's cost being $35,000.\nPossibility (of Eastern Canadian\nfinancial'Interests building a toll\nbridge here was raised recently,\nand Mayor Joseph Kary went to\nVictoria to discuss the idea with\nthe Cabinet \/\nBy NORM AN AL8TEDTER\nCanadian i Press Staff Writer\nUNITED NAT10N8, N.Y, Oot\n27 (CP) \u2014 Arab-Israeli, disagreement .oyer aid to. Arab, refugees\nofthe Palestine war was renewed In the United Nations, today.\nIn the General Assembly's-ape-\n, clal political committee delegates\nof Aral, countries (nslsted thai\nreturn of 800,000 Arab refugees\nto their former homes In Israel\n.li the only solution to -thei.'\n\"proble|n.r      -,,    V \u2022' \u25a0 , ''\nIsrael, which has offered compensation but refused to permit the\nArab relugees to re-enter IsraeL\nwill reply later. .. -'       J\n' The Arab delegates started the\nargument during a debate on the\nreport by John Blanford, Director\nGeneral ol the Relief and Works\nAgency for Palestine^;.\n- Canada participated In tbe debate and said its generous Impulses\nin donating to Arab refugee eld\nmight lose some warmth if mor?\ncountries do not contribute.\nCANADA'8 CONTRIBUTION\nDavid Johnson, Canada's permanent U.N. delegate, said-\"it is\nneither sound nor equitable, if\ncertain r great -powers and a small\nnumber-of other states consume\nalmost the whole financial responsibility for a project that bears the.\nimprimatur of the United Nations,\nHe noted that Canada has contributed $3,000,000 to the refugee\nftihd.- '\nBritain, the United States, France\nand Turkey proposed a resolution\nto boost' the .refugee aid budget for\n1052-53 to.$23,000,000 from $18,000,-\n000. Arab delegates said the fund\nshould be'at least $27,000,000.\nIn the first - political committee,\nSoviet Foreign * Minister Andrei\nVishinskyr-held \u25a0 up the debate; on\nthe Korean question by sending\nWord; that he ! was not ready to\nspeak; He said he might be ready\nby, Wednesday to answer the address dt '\u25a0 State Secretary Dean\nAcheson of the U.S. who laid the\nKorean conflict at-Moscow's door.\nPioneers'Great\nGranddaughter Dies\n1 WlNN-PBO^Oct. 27. CP)\u2014 Mrs.\nFrederick Gehthon, 93( great-\ngranddaughter of one of Canada's\nearly. ploneersj died at her' home\nhere yestetday-    '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'''\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.   i   \u25a0 .\nMrs. Genthon was born at Fort\nGarry, tho daughter of tho famous\nJean'. Baptiste Lagimodlere - and\nMary. Anne. Gaboury \u2022\u25a0 Laglmodiere\nwho arrlyed at Red - River from\nQuebec In 1807. She was the first\nwhite woman to settle at The Fas,,\nin. Northwestern Manitoba. '\nIP\nThought Suicide\nVANCOUVER, Oct 27 (CP) -\nFour probable suicides were among\nthe six \u2022 sudden deaths reported to\nVancouver police during the weekend. '.-'-\u25a0\nAlois-Slrotney, 87-year-old carpenter,' was killed when he plunged\n90 feet from the Victoria Drive\nViaduct. His daughter said the man\nwas unemployed and had been receiving treatment for a bone disorder in both hands.\nPeter Paul Maschewsky, 42, was\nfound hanging with a light cord\naround his neck. Police were told\nthe man had been despondent because his wife from whom he had\nbeen separated, refused to \"go back\nto him.\" .\nJohn Radmaker,\" 8$, was found\ndead In a woodshed at the rear ot\nhlsheme. Polite reported, \"nature\nof Illness\u2014suicide.\"   \u25a0    :\nVictim of a gassing waa Robert\nMiller Estey, 27, an office worker.\nHe was discovered by Ids parents,\nwho told police be bad been \"de,\nspondett.\" lately.\nA four-month-old '.boy, Robert\nDragan, was found unconscious in\nhis buggy on the porch bf bis home.:\nHe was dead on arrival at hospital.\nCause of death was not determined.\nMrs. Elsie Victoria Palmer, 28, of\nCalgary was found dead in her bed.\nShe arrived here Thursday to visit\nher mother, Mrs. E. Empleton, who\nsaid her daughter had been, visited\nthree times Saturday by a doctor\nwho was unable to determine -what\nher Illness was. She died Sunday.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nStevenson Has\nShaky Platform\nN^W LONDON,^Conn, Oct\n27 (CP)\u2014A temporary wooden\nplatform collapsed, today Just\nn .natter of seconds before\nGovernor Stevenson wea to- ascend it in tbe railroad station\nhere. \u25a0 .\nAbout 40 Democratic leaders\nwere on the structure when it\ncollapsed but they apparently\nWere riot hurt.-Among those\nWho fell were motion'picture\nstars Lauren Bacall and Robert\nRyan.   .-\"\u25a0'.'.';'\", 2\nA crowd, estimated at 8000\nwas on hand as tho platform\ngave way. Stevenson found a\nportion of' the platform that\napparently was still safe, ascended and began his talk.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiituiiiuiuiiiiiiuuiiuuii\nWOODWORKERS\nVOTE;F0R\nSTRIKE ACTION\n- VANCOUVER, Oct, 21 (CP) -\nInterior Woodworkers have voted\nin favor of strike action to back\ntheir demands for a wage increase,\nStewart Alsbury, president of the\nInternational Woodworkers of America (C.I.O>C,C:L,),' said today:'\/\nThe union's policy committee met\nhere today to plan Its next move\nfollowing workers' acceptance and\noperators' rejection of settlement\nterms suggested by a conciliation\nboard. The move may be a request\nfor a government-supervised strike\nvote.\nThe majority report ol the board\ncalled for an Increase of 3.4 cents\nan hour. Current'bastc rate for the\n5000 Interior lumberworkers is\n$1.30. ' .-\u2022---\n16-Year-Old Left in\nCharge of Consulate\nMONTREAL, QCt 27 (CP) -\nGeorge Arrosemena, 18-year-old\nnephew of a former president of\nPanama, appears today to be the\nsole administrator of the Panamanian Consulate-General in Montreal.\nArrosemena, a secretary at the\nConsulate, said today the man appointed as Consul-General, Tito\nJuvenile Arias, ostensibly left only\nfor a trip to Washington, \"but it\nlooks as if he has gone home; he\nnever liked Montreal.\"\nRussia Rearranges\nShakespeare Play\nLONDON, Oct 27. (Reuters) -\nOthello Is a \"good, honest progressive figure of his time\" hi a Sovlet-\nized version of Shakespeare's tragedy, to be presented soon, Moscow\nradio said today.\nOthello, the Moor who according\nto Shakespeare killed his wife Des-\ndemona because of jealousy, Is \"not\na Jealous person at all\" In the new\nSovietized- version.\n' The broadcast said that Iago, the\nintriguer, is \"characteristic of present-day Fascist elements who stop\nat nothing to achieve their goal of\noppression and domination of the\npeople.\"\nDOLLAR UP\n.NEW. YORK, Oct 27 (CP)\u2014 Tha\nCanadian dollar was 3\/32 of a cent\nhigher at a premium of 3 25\/32 per\ncent in terms of \"United States\nfunds in closing foreign exchange\"\ndealings today. The pound sterling\nwas % of a cent higher at $2.70-\n13\/18.\nMONTREAL, Oct 27 (CP)\u2014 Tha\nUnited States dollar today closed\nat a discount of 3 10\/32 per cent\nin terms of Canadian funds. Down\n1\/32 from Friday's close. That is,\nlt took 06 13\/32 cents Canadian to\nbuy $1 American. The pound sterling wa3 $2.69?-, down 1\/16 from\nFriday.\nAnd in This Corner...\nHUN8TANTON, Norfolk, England, Oct 27 (Reuters)\u2014Tavern-\nkeeper Peter Turner reports booming business as the result of his\nbeer-by-telephsno service for \"henpecked\" U.S. Air Force husbands.\nTurner promises to deliver heer by the glass or bottle within five\nminutes of a telephone call to his \"hole-ln-the-wall\" publlo house. He\nsaid he Inaugurated the system after U.8. Air Force men'and their\nfancies moved Into the area.\n\"American wives don't let their husbands slip out for a drink as\neasily as English wives,\" he said, \"so I thought of this idea.\"\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Oct 27 (Reuters)\u2014Police have named\na car thief here \"Weary Willie\" because they aay he is too lazy to\ndo his own stealing. He uses city towing firms to do the job for him.\n\"Weary Willie'7 spots a likely car, phones a firm, explains that\nhe haa clutch trouble, and asks the firm to tow the car to a quiet\nsuburban street where he picks it up.\nLONDON, Oct 27 (Reuters)\u2014The newa,leaked out today that\nPrince Farouk, exiled Egyptian ruler, hasn't paid this year's dues\nto tha British Matchbox Label and Booklet Society. He owes about\n$1.75.\n\"I sent a remlnder'to Farouk's palace In Cairo three days before\nthe abdication,\" reported secretary Charles Crampton at the society's\nannual exhibition here, \"But I expect-In all the fuss It was overlooked.- '   .,\n\"I'll get In touch with him again as soon aa I know his permanent\naddress.\"\n.But though Farouk Is behind In his dues, his name still headed\nthe list of patron! on the program issued to delegates.\n\"For,\" said Crampton, \"Prince Farouk Is the world's most distinguished philumenlst\"\nThat's quite a compliment from the secretary, who al 79 Is the\nsociety's eldest member and has a collection of close to 150,000 match\nbox labels. He said Farouk had a collection that makes his own seem\n. a mere trifle\nimkmsMmm\nas,   ,; ._.*_\u00bb&_.\n r\"W'\"\u00abwws\u00bbw!\u00abw^\n',;\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0-- -.(-''I. \\. :'':\":      \"... -\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28i 1952\nLAST TIMES TONIGHT \u2014 Shows at 7:00 - 9:00\nr ptctui* In CeMTfM Met word in laughi' ^<\n-__ .    (.\n , __J'e\u00bb\nNewi\nCartoon\nSport\nWEDNESDAY ONLY\n... Oat proud and aapises\ndtnted thing: aa epm film done\nwith id the richnen and en ths\nflourish that uyut could uk.\nKmrythlag thst could b< expocUd\nla tht way of ulmt and pwdnc-\ntion Is Iter*. You'll llvi long before\nyou iu a picture moro grandly\nand Iumlnou\u00ably produced.\n-80SUY OlOWIHtlt, NX Wis\n\u25a0v __,\u00ab____ offenbaCH   '_\u00bb\nBYjACQUBOFFlNBACH\n\u25a0sttrnnf\nMOIRA SHEARER\n_ lEONIDE MASSINE\nS. ROBERT HEIPMANN\nROBERT ROUNSEVMI\nlUDMIllATCHERINA\nANNAYAR5  with\n511 THOMAS IfKMAM ,\n\u2022Mite lOTAt\nPHIHAIMONie OKHIITU\ncptofiY TECHNICOLOR\nCMC\nr-*_.i.\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nON No. 3 HIGHWAY, EAST OP NELSON\nTuesday - Wednesday \u2014 Oct. 18 - 29\nCARTOON and SHORTS\n. let Show 7:30 2nd Show 9:30\nAdmission 60* CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE\nSTARLIGHT DRIVE-IN SPECIAL\nSTARTING OCT. 23RD until further notice, every car\nentering the Drive-In Theatre, containing 4 paying\ncustomers, will receive a gift certificate, redeemable\nat SUPERIOR MOTORS, VERNON ST. FOR\n1 Gallon Gas FREE\nCAfcRETURNED BY\nJUVENILE AFTER\n\"TRYING IT OUT\"\nA car taken from a local garage's\nparking lot Friday afternoon was\nreturned about three hours later\nby a 16-year-old who told police he\n\"just wanted to take lt for a drive\nand try lt out.\"\nThe car was reported missing\nabout 2 p.m. Friday afternoon by\nthe owner who said the juvenile\nhad looked it over several times\napparently contemplating buying lt.\nNo charges have been laid pending police investigation.   \u2022\nLocal Painting\nAt Coast Exhibit\nA painting by Mrs. A. VT. Lymbery of Gray Creek, member of\nNelson Art Club, Is Included in the\n21st annual B.C. artists' exhibition\nshowing at Vancouver Art Gallery\nfrom October 21 to November 16.-\nHer painting \"Still Life-Partners\" is among works exhibited In\nthe jury show.\nMrs. Lymbery has contributed\npaintings to many local art exhibitions, and has won prizes in\nthe West Kootenay exhibition's art\nsection. '\nCARLOAD SALE\nHELD OVER for This Week'\nBY POPULAR DEMAND AND REQUEST\nFor the benefit of our out-of-town\ncustomers.\nFor Winter mealtime goodness,\nBE SURE TO STOCK UP NOW WITH\nRoyal City Quality Products\nLIBERTY\n-FOOD STORE\nRejection of Schools Won't Build\nHospital, Trustee Tells Questioner\nQuestions, constantly arising since\nthe introduction of the new schools\nconstruction bylaw, were answered\nby William S. Ramsay at a Rotary\nluncheon in the Hume Monday, Mr.\nRamsay pointed out that 000 more\nchildren attend schools, now than\nin 1942. -.-.\u2022\u25a0\nHere are tha questions answered\nby Mr. Ramsay:\nQ. Is our taxation system wrong?\nA. The system of taxation yjias\nbeen in effect for a long time. Tf\nit Is wrong, presentation and passing of a school bylaw is not likely\nto change.it. Financing Is now calculated on a basis of land and Improvement value. It definitely Is\nnot likely that this system Is\nchangeable overnight. It might take\nyears to change the taxation system\neven If this were found desirable.\n'Our children can't wait 20 years\nfor adequate schools.\"\nQ.i How can we be assured the\nestimates are not too low?\n9. Estimates for this program'\nwere arrived at by a firm of Vancouver architects who have built\nnumerous schools throughout British Columbia. Estimated cost is ar\nrived at through computation on a\ncube basis. The architects also allow\nfor a reasonable margin of safety.\nQ, Should a hospital berg have\npriority? \u25a0 .-->\u2022\u2022'  \u2022\nA. ?There Is no reason whj; wa\ncai\\'t. have both, within reasonable\ntime. To defeat a school bylaw on\nthe argument that we need a hospital r more, will lead tb defeat of\nthe hospital bylaw on the argument\nthat schools should have priority.\"\nMr. Ramsay compared mill-rates\nof other Kootenay be*htres With\nthose of Nelson. Here are mill-rates\nfor school purposes:\nTrail  .. ' 40.70\nCranbrook __.    89.1\nFernie _\u201e._    40\nKaslo    -..\u201e_\u201e.\u201e......:__...\u201e.   49\nTadanae  ..^....,_.___,_-,\u00ab.i-  47.\u00ab\nRossland   _..._.;. .,;.\u201e._.,.,.....   86.9\nNELSON :..\u201e..\u201e;    32\nAsked whether a lot pt the floor\narea in the proposed school Is taken\nup with auditorium space, music\nrooms and other out-of-claasroom\nactivity, Mr. Ramsay replied, \u25a0 \"the\nschool Is designed so that this space\ncan be easily converted into classrooms as school population grows,\"\nLast Rites Held\nFor Castlegar Man\nRequiem high mass tor Arnold\nDube, Castlegar man killed In a logging accident at Crawford Bay\nThursday was sung at the Catholic\nchurch in, Castlegar Monday morning. '\u25a0'\u25a0'   \u25a0-'..-     -;'-;\u00ab   r   .\nMany.frlends .and feUo^.workmen\nattended and 'a.wealth of floral and\nspiritual.offerings paid.final tribute\nto'the 25-year-old truck driver.\nRev. J. B. Barnes was the celebrant, rr1' -, *\nPallbearers were Otto Walker,\nClifford Tipping, Mike Koochln,\nFred Popoff, William Moruso.and\nPhil Gendren. interment was In\nKinnoird-Costlegar Cemetery.\nSchools Bylaw\nFORUM-\nTht Daily News, In the interests\not bringing to light all phases of\ntha Nelson School District building\nbylaw to ba voted upon Nov. 5, Is\ninviting readers to ask questions\npertaining to the bylaw.\nEvery attempt will be made to\nobtain tha Information required\nfrom educational and other authorities. This service Is not Intended\nto be of a contentious nature, rather It Is Intended to be informative.\nIt is not an attempt to gather opinions, but to gather facts and figures.\nReaders are asked to either write\nout their questions and bring them'\nto the Dsily News office, or to mail\nthem. Names are not required, but\nwill be published when permission\nIs given.\nThe first question and answer\nfollows:\nR. J.\u2014What Is the mill rate for\nschool purposes within the city\nlimits and what Is lt In that part\nof the school district that Is outside the city? If there is a difference would you explain why?\nThirty-two mills In Nelson; 10\nmills in the rural area.\nPart of the difference is accounted for by the fact that in the rural\narea the mill rate Is levied oh 75\nper cent of the assessed value of\nImprovement* (houses, commercial\nbuildings, etc.) whereas in the city\nthe mill rate Is applied only to 50\nper cent of the assessed values of\nImprovements, with- the result that\nlt requires more mills In the city\nto represent the same'amount of\ntax in dollars and cents on a given\nvalue of Improvements.\nAnother part of the difference Is\naccounted for by the fact that the\nrural area charges taxes on fixed\nmachinery whereas the city does\nnot, so that the tax load is spread\nover more assessed values and a\nlower mill rate will raise the same\namount ot money. The effect of\nthese two differences In the method\nof calculating tax Is that eight mills\nIn the dty Is equivalent in taxation\nto about five mills In the rural area\nsystem.\nThere Is still another factor which\noperates to make the mill rate in\nthe rural area lower than that In\ntheclty. TJie provincial government\nmakes a special aid, grant to the\nrural area- which has the effect of\nlimiting the mill rate for school\noperating costs to eight mills. This\napplies to operating costs only and\nnot to capital expenditures touch as\nthe building program proposed by\nthis bylaw. However, the provincial\ngovernment also makes grants to\nthe municipalities, notably the\nthree per cent tax grant.\nLast year the amount of aid received by the City of Nelson by\nway of the S.S. and M.A. tax grant\namounted roughly to $76,000. If the\ncity chose to apply this money\ndirectly to the school costs as the\nspecial aid grants are In the rural\narea, the mill rate for school purposes In the City of Nelson would\nactually have been 16 mills, which\nas previously explained is the equivalent of 10 mills In the rural area.\nIn other, words, If the city taxed\nat 75 per cent of improvements and\n75 per cent for fixed machinery and\napplied the municipal aid to education, the mill rates would be-very\nclose.\nVernon Boulevard\nWill Be Removed\nA city boulevard oh Vernon\nStreet between Hall and Josephine\nStreets is'to be removed.\nThe boulevard is hampering re-\nconstruction of the Vernon Street\nretaining wall and will be a traffic block when the wall Is finished and the street is again open\nto traffic. It will probably be. replaced by a concrete Centre-line\ncurb which would be the base for\nlight standards. .  ..;.,-\nCity Council made th?se' d^tlslons\nMonday night\nThree Ministers\nConduct Riles\nFor Duncan, Smith\nFuneral services for Duncan\nSmith, widely-known Nelson man\nwho worked many years with the\nCanadian Pacific Railway, were\nheld frorrf St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral Monday afternoon.\nRt. Rev. F. P. Clark, Bishop of\nKootenay, Very Rev. T. L, Leadbeater, and Rev. Allan Dixon, officiated at the services.\nTwo hymns, \"Breathe On Me\nBreath of God\" and \"The Day Thou\nGavest Lord-Is Ended,\" were sung.\nMembers of the Nelson Branch\nof the Canadian Legion and Ladles\nAuxiliary attended the services In\na body and formed open ranks from\nthe church to the hearse throiyrh\nwhich the flag-draped casket was\nborne.\nAt the graveside In the Returned\nSoldiers' Plot bf Nelson Memorial\nPark where Interment was held,\nPete Markin gave the Legion burial\nservice, after which Legion and\nAuxiliary members deposited poppies oh the casket.\nPallbearers were Reeve Harper\nand Norman Brown, Canadian Legion members, and Keith LePage,\nHarold Dow, R. B. Stewart and\nH. R. Ypunger.\nMr. Smith, who was born in\nAberdeen, Scotland, served 48 years\nwith the 'Canadian Pacific Railway\nCompany - as brldgeman, foreman,\nroadmaster and bridge and building master. He has lived in B.C. 20\nyaers and in Nelson since 1941. He\nlived here and in Penticton previous to coming back in 1941. He\nretired in 1946. Mr. Smith died at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nFriday at the age of 71.\nOld Con Game\nFails On Traillte\nTRAIL, B. C\u2014Dr. J. M. Burnett\nof Trail has been the intended victim of a Mexican version of the\neld Spanish prisoner con game\nwhereby a prison inmate appeals to\nsympathy in an effort, to exhort\nmoney.\nA letter forwarded to hiip from\nhis previous address in Washington requested his trust In a \"very\ndelicate matter\" in which the sum\n$450,000 hidden in the secret compartment of a trunk deposited in a\nIT. S. custom house, was at stake.\nThe author of the letter who signed himself, F, also stated that the\nentir^ future of his dear daughter\nwas also at stake. ._\nThe letter stated that It would\nbe necessary fbr Dr. Burnett to\ncome to Mexico and pay the expenses incurred in releasing the\ntrunk for which he would be rewarded one-third part of the total\nsum. The man, who said he was in\ncharge of a prison school, gave the\nname and address of a third ..party\nfor contact purposes. It, was re-\nquested that a reply be mjde by\nair mail \"due to' serious reasons\nwhich  would  be  revealed  later.\nDr.- Burnett, surprised to receive\nthe letter, said he would like to\ntake a trip to Mexico but not under\nconditions as related In the letter.\nIt \u00ab\u2022 til* Be turned' tsvsr to the police.\nFINED FOR DRIVING\nWITHOUT DUE CARE\nFor driving without due care and\nattention, Llewellyn 3. Schwartzon-\nberger of Trail was fined $25 and\ncosts In Provincial Court here.\nThe charge resulted from an accident at Taghum railway crossing\nwhen Schwartionberger failed to\nmake the turn and crashed into the\nditch. His auto was a total' wreck,\nHe pleaded guilty before Stipendiary Magistrate William Evans.\nNelson Warned Money Order Racket\nA railway express money, order\nracket which reportedly has .spread\nacross Canada'is believed to have\nbroken out in Nelson and police\nwarn against cashing orders without checking.\nA railway -money--order-,--,-t_wT\namount payable hiked from $8 to\n$80, was cashed by a local business\nfirm here Saturday. This fraud followed the pattern of a racket that\nreached significant proportions in\nEastern Canada several weeks ago.\nOnly Saturday Victoria residents\nwere warned by police of the\nracket. .:-_.. _\u201e\nOn Saturday a man who gave his\ntPf\nname as A. Lewis, about 40, wearing a dark shirt and a black cowboy hat trimmed with white, asked\nthe CP. railway ticket office\nan $8 money order made out to\n\"Art Chapman of Penticton.\" The\nclerk, complied. Lawls picked up the\norder and disappeared. Later the\norder allegedly turned, up with a\n\"y\" added to the written eight and\na \"0\" to the numeral 8 to be cashed\nby a local firm. The-check was\nsigned \"Art Chapman of Sslmo,\"\naccording to police.'\nTbe stub telling hoiy mych the\nOrder vas made out for, was torn\naway, police said.\nCouncil Presses\nPost Office Plan\nTha City ia pressing Its idea of\nacquiring the Nelson post office\nbuilding for a city hall.\nCouncil has wired Hon. James\nSinclair stating Its proposal, and\nthe. fact lt was unaware present\nplans of 'the Dominion Government's1 postal department call for\ndemolition *of ths building.\nThe communication is under advisement, and has been referred to\nthe architects.\nFirst Information. received here,\nwas that the department planned\nto expand and -renovate the pqst\noffice building. But lt was learned\nrecently that the building would\nbe torn down, and tenders called\nbefore the end of this year.\nTha City has been looking for\nmeans of replacing ^overcrowded\nand antiquated city hall on Front\nStreet for years, but Councils have\nnot ventured a' construction move\nowing to high costs.\nRecreation\nFacilities Study\nHere Asked\nA request that the city Investigate-further recreational possibilities at Oivlo Centra, and various parks, - Monday night was\npresented to City \u2022 Counoil 'by\nNilson Junlor-Senlor high school\nParent-Teocher Association.    . r*\nCouncillors felt that owns to\n-lateness of the season, tha request\nshould-ba considered by next\nyear's Counoil, Tha P.-T.A. will\nbo asked- to submit suggestions\nbefore the end of th't yea^for\nconsideration when next year's\nestimates are drown up,\nALDERMAN SMITH TO\nCiVll. DEFENCE MEET\nAlderman, W. S. Smith will attend a Civil Defence meeting in\nCranbrook today. Ha is attending in\nplace of Mayor Joseph'Kary,\nPavid Nystrom\nFAINTER AND\nPAPERHANGER\nPHONE 792-X\nApply 512 Anderson Street >\nPHONE   144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nClassified Ads Get Speedy Results\nMM-\n6.W.G.\n^       Men's\nCowboy\nPANTS\nMADE FROM\n11 OZ. BUCKSKIN DENIM\nPre-Shrunk\nThey wear and wear.\n$5.65\nPr.\nWades'\nThe We.\nNELSON \t\nSt Johns   \t\nith\n36\nei\n63\n31\n45\nHalifax   _..\u2022\n37\n53\n45\n62\nOttawa  \t\n41\n63\nKenora  _ _.\n25\n30\n24\n31\nBrandon  \t\n22\n30\n21\n28\n16\n33\nSaskatoon \t\n1,1\n34\nLethbridge ,\t\n22\n55\nCalgary     _\n44\n53\n21\n43\nKamloops  _.\n44\nS3\nPenticton   _  .\n44\n54\nVancouver    \t\n39\n60\nVictoria  ___..\n46\n63\nKimberley    \u201e\n20\n53\nCrescent Valley \t\n27\n57\nKaslo    \u201e\n31\n10\n50\nGrand Forks  _.\n56\nSpokane        \t\n36\n61\nSan Francisco \t\n45\n'64\nNew York    _\n48\n66\nWhitehOrse\n26\n38\nATTENTION\n.03\nCANADIAN   LEGION\nand\nLADIES'   AUXILIARY\nMEMBERS\nMembers ore requested tc\nmeet at the Canadian Legion Tuesday (today) at\n1; 15 p.m. for the purpose of\nattending the funeral of our '\nlate comrade, Capt. Malcolm MacKinnon.\nmw^m\nCapitol Theatre\nThurs., Oct. SO \u20148 p.m.\nDiscussion\nSCHOOL\nTAXES and BYLAW\n\u25a0 \"\u25a0 SPEAKER\nGEORGE\nPEASE\ntBL.\n*\u25a0\nAll Taxpayers\nWelcome\nMEN \u2014 Get That NEW HAT Feeling!\nMILUONS.DO \u2014 SO CAN YOU!      ':-\nFALL and WINTER HATS\nBY BILTMORE and STETSON\nThe Most Complete Range We Have Ever Offered, in\nStyle, in^Price and in Color\u2014With Emphasis on Greys\nand Browns.\n\"THE CAVALIER\"\nFactory Creased. Each    .-._ ;\t\n\"THE ROYAL\"\nEach   x..\u201e\n\"THE PRESIDENT\"\nEach        :..:.\u201e....\u2022.\u201e.......\n\"THE COUNTRY CLUB\"\nEach  '.. '. ',\",;'\u25a0'*\u25a0\u201e\u201e' .\nAll the above with the exception of the \"Cavalier\", are finished with\nBiltmore's exclusive Carter conforming leathers.\nSisdA.\n\"The Stetson Select\" \u201e\n\"The Stetson Whippy\n\"The Stetson Aufc\" M\n\"The Open Road\" .._____.__..\t\nSnap Brim Model* \u2014 Off-the-Faco Models\nWe Also Carry a'Rcfngetbif. |Long Ovals\nNational Hat Week\u2014'October 25th to November 1st\n$ 8.95\n$10.95\n$10.95\n$10.95\nIt\n270\nBox\nTUES.-WEP.\nTUNA FISHi\nSolid, Tip Top *)*f4\n7 OZ     Am I\nSeacrown, Fancy\nSOCKEYE\nSALMON\n421\n!4s. Tin\n'     Kersey's, U. S.\nPEANUT\nBUTTER\nBarrel jar. $|>4_|\nVl gal. size, 4V_ lbs.   I\nFor Cleaner Washdays\nGIANT FABI\nGiant pkg _   1mm\nLIBERTY, Fresh-ln|\nCOFFEE\nYou'll love its f|qvor\nYou'll love its \"T \u00ab||\naroma. Lb    I wt]\nHallowe'en\nPARTY\nNEEDS\nFIEEWOi\n5*    $i\nto     I\nSHOP  EARLY  PLEASE\n11\nMASKS\nSupply limited. Each\nPUMPKINS]\nALL SIZES\nfor Pies or Lanterns\nColored\nPOPPING\nCORN\nShop early JJ P\"|\n10 oz. pkg _ 3^1\nPeek Frean's i\nPLAYBOX\nBISCUITS\nEach biscuit iced toy desiej\n2 Ib. 1 oz. drum ..\nI.lb 2 oz. tin\u2014._\nMelNTOSHi\nAPPLES\nin new handy sized\njunior boxes\nApproximately 18   $*).!\nto 20 lbs  JL\n7 lb. hag 75<\nM\n.1*4*\nFreshly Roasted\nlb. 34c\nHallowe'en]\nSpecial '\nfor Tricks or Treats\nMixed Kisses, Jelly Beaij\nCreams. Ideal to mix wi|\npeanuts\nWeston's 12 ox. pkg.