{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2023-07-16","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1952-11-14","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426490\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Food in Pubs Only\nFavored in 3 Briefs\nCasHegar Group Gives Sole Support\nTo Restaurant Sales, Cocktail Bars\nOnly, four briefS--})ut represeWtinjg a wide divergence\nlof outlooks\u2014were received in Nelson Thursday by the B.C.\nILiqubr Inquiry Commission, holding its 19th sitting since\n\u25a0its iiiquiry. wais launched in October. \u25a0*,'\u25a0\nT Nelson Ministerial Association, United Women's Mis-\nnonary Society, the Castlegar 'Chamber, of Commerce and\nthe Nelson District Hotelmen's Association made presenta-\nlons.   ;\n(For details of briefs see page 2.)     .<--.\"\u25a0\nDesire to pr.otect young people from influence toward\np. consumption  of liquor I -..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 .    .    \u25a0\u25a0 - \".'-.- - \"\u25a0;\u25a0-.--.\nrail evident in all briefs.        *\u00bb. handled by inexperienced oper-\nThe ministers urged that\nbeer\nparlors be permitted to sell foods in\niference to the extension of liquor\niles privileges to cafes, and sought\nI crack down on bootlegging, which\nfey,declared was extensive here..\nAssociation   will  forward  a\nBtt-n brief to Victoria.     \u201e\n| In   this   respect   there   was   a\nilarliy with the recommendations\n! the Hotelmen.\nhe W.M.S. opposed the creation\n- additional   liquor   outlets   and\nked means to further restrict use\nalcoholic beverages. They were\nbposed to cocktail bars as making\njinking attractive to youth, and as\nalternate also suggested extension of beer parlor facilities for\nInd dispensing.\nMTOXICATION TESTS\nI They asked scientific tests for\nrfdence of intoxication in drivers\nfvolyed in accidents. '\nSociety was against liquor\nlies in restaurants, wanted stricter\nBforcemeht of existing regulations\nI regard to licensed premises, clear\n,ate glass Instead of opaque glass\nI put windows and stern treatment\n\u25a0 Illegal seller?.\n| The Hotelmen's brief urged the\nilsslon to do ell In Its power to\notect youth trom \"the pUfalls that\nlould arise if liquor by the glass\n\u00a3fcto$\nh^7\n*-\u00bb'a'\"-<\u00bbT\u00ab\u00ab^j\u00bbiJi m \u25a0\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay\u2014Cloudy. Light tain.\nLittle change in temperature. Winds\nsoutherly 15. Low and high at Cranbrook and Revelstoke SB and 45,\nCrescent Valley 35 ahd 43.\nVol, 51\nimSON' b; c; c\/jirapa^FHipAY mojning, November ii; .952\nNo. 164\nCANADIANS\n[OMING HONE\ngear's Service in\n5ermany Concluded\nIHANNOVER, Nov. 13 (Reuters)\n|A total of 68.6 married officers and\nlen of the Canadian 27th Infantry\nBrigade left for home today after\nlyear's service. InGermany as part\n\u25a0North-Atlantic Treaty forces.\ntony friends were on the station\n[see them off on a cold and foggy\niy. Two military bands played'-as\np soldiers boarded the train,\nvia]. G. J.- Baird of Regina, com-\nnding the first returning batch,\njplalned \"We shall arrive at Rot-\nfdam ... tonight, and' then we\ngoing to board the troopship\nIptunia for Quebec.    .\nI'ln 10 days we shall be back in\nIjda.\"\nbe commander of the 27th Bride, Brig. Geoffrey Walsh, who is\nturning home next month and is\npected to become director-gener-\n|\u25a0'\u2022'of Canadian military training,\n' the contingent off.\n!apt. E. A. Shortt ot Calgary, said\n[would reach home just in time\nJ his daughter Caroline's ninth\nthday. There was a  top-secret\nndle in1 his luggage for her.\nMany of the Canadians carried\nIvarian leather shorts for their\nlldren, folding umbrellas for their\npres and souvenirs of all kinds.\nators.\nThe hotelmen were anxious to\nkeep liquor sales within their own\nhands. They asked rights to sell\ncertain foods, registration forms for\nsuspected minors to sign to protect\nthe beer parlor operators, and first\nconsideration for their own licence\napplications if liquor by the glass\nsales are approved,\nNEW APPROACH\nDeclaring that June 12 plebiscite\nresults were a protest against present liquor laws and a demand for\nan entirely new approach, Castlegar Chamber submitted as a first\nobjective'the creating of a situation\nwhere reasonable quantities of beer,\nwine ahd liquors are available to\nthose persons wanting them in\nreasonable places and at reasonable\ntimes.\nThe Chamber also suggested that\nthe age  limit for admittance  to\nlicensed premises be iowered to 18.\nStandards should be provided\nfor   premises   dispensing   liquor\nand non should be looated within\nwhat was a \"reasonable\" distance\nef schools and playgrounds.\nThe sale of liquor with food In\ntaverns, and in restaurants, hotel\ndining rooms, railway cafe cars and\nboat dining rooms, clubs, cabarets\nand night clubs was also approved:\nIt also urged that cocktail bars and\nlounges sell all beverages with\nfoods available if wanted.\nLICENSING COMMISSION\nA provincial commission to review\nand grant all licence applications\nwith right ot appeal of rejections to\nthe courts, was also recommended\nby the Chamber.\nThe Ministerial Association declared its Interest was to support\nthe wide body of opinion that opposed the Increase In the number of\nliquor outlets while recognizing that\nthere existed a demand for change\nIn present liquor laws.\n78 BRIEFS\nThe three-man commission, headed by Hon. Harry H, Stevens, leaves\nfoif Vancouver today. The former\ncabinet;. Jninister-.^ani.-^anlMu\u00abi_tJ-^a^_la\nBoard of Trade president sits, with\nVery Rev; Dean Cecil Swanson of\nChrist Church Cathedral and George\nHomei -secretary-treasurer ofOtoe\nB.C. Federation of Labor, Mr. Home\nis a former Sahnolte,\nThe commission has received 75\nbriefs since Its first session in Van-\ncouver bctober-19.\nThe Commission was formed by\nthe \"government to determine - the\nmanner and means most acceptable\nto the people of B.C. of the sale of\nliquor by the glass ,in premises\nlicenced for the purpose,\nIn a plebiscite in the June 12 elections asking i'are you In favor of\nthe -aa_e>'; bf ;\u00abptfltuous liquor and\nwine by USeVSl-ssrin establishments\nlicenced 'fbr such purpose?\" 316,268\nvoted In favor and 204,761 against,\nWo-ding of the plebiscite was\nconsidered to be unclear and ambiguous and in the public Interest\nthe government decided liquor by\nthe glass question would be studied\nfurther through the public inquiry.\niiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiniiiiii\nLad Rescues Sister\nFrom Burning Home\nVANCtJUvilt, Nov 13 JCP)\n\u2014Seven-year-oitt:. Wayne Rod- '\nway-today raced into his burn-  ,\ning home to pick up his,two-\nyear-old sister, Alva, and carry\n\u25a0 her-to safety. ,r<\/X'\/. > .::,\"',\nThe boy was playing on the\nporch with a friend when smoke\nstarted to rpdur from a basement window . .,\n\u25a0   The fire department was cal-.\n. led by -neighbors aroused by\nWayne's dries', of, '\u00abre\"l after\nhe ran from the house.1 Firemen\nsaved the house from destruction.   \u25a0 ..   \",'.>\"' ,\u25a0;'...>.\nThe'children*!,,mother, .Mrs,-\nElaine Rddway, was returning\nfrom a neighborhood store\nwhen the fire broke but*   \u25a0\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nChurchman Says\nCanada Soldiers1\nMorale low\njtheran Minister Says . . ;\nimmigration, Housing,\nTot Cfiurch Business\nLONDON, Obt,- Nov.* 13 (CP) \u2014\nThe morale rot Canada's 87tn -Brigade In Germany is very bad, Rev.\nW. H. Young of Toronto, chairman\not the- chaplain service ot the Canadian Council of Churches charged today.\n- Dr. Young told a council meeting\nthat the government was aware that\ngeneral welfare- conditions- in the\nbrigade were-bad; and so \"was tppr-\nale, but because ofthe touchy situation of either choosing* one of four\nwelfare dgencies or none, had chosen'none and Aeft the army to take\ncare of Itself.\nThe defence department's attitude\nDr. Young said, was that all four\nwelfare agencies \u2014 Y.M.C.A, the\nKnights of- Columbus,'-';-\u25a0 Salvatiori\nArmy, and Red Crdss-^-Could not be\nsent to Europe to look after a single\nbrigade.' He said that lett only army\nwelfare officers to concern themselves with the welfare needs of\nthe troops. He said neither the\nchaplain service nor ther churches\nwere satisfied- with' the- workr -ot\narmy welfare officers in looking after the 27th. , \u201e;:\nWELFARE HOUSE*\n' Morale to. the;WtM';OT\u00bb>Jljl'\nGermany, is far hlgheir: than the.\n\" sdlan soldiers, he ssld.\nAnd the only difference in the two\ngroups' iltiiitlbri: Was.sthat^Mtuh\nchurches-rChurch of England, the\nChurch, of Scotland, and ft* Met]-:\nodist Church\u2014had established \"Welfare\" houses\" for their-troops.\" '\u2022 '':\nHe'suggested the Canadian Council of Churches take similar: action\nand organize establishment rot \"welfare houses\" for Canadian soldiers\nin Germany.' r '\nThe houses; he said, could be\nmanned by church,personnel and\norganized under . the Canadian\nCouncil of Churches and the army\nchaplain service. \u25a0;\u25a0-'-\u25a0\nTie Council: agreed with Vt.\nYoung and'ordered its committee oh\nchaplains to the forces to make a\nfull report to the. executive .of the\ncouncil for \"its action^',\nDr. Young refused to make public tbe source,, of his information- on.\nconditions .'among-members of the\n27th but said his source was reliable.\nAn army plan to recruit 16-year-\nolds as apprentice soldiers beginning in January also came under\ncouncil fire.'   .\nDelegates, argued that -such recruitingunless there r Is absolute\nsegregation of the boy-soldiers from\nother troops li \u00bb great''danger.'-to\nthe welfare of the boys.     ., *'\nLondon,.Ont., Nov. 13 (cp> -\n|e Canadian Council of Churches\ntold today by a Lutheran\nver that immigration, housing\n[other similar matters are none\nI its business and it has no right\nI send resolutions to the govern-\nnt about them.\nhe Lutheran Church Is not a full\nnber of the Council of Churches\n1 therefore has no vote.\nhev. C. H. Whitteker of Bridge-\nIter, N.S., didn't believe it was\nchurch's job to interfere with\nilation. The church should be\nI authority on salvation, he said,\nTit that's all.\"\npouncil passed a resolution urging\nr Federal Government to step up\nnigratlon of unsettled persons In\ntope and to offer greatrr encour\n4B0BBFIHIND\nAT (RASH SCENE\nNo Known\nSurvivors of\nvU.S. Plane Crash   .\nSHELTON.Was-, Nov. 1\u00ab (AP)-\nThe scattered' wreckage of a four-\nengine U. S. navy plane and the,\nbroken and burped b odies of four\nof the 11 men aboard were found by\nsearchers today ih the rugged Olympic Peninsula foothills. r\nThe other seven'passengers were\npresumed to have died in the crash\nand explosion of the Privateer that\nsplattered against the forested hillside last - night r-with a r thunderous\nroar and blinding flash.  \u25a0   '.\nSearch parties iad been working\nall day toward the spot where log?\ngers and residents of the remote]\narea 16 miles'. Northwest of here\nsaid they had seen and, heard the\nplane crash,\n,' Lt. Cmdr. H.. E. Saunders, coast\nguard officer In charge bf the search\nsaid the plane r.ammed into the forested area at an altitude of about\n1800 feet, He estimated' it was 400\nfeet below the crest of the hill.\nA navy crew was dispatched Immediately to the scene to* bring out\nthe bodies. The Privateer met Its\ntragic end while on a training flight\nfrom IU bate at the 'Seattle naval\nair. station. Two parties reached the\n\u25a0plane. .',      .'-';:   ';.' '\/\",. :\nThe wreckage was first sighted\nby a ground party of navy men,\nwho. approached lt from the South,\nSoon alter a second group of searchers came upon the scene.  ,\nAbbott Asks taxpayers Ease\nDemand if Tax Cuts Wanted\n. .PLEA8ED WITH THE PROGRE8S,of the mutual defence talks-\nFilipino President Elpldlo Qulrlno (loft) smiles as he,attends tin\nPhilippine-American security conference In Manila. The meetings\nserved to reinforce the system by which the United States hopes\nto maintain a strong line of defence In the Pacific'\n-. - .   . '-iCenlr\u00bbl Press Canadian.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSilence Was Golden \"\u25a0'\u25a0!\n. v. For the Thief\nHOUSTON; Tex, Nov. 13\n.(AP)-Mrs. Mabel White told\nher elementary school1 class to\nbe quiet while she was out of \u2022\ntoe .room yesterdayHand the\npupils obeyed perfectly.   \u2022\n1    Not one let-out arpeep when .\na strange man walked In and\nspoke to them.\n\"You children must be avr-\nfully good for .the-teacher not.\nto be here;\" the children said\nthe man told them.'        ,   *'\n-,7Jieire,vstffl, vMiAua.^ffifj^\n-from the pjipils wheivjie opened',\nthe* doorrof a corner\" e^tpieti'p\n. stela the teacher's pursefcon-\n,taining $7 and departed, *    \u25a0 \u2022' \u25a0.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIiilllll\nSays Sommers; Only Liberal Vole\nrScheiiie4\nFinance Minister Warns Increased\nOoy't Services Woii't Lower Taxes\n;LGNp6N, Ont,, Nov. 13 (CP) \u2014 Finance Minister\nAbbott today toldr Canadians to halt demands for increased\n'government services if they want tax cuts. <  j\n, They simply,can't have,both, he said in a speech be^\nfore-VtKfe; W<amea[s> Canadian; Club of London. Taxes wero\nthe price .consumers paid for government services, whether\ni : \u25a0\"\u25a0:\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 - .\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u25a0 ',\u2022-.' \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 -. \u2022- \u2022\u25a0 federal, provincial or munlc-\nililiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniii -   \u25a0\nEDGEWATEK \u2014 Hon. R. E. Som- peated his assurance of,his knowl-\nagement for emigration from tbe\nBritish Isles. At'the same time it\nappealed to churches to take seriously their responsibility, to a\nplacement plan for European refugees sponsored by the Council of\nChurches.\nokIL\n35\n7\n21 Countries Talk\nOn Korean Peace\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y, Nov. 13\n(CP) \u2014 Twenty-oile countries supporting a'Western proposal for a\nKorean cease-fire conferred. today\nin one meeting among a feverish\nround of private talks in the United\nNations on possible solutions of the\ndeadlocked war-prisoners issue.\nDiplomatic sources reported that\nthe 21 countries, including representatives of Canada, discussed pro-\nposed amendments to their resolution .backing U.N. prosecution of\nthe Korean war and calling for a\ncease-fire In terms pf non-forceable\nrepatriation,\nMeanwhile, Mme. Vljaya Lakshmi\nPandit, leader of the Indian delegation which diplomatic sources report is set to submit a compromise\nresolution, conferred with Foreign\nSecretary Anthony Eden of Britain.\nCHRISTMAS PACKAGE DRIVE\nMONTREAL, Nov. 13 (CP)\u2014Members of the Junior Chamber of Commerce throughout Canada wUl loin\nthose of 25 other countries in \u25a0\n\"Christmas Package For' Korea\"\ndrive, lt was announced today. The\npackages will be for Korean civilians.\nTicket Suspended\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13 (CP)-A\nmemory lapse by.. chief \u2022 officer\nCharles W. Savage today was found\nthe cause of the JOss-of. the Canadian- Pacific Steamships' luxury\nliner Princess Kathleen near Juneau, Alaska, Sept. 7. r\nMr. Justice Sidney Smith; who\nconducted the formal inquiry, suspended Savage's master's ticket for\none year from the date of the sink-\ntog but recommended that rat toe\nend of six months lie be granted a\nchief officer's ticket for the remaining six rnionths.   ; .'. ;\nSavage held' captain's papers' at\nthe time of the mishap but was\nserving as chief officer. ,\nIn pleading for clemency for'his\nclient counsel said the mate's lapse\nof memory was \"not positive neglect\" .       \u25a0:'.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMI\nParrot Knew'..When'.'\nTo Keep Mum '\nBROWNSVILLE,- Tex, Nov.*\n13 (AP)\u2014A parrot accused of\n, using foul language beat the\nrap here; by refusing .to be a\nstool pigeon. ;r        . ;     V \u25a0\u25a0\nThe parrot, cage and all, was\nhauled before ' Justice of the\nPeace M. - A.: Rodriguez after a.\nneighbor woman charged: toe\nbird's owner had taught tho\nparrot to swear. ' \u2022  \u25a0.:\u25a0',\nTh? owner  denied. he had -\n, taught his pet to use foul lang- ,\nuage,-  . \u25a0':.. ' !i ..V\nWho was right? The parrot,\ncould have told. But he kept bis\nbeak shut. tU,\nAnd the case was dismissed.  .\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillll\n, PITTSpURGH, Nov. 13 (AP) -r\nPhilip . Murray, beloved president\nof the C.I.O,, was burled today on\na, cemetery, hilltop within view ot\none of the soft-coal mines In which\nhe began his long labor, career.\nThe -88-year-oid Murrsy \u2014'often\nhailed as the statesman of organized labor\u2014was burled in his family\ncemetery plot in suburban Castle\nShannon afteif services in St. Paul's.\nCathedral;      ..\nAn Estimated 1,000 fellow-Pitts-\nburghers watched the funeral procession of ISO chartered limousines\nand scores of private cars make its\nway to the cathedral and then to\nthe cemetery. About 3000 crowded\nthe church for solemn.requiem high\nmass celebrated by a boyhood friend\nof Murray\u2014Msgr.'Henry A. Carlin,\nvicar-general'of the Pittsburgh Roman Catholic diocese. Another 2000\nwere waiting at the ^eniete^r when\nthe procession arrived.\n..Two Canadian labor leaders were\namong the honorary pallbearers.\nDon MacDona|d of Ottawa, seen-\ntary-treasurenof the Canadian Congress of Labor, represented the\nC.CL. and - the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions.\nJames'C. Nicholson of Sydney, N.S.,\na close personal friend of Murray,\nwas there from Local 1064.pf the\nUnited Steelworkers of America\n(CXO.-C.C_.). r   \u2022\nmers, Minister of Lands and Forests.\nspeaking here Thursday night at a\nwell-attended meeting Which included, operators of most of the Columbia Va,Hey lumbering interests,\nmade an announcement of prime\nInterest\n. \"Anyone \u25a0who operates on crown\ngrjmted, .lands, will .be required ito\nreplant toe land, and if he does, not\nreplant, toe-Gove^nhient y^Hl-io so\n,tod;''TOes*'I,iii\u00bb''vcbrdtoay--'onl\u00ab\nppEeSin '\u2022A'aK'baslJ';'*. T,._\" '..\n'aJr. Sommers explained the recently announced cubic measure\nstumpage regulation as applied to\nthe B.C. log.scale. It was introduce^\nbecause some operators were not\nplacing the game: with the Government he said; and because the B.C.\nlog scale: could not be upheld In the\ncourts. He added that full utilization\nof timber is made atthe Coast, ind\nsince- it Is all' utilized it should be\npaid for. However, adjustments will\nbe made for these Interior operators\nbecause hero lumber cannot be eom-\npletely uUKied.'s\"\nAttorney.General Robert Bonner,\nalso speaking to the meeting, re-\nedge of the need of hydro power for\nthe Columbia Valley, He.said: preliminary studies had been made by\nharnessing of the SpilUmacbine\nHiver, , possible diversion. of the\nBugaboo ,River, into, the, Spilli-\nmacHine to augment the supply.'\n\"TORIES WITHOOt WHi8t<EF|8\"\nElmore Phll'pott, speaking at Invermere in support of George Keeii-r\nleyslde. Liberal candidate for Co-;\nlun;))lav riding, declaredr \"this byJ\nrelectiori Is one of toe mOBt Import^\nant ever held In, Canada. If you\nelect, the Liberal and reject Spcial\nCredit you can stop a scheme\ndangerous to the.. whole donjinion \"\n\"The Social Credit-party hopes tor\nrepeat in the Federal election the\nsmoke screen and mess that we got\nhere \u25a0 last June.'- The; ;new:: Govent-\nment of British Columbia are jiisl\nTories with whiskeirs shaved - off,\nThey had been Tories not so mejijj\nmonths ago and In a few more\nmonths will be Tories again\"   .,. j.\nThe speaker accused the Social\nCredit party r of using religion, for\npolitical purposes. They, had gone'\nInto Ontario recently to cause the\nsame confusion they did in B.C.\nAit Unappreciated ,\n' NEW YORK, Nov.'*l3 (AP)-\n'' Young Morton - Bloom I thinks\n\u2022nothing of singing 14'hours n\n' day\u2014and his neighbors. think\n, even less of It   :\nIn no, dulcet tones it all came\nout in court yesterday, with110\n: residents living within,a block\n\u2022 of 17-year~(jld Blobmicbmplaln-\n] lng that he sang almost every\n' day from. 7:30'a.m. to 9:30 at\"\nnight,    r .-'.  ,:w    :.   2'..\n\u25a0,\u25a0   \"If he could sirig,\" one complainant told Magistrate Charles\nF. Murphyi \"I .wouldn't mind.\nHe yells and It cuts through y%a\nlike a savf\" -\nBloom said he sang one song\nfor a vocal teacher three years\nago and was told \"I had possl-\nbffltles.'V \u2022''.:.. \u2022\u2022,'.\nMurphy, learning that Bloom\noften stayed home from high\nschool classes just to sing, told\nthe youth:-.,.',, .-,.., *,.,r... ..-.\u25a0\u2022'\n\"There's a .talent scout looking for you\u2014toe truafltofficer.\".\nMurphy, decreed, \"that Bloom\nsing only in the.schqol auditorium or in the nearly-soundproof basement of his apartment\nhouse-^and riot for U'.hpurs.-\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nipal.\n\"I agree with almost everybody,\"\nbe said; \"that tax rates are uncomfortably high and that we ought to\nfollow policies which will lead toward lower tag rates. ,\n\"We can .have lower tax rates on\ntwo conditions\u2014that we increase\nour total efficiency and productivity and that we do not ask our governments to embark-on large, new\nand- expensive projects.\"\nIn a democracy, citizens had to\nrealize that when it curia to government services, there was nothing \"free\". Yet the demand for to-\ncreased government services had\ngrown tremendously through the\nyears...-\nSERVICES NOT FREE\n\"It is a simple fact,.but en* that\nhas to be constantly repeated,\" said\nMr. Abbott' \"that no government\nservices are really free. They all\nhave their price.\"\n\"My view.Is that we should ds\nwell in toe Immediate future to digest bur recent gains and move very\nslowly in the direction ot new government services .;\u2022'.   .\n\"When we have got our productivity up and our tax rates.down,,\nlt will be time enough to consider\nwhether we should undertake large\nnew services.\"   , , .\nYet Mr. Abbott said, he realized\nthat in a democracy, governments\ncannot    persistently    refuse    to\n.Wfdeir$lkqr projects:whicltVtKfr-'poeiirv\np\\A. Wawffid:.stitt;\u00bbtw\"ft.bf0ce.     \u25a0\n\u2022ahe. onjjr;totog^e::cpiiWidbwhlrto\"'\nsuggest toat consumers-toe \"taxpayers\u2014think twice,   i, -\nExpert Says Gas\nSurgeon Switches\nTendons in\nPolio Patients\nC-EVHlfAND, Nov. 13 (AP) - A\nToronto surgeon described here today how he switched tendons In\nlegs of polio-paralyzed children to\nenable them to~move better.\nDr. William T. Mustard of the\nToronto Sick Children's Hospital\nspoke to a session of the Interstate\nPostgraduate Medical Association.\n\"In operating on children, for\ntendon transfers,\" he said, \"we do\nnot operate on the bones. But by\nmoving the tendons, a greater freer\ndom.' of normal movement la permitted, and operations on the .bones\nmay be done later to_ life, if\nnecessary,*,    'v '        \u25a0\nHe sold \"a lot can be done for\ntheso 'children if tho: operation is\nperformed early,\" and' ad-ocoted\nsurgery six months after onset of\nparalysis for children from two to 10.\nMost polio surgeons put children\nto: braces until they'''are. 11 or 12\nyears ' old, Mr. Mustard: said. He\nadded' that after \"several hundred*\ntendon switching and splicing operations, he believes that method can\nsave,,youngsters .years of .tiring\ntrace-wearing; \u25a0'    '*   ,\nBy WILLIAM C. BARNARD\nSEOUL, Nov. 14 (Friday) '(AP)-\nA sensational charge by South Koreans that Chinese Communists\nused gas shells early today in capturing Pinpoint Hill was termed uh-; \\\nfounded by-a United States chemlr\ncal'warSure expeft  ,\nLt-Coi. Harrison A. Markhami\nchemical officer of the ninth Corps,\nsaid after an investigation all the\nfront that one 'soldier was made ill\nfrom picri6 acid fumes from a regular artillery shell.    .\nAnother South Korean soldier\nwho was rendered unconscious was\nfound to have been knocked; out by\na log whea a bunker\" was blown, up\nby jm artillery shell; Markham addf\ned.\nEven as the charges were laid to\nrest; the neveirvglve-up South Koreans returned to the counter attack\nand swept to the top of Pinpoint\nHill from which they were knocked\na few hours befprei    ,\nA little less than four hours after\nthey, lost the crest the Koreans\nstruck back to the dark and;by\n6 am;, were locked In savage hand-\nto-hand combat with Chinese Reds\non Pinpoint's summit        -,\nA ffont dispatch said that the\ncounter attacks were pow.ered by\nthe troops who had' been forced\nfrom Pinpoint in what they said\nwas a Red gas attack.\nhunter may head\ndefence finance\nDepartment\nOTTAWA, Nov. 13 (CP) \u2014 Gordon W. Hunter, 38:year-old Winnipeg accountant, may soon be selected as the new financial brain of\nCanada's defence production effort;\n\u25a0Informant* disclosed today that\ntoe husky six-fobf^r likely will, be\nchosen as the defehce production\nDepartment's financial, adviser, sue-;\nceeding O. A. Matthews, Montreal\narid Toronto accountant,-recently\nappointed to the Board of Transport\nCommissioners. :    \u25a0 -.' \"\u25a0\u25a0\n: Mr. Hunternow is deputy financial adviser and formerly was exec\nutive'assistant to the. deputy ministers of production, and trade.\nWantU.N.Jludyof\nThe .\"inertia* of Nelson arid district citizens to, presenting,. only\nfour briefs to the Liquor'Inquiry\nCommission sitting here \u25a0 wai scored\nby Very, Rev. T. r L. .Leadbeater- at\nKiwanis Club meeting at the Hume\nThursday, night\nTbe 'commission' had Jjist come\nfrom a sitting at Penticton, where\n14   briefs   were   presented,. Dean\nLeadbeater said,- and he found it\n\"rather- alarming\" that toe people\nand;organizations Iri this area had\nfailed to. appear to' force.' Irritation\nhad betjn shown by the commission,\nwhich, found'little .'to do during its\nsitting Iri Nelson.' ; :' :.2:2.- >  ,\nDean Leadbeater 'suggested that\nany apparent lack of action on\nthe part of the commission or provincial government In framing a\nnew liquor policy would see\nstorm of protest Yet the people\nhad failed to seize the opportunity\nto tell the commission members\nwh'at they wanted to know. The\n- commission sought to know the\n. mind. Of the citizens, wae prob\nlng for the recognized wish of the\npeople so that a new policy could\nbe put .Into concrete form,\nThe retnarks led to considerable\ndiscussion by toe Kiwanians, but\nsugges'Hori-to^t theclijb forward a\nb^iet to;toe:-commission was voted\ndown-rafter, ;ariotoer'member declared ^toe club had \"missed the\nboat.\"-'Discussion of the subject a\nfew weeks ago to stimulate interest\nto   the   commission   sitting   here\nmight have made it possible fbr the\nclub to present a-brief, It was felt\nU.N;Wbos Whitton\n'TORONTO, Nov. 13 (CP)\u2014Mayor\nCharlotte Whitton of Ottawa today\ntold a reporter she has received\nInvitations from the executive of\ntoe -United.Nation's add. may consider them If not re-elected Iri Ottawa. She would not', amplify - the\nreference to toe Invitations.