{"@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":"1953-10-16","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427709\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \"POWs SCREAM REJECTION. ..\nExplanation Experts\nMake Little Headway\n490 of 500 Interviewed Return\nTo UN Custody After \"Explanation\"\n\u25a0first Chinese prisoners interviewed by the Reds Thursday\nchose the United Nations In a screaming, face-to-face repudiation of Communism,\nQf the first 500 who reluctantly went to the explana-\ntion booths-rafter Indian troops had. threatened to drag\nthem there\u2014only 10 walked through the door carefully\npointed out to them as the one leading back to Red riile,\n. The other 490 wflked through the door back to UN\ncustody after shouting insults at the sweating and em-\nbarrassed Red persuasion experts.\nOne Chinese, left alone for five minutes to make\nhis decision, was still there when everybody came back.\nHe s^id he was too afraid he might go out the wrong door\n(-i-the one back to Commun- \t\nam\nA%1*\nVoL 58\nism.\n\"Do you ever think of your family?\" was the first question asked.\n.\"Yes,\" shrieked one prisoner.\nWhey were all killed by the Communists.\" ;\nThe Reds get the chance to try\nit. again today with 1000 more of\ntheir former soldiers\u2014at least 600\nof them North Koreans.\nIf Thursday's proportion ot two\nper cont should hold for all the\n22,400 Chinese and North Korean\nprisoners, the Reds will get back\nonly between 400 and 900' of the\nmen they claim have been held\nagainst their will be the United\nNations.\nIt was too early to make any\nsolid predictions: The rules of the\nNeutral Nations Repatriation Commission give the Reds almost unlimited opportunity to call prisoners back for repeated questioning.\n.The long - awaited explanations\nstarted at 3:12 p.m. Thursday after\n-the 5000 neutral Indian guard\ntroops barely averted mass riot.'\nQuestioning was to have opened\net 8 a.m. The nervous. Chinese,\nfearing Communist trickery, staged\na sitdown strike when ' the Indians\n'started to move them out. Finally,\nwith a combination of threats, explanations and persuasion, the Indians got the Chinese moving.\nEach prisoner was led by Indian\nguards to the dirty gray tent to\nmake one of the biggest decisions\nof his life. Inside sat 10 men.\nTHREE EXPLAINERS\nThree were Red explainers, five\nwere representatives of the neutral\ncommission\u2014one Swiss, one Swede,\none -Pole, one Czech, end one Indian. Two were 'the rival observers,\nCommunist and United Nations.\n|-'Don't you want to go back to\nyour home, your family?\" the\nilg   Chinese   Red* \"persuader\"\nuld begin. \"Don't be cheated-by\nUnited Nations     = , Now is\npb>fW&Mft$slm%, K-.'is\nm ttto late, to'- make, the right\nehocle; rather' MaO Mao Tse-tuttg,\ntop Chinese Communist wants you\nWck,\"\n'Some prisoners answered with\nobscenities.\nSome screamed \"yes, we want to\ngo home! We'll land on the beaches\nsoon and kill you all!\"\nCHOOSE DOOR\nAt the end, a calm Indian voice\nWould explain patiently to each\nChinese that everyone would leave\nthe tent except him. Then, if he\nwanted to go home, he should walk\nout of that door, and it he wanted\nto.stay with the UN he should\nwalk out of this door. In solitude,\nthe prisoner made his decision\u2014in\nmost cases going oUt of \"this\"\ndoor. The 10 who walked out \"that\"\ndoor were handed over to the Reds\nThursday night.\nThe Red talkers gave up easily\nin many cases. There were no reports that any tried improper or\nluiduly Intense \"explaining.\"     i\nForgotten men ih the bustle were\n23 Americans, one Briton, and 335\nSouth Koreans, represented by -the\nReds es electing to stay behind\nthe Bamboo Curtain. The UN. has\nsaid repeatedly lt ls in no hurry\nto do Its own explaining which\nphysically could he done in a single\ndey if necessary,\nSOVIET WANTS\nSAY IN TRIESTE\nVishinsky Charges\nViolation, Italian\nPeace Treaty\nBy FRANCIS W. CARPENTER\nUNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP>-\nChief Soviet delegate Andrei Vishinsky served notice Thursday that\nRussia never will agree to a Trieste settlement reached without\nMoscow's participation.\nHe gave Ails blunt warning to\nthe United Nations Security Council at the end of a 40-mlnute speech\nIn which he charged that Britain\nand the United States violated the\nItalian peace treaty by deciding to\nturn over the administration of the\nAnglo-American zone A to the Italians.\nHenry Cabot Lodge, Jr., chief U.\nS. delegate, 'touched: off fireworks\nin the council by charging that the\nRussians brought, up the Trieste issue only to moke trouble and\nspread propaganda. '-\nVishinsky angrily lashed back\nthat Trieste long had been on the\ncouncil agenda end. wes. no new\nproblem in that body. He charged\nthat the West bed. nominated persons to be governor of Trieste but\nhad repudiated them   as^soon  as\n' -\"It\"aeemsdiir approval ja .t\ntaboO or e plague,\" Vishinsky said.'\nVishinsky raised the Trieste issue, long dormant lh the Security\nCouncil, as the foreign' ministers\nof Britain, the United States and\nPrance prepared for a meeting this'\nweekend In London. Trieste is high\non the list of problems facing the\nBig Three and Vishinsky put at the\ntop of that pile his warning that\nRussia -will hot countenance any\nunllaterlal action on Trieste reached by Britain, tho United States,\nFrance, Italy\/or Yugoslavia. This\nwas. a reference to a proposal by\nPresident Tito that the problem' be\nconsidered at a conference.\nVishlrisky called on' the council\ninstead to approve a Soviet resolution . which provides for Internationalizing the Trieste territory under e Swiss governor, Col. Hermann Fluckiger. He said this was\nthe only way to assure lasting\npeace in the troubled Adriatic\nzone.\n->\u2014\nReport from Victoria\n-BY JAMES K. NESBITT\nVICTORIA J- It's ajl smooth sailing where the new\n\u25a0Liquor Act is concerned.\nThe government never expected to have it so good!\nOn second reading, one after another, the oppositionists\ngot up and praised the gov\nernment for such a fine Act.\nThey all had their own ideas, of\ncourse, how best the new act could\nbe made to work,' but all agreed\nthat, in principle, the new act\nshould do much to outlaw the disgraceful drinking habits that have\ngrown widespread in B.C.\nFor weeks MLA's had expressed\n\u2022great sorrow for Attorney-General\nBpnner, because he was faced with\nUie responsibility of bringing In\nfthe new act. Poor Mr. Bonner, walled everyone\u2014he has an awful Job\non his hands. Nobody wanted to be\nIn poor Mr. Bonner's shoes.\nThere were those who were suspicious that these were crocodile\ntears, and that when the act finally\nreached the floor ot the House Mr.\nBonner might get kicked around.\nCO-OPERATION\nBut, no, they weren't crocodile\ntears! When the liquor bill was discussed, everyone pledged co-operation, determination to help make lt\nwork out In the best Interests of\nall the people.\nMLA's forgot politics, as they discussed' liquor, there wss no sparring for position, no wisecracks\nabout booze. Everyone was deadly\nserious, realizing that liquor is a\ntremendous problem, a great social\nproblem and It Is up to the province's highest law-makers to do\ntheir level best to encourage moderation in drinking.\nYes, you'd have been proud of\nyour MLA's if you could have seen\nthem put their shoulders to the\nwheel in a sincere effort to do their\nbest for the people and the province.\nQeohgist to Testify\nIn Whatshan Inquiry\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Dr. Karl\nTerzaghi, geologist, will be brought\nhere next month to testify at a\nRoyal Commission Inquiry Into the\nWhatshan power plant elide, commission counsel said today. .\n. C. W. Tysoe, conducting the hearing for the crown before Mr. Justice J. V. Clyne, made the announcement es the commission prepared to move today to Lower\nArrow leke, in the West Kootenay\nvalley, scene of the Aug. 11 and- IS\nmud   slides   whleh   crippled   the\nhuge power development.\nMr. Tysoe described Dr. Tor\nzaghi as \"one of the-world's foremost soil experts. Ho wiH report\non an investigation he made of the\nB.C, Power Commission's hydroelectric plant after the slides had\nstruck it.     '\nWith the commission In the interior will go lawyers, Court officials and newspaper men.\nM '&\/H*  V. \/ry\",.   -\"\"\"        '  '\"       \"\u2022'-\u2022'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\"\u25a0\"  \u25a0'    \/\"\u2022\u2022\u2022\"   -\u2022      '   '       :-     ';   '\nr^S-  *? *' ty\/*Q_,     -NELBOiil, B. C., CMADA-FRTOAY MOHI^G, OCTOBER 18, 1953\nWEATHfeR FORECAST\nKOOTENAI?\" - Cloudy, llttlo;,\nige In temperature. Wind light\/;\n\u201ejw-hlgh Cranbrook and Crescent\nValley 28 and 83, Revelstoke 38 and\n8*7   .,.?..\u2022\u25a0.',_ \u25a0   '-,.     '    ;.<,\nNo. 148?\nRates Higher\nJS^^\nNEW- KIMBEJRLEY FERTILIZER ;PE_?.^TMI.OT\nof Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company, a $9,-\n000,000 project which has taken ;tw> yearg'to\/build and\nis one of the most up-to-date chemical plants in Canada,\nis-pictured from the air. Startup of the operation Vwas\naiinouAced'Thurtday. \u25a0-t:ifl''design#;fo\n1?0 tons of 'ammonium phosphate p\u00a3_ clay. 'Beyond the\nplant is the huge pond where iron sulphide-i-pm Cominco's Sullivan Concentrator is stockpiled.;Some of the\niron sulphide is used ill the ammonium phosphate fertilizerprocess;\u2014Photo sby'0-rtfel.     '-\u25a0\".' \u2022'.\"\u2022.*'\u25a0\"\"   \"\nIncident Free Drivers'  *\nInsurance Rates Normal\n;VANCbirVER (CP)\u2014A new automobile insurancaf\nrate Structure with stepped-up levies against accident-prone>\nand irresponsible drivers will go into effect in British Co-,\nlumbia Nov. 1, insurance underwriters announced Thursday.;'\n'Uiider the pew.'plan, a motorist -With two ormore*!\ntraffic convictions .on his record may be- charged two ,6\u00a9\nthree times as much as an accident-free driver'fo. the sajha\n, -\"-.:   '.   :'..\u25a0.-'-   :\u25a0   \u25a0 .'-\u2022\u25a0\u25a0 '\u2022  ' amount of insurance protec-\nCancellation HIS\nBy GEORGE FINLAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP), -AVSimple\nplaque, .marked'\"Burnaby .itfcpn-\nina.'. was ..unveiled ..Thursday,, -on\ncompletion Of -the $07,000,000 Trans\nMountain oil pipeline.from Edmonton to Vancouver.    !; -'   '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nOilmen from the United States\nand Canada were present st the\nunveiling ceremony at the suburban Burnaby tank farm terminal, eight miles east of Vancouver.\nBut no oil flowed through the\n24-inch pipeline designed to carry\nthe black gold from Alberta at the\nrate of VA -miles an hour, A leak\nnear the Alberta - British Columbia\nboundary halted plans to put the\nline \"oh steam.\" Welders worked\nthroughout the day on the break\nand the first oil is expected to\nmove into the big Burnaby tanks\nlate today.\nThe plaque has a carved picture\nof the. pipeline as it snakes it-\nway across the Rockies, and bears\nthe colorful T-M emblem of Trans\nMountain Pipe Line Company,- operators of the line built by Canadian Bcchtol Limited under -the\nsupervision of S. D. Bechtel. ,.\nMr. Bechtel and ,R. L. Bridges\nof San Francisco, retiring president of trans Mountain, unveiled\nthe plaque- as the new president\nJ.'Grant Spratt of Calgary watched\nthe ceremony.\nSession Expected\nTo End Saturday\nVICTORIA (CP)-Brltish Columbia's 24th legislature is expected\nto be .prorogued Saturday, ending\nthe first session of a majority Social\nCredit government in the province.\nIt was learned Thursday that the\ngovernment hopes that all new legislation will have been approved by\nthe legislature Friday night and.\nthat Lt.-Gov. Clarence Wallace will\nbe able to give his approval to the\nbills Saturday morning,\nThe House will be recessed Friday so members may attend\" the\nfuneral of Education Minister Mrs.\nTilly Rolston In Vancouver.\nIf the legislature prorogues Saturday it will have been in session\nfor five'weeks and four days.\nCabbie Prevents\nSuicide, Loses Far*\nVANCOUVER (CP)-7-T*xi;dr.ver\nGerald McRae prevented his fare\nfrom leaping from Lions Gate\nbridge Thursday, but he's still out\n$15 the men owed him.\nMcRae told police-the man had\nhired htm .to drive around Stanley\nPark while the fere consumed a\ncue of beer, then told him to proceed to a West Vancouver address.:\nIn the middle of the span, the passenger told McRae to stop the car,\nthen got out.       \u25a0  j  .        7\n\"The next time I saw him, he\nhad one of his legs hanging over\nthe side of the bridge.\"\t\nTlte cabbie hustled his erstwhile\nfare back Into .Uie ear. and drove\nto the bridge toll gate, wheVe the\nDuH^ i^ fpr\nBig Three Cmf^tertee\nM 8TANLISV PR I DDL! M\nLONDON (Reuters)r-State Secretory John \u2022 Foster Dulles ari\n-here Thgi'sday- night fot -a. crucial\nbig three! conferert.e aimed at easy\nlng- .worfdTteheioh \"caused by the\nmenace of war.\"    .'\"''< -}'\nAt the Same time,,'Dulles told\nnewspaper 'men' at the airport that\nhis talks opening today with Foreign: Secretary, Anthony Eden end\nFrench Foreign Minister Georges'\nBidault will not produce \"any\nmagic formula for peace.\"\nBefore hurrying oft for dinner\nwith Prime,Minister.Churchill and\nEden at 10 Downing Street, Dulles\nexpressed his happiness that both\nBritons who were, ill- through ihe\nsummer are again \"ploying their\nfull and always distinguished part\nih world>a_8al*s.\"\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0'\"' .\/  .\nIn a prepared, statement, he. said:\n\"I am confident that this coming\nexchange of views anions'' three\nfriends will advance the cause of\nworld-wide peace and justice.\"\nThere will be no shortage at the\ntwo-day conference of \"complicated situations\" mentioned by Dulles.\nHigh on the list is the ijicendiary\nsituation.in Trieste as.a result of.\nthe Anglo-American decision a\nWeek ago to hand over their occupied zone to Italy.\nthe; three foreign ministers will\nWeigh the seriousness of \u25a0 Yiigo-'\nLiil'i^^eet; ^tn-'open-'. i^itiiUifc\nifa-i^aii.tr^ps,'_is>v_-,intcr\nthis zone next-month. They .will\ndiscuss'President Tito's proposal .to\nhold four-natibn talks before .the\nhand-over decision is implemented.\nBIG  FOUR MEETING E\nRussia, which,hes urged United\nNations security council interven.\ntion ih the Trieste issue, figures in\nvirtually every topic tb. come under\nreview here in the next two days.\nThe three Western, ministers will\nstudy^ Soviet -intentions:in Korea,\nIndo-China, the-Middle East and\nEurope. :.,.,-.   ,,'.\nTUC Considers Tax\nTo Boost Treasury\n;vANC6UVE_i7,(<3P)-'r_ie B.C.\nTrade Union\/Congress decided\nThursday to study a little' longer\na proposal to build up its' treasury through a per capita tax on\nmembers,\nThe question arose during .a discussion on finances needed to\nlaunch* campaign to draw more\nunions into full membership in the\nTUC\nSplit :\/iy^:Fam^^:;^Jr|5i\u00bb;-\nman.was turned over.to;pollce.  It: .._-.   _,.._ \u201e_,\u201e .,_\u25a0......_. ... _._.,_--\nwas  the  second   suicide   attempt flees in Vienna and had a child,\n. MONTREAL (CPMrhe plight 0-\na family of five, which may become separated in three countries,\nwas related Wednesday in Superior\ncourt  \u25a0 yy. \".. :.'\u25a0 -,\n'Attorney John M. Schleslnger,\nseeking a write, of habeas corpus,\ntold Mr. Justice Andre Demers that:\nunder the ruling of a board of inquiry bf -the immigration department the family would have no:\nhope of reunion.\n. He sajd the board's i decision will\nhave these consequences: the American-born mother' and her American-born son' will have to live Jn'\nthe United States; the father end\nhis Austrian-born son .will have\nto return' to Austria; the couples:\nCanadian-bora ion, 2% years eld,'\nwill have to live in Canada.\nFOUGHT THE RUSSIANS\nTlie family is that of Paul Walter\nGlezer, 34; Mrs. Glazer, 28; Aus-;\ntrlan-born Tony, \\T, U.'S.-born Richard, 10, and \"Canadian-born Gary,,\n\u25a0VVt\nIn seeking -hebne. corpus proceedings 'and invalidation ot the\nboard's ruling, Mr, Schleslhger gave\nthis history of the Glazer family:\nGlazer fought against the Russians In the Second World War and\nafter the liberation o< Austria was\nstationed: in the .Eastern' tone of\nVienna. - He was then employed\nby the U.S. army SB an interpreter..\nSuddenly he waB whisked aw:_y\nby the Russian.police without explanation. .'After six weeks in Russia he was released. Some time\nlater he met the .woman he married.  She-was widrktng in-U._.,dl-\non the bridge in two days.\nI American-born, by ,a previous mar- next week.\nrlage. The family came to Canada\nin 1990, believing lt would be dangerous ,*\u00bb' Glezer to remein in\nAustria. . The family was given a\ntemporary permit to remain here.\nGlezer found a good job; his wife\nstayed home looking after the children. \u2022 ,; \u25a0'!,\u25a0-.'_\nORDER MADE FINAL\nA few months ago, said Mr. Schle.\nsinger, the board of inquiry gave\nits deportation, decision, Representations were made to the immi\ngration department and extensions\nwere- periodically granted. Later\nthe deportation .order was made\nfinal, :Th- attorney ssid the department gave no reason for the\norder.'--.... \".. \u2022.-'\u25a0\u25a0' \u2022-'\u25a0 '\u25a0\ni Rev. S. C. McBride of Bphrlam\nScott Memorial Church testified the\nGlazers were,regular church-goers\nand he considers: them a model\nfamily. Heoffered to go'bond for\nthem so they, could remain:in,Canada.\nMr. Justice Demers said he was1\nimpressed- and suggested.' Mr. Mc- -\nBride accompany Mr; Schleslhger\nto Ottawa to see the minister of\nImmigration.\nCITIZENSHIP CLAIM\n\"I am not- suggesting this as -a\nJudge but -really off tho record,\"\nhe added In taking :the case under\n.adevlWment..' - \u25a0'\u2022 ' '\u25a0\u2022 i\n' it'was stated during the hearing\nthat Glazer has- applied for oltl-\nzenshlp papers,-but the application\ncannot be seriously considered be-.\n.cause, he is not 'officially \"a landed\niitu^iitaBt:\"\": \u25a0;-'   - yy-y .'\n: Mr. Schleslnger said he wiH se-\ncompany Mr. McBrlde to Ottawa\nillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nCanada Due For\nProsperous Erd\n.v>VAN.CbraW_R-' ,-.(BP).'.,^-. Van- \u25a0\nada,is-'on the threshold of an \u25a0\nera of unparalleled.prosperity,\nGen. Lucius Clay, former rnill-\n:tery!.govemor7jit. the.-jJnited\n,j|t|<ais, fort*.. W^erwehSs^ seld --.\n:^etoiMn|sv (otging. ihead'at *\n1 :,ah istoundlrig; rate,\" he told,.%!\nlarge: audience - in '\u2022' suburban'\nBurnaby .as he officially opened\nthe hew $2000,000 plant of- the:\nContinental Can Co. He is\nchairman of the board of the\n. company, .-'.\".\u2022\nGen. Clay said Canada had\nreached \"the eminence of fourth\nplace among the trading nations\nof the world, and there appears\nno limit to your horizons.\"\niiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nChurchill Wins\nNobel Prize\n'\u25a0'{'\n- ; \u2022   HylfAl MVRING\nSTOCKHOLM <AP) - Sir Win-\n-ston Churchill, the greatest phrase\nmaker of his time, won the Nobel\nPrize, fdr, literature .Thursday,, but\n-he disclosed that he still thinks\nKipling and Shaw were better\n.wrHera.i\n' The Swedish- Academy, which\nawards the prize -annuelly under\nthe will of dynamite-maker Alfred\nNobel, voted lt to Churchill as both\nauthor and orator, It cited his \"mastery, in historical and biographical\nwriting, and the: brilliant art ot\noratory with which he has stepped\nforth as a defender of high human\nvalue?;'\u2022 ,.\n- The award carries with it a prize\nof $331840. The 78-year-old prime\nminister, he has been writing books\ntor 55 -years, received the newa\noff lei ally in London -from Swedish\nambassador Gunhard Hagglof.\n\u25a0 \"t am very proud indeed to receive an honor which is inter-\nnatiohal,\" Churchill said.\"\"I have\nreceived' several -honors whloh are\nnatlohal, but this Is the first time\nthat I hove received one which is\ninternational in its character. It is\na; literary, distinction, and I am. particularly prbud- of that.\" \u25a0 j\nOpposition Fire\n; VICTORIA (CP)-Members of the\nopposition in the Legislature Thursday charged: the government with\n\"putting a premium on law-breaking\" and \"validating wrong-doing\",\nby cancelling',irrears lii: B.C. hospital insurance premiums.\n- the House was considering a. bill\nthat ,w\u00abuld amend the Hospital Insurance act to, among other things,\ncancel the arrears the \/government\nhad \"suspertded\" In May. - It would\nalso .'allow' the; gbVeriimerit to cancel any- subsequent arrears.\nMembers finally \"gave the. bill\nsecqnd reading-approval in-. principle. ) -' \"\"-\":7',, \"\u2022,   :\u25a0 :v;',',     \",\nBob Strachan (CCF,' Cowlchan-\nNewcastle) vSald Uie' government\nwas introducing the -bill,to make\nan   honest   woman   out   of   the\nbchk|\/''\"';,;\u25a0; .)\u25a0 .7 \"\nHe,said the government had left\nthe impression that it had cancelled\narrears last May Instead of just\nsuspending -them. This was government \"by. rjrees-.jielsieM\", '.-..'7..\nHealth Minister>Erlc Martin said,\nthe persons who owed arrears were\nmostly people who-could not make\npayments.l He'alspi said, the; can-\nra|i|V^\u00abos^pl|9.e\\the,lP8urance\nawwoi'\"kjn a sound.'h^sIs. y,^_ \u25a0-.\nfy^t'omiMmS.. members\" ,t.enlisjf\nthis tni- said a large' percentage\nof those owing arrears were able\n;topajS , '\"\u2022 ' 7-''. , ',-\u25a0. \u2022'  .\nThey demanded.that the hospital\ninsurance '.service' be amended to\nj give a break to persons- in the low-\nincome brackets. - .-\u25a0 -. i-.--\ni Liberal Leader Arthur.Laing said\nthe bill was a \"hill to validate\n;wrorlg 'doing.!' i  :  i  '.     ;;\nRandolph Harding (CCF, Kaslo-\nSlocan) 'said if the government was\ngoing, to, force 75 per cent of the\npeople to ,pay through payroll, deductions-then the other 26 per cent\nshould be forced to pay Otherwise, he selds the - government\nshould take complete responsibility\nfor the debts accrued through nonpayment by patients-not Insured\nunder: the hospital ;insurance;\nscheme.,\"7'  i : \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0        '\u2022'    ' !f''\nMr. Laing said the about $2,000,-\n000 lost, through cancellation ot arrears belonged to the people.\nMr. Martin said that since the\nsuspension of arrears last May there\nhad been 20,875 additional registrations of which\" 11,964;; were family\nheads and 8,914 were single.\nThe House also gave second reading fo a hill that, will allow appointment of two more justices to\nthe B.C. Appeal Court At present\nthere are five; .-' '.-:'\u25a0\u25a0\n. The -bill to legalize the Doukho-\nbor \"bread-ahd^alt\"- marriage was\nslightly amended and given third\nand final reading. \u25a0\",.!''\ntiqnt,_.      .   ,\nImpaired,; .drunken. or reckles'f1\ndriving convictipns will bring &\n100, per' cent jump in premiums. ?-\nthe rate increases concern only.\npublic liability and property dam*\nage. coverage; Collision, tire and\ntheft coverage is not involved. :    '\nThe new rate structure is ,lncor\u00ab\nported in changes in the asslgnisdi\nrisk plan under which the 150 com-' '\npanfes writing car insurance in\nB.C. share the burden of providing\ncoverage to motorists considered:\npoor insurance risks.\nThe 'plan, which affects some\n10,000 motorists in B,C, wu .outv\nlined to underwriters here Wed*\nnesday by K. F. V. Malthouse, mah\u00bb\nager of the B.C. Assigned Blsl^-\nPlan, and' made public Thursday,,\nMotorists considered good ihsuri-,\nance risks by the companies may;\nobtain from any company desired\n-the public liability and property\ndamage coverage mandatory under'\nB.C. traffic regulations.     . \".' '$\nApplications from motorists con-\nsidered poor risks are dealt- with\"\nunder the assigned risk plan which.;\nclassifies motorists in two groups\n\u2014those who have not been convicted of major traffic violation^;\nin the. previous three years \u25a0 and'\nthose who have..