\n35e\nLIBERT\nPHONE 1192\n\u25a0 -\u25a0'22::' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,'--'\n_\nm\n .\u25a0-.:\u25a0 \"\n\u25a0--;\u25a0'   -',\"'\u25a0      .'''\u25a0\nP^IpI__-IImI^^w\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\".} r:\n'M.f\nWarm\nSlippers\nfor-the\nComing .'Cold Mornings\n$Ti95 to $R95\nALL COLORS, STYLES\n, .  AND SIZES\nTHE SHOE\nCentre\ntfjionslBM\n633 Baker 8t\nJOHANNESBURG, South Africa\nI (CP) \u2014 A (Troup of Venetians near\nI here is making glassware said to\nI compare with the best in Europe.\nI The entire \"factory\" was transferred from Venice a few months\nwith experts in the ancient\nsraft.\nSHRINE BALL\nFRIDAY,  NOV. 7\n\u00bb\u00abe\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28, 1952 \u2014 3\nPremiers Invited to\nFernie Highway Meet\nFERNIE\u2014Formal celebration of completion of the\nsurfaced Southern highway across Alberta is set for November 21 in Fernie, with the double purpose of urging completion of unsurfaced gaps in the Southern transprovincial\nhighway as the British Columbia continuation Westward.\nBUILT AT A COST of more than $1,000,000, the new\n16-oven battery of coke ovens of Crow's Nest Pass Coal\nCompany at Michel is going into production. The ovens\nwill produce 170 tons of coke daily from 240 tons of coal,\nand are, shown lier*. with\".auxiliary buildings such M\nscreening plant, cooling towers and'coal bin. ConBtraction\nwas started last Fall.\u2014Daily News,photo.\nPremiers and cabinet ministers\nof both provinces may attend this\nbanquet and public meeting here,\nwhich will be supported by Chambers of Commerce of Medicine Hat,\nLethbridge and other Southern Alberta centres, and Kootenay Cham-\nben of Commerce all the way West\nto Grand Forks. Motor cavalcades\nfrom Medicine Hat and Grand\nForks will converge on tha town.\nBoth.highways are Number 1 in\ntheir respective provinces, and are\nthe route urged for the Trans-\nCanada highway prior to the federal-provincial decision to locate\nCanada's Highway Number 1 via\nthe Kicking Horse, Big Bend and\nFrasaer Valley.\nAlberta's completed asphalt Number I continues West as B.C.'s surfaced Number S for 40 miles to a\npoint West of Fernie, resumes at\nElko for about BO miles to a point\nWest of Cranbrook, resumes at\nYahk for 25 miles, and continues\nfrom Nelson to Rossland with the\nsummit gap to Grand Forks.\nHie meeting will urge immediate\nattention to the gravel intervals,\nwhich amount to Sbmrt 90 miles of*\ntha total approximate 300 miles.\nAlderman James Whit* has been\nchosen by Fernie Chamber ot Com-\nmeree as chairman lor arranging\nthe banquet, with committee members C. T, (Bud) Lynch and Paul\nPolomark.\nMarysville Gets\nNew Fire Truck\nMARYSVILLE \u2014 The Village of\nMarysville's n?w'fire truck made\nits trial run this week, and residents and village officials expressed great satisfaction with its performance.\nT. Leighton has been appointed\nfire chief and J. Bradley, assistant\nchief. Arrangements will be made\nto register volunteer brigade members and practices will get under\nway shortly.\nThe fire truck has a front-mounted pump, capable of pumping 500\ngallons a minute. Also on the truck\nis ar 290-gallon water tank. Hoses\nare tarried on top of the truck\nbody, nozzles fit on the running\nboard and axes and bars on the\nsides.\n#< Kill\nWould you bglleve It?\u2014Over\na mile and one-half of colored\nstreamers at the. 3rd Annual\n\u2022hrlne Bt*, \u2666 \u2022 \u00bb \u25a0\n-Jc' *' \u2014\nS-OWW-T.\nA COMPLETE CHOICE OF\nWELL-APPOINTED AND FULLY\nSERVICED APARTMENTS AND\nHOTEL ROOMS'* MODERATE\nMt\/LCmi* RATES Mmmqo,\nVANCOUVER BC\nPHONE   144  FOR   CLASSIFIED\nYour taste will tell you\nSmoke Player's and your taste will tell you\nwhat mildness really means I\nPlayer's are made from the < costliest\nVirginia tobaccos, specially selected because\nthey are milder.\nAnd Player's freshness brings out all the\nflavour.of these milder tobaccos... makes\nPlayer's the mildest and best tasting cigarette\nyou can smoke I\nTHE NAME \"John Player* G.Sons\" ON THE PACKAGE\nIS YOUR GUARANTEE THAT EVERY CIGARETTE IS FRESH\nBUY A PACKAGE\nrony...\nSAy\n5 Kootenay Towns Working\nOn Hospital Improvements\nHospital facilities in at least five\nKootenay centres are being improved, or are being renewed.\nConstruction or pending construction jobs in Kimberley, Creston, Golden, Trail and Rossland are\nconstituting the biggest all-round\nimprovement in hospital facilities\nin tbe district at one time, for many\nyears.\nAt Creston, Bennett and White,\ncontractors fbr the new $440,000\nCreston Valley district hospital, are\nstarting with the hope they can\naccomplish some work before Winter sets in. The proposition was approved by ratepayers only a few:\nweeks, ago.\nKimberley Hospital Board is considering construction of a modern\nhospital to replace the two-storey\nframe McDougall Hospital. The\nexisting hospital was originally a\nConsolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany project constructed in the\ndays when Kimberley was a very\nsmall town.\nREPAIRS AT GOLDEN\nTenders have been requested for\ngeneral repairs and new alterations\nby the Golden Hospital Board.\nOn the bench above East Trail,\na new 150-bed hospital which will\nbe the finest in the Kootenay is\nbeing constructed to replace ihe\nlong-outdated Trail-Tadanac Hospital. The total cost is estimated at\nabout $2,140,000, two-thirds of which\nwill be provided by provincial and\nfederal governments.\nA new two-storey addition is providing new and modern kitchen and\nlaundry facilities for the Mater\nMlsericordiae Hospital at Rossland.\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) \u2014 With\nhome-grown tobacco still short and\nheavy cuts being made in imports,\nletters to the editor in many newspapers are suggesting Australians\nshould cultivate a taste for smoking\ngum leaves. Cigarets made entirely\noi dried leave! of the blue gum tree\nwere tried commercially in the 1920s\nbut didn't catch on.\nTrail Business\nTRAIL \u2014 Interior Stages Ltd. has\nexpanded into new quarters, adjoining-he old budding on Columbia Avenue and added a gas station\nand- auto repair service to its facili.\nues. \\ v\nThe., new building was open tor\ninspection Monday.\nThe hew structure includes smart\noffices,..the:gas station, and a big\ngarage for auto repairs and repair\nof the. company's' own buses and\ntrucks. The old garage is mainly\nused now for storage ot company\nequipment\nThe sinart business office is\nsecretary's   dream.   Finished   with\nwood panelling, it is brightened by\nbig picture windows facing Columbia Avenue arid the river.\nThe service station off Columbia,\nis a' curved white stucco structure,\nbrightened with panels of glass\nblock,, ahd includes rest rooms for\ntravellers.\nthe remainder of the ner\/ building\nis of reinforced concrete and con.\ncrete block structure, with laminated two by four roof. This section\nis kept bright with lots of window\nspace.\nThe main repair garage measures\n75 feet by 80 feet, and is fitted with\nhydraulic lifts, work benches, acetylene electric welling apparatus and\nall the appurtenances of an auto repair shop. The \"whole is steam heat\ned, Half of this sector, with two folding doors 12 feet wide and 13 feet\nhigh is reserved for auto repairs,\nand the remainder with bigger doors\n18 feet wide and 14 feet high, is used\nfor repairs of the company's own\nbuses, and any other heavy equipment\n\"Contest All Seats\". . .\nLiberals Will Stage\nCome-Back\u2014Turnbull\nCanada's Mildest (Wtte\nTRAIL \u2014 Former Health and\nWelfare Minister A. D. Turnbull\nexpressed the optimistic prediction\nthat the Liberals would again hold\nthe reins of power in British Columbia in the keynote address Saturday to tne annual meeting of the\nRossland-Trail Liberal Association.\nMr. Turnbull compared the principals of Liberalism against the\nnon-existant policies of the present\nSocial, Credit Government and\nbased his belief on the overwhelming desire, of the people to have\nsound, r stable government.\nC. W. (McBey, retiring secretary-\ntreasurer, of the Association gave\nhis report '.on the recent meeting\nof the provincial advisory council\nwhile, R.,T_. Mitchell of Rossland\nwon \\w_animous approval for his\nresolution that Liberal candidates\nb_ nominated for provincial . and\nfederal ridings as soon as possible.\nMr. Mitchell's resolution will receive consideration of the association at its first meeting in the new\nyear and it is believed that candidates for both the Federal and\nProvincial House will be nominated at that time.\nThe recommendation followed\nthe suggestion of speakers who\nurged that the Liberal party contest all seats in provincial and federal elections.\nAnother resolution adopted at\nthe meeting was that a central publicity committee be esetablished in\nthe West Kootenay region for compiling and dispersing information\non Liberalism and its principals.\nJim   Leamv   of   Castlegar   was\nelected to succeed retiring presi\ndent Clayton Stewart while Doug\nWetmore waa elected secretary-\ntreasurer following the retirement\nof Mr. McBey after 12 years in that\npost.\nOther officers elected include:\nMrs. N. J. .Backus of Trail, first\nvice-president! Don Cahiozzl of\nRossland, second vice-president;\nMrs. Clair, Saunders of Castlegar,\nthird, vice-president; Al Johnson of\nFruitvale, fourth , vice-president\nand' John 'Forrester of' Trail, fifth\nvice-pitesident.! ' '.<       '.'\nIT\nHear\n\"Dollars and\n%;fcenteM  \u25a0\nCourts...   McHardy Agencies\n6:30 p.m. Tues. and Thurs.\nTRAIL RESIDENT\nPASSES AT 38\nTRAIL \u2014 Gabriel John Benware\ndied early Monday morning in\nTrail-Tadanac Hospital after a\nshort illness. He was 38.\nMr. Benware was a CM. & S\nCompany employee and worked in\nthe zinc tank rooms. He was born\nat Sarnia, Ont\nSurvivors include his wife' Pauline; two children, Catherine, eight\nand Robert, six; two sisters, Margaret and May;-one brother Jack;\nand his. parents at. Sarnia.\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nLUMBAGO (Lame Back)\nWhen your back la stiff and vary painful\nand it's an effort for yon te stoop or bend,\ntaka the remedy that has brought swift;\nsafe relief to thousands\u2014Temp!_to_t'_\nT-R-C's. Dent suffer from the nagging\nmisery of Lumbago a day longer Sum you\nlave to. Get T-RrG's today. eSflk $1.-5\net drug counters, !\u2022_40\nNelson\nPharmacy\n\"TOUR FORTRESS OF\nHEALTH\"\n\u2022 PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS\n\u2022 SUNDRIES\n* * *\nListen to\nDrama ef Medicine\nOver CKLN 6 p.m.\nPhone 1203    \u2014     Res. 3-4-1.\n433 Josephine St.\nFund Total Hiked\nBy Ainsworth Mine\nAINSWORTH - A donation by\nthe management and employees ot\nthe Yale Lead and Zinc Mine here\nhas boosted the total in contributions to the Canadian Arthritis and\nRheumatism Society in Ainsworth.\nThe management and employees\ngave $47, to bring the total to $82.\nNelson\nCollege\nof Commerce\nHome Furnishing Building\nDay or Night\nClasses\nREGISTER   TODAY\nDONT DELAY\nPhone 38\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Claiiified Way\nNew Arrivals in\nAccessories\nTenna-Lite Plexiglas Door Visors\nbe lowered  In driving rain, anew oi\nWindows\nsleet\n\u2022 Wheel Muffs from SOc to $1.19\n\u2022 Magnetic Dash Thermometer I9<\n\u2022 Vacuum Cup Thermometer SO*\n\u2022 Trico Motor Fan $4.95\n\u2022 Automatic Safety Signal $8.95\nLets driver behind you know when to atop\u2014slow\u2014go.\nand a host of other auto accessories\nNELSON HARDWARE\nFRIENDLY   SERVICE'\n446 Bokc\nIN FIRE SAFETY WITH THIS\nFIRE-DEFYING\nPLANNING TO BUILD OR REMODEL?\nThen start right by bniiding fireproof\npartitions of Johns-MaimHe Asbestos\nFlexboard. Here's a braiding board with\nonlim-ted uses both indoors and oot.\nMade ot asbestos and cement, Flexboard\nis literally a \"sheet of stone\" yet it can\nbe sawed and nailed like wood. It's ideal\nfor basement and attic \u2014 kitchens and\nbathrooms, too. k never needs painting\nfor preservative purposes bnt paint goes\non smooth if desired. Flexboard comes\nin large 4 x 8 foot sheets. For full details\non this versatile asbestos braiding board\nsee your J-M dealer or write\nCanadian Johns-Manville,\nDept. 32, 1<>9 Bay St.,\nXocootOj Ontamx\nWI ASBESTOS .\nModem asbestos \"ioagfc\", ib At\nform of fireproof asbestos mttikfc\ntoday wards off mart ba_s '\nonce took tragic tofi of i _\nwealth and toman lk\u00ab. '\nto asbestos ctottrfng far tbe fit*\nfighter, fixe departments MB bat_tt\nable to cope -with seoriaB.    \t\ntog flames. Asbestos owen<l.._\ntect the housewife fmo *^iwit\neven the theatre 70a extend \u00bb\neafer thanks 10 an Moaner\nWhen a giant deeridt fita a burnt\nload and \u25a0\u00ab\u00bb it dcmwnjgMJf k: dg\nperms on asbestos triCMOO materials\nfor safe. satCj iwaidfe <\u00abtogfc TOwg\nthe office tttwatot retnolcs n__B\nhour loads smoocblr its 1\nthat takes the sttai\nManville  contra\nJ^lndwtriai ] .\t\nequipment ir \u2014 *-\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u00ab-\u2014-\nsidjsoerdiztd <\t\nS-OT\nJohns-Manville\nASBESTOS FLEXBOARD\n\u2666Aiwriwr 3eam Mo-v-U-j-iHm ___wi\n*\nJohns-Manville\nFIRST IN ASBESTOS FOR EVERY PURPOSE\nBUILDING MATERIALS - BRAKE LININGS\nTRANSITE PIPE - ACOUSTICAL MATERIALS\nINDUSTRIAL  INSULATIONS - PACKINGS\nNELSON MACHINERY CO. LTD.\nPhone 1139\nB.C\nDistributors fer tha Interior\n214 HaU St.\n1424 Cedar St.\nArctic Insulators & Roofing Ltd.\n.Nelson, B.\nAGENTS\nPhone 955\nThe Fabro Building & Supply Co. Ltd.\nKimberley, B. C.\nAGENTS\nPhone 4\u00ab\nPhone 444\nD. B. Merry Lumber Co. Ltd.\nTroll, B. C.\nAGENTS\n1080 Spokane St.\n^^- \u25a0\"\"**\n.-.}.     ^.V'v.i'i'--\"'.-\u2022\"'>'.';v.\u25a0\u25a0.-''. . v ..\n __\n \/Sb(o\nJfelamt Hailyiii    LETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nEstablished April 22. 1903\nBritish Coliunbte'i\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished .very morning except Sunday by th.\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorised as Second Class Mall,\nPost Oftlco Department, Ottawa,\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n' THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 1 t\nTuesday, October 28, 1952\nSlocan, the Lucerne\nTHe Slocan is a lovely lady, Indeed,\nand especially so when she changes\nher garb to the reds and golds, yellows\nand browns of Autumn. Then she is at\nher most colorful, and a sight more\nthan ever worth seeing.\nFor the motorists wanting a Sunday drive or a weekend tour, we can\nthink of nothing better than travel\nthrough the pastoral loveliness of the\nSlocan Valley\u2014visiting Slocan City,\nSilverton, New Denver; then, perhaps,\non to Nakusp in beautiful setting on\nthe Arrow Lakes, or up the historic\ntrail to Sandon and down to Kaslo, to\nreturn via the shores of Kootenay\nLake.\nWhat can you expect on such a\ntrip? Well, just about everything that\ngoing \"out in the country\" means.\nThere are curving roads past the winding, pleasing Slocan Biver; tjiere are ,\nsights of silos, harvest-filled barns, and\nbrown earth rid of. chores for another\nseason ... the farm dog barking at the\ngate and farm animals quiet In the\nfields; Perhaps there will be sight oi\nmuskrat or beaver, deer or bear to\nremember. With the sun on the water,\nSlocan Lake is a sight that deserves\nthe description \"breath-taking\". . . .\nThrow a rock from the heights of Cape\nHorn and it'll disappear from sight\nbefore it hits the water; beyond, one\nman's desire to create a memorial has\nprovided one of the most unique of\nthis Province's viewpoints.\nSuch a journey takes a traveller\nthrough towns whose very appearance\n,tells the story of their activities; lumber, mining, agriculture, mostly; hamlet and town in a gemlike setting to\nrival any Swiss postcard spot. Glacier\nice, cloud-snagging peaks, high-pitched\nhills, green woods are backdrop to it\nall.\nYou can see the busy present or\nyou can drive an old-time stagecoach\nroad for a glimpse right back into history. You can chat with an oldtimer\nwho knew Sandon in the hectic boom\nof the nineties, or with a young engineer in a mill, busy with the new activities of the present. You can talk\nto retired folk who've found contentment there, and to the younger ones,\nstriving for pavement, more power,\nand preparations for a tourist industry, yet in its infancy, but bound to\ncome. Yessir, you can find a mighty\nlot of pleasantness in the Silvery\nSlocan.\nLooking Backward\n25 YEARS AQO\nFrom the Nelion Dally Newi, Oot 28, 1927\nJohn Douglas Forin, eldest son of Judge\n3. A. Forin, hss received word that he has\nbeen awarded the Confederation gold medal\noffered by the Diamond Jubilee Committee\nthrough Queen's University* as first, of three\nprizes won in the lately-held essay contest.\n60 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelson Dally Newa, Oct. 28, 1902\nGeorge Hunter, who has been shooting at\nBalfour, brought back a dozen plump grouse.\nJacob Dover has returned from his annual\npurchasing trip to New York, Montreal and\nToronto.\nLatten may ba published over a nam\nd. plume, but th. aotual signature of tho\nwriter must b. given to the Editor as\nevidence of oood faith, Anonymous letters\ngo In the waste paper basket\nSeeks Old Timers to\nConfirm Brooklyn Birth\nTo the Editor:   - ..-.,..,\nSir\u2014I am attempting to obtain a birth\ncertificate tor my wife, Agnes Beatrice Ka-\ndow, whose maiden name was Agnes Beatrice\nMcManns. She was born July 1,1890', in Brooklyn, B.C., and her parents we're John Henry\nMcManns and Sellna. McManns. There appeared In the Nelson Tribune, July 6, 1699,\n\"the following announcement: .-\u2022''\n\"The people of Brooklyn had a celebration\non Saturday. They commemorated tho 32nd\nbirthday ot the Dominion as well as th. birth\nof the daughter ot Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McManns of the International Hotel\/   -.*'\u25a0'\u25a0-\u25a0>\nThis daughter was Agnes Beatrice. I was\nwondering if any of your readers knew the\nMcManns or could recall the birth of their\ndaughter. It would be a great help In establishing her birth, and would.be greatly-appreciated by both my wife and myself..\nC. F.KADOW.\n1129 West 90th Street, '\nLos Angeles, 44, California.\nBetty's Weekly Letter to:\nDear Jane:\n(Editor's note: This weekly column Is\npassed on to the reader as the thoughts\nand observations of a Nelson housewife\nand community worker.)\nDear Jane:\nOn street corners, at tea parties, and oyer\nback fences, there are animated discussions\ngoing on this week. The suggested toll-bridge,\nthe school by-law, the sprinkling regulations\nand s housing scheme fflr Nelson and district\nall seem to be in the limelight\nSome of the oldtlrners who watched the\nengineers take soundings 40 years ago oant\nseem to get very enthused about talk of a\nbridge. They'll Relieve it when they see it.\nThose who believe the Government should do\nthe building instead of private enterprise, and\nthose who dislike the thought of digging down\nevery time they cross the bridge, are all expressing their opinions. But I guess most of us\nwould be glad to see a bridge built under\nalmost any circumstances.\nIWs cloudy weather makes Us think our\nwater problems may be over. For once there\nwill be few complaints when and it lt rains.\nIn the 'meantime some of us our taking our\ncup of water out to our favorite rosebush.\nOpinions.about the school by-law and th.\nproposed newhigh school for Nelson go from\none extreme to the other. Some say there is\nnothing .6b good for the school children, while\nothers say anything is good enough for them.\nSeems to me we want our schools to teach\nour young people about their heritage of democracy and,of Christianity. We want our\nyoung people to be fitted to lead useful lives\nin home, in community and In the world; to be\nable to take the disappointments and knocks\nof life along With the joys. We want teachers\ntrained to teach these things, and well-lighted,\nwell-equipped, clean, healthy classrooms in\nwhich to teach them.\nI suppose you noticed in the Daily News\nthe pictures of the suggested high school.\nDidn't it look good to you? I think our local\nSchool Board is smart to 'propose such a practical type of building, and to swing away from\nthe ultra-modern, sprawling, fancy, hard-to-\nheat and costly-to-erect type. Nothing could\nbe more absurd than to see a'child come out of\na not-fit-for-humans house and enter an out-\nof-thls-world school.\nAnd speaking of homes, It looks as\nthough the ball  It really going  to get\nrolling, If we haven't homes for people,\nwe haven't much, have we? Many tenants\nare afraid to have the truth about their\nliving quarters known because thy know\nthey would not pass the tests of safety\nand sanitation. But It li all they can get\nat a price they oan pay.\nThe talk seems to be of houses that could\nsell at a reasonable price. .As one editorial\nsaid, \"To permit families'of moderate means\nto own their own homes and  thus -create\nreasonable rental for others.\" Well, they trust\nsome of these landlords more than I do, for\nI'm telling you, Jane, you wouldn't believe\nwhat some are  charging for very  inferior\naccommodation. Can't see that this would do\nenough for the ones who need help the most\u2014\nthe renters with children.\nIf I had (100,000 I'd like to build a two-\nstorey apartment block. It would be shaped\n? Questions 1\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of personi\nasking questions Will not be published,'\nThere It no charge for thlt tervlce.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL exoept Where there It obvious\nnsottslty for prlvaoy.\nThe American Voters Speak \u2666 \u2666.\nC, A. C, Nelson\u2014I-would Ilk. tb work in tb.\nStates. Would you pitas* let me know\nwhat to do about itf.    .\n'.'Writ, to the U. S.;. Consul, R, I, Smyth,-\nS55 Burrard Street, Vancouver, B. C, for full\nparticulars.\nM. W\u201e Chapman Camp\u2014Could you please tell\n. m. where I can find information about\ngoing on a visit to Mexico? Alio, I have\nlost my birth certificate. I was barn In.\nPennsylvania; jny husband Is a naturalized citizen, of Canada. Where would I\nobtain a copy of my certificate,should.it\nbe needed? :\u25a0,\u25a0\u25a0:. \" ' '\u25a0;';\nWrite to Ricordo Almanja Gordon, Mexican Consul, 103 West Hastings Streat, Vancouver, giving 'hlm:lull' particulars of yourself\nand your husband. For copy of birth certificate, write to tha State Capitol, HarrlBburg,\nPennsylvania.\nA. d! H\u201e Port Crawford\u2014Where can I get th.\nB. C, Gazette?\nWrite to the Queen's Printer, Victoria,\nB. C. Single copies are IS cents, yearly subscription $3.\nH. M., Nelson\u2014I hav. some old pictures, engravings and etchings, dating back to 1833.\nWhere could I obtain Information aa to\nthe value of these?\nWrite to the National Gallery, Ottawa,\ngiving full description, nam. of engravers,\netchers, etc\nReader, Kimberley\u2014Please give, head office\naddress of the Slocan Base Metals.\nSlocan . Bus- Metals,  Ltd.,  1349 Marin.\nDrive, West Vancouver, B. C.\nG. A, New Denver\u2014Where can I obtain materials and pattern needed for knitting\nan Indian sweater?\nThe Children's Shop at Nelson last week\nadvertised these patterns and wools, ,\nSAMUEL LUBELL, author and political analyst gets United\nStates election campaign dope from the people.\nA tit-less doorbell ringer, Mr. Lubell goes directly to the voters\nto find out what they'ro thinking politically, and why they feel th.\nw\u00bby_tn.y do..\nThen he charts their voting behavior\u2014by stats, county, ward\nand precinct. Ho's been doing if for years\u2014in tho big cities. In the\nvillages and hamlets, and in the farmlands.\nHis appraisal of the voting prospects in this year's Important\nnational election Is based on those unmatched records and on what\nhe's learning in the front-porch talks'he's now having.\n\u2022 Schoolhouse, 1952\n(Christian Science Monitor)\nThe Little Red Schoolhouse at ths Crossroads was picturesque snd st least had the\nbeauty ot simplicity. But It is probable the\nsurvivors look more attractive to the tourists\nof today than the originals did to the occupants of yesterday, when too much fresh air\nleaked in mornings and not enough after\nthose pot-bellied stoves really worked up enthusiasm\nWe have a theory that nostalgia for little\nred schoolhouses was engendered by those\ngrim and graceless structure* of a half century or more ago to which a sadder and Wiser\ngeneration have added needed excrescences in\nthe form of chutes and stairways.\nThen came what school men have come\nto call the \"Ittner Era\". And both pedagogy\nand the landscape owe a debt to William Itt-\nner's use of good basic lines and up-to-date\nstructural features. But even these sightly\nbuildings had a sameness inside and out of\nboth design and decoration. In the custom of\nthe period they were often painted throughout\nwhat one great modern architect once pensively termed \"a nice jail grey\".\nThe architects and other officials who attended the recent convention of the National\nCouncil ot Schoolhouse Construction in Boston\nhave been talking In still different terms:\nlight space, variety, color, movement, \"bringing the outdoors in\"\u2014and imperative economy, too.\n\"What is It that is needed for every aspect\nof the educational Job?\" they seemed to be\nsaying. \"We'll make the architecture serve lt.\"\nYour Horoscope\nTry Something unusual today for entertainment, and plan for an Interesting.week.\nYour next year should be Important, active,\nbusy, with gains foreseen. A strong, forceful\ncharacter should be looked for In the child\nbom today,. .        *   -.-'.,\nlike a wide hairpin. Each home would have\nits own front door and back door, and there\nwould be a large play-space at the back. \u25a0\nThere would be a sign on lt\u2014\"Children\nWanted\u2014Fathers and Mothers Welcome Too.\nRent Reasonable.\" Of course, I don't have\n$100,000, but if 100 people had $1000 each, or\n1000 people had $100 . . . well . . .\nBETTY BLYTHE.\nBy SAMUEL LtiB-LL\nA feeling of disgust with tha\ncsmpaignlng of both parties is\nspreading among the nation's voters,\nSome persons, in fact, ore so \"sick\nof all this mud-sUhging\" that they\ntalk of not voting for either candidate. Others say they have stopped paying any attention to the\n\u2022lection bgttle. :\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 \"\n, On Whitney Street In Boston, for\nexample, an elderly arsenal worker, always Democratic th the past,\ncomplained, \"Itls terrible the way\nthey're carrying on! Don't they\nceire what happens to the country?\nAn enemy IS watching us all the\ntime, What does the enemy think\nwhen he reads what the\" Candidates\nare saying about each other? .If\nthis keeps up I'm. going to stay\nhome , on .lection'day. I'll, be a\nbetter patriot than those who vote.