\nNEW YORK, Nov. 13 (CP) \u2014\u2022 A\nworld congress to discuss the problems' -of fertility arid sterility \u2022'\u2022 will\nbe held here next May 25-31, the\nInternational' Fertility Association\nannounced'today. Dr. Abner Weis-\nman of New, York, associate secretary-general of the I.F.A., said 1800\ndoctors from 43 countries, including\nCanada,.are expected to attend the\ncanli^ew.'   \u25a0\n. By NORMAN ALT8TEDTER\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nUNITED NATIONS. N.. Y^ Nov.\n13 (AP)\u2014tJBighteen United Nations\ncountries, today urged establishment\not an international commission to\ninvestigate the racial 'conflict ' in\nSouth Africa which Pakistan called\n\"A stinking mess.\".\nThe resolution, sponsored by Arab, Asian and Latin, American\ncountries, was submitted to the social committee of the General Assembly which already.is considering\na South African resolution demanding the U. N. declare itself hot competent, to deal with the question.\nNATURE'8 FIREWORKS r\n' NEW'YORK, NOV. li (AP). \u2014 A-\ntour-night shower of shooting stars\nbegins tonight throughout ; the\nworld, the Hayden Planetarium\nsold\" today. Robert Coles, planetarium chairman, said the leonids, or\nmeteors, should be vlsabie' at the\nrate- of six- an hour from midnight\nto dawn.   \u2022\nOTTAWA,- Nov. J\u00bb .(CPJ - Tte\nbreadwinners of more than 100,000\nwage-earning, families, reported\nearnings'in. 1951 of less than $1000\na year; In contrast, the: heads of\n41,000 families' showed annual\nwages of more, than, W00Q.\nThese and other facts about family- life in Canada-\"'were outlined\ntoday in a Bureau of Statistics analysis ->'ased on last, yearfs, decennial\ncensus.\nThe analysis showed;\n, 1, A trend towards smaller families in Canada.\n2. A boost of almost 700,000 to toe\nnumber of Canadian families during\nthe last 10 years, -.-'\n3. Newfoundland's families are\nlarger then those in Quebec, long\nthe home of Canada's largest families. *:,.  \/\nIn more than S3 per cent of toe\nfamilies, there was only one wage-\nearner. About 26 per cent had two\nor more. ;\u25a0\u25a0'*-'\nTbe largest group\u2014402,000 families\u2014showed that toe head of tha\nfamily earned between $2000 end\n$2500 annually.\nBetween $1000 and $2000 a year\nwas earned by toe heads of 462,000.\nfamilies; 365,000 between $2500 and\n$3000: 290,000 between $3000 and\n$4000; 109,000 between $4000 and\n$6000.\nBritish Portrait\nPainter Dies\nLONDON, Nov. 13 r (Heuters) \u2014\nThomas Gantrell .Dugdale,.-': 72, one\nof Britain's foremost portrait painters, died at his London home today.\nHis portrait of Princess Margaret,\nin an evening gown;! was-* accepted\nfor last year's Royal Academy\nexhibition.\nHospital Has\n50th Birthday\nVANCOUVER, N6v. IS (CP) \u2014\nVancouver General Hospital celebrated its 50th anniversary by holding open house. The hospital opened\nin 1902 as a tiny, 50-bed affair.\nVANCOUVER, Nov. 13 (CP) -\nA 70-year-old woman died in hospital tonight from injuries received\nIn an automobile accident more\nthan a month ago. Mrs. Ann Howard\nhad been in hospital with multiple\ninternal injuries since that accident\nNov. 2:\nDOLLAR HIGHER ',       .\nSTERLING LOWER\n- NEW YORK, Nov. 13 (CP)\u2014The\nCanadian dollar was H of a cent\nhigher at a premium of 1 13\/16 per\ncent In terms of United States funds\nIn closing foreign, exchange dealings-today. The'pound'sterling was\n3\/16 of a cent higher at $2.80 1\/10-\nAlii in This Corner.. \u2666\n; NEW ,YORk,.,Nov. 13 (AP) \u2014 C. M. Vandeburg today chomped\ndown a crow sandwich In a Times Square restaurant.\n,. \"It's not tasty,\".he said.\nVandeburg, who headed the American Heritage Foundation's gel-\nout-the-vote drive, ate the crow publicly to fulfill an election pledge\nhe'drdo so If the voter turnout failed to reach 63,000,000.\nTho tally now stands at about 60,000,000.\nSEATTLE. Nov. 13 (AP)-Thtt high cost of living hit the old\nswlmmin' hole today. <    ,.      ' ,.    ...\n\"'. .This: Seattle Park Board announced towels will cost the kids a\ndime instead of a nickel at Municipal Lake beaches next, season.\n8T.: IVE8, England, Nov. 13 (Reuters)\u2014Alexander MacDonald'a\n\u25a0' Irresistible urge to tell strange women how to wear their .hair landed\nhim In court yesterday, charged with acting In a manner likely to\n' cause a breach of the peace.\n-,   He pleaded guilty and was oleced under \u00a360 bond for one year.\nThe prosecution' said women complained about MacDonald's unusual Interest In their coiffures. Once he went Into a beauty shop and\ntold the woman In charge she should re-stylo her hair-do. She ordered\nhtBTeisfc-V'    \u25a0      [\u00bb<\u2022\u2022'\u25a0    -, \u25a0: -'\u25a0\nMaoDonald, 33, said ha has suffered excessive Interest In coiffures\nsince childhood.\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14, 1932\nTHE MIGHTY NOVEL MIGHTIER ON THE SCREEN\nClear Glass for Pub Windows .. .\".\nCAFE SALES WOULD ATTRAa YOUNG\nTO LIQUOR, MINISTERS CONTEND\nHie usual Indian wampum belt\ncontained about 11 strands ot UO\nbeads. \u25a0\nThe largest living kangaroos\nhave heads about toe site of a\nsheeb.\nANNOUNCEMENT\nTO THE RESIDENTS OF\nRIONDEL\nWe are pleased to inform you that\nMr. Alvin A. Schultz has been appointed\nour Agent in Riondel.\nMr. Schultz Is able- and ready to\nestimate your requirements and forward\nyogr orders to us.,\nCRESTON SAWMIUS LtD.\n-Quality and Service at All Times    :   .\nRam stories...\nI     I3y the great Horn Spoon, those were gales,\" said the bosun.\n\"Not only could wo not round the Hon, but the fury of\nthe elements was driving us backwards up the coast of\nAmerica. Only by the unusual feat of using the bowsprit\nas o rudder could I keep us from perishing on those Inhospitable shores. At this point, a flock of gigantic albatrosses\nsank exhausted on the deck. Hastily reviving them with\ntote of our cargo, Lamb's Navy Bum, I harnessed them\nto the vessel and encouraged them to fly In the desired\ndirection. Tha upshot was that our time for the Boston-\nSacramento run stood as a record for thirty yeara.'.'\n* ^That's a Rum Stoiy,\" said the unsuspecting guest \"\n.\"Thank you, air. I should enjoy nothing better than \u2022\nLamb's Navy Rum.'!\n\u00a98>\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the liquor\nControl Board, or by the Government of British Columbia.\nAs more desirable then' allowing\nliquor to be sold in restaurants and\npublic eating places, Nelson Ministerial. Association In a brief recommended that beer parlors extend\ntheir facilities to Include light\nlunches. *   r\nFacilities for liquor distribution\nin Nelson \"were, already sufficient,\nthe brief contended, through' the\nGovernment .Liquor Store, licenced\nclubs and beer parlors.   \" , ,\\\nOn a Saturday night, after hockey\ngames, shows or a dance, students\n-crowd the restaurants and. sale bf\nliquor whore so many young people\ncongregate Would increase its attractiveness and arouse the desire\nto. drink. Very Rev. T. L. Lead,\nboater of St. Saviour's Pro-Cathe;,\ndral, one of three Nelson ministers\nto meet the Commission, explained.\nRev: Theo T. Gibson and Rev. Allan\nDlxdn took part In the discussion.\nBecause ef the large mining-erea\nsurrounding Nelson, beer partes,\nwould likely ba .mm.JJftpflSf\nthan cocktail lounges, George Home\nmember of the three-man commission believed. He had been a miner\nin the Salmo area for eight years\nbefore 1M1.\nPrevious briefs Indicated\nators of beer parlors were noffln-'\nterested in selling food, but in selling liquor and were not equipped\nto provide the additional service,\nthe chairman of the Commission\ntold the delegation..\nThe ministers' brief alsq declared\nthat bootlegging had been extensive\nin Nelson, creating a problem, of\nteen-age drinking. Since efforts to\ncrack down have, been taken* the\nsituation had Improved. Chairman\nStevens pointed out that without\nreal facts and proof, ot which little\nhad been received so tar across\nB.C., the Commission could make\nno recommendations on bootleg-\nBing.\nTHRBE-POLD' PURPOSE\nThe United Women's Missionary\nSociety of Nelson In a brief expressed disapproval ot: additional\noutlets of liquor. Ihe brief was pre\nsented- by President Mrs.. M. T.\nHarris, Mrs. J. A- Wilson and Mrs.\nCM. Coventry'   ;\nIn the past 25 years liquor sales\nhave; increased three-fold in. Canada, the brief pointed out\n. . -the W.M.8. also recommended\nthat, is alcohol Is a narcotic drug\nwith depressant and Irritant after.\neffects, that changes be consider-\ned with \u25a0 view tb restricting Its\n. use.\n,'. The Society was in agreement\nwith the Ministerial Association, in\nrecommending that beer parlors extend facilities to supply light\nlunches.. Cocktail ban, they, felt,\nwould make liquor more attractive\nto youth.\u2022'-.\u2022\u25a0\u2022:-.-.-... . \u25a0\u25a0,.,.- ;;. \u2022.,:;.-.\nH,liquor andvwines are soldln\nrestaurants, families would bo faced with bringing their children.into\ncontact with' it at mealtime or\navoiding restaurants altogether, the\nSociety, laid,\nQRI\u00bb\u00ab* TESTS\nWith the:. Increase of automobile*\naceiaeHtilH \"B.C.-the brief rewm-\nmended scientific tests to determine\nif a driver Is under alcoholic? influence and that results of such\ntests be used as evidence. Stricter\n,er- enforcement of existing laws regarding liquor traffic, particularly\nthose pertaining to licenced premises, were suggested.\nCLEAR OLASt\nAlso recommended was that \"licenced premises be subjected to government Inspection \"snd proprietors\nor management caught selling or\nallowing sale of liquor to minors\nbe subjected to heavy fine,-their\nlicences cancelled and premises\nclosed, that opaque or stained glass\nwindows be replaced by plate glass,\nthat bootleggers or agents conducting Illegal sale or distribution of\nllquor be. prosecuted .to the full extent, of the law, and gaol-sentences\nbe levied, that 'blind pigs' and 'back\nalley Joints' where liquor Ir sold\nat outrageous prices be closed and\noffenders prosecuted, \u2022 and that\nstricter observance of present liquor\nlaws be enforced upon licenced\npremises. -'\nReasonable Tolls . . .\nNumber of Briefs\nDisappointing\nTo Commission\nDisappointment In the sniall number of briefs presented oy Nelson\nand- district organizations, to\" the\nB. C. Liquor Inquiry Commission\nwas expressed by Very Rev. Dean\nCecil Swanson at a Chanrber of\nCommerce dinner meeting'Thursday.\nThe   three-man   commission   of ^SHy?'\nt. . )\nLicencing Commission Asked....\nEconomics (onf rollingSurvival\nSufficient fo Curb Liquor Abuse\nCastlegar District. Chamber of\nCommerce, In a brief presented by\nPresident' C. ft. Anderson to the\nB C. Liquor Inquiry Commission\nhere Thursday, recommended sale\nof liqu'of by the glass with food In\npremises regulated to reasonable\nstandards. It contended that \"the\n.normal economic factors controlling\nsurvival   provide   adequate   safe-\nChanter Slides\nAs guest of honor at the. Kinsmen\nClub meeting Thursday at the Canadian \u2022 Legion, T. H. W. Chanter\nshowed several series of colored\nslides taken on various trips In the\nNelson district and elsewhere, and\ngave a running commentary en\neach.\nAmong the places shown were\nBonnlngton, Slocan, Banff, Pend\nd'Oreille, Queen's Bay, Coffee\nCreek, Blaylock, the Lardeau country,, Metaline Falls, and Spokane.\nSlides of climbing expeditions, at\nKokanee and Sphinx Mountain\nwere Included.\nLiter, the Kinsmen arranged a\npreliminary program for the first\nKinauction night next Thursday by\nforming a chorus; Singing arrangements were In the hands of Mort A.\nBrowne, and the official accompanist Is non-member Jack Bagnall.\nNOW-She's Got\nExciting ZIP\nand G10W\nu.ap't'liatyelBsaax\nDon't tavy ht\/\ncharm or radUnt\nhMluil Main lt\nfour, tho var\nhemandf of\npal., liitloai,\nafiomio peopl.\nara dolno-wltb\nDr. Wllliama\nPink Pill.. Br\nnrltallibf and anrtehins jroor Wood-\n.jttaam,, Dr. wmiun. Pink 'rm, may\nassess^-\nDR. WILLIAMS\nPINK PILLS\nMen\u2014\nDONT DELAY\nTime Is Running Out\nFor That Christmas\nWe offer perfect fitting, well-tailored clothe;\nmade by\nFIT-REFORM or:..y2\nCAMBRIDGE      2\nChoose from a large pattern assortment\n\u25a0' '.     i \" ;\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'\nDeliveries three to four weeks.    -\nGODFREYS,\nPhone \u2014 270 \u2014 Box\nFather Fed Babe\nPoisoned Milk\nVEHNON, B.C\u201e Nov. 18 (CP)-\nk statement in which a young\nmother was quoted as telling pollpe\nshe held her mentally-retarded baby\nIn her arms while her husband fed\nthe child : poisoned jnilk v\/ps admitted as evidence today In\u25a0 Assli$\nCourt .here.\nTbe statement added tho .man and\nwoman sipped champagne spiked\nwith the same type ot poison to seal\na suicide pact Bodies of the child\nand husband were found in an auto\ncourt on the outskirts of Penticton,\nB.C., in March. \u2022\nIhgrldla Deglavs, 33, also known\nas Mrs. Ingrld.Seeberg, is charged\nwith murdering her 11-months-old\ndaughter Victoria because the child\nwas doomed to a life of Idiocy.\nThe trial goes into its third day\ntomorrow before Mr. Justice A. O.\nMacFarlane.\nChe statement quoted the woman\nas saying the child died and she\nbecame unconscious. When; she\nawoke she found her' common-law\nhusband, Manfred Seeberg, dead.\nThe statement went on to say she\nsubsequently tried to kill herself by\ndrowning, hanging and by slashing\nher wrists.\nThe bodies were found when Mrs.\nSeeberg led H.C.M.P. to the cabin\nafter funning from the auto court\nearlier. . ,\n'Also admitted today as evidence\nwas what was described as a suicide\nnote, in which Seeberg and his\ncommon-law wife willed their\nbodies to the University ot British\nColumbia for \\ scientific research.\nThe note was'signed by both.\nIrtgrldia Deglavs.is a native ot\nLatvia and has been in Canada only\na matter of months. Her mother\narrived here yesterday from London\nto be at her daughter's side during\nthe trial.\nHon. Harry Stevens, chairman;\nGeorge Home,' Secretary-Treasurer\nof the B. C. Federation of Labor;\nDean Swanson and E. C. W. Sharpe,\nSecretary-Solicitor of the Commission, were luncheon guests of the\nChamber,\n\u2022'\u2022' Nelson Chamber, asked by Dean\nSwsnsW why the Chamber hid\ntailed ot produce a brief, decided-\nafter discussion, to prepare a brief\nto be sent to the Coast within a\nweek or 10 days. On a committee\nnamed to work on the brief, are\n.-representatives of tho clergy, city\ncouncil, police department and a\ncross section ot the Chamber.\nCommittee members named\nThursday were F. H. W. Chanter,\nJack McDonald, N. C. Stibbs, A. C.\nMorton, Vincent Fink, E. G, Bodard, Very Rev. T. L. Leadbeater, J.\nC. Loomer, Mayor Joseph,Kary and\nChief of Police Robert Harshaw.\nChairman Stevens reminisced on\nprevious visits to the, Kootenay.\nPresident of the Vancouver Board\nof Trade, he told the 40-odd members present, he considered the\nKootenay one of the loveliest spots\nin Canada.\nThe Chamber unanimously endorsed a resolution from the Roads\nand Bridges Committee in favor of\na toll bridge providing tolls were\nnot excessive.\nA letter from Castlegar Chamber\not Commerce assuring continued\nsupport ot efforts to procure a'\nbridge across the West Arm, was\nreceived. J. A. Bracken, secretary,\nwas instructed to acknowledge the\nletter, which was  tiled.\nWelcomed as new members were\nB. Clarkson of the Department of\nSocial Welfare; R. G. Simms, Nelson lawyer; J. C. Loomer, High\nSchool teacher who will represent\nthe Nelson District Teachers' Fed,\neration; W. Lawrence HaU, man\nager ot the new branch- office of\nMutual' Life'1 Insurance at Nelson,\nand Lieut\" \"15: C. Stokes, who was\naccepted at the last meeting ot the\nChamber.\n> Also a guest wes N. X. MacLeod,\nassistant superintendent of agencies\nWaterloo,.Ont, of Mutual Life Insurance Company.\nSuggestion that reasonable quantities of beer, wine and liquors be\nmade available to mos* wanting\nthem lrt' reasonable places and i at\nreasonable times, was included in\nthe brief. Certain establishments\nserving food should be allowed to\nsell ' beverages with reasonable\nstandards to govern quality of food\nand liquor, f \u2022\u25a0'    -\u25a0\nEstablishment, of such premises\nshould be  a  reasonable distance\naway from schools and playgrounds,\nthe brief suggested.\nOther recommendations made\nwore to lower age limit of patrons\nfrom' 31 to 18, for, the Chamber\nfelt, If 18-year-olds are old enough\nto be called to the armed forces,\nthey are old enough to \"drink; that\nboth sexes be permitted to drink\ntogether; that taverns he allowed\nto sell beer and light wines with\nfood available if wanted; that restaurants, hotel dining rooms, railway dining cars, passenger boat\ndining rooms, clubs, cabarets, night\nclubs, cocktail bars and lounges be\nmeals.\nallowed to sejl \u00bb1l beversge? with\nThe Castlegar group alio suggested that a provincial commission\nbe formed to review ahd grant all\napplications tor licences with right\nof appeal to the courts in the event\nof a rejection.\nHotels Againjl More Liquor Outlets\nNelson and district Hotelkeepers\nAssociation has recommended that\nhotel beer parlors be allowed to\nsell certain foods, including wrapped sandwiches. Under present law\nthese foods can be brought in and\nconsumed in the beer parlors, Frank\nWilliamson, president of the Association explained in presenting the\nbrief te tha B. C. (Liquor Inquiry\nCommission here Thursday. ,\n, Accompanying Mr. Williamson\nwu Hotelkeepers Secretary, Howard Thurman.\nThe Association, feeling that minors took a delight in seeing It they,\ncould pass as being of age and so\nbe served at hotel beerparlors, recommended that existing laws pertaining to minors entering licenced\npremises be rigidly enforced. A\nregistration card or some form tor\nthe minor to sign certifying ha wu\not age would be of some help in\nfreeing the operator of responsibility,. Mr. Williamson felt\nIf liquor by the glass comu Into\neffect, the Association- asked that\nfirst consideration be given to present licenced operators for four reasons\u2014 1. Tha hotels ara already licenced and under rigid supervision\nby the government; 1 Heavy capital expenditures have been made\nte meet. present regulations;, 3,\nYears ot experience qualify operators to administer additions to the\npresent Liquor Act and 4. The Association takes a dim view of giving\nestablishments, hotels Included, who\nlack experience, the privilege of\ndispensing liquor.   -\nThe brief also expressed a trust\nthat the Commission would do all\nin its power to protect youth from\nills from liquor that might arise\ntrom its dispensing by inexperienced operators.\nWSawSi^kaammiiSSkmmS=s\nwarm, cozy\nSLIPPERS\nChildren's . Miuei\nWomen's \u2022 Men'a \u2022 Boys'\nA CHOICE-OF FELT OR\nLEATHER AT VERY\nREASONABLE PRICES\nSee Them at the\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\n638 Baker 6t\nMens \u00abM|\n15 DAYS FOR TRESPASSING\nA transient, Angus \u25a0 McEarchei\nchose 15 days In jail after plead\nguilty to trespassing on Cany*\nPacific Railway property Wednei\ndty evening.  ,\nMcEarchen appeared In eity cou\nThursday before Magistrate WU\"\nBrown and wu fined ?! or 11 da;\nin, jail.\nTRANSIENT CHARGED\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Nov.!\n(CP) \u2014 Glen O Hogenson, 11\nlent, today appeared before .'\nMagistrate P. J. Moran on a chard\nof being In possession of parsphej\nnalia for producing obscene\nhires.\nMaximum   penalty   under\ncharge Is two years In the penlti\ntiary.\nWill Meet Here\nProblems concerning farmers and\nranchers In this district will be discussed November, 22 In Nelson at\nthe Fail meeUng of the West\nKootenay-Boundary Central Farmers' Institute.\nA number of resolutions are\nslated to come before the meeting\nfrom the various member Farmers'\nInstitutes.\nL. W. Johnson, superintendent of\nB.C. Farmers' Institutes, hu been\ninvited to attend the meeting in\nLegion hall, ahd other speakers will\nalso address the delegates. Sessions\nstar: at 10 a.m.\nFATHER OF\nTRAIL MAN DIES\nATVICTORIA\nTRAIL \u2014 Funeral services for\nAlexander. Porter,'father of Andrew Findlay Porter of Trail were\nheld at the Coast Monday.\nBorn - in Glugow, Scotland,\nMarch 3, 1870, ho died in Victoria\nat the age of 82.\nNelsonite in\nGonzaga Conceit\nJoseph Sturgeon ot Nelson )i one\nof the new members of the-men's\nglee club at Gonzaga University,\nSpokane, He has Joined the baritone . section of the group which\nwill present Its jtixA. formal; concert December IS In' Spokane. -\nHe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. W,\nJ. Sturgeon, 818 Silica Street\n$35 FINE RESULTS\nFOOT SLIPS, CAR SLIDES,\nPeter Kau of Nelson, was fined\n$35 in dty court Thursday. '\nWhen driving West on Gordon\nRoad an oncoming car trom Nelson'\nAvenue caused Kau to apply his\ncar brakes, his foot slipped making\nthe ear jerk and it slid. sideways,\nscraping a parked automobile, he\nexplained Wednesday;\nJ. B. Ritchie appeared fbr Kau\nbefore Magistrate William Brown\nand entered a plea ot guilty to driv*\nlng without due care and attention.\n$25 FINE FOR\nCARELESS DRIVING\nRalphs. Orloskt of'Saskatchewan,\nwhose car was in collision with a\nNelson car on Baker Street causing\nminor damage Monday night1, pleaded guilty to a charge bt driving\nwithout. due' care'.' and attention\nWednesday. .-::\u25a0\".-\nOrloskt, who pulled Into the path\nof a passing car driven by Lawrence\nSmith of Nelson, was fined $23 by\nMagistrate William Brown in city\ncourt, v\n$70 DAMAGE\nFROM VERNON\nSTREET COLLISION\nApproximately $70 damage resulted when .two cars were In collision on Vernon. Street Thursday\nafternoon.\nA car, driven by Anthony J. Romano' of Nelson, and a car driven\nby Hanna Tschawner of Blewett\ncollided aa Tschewner wu making\na left turn oft Vernon Street early\nThursday afternoon. Both ears were\nproceeding West\nFormer; Nelson Man\nGets Oakland Post\nA former Nelson man, Alex Allan, Is being transferred by the\nMoore Corporation from Toronto\nto Oakland, Calif., to become assistant accountant-for Its Pacific\ndivision. The appointment will become effective at the beginning of\nJanuary.\nMr. Allan attended Nelson\nschools, and graduated from Queen's\nUniversity in arts and commerce in\n1947. He started with the company\nat its head office in Toronto, and\nhas been on its travelling audit\nstaff, going to all parts of Canada\nand the United States. He Is the\nson of Mrs. Wilfrid Allan and tbe\nlate Mr. Allan.\nThe Weather\nSynopsis; Gale force winds lashed\nthe entire. B.C. coast Thursday,with\nspeeds U high as 60 m.p.h. reported\nat many points. Winds are expected\nto decrease slowly as the. storm\ncentre weakens. Showers,ot rain or\nenow .will continue through today.\nNELSON\nSt. Johns ......\nMontreal .....\nPort Arthur\nThe Pu._...'.....\nRegina '..LL.\nSaskatoon.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nMedicine Hat\nEdmonton .....\nKamloops.......\nPentlcton r_.\u201e,,\u201e,i\u201e\nVancouver i~__.\nVictoria  :_.\u201e_\nkimberley .......:....\nCrescent Valley\nGrand1' Forks :\t\nSeattle :.;...;..\u201e;..\nSpokane .......\t\n44\n35\n18\n18\n89\n52.\n48\nM\n48\n80\n48\n47\n47\n44\n42\n43\n52.\n43\n1.41\n.01\n.04\nNow We Are\nDoing Alterations\nBut Business\nWill Carry On\nAs Usual\nSee ui for your\nLuggage\nMen's Wear\nand   \u2022\nLeather\nGodds\nBring the\nChildren.,,\nOn your visits to\nSpokane, stop at the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane\nTo better serve our\nguests; children under 14\nstay free with their\nparents.\nBring the children to\nsee the- heart of\nthe Inland Empire ...\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Air Conditioned\nSilver GHlt\n\u2022 Parking at our Front\nDoor\/       '     ,    -. .\nANNOUNCEMENT\nWe Hereby Wish to Announce\nTHE CHANGE IN LOCATION OF\nBAKER'S GROCERY\nand to.take this opportunity of thanking our\nuptown customers for their past patronage.\nThe new store is located on\n1020 BEATTY AVE., FAIRVIEW\nand the business will be'conducted as before.\nDut to our new location and low overheqd, our\nprices will be greatly reduced. Our delivery\nsystem will be efficient for all.\nPHONE 46 for FREE DELIVERY with a smile\non a complete line of quality groceries, fresh\npackaged and fresh cut cold meats.\nWe request that all accounts be settled\nat the end of November.\nColin H.Baker\nYoungstown Kitchen\n\u00a32&\nr\n\u25a0-..\n\u2022\njtl 1\n1\nii\nm\nSB. (\njy\n* '     &-\u25a0\n^\u25a0\u25a0ck\nYou'll enjoy cooking even more when you're in a Youngs-\ntown Kitchen ... because you'll find more practical, Mil*\nhelps than ever before. -r\nYes, from the time you start gathering ingredients right\non through to dishwashing time, a Youngstown Ititchen\nis the greatest help any housewife ever had!'    ;  \u25a0\u25a0 J\n* '     .   .. '..-\u25a0.'. r - \\\/\nlet us show you the all-new, timesaving, work-saving\nYoungstown Kitchens in lifetime STEEL! Come fat now'\nand let us plan your kitchen in miniature. No obligation.\nlUmtmtim above features Totmpttevm Kitchens\nElcctfio Sink in, a lately lifetime BTEZl kitchen.\nREAD  THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nYoungstown Kitchens\nJet-Tower* Dishwasher. No other method\ncan wash dishes so\nclean, so {ast! Only\nWS.00 down.\nYoungitown Kitchens\n68\" DeLuxe Twin Cabinet Sink. One of 14\nmodels,, each die-made\nOf long-life steel. Only\n$35.00 down.\nYoungstown KitchJ\n94\" DeLuxe Cablf\nSink. One-pleee, aa\nresisting porceti]\nenameled steel '\nSS3.M down.\nHmt Rotoiy Csntt WiB Ci.Mt\nM \u00bb\u00abiij Oxim Bu\u00ab CiUMt\nKowmwit-wJtM conttt ipjct\nImp Mi\n?\u00abH'\nMcKay & Stretton Lft\nPhone 1559\n532 Baker St;\n n^\n..; HIGH-QUALITY TtfRKEYS, to be served \"With all the' ttiiMmings\"\nin Kootenay homes and banquet halls, are being raised' in increasing numbers by Kootenay \"Pay rancher Bert Harper and. his wife. He has; raised .\nss many .as 1200 in a year,, and aims for 1500 next year, Soft? of the hun.?\n'TALKING TURKEY\" WITH. THE HARPERS\ndreds of birds being fattened at1 present are shown here, many destined\nfor Christmas dinners, and the picture at left shows a few of their heads\ncraned through a pen at a feeding trough. Mr. Harper, who began raising\n-turkeys as a Kobby. in Mdaya' 26 ygars'igq^lc^ over\\ groupat oeatoe\n\u25a0 -left 'with their 'tails fanned in a special pose for the photographer, and\nitright;is,;the Harperwktch-dog,:\u25a0 'Bobby,\" old English bob-tail sheep dog,\nwho gets along famously with his feathered companions.\nv.\".  \u25a0\u25a0'-'.\"'... *' ',-. ','-.'''':..'\u25a0 .',.;.'    : , ,   \u25a0\"   \"' \u2014ffaMy News photos.\nMootetmy Bay Qmi\u00a7k Raise (Jof^p |^ Local Market\nKOOTENAY BAY-Mr. and Mrs.\nH. H. Harper of Kootenay Bay are\nat least two people Who are helping to make the. Kootenay-country'\nself-sufficient in its food supply.-.