- \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 ( -', - v     -..[; '7,.\nThe\" applications are spread\namong the 150 companies on a\nprorata, basis. \u25a0 \u25a0 . \u2022\n. Motorists with a three-year clean\nrccord'wlll obtain Insurance cover-\nage at normal rates. 7\nKootenay Lake water level Tuesday,, 7,te\u201e-s_et -above zerj; Wednesday, 7.75; Thursday,. 7,78..\nCANADIAN DOLLAR,Ui\u00bb\nNEWYQRR \u00ab3I\u00bb)^'-he:Can\u00abdian\ndollar* was 9-32 cent higher at a\npremium of 1-'31-32 pty ceiit In\nterms.of.U.S. funds. Pound sterling\nup 1-16 cent at $2.89%,\nMowsaavL; (ca?)^r_\u00bb ua'doi-\nlor closed at a discount ot 1 21-32\nper -cent in -terms of Canadian\nfunds, off 9-32 Found sterling\n$2.79 15-16, off la-w:\niPHEB'HANGINGS.\"\"'.\n?. GXBip (Reuters) t-ISgt:,Moha-;\naudi Zuhkal; officiol Egyptian executioner, has decided to forego his\n$14-a-head fee when hanging Far-\nouk-ora traitors. \u25a0 He hes. already\nhanged one former government official and is due to execute three\nmqre-Saturday- !7    '\u25a0':'' *'.'<'.,'\n$50,000 SOLD STOLEN\nNEW: YORK (AP)-A shipment\nof gold bullion valued at $50,000\nwas stolen Thursday from, an Idle-\nwild airport. Cargo warehouse. The\ngold wes consigned to the American Smelting end Refining Co.,\nPerth: Amboy, SpJ; h*1 the: New\nYork end El Salvador Mining Co. room that night,\n___\u00ab______'\u00bb C1\u00abSI\u00bb__-'-\nuuiana MriKe\nPicture Brighter\nGEORGETOWN    (CP) - Brltish\n;Guiana -sugar producers said a\n\"alight Improvement\" on their\nstrike-bound plantations- Thursday\nas more leftist-led workers came\nbeck to theMobss .\"... -\u25a0 .   \u25a0-\"\"\nSugar ! refineries also reported\nmqre action, with one resuming full-\ntime operations.- Eleven ire OS.\npartial operation anad two are com*\npletely stopped!'.'\u2022''\nHere' is still no estimate df the\nexect number ot laborers, who have .\nanswered the- strike' call on the.\nPeople's progressive Party to protest Britain's actions in turning\nout the .colony's left-wing government, suspending Its constitution\nsnd moving in troops.\nPPP leaders-spent-the day trying to rally support aha sympathy\nabroad., ,' '\u25a0   -\u25a0-<y-:y!  \u25a0\u25a0\nBELIEVE THUGS GOT\nRANSOM MONEY\nST. LOUIS (AP)-The .police of-\nfleer whose work led tp a solution'\nof the Greenlease kidnap-slaying\ncase expressed belie; Thursday St\nLouis hoodlums have the missing\n$300,000 in ransom- money.\nLieut. Louis Shoulders said he\nis convinced the money was taken\nthe night ot Oet. 5 from a motel\njust west of St. Louis where Cerl\nAustin Hell, the confessed killer\nof six-year-old Bobby Greenlease,\nspent the night <:\nThe officer said It is almost certain that persons other than HaU,\nSandra O'Day and taxi driver John\nHager: were present in Hall's motel\n:7\nAnd in This Corner...\nAUCKLAND (AP)\u2014Vice-president Richard Nixon Wai standing\non ths verende of the Maori king's palace when a buxom, tatooed\nwoman walked In front of Win, stored, then leaned forward and\nsolemnly rubbed -noses with him.\nNikon smiled and rubbed baok, That made It official.\nThe Meerlsi descendants Of the original settlers of New Zeelend,\nstaged the traditional ceremony at Ngaruawahla, a Maori Village 34\nmiles south of Auckland. I  . ';'    *_L     :   ;'\nThe nose-rubbing ceremony .was repeated by six Maori women\nwith the U.8. vice-president and Mrs. Nixon as well.\nEarlier,' Nixon Inspected! one of New Zealand's rich dairy farms.\nThe two side trips hlghllflhted the end of a three-day .visit te\nthe first country of Nlxon'e 16-country tour, Australia Is the next step,\n' LONDON (Reuters)\u2014Dr. C. H. Andrews' voice was husky when .\n. he. told a television audience about his battle as a top British expert\nagainst the common cold.\n\u2022'I've got a.bit.ftf.a.'bold myself;\" hd confessed.\nCANBERRA (AP)\u2014Australian troops In Korea complain they\nire getting tee much chicken, turkey, veal and ham In their United\nStates rations, Army minister Joslah Francis said Tuesday.        ,7    .\n- Ho said they want more red meet but It la not.possible to moke\nseparate arrangements with, the U.S. forces. ,. ;>\nThis Is the only complaint against the food, Whloh le the heft\never .eaten by Australlen troops In a war ions, he added. -    .\nSINGAPORE (AP)\u2014Women members of the RAF waxed indignant'\nTuesday because their superiors banned them from visiting Singapore\n\u25a0 't^tife'.jiirlorifi:,. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-..'.:,.'\u25a0; *.- \u25a0 .  ,\n:   The 150 WRAFS in the Far East command headquarters here\nthought it a great joke when the story got around thet one ot them\n1 . had become a tattooed lady.\nBut they frowned after, reading Tuesday's order.\n\u2022 -One complained: \"Airmen may be tattooed if they want to, so\nwhy -not-.us?'It's-discrimination. Besides, the girl who wss tattooed\nhad only a little artistry done.\" \u25a0\n\u25a0 \u2022 '\u25a0''\n\u00ab.,j'i;l .I'\"''\n \u2014\n-p\u2014\n\u00a3&l\nYou Haven't Seen the Real 3-D\ntil You've Sefcn the Finest...\nIN 3 DIMENSION\n^ in cm un hy techniculor\n\u00bbs\nNews\nCartoon\nPrists This Engagement Only\n75c, 55e, 30c \u2014 Tax and Viewers Included\nTonight\nand\nSaturday\nGiific.\nComplete\nShows\n7:00-9i00\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nTHREE MORE DAYS\nToday-7:30 p.m. - 8:10 p.m.\nSaturday-7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.\nPALMER LEE \u2022 WILUAM REYNOLDS Wfll\/MWd ttefifyMti\n-2\/Umt\n-tjrnrn^\n10 MILES EAST OF NELSON\nVICTOHIA-Bill 84 to establish\nCrown corporation to construct and\nopersta toll highways and bridges\npassed third resding Thursday at-\nternoon. The measure comas into,\netteet on proclamation.\nTotRuihedTo\nVancouver Hospital\nVANCOUVBB (CP) - Patricia\nHawes, fiya months, was under observation tn hospital here today following a flight hero by HCAF\nplana.\nTha tot, suffering from a heart\nailment, was taken by ambulance\n'from Nelson to Kamloops, and put\naboard tha plane for Vancouver.\nYour Drive-In Directory\nCRANBROOK MARYSVILLI\nPint thaws 1.11 \u2014 All Show. Approx. I Hours\nI OOMPLETI SHOWS EACH NIQHT\nTODAY  and   FRIDAY\nREGULAR SHOWINO\nFlrtt Show\nTill p.m.\nSecond Shew\nAt 9:15 p.m.\n\"24 Hours in\nlife''\n-   Merle Obaron\n. Rlohard Tedd\nShew Time* 7:15-9:15\nHAMBURG RUINS\nFINALLY CLEARED 7\nHAM-.UHC. (Reuters)\u2014Hamburg\none of the most heavily battered\n1 cities in Qennany'during fiia war,\nls Anally dear ol . ruins,. city\nauthoritlts said' Thursday, They\nsaid ruin clearance would _nd: officially next 'month. Nearly' S4.,-\n000,000 has been spent on'removing\nthe wreeli-agas- '\u25a0. .:-.-:,\n5 Miles From Troll Centre\nOn Fruitvale Road .\nFirst'Show 6:45\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\n\"DEADLINE U.S.A.\"\nWith Humphrey Bogart and\nEthel Barrymofe\nPLUS \u2014\n\"FORT DEFIANCE\"\n(In Clnecolor)\nCARTOON     .\n8UNDAY  SHOW\nSilver  Collection.\nGate Open 8:00, Show 8tarti 8:30\n,      \"YUKON GOLD\"\n'With  K. Grant and Chinook,\nthe Wonder Dog,\nSHORTS - CARTOON\nMONDAY^and TUESDAY\n\"THAT'S MY BOY\"\nWith D._vn Martin, jerry Lewli\n8HORT8 \u2022 CARTOON - NEWS\nTHURSDAY and FRIDAY\n\"CAPTIVE CITY\"\nWith  John  For\u00bb\u00abthe  and\nJoan Camden    <\nSlflJRTS  \u2022 CARTOON  -. NEWS\nyou're sell\nyou're sakl\n-. you're sure!\nmsn\nBRAN\nANTI-FRI\nInstalled j\nSLOCAN PARK\nGENERAL STORE AND\n..   SERVICE STATION\nSlocan Park, BX.\nQUILTED\nJACKETS\nPOR\nFALL AND WINTER WEAR\nCarefully selected Jackets In\ndrills', wools, nylorgabs, and\nleather, all with pure* wool\nlinings. ,..-\u25a0,\u25a0\nCheete from bomber styles,\nsurcooti and regulars In a\nComplete color range.\nSIZES 34 TO 4\u00ab\nPriced Prem\n$12.95 to $29.95\nGODFREYS'\nX09.\u2014 0_Z ~ INOHd\nJ \u2014 NELION DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 16, 1953\nF-L-A-S-H\nKBLOWNA, BiC. <CP>-Empley-\nses of 3J logging and sawmill firms\nIn the southern B.C, Interior Thurs\nday valid -In favor ot strike action\nby the slender margin of 27 votes\nIn a government-supervised ballot.\nOf rthe 1498 ballots cast, 761\nfovored strike action and 734 were\nagainst. Tht affirmative vote represents employees In 17 of the 35\noperations. .Results ot voting In\nsix other operations were not immediately avertable.\nThe strike vote was taken after\nthe International Woodworkers of\nAmerica (CIO-CCL) rejected a conciliation board aword of a three-\ncent-hourly : waft increase. Hie\npresent rate ls Sl2SVs. .\n. Thi largest operation Involved In\ntht dispute Is the S. M. Simpson\nLtd, sawmill at Kelowna.' -  ;>\nBridge Measure\nPasses House\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\nCASTUEOAR, B.O.\nTonight and Saturday\nMartin ond Lewis\n\"THE STOOGE\"\n\u2022hows at 7:00 and MM p.m.\nVISIT  OUR  0O8Y\nD1NINO   ROOM   AT\n\"The Tillicum\"\n(Restaurant and Cabins)\nSituated at tht Balfour\nFerry Landing\nWa Hava for Your Convenience:\nSnack Bar,   Cigarettes,   Candy,'\nMagazines, Fishing Taokle,\nSouvenirs\nReservations Appreciated\n.    PHONI BALFOUR S\nNight Calls, 10\nJail SerUene^s Qiven\nCouple in Baby's Death\nA Creston Indian couple was convicted Oh a charge of manslaughter\ntar an assist court Jury Thursday,\nThe, jury deliberated for almost an\nhour before bringing in a guilty\nverdict. They asked Mr. Justice A.\nM. Manson for leniency in sentencing tht woman, Mrs, Mary Basil.\nHtr husband, Isaac Basil, waa sentenced to two years in- the penitentiary and the woman was given ont\nyear in Oakalla,\nTht couple was charged with\nmanslaughter In the death of their\n10-month-old Infant son. Judge\nManson. .baton' passing sentence,\nsaid the charge was a grievous ont.\n\"Drunkenness Is not an excuse in\nlpw and in tht esse of tho two of\nyou, you wtrt on I tprtt of drink-\nIng that lasted several days,\"\nMrs. Basil burst into tears when\ntha Judge directed hit address at\nhtr, \"Vou, at a mother,\" ht stld,\n\"should havt taken your kiddles\ntnd gotten away from tha drink.\nIng party,\" She tobbtd <tuletly\nwhllt he told htr he was ''sorry\"\nfor them both,\nAn RCMP dogmaster, told tht\nJury his service dog Wolf found tht\nbody of tht Creston Indian baby In\ndense grsst near tht Creston village\ndump. . \u25a0\nTht young couple conducted their\nown defence. D. T. Wttmott of\nTrail and E. McOauley represented\ntht crown,\nTht baby, Ronald Otorgt Basil,\nmissing since August 1, was found\non the morning of August T, ont\nday after the child's absence wss\nreported to RCMP.- When dlscov-\nered by Corporal's: A. Hammage\nand the police dog, tht baby was\nlying fact down on a marshy field\nJust outside the dump, clad only in\na soiled white T-shirt. The babe\nwes lying some 450 feet from whtrt\na \"drinking orgy\" was carried oh\nfor more than three dtyi\nDr. V. L. Smith, who conducted\nan autopsy, testified thaf the infant\nhad baen dead tor \"thret or four\ndays at least!\" Dr. Smith said dtsth\nwas due to exposure\u2014lack of normal things to sustain life such as\nproper temperature, food, drink and\ncleanliness.\nDRINKING SPREE\nIn a statement made to police by\nMrs. Basil and ruled adm'lssable\nevidence by His Lordship at Thursday's trial, Mrs. Basil told of a\ndrinking spree In the Creston dump\narea on August 1, the last time she\nsaw her Infant son, ',..>\nWith Anastasia Basil, sister ot\nIsaac, and their two children, the\ninfant and a three-year-old son,\nLloyd, they arrived in Creston from\nBonner's Firry in j Alex Andrew's\ncan They stopped at Creston, the\nstatement said, bought liqUot and\ndrove to the dump. There they consumed two cases of beer. They went\nto the Indian Mission and returned\nto the dump with a fifth person\nadded to the party, Joe Seymore.\n\"I started getting drunk and don't\nremember seeing anybody leave,\"\nMrs. Basil said In the statement-\n\"I remember Isaac holding the\nbaby outside the car and asking\nfor mora bear. I gtot two, one for\nhim and ont tor myself. I guess I\npsssed out then. Tht next thing I\nremember I wat back In the ear\nand had'the baby asleep on the\nseat beside me, Ike (her husband)\nand Andrew were on tht outside\nof tht ctr.\" Anastasia and Lloyd\nwere in the car with her, her state,\nment continued;. \"The next thing\nI remember was standing at the\nbaok of the car and had tht baby\nin my arms. A ctr cama down the\nroad and I guess I flagged it down.\nThere was a woman driving it.'\ntold her we were all drunk. I put\nthe baby on the seat of tht car. I\nu convenience-pack ed\nnow Deluxe\n\"Thrlfty-30\"\nFRIGIDAIRE\nElectric\nRange\nMc & Mc\n(NELSON) LTD.\n476 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1300\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinrniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.it\nB RANI)\nANTIFREEZE\nAT\nWOODVALLANCI\nHARDWARE CO.\nJ93 Baker St.   Phone 13J0\nllllllllllllll|IIIIIIIHIIIII|llllllllll|llllll\nOET THB GUARANTEED\nPROTECTION OP\nPRESTONE\nLOCATED AT 323 VERNON ST.\ndon't remember when tht ear left\nor whither I took the baby out\"\nBht ssid In the statement that\ntht eouid remember nothing \"till 1\nwoke up the next'morning. It was\nJust getting daylight ond I Wat\nlying on tht road by the dump.\"\nShe told of walking aimlawly about\nCreston and tht dump. .Monday\nnight she spent In an abandoned\ncar behind a Creston cafe.\n\"Tuesday morning I wont to tht\nstation to go to Wynndel on tht\ntrain,\" her statement ' continued,\n\"end my mother saw, me there,\nThey said they were looking for\nme and tht b\u00bbby.\" (\"Thty\" wtrt\nhtr husband, Andrtw, and htr\nmother,) \"I told thorn tht baby\nwat with Isaac's mother and thty\ntald tht baby wasn't there.\" Wt all\nwant down to the dump and looked\nfor tht baby. After gping to the\ndump wo went to the ml.slon and1\nasked tht Indians there if they htd\nseen tht btby. Wt etmt back to\nths.<4ujhp and started sll ovtr. Wt\nwent to Wynndel that night (Tuesday) tnd on Wednesdiy wt searched around tht dump again.\" She\nalso ststcd that thty checked at tha\nCreston Valley hospital.\nThursdsy morning \"wa searched\naU around tht dump again, Then\nI told my mother to toll tht po-\nHe*.\" .   \u25a0>;\u2022      7    \u25a0;\nIsaac Basil's story to RCMP corroborate* Mary's statement up to the\ntlmt thty separated Saturday, Aug.\n1, circumstances of whleh neither\ncould ractlL \"fe   -\nAlexander Andrtw ot Bonner's\nFerry told the asme story of events\nleading up to tht drinking spree\nIn the Creston dump Aug. 1.\nAnastasia Basil told the court\n\"Mary had tht btby and Isaac was\ntrying to take lt\" (This allegedly\ntook place at the dump on Aug,\n1.) \"Ht struck Miry onct. Ike had\nthe baby after that\" Whan Anastasia left tbt dump tht took Uoyd\nwith htr to htr mother's home.\nCharlotte Bull and Mary Miohel,\nmother of tha defendant, Mary\nBasils alto gave evidence.\nCpl. N. E. Elphick tnd Constable\nD. Poole said thit the first they,\nheard of tha missing child was Aug.\n6 when Mrs. Michele reported tht\nmissing infant.\nTht Jury ia composed of C. F.\nBlakeman, foreman; Leslie P. Band,\nJack D. Lewis and A. J. Romano of\nKelson; F. M. Turlk and Walter\nDavis of Trail; A. J. Popplewell and\nArthur J. Lees ot Rossland; Eric\nIra Box and Donald McDonald of\nSouth Slocan; Joseph A. May of\nMontrose, and Petor Harder of Kinnaird.   v.-. ,7. 7'; \u25a0'.\u2022    ,-..\u201e\u2022\u25a0 ,:.-.   \u25a0\nTrail Chamber\nTackles Denial\nProblem al Meet\nTRAIL\u2014A uniform plan of preventative oare is tha proper solution tor better teeth, Dr. Andrew F.\nBalkany, dlrcotor of the West\nKootenty health . unit, told the\nChamber of, Commerce Thursday\nnights \u2022\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0'\u2022\u25a0    . \u25a0    \u25a0\nHo emphasized the need for proper core of the teeth, starting at an\nearly ago. He pointed out that 72\nptr cent spend > nothing > on, teeth\nwhile family units,in Income groups\nof under 81-00 spent on average ot\n$2.80. This, he nought, Wai not a\nhealthy state of affairs.,Diet, fluoridation and long range planning ot\nprevention war* etttntlil,,' -.-.\u25a0   .  ;;.\nDr. 19. A. Sinclair, chairman of\nthe health committee, who Introduced tht speaker, submitted four\nseparate recommendations, each of\nwhich was,discussed and approved\nby the Chamber;.\nRecommendation of a dental service plan for grade one and preschool children was made. A second! flow crowd of\nresolution  recommended  the, do-Stadium,\nvelopmtht of t publicity campaign\nto educate tha public on the merits\nof fluorldlz.tlon of drinking water.\nTrail water tested .05 about one-\ntwentieth of the amount necessary\nto properly reduce tooth decay.\nTbt Chamber went on record is\nendorsing tht need for a new and\nadequate respirator ' for poliomyelitis fpr the Trail-Tadanac Hospital. It was pointed out thtt definite .need existed for up-to-date\nequipment ot thlt ntturt. A recommendation was passed that government funds be provided tor out of\ntht next budget for a dental faculty\nat UBC. It was pointed out that\nthere Is tn acute shortage ot dentists and the population Is Increasing by 49,000 a year,\nThe Trail Chamber endorsed a\nresolution approving a merger of\ntht' Trtil Merchants' Association as\na section of the Chamber. The\nresolution, ilrawn up by both or-\nsonizations, will.be presented to\nthe TMA at Its next regular meeting.  \u25a0''.'.\nJ. V. Rogers, past president, and\nE. H. Oautschi, president, will be\ndelegates to the provincial Chamber convention on Oct 28. '\nLICENCE RENEWED\nW, James Scott who completed\nthe plumber's exams in 1947, was\ngranted a renewal of his plumber's\ncertificate by City Council here.'\nThe tine carved oak roof Inside\nWestminster Hall in London, England .dates from 1309.\nMOSCOW (AP)\u2014Austria's cham-\n\u00a7Ion football team, Rapid, Thurs-\nay night defeated Moscow's crack\nDynamo team 2-1\" before tn over-\n,000 at Dynamo\n..\n\u2022EOOND  WINTER   SEASON   SERIES\nFilms for Children\nOPENING PROGRAM SATURDAY, OCT. 17, 10 A.M.\nJUNIOR-HIGH AUDITORIUM\n\/  A  non-profit project of your  Nelson Community film\nCounoll,, endorsed and approved  by tht  Nelson School\nBoard.,' \u25a0\";,','\u25a0\u25a0       ,  ,'\nMemberships available at your respective school offices. .\n4TH ANNUAL\nSHRINE\nBALL\nFriday, Nov. 6th\nFRED AYDON\nMAKE NOV. 6th\n\"The Loneliest Wight\nof the Year.\"\nThe Weather\nNELSON ...\nCalgary \t\nVancouver\nSpokane ...\n30\n30\n40\n45\n62\n58\n65\nKasloNelson Coach Lines\nPASSENGER TIME SCHEDULE\nREAD DOWN\nDAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY\nTABLE 1\nREAD UP\nDAILY EX. SUNDAY\n6:50 A.M.\n7:10 A.M.\n7:20 A.M.\n7:25 AM.\n7:30 A.M.\n7:45 A.M.\n7:55 A.M.\n8:20 A.M.\n8:30 A.M.\n8:50 A.M.\nLv. NELSON\nWILLOW POINT\nCRESCENT BAY\nKOKANEE\nLONGBEACH\nBALFOUR\nQUEEN'S BAY\nAINSWORTH\nWOODBURY\nAr. KASLO\nAr.\nLv.\n5:30 P.M.\n5:05 P.M.\n5:00 P.M.\n4:55 P.M.\n4:50 P.M.\n4:40 P.M.\n4:30 P.M.\n4:05 P.M.\n3:55P.M.\n3:30 P.M.\n- '\u25a0r\\\n.u.\nI88UED:  SEPTEMBER  14TH,  1953\nEFFECTIVE  OCTOBER  19TH,  1953\nIssued by 8. E. Fyfe, Nelson, B.C.\nON ROYAL CITY PRODUCTS\nAT THE LIBERTT\nCHOICE. IS OZ.\n2\n6\nCase of\n24 tint\ntins\ntins 98\n'3.79\nFANCY.\ntins\nSIZE 2. 15 OZ.\ntins 51\n1.47\nCase of\n24 tins\n'5.59\nROYAL CITY\nCUT GREEN BEANS\nChoice, Size 4, 15 oz.\n<i     a\u00ab# c     $1.10\nLs   tins D I     O    tins   I\nCase of $ A   I O\n24 tins  1 .     TM-S-\nSIZI 2. FANCY. 15 OZ.\n2.... 51*\n'1.49\ntint\nCase of\n24 tint\n'5.75\nSIZE 3. FANCY. 15 OZ.\n2,,;. 43'\n0   tint   1.25\nCase of\n24 tins\n'4.79\nFANCY. SIZE 4. 15 OZ.\n2\n6\ntins 33\ntins 98\nCase of\n24 tins\n'3.79\nFANCY. SIZES. 15 OZ.\nZ tins 32\nV tins 89\n'3.55\nCaia af\n24 tins\nFANCY. 15 OZ.\n2, ,..39*\n6   tins     Iti2\nCassaf        9\/V ^Q\n2Mn\u00bb    Tf-fMr\nCHOICE. 15 OZ.\n2\n6\nCaia af\n24 tint\ntins 28\n.,\u201e.80*\n\u20223.05\nFANCY. IS OZ.\nZ tins TO\nO   tins   Ta4Q'\"\u25a0'\u2022\n'5.29\nCase of\nU tins\nFANCY. ,15 OZ.\n2.,.. 43*.\n6 .,..'1.25\n'4.65\nCase of\n24 tins\nCloverleaf\nSHRIMP\n5 os. tin .\n55*\nCote of\n24 tint\nFANCY. 15 OZ.\nits tint 33\n6 tint 98\n\u20223.79\nCase of\n24 tins\nCHOICE. 15 OZ.\n2,,.. 41*\n.,,,.'1.20\n'4.65\nSun-Rypo. Clear.\n48 as. tin -\t\nAPPLE\nJUICE\nZ tins 5 8\nCOUNTRY ORDERS WELCOME\nFreight charged at SOe ewt. Kaslo, Salmo, New\nDenver, Silverton and all points, out served by truck.\nFree delivery, in town of 4 cases or mora during tale.\nPrices Effective Today and Saturday.\n\u25a0^_^___\u00bb-_-\u00bb-s-s\"\nLIBERTY\nFOOD STORE\n\u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\n \u25a0\u25a0^'its^mmaiiimm\nJ____________i____\u201e y..:\u25a0:-:-:\n t^ff^x-^'^\n__-__-__--_-________-__________________-_-__l\n' * \u25a0   '   \u25a0\" !';'\u25a0;\u25a0';-      \u25a0 _\u25a0'>*\u25a0\u2022\n.'$833.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 16,19S3 \u2014 3\nThe Roaster Plant (left), and the Acid Plant (right) where iron sulphide from the-.Sullivan ednctatrator is used\nto make sulphuric acid necessary in the ammonium phosphate process at the Consolidated Mining and Smelting\n: Company's Kimberley Fwtilizer Department are shown in picture at extaemel^t..Cento*, the Rock Plant is part\nof the $9,000,000'project which has just gone into production. At ttpper.left is\/'the Storage Plant; Where'about 70,000\ntons of ammonium phosphate fertilizer a year, will be bagged and shipped. Centre of activity is the Phosphate Plant\nat right, where the final product, ammonium phospate, is made. At right centre is the Storage Plant.\n: ';\u25a0','. ' \u25a0 -'i.  .        \u2014Photos by Daniei\nKimberley's $90,000,000 Fertilizer Plant Ope ns\nIhe Persian Gulf, covering 75,000\nsquare miles, has an'average depth\nof 25 fathoms.\nSmart\nI-:-.\n\u00bb'\n\"FLATS\"\n\u25a0     By CONNIE\nRED\n<SRt_EN\nBLACK\nWidths AA to B\nSixes 4V_ to 10\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nSit Baker St.\nPhone 809\nmat\nWhalshan Units\nSent East\nGASTLEGAR \u2014 Two wreoked\nelectrical transformers from the\nWhatshan power plant which was\ndevastated a few weeks ago bf two\nmud slides,-were loaded onto railway ears at Castlegar Tuesday ahd\nWednesday to ba taken to Toronto\nfor rebuilding. .\nThe mudpacked, 35-ton units\nwere dug out of the mud at Whatshan, loaded onto a CPR barge and\nferried down the lake by the tug\n\"the Widget\" to Castlegar. A truck\ntook them from the .landing near\nthe Castlegar ferry to the CPR\ntrack where a crone loaded them\non flatcars.\nGeneral Construction Company\nhandled the removal projeot and\nalso were in charge of bringing in\nthe three yw transformew which\nSCOUT LEADER\nVISITS KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY - R. K. Jordan,\nprovincial executive Soout \/commissioner, this- month visited Kimberley, addressing leaders and the\nexecutive. He stated that a training\ncourse will be held here in November.\nMr. Jordan presented first class\nScout Ray Turner with his Queen's\nScout badge. Tommy Meddlicott\nreceived his silver arrowhead badge\non completion of an advanced\ncourse for patrol leaders. Scouter\nwarrants were presented to Cub-\nmasters H. Tan Wyck, J. Martin and\nG. Williams.\nPietermarltzburg, the Natal provincial capital in South Africa,\nwas founded by the Boers in 1B38.\nwere unloaded from the train at\nWest Robson and taken up the lake\nby boat to Whatshan two weeks\n_*\u00a3_ '\nFruitvale Union\nOpens New Home\nFRUITVALE \u2014 Thursday was a\nbig, day in the history'of the lfruit-\nvale Progressive Credit Union. As\nwell as commemorating Credit\nUnion they officially opened their\nnew office building. They are the\nonly group in; the West kootenay\nChapter of Credit Unions to own\ntheir own building;\nOf frame construction, the building is 22 feet by 18 feet and is insulated. Carpenter on the building\nwas Joel Walgren. It hes two rooms,\none for use by the manager while\nthe secretary is busy with clients.