\"\nTypical of other comments in\nthis same vein that. I havo received\nwas the remark 6f a Philadelphia\nveteran: \"There's too much scuttle,\nbutt in this campaign.\" An Iowa\nfarmer wrote me recently, \"The\nway th. dirty mud is being smeared I don't think halt the people\nwill know how to yote.\" In Glen\nView, Illinois, a 28-year-old buyer\nfelt, \"there's no way of finding out\nwho is telling the truth. The newspapers only confsue you. Everyone\nseems to be lying\"\nAnother veteran was indignant\nat the furor kicked up over the income tax returns of the candidates.\n\"Whose business is it bow much\nmoney a man makes?\" he demanded,' \"as long as he' doesn't break\nany laws ahd pays his taxes. All\nthis prying Into people's personal\naffairs! Why don't they stop calling each other names and tell us\nwhat they ar. going to do if they\nare elected?\"\nFrom the response given m. by\nvoters In recent weeks there is no\nquestion that this sense of disgust\nwith the campaign has grown since\nPresident Harry S. Truman started\nhis whistle-atop tours on-behalf of\nGov. Adlal E. Stevenson.\nHELPING  OR HURTING?\nWhether Truman is helping or\nhurting the Democratic chances is\nmore difficult to Judge. Probably he\nIs doing sonje ot both. His attacks\non Elsenhower have been repeated\nback to me by Democratic voters,\nindicating that Truman's talks are\ngiving Democratic voters talking\npoints, phrased in blunt, street-corner language, for arguing against\nEisenhower   ..\nOther Democrats, however\", say\nthey resent Truman's prominence\nin the campaign, Commented one\nBostonlan, who operates a diaper\nservice, \"I'm against Truman but I'll\nstill vote for Stevenson. I didn't like\nTruman's twisting Eisenhower's remark about Oliver Cromwell. Truman was right, though, when he\nsaid if Eisenhower knew how to\nend the Korean War he should\nspeak up and say how.\"\nThus far I have not run Into a\nsingle instance of any person chang-\n! lng his or her vote\u2014in either di\nrection \u2014 because   of   Truman's\nspeeches,   '   . '\u25a0\nStevenson's own campaigning, on\nthe oher hand, Is winning over fair\nnumbers of persons who started\nout earlier this year as Elsenhower\nrooters, A young loctor'a wife in\nStuyvesant Town, N.Y,, told - me,\n\"My family y\/ap among the few\nRepublicans In Oklahoma. I was\nfor Ike against Taft, Stevenson has\ngreat charm. He daesn't talk down\nto the.ybterr I'll vote for him.\"\nOnly rarely have I encountered\nanyone who praises Eisenhower's\nspeeches. Even persons who intend\nto vote for him concede that Stevenson It making more effective\ntalks, \"I wish Stevenson were a\nRepublican,\" said one'elderly Republican in Indianapolis. \"He seems\nlike a fine man. I'm tempted to vote\nfor him but I couldn't stand another\nfour years of the Democrats.\"\nDOESN'T SAY MUCH\nIn Miami, an employee ot a public utility,\" who had voted Democratic iri the past but Is swinging\nRepublican, confessed, \"Elsenhower\ndoesnlt say much In his speeches. I\nlike Stevenson's a lot1 better. He\nmay even be the better man, But I\njust feel the Democrats have been\nIn too long and It's time to let things\nswing the other way.\"\nOther    Eisenhower    supporters\nDalhousie Honors U.B.C. Law Dean\nHALIFAX, Oct VllS$)~L Dal-, of Nova Scotia; Dean, George't.\nhousle University Law School,\nwhose graduates include prim, ministers and other notable contributors to Canada's legal and Industrial\nheritage, marked an eventful occasion by conferring honorary degrees\non four Canadians'and an American, Saturday.\nFor the first-time In its (9-year\nhistory, Canada's pioneer law school\nwill have a building for Its exclusive\nuse on the University's trim, willow-\nlandscaped campus.\nThe ivy-covered, stone building,\nwhich it has officially taken over\nhav. stated they will be voting tor\nhim even though \"he talks as if he\ndoesn't know what he stands tor.\"\nThe reactions of the voters, In\nshort, do not Indicate that they feel\nStevenson has been talking over\ntheir heads. If anything, Stevenson's\ntype ot campaigning has been a political asset. His heaviest campaign\nliabilities have been first that Eisenhower enjoys the enormous advantage of a hero's fame while Stevenson Is a'relative unknown, and\nsecond, that campaigns st best\nchange only a small proportion of\nthe votes.\nMost of the Democats shifting to\nElsenhower, I have found, decided\nthey wanted a change long before\nStevenson was nominated. Although\nStevenson is winning back a good\nportion of these persons, in every\nneighborhood I go Into I still find\nEisenhower running stronger than\nGov. Thomas E. Dewey did four\nyears ago.\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\".'.'\nCurtis, University ot British Colum-1\nbin low school; M.r Justice Ivan\nC. MacDonald of th. Supreme Court I\nwas formerly shared with arts students but completion of the $1,600,000 I\narts - and administration building j\ngave them a home of their own.\nReceiving   honorary  degrees., of I\nDoctor of Law were Justice Vincent j\nRand of the Supreme Court ot Can*)\nada, Andre Taschereau, president ot\nthe Canadian Bar Association, and..\nDean Irwin N. Griswold, Harvard\nUniversity law schooL\nPEOPLE ANGRY\nOVER TV BAN\nLONDON, Oct. M (Reuters) \u2014\nPrime Minister Churchill, hounded\nby indignant protests over the decision to ban television camera's\nfrom the coronation ceremony next\nyear, today called a special cabinet\nsession to help him draft a statement.._\nto road to the Commons Tuesday, 1\nIt is considered unlikely that he f\nwill be able to do much about getting a reversal' of the decision, officially announced last Monday by\nthe coronation committee on \"advice from the cabinet\" Observers\nssys the best he can do is hint that\na reconsideration would be welcome. <|\nObjections to the ban, which will\nlet some 20,000,000 viewers sea th.\nprocessions and trappings next June\nbut will bar them from the actual I\ncrowning in Westminster Abbey, I\nbroke out in an angry rash in today's |\nSunday press.\nPUBLIC TUNE\nbif, $JimIiiL\nGremlin's cartoons will appear on this page from time to time. Readers are .\nInvited to send suggestions to Editorial Cartoons,-Nelson Daily News. '\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nfcgwm. n. hmm Osmm\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nTHE LAST VMS HE4DSTOJE\nTALKED ABOUT HIS LOLLI- .\nPOP C?AyS,IT WAS THE  -<\nAHD SHE      >><30VEI5NESS WHO HELD\nJUST 60TTHfCU6H\\ \u00abS LITTLE HOT H4ND-\nToday's Bible Thought\nJesus abolished the law of parsimony and substituted the lsw of\nabundance, Humanity is just beginning to understand the boundless abundance of nature. No one\nhas seriously probed the resources\nof the soul. God's children are richer\nthan you think..\nJesus said: Give, md It shall be\ngiven to you.\u2014Luke 6:38.\nCtunLd(aL\nOuia<,w4TSpig,7He\nVWEELCMlU-mEy'U-\nDOITEVB?ynME'\nTtunxAnoAriPop\nthe hatu. hat-to\nLois Wilson),\nft,   NEW YORK Cny,\nt'it\nThei   way   Helem  criticizes\n' everybody,   you'd   think   she\ndidn't care whether folks like\nher Or not But p little praise\nmakes her happy as a June bug.\n'\n  \u2014\u2014\u2014\n\/6\u00a37\n'It Ptyijo Buy Quality\"\n..... Be Sure to Spe\nOur Complete Stock of\nB. F. Goodrich\nRubbers and\nQverslioes\n. '..Top Quality\n..   Competitive Prises . '\nR. ANDREW\nLEADi-RS   IN   FOOTTASH10I.\nEstablished 1902\nNelson Social\n'. \u2022 _ __\u25a0\u2014,, __.__ PHONE    144 ,\nTrail members and their wives attended \"ladies' night\"\nof Scottish Bite here Friday night.   \u25a0\nFROM TRAIL\nMr. and Mrs.\nArt Irwin, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Mc-\nBey, Mr. and Mrs. Don McLean,\nMr snd Mrs. F. Morrlsh, Mr. and\nMrs. T. W. Matheson and Mr, and\nMrs. A. R. Rotter were among those\nfrom Trail attending the \"ladies'\nnight\" sponsored by Kootensy\nLodge of. Perfection, Scottish Rite,\nat the Hume Hotel, Friday night\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022    \u25a0\nTO PRINCE GEORGE . . . Constable C,' P. Wasson left Monday\nfor Prince George where he has\nbeen transferred by the R.C.M.P.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWHEAT PROVINCE ... Mr.\nand Mrs. Edgar-Kulchyckl ot Kin-\nLove Problems . \/. ',,.\u2022''; '  ,';\nNeighbors Who Come Too\nOften Can Cause Trouble\nBy JANE ATKINSON\nDear Miss Atkinson:\nCould you tell me how to handle\n\u25a0 situation that Is perhaps not serious, but very annoying? There are\nsome people we have known slight-\n- ly for sortie time, ahd who we once\nInvited to a party. NoW all of a sudden they come to our house every\nevening, sometimes just the husband, but more often both of them\nand the children as well, tfly children have always gone tQ bed\nearly; theirs are night owls. On\nweekends, even when .we have\n.other friends visiting us, If we so\nmuch as .say -hello to them they\neome over and join us.\nCan't you have' friends without\nthem popping In at all times? I\ndont want to make enemies, but I\ndon't want to see these people every\nday and eveihg. We like a Utile\nprivacy In our home life, ljut they\nL\nPhone 88}\nTOWLER\nFuel A  Trantfer\nNolson. B.C\nlook Your\nALWAYS!\nwith professionol care!\nHove Your Foil,\nPermanent NOW\nto suit your type\nof hair.\nAll latest hair styles\nto suit you.\nCall at'\nHAIRDRESSING SALON\nLocated Above Bonnie's Grocery\nPhone 1236, 1117 Front St.\ndon't seem to ever want to be home.\n: B.A.\nDear B. A.:\u2014I don't heed to tell you;\nof course, that the trouble here is\nthat these people lack the consideration and understanding that are\nan important part of good manners.\nIf they had thesa qualities. - they\nwould know that you wouldn't\nwant them coming Into your home\nat all hours, whenever they pelased.\nNaturally, ybii don't want to\nmake enemies, but at the same time,\nI think it seems apparent that you\nwill have to take -some definite\nstep to make these neighbors\nchange their ways. I suggest that\nthe next time they come over uninvited, you excuse yourself on\nsome pretext or other as politely\nas possible, either pleading an engagement, or work you have to do\naround the 'house, or things you\nhave to dp for the children\nJust because they haven't sense\nenough to put their children to bed\nat a proper hour, don't let that keep\nyou from getting yours to bed at\nthe time you think right If you con'\nsistently follow the plan of explaining that you are too busy to\nvisit or that you have to go out\nor something of the sort, it should\nnot be long before they take the\nhint.\nIf they get offended, it's too bad,\nbut you can't help it If you handle\nlt as tactfully as possible, however,\nthey should catch.on without having to have it made so plain to them\nthat they will resent it\nDon't Rely Too Much\nOn Foundation Wear\ntuns design look like an ill-fitting\nsack, says Cecelia Hewlett a Leeds\ndeportmdnt teacher.\nThe lazy, figure, she said, belongs\nto women who cannot or will not\nmake the effort to move properly.\nToo many rely on foundation gar-,\nments to keep their figure in shape,\nallowing the upper torso to droop.\nImprovement Is largely a mater ot\nwill-power, fjMiss Hewlett added.\nMannequins .knew the importance of\nmuscle-control, particularly of the\nstomach muscles.\nNakusp Notes\nNAKUSP \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Bert\nMcRobert, who have spent the past\nmonth visiting friends in the three\nprovinces Alberta, Saskatchewan\nana Manitoba, have returned* to their\nhome. =ii\nMr. and Mi*. Roy Armstrong have\nas their house guest Mrs. Armstrong's mother, Mrs. V. \u00a3cott of\nWetasklwani,1 Alta.\nAlbert J. Harrison has returned\nfrom a 10-week holiday In England.\nHe visited many of his relatives and\nfriends in Kent Essex, and Yorkshire,\nMrs. Harry Vaughn, who has visit\ned her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nMcWhlrter, has left for her home in\nVancouver.\ni\ns 1\nWell-dressed  men -know\nwhat an Important part\nreally fine dry cleaning\nplays in .their appearance! Our cleaning and\npressing il unsurpassed!\nCell ui today!\nCall Office\nIN AT NINE\nOUT AT FOUR\nFree Pick Up and Delivery-\nKOOTENAY LAUNDRY\nAND CLEANERS\n182 Baker St.\nPhone 1175\nnaird bad as guests Mr. Kulchyckl's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs, Anthony Kulchyckl and also\nhis nephew Mike Kulchyckl ot\nMeadow. Lake, Saskatchewan.\nVISITORS . . . Mr. and Mrs. Ar-\nthur Townsend of Revelstoke \"felted at the home of Mrs. Town-\nsend's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Edgar\nKulchyckl at Kinnaird. Thay alsb\nvisited friends and relatives in the\ndistrict\n*   *   * *\nCHRISTENING . . . A christening psrty was held at th. home of\nMr. and Mrs. Anedlo Tedesco, 124\nHouston Street following the baptism of their four children-by Rev.\nFather Cullen In,the' Cathedral ot\nMary Immaculate Sunday afternoon. Sponsors for Sandra Jean are\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Tedesco; for\nJames Ernest, sponsors'are Freddie\nand Margaret.. Tedesco; for Teresa\nGail, Glno Peloso and Marie Stangherlln; and for.their Infant daughter,' Justino DeVuolo and.Mrs, E.\nStangherlin, A luncheon was serv-'\ned for more than 40 friends.and\nrelatives at the parentis home.\nON TOUR ,. .'David DeGroot df\nVancouver is spending two weeks\nIn Nelson as representative of the\nBritish and. Foreign Bible Society.\nHe is on, a province-wide tour\nwhich started in Vancouver and\nhas so; far taken him through the\nOkanagan district He will later\ntour the Koi\nGUIDES, BROWNIES\nMAKE $40 AT SALE\nApproximately $40 was made\nwhen Nelson Guide and Brownie\nAssociation sponsored a bake sale\nIn a Baker Street store Saturday\nMrs. W. E. Ogden convened the\nsale assisted by Mrs. J. Maber, Mrs.\nH. Cain, and Mrs. J. A. McMaster.\nAlso helping were. Guides Myrna\nCain, Elaine Ogden, Fat McMaster\nGayle Bonacci and Carolyn Petro-\nsky.\nProceeds will go to the Association.\nBoswell Notes\nBOSWELL \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Fredrick Simpson gave a farewell party\nfor Richard Embree who will leave\nto'take up his duties again, In a few\ndays, possibly in Korean waters.\nMr. and Mrs. George Hill entertained the young folk of the district\nat a party given in honor ot the\nnewlyweds, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick\nSimpson, who received many lovely\ngifts, Games, singing and dancing\nLEEDS, England (CP) \u2014 Women were enjoyed, u\nwith \"lazy\" figures can. make a cou-. .Mr. and Mrs. A. Hepher have re\nturned from a holiday spent at the\ncoast with their son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. 3. Hepher.\nEdgewood Notes\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 Mr. and Mrs. Earl\nSelinger, with Raymond and Kathleen, spent a few days visiting old\nfriends at Edgewood. They were\nhouse guests of Mrs. Margaret Williams ant Donald.\nReturning to Vancouver by car,\nvl.. Monashle pass road, they were\naccompanied by Mrs. Beamiss, who\nhas spent .h few weeks In Edge-\nwood visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Hanson\nParks.\n(DhsM. 74p. Wtik\nVnwrian. TflaJditt\n9041\nSIZES\nS-1+-I6      i u\nM-rW-M    \u00ab_->\u2022..  H.  \u2022\nwo-tt     -_2b\"!#'~\nOIFTI BAZAARI YOUI\nThriftiest, most useful gift you\ncpuld give\u2014or getl Note the hip-\ninterest pockets, handkerchief-\npoint hem, this Is bound to be the\nhit of the bazaar! For glamorous\nserving, sew It in organdy . . , for\nstove-side duty, in percale print\nAdd,ready-made binding.\nPattern 0041: Misses' sizes small\n14-16; medium 18-20; large 40-42.\nSmall, 1% yards 35-lnch.\nThis easy-to-use pslttern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shdws you every 'step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENT8 (3Be)\nIn coins 'stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print plainly\n3IZE, NAME, ADDRE8S, STYLE\nNUMBER.  . '\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Dally\nNews, Pattern Dept, Baker Street,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28, 1952 \u2014 5\ni A 'WEEDING, TRIP\/to Niagara- Falls' and Toronto followed themarriage* in JCim-\nberley's Sacred Heart Church of Aiiiiette Dawn Rouleau, daughter of Mr, ahd Mrs.\nAlbert J. Rouleau, and John Hughes, son of Mr. and Mrs.,Harry. Hughes of Wy-\ncliffe. Left to .r'ght \"here are Harry'Hughes, brother of the groom and best man;\npenise Fontaine, second cousin-of the bride and flower girl; Mr. and Mrs. John\nHughes, Miss Pauline Rouleau, sister of\" the bride and maid of honor; Miss Jeannine\nGarnewv bridesm__id, and Raymond Rouleau, brother of the bride and best man.\n- i-'     ' > \\' \u2014Charles Wormington photo.\nParents Urged to\nMaintainMl\nTo Educate Child\nTRAIL r- Parents never relinquish the right to educate their\nchildren In the. way they feel Is\nmost beneficial, said tylpst Rev.\nMartin Johnson, Bishop of Nelson,\nin address to 300 members of the\nTrail, Rossland and Nelson Knights\nof Columbus on th. occasion of the\n25th anniversary .of the founding\nof the Trail Council here tonight.\nThe'Bishop stressed in his address that ths Mate was established\nto assist mart and not man the state,\nand that the-relinquishment of the\nGod-given- rights to cloth.,' feed\nand provide for the Children's mental and moral welfare were delegated to the state but that the parents still enjoyed the right to determine the.type of education the\nchild Was to receive.\nProvincial authorities have jealously safeguarded their rights in\nthe education field, he said, but it\nwas up to the Individual parent to\nsee that his interests were served\nby the province. The banquet concluded the day-long celebrations of\nthe Trail Council's silver jubilee\nwhich saw the Knights attend the\nJubilee Mass Sunday morning and\nthen Initiate 40 new Knights Into\ntheir fraternity order Sunday afternoon. -   ',\"..   ' '\"'''..     '-:\u25a0'\u25a0  '\nllllllll.lil:I.ir,l!lllilli:''I'hi'.IM fllllllll.\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\nFreeinan Furniture Co.\nThe House ot Furniture Values'\n.     PHONE lit - NELSON\n.iniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit\nKaslo Notes\nKASLO - Mr. and. Mrs. R. M.\nCrookshanks and son, who have\nleft Kaslo to reside In Salmo, were\nguests ot honor at the home of Mr,\nahd Mrs. B. F. Laybourne, where\nfreinds and neighbors assembled tor\na farewell party. Contests, music\nahd singipg wefe on the program,\nand after a luncheon, Mr. and Mrs.\nCrookshanks were presented with a\ngift.\nA party including Mr. and Mrs.\nG. (Monty) Armstrong and family,\nMr, and Mrs. C. Pangburn and\nfamily and Mr. and Mrs. A' Jardine\nmotored to Cooper Creek where\nthey were the guests of Mrs. M.\nAlexander.\nMrs. A. Gray, teacher at the Glad,\nschool, visited her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Wi C. Cleave.\nGeneva, home of th. old League .\n,of Nations, was a well-known settlement in the time of th. Romans.\nSqueeze Play Irks\nCharlotte Whillon\nOITAWA Oct. 27 (CP) \u2014 The\ncapital's 1092 mayoralty campaign\nappears to be developing > into a\nbattle of the sexes. Voting is Monday, Dec. 1.\nProbable principals, are Mayor\nCharlotte i Whitton, 58, a foriper\nwelfare worker,' and Controller L.\nL. (Len) Coulter, 52, Ottawa business man.\nWhile other candidates may enter\nthe field, there was considerable\nagitation in the city to persuade\nother possible male candidates\nwithdraw to give controller Coulter\na better chance to defeat Miss\nWhitton.-\nIt was this pressure which today\ncaused the mayor to declare she Is\nin the race \"to the death\" and will\nnot. seek a provincial or federal\noffice as had been rumored.\nThe mayor's outburst came after\nGeorge Nelms, Ottawa optician and\npublic school trustee who had previously announced his Intentions to\nrun, issued a statement that he was\nwithdrawing in favor of Mr.\nCoulter.\nShe said she had been informed\nthat a deputation led by Andy\nAnka, who has tangled with her on\nseveral Issues Including that of\nSunday sport, called on Controller\nCoulter last night and urged that a\nman be run against Charlotte \u2014\n\"any man rather than have a\nwoman.\"\nONLY THE BEST\nThe women supporting her, Miss\nWhitton said, are not saying \"any\nwoman rather than have a man\nmayor.'' They said: \"The best\ncandidate we can get, regardless of\nsex.\"\n\"Nothing but death would keep\nme out of the mayor's chair now,\"\nshe told reporters.\n8 Brownies \"Fly\n\" to Guides\nUp'\nEight enthusiastic Brownie of the\nFirst Nelson Jubilee Pack recently\njourneyed from Brownie Land to\nthe Sisterhood of Guides in an\nImpressive \"flying up\" ceremony\nheld at the Scout-Guide Hall.\nMerrllyn Ure, Norma Evans, Beats. DeFerro,, Fenny Drummond,\ntrice Maher, Phyliss DeFerro, Lou-\nGerry Drummond and Susan Morrison bade farewell to the Brownie\ntoadstool and fairlyland to trip\nlightly down the flower and leaf\nstrewn path and be met and welcomed by th. Guides of .he First\nNelson W. I. Jubilee Company.\nDistrict Commissioner Miss Greta CuTWen presented th. girls with\ntheir wings, which are badges symbolizing a first class Brownie and\nmay be worn on the Guide uniform.\nEleven proficiency badges Were\npresented to four hard working\nBrownies by Mrs. R. A. Custer, district badge secretary. Those receiving badges were: Minstrel's badge,\nPhyliss DeFerro, Norma Evans,\nMerrllyn Ure and Louise DeFerro;\nCollector's badge, Merrllyn Ure,\nLouis. Deterro and Norma Evans;\nWriter's badge, Norma Evans and\nLouise DeFerro; Observer's badge,\nNorma Evans; Needlewoman's\nbadge, Louise DeFerro.\n' Brown Owl, Miss Pat Warren and\nTawny Owl,, Miss Barbara James\nwelcomed Ladies' Auxiliary members, parents and friends wjjo came\nto witness, the ceremony.\nDeer Park Notes\nDEER PARK, B. C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nRupert Jamleson and Son Roy, of\nPortland, Ore., who have been holidaying at Fort St. John and other\npoints, are spending a week with\nthe former's parents, Mr. and Mrs!\nD. D, Jamleson.\nMrs. Lawrence Hill and daughter\nLorraine, returned to their home\nin Pentlcton after spending a few\ndays at th. horn, of Mr. and Mrs.\nG.'A. Walker.\nMost of the Deer Park residents\nenjoyed the film ''Maryland\" at a\nrecent showing of films in the\ncommunity hall. During .an intermission, a contest was held, the\n\u2022prize going to Miss Carole Crockett.\nGalileo invented the thermometer\nin 1593. \u25a0 , .' -V\nIt's Okay To Elope:\nAmy Vanderbilt Says\nNEW YORK, Oct. 27 (AP)-That funny noise you\nhear may be Mrs. Grundy spinning in her final resting place.\nauthor of\nAmy Vanderbilt, author of the\nnew \"The Complete Book of Eti-\nquette\", has come out In favor of\nelopements and against debuts. She\nthinks formal dinners are nonsense)\n\"Etiquette,\" said Miss Vanderbilt,\nis an old word for itsy-bitsy manners\u2014where to put your feet, how\nto hold your hands, how to sit\ndown. For goodness sake, modern\nfurniture is so wide and so big, it's\nimpossible to sit down like a lady,\nand most ot the time you need help\nto get back on your feet.''\nMiss Vanderbilt has written a\nfive-pound tome which she feels\nis mainly .a guide to modern living,\nThere are chapters devoted to the\ntraditional items such as when to\nturn down the corner of . calling\n.card, how to address the younger\nsons of a duke, and tbe proper uniform for a chambermaid.\nBut her heart, is really in portions devoted to informal entertaining, household budgeting, \"painless\nmethods of getting rid ot obnoxious\nguests and other vexing problems.\nShe thinks an elopement Is a\nhandy device If the couple Is expected to have tl big wedding and\ndoesn't want one. She thinks debuts\nare silly and tokens of shallow social success.\n\"MAN MAKETH MANNERS\"\n\"Etiquette is really a social study\nof manners,\" Miss VSnderbllt said.\n\"Manners are directly related to\neconomics and sociology. Informality became important in wat time.\n\"I .think we'll never go back to\nstereotyped living.\"\nMiss   Vanderbilt \u2014 who   admits\ntfy. dCcuuuL U)hssdsc%\nQUICK AND LOVELY\n< You're going to crochet your new\ncloth or spread very quickly with'\nthis hexagon. It's easy to memorize.\nStar medallion goes quickly\u2014make\na few a day!       .\nFor any accessory, this hexagon\nshould be first on your list! Pattern\n840 has crochet directions.\nSend TWENTY -FIVE CENTS\nin coins, (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., Baker St.,\nNelson. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and AD-\nDRE88. '    '   >   -\n\u2022 SucH.a colorful roundup of handiwork ideas! Send twenty-five cents\nnow for bur-Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Catalogue. Choose your patterns from our gaily illustrated toys,\ndolls, household and personal accessories. A pattern for a handbag\nis pripted right In the book.\nthat the magic name she Inherited\nis a good one tor an arbiter of manners\u2014is p wife, mother of three,\nindefatlguable hostess and formerly\na successful business woman.' She\nwrote most ot the rules in these\nareas out of her own experiences,\nbe sure to get,\nftmaorffofap*?****\n:2,\n2\nthese\nLOW PRICES\n*\/SAFEWA\nif Lakemead Applesauce S\nif Choice Peaches\".\u00ab\n* Pineapple Juice 8\nif Tomato Juice S\ni Fancy Peasfcft^4\nif Cut Green Beans \u00bb\nCountry Horn*, fancy,\nIS oi. ean\nPrince Leo, fancy,\n734 ox. ean\nLuncheon Meat\",\noz. can\n\u2022 Golden Corn\nif Pink Salmon\nif Swift's Prem \u00ab\n^r Peanut Butter\u00bb.\u00ab\nif Velveeta Cheese B\nif Airway Coffee Wtf\nCastle Crest, halvec\noz. can\nSunny Dawn, fancy.\n\"\" oz. can\nKraft.\noz. carton\niiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l2ffoxft   \/Ohngfucfi.\nj)f Crisp Celery 6^ ..oik. __\u2014\nif Emperor Grapes\n.iiiiiiiiiii.iii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.-i-_.ii\n- Lb. 14c\n_Lb. 12c\n-^ Macintosh Apples *\u00ab,. -nmt ___\u25a0 Lb. tic\nSweet,\ntable variety\nilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nllll-lllllllllllllllllllllllll-lli\nSucvuudwL WjwiLl\n\u2022 Boneless Stewing Beef \u00bbm Brand.._. Lb* 55c\n\u25a0k OXtSlIS For tosty stews ond soups lib*  lt^C\n* GlfOlind Beef   Blue Brand. 85% lean . Lb* 55\u00a9\nPRICES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 28\nSAFEWAY\n ^\u25a0^f^^^^^^1 ' \/ ~\nM%\nfri. NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28,1952\nFilm Workers Have Many Happy\n\u00a3 Memories of Trag\nBy BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD. Oct'27 (AP)-No\n| ovcnt in recent months has sadden-\n' ed Hollywood as much as tha death\nof Susan Peters last week,\nThe movie people had their mem-\nj orles Of the brilliant young actress\n.  who flashed In th. screens during'\n-the war years. She appeared oppos-\nite Robert Taylor tn \"Song of. Rus-\n;sla\" and critics hailed her as a\n.bright new dramatic'star;\n;\u25a0'   I first met her In 1945 when she\nwas, recovering from the hunting\n: accident wound that paralyzed her\n* from the waist down. She was llv.