\n.Plump, dry-plucked birds from\nNEW UNBELIEVABLE VALUE-\"\nLUXURIOUS  CHENILLE\nBEDSPREADS\nAT ONLY $5.39 EACH\nThli bedspread Is-the'latest .rase.\nIt has thousands of small velvety\ntufts, which'completely cover the\nspread. Absolutely the finest; type\nof spread made at this price. First\nauallty. In full double or single-bed'\nze. with attractive multi-colored\npatterns or with solid same color\n\u25a0 designs. All shades. Makes an Ideal\n-.gift. Sent C.O.D. plus postage. Your\nrull cost will be immediately refunded If not satisfied.\nTOWN* COUNTRY MFO,\nBex' 1496 ' Place D'Armes\nMontreal, Que.'\nI's\nNeUon\nPharmacy\n\"your rdSTMSss or\nHEALTH\"\n\u2022 PRESCRIPTIONS\n\u2022 DRUG PATENTS\n\u2022 SUNDIES\nPHONE\n1203\nRES.\n'433 Josephine St.\ntheir turkey farm here are going to\nhomes in Nelson, Riondel, Creston,\nKaslo, Kimberley and other district places, not just at Christmas\nand Thanksgiving, but all year\nround.\nFrom a small start, the Harper'*\nturkey farming has become big business. The quality of the birds is\nwhat is enhancing the farm's reputation more than anything else.\n\"Talk turkey\" with the Harpers\nand you are instantly struck by\nall the work which raising of upwards of 1000 birds involves.\nMr. and Mrs. Harper are two exceedingly busy people, so busy, in\nfact, they decided to invest in a\nplucking machine a little more than\na year ago. It was imported specially from Dorset, England, and cost\naround $500, delivered in B. C. He\nmachine is' thought to be the only\npower poultry dry plucking mach-\nPILES that\nItch arid Burn\nIf yoo now suffer from He itchins soreness\nand burning pain ol piles you can be\nhelped.\nj<\u00bbt let \u2022 package ol Hem-Hold, tn\nInterna] pile treatment, at any drug etore\nand use ai direcrtd, You will be pleased\nat how-quickly your pile trouble is relieved.\nOnly *1.59 for the big 60 tablet package.\nJJ Jtu are, not 100% pleased after using\nHem-Roid 1 or 3 daya, as a test, ask for\nyour money back. Refund agreement by\nall drug stores, .-,\u25a0\nine on the North American continent. '\n'.Like most, new \"toys\" lt.called\nfor many try-outs and Just recently, when Mr. Harper's flying officer\nson, Warwick, came home for a visit\nbe got veryJnterested'in the mechanical parts and soon accomplished\nthe needed adjustments. Plucking\nof a good-sized turkey can now be\ndone in close to four minutes r\u2014\nthat's all but the pin-tall and -wing\nfeathers.   , .,-.   \u2022\u25a0\nMr. Harper, former rubber planter, really started raising turkeys\nback in 1026 on the edge of the\nEquator, in Malaya, more or less as\na hobby. He came to Crawford Bay\nin 1031, raised a small number, as a\nfurther experiment, then, before\nsettling down, made another trip\nto Malaya and Australia between\n1931 and 1047. \"'\":\nB^ACRE-rNOLDIIifl.\nReturning to,Canada In 1917 with\nhis mind really made up, Mr. Harper first of all married Miss Hilary May, who had served in the\nW.A.A.C. in England during the:\nlast war. He then bought a fine\nholding Of 97 acres at Kootenay\nBay, built a modern house in-sight\nof the Anscomb ferry landing, then\npushed ahead ' with large turkey\npens,     ' '.>\u2022    j\nAs years passed, he enlarged facilities and increased his bird production Until today he raises approximately 1200. The ardent farmer\nIntends to Increase again in 1953 to\n1500. This year, Mr, and Mrs. Harper have  incubated  around '500\neggs and imported the balance of\n700 as day old poults from the\nCoast.'.,', ,'r '. ,'*\u25a0'. '\u25a0;\u25a0 ti'.\nThe main houses or pens, 70 feet\nlong and 16 feet wide, are elevated,\nfrom the ground to; reduce 'disease,\nDroppings fall to the ground six\nfeet below tbio'tigh Open slats, .\u25a0\u25a0\n\"BARK\" .'CHq'RiiS\nTbe birds start up a terrific, rac-\nket-7-a bark more than a'gobble'\/\u2014\nwhen' ohe walksfaiong; the 14-foot\nfeed- alleyway between -the pens.\nThe birds* stick their hecks'through\nthe wire of the pens-to get. at-feed\nand water in .two shallow troughs\nalong each,side of the walk;\nTurkey producer'Harper, is-quite\nan expert now ahd watches the feed\nSituation closely | A national milling company sent its' expert from\nthe prairies to talk matters; over\nwhen the farm got.underWay. Now\nthe firm supplies foods to fill the;\nHarpers' specifications and needs\nby. carload lota, -     , \u201e  ..\".\"\nA new shed holding 30 tons of\nfeed has just been added to * the\nfarm layout, constructed ,oij the\nsame level as the turkey pens to\ncut down on the ;iabor in' -feeding.!\nA metal bit is lodged between the\nupper and lower beaks of the birds\nearly in their lives so that they\ncannot strip, the feathers off each\nother* Unless this is done, the bare\nbacks of the birds give -the flesh\na blue* color r\/Which wiU (uTowtij)\nIn a'dressed bird.'   r-'<\u2022>';'\u25a0' -'$'\u2022-:\u25a0\u2022 ' \u25a0'\nMr. Harper's pride is hlsplucking\nmachine, powered rby a water-cool:\ned British engine. The gadget will\nIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIHimil\n' District Ne*wi\nOn Page 8\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiii\npluck as many as 40 birds an hour\nwhen handled- properly.\nSix' adjustable discs, behind a\nsn\\aU screen.travelling at 1000 revolutions per minute, draw the feathers as the turkey is moved across\nthe face of the screen into a tub,\nwhere they are carried through a\nflue pipe, .fan dried, passed into a\nsealed chamber behind the plucking\nroom and \"presto\", the feathering\nis done. The. machine can also be\nadjusted to de-feather chickens and\nducks.        ; ,  \t\nThe Harper turkey stock is pure\nbroad breasted bronze bought as\nday old poult? in May and. averaging\n19% pounds for the Christmas trade.\nOf 'course, many growylar^er and\ntoms go as high as 30.pounds.\nWhites are;crossed with broad\nbreasted bronze and hatched In\nlots of 50 to: 70, commencing in\nApril each year and continuing until the end of August. These, making\nthe Harper farm's \"beltsvUle cross\",\nare bred especially for. fryers and\nThanksgiving birds. They are six\nto 8H bounds at 1! to 16 weeks;\nBert Harper hopes soon to be able\ntoa-ways have fryers on hand,' as\nhe'obnJI{lert: they are' much better\na buy than'the chickens, particularly wlleh the^ are selling at the same\nprice;- He\"jget_. orders for .wedding\nfeasts,, club and lodge banquets and\nsoon expects to have a good demand\nall year round.     '   . .\nWith the chores.involved in turkey raising, the Harpers combine\nfarming.   .f>; \/\u25a0\u25a0    \"-\nGuardian of the turkeys at night\nor when the Harpers art away is\n\"Bobby\", their Old English bob-tail\nsheep dog. \u25a0\u25a0\nBobby's companion is a disfigured\nturkey; a household pet which Mr.\nharper \"had tb help out of its shell\".\nBobby, .though, bounds' Into the\nlimelight when;the turkey gets\nmort than' its share of attention.\nSunshine Boy Rink\nOfficers Elected\nSUNSHINE- BAY ~ Gilbert Me-'\nMullin was -elected president of\nthe Community Skating Rink Association at a meeting at the.home\nof Mr. and Mra. R. L. Stevenson.\nAlec Garner is vice-president, and\nMrs.' McMullin, secretary-treasurer. .\/-..\u201e    .\u25a0'..,'.\nMembers also discussed plans for\nnecessary work on the rink.\nSuccessful in Exam\nCRANBHOOK '-!\u25a0. City^electfical\nsuperintendent George BuTch has\nqualified for his-class A electrical\ncontractor certificate, following an\nexamination under'rgupervisibn of\nJ. Gillis, kootenay resident electrical tespectbr for the Provincial\nGovernment.; - -'.\u25a0 - ,'.    \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14,1952 \u2014 1\nLegs Take Beating\nIn Wynndel Area\nWYNNDEL \u2014 A series of leg in-,\njuries has plagued this district lately..!   .... -,;.:;; ;**\u25a0-; ;\n\u25a0Terry Ellis slipped between the\nwheels of a gravel truck and a sack\nof potatoes, receiving painful bruises on his leg,, and H. F. Packman\nfell off a picking ladder and broke\nhis ankle. Young Richard Hammond\nGrade II pupil, 'slipped on the school\nsteps and suffered a.broken leg, on\nhfs first <day of school after having\narrived here from Calgary.\nBoswell Honors Dead\nAt Impressive Rites\nBOSWEliL \u2014 -Hey.,E. R. Hop<i\"oi\nCreston. conducted a Remembrance\n\u2022Day service ln'the Memorial hall\nhere.\nIn an impressive service, the vicar\nread the names of all those from\nthis district who had.fallen in the\nWorld Wars, a- two-minute silence\nwas observed .and a, wreath \"of poppies was rplaoed'-bn the; memorial\nplaque. '\u25a0 \u2022 ^,_-\nREAD   THE   CLASSIFIED   DAILY\nRedemptorist Speaker\nTo Visit Windermere\nINVEHMERK\u2014An eminent Bleaker will visit the Windermere die*\ntrict next week fa the person ef\nRev. Father John S. MacDonald of\nthe Redemptorist Order from Calgary.    \u2022 \t\nFather MacDonald wffl be addressing a congregation each evening from Sunday to Nov. 28, is,\nthe .Church of the Canadian Martyrs at Athalmer, The public has\nbeen invited to attend the sessions.\n\"55' .;r)S\nLAKE8IDE  HOBBY  CENTRE\nOpposite Castle Iheatre -\nFor All  Your Craft SuppHee\nPrompt Mall Orders\nBox 492 - Phono 3331 . Castlegar\nYOU CAN DEPEND ON\nWhen kidneya fiillo      J*4_a_____b__ \u00bb\nrcmovo execsfl aoids\nand wastes, took-\naohe, tired feeling,\ndisturbed rest often\nfollow, Dodd'a.\nKidnoy Rlla a(imu\u00ab!\nlata kidneya tol\n. normal duty. You I\nfool bettor\u2014slcap R\nbetter, work batter, ll;\nGet Dodd'a at any >\ndrug stole. You can\ndepend on Dodd'a,\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n'-    B!M \"J     -r\nBur Mow\ngoautOfff*!\nmm\n^3 \u2666\nof added cost.\n$16.00 Value.\nMechanical\nThermostat\u25a0\/\nOil HIATIR NOW!\nTHE\nREFRIGERATOR\n8.8 CUBIC FOOT\nCome In!!! and buy an\nELECTRIC\nWASHING\nMACHINE\n\u2022 IN RUNNING CONDITION\nTremendoui trade-in allowance on your old refrigerator. No\ncaih dawn payment required. Easy monthly payments.-Come\nin and seo us about this outstanding deal.\nSee Our\nTOYLAND\nLay Away Your\nCHRISTMAS\nGIFTSNOW!\nOnly $171.70\n, Completo with Blower\nACT NOV and set \u25a0 valuable\nmechanical thermostat FREE of\nadded cost with purchase of\nDuo-Therm heater.\nSeethe big-capacity value\npriced Duo-Therm today with\neiclusiveDualChamberBurner.\nAdd exclusive Automatic\n' Power-Air Slower'for forced\nwarm air circulation and up to\n25% fuel savins*. Your FREE\nthermostat tends the fit*;\nDeluxe Duo-Therm styling\nbeautifies your home, Auto-\nBiadcDraftMiader.Humidifier,\nWaste Stopper, Coordinated\n'\" Controls and other Duo-\nTherm eztrai at no extra cost\n,   Only $22.32 down\nand $10.00 a month '\nSUNSET SALE\n\u2022 Brass Coal Helmet        >     JjjgJ*'\n$|Q.9S\n\u2022\u25a0;' Imitation Fireplaces\nEach\n\u2022 Clothes Hampers\nUp from  ....;......,\t\n\u2022 Electric Fireplace   *9A&'  $j,Q.M\nMagic Coal.  :,'\u25a0'-**J' ':.  te      WM\u00bb'::\n\u2022 Coco Mats M-M      f7\n..*..   \". l4x 24...'..... '..::.\"\u2022\u2022. '-\u25a0 ',  . 16x 27 .: \u2022\u25a0\n\u2022 Plastic Chair Cushions\nEach  .!.....r     :!:    ;\u201e.:'\t\n\u2022 Electric Heating Pads\nEach      ......:.;..\/..., .'\n\u2022 Card Tables\n.  Each'',;!;;'. :-\t\n\u2022 Fern Stands\n\u2022      - Walnut. Each .. .   ....:...;.................\t\n\u2022 Styletuft Rugs\n27 x 54. Reg, $21.05, Sale - ,.\n18x80 '&'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\n y'SS*\n$-r.9B\nAajlpw as\ntwin luggage Sets!\nSet '\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0,\u25a0';\"i    ':'-.. ,'..'* '..'\u25a0:\u25a0.\nPondora Case $19.95\nChesterfield Cushions\n\u25a0Each   \u00bb   v \"\u25a0' -.9-\u00ab.,,...:\nFlcxi Sander Polisher Kit\n,Prtced-..*t'  \"' ,-.  --\u2022!.\"'\nGaytime Glasses .\n6 - 8 ounce, in carry home pak....r..-......:....\u201e\n\u2022\u2022S3-00\n97^\nMc * Mc\n(NELSON) LTD.\nYOUR FRIENDLY STORE\n476 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1300\nCHROME SET\nA five-piece chroma let absolutely guaranteed.\nAll colon. As' illustrated '.\t\n$S9-75\n\/   Floor\nCoverings\nMake your floors a part of\nyour decorative s c h e m e.\nThere's, no need to have drab\nfloors or floors that are ha'rd\nto'keep clean. An occasional\nwash and the swish of a mop\nkeeps \u00ab linoleum floor looking like new' Come in and\n3C see our new range. We've\njust the right color .for you\nand you can have your choice\nof Marboleum, Jaspe or Dominion Plain, in tiles ar by the\nyard.\n \u25a0P\"PP\"i\nEstablished April 22, 1002\nBritish Columbia's\nMost JnterejfJnqf Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by tha\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n268 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia.\nAuthorized aa Second Class Mail,\n;   Post Office Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THB CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU Of CIRCULATIONS.\nFriday, November 14, 13S2\nAgoinst Discrimination\nTwo measures were adopted this\nyear by the Dominion Government to\nprohibit discrimination in employment.\nThey are: (a) an amendment to the\nFederal Unemployment Insurance Act\nto prohibit discrimination by the National Employment Service when referring job applicants to employers;\n(b) an order-in-council, passed by the\nCabinet, prohibiting discrimination\nagainst workers on the ground of race,\nnational origin,, color or religion, employed on Dominion works contracts.\nThe first public announcement, of\nthis anti-discrimination regulation was\nmade by Labor Minister Milton F.\nGregg to the convention of the Canadian Congress of Labor in Toronto. The\nannouncement was applauded not\nalone by the national labor body but\nby many other citizens' organizations.\nThe anti-discrimination clause in\nthe Unemployment Insurance Act is\nalready in effect, but the order-in-\ncouncil respecting Dominion contracts\nwill not go into effect until Jan'. 1,1953.\nThe first prohibits discrimination on\nthe grounds,of political affiliation as\n\u2022 well as race, religious creed and color,\nWhile tjie second meas^fe^( does not\ninclude political discrimihatM..\nThe order-in-council prohibiting\ndiscrimination against workers employed on Government contracts is the\nfirst of its kind in Canadian history,\nnotes .^ftiTpkonto Star..|[ei;ertpfoEe, ef-,v\nforts were iiade on a Voluntary 'basis\nto discourage and. prevent discrimination against workers. But commencing\nJan. 1,1953, the'Federal Minister of Labor iWjJU.rthj^e authority to withdraw\nor refuse to grant a works contract to\nany. firm for construction or repair of\npublic 'buildings or for* the manufacture and supply of equipment, materials-and supplies, where there is evidence of unfair labor practices. Moreover, the new labor contracts must\ncontain a clause prohibiting discrimination against workers on the ground\nof race, national origin, color or religion. The order-in-council directs contractors as follows:\n1. In, the hiring and'employment of\nlabor for the execution of this contract,\nthe-contractor shall not refuse to employ or otherwise discriminate against'\nany person in regard to employment\nbecause of that person's race, national\norigin, color or religion, nor because\n\u2022the person has made a complaint'or\ngiven information with respect to an\nalleged failure to comply, with .this\nclause.\n2. If any question arises at any time\nas to whether or not there has been a\nfailure on the part of the contractor to\ncomply with the provisions of this\nclause, the Minister ,of Labor or his\ndeputy or other designated person\nshall decide the question, subject to fhe\ncontractor's appeal within 30 days after the decision.\n3. The contractor shall rrlake available to authorized persons in the Labor\nDepartment books and records and\nsuch additional information as is required for the purpose of making a\nWhy a Factory,\nShuts Its Doors   ,\n(Midland Free Press Herald)\nThis Is a story without names, but not one\nwithout a moral.;\nSome time ago, In a Slmcoo County com-.\nmunlty, some distance from here, an industry\nshut its doors.\nThe public was given a good reason why\ntha factory closed. Conditions were not good\nin the trade, 'and Its owners hod extensive interests elsewhere.\nWhat was not generally known, however,\nwaa the tact that the company might well have\ncontinued its operations In Slmcoe County If\ncertain local conditions had been different,..\nOne of the major reasons; why that company closed waa the prevalence of local petty\nthievery and malicious damage, a condition\nwhich'the Municipal officials admitted but\napparently were unable to halt.     ...\n'At one time police uncovered stolen goods\nfrom the factory in the possession of no less\nthan 80 juveniles in that community. After the\nfactory closed down, and long before It was\ncertain that It would not reopen, local residents broke into the vacant building on several occasions, doing malicious damage to its\ncontents.\nThat, as the Municipal Council and Chamber of Commerce realize, is no way to encourage new industry. They trust it will not happen again.\n,   But what can be done about it\nMore local policemen? That might be desirable.\nA night watchman at the plant? That Is a\nsubstantial expense for a small factory.\nPerhaps what Is far more necessary and\nfar more desirable Is a re-examlnatlon of the\nhome, school and church life of the community which permits such conditions to exist.\nCause, Not Punishment\nThe greatest thing that psychiatry can\ncontribute in our schools is to insist that the\nproper attitude to take toward truancy or\nany other behavior problem Is one of asking.\n\"Why does this happen?\" and not \"What punishment shall- we use?\", according to Dr. R.\nO. Jones, professor of psychiatry at Dalhousle\nUniversity, writing in Health.\nDr. Jones insists that reliance upon \"a big\nenough stick applied hard enough\" is no solution to school misbehavior. There may be\nany one ot a score of reasons for truancy,\nfor example-J-poor eyesight or poor hearing,\nlessons that are.too easy for one individual\nor too difficult for another, or a variety of\nfamily troubles at home that prevent a child's\nconcentrating on his work.\n\"Now I'm quite sure that any one of these\n.causes of truancy might be dealt with by the\nbig stick method,\" observes Dr. Jones.. \"But1\nI wonder if anyone really feels it's sensible\nto use stern discipline and fear to make a\nchild with any of these problems stay in\nsomething he can't possibly profit from. Obviously, you are only storing up trouble for\nthe future.\"   ' '\".-.. .;'-. ,'   .. ,.\n\"He's going to learn what people with\nauthority are like, and\/that he eltlier has to\nknuckle down quickly or bide his time until\nhe gets the big stick in his own hand and\nstarts fighitng back as vigorously as he can,\"\nsums up Dr. Jones. \"In either case, we've done\nsomething which makes for social trouble in\nthe future,\"\nStretching Life\n\"It took over 1000 years to Increase the\naverage length of Ufa, by 27 years\u2014from 22,\nin ancient Rome, to 49 on this continent at\nthe turn of the century,\" writes Dr. A. R. J.\nBoyd, Toronto deputy medical officer of\nhealth, \"In the next 50 years, almost 20 more\nyears were added to the life. span. Even in\nthe last 15 years the average length of life\nhas increased five yeara ,or more for rnales .\nand seven or more for females.\",\nI held lt truth with him who sings to one\nclear harp In divers tones, that men may rise\non stepping-stones of their dead selves to\nhigher things.\u2014Alfred Lord Tennyson.\nfull inquiry into any complaint that\nthe contractor is not carrying out the\nprovisions of this clause.\n4. Failure of the contractor to comply with any of the provisions of this\nclause shall constitute a material\nbreach of the contract.\n5. If the contractor is dissatisfied\nwith a decision rendered by the Minister or his deputies, he may, within\n30 days.after the decision is made, request the Minister to refer the question\nto a judge of a superior, county or district court, whose decision is final for\nthe purposes, of this contract.\n? Questions?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader* Names ot persons\nasking questions will not be'published.\nThere It 'no oharoo' tor thli servloe.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there. Is obvious\nnecessity lor privacy.    .\nMathemntlclon\u2014What   is   the   answer   to\n78 x t x > x 1 x 0 equals 7\nApparently our previous answer was\nwrong. In self-defence we must explain that\nmerely a simple problem drives us to aspirins\n\u2014and this one defeated an accountant friend\nwho came to our rescue. A phone call from\nan.ex-teacher and another from an'anonymous\nreader Informed us of our mistake. The answer\nis zero, because when ono multiplies by zero\none gets tero.,. _.-    : .\u201e )    .,' \u25a0\nMrs. M. R. W-, Nakusp--Wlll you please let\nus have words of the song \"Duna\", also of\nanother song beginning \"Just before\nChristmas I'm as good as I can be\"?' ' r;\nWe regret that, owing to copyright regulations, we aro not, permitted tb do Jhls.\nReader, South Slocan\u2014CaA you give us-the\nrecipe for potato champagne?\nPotato champagne, or Australian brandy:\nScrub well two of the largest potatoes to be\nobtained, and whin cftan do not Cut,' but grate\ninto tub in which you have airaedy^poured a\ngallon or rather more of lukewarm water. SUr\nin potatoes, then, add halt pound of grain, twp\npounds seedless- raisins,  four, pounds pure\nDemerara sugar, and rather less than !>alj an\nounce yeast spread oh some toasted bread; No\nboiling is required, Cover' ahd leave tfoee-\n.weeks, strain into barrel or large atone jar,\nand close down as usual till fermentation Is\nover. Remove yeast,  bottle, seal,  and  lay\nbottles on one side.\ni\nM. J. S\u201e Castlegar\u2014Referring to your request\nfor address ot Dolls' Hospital at Coast, we\nara Indebted to another reader who kindly\nphoned in the following information:\n\"Dolls' Hospital has been (moved to 2200\nblock, Main Street, Vancouver.\"\nPress Comment\nQUALITY, NOT PRICES\nA war Is being waged in Dublin over the\nrespective qualities of Irish end Scotch whisky.\nTopers would be more interested In a price\nwar.\u2014St. Thomas Times-Journal.\nSIMPLE FLAVOR TB8T\nTea and coffee tasting Is a tricky business,\nemploying experts who rinse out their mouths\nbetween each sip. A Long Island, N, Y.j confectionery firm solves its problem In a simpler\nway. It lays out Its products in different boxes,\nthen opens its doors to a troop of Boy Scouts.\nSince children's taste buds are.said to be extraordinarily sensitive, especially where candy\nis concerned, the firm just watches to see\nwhich ,candy boxes are emptied first.\u2014Cornwall Standard-Freeholder. '.   .\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\n.From the Nelion Dally News, Nov. 14, 1942\nMost Rev. Martin M. Johnson, Bishop of\nNelson, and Henry Sommerville, editor-of the\nCanadian Register, left for Trail and Rossland,\nwhere Mr. Sommerville will be guest speaker\nat Rotary luncheons.\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelion Dally Newi, Nov. 14,1927 '\nJess Saunders and Ben Hamann have left\nfor Kettle Valley ona hunting trip;\nRev. B. L. Oaten of Trail conducted services at Trinity United Church Sunday.\n50 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Nelion Dally News, Nov. 14,1902\nA two-foot lead of galena has been uncovered for a distance of 20 feet on the Gillis\ngroup at the mouth of Hall Creek.. Property Is\nowned by. John M. and John A. Gills,\nM. S. Logan will return from New York\nsoon to resume operation of the Juno, on;\nMorning Mountain.\nYour Horoscope   ,\nDo not magnify casual remarks to major\nproportions, - but keep a cheerful and determined attitude, despite minor upsets. Care\nused in financial transactions will pay off\nduring the pionths ahead. A child born today\nmay be very fond of pleasure and be a gay,\ndelightful companion.\nFrom an\nOldtimer's\nNotebook\n~\" by-R.X2. JOY...~\"\nHlttor|an Nelson District Oldtlrners\n...     . Association\nThere are \u00bb# number of prospects\nshowing considerable work which\n(been done by pien who enlisted\nthe South African and the Hrst\n\u25a0Great War and never came back.\nHave they- been forgotten? No!    :\n.Their buddies \\ still, -remember\nmost of them with respect and some\naffection. The words on our Nelson\nCenotaph were composed by our\nlate citizen who so many oldtlrners\nremember, especially approaching\nFall-Fair time. His name was\nGeorge Horstead,\nI am also including in this article\nthe names of the old-time lacrosse\nteam which were in the Nelson\nDaily News 50 Years Ago column\nseveral days ago.\nMany Nelson citizens accompanied that lacrosse team tb Grand\nForks- one Dominion Day, where\nhorse racing and rifle competitions\nwere held -between the two towns.\nWe travelled by stage to the\ngrounds, and one et our citizens,\nHarry Wright, later a Member of\nParliament, in getting off the stage\nfainted from the effects of the heart.\nCharles Jeffs, a good lacrosse man\n,from Nelson,.and his brother, Alfred (Alf), both received their early\nlapross training at .Paris, Ont, and\nThough our works find righteous or unrighteous Judgment, this at least is ours, to\nmake them righteous. '\u2022-.;,\n\u2014Algernon Charles Swinburne.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nWmeM CBJOHEfS IU TWN HE EXPECTS\n2\u00a96_SSTHE REP RU6 TREATMEMTOKl\nPAL PET-V- 'EXPENSE ACCOUMT\u2014\nWMMIMO\/\nON\/CMOH.PETEy-\nWE -OTTA MIT THE\nDEW CLUB yET-\n'- GO-O-O-Of\nJgfcWSL O^5 H TEH >E4RS\nJ3SE_V|srrs CSUD, HOW IS HE\nENTERTAINED? YOO SHOULDASK~\n.TO? 84D WE'RE;\nrtw*5 OJR HOUSE\nOOHSOrtR.WEWAHTeo\nTOHAvByeu\u00abtty,\nWITH OSMvgRELEAVihle\nToddy's Bible Thought\n,, Humility is a mark of wisdom.\nWise men can learn from experience of humble people and from all\nexperience.        '\u2022\u25a0\"\n. ''A'wlse nian will hear, and\nwill Ihcrepso learning.\n', ' \",'.-       - - r,rr\u2014Prov. 1lS. .\n-MS&M\nStyles are queer.. Jr.can remember when a thin '..'young,\nwoman couldn't hope to-get a\n,husband    except   a   'widower\nwith six younguns. *. \u25a0.-\u201e\nBuy, Sell. Trade the Claiiified.Wey\nCeylon's Rubber fo Communist China\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon, Nov. 18 (Reuters)\u2014Ceylon announced today she\nis stepping up shipments of rubber\nan-t certain other undesignated commodities to Communist China.\nPremier Dudley Senanoyake disclosed that a Ceylonese delegation\nwill arrive in Peiping, China, with-\noften played with the Indians In\ntheir bare feet. \u25a0-\u2022'\n; Barney Archibald, another fine\nathlete, had a way of his own in\nweaving himself and ball through a\nmedley of players who were slashing at him with the net side of the\nlacrosse stick.\nVERSATILE,'\nJoe Thompson (good old Joe), was\na. great' favorite with the crowds.\nHe was cool, and one of Nelson's\nbest all-around athletes, He was also\na member of the winning hose reel\nteam in anold-tlme race,\nTaylor, also a good man, and\nRutherford (possibly Bill Rutherford;& former leading druggist in\nNelson), an oarsman pf Ontario,\nalso played. .;-.