\nThe Fruitvale Credit Union was\nformed ten years ago in March,\n1043 ahd had a membership of 15.\nPresident was Harry Patterson and\nsecretary-treasurer was first Fred\nHaines, Mrs. J. DeBruyn and final-\n\u2022\n':\nTo Produce 190Tons\nOf Phosphate a Day\nChemical fertilizer for Canadian crops holds the spotlight at Kimberley, B.C. The Consolidated Mining; and\nSmelting Company of Canada Limited has'\/announced the\nstart-up of its newest operation, the Kimberley Fertilizer\nDepartment, designed to produce about 190 tons of ammon\u00bb\nium phosphate per day.\n' The $8,000,000 project has taken two years to build\nand is one of the most up4o-date chemical plants in Canada.\nThe planning stages were handled\nly John Wood, who kept the post\ntill last year. Present membership\nis over 390, close to 400, and of these\nover a 100 are children's accounts.\nPresident president is Cam Weir of\nBeaver Falls and secretary ls William Pratt. Vioe-president is Dennis Miller,\nThe local Union plans an open\nhouse to view'their new home.\nDepths of'more than 1600 fathoms\nhave been recorded in the Atlantic\nbetween Norway and Iseland, \u25a0-.'.:\nman?\nRefe jmr-mob. He is esse et the large staff of experienced A.B.C* circulation\ntmcBfcow who am working constantly to provide you and other advertisers with the\nftMTCB pon need In protect your advertising dollars. Ms He visits our office\nat regular Intervals to make exacting audits of our stimulation reoqrds. He has access\nto si of oar books and records in obtaining the FACTS about our oi-culation-\nftiv your information, tWr The circulation facts obtained by tbe A.B.C.: auditor\nf> f sum man-aee condensed in easy-to-read A.B.C. reports which tell you: How much\nefcaefatfoB we hawej where the circulation goes, how it was obtained, and many other\nFACTS about ihe audience this newspaper provides for your messages about\nItfom merchandise and service, -Mr Ask for a copy of our A.B.C. report. See for younss\"\n\u2022rfif yoor advertising in this newspaper is a sound business investment,   .\nmade on the baefe of FACTS.\n\u2022The,Audit Bureau of Circulations, of which\nOris Newspaper is a member, is a cooperative,\nnonprofit association of 3460 advertisers, advertising agencies and publishers. Organized in\n1.14, A.B.C. established (definition for paid\ncirculation, rales and standards for measuring\ncirculations and methods for auditing and reporting circulation FACTS.\nNELS0N DAILY NEWS\nA. Lt.   REPORTS - FACTS   AS   A   BASIC   MIASURt   OF  ADVERTISING   VALUE\n,\/.:.....      .-..-..., ...    i \u25a0 ':. ,j,_ 7 :\"~r7\"\u2014w\u2014- ~-\u2014-\u2014\n\u00bb.--.-,'- --V ...-*\u25a0,.,.,-   \u2022   -.,..,.-.,,.. - .......,,..,.,,.,^,,^.,^.17.7'-   .,.. ..;,..7;\t\nAre Specialists\nat Their Trade\nContracting\nIN PARTICULAR:\nBoth Commercial\nPrivate Residence\nElectric\nPhone 258   645 Baker St.\nby Cominco engineers and designers\ndrawing on information and experience gathered over a period of\ntwenty years in the company's\nchemical fertilizer operations at\nTrail, B.C. In October, 1051, Stone\nand Webster Canada Limited, construction contractors, began work\nat the site located near the Sullivan Concentrator. The job was\ncompleted last September.\nEIGHT MAJOR BUILDINGS\nEight major buildings are being\nused to treat raw materials, to turn\nout the finished product and tor\nservice purposes. -They are the\nroaster, acid, rook, phosphate and,\nstorage plants as well as a supply,\nwarehouse, central shop and combined change room-f-offlce.\nHaw materials for ammonium\nphosphate production some from\nthree sources. Phosphate rook; mined at.a Cominco subsidiary operation in Montana, is shipped by rail\nto Kimberley where initial treatment takes place in the rock plant.\nAmmonia comes from Cominco's\nAblerta nitrogen department near\nCalgary, Alta. Iron sulphide, isolated during the treatment.of lead-\nzinc ore from the Sullivan-mine at\nKimberley, comes, from the nearby,\nSullivan Concentrator. The .iron.su.\nphide is treated in the roaster plant\nand the generated'sulphur dioxide\nis used in the acid plant tor sulphuric acid production.\nPhosphate rock,' ammonia and\nsulphuric acid enter the phosphate\nplant where the. finished product,\nammonium phosphate is synthesized,\nEFFICIENT LAYOUT\nLayout of the plants Is designed\nfor maximum efficiency in handling the flow of raw materials and\nthe finished product, Working con-\nditiOns and general plant appearance were also big factors when the\nplants were planned.\nActual production of ammonium\nphosphate fertilizer started on Oc\ntober 14. It is expected that all of\nthe finished product will be shipped to the Canadian Prairies.\nL. J. Nicholson heads the Kimberley fertilizer department for\nCominco. About ISO men.are employed to all phases ef the operation.\nJERUSALEM (AP) \u2014 Jordan\nsources) claimed Thursday that SI\npersons were killed- and two injured in tile Jordan village of Kibya\nin an attack by Israelis with mines\nend mo-ten. Jordan's acting delegate to the mixed armistice commission said UN observers are-on.\ntheir way to the villages to.-'investigate.\nOriginator of vaccination was\nEdward Joriner, English physician,\nwho died in 1823.\nmWKT Buy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nBickerton's 1st Anniversary\nTODAY AND SATURDAY\n10^ OFF up w        no\n-. ASK ABOUT OUR\n20 PIECE ENGLISH CHINA CONTEST\nIHCKIRTOW\nPHONE 1707 \u2014 Coriier M Cedar and'Observatory Streets.    \/\nBALFOUR-QUEENS BAY\nHospital Improvement District\nQUEEN'S BAY \u2014 7 P.M.\nHome of Mrs. Quentin Whishaw\nSpeakers!\nA. K. McAdams, Dr. F. M. Auld and R. H. Procter.\nBALFOUR \u2014 B P.M. \u2014 Woodland Hall\nSpeakers:\nJ. W. Graham, A. K. MeAdami, Dr. F. M. Auld\n..... ond Mrs. F. W. M. Drew\nPHOTOGRAPHS\nQUESTION PERIOD\n1\nNew! 'Matchless1' Heating!\nOIL HOME HEATERS\nWITH  EXCLUSIVE ELECTRIC\nNo matches needed) All yeu do te\nhim the \u00aba|. Electric SElf-llghter\nlights yeur healen.\nDOWN... EASYTE RMS\ntxdusive Duo-Therm Ana furnituro styling!\n\u2022 More heat, cleaner heat, from every drop of oil\u2014\nwith Duo-Therm's exclusive Dual Chamber Burner.\n\u2022 Fine furniture Styling, beautiful mahogany finish\no Forced-heat circulation ahd fuel savings up to 25%\nwith Duo-Therm's exclusive Automatic POWER.\nAIR Blower.\n\u2022 2 wide-opening doors for radiant heat. Healthful\n.   Humidifier. Special Waste Stopper. Hundy waist-high\n\u2022\u25a0ttontroL .\"\u25a0:\nHave matchless comfort this winter end years to come;\nSee this new Duo-Therm Windsor now;\nEasy Payment Terms Arranged\nMc&Mc\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022'-      (NELSON) LTD.\n476 Baker St. PHONE 1300\n<\".\n_\n skM\n?\nWmlm&; Slllll*a:^Questions-?\nANSWERS\nBritish Columbia's\n.   Most interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sundiy by tht'\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street,   Nelson,   British Columbia.\nAuthorized os Second Class Mail,\nPost OHlco Deportment, Ottawa.      \u25a0   -\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDI? BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS,\nFriday, October 16,1953\n\u2022i' Memory\n' An investigator has written- iri ths\nFamily Doctor, published by the British Medical Association, that memory\nfailures are due primarily to emotional\nupsets. He conducted a classroom test\nto prove it, giving students a list of\nwords to remember and then Causing a\nnerve-shattering explosion that made\nthem forget most of the words.\nHe urged ss a cure for poor memory\nto concentrate only on remembering\nthe important things, holding that such\nmemories Would survive any upsetting\nexperience if the mind is not eluttered\nup with inconsequential.\nThat thesis can, be argued fairly\nconvincingly, but no one seeking a cure\nfor forgetfulness should ignore causes\nother than emotional upsets.\nThe school jpupil who forgot to do\nhis homework, for instance, needed no\nexplosion to keep his mind off the\nneglected duty. More often, certainly,'\nthe homework is forgotten because it\nis not looked forward to with pleasant\nanticipation, homework being what it\nsometimes is.\n\u2022 The man who forgets to pay a bill\nin a period of financial embarrassment\nwould, if the truth were known, have\nno excuse except that payment was too\ndisagreeable a thought to keep in\nmind.\nMany a date is forgotten when the\nengagement would mean visiting an\nunfriendly host, perhaps because the\nagreement was buried in some pigeonhole of the subconscious mind. Yet it\nis remarkable .how Of tett an umbrella\nor a hat can be forgotten where lt\nwould be a pleasure to gd back and\n.Set it.\nMost frequently forgotten of all'\ntilings are people's names. Not all are\nlost to memory because their owner\nmade no impression. Just as often,\nthe person's appearance or character\nor good deed was so memorable that\nthe name did not matter.\nIf one were to take the Briton's\nadvice, trying to retain names of only\nthe \"important\" ones, the result would\nbe highly unsatisfactory. Any .person's,\nname is important at the moment there\nis need for remembering it.\nHumor\nHumor implies a sure conception of\nthe beautiful, the majestic and the\ntrue, by whose, light it surveys and\nshapes their opposites. It is a humane\ninfluence, softening with mirth th*\nragged inequalities of existence,\nprompting tolerant views of Hfe,\nbridging over the space which separates the lofty from the lowly, the\ngreat from the humble. :\u25a0<.-\u25a0'\n\u2014K. P. Whipple.\nHorse and buggy days are passing\nout in Montreal. A cab imported-from\nEngland in 1786 has been wrecked in\ncollision with an automobile.\u2014Vancouver Province.\nThere -wtt, in tht sixteenth century, a\nfamous Frenoh monk and physician who\ntaught thtt \"laughter ll tht right of mm\"\ntiid thtt cheerfulness ls the best cure tor\nhuman ills, y _.\nHis philosophy is needed today os much\nll.lt wu in the yosrs before 1.03 when Fran-\ncols Rabelais lived and wrote his. eloquent\nallegories, Yet it required Americans to start\nand'to sustain a drive that is gaining headway to honor the author and again popularize\nhit principles. The French, who for too long\nhtv* neglected him, art traditionally a gay\nand happy people, but the Americans of today, apparently, have more to lough ibout.\nShortly otter World Wir Jl- a California\noouple \"adopted\" tht French village ot Mollle,\nnear Tours, tnd discovered thtt it contained\nthe neglected birthplace of Rabelais, Deciding\nthat the world could use more happiness and\ngood fellowship, they Joined with France's\nFriends of Rabelais to form tht international\nsociety of Companions ot Rabelais. All itt duet\nhive gone Into' tht work of restoring tha\nbirthplace Md establishing a Rtbtltls museum, Although tht society his mombors in\n23 countries on five continents, fully half, trt\nhere in the United, Stttts.\n-Even without Joining, there Is nothing to\ndeter anyone from Indorsing wholeheartedly\nthe Rtbelstitn principles upon which the\nmovement is founded: To love one's fellow\nman, to treasure liberty of thought, and to\nbelieve that laughter It the inalienable right\nof everyont.\u2014Spokasmtn Review.\nLove in Print\n\"Well over I hundred thousand editorials\nappear each yeir In tbe daily and weekly\nnewspapers of this country. Few ot the articles deal with love. This ls a bit odd, as, the .\npieces being unsigned, it might be thought\nthat the authors could feel free to let them-,\nselves go. If they had love In them it could\ncome out with not so much embarrassment\nas- If the articles were signed. Vet columnists\ndeal with love, or at least what posses for\nlove, tnd they put their names- to this Intimate subject. Authors of novels let themselves go on at great lengths about love, and,'\npoets make a full-time job of it; but in unsigned articles in the pressT Not love.\nPerhaps this is because the .unsigned article is the opinion df the piper, rather than\ntht individual writer, tnd a nawsptper, however adequate In other respects, scarcely qualifies as a great lover. A girl could love t\npressman, and a pressman might oven love t\ncertain press, but the whole newsptper is\nsomething else. Yet, understandable though\nthe lick of love editorials may be, this lack\nis indeed a flaw in our society. These short\nItems of comment that appear dally or weekly\nIn the newspapers ot Cinada are an important part of the realm, and no country can\n.flourish largely If lt ls concerned only with\nmeet and potatoes. Perhaps at least 'those few\npapers that are run by women could be expected to get up nerve enough to tackle tn\neditorial or so on love.\u2014Printed Word.\nMan's Yearly Intake\n(Windsor' star)\nAstounding as lt mty seem, the food,\nwater and air t man receives In t yetr amount\nto more than 300. pounds\u2014about ont tnd one-\nhalf tons, or 20 timet tht average man's\nweight     . \u25a0 -\nThis fact shows the gigantic expenditure\nof material required for life, and proves better\nthan words the changes which trt ctused\nhourly by every living being.\nAbout two and one-quarter pounds avoirdupois of dry food are required dolly for each\nIndividual. Of this, about three-quarters are\nvegetables, and the rest animal. At the close\nof a full year the amount- ls upward of 800\npounds. i\nEnumerating under the title of water all\nthe various drinks, the estimated quantity is\nabout 1900 pounds per annum .\nThe air received by breathing mty be\ntaken at 800 pounds.\nA consuming creature indeed is mm.\nOpen to tny reador, Names ot persons\ntiklnu questions will not bl publlshid.\nThan It nov oharoo for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT, SI ANSWERED\n' IV MAIL Swept wthtn there It ebvlom .\nnecessity fer prlvieys '''.-,.\nHomemtker, Nelson\u2014Please print formula\/for\ngood putt .that will lt-ob.\nTwo cup* of flour, Use cold witter. Add\nwater to flour, stir till heavy; paste and til\nlumps smoothed out, and keep adding water\n. until the consistency to pour easily. Cook over\nlow heat until transparent. Add four to five\ndrops of glycerine to prevent hardening, ind!\n\u2022bout one-quarter tetspoon formaldehyde,\n'which will prevent spoiling. Keep tightly\ncovered when hot In use, , , \u2022\nSubscriber, South Slocan\u2014Do you know\n',\u2022\u2022, where I can bay 30 pounds of rsw wool?\nI heed.it it soon as possible.\nPerhaps other readers can help.\nReader, Troll\u2014How many letters sre there in\nthe Hawaiian alphabet?\nThe Polynesian languages, one of which\nis spoken oh the Hawaiian Islands, belong to\nthe 'great Oceanic family ot speech, of which\nthere ere four branches, the other three being\nIvtelaneilan,' Mlcronesian, and Indonesian.\nThese four are clearly marked off from each\nother and so definitely spring from one common parent that it is customary to refer to\neach as mere dialect, .With dialects and sub-\ndialects Polynesia has almost a hundred variants ot the original tongue, all with varying\nalphabets and phonetics. The quickest way to\nanswer this question is to reply'there are five\nvowels (t, e.,1,.0, u) and .seven consonants\n(k, p, h, w, 1, m, n), which' are the backbone\nof the language as spoken In Hawaii. There\n\u201e are also inflections that can alter meanings,\ntnd reduplication of certain consonants (hh,\nfor instance, nn, end sometimes v) thtt moke\nit very difficult, for one who has not studied\nthe question, end who his. not been brought\nup on the Islands, to give e Comprehensive,\nehswer. The Encyclopedia Britannica mentions that owing to a lack of direct words It\nis: very- difficult to translate Polynesian languages into European speech'.\nK. L.'f.,'Nelson\u2014Is there Sny way of making\na waveset lotion at home? '\nBolt together for ten minutes eight ounces\nof water tnd one tablespoon flaxseed. Strain,\nodd- vegetable coloring it desired. Keep in\ncool place, at it will turn'sour after i few\ndays. '\nThe Teachers'\nConvention\n-. F. I. Peorea\ns We Can't All Retire\nTho people of France for years have been\nstetdily, cutting down the hours of work.\nThey hive cut it down per dty\/per week, per\nyear, and per lifetime. At the seme time they\nhave lagged fir behind thefr neighbors in\nmodernizing plant and equipment. As a result\noutput per mm in tht factory, mint tnd mill\nhis fallen fir behind the rate of. other Western natioiis, in some lines os much is 10 per\ncent ' '  \u00ab\nVirtually tveryene in Trtnee -retires au-\ntomatically on pension at 09, and some favored\nclasses tuch as miners, railway men and merchant marine Sailors, may quit 10 or even 15\nyears earlier than tost, There are mighty few\n\"Quarjer Century\" clubs among employees for\nthe simple reason that when a man or woman\nworka that long usually a pension ls waiting.\nVein, ago Marie Antoinette advised the\nFrench people to eat cSke when they ran out,\nof bread. By cutting hours of work without\nIncreasing output per hour, the modern\nFrenchman is-trying to keep his cake and eat\nit too. It can't be done, either In France or\nCanada.\nIt tikes a definite amount of real goods\nend services to keep any country clothed,\nsheltered and fed. Regardless ot my other\nfactor, somehow we must produce that definite amount and much more than that if we\n' wish to live well.\u2014The Financial Post\nYour Horoscope\nAvoid getting nervous and .tense, for this\nmay be a disappointing day when you will\nfeel baffled and unable to get ahead. Just\nkeep plugging along and get a good rest in\nthe evening.\nPress Comment\n(   \"DIAMOND LIL8\".\nGetting a pearl out ot an oyster lent so\nwonderful when you think of how many girls\nget a diamond out of an old crib.\u2014Toronto\nStar.\nIt li sometimes very pleasant to\nbe on the outside looking In, and\nafter years of attending teachers'\nconventions,, It is pleasant to go-is\na visitor;-and be able to appraise\none Objectively,'..-.\nThe- West  \u25a0 Kootenay-Boundary\nconvention li Held annually in different, cities.    This year It.ii in\nRossland, a very pleasant pltee it\nthli time of the yttr.       7\nTlie program is a long one and\nShows evidence of much thought,\nthi Jgh one gets tho impression that\nthe people in charge suffer from\nover anxiety to do the right thing-\nend  have  teachers  do  the  right\nthing also.    So the banquet ind\ndinct -Sri on Saturday night in\nthe hope they will refrain from\ngoing home 'HI early Sunday morning.  That is hard on. teachers who\nhave a long way to go, but doubtless they' Will stay, for tho Ross.\nlend people have a reputation for\ngood banquets.   .,     ......\nSERVANT OR MASTER ',',',\nThe convention opens with a public meeting. -The subjeot is a panel\ndiscussion entitled the \"School,\nCommunity Servsnt or-Maater.\"\nWhat they mean by that they don't\nsty, but tht panel, members Include representatives ot the church1,\ncity I government, industry, recreational groups, the press and radio,,\nservice clubs as well as the teaching\nprofession. JEvery body in fact but\nthe parents.' But it ls noteworthy\nthat everyone else knows all, about\neducation except the parents;\nCOFFEE NOTES\nFriday''starts the real work of\nthe convention with morning cot-\nfee, 0 to 9.30. It Is surprising how\nmany bright young things will last\nthrough the morning sustained only\nby a cup ot coffee and a doughnut,\nand in this half-hour they will exchange notes on ill sorts \u00b0' things,\nfrom tht number of children in the\nclass to where they got thit pretty\nhat. The rest of tht morning is\ndevoted to demonstration lesions.\nThese are htrd on the demonstrator, but highly popular with both\nyoung and old teachers. Everyone\nhas t cufloslty to see how someone\nelse handles the Job.\nElementary teachers  have always had a suspicion that high\nschool teachers don't know how\nto  teech  and  the senior  high\nIsn't demonstrating. They hove a\npanel \"Tht Efftoti ef Extrt Cur-\nrlcular tnd Community Activities\non    Acadomlo   Standards.\"     In\nother words, It Is all the stuff\nyour child does after sohool affecting his homework and itudlcs.\nDr. tTohn Frieson, newly appointed director of tho -Department, of\nExtension   UBC ::w!H sfeak .Jpri:\n\"Adult Education for'WBit?\" ' It\nwould be nice also if he said for\nwhom and why. Adults seem quite\nnice even if net educated.\nEXAMPLES NEEDED\nNo convention could possibly be\nheld, without some display of pur\nnetional concern for the poor re.\ntarded student, so.the first item on\nSaturday's program is \"Teaching\nReading to the. Slow Learner.\" It\nis a pity that they could not hsve\non hand Tommy and Henrys big,\nhandsome blonds, and six-fopt-two,\nwho never learned to read but who\nare now in the automotive Industry\nand seemingly quite content. It\nwould relieve somewhat tha sen-*\nsltlve professional consciences of\nour. primary teachers.\nThere sre other luncheons on\nSaturday with more speakers, and\nmore BCTF business in the afternoon. The whole affair will end\nwith a banquet and dance in the\nevening.\nAll thli yeu will agree It a\nretty fair weekend's werk.    Dp\nCanada Designs\nSecret Aircraft\nOTTAWA-(CP) - A top British\naviation industrialist ssid today\nCanada is designing secret aircraft\nprojocts so revolutionary In concept\nthere Is nothing to equal them in\n'the tree-world, ;      \/;\nSir Roy Dobson, chairman ot the\nboard of A. V. Roe Canada Ltd.\nahd. managing director of A. V.\nRoe and Co. Ltd., Manchester, told\na press conference that Canada\n\"takes no back seat\" to any country: in -aircraft .design;   '\nHe declined to disclose details ot\nthe secret projects, except to say\nthey aro being blueprinted at tho\nAvro plant at Malton, Ont., and to\nmake this prediction;\n\"Within IS years, there will be\nvertical take-off of plenes, eliminating take-off\" and landing-speed\nproblems. The planes will go\nstraight Up- ond then shoot straight\nahead?-.-\"\u25a0'     -y '\u2022 '\u25a0\"'  *\u25a0\u25a0\nSask. Hospital\nBars Reporters\n. SWIFT CURRENT, Sask. (CP)-'\nThe Union hospital board has decided to bar members ot the press\nfrom future meetings.\nThe action was taken Tuesday\nnight. The board decided to form\na press committee to release information, G. V, Roth, hospital board\nlegal advisor, said business of the\nInstitution is not'public and news\ncoming from the hospital should be\nreleased os It would be from a private corporation.:\nEnough Is Enough,\nSays U. K. Soldier\nACCRINOTON, England (AP)-\nRlfloman James Hlbbert came home\nfrom on enemy prison camp for the\nsecond time In eight years.\nHlbbert, S3, wss captured by the\nJapanese when the British Army\nsurrendered Singapore in 1042, He\nspent 3% years as a POW.\nBack In the uniform of the Royal\nUlster Rifles for the fighting in\nKorea, he-was captured'Sy the Chi-,\nnose when his tenk hit a land mine;\nIn January, 1951. Hlbbert spent on-\nother 2V_ years behind barbed wire.;\nRisked whether he will re-fenllst\nwhen his enlistment expires next\nmonth, Hlbbert replied: \"Not me.\nI've had enough.\".\nMalta, tbe British bastion in the\nMediterranean, his an area ot only;;\n84 square miles.\nLittle Confusion\n.At London Airports\n: LONDON (AP)-A French Sky-\nmaster from Paris with 37 passengers aboard received permission to\nland at London airport Wednesday\nnight.. The pilot soon radioed:\n\"Landed lately.\"\n\"Put on your landing lights,\",\nsaid the. puzzled airport control\ntower. \"We ctn't see you.\"\nThen the control phone rang.\n\"You lose a four-engined airliner?\" asekd a voice. \"This is\nNdrtholt. We have lt here.\"\nNortholt airport Is sight miles\nfrom London airport.\nThe pilot set his wandering Sky-\nmaster down at the right airport\n30 minutes later. He explained: \"My\ncompass wss out and I took a wrong\nturning.\"\nRoth airports were using the same\ndirection, runway.\nMount Kosciusko, highest peak In\nAustralia, reaches an altitude of\n7S.9,.eet. ,- .\n\u25a0i-js's., \u25a0jglSfc I,.,..,  \u25a0 \u2014,',, \u25a0\u2014....   ,-fc\t\nIt's Been Said\nLove looks through  a telescope; envy,\nthrough a microscope.\u2014Henry Wheeler Shaw.\nTheyTl Do It Every Time\n\u25a0 w\nTHEY LOV| A SAILORI .\nThe possibility of the Royal Canadian\nNavy taking over the air station at Summer-\nilde would present the tlcHUsh problem of\nthe senior lervlee succeeding the Junior. Even\nmore delicate personal adjustments md attitudes of the fair sex would be involved, but it\nti unlikely thet Bummerside girls would remain uncowollble.\u2014Chtrlottetown Guardian.\nToday's Bible Thought\nduni ML\nWe   derive   nourishment   from\nwisdom. The soul can hunger too.\nI havo esteemed tho words of\nthy mouth more then my necessary food.\u2014Job  23:12.\nI know Jfihe would win If she'd\nforgive him.-A wanderln' husband\nalways drops thi othor woman when\nbe wonts to feel reipeo.tible again.\n' \\       \u25a0     \"   \u25a0   .ss'V.'. I.'1'-    '\u25a0' ,'Vl '\u25a0 .    \"'\nOen. Sir Thomas Brisbane, governor of New South Wales who\ndied in 1821, catalogued 7385 stars.\n-      CLASSIFIED ADS OET.RESULTS.\ntesfoheri get mueh out efltf' They\nde.   It comes |at a time when the\nwork theed looks pretty grim, but\nthty meet others teachers and\nfind! thlt they hive troubles too.\nthty exehanga experiences tnd\ngain Idles whleh send them back\nto their classes with more confidence and hope,\nBut, if anything, the convention\nls too Intensive;   There should be\none afternoon of relaxation,  one\nafternoon when the teachers can\ngo shopping. Merchants should put\non convention specials.     For the\nyoung toacher just out of.Normal\nhas her first poy cheque, and what\nhappier .moment is there than when\nshe first-chooses and pays for her\nown clothes?\nThe program stands in need of\nbetter' proof-reading. It has recreational goups instead df groups,\nsnior high instead of senior high\nand ipeaki of Rossland in the Gay\nNlntles, not to mention a new md\nextraordinary verb in the sentence\n\"Mr. Johnson will chair the meeting.\"' In theso days when business men are threatened with chronic astigatlsm through looking for\nspelling mistakes more care should\nbe exercised.., \u25a0   7' 7 7 . .\nNevertheless, and taking it by\nand large, It is a- good program\nand .worth anyone's $10.\nAsjr -sW*H- Ms). I... but I MSl'l wrtl.l\nCef money qvhkly\nNIAGARA\nAUTO LOAN\nWith  proof of. ownership\nand your signature you can\n.to loan in minutes.\n1,000*. or mon, de-\n. on what you drive.\n>ng or short * term plane.\n\u2022toons to f 1,500 life insured\nat na extra catt to you. <\ntown gam ON    '\nMANY ntlENDlY WANS'\nYssis\n0.1     ,\nMonlMy\nPaym.nt\nNt>. s>!\nPaym.nll\ninto\n$63.60\n- 24' ' \u2022\n\u202200\n\" was\"\nU\n7S0\n70.35\nIS\n2B0\n44.63\na\nHI ACARA\nWilli :\\HS| ea^^sgssjWysMi\n540 Bqkor Street\nPhone 1638\nAn Atl-Car.adlan Cenpsvss- In ov.r 50 tllitt\nSUNDIY IOANS $\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab$ ILtNlllY IOANS) (Itt!\nADMIRAL\nREFRIGERATOR\n9.8 Cu. Ft.\n$379\nINTERNATIONAL\nHARVESTER\nREFRIGERATOR\nThe Popular 0.2 Cu. Ft\n$295.50\n\"WESTINGHOUSE\"\nELECTRIC RANGE\n$390-95\niWAVE\"\n.   ELECTRIC\nCOTTAGE RANGE\nh   ^BSNMX\"\n$255.50\nCOME IN! Ask about all the\nnew Frigidail-e Refrigerators\nAT THESE\nPRICES\n\\\nSale Start!\nTomorrow\nSaturday 17th\nECONOMAT\n$289\nINTERNATIONAL\nHARVESTER\nREFRIGERATOR\nSA CU. Ft\n_;.\"' |$33fr;..\nINTERNATIONAL\nHARVESTER\nREFRIGERATOR\n7.4 Cu. Ft\n$259\n\"GURNEY't\nELECTRIC RANGE\n$355.95\n\"TAPPAN\"\nGAS RANGE\n$272\n\"BENDIX\"\nDIALOMATIC\n$265\nFred Welsh & Son\n321 BAKER ST.\nAPPLIANCES AND PLUMBING SERVICE\n. A Complete Plumbing and Heating Service\nPHONE 1748\n\t\nm$8M&^^\n mtit^mm^mm^m.\nmw*\u2122\u00b0>\nmmm^w^mmm^,\n\u2014\nmmw\t\n____--____\nWS^\n\u00ab!|t Pay* To Buy Quality''\nOnly 2\nDays Left\nOUR GIGANTIC\nOPPORTUNITY *\nSALE\nENDS TOMORROW\nSATURDAY 17TH\nR.ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1908\nEALTH PLAN URGED\nTRURO,   N.S.   (CP)   - United\niine Workers (CCL) .Maritime\npnventlon Wednesday urged -the\n.deral government to inaugurate\nnational health plan as soon as\nosslble. A resolution passed un-\nnimously said tbe federal treasury'\nhealthy while many citizens can-\not afford necessary medical care.\nBlack neckerchiefs of British\nravy sailors commemorate the\neath of Admiral Nelson in 1808.\nluy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nWEEKEND\nSPECIAL\n(BY REQUEST)\nPEANUT\nBRITTLE\nTH.. BUTTER KIND\nFriday,and Saturday Only\n#c the Wlb.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nVets we have a nice selection\nof party favors, suitable prizes\nand all the necessities to make\nyeur party a gay success,\nWe Will Have Sea-Foam\nJb;.    Thli Weekend..\nI |   v \u2022 \u2022 ,\u2022''\u2022\"\n7 *\nMeet Your Friends at Rannlger's\nitfWhere Candy Is a Specialty,\nBi     Not a Sideline.\n466 BAKER ST.\nNelion, B. C.\nNuptial High Mctss Sung\nAt Rossland Weddmg\nROSSLAND \u2014 Nedine ' Helen,\nelder daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Fleury of Rossland, and John\nLloyd Mclnnis, only son' of Mr., John\nMclnnis and the late Mrs. (Block-\nburn) \u2022 McGinnls > of Vancouver,\nwere unite, in holy matrimony at\nan Impressive nuptial, high mass\nsung by Rev. A. K. Mclntyre, Vicar-\nGeneral, in the.' Sacred Heart\nChurch here Saturday morning,\nThe altars were decorated with\nlarge mauve and white chrysanthemums and green fern and: cedar,\nthe gueBt pews, marked with tiny\nsprays of white button 'mums end.\nWhite satin ribbon. The' wedding\nmusic, with Dr. Richard Bourchier\nas organist and Mr. E. B. O. Bourchier aa choir, leader, waa lovely.\nThe fair, stately bride entered\nthe church on the arm of her father;\nher formal white wedding gown\nfashioned of soft silk velvet featur:\ned sweetheart v neckline end My\npoint long sleeves, a shirred bodice\nadd full circular skirt. With it she\nwore a veil of net' illusion held in\nplace by a. coronet of pearls. Big\nwhite chrysanthemums were used\nfor the bride's bouquet.\nMrs.. W, Skelcher and Miss\nYvonne, Fleury, sister of the bride,\nwere her attendants. They were\ngowned\";alIke in forest green silk\nvelveteen strapless, formats mode\nwith full circular skirts with which\nthey wore matching boleros; their'\nbouquets were gold 'mums end\nplunoss. - ts\u00bbj i .\nMr. Vern Cody attended the\ngroom. Alfred Fleury'; the bride's\nbrother, and Mr. Frank Fertlg were\nthe ushers.\nFollowing the double ring ceremony a wedding breakfast was\nserved to seventy wedding guests,\nall intimate friends and relatives,\nIn the. Masonic: Temple banquet\nroom, which was decorated with\nbaskets of gladioli and large yellow\nchrysanthemums, The bride's table,\ncovered with a hand-made ell-over\ncutwork Ivory colored cloth, was\nlovely with silver and was centred\nwith a massive green pottery bowl\nfilled with yellow and bronze\n'mums, flanked with ivory lighted\ntapers in matching pottery holders,\nThe three-tiered wedding ceke,\nmade by the bride's grandmother,\nMrs. E. M. Fleury of Nelson, was\non a separate table which was\ncovered with a linen cloth with fine\ndrawn work and solid silk colored\nembroidery, the work ofthe bride's\nmaternal grandmother, the late\nMrs. Alfred Treglllua of Nelson;\nthis cloth being 80 years old]. A\nwreath of orange blossoms and a\ndlMiftd\nMl  \u00ab\"\nm\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel\n& Transfer.\nNot just one - but Mo power transformers are used on\nthe Spa-ton TV chassis! It costs a Urde more, but itjpays\noff handsomely In better pictures and more dependable\nperformance. In such an important investment, don't cheat\nyourself. Come in and find out whet TWIN POWER\ncan do.\nWe have a number of television sets operating successfully In the Salmo, Kinnaird, and Castlegar areos.\nWe have a 70 foot travelling' antenna probe and the\nbelt in test equipment. Ask te have a test made in\nyour area without cost or obligation.\nSETS PRICED FROM $299.75\nEasy Payment Termi Arranged\nMc&Mc\n476 Boker St.\n(NELSON) LTD.\nPhone 1300\npair of doves each.carrying a wedding ring, topped the cake.\nMonslgnor Mclntyre said the\ngrace.. George Lambert, uncle of\nthe bride, proposed her toast to\nwhich the groom responded. Following the toasts and the reading\not telegrams, the bride end groom\nmade the first cut in the'wedding\ncake, after whleh Mrs. George Lambert cut the cake,-\n< following the weddlAg breakfast,\n\"open house\" was held at the home\nof the bride's parents, when more\nthaq; 100 guests called. Autumn\nflowers graced the living rooms.\nOn the receiving line with the\nbride end groom were the bride's\nmother and the groom's sister, each\nattractively attired In navy blue\nwith light accents end wearing corsages of pink carnations and fern.\n, For her honeymoon, the bride\nchose a smart navy woollen jacket\nand soft light' plaid dress with\nmatching wide scarf in the new\nautumn fashion, A close-fitting light\nyellow hat and gloves and navy beg\nend shoes completed her costume.\nHer,, corsage was of pale yellow\ncarnations and she carried a; grey\nall-wool fleece topcoat. Miss Catherine Irwin caught the bribe's bouquet .     77.7 ..-,  ,   . '.''\"\" '\u25a0\u2022'\nOut-of-town guests included J.\nMclnnis, father of the groom, Mrs.\nMerle Brown, the groom's sister,\nDonald Brown, nephew; Mrs. Cody,\nVern Cody, Mr. and Mrs. W, Skelcher, Miss Catherine Irwin, all of\nVancouver; Mrs. Dave Bell of South\nSlocan; from Nelsoa come Mrs. E.\nM. Fleury, George Fleury; Mr. and\nMrs. George Lambert; also Mr. and\nMrs. Ross Fleming, Dolores McLeod,\nMrs. -'red Nichols, Mrs. Cox and\nMr, A. Tregillus. The bride's sister,\nMiss Yvonne Fleury,. flew down\nfrom Fort St John to be present\nThe bride, who hes been with the\nRCAF in eastern Canada for over\ntwo years, is well known in Nelson, where she attended high school,\nfor three years, She Wee w^, the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce staff\nbefore being transferred to Calgary\nand Vancouver. The groom has recently been stationed at Penhold,\nAlte., -by. the RCAF.- The young\neouple will live there.\nThe French Islands of St Plerre-\nMiquelOn near Newfoundland have\na combined area of 88 square miles.\n, TbwtiscAagL\njty. t&uuut (tfhsudsui\nPRETTY AND COSY)\nFor big and little sisters \u2014 this\ncosy cap-and-mltten set ls quick,\ncrochet in long double shells and\nsingle crochet Cold weather coming\u2014crochet thla set now in lightweight knitting worsted;\nPattern 765; directions for Child's\nand Misses' crochet set\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit Complete, Illustrated sew\nchart shows you every step.\nSend thirty-five cents (35c) in\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor. this pattern. Print plainly size,\nnam's, address, style number.\nSend your order to Marian Martin, eara of The Nelson Dally News,\nPattern Dept\nJamaica, largest, island of the\nBritish West Indies, covers Mil\nsquare miles.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n*3L   *oj\n\/A\nIL-AMtR'\nPerk up small v\nappetites with\nAYLMER\nCATSUP\n\".if\" '\nFormer Nelson Miss\nWed at Vancouver\nVANCOUVEB-A lace handkerchief worn by the bride's mother\nSnd grandmother, on their bridal\nays,' was the \"something old\" In the\nlovely ensemble worn by .Catherine Elizabeth Hinoka for her. marriage to Horry Lindsay Cantlin.\nThe ceremony took place In' St.\nMary's Anglican Church Oot 10,\nwith .Canon Dudley Kemp of Isolating. .-\n, The bride, who was given in mar-\nrlageby her brother, Mr. H. A,\nHlncks, IS the daughter of Capt.\nand Mrs. Henry Hlncks of Nelson,\nB.C. The groom's parents, Mr,\nand Mrs. H. At Cantlon, came from\nSaskatoon for the wedding,\nA floor-length gown of Chantllly\nlace was worn by the bride. Her\nlace headdress was outlined with\nseed pearls and held a chapel veil,\nShe carried a white prayer book,\ntopped with an orohid.\nMiss Connie Centlin and Miss\nLois McEDieron were her attend\nants. Frocked alike, they wore\ntoast-colored net over taffeta -' in\nballerina style, end they carried\nbaskets filled with bronze mums\nand wheat heads.\nMr, Kenneth A. Downey was best\nman,, and ushering were Mr. Bill\nCantlbn, Mr. Bob Olsen and Mr.\nDouglas Heal.\nAt.jhe-reception held at the home\not Mr. and Mrs.' D. Fisher,. the\nhost proposed the toast to the bride.\nShe Is a 1853 graduate of Vancouver\nGeneral Hospital ,as is Miss Mc-\nElheran. . '-,\nThe honeymoon ls being spent In\nthe Interior of B.C. end at southern\npoints, For travel, the bride chose\na' suit of ancient hunting Fraser\ntartan, with 'mltchlng: hat Accessories were brown and her topcoat\nof- camel hair,. to which a white\norchid was pinned.\nThe popular newlyweda will reside at 352 West Eighteenth In Vancouver.\nson\nNel\nSocial\ni;itehytfo.SimMie,ltieAylmarUredit>a*.\n\"Your childron will eat without\neoazing,\" says' Mr. Sunshine,\n\"when, Aylmer Catsup makea\nmeat ond vegetables taste so good.\nChildren love that Aylmer \"true\n'  ' tomato\" flavor... and thoy need\nL'   '. Vitamin C Got the: pun catsup\n\u25a0rtt. that's Born of Sunshine for Richer\n*jL  Flavor... A-Lmeb Cat-tip.\nHfOUR FAMILY DESERVES AYLMER QUAUT?\nSee YOUR FRANCHISE!) BRIDAL BILL MAUR\nCOLUNSON'S\nJEWELLERY\n561 Baker St. '-. Phono 120\nNelson's kDiamond Headquarters\nFOR  A COMPUTE\nSELECTION   OF\nDIAMOND RINGS\nSparkling Diamonds In Hie\nmoil boauliful selling! you\never \u00bbw\u2014yeu'llilrn) a\n<omp.lo.le selection lit our .\nDiamond Department.\nBridal Bell's value prices\nbegin al $37.50, so come\nin soon and let us help you\nchoo.se that extra special\nChristmas gift.\n$.50.\nWi-dlns ilis sum\n$110.\nlimit klmvm CfetiittM\nUSE OUR EASY IAY-AWAY PLAN\nPHON* 144\nFISHING TRIP -...-. Mr. and Mrs.\nKerby Grenfell, Mr. and Mrs. Frank\nMcClellan and .Mr. and Mrs. Carl\nMoore of Spokane have-returned\nfrom a fishing trip to Gerard,\n\u25a0 ,,- :. \u2022  .*.-'\u2022 -\n: BETOEN . . . Mr. and Mrs. E.\nQuirk and daughter, Marian, have\nreturned from a five-month trip to\nEngland.\nFROM LETHBRIDGE ...Mr.\nand Mrs. Grant Clark and two\ndaughters have arrived from Leth.\nbridge to,moke their home in Nel.\nson and have\" taken up residence on\nthe North Shore.\n\u2022 \u2666-*'\u25a0\u25a0'.-\nTO NEW WESTMINSTER  ; .\nMr. and Mrs. J. F. Waters, 811 Car.\nbonate Street leave Saturday for\nNew Westminster to visit their son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. S. Bryson.\n\u2022 \u2022  * .   \"\nSBWING CIRCLE ... The Ladles'\nAuxiliary to Fraternal Order of\nEagles held a sewing circle Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs.\nJ. C. Blight. Co-hostess was Mrs.\nW. Shewchuk. A guessing contest\nwu won by Mrs. D. H. Froudfoot.\n.......\n. GERRABD, TRIP . . . E. W. Ko-\npecki, J. Hei-tridge, W. C. Murphy\nand D. T. Lfttlewood have returned from a weekend fishing trip at\nGarrard.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHUNTING TRIP ... J. R. Bailey,\nJ. J. McEwen, Ted SwendSon, C.\nSuitor and W. .Gold leave Sunday\non a hunting trip to Vauxhall, Alberta.\n. \u2022  \u2022  \u2022  \u25a0\n. WEDDING BELLS ... Mr. and\nMra. Alexander H. Murray of the\nIndian Reserve Staff, Glelchen,\nAlta., and Mr. and Mrs. William\nArnsdorf and family of Vancouver,\nhave arrived In the city to attend\nthe wedding of their sister, Miss\nEsther Arnsdorf, to Mr. John W.\nLucas, which takes place today.\nWhile'here they are guests of their\nmother, Mrs. Ida W. Arnsdorf, 412\nSilica Street. Other out of town\nguests expected to arrive are Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Wagner, Mr. and Mrs.\nF. Wagner and families, Trail, and\nMr. George Trounce, Vancouver.\n\u25a0 \u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nHONORED.. . . Mrs. M. Brader,\nSelby Street, entertained Sunday\nnight In honor of Miss Esther Arnsdorf, October bride-elect Games\nwere enjoyed and after luncheon\nvas served Miss Arnsdorf was presented with a combined gift from all\nwhich was wheeled in a decorated\nbuggy by Miss Helen Brader.\nNew Arrivals ef\nPumps and Straps\nColors: Black,\nBrown, Navy,\ni Red. Cuban\nand High\nHeels,\n411 Baker St.\nOver 150 Attend\nParty\nSecond in-a series of coffee parties wss attended by more than\n160. persons at pariah hall of the\nChurch of the Redeemer Wednesday. Proceeds of tile event sponsored by women of the congrega-,\ntion, will go towards purchase of\na new stove ior the! parish hall\nkitchen..\nFlowers,decorated the hell and\nthe tables were covered with gaily\ncolored clothe and vases of flowers.\nMrs. W- J. Silverwood was'eon*\nvener end waa assisted by Miss S.\nLea, Mrs. C. Ward, Mrs. Frank\nPennoyer, Mrs. A. G. Boss, Mrs. J.\nP. Horswlll and Mrs, E. DeFoe were\nirt'the kitchen. Mrs. B. Florendino\nand Mrs. W. Bailey were at the\nbake table, Mrp. V. Thompson and\nMrs. S. Sjostium at fishpond tables,\nand Mrs. R. Phillips and Mrs. T.\nHalsey the rummage table. Mrs.\nJack Burgess and Mrs. R. Brown\nsold Christmas cards and Mrs. H.\nB. Forse was cashier.\nJack Burgess and Rev. Canon W.\nJ. Silverwood were welters. 8.\nHaydon was \"fireman.\"\nAdvertisers Favor\nNewspaper Columns\nMONTREAL (CP)-Advertislng\nmen were told Thursday that national advertisers are beginning to\nreturn to the newspaper as their\nprincipal advertising medium.\nErie Wilson, advertising director\nof the Montreal Star, in his presidential address to the Newspaper\nAdvertising Managers' Association\nof Eastern Canada, said advertising\nlineages have generally shown\nsatisfactory, increases during the\nlast year.\nAmong newspaper executives In\nadvertising there had been en awakening to the realisation that more\ncan be done about selling their\nmedium to advertisers, he said.\nGreetings from Western Canada\nwere conveyed by John Toogood,\npresident of the Newspaper Advertising. Managers' Association of\nWestern Canada.\nThe Newfoundland dog, fearless\nin water, may weigh up te 140\nor J50 pounds. -\nNELSON DAILY NIWS,' FRIDAY, OCT. 16, 1933 \u2014 8\nPTA Welcome\nCommittee Named\nWit!} the objective of welcoming\nto the city newcomers, who have\nchildren attending the Central\nschool, a committee was formed by\nthe school's Parent-Teacher Association at its monthly meeting Wednesday.\nConsisting of the mothers ot one\nchild from each grade, the purpose\nof the committee is to' make\nstrangers feel welcome and to en-\ncourage parents to join the P-TA.\nElection of officers was held, with\nMrs. L.' Catley who headed the\nassociation last year, again being\nacclaimed president The position\nof vice-president was left vacant\nfor the pr client.\nOthers elected were Mrs. Peter\nRobinson, secretary;, Eldred - K,\nEvans, treasurer; Mrs. Irwin Black,\nprogram convener; Mrs. Golling,\nmembership - convener; Mrs. Sjo-\nberg, sunshine convener;'Mrs. Williams, msgazine subscriptions; Mrs.\nEarl Wilson, community standards\nconvener; Mrs. Hlggens, hospitality\nconvener; Mrs.'M. Jurlloff, press\nreporter, and Mrs. Fyke, pianist\nBy an almost unanimous - vote,\nmembership tees were set at $1 per\nyear, President Mrs. Catley emphasizing that the P-TA waa not a\nmoney-making organization.\nCentral school's now principal, B.\nB. Stallwood was welcomed, and\nhe in turn introduced e number of\nthe teachers on his staff to the as\nsembled parents,\nA type of billiards was played\nin Greece as early as 400 BC.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll!\n$5.oo\nTRADE IN ALLOWANCE\nFor Yeur Old Bed'Spring, re- -\ngordless of age or condition, y.\nwhen you purchase a new\nBed Spring\nAt Our Regular Low, Prices ef \",.-.\n$18.80 and up.\niiiiliiilHlliliilliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuni\nCalgary Newsman\nLeaves Hospital\n\"SPOKANE (AP)-Harry Scott, of\nCalgary, Alta.Vt Injured in a gas-\nexplosion that killed his wife, was!'\nreleased from the hospital here\nWednesday after 44 days of treatment\nScott, 68, said he will remain In\nSpokane tor about' a week for \u25a0\nfurther medical observation. Mrs.\nScott was fatally injured in the.\nexplosion at a motel here. She\nhad struck a match to light a gas j\nstove.\nScott a former newspaperman,\nnow is public relations representative for a Calgary brewery,\nASTHMA\nGet wetoomo\nrelief tarn tbe\nw-cejhu. gasp-\nIns straggle for breath caused btf Ast\u2014\u2014ul\n-nk\u00ab Ras-HUh, spedaDy nmd- towfave\nAsthma misery. Helps yea Shap end-\nwork in comfort. Don't km aswUbir\nSight's sleep. Take Templcton'\u2022___\u25ba*!AS.\ntoday. 6Sc Sh3S tt dnjggllU. BBB\nECONOMICAL\nBEAUTY\n(PROCESSED LAMB)\nFull Length, Va, and\nShorties in Rich\nCinnamon Shades.\nSmart ihawl collars with\ncocktail euffi overlapped\nwith velvet buttons..\nPriced From\nsBSw\nto\n$195.00\nTRAIL RESIDENTS are reminded that these beautiful coats\nare also available at MARLATT'8.\nGREENWOOD FURS\n580 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 272\nIt's a different\npicture when you\n\u2022    own a\nLENNOX\nAIRE-FL0 HEATING\nWarm Air Furnace\nGas or Oil Fired; Forced\nLENNOX provides a new high degree of\neven, draft-free warmth and comfort\nwith exclusive engineering principles ef\nPerima-flo heating.\nLENNOX supplies you with an Individually engineered ' installation which\ncompletely solves your heating problem.\nAutomatic Humidifier\nLENNOX comet equipped with an automatic humidifer. It'i always on the\njob, adding the proper amount ef moisture to the warm, clean, circulating\nair. Guards against that harsh, dry feeling in note and throat, Prevents\nfurniture from drying out. Ha* solid copper float' chamber and cover . . .\nevaporating pan of vitreous enameled steel... porous Vapo Glass segments,\nperfect far quick evaporation.\nThe cleanest heat obtainable. NO ASHES \u2014 NO DIRT. Ghooie your model\nef LENNOX fired by ROCKETGAS or OIL\nAik about our heating survey \u2014 It'i free\n. \u2022 y   \u2022      \u25a0  \u25a0 - \\     \u25a0\nMcKay & Stretton Ltd.\n532 BAKER ST.\nYOUR HOME PLANNING CENTRE\nPHONE 1555\n' ;.;..'; -   7 \u25a0 \u25a0,. .-.:;-.\n.. -. .i .     .-\u25a0\u25a0-.. Sfltst \u25a0:  t  iMfe..._-,--', I  ,\u25a0..-.-....-\u25a0  i     >,,'_.. ..,:'.'\u25a0 '.-..::.\u25a0. ::'''..'!'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0.\n \u25a0 '\niw\nm\n<#^\n\"*\n\u00ab ^- NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 1$, 1*53\nLung Cancer Said\nOn the Increase\n^ TORONTO (CP)wLung cancer ls\njbn the increase in both North Ara.\neric* and Europe, the Toronto\nbranch ef the Canadian Cancor So\ndety was told.'\nDr. John F. W. King, director of\nprofessional service, for .the American Cancer' Society, said research-\n, era are studying the effect of air\npollution in lung irritation.\n; He said also thst research has\n'shown lung cancer Is 10 times as\n' common. among heavy smokers as\namong non-cmokers.\n7*?\n\u25a0:t\nYou Gai\n\u00ab   \u25a0*\u00a7**\nBEST 7*   ?\ntor only    \u25a0      M*\u00ab\nNets Law Price\n, Memphis,. Tonn\u2014Clarence Saun\nders, 72, the man who invented to.\nday's supermarkets, making ahd\nlosing $15,000,000 on them. \u2022\u25a0'.\nBlddeford, Me.r-Rev. Athanaslus\nIsedoux, 04, professor of history and\nphilosophy ot St. Francis Colloge,\nBlddeford, Me.\nCGRA Grades Major\nCanadian Cities\n~ VJCTORIA (CP)-i-Centrallsatlon\nof traffic responsibilities helped to\ngive Victoria third-place tie with\nEdmonton In a grading of major Canadian cities on excellence of traffic control.   ,\nJacques Barrlere, Montreal traffic\nengineer, Thursday listed faults and\nvirtues of traffic in cities of 90,060\npopulation and mora in an address\nto the Canadian Good Roads Association convention here.\nVictoria and Edmonton had a net\nscore of 13.. Vancouver topped the\nlilt with a net 21 and Calgary .was\nsecond vjlth (0. Ottawa was last\nwith minus id,.\nOTTAWA (dP) \u2014 The C a n a da\nGazette, published a proclamation\nin a special edition Thursday formally setting Thurtday, Nov. 12 as\nthe date for the meeting of the first\nsession of tho 22nd Parliament.