{"@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":"2023-03-02","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1953-10-05","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427481\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" nspa-ww^\nowns Seek Freedom\nom Supplying\nrater Beyond Limits\nProvincial Loans otLow Interest *\nRates, Installment Buying for\nEquipment Sought by Municipalities\nCASTLEQAB \u2014 Fifty-three of 5^ resolutions preyed to the Association of Kootenay Municipalities were\ntorsea at the Fall.coherence here Saturday. -' ,7 7\nI Sixty-six delefaW^Were on hand'for the-:_usjness\nsionvin the Twin, Rivers Hall after which a sightseeing\nJjr !,w_s conducted through the Brilliant power-plaht7and\n(stlegar airpbrt. '\u2022:\u25a0-.\niyor. R. E. Sang of Cranbrook\/\nlideht of the Union 01 -B.C,,\ninicipalities, was the speaker at\ngala turkey banquet In the\nuialrd Improvement Society hall\nich brought the highly success-,\nconvention to a close;\nattended by 150 municipal dele-\nes and invited guests, the ban-\nit was followed by top flight\nideal arid comedy entertainment,\n-anged \u2022 and emceed by Wally\niper of Kinnaird. \"   \u2022\u25a0\ninventions such as these are\niiiently worthwhile, Mayor Sang\nthe banquet audience. 75 per\nit of the resolutions approved by\ninicipal conventions in the past-\nire -eventually  become law, -he\nd;-- \u00bb\nJayor Sang also spoke of the\nreasihgly difficult -problems,\nnicipalilles must face. The\ninicipalities share, of total re-\nme is decreasing, but the serv-\ndemanded of them are increas-\n, he said. He pointed out that in\nB, municipalities collected 39 per\nto. total,tax revenue but their\nre in 1951 was only 11.9 per\n1 \"...\nAmong the resolutions endors-\nd at the business session! duqlng\nte day, was a Vernon resolution\nring that municipalities, be\nlaced, outside the scope ofthe\ntibllc Utilities Act so that they\nannot be forced to supply water\nHrvlee to residents outside their\noundarles.\n.nother resolution' endorsed,\n:ed that Villages be given the\nr.er. to expropriate land- and\nisr real property for road .stares, as cities are able to do.\nresolution proiding the pro-\ncial government allocate to\nnicipalities profits from sale of\n_or, proportionate to the burden\n\u2022ne by the municipalities in law\nbrcement occasioned by the mis-\nof the gpvernment's liquor,\ns also endorsed by the convenes A proposal to enable school\nnhers.' to qualify for service on\nnicipal councils and municipal\nincillors  to  qualify fpr School\nEn\n7res6sUiioii_ app|(bvpd were:\nlhat the provincial;government\nmburse municipalities ', for 80 per\nit of 'the cost of funerals for,\nlftenjs; 7,7.\nbat assessment appellants be\niwed two weeks to;givel notice\nappeal regarding tax assess-\nntSi'-.',\nW INTEREST RATES\n!hat the federal government\nsin make operative the protons of the Municipal Improve-\nnts Assistant Act of. 1938, in\nter that funds may-once more be\nde available to municipalities at\nit rates of interest, for the ,con-\niiction of self-liquidating \u2022___}-\ns; . '- .-' '\nChat a council or board of com-\nssioners be empowered,' subject\nthe prior approval of the electors\n1 inspector of municipalities, to\n*t into agreements' calling for\ntallment payments over a future\n-iod. not exceeding five years,\n- capital expenditures for work\nequipment. ;'.\nChat' the Sheep Protection Act\nrepealed since it provides insures for a preferred class of 'resists in a municipality and is dis-\nminatory    to    other -residents,\nmaking provision only for damages\nby dogs to sheep, goats or-poultry.\nDEFEATED   -.'''. -\u2022>-\nAmong the resolutions defeated\nwas one urging that representatives\npf ratepayers groups duly incorporated under the Societies Act,'be\nallowed to be present in polling\nstations during vote on money bylaws for the purpose pf getting out\na better vote.'-The convention.'-felt\nsuch groups would thus have the\npower to exert undue Influence on\nthe voting. - -  *\nMayor   W.   E.   Map Arthur   of\nGreenwood served notice that he\nwould move an amendment to the\nconstitution at Ihe Sprint, meeting of the association at, Marysville and Chapman Camp, which\nwould   give   village, clerks'the\nright-to vote at the association's\nbi-annual conventions,-\nMayor J. Kary of Nelson, association   president,  congratulated   the\nCastlegar    and    Kinnaird    commissioners for a splendid job of\narranging the day.\nmm.\nmhi _\\rctu_>\n^^03\nWEATHER FORECAST\n. Mostly   clear.  Little   change  in.\ntemperature. Winds light. Low-high\nat Cranbrook and Crescent Valley\n30 and 65\n-B. C, CANADA-MONDAY MORNING, OCTOBER S, 1953\nNo, 139\nKimberleyite Charged\nIn Youths Shooting\nUnions Want No\nBoard Supervision\nOf Strike Vofes\nVANCOUVER (CP) \u2014 Abolition\npf labor relations board supervision of strike votes was demanded Saturday at a meeting between\nLabor Minister Lyle Wicks and'\nB.C.'s two main labor organizations.\nThe strike vote demand was\namong 65 amendments to the Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act proposed at the meeting\nhere by the B.C. Trade UrilpnCon?\ngress, representing all AFL unions\nIn the province, and the B.C.,, Federation of Labor, representing CCL\nunions. 7  , \u2022'\u2022..,, .-\".,.\nISf! an' earlier conference- BeoSus*'\nthe labor; minister. Irurftea; vlbcaj\ngroups rather.: fltaa;-|h'e province^\nWide, policy-making councils. This\nresulted in briefs being presented\nat the time >6y7on|y the United\nMine,' Mill.sind Smelter Workers\nunion and the Native Brotherhood.\nMr. Wicks also met previously\nWith representatives of, business\nand tadustry and received requests\nfrom them for 25 changes In the\nISA Act. Most of these proposals\n.were in conflict with the view .of\nlabor.   '\nThe B.C. Federation of. .Labor\npresented a'brief asking 53 changes,\nwljile the Trade Unlep Copgress\nasked 12. amendments and, made\nother recommendations. These i included a plea for. re-establishment\nof a fsjll-tlme labor relations board\n;ahd the setting up of arbitration\nprocedure for'the settlement of\ndisputes between the government\nand its employees.\nBoth of the'-big.! labor groups\nasked abolition of the labor relation\nboard's power to supervise strike\nvotes. They also asked elimination\nof the right of the board to submit\nstrike settlement offers to employees \"over the heads\" of union\nofficials.\n''Operation   Spread-Out\",  In   which  striking\nlongshoremen park their cars,Ih a spotty pattern\nover a pier Instead of setting up a .hard and fast\npicket line, got under way  In  Philadelphia lis -\nports along the East Coast were affected by;>a\ndock' workers' Walkout More than 7600 dock\nworkers In the Greater Philadelphia area are on'\nstrike, International Longshoremen's Association\nspokesmen claimed.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nMOBILIZATION EXPERT WARNS... . . .:\nSoviet H - Bomb Threat\nCause lor U. S. Concern\nBy STERLING F. GREEN\nWASHINGTON \u25a0,'(APJ%%blli-a-\ntion director Arthur S. .Flemming\nsaid Sunday Russia can, deliver the\nhydrogen, l\u00bbmb7'Vjijdejj-y: and\nwithout warning*' on chosen United\nStates targets, andluii^t U.S, mobilization should be geared to that\nthreat'  -'.' ;''=\u25a0 ..'\"'\nThe. statement ' made at the\nopening of Flemming'? quarterly\nreport to President Eisenhower,\nwas more definite and sweeping\nthan any previous official appraisal\nof. Soviet H-bpmb development.\nFlemming did not Indicate that\nthere are plans to speed the military buildup, although the national\nsecurity council 'lis re-evaluating\nthe U.S. defence status in the light\npf. the H-bomb hazard. \u2022-\u25a0\nThe\" Flemming document stressed,\nl%e^'$teW>tif&i^^\nthe office of defence mbbfflzatlpn,\npreparedness measures to keep industry and government going in\nevent of an atomic or hydrogen\nbomb assault,   \u2022' .*''  .-'. \u25a0\u2022;-j\nFlemming said the Soviet threat\nmeans the S, must have a defence\nmobilization program of size and\nscope sufficient to deter an aggressor or, if attack comes, \"to enable\nus to'fight and win.\"\n; Official statements up to this\ntime have .not said that Russia\npossesses a deliverable, completed\nH-weapon. -. . ,\nAn announcement by Russian\npremier Malenkov Aug. 8 said the\nUnited States now \"has no monopoly In the production of the hydrogen bomb.\"'        7     \u25a0'...''\"! [\nLater that month, chairman\nLewis L. Straus of the atomic\nenergy commission said tho AEC\nhad received information that the\nRussians had tested a \"thermonuclear device.\"\nNEW8MAN DIE8      '.\"-.    '        .:\nOTTAWA: (CP)-Charles J.- Mitchell, 78, veteran newspaper man\nand telegraph editor at the dhar-\nlottetown Patriot for many years,\ndied in Ottawa Saturday. Mr. Mitchell retired from The Patriot in\nJune and went to Ottawa last\nmonth to live with his daughter,\nBennellr Manning\nHold Caucus\nEDMONTON <CP>\u2014Premier W.\nA. C. Bennett of BritiBh Columbia\njoined Premier Manning and the\n15 members-elect of Parliament\nrepresenting Social, Credit today for\nfurther: discu ssion on federal poll-;\ncles they will advocate at thd next'\nsitting of the .HpUse of Commons.\nHeading the group in a closed:\nmeeting ip.the legislative huildlngs\nare- Solon-Low, national leader of\nthe patty.- apd JfW _!, ffit&attfeiX\nnational \u25a0; president,\nSecond Blast In\nTwo Days Rips\nPoupore Tracks\n'\u25a0\" CASTLEGAR \u2014 The second\ndynamite blast Ih as many days\nblew out a three-foot section of\ntraik early Saturday morning on\na CPR siding at Poupora, sevSn\nmiles South 'Bf-'.netat: -\nThe blast, heard lata Friday\nnight, went undiscovered until\nSaturday morning whan track\npatrols, making- regular I inspections, found dynamite had,ripped\na hole in the .ground, damaged\nseveral ties and blew-out-a rail.\nTrain schedules were' not af-\nfeotod,\n' Friday, an explosion ripped a\n- large hole in the track bed, and\n'blew out.a-three and a half foot\nsection of rail on the CPR's,Kattlo\nValley line near vVynhdeU....;',,\n\/ Late Saturday night a blast was\nhear4 near Gbtfc Lynn by- 1iye\nresidents of that area,' but its\nsou'reevwas not ideritlfled.\nTWO DIE IN\nBURNING PLANE\nAvenger Overtidms.\nIn Forced Landing,\nf Three Escape\n\u25a0KENORA, Ont. (CP) \u2014 Two.of\nfive crew members died trapped in\nturning wreckage Sunday when a\nnavy Avenger aircraft, in.trouble\nfor the: second-time since leaving\nihe. west coast overturned and\nburned in attempting an emergency\nlanding here.\nThe other three\u201ein the rear of the\nsingle-engine light bpmber, were\nable to scramble to safety all but\nuninjured in the brief moments\nbefore the aircraft caught,lire after\nflipping over on ltp .back.,\nKilled' \u2022 were ; the' pilot; v Lieut\nGeorge Noble of Halifax and Toronto-and PO. George: Wraith of\nthe Shearwater naval base at Hall?\nfax.\" \u25a0 \u25a0''\u25a0\u25a0'-\u2022\u25a0' '\u25a0       V\u00bb!:.'v: \u2022 77 < v,'\nThe survivors were identified as\nFO. Adolph Chranows, Dartmouth,\nN.S.; PO. John White, Dartmputh,\nand LS. Garfield O'Connor; ot New\nWestminsters B.C. - , \u25a0\u2022\nThey were flown back tp Rivers,\nMan.; where they had been delayed\nearlier'by. engine trouble on the\nreturn lap of a training flight which\nhad taken them from the east coast\nto Vancouver,. Y<\n: Some five hours' after the.crash\nthe two bodies were'removed from\nthe still-burning .wre-kage, heaped\nat thej.soutli end Of the,alrpor,t's\nnorth-south runway.\n,; RCAF niembprs who flew to the\nscene after the, crash reported a\nshortage of fir.efightlng equipment\nat the field, 130 miles east of Winnipeg...'.-      \/ 7   \u25a0\u25a0\u2022-\u25a0 '-'\".-^tis.-\n17-Year-0ld To\nl-CMP Dig Body From Two-Week   \"\nOld Grove Outside Kimberley\n35IM-5RL--Y -%: A l_te^\nmurder-iri\" connection with the-\" shooting' of a iffryear-old?;\nKelowna youth.7 ,' \u2022 '      ,.\n'Darwin Sullivan wis charged: Saturday in proviliclal\"\u00bb\ncourt here foHdwuig discovery'-of.the body'.ot EdwMd G()-ien.;:\n: Coejen's 'body wasbiiried in a woods ay few;miles frptB;,\nKimberley and was. recovered by RGMP' early Saturda'y\/\nmorning. RCMP in Nejson believed the, shooting occurred in'\nthat afea on September 21.     ' \/ ,  ,   ,;\nA'CM, ownedibyGoelen^iitwlii^ M\nluggage were idiindj was discovered several d^ys; ibefori\u00bb\nSullivan's arrest,It^^had'iie'en hidden in the woddsV , , t   :\nThe youth, whose parents survive him in- KdoWna-\nwas driving through. Kimberley on hu way tp Gtdgary;\nRCMP said he apparently died from a 'rifle bullet in tha\nback. Police did not reveal further dt.tails. ;\u2022>,      :\nNo Word Of\nKidnapped Bey\nKANSAS CITY (AP)-HsS something gone wrong in the Bobby\nGreenlease kidnapping case? .\n. If the kidnappers haven't made\nContact with the .wealthy parents\nof the six-year-old boy, as their\nspokesmen say,,why haven't they?\nIf theyihave, as.one tumor perr\nslats despite a family denial, what's\nholding up completion. of ransom\nnegotiations and the child's return.\nIt has, been seven days how since\nlittle Bobby was abducted from a\nprivate Catholic school by a woman\nwho posed as the boy's aunt to the\nnun m charges:\n' Today the FBI can enter the case\nactively Under, the Lindbergh, Act\nwhich presumes that if. a kidnap\nvictim is not returned wBhlij-'seven\ndays, he or she was transported\n-across a .state line.   '   7 \u25a0\nHang lor Mitrdetg^yg^\n\u25a0 G\/aiG\/iHS\"' (CP) !t Seyenteen-\nlyeir-old'Bbbert'>R. Ytikiety..\"Satur-\nu__y .'night \u25a0 wis , sphtetlced to; be\nRanged, convicted of the knjfe=slay-\ning of another youth whof'was bis\nrival for the, affections of a teenage glri;\n.-A'slx'man lury\" brought;, to a\nguilty verdict after deliberating 2_\nhours, and.Mr. slustice J IBpyd McBrlde, sentenced Yokety to hang\nJan. 12 ,for the I murder of Brian\nSnell,;also 17,last May 12,   .''\nThe condemned'youth's mothers\nwho. attended the Six-day, trial, began to weep but then composed\nherself - and. stared, straight .ahead\nafter she heard the verdict   7 ,\n! , Yokety himself, small and. pale,\n(.received the sentence In a resigned\n! manneiyshowihg no emotion. ,.','\nI .The .cburtrdom; was crpwded.with\ni teen-age'; friends' of  the  youths,\n\u25a0 whose pursuit ofthe same girl led\n| to tragedy. Several teen-age girls\n, sobbed loudly when the sentence\n! was passed.1\nBMIjA_,'Tp5c; (AP) '\u2014\u2022 'Ai-rned\nand'edgy-Pallas cltiiehs. reported\nseeing or ihooting .sit,' U prowlers\nand peeping toms as the city wide\nmanhunt continued,Sunday fpr the\nrapist-killer dt lj_fs'--H.\" C.\" -\"arker.\nThe only injury reported was a\nman who \"shot himself in the hand\nwhile unloading a shotgun after he\nhad investigated a prowler outside\n_is house, ft ,   ..-..\u25a0 ,\nEntertainer Sophie Tucker has an enthusiastic hug for Mew\nYork Yankees' Manager Casey SterigSI, left, and Chuck bressen,\nDodgers' leader, prior to the opening World Series gams', Casey\nSeems almost overcome by the greeting as Chuck kisses Sophie on\nthe cheek--(AP Wlrephoto.)\nVICTORIA (CP),-High-ranking\nnavy, army and air force officers of\nCanada and.-the United States-.concluded a series of defencec ohfer-\nehces at HMCS Dockyard Friday.1\nTop-secret discussions revolved\naround defence plans for western\nCanada, Alaska and the western\nUnited States.    '\u2022\u25a0 -777\nPRINCE DIpS, 93 7,7\nSTOCKHOLM (AP)\u2014Prince Oscar Bernadotte, 93-year-old .uncle\nof King Gustaf Adolf VI of Sweden,\ndied here Sunday; .Prince iOscal.'\nonly; surviving brother ofs the lata\nKing Gustaf V who died at 92 three\nyears ago, was the father of Count\nKoike Bernadotte, whoiwas.assassinated in Palestine' in.\" 1948 .while\nworking as the TfnJted'Nations hie-\ndiator, Ihere.   -. ,.-,' ': 7\nCardinal Closes\nMdnster Rally\n1 tytn6t PA8UTTI     \u2022\nVANCOUVtER (CP) - British _p\u00ab\nlumbia's biggest Roman Catholis\ncelebration, the silver, Jubilee of\nArchbishop 'William M. Duke and'.,\nthe golden jubilee of Vancouver's\nHoly Rosary Cathedral; concluded\nSunday with a oolortuj rally pf\n6500 persons at Gapilano Stadium,\n,Compiemorating... the church'a\n\"Feast of Our Lady pi; the Holjr\nRosary,\" which by coincidence came\nduring the dual jubilee of Archbishop Duke snd the cathedral, dignitaries and lay members of tha\nChurch publicly renewed their\npledge tp continue the .family recitation of the rosary for the intention\nof family solidarity.\n\u25a0 The rally, ending a series of week-\nlong celebrations, was presided over\nby James Cardinal McGuigan of\nToronto, assisted by-; some 80$ Canadian and American bishops.\nEarlier in the day, a jubilei mass -\nof (hanksgiving waj.sup^ to-.A'ch.-.\nbisEoprDuicer'in'th_':,H_wly.\"consecrated cathedral. The consecration,\nclimax of the cathedral's jubilee,\nwas- performed by,tht! archbishop\n,|_afUrday morning in. a lpng service\nmarking the cathedral's rededica-\ntion to God.  .,      ,\"\u25a0   v.  \u25a0,..)\u25a0       ,[ '\nSunday's rally, held1 to brilliant\nsunshine, opened with \"a solemn\nprocession of more than! 3000 parochial school children .and; seminarians. Following the entrance of .the\necclesiastical dignitaries, a group\nof 100 girls and boys, clad in the\ntraditional colors of the Virgin Mary\n\u2014blue and white -t farmed the\nfigure of a rosary along the rim of\nthe infield grass.      ':       -.\u2022',;\nLONDON (AP)\u2014The great clock\nat Westminster,. known7 to . the,\nworld as Big Ben, was stopped for\n60.minutes Saturday night as Brit-\nain had, its last few hours of summer tin*. Clocks Went back to\nGreenwich tiine at 2 a.m., Sunday.\nSeven Mtmn Aiter M Bciys in Bush\nKate, the worried pointer In the dog-house, takes a dim view of\nler master's new bet Skunk, Taboo has been descehted, but Kate\nloesn't know It. When out of hie cage, Taboo wants to-be pals and\nlangs around the dog house door. Kate wants nothing,to do with\nhat kind of kitty. The two are pets of Travis Hedge of-Dallas,\n'exasy\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.) .,;\nBy RICHARD DAIQNAULT\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBAQOTVILLE, Que. (CP)\n\u2014 Seven gaunt and dishevelled men were rescued Saturday from probable death by\nstairyation; .and, exposui;e in,\nQuebec's northern wilderness\nwhere they were lost 37 Atyiy\nThey were picked up from a remote fake and flown' nearly 300\nmiles to this RCAF base In Sa^ue-\nnay district where an awed crowd\nwatched, airmen assist them from\nrescue aircraft. -.\"..-.';\nThe seven were fed their first\nsquare meals in more than a month,\ngiven medical examinations and declared in need ot nothing more\nthan solid food, reunion with their\nfamilies\/ and rest\nTheir, rescue after more than\n200,000 square miles of northern\nQuebec had been patrolled by\nsearch planes brought a happy ending to one of the grim chapters\nin thfe story' of development of the\nCanadian'nOrth. ,\ni The party, flying In\" a single--\nengine Norseman plane,, were returning from a visit to properties\nof Fenimore Iron Mines Limited in\niron-rich Ungava when they dropped out of sight Aug.; a\".\nAboard ,; the 'pontoon-equipped\nplana which had beep due; to refuel at Nitchequon, half-way point\non -the 700-mile flight from Fort\nChimp to Roberval Were:\nRay Vanstono, Toronto student;\nVictor Abel, an experienced bush-\nman from. Senneterre, Que.; Klaas\nKoeten of Rotterdam, Holland;\nRolph Theinhaus,; German geologist\nfrom Seigen; Aridre 7 Levesque,\nMontreal? R. J \u00a5Mullln, Kenora.\nOnt.; and Richard Everitt, Monfe-\n'real., ...'. '\u2022-\u25a0\u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>\u2022,     ' 7-\nMullin Was the Norseman's pilot\nand Everitt,  the flight  engineer.\n8POTTEt> NdR&tWAN;  ;    ^\nFriday afternoon, on the second\nday of a final RCAF sweep of the\nlake-dotted, : heavily-wooded i area\nsouthwest of Nitchequon, Sqdn.\nLdr. Jack Woods of St. John's Nfld.,\npotted a Norseman dwarfed by\ntoll forests, around Lake Emmanuel\nand saw three men waving wildly.\nWoods parachuted food to the\nthree; Signalled, to their position\nto his gase at.Bagotville and waited\nforithe -rrivsi of.a Canso amphibian; owned by Mont Laurier Air.\njyajjs. .to whlcl^ the missing \"Nprse.\nman nieloriged.\nThe Canso also, signalled that the!\nfpur others;were not at'Ljike Em-:\nmanual having set put the day before on toot -in1 a' desperate, bid\nto reach safety and tell of the location of the other three before,\nwinter gripped the northern region.'\nAt 9:15 a.m,,: an RCAF Canso,.\nequipped-; with loudspeakers that\nblared advice to the four to light\na fire that would locate them, spotted the men hear Lake Emmanuel.\n'The Canso set down about a mile\naway, its crew went ashore to meet\nshe-four- men and  after feeding\nthem; flew then} to' Bagotyiiie.;.\u25a0',\nAn ambulance was ready 'but\nonly Levesque,used, it \u25a0    . i\nDr.' Theinhaus, though thin and\nweakened, celebrated with a weak\ndance on a small passenger-landing platform at the plane's side,\nwhile he waved and peered at the\ncrowd through horn-rimmed\nglasses. ;\nVanstone, whose- dark-hair; and\nbeard had grown.long,.when-first\nquestioned by ; newspaper men\nopened his mouth to answer but\nfound nothing to say.\nWORTHWHILE  EXPERIENCE\n: After a hospital visit, a meal\niand a shave, he. decided that he\nstill \"loved the litjrthland\" and\nplanned to go backi... '\u2022\n\"This has been a worthwhile experience,\" he said.       \u2022'._      :\nElderly Victor Abel said he had\nnot given up hope of rescue but\nwondered just when-and how it\nwould Cs_\u00bbe7\nAll lauded the efforts of pilot\nMullln who supervised distribution of their meagre rations\u2014two\n;; men's rations for 30 days\u2014and\nwatched over tho 'primitive comfort pf the group.\nAround' their   oampfire   while\nawaiting rescue in a clearing on\nihe  ropky  shore   they   discussed\ntheir chances of being. found and\nfinally concluded they: had been\ngiven up. as killed in a crash of\ntheir Norseman.   . \" .,''       .'.-\u25a0 . 7\nThe' lost men ate. sparingly to\nmake their food supply last as long\nas possible. ;'*\"\nWith a rifle the plane oarried\nthey brought down partridge. They\nsnared rabbits but had bad luck\nwhen a fishing net was lost.    '\nThe Only fish they were able to\ncatch in supposedly teeming water\nwere two trout.\nVanstone, 20-year-old student at\nthe1-University of Toronto, lost 40-\npouhds during the ordeal.\nPE0|DE;tx> SPLIT UP\nTelling of the group's decision\nto spilt up last Thursday, he said;\n\"We figured, we we're thought\ndead:, by. then and we remembered\nthat 'God helps them that help\nthemselves\"'\n- J, V. Allard, veteran bush pilot\nwho set,the Canso down on Lake\nEmmanuel,'said;\n\"^enrj^got to the camps .A-el\njumped up and grabbed me around\nthe,neck. I have never seen hap\npier mamf  .7 , \u2022   -,,;:-\nThe hush among spectators that\ngreeted the arrival at Bagotville of\nVanstone, Koeten and Abel was\nbroken by only a few nervous\nhandclaps. -,'.\u25a0\"'\"       7 -\u25a0\nThe arrival of the remaining four\nlater Saturday- afternoon also was\nquiet except for a shriek- from,\nEyeritfa mpther;\n. '!Ybu ipade it; Dick; you made\nit,\" she called out to him.\nihe rescued men's first request\nwere, tor food and the RCAF had it\nready for them.\n;\n-1\n'.'Chisago doctors said a rare operation \u2014 called the first of Its\nkind \u2014 saved the life of Colleen Gale Johnson, who Sleeps peace-\nfully In the arms'of her mother, Mrs. Charles Johnson at American\n'. Hospitals Colleen was born September 22 and It was found-that her\npancreas gland-was wrapped tightly around the duodenum, whloh,\nleads from stomach Into Intestines\/Examination showed. Infant\nwould die without corrective surgery, which Dr. Paul M, Eg'el performed, ths operation when Colleen was two days old. Dr. Max\nThorek, head of the hospital said the operation was the first successful one of Its kind.\u2014(AP Wlrephoto.). , -. . A\nArid m This Corner. f't\nDETROIT (AP)\u2014Arthur Wallace of Detroit was.granted an uncontested divorce wljen he told the judge:    '     ,..