-,   . r\nWilliams, Hawkins, one of Nelson's first street'car men, McMor-\nris, son of Captain' McMprris of\nsteamboat fame and the famous\nsteamboat race years ago on Kootenay Lake! were all players. -\nArthur Perrler Was noted for upsetting the plans of the opposition.\nFox was another reliable, and Dud\nBlackwood always figured as one\nof the best. Dud, like Joe-Thompson, was ekceedingly popular.\nScptty Williams was good in goal,\nalso on the field, being a tall, husky\nScot! He had a longer read) than\nmost and naturally was well suited\nfor the net.\nin two weeks tc conclude a major\ntrade pact-\nHe said Ceylon hes agreed to sell\n50,000 tons of sheet rubber annually\nfor five years to China at an Initial\nprice of 37 cents a pound\u2014approximately 10 cents a pound above present world prices.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nAfter\nfht-dienf\nii 11\u00bb\nSPECIAL\nSELECTED\njj-8\u00ab\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board, or by the Government of British Columbia.\nCanadian Soldiers in Germany\nThe front lines of Canada's security lie not only on our\nImmediate borders but in Europe and Asia.\nCanadian troops overseas, with the Soldiers of other freedom-loving\nnations, stand as our bulwark against threats of aggression.\nIn Germany, the 27th Canadian Infantry Brigade G{oup\nhas impressed all with its qualities as a unit and .. . with\nthe spirit and training of its soldiers.\nTake, your place with Canada's frontline soldiers. Serve with\nthe most important men in the Army \u2014the Infantry.\nYou are eligible if ydu ire 17 to 40 years of age, physically fit\nand ready to serve anywhere,,\nApply now lo Ihe Army Recruiting Depot nearest your homer\n\u25a0\"      No. 11 Personnel Depot,\n...   : .: \u25a0    :   - \u25a0       :\n ;ns\n\"It fays To Buy Quality\"\nSPECIAL PURCHASE\nFlight Boots\nOil-fan Leather Top\n''Shearling Lined\n. Regulf-r $21.50\nSPECIAL $16.50\nR; ANDREW\n& GO.\nL_APERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\n\u2014 \"    ,  '.\u25a0   ;; \"'   ;;.;;.   \u25a0\u25a0-,\u2022' ,P\u00bbn*tn   tAA\nDistrict residents are leaving for Miami, Florida, where\nthey will spend the Winter months.\n_______________________ . . . , .\nTO FLORIDA . . . Mr. and Mrs,\nT. E: Homersham ot i Procter Will\nleave Monday, by ear, tet Miami,\nFlorida, where they will spend the\nWinter., *       -\nWeekend\nSpecial\nCreamy\nMint Chews\nwith the toffee centre\nFriday and Saturday\nOnly\n35c the'Alb.\nTIME FOR OLD COUNTRY\nPARCELS\nWe pock \u2014 We wrap\nOrder now before the\nmailing deadline\nCANDY IS A DELICIOUS\nFOOD \u2014 BUY SOME EVERY\nDAY AT\nRANNIGER'S\nCandles Ltd.\n466 BAKER ST.\nNelion, B. C.\nNelson Social\nBoswell Club Plans\nFor Yule Tree Party\nBOSWELL \u2014 Arrangements tor\nth j community Christinas tree party\nwere made by members ot the Bob\nwell and District Women's Club at\ntheir monthly meeting,at the home\nof Dr. and Mrs. H. Ness. The committee consists of Mrs, J. Pryke,\nMrs. H. Bell, Mrs. H. Hewitt and\nMrs. Kenneth Wallace.\nA birthday gift was presented to\nMrs. B. Bambridge.\nNAKUSP'- Whist drives, being\nheld iortnightly during Winter\nmonths by the local Social Credit\ngroup are drawing good crowds. At\nthe last, prize winners In whist\nwere Mrs. C. H. Horrey and Jack\nEdmunds, first, .and'Mrs. Edmunds\nand Mrs. Nate Woldum, consolations.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nFOR\n: COOKING-:\nU.S. HOLIDAY ... Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Phillips of Phillips Motel, left\nThursday for Spokane, whence they\nwill take the Stratocruiser to Seattle\nwhere they will visit friends.\n..\u25a0*.:\nFROM CRESTON . . I Mrs. C,\nAmoroso of Creston, is visiting her\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Amoroso, 918 Sixth\nStreet.\n',*\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nTO GRAND FORKS . . . Mrs. I.\nE, Bickerton. 907 Carbonate \"Street,\nis visiting friends in Grand Forks\nfor the next week.   '\n'.. . .*\nVICTORIA HOME .. .Mist Barbara McLennan, who has been employee] at the Court House here,\nleft Thursday for Victoria and a\npost in the Parliament Building.\nGovernment- employees presented\nher with a cedar chest as a farewell gift. Her parents, Mr, and Mrs;\nJ. R. McLennan, former Nelson residents, are living In the provincial\ncapital.\nEngagements\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Spencer announce the engagement of their\ndaughter, Margaret Dawn, to Ralph\nHubert Goddard, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Frank Goddard pt Victoria,\nB.C., tha wedding to take place on\nNovember 28th In the Chapel of tha\nRoyal Jubilee Hospital, Victoria,\nB.C. at 7:30 p.m.\nPacific Milk adds   extra\nflavoi end nourishment te\nrecipes.\nBUY B.C. PRODUCTS\nPHONE    144   FOR   CLASSIFIED   '\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nshort\nand sweet\nfor\nbig\nevenings\nWe've the dancingest dresses you've ever\nworn. Shorter than before because it's\nfashion's ultimatum. ... Sweeter than\never with their huge skirts, that billow\nand sway in graceful terhpo.\n(Df&L\nLadies' Apparel\nTHE   FASHION   CENTRE\nPhone 775 Nelson, B C.\nU. $; Honeymoon\nFor Newlyweds\nFRUITVALE - After their UUUS-\nrlage, David Seifrit and hla bride,\nthe former Suzanne Marie Creff, left\nIon a wedding trip to United States\nI points.\n[ The groom, son of Mr. and Mri.\nPhilip Seifrit, and his bride, spoke\ntheir vows at the home of the\nbride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer\nRoss, before Rev. Bryson BOyle.\n'iha bride wore a white suit, with\npencil slim skirt and fitted jacket\nwith small black buttons, a Mack\nvelvet hat and shoes. She carried a\nnosegay ot white chrysanthemums\nana red rates.\nMrs. J. Seifrit, the matron of\nhonor, chose a light blue suit with\nnavy blue trim, white accessories,\nand a corsage of pink carnations.\nMr. Seifrit supported his brother.\nA buffet lunch was served for the\nfamilies of the young couple.\nFor travelling, the bride had\nselected a black wool suit, with a\npencil slim skirt and fitted jacket\nand black satin ribbon bows, black\nsuede shoes, black handbag, red\nvelvet hat and red silk scarf.\nMr. and Mrs. Seifrit will reside\nin Fruitvale.\nWILLOW POINT RESIDENT Mrs.,Robert Hong pauses beside her uhiqueCcol-\nlection begun 27 years ago with her mother's hand-made earrings.\n\u2014Daily News photo.\nEarringsFrom Around the World\nCome to North Shore Collector\nFruitvale C.W.L.\nUps Building Fund\nFRUITVALE - A substantial\ndonation to the church building\nfund was made' by members of the\nCatholic Women's League a' their\nmeeting at tha home of Mrs. Frank\nKaluslk.\nA new member, Mn H. Me-\nCutcheon, wai welcomed. Favorable\nreports were given on a recent fowl\nsupper and on activities of the Kootenay Society for Handicapped Children. Plans were made for a bake\nsale.\nL\nPhon. IS*\nFuel A Transfer\nNelson. B.C.\nWarm, Cozy\nShearling Lined\nor Plain\n$1.75 to $8.50*\nYour choice of color! ,\nBefore you buy, be sure\nto see these slippers\nPhone 1114        Nelson\nThere is a quotation which says;\n\"We are never too old or too Important to ride a' hobby-horse.\"\nEvolving from medieval English\ntha term \"to ride a hobby-horse\"\ntoday simply means to pursue some\ninteresting pastime.\nMrs. Robert Hong of R. R. 1, Nelson, has her own special brand of\nhobby-horse. In 1929 she took her\nmother's hand-made earrings of\nfine cut jet that came trom Lockerbie,, Scotland, and began adding\ndod ones that turned up from time\nto time. As the collection grew so\ndid Mrs. Hong's enthusiasm. Today\nhas 728 earrings and (there are\nnd two alike) from as far away as\nNorway, Mexico, and Hong Kong.\nThe story behind each earring as\nIt finds iti, way into Mrs. Hong's\nglass-faced collection case (made by\nher husband whose interest was\nalso attracted by the unique collection) carry the human interest\nand color of an unknown in a far\nland or the neighbor next door.\nPROM MONO KONQ      -\nThere's one that .travelled halt\nway around the world from Hong\nKong, while a cameo was brought\nover by a Longbeach woman, Mrs.\nMable McNown.\nA store floor In San Francisco\nyielded up a trinket about five\nyears ago, another was picked up\non the railway track between Proc-\nFRUITVALE L A.\nGIVES BANQUET\nFRUITVALE \u2014 A Remembrance\nDay banquet given by the Ladles'\nAuxiliary to Fruitvale Legion\nbranch in Legion hall was well patronized by Veterans, Legionnaires\nand Auxiliary membera.\nI\"rinclpal speaker was Ven. Archdeacon B. A. Resker, who delighted\nhis audience with tales of his recent\ntrip to England. Others speaking\nbriefly were President Alan Johns,\nMr. Wallinger and Ron Hill.\nServing were Mrs. J. Becker, Mrs.\nJule Lewis, Mrs, Q. Metcalfe, Mrs.\nC. Rogers, Mrs. J. Shannon and\nkitchen arrangements were In the\ncare of Mrs. G. Grieve, Mrs. G. Con-\nnolley, Mrs. A. Endersby, Mrs. W.\nGrieve, Mrs. F. Peitzsche. A dance\nfollowed the banquet, Mrs. R. Larson and B. Campbell supplying the\nmusic,\n(0mA, Tip. With,\nWahian, WloJdiiL\n9329\n2-10\nMOMI A 8EW-EASVI\nSave money! Sew that cute corduroy, Winter cotton, or wool outfit\ndaughter needsl This pattern is so\nbaaic you'll whip it up easily \u2014\neven if you're a beginner!'\n. Blouse; Jumper, jacket \u2014 mix-\nmates that double her wardrobe!\nPattern 9329: Child's sizes 2,4, 6,\n8, 10, Size t jacket and jumper, 2%\nyards 35-inch nap; blouse, Ti yard\n85-inch fabric. '\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fib Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart showa you every step.\n\u25a0Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS,\n(33c) in coins (stamps-cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS.\nSTOLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept, Nelson, B. C\nter and Tye by Robert Dickson, a\nC.P.R. foreman while a third came\nout of the pocket of a coat sent\nfrom Swift Current.\nAn earring commemorating the\npilgrimage to Rome in 1950, a circle\nwith a dainty cross, rests among\nMrs.  Hong's collection  which includes rings of hammered silver,\nbrass, gold, pearls, cameos, rhinestones and a multitude of other ma\nterlals.\n- Mexican silver In the form of a\nsombrero, dogwood leaves from\nFerndale, Wash., a nosegay with\nreal lace and shells, all catalogued by small tags which lead to\na file telling the history of each\nring, gives their unique touch te\nthe collection.\nFeatures ot the Duke of Windsor\ngraces tha hobby chest in the form\nof an earring'made when he abdicated the British throne in 1939.\nOne of the most expensive pieces (Mrs. Hong hai no Idea of her\nhobby's value, believing Its worth\nIlea In human Interest) Is a gold\nband made  In  Norway over 80\nyears ago. It Is alto believed the\noldest In the group.\nFrom Hollywood and Germany,\nFort Worth, Tex., and just across\nthe back fence, from store clerks,\nfellow collectors, Canadian Pacific\nRailway employees and friends, specimens ara. passed along to Mra\nHong.\nBirds and grape designs are the\nmost common, inexpensive jewelry,\ndominant, but the latest In earrings,\nsprays of rhinestones and pearls,\nalso find a place in the showcase,\nA variety of experiences go with\nthe collection.\nNot long ago what. Mrs. Hong\nthought to be three American pennies on a Hollywood earring, took\non value.and interest when a CP.R.\nengineer happened to recognize\nthem as English farthings made into earrings by World War II veterans and sent to America for sale.\nAnother time, a Nelson girl, Audrey Gerrish lost a silver band, tried\nwithout success to replace it, and\nfinally gave up the search. Mrs.\nHong supplied her with a duplicate\nsent from Minneapolis.\nAsked why she chose earring\ncollecting aa a hobby, Mrs. Hong\nreplied! \"Everyone has a hobby--\noups  and  saucers,  ereams  and\nsugars\u2014earrings teemed te take\nup leu room.\" Behind the collection Met Mrs. Hong's Interest In\ndainty trinkets and people.\nTwo or three more rings and Mra\nHong will have to look around for\nanother showcase to house her rapidly growing collection.\nAmid carefully tended trinkets\nrest the one or two that claim no\nfame or history for Mrs. Hong \"just\ndoesn't know where they came\nfrom\", but they add the charm of\nthe unknown to a collection thai\nadds up to one interesting and original hobby.\nThe name Lillooet for the district\nin Southern British Columbia came\ntrom an Indian word meaning\n\"wild onion.\"\nSTABBING HIP PAINS\nDom your Up feel at \u00ab packed with\nbroken giant Or aa If a knife were being\ntwisted lo it ? Don't suffer needlessly from\nthese stabbing paint. Get fait relief with\nT-R-C's. Uied successfully by thousands\nfor quick relief of Sciatic Rheumatic or\nNearitic pain. Alto Lumbago, Neuralgia.\nAsk for Templeton'i T-R-C't. 65c 81.35\nat dliif counters. I-SSI\nQuality,\nAuthentic Tartans\nKilts and Pleated\n\u2022 e\nWorsteds\nOrion Wools\n\u2022 #\nWool Flannels\nand Tweeds\n\u2022 e\nPic and Pie\n\u2022 \u2022 \u00ab\nGabardines\n$7.98 to $22.95\nGood Selection ef\nCARDIGANS\nReg. $7.95   NOW $5.95\nGreenwood Furs\nFor Value ... See\nALL OCCASION\nCOAT\nOF MINK DYED\nCentre\nPack\nMuskrat\nFour-Ripple Back\nPointed Wing Collar\nFull Cocktail Cuffs\nPriced Prem\n$325.00\n$475.00\nFURS\n580 Baker St. Phone 272\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14, 1952 - 5\nWIDER NURSERY\nSERVICE ASKED\nMANCHESTER England (CP) -\nMothers who don't go out to work\nhave more strain and worry than\nthose who do, says a nurseries committee.\nThe committee decided to ask the\nhealth ministry to have day nurt\nseries thrown open to the children\nof mothers who remain at home\nduring the day.\nA member of the Committee, Mra.\nJoan Harris, said that if the government acted on the appeal much\nof the strain that turns many moth,\ners Into \"worn-out bundles of\napathy\", would be relieved,\nGrover Cleveland was ,the only\nDemocratic president between 1890\nand 1912,\n'Mtilillllliiiiii;iiiiliiiiiiit;iiitiiiliiillli\nBUY\nON OUR\nCONVENIENT\nBUDGET PLAN\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nTht House ot Furniture Values'\nPHONE 116 - NEL80N\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nThe library of the Jesuits, established at Quebec about 1750, -was one\nof the first libraries In North\nAmerica.\nDo Your\nChristmas Shopping Early!\nUSE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN\nSee Our stock of\n\u2022 PHILCO\n\u2022 MARCONI\n\u2022 ELECTROHOME\n\u2022 ROGERS  MAJESTIC\nJEFFERY RADIO\nand APPLIANCES\n446 Word St.\nPhone 1302\nSPECIALS\nTWO ONLY\nGreen\n2-Piece\nCouch\nChesterfields\n1\u2014Regular $164.50, fer\n1\u2014Regular $210.50, fer\n$146-50\n\u00ab194-so\n1 ONLY, RED\nKroehler Cushionized\nChesterfield\n$279*50\n1 ONLY, \"Twin Deluxe\" Goodyear\nAIRFOAM CHESTERFIELD \u2014$249.50\n*-*' Standard\nLAMPS\nend\nTrilites\nwith ihedei\n$15.95 - $17.95\n$20.50\nUSE SIMPSON'S EASY\nPAYMENT PLAN\nDown\nBalance easy .monthly\npayments. No down\npayment on established\nbudgets.\nIt's for the Home . . . It's at\nM\n S.\u2014 NELSON PAtLT NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 15,1952\n^oqudis I^ke Revenge\n(|)n Red^ Shore Battery\n\u00bby Lieut James L. Wlghtman r\nl   \"*\u25a0 Naval Information Officer\nI- ON BOARD H,M,C,S. IHOQUOIS,\nv IN KOREAN WATERS,  Nov.  13\n;j<0P) \u2014 This destroyer took re-\n} verigo within 24 hours on the com-\nSmunist shore battery which killed\n:'three of her men Oct. 2.\n: The Iroquois returned the next\n\u25a0\u25a0'; day, ranged on gun flashes ashore,\n., and then poured in rapid-fire broad\n3 slues from her four-inch guns,\nI iThe whole area was left a amok-\nr.iUKwrecK and tbe enemy guns made\nt no-further answer\u2014then or during\nf the six days following that the Iro-\ni'quels patrolled that East-coast area,\njust South of SongJIn.\nii ;Three were killed and three\na others wounded\u2014the first Canadian\nnival casualties ot the Korean war\nr-rwhen the ship waa hit by the\ni'enamy.;,\n! CARRIES ON\nI   fifteen minutes after taking over\nthe patrol' she waa tired on by a\nhidden shore battery, but none   of\n\u2022 the shots fell close. She carried on\nwith her Job\u2014chiefly one oi bombarding a.shoreline stretch et railway and shooting up shore gun emplacements,\nTho Iroquois began her fateful\npatrol Sept, 29 under command of\nCapt W. M. Landymore of Brant-\nford, Ont, and Ottawa. She headed\na task force element with destroyers and destroyer escorts of the\nU. S. navy and smaller craft of the\nSouth Korean navy.\nDirected by Gunnery Officer,\nLieut Douglas Tutto of Victoria,\nB, C\u201e the four-inch guns took a\nfew ranging salvoes and then poured In broadsides at the flashes of\nshore guns,\nThe Iroquois chose to patrol that\nparticular area for six more days,\nshooting harassing rounds at Irregular Interval! at the rati line and\nthe. adjacent gun emplacement\nThere was no further sign of fight\nfrom the gun.\nLater the Iroquois moved (long\nto other coastal points for the rest\nof her patrol and then returned to\nbase in Japan,\nU. K. Public House System in B. C.\nPENTICTON, Nov. 13 (CP)-Brl-\ntlsh Columbia's liquor Inquiry commission had a brief before It-today\nproposing that licences be granted\nto taverns and bars, on the British\npub system.\n. The brief was presented to the\n^commission headed by H. H. Stevens of Vancouver by the Pentlcton\n.Junior Chamber of Commerce.\n\"It suggested that-.provisions be\nestablished for the playing of games\n.' other than card games- in the taverns and that food be served. It was\nalso proposed that bars be allowed in legitimate theatres but not In\nfmovie houses.\nKELOWNA SUGGESTION\nThe Kelowna Chamber of Com-\n%\nmen\naneet...\nARISTOCRAT ANNIVERSARY\n'2 6 years old 5 years old\nVISCOUNT     010 KEG\n'4 years old       3 years old\nrThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\n\u2022Control Board or by the Governor   meat ol British Columbia\nmerce recommended that liquor\nstores operate 21 hours a day in\nlarger cities. It also suggested that\nbeer, wines, and. liquors be sold\nby restaurants along with meals,\nthat cabarets sell Veer by the glass,\nthat public cocktail bars be legalized and that beer parlors serve light\nfood with beer.\nIn a June plebiscite, British Columbia voted in favor of sale, of liquor by the glass on a local-option\nbasis.' The three-man commission\nwu appointed to Investigate the\nbest methods of establishing more\noutlet? for distribution and sale of\nr^uo*ry., ;\u25a0\"\"\u25a0;;. v?>,;\nUnder.present B. C. law, beer.\nonly is sold In taverns. Liquor can\nbe. purchased at government stores\nor la a few private-clubs, -r\nC.A.B. Asks for\nIV licences\n? OTMWAj Nori-H (CP> - The\nCanadian Association of Broadcasters has asked tha federal government to allow privately-owned radio stations to enter the television\nfield.\nThe request was made in a brief\npresented r to Prime Minister St.\nLaurent and members ot tbe cabinet\nThe brief was made public today\nby the Canadian Association of\nBroadcasters, whose membership\nincludes most privately-owned radio stations.\nUnder present government policy,\nno licences for privately-owned television stations will be Issued until\nthe CBC has established stations in\nkey points.,, ;,\nThe C,A,B, recommended:\n1. That the government grant TV\nlicences to private applicants.\n2. That an Independent tribunal\nsimilar to the Australian Broadcasting Control Board, be establish\ned- to handle television licensing In\nCanada. - '\u2022\u00bb '.\n3. That all non-government applications for TV licences be considered Impartially on the merits of\nthe oplicatlon .and the experience\not the applicant\nPerfect Whist Hand\nrAKENHA^,\"Nortolk, England,\nNov., it (Ap) .\u2014'A'perfect whist\nhand-si complete suit for all four\nplayers;\u2014 Was dealt at a local whist\ndrive recently- by Baker Edward\nParker. Sllderule experts calculated\nthe odds against this were 2,235,197,-\n408,895,366,368,301,560,000 to 1. Only\nfive such perfect hands have been\nreported'dealt at whist or bridge\ntor the last SBryears.\nEVEN IN THE MIDDLE of a\nwar, the democrats rights,mutt'\nbe preserved, and U.S. Sergeant.\nJamet Willard, ohlef of a bombing plane crew, perches on the\neowllpg of hit thlp to vote In the\nPresidential eleotlont. A few moments after marking hit ballet Ke\n. vyai on hit way over Korea, -\n\u2014Central Preat Canadian\nN.A.T.O. Checks\nFalse Spy Scare\nBRUSSELS, Belgium,. Nov..'; 18\n(Reuters) \u2014 A false spy score today\nprompted N.A.T.O. headquarters and\nEuropean governments to check top-\nsecret files, They found nothing\nmissing.\nPolice denied earlier reports that\nthey had arrested a German for\nstealing North Atlantic Treaty Organization documents..\nThey said the man. Eric Clare, 40,\nhad been picked Up at Eupen, near\nthe border, after a five-day search\nin a.case \"with an international\nangle.\" - \"\u2022    ' \u25a0 .        .\nThe Belgian Justice Ministry said\nthe case bad nothing, to do with\nmilitary secrets or the security of\nthe state. -   \u25a0\nThe police hunt, said the ministry,\nconcerned \"a check on suspect\naliens1' believed crossing into Bel-\nglum for \"criminal activities.\"\nAirman Awarded\nConciliators lo\nDiscuss Bus\nDrivers'Wages\n; VANCOUVER* Nov. 13 (CP) -\nWage dispute between 200 bus\ndrivers and Pacific Stages Ltd. will\ngo before a conciliation board.\n' The men,- members of the Street\nRailway Union (A.F.L.), are seklng\na 20%-cent hourly wage Increase\nacross the board as well as a 10-cent\nhourly night differential and other\nconcessions, .\/-\u2022:,-2-\n: The outcome of the dispute will\ndetermine the pattern of early 1958\nnegotiations between the B.C, Electric Railway Covrrand 8000 SU.Ui\nmSmbers.'\nThe company offer In the present\ndispute has not been disclosed\/\nNegro Guests in *\nWashington' Hotels\nWASHINbTON, Nov. 18 (AP) L\nThe National Association ot Inter-\ngroup Relations officials say the big\nnews of its-meeting here was that\nNegro ^members were welcome- in\nseveral leading Washington hotels,\nHarold A, Lett, president of the\nassociation and a Negro, said the\ngroup has received invitations from\nfour hotels here although the organization Is \"racially mixed.\" Such\ninvitations; would not have been\nforthcoming a few years ago.\nThe first photograph of the moon\nwaa taken by John Draper in 1840.\nARE SPECIALISTS\nAT THEIR TRADE\nIN PARTICULAR:\nContracting\nBoth Commercial\nand Private Residences\nWe Carry\nTrllights\nTorchieres      -\n-Electric Clocks\n$6.95 to $14.95\nElectric Blankets\nDouble 8lie\n$43.50\nElectHc Heating Pads\n$9.95\nCall in Today at\nSmith Electric\nPhone 258   645 Baker St.\nSEIGNIORY CLUB,' Mon'tballo,\nQue., Nov. 13 \u2014 Phil C. Garratt of\nToronto, veteran Canadian airman,\ntonight received the McKee Trophy\nfrom Air-Marshal W. A. Curtis at\nthe McKee Trophy dinner of the\nAir Industries and Transport Association. A.I.T.A. Is at present holding its annual meeting at the Seigniory Club, Seated with Mr. Garratt\nat the head table were 15 past recipients of the Trophy which Is\nawarded annurlly to the person doing most during the year to further\nCanadian aviation.\nIn a short address to A.I.T.A.\nmembers Air-Marshal Curtis paid\ntribute to the accomplishments of\nMr. Garratt In the field of aviation.\n'Mr. Garratt,\" said the Air-Marshal,\n'through his connection with DeHavllland Aircraft as managing director, has been responsible through\nthe yeara for the transition of British aircraft to Canadian requirements, but his most Important contribution to Canadian aviation, has\nbeen the development during the\nlast year of the DeHavllland Beaver, an aircraft which has kept Canada In the lead as a country able\nto produce a transport aircraft\nadaptable to all conditions of bush-\nflying.\" -\nAir-Marshal Curtis also praised\nMr. Garratt-for the-later development ot the. Otter A large model of\nthe Beaver, more powerful and\nmore economical to operate.\n\"Through -the development of\nsuch air-craft by men such as Mr,\nGarratt, Canada is in a position\nwhere she can sell' aircraft to practically' every country in the world,'\nthe Air-Marshal said.\nMr. Garratt paid tribute to the\nformer McKee Trophy winners who\nwere seated.at the head table with\nhim. They included, Capt. C. H,\n\"Punch\" Dickens, George Phillips,\nMaurice Burbrldge, W. E. Gilbert,\nJ. P. R. Vachon, M A. Seymour,\nQ.C.j T. W. Slers, A. D. McLean, T.\nM Reid, J. A. Wilson, G. W. G. Mc-\nConachie, Group-Capt Z. L. Leigh,\nO.B.E., E.D.; B. A. Irwin, Flt.-Lt.\nR. B. West, D.F.C., A.A.C and Carl\nAgar.\nJudges' Decision Puts\nMalan's Cbtirt on Spot\nnsa\nBLOHMFONTEIN, South Afrloa,\nNov. 18 (AP) \u2014 South Africa's\nAppeal Court today unanimously\ndeolded that Prime Mlnliter ban-\nlei P. Malan's 'High Court of\nParliament Is Illegal. The court's\naction pesad new threats of grave\n- elvll ttrlfe fer the race-torn\n\u2022 country.   ',\/.'\u25a0  -.\nThe five judges \u2014.their country's\nhighest court until creation of'the\nparliamentary tribunal \u2014 dismissed\nthe government's appeal against the\nSupreme Court's ruling that Perils,\nment acted unconstitutionally to\nsetting Itself up as tho highest court\nto rule on constitutional .questions..\nParliament, In which Malan's Nationalists have a smalt majority,\ntook that action after the courts\nstruck down a key' law to Malan's\nwhite supremacy program.' .\nPOSSIBLE COURSES\nThe Appeal Court's action left\nMalan two possible courses of\naction; '\n1. He could defy the verdict and\ncall* on the high court of Parliament\nto rule Itself a legal body. .'.'\n_. He could accept- the decision\nahd call an early general election\nin which he would seek a large\nenough majority to re-enact his disputed race laws within the framework of the constitution,\nThe country already is torn by\nrecurring bloodshed and violence\nand a Negro - civil. disobedience\ncampaign against restrictive laws.\nLeaders of groups opposing the\ngovernment   have  warned   they\nwould \"meat action with action\" if\ntha -Nationalists try' to lmplemont\nlaws the courts rule Illegal.\nShould the government seek to\nhave the parliamentary high court\noverrule the Appeal Court, observers fear the 'Independence of the\nordinary courts might be destroyed,\nThe five Justices delivered separate opinions explaining their decision today,'but most of them\nagreed creation of the high court\nwas a constitutional change requiring a two-thirds vote of-approval,\nsomething the act got to neither\nHouse of Parliament,\nOTTAWA, Novi 1MCP)\u2014?Dean\nAcheson Is coming to Ottawa- next\nweek.for a friendly*\"farewell as\nUnited States Secretary of State.\nThe External':Affairs Department\nannoUncedr-.todayr he will arrive\nNov. 21 and will address a Canadian Club luncheon:  :'-.'\nThat night he and Mrs. Acheson\nare scheduled to be dinner guests\nof External Affairs Minister Pearson and Mrs. Pearson, and on Saturday they will dine*with.the Governor General and later with U.S.\n\u2022Ambassador Stanley Woodward.