\ning In a small Beverly Hills apart-\nment with her husband, Richard\nQuine.\nSusan still had- her Irish beauty\n. and spunk. She told proudly of how\n- she had a temperature of 108 after\ntho accident and the doctors gave\n' up hope lor her. But. she. had been\nable to murmur to her husband, \"I\n| just wanted you to know that I'm\ninot going to die,\"\nI   In her first interview after the\naccident, she reported she had tak-\n' en three steps in her new braces. \"I\nought tb be walking pretty well In\nthree months,\" she enthused.\nCOMEBACK\nWould she act again?\n,'. \"Just let them try and stop me,\nshe said.\nShe never was able, to walk, but\nshedld act again\/Her first Job was\nthree  months  later,  on  a  radio\ndrama with Van Johnson. She came\nthough with flying colors,\nLater she was driving her own\nicSusan Peters\nhand-operated .car and oven taking flying lbssons.\n- Christmas of IMS was a Joyous\none. She and Dick had adopted a\nbaby boy, Tlmmy. The doctors said\nshe might lie able to act in a movie.\nThe picture., was .\"Sign of the\nRam\" and she played a'mean women in.it. \"Sign of the Ram\" was\nnot a success, and it was Susan's\nlast picture. After that, her marriage to Quine cracked up. Their\nfriends reported that It was entirely\nher doing., His; loyalty; remained\nsteadfast,' they said..but she did not\nwant tb tie his life to a cripple,\n\u00a3_*ONE\nAfterwards, Susan miia her\nUfa alone.' She wanted' to'be in.\ndependent and worked herself to\nthe limit of her frail health. She\ntoured all- over the country in\n.The Batretts of Wimpqle Street\"\nand \"The Glass Menagerie.\" '\n-When I saw &er for the last time,\nshe proudly broufeht out her rave\nreviews. \u2022':   \u25a0\"'.. '?'\nFor the first time, she made no\nClaim that she would, walk again,\n\"How 'Cart I\u2014I hav*, no' spinal\ncord,\" she said. \"It will take longer\n,than I live for the doctors-to discover how to fix that.\"\nShe was running out of hope,\n.and she came to the end of it last\nrjieeit.-\n\"She wouldn't allow anyone to\nhelp her recently,\" said the doctor\nafter She died. \"I believe she lost\ninterest in living.\"\nCoast Delegation Seeks Seattle\nSupport For B.C. Gas Pipeline\nSEATTLE,'; Oct 27 (CP) - A\nthree-man Vancouver delegation\nappeared before Seattle Qity Council today to seek support for West-\ncoist Transmission Company's proposed natural gas pipeline from the\nPeace River area to Washington\nand Oregon! ;..   . _,\nThe delegation \u2014 Aldermen Hal-\nford Wilson .and J. W. Cornett and\nJames Eckman, chairman of the\nMetropolitan Industrial Development Commlsslon^-sald In a brief:\n\"We have noticed that a great\ndeal of the opposition to the Import\nof our gas has been raised by\ncertain groups In Seattle.\n. \"The charges made against our\ngas and its potentialities are, we\nknow, after studying the situation,\ngroundless^\"\nGROWING RESERVE\nThe brief said there Is a growing\nreserve of -2%. trillion cubic feet, of\ngas available for the pipeline area,\nthe only gas area on the continent\navailable solely for the Pacific\nNorthwest ''\nIn British Columbia alone, the\nbrief said, there are 30,000,000\nacres of potential gas land, 13,000,-\n000 In Alberta and many more\nmillions farther North. Piping distance to Portland would be 060\nIf You're TIRED\nAIL THE TIME\nErajbodygeltobitmn-dounnoBiuid\npen, Urcd-out, JicSfy-hcadcd, snd maybe\nD-Uiered by taeludui, P-rkpa nothing\ntsrouily wronj, Just a temporary toxic\ncondii\u2122 caused by eiceia acids and\noaitu. Thafa the limo to take Dodd's\nKidney Pills. Dodd'a stimulate tha liidn.ji,\nand ao help restore their normil action ol\nitmmng excess adds and wastes. Then\n. you fed belter, sleep bolter, mri. better.\nGet Dodd'a Kidney Pills now. Look lor\ntho Una bos with the red band at ^11\ndruggists. You can depend on Dodd'a.   jj\nmiles compared with 1880 from\nNew Mexico to Seattle, leading to\nlower costs.\nConstruction and maintenance\ncosts'Would'also be-less, the brief\ncontended. The $111,000,000 line\nwould follow through B.C. Instead\nof crossing mountains.\n\"We can see absolutely no\nreason, forcharges that the B.C.\nline: would coot Washington consumers' moro for their gas than\nother. .lines\/' ., -v\nDe Valera's Eyes\nCausing Trouble\nDtiBtitN, ObtfST .AP. -Assocl-\nates of Prime Minister Eamon de\nValera bf the Republic of Ireland\nfeared\" .today, that his eye trouble\nmay force him out of active public\nllfS.\nSpecialists in a clinic at Utrecht,\nThe Ifetherlands, are- fighting to\nsave-what remains of the 70-year-\nold leader's sight     ' :\nColleagues in de Valera's Flarina\nFall Party doubt that he.will be\nable to carry on much longer the\nday-to-day duties of prime minister,'\neven If the. treatment is successful,\nMost prominently .mentioned, as\nde Valera's probable~si_cie_roi''are\ntwo members of his Cabinet \u2014 Sean\nLemass, 50, Minister for Industry\nand Commerce, who is the acting\nprime minister, and Frank Aiken,\n54', Minister for External Affairs.\nDe Valera was virtually blind\nwhen he went to Utrecht,. Official\ndocuments had to .be? read:'to; him\nby secretaries.' ....... .\nDEATHS\nHalifax\u2014Dennis. F. Morlarlty, 63,\nharbor master of the port of Hall-\nfa*:.;. '  - ;\u25a0   \u25a0\u2022,-;>- .-' ;..-.,,   :-,...\nSingapore \u2014 Sir. Iiipr Llewellyn\nBrace, 64, Chief Justice of British\nBorneo territories.\n01 TOUCH OF\nTHE NEW DRAMATIG FINISH I Newest\ntrends in interior decoration call for soft, velvety\nfinishes on walls anil woodwork,,.- finishes that,\nwill highlight furniture and accessories. For this\n:. jurpose, wonderful new MONAMEL VELVET\nr \"rwas developed ... a rich, glowing finish that\nflatters and dramatizes any room.\nAnd here's NEWS!! MONAMEL\nr VELVET is truly WASHABLE\n... you can depend on the finish\nretaining its original beauty for\nyears!\nTHREE FINISHES '\nGLOSS \u25a0 SATIN - VELVET\nLiverpool Opens Probe\nOnMds^gB^\nJON MORROW LINDBERGH, one of eight scientists recently engaged In oceanographlc surveys, displays a glass cylinder with a\nsample of water taken from the sea floor as he arrives at Hoboken,\nN. J, Jon, who Is the son of Col. and Mra. Charles A. Lindbergh, said\nthe expedition came upon a hitherto unknown Atlantic canyon that\nstretches for 800 miles somewhere midway between Bermuda and the\nAzores,\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nLIVERPOOL, England, Oct. 27\n(Reuters)\u2014An Inquiry began her.\ntoday Into the. death of Mrs. Bon-\nite, King, 22-year-old Canadian\nbride, who' disappeared from.the\nCun$rd liner Ascanla July 30 on a\nhoneymoon trip to Europe. i\n. The girl's scarf, sun glasses'and\npurse were found on deck after her\nhusband, Robert W, King bf Edmonton, reported her disappearance.\nKing said he awoke early in the\nmorning' and found that Tils wife\nwas not in the cabin.       .   .   -\nMi immediately looked for her,\nAnd after an'unsuccessful search I\nreported the master to,the officer\nof the watch and a thorough search\nof tho  ship  .was .organized,\"  he\nnit. :--2.2K-'\"7 22-2''222\nsrey\/Atitit'A .tymtriCU       ,,\nEdword , Stanley,. tourist,, elixk\nbedroom ,'itewat:d,. .tplti.. the. .bbaW\ntoday that fte^coliple seemed \"quite1\nnormal and Jiappy\" dwInk .the yoy.\nage. \u25a0 \"As, faf^'as. I .'know mgtk bad\nbeen no trouble. belrwee,n Ut. and\nMrs. King,n^d nothing was eve.\nsaid to-suggest.that ohe. would do\nanything .drastic,\" he testified.   '\nThe inquiry,, which was post,\nponed until the ship completed its\ncuWent Atlantic riih.wsis adjoUrp-.\ned untirwednasd^,,wh'en,.'the*AB-j\ncania's commander, Capt. Andrew\nMacKellar, will .esty*. r  ,v: '\nPress Barred From (on^nltopf a$\nTeachers Discuss Peijsionllans\n\"PRINCE GEORGE, B.C., Oct 27\n.CP), \u2014 With only fou* dissenting\nvotes, the \u2022 convention of North\nCentral district, B.C. Teachers'\nFederation! Saturday ' approved a\nproposed pension < plan revision\nunder which all teachers could retire if they wished at 60 and wpuld\nbe obliged to retire at 65,\nWomen teachers at: present are\nforced to retire at 60 but men\nteachers must work until 66.\nA special -panel consisting of a\nrepresentative: of tho; Federation,\nthe school' board' concerned rand the\ndeputy minister of education would\nbe set up-to'-iear the appeal of any\nteacher between 60- and' 05 who'\nwished to continue - teaching .but\nwhose school board wishes to retire him owing to \"any reasons of\nunsui .ability or Incompetence.\"   ,\nThe' pension proposal was discussed In a closed session from\nwhich the Press were barred. -\nConker Champion Gives\nHints to Challangers\nLONDON (Reuters) - Twelve\nyear-old Ian Lyons of North London\nis the conker king of Britakt-cham-\npion of the greatest mass-participation sport for youngsters since the\ngame of marbles wds'invented.\n: Ian climbed to his dizzy pinnacle\nin a televised contest between four\nfinalists. His battered, 15-year-old\nconker\u2014a horse chestnut\u2014smashed,\nhis, foes' conkers to pulpy bits.\nThe sport, played, by every British\nyoungster1 from since Victorian\ndays, Is a. simple match between\ntwo contestants. Bach has a horse\nchestnut swinging at the end of\nabout two feet of string. The boys\ntake.turns smashing at the conker\ndangling at the end of'his 'foe's\nstring. The game ends when one\nconker is broken.\nTELEVI8EO CONTESTS\nThe sport was unsung In public\nprint ahd.no national, contests were\nheld until the B.B.C.. announced Its\nchampionships for televised chil-\ndren'SfProgram. All boys with conk\ners which had survived 100 battles\nwere Invited to participate.\nIan, claimed his conker,' named\n\"William the Conqueror\", had a\nscore of 7351 victories. Of the\ntotal,, he said, 2685 were Straight\n\"smashes\" of other conkers. The remaining triumphs represented the\ntotal victories of conkers he had\nsmashed. According to unwritten\nrules, the whining.conker annexes\nthe losing conkers' score.\nFAMILY HEIRLOOMS\nAfter hiB triumph, the \"conking\nhero\" gave this advice to future\nchallengers:\n\"Dip your conker in vinegar. Then\nstore it for several years in a dark\ncupboard. Do' not bajse'lt.\"\nThe favorite conker is a \"ches\nser\", Ohe ol two horse chestnuts\nfound in a single shell. The smallest\nchestnuts often prove tha hardiest.\nIn many cases, such as that of\nIan's prize weapon, the conker is\nhanded down In the family from\nbrother or even father to son.\n',\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0 \u25a0'..'. ', '\u25a0    j.-J-ir   . .--\".\t\nPortuguese Hospital Ship Carries\n(allie, Pigs, andflock of Hens\nST, JOHN'S, Nfld. (QP)-When\nPortuguese fishermen become ill or\ninjured on the Grand Banks, prolific fishing grounds off Newfoundland, they board one of the world's\nmost unique hospital ships.\nTho 1814-ton Gil Eannes. might\neasily have sailed from the pages\nof a pirate's log, if her engines,\nmodern facilities and bona fide flag\ndidn't betray her.\nBelow the wooden deck of the\n278-foot vessel live several cows\nand a few grunting pigs. Crew\nmembers split and clean codfish\nand the scraps are picked up by a\nflock of hens.\n40-BED WARD\nThe Gil Eannes* Job Is to look\nafter the medical' and spiritual needs\nof the 4000 men who man the Portuguese fishing fleet of tail-masted,\nsnowy-sailed vessels. .,\nA doctor and two'male nurses-do\nthe work. They have a 40-bed ward,\nan annex, for tuberculosis patients,\noperating-room with all facilities,\n6PM-1I\nBurns Lumber Company\n602 Baker St.\nPhono 1180\nIf You Want To\nWrite, Travel\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Sacheveirell\nSltwell, \u25a0 British' essayist, .novelist,\npoet and critic, has' this a<_vice for\nJtoung, would-be artlsts^'travel.\"\n\"Do not take up painting, writing\nor any art permanently until yoil\nare certain of your vocation,, and\nHep travel a great deal,\" he said in\nah interview here.\n\"I would advise all artists -to\ntravel, especially around the age of\n26. Even before Is a good time but\n26 seems the perfect time. Travel,\nobserving every detail of life and\nlooking beyond the vlsiWe-oblect.\nMr. Sitwell paid the Commonwealth can contribute a great deal\ntowards world culture.\n\u25a0' ''This is the time 'for* the detain.\nIons to'write books about thqfc land;\npaint pictures, about. their. sce'neitf'\nand write, must: about their-'great\ndoing-. Canada, Australia'and others\nshould bring out works depicting\ntheir Ways of life, the'r peoples ana\nwhat Is going on. Were are mahy\nsubjects for every artist, arid' it is\njust a matter of hard- work, determination arid constancy.\" ....- ,\nTunnel WorkersSet\nNew Record, Kemano\nKEMANO, .B.C.. Oct. 27 (CP) \u2014\nTunnel workers on Aluminum\nCompany of Canada's hydro project\nhere set a world record last week\nby driving 258 feet at one heading.\nPrevious world mark was 241 feet,\nset In 1848 at Big Creek, Calif, on\na similar hydro.tuntieL.     -\nIncluding X-ray equipment.\nInjuries are frequent on the banks\nwhich often bear the brunt of North\nAtlantic gales\" and Caribbean-bred\nhurricanes. Lives have been saved\non the operating table while the\nseas, were in tumult. Generally,\nhowever, serious cases are taken to\nSt. John's and later flown to Lisbon.\nFOR HOME U8E\nCrew members do a lltle fishing\nto supply their families at home.\nThat's the reason, for fish-cleaning\non  the  decks.\nThe livestock assure a good quantity of J fresh milk, eggs and meat\nfor the patients. The animals are\nfed easily-obtainable cod liver oi)\nto compensate for lack, of grass.\nA beautiful altar is located in the\nward. A priest celebrates masses,\nbroadcast to other vessels of the\nfleet by loudspeaker.\nThe Gil Eannes, built In 1014,\nwill be replaced by a new- hospital\nship \"within two years\" by the\nPortuguese government ,\nKaiser's Only Remaining Son Hum\nOn Views Pertaining lo Royalty\nBy BRACK CURRY\nBONN, Germany (AP) \u2014 Prince\nOskar of Russia, last'surviving son\not Kaiser Wllhelm, apparently inclines to the hope that the Hohen-\nzollern family once again will rule\nGermany.\n'. However, all th. prince, 64, will\nsay is that: \"The question of a return of the monarchy in Germany\ncan only be answered by the German people themselves.\"\nPrince Oskar, an old soldier turned charity worker, denies that the\nrecent Interment-in Western Germany of two great Prussian klngsr-\nFrederlck the Great and Frederick\nWilhelm\u2014has any political significance.\nRival Bavarian monarchists claim\nthat placing the remains of the\nkings in the family's old castle at\nN.A.T.O. FORMATION . . . Canada's N.A.T.O. formation In\nGermany recently staged the largest military parade held in Hannover sine, th. end of the, Second World War. Their military precision and smartness was praised by watching British troops and\nGerman civilians,\u2014CP from National Defence.   ,     -\"-, -\u2022\nHechinsen means the'kohonzollerns\nare giving' up further pretensions\nto the German crown. . -\nWHERE THEY BELONG:.\nIn ah Interview,.. Prlnco Oskar.\nSsld this interment \"is only provisional.\n\"Tha caskets belong In Potsdam\nand they will most surely bo returned there as soon jis possible.\"\nPotsdam- Is the traditional home\nof the Hohenzollern kings. Since.\n1046 it has been the headquarters of\nthe Soviet army. In East Germany.\nThe prince declines to predict\nwhether Germany will ever have a\nkaiser again.\n\"I 'shall not discuss politics. I'm\njust a simple German citizen. Naturally I favor the reunification of Germany, as does every German who\nloves his fatherland.\"\nBusiness Spotlight.'..\nCharge Accounts Leaped To Highest\n111 Pilots To\nMake Decision\n-WASHINGTON, Oct 27 (AP) -\n\u25a0Th\u00bb United States* Air Force Is leaving! to Iti pilot* and overseas commander's thi decision of what to do\nif Soviet fighters again attack American planes flying peaceable missions over ion-Russian territory.\nA-spokesman mode, it plain today.\nIn answer tb questions, that the\ncrow of a plane, like the B-29 shot\ndown by Russian fighters over Japanese waters earlier this month, has\nthe right to firs back in self-defence.\nHowever, the U.S. plan, downed\nby Soviet'gunfire Oct. 7 could not\nhave fired back because lt wasn't\nprepared tor shooting. Its guns, were\ntied down\" during the routine\ntraining flight to the Northern tip\not Hokkaido.\nAnother answer by the spokesman\nindicated the air force now is. ready\nto cope with any such attacks by\nSoviet fighters by assigning a fight-\ncr-plano escort' when needed. The\nspokesman told a reporter \"day-today tactical Considerations dictate\nwhether escort Is provided.\"\nBy HAROLD MORRISON\nCanadian Press 8taff Writer\nGrowth of the \"on-the-cuff\" buying has sparked the biggest consumer debt In history. '\nBut lt also has helped retail stores\nkeep goods moving, increased automobile sales through financing and\ngeneral pepped up industry to keep\nthe economy humming,\"\nTotal consumer-credit' debt was\nestimated at a peak $1,226,000,000\non June _0 ' - Bank of Canada In its\nSeptember summary of current financial trends,   -\nThis was an increase of $119,000,000\nfrom $1,107,000,000 a year ago and\nalmost doubling of outstanding debt\nin the last o-r years from $748,000,-\n00C In 1948.\nLITTLE THREAT\nIn bad times a big outstanding\ndebt, such as the June peak, would\npose a threat to the economy. Without jobs, debtors would find it tough\nto meet periodlo Instalment, choking\noff the flow of cash into tills and\nmaking lt tough for the storekeeper\ntd pay his bills and buy new goods.\n. But in current, relatively-buoyant\ntimes, the experts see llttl. threat\nfrom the June peak. For one thing\nsavings were high, and for another,\n\"'     -    -\\       ' -l--l..i..|-_.C..\u25a0..._-......   f,..;,,,    _jl,j(\nJobs wero plentiful.\/Th.so were two\nsafeguards against the consumer\nover-extending hla credit\nProbably on. ot the main reasons\nfor th. peak, tho experts bollovo,\nwas th. government's move to eliminate credit controls last May. Many\nCanadians with dollars to spend had\nbeen holding off, waiting for such\na move and when It came many of\nthem made a beeline fo.' the nearest\nstore.\nACCOUNTS CLIMB\nIri any case charge accounts In\nretail stores climbed to $397,000,000\non June 30, Up $40,000,000 f-6m $357,-\n000,000 a year ago. Instalment credit\nJumped to $409,000,000 from $350,-\n000,000.\nOf the Instalment credit, tb. biggest portion was in loans by finance\ncompanies, dealing mostly. In auto\nfinancing. Their credit climbed to\n$271,000,000 from $228,000,000.\nPersonal cash loans which the\nconsumer obtained either from\nbanks, credit' unions or loan companies Increased to $420,000,000 from\n$400,000,000.     s \u25a0.-..,\nThese transactions were made at a\ntime when retail sales were climbing. For exariiple, in tin first eight\nmonths ot 1052 they jumped to $7,-\n190,500,000 from. $6,743,000,000 last\nyear\u2014a boost of almost $500,000,000.\n. . ADLY 8ALEH LAMLUM, 23, left, scion of one of Egypt's wealthiest families, Is shown with another prisoner, as he arrived at court\nat El Mlnya to hear his sentence of life In prison for opposing Egyptian land reform by force. Lamlum was accused of storming Into a\npolice station at nearby Maghagha, brandishing a tommy gun and\nshouting that land reform would be enforced only \"over my dead\nbody.\" Land reform legislation, enacted In mld-8eptember by the\nGovernment of Prime Minister Gen. Mahomed Naguib, llmlta Ownership of-agricultural land In Egypt to 200 acres per person, Tho Lamlum family owns several thousand acres South of Cairo, and Is reported to employ bodyguards and rule whole villages In feudal style.\nThe Egyptian army had announced they ara going te make an example of Lamlum as a remnant of \"the old criminal-feudal regime\",\n  -    ----.,:_ \u2014Control Prc\u00ab\u00bb Canadian.\nSuspect Panther in\nNew Brunswick Woods\nTRURO, N.B., Oct, 27. (CP)! \u2014,\nSeveral residents ot, tho. nearby\nBlack Rock district today reported\nsighting a sleek, .black animal \"not\nunlike a panther.\" ..... .._..\nMax .Henderson,-.50,. iral'd the\nanimal .had a,'long tail -. and- was\nlarger than a wildcat or fax, \u2022\n\"It was hot unlike pictures I\nhave seen j>f panthers,\" \u00a3e ..said.....\nBelieved, extinct,,In. the . Marltlmes for. 60. years, panthers were\ndiscovered in New .Brunswick in\n1948. Although none has been shot\nor; photographed naturalists haver\nthrough study of. the. tucks, and\nother evidence, definitely Identified\nthe-specie*. ;,  ,..,..,,:.   '.'....,\u25a0\nAlso known.as Cougar, Puhis;\nMountain IilonVand. Black .Devil,\npanthers were at. large' In the\nwlldirnesf .over, .all North,,America\nIri. earlier days' arid. im^re .CariHhoh\nfrom the-Gulf of Mexico to. the\nGreat Lakes. *\nPanthers which roamed h\\ the\nMarltlmes,had a*, shaggy coat Arid\nweighed; about .200 pounds,. jSrger\nthan, the\" We's'tetn. Puma.   _\";',;. _'\"\nKathleen Hearing\nAgain Postponed\nVANCOUVERi-Oct.\"'27' (CP) ~\nPublic hearing5 Into this sinking' of\nthe Canadian^' Padiftc. steiin'shljr.\nPrlricess Kathleen off \"Alaska Sept\n7 was postponed again today owing\nto the Illness of Mr. Justice Sidney\nSmith. No new date Was immediately set No lives were lost In the\nstriking.\nLargest of the Great Lakes, Lake\nSuperior has:-a surface area of\n31,800 square miles.\nHITCHQ.. England (CP) \u2014 The\nlocal Home: Guard held its first\nworkout since the war In this Hertfordshire; district bhd of course bad\nto choose a code name tor, the\nexercise. It Was styled;, \"Exercise\nLumbago.\"\nPERFECTION P.E\nJust ths other day, wo hoard,a\nfriend say, \"You should taste my\nwife's perfection pie I\" So w\u00bb did;\nand here's the recipe for you. The\nshell is light, crisp baked meringue;\n__lledrwith.'Shirri_rs delicious chocolate Bud Dessert. Spread . tho\nmeringue in a well-greased pid pah\nand bake. When coil, lino it with\ndiced peaches. Turn- in tho Bud\nDessert, slightly cooled, rind garnish\nwith peaches. We know you'll lovo\nit too, for there's such deep, dark\nchocolatey goodness in Shirri|r\u00ab\nBud Dessert. It's so easy to malm\nthrifty desserts, pies and cake tKU '\ntrigs with Shirriff's Bud Desserts'\n. . . and you'll always find them\nextra rich, \u00ab*fro-good*'.'rthiB-_r_tV'\nShirriff's famous Savour bud.\nA!)\n' of GDii-iiJ^\nThe Canadian Bank\nof Commerce\nIJM\n - r-TT^yTT? -Tf^ri'V^^tBfW^\u00abIWlS^l^m^fS!aS\nFINING.IN THE KOOTENAY\n\\iipWdrthCo\nAinsworth - Base Metals. Ltd.,\n'hose promising property adjoins\nat of Cork Province Mine, is one\nmpany continuing development\noris despite the discouraging metal\niarket conditions of the last few\neeks. Ore from the development\nactings Is being treated by a jig\n111 with a concentration of approx-\nBtely three to one. Concentrate Is\nig shipped to the concentrator\nWestern  Mines Ltd, at Ains-\nKh. As of October 7. 11 tons\nbeen shipped.\nF. Kenward, managing director\ni that 1( Is the intention of the\ntyptay to carry out the full de-\n\u25a0lopment' program recommended\n'consulting engineers,\n\u2022 .. \u00ab\nOfficers of Estella Mines Ltd.,\na, B.C., were elected at the an-\niqI meeting of shareholders this\nonth. They are E. J. Chapman,\nesldent, Frank D. Farrell, vice-\nesldent and Norman Harvey, sectary-treasurer.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nM>PERTY 80L0 <\nKaslo Base Metals. Ltd., has sold\nWoodbury Creek (Amazon-Bud-\nler) group to Woodbury Mines fpr\ncapital payment of $50,000, pay-\nle at a rate ot $400 per month or\nper cent of net smelter returns,\nlichever Is the greater. The\ndms are situated in the Ainsworth\nnlng division. The deal further\nUs for delivery of 317,150 shares\nWoodbury treasury stock, of\nlich 100,000 shares must be deliv-\ned by January 1, 1953, 100,000\nares by April I and the balance\nfiJuly 1, 1953. \u2022\n{Sydney Hoar., vice-president of\noslo Base Metals, In a letter to\nareholders, states that developed of the company's Woodbury\noperty Is meeting with favorable\nsuits. Mr. Hoare explains that the\nmpany ts capitalized at 3,000,000\nshares of. a par value of. 50 cents\neach, of, which 750,000 shares have\nbeen Issued tor properties, 307,150\nshares have been sold tor cash and\n,1,942,850 shares remain in the treasury.\nIn addition, the company owns\noutright a complete mining, plant\nandra 35-ton'mill (or the development of Its original Index group\n- of claims, Went of tho Cork Province mine near Kaslo. Mr. Hoare\nexplains that the same geological\nconditions extended from the\nCork Province to the Alnaworth\nBate Metals, Daybreak, 8llver\nBear, B.N,A\u201e Silver Bell and to\nthe Index gif up.\nThe vice-president advises shareholders that the present program\ncalls for the building of a road to\nthe upper, working and surface\nstripping with a bulldozer before\nthe lower tunnel extension is commenced.\nHe states that ample funds are on\nhand for the program. \u25a0 Kootenay:\nprofit margin, of September with a\ngrade of 20 per cent combined lead\nand zinc was cut in half by the. drop\nIn metal prices-in October. Costs\nare now down to less than $15 per\nmonth. .\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nExploration Is continuing at Van\nRol Mines Limited, one of Transcontinental-.Resources Ltd.'s B.C.\ninterests. Negotiations are now\nunder way to rent the mllL\n\u2022 .   *\nThe results of diamond drill\nlng program conducted by Prlv\nateer Base Metals Ltd., on Its\ngroup of eight claims near Atna\nworth during the past year has\nnot been as encouraging as antlcl\npated. Consequently.n director's\nmeeting has been called to precede the annual moetlno of shareholders of the company with -a\nanada's Purchases From U.S. In\nixcess of Exports South of Line\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nSEIGNIORY CLUB, Que, Oct. 27\n3P)\u2014Canada, as tb. United States'\ntst Customer, receives \"rather poor\n\u00abatment\" from that country, Alex\nray of Toronto, President of the\nanadlan Exporters' Association,\nlid today.\nAddressing, the Association's an-\nnol meeting, he said Canada's\nado figures with the United States\nure not good\". In the first eight\nrontho of this.year, Canada's pur-\nlases from the. U.S.. were $418,-\n10,000 in excess of her sales there\n\"the highest deficit in five- years,\nid the sad part is that our exports\nlargely raw ahd semi-raw ma-\nsrlols ,and our Imports largely\nIghly-mariufactured goods,\"- added\ntr. Gray, i ,',j\nIU8T EXPAND --,\nMr,. .Gray-noted rthat .Canadian ex-.