-,     -\n'fit-was bad enough when my wife made me take her former\nhusband along with us every time we went Out. But, when I always ,\ngotstudj. wltli^'tab, thatrvvaa tod-muolW'-'       ,.',;\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.' '-\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a07,\n-; i-lssj*\n'\u25a0:'..;.;'.v.;.;-\u25a0:,. -,\u25a0\u25a0.-\u25a0.';\u25a0\ny:-:';,..    ,   :.  \u25a0 1 .' \u2022 .'.      :\ny....\n ^^l^^rmma^ammm^mmmm\n\u25a0vv ;      \u25a0    \u25a0'\u25a0  \"\n2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1953\nTONIGHT\u2014TUESDAY Complete Shows 7:00-9:00\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTHEATRE\nMonday 7:30 \u2014 Tuesday 7:30\nLast Complete Show (tarts at S:10\n^enJBYHOILIMY..\nCOMINO WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nMBARCIANO-LA STARZA FIGHT PICTURES\nPluei \"WILD BLUE YONDER\"\n10 MILES EAST OF NELSON\nYour Drive-In Directory\nCRANBROOK MARYSVILLE\nFirst Wsowts 7i15 \u2014 All Shows Approx, I Hours\nI COMPLETE SHOWS EACH NIGHT\nTonight and Tues.\nReissue by Public Demand\n\/\/\nII\nMrs. Mike\nDick Powell and\nEvelyn Keyet\nA Srsut Book Becomes a\nGreater Picture.\nLast Timet Tonight\nluxury\nGirls'\nS. Stephen\nThe first suspension bridge In\nBritain was built In 1741 at Tees-\ndale, Yorkshire.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nBuy. Sell. Trade the Classified Way\nKERSEY\nWOOL SHIRTS\nFor Working Comfort\nTHE WOODSMAN\nJ AC SHIRT\nBright plaid. $*\u25a0!.95\nSquare cut;      \/\nCARIBOU KERSEY\nBright plaids. $Q.2S\nRegular .shirt style.    O\nCARIBOU KERSEY\nGrey only. $Q.SO\nSquare cut.     O\nWASHABLE, RUGGED\nPRACTICAL\nGodfreys*\nPhone \u2014 270 \u2014 Box\nU.S. Retains\nRyder (up\nVIRGINIA WATER, Eng. (AP) \u2014\nBy the narrowest possible margin.\nOverconfident United States golf\nprofessionals barely retained the\nRyder Cup Saturday with a SVs to\n5V4 victory over a determined Bri\ntlsh team.\nA pair of flubbed three-foot putts\ncost England the cup. -\nA three-footer missed by Bernard\nHunt of England on the 36th hole\nof the last of Saturday's eight singles\nmatches enabled Dave Douglas of\nNewark, Del., Canadian open cham\nplon, to draw even with Hunt. Under the scoring system used In cup\nplay, each country got one-half\npoint.\nPeter Allies also blew a three-\nfoot putt on the 18th -and was a.:\nup loser to Jim Turnesa of Briar-\ncliff, N.Y.\nCHILLIWACK, B.C. (CP)\u2014A\nfire which destroyed a resort house\nat Cultus Lake Friday night has\nbeen blamed on children playing\nwith firecrackers.\nOfficials at the. resort settlement\nsaid today a bylaw probitlng the\nsetting off of any type of explosive\nin the area would be strictly enforcer.\nOVER 100 STUDENT delegates were\nin Nelson over the weekend for the\nStudents Councils and Sponsors conference. Representatives of five centres\nwere, from: left, Scotty Henderson of\nPentlcton, Florence Nowick of Fernie,\nSylvia Shorthouse of Nelsqn, Joan Miller\nof Kimberley and Peter Fitonkish of\nGrand Forks.\u2014Vogue photo.\nAssociation of Student Councils\nIs For_^       Kootenay-Boimdary\nAn association made up of all month tor the track meet; and in-\nStudents' Councils In the Kootenay-\nBoundary area has been termed\nas a result of the student' conference held -here,Friday and Saturday.   ' ..- 7\nTha association will ba divided\nInto two groups, East and West\nKootenay, and each group will draw\nup a constitution to suit Its individual needs. Member schools of each\ngroup will meet regularly during\nthe year.\nAll schools belonging t othe Koot-\nenay-Boundary Students' Council\nAssociation will meet for an annual conference, however, and will\noperate under a central constitution.\nOne representative from each\nschool In the West Kootenay will\nmeet soon to draw up the constitution. Delegates from Natal-Michel,\nrepresenting the East Kootenay,\nwill take word back to their district so they may do the same.\nFinal decision on the association\nwas made Saturday afternoon at\nthe general session.\nGerry Borch, minister of citizenship on the Nelson High School\ncabinet, was chairman. tor the\nluncheon and the Saturday afternoon meeting.        , \"\"\u25a0'\nThe general meeting heard reports from the chairmen of the two\nmeetings held Friday afternoon\nwhen the larger and smaller schools\ndivided. The chairmen for these\nwere Lome Loomer, minister of\nfinance on the Nelsoti High School\ncabinet, and Leo Drugge, president\nof the Salmo Junior and-High\nSchools, respectively.\nThe first group reported discussion on the organization of activities and student government; types\nof activities for fund raising, school\nspirit and variety; and the awards\nsystem.\nThe second group reported discussion on much the same line as\nthe first with special emphasis on\nthe duties and responsibility to be\nplaced on the Junior students of\nths smaller Junior and Senior High\nSchools and the need for Students'\nCoifncils.\nPAPER8 EXCHANGED\nReports -were also heard of the\nmeetings' held Saturday morning.\nSylvia Shorthouse, chairman, of\ntha Publications meeting, reported\non the activities ot a Publications\nClub, Including school newspapers,\nannuals and bulletins; - representation and association of the club\nwith the Students' Council; means\nof creating interest In the club\nand its publications; organisation\nof the clubs including meetings\nand executives; make-up, material,\nfinancing and distribution of school\npapers and annuals. Discussion followed oh policy for exchanging\nschool papers and annuals . It was\ndecided that each school would\ndraw up Its. own list of schools\ninterested In exchanging papers\nand would correspond with those\nschools.\nMaureen Paterson, In reporting\non the social affairs meeting., told\nof . discussion.-, on ..organization,\ntypes    and    policy   for   school\ndances, means of creating more\nsocial activities; and some Ideas\nfor   flnonsjlng   social   activities.\nDiscussion followed on a means\nof  excluding  and  breaking  up\ngroups or cliques at school dances\nIn order that students will mix.\nThe chairman of the finance meeting, BUI Horswlll, reported on discussion of activity fees and cards;\nmeans of raising funds for financing  activities;  financing  team  or\ngroup trips; systems of bookkeeping in various schools; extent of\nStudents'  Council  funds;   and  financial systems ot various schools.\nBill   Phillips,   Athletic   meeting\nchairman, reported on types of athletic activities In the schools, and\npolicy, schedule and frequency of\nthem; house competitions and 'setups;  school athletic  teams; track\nmeet events and discussion.on the\nter-school competitions.\nOf the i clubs meeting, Jeanne\nStringer, reported discussion on\ntypes of clubs-lh the various schools\nsuch as Drama, Red Cross, Fine\nArts, Hi-Y, Radio, Photography,\nWorld Events, and Dancing clubs;\norganization and activities of clubs;\nmembership of clubs and their association with the Students' Council. Discussion followed on means\nof creating and maintaining interest\nin clubs.      7\nThe report of the Constitution and\nSet-Up meeting was. given by Ron\nGraham, chairman, who told of discussion on general student government organizations and house systems; awards systems; various\nschool constitutions; and responsibility of Students' Councils.\nGeneral discussion followed the\nreports and during that time the\nKootenay - Boundary Btudents'.\nCouncil Association was discussed\nand formed. Refreshments were\nserved by the PT-A after adjourn-;\nment of the' Convention. Mimeographed reports containing condensations of all the meetings and\ndiscussion will be sent to all the\nschools which took part in the\nConvention.\u25a0-' '-'\u25a0' '    *\nOver 100 delegates attended the\ntwo-day convention representing 17\nschools, Nelson senior high, Nelson Junior high, Trail, Rossland,\nCastlegar,-Grand Forks, New Denver, Kaslo, Metallne .Falls, Kettle\nFalls, South Slocan,vFernie, Kimberley, Natal-Michel, Nakusp, Penticton and Salmo.\nYOU CAN DEPEND ON\nWhen kidneyi fail to\ntemoTe excess acids\nand wnat*3, backache, tired feeling,\ndisturbed rea. often\nfollow. Dodd'a\nKidney Fills atimu-\nUto kidneys to\nnormal duly. Yoa 1\nfeci better\u2014aleep I\nbetter, work 'belter. \\\nRet Dodd'a at any ^\ndrug store. You can\ndepend on Dodd'a.\nIJOI-DS\nKIDWEY\n\\, PILLS j\nJames A. Mullen\nDies al Trail\nTRAIL \u2014 Funeral services for\nJames Archibald Mullan will .be\nheld In th'e First- Presbyterian\nChurch Tus-sday afternoon. Rev, J.\nYoung will .officiate.\nMr. Mullan, who died in Trail-\nTadanac Hospital' Friday after a\nlengthy illness, has resided in Trail\nfor the past 29 years and was em-,\nployed as an oiler for the C. M.\n& S\u201e Co. He formerly operated a\ngrocery store in East Trail,\nBorn in Derry, Ireland, In 1800, he\nis .survived by his wife, one son,\nArchie, one sister Clssle, and his\nfather, William, both In Ireland.\nIntefment will be In Mountain\nView Cemetery-\nMr. Flotsam,\nShow\nOutstanding\nBBC Radio Artist\nAuspices Nelson\nKiwanis Club\nCapitol\nNolson, B.C.\nFrldoy, Oct. 9th at\n8.Q0 *M>\nADMISSION $1\nMr. and Mrs. Alex Sutherland I eave\nNelson After 5H Years For Coast\nMr. ahd Mrs. Alex Sutherland,\nWho for more .than SO years have\nmade their home in Nelson, are\nleaving today tor this coast.\nTheir ffcfat. stop en-roirt^to their\nhew home is Penticton where the\nSutherlarids will visit their son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mra,\nNorman, Gaddy,    ,    , \"'\u25a0',\u25a0.,.\n; Mr, Sutherland, who has been\nactive in civic and other affairs\nduring his stay here, was for four\nyears a member of Nelson's City\ncouncil. He also had experience in\nmunicipal life in Kaslo before\ncoming to Nelson, during a residence of eight years. In Nelsop he\nwas employed in the train service\nof the Canadian Pacific Railway.\nLong a sportsman, he played a\npart In building the golf course at\nKaslo and took- a similar interest\nIn establishing a golf course during a period he made hla homo at\nGrand Forks. He has also been a\nmember of the Grand Forks and\nNelson curling clubs and the Nelson Golf and Country Club.\nFor ten years he was chairman\nof the Dominion Legislative Board\nof the Railroad Trainmen and\nchairman for B.C. for 20 years,\nhaving attended 18 sessions of the\nB.C, Legislature tor the organization. He retired\/in 1B.7.\nLatterly he founded a CPR\npensioners organization here and\nwas on the Dominion executive of\nthe association. -\nThey plan to make their home in\nNew Westminster or White Rock.\nVeteran's Riles\nFor S. Colman\nCanadian Legion and Ladles Auxiliary member and a large attendance\nol friends assembled at St. Saviour's\nPro-Cathedral Saturday afternoon\nto attend funeral services for Spencer Coulson Colman, a veteran of\nthe First World War.\nVery Rev. T. L. Leadbeater offU\ndated at the services. The two\nhymns sung were \"There Is a\nGreen HUT and \"Abide With Me.\"\nAt the conclusion ot the church\nservices the Legion and' Auxiliary\nmembers preceeded the flag-draped\ncasket trom the church and formed\nopen ranks to the funeral coach.\nInterment was In the Nelson Memorial Park where Spencer Newell\ngave the Legion burial services. Legion members acted as pallbearers,\nJ. Brinly, 0. Anderson, E. Marsden,-\nA. Morton, W. Bailey, B. Broadfoot.\nThere was a profusion of floral tributes displayed at the Thompson\nFuneral Home prior to the funeral\nservice.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Montreal\nRoyals, representatives of the In.\nternational League, Saturday night\ndefeated Kansas City Blues, winners of the American Association,\n6-2, to lead the best\u00bbof-seven little\nworld series 2-0. Royals won the\nfirst game 10-0.\nJohn Reuckerl,\nBeekeeper, Dies\nJohn Reuckert, resident of Nelson for about 26 years, died suddenly at his home, 1112 Mill Street,\nSunday afternoon.\nBorn In Riga, Latvia, he was\nthought to be about 82 years of\nage.\nHe lived for a time In Nova Scotia, then ranched in Saskatchewan\nbefore coming to Nelson. While in\nNelson he was well-known as a beekeeper and was a former secretary\nof St. John's Luthern Church. There\nare no known relatives.\nThe We\nathe\n    3B   65\n    82   SS\nCrescent Valley \t\n.....   34   S3\nGrand Forks\t\n.....   43   63\nPentlcton :\t\n    34   59\n    40   68\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED DAILY\n\"All my Mil liMW'(\nNeed MONEY for bills?\nOkie\nNIAGARA\nFRIENDLY\nLOAN\nWhether you need 1100 or\n$1000. or more\u2014you'll And\na Niagara loan can be quick\n. . . convenient\u2014ond you\nchoose the payment plant\nOn loans to $1500 you get\nproteetlve life-insurance\u2014\nat no extra cost I\nYOU PAY till roll MANY\nFRIENDLY LOANS\ntm\nO.l\nMssnlhly\nPaym.nl\nN...I\nP_Vns.nl!\nSI6BJ.10\nSB3.00\n24\n1003.80\n40,00\n' 20\n710.18\n85.00\nII\n5S8.95\n50.00\n12\nsrssvsh\nOS ODD A\nMOUNTS\nilj I AC ARA\n560 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 16S0\nAn AH-Canadhi. Company hover ifO\nHEN01Y IOANS $ J $$\u00ab FtlFNOlY IQANS t$t\u00bb\nParly Held For\nMount Residents\nThirteen Mount St: Francis residents spent a delightful evening at\nthe Church of the. Redeemer Hall\nwhen Mrs. W. J. Silverwood arranged ..a small Informal party for\nthem.\nUnder the direction ot Mrs. R.\nBain Oliver, * number of children\nentertained the \"old timers\". Assisting Mrs. Silverwood were Mrs.\nV. Thompson, Mrs. H, B.'Forse,\nMrs, S. Lea and Mrs. W. Bailey.\nThe visitors were transported by\nRev. Canon Silverwood, D. Louts\nKerr and George Schupe. The children who took part were Kathleen\nSczklca, Joy Livingstone, Ronald\nFawcett, Gael Graves and Alex\nHanna,\nKelson Building\nNear. $400,000\nPermits authorizing $10,386 In\nbuilding snd minor construction\nwere Issued from the city engineer's\noffice In Nelson during September.\nThis brought the total for the, year\nto $301,654, down considerably from\nthe 1953 total for tha same period\u2014\n$524,593.'\nBuilding in August totalled 128,-\n43S ahd in September of last year,\n$27,021.\nHP\n; :\u25a0'; m^\nStudent Meet\nSeen As Aid To\nSchools Advanci\n' The two-day Kootertay and -Si\ndary Students' Council donven\nat Nelson ls a Vast opportunity\ndevelopment of individual lea\nship qualities and for^he adva:\nment. of organisation ond prese\ntion of school activities, \u25a0 Sy\nShorthouse said in her oddres\nthe convention members. - .1\nShorthouse Is prime minister\nNelson High School Parliament\n\"We hope that the -staging of\nconvention and Intor-cHanglng\nldeass'Wili lead to a closer ut\nof the schools ahd a more of fie\nactivities program for all the*,\ndents,\" she said. \"We arq rati*))\ntor gradual betterment of stilt\ngroups and activities and a m<\n'of solving rising problems.\"\n\"We have come together hen\nleaders chosen by the student!\nour respective schools to, reprei\nthem and to gain as much as ;\nsible from such a convention\ntheir Individual joint conce\nThroughout the sessions we will\nercise our actual- leadership\nervlce our actual leadership\nwhich many of our classmates h\nplaced their confidence,\", she s\n\"Let us live up to this confide\nand represent our schools as\nwould have lt.\"\nMiss Shorthouse also gave;\nconvehtlon members a general i\nline of the two-day program,\nBritain's best-known waterfa\nBettysy Coed In Wales is on\nLlugwy river, with a plunge s\nfeet.\nHEINTZMAN\u2014Makers of fine pianos for over 100 yean\nCHE HEINTZMAN YORKE LOU!\ntSot-Ar\/mo ofi^mte c\/umm\nThe beauty of its distinguished design, the Heintzman\nquality of craftsmanship, make, the Yorke Louis a piano\nthat will enhance the finest home.\nIncorporating the exclusive\n\u2022 Patented Agraffe Bridge\n\u2022 Grand Piano In Vertical Form\nit hu a singing tone and responsive touch that have mads\nHeinftman pianos renowned, and beloved by every owner\nVisit our showroom. See and hear the Yorke Louis' model\n$1145.00\nMahogany\nBudget Terms ,\nOther finishes and bench at slightly additional cost.\nHeintzman & Co. Ltd., Calgary. Alberta'\nOr Soe Them at\nBEN SUTHERLAND\nMUSIC - APPLIANCES - RADIO\nMS Boker St. Nelson, B.C. Phone 25;\nOCTOBER\nOCTOBER\nW STARLIGHT DRIVE-IN\"HB\nMonday    T   Tuesday\n_^___^_s_\u2014_*sssip_s_^issssssssssss^\nSunday\nWedneiday   I     Thursday\nFriday\nSaturday\n\u2022 Visit our Snack Bar for Hot Dogs, Popcorn, Cigarettes, So ft Drinks and other refreshments.\n\u2022 Free Windshield Washing Service, courtesy Superior Motors.\n\u2022 You have no baby sitting problems at the Starlight. Bring t he baby ond enjoy the show In the privacy of your own car.\n\u2022 Don't forget tha Kinsmen show every 8unday evening at 9115 p.m.\nWATCH DAILY PAPER FOR TIMES OP SHOWINGS\n:'7:y--u\n\"TWO  OF\nA KIND\"\nEdmund  O'Brien\nLlzabeth Scott\nTerry Moore\nSHOW \u25a0-':\nKINSMEN\n\u25a0:'-'-1*v'7:\n\"8UNNY8IDEOF\nTHE; STRIEST\" ,\nFrankie Laine '\u2022'\nfilly Daniels\nerry Moore\nJerome Courtland\nKinsmen; Show\nI\n\"THE MARRYINQ KIND\"\nJudy Holliday, Aldo Ray .'\n\"THE WILD BI\nLUE\n8\nYONDER\"\nPlus\nMARCIANO-LaSTARZA\nFIGHT PICTURE8\n9 10\n\"THE BRIGAND\"\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nAnthony Dexter, Jody Lawrence,\nGale Robbins, Anthony Quinn\n12\n13\n\"AT 8WORDS POINT\"\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nCornel Wilde, Maureen O'Hara\nPlus\n\"DOUBLE DYNAMITE\"\nFrank Sinatra, Jane Russell,\nOroucho Marx ,\n19\n20\n\"THE  RACKET\"\nRobert Mitchum, Llzabeth Scott,\n.  Robert Ryan  .\n14\n15\n16\n17\n\"FRANCI8 GOES TO WEST  POINT\"\nDonald O'Connor and Francis the Talking Mule\n21\n22\n\"FANCY PANTS\"\n(TECHNICOLpR)\nBobe Hope and Lucille Ball\n- Plus\n\"APPOINTMENT WITH  DANGER\"\nAlan Lodd, Jan' Sterling,\nPhylie Calvert\n7-af 0\n.WW A COCK,\nEYED WONDER\"\nMickey  Rooney\n'\u2022 KmSMSrl'\"\"'\nSHOW\n26\n27\n\"SAILOR BEWARE\"\nDean Martin, Jerry Lewis,\nCorrine Calvert\nPlus\n\"SILVER CITY\" (Technicolor)\nYvonne De Carlo, Edmund O'Brien\n28\n29\n\"REDHEAD FROM WYOMING\"\n(TECHNICOLOR)\nMaureen O'Hara, Alex Nlcol\n23\n24\n\"SLAUGHTER TRAIL\"\n(COLOR)\nBrian Donlevy,, Virginia Grey,\nAndy Devine\nPlus\nWalt Disney's\n\"NATURE'S HALF ACRE\"\n30\n31\n\"ADVENTURE8 OF\nGALLANT BESS\"\nN (COLOR)\n-\n I'C\n,iW^\u00bbA-lf\n\u25a0\u2022'SJ' \u2022;\u25a0\u2022'..'\u2022>...*\u25a0'\u2022\u2022;\u25a0\n\"^\nRUBBERS\nOVERSHOES\nSNOWBOOtS\n\u2022 Everything For Your Needs This Coming Winter.\nQuality ot Reasonable Prices at '..\nTHE SHOE CENTRE\n553 Baker St. *      Phone 895\nTRAIL \u2014 Ways and means of arriving at better coordination of, departmental services in the professorial xsjre\nof patients, was highlight of a jpftnel discussion at a West\nKootenay Regional Hospital\nconvention here Saturday.\nlyril Podmero      .,\nrooter Student\nCouncil President\nPROCTsfflR\u2014Cyril Podmero, Proc-\nr student wss named president\n! the Procter Superior School Stu-\nents' Council Olga Stochlnoff\nas named corresponding secretary,\n[ary Dvorack recording secretary,\nid' Heather' MacLeod treasurer.\nClass representative is Cecilo\nlucho and sport representative\nean Rcnzlo. Grade 7 representa-\nve to the council is Millicent\nvorak.\nManslaughter\nlarge Reduced;\nfeckless Driving\nCRANBROOK\u2014Alfred Richard\n\u2022f Fernie, charged In Assize Court\nWith manslaughter In the death\nduly 19 at Elk Valley near Fernie of Edward. Phillips In a ear\naccident, wat found not guilty of\n\u2022this charge by e Jury. However\nhe was found guilty of the lesser\neharge of reckless driving, and\nwas sentenced immediately by\nMr. Justice A. M> Manson.to a\nfine of $250.\nHis defence In court was presented by Horry McKay of Fernie, and crown prosecutor was\n'.'Alan Graham, QC, af Cranbrook.\nThe first Lachine canal on the\nt. Lawrence was opened in 1625,\n-ven years before the first Rideau\nsnal.\n(David. VUfAbiowL\nFor Your\nPAINTING\nPAPERHANGING\nNEEDS\nPhone nZ-X.\nHon. K. Kiernan\nTo Allend Fl\nAnnual Meeting\nBOSWELL-Word has\nbeen received here from Victoria that Hon. K. Kiernan,\nMinister of Agriculture will\nvisit the Arrow Lakes October 27. Mr. Kiernan will also-\nattend the annual meeting of\nthe West-Kootenay Boundary\nCentral Farmers Institute. In-\nonoaklin and Edgewood in-,\nstitutes Will be hosts to the\nmeeting.\nHerridge Says\nNew Wharf For\nRobson Sought\nCASTLEGAR -sM. B. Dalton,\npresident of the Castlegar and District Chamber of Commerce has\nreceived verbal assurance from H,\nW. Herridge, MP, Kootenay West,\nthat replacement of the East Robson wharf is being urged.\nThe Council ot the Chamber at\na meeting early in August passed\na resolution urging that the wharf\nbe replaced. The resolution was\nforwarded to the Federal Government of Public Worka .-,':    -\nMr. Herridge, who visited Castlegar last week, assured Mr. Dalton\nthat he is working toward the replacement ot the wharf. The chamber felt that < the present wharf,\nwhich has a three-ton load limit,\nis dangerous.\nThe wharf ls used by the CPR\nsteamer Minto in its twice weekly\ntrip on the Arrow Lakes.\nFAIRNESS\nIS THE\nof o\nHOSPITAL\nIMPROVEMENT DISTRICT\n2398 ef the 3892 patients who received ooro \u00abt Kootenay Lake General Hospital in 1952.\n1666 of the 2748 patients in the first eight montha of\n1953 were from out-of-Nolson city arena.\n1956\nb the deadline under a Fire Marshal'* order for continuance ofthe operation of the present KLG Hospital\nbuilding in its present state.   -\nA Partnership\nIs Needed\nBetween the people of the district and of the city who\nwill benefit from the care of a modern district hospital.\nTo create that partnership is the object of organizing\na Hospital Improvement District.\nTOGETHER WE CAN BUILD\nA NEW DISTRICT HOSPITAL\nLearn How This Can Be Done.\nMeetings Will Be Held Throughout the\nProposed District Between Oct. 8 and 27.\nFirst Meeting:\nThursday at the\nMemorial Hall, 8 P.M.\nResidents of '\nSouth Nelson, Upper Foiryiew, Rosemont, and Uphill \u00ab\nPLEASE ATTEND\nDepartmental Co-Ord ina tion Topic of\nW. Kootenay Regional Hospital Panel\nMembers of various departments\npresented the topics and subjects\nsuch as admissions and discharges,\nmedical- records, laboratory services, physiotherapy, occupational\ntherapy, hospital public health service and X-Roy service came up tor\ndiscussion, '7i.--.'\nGuests were welcomed by J. H.\nHargraves. J. A. McNab, representative of B.C., Hospital Insurance\nService spoke on \"Medical record\nproblems in the community hospi-\ntal,\"\nH. L. Christian, hospital trustee,\ngave an address on the duties ot a\ntrustee of a small hospital and Dr.\nH. R. Christie of the medical staff\nalso addressed the meeting...\nVen. Archdeacon F. H. Graham\ngave an Interesting account'with\nboth humorous and serious aspects\nentitled,.\"I was a patient.\"\nA round table discussion on hospital problems was conducted by H.\nL. Mack, accountant for Trail-Tado-\nnoo Hospltsl.\nThe next regional meeting was\nscheduled to take place in Nelson\na month prior to the provincial\nmeeting. It was decided to hold one\nregional meeting a year.\nNew officers elected are. George\nTurner of'Nelson chairman, H. L.\nChristian of Rowland, vloeohalr-\nman; Miss Vera  Eldt, secretary\nand Miss Helen McKay, recording\nsecretary. v\nRatepayers To\nVote on $13,802\nExpenditure\nKIMBERLEY\u2014Kimberley voters\nwill have at least one other task\nbefore them than the naming ot\ncivic officials when they go to the\npolls next December. ,\nThlS will be a bylaw to divert\nthe sum of $13,802 to the extension of essential services in Lower\nBlarchmont.\nThe money, proceeds of the ex\npropriatio by Chapman Camp ot\npart of tiie city's water system is\nat preset lying in a special account\nin the Bank of Montreal, untouched\nand untouchable,\nUnder municipal law, the imoney\nshould be used to help retire the\ncapital-indebtedness originally incurred when the water system waS\nacquired. To use it for any other\npurpose requires.tlte consent of the\nratepayers;\" v,. \\ *? \"\nBut it is emphasized it would be\neconomically unsound for the ratepayers to withhold their consent\nThe money was originally borrowed at a low rate of Interest and lt\nwould be cheaper for the city to use\nthese funds to do needed work than\nto use it to retire an old indebtedness at a low interest, only to have\nto borrow the same amount again\nat today's higher borrowing eosts.