\nThey return to Washington Sunday. - - -\nAnglo-Canadian Loan on Agenda\nOTTAWA, Nov. 18; (CP) - The\ngovernors of the Banks of England\nand Canada will meet here next\nweek to discuss, among other things,\nthe repayment of the 1048 Anglo-\nCanadian loan, lt was learned today.\nC. F. Cobbold, governor of the\nBank ot England, will begin a three\nday visit ..Nov. 17, following talks\nwith Federal Reserve Bank officials in New York. '\nHe-will, hold confidential talks\nWith Graham Towers. Governor of\nthe Bank of Canada, and other federal financial officials.\nOne of the main reasons for his\ncurrent.'trip, it was learned, Is to\ndiscuss repayment of the $5,000,000,-\n000 Britain borrowed from the U.S.\nand Canada in 1046.\nAn annual instalment of some\n$178,000,000  covering Interest  and\nprincipal on the two loans Is due\nnext month, and'Britain Is expected\nto maka payment on time, as she\ndid a year ago.\nThe Canadian portion ot this loan,\nwas $1,180,000,000 and the annual\nrepayment due to Canada \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 next-\nmonth will be about *J7,0O0,00O,   '\nHudson Bay is more than 1000\nmiles.from North to Southland 600\nmiles across ot its wldestfcart.   \u2022'\ncor FEE\nJmm& tofoy$*fi$#\nFreed Driver lo\nFace New Charge\nCOURTENAY, B.C., Nov. 13 (CP)\n\u2014Lloyd Wilfred Bulmer, 10-year-\nold truck driver, who had a charge\nof manslaughter against him dismissed after a preliminary hearing\nSept 18 and 10, has been charged\nfor a second time.\nCharge arose out ot the traffic\ndeath Aug. 10 of Levitt F. Taylor of\nVancouver, who was struck byr a\nloaded gravel truck driven by Bulmer while on the Pyke RoajjL   .;...\"'\nBulmer was remanded for eight\ndays on $100 ball.      !:\u2022 -j\nAccused had been working in\nHaney, B.C., since bis first, preliminary hearing.; He was picked up\nby police there Monday and returned here after being charged with\nmanslaughter for the Second time.\nAt his first hearing to September\nBulmer was released after Magistrate G. H. Pidcock ' found Insufficient evidence to commit him\nfor trial.\nThe Interior of the Initial fireball\nformed to an atomle bomb has a\ntemperature of many millions of\ndegrees.\n::.:,-\/:\u25a0\u2022<:\/.-.\/\nFor the Whltttt whitewashes you ever dreamed of\n-end the brightest colors-change now to new blue\nCHEER. For CHEER brings you a miracle whitening\nagent-and that's why CHEER can guarantee you the\nwhitest, brightest washes possible! Whiter, brighter\nthan any leading soap, in hardest water.\nThe moment you open the box, you'll see the thtt\ndifference between new CHEER and all the others!\nYes, even the color is different. It's blue. And juat\nWatch those magic blue granules burst into oceans of\npeppy, bright-white, dirt-chasing suds '.'\".'. guaranteed te give yoil the cleanest washes possible! Cleaner\nthan any soap you can buy!\nfi&Wffl.7\nNew CHEER-with iti exclusive formula-is a\ncomplete clothes-washing product. You need\nonly CHEER\u2014without bleaches, water softeners,\nor any other washing aids. Just CHEER alone for\neverything you wash\u2014from heaviest, dirtiest\nclothes to the finest, most delicate fabrics in\nyour family wash. And remember i pleasant-\nscented CHEER is safe for colored waehables.\nDouble your money back if you don't agree hew\nCHEER- gives you the cleanest, whitest washes\npossible.\n'\u2022l-.RjslHBR'\n\u00ab<.gjGgAfeft<\nx^Sr\n^2^\nDishes Too!-You'll love blue\nPf\n\u2022% * \\. '   Mj\nCHEER for dishes. Sparkling pure\ni f tsS-\nglassware and diahes without wip\ning .., . no scum, no film of any\n;*axpg|\nkind)  And new CHEER Is really\nfflBt&r?\n^-__j\u00bb~-*\ngentle on your hands.\n;   -'    ^2:..,yy,2,2... 2.   , \u25a0       .. '      |\n IB\nFor Austrian Oil\n[VIENNA; Nov.' 13 (ReUters)-\ntustrla has. decided to bill Russia\nfr oil the Russian occupation au-\nhorltles are pumping out Of Aus-\n|ian oil' fields..The Russians claim\nr.ls Nazi property which they\nlould get for nothing.\n\u25a0Parliament has passed a resolu-\npn authorizing Finance Minister\nelnhard Kemltz to ask Russian\nIthorltlea to, pay for all oil taken\npm the Zisterdorf oilfield since\n) war, and to pay for future sup-\n' i at market prices.\novlet authorities have exploited\ni field since the war.Wlthtiut pay-\nfcnt to Austria,\\\n0.\n\u25a0'\u25a0 '.t^sasmtnastittaim.\n; Vrtien you \"So Greyhound\".\nI money-saving farei together\nIwilh frequent, convenient\nIschedulei and liberal stopovers,\nIntake It a really outstanding buy!\n1   From Nelson\nOne   Round\nTO\nWay    Trip\nPenticton\n8.30 14.95\nVancouver\n12.50 22.50\nCalgary\n12.80 23.05\nEdmonton\n18.15 32.70\nWinnipeg\n29.10 52.40\nToronto\n49.85 89.75\n.ES&t. Winnipeg\nLeave   NELSON\n0:20 a.m.   1:50 p.m.\noJiiy to Vancouver\nLeave   NELSON\nJ1:40 a.m. 4:30 p.m. 11:15 p.m,\nfe Calgary\nLeave   NELSON\n6:20 a.m.  1:50 p.m. 6:50 p.m.\nfor complete information con.\nI\u00abt your local Greyhound Agent,\n>REYHOUND\nNctibs of theD&y\nRATES: 80o line. 40o Una blaek taee typel larger type rates an\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nEAGLES SOCIAL  MEMBERSHIP\nCLUB  MEET8 TONIGHT.\nDANCE SATURDAY NIGHT\nEAGLE HALL - MItODY PALS\nKeep Sat, Nov. 22, In mind for\nthe Trinity Service Club bazaar.\n\u2022    .KINETTE BAKE SALE\nSaturday morning at Mc tt Mc's.\n12.\neach, coats, sizes 6-6x, 8\nTOT-N-TEEN 8HOP.\nC.C.M. skates and hockey equipment, at Edey's, formerly Bern\nBrown's.\nMystlk self-stlk cloth tape - all\nshades, W\" 30c; 1V\u00ab\" 60c.\nBURN8 LUMBER CO.\nSocial Bingo tonight at Sacred\nHeart HaU. HaU Mines Road, at\n8100 p.m.\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L.\nKEEP NOV; 15 OPEN  FOR THE\nL.A. TO CANADIAN LEGION\nTEA  AND  BAZAArl,  2:30.6:30.\nWe doctor shoes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save their solesl\nTONY'S REPAIR SHOP.\nSOROPTIMIST CLUB RUMMAGE\n8ALE SATURDAY AT THE\nCITY MARKET.\nNew shipment wool skirts. Attractive plaids. $3.05.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP.\nLadles' AuxUlary to Canadian Legion Bazaar -and Tea tomorrow,\n2:30 to 8:30 p.m.\n\"FamUy Polio RoUcy, $10.00 twb\nyears.\" Phone C. W. APPLEYARD\nA CO. LTD- 269.\nFULLER BRU8HE8 make very\nattractive Christmas gifts. Be sure\nto order before December 1st to\nassure delivery. Phone 1786.\nCurtains for your home. \u2014 We\ncarry a full range of Uving room\nand bedroom curtains.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nKirsch drapery needs \u2014 Curtain\nrods, draw rods, pjeaters, tie-backs,\nsash rods and pins.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nFor Sale\u201425 N.H. puUets, ready\nto lay. Phone 471-L-4.\nDONT MISS THI.   .\nSADIE HAWKINS DANCE\nAT PROCTER NOV. 14.\nTOYS     TOYS     TOYS\nEverything In toys for a Joyous\nChristmas,  Pull toys,  mechanical\ntoys, games, tea-seta, tool sets, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nKA8LO-NEL80N COACH LINES\nChange of Schedule, effective November 10, 1053:\nLeaving Nelson for Kaslo\u20147:90 e.m.\nLeaving Kaslo for Nelson\u20142:45 p.m.\n' Phone 045-X tor Information.\nGIFT SUGGESTIONS\nWhat better gift than a new West-\nlnghouse electric range, washer,\nradio, refrigerator or electric oven.\nA gift that brings remembrance for\nyeara to come. \u2014 HfPPEHSONJS,\n70 Coast Bakeri\nGet Pay Increase\nVICTORIA, Nov. IS (CP) - A $6\nwetkly pay increase, retroactive to\nNov. 1, has been won by about 70\nworkers in three Victoria bakeries,\nThe new scale places experienced\nmale he.p at a basic salary of $63 a\nweek. Experienced female help will\nreceive a. basic salary of $55 a week.\nThar workers'are employed by\nWeston Bakeries Ltd, McGavin\nBakeries Ltd. and Canadian Bakeries Ltd.\nB.C. Power Plans\nline Extension\nVICTORIA,.Nov. IS. (CP)\u2014\u2022 A\nnew 63,000-volt transmission', line\nin the North Okanagan wUl' be\nenergized during December to bring\nImproved electrical service- to customers In the Enderby, Salmon Arm\nand Canoe districts, B.C. Power\nCommission announced today.\nThe Une is another section, in what\neventually will be a transmission\n\u201e.\u201e.mm... \u201e->,.,. loop linking the North Okanagan\nWINDOW GLASS mi Kamloops areas.\n\u201e\"' i\u00bbvf \u25a0.ewnwete- range of    u \u201e\u201e, eJrtension of a llpe built\n^IIISW m *om Vernon to Arm-\nvldual requirements.\nT. H. WATERS A CO. LTD;\n101 Hall 8t     Nelion     Phone 156\n. We have one Klaber cabinet grand\npiano for sale. Reasonably priced.\nWe buy and seU new and used\nfurniture; ir  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 r. ';\u25a0\u25a0'   r\t\nSpecial price quotations-given on\naU mining, logging and construction\ncamp beddlhg requirements. !\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\n413 HALL ST.        PHONE 1660\nAppeal Started to\nFree McCulloughs\nWINNIPEG, Nov. IS (CP)-An\napplication for the release of Gavin\nMcCullough,. former Winnipeg office manager, held in custody toV\nlowing his acquittal on a murder\ncharge,hasbeenmade toManltoba's\nLieutenant-Governor.\n: An assize court Jury last May acquitted M<?CuUough of murder to\nthe prayer-session slaying of his\nseven-year-old foster child, Martha,\non the grounds he was insane at\nthe time. He was ordered held In\ncustody to await the pelasure ot the\nLieutenant-Governor.'\nWIFE ACQUITTED  0\nHis wife, LiUian, also was charged\nwith murder. The proeeedtoga were\nstayed when she was pronounced\nInsane. Last month, she was declared sane and was tried for murder. She was. acquitted because of\ninsanity and also was ordered held\nat the.plifiuure ofthe Lieutenant-\nGovernor. '2222\n. NAPLES, tlftly, Nov. IS (AP) -\nThree thousand troops stormed\nashore on Turkish beaches, today\nIn the final chapter of \"Operation\nLongstep\"\u2014biggest N.A.T.O.' manoeuvre yet held in the Mediterranean. The 10-day exercise joined\nforces of the U. S\u201e Britain, France,\nItaly, Turkey and Greece, A total\nof 100,000 men, 500 aircraft and 170\nships participated.    -\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to express our sincere\nappreciation for I the;- sympathy\nshown to us In the loss of our beloved daughter and sister, Lillian\nCarlsen. Also we wish to thank our\nneighbors snd friends for their\nservices rendered to us willingly\nand also for friends thit sang Russian hymn songs rand to those that\nsent beautiful floral offerings and\nto the pallbearers for their 'kind\nservice.\nMr. snd Mrs. W. E. Moroso\nand famUy.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nHOkANS\u2014Funeral services for\nthe late Marie Hokans wUl be held\ntrom the Thompson Funeral Home\nSaturday at 1:30 p.m. Rev. Devld\nA. Butterfield of the Evangelical\nMission Covenant.Church wUl officiate and interment will be in\nNelson Memorial Park. ?\nWitness Admits\nHearing Shot\nling\nY:(to.fNlihl\nIt's richer, robust, full-bodied..,\nblended to satisfy the taste\nof British Columbians. Try iti\nYou'll like Captain Morgan\nBlack Label Rum.\nfolly Agsdtn Smell Ool Coils\n3p%\nRUM\nr*lJM\nBlended to Perfection\nfrom Carefully Selected\nRare Old Rums\n|S ADVERTISEMENT IS NOT PUBLISHED OR DISMAYED BY THE LIQUOR CONTROl\nBOARD OR BY THE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nDIOMt, France, Nov.18 (AP)-\nGustave Domlnici, a 81-year-old\nfarmer, told a court today he heard\nthe shots last Summer that klUed\nBritish diet expert Sir Jack Drummond -and his wife and child but\ndid nothing about lt\nHe also told the court that at 5\na.m., when he went out to Inspect\nhis farm here In Southern France,\nhe found 11-year-old-. Elizabeth\nDrummond moaning, arid\" saw .her.\nleft arm move. !T'\n' Domlnici is charged with falling\nto go tq the aid of a person In danger. If convicted, he could get up to\nthree years in prison and a fine of\nas much as 500,000 francs ($1400).\nThe court postponed judgment\nfor a'week.\nThe Drummbnds were murdered\nas they camped by the roadside\nhere in the Southern Alps last August . .\"*   \"\"'\nNo Nicknames for\nDuke of Cornwall\nBy JOHN JUDMAN\nLONDON, Nov,-IS Ote_ter\u00bb)\u2014The\nDuke of Cornwall, sturdy, blue-eyed\nheir to the British throne better\nknown tor the -world'.-as Prince\nCharles, celebrates his fourth birth-\nday tomorrow \u2014 still', without s\nnickname, \u2022 '-'\n. Many restrictions on the royal-up-\nbringing havo been waived for the\ncelebration, but not the ban on\nnicknames Imposed In his nursery\ndays. The Queen, herself known as\n\"LUibet\" to her famUy before she\nacceded to the throne,, calls, her son\n\"Charles\" and expects aU others to\ndo the same.\nThe court circular, official diary\nof royalty, refers to the youngster\nsolemnly as the Duke of Cornwall,\nbis accepted title until the Queen\ndecides he is old enough, to be proclaimed Prince of Wales>;\nIn one department, Charles will\nbe as free tomorrow as any birthday child In the world, The Queen\nhas agreed to lift his rigid diet\nwhich forbids meat, rich pastries\nand more than two candies a day.\n. Outside ot meat extracts in soup\nand sauces, the Prince has never\neaten-meat. The Queen wants him\nto stay away from meat until he is\nolder. '\u00bb \u25a0\nBefore receiving his birthday presents after rising at about 8 sin; tomorrow, Charles, will \"receive''\nclose members of the family.\nAt first sight.of his mother,khe\nwill bow deeply as he has been\ntaught to. do. He must kiss his two-\nyear-old sister Anne only on the\nhand\u2014kisses on , her cheek: .have\nbeen ruled out for-some. time.\nThe public is expected to get Its\nusual dally glimpse of Charles when\nhis nurse and the inevitable bodyguards escort him from Buckingham\nPalace to St. James Park' for\nmorning walk.\nPlumbers Qui!\nOver Wage War\nEDMONTON, Nov. 18 (CP)-Bo-\ntween 400 and 500. plumbers have\nquit work in a wage dispute affecting millions of dollars worth of\ndefence\" and other construction In\nEdmonton 'and Central Alberta,\nProjects affected Include the new\nJasper Park lodge, being built to\nreplace the building burned down\nlast Summer, airport work at Pen- READ THE CLA881FIED DAILY\nhold, Namao and Cold take, m$\n$9,000,000 Macdonald Hotel extension In Edmonton, and Canadian\nIndustries Limited $15,000,000 chemical plant just East of the- dty.\n' The plumbers are asking $2,18 an\nhour. Contractors have offered $2.05\non hour recommended by a government board; , .- ' \u25a0'\/,\u25a0\u25a0\nUnion officials said strike votes\nwere taken early in .October by officials of ^ the Board Of Industrial\nRelations.' One large contractor said:\n\"This will be very serious if It .lasts\nand wiU tie ui a lot of construction.\"\n17\u00abS3\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14,1933 \u2014 7\nWordy Warfare\nBERLIN. Nov. IS (AP) -Post\noffice slogan writers joined the\nEdsf-West duel In BerUn today.\nLetters from the'Communist East\nbore this stamp on the envelopes:\n\"Learn.'from the Soviet people\nand the great Stalin how to build\nsocialism.\"\n. .The' West BerUn post office put\nits own stamp directly underneath:\nI \"And what has resulted from It.\"\nVirginia Bruce Weds\nFormer Husband\nISTANBUL, Turkey, Nov 18 (AP)\n\u2014American actress Virginia Bruce\ntoday remarried wealthy AU Ipar\nIn a simple ctvU ceremony at their\nIstanbul home.- They were divorced\nso All could serve as an officer during a year's compulsory army service. Turkish law denies, an army\ncommission to Turks who are married to foreigners.\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nstrong; and replaces the 83,000-volt\nUna now Serving- tbe area North of\nArmstrong. New substations to\nhandle the higher voltage have been\nconstructed at Enderby, Salmon\nArmand Canoe.\nCompletion of the loop is scheduled for next year, with construction of Chase-Salmon. Arm section\nand a second Une from Monte\nCreek to Kamloops.\n3 IN B.C. AWAIT\nRACE RESULTS\n, VANCOUVER, Nov. IS (CP)-At\nleast three British.Columbia residents wUl be waiting anxiously for\nthe results ot the November Handicap tun at Manchester, England,\nSaturday. Each has a ticket which\ncould return them as much as\n|I8.000-    -\nThe holders of Army, Navy and\nAir Force veterans sweepstake\ntickets which Hsve drawn starters\nare Mrs. C. Harves ot Vancouver;\nMiss T. L. McElvey of Kelowna; and\nAlfred Splneto of Ladysmith.\nMrs. Harves has a ticket on Solar,\nMiss McElvey on Tlntlnnabulum,\nand Mr. Splneto on General Le\nClerc.\nSecond prize In the sweep will be\nabout $28,000 and third prize nearly\n$19,000.\nEach ticket holder Is assured of a\nsubstantial consolation prize, even\nif the horse on which their ticket Is\ndrawn does not finish in the first\nthree.\nLamps were first, widely used In\nGreek homes about 400B.C.r> te\u00ab*\n.04\nCknferiti\/ygim\nyou st\/ci mete*...\nm\n,\",.\u00bb'\u25a0 .,V. ,'.*\u25a0:. ' -.. r-.jj)    rj^ ,        -. .'..-I.',,,.','.-'.- -.V\u201e r'rf'lit tf.^A-VlUt Ptlt fliPtatM \u25a0\nm mmm ]    I     _H9'\nW m Gf'%'\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nr' seems that owning a Brick is some*\nthing that a Jot of folks dream about\n,\u2014flap foj\u2014and finally36.\nWe say that because, so many times, they\nsay so in words like those above.\nThose words make us happy, bf course-\nhappy to know we sell a car which means\nso much to those who own it.\nBut they make us feel a bit sad as well-\nsad to realize all the years,of fun such\nfolks have been missing for no good\nreason at all.\nFor the fact is this: If you can afford any\nnew car, you can afford a Buick.\nYou can afford the thrill of bossingarpund\nthat big Fireball 8 Engine that purrs forth\na mighty'flow of power. 2>\nYou can afford the gas bills\u2014as any owner\nof a 1952 Brick will tell you\u2014because\nthat high-compression^ Yalve-ln-hea J\nmarvel gets a lot of miles from a gallon\nof fuel.\nYou c^n afford the extra luxury of a real.\nmillion dollar ride\u2014the silken smooth*\nness qf Dynaflow Drive*\u2014the extra room\nand comfort and style that have made the\nname Brick synonymous, with motoring\nat its very finest;\nSo if you want to own a Brick\u2014there's\njust one thing to do: Come in\u2014pick the\none of your choice\u2014and let us show you\nhow close thefigure that goes on the bill of\nsale comes to what you'd pay elsewhere;\nAs we're said before, your first car can be\na Bricfc Why1 not take the Big Step now?\nAOINItAlMOTOUVAlUI\nBtntmml, mestmH MmmtmMnnimtitHi itmtm wttm*\nnstkt,'DyuflimDrli4\u00a3!tdWMCrtshil4ixUrJuItM4nssltr,\ntptlxuttt txlr. nslmsttirSlriis. Powtr Stttrbls *>a drttUHs\n\u25a0m'-SMt'mmilmimintmr stttrntlatatnca+y\nB-I052S\nWhen better automobiles are bull\nBUICK\nwill build them\nWIGINTON MOTORS LTD.\n206 Baker St.\nPhone 122\n 2\/ '22\nm\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS,\nFRIDAY, NOV. 14, 1952\nTRBM TOR U*\nWASHINGTON. Nov. 13 (AP) -\nCanadian. Christmas treea may be\nbrought Into the United States on\ntrucks end other vehicles providing\nthe vehicles carrying the trees are\nnot contaminated by animal matter,\nhay or straw, the United States Department of Agriculture announced\ntoday.\nOrgans have been\nthe fifth ce\/ttury.\nIn use since\nCiMcomiL\nAwaits Your\nVisit-To Trail   \u2022\nAt The\ns\nT\nO\n1\nHOTEL\nPhone 1865\nVi Mile From City Centre\nTurn Left At Tunnel\n156HAIGST.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nCalgary Power Dickering With Cominco\nTR A IL - Calgary Power\nLimited is reported here to be\nnegotiating with Consolidated\nMining and Smelting1 Company of Canada, Limited, to\nobtain {tower frorp' the West\nKootenay for relief of a short-\nage in Alberta.\n\/The Alberta firm proposes to\nbuild a 190,000 volt .transmission\nUna from Kimberley to its Elk\nRiver line. It also la reported thst\nthere Is a possibility this connection-between Calgary Power and\nthe West Kootenay source may be\nextended In the future to set up a\ngrid system. This system would\nencompass Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company facilities, Grand\nCoulee, the H.C. Power Company.\nB.C. Power Commission facilities,\nas well as the present grid system\nin Alberta.\nSuch an International system\nwould permit surplus powsr to flow\nfrom one,district to another and\nassure all consumers a maximum\nsupply.\nConsolidated Mining expects to\nhave a surplus of power whan the\nWaneta project, Southeast ot Trail,\nis completed In 1094.\nIt also Is reported that plants ot\nthe Celgar pulp and paper project\nat Castlegar may become new consumers of Consolidated Mining and\nSmelUng Company power.\nFORMER TRAIL\nWOMAN PASSES\nTBAHr-A former Trail woman,\nMrt.. Miry L. Weber, hss died at\ntha home of her daughter In Golden\nafter a lengthy illness.\nBorn In Lye, England, August S3,\n1874, the late Mrs. Weber came to\nCanada In 1900. She resided at Michel and Fertile, and during* tha\ndisastrous Fernie fire In 1908, she\nassisted In evacuating patients trom\nthe Fernie hospital.\nShe is survived by ona son, Harvey Weber of Trail, and two daughters, Mrs.' Ralph Bartlett of Penticton and Mra. W. It Lenny ot Gol-\nmtaL.-'A- 2      \u25a0 \/:'\"-\/\u25a0\nThe funeral wu held at Golden.\nKimiberley R&epdyers\nSJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIV\nI   WE CAN FILL       '\nALL\ns\nI\n3\nS\nS\nI\nA Complete Stock ef\nALL WIRING MATERIALS\nELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS AND SUPPLIES\n- ,.w..rtr\"**-   --'-\u00ab'\"- ':\"\nTHE BEST IN EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL\nCIO. LTD- I\n1457 Boy Ave.      \u201e     Phone 133 Trail, B.C.   f\nnillllllllllllllllilillillliillilllliilllilliilliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillliiliifii\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Four: bylaws are\nexpected to come up for ratepayer\nballot in conjunction with the' on-\nnual municipal elections here per\ncatpber-It.   ., \"-.'..,'..' 2:\nWith necessary preliminaries and\nprovincial government departmental\napproval, ratepayers.wlU be asked\nto endorse expenditure c approxl.\nmately 139,000 out of-revenue, over\na three-year period,. for construe',\ntioi. of a new'electrical sub-station.\nKImberley's power,' which sup\nplies the city, and the villages ot\nMarysville and Chapman Camp, Is\nbought from East Kootenay-Bower\nand Light Company, and . is distributed through one, city-owned\nsubstation on Catholic Church -bill.\nContinuous Increase In. consumption\nIs overloading the single -substation, With resulting occasional\ninterruption ot service.\nTwo debenture bylaws'are-also\nplanned. The first, tor $40,000, is\nthe 1993 pert ot the long-term sewer\nprogram which has Installed a\nmain system of about 10 miles since\nincorporation at a. cost, of more\nthan a quarter of a million dollars.\nThe second debenture bylaw deals\nwith the Important school construction program. A school district by-,\nlaw tor a $160,000 expenditure to\nprovide seven badly-needed - new\nclassrooms has received tentative\nprovincial approval, 'City's share of\nthis require debentures of 343,000,\nwhich ratepayers,will ba asked, to\napprove.\" '\nTha fourth bylaw wUl deal With\nthe perennial problem ot dogs\nwandering at large.in the city, and\nwlU ask ratepayer opinion' on' a\nregulation that all doga must be\nleashed when In pubUo,\nTrail Rotarlans\nPlan New Park\nTRAIL\u2014frail Rotary Club Is considering developing a new city park\nand recreation ground on a bench\nabove the new hospital site.\nLloyd Brooks, parka division official of the B.C. Forest Service,\ntold the Rotarlans that they should\nbe commended for the park plan,\nbut that a suitable park in that\narea would require much time and\neffort, tie recommended that Winter sports should first be considered\nand from this a year 'round recreational park be'built. ..:,\nThe Rotary Club has several\nthousand dollars In a special fund\nderived from the sale of land to\ntha Dominion.government for the\narmory site. The club has been\nstudying various ways in which to\nput the money to use.\nThe area being considered for a\nTrail park is about 200\" to 250 acres,\nand is just outside the city boundary.\nCRANBROOK-The sum of 313,-\n500 has been realized by the Cranbrook Golf Club from sale of the\nHS-acre former course on the prairie just North of the- city, which It\nrecently acquired for delinquent\ntaxes;*. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u2022\u2022'\u2022-        ..\u2022..-'\u25a0.\nOriginal\" owner* was the Cran-!\nbrook Golf add Country Club, organized more than .30 years ago,\nwhose, members financed the- old\ncourse through purchase ot shares:\nFew of the shareholders remain\nhere, and those who were-located\nconsented to the abandonee! course\nand clubhouse being listed for tax\nsale. '\u25a0*     \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0\/\u25a0\nPurchasers are the City Dairy, operated by Cecil Morrison, and Sam\nBarrett, and Otto Thorn, builder and\noperator of a tourist, bungalow\ncamp at.the nearby, junction of\nHighway No.: j .and the. Rimberley\nroad. The former will farm their\nshare to increase.feed production\nfor their expanding herd, and wUl\nuse the creek running through It for\nirrigation.  .\nThe new golf club, Incorporated\nunder tfie Societies Act, plans to\nuse the proceeds from the sale of\nconstruction of a clubhouse on its\nnew scenic nine-hole course a mile\nEast of tha city, which hes completed its first season of play.\nIn a remarkable community effort, the new course was literally\nhewn but bf bushland on a nearby\nbench, cleared With borrowed\nequipment, water system Installed\nand fairways planted over a four-\nyear- period. Financing has been\nthrough sale of shares refundable\nIn memberships, and the course'\nwhen it went into play this season\nwas evaluated at tens of thousands\nof dollars.\nWith provision of nine-hole links,\na combination groundskeeper and\ninstructor Was engaged for the season, and competitions were player*\nregularly to early October.5'The\nclub hopes to get construction of\nits next need, a clubhouse, started\nin the Spring.\nCanada's first large abattoir for\nbeef slaughter and packing was es\ntabllshed at Toronto in 1898.-\nSilver City Sidelights\nCENTRAL figure in Columbia\nbyeleotlen campaigning Is\" Attor-\nney-Qeneral Robert Bonner for\nwhenv'-the seat was vacated, Hla\nopponents In the Intense electioneering are C.C.F.'s Ch'rls Madson\nand Liberal George Keenleyslde,\nCANADIAN VISITORS\nARI ALWAYS WELCOAMtAT \/\nSPOKANE'S   MNE8T   DOWNTOWN   MOTEli\nCQRJIJB W. 1929 6TH AND CANNON - PH. RIVERSjDE 32T1\n22 DeLUXE UNITS.\nand CAFE KITCHENETTE\nREASONABLE RATES\nFOR O^i OR A FAMILY\n. - -.-_\u25a0\u00bb >ii \u201ei :    \"i   \u25a0 \u25a0 -        ^\nYour ComEort Is Assured\nBlood Donor Goal\nTRAIL\u2014Tenth Red Cross. blood\ndonor clinic will open in the Canadian Legion building here Tuesday\nafternoon.   -\nAn objective of 800 pints haa been\nset for the two-day session, 16 pints\nmore than the amount collected at\nthe November, 1951, clinic.\nSome 2000 people in' the TraU dls.\ntrict, who have given blood, in the\npast, have been sent appointment\ncards In the mail. Cards returned\nby donors who note their preferred\ndonation times will be used by the\nRed Cross committee to. make up\nthe clinic schedule.