\n\u00bbrts to \u25a0Si:, countries have increased\nid said \"it would appear that we\niould continue to expand;\"\nH. predicted keener competition\nlead.\n\"Britain, France and other Eu-\npeon countries have been receiv-\nfmnwipi\nlng defence and'Marshall Flan aid\nfrom the U.S. This will presumably\nbe reduced, and these countries will\nhave to make-every effort to export\nfor dollars.\n\"And, as the U.S. posses the peak\nIn defence spending and U.S. manufacturers receive reduced business\nas a result of the cut. down in gifts\nand loans to Europe, they also will\nhave to fight for business.      \"\u2022\n\"The only answer is harder work,\nIncreased efficiency, and greater\nproduction by Canadians. I am certain Canada can meet the test successfully.\" .- '\nOn the Commonwealth, markot,\nMr. Gray said, \"We must take ths\nlong-range view ...\n\"We keep hoping and working to\nhave It opened again. But I believe\nyou will have to wait a long time;\nand while we should, tight for It, in\nthe-mcantlmo your - energies, had-\nbetter bo directed-to other markets.\"\nTRADE DIFFERENCES\nMr. Gray indicated that then\nhav. been differences of opinion\nwithin the Association concerning\nthe Canadian International Trade\nFair, held annually tor the last Uve\nyears in Toronto. He said:   ,\n\"The C.I.T.F. wais sponsored by\nthe Department ot Wade and Commerce with the mam'hope that It\nwould help. export-* but -due to\nworld conditions it appeared to tend\ntowards an import _fair, and last\nyear.it built up .'.jtp success by\nadding to export an* Import possibilities its facilities**! a great domestic fair.\n\"C.E.A. directors hav. co-operated\nwith the Department of Trade and\nCommerce and th. Trade Fair executive up until the end of the 1953\nfair. We have felt that this was the\nwise and proper course, although\nwe have had one or two resignations in protest\n\"At the proper tlme^any views on\nthe Board's pos-tlbn*w_ll be gladly\nreceived from the membership.\"\nHIS ADVEfiTISEMENT IS NOT PUBUSHED OR DISPLAYED BY THE IIQUOR CONTROL\n_    -BOARD OR BY THE GOVERNMENT Of BRITISH COLUMBIA\n' \"v|ew to offering a* reooeim.nda\nHon.     ''\u2022'*,       \u25a0\",':\u25a0\"\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,\/\u25a0.. ' \u25a0*\u2022-\u2022' *r\nIN ORE,    \/,.,;\t\n\u2022 Two j development' headings 'of\nBluebird 'Slocan Minos Ltd, but\nSandon aif. currently in. ore, nq-\ncording to *H. R. Walker vlcp-psipl\ndent Following .a, Recent examination of the mine, C. -tutherford,\nconsulting onglpcer, advises th'tit the\ndrift,'North otitb, 4-tapssciit;tn.tb\u00ab'\nIdaho Up; i tunnel has.been advanced, through 17 feet.pt gontin-.\nuous ore.' The present^ facp (hpyi'p\n5.7 feet assaying 22 per cent In combined metals. Of this, a one-toot\nsection; on - the. hanging wall runs\n2,2 ounces, silver, jier ton yJitli.jM\nper cent ^ne. andr.p,7 .perVcent leqd\nand the remaining; \"4.7 ,iperVfsays\n2,4 ounces.sitaer per ton.with.IM\nper-cent zinc and 0.6 per cent lead.\nThe total exposed length of the-ore\nnb#r Is 40 feet' ;with on. [average\nwidth of 2.3 feet and grading 24.78\nper cent zinc.\nA rhise Is being driven at'tht\nWest end of the orebody and has'\nbqen advanced 10 foet over which\nlength n-six-Inch width of ore Carries 42.4 per;cent rzlnc The raise is\nbeing continued; A diamond-drill\nstation has been established on the\nlevel to permit the-driving \"of holes\nboth upward anfl- downward. -.- \u00bb\u2022\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBralorno   \u201e..._._..__\nCariboo Gold .,...._ .\nEstella   _\nGrandview ...\t\nGiant Mascot ______\nHighland Bell __\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Border ..___.\nQUatslno ...U.\nReeves MacDonald!.\nSheep Creek  _.\nSilver Ridge ...vij\u2014\nSilver Standard....\t\nWest Exploration\t\nWest Uranium ___\nVila \u201e_\u201e..i_________;\nOILS\nAnaconda \u2014    , .\u201e\nAnglo Can     , ,,' ;\nA P. Con.\nCal&Ed _..._-_.\nCalmont  t. ._,\nCommonwealth\nHome ..'...__ _.\nMercury \u201e..:-..\nNat Pete .'.._\nOkalta Com\nPac Pete \t\nRoyalite  \t\nVanelta ___.\nVulcan _ _\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates\t\n4.65 '\n1.30\n\u25a0S3'\n23\n' .42\n.43-\n1,90\n.12\n. ,68\n:S.30\n1.25\n.18\n1.40\n, J5S.\n4.60\n.28\n.ii\n6__5\n.   .W\n11.23 '\n1.05\n.4.20\n12.50\n\u2022\u25a0_\u00bb\u2022\n1.68\n2.90\n10.00\n13.75 i\n.31\n2M\n17.00 '\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nPython, Elephant .\nStage Tug-of-War\nCALCUTTA Oct 27 (AP)\u2014\nA junglo tug-of-war between\na giant python and a calf elo-\nphant drew villagers from\nmiles around to a clearing In\ntha. Mancblk forest reserve\nnear here, tribesmen reported\n,'\u25a0\u25a0 today.-   \u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0.\nDie. python bad seized the\nolephapt by. n hind leg and,\n*. \"mooring\" Itself to a tree, start-\n' cd a fight to the death.     '\nThe    fight    see-sawed    for\n. hour's.-. ..-;\u2022\u2022    ;. '' , ;\nEventually the python \"swal-.\nlowed\" the elephant's leg.\nThen came a deadlock.. Th.\nelephant couldn't mov. and th.\nreptile  couldn't  swallow  any\n.  more.      .   \u25a0\nVillagers stepped In, hacked\n, the python to'pieces and treed\nthe elephant\nSeventeen years ago in the\nsame forest villagers watched\na three-day tug-of-war between\na giant python and a fully-\ngrown elephant. The outcome.\nwas the same that time.  ,\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt\nCalgary Livestock\n\u2022 CALGARY, .'Obti.r?1.. 'iCP.-Bid-\nding was not too brisk on sales of\nmostly stocker and feeder cattle on\nthe Calgary, livestock market today.\nOn offer were 500 cattle and calves,\nwith, a good truck run building up.\nEarly sales of a few heavy butcher steers indicated a weaker tone,\nwhile light butcher, steers and heifers were about steady. Very few\ngood cows were offered, with early\nIndications' steady to lower, and\nbulls were steady.. Stacker and\nfeeder steers were steady. Veal\ncalve* were steady.\nHogs closed steady last week at\n$23.75, sows at $18.23. Good lambs\nwere steady at $18.50.\nGood to choice light butcher\nsteers, $19.50 to $22.50; good heavy\nbutcher steers, $23 to $24; common\nto medium, $14 to $19.\nGood butcher heifers, $18 to $20:\ncommon to medium, $13 to $17.80.\nGood cows, $11 to $12; common\nto medium, $0.60 to $10.50; canners\nand cutters, $7 to $9.\n'. Good bulls, $12.80 to $13.80; common to medium, $10 to $12.\nGood stocker and feeder steers,\n$17.60 to $20.80; common to medium,\n$14 to $17. >\"\nGood to choice veal calves, $16.60\nto $20.50; common to medium, $14\nto $17.\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 Fibre flax was\ngrown on mor. than 0500\/acres In\nEastern Canada this year, 4500 in\nOntario and tha rest In Quebec.\nSome ot the flax mills In the East\nplan to process'linseed flax.   \u25a0'..\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 60s line, 40a Una black floe type; larger typo rates m\n.ronuoot Minimum two lines.-..10%, discount for prompt paymont.\nFalrvl'dw CWIi'teh'and b'akersale- ' Piano  tor' oale.   Phone   I227-R\nBlessed-Sacrament-Hall,'Oct. 29th. mornings.\n. Bingo Tomorrow. Night,\nCathedral Hall.\nNEWS,.SMOKES, CANDV, COKES\nALL AT VALENTINE'S ALWAYS.\nMAC'O COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE WAY.\nMore miles per foot on shoe repairs at TONY'8  REPAIR SHOP,\nL.A. TO B. OF R.T.\nRegular meeting. tonight 8:00 p.m.\nReserve Nov.  15th .for Kinette\nbake sal. at Me & Mc'a.\nTypewriter for sale godd as new.\nCan be seen at Wait's Newa.\nTELESCOPE  SIGHTS   AND\nMOUNTS, -JACK BOYCE.\nWanted \u2014 Clean, COTTON: rags.\nNO buttons. Daily News Job Dept,\nHunting and Fishing LIcencco.'.\n. \"\" J4ck B'byce. \" f\"i\"-\n\"Family Polio Policy, $10.00 two\nyears.\" Phone C. W. APPLEYARD\n& CO. LTD,, 269.\nFLO-ON; '\u25a0'-'\u2022\nRubberset Nylon Brushes.\nBURNS LUMBER COMPANY.\nBe* tho.latent, arid smartest- In\nhats arid other accessories ot '\u25a0\u25a0\"'-.\n> AtfRIAf-MlLUNEpY.    >\n-.1 ii ' '\nCowboy Kirig pants,.rider otylo,\n11-ounce' bu'eksk-ti   -denim, ; pr?-\nshrunk, $5.6,S;palr. -'.WADES'. - '\nT-shirte,;We\u00abfers.?Pato-r -S-'BaidV\nwin's V-N knit ensures better qual-\"\nity. -i-.'THE CfllLtSPEM'S SHOp. '\n. ,~i\u2014V \u25a0'\"'\u2014\"^\nSeparate ski jacket regular $10.95,\nSpecial\/*7:os;, -r-1'.;\"   .V:--','\u2022\"-:\nt0t;n:tEeM8H0p-\n25e a balLwdol clearance. Ar^ylei'\nPansy, Bouquet'sock, yarn.*'.\nTHE CHILDREN'S'SHOP.\nFor Attractive iplft ifemi, 8011*-\nenlrs and rioveltfes,, visit\u25a0'\u25a0'. ';  '\",'\nQR\/KY'8 -JOSEPHINE. \"ST.\":\nM^M Square Dancing Clutr \u2014\nPlease - pfek .'tip merribershlii' Cards.\nCity Driig,(before B:30rp.m. Oct.'. S(fc;\nBamboo l_awri7Rakes\" fbr\"\"y6W\nFall Clean-Up \u2022\u00bb- 40c.;..- ;s.j;-':\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\n -_-_**___\u00a3_(\u25a0!. r--;, \".'',.\nMembera.of Oljn McLeary will\nmeet nt ttje ICO.Fir-Hall; nt 1-p,m.\ntoday to- nttdnd tho fqne'ral of the\nlate Malcolm MCKlrinbn.,;'  ,:\np.\" -   \u25a0 t \u25a0 ,    ,.  . :   \u25a0\nPlastic- aboWer curtain  sets; In\npink, green, blue, yellow and white\nat'the,.-, -,. '; ,\u25a0...,.,\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nPaper-white- narcissus far Christmas flowering, 15c i each,\" at \u25a0\nCOVENTRY8' FL.OWER SHOP\nPhone962.\nRubber floor tile In many attractive-colors. Tils and linoleum laying expertly done.\nT. H. WATERS A (JO. LTD.\nFor. your Christmas baking! All\nsizes of English stoneware, pudding\nbowls, square and round story-cake\ntins. - HIPPl-RSON'S.\nRummage sal. at Farmers' Market on Saturday, Nov. 1st. Come\nand choose your useful articles at\nreduced prices..\n8TRAYED KITTEN\nGrey tiger striped  with white\nchest Reward. 171 Baker St Phone\n388.\nIf BUTTERFIELD cant fin It\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly-done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.        .\n' Suits to messur. for ladles and\ngentlemen\u2014$59.50 up.\nROBT.NOLTE\nMaster Tailor\nFIRST CELEBRITY CONCERT\nJajoff Male Cho'tus flnd Dancers,\nWednesdSy,-. Oct 29, .Trail Junior\nHigh School Auditorium, 8:30 p.m.\nSave fuel! Weatherstrip doors and\nwindows riowl Our stock is complete of felt' rubber; gasket and\nstrip-seal weatherstripping.\n.BIPPERSON'Si\nTho nrinuol nieetlrig of tho,West\nKootenay Medical Association Will\nbe held.Wed., Oct 29. The Medical\nClinic will therefore be closed at\nnbon onWednesday.\n\u25a0 HALLOWE'EN ANNUAL MAS,\nQUERADE. CA8H DOOR PRIZE8,\nOA8HPRIZE8 FOR BEST DRESSED LADIES AND GENTLEMAN.\nADMI88I0N $1.25 A COUPLE.\nLEGION HALL, OCT. 81, 0-1.\nFlndlay 4-burner gas range, like\nhew \u2014 $150.00.\n\u2022We buy and sell new and used\nfurniture. -   ' '\u25a0'.\nSpecial price quotations given on\nalt mining, logging and construction\ncimp bedding requirements.  '\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n'413 HALL 8T.    *. PHONE I860\n2:2 -\u25a0;.''.\u2022''\u25a0:.*\/: *-:*\u25a0.\nOver Station CKLN Todoy . . .\nTwo addro-Beo, sponsored by the\nNelson School Board, for'; the - pur,\npose of Informing tho public on the\nforthcoming School r Bylaw. '\n.Tune In on CKLN at 11:45 a.m.\nto.- hear School Trustee MRS. G.\nDE LONG, At 7:45 this evening\nover the same station hear DR. N. E.\nMORRISON.\n-\u25a0 .\/.'.\u2022   '\".\u00bb\u25a0.\u25a0\u2022.\"\nCAF1D OF THAN K8\nI wish to thank all my' friends\nSnd neighbors ^or the lovely flowers : and kindness' during* my. bereavement\t\n-      Mrs.-R. N Hill and family,\n* 'South Slocan.\nYOUNGSST Rover Scout In\nCanada is James Christie, 18-\nyear-old former Vancouver boy\nwho is working atj Salmo to earn\nmoney for a trip to Switzerland\nto,attend a Rover Moot Jim's\nparents, Mr., and Mrs. J. A.\nChristie, are resident at 912 Silica Street All members of\nChristie's former troop at Vancouver plan to attend the Swiss\nrally, ,\nWashington monument Is more\nthan 555 feet tn height\n\/$&i\nMassey Trimmed\nBy Tony Leamza\nEDMONTON. Oct \u00bb (CP)-\nGovernor-General ' Vincent\n. Massey was clipped here Satur- <\nday   night  by  Tony   Leamza,\nbut for Tony It was no new\nexperience. -He'a  sheared 'the\nbeads of four Governor-Gon-\n* eral^i now,, .\n.   Tony Is th. barber at i downtown Edmonton hotel. He was\n. called out Saturday night to\nperform the hair-cutting operation, on'Mrv'Massey.  '-., .\nOn previous' occasions Tony\ncut tho hair of Lord Willingdon, Lord Twccdsmuir and'the\nEarl of Athlone.\n' \"Mr. Mossey said I did not\nneed to bo introduced, as h.\nknew me in Ottawa In 1914,\"\nTony remarked. \"He eame to\nmy shop in Ottawa for a haircut Another time was In 1917.\"\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n80 U.S. Planes to;\nStop at Edmonton\nEDMONTON, Oct. 27> (CP)-Alr\nForce officials at tha Edmonton\nairport announced today that beginning tomorrow night 80 United\nStates C-119 Packet aircraft twin-\nmotored Transport planes, will be\narriving In Edmonton at 30-minute\nIntervals on route to Alaska. The\ncraft will be checked and serviced\nhere.\nThe   planes, ar.   airlifting   th.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28, T9S2 \u2014 1\nIron Lung Flown\nTo Polio Patient\n, IDMONTON, Oct-7 (CP) - An\nR.CA.F. Dakota 'aircraft left Edmonton today for Walnwrlght Alta.\n130 miles Southeast of hero, bearing a doctor and a portable Iron\nlung to b. used In assisting a polio\npatient from Provost near Walnwrlght .\nThe patient believed to bo a\nyoung man, is being taken to Walnwrlght by car and from there will\nbe air-lifted In the Iron lung to\nhospital at Edmonton.\nFlt.-Lt Dr;' D. D. McPhee ot the\nR.C.A.F. \u2022station Edmonton hospital\nla accompanying the flight first of\nIts kind in Alberta during the current polio outbreak. Pilot of the\ncraft is FO. A A Ehman of Saskatoon.\nTh. R.CA.F. mercy flight was\nrequested by Dr. Norman Baster,\nAlberta director of communicable\ndiseases.\nThere wero eight new polio cases\nand one new death inHhe province\nduring the weekend. -Provincial\ntotals now are 667. cases and 61\ndeaths.   .,\n503rd Regimental Combat Team bf\nthe United States Army from Kentucky to Alaska to participate in\n\"Operation Warmwind\" in Alaska.\n\u25a0 i i  ,\nREAD  THI OLA88IFIED  DAILY\nTWO OF A KIND\nMOtr^OW, Oct 27 (AP) - Pravda\ngave Russian leaders a half-page\nsummary today of the U.S. presidential campaign, calling both Gen.\nDwight D. Eisenhower and Gen.\nAdlal Stevenson \"true servants of\nAmerican monopolies.\"\nNEWsMsx\nWHITE\nGi^Ljm LAMP\nNelion and District Dlstrlbutorai\nWood Vqllance\nHardware Co. Ltd.\n893-Baker St Phone 1630\nImportant Announcement by\nK> \u25a0\nMMfl.\nBRITISH COLUMBIJt l\u00abvi0N\nCANADIAN MEDIC AL\nThe Medical genrleei Aosoelatten Incorporated nnde?'tho So.detlei) Art of Britljli fcolumbla b an\nindependent non-profit organization carrying on the function, of administration of a prepaid medical\nservice plan. The Board of Directors, fully responsible for the management of M-S-A, it composed of\neight directors elected openly at an Annual Meeting, four of whom are employee directott,.two employer\ndirectors and two physician director!.\nThe British Columbia Division, Canadian Medical Association, lo Incorporated tinder tho Societies\nAct of British Columbia and is governed by. its officers and member, of the Board elected in geographical\nconstituencies throughout British Coluthbia.\nIt Is desired to point out that these two bodlet are Independent of each other bnt that the success of\n\u25a0 the prepaid medical ea\u00bb plan depends upon their absolute epioperatlon,   ;';.;,' .', '.*.  .\nThe recent policy statement of the British Columbia Division, CM.A.,\ndoes not change the existing agreement with M-S-A. It does clarify two\naspects of the patient-doctor-M-S-A relationship. ;\n(a) It clarlfleo the protection which M-S-A and tho doctor havo from those\nfew members who, becauoe of the Interpretation of the M-S-A Contract,\nrequest extra service which Is over and above the tequlrements of good\nmedical service, .or engage the services of specialists without referral.\n(b) The authority of the British Columbia Division, C.M.A., cat? now be used\nto protect the patient from requests for an extra account whichwas not\npreviously clearly agreed to between him and his doctor.     \/\n\u25a0)4r There Is no intention or desire on the pag of the doctor In general practice to charge the patient\nextra for procedures covered under theM-S-A Service Contract. They will continue their participation\nin M-S-A as they have for the past 12 years. . '\n\u25a0jfc- The M-S-A Contract provides for specialist services when needed. It is intended that the attending\ndoctor call in the specialist when necessary. In such eases, specialist care Is paid for by M-S-A:However,\nwhen a patient goes directly to a specialist, M-&A would pay the general practitioner fee. Any Increased\ncharge arranged by the patient and the specialist is the responsibility'of the patient     .  \u25a0 \\\n' \"^ The British Columbia Division, C.M.A., has in operation a \"Reference Committee\", access to\nwhich will now be available to any M-S-A member in regard to ai personal account from his doctor\nwhich is considered excessive.\nCLARIFICATION OF M-M SERVICES:\nT^r Members of M-S-A and registered depehdenti shall be entitled to the following services.\n(a) The necessary services of a general practitioner, who is a physician and surgeon licensed\nunderthe \"Medical Act\" of- British Columbia, when required for preventive, diagnostic\nor therapeutic treatment and care' and the services of a specialist registered as such by\nthe College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia only when referred by the\n,   ,.attending doctor. An Increased charge-by 'a specialist for a ease not referred is the\n:.: -\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0'  .   responsibility of the member.\n,..        .-(b) Necessary standardized laboratory services and diagnostic aids,, Including X-ray by a\n>\/'    \u25a0'.,    radiologist, when ordered by the attending physician and surgeon for non-hospitalized\n:patients.       -   ..v. '. \u2022- ,\n(c) You are advUed, if you have not already done so, to select ,i doctor for your family in\nadvance of illness or accident. You should make yourself known to him and Identify\nrv* yourself as a,member of M-S-A;'.Thla is the normal and correct procedure for obtaining\n\"' \u2022 medical care and will assure you ofthe necessary attention in an emergency.\n(d).For the few persons who,' of their own volition, desiretiiat their regular doctor provide\nextra service or attention, an agreement should be worked put between doctor and patient\n, to this effect before the service is rendered. M-S-A is not liable for the fee that would\nbe-charged for this extrar service. Any extra account sent, by the'doctor to the patient\n|    would state: \"For procedure arranged with you outside the M-S-A Service Contract.\"\nG. G. FERGUSON, M. D.;\nExteutiei Sierttary ef B.C. Dhitlm;\nCanadian Medical Association.\nA. L. McLELLAN,\nDirtclor,\nMedical Services Association.\n -^...^mmmimmmifmmmmmmmmi\n'Sib\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,\nTUESDAY, OCT. 28, 1952_\nKejiya Situation\nTense and Quiet\nNAIROBI, Kenya, Oct. 27 (Reuters) ^-Police announced here today\nthat another Mau Mau murder had\nbeen discovered at Nanyukl, 125\nmiles North ot Nairobi.\n-The body ot an African named\nNdundo Dishon. last seen a week\nago, was found in n thicket where\na Mau Mau ceremony had been held.\nThe police said 10 suspects had been\narrested.\nPolice also reported today that 8D\nAfricans were arrested at a Mau\nMau meeting two nights ago In bush\ncountry near Sagati. Mau Mau\nmeans \"the hidden ones.\nMASS ARRESTS\nBut generally the situation wu\nquiet though tense in this British\ncolony, threatened by a native rebellion.\nSince auhoritlea opened their campaign ot mass arrests in a \"get-\ntough\" policy against the Mau Mali,\nthousands ot tribesmen have fled\nr<m cities to the mountains.* There\nwidespread tear they may be organizing a revolt there.\nAn air spotter pilot returned to\nbase today to report he had seen\na fathering ot. about 100 tribesmen\nin a clearing in the mountains. The\ntribesmen- come from ths Kikuyu\n'tribe. V   & ?\n\u25a0\".... \u25a0''.-\u25a0 2- \u25a0 \u25a0 '\u2022,-'..     i   .\"'\u25a0.- i    t-     \u2022 -\"*'.'\"'. '-'i.'' -*. \". \u25a0 \u25a0 -\u25a0        '' ;. : . ' -.'     .        '-.'\u25a0'. .      .\"\"\u2022*'. --.-\u25a0'      \u25a0. \u2022 ''\u25a0'\/.\nMoving Ahead with Can\n-.-ii\n1.\nSUMMEKLAND, B.C. \u2014 More\nthan 12,000 seedlings of hardy varieties of apples are being prepared\nat the Dominion Experimental Station heris for fruit growers in the\nNorth Okanagan Valley,\nOf this number 2700 seedlings are\nin the station orchards and an additional 10,000 are in nurseries to be\nplanted as land becomes available.\nPurpose ot the experiment, says\nDr. A_.J_.Mann. station orchsrefot.\nIs \"to provide growers living north\nof Oyama with apple varieties that\nwill mature for markets.   ;\nAt present, he said, these growers are restricted to a few varieties\nexcept in favored locations.\nAs Mcintosh production has\nreached-the limits of market capacity, tfte Summerland. station is\nseeking varieties that will place\nNorth Okanagan growers in a competitive position with South Okanagan rfruitmen.\nThe apple breeding experiments\nthat have produced the seedlings\nnow available, have \"used a hardy\nparent stock produced to resist\nharder winter climatic conditions\nnorth of Oyama.\nIndian Woman Held\nOn Arson Charge\nLILtOOET, B.C., Oct 27 (CP) \u2014\nAn Indian woman, Helen Johnny,\nwas committed for trial Saturday on\na eharge of arson following the\nburning of two Indian houses at\nD'Arcy Reserve.\nAt the height of the fire, witnesses\nsaid, she locked herself In one of\nths burning houses but was rescued\nby volunteer fire fighters who battered down the door with a piece of\ntimber. \\\n..*er son, William, Johnny'and\nCary Mary August told the court\nthat Helen Johnny had been drinking and came into their house and\ntold them she was going to burn It\ndown.\nShe struck a match, they said,\nand held it to wallpaper in the bedroom anc. living room.\nWilliam said he tried ta stop her\nbut the fire spread and destroyed\ntwo houses, and other property.\nMrs. Johnny lost her home on the\nFraser at Lillooet by fire a year agp.\nMelbourne Press\nCensures Censors\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Oct. 27'\n(Ret-ters)^ The Mef bourne Herald\ntoday criticized military censors In\nKorea for preventing identlficstion\nof the British Commonwealth unit\nengaged in the battle tor Little\nGibraltar Hill last week.\nDescribing' the    censorship\n\"over    rigid,\"    the    Herald    said\neditorially:\n\"The censorship allows the publication of the news that one company of the British Commonwealth\ndivision was practically wiped out,\nbut withholds identification of this,\ncompsny. \u2022'\n\"Relatives of every British, Australian and Canadian' soldier serv-\nin'g'ln one'of the BO-odd companies\nof the division aft exposed to\nharrowing anxiety.\n\"TCie unit Involved must have\nbeen identified, .by the enemy\nforces and there is no point in\nwithholding the Information from\nour Own people.\"\nA North Korean communique\nclaimed heavy Western front fighting last week at Little Gibraltar\nHill, West of Chorwon, resulted in\n230 casualties to the 25th Canadian\nBrigade. A Canadian Army spokesman said tbe communique was\n\"grossly exaggerated... we haven't\ngot the final figures on the\ncasualties for publication yet, but I\nam certain they are nowhere near\nthat number.\"\n^^S\u00bb\nSCARBOROUGH AND UASIDC-Frigidaire more, aheai with\nCanada. Tills new H-acre plant In Scarborough was opened officially on\nOctober 16th. In addition, a large (lent at leaside Is occupied on defence -\n'\"'\" \"\"'=* -S? fl?\n <-  \u25a0     syi,\n,S \u2022   SS \/\/\nv -ts -*\nLONDON-General Motors Diesel Limited moves ahead with Canada. This seven acre\nplant opened In 1950. has already announced plans for an 85,000 square foot addition,'\nwhich will enable It to provide the most modern service facilities for locomotives.\nCzfechs Lose Seat\nTo U.S. in U.N.\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y., Oct 27\n(AP\u2014United States-backed Yugo-\nslavia today beat Russian-sponsored\nCzechoslovakia for a seat on the\nU.N.'s Economic and Social Council\nafter 18 hotly-conjested ballots. The\nvote was 40 to 18. A two-thirds\nmajority was needed.\nIt was the third time U.S. pressure had kept Czechoslovakia out\nof a U.N. post for which lt had\ncampaigned.\n-^ %2l-.\n\" .     \"*\"\u2022<\u201e\n?<<$#'?\u00ab '\u25a0 \" \u25a0 .\nv,v,>   - -:; :.,.rrr-.\n1--..rr.., y\n*\u00a3l\\,\n'%&V        \u00ab\n~:'*^2li__&.\n.lurnkak\nST. CATH.                .  ___\t\nahead with Canada. This Tut new foundry, opened In Grantham Township on October 15ll|,\nmakes possible the construction of heavy engine components impossible before.* Tbgelli. r\nwith the main plant In the city of Si. Catharines, the McKinnon enterprise now has 35 acres\nunder roof and contracts are being lei for additional building covering eight acres.\nGeneral Motors builds more ears and tracks ill Canada than\nany other manufacturer.. .and because of Gltfa unchallenged\nleadership in motor vehicles, many people think of GM as\nonly an automotive firm. 'But there la much more than that\nto the GM story. \/     '\nTrue, GM's largest contribution to Canada's industrial strength\nis in the vast group of plants hi Oshawa* which -last year,\nturned ont 185,000 ears and trucks. But in London, Ontario,\nthe new plant of General Motors! Diesel Limited is building\nevery type of diesel locomotive\u2014quick^ efficient switchers,\nmammoth high-speed road locomotives. In St. Catharines,\nOntario, the two plants of The McKinnon Industries Limited\nturn, out varied'prbducts from heavy malleable and gray,iron\ncastings to small electric motors\u2014Delco motors that power a\nhigh percentage of home appliances in Canada. Frigidaire\n. Products of Canada Limited, at Scarborough and Leaside\nplants, builds world-famous home appliances, as well as com-\nl .\nOSHAWA-Cenrral Motors of Canada Llrallrd moves ahead vrflh Canada, t\nturn ont more and better can and tracks In the tradition of fine crai-smansUd\nestablished mete than 80 years ago by carriage maker Rbbert Mclaughlin. T\"\nplant shown has SO acres of floor space. In addition a new 17-acre truck plant\u00bb\n.joe opened tn 1953.. ,\u2022 \u00bb\u00abw six-acre central parts warehouse was opeded In 1951|\n'and other new parts warehouses built or under construction are at Vanoonw]\n, Winnipeg. London, Mostfrsnl and Moarton.,\nWiNDSOR-The CM Engine Plant moves ahead with i\nProducing more engines than, ever before, the Engine Plant is I\nsUndy expanding to meet production demands at Oahawa. It <\n8 acres.