\nCastlegar Society\nGrants $475 Te\nDistrict Projects\nCASTLEGAR\u2014Tour grants totalling $475 were approved by the directors of the Kinnaird-Robson-\nCastlegar Welfare and Recreational\nSociety at their first meeting after\na summer recess.\nGrants went to file Castlegar Le-\n'gion- Band, $200, St. John's Ambulance Association, $50, Salvation\nArmy ot Rossland, $150 and Camp\nKoolaree, $75. ,\nAn application for an additional\ngrant to the Castlegar Public Library and an appeal from- the\nGreek War Relief Fund were tabled\nuntil further funds are available,\nA committee was named to look\ninto the possibility of holding a social evening for directors and their\nwives.\nSteven Bahrey\nHeads Teachers\nIn Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Stevefl f Bahrey\nhas been chosen' president of the\nCranbrook local of th'o B.C. Teachers' Federation at tho annual meeting here. Plans were laid for a\nmeeting the fourth Tuesday in each\nmonth. -.;\u25a0\n-Other officers elected were Joseph Connolly, vice-president; Miss\nDprothy SppWart,. secretary;, and\nJames Fyfe,1 treasurer.' .{Staff representatives ninifed from the various schools were. V. E. Gummer\nfrom Mount Baker, Mrs. William\nRiley from Central, L.' C. Phillips\nfrom Tenth Avenue, and Harold\nHarlow from rural schools.\nCommittee chairmen named were\nWilliarn Busch for salaries; M. D.\nMoPhee, resolutions; Miss Margaret\nVanderburgh, hospitality; .Mrs.\nMina Burwash, courtesy; Miss Rae\nWoodman, federation credit union,\nand D, F. Maclean, publicity. Federation co-operative, association representative will' be - appointed by\nthe executive.\nFA8T METHOD\nSTOCKHOLM (CP) \u2014 A pneumatic tube stretching three-quarters of a mile has been, installed between two main telegraph offices\nhere.- The compressed air used as\na transport medium is cooled down\nte a lower temperature than the\nsurrounding air, to avoid conden\nsatlon.\nEo Kootenay IWA\nRequests Strike Vote\nCRANBROOK \u2014 The Internatibnal Woodworkers of\nAmerica vote oh the Southern Interior conciliation board\naward', indicated, unanimous rejection'.' A strike vote .taken\nat ihe s^me time indicated an overwhelming,majority of\nlUmber workers in-iavor. of\nstrike\/action.\nThe conoiiiatlon board had>tfer-\ned the workers a 3-cent Increase\nA government-supervised strike\nVote wBI be applied for immediately, IWA sources said, # and the\n\"possibility\" of a work stoppage in\nthe wood-working Industry seems\nimminent\"   . \u2022\u25a0.;,-.\nMeanwhile Its rival Woodworkers Industrial Uhlan of- Canada,\nwhose contracts with the same\nemployer organization also expired,'Aug. 31, have as strongly\nvoted In favor of acceptance of\n, -.the 12l_- cent-Increase and other.\n'. concessions in the majority award\nL.S.Hanson\nLaid al Rest\nCRANBROOK, - Funeral s\nvices were held Saturday for Lave\nSigfrld Hanson, cook at J.S. & -B.\nlumber company camps for many\nyears, who died in hospital here\nThursday after two months' illness.\nHe was born 58 years \"ago at\nEmitslav, Sweden, and came to\nCanada about 26 years ago. He was\na Canadian citizen and had lived in\nthis area for the past 11 years.. He\nwas an actlv.e member of the East\nKootenay Scandinavian Brotherhood. He was'single and had no\nrelatives in this district.\nof Its separate conciliation board.\n- WIUC,' discussing possibilities at\na recent general meeting would\ntreat' an employer- lockout as a\nstrike.- 7      \u2022       '.  7 '\nBERT PIER80N\n. . . who was. recently Installed\npresident of the Fernie Kinsmen\nClub.\nControl Under Shelling, Wiring\nTask Sited in Pitts* Korea Award\nCASTLEGAR \u2014 An account of the exploits in-the\nKorean theatre which led to the Military Cross for Lieutenant Herbert C. Pitts of Castlegpr has been released.by the\nCanadian Army.\nLieut. Pitts, an officer in- the Third Battalion, Princess\nPatricia's Canadian Light Infantry, is the eldest son of Mr.\nand Mrs. Herb Pitts of Castlegar and. formerly of Nelson.\nThe. Army report of his\nexploits follows-:: -\nLioutenant Pitta joined 1st Battalion, Princess Patricia's Canadian\nLight Infantry, in Korea in July,\n1952, and continued-his service with\n3rd Battalion Princess Patricia's\nCanadian Light Infantry, from November 1052..On November, 1052,\nhis unit occupied a position known\nas the'.'Hook.\" Previously this officer had.been ordered to train a\nspecial wiring party which would\nlay concertina wire Quickly and\nsilently on obvious enemy approaches in areas as close os two hundred\nyards to known enemy positions,\nwhere any movement either by day\nor night usually brought down\nenemy small arms and mortar fire.\nOn the nights November 30, and\nDecember 2, 1052, Lieutenant Pitts\ncommanded this wiring party of 32\nall ranks.       .   \u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0  .<\nThe area to be wrlod consisted fat\npart of an old Korean minefield\nwhich had been shelled and walked\nover to the extent that it was considered a reasonable risk to commence wiring over it. During the\nnight November 30, while the wiring job was being done, two of the\nparty were killed by an enemy\nmine, and although fully aware of\nthe risks Involved, this officer retained complete control over the\nparty -and completed the tasks al-\nloted. On the night.of December 2,\nthe same party again -went into this\ndangerous area completed their wiring task expeditiously and efficiently. Throughout this whole operation Lioutenant Pitts by his coolness and leadership maintained perfect control and effectively completed this difficult task-\nWhen the .battalion occupied the\n\"Naechon\" area he was base plate\nofficer for the mortar platoon. During the night May 23,1053, the battalion was Attacked and subjected\nto heavy mortaring and shelling by\nthe enemy. Many shells landed\naround the mortar base: plate position. He showed a high example of\nleadership by his courage in. son-\ntrolling under enemy fire the mortar platoon fire in support of the\nRoyal Canadian Regiment and-his\nown battalion. Throughout his service .with the Princess Patricia's\nCanadian Light Infantry Lieutenant\nPitta by his coolness- devotion to\nduty and leadership of a high order\nmaintained perfect control during\nmany difficult tasks.\n^s>_r'\nftELSON DAILY NEWS\/MONDAY, OCT. 5, Ml,-\nBank (losing\nHits Saturday\nSales, Trail Finds\nTRAIL \u2014 Since the hanks started\nshuttlg up shop for the week on\nFridays, Saturday business for Trail\nstorekeepers has dropped considerably. So said.members of Troll\nRetail Merchants association at\ntheir association-meeting, 7'\nPresident W. Forrest opined that\ntrade had \"slackened off a groat\ndeal\" as people could not now visit\nthe banks on Saturday mornings, *\n\"Everyone's oh a five -day week\nexcept us,\" he complained.\nH, Tutt said that the revised\nbanking hours hod cut Saturday\ntrade In Nelson by half and that\nhe had written to other cities to\nfind .out how they were affected\nby the conditions. He pointed out\nthat the. bank hours were set by\n. the government and that there\nwas nothing tradesmen could do\nabout It\nStore' Manager T. MoFetrldge,\nhowever, announced that nil was\n\"quite happy\" with the present\nbanking hours. He was not without support In this view. _.\u25a0;\u2022\nIn reply to a suggestion that shops\nstay open late' on Friday, nights-\nbanks are open for a short time Friday  evenings\u2014A.  I. Olaf son said\nthat he did not favor the idea unless it was absolutely necessary. The\ntime might come when this' would\nbe. He thought it a \"great mistake\"\nto close the banks on Saturdays.\nDOING BANK WORK\nMr. Olaf son said storekeepers had\nto. get thousands, of dollars more\nout of the banks on Fridays in order\nto cash checks and \"do the work\nthe banks should be doings\" This\nphrase was repeated several times\nos members discussed the affair at\nlength.\nMatters brought tip were the possibilities of limiting the cashing of\nchecks, arranging pay days for\nThursdays so that workers could do\ntheir bank business Fridays and requesting banks open Saturdays\nwhen a payday falls on that day.\nNo motion was made on the sub-\nThe TRMA is to back a big move\nbeing prompted by official bodies\nin the province against the high\ncost of county court registrations.\nIt costs SB to register a contract in\nB. C compared with charges. in'.\nother provinces varying from .St\ncents to nothing at all.\n(WAD THE CLASSIFIED  DAILY'\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nFour Persons\n\"GettheAxe\";.\/-. %'.\nIn Procter Area ;      .\nPRO.CT_R \u2014 To Procter-Sunshine Bay residents, \"getting the -\naxe\" is not Just i saying.\nLast week, Charles Ouristall,\n13, of Sunshine Bay suffered a\n. bady cut thumb when he hit It\nWith an axe while chopping fire\nwood,. It took eight stltchfs to\nclose the wound. -,\n, Earlier, three similar accidents\nIn this district caused grief to\nresidents. D.SIcotti. Injured his\nthumb, Mrs. P. Solepkl gashed\nher left hand with an axe, and A.\nMaclean suffered a. badly out'\nhand while working with an axe.\nMrs. A: J. Gamer\nNamed President\nOf Procter PTA\n.PROCTER s--''Mrs. A. J. Garner\nwas elected president of the Parent-Teacher Association at 'the first\nmeeting of the new season in tbe\nProcter, Superior School. B. J.\nFitchett was named honorary presi-,\ndent,..Mrs. I. Pcrcello, vice-president,.Mrs. T. Wickstrom, recording\nsecretary, Mrs. Cy Fitchett, corresponding secretary and Mrs. F.\nBonocci, social convener. A vote\nof thanks was tendered retiring official..     '.-'.-\u2022;,\nThe association will sponsor t\nHallowe'en party for >ehlldren ' in\nthe district with' the assistance ot\nthe students' council; The event will\nbe financed through donations.'\nMEETING THURSDAY\n,' A committee of three, comprised\nof Mr. Fitchett, P. Iwanik and Mrs.\nW. A. Henke were delegated to attend a Hospital Jhnprovapieht District meat|n$ ih N6lson, Thursday.\nPHONI 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer\nPerhaps the vital spots of your home,\nthe plumbing and heating,   ' ;\nrequire attention.\nA timely checkup now may save damage\nand annoyance. Our wide experience\nand the cost is nominal,\nenables us to make an intelligent survey,\nOUR S-RVICiS ARE AT YOUR DISPOSAL       v\nKOOTENAY PLUMBING\n&\n151 BAKER IT.\nHEATING CO. LTD.\nT. 8. JE-MSON, Manager\nPHONE 666\nLast Riles For\nAbel Sebastian\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Requiem mass\nwas sung Saturday at St. Eugene\nMission Church for Abel Sebastian',\nwho has lived on St. Mary's Indian\nReserve since his birth 67 years\nago.\nHe grew up on the reserve snd\noperated a farm there with field\ncrops \"and livestock all his life.\nHe was married at the St. Eugene\nMission Church in 1903 to Josephine Baptiste.\nSurviving him .are his wife, a son,\nMark, a daughter, Mrs.. Cecile Ignatius, and seven grandchildren. Two\nsons predeceased him.\nJail Term for\nImpaired Driving\nKIMBERLB-1\u2014Three months' imprisonment in Nelson jail Without\n'option of a fine .was the sentence\nin district court on O. M. MacDonald when he pleaded guilty before\nMagistrate V. M. Bourne to driving\na car while his ability was impaired. Severity of the sentence\nwas due .to the fact it was his second offence on this charge.\nFine of $90 and costs was levied\non Noah Thompson Jr. when he\npleaded guilty to  a first offence\nof driving while impaired,\nM\n.\n p^wywwwiw .\u00ab.\nE_tuhltBhed April ?3, 1802\nBritishColtmbia'i\n,\u2022\" Mosi'lntetestlncj Newspapet\nPublished every morning except Sunday by tho\n, NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n206 Biker Street,  Nelsoa,  British Columbia.\nAuthorized os Second Class Mail,\n;. Post Office Department. Ottawa.\n< MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE. AUDIT SUB-AU OF CIRCULATIONS,\nMottderyi Qclobett 5,1953 '\"\"\u25a0 .   .\nDistrict Hospital Site\nMust Provide for Future\nThe choice of a site will be one of\nthe big considerations facing those\nwho .will eventually make the decisions regarding a new district, hospital for this sirta,'\u25a0.\u25a0;\u25a0'\n\u25a0j District hospitals, nq longer are\nbuilt fpr-the'needs pfthe '.day or to\n. meet, those of the foreseeable future.\nThfeyarfe'designed initiiliy to develop\nas, institutions growing as the district\n; .tfi^yserye-grows and the possibilities\n' -lor, hew, niedical service* are revealed..\nTis_ land on > which ^e foundation\n'bt-Hdin^:*are. laid must a)\u00a3a- conse-\nvquerice be sufficient .toij.lehd ttiem-\n: aslVfeis to sUdt:e^pan'y6nv'','.;'   *\n;.  ,;It-was in^isTfW-ii'ea.'Uer days that\n| .pforieer hospital? 'should, bt. built to\nI prov-dfe for. iisimediate requirements\nand for the possibilities of, say, two or\nthree decides 'into' the future. For one -\nthing suitable buildings, in those times\ncould be -raised for tensrof thousands;\n1 todayiscientific'.institutions.for adequate- care; of the sick require outlays\nmultiplying earlier figures many\ntimes. -Just how important medical\ncare' experts regard tbe need to look\nfar ahead was the recent refusal by the\nprovincial gpvernihent to permit,sale\n: of lsinds adjoining the modern medical\n, centre. being constructed  for  Trail\narea. Even'thoujlh it rsjs atwO million\n. dollar outlay, expert' planners See thie\nday when' it \u2022 must 'be further developed. Sjiky77 \u25a0'.- \u25a0\u25a0\".' \u25a0'\u25a0 m _\u25a0_:\u2022;-.\n^Foi: a,rt^ern hospital sjxchM$m'.\nbe' planned . toserve the* proposed\nKootenay ^Valley Hospital Improve-\n.nent district many factors will have to\n'..be -taken iinto \"Consideration,, particularly; asiregardsto^tK^ The pro-\nvision of adequate land for expansions\n. in the. decades ahead will Mf primary\n\u25a0concern. Convenience, for those coming from the. corners of -the district\n\u2022 which is roughly a triangle measuring\n60'rhiles^'across its Northern edge b^\n40 mileS to the international border\nmust be considered. One of the major\nproblems it has been found, at other\nnew hospitals is that of assuring .^dc:\nqiiate parking space. --.\u2022\u2022-\u25a0-\nThe organizing committee for the'\nnew improvement district has, wisely\ndecided that the controversial considerations that have been' raised in\nthe past concerning the sites of public\nbuildings will be avoided; They have\nadopted as a poUcy the decision, that\nsite of the proposed district hospital\nwill not be pre-determined. That\nafter the improvement- district is\nformed, a committee representing the\n.district, the municipal cointeipiityj'the\n... hospital society and advised'jby plan-,\nning and architectural ^experts''will\ndecide on a suitable site.-^-a\/site\" that\nWill provide for the present and be\nadaptable to the needs of the future.\nTkis Could\nUndermine Society-\n(London^Free.Press)   -.\nThe Ontario Government'! select committee on reform institutions is disturbed, and\nproperly so, at the recent wave of assaults on\npolice officers. Incidents of citizens standing\nby and simply watching while officers .were\nbeaten up or helping to beat them up were\ndeplored by the committee.;\nMost of the trouble arises from youths\nfrom, broken homes! or unfortunate aurround-\n' Ings who have probably never seen the inside\nof a church. The London police'have; to a\ncertain extent met the problem by kindly\napproach, Such activities as the Police Boys'\nBand tend to make the relationship between\npolice and youngsters more friendly and, give\nyouths an outlet-along right Unas for their\nnatural energy.\nRespect for law and order is at the foundation of our civilization and Inheritance from\nGreat Britain. Anyone who has visited Britain\nsoon finds how deep-seated is this feeling. The\npolice themselves, also, oh their side, respect\nthe rights of citizens. -\nIt Is a problem which ls one for the polices\nfor, the schools, for the churches; foe all organizations Interested in character building,\nand for the homes.\nIf we allow disrespect for authority to\ngrow, it will hit at the very bull of our way\nof life. \u25a0 '\nAs a reducing program for'hls wife, who\nweighed 285 poundi, a Los Angeles, Calif.,\nman walked her 2350 miles across the United\nStates In four months, causing her to lose' 110\npounds. '\u25a0.:\u25a0\n10,000 New Pupils\nEvery Year\nWhen school enrolment increases by 47,000\npupils In five years, one of this major public\nexpenditures facing- provincial and local governments is the provision of school accommodation. 7 7:-; '\u25a0-'     ; \u25a0 -    ;\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\nThe expenditure during' the past, year tor\nnew school buildings and additions to. existing\nbuildings has resulted in relieving some of\nthe pressure tor the school accommodation of\nthe 103,201 pupils, 10,000 of which were an\nincrease over the previous year.\n, It is interesting to note that the' new\nschool buildings totalled 94, while additions to\nexisting buildings were 07, or a total of 101\nincreases in accommodation.\nIt seems probable fsom a study jot the\nbirth rate during the past six years-ttiat ther*\nwill be an annual increase of from 10,000 to\n15,000 pupils per year for the next few years.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\n'. Open to any reader, Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published,\n* There .IV no. charge for this service.'\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvious\n' neenslty for privacy.    ,.      > 7   \u25a0\nD. E, P., South Slocan\u2014To settle an argument, could you please tell me whether\nAlec Templcton is still olive? If not, when\nand where did he die?   .\n\u25a0 Alec Templcton is still olive and playing\n\u2022in public and on the airwaves.\n.-:\u2022 , '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022' V \u25a0. Y. ' .   \u25a0 ' - ;,\nE. vr^D., Slocan City\u2014Please let me know\n'   elevations above sea level ot Salmo, Meadows, and Fruitvale?\nSalmo, 2178; Fruitvale, 1004; Meadows, not\nknown. '\n.Interested,   Kinnaird\u2014Who   won   the, .'1903\nWorld Series?\nNew York Yankees, four games to three.\nF. K. T\u201e Trail\u2014On what date did Spain'fall\nInto Franco's handa 7\nMadrid surrendered Feb. 1, 1030. The last\nnine of the 52 provincial capitals fell to Franco\nMarch 20, J03B. . 7' \u25a0 ,.\u2022;.\nHeader, Nelion\u2014Po you know of a reolpe for\npickled'rhubarb? '   '   ;\nOne quart flrieiy. thopped rhtibarb; One\nquart finely chopped oisiops, one.pjnt vinegar,\none tablespoon.salt, three cups brown sugar,\none teaspoon cinnamon, one teaspoon ginger,\none teaspooja allspice, half teaspoon black\npepper.; Simmer'slowly until the .ohlons and\nrhubarb are cooked, seal in, sterilized sealers.\nHousewife, Ca_tiegar\u2014Is there any way I\n'can keep cheese from roildewihg?'\nCheese \"wrapped in a cloth wet with\nvinegar will keep fresh and free from mold,.\nwe have been advised. .'\nSnQ^\nVe\nrse .\nHRM Queen Elizabeth II\n: Trumpets blare a royal, fanfare;\nA Queen goes therel   '\n-   Banners fly against the iky;\ni        A Queen Is Sigh.\nA busy street, hurrying feet,\nThe Queen to greet\nHoll of drums, booming guns;\nThe Queen! She comes-     t:   , .,\nPostillions bold, cpaeh,of goW,,. \u25a0 \u25a0\nCustoms old\nThe Abbey dim; the choir-boys sing\nAn ancient hyrtn.\nEnter there tbe Royal pair,\nAnd kneel in prayer.\n,  Ritual,-rite, power and might,\n7, , For God and right. ^ \".'..'. y~y\n\u25a0' Anointed! Crowned! The words resound\n':\" \u25a0' j.\".'   The world around. \".,..\n\" Church 6h9 tower proclaim the hour\n\u25a0:; Of Britain'* power. \",\nExultation! Jubil*tlOk.K \u25a0\u25a0.'\n- <i; \u25a0\u25a0 -   Coronation!\n' \u2014UffTtB'J: PANNELL.\nMidway, B.C.   ' ...\nLooking Backward\nmy EARS aoo '.-:'\u25a0\u25a0\nFrom'the Nelson Dally Newsi October S, 1043\nIn the course of his irispection of the\nbattalion, Lieutenant-Colonel G.H. Ellis of\nKamloops, officer commanding the Rocky\nMountain Haflgers (Reserve Army),tvlsited'\nthe Nelson platoon Monday night. \u25a0;,'-;   \".. \"\nOwing to the Legion HaU being occupied\nby the CPR Victory Loan meeting,' Jhe\nwomen's pro-rec dass, whloh'was Wiled to\nsttrt its seasOsl there Monday nlj^t, had to\ngo down tp\u201ethe'C-vie Arena, ,taklng down the\n.springboard and a load of mats in a car.\nCOlO\n'.',', ..- .' ' '- BY JAMES ICNESBITT\"\nVICTORIA' .-j The-more M,L;A.'s w even the opposl-\ntiqnistjj.-T study tbe new'Liquor. Bill, the ftiore they like\nIt \u2014 that is, as long as. 'there\nhas to be a liquor bill.\nOppositionists are astonished, and\nsomewhat frustrated that they can\nfind so little in it to oppose.- Oh,\nhere and there, of ^.course,' they'll\nlind some1 flaws. No act, especially\na liquor abt, can please \u25a0\u2022 everyone.\nAnd, naturally, oppositionists will\nsay far too much has been'left to\nregulation\u25a0'< and ordcr-lrt-councll.\nBut how other con a government\noperate efficiently? It can't be completely.'tied up by the Legislature.\nIf it wasn't for order-in-coun'cil, the\nLegislature- would, haye, to sit day\nin ond day out, throughout the entire year.    '_\"       7\"\nBy and'large, it appears the liquor talk will quickly collapse, and\nthe bill go through fairly, quickly.\nWe are likely to see the quite extraordinary, spectacle of the entire\nopposition voUng solidly with . the\ngovernment on a major piece of\ngovernment legislation., That will\nbe a tremendous victory for the\nBennett government. ,      \u25a0' \u25a0\u2022\nIt must, in all fairness, be said,\nthe government.has not pussy-footed In the new liquor bill. It has\nfaced facts, brought in what the\npeople, In a plebiscite In, 1032, ask-\ned for, and what the Stevens liquor\nenquiry commission recommended\n\u2014cocktail bars, arid beer and wines\nin -restaurants, and hard liquor by\nthe glass at cabarets. This latter\nShould entirely outlaw the disgrace-\nful bottle-under-the-table fashion at\nsupper dances that goes on in B.C,\nunder the present, liquor set'up.   ;\nGenerally; speaking, the ne.w liquor law should .decrease drinking\nIn this province. When it's possible\nto buy: one or two drinks in an at\ntractive cocktail lounge, perhaps\nthere won't be so many .bottles sold\nand killed at one sitting in a, hotel\nbedroom's with subsequent loss of\nappetite for food and demands fpr\nanother bottle. So, congratulations\nto the Premier and Attorney-General. Bonner for their courage In\nchanging the liquor laws, even\nthuugh they know a small, but\nvery vocal minority wUl hate them\nfor it       v '\u25a0'-'\u25a0'\n.,-..'... >\u2022\nBurnaby's CCF Mr. Winch was in\nhis usual good form when he made\nhis speech. He announced that he\nrefuses to judge his age (over 70)\nby the date oh his birth certificate,   This sentiment was heartily.\n-    28 YpAR-t AdTO     '\nFrom the Nelson Dally Newf, October, B, 1928\n.'\u25a0\u25a0; The'CHR shipyard crew-at. Nakuip gave\na' splendid dance at the Masonic Hall Friday,\nplaying hosts to the citizens of Nakusp. The\nmen ha4 been working several months on the\nsteamer Minto.\nMrs. H. H. Pitts of Netopn jieads the Root-\n'-, tpay and Bpundary,;pist$,ct Women's Institute for the ensuing yejktj. being elected to\nthat office by the newly chosen board of directors. .:,-,-.'\nBOYfARSACO\nFrom the Nelson Dally News, October B, 1903\n| .John Keen,- president of, the Provincial\nMining Association >of ,'H. C\u201e ;pa_sed \u2022!through\nNelson pn rpvtib, to. Vancouver.ppd victoria,\nto arrange for the jneetlBg of the executive at\nKamloops Nov. S3, \\' :': ;\nA peculiar thing, about the election returns from Nelson' arid R6'ss,land, lie- in the\nfact that the; totals;cj: votes,polled ih 'both\ncities tallied. In Nelson the total was 781 and\nin Rossland 782.\"   - - S \u25a0'\u2022      \u2022;..; -v...\nendorsed by other MLA's, all of\nwhom, except Mr. Uphills are far\nyounger than Mr. Which.\nMr. Winch said the result ot the\nlast election didn't exactly please\nhim, but he finds consolation In telling himself it was just an out-of-\nseason frost, and that summer will\nsprely come.\n\"We're having summer now,\"\nsaid Premier Bennett, all smiles.\nMr. Bennett misunderstood, pur-\nposely<r, by . way of kidding Mr.\nWinch, whom he admires and respects. Mr. Winch, you see, meant a\nCCF summer, not an SC summer.\nMr- Winch then said he's glad tbe\nSC Government Is taking up so\nmany CCF ideas, such as equal-\npay-for-equal work . for women.