\nClinic times will be 1:30 to 4:15\np.m. and 6:30 toiOrOO p.m. Tuesday,\nand the same tor Wednesday with\nthe addition ot a morning session\nfrom 9:30 unUl 11:13 a.m.,    .\nEDGEWOOD \u2014 The house of\nWiUiam Shipmaker, jr., was completely destroyed by fire early\nThursday afternoon. The causa of\nthe fire is not known,\nMr. Shipmaker, an Inonoaklin\nValley dairy farmer, was with his\nwife and daughter lane out ot sight\nof the house and the fire was first\nnoUced at 1:30 p.m. by neighbors,\nMr. and Mrs. L. J. DeGans.\nThe DeGans at once used the community's alarm signal, five long\nrings on the telephone, and neighbors from the countryside quickly\nassembled at the Shlpmakers' home.\nMost of the contents of the house\nwere saved,; bUt the building itself\nburned to the ground.\nThe B.C. Forest Service'arrived\nwith pumps In time to save one\nwall through which the power Une\nentered the house, and thus avoided\na.live.wire hazard.\nThe, fIra? burned for about an\nhqur and- a halt. A high wind was\nblowing when the fire broke put,\nand the bleze was out of control by\nthe time the Shlpmakers and their\ndaughter were aware of the disaster and arrived on the scene,\nBy Dally News Correspondent\n' Since hanging up his skates, old-\ntime Smoke later Jimmy* Morris\nhas been, suffering from the bite\nof. a bug which Is gradually Inoculating his entire system and fanning\nhis. interest to fever heat\u2014the curling'bug r...'\n\"A hundred and twelve new\nmembers this year,\" he said the\nother- day. \"Think of it, 88 rinks;\nThat's 14 more than 1991, This Is an\nall-time record; leads to seconds,\nseconds to thirds,, 38 .new skips\ncreated. I tell you, Interest Is really-\ngrowing. This story should be put\non Canadian Press,\"\n\"Can you furnish us with a few\nhistorical facta about the club? Who\nwas the first president?'!\n\"Get. hold of Dad Hartley.' He's\non the publicity committee. So it\nwent:\n\"Mr. Hartley, een you furnish me\nwith some historical. information\nconcerning the curling club \"\n' 'lYou-say you want it for the Trail\npage on Friday?. WoU, it might take\nme two or three days. Call Harold\nJordan. He's the past-president and\nhas everything at his fingertips.\"\n\"I was president last year, Alec\nRoss Is your man. Ha Is the president. Or you, might call Luce Fpr-\ntin, Been with the club 19, 20 yean.\nYes, ha can Una. you up.\"\n\"Mr. Fortin, we want a bit of\nhistorical information; first president, and so on . . .\"\n\"You must come down soma evening and talk to some of the old-\ntimo curlers, Bob SomervlUe, James\nBuchanan, George Shaw, or any ot\nthe others will be glad to give you\naU the Information you want Oh,\nyou wont the Information right\naway? Have you talked to the president? Bob Dockerill is the first\nvice-president\"       .\n\"Yes, this is Bob Dockerill speaking. Certainly I can tell you where\nyou can find something about former presidents ofthe curling club.\nThey ara all listed; right from the\nvery first one, on the waU of our\nclub room.\"\nAnd there they are: Charles A.\nMilllgan was the first president,\n'way back in 1908, and J. Buchanan\nthe first secretary-treasurer. R., W.\nSomerville, charter member, was\nthere at the list's beginning.\nInformation has just been received from Dad Hartley that it is being\nplanned to operate a curling clinic\nto. create interest and instruct new\nmembera. These wiU be held on\nSaturday afternoons from 3 to (.\nCoaching will be done by such well-\nknown curlers as \"Frenchy\" D'Amour, Reg. Stone, Roy'Stone, \"Chess\"\nChesser and Johnny Cameron.\nChildren in Slocan\nRemembrance Parade\nSLOCAN CITY \u2014 Legion branch\nmembers, members of its Auxiliary,\nand many citizens Including school\nchildren, paraded to tho cenotaph\nRemembrance Day to honor the\nfallen of the past two World Wars.\nServices conducted by Paul A.\nBarber foUowed In the I.O.O.F.\nHaU.\nSHOWING\nAT THI\nSXRANJ\nA Famous Players Theatre\nTRAIL* B.C.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nTrail Area lo See New Science Film\nTRAIL \u2014 Latest In the famous\nseries of \"Sermons From Science\"\nfilms produced by the Moody Institute of Science, will be shown In\nTrail-Rossland district starting Sunday.- -\" ' - '\u25a0' \u2022\u25a0-.' \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0  ,\nThe 'new film, \"Hidden Tteas-\nures,\" delves into miniature beauties\nof the world, the camera teaming\nup with the giant Palomar telescope end the microscope to film\nIn natural color the tiny snowflake,\ndelicate diminutive flowers In the\ndesert Invisible to the naked eye,\ntreasures In the sea and in the air.\n. The film showings here are sponsored by tbe Christian Business\nMen's Committee of Trail and Rossland. The film elso will be shown\nin TraU Monday night and In Rossland Thursday.\nIt will be tbe fifth ot the series\nto be shown In this district\nTrail Employment\n'chcrishd for its beauty\nVerl-Miln 1ARK\"\n10 kt. gold-filled top.\nstolnlMs Gulldlto back,\n$33.75\nVerMhln,\n\"CHAND-i*\"    _      ,\n10 kt ooH-RUed toft, ?_-\/\u2022\ndaWM ftjildlt. bodt,     \"\n$37.50\nVert-thin\n\"DAINTY ROC\"\n\u2022xpaakn bracelet 10 H.\n0ol_.(lllodlop,!tolnlBj\nGuDdlle batk,\n$52.50\nLAUENER BROS.\nCREDIT JEWELLERS\nCedar Avenue \u2014 Opp. Strand Theatre\t\nPHONE 194 TRAIL, B.C.\nInstall\nJOHNS-MANVILLE\nROCK WOOL\nBAITS\nSm Up To 30% On Hauling Costs\nRemember, wasted heat costs\nmoney! Why not enjoy the com-\nforr and fuel savings of insulation? ft soon pays for itselfl J-M\nRock Wool Is fireproof, rot-\nproof, permanent es stone. We\nhav* bis, thick J-M Super-Felt\nBan in stock. Call us today.\nD.B. MERRY\nLUMBER CO. LTD.\nTriil, B.C.\nTAYLOR BROS. LTD.\nSalmo Agents     '\nTRAILr-The unemploymen| picture in TraU and district il fair,\naccording, to J. T. Wilkinson, employment' officer, who has had a\nbusy, time in recent months..\nAt -present there are.-a-little more\nthan 300-men and,*oijnen registered\nfor employment a' situation which\ncompares; favorably with the 6ame\nseason In previous years- Broken\ndown,' the total Includes approximately 220 men and-5 women.\nThe TraU office recently ' haa\nhandled more cases than usual\nBetween 600 and 800 men have\nbeen placed in Jobs in the last few\nmonths owing to the Influx following news.publicity about Celgar and\nthe. Waneta dam. :*r-\nA situation where the amount of\n\"unemployed workers wUl rise is not\nexpected here until the beginning\not the year. .Ordinarily when the\nsnow gets too deep for lodging\ncamps to continue operations, the\nnumber ot unemployed persons In\nthis district doubles:      \u2022\nAMAZING PACTS about these\ntiny desert flowers\u2014some of them\nhavlno blossoms less than a fifth\nef an Inch In diameter \u2014 and\nother mloroieoplc .wonders of\nnature ara revealed In the film\n\"Hidden' Treasures,\" to be shewn\nIn the Trall-Reasla'nd'area.\nHAZLEWOOD\nDRUG\n\u2022\u2014\t\nIN TRAIL\nFor\nPrescriptions\nMedicines\nToiletries\nBooks\nStationery\n\" __ __#'\nLICENSED GRADUATE\nON DUTY AT ALL TIMES\nf'-'-'2   see\nEat a. tha\nSTAR CAFE\nA choice of\nGood Foods\nFISH AND CHIPS\nCHINESE DISHES\nA SPECIALTY\n967 Spokone St., Troll, B. C.\nMort.-Tues.-Wed. r\nNovember 17 -18.19\n'\u2666We're No\nMarried\"\nOINGER   ROGERS\nDAYIP WAYNE\n\"THE RAINS\nCAME\"\nMYRNA LOY\nTYRONB POWIR\n, Thurs. - Fri.. Sot.\nNovember 20-ai-Jl\n\"Deadline U.S.A.\"\nHUMPHRIYBOCIART   1\nETHEL BARRYMORI .   .\n\"Alaska Patrol'*\nRICHARD TRAVIS\nHELEN WESOOTT\nMA T I N 11\n\u25a0very Saturday\nShows Continuous From 1 P.I\nTRAIL, B.C.\nWESTON FUR Co.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nESTABLISHED SINCE 1010\nManufacturing Furriers\nPHONE 2126 1661 BAY AVB.\ni   Stores In Vancouver and TraU\nTRAIL\nIffi\nmtmwpiiS\nJohns-Manville\nBUILDING   M\/UFRIALi\nBoy's Dare Sends\nTot Through Fire\nNEW YC-SK, NOV;- IS (AP) \u2014 A\nplaymate's.dare .sent .three-year-old\nJoseph Sena'walking through a bonfire and emerging Ss a human torch.\n\u25a0tWyoungit-r.wM playing ^tar-\nday with, chums near\/hit home In\nBrooklyn when'he toddled.Into and\nthrough the blaze.    \u25a0-,...\nA bus driver saw what bad happened and dashed over1 to tji\u00ab body.\nHe beat out.the.flames with his\nhands,\" then wrapped Joseph In\nblanket? and drove hlrt te a hospital. .:\u25a0\".'.\".\u25a0     \"i\nToday. Joseph'was described In\nfair condition.     \u25a0  .     .'\nWhen Joseph's mother asked him\nwhy he walked Into the tire, the\nchild said a boy dared him to ahd\n\"I did and I fell down in It,\" -'.\n'   Some'fossil' kangaroos' are Be-\n'lieroH ti hive weighed as much as,\nsmall hor.es.\nKLINE S\nYOU'LL ALWAYS DO BETTER AT klfNE'S''\"''\nTRAIL, B.C.\nMAKE KLINE'S YOUR\nCHRISTMAS GIFT HEADQUARTERS\nThe Largest Selection In Town\nSporting Goods   Luggage   Glassware\nToys    Novelties    China    Figurines\nSilverware    Lamps    Appliances\n, Furniture    Occasional Pictures\n-^\/. FREE'Glfr WMP;':''.\/\/\/\nUSE OUR LAYAWAY\n10% Discount on Cash Purchases\nKLINE'S\nTrail's Super Service Station\nMOTOR INN\nLIMITED\n1608 BAY AVE., TRAIL, B.C.\nRepairs To All Makes ef Cars.\n\\See Ui For Better Used Cars.\nCOMING \u2014 The Entirely New 1953 DODGE\nThat Can Be Seen and Driven Shortly at Our Premises\nPhone 899\nTrail, t.C\nClosed up\nfor Dress up. ^\nThe closed pump covers itself\nwith glory this Autumn.\nIn suede, \"soft as\na charcoal drawing .. .\nClever nylon    .\nlace inserts ... Glamorous rhines'tone designs or a\nperennial favorite ... the plain opera pump.\n8IZE8 4 TO 10. - WIDTHS 4A \u2022 3A -2A \u2022 B.     '\nWALIRITE Shoes Ltd.\n1368 CEDAR AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTire Service\nWE CAN HANDLE TIRE SIZES FROM\n525-16 TO 1400-24\nNUTSHELL-600-16\nKNOBBY or CHAIN BAR\nRKAP\n$12.00\nCOMPARATIVE PRICES FOR OTHER SIZES\nWe Pay Express One Way on All Tires;\nShipped To Us.\nTHREE-DAY SERVICE ON ALL PASSENGER\nRECAP JOBS\nPhone 533\n1474 fay Ave.,\nTrail, B.C.\nFLEET DISCOUNT\nON TRUCKS, TAXIS, ETC.\nOK.\nRUBBER\nWELDERS\n(KOOTENAY WEST) LTD.\n801 Victoria St.   TV&U* B.C.  Phone I486]\n BRONCHIAL COUGH\nof coughing seems able ta dislodge lt?\nTempleton^ BAZ-MAH capqules 'are\nesjKdally.'made to loosen phlegm. \u00abo It\ncorns'4 myeaiily^ai. you \u00ab\u00abrelievedlot\n\" coughing and wheeling. Get Kai-mah tor\nquick relief. 65c, M.35 at druggists. ,   8-56\n8HANTZ WIN8 AWARDt\nNEW YORK,; Nov. IS .fAI*)r \u2014\nBobby Shantz,' \\,tbe Philadelphia\nAthletics1 pint-sized pitching marvel, today won the American \/League moBt-valuable-player award by\na landslide vote.\nOttaar  Mergenthaler   invented\nthe typesetlng machine in July 1886\n-  ''\u25a0' \u25a0 '\u25a0 ''  'r !**   -    '-,',\nSenior\nHockey\nSat.\n8p.ni,\nJULIUS (BOOMER) RODZINYAK\n,-.-' - Nelson Maple: Leafs\nTRAIL SMOKE EATERS\nNELSON MAPLE LEAFS\nTICKETS ON SALE\nKootenay Stationers, Fri.,TO - S p.m., Sat., 10 - 5 p.m.\ns\nCivie Centre, Sat., 7 p.m.\nFREE PARKING\nON  BALL GROUNDS\nm\nOut-of-Town Ticket Orders \u2014 Phone 362\nIThafsinhyyou\nNEW \u25a0*\nSmokies Break Jinxj\nBeW Maple Leafs 4<3\nTRAIL \u2014 Trail Smoke Eaten\n.broke a five-game losing streak in\nthe Comlnco Arena Thursday night\nin a thrilling game when they, detested the Nelson Maple Leafs',' 4-3\nin overtime.-In a game that wag\nanybody's throughput, the Score was\nmaintained at an eveft mark until\nthe* last.   ';.:\u25a0.'\u25a0\u25a0'   v ..-. \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-, , \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nThe Smokies, using goalie Johnny\nSoflak tor the first time in a home\ngame, held the flrat period to a\ngoal-less* deadlock, Johnny Rypien\nIn a clean breakaway almost scored\nfor Trail, but the nimble Boomer\nRodzinyak diverted the puck behind the net', Nelson's Ernie Gare\nwas knocked into tha boards and\nwas out of action for the rest of\nthe game.- '      ;\"  \u2022\nWithin one and a halt minutes of\nthe second period, Bill Haldane\ncame stlckhandling down past the\nTrail defence, flicked a pass to Jimmy towe, who drqve it past Soflak\nto score tor Nelson. At the halfway\nmark, with Trail shorthanded.'the\nNelson boys kept the puck flying\naround the Trail net, missing it by\nInches. Shortly after, with Trail\nback to'full strength, Terry Cavanaugh put the rubber into the Nelson\ncage to even the score. \"Within\nthirty seconds of the third Haldane\nscored to give Nelson the lead. Trail\ntied it up onlyto have Nelson again\ntake the lead.' This - was once more\ntied by the Trail,team, forcing the\ngame into overtime, to give Trail\nthegamef '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.\u25a0\u25a0' y'2'.V\u25a0-<'\u25a0 '\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nSUMMARY -.\/.'. y.    -.,.'-'r\nFlrstperlod\u2014Scoring: none;- . ,\nPenalties\u2014Burshaw, Hyssop.- -rr\nSecond. period\u20141. NelBon, Lowe\n(Haldane,' Hyssop) 1:30; 2..'Trail,\nCavanaugh (Turik, Sinclair) 14:54.\nr Penalties \u2014 Pasqualptto, C o o k,\nRyplen. \u25a0       \u25a0'-...'-.,\u25a0\" \u25a0':,\u25a0\nThird period\u20143. Nelson,'Haldane\n:30; . 4. TVfiil, - Kromm (Shabaga,\nSecco) 3:55; B. Nelson, Haley, (Severyn) S:0i'i' 8.. Ttalll,: Sinidklr ..(Bur-\nshaw) .6:89. y.-..\\\nj;enalties-TTr.;KoeHe,:Turik,r Haldane, LovetfcjKfrpn-ji,*: .<)-}\u25a0\u25a0\/\nOveVtiine-fcerioi\u20147..Trail, Kromm\n(Shabaga, Secco),, 3:00. ,<\u25a0\nPenalties\u2014Sinclair,' Haley?. Rypien,', Kromm,-Haldane.     '\u25a0?'.\/\nLineups: :\u25a0.\/\/.,- :'\u2022-'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\nTRAILr\u2014Goal,'Soflak;'defence,\nHamilton, Sinclair,-; Cook, Corrado;\nforwards,' Turik,'Bursaw,: Cavanagh,\nRyplen, Secco, Hjssop,' Shabaga,\nMailey, -Kromm. \" ... .\n'NELSON\u2014 Goal, Rodzinyak; de\nfence,' Malacko, Gape, Pasqualotto,\nSeveryn; forwards, Lowe, Hyssop;\nLovett, Haldane,' Smith, McClenaghan, F. Koehle, R. Koehle, Haley.\nFlyers Down Dynamiters\nIn Free Scoring Match\n(agers Clash\nIn Opener Tonight\nSenior basketball season will start\nh\\ Nelson, tonight when > tha City\nteam .(which- Is still looking fpr a\nname) under temporary coach Stan\nPayne takes on Des' Corry's Notre\nDame Pups in a match at the Civic\nCentre\/.' \" \u2022..\"\u25a0'   .'\nA men's Senior B basketball\nleague was fortned here recently\nunder Pro Rec auspices, and tonight's game is the league- opener.\nExhibition matches against outside\nteams ara being arranged.\nLeaf s in League Top Spot\nPeerless Curlers\n'Spiel Winners\nL. G. Peerless lived up to his name\nTuesday, by leading his rink to an\n11-7. victory over D, Cathcart, thus\nwinning the Nelson Curling' Club's\nannual Red Cross Bonspiel.. Scores\nin the elimination play;\n. Monday:       *\nJ. Learning 7, C. H. Parrish 8\nJ. Hingwing 8, W. A. Trlggs 4\n. J. Morris.9, W.Kline 8 , \u25a0\nR. Mason 6, W. Tozor 8\nE. Mason 8,-H. D. Fbrmah 7'\"\u25a0\nR. Palmer 8, E. Ramsbottom 7\n-' J. Morris 8, W. Tozer 8\nC. Hi Parrish?, J. Hingwing 8\nJ. D. Forman 8, D..Cathcart 11\nL. G. Peerless 8, S. Meaklns 8\nTuesday: '.'.   . \u2022\nL. G. Peerless 10, E. Ramsbottom 7\nC. H. Parrish 9,.J. Morris 7\nD. Cathcart 7, L. G. Peerless 11.\nNo matter how yoo shovo-brash-\njless o* lather-ym're in for a grind-\n|nm)riso,firstt'mey!>ijtryiiew3-WAY\niSHAVEilt's the now \"wonder shave\"\nrthat takes op where other shaves\n\"leave off-does more than tart softea\nyonr beard\u2014it's medicated\u2014good far\nyour skin. Hero's how it works.\n\u25a0! X Prepares whiskers, fkrn.\nJ Soften toughest whiskers. Pro-\n] vfdes fabricating fllmr for smooth\nr razor glide Protects tender akin.\n\\%\\- Pii-ahsi shaves. Bfa exdnrivo\n\u2022' medicated built-in pain piwea-\ntiva to sooths tender SUn. Shave\nr'J'., ;ta\u00bb^eoi\u00ab\/\u00bb\u00abft*flrstttmei\nIr3* Helps BOM hwisiMe ram- dam-\n1; age yon get with every sham. Ifs\n>\\ OK&calm. Grooms sHrn-hdpskeop\nB \u25a0 a healthier, younger-looking.\n'rSami Try 8-Way Shave. More shaves,\nbetter shaves for len money. Try it\nbefore and after your latter eha\u00bbe\n(or instead of yonr brusbless shave).\nIf yon don't agree it's by far the best\nshave yoa ever had -t.. return it te\nNoxiema, Toronto\u2014your money wiH\nbe refunded. Get the big money-saving jar of Noxzema's 8-Way Shave\n\u201e,ten ounces for only 89*... today I\n--SAVE! SAVEI--\nI Discover thin remarkable new |\nIeli'avfll Uce this coupon aa a re- \u25a0\nwinder to get joar jar today. Also \u25a0\nI In bandy tabes. At aH drag, dept, \u25a0\napd eyndictte atorefl. . \u25a0\n| Big 10 Or. Economy Jor |\n! Z89* j\nj   3-WAY SHAVE    |\n\u25a0 - A Product ef Noxzema J\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 Breaking, loose\nwith a five-goal scoring .burst in\nthe final period Spokane Flyers\ntumbled Kimberley 8-8 before a\ncrowd of 1100 Wednesday night\nIt was the highest scoring game\nwitnessed in Kimberley this season\nand it was the Dynamiters' second\nstraight home defeat\nTempers flared throughout the\ncontest with a total of 19 penalties\nmeted out\n'Buck Buckholtz replacad Dave\nMcLay in the Dynamiters' net and\nturned in a brilliant performance\ndespite the eight goals that got by\nWm. '\nDynamiters were satisfied to play\na strong defensive style during; the\ninitial period and waited for the\nbreaks before going on to the offensive.\nTheir system got results for they\nheld a 2-0 margin after 20 minutes.\nSpokane came roaring back in\nthe middle stanza and only a fluke\ngoal by Jack Yost at thi 19:07 mark\ngave the Dynamiters a 4-3 lead. The\nFlyers ran all over the Dynamiters\nin the final canto and Buckholtz\ngained absolutely no support from\nhis teamrmatesi-V :-.-.;-\u25a0\nCoach Bentley was evidently determined to return to Spokane with\na victory and sent his squad on four\nand five-man ganging attacks.\nTino Rozzini, the* ex-Tacoma ace,\nstarted for the Flyers rapping In\nfour goals and assisting on another.\nScott, McNally, Butler and Tilson\npicked up the rest of the Spokane\ncounters.\nCal Hockley banged in two\nmarkers for the Dynamiters with\nsingles going to McNiven, Barre,\nYost and Kavanagh.\n- Buckholtz, r Johnson, Kavanagh\nand Hockley shone for Kimberley\nwith Luke, Rozzini, Butler and Tilson the pick of the Flyers.\nLINEUP ',\nKimberley\u2014goal, Buckholt?; defence, Johnson, Sutherland, Yost,\nJones^forwards, Hockley, B.. Mellor,\nKavanagh, Barre, McNiven, Bell,\nLsrter, Tatchell, R. Mellor.\nSpokane\u2014goal, Fodey; defence,\nLuk,e, Hodges', Grebinsky,. Reeves;\nforwards, Ramsden, Tilson, Scott,\nRozzlni, Miller, Butler, McPherson,\nToole, McNalley. ,\nFirst ;-perlod-rl, Kimberley, \u2022 Mo-\nNiven (Barre,, Bell) 9:81; i 2, Kimberley, Hockley (Kavanagh,\nJones) 13:24.    '       ..-\nPenalties^-Butler (8), \u25a0 Hodges,\nMiller (10 mins. misconduct).\nSecond period\u2014S, Spokane, Rozzlni (Miller, Butler) 8:38; 4, Kimberley, Barre (Bell. McNiven)\n10:48; 5, Spokane, Scott' (Ramsden,\nTilson) 11:48; 8, Spqkane, Butler\n(Rozzini)' 15:38; .7,=Kimberley, Yost\n(McNiven, Bell) 19:07. \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0>\u2022\nPeMlties-Mellor (delayed first\nperiod 19:30), Rozzini, Yost Barre,\nToole, Reeves; Larter.        r\nThird periodf-8, Spokaner McNally. (McPherson, Toole) 4:08,r9, Spokane, Ramsden. (Tilson, Scott) '9:10;\n10, Spokane, Rozzini (Miller) ll!02;'\n11, Kimberley, KaVanaghr (Johnson)\n13:22;! 12,\u00abSpokane; Rozzlni (unassisted) . 14:40; 13. ? Kimberley,-Hockley (Mellor, McNiven) 18:28; 14,\nSpokane, Rozzini- (Miller), 18:40...\nPenalties\u2014McPherson, Yost- Bell,\nMcPherson and' Yost S mins.,; R.\nMellor, Grebinsky, Kavanagh : (2\nmins. plus 10, mins. misc.)\nand Besoiri\nTwenty rihka are -entertd'-ln-the\nNelson. Curling ClubV;Shirp Cup\ndraw, with- play taking place; tonight:;\n7p.m.\u2014Al Barrett vs:W.'Marr;\nH. Farenholtz *vsB. D. Hickey;1 H,\nPalmer vs A. Kraft; J. G. McMurchy\nvs M. B.'Ryalls; E. Rkmsbbttom vs\nH.-D. Fonhan.r  i  , \u25a0.\n' 9 '.p.m.\u2014W-i Kline vs. R: rD., Wallace; J. .Mprris vs A. Farenholtz;\nC. R.' Mattice vs A. Ronmaf k; H. D.'\nForman-vs-J. HingWingjE.' C, Hunt\nvs T.;Sr Jemson. \\.'  '\nResults of Thursday's Sharp Cup\nPlay:- \"   '\nD. Meaklns 9, A. Waters 8; '     .\nR. Riesterer 12, W.'Tozer 10;\"\n' R. Carmichael 8, E. Mason.8;\nJ, Harvay 11, W. A. Trlggs 8;\nJ. Campbell 12, C. H..Ptttrieh.lO.\naMiioooTOw\nTon may haw growing children, and high hopes of giving them\na sound education, a good start in life. Perhaps your particular\ndreams are built around some other goal entirely. Whatever\nyour plana, chances are they will take money. Note is the time\nto open a special-purpose savings account at the Royd Bank.\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14,1952 \u2014 9\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto Maple Leafs roared Into\nsole possession of first place in the\nNational Hockey* League for the\nfirst time this season -by defeating\nMontreal Canadiens 3-1 Thursday\nnight- before a crowd of 14,449 in\nMontreal.\nTha Canadiens relinquished their\nhold on the lead and dropped down\ninto a second-place tie with Chicago\nBlack. Hawks who; blasted New,\nYork Hangers 6-2 before a Chicago\ncrowd of 6210.\nThe Stanley Cup champion Detroit Red Wings' showed their' last\nyear's power by blanking Boston\nBruins 3-0 at home with Ted Lindsay pacing their attack with, two\ngoals snd goalie Terry - Sawchuk\nregistering his- second shutout of\nthe season, ; -..'.'.\nStrikes V Spares\nThe Handicappers made a clean\nsweep ot the honors in the Ladies'\nVariety Club bowling Tuesday,\nGwen Macrone chalked up a 616\naggregate,.Rose Dahlstein Made the\nhigh single with a 249, and the team\nscored high with a single of 963 and\nan aggregate of 2532.\nThis left the Handicappers and\nthe Laffalots tied for second place,\nwith Amigos and Deadend Kids\nleading, the league.\nIn the Men's Commercial League',\nKeith loewen stepped up for his\nfirst showing with the Bennies\nquintet and made minor history\nwith a single of 369 and an aggregate- of 764.-Don Iceton of the\nEagles, who currently leads in five-\npin bowling with his 234 average,\nmade an aggregate of 705.\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL \u2014 ^The'following Is Friday's draw in the Traii Curling\nClub's President vs. Vice-President\ncompetition:\n' 6:30 p.m.\u2014Al B. Ross vs. R. P.\nDockerill; C. H.-Wyattvs. M. D.\nDesBrisay; R. .E.. Stone vs. E. G.\nN. Player; W. A.-. Forrest vs. R.\nBainbridge; W. Gregory, vs. F,\nStrachan; W. J. Siddall vs. R. C.\nMcGerigle.\n8:30. p.m.-rj. R. Landiiccl vs. W.\nE. Vance; R. C. Rose vs. J. J. Service; D. MacDonald vs. W. S. Ross;\nC. D. Stuart vs. Ar.Dafoe; N. S.\nBentley vs.- L. Landucci; Boy Stone\nvs. H. Jordan.       ' ,\nTRAIL\u2014Wednesday's' and' Thursday's results In the Trail Curling\nClub's rPresident vs. Vice-President\ncompetition:\nWednesday:\n' L. L. Fortin 10, G. H. Gill 10.\nT. H. Weldon 7, H. T. Beckett 13.\nA. G. Burwash 1$ W. L. Wood 8.\nE. A. Mitchell 10, A. F. Snowball\n14.'\nD. J. Mlnto 14, E. Montpeiller 5.\nA. B. Anderson 4, J. J. Cameron 9\nA. M. Chesser 3, A. G. Cheyne 8\nA. Crichton 12, T. Cumming 4.\nJ. H. Wallace 7, A. Forrest 9.\nC. Strachan 10, G. K. Fairbairn 10.\nV. E. Ferguson 13; R McGhle 5.\nA'. Balfour 7, A. G. MacKinnon 11.\nThursday: ,'. -\nJ. D. Rae7,R. E. HIU 15.\nE. Jandrell 4, T. W. Mathieson 9.\nJ. W. Milburn 12, A. R.i Robinson\n5. \"     '\nW. Rae 11, T. A. Rice 4.\nJ. H. Mark 6, L. F. Wendel 9.\nA. A.'Hobb 1, W..B. Hunter 0.\nCrdnbrbbk Bowler'\nRoHsiOinRow,\n: CRJiNBROOK-Hlghest indi-\nvidiiar rbowlihg score ever re-\nj corded :in Cranbrook was rolled\ntyip ;rec*itl*byriBertfHrlcl|^>tt in;\nCommercial League play at the\nnew Bowladrome.\nHe is.captain of Pacers, and\nin their league game he rolled\n10 consecutive strikes for a total\n.score-of'418. He has been consistently, among the top scorers\n. since bowjiii^ started here sev-\neraT-.years ago; but this was his\nbesfscgre-^ by- a wide' margin.\n,%mm*> J#>- J-4\"1*\nWUjmibJtWM^A-\n^&tmm4&4#rt\n^:|I^'^:;-':^\n+    INN    *\nCOCKTAILS\nitti\n,The winner in any\naport has juat that\nextra edge on his competition. That's what\nHarwood's has over\nother brands of quality\nrye.. Sb, for year's,\ndiscriminating people\nhave agreed that this is\nCANADA'S   FINEST\nHarwoods\n^ANnDiniu\nThis aover\u00absement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or bj the Government of British Columbia\nIT'S BUILT TO LAST LONGER\n\u25a0'\u25a0     '\u00bb... to give more-resistafice to overcharging\n...to give mote starting power on coldest days\n... to give more protection against extreme summer heat\nThat's why;Ultra Start is today'sbest battery buy ... not only for\nnormal car service, but for the really tough jobs such as in taxis\naad light trucks.\n\u25a0 See this revolutionary battery itt your Exide dealer's today!\nEXIDE BATTERIES OF CANADA LIMITED\nTOR Oi! to MONTREAL WINNIPEG VANCOUVER\n |lh\niwjwwp^f^^\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nWBATHBR\nrmpoht;\nCLEAR    .\nAND\nWINDV     -\nW-\nwmm\n*\/2\/\\\nK\nI\nN\nG\n0\nF\nR.\nC.\nM.\nP.\n10\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14,1932\n1WIKII IDS\nPfRSOMO-POISON WANT ADS\nFOR QUICK .WULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeodjine fer Closslficd Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nA LOCAL TRANSPORTATION\norganisation hat a vacancy In\ntheir sales'staff for a female\nticket clerk between tho ages of\nlt and 90. Applicants must apply\nIn their own handwriting stating\nfull particulars of education and\nPrevious employment. Apply Box\n280 Dally News.\nWANTBD - GIRL EXPERIENCED\nIn clerical work. When applying\nplease bring' hand-written letter\nof application. Phone 1800 for appointment. The Medical Associate\nClinic, Nelson, B.C.\nEXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY FOR\nyoung man In the refrigeration\nfield, Apply Manager, Nelson\nCivic Centre Arena, before 4 p.m.\nNov. 17th, 1082. j\nWANTBD - SUITABLE YOUNG\n.man for men's and boys' clothing\nstore. Excellent opportunities tor\nadvancement for suitable applicant Apply Box 4784, Dally News,\nSALESLADY WANTED FOR\ncandy shop. This Is full-time\nwork, not just for Christmas. No\nphone calls please. Apijly Ran-\nnlger's Candles Ltd.\nWANTED-MILLWRIOHT. FULLY\n.experienced; able to hammer and\nlook after saws as well. Top wages.\nApply Halston Planing. Mills Ltd.,\nKamloops. B.C.\nWANTED STENOGRAPHER WITH\nshorthand for local business office. No experience necessary if\nwilling to learn. Reply Box 7252\nDally, News. State salary expected\nWANTED - CARETAKER FOR\nWinter months tor country home.\nFree rent, fuel and light. Apply\nDally News Box 7669.\nWANtoili-r-LbdftWJG CdiMSAfl.\ntor to log 800,000 per month. Contact Frank Freeze, Fruitvale.\nWA^ttb-pAWrt* to fio IN-\nterlor work. Apply Royal -tptel,\nWANTED\u2014HOTEL DESK CLERK.\nApnly, Box 5793. Dally News.\nAGENTS WANTED\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nElectrolux\nCleaners\nDomestic\nRefrigerators\n(Operated by Gas, Kerosene,\nElectric and Kerosene-Electric)\nPHONE 1108, 688 OB WRITE\nBOX 8878, DAILY NEWS\nKITCHEN EXTENSION TABLE, 4\nchairs, boy's tube skates, size 4,\nlike new, 2 pr. girls' white figure\nskates, size 4H, 8H. Phone 1120\nevenings.