\nmercial refrigeration, air-conditioning and humidity <\nequipment. In Windsor, the GM Engine Plant builds and I\nthe power plants for GM's Canadian-built cars and trucks, j\nPictured here are representative plants of GM's Canad\ndivisions. They have been growing impressively\u2014in outp\nin number pf employees, in size of plant. ..striding ahead .\nour country. Today GM gives employment to over 20,C\nCanadians. And what does GM's great industrial sti\nmean to any one citizen of Canada? It means more i\nmade at home\u2014less to import and thus more to be aha\namong ourselves in Canada. In addition to turning out mo\n.and better things for Canadians,\nGeneral Motors plants are.also\ncontributing to the nation's\ndefence program and to its\nexpanding export markets.\nThat is our proud story. That\nis General Motors in Canada.\nmwifi\nGENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA\nUMITID\nOSHAWA AND WINDSOR\nFRIGIDAIRE PRODUCTS OF CANADA\n\"\u25a0\"-.   '\/.-.'        UMITID\nLEASIDE AND SCARBOROUGH\nGENERAL MOTORS DIESEL\n-.'\u25a0\"; \u25a0 UMITID' 2 I;\n\u25a0 LONDON\nTHI McKINNON INDUSTR\nUMITID\nST. CATHARlNlS AND GRANTHAM TOWNSHIP\nPRODUCING    MORE    mWH    BETTER   THIMGS    FOR    IHOSfcE    PEOPLE\nNELSON TRANSFER CO. LTD.\nComer of Stanley ond Vernon Street!\nNelson, B.C.\nWIGINTON MOTORS LTD.\n206 Baker St., Phono 122 ...'\u2022'\u2022 \u25a0\u2022..'\u25a0-.'Nelion, Jfc-<C.\n .\nTrqut take seems to be the destination fpr many a\nlocal sportsman, trying his luck with rod and reel near the\nseasons end. Catches have included trout up in 14 pounds.\nNelsonites;^i_p'Kapak,   Walter\nDuckworth, Louis Hanic, Tom Vox\ntad Walter,' Kitto.:iust returned\nfrom   Trout . Lake   disappointed.\n: Here's why; Kerby Grenfell,' his\nwife and an Idaho couple spent n\nweek at the lake. Tho first three\ndays of fishing netted, them nothing, but for the balance-of the week\nthey pulled them out \"like mad.\"\nThey came up with some beauties.\ntwo 14-pounders, a few, 10-pound-\ners and some Smaller trout weighing up to five pounds.\nBack home came the other party\nwith a \"small\" catch, the biggest\nweighing about two and a half\npounds..\"! guess the weather was\nI too nice,\" said Walter Duckworth,\n\"We sure didn't cash in on the fish.\"\n'\u2022\u2022'.*'*\u25a0'.\nThey had o fine time anyway,\nthey said. On their way home\nfrom Marblehead bridge across\nthe Lardeau River they saw a\ncloht to thrill any sportsmen,\n. Over 100 Dolly Vnrden lay fan:\nnlng their' tails against the current '.Biggest was about 20 pounds\nBill tells-us. The river Is closed\nto char fishing (the Dollies are\nlate (pawners) do the gang didn't\ntry  for  any.   Some  temptation,\nthough.'\n...'.'.'-'\nReg Goldsbury is having \"quite\nThe world's\nfinest tobaccos\nmost\ncigarette\nyou con smoke!\na bit of luck\";on Kootenay Lake.\nHe landed a 13-pound salmon after\na 10-minute scrap.  \"He. sure put\nup a dandy fight\" said Reg. The\nNelsonite   used   a   \"game   guide\nplug\", the fiat fish-shaped wobbler.\n\u25a0*  r*   *\nA Kootenay Bay .resident has\nabsolutely   ho   complaint   about\nMain Lake fishing. As a matter\nof fact, he Justly boasts of the\ncatches he's had In the last two\nweeks. This expert has  landed\n12 \"salmon\" weighing jp to 20\npounds. Quite a catch. Most of\nthem, he said, were caught Just\noff Pilot Point\nThe West Arm Is still giving\nthem up (provided you dont give\nup first) says Bealby resident Arno\nSommerfeld. He's had amazing luck\nduring the past week after several\nweeks ot still fishing without re.\nsuit. Now he's averaging four and\nfive a day in his spare time. Arno\nsays minnows have been his best\nlure. Fly fishing on the point has\nhot netted much.\n'\u25a0-,;\u00bb.\u00bb   *' \"...\nNow that fishing Is limited to the\nMain Lake and Its West Arm perhaps some of you are planning a\ntrip to try end-of-the-season-luck.\nHere are some tips from some of\nthe'sportsmen who have had good\nluck on these waters.-A red and\nwhite plug when the weather's fine\nshould tempt trout in the Main\nLake, fishermen tell us, A Number\n2 Gibbs in the Arm has proven\nmost successful, and still seems to\ntempt the fish more than fly or\nplugs.\nI'll take mine with era olive.\nKelowna Profits\n$1100 On Regatta\nKELOWNA-Net profit from the\n1052 regatta will run around $3100\nit was learned as plans were made\nto hold, the annual meeting ot the\nKelowna Aquatic Association to\nplan for the 1953 event\nPhil Megk, who has guided the\norganization for two years, has\nindicated he will not stand for\npresident for another year. Pressure of business is his reason tor\nstepping from the chair.\nDirectors who complete two-\nyear terms are: pr. Walter 0'Don-\nnail, Joe Capozzl, Harold Tong,\nDick Parkinson, Dexter Pitt-grew\nand Don Watt,\nReplacement for W. H. Sands,\nwho has another year to serve, will\nalso be necessary. Mr. Sands is\nnow deputy minister of labor. .\n. Directors-who still have another\nyear to nerve are: Dr. Welter\nAnderson, Dr. George Athans,'Jack\nTreadgold, Don Bruce, Dr. Mel\nButler and Phil Meek.\nN.H.L. LEADERS\nBy The Canadian Press\nStanding \u2014 Montfeal, won four,\nlost two, Med two-rlO points.\nPoints\u2014Kennedy, Toronto; Lindsay, Detroit; Howe,J)e_rolt\u201410.\nGoals\u2014Kennedy, Toronto) Howe,\nDetroit*-*'*.. *\u00a7..'-.'\nAssists\u2014Prystal, IJ^trolt, Prono-\nvosl; Detroit, Ronty^New York \u2014\nsix. S\n\u2022 Shutouts\u2014Henry, 'j.os.on, Sawchuk,, Detroit McNeil, Montreal,\nRollins, Chioago\u2014one.\nPenalties \u2014 Ua<Wy, Detroit-30\nminutes. ips\n SS\t\nA cubic toot of -J&at 20,000 feet\nabove sea level weigos only half as\nmuch as the same airl;at sea level.\nPro Rec (lasses\nGrowing Here\nPro Ree got into its stride in Its\nsecond week. as some 15 people\nturned out Monday tor three classes at the Civic Centre. v   >\nThe men are still the laggards.\nPut in percentages, said Stan Payne\nit looks rgOOd: a 100 - per cent increase oyer last week.. But the\nmen's instructor added that the increase, was from two men to four.\nHowever, 30 girls and 22 women\ngot down to business in two classes\nfeaturing balance work, tumbling\nand keep-fit exercises done to\nmusic. Instructors reported much\nenthusiasm for the classes, and expected the turnout would be larger again at future classes.\nAnother women's class is slated\nfor Wednesday, and the boys have\ntheir innings on Friday.\nZatopek Upsets\nWorld Records\nBy MILTON MARMOR\nLONDON, Oct 27 (AP) \u2014 Emil\nZatopek, the incredible Czech, run.\nner, has rewritten the world record\nbook for long distance races.\nThe holder of three .Olympic records,, all set in Helsinki this Summer, now holds seven world marks\n\u2014every recognized distance event\nin the books from 10,000 metres\nonwards.  \u25a0 ,'\u25a0   '\nHere are his seven world marks\n^et at different periods since 1950\n(the 25,000, 30,000 metres arid 15\nmiles Sunday):\n10,000 metres: 29 minutes, 02.8\nseconds,    .- . \u2022 \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.'\n20,000 metres: 89 minutes, .81.8'\nseconds.\n25,000 metres: 1 hour, 19 minutes,\n21.8 seconds.\n30,000 metres: 1 hour, 85 minutes,\n23.8 seconds.\nr 10-mile run: 48 minutes, 12 seconds.     . '\n15-mile runt.-1 hour, IS minutes,\n28.4 seconds.\nOne-hour .ran: 12 miles, 810 yards.\nUnofficially, Zatopek also has annihilated the six-mile world record\nof 28:30.8, set in 1940 by Viljo Hetno\nof Finland.\nThe Czech army major's clocking\nbf 29.02.6 for the 10,000 metres (six\nmiles, 378 yards) in 1950 meant that\nhe sped the six-mile mark some ?5\nseconds or so faster than Helno's\nworld record. But on that day in\nTurku, Finland, the officials had\nfailed to put watches on him at' the\nsix-mile distance.\nFootball\nNEW YORK, Oct. 27 (AP) '\u2022'-\nNational Football League standings:\nAMERICAN CONFERENCE\n' .':v...-. W L T Pet Tp Op\nCleveland.  4 1 0   .800 135 r   *\nNew York  8 2 0   .600 105 -60\nChicago Cards   3 2 0   .600   98   96\nPhiladelphia 8 2 0   .600   85 136\nWashington    2 3 0   .400   92 102\nPittsburgh     1 4 0   .200 124 133\nNATIONAL CONFERENCE\nSan Francisco ..5 0 0 1.000 170   54\nDetroit 3 2 0   .600  96   92\nGreen Bay  2 3 0   .400 118 140\nLos Angeles .... 2 8 0 .400 98 113\nChicago Bears 2 3 0 .400 95 126\nDallas 0 5 0   .000   75 171\n68 Thoroughbreds\nDie in Stable Fire\nLOUISVILLE, Ky\u201e Oct. 27 (AP)\n\u2014A disastrous fire raced through\nthe largest barn at Douglas Park\nrace training track last night, destroying 68 thoroughbred horses,\nvalued at more than $280,000.\nMost were yearlings.\nTrack superintendent Tom Young\nsaid only seven, horses were rescued\nfrom the 400-foot-long stable.\n-mm*\n*Ha_ MILK pifJoH_r when you DRIVE.\nTTUnx\nA. PRODUCT   \u00a9,P   TNI   R.OOT.S   GROUP\n,   Kootenay Motors (Nelson 1949) Ltd.\n201 Baker St. Nelson, B. C.\nBrother Act a Leaf Feature\nRONr (RtfD);KOEHLE\nFhlTZ KOEHLE\n- AS GOOD A8.EVER In tholr oleon-playlnn, high-scoring brother\nact-are Red; and Frit?, ;who this season spark the Leafs' first line.\nRed.'elder hilf of tho combination, came to the Leafs In 19.6 from\ntho Nabalmo Cllppero, arid-Fritz followed In 1949 after a stint with\nWetaeklwln Canadians. Frltegot off.to a good start this semester\nwith a hat trick In a pre-season exhibition mitch against Trail.\n4-Team Cage League\nReady for First Whistle\nA ' four-team senior -basketball\nleague, is 'being forrned here as the\nnewest i activity ill Pro Rec's expanding ; prigram. '\u25a0_;\n'Representatives, of the- Junior\nHigh Bombers, Notre Dame Pups,\nand' the: nucleus of two city teams\nmet at the j Civic Centre Tuesday\nnight and decided to form a senior\n\"B\" league. '\u2022\u25a0'.-.-\u2022.'\u25a0\nFirst practice will be Wednesday\nln'the recreation hall.at the Civic\nCentre. The hoojwilayers are losing no time in getting started, and\nplan -the first regular league \u25a0 game\nfor Nov. .14. .v\nStan -Payne, Pro Rec: organizer,\nwasi named chairman at the meeting.1 Iriterlnv^ommlttee to get the\nleague organized will consist of\nDes 'Corry, i Gene -Nutter,' Don MacKinnon, Joe Ebstttikoff, Pat Ren-\nwick, Keith Lowen and Bill Jack-\nman.     -.'.-' ..''\nThe meeting discussed ways and\nmeans, and decided to contact a\nlist of possible coaches. In addition,\nreferees, timekeepers and score-\nkeepers will-be-sought.\nAverage, age in the leagua will\nlikely be about 21, but it was stressed that there is no rigid age limit\nMore'players are looked for to fill-\nout the two city teams.\nPossibility! of Saturday night\ngames against outside teams was\ndiscussed. It was felt that an all-\nstar team from the Nelson league\ncould take on the best senior teams\nin the Interior.\n- If participation is adequate, Pro\nRec authorities will supply equipment tree; Further practice times\nand a league schedule will be announced later.\nMinor Hockey\nIce Fees Up\nThe Civic Centre Commission, has\nincreased minor hockey ice fees,\nContract has also been drawn up\nwhereby the Nelson Curling Club\nwill pay $2845. rental for. the coming\nseason. Ibis is the same as last\nyear when rates were increased.\nUnder the new minor hockey ice\nfees, the., juvenile age; group nas\nbeen raised from $1.50 - to $3 and\nthe intermediate age group from S3\ntots.\nIncreases-in price for admission\nfend use of the Civic Centre aifena\nhave risen from tl to $1.50 for the\njunior age \"group, $2 to $3 for the\nintermediate age group -.and $3 to\n$5 for the senior age group.\nMantle Results To\nSurgeon-General\nOKLAHOMA CITY, Oct. 27 (AP)\n\u2014The'Army recruiting station announced today the results of a draft\nphysical for baseball outfielder\nMickey Mantle, ace for New York\nYankees, have been forwarded to\nthe surgeon-general in Washington.\nIn the past, when physical examination findings went to the\nsurgeon-general for review, it indicated rejected. Normally, when a\ndraftee passes, the papers are sent\nto his county draft board. \u2022\nMantle, 21-year-old Commerce,\nOkla., slugger took his third'draft\nphysical Wednesday.\nMantle was rejected twice because of a bone infection in his\nleg\u2014osteomyelitis. '\nHOCKEY'S BIG 7\nBy Tha Canadian Press\nG A Pt\nKennedy, Toronto _   8   4  10\nHowe, Detroit  .-    8  4   10\nLindsay, Detroit     8  0   10\nPrystai, Detroit     8   8    9\nRichard, Montreal ............   II    8\nRonty, New York    16    8\nHergesheimer, New York    4  1'   7\nDelvecchio, Detroit    3   4    7\nFronoyost, Detroit .....;..:..:   1ST\nDales Set\nWINNIPEG,, Oct 27L(CP)-Dates\nand times for the .'Western Inter-\nprovincial Football!, final; between\nWinnipeg r Blue Bomber? and Edmonton' Eskimos were announced\ntonight, by.; club'officials. 7 \".-.'.\n\u25a0'\u25a0 First .game ofithe best-of-three\nseries 13 at.Edmonton Saturday at\n8:30 p.m\/ MST. Tho: series then\nshifts to Winnipeg for an afternoon\ngame Nov. 8 starting 2 p.m. CST.\nThe filial game, if necessary, will\nbe played at Winnipeg Armistice\nDay, Nov. 11, at 2 p.ml\nThe.series\/winner will represent\nthe .West s In the Grey Cup final'. at\nToronto Nov. 29th, .   .\nCAP OF GOLD,\nRICHER, HILLTOP\nJ(>P FAVORITES\n.LONDON, Oct. 27.AP) - Cap\nof-Gold'.held'firm as'thef 10 to-1\nfavorite tonight as two 100 to' 1\nshots\u2022'\u2014 Kara Tepe and ;Nightn_an\n\u2014were withdrawn from ' Wednesday's Caihbridgeshirer Stakes at'\nNewmarket -\n\u25a0With the withdrawal of the two\noutsiders, 50 horses still were.left\nin-the .'field2for the 1 1-5-mile\nclassic. '\u25a0'\u25a0-;. .    (.',>:\u2022\";\u25a0\nRicher and: Hilltop each- were\nquoted at 100i to 0. odds, second\nchoice-torCapof Gold, inrthe bppk.\nmakers'; call-over at the Victoria\nClub. AVfinal call-ever, atr odds will\nbe made'' of tho club' tomorrow\nrught - .   ' \u25a0\u25a0      -.   ,'.   ..    ..\u25a0\u2022\nBoxing Champ Off\nTo Vancouver\nEDMONTON, Oct. 27 (CP) -\nJimmy Jones announced tonight he\nwill be leaving Edmonton tomorrow for -Vancouver with Canadian\nheavyweight boxing chartpion Earl\nWalls. and two. other members of\nhis stable.\nManager. Jones said all three will\nappear on the Nov. 13 boxing card\nbeing staged in Vancouver . by\nmatchmaker Jack Berry of Edmonton.\nTravelling with Jones and Walls\nWilli be Sonny Jones of Toronto, a\nlight middleweight and Jersey Joe\nEdwards of Calgary, a flyweight.\nA 8-hny Jones, who; entered\n\u25a0boxlrtg at Vancouver, formerly\nlived at Nelson. \u2022\nShirley Eckel\nWins Trophy\nTORONTO, Oct. 27 (CPJ^Shir.\nley -Eckel, a' member - of Canada's\n1952! Olympic track team, Sunday,\nwas,!chosen Ontario's outstanding\ngirl athlete.,  .\nShe-was awarded, the Norma\nCraig. Memorial Trophy by the\nWomen's Amateur Athletic Federation-of Canada, Ontario branch.\nCoalers Down\nBuffaloes 7-6\nBEL__EVtJl!,rAlta\u201e Oct. 27 (CP),-^\nAn: overtime goal by scoring ace\nGordon Vejprava tonight-gave the\nCrow's Nest Coalersa 7-6 victory\nover Calgary Buffaloes in a Western Canada Junior Hockey League\ngame here.\n' The win moved Coalers into a\nthird-place tie with Moose Jaw\nCanucks ahd left the Buffaloes tied\nfor first place with Reglna Pats.\niiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-i.-iiii.-i\nChampion Pacer\nHonored or Lunch\nNEW YORK, Oct 2T (AP)\u2014\nGood Time, champion money-\nwinning pacer being retired to\nstud after six years of campaigning, was.given a unique\ntribute by the United States\nHarness Writers Association today. He was guest of honor ot\na luncheon at Yonkers Raceway.\nAs other guests ate their roast\n.. heef and salads,. Good Time\nmunched apples, carrots and\nsugar and heard himself extolled . as the greatest harness\nhorse of all time, whose earnings of $318,792 never have\nbeen approached.\n111u.M-i11111111i-i11111.1111111.11111m-.-i\nFernie Bowling\nFERNIE, B.C. \u2014 Standings of the\nCommercial Bowling League follows: '.,\"'.'\nMeat Market, 13 points; Quality\nMeat 11: Coal Company 10.. C.P.R,\n10, Fiorlello 8, Bean 7, Combines 7,\nEagles 7, Firemen 7, 4A's 8, Garage\n6, Rum Bugs 5.\n\u2022        *        * V\nHot Shots are living up to their\nnames and are leading the Fernie\nLadies Bowling League, Complete\nstandings follow:\nHot Shots, 16, Aces 14, Lucky\nStrikes .13,-O.K.'s 9, Kings,8, Shamrocks 7, Jokers 7, COmets, 7, White\nSpot 5,' Bombers 4, Rebekahs 3,\nNurses 8.\n\u25a0 * \u00bb'.'\u2022*.., \u2666\nStanding of the Thursday. Commercial League as follows:\nNorth.End 15, Eckersley 9, Murphy 7, Qupil-5,'Marwell 5, Telephone 4. '..:''\n\u25a0 *'.' \u2022    *\n'   Standing .of: the  Fernie  Mixed\nBowling League is as follows:\nMiscisco .13, Cooks .12, Morley ,11,\nC.Y.O. 11, Teachers 9, Cameron 8,\nBankers 8, White 8, Neidig 7, Greyhounds 4, Queens 3, W. Fernie 3.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nMARITIME MAJOR        ,\nSydney 3, Charlottetown 4 (overtime)\nONTARIO SENIOR\nChatham 7, Hamilton 0\nHospital Wage Hike\ns Patients Costs\nUp\nDUNCAN, B.C., Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014A\n10 per cent wage increase and\nchanges in working conditions asked\nby hospital'lay employees will cost\nKing's Daughters' Hospital an extra $88,000 per year and increase the\npatient-day cost by $2.25, according\nto hospital directors.\nThrough the Hospital Employees'\nFederal Union the employees have\nasked for a 40-hour week, three\nweek's holiday after, five years of\nservice, and 18 days sick leave per\nyear.\nLETHBRIDGE,, Alta., Oct. 27\n(CP) \u2014 Lord Abbott Kosho Ohtanl\nof Kyoto, Japan, the spiritual\nleader of Hompa Hongwanji Budd-\nliist sect in Japan, will visit members of the faith in Southern Alberta during November, it was announced here by Rev. Y. Kawan-\nura of Picture Butte, Alta.\nThe announcement said Lord Abbott will make his first Western\nStop at Winnipeg Nov. 1, then to\nRegina Nov. 2 and Edmonton Nov.\n3 He is to be in Lethbridge Nov. 4\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28,1952 \u2014 9\nQroza's ToeQoodfor\n50 Yards for Browns\nCLEVELAND, Oct. 27 (AP) \u2014\nWhen you've got Lou Groza on your\nfootball team, touchdowns somehow\nseem old fashioned.\nWatch Cleveland Browns any\nSunday. It's fourth down. Do they\nkick? Do they pass? Not always, if\nthe goal posts are 50 yards away\nor less.\nThey call Groza from his left\ntackle job, and the most famous toe\nin United States football is aching\nfor a field goal.   .\nTo the distress of the other teams\nin the American Conference of\nthe National Football League, this\nusually works.\n\"Of course, we'd rather have the\nsix points,\" Lou conceded in an\ninterview today. \"But Paul (coach\nPaul Brown) feels that under thdse\nconditions we have a chance for\nthree points.\n\"If the kick falls, then the ball\nPATS DEFEAT\nCANUCKS 7-6\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Oct. 27 (CP)\n\u2014Regina Pats tonight withstood a\ndetermined comeback attempt and\ndefeated Moose Jaw Canucks 7-6\nin a Western Canada Junior Hockey\nLeague game here.\nThe .win moved Regina Into a\nfirst-place tie with Calgary Buffaloes, Canucks are alone in third\nplace, two points behind Edmonton and Lethbridge, tied for second.\ngoes out on the other team's 20-yard\nline, and that's almost as good as\na punt.\"\nThrough the years, Lou has meant\na great deal to the Browns. He\nhas: kicked 87 extra points in Accession in the N.F.L., four points\nhigher than the record.\nScored more points than anyone\nelse in the league\u201453\u2014this season.\nThirty of those points are field\ngoals.\nSet the record for field goals\u2014\n13\u2014for the league. This was tied\nthe following year, in 1941, by Bob\nWaterfield of the Los Angeles\nRams. But Lou's 10 this year puts\nhim in a formidable spot for a new\nrecord. He has seven more games\nto play.\nLou's longest successful boot was\n53 yards, kicked against Brooklyn.\nCIVIC\nSKATING\nTINY TOTS\n2:30-4:00\nCHILDREN\n4:05-5:50\nTODAY\nx SENIOR HOCKEY \u00bb\n9             WEDNESDAY cJ\n3          SPOKANE FLYERS J\nV8\n3      NELSON MAPLE LEAFS \\\n8 P.M. :*\n3         Tickets  On  Sale. at  Kootenay  Stationers 7&\nWedneaday, 10:00 a.m, to 12 Noon JP\nClvlo Centre, 12 Noon to 5:00 p.m.\nA SPECIAL\nNAVAL RECRUITING OFFICER\nWILL BE HERE IN\nNELSON\nf y-yMft\nm\nasMflB\nTOMORROW\nOct. 29 to Nov. 1\nSpecial R.C.N. Recruiting\nOfficer, is here to tell yon all \\\nabout the openings there are in-\nCanada's expanding Navy.\nYou should be aged 17 to 251\n'(or 29 for stime specialist\ncategories),\npreparedness is the surest prevention,\nof aggression. Yon can help\nyour Royal Canadian Navy\nto help keep Canada strong!'\nCANADIAN\nLEGION\nBUILDING\nywet \u2022 SERVE YOUR\nCOUNTRY   -SERVEYOURSELF\nRoyal Canadian Navy\n. ..Planned advancement opportune\n.SOdoytonnuonwy^P^\n\u2022A man's B\u00bbe at teal\nIIM.B\n SiiPilWi!,i\u00abPiiJip.f|S\nL\nV\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\n10\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28, 1952\n'OM.MAfftS-J DON'T MOM)\n\\WHAT7DDO~..\nW&y-\n^m\nfv\nM\n^m\nf&\\r\/f>!Lmwb\u00a7\n\u2022GaszSr\t\nm -__\u25a0 \u25a0 vi i_^__b\n\\ fflm-W-PffiONWAMTADS\n\\    FOR QU\/CK RESULTS f\nPhone 144\nDmdllm for Cltwl.ldd Adi\u2014-S p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nGRADUATE   NURSES\nWANTED\nfor eervlco In R.C.A.F, Applicants mutt possess I certificate\nfrom a recognized hoapltal or\nuniversity and preference will\nbe given to those with operate\nlng room experience, Apply to\nR.C.A.F Recruiting .Unit, P.O.\nBldg., Lethbridge for further\nparticulars, or. contact the mobile unit when it reaches your\ntowa\nWANTED - GIRI. OR WOMEN\nfor boarding house. Good working condition. Good hours, no\nobjections to D,P. persons, of any\nnatiof-al-ty. Mrs, C. E, Taylor,\n1557 Pine, TraU, B.C. Phone 347-X\nTrail.\nWAttitib - A Cl_-Ar.ltorwff.\nman, for two or three hours per\nday. 75c per hour. Windsor\nCabins, Nelson.\nWANTED\u2014ONE BAhBER. GtbOD\nlocation; experienced preferred,\nApply Box 918, Cranbrook, B.C,\nWANTED-MILLWRIGHT, FULLY\nexperienced! able to hammer and\nlook after saws as well. Top wages\nApply Halston Planing Mills Ltd.,\nKamloops, B.C.\nsWANTED-D__SK CLERK AFTER'\nnoons and evenings. Apply Royal\nHotel.\nWANTED - MAN Tb __UlLS\nchimney, Ph, 405-R after 8 p.m.\nBOATS AND ENGINES\nCABIN CRUISER - IDEAL FOR\n.main lake fishing, duck hunting,\netc. Double bunk. 1325, Apply 320\nHall Mines Rd, Phone 1542.\nIC.-.o\"\nSAURIWWMF NEW    7.6\nboard. Leaving town. Ph, 481-R,\n~Wf.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nI     SITUATldNS WANTED\nIAN WITH FOURTH-CLASS EN-\ngineer's certificate desires steady\nposition as fireman or what have\nyou. Apply Box 6415, Daily News.\n\u25a0JOY, 16, WXfBfS WORK AYttSA\nschool and Saturdays, preferrably\ngarage or hardware. Phone 443-R\nHOUSEWORK DONE; 75c PER HR.\nPhone 1275-L. Ask for Florence,\n-UUNU LAD}.   WISHES HOUSE-\nvrork by the hour. Phone 1545-X.\nNotice is hereby given that a\nmeeting, of Debenture Holders of\nthe undersigned Company will be\nheld in Room 404' lh the General\nOffice Building of The Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company\nof Canada limited, Trail, B.C., at\n10 o'clock a.m. on the 13th day of\nNovember, 1052, for'the purpose of\nconsidering and, if thought fit,\npassing a Resolution authorizing\nand requesting the Crown Trust\nCompany; Trustee under a certain\nTrust Deed dated May 26th, 1017:\n(1) to acquiesce and consent to the\nexecution by tha undersigned Company of an option agreement dated\nJuly 18th, 1052, to be entered into\nwith Quatsino Copper-Qold Mines\nLimited under the terms of which\nIhe latter company Is granted an\noption to purchase from the under-\n.signed company the two mineral\nclaims known as \"Merry Widow No.\n1\" (Lot 1520) and \"Kingfisher Frac-\ntion\" (Lot 1532) mineral claims situate in Rupert District upon com-\noletion of payment of $25,000 to\nthe undersigned company and\nQuatsino Copper-Gold Mines Limited is further granted in the said\nagreement the right to construct a\nroad acrtss the undersigned company's mineral claims.\n(2) To > acquiesce and consent to\nall monies which, mart be paid under the provisions of the aforementioned option agreement being retained by the undersigned company\nto be used for the payment of taxes\nand otherwise In keeping Its property in good standing,\nCOAST COPPER COMPANY\nLIMITED\nTrail, B.C., October ,15th, 1052.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\n(Continuc.n\nE. J. AVERY, Salfno, B.C., '\nMM KHOWNSKB, Ymlr, B.C,\nTAYLOR BROS, Salmo, B.C.\nApplication Is being made, by the\nabove, to the Public Utilities Commission- for Increase in taxi rates,\nto be effective Nov. 24th, 1052, Rates\nmay be inspected at any of the\noffices listed above. The above application subject to consent of the\nPublic Utilities Commission. Any\nobjection must be filed with the\nSunt.'- of Motor Vehicles, Public\nUtilities Commission, 1740 W.\nGeorgia St, Vancouver, B.C, on or\nbefore Nov, 13th, 1952.\t\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nBABY BEEF\nAND PORK\nFor Your Locker\n- H.HARROP\nPhone 117   ;\nRENTALS\n$25 REWARD FOR INFORMATION\nleading to rental ot suitable house\nIn Nelson or district for family\nman. Box 5830, Daily News\nLARGE TWO RObll CABIN SUIT-\nable for two lo four adults, also\nsmaller cabin. Phone 387-L-4,\n-.(teit.il_.fe. w6taAM-.U__a__MW,'S.\nrequires light housekeeping room,\nPhone 107.\nf6r reNt - i-ltbdM STJTTO,\npartly furnished. Box 7424, Daily\nNews.\nWANTED \u2014 APT. OR FLAT FOR\ncpuple, no children. Apply Daily\nNews Box 7149.\nMoCLARY 4-BURNER COMBINA-,\ntion range, 1 year old; Frigidaire\nrefrigerator, 2 montha old; Beatty\nwasher; blond mahogany dining\nroom suite, limed oak bedroom\nsuite, Singer sewing machine, and\nmisc. items. Apply 230 Baker St.\nPhone 1521-R.\nPOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\n\u2022 (Continued)\nFOR SALE\u20141 PAIR OF CURLING\nrocks, like new. Apply Ffansen's\nBarber Shop, Trail, B.C,;.\n_rlfi sUUb b&btH, fldttVB KH\nsale. Apply 020 Latimer St, Nelson.\nI'ORlV.B-J! Sf5tG-_B PWDflJ\nmachine, perfect condition, $149.\nPhone 265.\nC__C._l.l_ BA__\u00a5 MW ?(_>_. LOCK-\ners. G. Duncan, New Denver,\nPhone 1B-W.\nPIPE FITTINGS AND PLUMBING.\nfixtures.  Columbia Trading Co,   1\n002 Front Street, Phona 1HI,\nra_rasrwxsH__inOTOTat.'\n' Phone 3B2-X. ',-.;\n{5KES3 mm skin-ton avw.\nrelief. Your Druggist Sells Cress.\nMICRONIC __EAR_W<S ABS.-\nWrlte P.0 Box 30. Nelson. B.C. I\nlumber at No. 8, Gov't Road.  .\nWANTED, MISCELUNIQUS\nSHIP US YOU? SCRAP METAL,\nor iron. Any quantity. Top price\npaid Active Trading Company,\n016 Powell St.. Vancouver,.B.C.\nDEALERS IN, ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment; mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire .rope; pipe and ' fittings;\nchain, steel plate and shapes.