\nQmante&t\nPRESTONE\nBRAND\nANTIFREEZE\nwhile ybn Watt at\t\nEMPIRE MOTORS\n803 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 1135\nOcyled \"little\/;\nIt\ni.\n! 1\n' \u20142\nSAUSAGE\nAT   YOUP   FOOD   STORE I\n..'\nI?\nP\nWATER reveals\nwhisky's\ntrue flavour\nPut Seagram's \"83\" tb the water\ntest. Water, plain or sparkling, reveils a '\nwhisky's true, natural flavour\nand bouquet;\nSeagrams \"83\"\n^anadian.'WhUkjf'\n0y> Seagrams wy* Sure\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by\nIke Liquor Control Board or by the Govornmopt of British Columbia\n'    .    . s      <    ,\n\u2022\u25a0:y,y.,y^y sr'yJ:-\ni . ::.:-::':y,::.::\nDesert PMted by Weird Craters\nAs Angry Cloud Soars 10,000 Feel\nBy DUNCAN HOOPER\nWOOMERA, Australia- (Reuters)\n\u2014Scientists Thursday moved into\nthe dead \"moon crater\" seared into ihe Australian desert by tho explosion of Britain's second atomic\nweapon.\nShielded trom deadly atomic rays\nin \"space suit'' costumes bt heavy\nprotective clothing, they began to\nassess the results of the explosion\nset off \u00bbt 7 axe. local time....\nElectronic devices in a SOO-foot-\nhlgh steel lattice tower carrying\nthe weapon had flashed data to.\nwaiting experts until the explosion\nvaporized it In a huge bleat, which\nburned a circular blotch a quarter\nof a mile across in the' desert.\nThe whole countryside was da*\nluted' with light, dimming the\nmornln(t ?un, .. .\u25a0 .7\nThe blast roeketted a peach-colored cloud more than 10,000 feet\nInto the air, It whipped setose the\nred plain country of the. secret test\nsite, scarred with \"claypan\" craters like the surface of a- dead\nplanet, .-..\nStunted trees and vegotation were\neither Incinerated or laid flat like\nscythed grass. ,7   .7 \":\nSir William Penney, Chief British\natomic scientist, watched the blest\nwith more than 100 other 'scientists\nand about SOi1 technicians.\nReporters watched tbe blest from\na ridge 18 miles away.   ,    '   .'\nFrom there the weapon tower\nwas visible projecting above the\neastern horizon.\nA loudspeaker crackled a time\ncheck at 4:14 am. ... again at\n6:15 a.m.\nWhite-clad technicians scrambled\nIn the distance and somewhere\ndesert birds could be heard twittering. - \u2022\u2022\u2022'-' '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 ; -, '.-\u25a0\nZIRO HOUR\nThe zero hour neared.\nThe last min left the power\narea in a Jeep.\nThe lbudspesker voiced counted\nthe seconds: \"four, three, two, one,\nzero.\" A sudden flesh'of light and,\n'You may turn around nows\"   .\nThe atomic flash swept across\nthe arid country like a super-\nsearchlight casting strange fleeting shadows where in bright sunlight no shadows, should have been,\nAn angry boiling mass of Incandescence forked with violent red\nand gold flashes was transformed\nIn a split second to a mounting\ncolumn of dust and smoke.\nThe column tore upwards to form\na mushroom whloh almost Immediately bent first into .cauliflower\nshape and then into a strange\nquickly passing resemblance of\nsome fantastic human profile.\nEARS TING.LE\nThe blast struck with a feeling\nof slight spongy pressure and 'a\ntingling In the ears as the resound\nlng crack came from the vaulted\nsky to be followed within seconds\nby a second bsng.\nThe brown and peach colored\ncloud drifted away, frayed by\nwinds.\nLater when the press party made\nan aerial survey after the blast\nthe target srea looked like a glgan\ntic bottle of Ink hurled on a red\ntable cloth.\nDuke Has   ;\nSuccess Formula\nLONDON (AP)-The Duke bf\nEdinburgh said Thursday an 'Industry that wants high productivity\nmust concentrate on building up a\nhappy.work torCe. .'.-\"\nAnd this Is a matter'of spirit;\na,que|tlqh of \"the proper handling\"\nof employees, the duke told a luncheon of the National Union of Manufacturers.'.' 7,7   .'-)'. '. \" t\\.~,\"\n\"No amount of ettle-ency exports, .labor saving devices, canteens or even pension schemes will\nnecessarily , inakje any' difference\nto the spirit of the work people,\ntike, the eld song\u2014'It's not what\nyou do, It's the way that you do It.'\n\"That's what get results.' In my\nopinion, the working, formula is:\nHappiness plus efficiency equals\nhigh productivity.\"       .  \u25a0       \u2022;\nBREAK WHITE 8J.AVER8 ;,\nPARIS (Reuters) \u2014 Trenoh police' In Paris: and Algeria said\nWednesday they had 'broken, the\nfirst link in a chain of white slave\ntraffickers shipping French girls\nto brothels In North Africa. A\nNorth African, Ahmed Ablteboul,\nknown as \"Jose the Tatooed,\" was\narrested In Paris after ona, of his\nvictims, an 18-year-old girl named\nMlcheline, was' found by polled In\nan Oran hospital, badly beaten.\nFIRE ON SHIP   ' V '\".-\u25a0'\"\"\nUVERPOp^, Bngjahd   (AP),-^\nThe American cargo ship   James\nLykes, a fire burning in her No.\n2 hold;: berthed here Thursday after her SOS brought; flreflghtlng\nand,rescue craft to her side, The\nmerchantman- flashed a radio call\nfor  help.off this port  and  fire-\nboats rushed out to her, They d_\ncldedit would be safe for her ti\nenter dock.  \u25a0\nVia mme \"John Pleyei> c Sons*\nee ike potkoje li your guarantees tbd\nev\u00abty cljarello Is smooth onilrtA.  \u25a0'\u25a0-\u25a0\nCanada's Mildest (fyarette\nSalmon Sneer at\nWaller Reuther\nVANCOUVER (CP)-BrltlSh Columbia salmon refused to affiliate\nwith the CIO.\nDespite a morning to dusk all-\nout effort by CIO president Walter\nReuther to entice the fish onto his\nhook, they weren't having any.\nMr. Reuther was a-gUest aboard\nthe- Tempest III, along with his\nassistant Jack Conway, Jim-Bury,,\nretiring secreary of the Vancouver\nLabor Council (CCL), and Ed Ken-\nney   (IWA), research director.\nConway caught tyo grilse and\nBury landed one..\nJagan Calls to\nNehru for Help\nGEORGETOWN (Reuters)\u2014Former Premier Cheddi Jagan Thursday urged Premier Nehru of India to help combat Britain's \"undemocratic action against his' deposed regime in British Guiana.\nJagan sought permission from\nNehru to present*his case before\nIndia's Parliament in New Delhi.\nEarlier, Jagan cabled the .Indian\ndelegation at the United Natlqns\nfor help but received no reply.\nNehru has csmpalgned incessantly tor greater independence of\nBritain's colonial possessions. So\nfar, however, he ha* not stepped\ninto the Brltlsh-Guiitna dispute.\nSmall Majority For\nNorway's Lqborires\nOSLO (AP)\u2014Official results, announced Wednesday night in Nor-'.\nwegian parliamentary elections\ngave the governing Labor party a\nfour-seat majority.\nThe legislature's 180 seats were\ndistributed thus: Labor 77, Conservatives 27, Agrarians 14, Christ.\ntan Democrats, 14, Liberals 15,\nCommunists 8.\nTh4 Labor party has been in office the last lt years.\nPILES that\nItch and Burn\nf yon sow suffer from tht ttohlsg lorenesi\nand burnifil piin of pile* yon cu bt\nclped.\nJuit gtt 1 piokBRo of Hflm-Roid, u\nnteiml pUt treitment, it uw drug -tore\nnd ut \u25a0\u2022 directed. 'You will bt pleated\nt bow quickly your pile trouble fi relieved.\n>nly 11.59 for the big 60 tablet package.\nIf you ete not 100%. Bleated altar Unrig\nII.-m.Rf.nl 2 or 3 daya. aa t test, ask for\nyour money hacks Refund agrt*meot, by\nall drill atorea.      .       !t1\nPROOF AGAIN-OF MORE FOR YOUR MONEY WHEN YOU BUY\nAutomatic Defrosting at a Low, Low\nPMl(rW\u00bbcltr\u00bb\nSuper-Freezer Chest I\nPorcelain\nRoll-to-You\nShelf!\n2 big, roomy\nHydra tors!\nPowered by\nMeter-Miser!\nOnly Frlgldaire gives you a 1953 nine\ncubic foot refrigerator with completely\nautomatic defrosting at the price you eari\nbuy thit Master Model MS-90! It's another\noutstanding example of the low prices\nmade possible by Frigidaire's huge new\nproduction facilities at Scarboro, Ontario.\nSee all ihe Frigidaire Refrigerators at you.  higidaire Dealers\n\u2022IT*. \u00ab*\u00a3 Full-Width low\ntomptratur* st#__w holds 47\ntss. ftoms food.. Cvcla-mollo\n\u2022ell-d-frsnllstg. Two Hydrator..\nPoor shtlvti.\nMODIL DMft Capacity 9 ess.\nft. Food Frooior bold. 4..B lbs.\n\u25a0frown foods.Aluminum sh.lves.\nOno Roll-to-You shelf. Cyila-\nmatlc .olf-dofrostlntj Two bio\nHydrotors- Door \u00bbh.lv._.   .\nMODE- MS-SJ. Sterog. spans\n8.6 tu. ft. Full-wldlh Super.\n, Fnsssst Chtil Md. M lb..\nfroitis food.. Automatic Reitt\ndofrostlnoiS full width' .Mint,\ne.movabl. holf-shilf. Hydrator\n!.'\/_ ql\u00bb. Door .halve.. \u25a0 \"\nft.  Supar-Frsuissr Chosl hold.\nttiirtwodi. Two rss-\nilf-shalv... Hydrotor\nswoi-tt.   Full-wllh\n; Mor llnlvts..\n414 lb>. froi.n\n' movoblr half-i'\nwM.'\nMOMl asjs. sios-oo mom\n6.B \u00ab. ft. Supw-Frwns- Ch\u00bbtt\n'  \u25a0-. J9.B Ibi. ftonn fswdt. .\n\u2666ull-wldlh ihsilvei, otw\n.\u2014jvabl. Kolf.shsslf. Hydrotor\nholdjI.'Aquartt Door iittm.\n L kS-M. -opoclty i.l co.\nIt. Idssol for- KoilW kllchM\nVOWS- Supssr.FrossMr Chotf\nholdi: 13.9 Ibi. fraud footU.\nFull-wl-th sMm. Cold itor.\ntat Tray, largo Hydrotor.\nLiberal trade-in allowance, low down payment easy terms\n%\u25a0-\u2022!\nCRANBROOK, B. C.\nR. B. Mitchell\nMc & Mc (Nelson) Ltd.\nCRESTON; B.C. FERNIE, B. C.\nSinclair Furniture & Ha\u00ablware   Quail Hdrdwari\nKIMBERLEY, B. C.   MIDWAY, B. C. NAKUSP, B. C.\nKimberley Hardware    C. 6. McMynn      A. L. Supply\nSALMO, B.C.\nCurwen & Buthl\n________\n-  _J\t\n P.1PW!?\u00bb?W^^\nm-^mwm\n~~\n,\nm^mm\nmmaamam\n5. WS)_\nBring the\nChildren...\n0\" your vlilft ,to\nSpokane, stop ot the\nFriendly Hotel Spokane.\nTo better serve our    - ..\u00ab'\nguests, children under 14\n\u2022toy free with their\nparent*\nBring the children to\nsee the heart of\nthe Inland Empire. . .\nthey're welcome, too!\n\u2022 Parking, at our Front\nDoorl\nAir Conditioned\nSilver Grill\n\u2022Capital Memo'\n;\u25a0!     !       \u25a0\u2022;,!.. BY JAMES K. NESBITT\nNow that the Bennett government is in full swing, people\nask: \"Is this a good government? Is it a bad government?\nHow can people inexperienced in government give any kind\nof government at all?\nThe Bennett 'government, at this\nmoment, ls -neither n good, nor o\nbad government. It is a government\nadequate fdr its times. It Is giving\nthe people what they wont. It's do-\nEXPERT\nBRAND\nANTIFREEZE\nAT\nB & W Service\nSALMO, B.C.\nPROVINCE OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nBOARD OF\nINDUSTRIAL\nRELATIONS\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Board of Industrial Relations will hold a public hearing In Room\n237, Court House, Vancouver, B.C. on Wednesday,\nOctober 28th, 1953 at 10:00 a.m. for the purpose of\nreceiving, representations in connection with the .revision of Male and Female Minimum Wage Order\nNo. 4 (1946) of the Board applying to tho Cook and\nBunk-house Occupation In Unorganised Territory.\nAli parties concerned art invited to attend. Written\nsubmissions may be addressed to the Chairman, Board\nof Industrial Relations, Parliament Buildings, Victoria,\nb.c. :V ' '\nW. H. SANDS, Chairman,\nVictoria, B.C.\nOctober 1st, 1953.\nIng the job for which lt was elected.\nLooking back, we cannot say that\nany of our governments in the last\nquarter century ,hava been either\ngood or bad. They-Were adequate\nto the'times in which they lived.\nThey did their good deeds and they\nmade their mistakes. Even-' the\nmuch, maligned Conservative government ot Simon' Tolmie was not\na bad government; it just got\ncaught up by bad times. In other\nwordi, it Was similar to the times\nin which it lived.\nAll governments, ot course, leave\ntheir marks tor good. Ihe Pattullo\ngovernment left us state-control of\nsome public utilities, Implanting the\nIdea that, big' business should not\nbe permitted to ride, rough shod\nover the people; tbe Hart govern,\nment left the B.C. Power Commission; the Johnson government, hospital iijsurance.'\u25a0 .,.'\nThe Bennett government ls young,\nfresh, eager.. The fact that the\nPremier is the only ono with logls\nlatlve experience is of little important. Men learn, and they learn\nquickly. It Is good ot havo men In\ngovernment who have no ties with\nthe past. Liberals or Conservatives\ncould never have brought lh such\ngood liquor act as the Bennett government. Liberals and Conservatives have too many friends who'd\nhave been hurt by such drastic\nchanges in the liquor law. And governments, any more than Individ.\nuals, don't like to hurt their friends,\nIn time, of course, the Bennett\ngovernment will grow old, will lose\ntouch with the times in which it\nlives. Then .the people of that day,\nimpatient for .change, will put it\nout   .,\u2022\n\u2022 \u2022 *\nIn tho Lenlslature Social Cred\nIters fairly burst with pride aa\nthey contemplate hospital Inaur\nance. They say hospital Insurance\nIt  wonderful.  They  never,  far\n- some strange reason, give any\ncredit to those who brought thla\ngreat social reform Into being \u2014\nByron Johnson, whs conceived\nthe Idea In the first place, and\nstaked his Whole political future\non It; Qeorge Pearson, who wore\n- himself put getting It going, and\nDouglas Turnbull who worried\nabout It, took heaps of undeserv\ned abuse,-and yet put It firmly on\nIts feet\nWhon oppositionists ask:   \"Who\nstarted hospital Insurance?\" Social\nCrediters mutter, and say \"we made\nIt work.\" Wouldn't it be simpler,\nand more straight-forward if they\nanswered: \"The record shows that\nthe Coalition government headed\nby Byron Johnson, a Liberal, started hospital insurance.\"\nAs CCF Eand.olph Harding of\nKaslo-Slocan 'said to Health and\nWelfare Minister Martin: \"Stop trying to kid the troops\u2014.-\"\u2022'' -\nPITTSBURGH (AP).- Federal\nnarcotics agents In a series pf\nraids rounded up 88 persons early\nThursday in Pittsburgh's Hill dis.\ntrlct More than 100 federal agents\nand police took part in the predawn raid.\n ,\nKAVjf,' '\nFUTURE DARKENS,\n\u00a7\nSill\n^:^:^-.*.^'S^^i^;^:^\n111\nH\nt-\nFor the unwed mother and her\nbabe, betrayed and friendless, The\nSalvation Army offers a refuge and\nthe chance to find happiness.\nThose in want or trouble find in\nThe Salvation Army the Door to\nHelp snd Hope. Misery never\ncalls in vain to the understanding\nheart and human touch of\nThe Salvation Army:\nTo help keep the Door to\nHelp and Hope always open,\nYOUR dollars are\nneeded. In this work of\nmercy, every dollar\nhu work to do.\nIltltll\n\u25a0ill\n,\/\nM\nSalvation Army\nRED SHIELD APPEAL J\nTHE SALVATION ARMY\nNELSON   HEADQUARTERS:\nTHE CITADEL, 51S VICTORIA ST. - PHONE 1148\n., \u00bbEWEL8 W QUEEN ISABELLA of Spain take on added In-\n^\"\u00a3 ,_f>Wl_.,e ,y.oun\u00ab t<\"\"'l\u00bbt\u00bb \u00bb\u2022 *hey are placed on publlo display\nIn Cludad Trujlllo, Dominican Republic In preparation for the\ncelebration of Columbus Day,' Oct. 12. They are part of a five-\nmillion-dollar collection of Christopher Columbus mementos kept\nthere In the oldest cathedral In tha new world, where tha great\nexplorer la antombsd,\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nSupermarket\nOriginator Dies\nMEMPHIS, Tenn, (AP) -.Clar\nence Saundors,07, originator of to.\nday's supermarkets who made and\nlost $15,000,000, died Wednesday of\na heart attack.\nSaunders changed tho grocery\nbusiness 30 years ago with his\n2400 Plggley Wlggley stores. They\nmade him a rich man in his early\n80s. He lost tie -torts In a complex Wall Streef.batttej \"' .'-....' ,.-\nSaunders recently announced\nplans tor a mechanical grocery\nstore that he believed would -put\nhim ..\"back In the million-dollar\nclass within a year.\" The mechan-\nlfcM store was to bo completely\nself-service with tha customers not\nonly sacking their own groceries\nbut also adding up the bill. ,\nWHEN QUALITY COUNT,\nm&.\nROYAL RESERVE\n. llih; advertlsenusu is not published or\ndisplayed by tht Liquor Control Board\nor by the Cpvernraent of British\nColumbia.   \u25a0 ..}\u25a0 \u2022 \u2022'. .  J\"V\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. IS, 1M*.*t T\nRusf Envoy Arrives\nAt Ottawa Embassy\nOTTAWA, (CP) - Dmitri Step-\nnnovlch Chuvnkhin arrived hero by\ntrain1 Thursday to assume his duties os Russia's first ambassador to\nCanada since tha Soviet spy ring\nwas uncovered in 1048.\nTho stocky, 50-year-old diplomat\ndeclined to talk to.reporters except to say he was glad to ba In\nCanada,\nHe was a senior official of tho\nRussian foreign ministry, before being appointed to his present post\nBis last, job abroad was minister\nto Albania.     '. . ,\nFIRE DAMAGES HEDLEY\nCOMMUNITY HALt        '\u2022\nPENTICTON, B.C. (CP). r-' The:'\ncommunity hall at Hedley, B.C.,\nJust west of hero.along the Trans-\nCanada Highway, .was damaged by\nfire early Thursday, yj   >\nThe tire was blamed on an overheated stove. Damage was estimated '\nat $.000. v\nDENTI8T8 NEEDED . ''\u2022\n' MONTRSAJ. <CP)>- Dr..W. H.\nReid of Toronto Thursday told -a,\nCanadian Dental Association meeting that Canada' faces a critical,\nshortage of dentists and no national health plan would be- practical\nunless training facilities ore. lit-;\ncreased Immediately.       \u25a0 '\u201e   \u2022>\nbe sureix) iget\nDELNOR\n_jf_M__t_M_Jrtj__* A    JUU&mmlL    J**m&\nSurplus Stocks, Furniture and Household Items - All Being Clfeared at Prices Par Below Regular\n\u2022*\u00bb\nEvery piece of Furniture oh our flop?\nhas been reduced in price* Sowe of the\nitems are slightly soiled \u2014 these will be\ncleared at HALF PRICE. Shop idrly^\nour stock must he cleared to make roorn\nfwiiew lines due to arrive soon*       \u25a0\nGAME RIFLES\nWinchester: Model 70. 30\/06 Calibre.\nWinchester: Mode* $4.30\/30^01^6,\nRemington: Mbd<-175Q: 300 Cdl iSrer _\nSavage: Model 99EG. 300,Calibre. ._-__\n$149.95\n$87.50\n$125.00\n$135.00\nHusqvarna: Fancy Stock. 30\/06 Calibre. _~ $129.00\nLee Enfield: Reconditioned. 303 British Calibre  $39\nCeiling\nFixtures\nA largo assortment of fixtures for\nevery room in the house. - Our 'complete stock being cleared at\nHALF PRICE\n', \\ .. .  .'      \u25a0;\u25a0 ' {' |\nFlashlight Batteries\nThe popular Eveready flashlight battery in standard size only. Stock up\n. at this new low price. 1 JPf\nEach . : l_>\nMANTEL\nRADIOS\nAC-DC model with 5 tubes,\ncarrying handle and 'gold\ngrille screen. Specially designed for convenience\nwhin travelling. Specially\npriced at -\n$2900\nFLOOR COVERING\nCongoleum Gold Seal floor covering\nin 9 foot width. Priced to clear quickly\nm* -!V-Y l',-7\nLineal Foot ... 75c\nWe also hove a number of remnants\nto clear at HALF PRICI.\n0\nFURNACE SHOVELS\nGood quality steel\nshovels with hardwood handles ond\n\"D\"grlp.     .\nSPECIAL\n$159\n1\n\u201e\n li\nCLOTHES\nPINS\n-Another offering of those\nspring clothe* pins at the\nvery low price of\n7c per dozen\nROOFING PAPER\n> Per Rill\nMineral surfaced roofing In yy '.__\u25a0\u2022__._-,\n90 Ib. weight. Choice of C M 0,5\nmaroon or grey-gwen,^>>*ralmtffem\nPriced at __._J _.__\nROLL BRICK SIDING\nA very limited quantity of this popular tiding\nin red only. Clearing at only\n$5.50 per square ;$m\nGALVANIZED PAILS\nHot dipped pails in the number 14 sUe with\nheavy wire handles. Priced at only   ...'\nMt\nEASY PAYMENT TERMS ARRANGED\n476 Baker Street*-Phone 1300\nvi\nH\n;\n\\   '.  .       '  .       . ...       . .\n-\t\n '&$:\n\u00bbi- NELSON DAILY NEWS\/FRIDAY, OCT. t\u00ab, 195*'\nBorder Io Hear\nBanned Speaker\n'  SR All-\u2014Mine, Mill Smelter Union\n'met in\"' Trail Wednesday to - hear\nari address by Asbury Howard, a\n.'Candidate for office of Internatton-\nSHOWING\nJf :p,-A,T the; ,    .    j\nItrand\nV A' Famous Players Theatre\n',_\u2022       TRAIL, B.C.\nj\"*,* C*i\njj     Mon.-Tuej..Wed.\nOet. 19, 20, 21   ;\nSangaree\n.' j -.     '      (COLOR) '\nI       3 DIMENSION\nfj  FERNANDO LAMAS\nh.   .     ARLENE DAHL\nI     \u25a0'*\/  '\n'I.     -Thun.-Fri.-Sat.\nOct.; 22, 25, 24\n\"Trouble Along\n1 the Way\"\n'JOHN WAYNE,   DONNA REED\nMATINEE\n|       IVERY SATURDAY\nShows Continuous From 2 p.m.\nal vice-president, but,Mr. Howard\nwes stopped ot tht border, by Cana-\n\u2022dian immigration authorities a n d\npolice,\n\" ' \"the entire membership' of Trail\nLocal Mlno, Mill, Smelters was most\ndisappointed, : and by unanimous\ndecision Instructed; the officers to\nprotest to Ottawa against this Interference with union activity,\" a\nspokesman said Thursday, - -\n-The meeting also decided that as\nmany es possible should go to tho\nborder, and hear' an address by Mr.\nHoward About 50 attended this\nmeeting at the border which lasted\ntill approximately midnight.\nTrail Local ls urging Member of\nParliament \u25a0 H. W. Herridge' end\nJames Byrne to act for them.\nMr. Howard ls taking advantage\nof tho right of appeal. No reason\nhas been given so far for the refusal by the Immigration authorities.\nUnion officials at Trail'said no\nreason was given by immigration\n'officials, here tor their action, They\nsaid Howard had been informed he\ncould obtain - a hearing' before, immigration authorities within 80\ndays. 7 \"7       .  7\nThe mine-mill union was ousted\n'from the Conadiftn Congress of\nLabor in 1050 on charges thatlvVas\nCommunist-led. \u2022 \\\nHoward Was the third American\nunion leader to -be.' turned beck by\ntaunig.atii.n, offloial^ in B.C.\nwithin '*\u25a0' week,' 'Last \u2022' Saturday\nKorly Larsen, ousted IWA district\nvice-president from Everett, Wash.,\nand Ray Glover, business agent\nof the Snumclau, Wash., local of\nthe IWA, were denied entry-when\nthey tried to attend the International Woodworkers convention how\nunder way in Vancouver,.\nImmigration officials ssid Larsen, recently acquitted In Seattle\non charges of conspiring to teach\nand advocate th* overthrow of the:\nUnited States government, was,, \"a\nmember of e prohibited class.\" l?o\nreason was (riven for turning back\nGlover.7.v . ','\"     ' '\"   \u25a0:\"\nAFTER IRAN OIL\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014An official\n'American mlsslbn will fly to Teh-;\nran thia month to negotiate a resumption of the flow of Irenlan\noil ^to' world- nurkets, a- relfab.e\nsource here ssid Thursday,. The\nmission, which has British snd\nIranian backing, will be led by\n\u25a0Herbert Hover Jr., state department oil expert\nfew Citddfrl for Trail\n(jJfJxjomsi:\nAwaits Your\nVisit To Trail\nAt the\n\"Vitamin\nSufficiency' _\nli necenoty lor vigorous .eollh\u2014\nilamlna to meellhe latt pace ol\nmodem llvlnfl.PLENAMINSiopply\n8 eisenllal vitamins\u2014plus the\nadded value et Lives- and Iron.\n2Ws6.00\nREGISTERED\nPHARMACIST\nIN ATTENDANCE\nAT ALL TIMES\nHazlewood\nDrug\n943 sfokane st.\n! ;   trail; b.c.\nR\nI\n, \u25a0 A   :\nHOTEL\nPhone 1865\nTurn Left At Tunnel\n, r \u00ab* HAIG ST. \u25a0;'.\n'      TRAlL B.C.\nVx Mile From City Centre\n-,7 f \"\u2022    JOIN THE TRAIL BUYERS LEAGUE\nVote for VALUfS-\nWE GUARANTEE .,. '\n1.\u2014Only blue Ribbon Beef, T-B Free (inspected by government)\n2.\u2014Only Delnor or Name Brand Foods In Your Locker ,\nlv\u2014Continued Service Through the Life ef the .Plan.,\n;   Phone 133 For Penonol Service or Information\nWHY'NOT HAVE A \"SUPER  MARKET\" _\nBIGOT IN TOUR HOMEt\nDEEP   FREEZE   FREEZERS   AND\n,       INTERNATIONAL   HARVESTER   FREEZERS\nWbdsML gkctiuc\n\u2022 1637 BAY AVENUE\nFrank Johnson\nTRAIL, B.C.\nPHONI 13S\nChuok Wyatt\nALL RISK\nINSURANCE AGENCIES\nInsurance      Real Eitate\nFirs -     '   Casualty\nInland Marino\nAutomobile\nI 14*0 Bay Ave.   TRAIL,B.C.   fh. 1589\nCASTLEGAR - PHONE 3281   .\nR. Livingstone\nBenevolent Head\nTRAIL \u2014 Robert. Livingstone wes\nre-elected president of the Consolidated' Employees', Benevolent So.\nclety by acclamation Thursday night\nof the annual meeting of the society\nheld.IntheKP -_a_l.; \"\u25a0: ,\u25a0,,'\u25a0'\"':\ni Named vice-president'wes Roland\nCacchionl.- Other elected- officers included Gilbert Kay, director,' Division No. 1; Jomes Blokely, director;\nDivision No. 3; Henry Stewert, director, Division No. 6; and Percy\nJeffrey, director, Division No. 8.\n. Roy Rijioldo Rinaldl -was named\ndirector, Division fib. \"A and' .Donald Krfig,- director,' Division No.