\nfsrmM=mw3iB-mmsr.\nerator, one year old; Beatty washing machine with bench and tubs,\n414 Silica St. Phone 437-X,\nFOR. SALE - WHITE ENAMEL\n\"Spe,ncer\" coal 'and wood- range.\nIn new condition, reasonable.\n' Phone 608-L-l.\nFOR SALE--1 GOOD CHEER FUR-\nm\npu\nnace, complete' with casing, pipes\nand 7 ducts. Reasonable for cash.\n, Apply Box 2, Kinnaird, B.C.\n1'oa SALE- SMALL McCLARY\nelectric range with lamp and timer, Used 6 months. $200 cash\nPhone 718-Y.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nGOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT\"\n(Section 27) \u2022\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE\nNOTICE Is hereby given that on\nthe 19th day of November next, the\nundersigned intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board for consent to transfer of Beer Licence No.\n9474 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). Fourteen (14), Fifteen (15) and Sixteen (16), in Block\nFour (4) of Lot Two Hundred and\nSix-A 1206-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(88) Feet perpendicularly distant\nfrom the Southwest boundary of\nthe said lots, from Charles Benjamin Reid to Maldon Hotel Ltd. of\nSalmo, British Columbia, the Transferee.\nDATED at Nelson, British Colum\nbia, this 21st day ot October, A.D.,\n1951\nMALDON, HOTEL LTD.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\nFOR SALE\nCentrally, located dwelling\nfor immediate occupancy.\nLiving room, dining room,\nkitchen, three bedrooms,\npart basement.\nPrice $4500\n$1300.00 Will Handle\nP. E. POULIN\n582 Ward Street\nPhone 70 Box 130\n144 AC. SUB-IRRIGATED DAIRY\nfarm for sale. Situated in fastest\ngrowing district in West Kootenay. Over 40 acres under cultivation. 23 head of livestock. Creek\nrunning through property. Hot\nand cold water In house. Reason\nfor selling, poor health. Apply\nBox 7279. Dally News.\nbUti SALS\u2014LIMITED QUANTITY\not remnant loads dressed lumber.\nApply.Kootenay Forest,Products\nLtd.. 905 Gordon Rd. Phone 1200.\ntoa, sale -'coAL ANN) W66fr\nstove, Water-front; white enamel,\nin very good. condition. F. B.\nTessman. New Denver. Ph. 58-R,\ndUUSsS BUNION SALVE*-- Fc*\namazing relief. Your druggist sells\nCRESS.\nfor sALfc-MctiLAfcV WMtAc,\nette.   Sunrise Dairy, Rosemont\nPhone 1124-R.\nLARGE SALES ORGANIZATION\nwants salesmen to operate a profitable business of their own.\nPhone Mr. P. Germsheld, Hume\nHotel, tor appointment, after 7\np.m. Friday or before Saturday\nnoon; or write Box -7808, Nelson\nDaily News.\nMACHINERY\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\n: LIMITED '\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL. LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries' Invited\nGranville' Island, Vancouver 1.. B.C.\nUSED .DOUBLE DRUM WINCH\nwith Chrysler engine, three-speed\ntransmission, Dlsston chain saw\nattachment; complete to buck\nlogs on landing. Bayes Equipment\nCo., Cranbrook, B.C,\nSINGLE AND DOUBLE DRUM\nwinches, Carco tractor winches,\ngas and diesel power units,- Columbia trailers, etc. Bayes Equipment Co., Cranbrook.\nFOR ' SALE-WINCHESTER 32-20\nrifle. Ideal tor deer. Peep sights,\nleather carrying case. Ph. 48,-R\nFOR, SALE \u2014 1 TANrf MODEL\n\"Hoover.\" For particulars call at\n516 Houston St, or phone 625-R-3.\nPIPE, FITTINGS AND PLUMBING\nfixtures Columbia Trading Co,\n902 Front Street. Phone 1511\n\"GOVERNMENT LIQUOR ACT'\n\u2022    (SecUon 27)\nNOTICE OF APPLICATION FOR\nCONSENT TO TRANSFER OF\nBEER LICENCE\nNOTICE is hereby given that on\ntbe 28th day of November next, the\nundersigned Intends to apply to\nthe Liquor Control Board tor consent to transfer of a one-half interest in Beer Licence No. 9601\nIssued in respect ot premises being\npart ot a building known as the\nNew Grand Hotel, situate at 618\nVernon Street, Nelson, British Columbia, upon the lands described\nas Lots Five (5), Six (6), and Four-\nA (4A), of Block Two (2), Official\nPlan. City of Nelson, Nelson Land\nRegistration District, In the Province of British Columbia, from Lena\nKapak to William Peter Kapak, of\nNelson, British Columbia, the\nTransferee.\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this 28th day ot October,\nA.D., 1952\n. WILLIAM PETER KAPAK,\nApplicant and Transferee.\nVEGA CREAM SEPARATOR,.TA-\nble model, used one. year, and\nten-gallon crock. Phone 1232-Y.\nFOR SALE - GOOD CHEER-\nwhite ahd black range. Phone\n451-Y.\ni pr. J30Y9' \u00ab...\u00a3 SkAWS, \"Stefe\n2. Phone 1173-L.\t\nFOR, SALE\u2014ROY  THERMO OIL\nburner. Large size. Phone 1275-L.\nBRICK-LINED COAL AND WOOD\nheater tor sale. Phone 434-R-2.\nmicaortic! pXSBIS AIBS:-\nWrlte P.O Bbx ?9. Nelson, B.C.\nFOR SALE-rQUANTITY OF USED\nlumber at No. 8, Gov't Road.\nROYAL CRESCENT COOKING\nrange; good condition. Ph, 96-L-2.\nWARM MORNING HEATER. AP-\nply 708 Silica St. or phone 763-R.\n k  I'\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. Leading:\nactor of\naplay\nB.AsIre\nofcool\n,8. Therefore\n9. Vehicles\nlOJProgcnyof\nline stock\n1); Ascended\nIS. Even (poet.)\n14. Awaited\n15. Finishing   .\nia Dispatch\n19. Saves\n21. Pigpen\n22. Girl's name\n24. Large roofing slate\n27. Military\nforces\n81. Sandarae\ntree\n88. Girl's name\n84. Celestial\nbodies\n86. A low pasture (Dial\nBag.)\n17. Vegetable\nresin\n88. Fragrant\nEast Indian\n'   .wood '\u2022-'\u25a0 -\n40. Unite\n41. Water craft\n42. Southeast\nby South\n,<\u00bbbbr.)\narmiof\n1 General\n17.'Void\ndirections\n20. State flower\n8. Mature\n(Utah)\n4. Pole\n23. Pinch .\n5. Capital\n24. Worthiest\n(Fr.)\n(Bib.)\n6, Eats away\n26. Fragrant\n7. To consent\nsmells\n9. Part of a\n28, To want\nlocomotive\n28. Native\n10. Malt\nof Ohio\n.   beverage\n29. Cardinal\n12. Whirlpool\n- number\n14. Seeming not 30. Droops\nto grow old  32. Staggers\n16. Frost 35. Attempt\nrir.iwi'i a\u00abEira\niiaau umuiu ,\nlaiaaaia aatfian\niaa hhi- Ki_iHii\nmm wanaaaa\nBHaci'-ianq.\nluraiaaa ohbhh\naaa Hiiuia\naaaaaHD ana\nui-iiii-i aan tp\naBaata Eat-HiaB\nHaaa laaraa\nnauiu tfisi-i-\nYMiwilny'i A.n\u00bb'vtr\n88. Warp-yarn\n39. oame of\nchance\nFOR SALE\u20144V\u00ab ACRES; NEW 5-\nroom house, with full basement,\nfurniture, electricity, running wa-\u25a0!,\nter. Also three-room shack and*\nbarn. Six miles from Nelson, close\nto store and school. Reasonably\npriced. Apply Fred -Hlookoff,\nBlewett, B.C.\nE. J. AVERY, Salmo, B.C.,\nB. L. KROPINSKE, Ymir, 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, 1952. 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\nSupt. ot Motor Carriers. Public\nUtilities Commission, 1740 W.\nGeorgia St., Vancouver, B.C., on or\nbefore Nov. 13th', 1952.\nCORPORATION OF\nTHE VILLAGE OF SALMO\nNOTICE\nThe Voters List of the above\nVillage having been duly posted, a\nCourt of Revision of the said List\nwill he held at the Salmo Community -Hall (Clerk's Office) on\nSaturday, November 15th at 10\no'clock in the fore noon.\nHENRY JOHN,\nVillage Clerk.\nFOR SALE - ONE ACRE GOOD\nblack soil, electric lights, running\nwater, 4 room new house, woodrSr\nshed, chicken house for 50 birds, j I\n$5000 with furniture, $4500 withi\nout. Half cash. Balance on terms.\nPhone 273-X-2 or apply Box 7666\nNelson Dally News. m\nFOR   SALE   OR   RENT,   EIGHT\nmiles West ot Nelson on highway;....\n20 acres; two-room dwelling; ex-    I\ncellent location for roadside bus-    |\nIness. Rent $20.00 month. Phone\n2847 or write A. A. Lambert, Kinnaird, B.C.\n161 ACRE FARM FOR SALE\u201430\nacres under cultivation, excellent |\nsoil, water, fruit trees. Good timber, complete with stock, buildings, etc. John Munch, Vallican,\nB.C.\nCOMFORTABLE HOME ON\nhighway; furnished or unfurnished. Four roqms and bathroom,\ne'lectricity, water, etc. K. Munro,\nYmlr, B.C.\nPROPERTY FOR SALE ON LOT\n54, Cottonwood City\u20141 acre df\ngood soil, 1 4-room house, newly'\nbuilt, electee lights, running water. Phone 273-X-2, evenings, or'\napply Box 7263, Daily News.\nFOR SALE\u2014THREE-APARTMENT\nhouse. Good revenue. For full particulars apply Box 7280, Nelson\nDally News. \u25a0\u25a0\"'\u2022\"\nFOR SALE\u20145 ROOM HOUSE; 3\nbedrooms, hard\\*ood floors, auto- r:\nmatic oil heat. $4700 down Bal-r\nance as rent. Phone 1252-R.\nIMMEDIATE POSSESSION, MOD-\nern 8 room completely Insulated\nhome. Oil fired hot water heat.\nHeated garage. Phone 1361.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nSMALL HOUSE FOR SALE WITH\nacreage at Willow Point. Apply\nDally News Box ;7078.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR TWO\ngentlemen in nice home. Close to\nbus, Phone 1002-L.\nROOM OR ROOM AND BOARD\nfor one girl. Fairview district, t\nblocks from bus. Phohe 1610-X.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nFRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1952\nPdtm\nt Placid\n'     DAILY CRVPXOQUOX_-~Here's how to work Itt\n'\".'\u25a0'\u25a0'.' AXYDLBAAXF  ' '\/\nIs LONGFELLOW . ;\u25a0''\nOne letter simply stands fer another. In this example A, IS used\ntor the three L'a, X for the- two O's, etc.. Single letters,. apos.\ntrophies, ths length and formation of the words are all hints\nEachday the code letters are different' -.'\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nLYZ    WZK.    LTZ    MFFSBLDR\n8JZ    SW\nJDFZX,      LYDL      KZEZ\nQ M Z \u2014 Y D R R Z T P.'\nJSL\nLt\nYesterday's Cryptoquotei THE MAN THAT FEARETH, LORR\nTO DOUBT, IN THAT FEAR DOUBTETH THBE-MAC\nDONALD,  ; ;::'\u25a0;.!\u25a0\"\"\nOlittitmted Sr Kins Fe\u00abluro Syndic*!.\n\u25a0 L>'-. v    j'        '\u25a0\"\u25a0\u25a0\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n7:15\u2014Sports Page\n7:20\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Breakfast With Boates\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n6;45-r-TowIer Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sports Corner\n9;00\u2014Morning Devotions .\n9:15r-Westem Fred\n10:00\u2014Sons of the Pioneers\n10:18\u2014Women in the News\n10:25\u2014News\n10:30-Coffee Time\n10:45--Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Shut-In Show\n11:15\u2014Dorothy Douglas\n11:20\u2014Date With D'Arce\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:25\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Behind the News\nl:0(Mv!usic Mill\n2:00\u2014School Brosdcast\n2:30\u2014Easy Listening\n3:00\u2014Here's Harmony\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n4:15\u2014Road Show\n4:30-TSleepy Time Story Teller\n4:45\u2014Pacific News\n4:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hi'\n5:00\u2014Rawhide\n5:30\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014ChHsttan Science\n6:15\u2014Bill Good Sports\n6:30\u2014A Man and His Magic\n6:35\u2014Five Minutes of Fine Musle\n' 8:40\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup.\n7:30-Mutlny on the High Seas\n7:45\u2014This Is Civil Defence\n8:00\u2014Music and Reverie\n6:30\u2014Vancouver Theatre\n9:00\u2014Music From the Films\n9:30\u2014Armdaler Chorus\n9:45\u2014Apartment in Paris\n10:00\u2014News *\n10:15\u2014Ticket to New Guinea\n10:30\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00-NEWS Nightcap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nSATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1952\n8:00-News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good Sports\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\nB:30\u2014Sample Case\n9I0O-News\n9:10\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club .\n9:48\u2014Songs of the West\n10;00\u00ab-Children's Musical Theatre\n10:30\u2014World Church News\n10:45\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Story of Music\n11:30\u2014Folk Song Time  '\n12:00\u2014Music by Mozart\n1:00\u2014Bandstand\n1:30\u2014Saturday Serenade\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014News\n3:10-Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014This Week\n3:30-431xieland Jaa\n4:00\u2014John Fisher\n4:15\u2014Sports College\n4:30\u2014Roy Rogers Show\n5:00--Sports Page\n8:30\u2014Piano Playhouse\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05~N.H.L. Hockey\n7:30\u2014Organ Music\nB:00-Share the Wealth\n8:30\u2014Prairie Schooner..\n9:00\u2014Symphony Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n10:30\u2014Dancing Party\n11:57\u2014News\n in t;ii his\nPERSON JO-PERSON WANEADS\nFOR QUICK RESOLES f\nPhone 144\nDeodlino for Closiified Ada\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nBargains!\nBargains!\nGood Stock of\nNEW and\nUSED CARS!\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\nLow Mileage and Extras\n1951 Ford Tudor\n\u25a01950 Chevrolet Coach\n1950 Monarch Sedan\nRadio and Heater\n1949 Chevrolet Aerosedan\nRadio and Heater\n1949 Pontiae Sedan\n1948 Chevrolet Sedan\n1947 Frorer Sedan\n1946 Mercurv Sedan\np    .1942 Pontiac Sedan\nI 1937 Pontiac Coach    '\n1937 Dodge Sedan\n1936 Ford Coupe  ..\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1951 Austin Devon\n1950 Austin Devon\n1949 Austin Devon\n1950 Morris Minor\n1950 Hillman Minx\n1951 Ford Prefect\nCOMMERCIALS!\n1952 Mercury Pickup\nJust Like Newi\n1952 Austin Pickup\n1951 Austin Panel\n1951 Austin Countryman\n1949 Dodge 3\/i-Ton\n1949 Austin Panel\n1945 International Truck\n1946 Chevrolet 3-Ton\n1946 Mercury Truck\nHoist end Box.\n1940 Chevrolet Pickup\n. TERMS and TRADES\nEmpire Motors\nPhone U35   803 Baker St.\n'47 HEAVY DUTY\nINTERNATIONAL     ,\nKBR11    -\nAir Brakes\u20141-00x20 Tires.\n'41 INTERNATIONAL KS7\nDeck and Hoist\n'47 INTERNATIONAL KS5\n3-TON\n'44 INTERNATIONAL\nKS5 \u2014 $395\n'50 FARGO PICKUP-\n'38 G.M.C.   2-TON\n$275\nGood Shape.\n'45 CHEVROLET 2-TON\nFlat Deck.\n'47 MERCURY 3-TON\nNew Motor.\n'50 AUSTIN 5-TON\n7000 Miles. Equipped\nWith Logging Bunks.\n$1200\n& Equipment Co.\nPHONES 100 -1400 - NELSON\nInvestigate Our\nLAY-AWAY PLAN FOR SPRING\nDELIVERY OF YOUR NEW\nMOTORCYCLE\nEasy terms, trade-ins.\nKOOTENAY MOTORCYCLE\nSALES AND SERVICE\nBox 350 \u2014 Phone 2601 \u2014 Castlegar\n\"The Shop of Friendly Service'\nTOR SALE-1947 CHEVROLET 4-\ndoor sedan in very good shape.\nGood tires, radio and spotlight.\nPhone 1293 at noon or after 8 p.m.\nPeter Abroslmo, c\/o Labossiere\nSheet Metal.\nBARGAIN\nFor Sale\u2014'52 Mercury 8-ton flat\n\"deck. 6000 miles. Apply 205 Chatham St. or phone 802-R.\nFOR SALE\u2014H.P. JEEP ENGINE,\nmarine conversion, like new.\nWrite Jack E. Craig, 1198 Third\nAvenue, Trail, B.C.\n(Continued In Next Column)\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES;   BICYCLES\n(Continued)  '\u25a0 .\nFOR SALE - 1937 TERRA PLANE\ngood condition. Heater, spotlight\n$150 cash Apply R Brown. South\nSlocan           \u25a0    ' '\"\u2022    ' '\nFOR BALE - MERCURY TRUCK\nVi ton '49. Low mileage; excellent condition. Apply Box 6817\nDally News.  V '\nFOR SALE - 1937 OtMUdt\/HX.\nFully winterized, heater and defroster, good tires, motor and\nbody See any time. 861 Baker.\nFOR SALE-1952 NASH STATES-\nman sedan. $400 below cost price.\nApply P. Zoobkoff, Taghum, B.C.\n.'UK 6ALa - lUol CriEVROLET\ndeluxe sedan: perfect condition.\nPhone 288 days or 1378-R eves.\n1950 VANGUARD. A-l SHAPE.\nTerms can be arranged. Phone\n1453-R.\t\n1950 VANGUARD. LOW MILEAGE,\nheater. Phone 1229-Y-3.  \t\nRENTALS\nWANTED - UNFURNISHED AC\ncommodation for business woman.\nPhone collect Miss Relth, < Kinnaird 3097.\nLIVING QUARTERS, IN FUR-\nnisbed trailer, with electricity, in\nreturn for household assistance.\nPhone 189-L-l.\t\nFOR RENT-NEW FOUR ROOM\nhouse near highway, school and\nstore. Paul Markoff, Slocan Park,\nB. C. ._> -\nWANTED\u20142 OR 3 ROOM SUITE\nor house, unfurnished; no children. Central location preferred.\nPhone Mr. Lome Kennedy, 144.\nWANTED, BY TWO YOUNG BUSH\nIness girls\u2014Furnished housekeeping rooms or small apartment\nApply Box 7292. Dally News.\nTOURIST CABINS, FURNISHED\nexcept bedding. Winter rates. \u2014\nCrescent Beach Auto Court. Call\nor phone 471-Y-l. \t\n$25 REWARD FOR INFORMATION\nleading to rental of suitable house\nIn Nelson or district for family\nman  Box 5830. Dally News\nFOR RENT\u20143-ROOMED CABIN.\nInside plumbing. 7 miles North\nShore. Phone 462-L-l. '\nWANTED TO RENT - GARAGE,\nwithin the vicinity of the Kerr\nApts. Apply, Box 324, City.\nROOM VACANT FOR YOUNG\nbusiness man- 601 Cedar Street,\nphone 1392-X.\t\nVACANCY NORTH SHORE MO-\ntel. Apply Suite 1.\t\nSLEEPING ROOMS FOR RENT.\nPhone 329-L.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFOR OUTSTANDING QUALITY\nIn calves, used Polled Shorthorn\nSires. Snowshoe Ranch offers\nyoung Sires at all times. C. Flick.\nEdgewood.\t\nFOR SALE-TEAM OF LOGGING\nhorses and one cow, freshened\ntwo  months  ago.   Mike   Plctln,\nWinlaw, B.C.\t\nFOR SALE OR EJOTXJJBE\ngood quiet saddle horse. What\nhave you? Yoxall, Mirror Lake\nB.C.\t\nFOR SALE - SHETLAND PONY,\nwith complete outfit Will trade\nfor   cattle.   Apply   Daily   News\nBox 3855.\t\nFOR SALE - 2 COWS, JUST\nfreshened. Good milkers. Apply\nSteve  Samarodln,  Slocan   Park,\nB.C.    \t\nSEVEN MONTHS OLD BARRED\nRock hens, $2.25 each, for quick\nsale. Phone 471-L-6 Fri: or Sat.\nFOR SALE-WHITE ROCk\nchickens, mixed; $1.50 ea. Phona\n602-Y.\nwANTEb - MH-g COWS. PBflNB\n70 or write Box 130.\nPERSONAL\nALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS\nPO  BOX 388. NELSON. B.C.\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co., D L Kerr. Agent\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot Clean rooms and reason-\nable'rates  Vancouver. B.C\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately. Oaily News Printing\nDept-., Nelson, British Columbia\nNHaon Satttj BfantB\nClaiiified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\nHe line per consecutive insertion after first insertion\n48c line for 8 consecutl'-e Insertions\n$1.56 Una per month (26 consecutive insertions). Box numbers\nlie extra. Covers any number\nof Insertions.'\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\n, TENDER;*, Etc.\u201420c, per line,\nfirst insertion:  16c  per  line \u2022\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates;\n(Not More Than Listed Here)\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance . .       M\nBy carrier, per year $18.60\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month    $ 1.28\nThree months       8.78\nSix months       7.80\nOne year       13.00\nMail in' Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month     ..'...          1.00\nThree months    _      2.75\nSix months        5.50\nOne year     i        10.00\nWhere extra postage !\u2022 required,\nabove rates plus postage.\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR\nscrap Iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading Prompt\npayment made. Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd.. 250 Prior St., Vancouver,\nB.C. Phone Pacific 6887.\t\nSHIP US YOUR SCAAP MKTAL\nor iron Any quantity Top price\npaid Active Trading Company\n918 Powell St., Vancouver. BC\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nYOUNG MAN WITH CONSIDER-\nable sales experience desires position in Nelson. Have good car.\nWrite Box 7546, Dally News,\n_uueki_.Yi&SSPPS WOStK\nChimneys, fireplaces, brickwork,\nblockyork. Apply Box 7687 Pally\nNews.\nmother wilL arVX bAV CAM\nto boy about tour. Close in. Box\n7443, Daily News.\nown home.  Apply  Dally News\nBox 7872.\nWiWm -\u00bb OWfftACT HAUi-\nlng poles, logs, lumber, etc.\nPhone 476-R-l. Applj-Ymir Rd. 60\n1 good cAMWi&S \" WXJft\nwork. Phone 13: ask for W. Hojer.\nS'-jSNO. DESttlES WeiftU'dRARV\nor part-time work. Phone 777-L-l.\n^ANtaa^tiotiSiiVdfik BV'HHi\nhour. App, Box 6432. Daily News.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\n-\u00bb-r\u00bb*^*'*- f -\u00bb +\u25a0\u00ab\u00bb +**-*<****\u25a0*+\nFor Our\nSaturday-Ad\non\nCEDAR POLES' - ALL CLASSUS\nand lengths. Kootenay Forest\nProducts Ltd.\nWANTED-Pli. CHILD'S SKXH5S,\ns<ze 10. Phone 357-R. -\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST, BETWEEN TRAIL, SALMO,\nYmlr, or road to Can. Exploration\nMine\u2014780x17 eight-ply-Ure and\nwheel; Finder please contact Canadian Bakeries Ltd., Trail,\nLosT-wgtftaSDAV WS0W.\nCanvas covered bedding between\nTrail and Slocan Park. Finder\nplease write Pete Samarodln.\nSlocan Park, B.C.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL  DIRECTORY\nASSAYER8 AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W wuiboW-ON i'iid, AS-\nsa.vers 801 Josephine St., Nelson\nAssayer. Chemist Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYOM\nboydc A-fOscK218-tc*BST\u201e\nNelson,.B.C. Surveyor. Engineer.\nLlV-StotK  DEAL.R*\nm wv 6-t siix tfmwcR-\nContact H. Harrop, Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\n\u2014SEOTHSTasara\u2014\nMachine Shop Acetylene and\nelectric welding,. motor rewinding Phone 393 324 Vernon Street\nfflSIlK <5rui*iNq: sit-\nraafti eftuisrtiG ANYwraia\nin BC E H Hlrd. Slocan City\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\nCUT\nTHE COST\nBUY QUALITY\nEQUIPMENT\nDistributors for\nCATERPILLAR   Product*\nJOHN DEERE Form\nEquipment\nSKAGIT Logging Hoists\nJOY Compressors and\nContractors\nEquipment ond Craig Bits\nHdLCOMB \"WESTEECO\"\nScrapers\nYOUNG Blocks ond\nLogging Tools\nPIONEER Crushers, Gravel\nPlants and Screens and\nFeeders '\nKOEHLER Light Plants\nHYSTER Winches, etc.   '\nDUNLOP Air Hose, Water\nHose and Fire Hose\nFINNING\nTRACTOR\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\nBox 119 Phone 930\nNELSON, B. C\nof\n1953 Plymouth\n1953 Chrysler\n1953 Fargo\nTrucks\nThese   '     .'\nGOOD USED CARS\nwill also be on display.\nPeebles famous reputation\nfor FAIR DEALING, GOOD\nMERCHANDISE and DE^\nPENDABLE SERVICE is behind every one of these.\n1951 Monarch Convertible\nClub Coupe\nCustom Radio, Whitewall Tires,\nElectric Windows, Air Conditioner. In excellent shape.\n1949 Plymouth Sedan\nAir Conditioner, Sun Visor,\nWhitewall Tires. ,\n1948- Dodge 2-Door Sedan\nHeater, Color; Green.\nGood Condition.\n1946 Pontiae Sedon\nColor: Maroon. Custom Radio,\nSpotlight, Heater. Good Rubber\nand Body.  -\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK, Nov. 13 (CP)-Spot\nprices:\nLead\u2014New York, .1480.\nZinc\u2014EaBt St Louis, .12V4-\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 13 (CP)-Win-\nnlpeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, .8714.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.40.\n1948 CHRYSLER\nWINDSOR SEDAN\nCustom Radio, Sun Visor, Seat\nCovers. One Owner.   \u25a0\nMileage: 20,000.\n1951 G.M.C. Pickup\n' Mileage: 15,000. Heater.\n1947 Willys Station Wagon\nMileage: 19,000. Lovely Shape.\n1951 Austin Station Wagon\nMileage: 7000. Like New.\n\u00ab->^^-Pt-\u00bb^\u00ab-^-^-\u00bb\u00bbN\u00bb--e--^^\u00bb*>-\u00bb-_\u00bb.^.-\u00bb^--*-p^\n_y_*\/\u00bb0\nLOAN MANS\nISSUES \u00abT 80 BtWACeii\nSUITE 1\nPhone 1650 .   560 Baker St.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULT8\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nAcadia Uranium \t\nAkaitcho \t\nAmal Larder     _\t\nAmerican Y K ...\t\nAnglo Huronian  _.._'\t\nAunor   '-.__.\nBagamac . \u201e..\nBarymln     ______\nBase Metals  ..\u201e___\nBevcourt   \u201e\t\nBobjo .'   ..\t\nBoymar Gold \t\nBralorne  ..   .:.\t\nBroulan    \t\nBuff Can , .'.\t\nCalliman \"\":. \t\nCampbell R L\t\nCan Mal \t\nCariboo Gold _ \t\nCastle Treth     __\t\nCentral Patricia \t\nChesterville   \u201e.\nChlma G    .'.  \t\nCoin Lake    \u2014\t\nCons M & S  .\nConwost      \t\nCrestaurum __._\u2014\nCrolnor  \u201e.._\nDelhite -. ,\u2014 \u201e..\nDetU R L _\nDome'    _\u201e \u2122\t\nDonalda , \t\nBuvay _-.\t\nEast Malartic  .t\t\nEast SulUvan \t\nElder Gold  _\u2022-\nEstella   \u2022___\t\nEureka    .'. \u25a0.\nFalconbrldge \t\nFroblsher    -_\t\nGiant Yel   \t\nGod's Lake   \t\nGoldale    \t\nGoldcrest  \t\nGolden Manltou\t\nHeath   \t\nHollinger  \t\nHudson Bay _._\t\nInt Nickel \t\nJoliet Que \t\nKerr Addison .   ;\nKirk-Hudson Bay ..... ........\nLabrador  \t\nLakeshore   \u201e\nLeltcb  !\t\nLynx  \t\nMacDonald  \u2014.._\t\nMacassa  \t\nMacLeod Cock .\nMadsen.R L  \t\nMolartle G T \t\nMarcus-G , ,\u201e ,   \t\nMclntyre  \t\nMcKenzie R L\t\nMinlng-Corp  \u2014_\u2014\t\nNegus  \t\nNew Calumet\t\nNew Goldvue\t\nNew Lund .'.\t\nNipisslng  ^\t\nNoranda   t\t\nNormetals   \t\nNorth Can .._\t\nO'Brien \t\nOsisko    \t\nPickle Crow  \t\nPlacer Develop ____...\nPreston E D\t\nQuebec Man\t\nQuemont  \t\nSan Antonio \t\nSen Rouyn  \t\nShawkey  j\t\nSherritt Gordon ... ;__\nSilvermiller   .\t\nSllanco  \t\nSiscoe  \t\nStadacona  ________\nSteep Rock\nSudbury Cont\t\nSylvanlte  \u201e..,\nTeck Hughes \t\nTbompson-Lund \t\nToburn \t\nTombiU\t\nTrany Cont Res \t\nUnion Mining\t\nUnited Keno ..\t\nUpper Canada \t\nVentures r  :.\nViolamac \t\nWaite Amulet\t\n0IL8\nAnglo Can  \t\nA P Con \t\nH A Oil \t\nGal tt Ed ...:\t\nCalmont\nCentral Leduc \t\nChemical Research  _.\nCommonwealth Pete\t\nDalhousie      .\nDavies Pete\t\nDecalta  \t\nDel Rio \t\nEastcrest \t\nFederated Pete        ,,\nHighwood   .:;__\nHome  \t\nImperial OU \t\nInter Pete\nKroy\nMacDougal Segur\nMid Cont\t\nNat Pete  \u201e\nOkalta        _\nPacific Pete  \t\nRoyalite  -\t\nRoxana \t\nTower Pete __\nUnited Oils      __\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi    -..\nAlgoma Steel  _\nAluminum   \t\nArgus \t\nAtlas St  _.\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian\t\n.18\n1.14\n.IS\n.28\n12.00\n2.80\n.18\n1.30\n.28\n1.08\n.13\n.12tt\n4.00\n3.08\n-    .18\n48H\n^\n1.20\n2.78\n.78\n,22\n.42\n.10\n3.2.50\n3.80\n.18\n.36\n1,99\n.18\n20.18\n.43\n.44\n2,70\n6.03\n.63\n\u25a02m\n1.07\n16.35\n5.00\n0.80\n.55\n.18\n.11\n8.95\n.13\n14.50\n59-15\n43.00\n.31\n19.15\n.74\n8.95\n8.00\n1.03\n.12\n1.25\n1.79\n2.42\n1.70\n1.74\n.11\n68.00 .\n.38\n12.78\n.19\n1.19\n.48.\n.28\n1.80\n7350\n4.10\n.83\n.98\n.55\n1.35\n42.00\n1.63\n1.88\n18.00\n2.03\n.12\n,    .10%\n4.60\n.95\n.36H\n.61   .\n_\u00bb\n7.00\n2.80\n1.47\n2.10\n.10\n-.33\n.22 \u2022\n.36\n.18\n10.00\n1.63\n17.83\n1.33\n12.75\n6.70\n.40\n19.00\n11.50\n1.23\n3.25\n1.31\n4.10\n.2314\n.24\n.73\n2.80\n.ioy\u00ab\n7.00\n.25\n12.23\n33.25\n24.85\n1.75\n.20\n.38\n1.75\n3.00\n10.00\n14.00\n.22\n31 Vi\n1.42\n.... UVt\n.... 44\n... Wt\n... 12H\n....  12 ii\n...   88\n...    9H\nthe KEY to\na worryless\ntomorrow!\nWe would like to remind you to notify your agent\nIMMEDIATELY if you lay your car up for the\nWinter as you are entitled to CREDIT FOR\nWINTER'CANCELLATION. '\nMcHardy Agencies\nIff\n554 Ward St.\nPhone 135\nBusiness Spotlight .\u25a0...\nPotash Deposits\nOpen New Phase\nBy The Canadian Press\nA new phase in Prairie agriculture has opened with the discovery and development of valuable\npotash deposits near the Saskatchewan centres of VV'a and Unity,\nabout ISO miles Northwest of\nSaskatoon. ''\u25a0.'' ''   '\nPotash \u2014 actually potassium\nchloride \u2014 is, one of the world's\nmost Important mineral fertilizers\nan. is rarely found in .commercial\nquantity and concentration,\nBesides tbe Saskatchewan deposit\nthere is only one Important one In\nthe Western hemisphere, It Is\nlocaten at Carlsbad, New Mexico.