\nAtlas iron A Metals Ltd,. 250\nPrior St',r Vancouver, B.C Phone\n- Pai_iflc:.8357   \"     ;'  ;\nFOR sale ftkUn\\fjHkTf, 4\nthousand cedar, and fir poles, i\n, million ft. ot saw timber. Roads\nand camps, also some logging\nequipment. Apply Box 6410 Nel\nson Dally News.\nFPR RENT - 2-ttM. fiWItWSB\ncabin. Phone 508-Y-l. .-.--\u2022'\n3-RM. FURNISHED APARTMENT;\nheated, for .rent Nov. 1. Ph. 870-L,\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST-BLUE .SATIN HAT, CIVIC\nCentre grounds, at N.H.S. track-\nmeet. Please phone 1586.\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE\nNOTICE is hereby given that on\nthe 10th day of November next, the\nundersigned intends to apply to\nIhe Liquor Control Board for consent to transfer of Beer Licence No,\n0474 issued In respect of. premises\nbeing part of a building.known as\nthe Little Davenport Hotel at\nSalmo, British Columbia, upon the\nlands described as that part of Lots\nThirteen (13), Itourteeh.(14), Fifteen (15),and Sixteen (16), in Block\nFour (4) of Lot Two Hundred and\nSlx-A (208-A), Kootenay District,\nPlan Six Hundred and Twenty-Two\n(622) which lies to the Southwest of\na line parallel to and Eighty-Six\n(86) Feet perpendicularly distant\nfrom the Southwest boundary of\n'the said lots, from Charles Benjamin Reid to Maldon Hotel Ltd. of\nSalmo, British Columbia, the Transferee. ';,';'.\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this 21st day of October, A.D,\n1952.\n MALDON HOTEL L,TD,\n(Continued in Next Column)\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Very small\nparticle\n5. False\n9. Nobleman\n10. Danger\n12. City\n(Algeria)\n13. High seas\nrobber\n14. Ignited -\n15. Fruit of\nthe pine\n16. Tantalum\n(sym.)\nIV. Plant of\ncrowfoot\nfamily\n19. God of\npleasure\n20. Music note\n81. Hall!\n32. Search for\n23. Malt beverage\n24. A tin . -\n25. Actors In\na play\n27. Swabbing\nInstrument\n28. Music note\n30. Noah's boat\n31. Adore\n33. Masurium\n(sym.)\n34. An age\n35. Miscellany\n38. Established\n88. Across\n39. Palatable\n40. City (Fr.)\n41. Spreads\ngrass to dry\n42. Do not\n(contracted)\nDOWN\n1. Ofthe sea\n2. Harangue\n3. Unit of\nweight\n4. Half an em\n5. Backbone\n6.In this\nplace\n7. Constellation\n8. Covering for\nthe hand\n9. Clayey\n11. Smallest\nIn size\n13. A corn\nbread\n18. Sheltered\nrecess\n18. Substance\nused In\nale-making\n19. Small\nraised cake\n22. Befalls\n2,1, Question\n24. Maize\n28. Military encampments\n26. Biblical\nmount\n27. The satellite\nof the earth\n28. Keenest\n29. Aside\n31, Obnoxious\nplants\nHUI-i-l   MUMia\n_imu\u201e_I'. i-iiunuio\nHIMibi l-IUIii-ial-l\n1114 r.'JM.- Lll'lk.\nlaiBHHIHHa\nauniiiaa nan-\nHflHWia HI.JHI-.U,\nMIII'IN   r.inU!;l!.',l.ll\n0Hi_iai-i0i_i0\nH0M   UEin      Kill\naaaiaaia Miai-i-i\n!' anaa .qi_i__i_i\nlVU-iM'a SKATE!., SIZE 11, MEN'S\nski boots Size 11 Ui men's ski and\n- poles size 7, 1 pair man's sheepskin1 lined over trousers, 1 man's\nheavy brown overcoat Phone\n623-R.\nOMi 2 TON .fLOOR .TYPE t-Y-\ndraulio jack, one iron double bed\nwith flat steel springs and spring\nfilled mattress.,, Apply Dally\nNews Box 7152,\nFOR SALE \u2014 100 SQUARE COR-\nrugated galvanized iron, used, In\nvery good condition, Arctic Insulating and Rooting Ltd, Nelson, Phone 935,\nCEDAR POLES - ALL CLASSE9\nand lengths; Larch poles Kootenay Forest Products Ltd.\nWANTED - SMALL !t______rWL__.\nApply Box 7211. Dally News,\nWANTED - T-tt-__.'US*b BEU3\nand dressers, Phone 816-L-<,    -\nWANTED - GObb-4.fi-_b'U__b-\nlum size oil heater. Phone 1373-X.\nFARM, GARDEN AND\nNURSERY\nROSES, OUR SELECTION - $7.25\ndoz, Tulips, grand mixture\u201489e\ndoz. (Mall orders, please add 3%\ntax.). Write tor Free Catalogue;\nfruit trees, berry plants, hut trees,\nshrubs, roses, evergreens, trees;\nvines, perennials, bulbs. SARDIS\nNURSERIES, Sardls, B.C...   .\nI 3-Ffc 3'' BED WITH SPSSR?,\nmattress! 1' baby Crib, full size,\nand mattress; 1 push chair. Phone\n\u25a0L.\nfor 6A-_E-4i_xS_.HX.Aftb\ntable; good condition. Cues, balls,\nscoring board accessories.. Phone\n1664-L.\nPEDESirA-_\".BA-M,' -bxi8,\" M6t>-\nern chrome fixtures; also roll rim\nkitchen sink, and taps, bqth In\ngood condition. Phone 870-L.\nCOR SALE\u2014LIMITED QUANTITY\nof remnant loads dressed lumber.\nApply Kootenay Forest Products\nLtd..' 805 OoraonrRd. Phone 1200,\nfor sAle -\"BeAcW RAtoc.-!;\ngood baker;-$25.00. Phone 308-R.\n1 PAIR BO^'S SKATES, SIZE 1.\nPhone 936-^, ..\n(Continued.;,1!)- Next Column).\nOlasslfled''AdvertlB>na Rate*:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive Insertions\nHe line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion\n48c line tor 6 consecutl-e Insertions      , ' ,\nf 1.56 line per month (38 consecutive insertions). Box numbers\n'lie extra. Cavers any number\nof Insertion., -\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Jtc\u201420c per line,\nfirst Insertion. i(o per line\neach subsequent Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LEM\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates)\n(Not More Than Lilted Here)\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance      JO\nBy carrier, per year  $15.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month  _....._.._ $ 1.28\nThree months      $.75\nSix months      7.80\nOne year     18.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     1.00\nThree months 2.78\nSix months  -     8.80 \u25a0\nOne year      10.00\n, Where extra postage !s required,\nabove rates plus pottage.\n\" ON THE AIR\nC K L>J PROGRAMS 1240 on the dia___\nr    (Padflo StaadaM Time)\n.    TUESDAY; OCTOBER 28, 1952\nYtitenUy'- Answer -\n32. A refuge\n34. Greedy\n37. Open (poet. I\n38. National god\n(Tahiti)\n40. Board (abbr.\n%\n1\n2\ni\n4\ni\n5\np\n7\n8\n%\ni\n%\nIO\nII\n11\nVA\n13\n14\n'^\n15\n^\n16\n17\n18\n%\n19\n20\nVA\n21\ni\nn\ni\nV\/\/<\n23\n%\n24\n^\n^\nZ5\nIt,\n%\n27\n'\n^\n29\n29\n30\n'^\n31\n32\n5!\nV4t\n34\n%\n35\n3\u00bb\n32\n\\%\n39\n39\ni\nw\n%\n41\n1\nn\nw\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n7:80\u2014News\n7:85\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n8:00\u2014News\n8:i0\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45-'Towler Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sports Corner\n9:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:15\u2014Western Fred's .Ranch House\n10:00\u2014Riders of the Purple Sage\n10:18\u2014Women In the News\n10:25\u2014News\n10:30-Coffee Time\n10:45-Muslcal Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Musical Minutes\n11:15\u2014Dorothy Douglas\nll;20-Date WithrD'Arcy\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12:20\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55-Behind the News\n1:00\u2014Music Mill\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Presenting\n2:48\u2014Musically Speaking\n8:00\u2014Here's Harmony\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Trans-Csnada Matinee\n4:15\u2014Hoad Show\n4:3P\u2014Childreii's Program\n4:45\u2014Pacific News\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament HID\n8:00\u2014Junior Jockey Jamboree\n8:30\u2014SpotUte on a Star       ,\nfl:4&?-Sporta News\n8:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Drama of Medicine\n6:1S-Fish_ng Talk    ',\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Mutiny on the High Seas\n7:45\u2014Candlelight and Silver\n8:00\u2014The Nation's'Business\n8:15\u2014North of the Nahana\n8:30-Music HaU\n9:00\u2014Haunting Hour\n0:30\u2014Mr. Showbuslhesl      \u25a0    -\n10:00\u2014News.      .'.,.\/       ,'\n10:15-B.C, Traveller\/\n10:30\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00-^\"NEWS\" Nl*ht Cap\n.     CBC PROGRAMS\n\u25a0..-.. -      -.   '    r\n\u2022\u25a0   \u25a0      (Pacific Standard Time)\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1952\n\u202210-21.\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:\n>    AXYDLBAAXR\nWLONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc.. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints.\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nBNAKAENHJCKVTAPVL,    PGE    OWG\ntW   JW   PAEEAT   OWGTKADR-UVTEHVD.\nyesterday's Cryptoquoto \u2014 THIS IS THB LIFE OF THOSE\nFREE FROM WRETCHED AND BURDENSOME AMBITION\u2014\nHORACE.    \u25a0 \u25a0 ..y. .. '   %\n..,',   Duuibuie by King FeiltiRi Syndlcut        -..\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10-BU1 Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:43\u2014Laura Limited\n8:00\u2014BBC News Commentary\n9:18\u2014Aunt' Lucy\n9:30\u2014Morning Concert\n10:00-Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten 6t the Air\n11:15-A Man and His Music\n12:15\u2014News     '\n12:25\u2014Showcase >r\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Fivo to One\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Easy Listening\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage i\n3:15\u2014Musicale\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n4:15\u2014Young Mas With a Song\n4:80\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45-News\n4:55-Spotlight\n5:00\u2014Rawhide       >\n8:80\u2014Something in Harmony\n5:45\u2014Question Box\n8:00\u2014Neighborly News\n6:15\u2014Music by Mantouanl\n6:45\u2014Introduction to Wednesday\nNight\n7:00-News\n7:15\u2014News-Roundup\n7:30\u2014An Evening Devoted te th*\n1    Supernatural    .\n10:00-News\n10:15\u2014Harpsichord Recital\n10:30\u2014America and the World To\u00bb\nday\nlUOD-VJf), Today 1   \u25a0\n11:15\u2014Today's Music\nll:45-Night Cap      : '%\nU:S7-News\n.... \u25a0;   ..\n \/S73\nUSIFIi IDS\nPER$0\/!\/-Wm$ONWANW?S.\nFOR QU\/CK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeadline rot Classified Ads\u2014S p.m.\nPhone 144\n\u2022      AUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nImmediate\nDelivery\n.   NEW FORD\nCUSTOMLINE\nTUDOR    \u00ab\u25a0\nNEW FORD 3-f ON\n%:\u25a0\/:   176\" W.B.\n. 1U9Ep,\u20acAR\nCLEARANCE!\n1952 Monarch Sedan\n1951 Meteor Sedan\n195*1 Austin Sedan\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950'.: Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet Club Coupe\n.  1,948 Pontiac Aero Sedan\n1948 Chevrolet Aero Sedan\nI 1948 Chevrolet Sedan\n1947 Dodge Sedan .\n1946 Mercury Seda\/i\n1946 Plymouth Sedan\n2- AUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued1\nSPECIAL!\n1938 Chevrolet Sedan\n; :    -'$400\n1938 Hillman Sedan\n$150\n1935 Studebaker Sedan\n$r50\nUSED PICKUPS\n1951  Fargo Pickup\n1950 Ford Pickup\n1949 Chevrolet Pickup\nTERMS and TRADES\nMel Emerge\nPhone 74 Vernon St.\nNelson\nNEW AUSTIN\n. SOMERSET\nSEAL GREY\n1952 Austin Somerset\nSedan\n1952 Austin Devon Sedan\n1951 Austin Sedans\n1950 Austin Sedans\n1949 Austin Sedans\n1951 Prefect Sedan\n1950 Hillman Sedan\n1951 Fdrd Sedan     (\n1949 Ford Coupe \u2022\n1948 Oldsmobile\nHydramatic\n1948 Kaiser Sedan\nSPECIAL\n1952 Studebaker\nCommander\n$100 OFF LIST\n1947 Oldsmobile  Sedanette\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n1947 Frazer Sedan\n1952 International Pickup\n149 Dodge 3,4-Ton Pickup\n1949 Austin Panel\n1947 Mercury Pickup\n1939 Ford Sedan Deliveryy\n.TERMS and TRADES'\nEMPIRE\n803 Baker St.    Phone\nNELSON, B. C.\n135\nGet Your\nMOTORCYCLE\nWhile Prices Are Down.\nNew and Used Machines.\nEssy Terms'\u2014 Trade-Ins\nKOOTENAY MOTORCYCLE\nSALES AND SERVICE\nBox 350 \u2014 Phone'2601 \u2014 Castlegar\n\"The- Shop of Friendly Service'\nFOR SALE - 1937 TERRAPLANE\ngood condition. Heater, spotlight\n1160 cash. Apply R. Brown. South\nSlocan.\t\nFOR SALE - 1935 FORD COUPE.\nBest offer. Phone 1043-Y.\nNew\nInternational\nTRUCES\nWe Can Supply Alj^odels\nof New International\nMotor Trucks\nALSO:\"'\u25a0'':\nGood Values In\nUSED TRUCKS\n1951 Mercury 3-Ton\n1950 Chevrolet, Cab over\nEngine\n1949 Dodge %-1-Ton\n1949 Maple t,eaf 3-Ton\n1950\" Austin 5-Ton\n1947 Mercury 3-Ton\n1947 International KBS-5\n1945 Chevrolet 2-Ton,\n1944 International KS-5\n1941 Chevrolet 1-Ton\nSEE THESE TRUCKS At\\\n& Equipment Co.\n\u2022Nelson, B. C.    Phone 1400\nFOR SALE - 1050 DELUXE 2\ndoor Ford sedan, original owner,\n16,000 miles, excellent condition.\nPhone 1024-Y.\nFOR SALE - MERCURY TRUCK\nVi ton '49. Low mileage, excellent condition, Apply Box 5617\nDaily News.\nrBARGA~lhi\nFor Sale\u2014'52 Mercury 3-ton flat\ndeck. 6000 miles. Apply 205 Chatham St., or phone 802-R,    \u2022\nFOR SALE \u2014 1937 OLDSMOBILE\n-sedan. Radio,  heater..and  good\ntires.   Terms   can   be   arranged.\nPhone 664-Y.\nWANTED\u2014BIDS ON 1948 WRECK-\n_ed Ford 5-passenger coupe. Has\nbeen roughed out Can be seen at\nWlginton Motors\nINTERNATIONAL TD-14 CAT. \u2014\nAngle dozer and winch. Apply H.\nLearmonth, R.R. No. 1.\nFOR SALE--1947 MONARCH DE-\nluxei sedaft. A-l shape. Phone\n1084-R. 107, Chatham Street.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nMoving to Vancouver,\nBurnaby, North or\nWest Vancouver?\n\u2022\nSave time, see us before you\ngo:.We have 200 dwellings\nlisted, all distr^ts, all prices\nT. D. Rosling\nReal Estate and Insurance\n568 Ward Street        Phone 717\nWILL SACRIFICE\n$3000\nAgreement for Sale\nAt a 12% Discount\nGOOD REVENUE\nPROPERTY IN CITY\nAPPLY BOX 7319, DAILY NEWS\nFARM FOR SALE \u2014 80 ACRES,\nsome timber, poles, fence posts,\nlots of wood. 3. acres cultivated.\nHay In loft, wood in shed, also 15\nregistered Saanen goats, 20x40\nbarn hay in loft. 5 room house Vt\nmile from school, one mile from\nstore and P.O. Henry Knowles,\nCrescent .Valley, B.C.\n2 ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE\u2014\n1<A miles, on new Ymir highway.\n1 two-storey house. 7 rooms: 1\ntwo-room house. Running water.\n1 24x28 foundation laid for bldg.\n$2000 cash and $2000 terms, or\ncould be subdivided. Phone\n476-L-l or apply Box 7131 Daily\nNews.\nFARM FOR SALE, 50 ACRES, 5\ncultivated, Irrigation, fruit tres.\n1 new stucco)) room house fully\nfurnished, basement. 1 two room\nhouse both hot and cold water,\nelectricity. Barn, chicken house.\nGood location in Glade on Nelson\nand Castlegar highway. Apply P.\nS. Tarasoff, Thrums, B.C.\n4-BEDROOM kOMfc OM BXKH.\nSt, with kitchen, dining and living rootn.,Well equipped to convert Into revenue proposition.\nPriced low for quick sale. Immediate possession. Near $2000 will\nhandle. Apply 230 Baker Street.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\n.    '-.\u25a0\u2022'   (Continued)\nFOR SALE IN SALMO - ABOUT\nVs mile from town;-10 acres it\nland, all level, 1 acre cleared, the\nrest Is very easy clearing; lots ot\nwood and valuable timber; water\nalso available. Cheap for cash.\nApply Box 7141, Dally News\nFOR SALE-RANCH, IB ACRES,\non Blewett Road. 7-room house\nand good barn. Apply 3. Podmor-\noff, Blewett, B.C.\nFOR SAI__5-Nldfe_i_.Ml-.i_6--_t_.to\n. two-bedroom house with furnace,\nsix acres of lend, on main highway between Trail and Castlegar.\nPrice 16000. Write W.< M.' Bale,\nChina Creek, B.C,\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\n\u25a0.'-,.       .(Continued)\n23 CROSSBRED TOULONS AND\nEmbden geese. Goose $8, gander\n' $10. Parent trio 2 years old, high\nfertility $39. Mrs, K. Nearing,\nCanyon, B.C.\nPROPERTY FOR SALE, ON LOT\n64, Cottonwood' Ciiy. 1 acre of\ngood sofl; 1 4-room house, newly\n. built; electric lights, running water! Phone 273-X-2 or apply Box\n7132, Daily News.\nFARM DOR SALE\u201497 ACRES; 40\ncleared; good farm land;. 6-room\nhouse, barn; Vi mile trom highway! 1 mile from stores and station. Write Henry Elliott, Utter-\nson, ONTARIO,\nFOR .SALiS\u2014 1 ACRES, PARTLY\nimproved, building and water.\nEasily improve more. Creston district; central locality, Apply Box\n7507, Nelson Dally News.\nFOR SALE- CHOICE LOT, LO.\ncated 4th Avenue, South Castle\ngar, near school. Price, $1200.\nApply JI12 Wasson ^t\u201e Nelson.\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014MODERN\nfamily home, central location; immediate possession. Box' 7409,\nDaily News.\n5-ROOM HOUSE. OIL FURNACE,\nhardwood floors, $4700 down, balance as rent. Phone 1252-R.\nMACHINERY\nRamp Body and\n. Fender Works\nDealers tor\nKING\nLOWBED TRAILERS UP TO 65\nIONS DOLLIES. LOGGERS.\nPOLE TRAILERS, LINE CONSTRUCTION BODIES, POLE\nDERRICKS, AERIAL LADDERS.\nREPAIR TOWERS\nPrices on Application.\nPHU1.E 199 - Nelson, B.C\n656 JOSEPHINE ST\nUSED ALLIS CHALMERS MODEL\nL Tractor with 10' straight hydraulic dozer or 12' or 14' angle\n\u2022 dozer. Also conversion for propane gas. Nelson Machinery Co.\nLtd'; Special price $3950joo.\nUsed Caterpillar RD8 Tractor\nSer. 2H3812 equipped with crank-\ncase guard, track roller guards,\n9' La Plante choate hydraulic\nangle dozer. Nelson Machinery\nCo. Ltd., Special Price' $6500.00.\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO\n'    LIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING.\nSAWMILL. LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1. B.C.\nSINGLE AND' DOUBLE DRUM\nwinches, Carco tractor winches,\ngas and diesel power units, Co-\n. lumbta trailers, etc.' Bayes Equip-\n' ment Co., Cranbrook.\n20 INCH SUMERS SHINGLE\nmachine complete with saws,\npowtr unit, etc. Further details\naoply Box 4,' Slocan City.\nBUSINESS AND. -\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nAS8AVER8  AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\ne. w- wiDDbtofioto ii d6,\nT$-\nsavers 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH   S   ELMES. I ROSSLAND,   BC\nAsmyer Chemist, Mine 'Rep*\n- AUCTIONEER |?\nAuctioneer\nREEVE PAXSON\nFernie, B. C.\nWRITE, WIRE OR\nPHONE COLLECT      \u2022\nPhone 333-X\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYORS\nBO\u00a5D C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.,\nNelson. B.C  Surveyor, Engineer\nLIVESTOCK  DEALERS\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H. Harrop, Phone 117.\nMACHINI8T8   -   -\nBENNETTS LlMITBB\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding Phone 693 324 Vernon Street\nTIMBER CRUI8ING, ETC,\nhMBE_.\/C_W.S.Na AN\nIn BC E H Hlrd, Slocan City\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nHIGH   QUALITY   LAYING   AND\nready-to-lay pullets, raised from\nour finest R.O.P. sired matings.\nLeghoms.Trosses and New Hamp-\nshlres. New low prices, etc Write\ndirect to New Siberia Funis,' N.\nBalakshin, R.R.2, Chilliwack, B.C.\nFoh  otjf-.*AJ\u00ab.M  (JUAlitV\nin calves, used Polled Shorthorn\nSires. Snowshoe Ranch offers\nyoung Sires at all times. C. Flick.\nEdgewood,\nNEW HAMPSHIRE LAYING PUL-\nlets, $1.75 each; shipping crates\nCQW. AND' TWO-    MlLK    HS.\ncalves tor sale, suitable for dairy\n. end farm. John   Reibin,   Goose\nCreek Rd., Crescent Valley\n3 60WS FOR SALE-2 *6 FRE_._P\nen on Nov., 16: one freshened in\nAug.^Good milker. Applst P. Ma-\nkortoff. Shoreacres.- B.C.\nCQW H'OR SALE SUITABLE FOR\nor farm\" use. Will freshen in Dec.\nWalter Swetllshoff, Goose Creek,\nCrescent Valley, B,C,\nCOW FOR SALE. FRESHENED ON\nOct 20: 2nd calf. Apply Alec P.\nSherstobitoff, Glade, B.C.;' P.O.\n0 Thrums, Bif.\nFOR SALE -. SHETLAND PONY,\nwith complete outfit. Will trade\nfor cattle. Apply Daily News\nBox 3855.\n8 WK. OLD PIGS TOR SALE,\nPhone 249-L-2. J. Hnatiuk, Nelson, BC.\nFOR SALE - 5 MO. OLD BARRED\nRock Pullets. F. N. Davidoff,\nThmm... B.C.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nPO  BOX 388. NELSON. BC\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN\nsurance Co., D L Kerr. Agent\nALMER HOTEL OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Clean rooms and reasonable rales  Vancouver. B.C\nWANTED \u2014 MAN, WOMAN OR\n.   dog.   Fishing   partner, tor   one\nweek, one month, no difference,\nall expenses paid at Trout Lake.\nApply Daily News Box 7147,\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately. Jaily News Printing\nDept\u201e Nelson, British Columbia\nA WORLD TRAVELLER AND\n. lecturer wants to get in. touch\nwith some advanced Doukhobors\nwho would be interested to provide their local assistance in organizing for the benefit of Doukhobor. communities around Nelson\na series of educational lectures\nin' Russian language with demonstration ot films on agriculture,\nnature and life in general on\nSouth Sea Islands. All correspondence should be addressed to\nNicholas S. Schatroph, 602 East\nHastings \"St,\" Vancouver, B.C.   ,\n\/The West Indies are also known\nis the Antilles.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n6ST A\nUotO C<f \/M_rtL.9ANS LIFE INSURE.\n,P \u25a0 \u25a0   *llWWO AT NO EXTRA CO.\nFINANCE COMPANY LID,\nllll WWWM   wbouiit tr iKoinrmu. aeevnia\nttwoiUTiM. im\nsunt 1\nPhona 1095    S60 Baker St.\nTORONTO\n(Closing\nMINES\nAkaltcho ...*...-..._\nAumaquo  ...............\nAunor   . \u201e___\nBarymin     \t\nBase Metals ...._._.\nBelloterre '    ..__\nBevcoUrt \"\"\u25a0'    .......\nBidgood Kirk ....:\u201e,\nBob-Jo\nBoymar Gold\t\nBralorne\t\nBroulan  . .._..:..\u201e..;.,\nBuffadi.qn .\u25a0'..:\t\nBuffalo Ari-t\" .:....,.\nCalllman\nCentremaque ........\nChestervllU \t\nCbchenour ...\nChimp O\t\nConwest ...,____\u201e__\nDelnite .... ..\nDome    ________\nDetta R L ..._,..,\nDonalda   \t\nDuvay        _._.\nEast Malartic ....__\nEast Sullivan'.\t\nEld-r Gold-:.'.\t\nEstella  ...: \t\nEureka      ..!.\t\nFalconbrldge .._..-\nFrobisher    .'. \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGod's Lake  ,\nGpldale    ;.\t\nGoldcrest    \t\nGpld.'Arrow   \t\nGolden Manltou _'.\nHardrock\t\nHeath\t\nHollinger    s,\t\nHudson Bay\t\nJack Waite \t\nJoilet Que _.\nKenville   .:'\u2022'.. \t\nKerr Addison \t\nKirk-Hudson Bay .\nKiikland Lake\nSTOCKS\nPrices)\n.  1.00\n.11%\n2.70\n1.08\nr. .25.-:\n3.50\n1.05\n.11\n.10%\n1   .13 .\n4.75\n2.80\n.12.\n.67\n.17.4\n.13^4\nJl\n1.35\n.42\n3,20\n1.64\n19.00\n.16\n.45\n.41\n2.40\n8.40\n.38\n.35\n1.10\n15.28\n5.43\n8.00\n.56\n.18%\n\u25a0    .12\n.10\n3.65\n.10.4\n.19\n14.25\n54.35\n.10,\n'.32\n.11\n17.73\n.82\n.70\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nUSED\n1948- Chrysler.\nWindsor\n.   Sedan\nRadio, Sun Visor, Air Conditioner. 1  Owner. 29,000 Miles.\n1949 Plymouth\nSedan\nColor:   Blue,   Sun   Visor,   Air\nConditioner.\n1948 Dodge Coach\nColor:    Harbor   Green.    Nice\nShape,\n1949 Austin Sedan\nColor: Black. Good Rubber and\nBody.\n1946 Pontiac Sedan\nRadio, Spotlight Heater.\n1940 Plymouth\nSedan\nRadio, Heater.\n1938 Plymouth\nSedan\n$195      ,-\n1938 fod Sedan\n$195\nCHRYSLER.-PLYMOUTH'*\n.FARGQ-oiW^TIRE.*  7\n\"W_., 1IVJC! . K:-\/r.-n '77> ~^J\nThe RCAF Will '\nGive You Trade Training\n.-ENQUIRE ABOUT THESE AVAILABLE TRADES,\nTRADE'\nPilot ','..;\nNavigator\nRadio Officer\nAIRCREW\nMen\nV\nV\nV\nWomen\nGROUNDCREW\nAero Erfglne Technician v*    '\nAircraft Control Assistant v\"   <\nAirframe Technician                , v*\nMovements Controller                        \u2022 v*\nBasic Electronics v*\nBandsman tf\nClerk Accounts      ,' V*\nClerk Administrative                  . - v*\nStenographer v*\nCommunications Operator v*\nCook                                           , \\f\nDental Assistant\nDraughtsman v*\nElectric Technician                      ,   s v*\nFighter Control Operator                                i.\nFift Fighter V\nGeneral Duties '  v*\nGround Defenceman '  v\"\nInstrument Technician ,\\f\nMetal Technician v*\nMeteorological Observer y\/\nMunitions and Weapons               '',. v*\nPhotographer V\nPhysical Training and Rec. Instruct v*\nSafety Equipment   - .-\u25a0.',-. v*        .\n\u25a0Security'Pol ice viaiiiit*'* r         -'\".\"'.;\/\" V\nStationary Engineer      ,*\nMedical Assistant y\"\nWRITE j OR CALL: 22'.\nCOMMANDING OFFICER,\nR.CA.F. RECRUITING UNIT, LETHBRIDGE\nSTATING:\nName Education   -\nAddress Previous Service' Yes\/No\nV\ntf\ntf\ntf\ntf\ntf\ntf\ntf\ntf\ntf\ntf\nLabrador   \t\nLake Dufault   .\u201e......_\nLakeshore    ....w,\t\nLeitch . \t\nLittle Long Lac  \t\nLouvlcourt .: _.._\nLynic r        \u00ab__.\nMacDonald    __.'...\u201e......\nMacassa ..:.,_\u201e__..__.,_\nMacLeod Cock -.._-__.\u201e...\nMadsen R L  ....\u201ei__~..._\nMalartic G F,.:._._ ..\nMprcus G*  ,__.___\u201e_.\nMclntyre        .\u201e_.__....\nMcKenzie R L.......:...'.\t\nMining Corp \t\nMoneta      _..._._,._\nNegus ..,._... .,\t\nNew Alger     ...._:_.__\t\nNew Calumet ..__.._ \t\nNew Goldvue ....*. ,\t\nNew Lund ...:\t\nNoranda _..  -..\nNormetals  -. -\t\nNbrth Can ,\t\nO'Leary  \t\nOslsko  _--_\u201e.._\nPamour    .\t\nPaymaster    , \u201e\u201e___.___\nPickle Crow \t\nPioneer   '.\t\nPlacer Develop  _ _.,\nPiestbn E D    \t\nQuebec Lab \t\nQuebec Man \t\nQueenstoh __\nQUemont      \t\nSan Antonio ^\t\nSen Rpuyn   __\nSigma '      \t\nSilvermiller \t\nSilanco    _..\t\nSlscoe   __\nStarratt Ols'en ..'. _\u2014\nSteep Rock,  '.\t\nSudbury Cont.. . i\t\nSylvanite      \u2014...j__\nTeck Hughes   \t\nTom-ill  \t\nTrans Cont Res -l_\nUnited Keno :., \t\nUpper Canada \t\nVentures  \u201e  .\t\nViolamac  ...J_^___\nWaite Amulet \t\nOIL8\nAnglo Can  :\t\nA P Con  ._.__\t\nB A Oil ..: ^.\t\nCal & Ed . : :\t\nCalmont   . \t\nCentral Leduc \t\nChemical Research  __\nCommonwealth Pete ._._\nDalhousie     ..__.\nDavies Pete  .-.\t\nDecalta   ,.\nDel Rio   _.\nFederated Pete\t\nHlghwood  \t\nHome     \t\nImperial Oil \u201e\t\nInter Pete    .\t\nKroy  _.\nMacDougal Segur\t\nNat Pete \t\nMid Cont   .\nOkalta        \t\nPacific Pete ._.._'\t\nRoyalite    \t\nRoxana    ...'. ^ -m\nTower Pete   \u201e\nUnited Oils     .\u201e\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi    _^_\nAlgoma Steel ....\u00ab.._\t\nAluminum \":   ^_\t\nArgus        ______\nAtlas St    _ \t\nBeattie Bj-os\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian    \t\nB C Electric pfd\t\nB C Electric  _\nB C Forest\t\nB C Packers A ..__\nB C Packers B   \t\nBuilding Products __\nCan Cement  _.\nCan Packers B ._,\nCan Breweries \t\nCan Canners    \t\nCan Car & Fdy\t\nCan Car & Fdy A ..\u201e\nCan Oil. \t\nCan Celanese  _..\nCan Steamships \t\nCan Pac Rly  _.\nCons M & S \t\nDist Seagram\nDom Steel & Coal B\nDom Tar & Chem \t\nDom. Textiles \t\nFamous Players  _.\nFanny Farmer \t\nford A\t\n8.73\n.62\n7.85\n1.08\n.62\n.16\n.10\n1.05\n1,78\n. 2.35\n1.63\n1.67\n.12\n64.50\n.40\n12115\n.37\n'.16\n.18\n1.02\n.45\n.38\n7450\n4.05\n.70\n.15.\n.55\n.81\n.58\n1.43\n1.91\n39.50\n1.66\n.19.\n1.45\n.35\n17.00 :\n2.05\n.11%\n4.50\n1.20\n.32\n.50\n.25\n8.05\n,}2H\n1.29\n2.00\n.21\n.38.4\n8.50\n1.50\n18.35\n1.35\n11.00\n6.40\n.31\n19.00\n11.65\n1.06 *\n3.20\n1.42\n4.20\n.25\n.25\n.70\n2.85\n7.20\n,20\n12.50\n32.00\n25.25\n1.73\n.20\n1.65\n.35\n8.05'\n10.50\n14.25\n.22\n.40\n1.40\n... 13%\n...... .43%\n-.. 48.4\n_. 11%\n_ 18%\n...     7\n.... 87\n.-     9%\n_. 77%\n_ 92\n- 5%\n-_ 12%\n- 7%\n_. 32%\n_. 70%\n.... 29\n- 16%\n- 30%\n.... 12%\n.... 16\n... 13%\n.... 42\n_ 70\n... 30%\n... 31%\n._ 22%\n.... 15%\n 10%\n... 16%\n.... 23%\n.'..   57\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28,1952 -~ 11\nriiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiininiNiiiiiiiiiiii\nSee Page -7 for\nMore Market News\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii\nNEW YORK. Oct 27 (AP)\u2014With\na. greai deal of difficulty Wading\nheld to a small margin of gain.