- S,\n;;, Jack Sergeant,' who has been 'i\nThrowing Bottle\nOn Road Brings Fine '\n. TRAIL\u2014ft doesn't pay to toss ar\nempty bottle on 'the highway, es\npeclally when' a policeman li\nwatching. , ,   \u2022\nFor doing so, D. L. Woodlttfe o.\nWaneta paid a fine of 130 and tl\ncosts in Rossland RCMP court whet'\nhe appeared before Magistrate J. C\nUrquhart on a charge of throwing i\nbottle on the highway. -\nRossland RCMP were patrolllni\nthe highway and hear'd the , bottle\n.as it waa shattered against tho roadway.   .,:-.',. \". 7:,     ;..  -.,-\nTieste, strategic port on the Adriatic Gulf., wes first fortified by\nthe Romans In 33 BC.    '.\nThe. panda bear is found only in\nthe Himalayas, while \"the Koala\nbeer comes bora Australia.     ,\n^\\<^\nmember ot the directorate of the\nsociety since1929, was honored at\ntbe meeting upon bis retirement\nfrom the society. Mr. Sargeant has\nserved in ail capacities on the directorate. -.',( \"'\u25a0, .\n, CORNERSTONE for the new Salvation Army Citadel at Trail\nIs being laid here by Brigs R, W. Ga.e of Vancouver, divisional\ncommander for B.C. Mayor E, 0. Fletcher looks on as Brigadier\nGage prepares to plaoe box containing a newspaper, the War Cry\nend Coronation eolns Ih the stone.\u2014Photo by D. A.iMetovleh. ?\u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0\nTrail's Super Service Station\nMOTOR INN\nmmstt*tmmt*eeiti*ai\nLIMITED\n1608 BAT AVE., TRAIL, B.C. l\n. Repairs To All Makes of Cars.    -\nSee Ui For Better Used Can.   '\n.See and Drive the terrific NEW 1953 DODGE\nnow-on display pt our premises.  ',\n.'     . 8 MOtsELS TO CHOOSE FROM      ',\nPhoneB99 7 Trail. B.C.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nCoritrpl Board or. fey the Government of.-.British''Coluiriblal\nCINDER BLOCKS\n\u2022 Concrete Blocks\n\u2022 Chimney Blocks\nSTEAMCUftEtl\nGovernment tosted products. Steam cured. Production\n4000 units per'eight hour shift. Wo deliver anywhere.\nKORPAK Cement Products\n154 Wellington Street     Troll, B.C.      Phone 991-L-l\nDistributors'-for Our Produots In  Nelson   .\nK. W. DIXON CO.\u2014701 Front St., Nelaon, B.C.\nTrail AOTS Told\nOf Hawaii Trip\nTRAIL\u2014The Trail (As One That\nServeth) Club held its first meeting bf the new season Wednesday\nin Knox House. Flans for AOTS\nchurch Sunday were discussed and\ninclude an exchange visit of speakers with Fruitvale.   -     \"\nA. guest, Alee Barclay, manager\nof the Strand theatre, wes introduced by Dr. -C. E. Toll. Mr. Barclay\ngave an account of a trip made \"by\nhis wife and himself to Hawaii,\nbeing the successful contestants for\na plane journey sponsored by Famous Players. ,:\n.. The'8200 mile,Journey stkrted'at\nCastlegar and continued non-stop to\nHawaii 14,000 feet above ground.\nStopping at the Royal Hawaii hotel\nMr. end - Mrs. Barcliy made Tmany\nside trips by csr end plane.   .\nTho pineapple plantatioii growing\non tho high .levels and the sugar\ncanes (requiring irrigation and lots\n\u2022of water) growing on the lower,\nlevels were visited.*        '\nCraters emitting Sulphur fumes\nWere Impressive.-. A scene of en\neruption only JaSt year showed\nwheirs. a newly built road had been\nconstructed. A church had also\nbeen pushed down to the sea, its\nbell tolling ell-the way.  |\nMr. Barclay said he was impressed with the beauty of Hawaii and\nparticularly with the tremendous\ngrowth!     7   \" 7\nSt. Laurent Names\nNew Senate leader\nOTTAWA (CP)-Prime Minister\nSt Laurent Thursday announced\nHon. W. Ross Macdonald lias been\nnamed government leader in the\nSenate and Senator W. McL. Robertson, his predecessor, has been\nmade speaker of that chamber.\nSenator Macdonald, 62, of Brant-\nford, Ont., was speaker, of -the\nCommons in the last Parliament and\nwas appointed to the upper Cham-'\nber early this summer.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Most Rev. W.\nF. Barfoot,-Archbishop of Rupert's\nLaftd and Primate of the Church of\nEngland In Canada, is one of eight\ngraduates of University College\nwho will receive' honorsry d,octor\nof laws degrees at the college cen\ntenary celebrations Friday.\nVenetian\nBlinds\nin\nWonderful Colors\n-..\"\u25a0\u25a0 * '      ...-*''\nLustraliime\nBlinds\nMade-to-measure, with   1f\\tf-\ncotton tape. S* ft. ....-.-   I Ut*\nWith plastic tape, in .    OC|t\nmatching colors. Sq. ft  Oj^\nD. B. MERRY\nLUMBER CO.\nLTD.,' .\n1080 Spokane St - Ph. 444-2040\nTRAIL. B.C.\n8ALMO -AGENTS!. 7\nTAYLOR BROS. GARAGE '\n.'*V-'i' :.. \"..''\nBRAND\nengine protection\nlike vWiWiSP an ti-freeze!\n1    .'    ' \u2022    \" l '' '    \u25a0 , \u2022 '   -s *\n':    \u25a0<  ' \u25a0 - ' -' ^V.     \u25a0   '   :-\" \"'\u25a0 \u25a0 {   ..\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0,- \u25a0*\n\"Prestone\" Brand Anti-Freeze\u2014the most, effective antifreeze ever\ndeveloped for your car\u2014is,fortified with a combination of special\ningredients to give more\u2014much more\u2014than just freeze-up protection.\n\"Prestone\", Anti-Freeze gives your car EXTRA protection against;\nRust and Corrosion, Acid Contamination, Clogging, Seepage, Foaming\n\u25a0  and Deterioration of metal and rubber parts.\nNO OTHER ANTI-FREEZE CAN GIVE YOUR CAR\nTHE SAME COMPLETE PROTECTION\nYour car will run better this winter-be in better shape\nnext summer if you ask for \"PRESTONE\" Anti-Freeze this Fall  .\n\"Prestone\" Brand Anti-Freeze\u2014the original 'one-shot' anti-freeze\u2014has been\nproved over millions of miles of driving\nunder the most extreme -winter conditions. \"Prestone\" Anti-Freeze is guaranteed to give your car winter-long\nfreeze-iip protection.\nBecause \"Prestone\" Anti-Freeze gives\ncomplete protection against freezing and\nboiling, \"Prestone\" Anti-Freeze permits\nthe use of high opening temperature\nthermostats to give peak engine performance. This means less cold weather oil\nsludge, engine deposits and wear\u2014more\nmiles per gallon of gasoline, THIS\nWINTER! :\\\nWith a cleaner, more efficient engine this i\nwinter, your car will be in better condition NEXT SUMMER!\n\"Prestone\" Anti-Freeze provides\nEXTRA- protection against rust, corrosion, seepage and acid contamination\nunder themostseveredrivingconditions.\n\"Prestone\". Anti-Freeze provides protection against foaming . . ; a common\ncause of overflbw loss with some anti-\n(fafotSd\/ fafe&tfe\/ (\/ouU^Sm!\n\"Prestone\" ssstt \"Bvtready\" ore registered trade-marks tj\nNATIONAL CARSON   LIMITED I\nSSOSSTSSf As,        TOSSOSSTO WSSSSSlMB I\nPRESTONE\nBRAND  #\nANTIFREEZE\n-'.-.. ;'\u25a0\u25a0- .\n__l\u00ab-;-7   \u25a0\n_________________________\n \u00a3\u00a33<5\nCbwunxL iksL\nut\nBy. LEN WALKER\nFirst I'd }ik\"e \"to\" congratulati?\nthe mothers ind fathers who have\narranged for their daughters to aid\nthe Nelson Booster Club by appearing fit games to sell refreshments.\n; Sewrtdly, bouquets ta the girls\nthemselves; they are doing one.\ngrand job. without them thi Booster\nClub now handling the concession\nbooth wouldn't hear as often, the\nring -of the7tin that, ls helpli-g\nhookey in Nelson.' '\u25a0-\" \u25a0'\u25a0\n7 it is only by this working to-\nfather, ot young and old, that\n[elson Maple Leafs will come up\n-wlth'what we hope will be their\nbest season thus far.\nNelson fans Wednesday evening\nwere treated to a fine brand of\nhockey, and although we hear much\ntalk on the subject of why we\nBidn't win, the fact remains that\nwe didn't lose.\nSpokane'iced a team which compares favorably with last year's\naggregation. In fact their third-\nperiod drive that produced three\ngoals to even up the game, brought\nKEYS CUT\nLOCKS REPAIRED\nEDEY'S\nLOCK AND CYCLE SHOP\n\u25a0 W Baker 8t Phone 1049\n\".|.,\"1. Mr'i',-;'7 '\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0 i, 1\"\nback sad memories to many fani\nof a similar performance in the\nfinal < game of the playoffs Jut\nseason on this same ice surface. ..\n.\u00a3111 Haldane opened She season\nin great style with a hat trick; Last\nseason Haldane was tied with line-'\nmate Lee Hyssop in this department with five triples each.\" Haldane'. performance was all the\nmore remarkable - because he Is\njfar ifrom'being to shape, yet\u2014and\n'admits it.-\" -':-'M \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0 7\".-.\u25a0\ni . ,..-\u00ab. . ,-jsr\nBoomer Rodzlnyak played a great\ngame in the nets for the Leafs,\nespecially in the first frame when\nhe did everything but stand on bis\nhead to stop, hard drives by the\ngoal-hungry Flyers,\nBoomer, in five games this winter,\ncounting the exhibition games, has\nan impressive record. He has registered one shutout and allowed\njust 10 goals for an average of two\na game.   .\nMarsh Severyn. we thought, play.\ned a good game for the Leafs. On\nmany occasions he cleared the puck\nwell, proved to be , valuable up\nfront by collecting two assists. The\none penalty he received was thought\nby many to be undeesrved.\nThe two work horses of the team,\nRed and Fritz Kpehle, again came\nup with stellar performances, tyke\nroaming gypsies they, checked'the\nFlyers Into, the ice, especially when\nLeafs were short-handed, Oh four\noccasions they killed off penalties\nwith. their aggressive play.\nRed scored the goal of the year\n> so far when 'he poke-chocked\nDanny McDougall In front of the\nFlyer net with the result the\npuck hop, skipped and jumped\nright '\"to tlWiWln\u00bbs        \\.L 7-\nTrail Goes pit Scoring Spree\nTo Razzia dazzle Flyers 8*3\nTRAIL\u2014A goal-hungry crew df\nTrail 8moke Eaters erased the bitter, reminder1 of four exhibition\nlosses from the ni'lndi of  their\nrabid followers Thursday night\nis they swamped a badly   out-\nI   played Spokane Flyora 8-4 In the\nWestern International Hookey\nLeague opener at Cominco Arena.\n.Saving their all-out attack until the free-wheeling final, Moe\nYoung's Smokies hatted  home\nfour taiHIes while  Hebe   Lundmark and Wingy Johnston  an-\n\u2022swered with a pair for Flyers, '\nSafeguarding a  two-goal lead\ngoing Into the periods coach Moe\nYoung split Fodey ..pads for the\nfirst goal of the period, while Terry\nCSvanagh notched his second of the\nnight less than .'a minute later.   ,\nGino Rozzlni war' sitting out . a\ntwo minute hooking penalty when\nthe Smokies counted up their two\nfinal tallies,.with,Bill McCulley collecting hla second of the night, followed by Young with his second to\nround out the scoring spree,\nLundmark evaded an out-of-pbst-\ntion Trail defence for Spokane's\nthird and final marker after Wingy\nJohnson had set up the play in the\nTrail zone.\nft four goal outburst with both\nteams splitting a pair of tallies set\nthe pace in the first period, Spokane's Gino Rlzzinl move the Flyers\nout front with the game less than\ntwo minutes old as he slapped home\nDoug Toole's pass from close In.\n. Rookie Frank kuzma got that one\nback tor the Smokies before the\nminute mark as he tipped in App\nDorohoy's perfect goal mouth pass\non a three-way play with Bill Mc.\nCulley getting; the other .assist, ,\n\u25a0'.' The game was delayed 25 minutes when Flyer goalie Gerry\nFodey was creased by a high shot\n'from the stick, of Bob Kiel, but he\nreturned to the. Ice apparently none\nthe worse.\ni \u25a0'. Aa play resumed coach Wingy\n{Johnston put the Flyers back in\nthe lead as. he slapped  in Ralph\nThat's why you need this medicated\ni\nNoiw^rh9wy\u00abrt#*\u00bb-\u00bb>ro--\nku orlather-you're'ln for a grand\ni_rpriie, first time yoa try no* 8-wat\nBHAVEl It's the new \"wonder share\"\nthst takes sp when other, sharps\n(or.lmtoadsif yonrimi!hle.s'\u00bb|issTe).\nIf you don't agree It's the best share\nyoo ttrer had, return it te Nox-ema,\nIbronto\u2014yonr money will be refuhd-\n    \" '     Jar of\nworth\n_... \u201e_,__ ... \u201e...\u201e.. ........ ......    ed. Get the bifmoniy-sarlng Jar of\nleare off-does mors than lustsoften    Noaema's 8-Way Share .. .wor\"\nyonr board-it's twdfatW-good for    SU5-10 on. for only 89* today!\n\u25a0-\u25a0SAVE! SAVE! \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nyonr skin I Here's how It works.\n1s> Proparos whiskers, skin.\nfSoIton. toughest whiskers. Pro-\nrides lubricating film for smooth\nrotor gilds. Protects tender skin.\nSts Painless shavas. Has otcclusire\nmedicated built-in pain proven-\ntiro to sooths tender skin. Share\nin real comfort tot first ttaol\n3. Helps heal Inrlilblo razor damage you get with ertry share. It's\nm-_s.at\u00ab_'.Groosss\u00bb\u00bbkln-ho!p-kcop\nIt healthier, younger-looking.\nBare! Try 8-Way Share. Moro shares,\nbatter shares for less mOnoy. Try, it\nbefore snd after your lather share\nDieoo-e. this _-m\u00absrkttblo now I\n-have I Uh tbU coupon as A re- H\nminder to H-tyonr jar today. AI-o \u25a0\nIS handr tubas. Ai all drag, itvi.,\nand ey-dleata \u25a0torn.\nBig 10 Qz, Economy Jar \u25a0\n$1.15 gig*    g\nD\nVALUE I\n3-WAY SHAVE\n| A Product ef Noxzema |\nTrail Loses\nKuzma fo\nCougars\n' TRAIL \u2014 Alex Kuzma, 24-year,\nold right winger with the Saskatoon\nQuakers for tbe past two seasons,\nhas been picked up oh waivers by\nthe Victoria Cougars.\nKuzma, who arrived in Trail\nThursday with brother Frank, will\npause only briefly before continuing on to Victoria where he'll re-\nport Saturday.\n> The Trail Smoke Eaters, who, had\njiutchase^ Jtop^qontract^from\nthe New'YdrR Rangers\u25a0 only last\nweek, were informed of the Vic\ntorfa move by Norm Couch, who\nhad asked t waivers on tlie high-\nscoring Saskatoon-born winger.\nTwo weeks of negotiations were\ncompleted over the Thanksgiving\nweekend and Couch released Kuzma to the Smokies only to be informed Wednesday night that his\nattempts to clear Kuzma from the\nWestern Hockey .League had been\nhalted by Victoria's Lester Patrick,\nwho will now get Kuzma for the\nwaiver price.\nKuzma will Join Victoria Saturday, but his 21-year-old brother,\nFrank, who was optioned to Trail\nby the Vancouver Canucks, will\nspend the season with Coach Moe\nYoung's squad.\nLuke's rebound off the stick of\nTommy Hodges. The teams went\ninto the second period on even\nterms, however, after Laurie Bursaw converted a three man\nscramble into the second Trail\ntally.\nA one man disadvantage and -the\naggressiveness ot rookie' Bill McCulley sparked a steamed-'up Trail\nattack late in the seoond period.\nComing into the middle session On\neven terms the Smokies, fought Spokane in a dazzling display ot end to\nend rushes but it was Danny Mc-\nDougal's tripping penalty just over\nthe bldway mark that gave the\nSmokies the lead for the first time\nIn the game.\nTetry Cavanagh completed a\nthree-man ganging attack when he\nbeat Gerry Fodey from the side of\nths net ettar McCulley. had slapped\na rlnkwlda pass to Laurie Bursaw\nfor the. third Smokie marker. The\nrugged McCulley, working well\nfrom an unfamiliar defence, position, took Gordie Robertson's pass\nfrom the corner and then, rifled\nhome his own rebound to give Trail\na two goal lead, with less than a\nminute remaining in the period.\nLineups:\nSpokane\u2014Goal, Fodey; defence,\nLuke, McDougal; centre, Tilson;\nwings, Rozzlni, Ramsden. Subs,\nGrebnlsky, Reeves, Scott, Toole,\nMcNally, Rozzlni, Lundmark,\nHodges, Johnston.\nTrail\u2014Goal;. Gibson; defence,\nCook, Corrado; centre, Shabaga;\nwings, Bursaw, Cavanagh. Subs,\nMcCulley, Hamilton, Kiel, Coro-\nhoy, F. Kuzma, Hyssop, Young,\nRobertson.\n,   Referees\u2014J\u201e McLeod T. Merlo.\nSummary: ,. .1\nFirst period\u20141, Spokane, Rozzlni (Toole) 2:02; 2, Trailj.F. Kuzma\n(Dorohoy, McCulley) 2:54; 3,' Spokane, Johnston (Luke, Hodges) 0:26\n4, Trail, Bursaw (Shabaga, McCulley) 7:05. Penalties\u2014Kiel, Toole.\nSecond period\u20145, Trail, Cava,\nnagh (bursaw, McCulley) 12:57; \u00ab,\nTrail, McCulley (Robertson) 19:33.\nPenalty\u2014McDougal.\nThird period\u20147, Trail, Young\n(Hyssop) 11:12; 8, Trail, Cavanagh\n(Shabaga) 12:49; 9, Spokane, Lundmark (Johnston) 13:12; 10, Trail,\nMcCulley (Kuzma, Kiel) 15:30; 11,\nTrail, Young (Robertson) 18:34; 12,\nSpokane, Johnston (Lundmark)\n19:30. Penalties \u2014Grebinsky,\nHodges, Johnston, Kuzma, Rozzlni.\nShoemaker Ties\nDynamiters Drop\nFourth in Row\nIn Kelowna Game\nKELOWNA\u2014The Kelowpa, Pack.\ners of the Okanagan League handed\nKimberley Dynamiters their fourth\nStraight setback here Thursday\nSlight when they outscored. tha\nDynamiters 9-8. , |,, \u2022 _ -\nThe Packers rapped home six\ngoals in the initial frame while\nholding Kimberley to three. In each\nof the second and third periods.the\nteams split the goal-scoring honors.\nI Kelowna'S front line of Dunbar,\npar-lien and Culley picked up lit of\nthe 21 scoring points amassed by\nthe club.\nDunbar notched the1 hat trick and\n;ot one assist to make him tdp man\ntor the night.\nLes Lilley was Kimberley's top\nman, snaring two goals, while Red\nMellor assisted on a like number.\nGame Was fast iron.'the start\nwith first Kelowna-taklng the lead\nand then Kimberley; The Packers\ncaught fire late in the stanza to go\nout In front for the remainder of\nthe ganie.\nSUMMARY\n! First period\u2014Kelowna, Durban\n(Culley, Carlson) :57;. Kimberley,\nCraig (B. Mellor, R. Mellor) 3:04;\nKimberley, Lilley, 4:59; Kelowna,\nHoskins (Amundrud) 8:15; Kimberley, Hockley (Sullivan) 9:20; Kelowna, Middleton (Hergesheimer,\nKoslenko) 10:39; Kelowna, Culley\n(Dunbar, Carlson) 11:22; Kelowna,\nHanson (Hergesheimer) 15:32; Kelowna; Hanson (Hergesheimer, Middleton) 19:47.\nPenalties \u2014 Hughes (2), Craig,\nHanson (miscon.), Culley, Hergesheimer, Connors.\nSecond period\u2014Kimberley, Johnston (Campbell) 13:43; Kelowna,\nJohnson, 14:21.\nPenalties\u2014Jones, Johnson.\nThird period\u2014Kelowna, Durban,\n(Culley) 4:58; Kelowna, Brilliant\n(Durban) 11:01; Kimberley, B. Mellor (R. Mellor) 11:09; Kimberley,\nLilley (Larson) 15:09.\nPenaltles-B. Mellor, Hall, Middleton (miscon.), Johnson.\nCanadiens Whip\nRangers 6-1\n.   By The Canadian Press\nMontreal Canadlehs,i behind tho\ntwo-goal scoring of star rookie Jean\nBeliveau and .youngster \\ Bernie\n(Boom Boom) Geoffrlon, whipped\nNew York: Rangers 8-1 Thursday\nnight in' a National Hockey League\ngame at Montreal,\nAt the Bame time, Toronto Maple\nieafs rattled home three goals in\nthe first period and went on to a\n4--1 win over Boston Bruins before\n7619 at Boston. '       ;\nA crowd of 14,449 watched at\nMontreal, as Beliveau scored his\nfirst goal ot the young season in\ntbe opening period and then added\nhis second in the final session.\nThe loss left Rangers without a\nregular schedule \"win on Montreal\nice Since Feb,. 18, 1950.\n! The win. put Montreal in first\nplace.in the league standings.\nTORONtO, 8ECOND .     j\nI .Toronto moved Into a second\nplace tie with tbe idle Detroit Ret\nTEMKEN\nROCK\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 16,19S3 \u2014-\u00bb1\nWings, two points behind Montreal.\nRon Stewart and Rudy Mlgay\neach broke through Boston goalie\nJim Henry during the first 10 minutes. A Toronto player, Leo Boivln,\nwas in the penalty box when defenceman Jimmy Thomson trapped\nthe. attacking Bruins and set up\nBrlcNestercnko for the Leafs' third\nmarker.\nThe other Toronto goal, in the\nthird period, came from Harry Watson's high 10-foot angle snot while\nMilt Schmidt,, the veteran Boston\ncaptain, was serving a penalty.\nJohnny Peirson scored the lone\nBoston goal mid-way in the second\nAdult Skating\n,    TONIGHT,\n8:15 to 10 p.m.\nAdmission 35o\nperiod, The Bruins, in ragged form i\nmost of the tine,.were outshotStri.-\ns 20-18 margin. \u25a0 :}*'\u00bb\nFOOTBALL SCORES\u00a9\nBy THI CANADIAN PRE88\"'\nManltoba-Soskotohowan Junior ,.,,,\nWinnipeg Rods 2, Winnipeg Wt|H.,\"-\noats0.V7\/7 'yy:.y<y,yy:W$4-\\\nPhone 75\nCollision Repairs\nPaint Jobs\nDamage Estimate!\nSuperior Motors\n(N\u00ablion) Ltd.    j\nDoclde- DeSoto bealor .\nOpp. Post Office on -\nVernon 8t\nALBsfNV, Calif.: (APr-Jbclti.^r_:'ff'\nWillie .Shoemaker Thursday tied\nthe Unite.. States, record of 890 victories in a season when he brought\nhome Haltaflre in the feature race\nat Golden Gate Fields.\nIt was Shoemaker's first victory\nin 13 races Thursday and Wednesday. The record was set last year\n:by Tony Desplrlto. ,.\nShoemaker', 22, born in EI Paso,\nTex., failed Wednesday tp w|n pn\nsix mounts. He could do no better\nthan second on the first six ra,cei\nThursday. He left nothing to. be\ndesired In Thursday's feature, However. .,..-,\u25a0   .,\/\nHaltaflre broke almost on top.\ntook the lead away from South-\nborne, an English inaporly and\nlengthened out to lead the test ot\nthe way, He beat Home Free by\none and a quarter lengths. The favorite, The Green Lion, raced third.\nHaltaflre's time for, the mile and\na sixteenth was 1:43 1-5.\nA crowd of 8006 gave Shoemaker\na big cheer' when he finally reached\nthe winner's circle. '   ,\nHOCKEY SCORES\nWestern League\nNew Westminster 8, Calgary 7.\nInternational League\nJohnstown 7, Fort Wayhe 7.\nQuebec League\nSherbrooke 2, Chicoutiml 4.\n-_SJ>\nNorman B.C. Choice\nBEG Swim Coach\nVANCOUVER (CP)-Percy Norman, active in British Columbia\nswimming circles for 28 years\/has\nbeen selected as B.C.'s choice for\ncoach ^f Canada's swimming 'team\nin the 1954- British Empire Games.\n! Norman ? w a a t h e unanimous\nchoice of B.C, swim representatives\nat a meeting here Wednesday, His\nname will be forwarded to Albert\nFord of Winnipeg, president Ofthe\nCanadian Amateur Swimming] Association, for final selection pl'ong\n'With nominations from.other provinces.\nULLMAN SIGNS\nWITH OIL KINGS\nEDMONTON (CP) - Norm. Ull-\nman, 17-year-old centreman who in\nhis rookie season last year led the\nWestern Junior Hockey League Individual scoring race, has Signed\nagain with Edmonton Oil Kings.\nm\nBATTERIES\na B.C. product AVAILABLE AT ALL DEALERS\nTAYLOR & WILTON SALES Ltd.\nNELSON, B. C.\nDISTRIBUTORS   FOR   KOOTENAY   DISTRICT\nJtrtttftnt\nCHAMPIONS\nTHIS ADVERTISEMENT IS NOT PUBLISHED OR DISPLAYED BY THE LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD.OR BY\nTHE GOVERNMENT OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\nless Big Trade-in Allowance\nEasy\nBudget Terms\nCity Tire Service\n206 Boker St\nPhonel427\nFor fast, economical\nrock drilling.\nYOUR BEST BET\nFOR THE BEST BIT    \u25a0\nFor every Job.\nAvailable in Carbide Insert\nond Multi-Use Types\nSee us fo> your bit\nrequirements.\nAll types Timken bits\nAll Interchangeable in the\nsame type of steel\nPRICES ON APPLICATION\nThe\nSelkirks\nEquipment\nand Supply Co., Ltd. .\nPhone IBM P.O. Box .1\n520 LAKE STOKE*\t\n,    Mort Browne, Manager >\nIt'i A Sure Thing\nThat nice weather new prevails\u2014 but, the cald days\nare bound to come. Make certain you have the\nef your choice laid away while the etack It complete.\nHughes-Stuart Men's Wear\n459 WARD STREET\nPHONE 425\nSaturday. Oct. 17-8 p.m.\nTrail Smoke Eaten\nVI.\nNelson Maple Leafs\nTickets On Sale at Kootenay Stationers\n10 a.m. to 5 p.m.\n_J\n\u25a0\nabout the sensational\nExi&e\nULTRA START!\nFrom truck operators tb ted driven to\near owners, the word is going around,\n'There's no battery like the Ezide\nUltra Start.\" It's hanging up new performance records. Its amazingly longer\n'life is the' talk of owners and dealers\neverywhere.\nWMEN   ITS   A\nYea, when yoa Wstall an Bride Ukw\nStart battery, you can be sere yoa won't\nhave to buy another battery for a lotsg,\nlongtime.\nIXID1 BATTERIES OF CANADA UMITBD\nMontreal TORONTO Vancouver\nART .\n pp^^\n\u2014-\nu\nv\nL\nA\nB\nN\nfc\nft\nm I\nft\n1\ns\nE\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\n^AHiseotiiNASHoyt.\nHONEST ABE THE\nHISTORICAL 61\nO'DOGPATCH-\nHERE'5'KISSIN' ROCXWHAR\nPAIS-V MAE TRIED TsSlT MET\nFALs. IN LOME WIF HER\u2014\nBUTAH WAS-.e'WK'er-TBO\nSHAStr\/r- OH.THI5ISTH'\nSCENE O'-SOME-O'MAH\nBIOatST TRIOMPHS\u00bb7\nBUT-4VIW- SHE DONE\nMARRIED HttS.tr\u2014 ,, \u00ab'\nUE'5 OlTAWAV FOM\"     .\nTHIS SAD SPOT, HONEST\nAN'HERE-A\nANNOUNCEMENT\nTHEri-UMAK-:\nVO'SICKTCTH'\n\u20223T0MMICK,\nWHEN SO'IS A\nGROWN MAN\nPSSr\/fGIT' ^\nthet useless\nU'LBACHEWR\nourn-m'WM\nSOMETMH'\ntimet is\nOOMIH'.V\nBl\u00bb_\u00a3W\nII PUBLIC |\n|SCHOO_.