\nThe only other known large deposit\nih the world Is In Germany's Stass-\nfurt Basin,\nThe full extent of the Vera-Unity\ndeposit has not yet been determined;\nbut exploratory drilling indicates lt\nmight extend ever an area of 230\nsquare miles in varying thicknesses\nup to 11 feet. The ore ts known as\nsylvinite and contains a high concentration ot potassium chloride\nwhich is a readily soluble salt.\nSINK SHAFT >\nWestern Potash Corp. Ltd., has\nalready spent about $1,000,000 on'\nexploratory drilling with a view to\ncommercial development. A shaft\nhas been sunk to a depth pt 8450.\nTwo methods of' recovering the\npotash can ba used. Ona is the\n\"brine\" method in which the potas\nslum chloride is dissolved In.water\nand the solution pumped to. the\nsurface where the mineral is recovered by evaporation of the\nwater. The other method hKortho-\ndox mining operations,\nA ready market Is waiting for the\npotash. At the present time Canada\nproduces scarecely any mineral\npotash and imports almost $4,000,000\nworth a year from the United States\nand Europe.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, Nov. 18 (CP)-Many\nIssues gained slightly, but the trading as a whole followed an irregular path. Gains and losses were well\nmixed and mostly small.\nCanadian issues were mixed. Canadian Pacific slipped %, Dome\nMines dropped U, and International\nNickel was off   Hiram Walker\nand Distillers Seagram- both advanced %; Mclntyre was not quoted.\nTORONTO (CP)-Prices oontto-\nued'to weaken toward the close.\nIndustrials, golds and Western\noils each lost more than a point, on\nthe Exchange's Indices. Base metals\ndropped about half a point.\nTotal volume was .expected to\nreach 2,350,000 shares.\nOnly holding companies held firm\nin a declining golds list as Ventures and Anglo-Huron made small\ngains. Senior golds slipped, with\nWrlght-Hargreaves leading.\nMONTREAL (CP)\u2014Issuef were\nwell mixed in dull dealings.\nGains and losses, about evenly\ndivided, were generally limited to\na narrow range. Among widen movers were General Dynamics, momt\nIM points at 35K, and Noranda, off\none at 73tt.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Here was\nno sign of any real expansion of\ntrade on the stock exchange today.\nModerate activity was seen In\nforeign bonds, where Germans were\nup IU, while Japanese showed\ngains ranging to one point.\nGovernment securities were tt of\na point better.\nB C Electric pfd .\nB C Electric\t\nB C Forest\t\nB C Packers A ..\nB C Packers B .\nB C Power A .\nB C Power B .\nBurl Steel \t\nBurns A \t\nBurns B\nCan Cement\t\nCan Packers A\nCan Canners\nCan Car & Fry A .\nCan Oil .'.\t\nCan Celanese \u201e\nCan Dredge _.\nCan Pac Rly _.\nCockshutt  \t\nCons M & S \t\nDist Seagram\nDom Foundries \t\nDom Magnesium \t\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nDom Stores\t\nFamous Plsyers\t\nFsny Farmer\t\nFord A  _.\nGatineau _\nGatineau t% pfd _\nGen Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear  \t\nGreat Lakes  \t\nGypsum Lime \t\nImperial Oil  \t\nImp Tobacco \t\nInt Metal \t\nInt Nickel __\nInt Pete \t\nLgura Secord -\u2014\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMaple Leaf Milling ...\nMassey Harris\nMercury. Mills  \t\nMoore'Corp r \t\nNat Seel jCar\t\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River ... _.\nPower Corp  _____\nRuss Industries\t\nShewinlgan   ____\nSicks Brew ....___-__\nSimpsons A ......\t\nSimpsons pfd -....-\nSoutham \t\nSteel of Can \t\nSteel of Can pfd \t\nStandard Paving .\n76\n89H\n6\n14\n11\n34\n- 7*\n. 20%\n.   44\n. 30%\n.   74%\n- 29%\n. SOS'j\n.   15%\n14\n.   43%\n.   47>t\n.   82\n.   15%\n.   82%\n.   24tt\n.   14%\n.   10%\n.   15%\n.   13%\n,   17%\n.   24%\n56%\n\u25a0   20>4\n102\n16%\n47\n15%\n34\n33%\nm\n96%\n43\n24%\n. 18%\n36%\n37%\n8%\n10%\n_~. 23%\n__   35%\n    26%\n 72\n_._.   22-\n-_: 83%\n!\u2014   24%\n......   40\n_...  20%\n 48\n\u2014 104\n\u2014 18%\n;..... 81%\n..-.   81%\n17%\nTaylor Pearson        8\nUnion Gas of Can \u201e  24%\nUnited Corp B  i_-  45\nWin Elec com      39%\nWin Electric pfd   99%\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14,1952 \u2014 11:\nNEW PLANT TO\nCOST $10 MILLION\nEDMONTON, Nov. 18 (CP) \u2014\nPlans to build a $10,000,000 gas-\nabsorption plant in the refinery area\njust East ot Edmonton were under\ndiscussion today following the arrival of two New York financiers\nInterested In the project.\nThe plans provide for the piping\nof flare gas,* now going to waste,\nfrom 11 oil fields in the Edmonton\narea. The plant, to be built by Bar-\ncam Limited, would process ths gas\nInto marketable fuels.\nArriving to discuss the project\nwere R. M. Stewart, board chairman of Barcam, and R. R. Barker,\nvice-president. They were met by\nRobert Campbell of Vancouver,\npresident. Mr. Stewart is president\nof William A. M. Burden and Company of New York.\nRising Cosh Hit\nDairy Industry\nVANCOUVER, B.C-, Nov. 18 (CP)\n\u2014Delegates to the Washington State\nDairy Foundation convention here\ntoday were told that rising costs\nand smaller profits were cutting\nInto the health of the iridustry.\nBert Sweeting, of Tacoma, prest\ndent of the International Association\nof Ice Cream Manufacturers, said\nthe dairy Industry must emp\nnew techniques, cooperate with\nsoil conservationists and o t h e r\nscientists to bring down costs.\nBoys and girls must be encouraged to enter the industry and stay\nwith it, he said.\nRev. William Hills, of Victoria,\nB.C., speaking on \"our uncommon\ncitiienshlp,\" told the delegates that\nBritish Columbians and Washing-\ntonlans cross Into each other's\nterritory as though Into a neighbor's\nyard.\n*\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBralorne     8.00\nCanusa   .08\nCariboo Gold  _.\u201e 1.25\nEstella    M\nGiant Mascot  .49\nHighland Bell  .50\nKootenay Belle _______ .09\nPend Oreille   8.20\nPioneer Gold    2.10\nPremier Border   .15%\nQuatsino    .59\nReeves MacDonald  190\nSheep Creek   1.20\nSilver Ridge  :  .15\nSilver Standard  1.82\nVajnende   .02\nVan Rol    .08%\nWeHingtpn \u201e  : .01^\nWestern Exploration _____ jM\"\nWestern Uranium _:  4.65\nYale   J3\nOILS\nAnaconda   .12\nAnglo Canadian \u201e  6.50\nA P Consolidated   at\nCalgary & Edmonton  11.00\nCalmont   1.22\nCommonwealth  4.10\nHome ..\".   12.25\nMercury    .20\nNational Pete ,  1.65\nOkalta Com  8.00\nPacifie Pete  10.00\nRoyalite   _\u201e  14.00\nVanalta  \u25a0.. 31\nVulcan.         \u25a0     ' .45\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates  ; 17.00\nInt Brew B  _  8.90\nCanadian Dollar\nLowest in Monthi\nBUFFALO, N.Y, Nov. 13' (AP)-\nThe premium on the Canadian\ndollar here today dropped one-half\nof one per cent to two per cent, the\nlowest la months.\nBank sources here ssld increasing\npurchases of United States dollars\nby Canadians was the reason 'for\nthe change. They said many of the\nbuyers apparently were Canadian\nmerchants buying U.S. goods requiring settlement In U.S. dollars.\nAluminum Firm\nProfit Down\nMONTREAL. Nov. 18 (CP) -\nAluniinum Limited reported tonight\nnet profit of $15,883,109 for the nine\nmonths ended Sept 30, compared\nwith $27,112,322 for the corresponding period last year.\nOn the basis ot 8,186,378 common\nshares outstanding following a recent two-for-one split, profit In the\nfirst three quarters ot this year was\n$1894 against the corresponding\nperiod.) last year.\nGrain Moving at\nlOOCarsaDay\nWINNIPEG, Nov. 18 (SpedalV-il\nCanadian Pacific Railway's grain',\nmovement Is close to 100 cars per -\nday better, than last year, it-was\"f\nrevealed today by D. S. Thomson;'''!\nVice President of the Prairie Re-|\ngion at Winnipeg, as he released\ntransportation   figures   from   jilt\nstart of the new crop year on Aug.\nI to date. m\n'This year 56,611'cars have beesll\nloaded at C.P.R. country stations\nfrom Aug 1 to date for a dally average of 658 cars, compared to 48,a,\u00ab,\n635 cars for a daily average of'BUS:'?\ncars for the same period last year.\" |\n\"Since the first of November weH\nhave loaded an average of 789 cars \u25a0\nper day, and are aiming at' still\nheavier loading,\" Thomson said, as\nhe congratulated his road's operat- I\ning men and other grain handlers\non the performance.\nToday at the Lakehead the Ci>Jt. I\nhas 2053 cars on track ready for unloading and 2996 cars on the way\nthere. He said he had high praise\nfor the treniendous job the elevator\"\ncompanlei are doing at the Lakr\nhead In the unloading of cart.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Nov. 18 (CP)-Jftad.\ning was strong snd active- on the\nCalgary   livestock   market   today, :\nand, with the exception of heavy\nbutcher steers, prices were steady I\nto strong. On offer were 2624 cattle ;\nand   calves,  Including  2000 head\nheld over, mostly medium to'go\u00ab4\nreplacement cattle and stock celvei.-1\nGood to choice butcher steers\nover J150 pounds were $1,30 or more\nlower for the week, but good llglit\nbutcher steers and heifers were\nfully steady. Cows were In good demand at steady prices, bulls strong\nto 30 cents higher. Stocker and\nfeeder steers were in keen demand\nat strong prices, with stock steer\ncalves up to $23. Veal calves wen\nsteady.\nGood to choice butcher steers, $21\nto $24; common to medium, $16 to\n$21.30.-\nGood to choice butcher heifers,\n$19 to $21; common to medium, 115\nto $18.50.      ,\nGood light cows, $12.30 to $14;\ncommon to medium, $11 to $13.23;\ncanners and cutters, $7 to $10.30.\nGood bulls, $12 to $18; common to\nmedium, $10 to $11.50.\nGood stocker and feeder stein\n$19 to $21; common to medium, $18\nto $18.50. i\nGood to choice veal calves, $1$ to   |\n$20;  common to medium, $18 to\n$17.50.\nCAMP SUPPLIES\nLoek-Tite Camp Beds\n8' x 6' Camp Beds, frame\nV\/t\" angle Iran, legs and\nends 1\". Eaoh _ $9.78\n8'6\" x 6'6\" Camp Beds,\nframe V angle Iran, legs\nand ends 1\". Each  $11.25\nMattresses\nr x 6'-No. X Box Edge\nPelt Eech ., .... \u201e $9.50\n8'6\" x 6\"6\u00bb-No. 1 Box\nEdge Pelt Each     \u201e$11_*\nV x r-Sprlng Pilled.\nEeeh  $19_\u00bb\n8'6\" x 6'6\"-Sprlng Pilled\nEaoh .: _....' ._$at_w\nSheet.\nKhaki drill.64\"x90\u00bb. Pair H.1B\nKhaki Drill 72\"x90\". Pair $8.98\nFlannelette, Grey er\nWhite 60\"x60\". Pair $SJ>\nUnbleached Cotton,\n60\"x90\". Pair $5_S\nPillow, Case*\nKhaki drill. Dot. ...\nUnbleached Cotton. Dox.\nBleached Cotton. Dot,   .\nBlankett\nQrey, 64 x 84, 7-lb. Pair $11.80\nWine, 64 x 84, 61\/,-lb.\nPair        :....\u00bb11_W\nQrey, 64 x 76, 6'\/j-lb.\nPair _.\u201e _..,___. $9_\u00bb\nPillowt\nProcessed feather. Each $1.85\nFeather and Down. Each $240\nBunk Covert\nWhite Duck, 88\" x 72\",\n6-os. Each ....         . $1.7*\nWhite Duck, 54\" x 90\",\nEach  _.... $2,96\nMattress Cover*\n6-oz, Each    $171\nCLEMENT & CO.\n1925 Burrard St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nOR\nNelion Sales Representative\nMORT BROWNE\n506  Vernon  St  \u2014  Phone   1590\nGreen  With\nWhite Side-Walls\n1951 Dodge Club Coupe\n1950 Dodge Sedan\n1950 Dodge Sedan\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1948 Dodge Club Coupe\n1947 Plymouth 2-Door Sedan 8\"tEctc\u00b0ve\u00bb'\n1950 Ford Sedan\n1941 Chevrolet Coupe\nSuperior Motors\nOpposite Post Office '\u25a0 Phone 75\nQrey. Low Mileage.\nNew Rubber. Maroon.\n8iin  Vlaer,\nRadio, Seat Covers.\nGood  Rubbsr,\nSeat Covers.\nNew Motor, New Paint\nAll Leather Upholstery\nPerfect; Condition.\nM2''\n \u2022\nH5S\nWhat Every Husband Should Buy\nfor His Wire.. .\nObtainable In three colors ...' Red, Green, Blue\nAvailable at three prlcei...\n$1.59       $1.75      $2.75\nGuaranteed as to quality and workmanship.\nExcellent for cold feet, chilly* sheets\nlind a tendency to chilblains.      \"\nYOUR GUESS IS CORRECT\n'It 1$     ;.2\nOkatoif\nHot Water Bottles\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, NOV. 14,1952\nTrygve Lie Adviser\nPlunges to Death\nExpect Blackout\nOn Ike's Visit\nNEW YORK, NOV. 18 (AP)\u2014Abraham H. Feller, 47, an - adviser' to\nTrygve ;Lle, United Nations secretary-general, plunged to his death\nI today from hla 12th-floor apartment\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLANP\n& IMRIE '\u25a0\n'   Chartered Accountant*\n- ...Auditor* :--\u2014\"<;*\n871 Baker St PHons 235\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n;:  \"at the   ;-.:      '.''^';\nNelson Upholstery.\n409 Hall Street   '      Phone-148;\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St        Phone 381\nGENERAL\nGliCK\njhsL ixhfii&vmjL\nNo more:Worry about foiling osleepdhd leaving the radio' on . . .\nNo more stortled waking>d jangling alorms. . . Not with a G.E.\nCLOCK RADIO ... A clock, a radio, ond a musical alarm . . .\nThe best of each.\nModel C504 \u2014 $42.50\nModel C505 \u2014 $59.95\n374BaME\u00bb.\nGENERAL   J\u00bb ELECTRIC\nPhona 260\nwindow despite his wife's attempts\nto nold him.\nThe wife,. Alice, said he killed\nhimself because pressure of his\nwork was \"so.enormous.\" He had\nbeen suffering from a nervous disorder for severe' weeks.'\nRobert Morris, ..counsel for the\nMcCarran Congressional Committee\nInvestigating Subversion and Communism among American staff\nmembers of the United Notions, said\nhe and Roy Conn, special assistant\nto the U.S. Attorney-General, ques\ntloned Feller recently in connection\nwith his official legal capacity with\ntheU-N. -\nNOT'SUPOENAED\nMorris said that-Feller, was not\nunder subpoena to appear ss i\nwitness before the committee.\nFeller was art $18,000-a-year executive. Be had been-general counsel\nand principal director of the U.N.\nlegal department since 1948.\nHe did not report for work Wednesday. His wife said he arose today talked of killing himself, then\ndashed tp a window overlooking a\nrear courtyard.\n\"I held him as long as I could,\"\nshe sobbed. \"Then he fell.\"\nMrs. Feller received'reporters\nIn her apartment and broke down at\ntimes.\n\"He felt he had too many, things\nto do and couldn't get them all\ndone,\" she said.\nShe said he began to \"crack tip\"\nabout two weeks ago and that lately\nhe had been \"unable to concentrate\non things.\".... - - j\nAssociates sard Feller was a close\nfriend of Alger Hiss, former State'\nDepartment official now In prison\nfor perjury.\nSEOUL, Korea, No*. 13 CAP)\nTh\u00bb United Stales Eighth Army's\npublic Information officer -today\npredicted a news blackout during\npresident-elect Eisenhower's visit\nLt.-Col. R. P, Rosengren said a\nfinal decision had not been made,\nbut it \/ was probable the world\nwould get no news of Elsenhower's\ntrip until tfter he had left Korea io\nreturn to the d.S.\nDate o\" Eisenhower's arrival Is a\nclosely-guarded secret.       .\u201e;\nWanes and helicopters will carry\nat least 35 reporters, photographers\nan, radio men with Eisenhower on\nhis tour around Korea.\nIn case of a new- blackout, copy\nwill be held by the Army to be\nreleased the moment the ban Is\nlifted.\nAt Pusan, a government spokesman sale earlier that Elsenhower\nprobably will -neet President Syng-\nman Rhee In secrecy near Seoul.\nNanalmo Man Seeks\nP.C. leadership\nVICTORIA, Nov, 13 (CP) \u2014\nOeene Finlayson, 33-year-old Nanalmo real estate man, said today\nhe will seek the leadership of the\nProgressive Conservative party at\nthe Nov. 19 eonventlon In Van\ncouver.\nHi .became the first Tory to announce his candidature for the\npost to succeed Herbert Anscomb\n.of Oak Bay. c'\n\"I believe the party needs new\nleadership,\" Mr. Finlayson said,\n\"and I hops by offering myself\nas a candidate I ean brine together\nthe younger and' older elements\nIn the party.\"   ...\nAmateur Chemist\nBlows Self Up\nThe ancient Egyptian scarab Is\nan image ot the once-sacred dung\nbeetle which was revered as a type\npt the sun god. ;\u25a0'_' -\nThe Kootcitay's Favorite\nDance Rendezvous\nDANCE\n9 to 1\n-:\nSEE\nOUR\nD\nI\nS\nP\nL\nA\nr        ||^y\nLeonard\nRefrigerators\nlook what you con hove!\nArid \"lucky Pop\" too-if the Christmas list includes\nthese fop quality, moderately Driced appliances!,\nUSE OUR LAY AWAY PLAN\nSEE\nOUR\nD\nI\n8\nP\nL\nA\ny\ns\nLegion Welcomes\nottawa; Nov. is <cp> \u2014 The\nCanadiar . Legion's leaden today\nwelcomed signs that an overhauling\nof a Reserve Army is-under consideration at Army headquarters.\nDr. C. B. Lumsden, Dominion\npresident, Issued a statement on the\nbasis of Press reports that a reorganization Is under study by Lt-\nGen. G. G. Slmonds, chief of the\nGeneral Staff.\nHe safdr the Legion's national\ncouncil 'Is gratified with the government's favorable reaction to our\nsuggestion tor examination and\noverhauling of the Reserve forces.\"\nIt the steps taken were sufficient,\nthe Legion was ready to withdraw\nits call for a royal commission Inquiry Into the \"dangerous weak-\nises and Inadequacies of the\nReserves.\"\nPIGEON, Ont, Nov. 13 (CP)-Am-\nateur Chemist.Leslie7Rawlins, 30,\nblew himself to pieces today while\nexperimenting with a.chemistry set\nthat exploded,   i vl*\nFragments of, his body \"were scattered abouf the bathroom of -his\nhome.: He liyed with his father,\nHenry Rawlins.\nAll the upstairs windows in the\nhouse were shattered by, the blast;\nThe entire window' frame of the\nbathroom was hurled 'to the lawn\nbelow a piece of, window curtain\nwas left hanging':Inr a-tree 30 feet\naway. \"LJy'-'y\/, \u25a0\" . \u2022\u25a0;\nRawlins was alone ln'the house\nat.thatitne,.   ..\nOWN A-BOM_T-:\nFriends said Rawlins told them\njokingly that he. was working or\nhis own '.'atomic bomb\"  .\nThey described him as \"brilliant.'\nCrown Attorney Gordon Walms-\nley said there was hot a.\"trace of\nevidence\" ss to .what caused the\nex^losiqii. -\"We-are checking his\npurchases during the last tew weeks\nto determine what caused lt.\"\nRawlins, a flying officer during\nthe Second World War,' had not\nworked steadily since, his return\nfrom overseas. He was on a partial\npension due. to war, injuries.\nHe spent a great deal of time in\nKlS home laboratory, a second-floor\nroom be had converted for that use.\n[SEE THESE\nmfmi\nLABOR SAVERS\n\u2022il\nMcClary\nElectric\nRanges\nGainaday\nConvertible\nWasher\nElectric\nHotPlates\nSandwich\n'  Toasters\nBottle\nWarmers\nElectric\nFloor\nPolishers\nat Wood Vallance\n<$utibMm mmKster\nOnly the new\nModel 10 Mix-\nmaster has the exclusive larger\nBOWL-PIT beat.\ners for EVEN mixing, greater AERATION, and light-\ner, higher, finer-\ntextured cakes.\n*\u201e*, TOASTER\nAll you do is drop\nla the bread. Bread\nlowers itself auto- 1\nmatlcolly, no lev I\ners to push. Toast I\nraises itself silently, without popping or banging.\ntSmSM COFFEEMAST.R     f^SSuM IRONMASTER\nIt's automatic! Yoo can't\nmlssl Same perfect coffee\nevery time.' Shuts itself\noff when coffee is. done,\nresets Itself to keep coffee\nhob\nGem-like chrome plate,\nInside and out.\nAmerica s most popular electric shaven\nTwice-as-wlde shaving surface gives\ndouble the beard coverage. Entirely now\nehapej '\n'SHAVEMASTER\nHeats quicker-\nstays hotter\u2014irons\nfaster. Start ironing in 30 seconds\nafter you connect\nit. Thumb-Tip,\nHeat Regulator,\nWAFFLE BAKER\nHakes 4 delicious, good,\nsized waffles\nat one time\nautomatically.\nNo confusion,\nwaiting, or delay between waffles-\nserves 4 people with one baking\/\nMcClary\nRefrigerators\nGainaday\nElectric\nRanges\nMcClary\nElectric\nWashers\nElectric\nHeating Pads\nEgg\nCookers\nNine in Austria\nINNS8RUCI-, Austria, Nov. 13-\n(ftiuters) \u2014 Snowslides rumbling\ndown Alpine slopes kept nine persons trapped today and claimed the\nfirst two deaths ss In early Winter\nsettled OVei the Tyrol.\nMountaineers were making a\nsecond attempt to reach three lumbermen and their woman cook.'\nThey have been trapped three days\nin a hut 4800 feet above sea level in\nthe.mountains.\nTwo workers, buried under tons\nof anow on Fierberbrunn Tuesday,\nwere given up tor dead today\u2014the\nfirst avalanche victims in the Austrian Alps this year. Dozens were\nkilled there last year,\nPolice at Scharnitz, in the Tyrol\nNorth ot here, said a hunter, hla\nwife, their 4-year-old child,' and\ntwo. Other men were isolated In a\nhut on the Larchetlam in the Kar-\nwendel Mountains! All attempts to\nget food to the hut so far have\nfailed.\nYukon Gels New\nElectric Plant .\nOTTAWA, Nov. IS (CP) - Permanent light end electric power Is\nbeing supplied mines and communities In the Yukon, 20T miles\nSouth of the Arctic Circle.\nThe Resources Department said\ntoday that a hydro plant near Mayo\nhas been opened, bringing light and\nelectricity to the frontier settlements of Mayo Landing, Galena and\nKeno Hill, about 215 miles North of\nWhltehorse. Previously light and\npower came trom costly diesel\ngenerating plants at the mines.\nHomes mostly used oil lamps for\nlight.\nEngineers of a Vancouver construction company (Northern Construction - and J. W. Stewart Co.\nLtd.) built the plant It has a\ncapacity of 3000 horsepower which\ncan be expanded to 6000.\nPower is supplied to lead, rlnc\nand silver mines in the sub-Arctic\ncommunities where a few hundred\nminers, prospectors and trappers\nlive;\nEngineers built two dams \u2014 one\non the Mayo River and another In\nMayo Lake \u2014 to supply a 120-foot\nhead of water and ensure a steady\nflow. From the main dam, water\nflows down an elght-by-seveh-foot\ntunnel to the powerhouse turbines.\n260,000 ACRE-PEET\nThe Mayo Lake dam, a rock-\nfilled timber crib 320 feet long by\nIS feet high, will raise the lake\nlevel, about 10 feet. This will store\n250,000 acre-feet of water, equal to\nabout three years natural run-off,\nPower Is delivered' from the\npowerhouse to Mayo Landing by a\n6000 volt transmission line six miles\nlong. The Gelena and-Keno' Hill\nareas will be serviced by a 69,000\nvolt line 33 miles long.\nThe line to Mayo Landing will\nsupply 62 domestic users, 40 businesses and street lighting. The second line will run Into the mines\nat Gelena and Keno HIU.\nNew\nUnderwear\n\u2022 To Keep Warm\nComfortably :\n\u2022 Our complete selection\nIncludes both union\nsuits and shirts and\n- longs In all grades of\nwool, part wool or\ncotton.\n'       WATSON'S\nSTANFIELD'S\nHARVEY WOODS\nVIKING\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED 4 REPAIRED\nRECQRING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 PRONT ST. PHONE 6S\nHay* tht Job Don* Right\nVIC GRATES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL tRAININO)\n.Medical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phono 141\nSEE OUR DISPLAYS\nElectric\nBlankets\nGainaday\nElectric\nIroners\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nM\nPhone 1530\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nWholesale\u2014Retail\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0MM\nNelson, B.C.\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 327\n876 Baker St\nUnder Discussion\nSEIGNIORY CLUB, Montebello.\nQue,. Nov. 1. \u2014 The spruce budworm, \"number one killer ot Eastern softwood forests\", received a\nlot of attention during the annual\nmeeting of the Air- Industries and\nTransport Association here. B. W.\nFlelger, general manager of Forest\nProtection Limited, told A.I.T.A.\nmembers of last June's \"Operation\nBudworm\" when his company organized the aerial spraying of\nhundreds of square miles of New\nBrunswick forestland to kill off the\nhungry menace.\nMr. Flelger showed a. motion pic\nture describing the whole operation\nof the now-famous spraying'Job,\nright from the building ot the air\nstrip in the centre of the. infected\nforest during last Winter through\nto the final take-off ofthe spraying aircraft     ,\nHe reported the kill of the voracious insects as fantastic, saying\nthat in the 300 square miles sprsyed\nkills of 89.8 per cent to 100 per cent\nwere recorded.\nHe reported that plans are now\nafoot for the spraying of the entire\n5000 square miles Infected area on\na larger scale, and five more airfields are now being cut out ot the\nforests .in the.area.''. .\nMr. Flelger described all the preparation's which had to be made for\na spraylnglob of the'size of \"Operation Budworrn\" telling his audience\nthat it was the first time in history\nthat's* are competing with .the\nworm for the-same woodpile.' -\nCOMOX, B;C\u00bb Nov. >13 (CB-\nDawson and HaU'Ltd* Vancouver,\nhas been-awarded the contract to\nbuild at $4,000,000 cantilever hangar\nat the RCAF station here. It will\nmeasure 300 by 400 feet, and will be\nthe largest in British Columbia on\ncompletion.  .,\nFafemi Denies\nRed Propaganda\nTEHRAN, Iran, Nov. 13 (API-\nForeign Minister Hossein Fatemi today denied reports of a projected\nRussian-ilranian deal for a non-aggression treaty' provided Iran\nthrows out American military missions here. .\n. Several Tehran newspapers reported without attribution this\nweek, that Russia was offering the\nnon-aggression pact,- Iranian control\nof the' now Jointly-operated Caspian fisheries, and about 12 tons of\ngold Iran claims the Soviets owe as\nrefund for money Issued to Russian\nwartime occupation troops.\nIn return, the reports said, Iran\nwould cancel her agreements with\nthe U.S. for providing military aid\nand advisory training missions.\n\"This is a fabricated fiction, very\nwell contrived,\" Fatemi told newspaper men. \"One means ot poisoning public opinion is the fabrication\nof lies.\"     . ;\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC -BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n676 Baker 8t\nMad. Arts Blk.\nPHONE\u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescription*\nPhone m\n= AGENTS FOR S\n| Mldo-Multifort Watches |\n5 3\nE Located directly across from   3\nB       F. W. Woolworth Co. s\nalllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllir\nPut Seagram's \"83\" to the water\ntest. Wtter, plain or sparkling, reveal* 1\nwhisky's true, natural flavour\nsad bouquet\nSeagrams \"83\"\nCanadian *Whitfy\n'  0T Seagrams _w*6 Sure\nthis advertisement Is not published or displayed by\nAm Liquor Control Board or by Iho Government of British Columbia\nAsk Your Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWHOLE  WHEAT  OR  WHITE\nIt Makes Excellent Home-Made\nBread\nPHONE. 238\nELLISON MILLING\nA ELEVATOR CO, LTD.\nChristmas  Gift*\nin \u2022   \"\nEnglish Leather\nLeather Manicure Kits \u2014 $9.96\nLeather Shaving kits (Pitted)\n$5.95. and $8.60\nLeather Brush Cases \u2014 $7.50\nAt Your Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nBOX 460\nPhona 34,  Day \u2014 807-R Night\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nOF\nChevrolets\nSee Us Today for an\nOK\nUsed Car or Truck\n1951 FORD SEDAN\n1946 DODGE SEDAN\n1952 CHEVROLET 1\/2-TON PICKUP\n1950 MERCURY 1\/2-TON\n1950 FORD 1\/2-TON\n1950 G.M.C. 1\/2-TON    .\nWe have several ether unit*\nfor you to choose from.\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe largest and most completely equipped garage\nv in the Interior of British Columbia.\nM2 PHONE 35\n'\"''\u25a0,.        ...      ....   ...\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1952_11_14","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0426490","@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":"1952-11-14 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1952-11-14 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\/1.0426490"}