\n\"There is no other source from\nwhich you can get your information,'' thundered Mr. Winch and Social Creditors laughed and laughed,\nand the lone Conservative and\" the\nfour Liberals sat glumly in their\ncorner; bewildered and frustrated\nas they saw B.C.'s new political\nalignment\u2014SC. and' CCF\u2014thus In\nfull flower. They no doubt, wondered If the day will come again\u2014\noh, happy day\u2014when they'U be at\neach others' political throats, one\nthe government, the other the opposition. A lot of people think it\nnever will, and this reporter ls one,\n7 \u2022- \u2022,\/\u2022\nHealth and Welfare Minister Martin got up when.Mr. Winch sat\ndown. He had a nicely prepared\nspeech, all about hospital insurance\nand health services. But he couldn't\nresist going after Mr. Winch a bit\nHe said Mr. Winch talked nonsense\nwhen he said Social Credit gets aU\nits inspiration from the CCF. What\nutter rot, said Mr; Martin, 7 what\nutter tommy rot,- and Mn Winch\nriiust know it's rot.     ' -s\/A\n\"Heaven help the world if this\nshould be so, thundered Mr. Martin,\narid he can thunder as well as Mr.\nW'nch. \"As the dead hand of Socialism creeps over a|.ffee society it\nparalyses all in its path.\"\nMr, Winch wondered aloud how\nanything \"that ls dead can crepe. If\nMr. Martin knew, he didn't inform\nMr. Winch. Mr. Martin repeated\nabout the dead hand creeping, Mr.\nWinch still wanted to .know, but\nnobody told him. Mr. Martin, having a fine time, expressed great\nhappiness because the Conservatives had routed the Socialists - in\nCanada Supports\nProposal To\nCut UN Sessions\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (CP1\u2014\nCanada has thrown-Its support behind a proposal to help cut the\nlength of UN. sessions by providing tor a, limit to procedural debates,\nAlan Macnaughton, Liberal mem-\nbar of Parliament for Mount Royal,\ntold the UN legal committee Friday Canada \"does riot, consider it\ngood practice\"' to allow a minority to prolong discussion by debate\non a procedural point.\nHe took issue with Soviet Russia's contention that the rules\namendment would restrict freedom-\not delegates to discuss major issues. -;\nThe proposed change in rules ls\ncontained iq a Norwegian resolution with an amendment sponsored\nby Brazil and France.\nBritain, Ah, ha, now,. said the\nCCF'ers and Liberals to themselves,\ndoesn't that show that Social. Creditors are merely Conservatives In\ndisguise? CCF Mr. Turner said the\nTories got in In Britain because\nthey ran on a Socialist ticket.\nMr. Winch had said, when he got\nup, that he certainly hoped he\nwouldn't talk as long as the Minister of Trade and Industry, Mr.\nChetwynds who was more than an\nhour. Mr. Martin said he was happy\nto announce that Mr. Winch had\ncaptured the longest-speech trophy\nfrom Mr- Chetwyhd,\nAnd then, Mr. MarUn, having\nthus broken' the legislative ..doldrums said he would return legislative debate to a high plane by dis-\ncussingt his department of health\n.and welfare,.,.,7.., ..7,\nCONSECRATE HOL*\nROSARY CHURCH I\nVANCOUVER- (CP)\u2014Holy Ro:\narjr Cathedral was consecrated hit\nSaturday! in an ancient cereiritfa\nperformed by James Cardinal Mi\nGuigan of Toronto and otier d_\nnltarles ot the Roman Catholi\nChurch. \u25a0. \\.3l\nThe'cathedral was^fiUed.to.oim\nflowing by worshippers as Cardini\nMcGuigan, assisted by. Archbishop\nWilliam < Duke arid 30 blshopafj\ntbe church In their colorful rpba\nperformed i the consecration rite1\nIt wa_ the first time the ceremon\nhad been performed here.\nThe cereraoify was lollowed^fj\ncelebration  of  a. pontifical   b\nmass  by   Archbishop   Ildebro:\nAntoniutti    of   Ottawa,   aposti\ndelegate to Canada.\nGALLON\nON,\nRUBBER PAINT\nThis advertiMnwn! is not published or\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor _ by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nREAD THE CLASSIFIED DAILY\nRain on Suitb?it_.ers       Qnly ^ne;m SeVeii\nNo less than 128 -nudists defied rain and\nchilly weather to\" hold the seventh annual\nconvention of the Canadian Sunbathing Association in the North Shore mountains last\nSaturday and Sunday-  '\nThe Van Tan Club, Canada's oldest nudist\nclub, played host to visiting members from\nall over B. C. and from American, clubs, as\nfar as Portland, Ore;- Nudists enjoyed intermittent eunshipe during their prelindnary\nmeeting Saturday and'piayed sopie.very:fast\nvolleyVball on:the';dry cotirt. Rain Saturday\nevening spoiled the annual bonfire and outdoor entertainment arid cut attendance seriously. Sunday morning.    7. ,\n: In :splte: pf threatening skies the business\nof the convention w,as concluded out-of-doors\nSunday,, when a proposal to unite Canada's\n400 member nudists with the 5000 members\nof the American Sunbathing Association was\npassed by the Western Regional.\u2014Letter by\nRay Connett In Vancouver News-Herald..\n.(Mohtreel 8tar):7 '-\nv During the present year more-than two-\nthirds of all immigrants reaching Canada have\nremained in Quebec and only one-seventh bf\n\u25a0 the total have-been; classified as agricultural\nworkers. Unless-this situation IS remedied a\ndangerous imljalanpe must result i betweeri\nfood supply and industrial production. The\nday is bound to come (perhaps before the\nclose of thia century) when Canadawill be'\ncalled upon to justify to the world her possession of vast tracts of fertile land.\u25a0'.'',\"\nYourHoroscope\nA good day to go ahea'd'with.your plans.\nYou will find it easy to get along with people.\nit'_ Seen Spid \u2022\n, ,. Borrowed thOU'ghts, like borrowed money,\nonly show the povertyo{ theborfb'wer.-r-Lady\nBlesaington. ., :.;\u25a0\u25a0 ft \u2022 \u25a0' :  '- \"- '.\n       __\u2014___\u2014_\u2014._^__\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_____-_--\u2014\u2014\nTheyll Do It Every Time\n.m.       By Jimmy Hatlo\njEKEtstMM,\n\/^SSISX\u00abM>JT\nRACTOTUWWnH\nTHE LOC-i-TE^\nHASATOU6M\nJDBGIVINe\nAWi\/ TICKETS.\nDURlM61T_i '\nSEASON!\nToday's BibleThought\nSome imagine we glorify the\nLord by singing hymns. Talk is\nCheap; we must add a glorious life\nand that glorifies the Infinite more\nthan the loveliest song of praise.\nGive unto the Lord the glory due\nunto  His name.\u2014I  Ch. 16:20.\ndunt dbit\nSarah has been sick so much se\n' knows: what to do for every ailment\nbut it's worth the doctor's fee just\nto have somebody show Interest.\nATRIMOUSKl!\nALL CANADA\nINSURANCE\n UTION\nA $25,000,000 holocaust that struck without warning, leaving 2,500 people\nhomeless and lacing ruin. Within a week of this trial by fire,  -\nen avalanche of insurance cheques reached relieved claimants.\nA new community arose. Disasters on the scale of the Rimou-ld fire are rare,\nfortunately. But Fire,, Automobile and Casualty Insurance companies in Canada\nsettle claim- averaging half a million dollars a day to relieve the financial      <\n-      \u2022   burden of countless smaller, individual disasters.\nALL CANADA INSURANCE FEDERATION\n\u2022'   on behalf of more than 200 competing companies writing\n7 * Fire, Automobile and Casualty Insurance.\nBuv. Sell. .Trade the Classified Way\ni wm i 7.....\n\u25a0   .-.-\u25a0-.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'\t\n^dismM\n P*s\u00abw\u00bbrai^\n,pipffi^^\n\"\u2022*(; Pays To Bity Quality\"\n\u25a0:'.'. \"the '\u25a0>;:\ngigantic\nopportunity\n'$ALE :\nIs Still On\nIf you have not yet taken\ni advantage of our price\nslashing sale, you are\n\u25a0missing   the   opportunity\nof a (lifetime. \u2022\nCall In Today At\n1 ANDREW\n&C0.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n'   Established 1902\nNelson Social\n; '  ,; ... \u25a0'   :l.  <   '    .   .......:.-. --\"PHONE 144-    .:\nA Nelson couple has returned after k trip to Ottawa\nother Eastern Canadian\nday to attend the Regional Hospital\nConvention'.\nand\ncities.\nRETURN . . . Mr. ad Mrs.\nGeorge Turner, Stanley Street,\nhave returned from a trip to Ottawa and other Eastern cities. In Ottawa Mr. Turner attended* a legislative meeting ot the Brotherhood\nof Locomotive Fireman snd En-\nginemen. '   ' '\u25a0'-\u25a0\n.\u00ab\u25a0\u2022\u00bb:\u00bb\nFROM HALIFAX .'.'. Miss Rosl-\nlie Triggs of Halifax, arrived by\nplane Saturday to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Triggs,\nWillow Street. ,1\n\u2022   \u00ab '\u2022\nATTEND CONVENTION '. . . Mr.\nand Mrs. George Turner, Mr.' and\nMrs. Lyle Crulckshank, A. K. McAdam, Mrs. H, Bulling and Miss\nE. Suran motored to Trail Satur-\nJfrodman'Afckibald\nVows at Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR - St. Rita's\nChurch was the scene of a\n.'beautiful fall wedding Saturday morning when Marie Antoinette,   third   daughter  of\nMrs. C. Brodman and, the late\nCarl Brodman,  became the\n;.br.de of Mr. Anthony Archibald, son of Mr. and Mrs. A.\n;C> Archibald of Robson.\nBE Rev. Father L. Trainer of Castle-\nCar officiated.\nGiven in marriage by her brother\nCharles, the bride chose a full-\nlength gown of nylon net over taffeta with sweetheart neckline and\nfinkertip veil falling from a beaded\nierown. Her only ornament -was a\nthree-strand necklace and she carried a bouquet of white camelia.\n-with pink rosebuds.\nMrs.   Leo   Bosse   ot   Castlegar,\nBackache\n'n^oteatraMtafMityaam^\ntswtton or money baclc. Don2_ff& __2_?\ntar \u00bb\u00bb__*s_-w josst.-MUM tee Qtstm\nStart Fall with\nC6eoti<\nBLANKETS\nFROM ZINCTON .-. . MrS. G.,V.\nDyer and - daughters, Arlene and\nBillle,. of. Zihcton. have moved to\nNelson ond have taken up residence at 410 Richard; Street.\nBIRTHDAV '. .. Terry McGov-\nern celebrated his fourth birthday\non Thursday and entertained about\nten of his young, friends at the\nhome of his parents,- Mr. and Mrs;\nT. H. McGdyern, i816 NelsOn Avenue, Games and contests were enjoyed. ' . -.\/\u2022'\u25a0'-.\n\u25a0 .'\u2022  *  *-,-\nTO TRAIL . . ,3ert Young of\nNelson, former radio announcer tor\nstation CKLN, left for Trail Saturday where he>has joined the staff\nof CJAT.\nbridesmaid for her sister's nuptials,\nwore a blue, full-length gown of\nnet over taffeta and carried a bouquet of pink gladioli.\nBest man was Gerry Archibald,\nbrother of the groom, and another\nbrother, Pat, was usher.\nMrs. R. E. Goulet of Castlegar\nwas organist and soloist was Vic\nMisutka of Castlegar.\nA family reception in the Castlegar Hotel, followed the ceremony.'\nA miniature bride.centred.the table.\nThe bride's mother chose for the\noccasion, a turquoise dress with\nblack accessories and her corsage\nwas of white gladioli and pink rosebuds.\nThe groom's mother wore a black\ncrepe dress with mauve accessories.\nHer corsage was of mauve gladilo.\nThe newlyweds will spend a short\nhoneymoon at Spokane. For her\ngoing-away outfit the bride chose a\nlight blue suit with navy accessories and a corsage of white camelias.\nMr. and Mrs. Archibald will make\ntheir home'in Slocan City.\nBosweU Notes\nBOSWELL\u2014Mr. Herb Webb who\nhas been spending a holiday with\nfriends in BosweU has returned tp\nhis home in Edmonton.\nMr. and Mrs. James Johnstone\nhave left for their, home lh Montrose, after visiting with Mrs.' E;\nJohnstone and Mr. ahd Mrs. Percy\nMackie of Kimberley.\nMr. Percy Mackie and son Garry\nare spending a few days with Mr,\nand Mrs. A; Mackie.   .\nQueen's Bay\n.. QUEEN'S BAY \u2014 Mrs7 Hughes,\nNorval German and W. Shippo-\nbotham left last week for Vancouver. Mrs, F. M, Hughes will spend\nthe winter with her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Norval\nGerman.\nMrs. C. H. Erickson and her .sister-in-law, Mrs. N. Wedinof Fairy\nGlen, Sask., spent a couple of\nweeks at Mrs. Brick's home here.\nThey both left for Vancouver this\nweek.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n^Dy\nliillllll\niliillllll\nSPOKANE AND VANCOUVER ARE ON THE\nHONEYMOON itinerary of Mt\\ and Mrs. Edwin F.-Herman who were wed in Balfour. The bride is the former\nBeatrice Saunders.   :\nProcter Notes\nPROCTER \u2014 Mrs. S, Moore has\nleft for a visit to Vancouver after\nwhich she will spend three months\nIn California with her daughter,\nMrs. Snow. Later she will return\nto Canada to make her home- in\nSwift Current, Sask. Her home in\nProcter has.been purchased by Mr,\nand Mrs. H. Friesen'of Renatawho\nare' moving here with their daughters. LeOne and Violet.,. Another\ndaughter, Mrs.-fl. M, Klrkenall will\nbe their neighbor.\nMrs. G. A. P. Harrle has returned to Victoria after spending five\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 A meeting of\n700 British postmen decided to oppose the suggestion to cancel Saturday afternoon deliveries. Spokesmen, said the proposal, intended to\nprovide more leisure time, actually would\" mean working longer\nhours on week-days,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1953\n'\u2022-;. .. 7 ,---,\u25a0. .     -     ' .\u25a0+\u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0;',,, v    '\u25a0'\u2022 J \u25a0.. \u25a0 \u25a0   '     '\nYamywex Rites\nOf Interest Mere\nRelatives of the groom came\nfrom Houston, Texas, for' the wedding of Lorraine Dorrls Benher and\nGeorge Robert \"Phillips in St.\"\nJohn's (Shaughnessy) Church.\nRev. A, M. Trendell, DD, officiated at the ceremony uniting, the\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul F.\nBenner and the son of Mr. and Mrs,\nGeorge L, Phillips, ot Nelson, who\njourneyed to Vancouver for the\nwedding. 7\nSeed, pearls were embroidered on\nthe: Chantllly lace bodice of the\nbridal gown, -which had full net\nover satin skirt and long-sleeved\nlace jacket. White orchids,\ngladioli and stephanotls, with pink\nbaby roses formed the bridal bouquet ,'\nMiss Shirley Mclnnis was maid\npf honor and MiSs Sheila Crulckshank' and Miss Victoria Stephens,\nthe bride's cousins, were bridesmaids. Miss Mclnnis and Miss Stephens wore gowns of royal blue\nnet over lrrldescent taffeta and\nMiss Crulckshank wore a similar\ngown lh cerise. Roses, gladioli and\nstephotls formed their bouquets.\n' William Macrae was the best man\nand William Phillips, brother of\nthe grpom,'.and Geoffery Firth were\nushers. Mrs. R. Johnson was soloist.\nOut of town guests were Mrs. R.\nRodgers, groom'S aunt, and her\nSister Mrs. Michel, Mr. and Mrs. F,\nM. Webster, cousins of the groom\nfrom. Houston, Texas, Mrs. G. Hoger\nof Toronto, groom's cousins, Bos\nDavidson of Moose Jaw, Sask,, Mr,\nand Mrs, L, Rothel and Eunice of\nLadysmith, relatives of the bride.\nAfter the wedding reception  the\nweeks as guest of Mrs. S. Moore.\nDuring her stay she has renewed\nacquaintances, with former neighbors here, She visited friends in\nNelson and Creston and accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Cy Fitchett to\nRiohdel to visit Mr! and Mrs.- Harris who come from the same town I couple left for a honeymoon trip to\nin England. ' San Frahcisco.\nWynndel WI Aids\nHospital Project\n.WYNNDEL \u2014 Tht VWynndel\nWomen's Institute is going all out\n- to. raise funds for the new Creston\nValley hospital.\nA-danoe sponsored last month\nfor funds proved a great success\nand , additional dances will be\ngiven In: November and January.\nAt a meeting nere, $160 was sent\nto the. secretary of the Creston\nValley District Hospital Association, .,'\nThe group will assist In sponsoring i Hallowe'en party for\nyoungsters In the area. A social\nhour followed the meeting.\nON OUR BUDGET PUN\n10% DOWN\nBalance 18 Monthi        -\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Students\ndecided to spend more money on.\nthemselves sit UBC last week for\nthe first time in 10 years.   \\       7\nThey passed a referendum boost- ]\ning the student activity fee by $2\nto $12 and will pour $1-1,000 into ,\ntha  treasuries  of  student  clubs, -\nsome of which received no funds\nat all previously.\nGray Greek J\nGRAY CREEK\u2014Mr. Feenle is a\npatient in Creston, Hospital after\nbeing Injured in an accident at\nRiondel.       \u25a0\nMrs. W. LaPlante was driven, to\nWest Summerland by her brother\nGeorge Gould for the weddlpg of\nher sister to Stewart Pervls of\nEdmonton,\nLieutenant Sneddon visited his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs, D. L. Sneddon. He has been posted to Germany.       ' .--.;-\nMiss Catherine Harris spent a\nfew days here en route to Quebec\nwhere she sails for England on the\nliner Scythia. She has been with\nthe Columbia Coast Mission at Indian Isjand and at Simoon Sound.\nWood Vatlaii\u00abr\nHardware Co. Ltd.\n6-t Baker \u00abt\nPhone \u00ab0\n\u25a0a-\nm\nWE SPECIALIZE IN A\n2-DAY SERVICE\nMen's and Ladies'\nSUITS....- $1.25\nDRESSES\nI-pee., plain $1.25\nPANTS and\nSKIRTS  - 60c\n^\nf\/\/Ufc*\n|ust\nPHONE 288\nEmpire\nDry\nGleaners I\nMake Qrand Supper\nDish of Vegetables\nDry your c\/ottes anytime-\ndnywtere-withfhetiM\nBy MARGARET CARR\nThe ideal supper dish for 'fall\nevenings is built around vegetables,\nfor at no other time of the year\nis there so wide a variety to choose\nfrom. Fall vegetables, squash, tomatoes, egg plant, cauliflower, peppers, lend themselves particularly\nwell to use as main dishes in combination with other foods. With the\naddition, of-a very-little meat many\nof these vegetable dishes can hold\ntheir own as main courses at dinner.\nCAULIFLOWER-SPAGHETTI\nCAS8EROLE\nOne cup spaghetti, broken into\ntwo-inch pieces; 1 small head cauliflower, 2 tablespoons mild-flavored\nfat, 3 tablespoons flour, 1 teaspoon\nsalt, 2 cups tomato juice, Vs cup\ngrated cheese, -1 cup soft bread\ncrumbs, 1 tablespoon butter, melted.\n: Cook spaghetti in boiling salted\nwater for 30 minutes, drain and\nrinse. Meanwhile separate cauliflower into flowerets. Wash carefully and cook in a covered sauce-!\npan in a small amount of boiling\nsalted water until tender\u2014about 16\nminutes; drain. Melt fat in saucepan, add flour and salt, and blend.\nAdd tomato juice, and cook until\nthickened, stirring constantly. Add\ngrated cheese and stir until cheese\nis melted and sauce is smooth. Arrange spaghetti and cauliflower in\nalternate layers-in a greased casserole. Then pour tomato-cljeese\nsauce on top. Toss bread crumbs\nin meltsM butter and sprinkle over\nsauce. Bake in a moderate oven\n(350 degrees F.) until crumbs are\ngolden brown, about .20 minutes.\n'Makes six to eight servings.\n8UPPER CA88EROLE\nThree cups peeled squash, cut\nin %-inch slices; 1 cup .sliced green\npepper (about two peppers), Vt cup\nsliced onion (one medium), 1 teaspoon salt, Vs teaspoon pepper, 3\nhard-cooked eggs, \\% Cups medium\ncream sauce, Vs cup breBd crumbs,\n2 tablespoons fat.   \u2022 \"\nArrange squash, pepper and onion\nin alternate layers in a greased\ncasserole, sprinkling each layer\nwith salt and pepper. Top with\nsliced eggs, cover with sauce, sprinkle, with bread crumbs and dot\nwith fat. Cover and bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) about\n35 minutes. Remove cover and continue baking until crumbs are\nbrown and vegetables tender\u2014about\n10 minutes.   Makes six servings,\nCanadian Fashion\nGold weather lies ahead and this\ncoat will come into the picture.\nShort sleeves with wide cuffsgive\nthe coat a sporty appearance.\n8UNSHINE BAY tfoTES\nMrs. A. Fletcher of Salmo is\nspending apple-packing time at the\nranch of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.,\nJ. Sewell at Sunshine Bay.\nDONT ENDURE\n\"MORNING\nSLUGGISHNESS\nDo yon wake up morning after morning\nfeeling tired out? And does that dull,\nheavy sensation drag on all day, making\nlife a misery?\nDon't put up with it.    \"tj\nChances are the whole trouble stems\nfrom sluggish kidneys and constipation.\nYour system is becoming clogged by\naccumulated poisons that are slowing\nyou down.\nKruschen Salts are a wonderful help\nat these times. In many ways they are\nidentical with the waters of well-known\nMineral Springs... in other words,\nmuch more than a simple laxative. For\nKruschen contains diuretic ingredients\n(for the kidneys). So they help you to\nget rid of waste matters through\nhealthy, hatural bowel and kidney\naction.\nMillions of people use Kruschen. They\nhave found that less than half a tea-\nspoonful in hot water works wonders.\nFind out what Kruschen can do for\nyou from your nearest druggist today.\nKRUSCHEN\n*I AU DRUG STOKES\nLOW DOWN PAYMENTS\nEASY TERMS\nSee a Demonstration NOW!\n\u25a0\u25a0-.-: 7 \u2022 7 \\   ...!    . .    '..'.-\u25a0...\nMc * Mc (Nelson) Ltd.\n,    The only dryer with\nLIFETIME PORCELAIN\nfinish on cabinet and drum\nStayi gleaming white for life, ond it's so easy ta\ncleanl Your clothes are always safe from rust -poll\n\u2022 and snags. See these other natural, toot\n\u2022jlr Automatic Temperature Control\nic Automatic Timing Control\ni Interior Light\nic Interior Ozone Lamp\nif Automatic Signal Light\n- ic Dries clothes as fast en you\nwash them\n_M4?m.\nCranbrook.  B.C.\nMitchell Hardware\nCreston, B.C.\nSinclair Furniture & Hardware\nFernie, B.C.\nQuail   Hardware\nKimberley, B.C.\nKimberley Hardware\nMidway, B.C.\nC. G. McMynn\nNakusp, B.C.\nA, L, Supply\nSalmo, B.C. '\nCurwen A Bush\nMl.\n m^m-\niP^^pppsiiP?^\nB^g-m\n\u00ab*>v:\n \"\n \u2014\n'\" \u25a0\u25a0 ww\n6 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. S, 1953\n\u2022    Soccer\nLONDON (AP) - British soccer\nstandings: Top five teams:\nENOLI8H1 LEAGUE\n.    Division I\nW T L Pts\n^'W. Bromwlch    8  2 1  20\nHuddersfleld T     8   2 2   18\nWolverhampton    7   8 2' 17\n-Charlton A'   8,0 4  18\n;'Aston VlUa    7  0 4  14\nDivision II\n\u25a0\u25a0Everton    7  4 1  18\nDoncasterR    8-1 3   17\nRotherham     8  1 4  17\nLeicester     5   8 1   18\nLincoln City     8   3 8   15\nDivision III, Southern\n-Ipswloh T   10  8 1\nSouthampton  10   1 3   21\nNorwich City    8   4 2   20\nBrighton      8   4 2   20\nBristol City     7   8 4   17\nDivision  Ills Northern\nPort Vale   10   3 1   23\n-Crewe Alex   5 8 1  18\nBarnsley     8  5 J  17\nOateshesd       8   8 8   17\n\u2022Stockport C     5   8 8   16\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nDivision A\nQueen ot South   8 0 0 18\nsRaith Rovers    2  2 18\nSt. Mlrren   3 0 18\nDundee   *  ? !    !\nCeltic      2   118\nDivision B\nStenhousemulr     4   10\nMorton     4  1 1    7\nDunfermline     310    7\nAyr United   8 0 16\nMotherwell     8  0 2   8\nPlanning to pove?   Call as\n|,     tint Our modern van? and\n;;       skilled movers assure a SAPS\n......     \u2014-,.    .h-u-.u    .-irei   ___\nskilled movers assure a SAstB\nmove wherever you g\u00bb. Wl\nare agents for North American Van tines, Aaaesica.\n\u2022eading long distance moving\nMganlratlon. It costs no mort\nto enjoy this finer service!\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.   Nelson, B.C\nPhona 33\nFootball Scores\nSaturday\nWIFU\nCalgary 17, Winnipeg 24.\nEdmonton 13, Saskatchewan IB.\nBl_ Four\nHamilton 8, Ottawa 81.\nORPU\nSarnla 20, Brantfofd 6;\nToronto 'IS,- Kitchener 8,\nBrantford \u00ab, Toronto 28,- ,i\nIntorcolloBlato Senior\nQueen's 7, U 0-8, 18.\nWestern 40, McMaster--13.  -    ,i\n'Bxhlbltion\nOAC 1, McGlll 36.\nU.S. COLLEGE\n7 '  IA8T\nRice 28,'Cornell 7.\nOklahom 7, Pitt 7.\nPrinceton 20, Columbia lt,\nHoly Cross 19, Colgate 6.\nYale IS, Browfi 0.\nRutgers 20, Virginia Tooh 13.\nPenn 13, Penn Stats 7.\nNavy 55, Dartmouth 7.\nNew Hampshire 14, Rhode I 13.\nSOUTH\nMsryland 20, Clemson 0.\nNorth Carolina 30, Wash, & Lea 0.\nDuke 21, Tennes.ee 7.\nSouth Carolina 19, Virginia 0.\nGeorgia Tech 6, South MSth'st 4.\nTexas 28, Houston 7.\nArkansas 13, Texas Christian 6.\nTaxes Tech 27, Oklahoma .18.\nAlabama 21, Vanderbilt 12.\nWake Forest 18, Vlllanova 12.\nMIDWB6T\nWisconsin 13, Marquette 11.\nIowa 54, Washington State 12.\nMichigan 28, Tulana 7.\nMichigan State 21, Minnesota 0.\nIllinois 83, Stanford 21.\nNorthwestern 83, Army 20.\nKansas 23, Iowa State 0.\nNotre Dame 37, Purdua 7.\nKansss State 27, Nebraska 0.\nFAR WEST\n\" Idaho 20, Montana 12,\nWyoming 27, Colorado 16.\ni Uela 13, Oragqn 0..\nWashington 30, Oregon State 6.\nOhio State 33, California 19.\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Results of soccer\ngames Saturday In the United Kingdom:\nHome International and World Cup\nQualifying Match\nIreland 1, Scotland 3.\nENGLI8H LEAGUE\nDlvlilon I\nArsenal 3, Preston N E 2.\nBlackpool 2, Manchester C 0,\nBolton W 2, Tottenham H 6.\nChelsea 2, Sunderland 2.\nHuddersfleld T 4, Aston Villa 0.