|\ny$frt\n(mKf\nN\"H\nxmW\/ \u25a0      '^\u25a0^\ny \u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0\u2022''.   '.'\u25a0<\u25a0\n1      \u2022 ;\u25a0\nf%_\n^\nv j?w\nTH\njfflk'    Y\n%**B\u00abH V t__J\n1      '\niA *i\n1 5 c *S.J.*rt MH-WfMT KIND OF   *\n-?\/,_\/6\/S \/US You BURNINS tM THIS\"\n- 6N8INE* FRO\/M A STANDING\nSWOT, v\u00bb HlT.TVKl MUMPRE?\n* AM HOUR-UJFNE SECONDS!\n.^..s^^e^^^^^^,^^^^\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 16,1953\n1VVII1III lll\\\n.lm)lI I Ml  un)\nWd\nPTRSON-TO-PERSON MNTADS\nFOR QUICK RESULTS!\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nWOODWORKING MACHINE Operators; experienced. Union wages\n\u2014Winter; Work. Hy-Grade MilU\nwork Ltd., Saskatoon, Sask.\nYOUTH REQUIHED FOR FRINT-\ning Bhop. Whimster's Commercial\nPrinting, 507 Ward, Street\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nWANTED -RELIABLE MIDDLE-\naged woman to look after two\nsmall children. Must be fond ot\nchildren. Phone Mrs. Miller, 1214.\nAGENTS WANTED\nGOOD DISTRICT OPEN TO SELL\nRawleigh' Products. Write Raw-\nlelgh's, J1535, Winnipeg, Man,\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSECOND-CLASS STEAM ENGIN-\n-eer, B.C. papers, wide experience\nIn power-house work. Box 6735,\nDaily News.\nYOUNG LADY WILL CARE FOR\none or two children In her home,\nwhile mother works. Phone 472-L.\nWILL LOOK AFTER CHILD IN\nmy own home. Apply Box 8823,\nDaily News.\nfor yOur w 6 6 6 - etirriNff\nneeds, phone Willow Point Store,\n714-X-l.\nGENTLEMAN WANTS POSITION\nas night clerk. Write Box 58, Nelson,* B.C. 77 7\nPERSONAL\nUtCRONIC HEARINO ATOS=\nWrite P.O Box 88. Nelsoni. B,C\nWAWANESA SfSWpQ. Mtt BR-\nsurance Co.-D. L. Kerr, Agent\nmm. BOTOiU OiW-oSit* j*pc\nDepot Clean rooms and reeetn-\nable rates  Vancouver. B.C.\nNelarnt Satlg Npwh\nClassified Advertising Ratea:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions\nlie line per consecutive inser-\ntion after first insertion\n48c line for 6 consecutive laser.\ntions\n$1.56 line for month (28 consecutive Insertions). Box numbers lie extra.  Covert any\nnumber, of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, etc.\u2014Mc per line,\nfirst insertion.  18c per lino\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LBSS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rateer\"\n(Not More Than Lilted Here)\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance  _....   JS\nBy carrier, per year  .      $15.(0\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month    ... $ 1.26\nThree montht 3.78\nSix montht US\nOne year      15.08\nMall in Canada, outside Nelaon:\nOne month         1.00\nThree montht 2.71\nSix months    S.M\nOne year  _  10.00\nWhere extra pottage li required,\nebove rates plus postage.\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNEW GOOSE AND DUCK\nfeathers for Sale; Only, breast and\nbody feathers with natural, down\ncontents. No wing or tail. Goose,\n$2.00 per lb. Duck ,$1.80 per lb.\nP.   S.   Gross,   Pincher   Creek,\n' AJberta.      .\"'\" -    \u25a0 \u2022\nFOR THOSE WHO WISH A GOOD\nused washing machine, gasoline\nor electric, at a better than reasonable price (they must go), as\nlow as $15.00, call in to Jeffrey's\nRadio, or phone 1302.\nFOR ;3ALE \u2014 USED McCLARY\ncoal and wood stove, ivory enamel; warming closet. Good shape.\nPhone 765-R.\nFOR SALE-ONE C.C.M. THREE-\nwheeled tricycle: one child's toy\nelectric organ; both like new. \u2014\nPhone 1477-X.\nLARGE CIRCULATING OIL\nheater, 5-gaI. capacity, excellent\ncondition; $55.00. Box. 6832, Daily\nNews.\nKIRBY VACUUM AND POLISHER\n\u2014Original price $180.00 11 months\nagb. Bargain at $55.00. Box 6654,\nDaily Newa. -..'.\nFOR SALE-'31 MODEL A ROAD-\nster,. $76.00; also tractor, blade\nand plow, $450. Hilltop . Coffee\nShop, Phone 188-L-l\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES -\nSpeClll low prices. Active Trading Co, 931 E. Cordova St- Vancouver. .' \u2022   .\nFOR SALE - BOYff C.C.M. BI-\ncycle; very good- condition, $30.\nPhone 718-Y.   '\u25a0'    ; S\nFOR SALE\u2014 1 CHESTERFIELD\nchair, coffee table and end table.\nWrite Box 6752, Daily News.\nFOR SALE-DUCK BOAT. CAN-\nvas. covering on cedar planking.\n624 Nelson Avenue.\nFOR SALE \u2014 CAM.P STOVE,\nnearly new, with good oven. \u2014\nApply W. Wood, Brilliant foams\nCRESS WART REMOVER\u2014Leaves\nno scars.    Your Druggist sells\n. CRESS.\nFOR! SALE \u2014 KITCHEN RANGE,\n$40.00; also baby ' carriage, like\nnew, $20.00. Call 724 Richards St.\nBABY BUGQY, BABEE TENDA'\nand car seat. Phone 578-Y or 808\nThird Street.\nFOR SALE^-WINTER PEARS. -1\nPhone 1789-B; ,7\nBARGAIN PRICE ON NEW G.E.\nrange; never used. Phone 181-X.\nGEESE FOR SALE-57 YMIR RD.\nor P.O. Box 308, Nelson.\nFOR   SALE \u2014 WHITE- ENAMEL\nSpencer range,, Phone 1462-X. .\u25a0\u25a0\n*bR i_Afj!S-M_6S-W$SD RAtfdi;\nin good condition; $18. Ph. 1617-X.\n'MACHINERY\nbkm*Ab mdBMam to.\nLIMITED\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: M-NIHG,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AMD\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries invited\nGranville bland. Vancouver 1, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1949 HD-7 ALLIS\nChalmers, complete with 20-ton\nwinch, new tracks, blade and hydraulics in first class condition.\nMake an offer. Box 44, Nelson.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n1. Coffee Aa\n5. Begonej\n0; Removed,\nas the\ncenter\n_u. feerea\ncurioueijr\n12. Measure.\nof land\n13. A cat who\ncatches\nmice\nIU. Those\nscribble My\n16. Tellurium\n(tyin.)\nIT. Cutting\ntool\nJS, Red state la\nScorpio\n20. Offer\nsll.Jaiie.buga\n22. Started\naside\npS.FttHo*\neacian\n*weh\u00bb\nDOWN\nS.A\n\u00bb. Petty\ni.MissHe\nweapon\n3.No_rl_l-\n4. Man's\nnickname\n(.Merriment\n6. Zealous\ncttopaisMC\nwho     T.SlJtte\"\n8. Seesaw*\n9. Bounders\n1..8tylWi\n\u00abCoHo\u00ab*\n-3. Fix\nta Unproved\n28, Moves\nwith\nM-SatKli.\nties\nStRiver\n(So. .\nAm.)\n28. Novel\nby\nZola.\n\u00bbr.H.gh,\n*8.Angi_r\n\u2022..-.[\u2022liiiil iii- \u2022-\"-!-'\n'J'.'.IIWH l-JIU'J.il:\n'_'.'. :i':i >:^MMiiia\n3_U_B   _!!_B\nataffl    beb:\n- l-OHnKJO-E\n- ._._l@ _ll_Ui_l_\n[\u00a3lHBfflul_l.   I\"\"\"'\ni-jan    nam\nuian Bimasi\nr:i@r_ia3ii n__a__\n^mtmttaHSmtmn \u25a0\n31. Disease -\nof tye\nSt Organs       e\nof sight\n.-.Unadorned\n- 3J. Winged\nSS.B_-e\nVA   .\nt  7\"7\n\\\\'\nb\ni\nr\naf\ni?\nn\nBT \"\"\nii\nST\" ,\n. my\n%\nw\n17\n^\n_^_i_2\nto\n23   25   24\nJ\nV* w\nBT \u25a0\ny>r\n%\n'M\nl\n_r\nW\"\n'\/\/\nw\n.\nfc'    %\na*\ntt        er\ny?\nm\nI\nil\nV'\n-$\n\\%\n-i\n\\\n|26. Agreement\n27. Sailor\nlilaM\ni\u00bb. State et\nUgh\n, spirits\nSO. Observe\n33.Elevated\ntraiii;. -'\nS4.Conduet\nchoracteris.\nWe'e*:-'\nknight-\nerrant\n88. Old coins\n'    (Port.)\n38. Incite\n39. Confectioo\n40.FarcwcB\n<sp;)\n' mi.*\u25a0-' <\n_M*L\u00a5 C-WFTOQeOXE-Here's mm m work tt:\nAXID1BAAX1\nncNertuoff\nOne letter simply Staada for another. _c this example A ls used\nMr the three L's, X for tho two (Ta. ete. Single'letters, apos.\ntrophies, the lengttt and fonnaUon ef the words are ell -date.\nBach dasr the code iettera are dhlereat.,\n' !\\ rrjptn|r. tin fliinlttif\nr.''\u00ab * w l p'ii *   t w x s * *    * r.\nWRSJETKFRK-   MT    Ft    ITlEWIsFHt ,\n'\u25a0   lirXTir.-R! T-;__t I;'i. '\u25a0.\nYestertey's Cryptoquote. LET OTHER BARDS OF ANGELS\nBING. BRIGHT SUNS WITHOUT A SPOT \u2014 WORDS WORTH.\nIHI\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nETC. FOR SALE\n.    FOR SOMEBODY\n4 Rooms and.Bath, in very\ngood condition, on half an acre,\nnear school, at Harrop. Liberal\nterms to right party. SJ4500\n'McHardy\nAgencies \u25a0. Ltd.'\nReal Estate and Insurance\nPhone 135 \u2014 Eves.: 620-Y\nfoil\nS.4LE-20 ACRES LAND, 7\nacres orchard, 5. acres Mcintosh\nand Delicious, 2 acres cherries,\nprunes, apricots and pears; 12\nacres under cultivation. 7-room\nhouse. Electricity, running water\nand other buildings.. Will sell on\nreasonable terms. Fred F. Popoff,\nR.R. No. 1, Grand Forks, B..C.    ,\nFOR SALE-TWO CHOICE fcOCA-\ntions on Riondel Road; 300 yds,\nnorth of Trans-Provincial Highway. Each lot contains 32 acres\nwith 220 yds. of lake and- road\nfrontage. $600 down; total $1800.\nLiberal terms. W. Fraser, Kootenay Bay.\nFOR SALE-10 ACRIM- WITH UN-\nflnished house; but comfortable\nio live in. Water piped in house.\n. 9 miles west on highway. Write\nBox 387,. Nelson, B.C.\nFORCED TO SELL C!6M.(JR#-\nable 3-bedroom \u2022house. Good location. Full basement; automatic hot\nwater heat Immediate possession.\nBox 6935, Daily News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1-4 ROOM HOUSE,\nfully modern; 1-3 room house,\nfully modern. Apply Wm.'A.\nHenke, Procter.\nFbR SALE-BUILDING LOTS,\n60 x 120,, outside city limits, 1\n. block from bus. Phone 1099-L, or\napply 206 View Street\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST i* BED VELVET PURSE\ncontaining return bus\"ticket to\n' Trail, and some money. Finder\nplease phone 1310-Y.\nlost \u2014 m\/vips .white gold\npocket watch. Of sentimental\nvalue. Can ba identified, 823 Mill\nStreet:,,-       '\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0    , \"\nLOST-700*-7 TRUCK TtRE AND\nwheel, on highway between S.\nSlocan ahd New Denver. G. Duncan, New Denver. Phone 19-W.\nLOST-SMALL BROWN SUIT-\nease, Baker St., Nelson. Reward.\nPhone 144 or call at Daily News.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nGOOD .HOME. FOR TWO MALE\npups. One white Spitz, 7 mons.\nold; 1 small Boston Bull,'10 mons.\nold. No small \"children preferred.\nApply Box 6747, Daily News.\nROOM AND BOARD\nSOAftft   AND   ROOM - PHONE\nRENTALS\nTWO HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS',;\nfurnished. One suitable, for couple. Would like to contact lady\nwho would do light housework\nin return for rent. References re'-i\nquired. Box 6829, Dally News..\nQUIET, ELDEftLYvCOtlPLE DHi\"\nsires self-contained heated 3 or 4\nroom apartment. Would consider\nsmall house. Must be close in.\nBox 6762, Daily News.\nWANTED URGENTLY'\u2014 FUR-\nnished housekeeping' rooin .or\nsuite by business'girl. Write Box\n6751, Daily News.\n1 ROOM SUITE, FULLY FUR-\nnished, steam heat, .also one\nhousekeeping room with kitchen.\n171 Baker St.\nCOMFORTABLE DOUBLE ROOM\nwith use of kitchen. Reasonable.:\nPhone 308-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS FOB\nrent. General heat. Electric stoves.\nNorth Shore Motel, Phone 1684.\nNICELY    FURNISHED    SUMm\nsuitable for two business people;\nNo children. Apply 112 Vernon St\nROOM, CENTRAL, FOR BUSI-\nnessman, in nice home. All con-\n. veniences. Phone 457-R after' 3..\nFOR RENT \u25a0\u2014 SELF-CONTAINED1\ncottage at Willow Point Phona?\n1635-L-l.\nROOM.FOR RENT, CLOSE'IN. \u2014 i\nPhone 247-Y. . -4\nROOMS FOR SsWl \u2014 621 SlLttA''\nStreet. \u25a0  - \u25a0    ;;:\nFOR RENT-LKilW ' aOWS_P,:\nkeeping room. Phone 405-L.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear from the Appleby- Poultry\nFarm. Mission City, B.C. We have\nover 7000 extremely healthy sal\nproperly conditioned Breeders oo\nour own farm, pur baby chicks\nare produced only from our own\nstock in White Leghorns, White\nRocks, New HampsUree an*\nCrosses. Catalogue on request\nFROM FAMOUS EGG LAYING\nstrains R.O.P. Sired Neew Hamp\npullets, vaccinated against Newcastle and bronchitis. 10 wks. old\n$1.20, 12 wks. old $1.50, any\nquantities. Kromhoff Farms, R.R.\nNo. 5, New Westminster, B.C.\nPhone Newton 60-L-8.\nFOR SALE \u2014 3-Y*AR-OlLD -ICHX..\nstein bull. From registered purebred stock. Record may be ObfP\ntabled. Quiet and accustomed to\nbetaft'SeptWed. -Also an tt-month-\nold -folstetn M. Apply W. Mip-\nkow, Frultyale, g.p.\nFDR SALE\u2014COWi JOBl' l'kUsil_i\nened one week with second call\ng. Polenekpff, jllooan Park, ^.C7\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET IBICES PAID FOB\nscrap iron, steel,' brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading. Prompt\npayment, made. Atlas Iron St Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancou*\nver, B.C. Phone PACiflc 8357.\nWANTED-CIRCULAR SAW AND\n8-volt generator.' Hans Schlaffe,\nThree Forks, via New Denver.\nWANTED7-^CLEAN COTTON\nrags. Must be 12 inches square\nor more. Daily News.\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS\n1240 ON THE MM.\n(Pacific Standard Time)\nFRIDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1953\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Warren's Wigwam.\n7:15\u2014Sports News\n7:20\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Sport News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sporta Corner\n9:00\u2014Morning Devotions\n9:15\u2014Earl Warren Show\n-10:00\u2014Morning Music\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Music\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\nll-.po\u2014Shut-in Show\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Devoratively Speaking\n11:50\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:00\u2014Noon Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farip Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Chat With Listeners\n1:00\u2014Man In the Kitchen\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\nliSO-^-Fairview Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014Musical Prograii. ;  '\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n3:30\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n4:15\u2014A trip tc the Moon\n4:30\u2014Anne bt Green Gables\ni 5:00\u2014Daily Report from Ottawa\n5:05\u2014Pacific News\n5:16r-Int. Commentary\n5:20\u2014Behind the .News\n5.25\u2014Spotlight On a Star\n5:40\u2014SportB News\n5:45\u2014News\n5:55\u2014Legislative Report\n6:0O\u2014Sports News\n6:15\u2014Religious Period\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Royjidup\n7:30\u2014Int. Concert\n8:30\u2014Here's Juliette\n9:00\u2014Sports Page\n9:30\u2014John Fisher.     .\n9:45\u2014Speakers. Choice\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Music for Two\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10I45-Starlight Ballroom \u2022\n11:00\u2014Around the Town ''\n12:00-NEWS Night Cap\ncbc Programs\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nSATURDAY,\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broarvast\nIfb\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Musical  Minute-:\n7 40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical  March  Past\n8:00\u2014News    -.\n>8:l<MBill Good Sports  '\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Local Fill\n9:00-BBC News\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\nMO\u2014Stamp Club\n9:4!W_au Davis\n-OiOCM-Wbo's Herb Gott\n10:30-^World Church News ['y;\u25a0\n10:45s-*News and Weather\n11:00\u2014Story of MUsic \u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0'*\n12:00\u2014Follt. Song time .\n12:30\u2014Portraits of Sound\n1:00\u2014Musical Program\nOCTOBER 17, 1953\n1:30\u2014Turntable Tempos\n2:00\u2014Trans-Canada Bandstand\n3:00\u2014News\n8:1Q-Weekend Listening\n3:15\u2014This Week\n3:30\u2014Sports College\n3:45\u2014Armdale Chorus\n4:00=-To Be Announced\n4:15\u2014Sports College i'.'-\n4:30\u2014Curtain Melodies       '\n5:00\u2014Western Roundup\n5:80\u2014To Be Announced\n6:00\u2014News\n6:05-NHL Hockey  7,\n7;30\u2014Organ Music\n8:00-Share the Wealth\n8:30\u2014The Homesteaders\n9:00\u2014Hit Parade\n9:30\u2014The Music Box\n10:15\u2014MacDonald Hotel 'Orchestra |\n10:30\u2014Western Five\nIS\n .\"\u25a0\"\u2014\na2H(\nh.hnnl IMF ilfii\nPTRSOWO-PtRSQN WANT ADS\nFOR QUICK RESULTS!\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads- -5 p.m.\n-<_\u00a3_\nPhone 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nI    IMMEDIATE\nI     DELIVERY\nI New Austin.\nSOMERSETS\nCREAM      BLUE     GREEN\n1953 Packard Clipper\n,1953 Austin Convertible\n1953 Ford Fordor\n1952 Austin Somerset\n.1952 Studebaker Sedan\n1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Austin Convertible\n1951 Austin Devon\n1951 Monarch Coupe\n1950 Austin Devon\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1950 Pontiae Sedan\n' 1949 Austin Devon\n1949 Hijlrrvan Sedan\n1949 Ford Sedan\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Ford Tudor\n19?7 Ford Coupe\n1937 Chevrolet Sedon\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\n\\   EMPIRE\nMOTORS\n803 Baker St.   Phone 1135\nNelson, 6.C.    \u2022\nDrop Into Our New Car Lot\nJust Below the Cement Wall\nOn Vernon Street\nIn the 600 Block\nWE HAVE A\nCAR OR TRUCK\nFOR YOUR\nEVERY NEED!\nNew 1953 Austin Somerset\ni    1953 Henry J. Corsair\nj    1952 Austin Somerset\n1952 Chevrolet Coupe\n1951 Pontiae Coach\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Mercury Coupe\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet Tudor\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1947 Dodge Sedon\n1946 Pontiae Sedan\n:    1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1934 Ford Fordor\nCOMMERCIALS\n1552 Studebaker Plekup\n1950 Ford Pickup\n1948 Chevrolet Vi Ton\n1950 Austin Panel\nCASH    TERMS    TRADES\nJoe Langan, Manager\nI \u2022 EMPIRE\n600 Block Vernon Street\nNelson, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVE    -\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n.    .        (Continued)\n1948 HUDSON SUPER \u00ab. BRAND\nnew re-condltioned motor. New\npsint job, In excellent mechanical\ncondition. $875.00. Phone 046, or\nwrite Box 172, Nelson.'\nFOR SALE - '48 STCDEBAKIR\nChampion. Low mileage. Air conditioner, defroster, overdrive, radio. Good condition. Phone 20S.\n1042 CHEVROLET SEDAN. GOOD\ncondition. .Complete with radio,\nunder-seat heater, defroster and\n2 new tires. $4&J cash. Ph. 1480-R.\nFOR SALE \u2014MODERN 2-WHEKL\ncar trailer, licenced,'$05.00. Write\nBox 6638, Dally News.\nFOR SALHW47 DODGE C.6Atj_.\nIf you are looking for a car In\nA-l mechanical shape, ph. 443-R.\nWILL TRADE ito _HEV. SftSXR\nfor smell car. Phone 10 or 1044-L,\nF. A. Baker.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1037 OLi.S,\\.i_Bi___\nconvertible. Good rubber and en-\ngine. Phone 608-L-3 after 5-p.t_.\nFOR SALE\u20141040 K.B.-. itlTER-\nnatlonal. Phone 168-Y-3.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nHAVE $1500.00 TO INVEST IN\nsmall business, Apply Box 8836,\nDally News.\nFOR SALE - STANgm.RLI.I'S\nGrocery, Including 5-room house\nattached to store. 112 Silica St.\nTuy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nA38AYER8 AND MINI\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.  W   WIDDOWSON Si CO., AS-\nsyyere. 801 Josephine St, Nelson.\ntt   S '.feUU-,  ROSSLANft. _..<!,\nAisayer. Chemist. Mine Rep.\ns_wi.iN.-KR.. AND 8URVEYOR8\nR. K. COATtife, i!4..N6. 8. stt\nBaker St, Nelson, Phone. 1118.\nB.C   Lands Surveyor,\nB. V.. SBAYtftrt. t.6. b6S- _.*,\nKimberley, Phone 84.\nBC   Land Surveyor, Engineer,\nBOVD C AFFLECK, 2(8 GO-ft &1,\nNelson, BC Surveyor. Engineer.\nI\nwmwfmm \u2014\nMachine. Shop. Acetylene and\nelectric welding,, motor rewinding   Phone 593, 824' Vernon St\nGiant Mascot Mines Limited announced lt set new profit and production records in September at\nits mine at Spillimacheen.\nB. H. Gunning, managing director, reports that 16,581 tons of ore\nwere mined ahd milled and 917 tons\nof lead concentrates produced.\nNet operating profit for the\nmonth was $51,200.\nPrevious highest net operating\nprofit for any one month was $48,-\n.284, in July, 1952, when lesd wes\npriced at 10. cents a pound and the\ncompany benefitted from a premium on the U.S. dollar.\nMr. Gunning reports that the new\nlow level crosscut (No. 7 level) has\nbeen completed snd ls now in ore.\nLOG HAULERS\n'44 Reo Logger with 18-ton Willock\ntandem trailer, 427 cu. in, cont.\nmotor, S-speed trans., 3-spood aux.,\nSeattle bunks, water tanks end air\nbrake. This unit hss $8000 worth\nof nearly new 11.00x20 tires en it,\nReady to go to work. \u2014 Complete\nfor only $8900.\nUSED TRUCK CENTRE\n431 Kingsway . FA1834\nIT'S HEREI THE NORTON TEA-\nthorbed\" Domlnator Come la end\n- see this famous motorcycle, the\n. holder of the Isle of Men TT at\nKootenay Motorcycle Sales end\nService, Box 380. Castlegar; phone\n2801 \"The Shop of Friendly Service.\"\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nAND rpt\/c\/fs\nCOMPUMSMTS\nUSED CARS AND TRUCKS\nAt Super-Values at PEEBLES\nUSED CARS\n1952 Dodge Sedan\nBeautiful Brentwood Blue,\nPorcelainized. Air Conditioner,\nNew Motor.\nBeautiful Condition.\n1951 Austin A-40 Sedon\nGreen Finish. Solid Top. Radio,\nHeater, Low Mileage.\n1950 Pontiae\n2 Door Sedan\nSoft-Toned  Gunmetal.  '\nVery Low Mileage.\n1950 Prefect Sedan\nIn Excellent Condition.\n1950 Plymouth Sedan\nLovely .Pltcalrn Blue. Beat'' \"ul\nShape. .Air Conditioner.\n1950 Plymouth\nClub Coupe\nNew Motor. Exceptionally\nGood Condition. Low Mileage.\nIdeal Family Car.\n1950 Austin\nDark Green. One Owner.\nBeautiful Little Car.\n1949 Plymouth Sedan\nColor:  Gunmetal. Air Condi-\ntion. 6 Cylinder, L-Head Motor.\nUnmatched for Value.\n1948 Austin Sedan\nrlnlshed  in  Beige. Leather\nUpholstery, Com. Gear Steering. 4-Speed Transmission.\n$648.\n1948 Chrysler\nRoyal Sedan\n_iin Visor, Radio, Excellent Air\nConditioner, Good Tires, Saran\n,   Seat  Covers.\n\"Drive e Chrysler.\"\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n117\" Wheelbese. Color: Maroon.\nHeater, Hotchklss Drive.\nSafety Glass Throughout.\n1947 Ford\nGunmetal Finish. In Very Good\nCondition. Super Deluxe.\nWaterproof Ignition Distributor\n1947. Plymouth Sedan\nSingle Dry Disc Clutch. Safeguard Wheels, Quiet Auto\nMesh Transmission.\n1946 Chevrolet Sedan\n6 Cylinder Velve-ln-Hesd\nEngine, Delco Remy Ignition,\nUnitized Knee Action Ride,\nDiaphragm Spring Clutch.\n1946 Mercury Sedan\nBeautiful Metallic Green Paint.\nOood Body and Rubber,\nLOW-PRICED\nSPECIALS\n1940 Dodge Sedan\nGood Motor, Body and Rubber\nExcellent \u2014 $697.00\n1940 Old-mobile Sedan\nRuns Good \u2014 $396.00\n1939 Nash Sedan\nUpholstery\n-$448.05\nGood  Body,\nLike New.\n1939 Plymoqth Sedan\nColor: Black. Radio.\nRuns Like New.-$576.00\n1939 Plymouth Sedan\nRe-manufactured Engine.\nExcellent  Transportation.\n7 $547,00\n1931 Bulek Sedan\nGood Paint. Like New Inside.\nGood Transportation. \u2014 $140.00\n1937 DeSoto Sedan\nNice Body. Priced Reasonable.\n$576.00\n1937 Packard Sedan\nRuns Very Good. \u2014 $246.00\n1936. Ford Coach\nBrand New Engine, Radio.\nHeater, Turning Signals,\n'    $426.00      '\n1933 DeSoto Coupe\n\u2022Good Running Order. \u2014 $126.00\n1932 Chrysler Sedan\nAs Is Value. Licenced,\nRuns Good. \u2014 $76.00\nUSED TRUCKS\n1946 Ford 3-Ton\nFlat Deck and Hoist.\n1\" H.D..Cylinder - $896\n1950 Fargo\n, Va Ton Express\n126\"  W.B.   One   Owner.   1600\nMiles. Good Rubber and Body.\n1948 Chevrolet Pickup\nColor: Red. In Ideal Shape.\n1.947 Dodge\nVt, Ton Express\nIn Extra Good Condition.\nNew Motor. - $696\n1947 Fargo Panel\nCarefully Driven. New Meter.\nPriced.!* ciee>....\n1940 Ford Plekup      \"\nRuns Very Oood. \u2014 $297\n1936 Ford Pickup\nA Real Buy tt $98.00\nPeeblw Motor. ....\n[HRY-IERPLYMDUTII-FARDD;i.^7'TIREr'\nTORONTO STOCKS\n(^losing PHoes)\nMINES\nAtlas Y K  \t\nAumaque\t\nAunor ......  ~\nBagamac \u25a0_'. \u2014\nBarymin .\t\nBevcourt \t\nBobjo ,\u201e\u201e _.\nBralorne   \t\nBroulan   \u2014\nBuff Can  ,. \t\nCellftan  \t\nCampbell R L \t\nControl Patricia\t\nChestervllto\t\nChlmo O\t\nCochenour ...-.\t\nCons Golden Arrow ......\nCons MliS\t\nConwest\t\nCons Discovery ....\nDelnlte      \t\nDetta R L  \t\nDonelda \t\nDuvay ..     \t\nEast Malartie\t\nEast Sullivan  \u2014\u25a0\nEastern' Metals \t\nElder Gold  \t\nEstella\n.18\n.WH\n2.25\n.15\n1.38\n.36\nJU\n3.10\n2.19\n.17\n.18%\n7.10\n,65\n.40\n1.10\n.9*.\n.80\n23.83\n4.08\n2.13\n.11\n.15%\n.\u00ab0Vi\n.35\n1.60\n4.25\n1.33\n.40\n.37%\nEureka .   - -      .78*\nFalconbridge -   W-JO\nFroblsher     <-'B\nGiant Yel -     M0\nGod's Leke        ?8\nGoldcrest      -\u2022\u2022      \u2022\"\nGolden MSnltou     'IM\nHarrlcana   '\u00ab\nHasaga \u25a0\u25a0-      \u25a0\u00ab\nHolllnger       -    11-22.,\nHomer Y K   \u25a0,.