\n, Canadian stocks were mixed. Mclntyre and Distillers Seagram each\ngained, %, Hiram Walker advanced\n%, and Canadian Pacific, gained %.\nDome Mines'dropped %, and International Nickel slipped %.\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Prices continued firm except for Western oils in\nslow trading toward the close.     '\nVolume was expected to reach\nabout 1,500,000 shares.\nManufacturing 'companies and\nfoods led industrials,-Steels also\ngained. Most other groups were\nmixed, but papers lost strength.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Narrqw irregularity, marked late dealings. ',\nSmall gains held a slight edge\nover fractional losses. Many Issues\ncontinued to trade unchanged in\nlight volume.\n\u2666.   . '\u2014\u2014-\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The week\nopened, quiet, with interest concentrated In- domestic stocks.\nThe continued strength of sterling helped gilt-edged Issues with\ngains up to '%.  .\nBuying Of industrials was encouraged by the better outlook in\nthe coal situation and engineerings.\nTextiles were also better.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, 80%.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.42.\nGatineau    ;    20\nGatineau 5% pfd       103%\nGen Steel Wares 15%\nGoodyear   _._._. 86\nGreat Lakes' .\u201e..._ ______   16%\nImperial Oil  .    32\nImp Tobacco     6\nInt Nickel  _  L_.   42%\nInt Pete  25%\nLoblaw A     35%\nLoblaw 3  37\nMaple Leaf Milling r_    9%\nMassey -Harris ,_____-.' 11 \u25a0\nMont Loco  _..! _:...   14%\nMoore Corp      23\nNat Steel Car \u2014    25%\nMcColl Frontenac , .'.   35\nPage Hershey   a.    66\nPowell River  __..-...._   21%\nPower Corp   .... . \\\u00b1    32.\nRuss Industries \u25a0-.;..-. ;.._\u201e_.\" 23%\nShawinigan  ., . ! \"40%\nSimpsons A  ..__  ,    43%\nSimpsons pfd  ,___\u2014 103\nSouthern  ; _..____-\u2014   18%\nSteel of Canada '.\u2014i .30%\nSteel of Can pfd  , 31\nStandard Paving .,..\u201e..\u2014,_^... 16\nOnion (_as of Can   24%\nUnited Steel          10%\nWestern Grocers A  32%\nWinnipeg Electric pfd    39%\nlATtST REPORT\nAid year InvMtmsnl Djolcj\nfor Hie latest Report\nlot\nCALVIN BULLOCK\nltd.\nxayatq\nFUTURE\nCMM SHINS\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'JPBW\npp||p|p|||ppp\u00ab\nfr\nrom\nWood, Gundy & Company\nLimited\n744 Wert Hastings Street Vancouver\nTelephonei PAcifie SSil\nNelson\nColumn\n'    \u2022       \u2022\nIT'S NEW-\nREVOLUTIONARY ..\nSea tha j\nLESSMAN\nH.F. 10\nTWO UNITS IN ONE \\\n\u2022 Powerful Tractor\n\u2022 Power Shovel\nTha only loader with power-\noperated erowder-armt \u2014\nA. positive digging tool..\n1. Digs without tractor\npower\u2014no ramming.\n2. Unique crowd cylinders\nprovide 42\" ( forward\npower sweep.\n3. Digs In 12' on level\nground.\n4. Digs at any height.\nSi A full loqd every time In\nhard digging. 60%\ngreater loading force.\n6. Use crowder arms for\nback filling at any\nheight from ground. A\nfull 15,000 pound push.\nTHESE LOADERS  NOW\nON DISPLAY\nAND AVAILABLE FOR\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nAsk for\nDemonstration\n-\u2022   \u2022\nInvest in a\nRound-the-Year\nLabor Saver\nOLIVER O.C 3\nTRACTOR\nWITH WARE LOADER\n'0:\u00abmT\nBACK FILLING BLADE\nThe Ideal combination for\ntruck loading, ditching, etc\n.     \u2022     \u2022      -\n11A11 HP\nIm\/mlm A\nKATHANODE\nPROPULSION\nTYPE\nBATTERIES\n\u2022'    2ftir:.\n\u2022 Mining Locomotive*\n\u2022 Industrial Trucks\nand   other   motive\npower purposes.\nIMMEDIATE SERVICE\nON PARTS\n\u2022 \u2022\nColor Styled\nROOFING\nby\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\nTo   Beautify  Your   Home\n7  ; -SOLID COtpRS\ni or\n-,r - \"DRIFT BLENDS\" -\n\u2022'The new blended\n.   f  Asphalt Shingles\nYears of Protection\nGuaranteed\n\u2022 \u2022  '\nCALL or PHONE\n18\nMachinery\nCompany Ltd.\nIf It'i Machinery Vou Need.\nConsult Us\"\n214 Hall St.     Nelson. 8. C.\n^mm^^m^^^.^^ttautimik\n _\u2014r, __\n>5^\n\\t\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY, OCT. 28, W52\nI  Your\n^  Medicine Chest\nf NEEDS REPLENISHING\n: Cheek Now for:\nOIL OP EUCALYPTUS        OIL Of WINTERGREE'N\nFRIARS BALSAM GI_YC)SlU.\u00ab\nCAMPHORATED OIL CAMPHOR ICE       .\nond the dlwayij necessary-   .\nBANDAGES\nTINCTURE OF IODINE\nADHESIVE TAPE\nCOUGH REMEDY\nA. B. WILL\nTAKING OVER the relno of\nNelaon High school Parent-\nTeacher Association Is J. A, B,\nWill who was named president of\nthe. group at an organization\nmeeting recently.\n\u2014A. Stevens photo.\nProbation After\nDeath, Is Subject\nThe Lesson-Sermon entitled \"Probation Alter Death\" which was read\nin all Churches ot Christ, Scientist,\nSunday indicated- that every Instance of compliance with God's law\nis a step in progress1 towards Individual salvation.\nThe Golden Text was: \"The sting\nof death Is sin; and the strength of\noin is law. But thanks be to God,\nwhich glveth us the-victory thorugh\nour-Lord Jesus Christ.\"\n\u2014I CprinthlanslJ; M, 57.\nThe Lesson-Sermon included the\nfollowing passage front the Brlble:\n\"Wherefore, my beloved, as ye have\nalways obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in\nmay absence, *orls,out your own\nsalvation with fear and thembllng.\"\n\u2014 Phllllpplans 2: 12.\nAmong the selections from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health With Key to the.Scriptures\" by Mary .Baker Eddy was the\nfollowing: ''Mortals need not fancy-\nthat belief la the experience df\ndeath wil -awaken them to glorified\nbeing. Universal salvation rests on\nprogresison and probation, 'and is\n' unattainable without them.\"\nCOMPANY TAKES OVER\nCASTLEGAR BUSINESS\nLeitner's Clothes Limited at\nCastlegar has been incorporated under the Companies Act it is reported in the current issue of the\nB.C. Gazette.\nRegistered office of tha company,\nwhich has an authorized capital of\n$40,000, Is the Lewis Block, Castlegar.\nPurpose of the Company Is to\ntake over the Leitner's Clothes\nfirm carried on by Gus Leitner and\nAnthony Laurlente.    ,\nHard iabar For\nTeenage Youths\nVANCOUVER, Oct 27 (CP) -\nSentences-ranging-from 18 months\nto three-years hard labor'were\npassed today on three teen-age\nyouths who strongarmid two citizens under the protective covering\nof fog.\nYoungest one, James Rebum, 15,\nwill serve* two years, in-r the B.C.\npehitentiary. '.'--\n. John Silvey, 10, because of his\ncriminal record, was Jailed for\nthree years. John Wrobleskl, 16,\nwas sent to Oakalla tor 18 months.\nThey pleaded guilty, to assaulting\nJetties Mytriiek Oct 17 and robbing\nhinipfm;;' \u25a0\t\nIM:Wterii '* heid-laeefa-\ntion which required 28 _.l..i.\u00abs to\ncl'bi'S.\"\"     '-\" -'\u25a0 * v ,\nRobbed 14 tht itiat manner was\nTM MuM^ho lositt ti the thugs.\nteiitlalliln\nNorth Australia\nMELBOURNE, Oct 27 (Reuters)\n\u2014Relief .'irom the drought which has\nravaged Northern Austrlls for-the\nlast four months arrived In the Alice\nSprings area this weekend with a\n3%-lnch rainfall.\nThe tall was not enough to save\nthe Situation but indicated a good\nSpring season ahead, a government\nofflclilrrMifcl\" ' ;:\nRanchers now fear heavy rains\nwill flood the .area, bogging down\nweakened cattle, and cause more loss\nof livestock. No total estimate of\ndrought damage' has been reached.\nThe drought St.- .ted last April and\nspread', dver most of the continent.\nBroWnies Hold\nHallowe'en Party\nGoblins, witches and ghosts\ntransformed the Scout-Guide Hall\n-.at-urday afternoon when the\nBrownies held their annual;. Hallowe'en- party.   ' \u25a0'.'\nWinners of the costume parade\nwere Patty Hooker who was dress\ned as a pirate and Marylyn McEwen\nfor cdi-itc dress.\n.Games; \u25a0 contests and pack, songs\nwere'enjeyed followed by. refreshments.:\nGuide Sylvia Shorthouse assisted Brown Owl in supervision.\nAsiatic elephants may grow to be\nas much as 11 feet tall.       i\n'\u25a0\u25a0 .Views, ,\u25a0'\u25a0.\u2022.;\u25a0\nfrom th* '.-'{\nNews Fronts\nBy J. M. ROBERTS, JR.\nAssociated Praia News Analyst\nThe Communist Infiltration* campaign ,In North Africa and-'the\nMiddle East Is being co-ordinated\nfrom Moscow, according to a three-\nyear survey1 lust released' by .the\nMoral Re-Armament Movement,\nMuch pf the planning and real\nwork, however, Is being,, done in\nNorth Africa by French and Italian\nagitators and by their superiors In\nStance and Italy. In Egypt,-however, as elsewhere.in the Middle\nEast, it . Is . virtually a Moscow\nshow, with'much use being made\nof farmer . German field officers,\ncaptured during the war and indoctrinated, in Russia.\nIt was these officers, the report\nsays, who really engineered the\nrecent Cairo riots, i and who are\ntrying to force the present military\nleader, General Naguib, into dictatorial practices in order to create\ngreater cleaves.within the country.\nRussia also: operates directly ih\nEthiopia where the Soviet Embassy\nemploys. some. 2000 part time and\nvolunteer workers, in addition to\nits own staff, and where a Russian\nhospital indoctrinates some 400 attaches each.year for work among\nthe people bf the Sudan, Somali-\nland,- Uganda 'and. Kenya. The, report describes Ethiopia as the main\ntraining.ground for Communists In\nEast Africa, \u2022 iv'.\u25a0.:'\u25a0-.\nWest coast Communist leaders are\nmostly tralne'd in Britain, whose\nCommunists also provide the Inspiration and direction for the\nmovement In C e n t r a 1 Africa.\nFrench, Belgian'and Portuguese do\ntheir share.\nThe broad strategy Is \"Africa for\nthe Africans,\" \"Back to your tribal\ngods,\" and \"out with the white\nman.\" In the Middle East, it is to\nget Britain away from Suez. In\nNorth Africa, to oust the French.\nInfiltration of consular, police,\ncommunication and other public\nservices already has begun on a\nmajor scale, along with the familiar\nactivity in trade unions.\n\"Against this united force,\" say_\nthe M.R.A. report, \"there is the\nunorganized ' materialism of the\nWest, which aims to use the economic resources of Africa to bolster\nthe strength of the Western\ndemocracies . . .\"\nTo offset this situation, M.R.A.\nhas sent teams Into many of the\ncountries, seeking an answer to\nlocal conditions through the application of moral principles. They\nare competing In'European universities for the minds of the African\nstudents Who,' sent abroad for\ntraining In leadership back home,\nhave been.so actively proselyted\nby the Communists.\nBXX Eiiiployees Keep\n^ght Refe on Ne-vifc\nUMllllIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIU.\nI Get That \",'\"\u25a0 \"rw\nVICTORIA, Oct tf (CP) -DAM-\ngates to the ninth annual meeting\nof the B. C. Government Employees\nAssociation decided a tight rein\nshould be held on news concerning\nasspclatio-i;biislhe_s.';-'' \u25a0''\u25a0<\u2022:!\u25a0\u2022\nBefore the convention hare ended\nSaturday evening, the.' delegates\ndiscussed St length \"thi. .natter of\npress relations ind rVoted'down a\nresolution, sponsored by the Victoria branch, which would have\nallowed Reporters at local branch\nmeetings.'\u25a0\u2022:\u2022- -.'=\u25a0*\u25a0 .\u25a0 .....    ..,.\nThe convention also rejected n\nresolutlopL proposing \u2022 that local\nbranches appoint Its own\" &ress relations officers to handlp- press, releasesilrilhelrVijifti-ield-rte areas:Tha\nResolutlons Committee recprmmend-\ned non-eCToi_rrtnCe.;.\"-!l_di___ni'<\u00bbn\naffirmative vote wodld YdSat.lii\ngiving the association 42 voices,\nwhich might lead to confusion and\nconflict\"\"'' ,\u00bb>''''\nHAUK REELECTED\nCarl Hauk of New Westminster\nwas reelected president and W. H.\nOliver, Victoria, returned to office\nas vice-president.\nOther officers elected were: Ted\nIvay, Vancouver, -second vice-president ; and W. Ellsay; Vancouver,\ntreasurer.\nNamed to the executive by their\nrespective ' branches were Peter\nBarr, Frank Carr, Jean Gowor, Victor.!); Ted Cook, George Hirridgc,\nS. Devitt, Vancouver-New West-Ufn-\nsteri Jerry Ritchie, Revelstoke; Day-\nid Slock, Nanalmo; George Truver,\nE&ondole; Larry MePhill,. Nelson;\nJ. Holt, Vernon and S. Deans, Fraser\nValley,\nHAGGARD, BATTLE-FATIGUED but victorious soldiers of an\nROK infantry division await their turn for medical treatment at a\nmobile hospital behind the lines. The Soldiers were wounded Ih the\nbloody fighting with attacking Chinese Reds for possession of strategic White Horse Mountain, -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022\nnumber all other.U.N.\n....South Korean,troops now equal In\ntroops combined^\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nWilgress Discusses U*N\u00bb\nSplits Versus N.A.T,0-\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Uphofstery\n409 Hall Street\nPhone 140\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n51\u00ab FRONT ST. PHONE 83\nHove the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\n'      MASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCK8\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\n\u25a0- \u25a0 \"\nWOULD ABOLISH\nRADIO LICENCE\nOTTAWA, Oct. 27 (CP) - The advisory council of the National Liberal Federation today recommended\nimmediate abolition of the radio licence fee of $2.50 a year.\nThe Federation took this stand in\na resolution adopted at its annual\nmeeting, which said the action was\nbeing taken in recognition of the\nuse ot radio having become \"universal in Canada and a necessity of\nmodern life.\"\nTORONTO, Oct. 27 (CP) - Dana\nWilgress, under-secretary of State\nfor External Affairs, said today the\nNorth Atlantic Treaty Organization\nwill be able to accomplish its npn-\nmilitary objectives ''when we reach\nthat plateau ot rearmament on\nwhich real security Is found . . .\"\nHe said in an address to the Canadian Club of Toronto that In\nconcentrating on N,A.T.O.'s military goals \"we have not been able\nto devote as much attention as we\nwould wish to the non-military\nobjectives of the North Atlantic\nTreaty . .' .\"\nMr.' WilgresSt, who represented\nCanada in Moscow, Berne and\nLondon during the last 10 years,\nsaid the North Atlantic Treaty \"has\nbecome the main base of Canadian\nforeign policy.\"\nREAL THREAT\nThat did not mean Canada had\nlost interest In the United Nations.\nBut N.A.T.O. was a measure of\ncollective self-defence permitted\nunder the'U.N. charter In,the face\nof a very real threat of aggression,\n'providing for our own security.\"\nBut defensive strength could hot\nproceed \"unmindful of the economic effects of concentrating efforts on the. building up of armies,\nair forces and navies.\"\nBecause these economic \u2022 effects\ncould not be foreseen, an annual\nreview of the military objectives\nwas provided for.      \u2022.'\n\"This annual review Is now\nunder way in Paris. Some newspapers are already speculating .that\nBritish Diplomats\nDepart From Iran\nTEHRAN, Oct 27 (Reuters) \u2014\nBritish diplomats packed their\n' bags and departed today, leaving\nbehind the wreckage of prolonged\noil negotiations whloh ended last\nweek when diplomatic relations\nWere severed.\nTwenty-three members of the\nBritish Embassy left by road for\nBaghdad, Iraq, this morning.\n' Iran broke off dlplomatlo rela\ntions with' Britain following an\nexchange of notes on Iran's nation\nalliatlon of the British owned\nAnglo-Iranian Oil Company.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nJEAN ROU8SEAU of Paris, Franca, top, pops his head out of\nthe hatch.of the \"Malakoff II\", a 100-Inch pocket-submarlne of hlo\nown construction, during tests at Blllancourt, on the Seine River.I\nThe Inventor claims that the pocket-sub was the first to have ever\nsubmerged In the Seine. It Is powered by two electric motors, and,\nsays Brousieau, can dive to 100 feet and remain there for three hours.\nBut Just In case Rousseau Is wrong about that a cable Is attached, as\nshown in top photo. Bottom shows submarine lying at rest In Seine\nRiver.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nthe results will reveal a failure on\nthe part of N.A.T.O. to reach Its\nobjectives.\n\"This  may  be  so  In  absolute iManitoba'' jS-rWrnment\nVntDH-Sr, _^rOct^:<(Gt').--\nA stained glass *wlH_(oW, expressing\nthe thanks of a Belgian city to Its\nliberators lit: the Second World War,\nhas been dedicated in St; Mary's\nAnglican Church iere,     .\nThe window was sent by the\" city\nof Bruges to the 12th Manitoba Dragoons woo liberated the city from\ntho Nazis.. In.Bruges itse(f, the avenue and-n bridge over tho-Leopbld\ncanal that tha Canadians stormed\nhave beer renamed Manitoba Avenue. Two buffalo guard the bridge\nentrance and the avenue Is lined\nwith M.. ltoba Maples, sent by the\nterms but I am confident'that any\ndeficiency will be relatively small\nand should be assessed against the\nmagnitude of our collective efforts,\" Mr. Wilgress said.\nONLY FORUM\nThe.United Nations -remained\n\"the only forum where East and\nWest can meet,\" and the only\nforum of universal international\ncooperation.\nHowever, three cleavages \u2022 have\nbecome apparent In tho U.N, one\nwas the lack of desire for peace\non a basis of freedom which\ndivides East ahd West\n\"It has been the lack ef cooperation  on  the  part  of the\nSoviet Union that Is chiefly responsible for the failure of the\nUnited Nations to fulfill the high\nhopes that were held of It at the\ntime the charter was algned.\"\n- The second split was between\ndeveloped and under-developed nations and the third between .anti-\ncolonial countries and those with'\ndependent territories.\nHe warned that the \"have-not\"\nand anti-colonial countries'should\nremember the danger of unconsciously seconding the efforts of\nthe Soviet Union to bring about\ndisunity in the Western world.\n\"The principal obstacle to the\nkind of life these countries would\nlike to lead is the threat from\nEastern Europe \u2014 a threat to them\nno less than to any one of us.\"\nIn the recent :ceremony, the wis-\n'NEW*\nHAT\nFeeling.\n1\ni\nThis is\nNATIONAL HAT WEEK\n. so look at your hat... *;\nOther people do.\nWe have all colors and\nsizes from\n$6.50 to $15.95\n\u25a0\"'.\"\u2022 CREAN\n\u2022 BILfMORE\n\u2022 STETSON\nS   I\ndow was presented by S. J. \"Dale,\nBelgian Consul In Winnipeg, to Lt.\nCoL L. R. Fulton, Dragoons commanding officer.^\nThe window is Inscribed: \"thanks\nto our Canadian liberators.\" It bears\nthe Bruges coat ot arms and the\nunit's badge, a buffalo, Beneath Is a\ncross reading Bruges-Canada'.'   ,.\nIn his address to the congregation,\nincluding 25 former members of the\nRegiment V-ho participated In tbe\nliberation, Maj. Duncan said the\nceremony revolved around three\nfactors; memory of the fine people\nof Bruges and that city's hospitality\nto the regiment; and a memorial to\nthe unit's men and their deeds.'\nLIMITED , I\n, The Man'i Store    \u00a7\naiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiK\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service*\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n815 Kootenay St       Phono 501\nSudan Assembly\nCeases To Exist\nKHARTOUM, The Sudan, Oct.\n27 (AP) '-The Sudan legislative\nassembly has ceased to exist H Was\nofficially announced today.\nMinisters, undersecretaries and the\nexecutive council as a whole, how\never will carry oh until they hand\nover their duties' to their Successors\nafter the first Sudanese parliamentary elections, which, may be .held\nnext month, ;..\u25a0\u25a0,:\nEgypt and Britain art at odds over\nthe Sudan, nominally ruled by both\ncountries.\nMountain Climber's\nBody Discovered\nKELSO, Wash., Oct \u00bb (AP) -\nA miuhtain rescue (arty found the\nbody of 17-year-old Pat Girardot on\nMount St Helens today.\nA' brief radio report from tbe\ntimber line base camp told of the\nyoung mountain climber' being\nfound dead near the spot where he\nWas last .seen Sunday by two\ncompanibris(\nVour Bread Win Be Tastier\nMade From\nELLISON'S BEST FLOUR\nAsk Your Grocer or Phone 231\nELLISON MILLING\na ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nVOIDOrtEEN\nThe new Antiseptic Deodorizing\nMoiith Wash with Chlorophyll .\n12 oz. bottle \u2014 79e\nAt Vour Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY '\u25a0 j\"\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy*\nBOX .80\nPhone 84, Day - 807-R, Night\nLethbridge Has\nTwo Break-Ins\nLETHBRIDGE, \/Oct. 27 (CP) -\nTwo week-end break-ins were reported today by Lethbridge police.\nIn one several - hundred, .dollars\nworth of men's clothing waa^ taken\nwhile the thief or thieves who staged\nthe second Break, in. got .nothing.\nThe clothing store entered was\nBlack and Walkers men's wear on\nFourth Avenue South. Police, notified that an entry had been made\non Sunday, found that a small .window at the rear of the store had\nbeen broken and a considerable\nquantity of clothing removed.. The\nthief or thieves apparently broke Into the store behind the cover of a\npile of bricks at the rear of the shop.\nSecond break-in reported occurred at Fred King Motors, on Third\nAveitue South. Police said the office\nwas entered but that apparently\nnothing was taken.\nWives of Provincial\nGovernors to Fill\nPositions on C.A.C.\nTORONTO, Oct 27 (CP) - Ike\nwives of the lieutenant-governors\nin the provinces in which the Canadian Association of Consumers is\norganized have agreed to act as\nhonorary vice-presidents for their\nrespective provinces in the C.A.C,\nit was announced today:\nThey are; Mrs. Clarence Wallace,\nVictoria; Mrs. J. J. Bowlen, Edmonton; Mrs. W. J. Patterson,\nRegina; Mrs. L. 0. Breithaupt Toronto; Mrs. Gaspard Fauteux, Quebec City; Mrsi J. A. D. MCCurdy,\nHalifax; Mrs.' D.'-'__..'-MacLaren,\nSaint John, N.B.;. Mrs.' T.. W.r L.\nProwse, Charlottetbwn.\nThe recent death of Mrs. R. F.\nMacWilllams, wife of the lieutenant-governor of Manitoba, leaves\nthat position vacant     :.;:,\nOne of the world's outstanftiig.\nengineering feats is tho road and\nrailway bridge over the, Indus\nRiver at Sukkur, Pakistan.   -     .\nGel lo Know Old People and Their\nNeeds Advise lo Housing Planners\n\"The right to personal privacy Is\nof the very essence of our way of\nHying\", said Douglas VJ. Fowler in\na talk on the need for a housing\nproject for senior citizens.\n,Mr. Fowler, district supervisor .of\nthe Social Welfare Branch,' emphasized that \"when we plan for\nour older people we must keep in\nmind what they, want. We ,must not\ntell them what we think they\nshould have.\"   *\nThe speaker traced the steps necessary In developing a housing\nproject. Fact-finding. was first, on\nhis list: the first need was to find\nout just hqw many old people\nthere are in,the area who need better accommodation, and tb learn\nwhat their own feelings .were oh\nthe-subject. \u2022\u2022 .'.'\u25a0\"\u25a0\u2022\".      .<:\u25a0\u2022'- .-'.','\nOther needs of older people must\nbe kept In mind, said Mr.. Fowler.\nHe quoted the Society of Friends\n\u2014the Quakers-who summarize\nolder people's needs in the phrase\n\"Somewhere to live, something,to\ndo, and someone to care.' -Consequently recreation and the opportunity for friendship must be considered along with housing.\nThe Social Welfare Branch representative spoke to the Kiwanis\nClub. The Club has a continuing\ninterest In providing help to older\npeople, und is considering, sponsoring a new project. They already\nsupport the Mount St. Francis Infirmary in a number ofiways.\nMr. Fowler concluded: \"Without\nminimizing the Importance of housing, jf, think that there are many\nthing's to be done at the moment\nfor older people in this community,\nparticularly those-without close\nfamily ties. A housing scheme\ntakes time to organize. . In the\nmeantime, why not get to know\nthese fine old people first find out\nwhat they want and plan accordingly?\"   \u25a0 \u25a0   .\nCourtenay Air Mail\nService Refused \u2022\n,, COURTENAY, B.C., Oct.. JT .\u00ab*')\n\u2014The district postmaster in Vancou-\nyer has turned down a request for\nair mall service to Courtenay, Como.. and Campbell River, claiming\nthat with Improved surface transport\ntbe faster service is not warranted.\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n87\u00ab Baker 8t\nMed,'Arts Blk.\nPHONE 2\u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescriptions\n.   Phone tjt\/.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n070 Baker St Phone 230\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETMSf\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts Building\nSuiteaW......  Phone 141\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nSalon\nPhone 827..\n070 Baker Ot.\ne^SJElv.\nVATCH REPAIR.\nffARS _Xl*tR:EI.\nNfl SON   R C\nS       \"  'AGENTS,FOR   ....\n|      \"ROLEX\" Watehoo\n=, tpcated'dljectiy acrbss from *\n5, \u25a0-. r.-W-'WoolworthCg,'' =\nnuiiVuiliiiiiiiiiriUiiIiniiininiiiiiiiii;\nln'the good old doys,k'eeping^hj.K6iJs\u00ab('::   ;.\nJ  .properly heated wos amon's jofc The     -\";\n\/   Work wds'hard, the dirt wos there, often\n\/ .the fire-went out at the Wrong time.    '\nr ..   ,\",,'\"\u25a0-' .'i'u- ,i.,   --'\u25a0 .\",!\".   ' *--'\u2022-\"      -    i^    .- i\nModern Heating\nremoves all that drudgery and today '\nyou can get all its conveniences for loss\ncost than ever before'.'\/''':,'. \",'*'\u25a0\u25a0 2--\"'\" '\"\nr    Our cxperionco is at your disposal. \"   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0\nCall on us and take advantage of If.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO. LTD.\n351 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 666\nWe Ara Now Gathering\nPICTORIAL\nEDITION\nPHOTOS\nThe PHOJO EDITOR is how gathering\nSNAPSHOTS suitable, to use in the\nNelsorf Daily News\n1953 PICTORIAL EDITION\nReaders are invited to send pictures they\nthink suitable for publication\nto the Photo Editor.\nPictures of Industries, Public\nEvents, Sports, Scenei-y,\nVacation and Hobby Subjects\nare all welcome.\n....   ... :\/''','>'\/;'\/'\/' '\u25a0\/\u25a0.''\nPLEASE   SEND   NEGATIVES.' AK.D , A   ;, ,; '\u25a0\nPRINT WITH A CLEAR-DESCRIPTION    !      \u25a0 ,,f\n-OF THE .'.SUBJECT. MATTER TO . . .\n\"\u2022 ;\u2022  , 2     \u25a0 -;' >'\u25a0'\": \u2022\u2022\u25a0 1 '   ;i\n-THE ;.   i \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\".-    (     ,     ','*''\u25a0'\u25a0   ,,.-1' \"2['\nPHOTO EDITOR\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nAll Xegativet and Prints Will Do Returned\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1952_10_28","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0426265","@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":"1952-10-28 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1952-10-28 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\/1.0426265"}