\nLiverpool 2, Sheffield W 2.\nManchester U 1, Burnley 2.\nNewcastle V 0, Charlton A 2.\nPortsmouth 1, Cardtff City 1.\nSheffield U73, Wolverhampton 8.\nW Bromwlch 3, Middlesbrough 1,\nDivision II\nBirmingham C 3, Leeds U 3.\nBlackburn R 4, Bury'2,\nBrentford 1, Everton 0.\nBristol R 4, Hull City 2.\nDerby C 8,;\u00a3)ldham A 1, .\nDbncaster S 1, Rotherham U 2,\nLincoln C 3, Notts C 0.    '\nLuton T 1, Fulhsm 8,\u00bb\nNottingham F 4, West Hsm 0.\nPlymouth A 1, Stoke C 1.\nSwsnsea T 0, Leicester C 0.\nDivision III, Northern\nAecrlngton S 2, Chesterfield 3.\nBarnSley 4, W.rklngtOn 2,\nBradford 2, Scunthorpe U 2,\nCarlisle U 0, TranSmere- ft 3.\nChester 2, Wrexham 1.\nCrewe Alex 0, Southport 0,\nDarlington 0, Gateshead 3.\nGrimsby T 1, Bradford C 0.\nHartlepools U -, Halifax T 0.\nPort Vale 5, York City 0.\nRochdale 1, Mansfield * 0.\nStockport C 5, Barrow 1.\nDivision III, Southern\nBournemouth 1, Torquay U 2.\nCoventry C 6, Northampton T 0,\nI\nYes, you may now borrow $50 to $1000 from\nHousehold Finance by mail. Just mail tbe coupon\nbelow for complete information without obligation.\nNo Walling... HFC loans are made promptly for\nany good purpose. No endorsers or bankable\nsecurity required. So borrow from friendly, dependable Household Finance the quick, convenient way\n...by mail!\n1186 Cedar'Avenue\nSecond Floor Telephone 1809\nTRAIL, B.C.\nT. H. teowcroft, Manager-\nOUSEHOLD FINANCE\nir In Ceaada        . . i i i\nCUP THIS COUPON HOW!\t\nI\nI\nHousehold Finance Corporation of Canada\n1186 Cedar Avenue, Trail, B.C.\nPlease tell me without shlis\/tOon how I can jet a!\nKama ,    ,\t\nJoan by mail.\nAiirtss-\nCtty\t\n-Prolines*\n7\n7:.-\nJean Brings Canadiens\nUp to Full Strength\nBy W. R. WHBATLEY .\nCanadian Press Staff Wrltsr\nMONTREAL (CP) - Big Jean\nBeliveau today signed a five-year\ncontract to iplay tbt Montreal\nCanadian's of the National.Hockey\nLeague. Amount of tho .contract\nwas not immediately disclosed,\nTha Sighing oame attar a\" iinal\nthree-hour conference, which ended only 7Vfc hours before Beliveau\ngoes on tha ice as a member of the\nCanadians ih the seventh annual\nall-star; game.\nAt the conference with Beliveau\nand managing-director Frank Slke\not Canadians wejre a financial adviser, acting in Bellveau's interests\nand an expert on Income tax regu\nlatlons,\nSelke said he was pleased'that\n\"the highest contract aver given\nany. player is given a French-\nCanadian boy from Victorlavllle.\nAsked to elahorate on tha \"highest contract,\" Selke said; \"It is\nthe highest by a city block.\",\nCanadiens .finished second to Detroit Red Wings in the National\nHockey. League race last reason\nand then knocked off Chicago Black\nHawks and Boston Bruins in the\npost-season series to win the'world-\ntitle cup.  >\nAcquisition of -Beliveau would\nadd immeasurably to Canadians'\nscoring power where strength is\nmost needed-down centre. The\nlong-wanted Quebec Star, prolific\npoint-getter in, junior snd senior\nhotkey, startled the league last\nseason with a hat-trick performance as part of a five-goal contribution in three lend-lassa games ha\nplsyed with Canadiens,\nLOSE ONE PLAYER\n'Canadiens have lost only one\nplayer sines last season, tittle\nBilly Resy, veteran centre, has\nmoved. Ch. to coach Victoria Cougars ot Uie western Hockey League.\nThis doesn't necessarily mean all\nExeter C 4, Southampton 0.\n.Gillingham-S, Norwich C >\u2022\nttswich T 1, Watford 0.\nLeyton O 1, Southend U 1.\nMillwall 0, Brighton 3.\nNewport C 2, Queen's P 1.\nReading 6, Aldershot 1.\nShrewsbury T S, Colohestet U 1.\nSwindon T 8, Bristol C 0.\nWalsall 1, Crystal P 0.\nSCOTTISH LEAQUE\nDivision A   ,   -\nAberdeen 2, Partlck T 1.\nClyde 3, East Fife 1.\nHamilton A 3, Dundee 3.\nHearta 8, StlrlliigvA I. ,\\\nQueen of S 3, Hibernians 2.\nRalth R 5, Alrdrleonlans 1.\nDlvlalon B\nAlbion R 3, St. Johnstone 2.\nAlios 1, Third Lanarw 4.\nAyr U 1, Stenhousemulr 2.\nDundee, U 2, Arbroath 2.\nDunfermline A ,4, Motherwell 8.\nTbrttr A 1, Cowdenbeath 0.\nMorton 4, Kilmarnock 6.\nQueen's P 8, Dumbarton 0.\nAmateur International\nAt Bangor, Wales:\n, Wsles 1, South Africa 0.\nWorld Series\nFads and Figures\nBy The Associated Press\nStandings\nW     L     Pet.\nN*w York, AL     3     2     .860\nBrooklyn, NL- s   3     3     .400\nFirst gsme, at Yankee Stadium,\nSept. 30.\nBrooklyn, NL    3   12   2\nNew York, AL ....,    9   12   0\nReynolds, Sain (8) and Berra;\nErsklne, Hughes (2) Labine (S)\nWade (7) and Campanella. W-Sain.\nL\u2014Labine.\nSecond game, at Yankee Stadium,\nOct. i:\nSrOoklyn     2   9   1\nNew York  - \u00ab...  2 5 0\nRoe Ind Campanella; Lopat and\nbaits, -\nThlfd |ame at Ebbets Field,\nOo{. 2,\nNew York   26  \u00ab\nBrooklyn    3   9\nHaschi and Berra; Erskine and\nCampanella.\nFourth game, at Ebbets Field,\nOct. 8.  \u2022\n\"New York         8   8   1\nBrooklyn      7.13  <\nFord, Gorman (2) Sain (5) Schal-\nlock (7) and Berra; 'Lees, .Labine\n(9) and Campanella. W\u2014Loes, L\u2014\nFord. '\n.Fifth gsme st Ebbets Field,\nOct. 4.\nNew York   11   11\nBrooklyn      7   14\nMcDonald, Kuzava (8) Reynolds\n(9) and Berra; Podres, Meyer (3)\nWade (8) Black (9) and Campanella, W\u2014McDonald, L\u2014Podres.\nSixth game at Yankee Stadium,\nMonday, Oct 8; seventh game if\nnecessary, at Yankee Stadium,\nTuesday, Oct. 6.\nFinancial Figures:\nFifth game:\nAttendance paid\u201438,775.\nReceipts net  $214,304.33\nCommissioner's share .... $ 32,159.15\nClubs' snd leagues'\nslfsre  \u00bb18.,.35.18\nFive-game figures:\nAttendance paid\u2014244,981.\nReceipts net  11,407,221.00\nPlayers' pool first 4\ngames only  3 691,342.01\nCommissioner's share.. $ 211,083.13\nClubs' and leagues'\nshare  ,,. 3 587,761.24\nLITTLEWORLD\nSERIES SCORES\nKansas City  010 100 000-2   9 1\nMontreal  .-, 000 2.2 00x-6 12 8\nR. Colemah, Kucab (8) Wright\n(7) and Robertson; H. Coleman and\nYelen.\nMontreal leads best of ssven Lit-\ntie World Series 24.\nthe other regulsrs are aura ot their\nJobs, Tha battle at the-training\ncamp fpr Jobs, particularly- on the\nwings, has bsan terriflt.\nIn tha midst of the training grind,\nmanaging director Frank Selke and\ncoach Dick Irvin were still in some,\nthing of a dilemma about'their\nforwards,\nSelke put it this way: \"We can't\nmake up our minds. Some of the\nregulars hava pot been going as\nwell as soma of the newcomers but-\nstill hava shown enough to cause\ndefinite\nBritish Rugby\nLONDON (Routers)\u2014Results of\nSaturday's Rugby League games in\ntha united Kingdom:\nBarrow 17, Salford 11.       .\nBelle Vue 18, Whitehaven 0.\nBramley 27, Liverpool C ID,    ..\nDewsbury 11,, Rochdale 7.\nFeatherstone 13, Kelghley 18. : -\n-   Halifax 17, Castleford 12.\nHull 4, Huddersfleld 18.\nHunslet 32, Wigan 10.\nLeigh 14, Wakefield T 15.    -\nOldham 33, Widnes 3. ,\n. St. Helens 22, Brandford N 12.\nSwlnton 18, Doncaster 12.  *\nWarrington 42, H Kingston 13.\nWorkington T 28, Batley 14.     ,\nYork T, Leads 9.\nLONDON (Rcuters)-Results of\ntoday's Rugby Union games in th*\nUnited Kingdom: .-.; \\\n' Blackheat.8,, Birkenhead P 11.\nLondon Hoip, 30, Birmingham 6.\nZrQ%\nLondon Scottish 8, Harlequins 18.\nLondon Welsh 14, Richmond 11.'\nPaulines 3, Merchant Taylors IS.\nRosSlyn P 8. Mlllhtllisns 8,\nSt, Marys H 84, Crsnleif hans 6.\nChatham 9, St. Bartholomews'H 3.\nWasps 16, Cheltenham 6.\nAbervon 3, Neath S.\nAbertlllery 14, Glamorgan 8.\nBarnstaple 20, Falpnouth 3.\nBedford 6, Gloucester 13,\nBristol 8, London Irish 8,\nCardiff 15,, Newport 8.\nDevonport 16, Exeter 0.\nEbbw Vale 8, Cross Keys'!.'\nLeicester 14, Coventry t. '\u25a0\nLlanelly 6, Bath 3.    .    ,-' ,\nMoseley 8, Bradford 0.\nNewton A 16, Somerset Police 6.\nNorthampton 8, Sale 8.'\nNotts 14. Old Blues 10.\nPlymouth A 13, Redh-uth 8. ,\nRugby 3, Nuneaton 6.    i\nSwansea 6, Pontypool 11.\nTaunton 0, Bridgewater 8.\nTorquay A 17, Saracens 14.\nany\nde-\nus to withhold\nclsloV- ,   \u25a0 \" f\nOLMSTEAD LOOKI _O0D\nAt left wing Bart Olmstead ap-'\npears to ba surest of his Job. Dickie\nMoore, Dick Gamble and Paul Me-\nSer have found plenty of contention\nrom Eddie Masur, \u2022 Calum Baldy\nMacKay and Gaye Stewart\nMazur earns from Victoria last\nspring and played a big part Ih\nCanadians' Stanley Cup win, He\nlooks \u00abBdy for a regular job. MacKay, a regular but with Buffalo\nlast sesson, also saw playoff duty\nand Is a handy, rugged type' of\nplayer. Stewart became Canadiens'\nproperty last season and was sent\nto Quebec Aces where he teamed\nwith Beliveau and played a-big\npart In tall Jean's season-tank scoring spree. . *\u25a0\u25a0 '\n1 There aro at least two definite\nfixtures st right wing: Msurlce\nRocket Richard and Bernle Boom\nBoom Geoffrlon, The Rocket, now\n33, and starting ls 12th season, is\nin top shape and ih practice has\nworked on a-line with Beliveau and\nMazur, Geoffrlon, 22, and starting\nhis third full sesson, has lost none\not his scoring punch.\nFloyd Curry ls the third regular.\nHe is getting toughest competition\nfrom Lome Davis, called up from\nBuffalo for the playoffs last season. Other candidates are Eddie\nSlowlnskI, acquired in a deal with\nNew York Renters, and Eddie Lit-\nzenberger, tall,' capable youngster\nfrom Regina who played with Montreal Royal last season.\nVETERAN ON JOB\nEver-green Elmer Lach, 36, and\nstarting his 14th NHL campaign, is\nback: at centre, along with another\nveteran, Ken Mosdell, who is 31\nand starting his 12th season, exclusive ot two years' war service.\nOthers from last season' are John\nGoose McCormack, sweep-check\ndefensive centre, and young Paul\nMasnick, A good prospect ls Don\nMarshall with Montreal Canadiens\nJuniors two years ago and with\nCincinnati last sesson.\nSelke Indicated he will go along\nwith last season's five defencemen\nto start the new campaign. The\ntive are Butch Bouchard, 33, and\nready for his 13th season; Doug\nHarvey, al-star defenceman; Tom\nJohnson, pollard St. Laurent and\nJim MacPherson. Other defence-\nmen at the training camp Include\nJean;Guy Talbot, who may be returned to Quebec; and Rollle Rousseau and Walter Chine, with Royals\nlast sesson.\nGerry McNeil again has the goal-\ntending job nailed down. His\nunderstudy will probably bo. Jean-\nPaul Renaud, ex-ROyal, who will\nlikely serve as fill-in goalie for any\nClub in Canadiens' organisation.\nThis Is Carrier Boy Week\n<\u25a0'.:'*'   ForThat Ever Increasing Demand For Service ond Delivery of\n\"Kootenay's Favorite Newspaper\"\nTHE NEI^N DAILY NEWS\n. *\nThese Carriers Are Prepared To Be of Service To You\nIn Your Town or City\nSupport These \"Young Merchants\"\n\"      '       ..' . 1\nContact Your Nelson Daily News Carrier Today\nHe is Anxious To Increase His Profits by Serving You.\nRIONDEL\nBobShultz\nKASLO\nBob McLeish\nNAKUSP\nDale Morehouse\nMurray White\nSANDON,\nRaymond Varrin\nSALMO (Nelway Highway)\nDianne Parsons\nSALMO (Emerald Mine)\nCarl Sterne I\nSALMO (Emerald Mine)\nJersy Townsite\nBob Chenoweth    -\nSALMO (Emerald Mine)\nTungsten Townsite\nBetty Hill\nWYNNDEL\nGary Burch\nCRESTON (East)\nRudy Salvadore\nFERNIE\nAllan White\nLouis Bax\nCRESTON (South)\nKen Cole\nFRUITVALE\nRichard Endersby\nGRAND FORKS\nDennis Walker\nMONTROSE\nGordon Deadmarsh\nCHRISTINA LAKE\nKen Brown\nCirculation Department-NELSON DAILY NEWS\nI\nfor only\n<i\n\" I\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nCLOCKS\nLowest-priced electric kitchen clock in Canada\nNO WINDING, NO REGULATING\n...ALWAYS ACCURATE...\nHere's a bright .and friendly kitchen clock\npriced to please you.., styled to make your\nkitchen gayer... built to keep perfect time for\nyears and years.\nThe (5-E \"Helper\" has a sweep second\nhand and easy-tc-read numerals. Available in'\nred or yellow.\nBe sure to see this new low-priced\nG-E \"Helper\" at your dealer's today. Small ^\nAppliance Department, Canadian Genera}\nElectric Co. Ltd., Toronto.\nCANADIAN    GENERAL    ELECTRIC    COMPANY    LIMITED\n'yyyiy '.:..-\u2022\n\u25a0..,:-\u25a0\/ i^\n. Ssito \u25a0    \u25a0      \u25a0  \u25a0\n \u2022..,'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0'\nYanks Regain WorU Lead\n. -.TiJJy JACK HAND- '-\"y     --v;\nBBOOKLVN |AP.^:Mlckey Mantle, switching madly\nfrom hero to goat and back again, hit a crushing grand slam\nhome run off reliefer Russ Meyer's first pitch Sunday as\nNew York Yankees'bombed Brooklyn Dodgers llr7 in a'\nwild slugfest to regally the World Series lead,; three games'\nip.two. '_'....\n\u2022Needing only one more victory\nIts' clinch an. unprecedented tilth\nstraight championship, the Yanks\ngo home .to Yankee Stadium for\ntoday's sixth game and seventh, it\nnecessary.   \u25a0 >Vi\n, Jim McDonald, manager Casey\nStengel's desperation starter, yielded 11 Dodger singles before Billy\nCox's   three-run   homer   In   the\neighth knocked him out. Lefty Bob\nKuzava and finally Allie Reynolds,\nwith his aching back, were needed\nto make sure the Dodgers were\ndead for the day.\nSix home runs sailed through the\nsummery air to tie a series-record\nset by the Yankees and Chicago\nCubs, Oct 1,1932. The Yanks' total\nof four was only one short of their\nOwn mark, hung up'by the. 1928\n\"murderers\" row\" against St, Louis\nCardinals. '\n' \"The two clubs collected 25 hits,\ngood for 47 bases.\nI The blow Mantle hit off Meyer,\nwho had just replaced 21-year-old\nJohnny  Podres, stunned the  big\nSunday crowd of 36,775, exactly the\nsame number that set a Brooklyn\nseries record Saturday. The .Dodgers never were able to recover their\nbalance   although   they   thrashed\naround violently in the eighth and\nSjlnth.\n.Mantle's homer topped a cluster\nof five unearned runs in the third,\nan inning that let the ,alr'out of\nDodger hopes for a clean sweep in\ntheir home park.\nI A. vital error by Oil Hodges, on\nJoe Collins' smash off first base\nput the Yankees  in  position for\ntheir big third Inning. The error\nlet Phil Rizzuto score from second\nahd put starter Podres in a tough\nhole.\n: The hit southpaw hit Hank Bauer\non the right wrist and walked Yogi\nBerra on a 3-1 pitch to fill the\nbases.   Manager   Chuck   Dressen\ndecided   to   call   Meyer,  the   hot\ntempered   ex - Philadelphia   Phils\nrighthander.\nRuss strode in to face Mantle,\nfour times a strikeout victim of\nCarl   Ersklne   in   Friday's   game.\nMantle rode the first pitch high\nInto the upper stands lh left about\n390 feet away,\nEverybody predicted this would\ntie a {fee-hitting game when Podres\nand McDonald, two pitchers with\nordinary records and late season\n(tops, were named tp start. This\ngame just happened to catch both\nmanagers without a real top-flight\nstarter.\n. Gene Woodllng slammed Podres' fourth pitch Into the centre-\nfield seats, a 395-foot poke, lead-\nI lng off,for the Yanks, it was,the\n-.first time,'\u25a0 series player  had\n.CIVIC\nCENTRE\nCOMMISSION\nSCHEDULE\nOct. 4-11, 1953\nARENA\nMONDAY:\n\u2022 4:00- 5:30\u2014Open Hockey Midgets\n0:30- 7:45\u2014Senior Hockey.\nI 8:15-10:00\u2014ADULT SKATING.\nTUESDAY:\n4:00- 5:45\u2014CHILDREN'S    '\nSKATING.\n8:30- 8:00\u2014Senior Hookey.    ,\/\n8:00- 9:30\u2014Juvenile Hockey.\nWEDNESDAY: '\"\n4:00- 5:30\u2014Open Hodkey\nBantams.\n8:00        \u2014SENIOR HOCKEY.\nSEATTLE VS.\nNELSON.\nTHURSDAY: ..\n4:00-5:45\u2014CHILDREN'S,\nSKATING.\n8:30- 8:00\u2014Senior Hockey.\nFRIDAY:\n4:00- 5:30\u2014Open Hockey\nMidgets.\n8:30- 7:45\u2014Senior Hockey.\n8:15-10:00\u2014ADUI^ SKATING.\nSATURDAY:\n10:00-12:00\u2014GENERAL \u2022\n\u2022  SKATING.\n1:00- 2:00\u2014Bantam Pool.\n2:00- 4:00\u2014Open'. Hockey\nBantams.\n8:00        \u2014SENIOR HOCKEY\nTfcAIL VS NELSON.\nSUNDAY:\n10:00-12:00\u2014Senior Hockey.\n3:00- 5:00\u2014CHILDREN'S\nSKATING.\nRECREATION HALL\nMONDAY:\n4:00-5:00\u2014Junior Girls Pro-Rec.\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Senior Girls Pro-Rec.\n6:00- 7:00\u2014Basketball.\n8:00-10:00\u2014Ladies Pro-Rec.\nTUESDAY:\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Boys Pro-Rec.\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Senior Boys Pro-Rec.\n7:30-10:00\u2014Men's Basketball.\nWEDNE8DAY:\n2:30- 4:00\u2014Ladies Pro-Rec.\n4:00- 5:30\u2014Senior Girls\nBasketball.\n5:30- 8:30\u2014Ladles Basketball.\n8:30-10:30\u2014Men's Pro-Rec,\nTHURSDAY:\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Girls Pro-Rec.\n5:00- 6:00^-Senior Girls Pro-Rec.\n8:00-10:00\u2014Basketball.\nFRIDAY:\n4:00- 5:00\u2014Junior Boys Pro-Rec.\n5:00- 6:00\u2014Senior Boys Pro-Rec.\n6:00- 7:30\u2014Basketball.\n7:30-10:00\u2014Men's Pro-Rec.\nSATURDAY:      .\n-   \u2022    ,    SCHOOL TRUSTEES\nCONVENTION.\nopened up with .a homer since\nDetroit's Davey Jones In 1909.\n' Brooklyn, had McDonald on the\nropes.in the third when he was\nlucky to escape with only one run\non singles by Roy Campanella' and\nGil Hodges and a wild throw by\nPhil Rizzuto on Carl ljurillo's\ndouble play ball.\nThe Dodgers had men on first\nand third with nobody out and a\nrun in when Woodling took Billy\nCox's fly ball and doubled Hodges\nat the plate with a beautiful no-\nbounce throw to Berra.\nMantle's homer in the five-run\nthird gave the Yanks a 6-1 cushion\nthat looked mighty soft to McDonald, the fellow the Yankees\ntried to \\rade away all last winter.\nMcDonald kept skirting disaster\ntime after time until he was flattened lh the eighth. But the Yanks\nkept adding to the lead while\nBrooklyn threats blew up.\nCarl Furlllo rapped into a double\nplay when the Brooks began to\nget tough lh the fourth but a fifth\nlrtnlng spurt finally produced a run.\nWith one out, Junior Gilliam was\nhit by a pitch. Single by Pee Wee\nReese and Duke Snider rode him\nhome, Then McDonald tightened\nup again.   7 '\nMeyer  eased through  a  rough\nsixth when the Yanks loaded the\nbases with Only one out but finally\nhit the.dead end in the seventh.\nLEADING BATTER\nBilly Martin, the series* leading\nbatter with' 10 hits, only two short\nof the record, blasted a Meyer\npitch Into the left field stands following Berra's single, widening the\ngap to 8-2. Rizzuto's single ahd\nMcDonald's double that took a bad\nhop past Jackie Robinson ran it to\n9-2 later, in the same Inning,\nThe Yanks piled on aonther in\nthe eighth on Collins' double off\nBen Wade, a sacrifice and' Berra's\nfly ball.      - .,\nMcDonald finally got the business in the eighth. Singles by Robinson, Campanella and Furlllo produced one run and brought up Cox\nwhose three-run homer closed the\ngap to 10-6.\nIn from the bullpen came Kuzava, a lefty who likes to pitch to\nrighthanded batters. He promptly\nstruck put Dick Williams on three\npitches as Dressen replaced pinch-\nhitter George Shuba with pinch-\nhitter Williams\nMcDougald's home run off Joe\nBlack in the top pf the ninth seemed a lead enough. Stengel, however,\nwanted to make certain\/When Gilliam led off iwth a homer, Reynolds began to throw hard in the\nbullpen. Reese filed out but Duke\nSnider singled to right.     .\u201e.>,.\nThat wss all for Kuzava. Stengel\nwaved for Reynolds, the opening\nday hurler who was supposed Jo\nbe \"ouf for the-series\" with S\nbad back.  -\nJackie Robinson was the batter.\nWith the count two balls and one\nstrike, Jackie rapped into a game-\nending double play.\nThe game started In bright sunshine and mid-70 degree temperature. By the eighth inning it was\ncloudy and growing dark, prompting the umpires to order the lights\nturned on for the last two innings.\nIn Saturdya's game Duke Snider,\nBrooklyn's home run hero of last\nOctober, hammered home four big\nruns to back up Billy Loes' gritty\npitching as. Brooklyn squared the\nworld series with a 7-3 victory over\nNew York Yankees.\nBouncing back to even matters\nat home after losing the first two\nat Yankee Stadium, the Dodgers\nclobbered Eddie Ford, Tom- Gorman, Johnny Sain and Art Schal-\nlock for six doubles and a home\nrun ih their 12-hit total. Starter\nFord was the loser although he\npitched only one inning.\nWhen Loes, a sad failure since\nthe all-star game in July,, faltered\nin the ninth to load the bases with\nnobody out, manager Chuck Dressen called for Clem Labine to choke\noff the Yanks.\nThe game closed with a flourish\nwhen Billy Martin, trying to score\na second run on Mickey Mantle's\nsingle, was cut down at the plate by\nDon Thompson's peg to Roy Campanella,\nCampanella tagged Martin on the\nshoulder hard to make certain of\nthe final out, Martin turned and\nglared but made no menacing gestures.\nSnider,   whose   four    homers\nThis advertisement is hot published\nor displayed by The Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of.\nBritish Columbia.      .\nhelped Brooklyn take the Yanks\nto tha l\u00bbven-_\u00abtne limit last year,\nsmashed  a tremendous  426-foot\nblast over the right-field screen\nand off building across the street\nIn'the sixth Itinlhg.. , \u25a0'\u25a0'\nIt was Snider's double high off\nthe same screen that drove In two\nbig runs in the first Innings when\nthe Dodgers unloaded on lefthander\nFord, for three runs. Again in the\nseventh,  a Snider double   to  the\nleft-field corner drove In a fourth\nrun.- \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 .;\u2022 .   '-,-..,\nJunior . Gilliam,    with    three\ndoubles, two of the\"Alike variety\"\nand Loss with a pair of singles were\nthe other big Dodger hitters, ...\nLoes had won only one complete\ngame since July 8 and wasn't expected to last the route against the\nYanke team that boat him 3-2 in\nlast year's sixth game,\nBut the tall, skinny righthander\nkept firing that ball past the Yanks\nto strike out eight men in a fair\nfollow-up to the job Carl Erskine\ndid Friday when he set a series record of 14 strikeouts.\nNot until the fourth Inning when\nYogi Berra singled with two out\ndid the Yanks have'a hit By that\ntime, Loes was rolling along with\na 3-0-bulge. He lost his shutout\nIn the fifth on Martin's triple nnd\nGil McDougald's 370-foot homer.\nAlthough the 23-year-old hurler\nwas, being hit hard for long fly\nballs, he skirted serious trouble\nuntil tha ninth,' After Gene Wood\nling and Martin opened with\nIslngels and McDougald walked to\nload the bases, Dressen decided it\nwas enough and called for CUm\nLabine, the sinker ball expert.\nLittle Phil Rizzuto went down\nswinging and Labine looked up to\nsee big Johnny, Mize striding tb\nthe plate. Labine worked carefully,\nfinally getting Mite on a fly to Snider in shallow centre. The runners\nwere unable .to advance.\nMantle, who bad been fanned\ntwice by Loss after striking out\nfour times for Erskine Friday, lined\na single over Pee Wee Reese's head\nInto left, scoring Woodling, Martin,\ntrying to score from second, was\nout on a fine throw'. by Thompson,'\nwho had just replaced Jackie Robinson In left at the start of the\nninth, 7  1 '..''' :,'-,\nA record Brooklyn series crowd\nof 88,773 saw the game.\nto\nCbac% S^dJcttne\nWingy Johnston, for, the last five\nyears leading scorer of the Western\nHockey league's Tacoma Rockets,\nwill be the Spokane Flyers' playing coaoh this year.\nRoy, McBrlde, Flyers manager,\nmade the announcement afterword\ncame to htm from Johnston in\nSeattle, -where he began tbe season\non'the Seattle Bombers' roster as a\nright Wingman.\nJohnston, 33 years old, scored 321\npoints In his five years with the\nRockets. Of those, 146 were goals,\ngiving him a league record over\nthat span second only to Doug McAdam, who meshed -178. Johnston,\na clean-skating sharpshooter, spent\njust eight-minutes in, the penalty\nbox with the Rockets, last year.\n\"fm overjoyed. That's the only\nway to put it,\" McBrlste said. \"I've\nbeen trying to get Johnston since\n'way last summer,\" .\"'\n\u2022 'Til probably use him in the second line with Glno Rozzlni and Bill\nMcNally, or with Glno and Doug\nToole,\" McBrlde guessed.\n1 Johnston acted as playing coach\nWednesday night when the Bombers'bested Nanalmo,- 8 to 5, with\nregular pilot Muzz Patrick Bitting\nin the press box. Johnston was to\nCoach another Bomber exhibition,\nbefore joining the Flyers.\n1940 START -':'\u25a0\"\nGeorge Joseph Johnston \u2014\u25a0 that's\nhis long handle-^broke into professional hockey with Providence of\nthe American Hockey league in\n1940, and played with Chicago of\nthe National Hockey league from\n1841 to 1948, less two years in the\nCanadian armed forces. He's also\nbeen with Kansas City, Cleveland\nand New-Haven of the American\nahd United States leagues.    -\nThe Flyers, skating through the\nteam's first practice of the season,\nlooked as if they'll be bigger,\nyounger and rougher back of the\nblue line this year.\nMcBride already has on hand six\ndefensemen, Including two husky\ncheckers new to Spokane ice. Present for duty at the double session\nwere large Ralph.Luke and Tom\nHodges, Bernie- Grebinsky and\nJohn Reeves from Regina, Sask.\nThe newcomers were Danny McDougall, a former Trail defender,\nand Frank Carlson, a junior up\nfrom the Medicine Hatligera.. Mc-.\nDougall stands 6 feet 2 inches in his\nshoes and weighs 190 pounds', Carlson, at 185, is 5 feet 11 inches. Both\nshowed speed and a liking for contact work at the blue line.\nGolfers End Year\nWith Tournamenl\nThe Nelsop Golf and Country\nClub closed out a successful competitive season Sunday afternoon\nWhen the wlndup tourney of the\nyear took place. .\nThe two-ball foursome say many\nfine games played with ; the twosome of Mrs. R. Harper and'Buz\nWill breezing home the winners.\nRunners-up were Mrs. H. A. B. Will\nand Herb Peacock.\nPrizes for the hidden hole were\nwon by Mrs. E. McGregor of Bon-\nninton and Al -Freeman. Miss F.\nMatheson ad Bob Jarrett also copped prizes In, this event'.,\nAt the conclusion of the tour-\nnew a dinner was held in the clubhouse, When prizes won throughout\nthe season were presented.\nJimmy Allan declared the past\nseason the best since the war ended,\nwith many new members, some\nwho had never played the game\nbefore, showing up well. About the\nnewcomers, Allan was-high in his\npraise of. fellows like Bill Wlcken,\nBob Jarrett and Marshall Stedman.\nThey with several others came up\nwith some great golf that saw them\ncart home prizes.\nStrikes n' Spares\nOllie Kelly and Bruce Malcolm\nmade it quite decisive as to who\nwould take the-honors in the Mixed\nCommercial League Friday. Kelly\nwith her 296 single and 763 aggregate topped the ladies while Malcolm boosted-his season average to\n233 by rolling a 227 single and a\n745 aggregate. . .\nThe team honors went to the\nHumes with a single of 1046 and an\naggregate of 2999.\nBowling in the\/600's were Lena\nKoehle with a. 604, Fred Koehle\n623, Larry Johnson 636, Hank May\n663, Betty Apostoliuk 602 and Bill\nHorner 640.\nFord, Ersklne\nOn Mound Today\nBROOKLVN (AP)-Whitey Ford\nand Carl Erskine, the comeback\nkids ot the, 1658 world series, will\nbe the opposing pitchers Monday\nwhen. the Yankees and 'Dodgers\nmeet in the sixth game In Yankee\nStadium.      \u00ab '...'\u2022''\nManager Casey Stengel of the\nYankees named Ford, the youthful\nsouthpaw who lasted only one inning Saturday, as his sixth-game\nstarted-after the Yanks had taken\na 8-2 series lead by winning Sunday's 11-7 slugfest, Ford had an 18-6\nrecord during the regular American League season.\nErsklne, Brooklyn's 20Jgame-win-\nner, was named by Dodger manager\nChuck Dressen for his third series\nstart. He lost six games in the National League campaign.\nErsklne started the opening game\nof the series and was yanked after\none wild inning In which he yielded\nthree walks, two triples and four\nruns. He came back two days later\nto set a world series strike-out record by fanning 14 Yankees and\nholding the Yankees tq six hits for\na 3-2 victory..\nPrairie Ducks\nOn Move\nPintail and Blue-wing Teal southward migrations on , large scale\nwere observed during last halt of\nSeptember across the southern portion ot the three Canadian prairie\nprovinces . . . The waterfowl\npopulation remains at high level\ndespite reduced production by Mallards and Pintails ..'. Weather-and\nmigration pattern Is normal for the\ntime of year.\nTheseare facts'expressed in the\ncurrent issue of the Ducks Unlimited \"Duckological,\" prepared\nby Chief Naturalist Bert W. Cartwright.\nTheTeport reveals that Mallards\nare gathering on larger waters in\neach of the three provinces, but in\nsmaller numbers than last .year.\nCahvasbacks' are reported in large\nnumbers and the \"Duckological\"\nremarks, \"It ls evident that this\nfine species has reached a new peak\nof abundance following three successive years of favorable diving\nduck breeding conditions.\"\nHeavy volume of the late hatch\nis causing some concern. It is evident from reports by. hunters that\nan unusually high percentage of\nimmature birds is being taken.\nBombers Beat\nSfampeders 24-17\nBY ART BRYDON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014Calgary Stem-\npeders made a valiant effort to get\nback into the running in the Western Interprovlnclal Football Union\nSaturday night Abut were trampled\n24-17 by Winnipeg Blue Bombers.\nWinnipeg now is in second place\nwith 12 points, four back of the\nleading Edmonton Eskimos, who\nlost 19-13 to Saskatchewan Rough-\nriders at Regina,\nIndian Jack Jacobs called a steady\ndiversified game for the Bombers\nas the teams traded touchdowns in\na thrill-filled second half.\nFrankle Albert,' formerly with\nSan Francisco 49'ers, ran for one\nCalgary touchdown and passed to\nend Willard Sherman for another.\nFullback Bob West-lake raced 75\nyards for the other Stampeder\nmajor as he spurted tfom a spread\nformation'Vor the longest romp of\nthe game.\nGlen Christian converted two ot\nCalgary's three touchdowns,\nWinnipeg collected three converted touchdown for 18 points and\nflying,wing Bud Korchak booted\ntwo field goals tor, the. other six,\nKorchak converted all three.\nWORLD SERIES\nSIDE GLANCES\nBROOKLYN (AP) - Brooklyn\npitchers should have walked the\nfirst men they faced Sunday. Gene\nWoodllng opened the game by belting Johnny Podres, for, a homer to\ncentrefield. It was the same for poor\nRuss Meyer In the third when he\nrelieved Podres with the bases load\ned. Mickey Mantle greeted him with\na grand slam smash into Ihe centre\nfield seats.\nBen Wade's first batter was Joe\nCollins in the eighth. The Yankee\nfirst baseman clouted a 402-foot\ndouble to centrefield.\nMantle's grand slammer was the\nfourth in world series history. It\nslso gave him a total of seven runs\nbatted In for the series and leadership In that department. Mickey\nls still first in strikeouts with eight\nwhiffs,\nThe attendance of 36,755 and gross\ngate of $287,405 tor Sunday's game\nexactly duplicated. Uie figure's for\nthe fourth game.      7\nJim McDonald retired the Dodgers on four pitches ta the third\ninning for a record in this series.\nWhen Hank Bayer sacrificed Joe\nCotlns from second to third in the\neighth Inning, a woman shouted out\nto the Yankees, \"you ought to be\nashamed, of yourselves.\" The Yanks\nwere leading 9-2 at.the time.\nReliefer > Bob Kuzava fanned\npinch-hitter Sick Williams on three\nstraight pitches in the eighth inning\nand then trotted oyer, to left field\nto warm up, some more.\nThe lights were turned on the\nfirst time in the; series in the eighth\ninning Sunday, The weather has\nbeen gorgeous for all pf the games.\nThe six homers by two teams In\none game tied the record set. in '32\nby the Chicago Cubs and Yankees.\nIn both games the Yankees supplied\nthe heavier power, getting four\nhomers to two for the others,\nThe total of 18 homers so far\nequalled the mark established last\nyear by the same two teams. The\n47 total bases for Sunday was a\nseries record.     ,      -i      !\nBilly Martin, with 10 hits so far,\nis only two behind,the record held\nby four players all of whom collected their dozen in seven or more\ngames. ' ''    \"'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'..''\noM|\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1953 \u2014 7\nAll-Star Team Downs Canadiens\nBELFAST (AP) \u2014 Johnny Kelly\nof Belfast outpointed Peter Keenan\nof Glasgow Saturday night in a 15-\nrou'nd boxing-bout to become the\nBritish and European Bantamweight\nchampion.\n>'\nA church in East Grlnstead, Sussex, stands on the site of an\nearlier church built in 860 AD.\nBy W. R. WHEATLEY\nCanadian Preti Staff Writer\nMONTREAL.(CP)' The National\nHockey League all-Stars, capitalizing swiftly on manpower advantage\nIn the first period, defeated Montreal Canadiens, Stanley Cup champions, 3-1. Saturday night in the\nNHL'a seventh annual all-star games\nLittle Wally Hergesheimer of the\nNew York Rangers fired two goals\nin the opening period, enough to\nwin for the all-stars who were out-\nWORLD SERIES\nLINESCORE\nNew York .. 105 000 311\u201411 11 1\nBrooklyn .... 010 010 041\u20147 14 1\nMcDonald, Kuzava, itti, Reynolds\n(9) and Berra; Podres, Meyer (3),\nWade (8), Black (9) and Campanella. W \u2014 McDonald. L \u2014 Podres.\nHR: New York, Woodllng, Mantle,\nMartin, McDougald. Brooklyn, Cox\nand Gilliam,   .' '\nBlock Hawks Take\nSenators 6-2  ,\n' OTTAWA (CP)-Chlcago Black\nHawks of the National Hockey\nLeague overpowered Ottawa Senators of the Quebec Hockey League'\n6-2 here Saturday night In ah exhibition, games   ;, 7\nThe game was the second of a\ntwo-game series, between the teams.\nThe Hawks turned back Ottawa\n5-1 Thursday night at Pembroke,\nOnt., training camp for Chicago.\nshot 31-20 but were given magnificent support in the nets by the brilliant Terry Sawchuk of Detroit Red\nWings.\n.Maurice (Rocket) Richard scored\nfor Canadiens in the last period,\nrapping in the rebound of a smoking shot by Jean Beliveau, Canadiens' rookie sensation who signed\nhis contract earlier In the day. The\nall-stars were, a man short when\nRichard counted.\nGerry McNeil, who can't be blamed for the defeat, was pulled from\nCanadiens' net in the last minute by\ncoach Dick Irvin when the champions staged a - desperate offensive,\nand Alex Delvechlo of Detroit scored the final all-star goal in an open\nnet. \u2022'.-.*\nThe game set a record for both\npaid attendance and gross receipts.\nThe' crowd of 14,422 eclipsed the\nprevious best all-star game attendance of 14,169 in 1947 at Toronto.\nThe gros gate was $30,386.76. The\nbest previous was $25,920.75 In 1949,\nalso at Toronto.\nDespUe the summer-like heat, the\ngame seldom lagged and the teams\nplayed It to the hilt. The 11 penalties called by referee Red Storey\nIncluded majors to Red Kelly of\nDetroit and Bert Olmstcad of the\nCanadiens, who squared off and\nthrew solid punches early in the\nthird period.\nLine-up\n'All-Stars \u2014 Goal, Sawchuk, Detroit; defence, Kelly, Detroit; Quac-\nkenbush, Boston; Thomson, Toronto;\nGadsby, Chicago; Reise, New York;\nMortson, Chicago; forwards: Del-\nvecchlo,'- Detroit; Howe* Detroit;\nLindsay, Detroit; Prystai, Detroit;\nSanford, Boston; Mbsienko.-Chicago;\nItonty,' New York; Smith, Toronto;\nHergesheimer, New York; Watson,\nToronto.\nMontreal \u2014 Goal, McNeil; defence: Harvey, St. Laurent, Bouchard, Johnson, Macpherson; forwards;\nMoore, Curry, Olmstead,' Beliveau,\nRichard, Mazur, Lach, Geoffrlon,\nMeger, Mosdell, Davis, Mackay,\nMasnlck, McCormock, Gamble.\nReferee: Red Storey. Linesmen:\nDoug Davis and Sammy Babcock.\nSummary\nFirst period \u2014 All-Stsrs, Herge-\nshiemer (Ronty, Kelly) 4:08; Allstars, Hergesheimer (Kelly) 5:25.\nPenalties: Meger 4:00, Macpherson\n4:37, Lindsay 10:12.\n. Second period \u2014 No scoring, '\nPenalties \u2014 Mortson 5:03, St.\nLaurent 11:28, Howe 12:52, Richard\n15:18, Mosdell 19:58.\nThird period \u2014 Montreal Richard\n(Beliveau, Harvey) 4:80; All-Stars,\nDeivecchio 19:27..     \u25a0\nPenalties \u2014 Kelly (major) 3:34,\nOlmstead (major) 2:34, Smith 3:42s\nStops: i7..',i|\nSawchuk    12   8 10\u201430\nMcNeil'.      5 ' 4  8-17 ,\nPhone 75\nCollision Repairi\nPaint Jobs\nDamage Estimates\nSuperior Motors\n(Nelson) Ltd.\n\u25a0 Dodge-Desoto Dealer\nOpp. Post Office on\nVernon 8t\nA SPECIAL RCAF OFFICER\nEvery power-packed Atlas Heavy-Duty Battery\nis guaranteed for 30 months in passenger car\nservice\u2014with a Written Guarantee backed by\nImperial Oil Limited and honoured by 38,000\ndealers jn Canada and the United States.\nAtlas Batteries exceed the standards set by. the\nSociety of Automotive Engineers in all three im-\nportant performance measurements.. .up to 90%\n,__oi\u00bblife s-ycleB\u201420% more reserve power\u201440%\nmore starting punch... than S.A.E. standards\ncall fori\"\nGet Atlas\u2014and get coast-to-coast protection!\nHEAVY-\n1\nI   *w\\Fmmw    erWS^kJmf    vEllf IV'\n>A AND H<\ntS  IN  CA\nmm\n r\nM.\nlOPKI. -F01 K^FsJM ALL\nOVER. WRIT US HOW TO\nOUTA TH' DRAIKIWPBrf.\/\nMEBBEs3NtlDEA\nWILLWORK,\/\/'-\nPl\n\u20ac\nIM\nIt\n'\/ tt r atSS roayovie t\n\/weii,oRYOUDie> i\n\u25a0E_\u2014\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1953\ngrm\nPhone 144\nDeadline tor Classified Ads\u2014$ p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nFRASER\u2014To Dr. and Mrs. Robert S. Fraser ot Edmonton on October 1, a daughter.'\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nLOCAL. REAL ESTATE AND IN-\nsuranco office requires stenographer, October first or sooner.\nMust hove shorthand. Experience\nnot essential but preferred, Please\nstate qualifications In application.\nBox 26, Nelson, B.C.\nWANTED \u2014DEPENDABLE HIGH\nschool girl to mind children evenings, in exchange for room and\nboard, in respectable home. Box\n6844, Dally News.\nHOUSEKEEPER FOR TWO\nmonths. Modern home, .liberal\ntime off. Box 0170 Daily News:\nWANTED \u2014HOUSEKEEPER, IM-\nmedioteiy. Good wages, and good\nhome. Apply 612 Carbonate, St.7\nAQENT8 WANTED\nARE YOU TROUBLED WITH\nmoney problems? Become 'our\nrepresentative full or part' time.\nWe need men and women to act\nas agents in your surroundings.\nExperience helpful but not necessary. We will train you. .Consult\nus at once, FAMILEX, Dept. 12,\n1600 Delorimler, Montreal.''\nEXPERIENCED SALESMAN\nwanted\u2014Excellent opportunity\nfor right man to earn substantial\nremuneration. Wholesale Hardware \u2014Kootenay' Territory\u2014Already Established. State previous\nexperience and give references.\nBox 61.6, Dally News.\nIF YOU ARE INTERESTED TN\nearning $300 or moft per month,\nhandling Health and Accident\nand Income Protection Insurance,\nwrite Transportation Insurance\nCo., 5280 Dunbar Street, Vancouver, B.C. Experienced salesmen\npreferred, but others considered.\nSALESMEN\u2014Absolutely make $50\nin a d>y. New sensational utility\nitem for every food, beverage\noutlet, etc. Samples furnished.\nUTILITY A. Co. 53 C59 W. Jackson, Chicago 4.\nSITUATIONS. WANTED\nEXPERIENCED WOMAN DE-\nsircs part time job in general office, typing, and some bookkeeping. Apply Box 6489, Daily News.\nEXPERIENCED STENO RE-\nquires temporary, full, or part\ntime work. Phone 777-L-l..\nBUSINESS pPPORTUNITIES\nWE CANT BUY HEALTH\u2014EVEN\nwith all the money we're making\nIn our grocery business. Doc says\nwe've got to sacrifice it, so here's\nyour golden opportunity to grab\n$50,000 gross per year with little\noverhead. Lovely 8-room house\nnearby also for sale. Apply Box\n6144, Daily News.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\n\" (Continued)\nFOR'SALE OR TRADE\u2014PROFIT-\nable business covering tho Kootenays. Approx. $10,000 would, include stock and equipment.\nWould accept lumber in trade.\nBox 8188, Dally News,\nFOR SALE \u2014 P_TE'S GARAGE\nand Grocery Store, with 4-room-\ned house and outbuildings. Write\nor phone Pete's Garages.. Pass-\nmore, B.C.\nRENTALS\nFULLY MODERN 5-ROOM HOUSE\nin Ymir. Including electric stove\nand oil floor furnace. Rent $50.00\nper .month. Apply E. P. Hauke-\ndahl or Noble Gould, Ymir, B.C.\nFOR   JRENT   \u2014   EIGHT   MILES\n, West Nelson on highway, Dwelling,'. $15.00 month.  Phone 2847.\nWrite Mr. A. Lambert, Box 126,\nKinnaird, B.C.\nFOR RENT\u20141 4-ROOM HOUSE,\nunfurnished; 1 2-room cabin, furnished. 8 miles on Nelson-Trail\nhighway. Apply 610-A Hall St.,\nafter 5 p.ni.\nSUITE TO RENT\u2014THREE ROOMS\nand bathroom, and kitchen, furnished. Adults only. Apply Box\n6482, Daily News.\nWANTED  TILL  JUNE,  2  OR  3\nbedroom   house   on  the   North\nShore. R. E. Jackson, Starlight\n' Drive-In.\n1 ROOM SUITE, FULLY FUR-\nnished, steam heat, also, one\nhousekeeping room with kitchen.\n171 Baker St. \u25a0',     '.\",   V \u25a0\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS FOR\nrent, Winter rates. General heat,\nelectric stoves. North Shore Motel\n\u2014 Phone 1884.\n2 lrURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT\n\u2014$30 month. Young lady preferred. 718 Silica. Ph. 1441-R.\nROOM WITH BREAKFAST AND\nlunch, for .one or two sharing. \u2014\nPhone 718-Y.\nCOMFORTABLE    TWIN    BED-\nroom, with breakfast, two sharing, applyBox 60^, Doily News.\nROOM, CENTRAL, FOR BUSI-\nnessman, in nice home. All conveniences. Phone 457-R after 8.\nROOM AND BOARD FOR Business lady or man. Phone 474-X,\nWANTfED \u2014 GARAGE FOR WIN-\nter storage, Box 6474, Daily News.\nFOR RENT-SMALL .HOUSE, ON\nNorth Shore. Phone 1685-R-l.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOM   FOR\nrent \u2014 Phone S86-Y.      7\nPERSONAL\nMICRONIC HEARING AIDS.-\nWrlte P.O Box 89. Nelson. B.C\nvVawanKsA mutual ifKf HT-\nsurance Co., D. L. Kerr, Agent.\ni__MER HOT1-L. iSfKSUI C-P-ft.\nDepp. Clean rooms and reasonable ratos. Vancouver, B.C. '\nBuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\n-JAILY CROSSWORD\n3.Lcvel -\n4. Plural \u2022\npronoun\n5. Chief\n6. Unit o*\nwork\nJ. Girl's\nnickname\n(.Shade\nof aed\n\u2022.Aaploe \u25a0\nM.Long\nviolent\nspeech\nKA\nfood-\nflavoring;\nplant\nIS. Heavenly\nMr\nwith\n\u2022 tafl\n\u00bb. Rodent\n20. Frozen\nwater\nM. Other\nACROSS\n-.Gang .\nB.Edges of\ngarments\n9. A shade\n.   of purple\n10. Build\nIS-Meas-tw\nof land\nM. Book of OR!\nTestament\nM. Risked\n(colloq.l\nU. Rat-road\n(abbr.)\n17. Lamprey\n18,'Gold (Heft*\n-8. Nuclei at\nstarch\ngrains\n21. Clasped m\nthe arms\n23. Ascend\n26. Rugged\nmountain\ncrest\nit. Bearded\n(Bot)\n29. Swelling\n30. Cirrus\nWL*r.|\ntt. Resort\n34. Note of\ntha scale\n96. Member of\nafemHy\n37. Bear  '       ,\n40,MtUe\nred deer\n41. Female of\nthe ruff\n42. QourdHke\nfruits\n43. Perusa\n<4,Fore-.\nboding\nDOWN*\n1, Hiding place\nfor supplies\n2. Of the\ncountry\nDAILY CRVPTOQUOXE-Here's bow to work Mi\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIsLONGFELLOW\nOne tetter simply stands for another, la this example A la used\nlor. ths three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters, apos-\ntoophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints-\nEach day the code let.era are different\n'     '        - > .\nA Cryptogram Quo tattoo\nX e 8     _ V A T     C T A ' B     Q  S C C X B\nH a A     K Q X W O     O \u25bc C tt A *,     X O P 8\nH 8 A     HB_.HWF.fHB     B     1 \u00ab E A T -\n<UC 8.\nSaturday's Cryptoqiioto: KNEELING NE'ER SPOILED\nBILK STOCKING . . . ALL EQUAL ARE WITHIN THH\nCHURCH'S GATE\u2014HERBERT.\n*s|strisss-_ _\u00ab\u25a0__-\u2014__. mmuata\np\nr\nr-\nfy,\n1\ni\n\u00bb\nf.\ni\nII\nm\n^\nIS\nW,\nis\nft\nt\nIS\n\u25a0fjj\n\u00a5\n\u2022 \u201e.'\nf<\n*\nio\nf<\n%\n^(\n_) '\n&\nlt\\\naa\nas\n1\nW\n\"\u00bb\nSB\n'\n^\n%\net'\nr\/\/\nse\"\nsi'\n\u00bb\u00bb\nil\nV\/\/t\n%\nt\nV,\n57\nat\nn\n%\n4.\n%\n'tt\nat\ni\ns\u00bb\n%\n44\ndf\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nITC FOR SALE      v\nIW(Bsti_ie_iii:''\n' Buy tt .\nA 4 SUITE APARTMENT-\n\u2022H6US-\n8 rentals and owner's suite, or\nowner's suite could also be\nrented. Located in uphill district but not far out and on \"\nbus line, Revenue at present is\n$133,00 per month, plus owner's\nsuite. Present owner wishes to\nleave the city and CO AAA\nWill sacrifice' for ...... T~\u2122y\nWe have at present a choice of\n3-bedroom, houses now listed\nwith lis. They run from $7000\nto $9800, Also a 4-bedroom\nhouse at $8000..      . ,\nONE NICE LITTLE 2-BED-\nROOM HOUSE, fairly close in.\nHardwood floors and full basement, House 6 years CAftAfl\nold. Priced to sell at <P\u00b0vVV\nSplendid terms on this onei.\nTwo Lots on ObserVatory St.\n50' x 120'. Good loca- CrSA\ntion.Price -...,..\u201e T?*W\nNORTH SHORE PROPERTIES\nWith and! Without Buildings.\n'.,'    SEE US FIHST'I\nROBERTSON,\nHILLIARD\n&7CAWELL\n>ORJ^)M''4,MUSTSI^,COlSe|l\nfortable t a m i Ly home - near\nschools,- large living room, with5\nfireplace, dining room,' kitchen'?\nutility, -tree bedrooms, full basement, automatic hot water heat,\nstorm windows throughout, Bo*!\n8012, Nelson Daily News,\nPhona 68\n632 Ward,St,\nFOR SALE-MODERN 7-ROOMED\nhouse. 3 bedrooms; 11-3 acres on\nhighway with beautifully landscaped garden and trees. Automatic furnace, fireplace, electric\n, hot water heater, electric stove.\nNext to shopping centre ond\nschool. Down payment to be arranged. Box 116,: Kinnaird, or\n\u25a0 Phone 3502. Castlegar..\"',.-\nHOUSE FOR SALE \u2014 TWO BED-\nrooms, combination - living. room\nand dining room, fireplace, large\n. kitchen and'den. Hot water heat,\nfull basement. Upstairs can easily\nbe converted to suite for revenue.\nExcellent home. Good garden and\nfruit trees. Two blocks front' bus\nroute. For price and terms, Box\n5190, Daily News.\nHOUSE; ,6 ROOMS. BATHROOM.\nElectric light. 3 lots,, lakeshore\nroad. Woodshed. Coal and wood\nfor winter. Electric wood saw.'\nKitchen range and water boiler.\n! Good location., $5500. Box' 150,\nNakusp, B.C.\nFOR SALE - _tU__DIN(- lC__,'\n60 x 120, outside city limits, 1\nblock from bus. PhOne 1099-L, or\napply 206 View Street. -\n(Continued in Next Column)\nproperty, houses. farms\n?;';7.-;;itcvfor.:sai*-. \u25a0;,\nFORSALE-TW6 CI.6ICE tO_Al|\ntions- on Riondel Road, 300 yds.\nnorth of;Trans-Provincial High-1\nway. Each- lot contains 32 acres\nwith.220 yds. of lake and road\nfrontage. $600 down; total $16007\nLiberal terms. W. Fraser; Koote\u00ab\";\nnay Bay.\n\u2022FOR SALE-50 ACRES. 40 A_I_0_V.\nIn   good  timber.   6-roomed   log\nhouse, lots, of water, plped,\/on\nmain road 2 miles south of Slocan\nCity. Ill health' reason for selling^:\nApply to Mrs. J. Boudien, Sloeaa.\nCity, B.C,\nfor, sale - h Rdoii B6uSl_C;;\nfully modern; 1-3 room house,\nfully \u2022 modern. Apply Wm. \u2022 Ai-,\nHenke, Procter.\nFOR QUICK SAliE^-8-BEblit-61ffl.:;\nhouBe near bus and Schools. For|\nparticulars write Box 1497, Nel- J\nson Dally News,       ' -Si\nS-ROOM HOUSE Fbll TSBRSH\naale. Apply 45 Inside Ymir Road.!\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY ANtf;\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BA1.Y CHICKS :.\ny\u00abar from the Appleby Poulkr\nForm, Mission City, B.C. We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy aa<\nproperly conditioned Breeders oa I\nour own fane. Our baby chlckt\nare produced only from our ow\u00bb\natoek in White Leghorns, White;\nRooks; Now Hampsblres arJ\nCrosses. Catalogue on request\ntBM FAiidUS ltclel laWI\nstrains R.O.F. Sired Neew Hamp\npullets, vaccinated against Newcastle and bronchitis. 10 wks. old\nfl.20, 18 7wks. old $1.50, any\nquantities; Kromhoff Farms, RJ8.\nNo. 8, New Westminster, B.C.\nPhone Newton 60-L-8,\nFOR SALE\u20143 LOGGlNd- HOfcSltS, E\napprox, 1600 lbs. Also threshingI\nmachine. Apply Alex,Toft, Park5-!\nSiding. ..-'.,\u25a0--, ' >ij\nTOR SALft-Bl.c!K dbAt, Vt-OSI\nkids, and No. 10 DeLaval cream'\nseparator. H. Knowles, Crescent I\nValley, B.C.7 ' 1\nFOR SALE-1. ilOtltH tJtLSr'\npull- Apply Fred Maloff, Cres-1\ncent Valley.;\n2 (__Eivj__,.-H6it, mm i \u25a0ju\u00bb\"|v.\nmonths. J cows. Write &r parti*. >\u25a0\n- ulars, to W. Zoobkaff, Mewatt,\nINSTRUCTION\nDO YOU HAVE S*CURITY? \u2014\nLearn railway telegraphy now.,\nI want to talk to 10 men 16-40,\nwho are Interested in training as\nRailroad Telegraph Operators and\nStation Agents. We train you\nIn your home. Does not lnterfei*\nwith your present job. H sincere,\nambitious, and in good health,\nwrite NOW-to: Columbia, Bus-\niness Institute, Box 6841, Dailjr -\nNews.' \"_?\u25a0 -   yy\"\n :     \u25a0-. I\nONTHE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS . .\\ mo on the dial\n.(Pacific Standard Time). ;\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1953\n00\u2014News . .\n;05\u2014-Warren's Wigwam,\n15\u2014Sports News S\n20\u2014Warren's Wigw_m '\n80-News      '\u25a0\u25a0\n85^-Warren's Wigwam\n;00\u2014News     ..      -\n:16\u2014Breakfast Club '\n45\u2014Serenade \u2022'- '\n:55\u2014Sports News\n:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n:15\u2014Earl WarrCn Show\n:00\u2014Saddle Serenade\nIS-^News\n20\u2014Morning Visit\n30\u2014Story Parade\n45-Muslcal Kitchen\n00\u2014Shut-In Show\n18\u2014Horaemaker Harmonies\n:45\u2014Consumers Corner\n00\u2014Noon Special\n15\u2014Sports \u25a0 News\n20\u2014News . \u25a0'   ,\n30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n55\u2014Chatting With the Listeners\n:00\u2014Man in Your Kitchen\n15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n30\u2014Falrview -hopping Guide\n2:00\u2014Family Theatre   ;\u25a0'.-.\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matlnea\n8:18\u2014Saered -Heart Y\n8:30\u2014Afternoon Variables\n4:15\u2014Maxine Ware Sings\n4:80--Starbuck Valley     '\n4:45\u2014Roundabout\n5:00\u2014Report from Parliament 1\n5:09\u2014Pacific News\n5:1B\u2014Int Commentary\n5:20\u2014Behind the.News\n5:25\u2014Spotlight on a -Star\n5:45\u2014Sporta: Newa\"'\"\n5:50\u2014Newa\n6:00\u2014Dennis Day Show\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News ''\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-PacMic Pianoforte\n8:00\u2014Presenting'    .\u00bb\n8:15\u2014Canadian Musis\n9:00\u2014Summer Fallow\n9:30\u2014Cafe Continental\n10:00\u2014Newav\n10:15-Frovincial Affairs\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Balljoon.\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:0C\u2014NEWS Night Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTUESDAY, OCT. 6, 1953\n7:30\u2014News.\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:45\u2014Morning' Devotions\n7:55\u2014March Past\n8:00\u2014News\n?:10\u2014Here's BUI Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goea.\n9:00-HBHG News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Famous Voices\n10:00-Mornlng Visit\n10:15-H1\n10:45\u2014Invitation to Walts\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken , .,';.'.\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of .the Air\n11:80\u2014A Man and His Music\n12:15-News\n12.25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm. Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Five to One\n1:00\u2014The Concert Hour\n215\u2014Presenting\n8:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\nW&IML*,^,   ,'^,-^kd\n3:15\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45\u2014Yesterday's Favorites\n4:15-rClub Date \u25a0,.\n4:30\u2014North for Adventure\n4:45\u2014Music for Children\n5:00-At Home With the Lennicht\n5:25\u2014International Commentarf\n' 5:30\u2014UN Today    :\n5.45\u2014News ahd Weather\n8:85\u2014Have You Heard?\n8:00-rCue for Fun 7\n8:80\u2014Through South Africa\n7:'00-rNaws    \/' '\u25a0   7\n7:16\u2014News Roundup\n7:80\u2014Leicester Square\n\u2022 8:00\u2014A Word, in, Your E0r - ,\n8:15\u2014The Face of the Land .\n8:80\u2014Crime Is Our Business\n9:00\u2014Champions of. Sport   '\n9:30\u2014Songs From the Shows\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Molly Bobak Speaking .\n10:30\u2014Here Comes the Band\n'-\n \t\nWz i\nmmu) \\m\nPERSON JO-PERSON WANT APS\nTOR QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nDeodline *or Classified Ads- -5 p.m.\nPhone 144\nAufOMOTiyt\nMOTORCYCLES.   piCYCLIS\n'    IMMEDIATE     \u2022\nDELIVERY\nNew Austin\n\u25a0SOMERSETS\nCREAM     BLUE     GREEN\n1953 Packard Clipper\n1953 Austin Convertible\n1953 Ford Fordor\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1952 Studebaker Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Austin Convertible\n1951 Austin Devon\n1951 Monarch Coupe\n,1950 Austin Devon\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1950 Pontlac Sedan\n1949 Austin Devon\n1949 Hillman Sedan\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1948 Podge Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n-1937 Ford Tudor\n1937 Ford Coupe\n.937 Chevrolet Sedan\n1936 Dodge Coupe\nCOMMERCIALS\n1952 Studebaker Pickup\n1951 Austin Pickup  .\n1950 Studebaker Pickup\n1949 Ford Pickup\n1950 Austin Countryman\n1949 Austin Panel\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1947 Ford Pickup\nTERMS AND TRADES\nAUSTIN\nSERVICE AND SALES\nEMPIRE\nMOTORS\n. ~_03'$_ker'$t.\" Phone 1135\nNelson, B.C.,\nDrop, Into Our New Car Lot\nJust Below the Cement Wall\nOn Vernon Street\nIn the 600 Block\nWE HAVEA\nCAR OR TRUCK\nFOR YOUR\nEVERY NEED!\nNew 1953 Austin Somerset\n1953 Henry. J. Corsair\n1952 Austin Somerset\n1952 Chevrolet Coupe\n1951 Pontiae Coach\n\u2022 1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Mercury Coupe\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet Tudor\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1947 Dodge Sedan'\n1946 Pontiae Sedan '\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1934'Ford Fordor\nCOMMERCIALS\n1952 Studebaker Pickup\n1950 Ford Pickup      '\n1948 Chevrolet '\/_ Ton\n1950 Austin Panel\nCASH    TERMS    TRADES\nJoe Langan, Manager\nEMPIRE\n600 Block Vernon Street\nNelson, B.C.     \/\nAUTOMOTIV6\nMOTORCYCLES,   BlCYCLiS\n___________ __________________\ntOW SAL_ OR 9WAP-!\u00bbll-'--TON\nMercury, flat deck, licence. 7600\nmiles. 2-spsed axis. Phone 47.\nJ.  P.  Morgan  Store,  Evenings\nvoa-Rs \u25a0\nW -IsSVRdLfcT ltoiXN,'_66b\ncondition. - Complete With radio,\nunder seat heater, defrosters, and\n2 new tires, $405 Cosh. Ph. 1480-R.\nm s.q._}'-'.m resE ms-\nsenger  coupe.   Oood   condition.\n1950.00, BoxWI, Pally News,\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nHome Furnishings\nFor CLEARANCE at\nThe Bay\nPhone 40\nAvailable at Bay's\nConvenient Budget Terms\nNorge Oil Heoter\nReg. 120.50\nFloor modal. an en\nMedium size. Ssle ....   OOaOO\nElectric Sewing Mochine\nBy' Domestic, famous White\nmachine. Floor %lf.Q\nmodel Salt Price  \u00ab?\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. Dresser\nReg.,\u00bb.-5 -\nWhite wood. Ready to paint.\nSize 16x48x30 high. IJ QR\n\u00ab drawers  s,i.o>\u00ab\u00bb\nTri lights\nReg. 28.05\nComplete with shade. M 0,7\nSals Price  ..    \u00ab\"\u25a0\u00ab\"\u00bb\nWhite Wood Chest\nReg. 17.05\n4-drawer. Ready to psint. Size\n24x18x30 high. I A OS\nSale Price    '',\u2022i'*,\nCedar Chest\nReg. 80.00\nWaterfall design. Walnut finish.\nSlightly marked. %AO\nSale Price ;;  .trav\nHostess Chairs\nReg, 22.00\nFloor models. IA Q\u00ab\nSale Price     ' *,a\u00b0\nDrop Leaf Table\nReg, 1J.85               ,   ...\nUnfinished  plywood  construe\ntion. Ready to psint.     7 QK\nSale Price      ' ,a\"\nKitchen Buffet\nReg. 38.00 ,\nWith two glass doors, plus full\nlength top utility drawer.\nPainted white. lit...\nSale Price ,    \"\u2022^'J\nElectric Rdngette\nReg, 120.00\ny*,ed'^, $69\nSale Pries  vvv\nRadio Headboard Bed\nRog. 14,00\n4'6\" white wood finish., Ready\nto paint. Q Q\u00a7\nSale Price  ,    a,\u00b0^\nUsed Electric Motors\nVs H.P. 2 only. 9 OR\nSale Price, each ; ,.   a,9\u00b0\nChrome Chairs   N\nReg. 13.00\nOdd floor models from discontinued sets. . 6,95\n,..-!e Price            v,\"~\nFOR SALE MISC-LUNBOUS\n' >        (Continued)     77   -\nFOR SALI - CUSTOM : RADIO,\ntor 1048 Plymouth or Dodge. \u2014\nphone 1285-Y.\nAlsO enamelled coal and wood\nrange, $40. Phona U27-R-1.\n$120.00; one kitchen Sink,\ncom-\nr-\u00ab-.W,      WSSS3      SVSS-SS.SS      (MSSS1,      .V\nplate. Apply 713 Sixth Street\nam tim m> #'k& ws,\nsale.  Apply  Denis  Frie,  Notre\nDame College, Nelson,\n1 mm\u00ae 6\u00a3wkm, m\n1 cookstove and 30 gal. water\ntank, $65, Apply 824 Pavles St,\nrotCsSiS^-i 'pit1.' anu_Twi__TJ.\nskates; size 5; (5.00. Ph. 161-X-l.\n\u25a0tor M_^aL_>fc\u00bb ffours skates,.size 12. Phone 7..-Y,\nGtRL'S figurb skatks, sizb' 2\non White shoes. Phona 884-X.\nrt.TsAi_ft-uS.to wtMiJOw. -\nPhone Ol.-X.'  .\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nNOTICE TO CRIDITOSB\nHARRY HOWARD SUTHERLAND,\n\u2022DECEASED\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN thst\nSl| persons having claims against\nHarry Howard Sutherland, deceased, late of Nelion, B.C., who died\nthereat op the 21st day bt September, 1953, are required -to file particulars thereof With the undersigned solicitors tor the executrix\non or before the 31st day of October,\n1053, after which dato the Executrix\nwill proceed to distribute the assets\nof the said deceased among the\npersons entitled thereto, having re\ngard only .to the claims which shall\nthen have been filed as above required.\nDATED at Nelson, B.C., this 24th\nday of September, 1053.\n' GARLAND It GANSNtR,\nP.O. Box 480, Nelson, B.C.\nSolicitors for the Executrix.\nFairmpnf Zinc Stockpile Cause Of\nOutput SEash; Lead Prices Steady\nNEW YORK (API-Huge supplies of zinc forced 0A0 smelter\nto announce, plans last Week to\nSlash output of fcrlme western grade\nby SJ par cent.\nAmerican Zinc, Load and Smelt-\n1,0617 tons a month.  It blamed low\ntag 1\nHon at Its Fairmont, 111,, plant by\nMANAGING SDITOH . . . R.\nJ. Rankin, managing editor and\ndirector of tha Halifax Chronicle-Herald, was elected ' first\nvice-president of Ths Canadian\nPress In 1002. Chairman of the\nPort of Halifax commission, an\nhonorary Ufa member of tho Canadian Red Cross and director af\nthe Halifax board of trade, Mr.\nRankin began his newspaper\ncareer with ths former Chatham\nPlanet In his native Chatham,\nOnt., before' the First World\nWar, Returning from ovsrseas\nservice with ths Canadian army,\nha Joined ths stiff of ths Halifax\nHerald In 1021 and was named\nmanaging editor of The Herald\nand Tha Star In 1852. The papers\nmerged with tha Chronicle and\nThs Star In 1040 and Mr. Rankin\nwas named managing editor and\ndlrsoMr.\u2014(OP photo,)\nsine prices, high costs and excessive Imports ot the metal for the\ncutback. \u2022\u25a0\u25a0      -,\nSHORTER WEIK\n', Last week, the company cut Its\nztnv production by orte-third at its\nGrandview mine in tha Metaline\ndistrict of WssHlngton. In the same\narea this waek, Pend Oreille Mines\nand Metals Co. shortened Its work\nweak trom six days to five, declaring \"Wa had,to take this step\nIf wa ware ot continue te opprate.\"\nWhet) the year began, zinc Was\n'selling for 13 cents a pound, Bast\nst. Louis, compared with tha pros,\nant 10 cents, .-.,-'\ni, Th* monthly average of lead Imports for the first seven months\nwas 52,777 tops, only slightly above\ntha average ed 01,302 tons a month\nfor all of Mil.\nThe price of lead was steady at\n13Vi cents a pound, with buyers talcing fair tonnages. Europe was im-\npoiting considerable Mexioan lead.\nSales, of domestic copper were\nrestricted largely to the nearby po-\n \" THTTTljirrTrTTrT-\nsltlon. Tha price range continued\nat 20-80 cents.a pound.\nIn London, the ministry of materials said lt has completed arrangements to dispose' pf about\n00,000 long tons Ot copper over an\nextended period. The government\nagreed to release the' copper to\nfacilitate the changeover from government bulk-buying to private\ntrading Aug. 5.\nCopp>rr--29-30 cents a pound, delivered. Foreign,, 30-30.60 cents,\nNew York.\nLead\u201413.50 cents a pound, New\nYork; 13.30 cents, St Louis.\nZinc\u201410 cents a pound, East St\nLouis;   16.00  cents,   New   York.\nAluminum\u201421.S0 cents a pound,\nIngots, shipping point Pigs, 20\ncents,\nNickel\u2014OO cents a pound, electrolytic cathodes, Fort Colborne,\nOnt, U.S. duty included.\nSilver\u201486.36 oepts an ounce, New\nYork; 74 ponce, London.\nTin\u201483.60 cents a pound, New\nYork.\nOSLO (CP). \u2014 An exceptionally\ngood grain crop this year may\nturn out to be a record for Norway. Barley acreage, now twice\nas large as in 1947, accounts for\nthe increase. Cultivation of spring\nwheat and oats is smaller than a\nyear ago.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. ,, WI\nTha Feminine Touch\nBROOKLYN (AP)-Rachel Robinson hugged her husband as he\nleft home for Ebbets Field Friday\nand gave him three resounding\nkisses, , - ''   ; ,\nI'm giving you one kiss for each\nhit. I just know you're going to get\nthree today,'' were her parting\nwords.   . \"\n* Jackie Robinson smiled as he recalled these words, because he had\nfulfiled his wife's prediction. His\ndouble and twp singles helped\nBrooklyn defeat New York Yankees 3-2 In tha third world series\ngsmp. 7 i.,-\nCasey Stengel figures some of his\nboys went fishing during'Fridsy's\nsunny afternoon. \"Yeah, a tew of\n'em got nervous and want after bid\nballs when Ersklne had two strikes\non them,\" he said.\nMACHINERY\nFOR SALS-A VIBRATOR BLOCK\nMachine one year old. Output\n1000 Blocks per 8-hr. day; Included are 500 polets and 8\"-10\" and\n12\" forms and 1 _ h,p. electric\nmotor. For further information\nwrite,Mr. D. Moro, 404 Austad\nLane, Trail, B.Cf\n.MAIIONAI. MACMN-RV CO\nLIMITED\ndistributors for: minino\nsawmill, logging -and\ncontractors: jwuipment\n ...Enquiries'rinvlted\nannvtllf' Island   Vsncnuvai IBC\nTO'.At*-* fa-P.'mktn DWY\ngasoline engine. Appleton drag-\nsaw, 3x4 bulldozer pump, all\nIn good' working copditlon. W.\nFraser, Kootenay, Bay.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE - DRIVING SCHOOL\ncar, completely equipped with\nofficially approved dual-controls,\nclutch, brake, gas and steering\nwheel. 1040 Plymouth Special De-\nLuxe sedan; spotlessly clean, excellent condition. An outstanding\nopportunity for a school teacher,\nto develop a good paying after,\nhours business. Phone, write or\nwire Broadway Driving School\nLtd.. 2908 W.  Broadway,  Van-\n'   couver 8.  .\nft. mm m bSbkM1 jwa\ntherbed\" Dominator Coma In and\n, sea this famous motorcycle, the\nholder of tha Isle of Man TT at\nKootenay Motorcycle Sales and\nService, Box 860. Castlegar; phone\n2801 \"The Shop of Friendly Service,\"\n(Continued in Next Column)\nDEALERS IN ALL TYPES OF\nused equipment, mill, mine and\nlogging supplies; new and used\nwire rope, pipe and fittings;\nChain, steel plate and shapes. Atlas- Iron Ss Metals Ltd., 250 Prior\nSt., Vancouver, B.C. Phona Pacific \u00ab3B7, \t\nITOSAIj-- KIRKS' SfLt-\ncleaning automatic stoker, 23\";\ncapseity 250 lbs. per hour, Burns\nslack coal and only used 8 paths.\nReason for selling; w\u00ab have installed oil. Pries: $900.00. Douglas\nHotel, Trail, B.C.\t\nfC_t THbl-ft WHO WlStl A' fidOD\nused washing machine, gasoline\nor electric, at a better than reasonable price (they must go), as\nlow as $15.00, call In to Jeffery's\nRadio, or phone 1302. \u25a0\nfdR SAL_ - 120 BASS PIANO\naccordian. 7 tones \"treble, 4 bass.\nWill trade for smaller accordian.\nPhone 1727-R evenings.\t\nBOY'S SKATES, SIZE 0; GIRL'S\nsize 2. Like new. Westinghouse\nhand vacuum used 0 months,\nPhone 1414.\nWANTED -CLEAN COT.TON\nrags, Must be 12 inches squsra\nor more. Dally Newa\nWANTDb - UV_M'.d-t -t-AP.\nto lav Leghorn pullets. Ph. 304-Y2.\nPETS, CANARIES, PEES. ETC.\nFOR SALE - TWO BEAUTIFUL\nfemale Welmaraner puppies,\nWhSlped Aug. 2nd. Silver fcrey.\nFjrdm prize winning snd hunting\nstock. Pedigree and information\non request. Write Ed Blundell,\nKimberley, -\t\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nABBAYER8 AN-'MINt\nREPREMNTATIVE8\nE W. WIDDOWSON & CO., AS-\nsayerai 3pl Josephine St., Nelson.\nH   S.   ELMES.  ROSSLAND, B.C,\nAssaver, Chemist, Mine RSp,\neMi.sNEERB Ah\nr:.\"__.'WaW, SjurWd. 8, i>7_\nBaker St.,  Nelson,  Phone  1118.\nB.C. Lands Surveyor.\ns. .v: \u2022mmtk,.?.o. wa m\nKimberley, Phone 84.\nBC   Land Surveyor. Engiheer.\ngsWc 'mt^wW&'ut:\nN\u00ablson, RC|Survayor, Engineer.\nfet.OTJS.tT3 IMT.D\nMachine Shop, Acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor .rewinding   Phon* .103  324 Vernon Bt\nIM. Gold-Dollar\nReserves (limb\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 Britain's\ngold snd dollar reserves increased\n$17,000,000 during September, the\ntreasury announced Saturday,\nbring them to $2,488,000,000.\nThe Increase takes into account\n$28,000,000 ot defence aid from the\nUnited States, and payment of $15,-\n000,000 by -Britain, to the Europesn\nPayments Union, In part settle-\nmint of the sterling area's August\ndeficit with the union.\nThe treasury said Britain had a\nprovisional surplus of sbout $12,-\n000,000 with the BPU in September.\nThis will ba settled during October,\nhalf of it. by payment of, dollars to\nBritain by the union, and the other\nbait by reduction of Britain's outstanding debt to the union,\nFOR SALE\u20141851 MODEL PHIL\nlips combination, In good condl\ntion; $250.00 cash. For details\nphone 1120.\t\nHdrW-rt coAL-dAS ttAiStH,\n$125.00; McClary washer, $70.00;\nG.E. refrigerator, $50.00; some\nfurniture. Phone M8-X-3. '\npif-t' - \u25a0\u25a0iTtii-ia-\",1 ? mm -\nSpecial low prices, Active Trsd-\nlng Co., $35 E Cordova St.. Vancouver\nflittfl8 WART MM.VEft -\nLeaves no scars. Your druggist\nsells CRESS.\n&Ht APT.-fiJitfi PPC *iM.o6;\none kitchen sink, complete. Apply\n723 Sixth Street.       \t\n17L3TsA_^Mc_t_A_tV,_ ddok\nStove, $80. 710 Victoria -St. or\n. Phone 1131-Y;\nb_s_?s mm mm saspir\nSize 3. Phone 1222-X.\n(ConUnued lh N.xl Column)\nNpIboii Satlif Hftua\nClassified Advertising Raton\nHo per Una first insertion and\nnon-Consecutlvs Insertions\nlie line per consecutive Inser-\ntion after first Insertion\n48c Una for 8 consecutive insertions\n$1 56 lint for month (20 consecutive Insertions!   Box numbers  He extra   Covers any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)  NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc -30c per line,\nfirst Insertion   16c per lino\ntech subsequent Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE,RATES   LESS\n10* FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Ratesi\n(Not Mora Than Listed HarsL\n. By carrier, per week.\nin advance $0\nBy carrier, per year $15.80\nUnited Statea United Kingdom:\nOne month $ 120\nThret months     _,.-..       3.75\nSix months            7.50\nOne year 1500\nMall In Canada outside Nelson\nOne month 1.00\nThree months         2,76\nSis months              6.60\nOn* year 1000\n.Vherss extra nostsie In required,\nabove rates plui postage^\nAlto. Oil Output\nCut 11,905 Barrels\nCALGARY (CP)-AllowshU oil\nproduction in Alberta during October has been cut by another 11,-\n005 barrels daily by the petroleum\"\nand natural gas conservation board.\nThe new allowable of 200,440 barrels dally replaces the original 221,-\n354 announced by the.board earlier\nthis week and ls down 64,822 barrels\na dsy from September's allowable.\nThe reason for the decreased\nproduction, the board said, is that\nthe Interprovlncial Pipe Line Co.\nexperienced difficulty In late September in tying-ln four new loops\not the 16-Inch line, between Regina\nand Gretna, Man.\nBecause of this delay, the pipeline Company was unable to receive and transport approximately\n307,000 barrels of the Stepember\nallowable that had been consigned\nto the terminus at Superior. Wis.\nThis under-production had been\ncarried forward into October and\nin order to avoid any further production cutbacks, the board resettled its original allowable.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nLondOn-rRSv. Sir Herbert Dun-\nnlco, 77, miner's son who beesme\ndeputy Speaker of the House of\nCommons, 1020-81.\nCsmbrldge, Mass.\u2014Dr. Edwin J.\nCohn, 60, whose basic research on\nproteins lad to production Of liver\nextract and gamma globulin.\nSan Francisco\u2014George Creel, 77,\nformer newspaper editor and\nspeech-writer for the late president\nRoosevelt.\nSanta'Monica, Calif. - Mrs. Ids\nMonda \" Jennings Mannlon, 70,\nBroadway ingenue and vaudeville\nperformer In the early 1000s,\nLondon \u2014 Raymond Lovell, 83,\nMontreal-born actor who appeared\nin a long succession of London hits.\nNew York\u2014Jesse Edward Cross,\n61, head of the business reference\nbranch .of the Brooklyn public library for the last 20 years. A native\nof Baldur, Man., he received bachelor of arts and law degrees from\nthe University ot Manitoba and\npractised law in Winnipeg before\ncoming to New York |n 10-8.\nGillnetters Barred,\nGulf of Georgia\nVANCOUVER (CP) 'm> Gulf of\nGeorgia east of the Gulf Islands\nhas been olosed to sslmon gillnetters in the Interests of conserving the pink run.\nThe order, issued by the Federsl\nDepartment of -Fisheries, is1 In effect until further notice following\ndiscovery that insufficient numbers\nof pinks ara moving into spawning\nareas. ;   '\nAt the same time, the Fisheries\nDepartment opened Howe Sound\nand Burrard Inlet, effective 8 a.m.\nMonday, ior glllnettlng, with the.\nusual weekend closures.\nFilm Repudiates\nGerm War Slory\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (API-\nHenry Cabot Lodge, United Statea\ndelegate, has Invited United Nations\ncorrespondents to the first public\nShowing next Tuesday Of a sound\nfilm which he says shows the repudiation by American airmen pf\nso-called. \"Confessions\" that they\nengaged in bacteriological warfare.\nThe U.S. delegation declined to discuss the film further at this time.\nii if ii\" v m i\nCOO   OFFIOI'At, . , , R,,3..\nFOwler of Montreal was ole^cd\nchairman ef the executive, council of thl Canadian Chamber of\nCommerce at the annual ma\u00abft_fa-,\nIn Edmonton In 180$.\"i He 'is'\npresident of ths Canadian Pulp\nand Paper Association and of the\nNewsprint Association Of Canada,\nBorn In Peterborough, Ont., fie\npractised law In Toronto and Was\nlegal secretary to ths Rowell-\nSlrols commission en Dominion-\n'provincial relations, He w\u00ab\u00bb secretory and general counselof the\nWartime Prices and Trade\nBoard,\u2014(OP phete.) i ,\nrrr_-nr-T-T-jag\nm\nHave YOU a\n\"HIDDEN\"\nIn Your Attic or Basement?\nYou may have dollars and cents\n\"tted up\" in articles that are of no i-ise\nto you but may be to oihers\nChange those articles into CASH-\nTODAY - by advertising\nthem in the\nof the\nNELSON DAILY\nPHONE 144\n\"THfe   RESULT  NUMBER\"\ne\nQ\n-i\n3\nD\nT\nt%\n\u25a0\u25a0>\n3'\nJ\n\u25a0ijt\nj\n\\\nV\ni -\n tyewemmMmi\n\u00bb;i- NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, OCT. 5, 1953\n-U\nHOUSEHOLD\nHINTS\n\u2022A.  Never Jell the Little Lady\nW.  : -     ... '\u25a0   :!\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -''     ,  '-\u25a0\u25a0. \\lv- :: '. ':,' . '.'\u25a0 \u25a0\nHow to Cook\nmitt may* We suggest this method of arresting discolor\n!'ond off flavor in a variety of preserv-d.,and frozen\n, fruits. The usual practise Is to dissolve 200'milligrams\n\u2022of Vitamin C in the quantity of syrup used per pound\nof fruit.\nFor Ideal Results Use - '\nI BRITISH DRUG HOUSE VITAMIN C TABLETS\niDul-of-Work Mefal Miners Go Info\nBusiness On Permanent Basis\n\u00a3 By JOHN LEBLANO\n, _ Canadian Press Staff Writer\nS NORANDA, Que, (CP)\u2014The long\nStrike in the metal mines of north-\n. Brn Ontario and Quebec has thrust\na union into the fuel business.\n| Si the bush country hear' this\nstrikebound northern Quebec city,\nfile United Steelworkers of America (CIOrCCL) ls hacking down\nireee to keep its wood-burning\npeinbe.sl.ip fuelled for fall and\ntlnter.\nIUnion officials say the strike-\nfinpelled move has put the organisation here into fuelling operations\nSe.manently.\nf Across the provincial border in\nOntario's striking Porcupine area,\nthe union is wood-cutting, too, but\ntoesh't expect to stay in the business for keeps.\nJFREE DURING 8TRIKE\nI In Noranda district, about 500\n. Strikers will get wood free for the-\njduratlon of the tie-up. After that,\n\u25a0.will be oh a co-operative buying\nlasis\u2014the union's first move into\ntlie-.co-operative field In this region.        \u2022\n'\u2022 The plan was stimulated by two\nfactors. One is that many householders here burn that fuel anyway. The other is that strikers at\nNoranda Mines, Ltd., won't have\nmuch money to spend on coal\nwhile the walkout lasts.\nAnother stimulus ls that a large\nnumber of the striking miners are\nformer lumberjacks.\n!\u2022\u25a0\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME .'\n\"Distinctive Funeral Serv.ee\"\nAMBULANCE 8ERVICE\n(IS Kootenay St       Phone SM\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\n603 Baker St\nMed. Arte Blk.\nPHONE 28\nAccurately\nCompounded\nProscription.\nPhone 25\nI. A. C. LAUGHTON\nI   ;      OPTOMETRIST\n_ WtJUAL TRAINING\n_        Medical Arts Building\nI Suit* 206 Phone 141\nS\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\nI ttf Hall Street\nPhone 140\nThe union put them to work\nabout 15 miles from here, after\nbuying cutting rights on an area of\nJackplne and birch. Their mates\nmeanwhile walk the picket lines\nat the big Norarlda gold-copper\nplant,     i I\nTo get into the cutting section,\nthe steelworker-woodsmen have\nbulldozed out new roads for big\ntrucks and thrown a bridge across a\n75-foot stream.\nThe union expects to bring 80\ncords a day to a central distribution lot here. It now owns cutting\nrights on 4000 cords and expects to\ntriple or quadruple the amount.\nOver at Timmins, Ont, the USWA\nalso has plunged into the woods\noperation, but on a strike duration\nbasis. It has picked up cutting privileges on enough wood for its members, and also has purchased a\ncouple of trucks to haul the fuel.\nHowever, the Ontario mine*\ndon't intend-to stay in the business,\nA main reason ls that they haven't\nthe lumberjack-flavored membership of those-across the provincial\nline.\nPope Pius Lisls\nUnjust Warr As\nHead of Crimes\n| By PRANK BRUTTO\nROME (AP)\u2014Pope1. Plua Satuir.\nday urged the nations of the world\nto adopt a code of international law\nthat would punish crimes having\ninternational consequences. Chi e f\namong these, he said, would be ah\nunjust war.\nThe Pope spoke to delegates from\n.more than a score of countries,\ngathered in Rome for the sixth\nInternational Congress of Criminal\nLaw. He .received them in special\naudience, ,\nThe pontiff placed at the top ot\ncrimes with, international consequences which he said should come\nunder international law \"the criminal of a modem war . . . that\nprovokes rufn, suffering and unimaginable horror.\"\nREADY POR DEFENCE\nNo person should be able to bring\nthis about with impunity, he aaid,\nSuch perils \"compel all people\nto hold themselves ready for defence.\"\n, \"But that absolutely does not alter the fact that unjust war must\nbe put in the first 'place among\nthe gravest crimes that' Interna,\ntlonal law should punish with the\nheaviest penalty,\n\"Even in just war \u2014 that Is, In\na war of defence\u2014not all means\nof war are \"acceptable,\"\nHe then listed as- Inacceptable\nmass executions of innocent persons for reprisal, the execution of\nhostages, massacres for reasons of\nhate or race, mass deportations,\nviolence against women and children, and roundups of men for\n\"slave labor.\" -'.  .\nStricken Berlin\nAf Reuter Rites\nBERLIN (AP) \u2014 West Berliners\nbade farewell Saturday to Ernst\nReuter in a vast surge of public\ngrief for their dead mayor.\nHundreds ot thousands dropped\nall else to form a dramatic backdrop for the funeral of the man\nwho fought communism to a standstill in this crossroads city ahd instilled in his people the firm belief that the Red tide would be roUed back from German soil some\nday..\nOne hundred and twenty thousand stood in silence broken only\nby an occasional burst ot sobbing\nas final services were conducted\nIn the open air before city hall.\nHundreds of thousands more lined\na six-mile route to the cemetery\nin the American sector, near the\ntiny villa where Reuter worked\nlate into the night and where his\novertaxed heart gave way \u25a0 last\nTuesday.\nPresident Theodor Heuss of West\nGermany, Western high commissioners and diplomatic missions\njoined in the simple ceremony.\nOllawa Condemns\nPolish Gov't\nOTTAWA (CP) \u2014 The Canadian\ngovernment Saturday condemned\nrenewed religious persecution in\nPoland and said lt contradicts professed Communist interest in easing international tension.\n\"The news of the renewal of religious persecution in Poland\" will\ndeepen sympathy in Canada for the\nsuffering* Polish people,\" the department of external,affairs said in\na statement.\n\"The recent trial of Bishop Kaczmarek, three priests and a nun has\nfollowed the usual'Iron Curtain pattern in which the defendortts are\nInduced to condemn themselves.\nThe arrest of Cardinal Wyszynski\nwithout any' charge. Being laid\nagainst him outragesall principles\nof justice.\"\nBishop Czeslaw Kaczmarek was\nsentenced to 12 years' Imprisonment\nfor alleged espionage activities,\nStefan Cardinal Wyszynski, Primate of Poland, was suspended\nfrom his duties and allowed to retire-to a monastery on grounds that\nhe had engaged in activities against\nthe state.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChart-red Accountants\nAuditors\n678 Baker St Phone 211\nGet tout\n1.\nyy\nNow I\nAT DeFOES\nRadiator Check,\nAntifreeze\nBattery Check\nWinter Lubrication\nTires and Tubes\nGeneral all around check for safety driving\nin the winter monthi\nDON'T WAIT FOR THE COLD WEATHER\n$EE\u2014\nDeFOE SERVICE\n\"Bill DeFoe\"\n\u25a0 213 Baker St.,\nPhone 1234\nPurchase Ends\n15-Year Strike\nDUN LAOGHAIRE, Ireland (Reuters)\u2014A strike that has been going\non for almost 19 years, will end\nlate this mdnth with the sale of\nDowney's Bar here, the Irish Bartenders' Union announced Saturday.   '\nWheij pub-Owner James Downey\ndied lest June at the age of 74,\nit was thought that the tramping\nof pickets' feet in front of his\nplace would be heard no more.\nBut Downey's 52-year-old widow,\nFlorence, took over the bar\u2014and\nInherited the strike.\nNow comes the word the bar will\nbe sold by auction Oct 30. The\nunion said the pickets will be withdrawn the moment a new owner\ntakes over.\nPICKETS PITIED ,\n. The strike\u2014now H years, six\nmonths and 26 days old\u2014began In\nMarch, 1939, when Downey fired\na bartender. The union promptly\ncalled out the rest of his staff in\nsympathy.\nThat didn't phase Downey. He\nhired non-union staff and kept dispensing beer and whisky for his\npatrons.\nOld James used to take pity on\nthe pickets every anniversary of\nthe strike. He'd ask the picket\nline to come into his pub for a\nroistering party^-with all the drinks\non the house.\nBut old James forgot to make\na will. His widow said that as a\nresult she will have to sell the bar\nto ease the administration ot his\nestate. .        \"\nRising Food Prices\nBoost Living Costs\n1 OTTAWA CP) - Living costs In\nCanada arc.slowly rising again, edging toward the record high established two years ago.\nThey rose for the third consecutive month in July and the August\nsurvey, likely to be published Monday, may show a further jump.\nThe July increase of three-tenths\not a point, bumped the consumer\nprice Index to 119.7, just 2.9 points\nbelow the all-time high of 118.2 In\nDecembers 19917 \\' - '.'\nThis increase in the' yardstick,\nbased, on 1949 prices equalling 100,\ntogether with previous advances In\nMay , and June 'eliminated practically all pt a previous six-month\ndrop, moving it back to where it\nstood, in December last year. 7\nThe old cost-of-living index,\nbased on 1939-39 prices equalling\n100, rose by two-fifths of a point to\n186.4, This also was the third consecutive jump _or the index, bringing it to within 5.1 points of the\n191.9 peak in December, 1991.\n. In August wholesale prices\nshowed strength, the composite index moving up 1.2 points to 222.4,\njust about where it was a year ago.\nThis Index is based on 1035-30\nprices \u25a0'\nGA8 AND HOSPITALS\nUsually higher food costs spark\nthe,'jump in the consumer price\nIndex, but in July It wasn't so mueh\nhigher food prices as price increases'for such things as gasoline\nand hospital rates which propelled\nthe rises\u25a0'.'\n. The food column showed only an\nincrease of one-tenth of a point to\n112.8 from 112.7. A decline in vegetable prices, coupled with smaller.\ndeclines for fresh fruits arid beef,\nalmost matched increases for bread,\ncoffee; eggs, pork products and\nlamb7 \u25a0':,\nThere were other small, scattered increases fir rent, clothing and\nhousehold operations.\nBritain Presents America With\nFilmShowing Monlebello A-Tesl\n, By ELTON C. PAY\nWASHINGTON AP)-Brltain has\npresented the United States with an\nofficial motion picture film of her\nfirst atomic explosion experiment\nand noted that United States law\nforced her to devise and test the\nbomb on her. own.    7-7'.\nThe pictures of the test\u2014held off\nthe Australian coast last October-\nshowed an explosion pattern somewhat different from that ot most\nbombs exploded In U.S. experiments.\nThe film, \"Operation Hurricane,\"\nwas shown to an invited audience\nand then presented to general manager M. W. Boyer of the U.S.\nAtomic Energy Commission.\nPERTINENT COMMENT\nBritish Ambassador Sir \u2022Roger\nMakins commented that during the\nSecond World War work leading to\ndevelopment of the world's first\natomic bomb was the joint effort of\nthe United States -and Britain, together with Canada. But since then,\nhe said co-operation was impossible.\nHe was referring to the strict terms\not the Atomic Energy Act of 1946\nwhich prohibits exchange of secret\ninformation with any nation.\n\"What you will see tonight,\"\nMakings said before the film was\nshown \"is something we produced,\nI regret to say, out of our own\nresources.\"\nBut he also commented that\n\"Within the limits of the law we\nhave worked together very happily\nand closely.\"\nNo Americans were present at the\nAustralian test last October at Mon-\ntebello island, off the Australian\ncoast.\nDIFFERENT FEATURES\nFor-Americans who had seen\nsome of the nuclear fission explosive tests conducted by the United\nStates, the British blast had several markedly different features,\nUnlike tour U.S. bombs this reporter has seen detonated, the British explosion did not develop the\nfamiliar stem and mushroom cloud.\nIt appeared to develop a heavy\nlateral blast, with a broad-case,\ndense black cloud surmounted by\nthe boiling turbulence of seething\nflame, ;'\"\u25a0 .'-''\u25a0\u25a0  .\nLike the second bomb exploded\nby the United States In the 1948 Bikini experiment, the British bomb\nwas placed In a small ship to reveal the effect of an explosion in\nthe hold of a ship in a harbor. But\nthe weapon itself apparently was located at a' point close to the water-\nline instead of the 20- or 30-foot\nsubmergence given the Bikini\nbomb;\nPOWERFUL EXPLOSION\nThe result was a powerful explosion along the surface which obviously recorded sharp blast damage\nto equipment and instruments along\nthe shore. Bikini bomb, on the other\nhand, was so dep that the explosive\neffect either was transmitted, as a\nshock wave to damage and sink\nnearby shljsj or funnelled skyward\nIn a giant column of water. Little\ndamage resulted from a lateral surface blast of the Bikini bomb.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nN^ of ike Way\nRATES: 30c line, 40o line black face type; larger type rates en\nrequest Minimum twe lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\n-Rotary luncheon Monday, Oct. 8,\n12:15 p.m., Hume Hotel.\nTulip bulbs, Darwin mixed, 50c\na dozen. Grinelle's Florists, Ph. 187.\nEagles meet tonight at 8 p.m.\nHunting and Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyce Men's Shop.\nC. D. Pearson is honorary president of the Parrot Club for the\nmonth of October.\nSee our selection of men's, women's and boys skates and boots.\nJack Boyce.'\n20% to 50% off all stock for a\nlimited time only. \u2014 Better Buys\nat Butterfield'a. '-\"\u2022','\nWomen to Fight\nB.C. Liquor Act\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Temperance groups in B. C. will fight to\nkeep liquor outlets from spreading\nto residential districts, it has been\nreported here.\nMrs. W. S. Watson, vice-president\nof the Vancouver council of the\nWomen's Christian Temperance\nUnion, said her group will definitely promote petitions asking for\nlocal option votes.as provided for\nunder the new liquor act.\nMUST  8TAY  DOWNTOWN\nLiquor outlets should be kept in\nthe downtown areas of cities, she\nsaid.\nMrs. Norman R. Porter, of the\nVancouver council of women, and\nArthur Cowley, executive director\not the Alcohol Research Council,\nboth strongly indicated their groups\nwould provide full-scale opposition\nto applications tor new liquor licences.\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nFounder Chimney Servloe\nPhone 1941-L.\nB.C. AND, .HOLLAND BULBS\nPOR P'A'LL PLANTING.\nGRIZZELLE'S FLORISTS\u2014PH. 117\nFIGURE SKATERS\nInformation at Gilker's Ltd.\nGood' selection of used Bedroom:\nSuites and used Washing Machines\nnow in stock.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nHOME  FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\n413 HaU St.\nMear-Old Disappearance Of Earl\nAnd Dolly Kirk Remains Unsolved\ny\nBy BEN WARD\nCanadian Press Correspondent\nNORTH BAY,, Ont. (CP)-It'was\na crisp, autumn day\u2014Oct. 4, 1940.\nIt was a beautiful day for travelling. Earl Kirk, a successful North\nBay business man, loaded luggage\ninto.i his'' auto for a holiday trip,\nwarmed the motor while waiting for\nhis wife Dolly to dress, then went\nback to his house to kiss' his. four\nyoung children good-bye.\nAfter Mrs, Kirk spent another\nquarter-hour Instructing the housekeeper what to do, the Kirks drove\noff.\nThey never- returned. That day,\nsomewhere on the lonely 182-mile\nhighway 'hetween Sudbury and\nSault Ste. Marie, Earl and Dolly\nKirk, their car and everything in it,\nvanished..\nSTILL AM Y8TERY\nThirteen years later, there is still\nno motive or clue in northern On.\ntario's weirdest mystery and one. of\nCanada's , strangest disappearance\ncases; '...-,.. - '  \u25a0\nThe Kirks had set out for Wlnni-\nSeg. They drove 81 miles to Sud-\nury where ..they stopped to visit\nJack Newstead, friend and business associate ot. Kirk. He wanted\nthem to stay overnight, but the\nKirks declined. Kirk said he wanted\nto reach:the Sault that night and\ncatch the , morning ferry to the\nUnited States side.\nLater, at a gas station, another\nSudbury man, Robert Shea, pointed\nout the street' which' led to' Westbound Highway 17. He is the last\nperson;known .to, have, seen the\nKlrks7 -''7   '\u25a0 .-v!V-,-' : -I M\nIt'was nearly three weeks before\nthe disappearance became known.\nATTENTION\nB.C. dOV'T EMPLOYEES\nMonthly meeting of- the Kelson\nBranch of the B.C. Govt. Employees Ass'n. will b.e held in Canadian Legion Hall, Tuesday, Oct.\n6th at 8 pan. Films and refreshments.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nPERCIVAL \u2014 Funeral services\nfor the late Mrs. Calanthe Myrtle\nPercival will be held from the\nThompson Funeral Home Monday\nat 2:00 p.m. The Rev. Canon W. J.\nSilverwood will officiate, and inter\nment will be in the Nelson Memorial Park.'\nLaux casien glue-self bonding \u2014\n1 lb. tin $1.39; 3 oz. tin 40c.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nTrade your old tires at\nSUPERIOR MOTORS\nTire Department\nImportant meeting C.P.R. Pensioners, Women's Institute Room,\nCivic Centre, Saturday, 7:30 p.m.\nErasco Paint Remover \u2014 Leaves\nsurface ready for refinishing \u2014\nl\/16s 99c\u2014V4S $1.50.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nReserve Tuesday night for Nelson Film Council public showing\nat Church of Redeemer Hall at 8\np.m.    Everyone welcome.\nReplace those broken window\npanes now. We carry window glass\nin all standard sizes, and cut to your\nmeasurements. \u2014 HtfPERSON'S.\nGrow these in water: Paper-white\nNarcissi; Soleil-D or yellow Narcissi; Chinese lilies, 15c each.\nGrizzelle's Florists, Phone 187.\n'        1,    r   ';\nIf BUTTERFIELD cant Hii H,\nthrow it away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.\nMarSr Maxim, wools, patterns,\nknitting needles. Dealers for Northern style sweater wool.\nEBBRLE'S JUNIOR SHOP\nNew shipment of fish. Large variety of colors. Also baby turtles,\nbudgies and singing canaries.\nMAC'S FLOWER SHOP\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nMACKAY\u2014Funeral services for\nthe late William Wallace MacKay\not Kinnaird will beaheld Tuesday,\nOct. 6, 1953, at 1:30 p.m. from\nClark's Funeral Chapel, Trail. Major Moll ot Kinnaird will officiate.\nInterment will be in the family plot,\nMountainview eemetery.\nTry an ice cream sandwich at\nWait's News Depot.\n-.. DR.' BROCK   (Chiropractor).  32\nyrs. practical experience. Phone 969.\nJust Arrived\u2014New shipment of\nlamp shades. Alli kinds and prices\nto choose from, at\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nStoveguards and boards, stovepipe, elbows, wire, pokers, asbestos\ncement,, etc. Everything essential to\nput your heating system in shape.\n,   . HIPPERSON'S\nAttention Rebekahs and Oddfellows! Come and meet the Assembly president at a banquet oh Tuesday, Oct. 6, at 6:330 p.m. Regular\nmeeting at 8 p.m.\nROSEMONT, SOUTH NELSON,\nUPHILL and UPPER FAIRVTEW\nYour Hospital Improvement\n-District Meeting, Memorial Hall\n8 p.m., Thursday,\n.       STORM WINDOWS\nWell constructed, tight-fitting sash\nto eliminate Wintry blasts. \u25a0-V\nT. H. WATERS CO. LTD.\n101 HALL ST. PHONE 158\nMr. Flotsam Show .\nOutstanding BBC radio artist,1\nauspices Nelson Kiwanis Club,\nCapitol Theatre, Kelson, B.C., Friday, October 9th, at 8 p.m. Admission $1.00.\nLabor United By\nFrail Bonds\nBy ALAN HARVEY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nMARGATE, England (CP)\u2014Britain's biggest opposition group has\nagreed in principle on its platform\nfor the next election\u2014but the outline seems a trifle blurred.\nFor five days this week, in a huge\nhall carved out of a cliff base in\nthis seaside resort, Labor party representatives gathered in annual\nconference to debate future policy\nand, incidentally, thresh\" out the\ninner struggle of British socialism.\nWhen the end came, and the dele\ngates linked hands to sing \"Auld\nLang Syne,\" the policy statements\nhad been approved with only a few\nminor changes, and only a . few\nmuted menaces. But Margate left\nmany with an unfinished feeling,\nfor. the conference appeared to play\nout an old paradox.\nUNITY PARADOX\nThat paradox^ lies in the contrast\nbetween the vigorous expressions\nof party unlty-Tvhat one speaker\ncalled a \"spontaneous passion\" for\nconformity\u2014ahd'a stubborn .underlying conflict. The argument between Labor's political and Industrial wings, oh the showing here,\nseems bound to continue.\nWhat is the argument? On. one\nside are the trade unionists who\nsay they put facts before theories\nand'are regarded by some as favoring an accommodation with capitalism; on the other are left-wing\nconstituency party members and\npoliticians ignited by socialism's\nold \"fire In the belly\" spirit, the revivalists who oppose any slowdown\ntoward a society purged of the profit motive. \u25a0\nDEAiatjlf8 VICTORY\nThe quarrel, in short, is between\nleft and right, between all-out or\nstand-pat socialism, between visionaries and realists. And the main\nissue is nationalization, now usually called public ownership. This\nIs socialism's first article of faith.\nThe left wants to press on with new.\nnationalization and the.right prefers an empirical approach.\nThe empiricists won at Margate.\nWith union boss Arthur Deakin effectively wielding his bloc vote, the\nconference decided against ticketing a wide fange of hew industries\nfor state control; But the vote\nnevertheless showed that probably\nthe majority, of the constituency\nrepresentatives\u2014the grass roots of\nthe movement \u2014 disliked Deakin's\nnews.\nHope Ahead Of\nCancer Patients\nWASHINGTON (AP)-A cancer\nresearcher has predicted that wonder-drug remedies,for cancer are\nvirtually certain in the next 10\nyears or more.\nDr. Cornelius P. Rhoads of New\nYork's Memorial Centre for Cancer\ntold a congressional committee:\n\"Inevitably we can look forward\nto something like a penicillin for\ncancer.\n\"I am convinced that in the next\ndecade or maybe, more, we will\nhave chemicals as effective against\ncancer as the sulfa drugs are today against bacterial infections.\"\nHe said later he didn't look for a\nsingle drug like penicillin, but a\nvariety of drugs similar to penicillin in effectiveness.\n, Rhoads said he based this conviction on the fact that chemicals already have been developed which,\nwhile not cures, have relieved pain\nand prolonged life in certain types\nof malignancy including leukemia.'\nPresident Injures\nRight Elbow\nWASHINGTON (AP)-Presldent\nEisenhower has a sore right elbow, \"painful'and annoying\" but\nnothing to worry about, the White\nHouse reports. Presidential press\nsecretary James S. Hagerty told\nreporters Eisenhower's elbow was\nInjured when, knocked against a\nWhite House door about two months\nago.\nMall sent to Earl Kirk at Winnipeg\nwas returned to North Bay undelivered, Newstead reported that\nKirk failed to show up for a business appointment at Sault Ste.\nMarie, Oct, 21, The appointment had\nbeen made when Kirk visited him\noct.'-4. ,\u25a0;\u25a0;\u25a0. :'\u25a0: -\u25a0<.-..\nPolice were called In. A check\nwith the immigration offices showed the Kirks had not crossed the\nborder. They hadn't been seen anywhere in Sault Ste. Marie.\nWIDESPREAD SEARCH\nKirk's employer, an, oil company,\nsent a gang ot men to help police\ndrag lakes and rivers along the\nhighway and search the bush. Nearly 100 men-worked for six weeks\nwithout uncovering a, clue. When\nsnows piled up and rivers froze the.\nhunt was called off.\nKirk's affairs as district manager\nfor an oil company were in order.\nHis sizable bank ccount was intact.\nFriends said the couple disagreed\noccasionally, but not seriously. Both\ndoted on their four children,, the\neldest nine years and the youngest\nan infant boy of tour months. When\nthe pair failed to return, the children were sent to Kirk's relatives in\nWinnipeg. \u25a0'.\u2022-.-.,    ,\nA murder thebry hftd no support.\nKirk's friend Newstead discounted\nthe possibility that Kirk had picked\nup a homicidal hitch-hiker. If Earl\nwas alone he might have picked\nSomeone up, but not when Mrs.\nKirk was with him.\nThe mystery smouldered through\nthe long winter. Then, with spring,\nit burst to life again,\nFALSE CLUE\nOn May 7, 1941, a worker in a\nSault Ste. Marie scrap yard pounded; open a corroded metal box and\nfound in it parts of a human body.\nIt turned out that box' and contents had been owned by a Sault\ndoctor for some 40 years and were\ndiscarded after his death.\n.Three months later two fishermen\u2014Charles Scrlver of Eastwood,\nOnt., and E. M. Johnston of Toronto\n\u2014found human hair entangled in\ntheir fishing hooks at Red Cedar\nlake, 40 miles north of North Bay.\nA search of the lake with grappling irons, water glasses and\nsearchlights turned up nothing. In\nany case,\" the hair don't seem to\ncheck with the Kirks' hair andMhe\nlake was not on their route.\nThere has since been only one\nminor development; A man in Alaska, reading an account of the disappearance, mailed a signed blank\ncheck to a North Bay bank with instructions that the amount of Kirk's\naccount be sent to him. He landed\nin jail. ......\nHaigh\nTri>Art\nBeauty\nSalon'\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED 4 REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT ST. PHONE 63\n**.\u2014m&h\nTopcoats\nfor Fall\nAttractively' styled, expertly; tailored and \u00a9M\nfered, to you in a wide\nselection of fine British,\nWoollens, light, warm and.\nComfortable,\nNow Tweeds\n7 Gabardines   '   ' y   y\n\u25a0    Coverts ; '       :' V, '\nWest of Englands\n$3Q.S0\n, and up\nEmory's Ltd.\nJ\nV\n671  Baker St\nPhone 31\nSAUdE FOR THE OANDER\nSEOUL (Reuters)\u2014Men now can\nbe prosecuted for adultery In South\nKorea under a new law signed today by President Syngman Rhee,':\nUnder the country's old adultery::\nlaw only women could be prose-,\ncuted.\nCLASSIFIED ADS ,GET. RESULTS\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nMake your own Home Made Bread\nwith ELLISON'S\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\n=ull Instructions on every package.\nPhone 238 or call\nELLISON MILLING\nELIZABETH\n\u2022:\u2022:   ARDEN\nSPUN CfeEAM\nPERMANENT WAVE\n$4.2S\nRefill Kit  $2.00\nPineurl Kit  $2.50\n,     780LD ONLY-Afk, ,.\nCity Drug\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nPHONE 34-   i\n-THE AVERAGE PERSON TURNS IN HI\nSLEEP EVERY THIRTEEN MINUTES\nn\nAnd the Majority of\nTurn To\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nFor Friendly and Experienced Service\nNow Is the Time For\nFALL CHANGEOVER\nFor Anti-Frooxe, Radiator and Lubrication Servieo\nDrive In Today\n-\u25a0illjgl.!.\/\nCOMPANY   LIMITED\ntphoness\n.. \u25a0.,\u2022:\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022..\n.-:;&&\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1953_10_05","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427481","@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":"1953-10-05 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1953-10-05 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\/1.0427481"}