-       \u2022\u00ab%\nHudson Bay  \u2014 -    39.25\nInspiration        l.\u00bb '\nInt Nickel  \u2014\u25a0   a\"-6'\nJollet Que \u2014   \u2022 \u2022'*\nKerr Addison       \u00ab.50\nKirk-Hudson Bay _0\nKlrkland Lake        \u2022\u00ab\nLabrador  -    \u00ab-JJ\nLake Dufault 1     -\u2122\nLakeshore  -    \u00bb-j\"\nLake Wane -      \u2022\u00bb\u00bb\nLeltch     <\nLlngman (new)\nMacassa . \t\nMacDonald\nVancouver Stocks\n... (Closing Prioes)\nMINIS '      .\nBeaver Lodge ..\u201e\u201e-.....__.\u201e.. ,70\nBralorne',.,  v.  8,00 -\nCariboo-Gold  ........ .95'\nEstelle ;.,. '\u2022'..-....\u00ab li.\u2014\"-.. .26 \u2022\nGiant '.Mascot  .\u201e......_.\u00bb. .47\nHighland Bell ....;..',\u00bb.\u00bb....i. .33\nPac East Gold _ .10\nPend'Oreille;....\u00bb.\u2014..\u2014~_ 4.08\nPioneer, Gold ......... ,-..._ 1,80\nQuatslno \u2014  .21\nReeves Mac  1.43\nSheep Creek ......\u201e.\u201e\u201e.-....-- .80\nSherritt Gordon ..._-..-...,\u00ab.' 4.05 ,\nSilver Standard  _.;._\u2014 774 .\nVan Roi        .04%\nWestern Ex  .32\nWestern Tungsten ............ 1.25\nYale   ,24\nOILS\nAnglo Cen    5.30\nA P Consolidated  .... .33\nCal St Edmonton -._.... 9.80\nCalmont   1.17\nCan Anaconda   ,18\nCommonwealth  4,00\n.20\n1.59\n.61\n1\nMacLeod Cock \u2014    J-25\nMadsen R L\nMalartie G F ...\nMclntyre Pore\nMcKenzle R L\nMcMarmac  \t\nMining Corp\t\nNew Bidlamaque\nNew Calume t \t\nNew Goldvue\t\nNew Kelore \t\nNew Lund \t\nNew Larder U \t\nNew Mylameque...\nIt \u25a0\n1.60\n1.35\n..   53.25\n.33\n.11\n10.00\n.22\n.22\n.20\n.17\n.18\n1.51\n.34\n\u2022 1.40\n63.85\n2.65\n.19\n.64\n.44\n.37\n1.13\n27.25\n2.40\n.38\n15.35\n.60\n1.85\nNipisslr\nNorsnda \t\nNormatals s.\nNorth Inca .\nO'Brien   \t\nOsisko \t\nPaymaster ...\nPickle Crop\nPlacer Devel\nPreston E D\nQueenston ...\nQuemont \t\nRadlore  \t\nSan Antonio\nSherritt Gordon  <15\nSilvermiller   \u00ab\nSUanco  - 13\nSIscoe  \u2014\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022 \u2022\u00ab%\u2022\nStadacona  \u2014 -- .31\nStarrat Olsen  ;15\nSteeloy  -12\nSteep Rock  -  \u00ab\u2022\u00bb\nSudbury Cont  '\u25a0\u2014 -22\nSurf Inlet\". \u2022- -15W\nTeek Hughes  ..'  W\u00b0\nThompson-Lund  16\nTombtll - -18\nTorbrlt  1.10\nUpper Canada  107\nVentures   ,   15.00\nViolamae  2-25\nWalte Amulet   9.75\nOILS\nAnglo Can  3.50\nB A Oil    17.62%\nCal & Bd   10.12%\nCalmont    1.20\nSdn Atlantle - \u00ab.\u00ab0\nCentral Leduc    2.10\nCentral Ex   4.70\nChemical Research   1.15\nDalhousie - 22\nMarket Trends\nNEW YCiRK (API - Prices advanced with a rush that carried all\nsections sharply hither.    -\nHigher Canadian stocks included\nCanadian Pacific and Dome Mines,\neach up, ind International'Nickol.\nMONTREAL (CP) - Prices td'\nvanced fractionally in alow afternoon trading. -.'.'..    -   \\\nSteele, senior metals, papers, senior oils, utilities and miscellaneous\nIndustrials were firmer. Triad Oil,\nclimbed 28 cents to $3,78.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014London\nwas firm again, but exhibited little\noj Wednesday's vigor.\nBritish government stocks suffered fractional losses. Foreign\nbonds went ahead under the lead\nof Germans.and Japanese.\nTORONTO  (CP) \u00abf Most prices\nDalhousie\nHome   i\t\nMercury' .\nNational Pete ....\nOkalta Com \t\nPacific Pete \t\nRoyalite\/.\t\nVanalta\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapita) Estates\nInt Brew B\t\n.80'\n7.25\n.14\n1.92\n'\u20222!\n9.70\n13.25\n.21\n23.00\n4.25\nNIUON DAILY NIWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 16, WI \u2014 ijj\nwere higher toward the close of\ntrading.. \"..',, .,-\u25a0, '-.  \u25a0 .'\nIndustrials led the groups with\n0 more-than-a-polnt gain.\nBase metals were up, with several strong senior gains boosting\nthem; Juniors showed little change.\nMRTAL-Pf-ICM .     i\nNSW YORK (CP)-Spot prices: I\nlead-New York, .13%.      ---*.\u25a0\nZinc\u2014East St. Louis, .10. , ;\nTin-New York, .80%. A\n ' rV     fit.\nPHONE   144  FOB  CLASSIFIED\n7        FOR SALE\nSHIPMtOlt\nDIMENSION LUMBER\nPhono or Call\nS. P. POND\nNelson, B.C.\n.82\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi ...\nAlgbma Steel\t\nAluminum \t\nArgus \t\nAtlas St\t\nBathurat Power\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian    ,-.'..-    10%\nB C Forest\nB C Power A\nB C Power B'.\nBurrard A ....';\nCan cement .\nCan Melting\n14Vh\n39\n43%\n11%\n13%\n40\n..37%\n5\n34\na\u00bb\u201e;\n7%'\n78%\n51\n37%\nCen Paekers A ......._,....\nCan Breweries\t\nCan Canners   27\nCan Car Ss Fdy  18%\nCan Oar i Fdy A  18\nCan Celanese _ 28%\nCen Oil \u2014 12%\nCan Pac Rly   23%\nCoekshutt      11\nCons M It S  23%\nDist Seagram .'. ;.-.... ?\u00ab%\nDom Foundries   Wt\nDom Steel & Coal B  11%\nDom Stores .          17\nDom Tar Ss Chem     7%\nFanny Farmer  .-.  20>,i\nFord A   \u2014. 63Vi\nGatineau -\u25a0 20%\nGoodyear pfd     48\nGreat Lakes   18%\nGypsum Lime\nImperial Oil.....\nImp Tobacco ...\nInt Metals .......\nInt Nickel ..\u201e....-\nInt Pete -\t\nKelvlnator \t\nLoblaw A\t\nMassey Harris\nNat Steel Car ..\nPage Hershey\nPowell River\n33 Vt\n28%\n10%\n;S0\nS7\u00ab\n10%\n20\n38%\n7%\n25\n69 %\n23%\n17\nRuss Industries  -\t\nShawinlgan  , \u2014  ao\nShea Brew   !7tt\nSimpsons A   13%\nSouthsm    -  -..., 23%\nSteel of. Can  29%\nStandard Paving   17%\nUnion Gas of Can \u2014 80%\nUnited Steel   12%\nWinnipeg Gas      6%\n.............. ............a......i\nDel Rio \u00bb...\nFederated Pete\nHighwood Sr ....\nHome   \t\nImperial Oil\t\nInter Pete \t\nK-oy\n1.85\n4.50\n7.40\n7.68\n28.87%\n.18%\n1.29\n.17\n.18\n\"1.92\nMacDougel Segur Ex ...\nMid Cont\t\nNat Pete \t\nOkalta        2.00\nPac Pete     9.75\nRoyalite      14.00\nRoxana       .17\nlt....'...t'.*....9......\nThis adveitisement is not published or displayed by the Li-\nGovernment of British Co-\nquor, Control Board or by the\niumbla\nIU90\nHiCioit. B.C\n(Continued in'Next Column)\nOUTHOUSE OR CHEMICAL TOILET??\nDo Yourself a Favor..\nMIRACLE\nMISTOVAN\nClean Outhouses er Cheml$al\nToilets of Odors ... Human Willi.1\nInsects. Create! Sanitary, Pleasant\nConditions.\nRecommended by Departments ef Health\nand Over One Million Users.\nAvelleble it Most Grocers, General Stores\nWESTERN SANITARY SALES\nLIMITEp   '' '    .\nCqlflSry, Alls.\n(Nelson) L.d.\nBUY NOW AND SAVE!!\n-950D\u00abSQTO\n4-OOOR SEDAN 7'-',\nNew Paint, Automatic Transmission.\n1951 PLYMOUTH\n4-DOOR SEDAN\n1951 AUSTIN\nSEDAN\nVERNON\nST.\nPHONI 75\n1948 PLYMOUTH\n8.PA88INQER' COUPE    '\n194* DODGE\n4-DOOR  SEDAN     ,.\n1950PLYMOUTH\n4-DOOR 8EDAN,\n1940 PLYMOUTH SEDAN-$589.00\nSPECIAL\n1950 DODGE\nil\n4-DOOR SEDAN\nNew   Metelllo  Green   Paint,   Lovely\nCovers, New Motor, New      %i\t\nRubber. Wonderful buy\net only ir...;\t\nSeat\n1793\nIssue of <\n$700,000,000\nGOVERNMENT OF CJtNADA\n, \"bonds. \u2022-:\u2022.:\u25a0 vi.:\nThe Bank of Canada Is authorized by the Minister of Finance to receive'\nsubscriptions (er a loan offered in two maturities aa follows:\nIsfer cash subscriptions only)\nI Year 8 Month\n.,      2X% BONDS\nDUE 1st JULY, 1955.\nNon-callable to maturity\nInterest payable 1st January stud\n1st July; the first two months' Interest\nnil be payable 1st January, 1954.\nDenomt-atkmj\nt.,098,15,000, $25,000, $100,000\nand $1,000,000\nISSUE PRICE: 98.60% ,\nYielding about 3.49%\nto maturity\n(For eesh subscriptions and\/or\nconversion applications)\n4 Year 6 Month\n3% BONDS\nDUE 1st MAY, 1958\nNon-callable te maturity .\nInterest payable 1st May and\n1st November.\n$1,000, $5,000, $25,000, $100,000\nead $1,000,000\nISSUE PRICEi 97.15%\nYielding about 3.69%\nto maturity\nCONT1RSION OFFER\nThe Bank of Canada ia authorized to accept applications, subject\nto allotment, to convert Government of Canada 3% Bonds due lit\nMarch, 1954 into an equal par value of bonds of the above issue\nmaturing 1st May, 1958. Bonds maturing 1st March, 1954, which are\naccepted for conversion must have the final coupon attached and will\nbe valued at 101.50% inclusive of adjustment for\/accrued interest;\nouch bonds must be in bearer form or accompanied by proper transfer\ndocuments. Bonds accepted for conversion will.be exchanged on or\n' about 2nd November for an equal par .value df 3% Bonds due 1st May,'\n1958'and a cash adjustment wiH be-made on the basis of $43.50 per\n$1,000 of par value. '\nSubscriptions may be made to Bank of Canada, Ottawa, through\nany investment dealer eligible to act as a primary distributor or through\nany bank in Canada. An official prospectus may be obtained from any\nAgency of the Bank of Canada. '   .\nThe Minister of Finance reserves the right to accept or reject in\nwhole or in part any subscription for either maturity or both. Cash\nsubscription- to the 1958 maturity may be allotted on a different basis\nthan conversion applications at the discretion of the Ministerof Finance.\nThe books-of the Loan will open on 19th October, 1953 and will\ndose in either maturity or both in the case, of cash subscriptions or\nconversion applications with or without notice at the discretion of the\nMinister of Finance. \\.     ., -    .7\nOttawa, 14th October, 1953. i\n3\n-'S\n'A\n\u2022J\n .\t\nmmmmmmmm^mmmm\n12 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 16, 1953\nA Cold-Free Winter. \u2022 .\nYour ounce of prevention is here for the asking.\nA self imrhunizing course for colds.\n\u2022 IT IS EASILY TAKEN\n\u2022 IT IS INEXPENSIVE\n' ' \u25a0\" '\u25a0\"'. '-;'\u25a0'      ''\u25a0\u25a0',. \u25a0 .   '\ny?\"- Buy Your\nToday\n$1.75\n->$., -.-\nJmJFI SI\nDRUGS LTD.\n: PHONE 144 FOR 0LA8SIPIED\nfLEURY'S \u2022 Pharmacy\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONES!\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPieseriptioM\nPhont 36\nMelo-Aires\nir.^\/fal'HHrday -''9-1\"\nH You Like Easy Dance Rhythm\ni\u2014 K YouoLIke Pleasant Vocals\nr- If You Like Variety \u2014 Modern\nand Western Tune.\u2014\n'\u25a0!\u25a0    this le Your Dance\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP)\u2014There was a\nheavy carryover at the Calgary\nlivestock market Thursday, after\nlight bidding on offerings of 1882\nhead of cattle and Calves, including\n1170 head held over.\nHogs sold 25 cents lower Wednesday at $30.25 and sows dropped\n75 cents to $17; good lambs sold for\n518 to $18.50; good ewes held at\n$5 to $6.\n, Oood butcher steers, $16.50 to\n$17.50; common to medium, $10\nto $15.\nGood butchers heifers, $14.50 to\n$16; common to medium, $10 to\n$18.50.\n-Good oows, $9 to $9.50; eommon\nto medium, $7.25 to $8.75; oanners\nand cutters, $5 to $7.\nGood bulls, $9.50 to $10.50; eommon to medium, $6 to $9.\nGood to choice veal calves, $15 to\n$17; common to medium, $10 to\n$14.50. .   ;.*\" \u2022'\u25a0.'\u25a0\nA skunks litter Is usually be-\ntwqeen four and six young animals, but may run as high at 10.\n..aia.0 \u00bb\u00bb.\u00bb#._\nSEPTIC TANK BACTERIA\nNeed Correct\nAcid Balance\nTo Do the Job.\n8oap  Scum,  Fats,\nGrease, Are\nALKALINE  AND\nKILL BACTERIA\n\"SEPTIC\nAIDE\"\nIs absolutely a must\nfor sanitary active\nseptic tank or cesspool.\nEliminates  Odors,\nSoap and Grease Scum.\nSold at Grocers and\n.. General Stores\nSAVE ON CLIANOUTS\nDistributed by ....\nWESTERN SANITARY SALES\nLIMITED\nCalgary, Alta.\nDistrict Beauty\nWins Visiting\nSpokane Jaycees\nNelson Jaycees played host to\nfive Spokane Junior Chamber ot\nCommerce members and their\nwives. The U.S. visitors Included\nMi-, and Mrs. Jack Eachon, Mr. and\nMrs. Ed English, Mr. and Mrs. Jim\nHale, Mr, and Mrs. Archie Rutherford: and Paul Alison.\n' Mr. Eachon ls the President of\nthe Spokane Chamber of Commerce. Mr. English is at present a\nState Director and Mrs. Rutherford\nIs President of the.. Spokane\nJayceettes,\nWhen in Spokane recently a\ngroup of Nelson Jaycees and their\nwives visited the Eachon Ball\nField, so named after the Spokane\nJaycee' President. This field was\nconstructed by the Spokane Jaycees and is of great benefit to the\ncity of Spokane. It is valued at\napproximately $42,000 and is equipped with benches, a wonderful\nlighting system and is grassed. All\nball game proceeds are given to the\nJaycees and will continue to be\ndone so until.the field has been\npaid for. \u25a0 \\\nA dinner was held at the Shamrock grill for the U.S. Jaycees at\nwhioh Mayor and Mrs. Joseph\nKary were present; Mayor Kary\nofficially welcoming the' guests.\nAlso present were Dante Pascente,\npresident of Trail Jaycees and other\nmembers and their wives from\nTrail.\nFollowing dinner \u25a0 the Spokane\npeople were taken to see their first\nhockey game and thoroughly enjoyed an exciting two hours. So\nmuch so they decided they should\nnot miss games being played In\nSpokane in the future.\nThe visitors spent a busy day\ntaking pictures of Nelson as they\ntoured the Queen City and then\njourneyed up the lake to Balfour,\ncompletely captivated with the\nbeauty of the lake and countryside.\nThis was their first visit to Kelson, but all stated it wouldn't be\nlong before they would be'back\nbringing their families to enjoy\nholidays in this district.   .    .\nOn. leaving an invitation was\nextended to Nelson and, Trail\nJaycees to attend a State Board\nmeeting in Pullman,. Wash., October 31, More such international\nJaycee visits are planned in the\nfuture.\nTrans-Mountain Pipeline Spills\nAlberta Oil Into Burnaby Tanks\nPercy C. Hiles\nPasses at Trail\nTRAIL\u2014Percy Cecil Hiles, 89, active community worker; died suddenly in Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nThursday morning.\nBorn at Hot Springs, Arkansas,\nIn 1800, he was a resident here for\n14 years and had lived in British\nColumbia 20 years.       -\nPast president of Trail Kiwanis\nClub, deacon in' the Emmanuel\nBaptist Church, Mr. Hiles had also\ntaken active part in Trail Chamber\nof Commerce and Associated Boards\nof Trade of Eastern B.C.\nBesides his wife, he ls survived\nby two daughters, Mrs. O. Pennington of Princeton, and Mrs, R. M.\nCorrlgan of Salmon Arm, and one\nsister, Mrs. F. G. Dunlop of Ham\nilton, Ont. He is also survived by\nfour grandchildren.\nProvost Convicted\nFor Detaining\nWINNIPEG (CP)\u2014George Pre-,\nvost, who chose a five-year-old girl-\nas a traveling companion on a trip\nended by his arrest, was convicted\nThursday on one of three chargss\nlaid under the abduction section'\nof the Criminal Code.\nChief Justice E, K. Williams remanded the 95-year-old Churchill,\nMan., labor for sentence at the\nend of the assizes on a charge of\ndetaining a child under the age\nof 14 years. , i \u25a0\nALL-MALE JURY\nAn all-male jury, which acquitted\nProvost of taking a child under\n14 years from the possession of her\nparents and another charge of taking a child under' the age of 16\nfrom the possession of her parents,\nrecommended mercy in bringing in\nthe one guilty verdict.\nThe child, Linda Verfaillie, who\ntestified at Provost's trial, was the\nobject of a country-wide search\nlast June after she and Prevost\nfailed to return from a visit to a\nfarm near Winnipeg. Police arrested Prevost in Vancouver.\nfly GEORGE FINLAY\n. Canadian Press Staff Writer\nVANCOUVER (CP) - The \"big\ninchers,\"   the   rugged high-booted\nmen who know the oil  fields ot\nthe world, watched Thursday as the\nfabulous oil - wealth ot Alberta was\n\"tapped\" for Pacific coast service. -\nThe 24-inch pipeline running from\nnear Edmonton  to  the big  tank\nfarm in suburban Burnaby, costing\n$07,000,000 and.stretching 711 miles\nacross the Rockies,   opened . for\nbusiness.\nAt- strategic pumping stations,\ngiant valves turned and $1,000,000\nworth of oil gushed through to\nBurnaby, from where lt will be\ndistributed to tidewater refineries.\nTOOK 1600 MEN\nStarted in the spring of 1952 the\nTrans Mountain Pipe Line Company's \"big pipe\" snaked its way\nover the mountains as 1500 men\ntoiled through rocks, muskeg,\nrangelands, and the lush farmlands\nof the Fraser'valley..\nFor British Columbia motorists\nit will mean all-Canadian gasoline,\nand for the fast-expanding Industries of. Vancouver and other industrial centres will come a future\nof cheaper oil supplies. The surplus wiU go to Pacific northwest\nmarkets in the United States with\na $75,000,000 Washington refinery\ntapping the line next year.\nNinety-eight per cent of the crude\noil brought into British Columbia\nhas come by tanker from Califor\nnia. The other two per cent was\nshipping by rail in the last two\nyears from the Alberta field.\nCompletion   of the   pipeline   is\nSays Canada's Roads\nUseless in Wartime\nVICTORIA (CP). -A tqp '(-4ii\u00ab-\ndian army engineer said Thursday\nCanada's roads would be unable\nto carry the traffic that would roll\nthroughout the country in the event\nof another war.\nLieut-Col. D. W. Cunnington,\ncommandant of the Royal Canadian School of Military Engineering at Vedder Crpsisng, B.C.,\npainted a muddy picture of Canadian roads, from a strategic standpoint, to the 34th annual' convention of the Canadian Good Roads\nAssociation.\nMUST NOT RELAX\nA study under way by National\nDefence Headquarters in Ottawa,\nLieut.-Col. Cunnington said, \"leaves\nno doubt that Canada's roads are\ninadequate for strategic purposes.\nThough immeasurably improved\nsince 1945, from the military point\nof view the time for relaxing present construction programs is not in\nsight.\"\n\"In general, the study has shown\nthat our roads    are..mostly\nunsatisfactory for large-scale military movements. Of 3808  bridges\nexamined,   less  than 50 per  cent\nare suitable for such traffic.  The\n|J\n,;.\nh\ni\nCheek this List of Values For\nTHE HONE\nBurgess\nRadio Battery Packs\n12JO and 14.75\nCOol Hods\n4 must In every home where\nere is coal to be    <i  f\\\/\\\nhandled. Up from .. Z.UU\nRed Devil\nLiquid Soot Destroyer\nCleans out soot and tank sludge\nin oil burning heaters.^furnaces\nand stoves. Saves fuel and ensures more heat.       i   \u25a0\u00bb i-\nHut  1.35\nTractor Oil Pails\nJust what you need for filling\nyour oil heater tank. Half-\ncover lid, flexible spout, 2-\ngallon capacity. j   \u00abf\nE\u00abh      .$._&.>\nLight Bulbs      '\nAll sizes of the famous Syl-\nvanfa brand bulbs. For your\neyes' sake, replace those hali-\nburned-out bulbs now.\nWeatherstrip\nFor winter comfort, do it now.\nWe have everything in felt,\nbronze and rubber weatherstrip.\nBarrel Pumps\nYou need one. of these if you\nuse ah oil heater. Easy action,\nfast pumping.\nEach\t\n6.25.\nStovepipe\nAll sizes of stovepipe, elbows,\ntaper-pipes, tee-pipes, etc. \u2014\nAlso furnace'cement, wire, as-\nGarbage Cant\nRegulation size with four\nsturdy wooden legs and snug-\nfitting lid. Heavy \/ jj\ngalvanized. 'Each       O . 3 J\nCOLEMAN OIL FURNACES,\nAND HEATER8,\nBRICK-LINED QUEBEC\nHEATERS\nCIRCULATING COAL AND\nWOOD HEATERS\nQUEEN   HEATER8\nbestos paper, fire-shovels.\nDoor Mats\nKeep your floors clean. We\nhave two popular-sized cocoa\ndoor mats priced at\n1.65   and   2.10\nRubber door mats \u2014 made of\ncar tire rubber cord. >| >ip\nOnly     Z.Z5\nStove Boards\nOne of these under your heater\nis good insurance. We have the\nsize you need \u2014 nicely finished\nin light-oak design. Also folding stove-guards to match.\n395 Baker St.\n(HIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.)\nJOWNERS)\nM___H_____________BHi_____H\nPhona 497\nmain route Crossing one- province,\n568 miles! has 160 bridges. But\nonly 21 have the necessary minimum width of 24 feet and 32 are\nonly 14 feet or under.\"\nAlex Frame, deputy minister of\nroads {.for Alberta,, reported the\nmost successful season, in construction and maintenance, in his\nprovince's history. He said approximately $37,939,000 had been spent\non building and maintaining\nbridges, ferries; main and secondary roads,\nLABOR DIFFICULT\nA 11,000,000 increase in the gross\nroad budget for Saskatchewan was\nreported tor 1953 by L. T. Holmes,\nconstruction engineer with the Saskatchewan highway department.\n\"This year's gross budget was $18,-\n289,000, compared with $17,168,000\nthe previous year,\" he said,\n\"Supply of materials and equipment ls a minor problem, but the\nlabor situation is difficult. Trained\nengineers are unavailable in sufficient numbers.\"\nThe convention continues through\nSaturday,.    .\nESPIONAGE REPORTED\n\u2022 TOKYO. (AP).\u2014 Kyodo news\nagency said Wednesday large-scale\nred espionage is being conducted\nin Japan by Japanese captured by\nthe Russians in the Second World\nWar ahd trained as spies. Kyodo\nquoted repatriates as saying that\nthe Russians intimidated policemen\nindustrial researchers, newspaper\nmen, teachers and other educated\nprisoners into doing espionage on\ntheir return.\nthree months ahead of schedule,\nmarking Vancouver's first direct\nlink with a major oil producing\narea. .....    \u25a0 \u25a0 ,.\ntt was .designed and built under\nthe engineering management of\nCanadian Bechtel Limited,, internationally famous \u2022 in the pipeline\nfield. The principal contractors included Mannix Ltd. of Calgary and\nComstock Midwestern Limited of\nToronto-77\\-__ 7:':.v.':\u25a0:'-'- -.-\u2022'. Vi-'\"\n1-0,000 BARRELS DAILY 7..\nThe line is designed to transport\ninitially'-- tip to: -120,000 barrels' i\nday with .more than .0,000. required, dally to meet the B.C. de.\nmond. The ultimate, goal is for a\ndaily capacity of 200,000 barrels.\n' Coast refineries have' spent, mil\nlions'of dollars modernizing a n d\nenlarging plants tp handle the flow\nof \"black gold\" from Alberto. Imperial Oil,' the. largest refinery\nhere, has spent $13,500,000. It will\nhandle 22,500 barrels dally,\nOne of the key pumping .stations\nis at Kamloops, where the coining\nof the pipeline has- brought- a $3,-\n000,000 refinery. The stations were\nbuilt at a cost of $4,000,000 each,\nThe \"big Inchers\" \\yiio built -tjhe\nline came from Texas, from:. '\nSouth American oil .fields,,, arid\nfrom Arabia.    .     \u00bb    ,J\nThe Americans brought',\u25a0\u25a0ItflK.e\nknow-how to teach Canadian workers to build a pipeline In sunshine,\nrain and early snows. - \u25a0.\nIt was open house at the 200-\nacre Burnaby terminal Thursday\nwhere a plaque to mark another\nmilestone in B.C.'s Industrial history was unveiled by S. D. Steve\nBechtel, and R. L. Bridges pt Tor-\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS'ronto, president of Trans Mountain,\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nDR. BROCK (Chiropractor). 32 yrs.\npractical experience. \u2014 Phone 969,\ni  \u2014: . . \u25a0'.\nEAGLES SOCIAL MEMBERSHIP\nCLUB MEETS TONIGHT.\nMoodies, Vanta Vests. From\nTOT-N-TEEN SHOP.\n98c.\nFIGURE SKATERS\nFirst Session 4:00 p.m. Today.\nGarden Club meeting, held\nW.I. Room tonight, 8 p.m.\nHunting and Fishing Licences.\nJack Boyce Men's Shop.\nORDER YOUR FIREWOOD NQW.\n4-FT. SLAB OR CUT. PH. 330-L.\n' Pick up your tickets for. Legion's\nown banquet and dance at Legion\noffice. Limited number available.\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L.\nThe Shamrock Grill will be closed\nfor staff holidays trom Oct. 19 to\nNov. 8.\nWashing machine tubs, stand. \u2014\nBargain. Phone 10 or 1044-L. F. A.\nBaker.\nSee our selection of men's, women's and boys skates and boots.\nJack Boyce.\nNew Winter jackets, shirts, underwear, etc   Complete stocks.\nEBERLE'8 JUNIOR SHOP.\nTrade your old tires at\n8UPERI0R  MOTOR8\nTire Department\nMax Kaiper\nShoe Repairs\n350 Baker Street \u2014 Nelson.\nBALFOUR-LONGBEACH\nHospital District Meeting\nWoodland HaU TONIGHT, 8 p.m.\nFor faded awnings, or any canvas\narticles, 8ETFA3T CANVA8 PAINT\n\u2014 Quarts $2.35.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nMmmW\u00ae\nHYl Aristocrat\nAnniversary\nViscount\nOld Keg\nGIN London Club London Dry\nInsist on\n8 years aid\n5 yoars old\n4 years old\n3 year* aid\n80ROPTIMI8T\nBridge at the Legion, October 30.\nWe doctor shoes, heel them, attend\ntheir dyeing and save their soles!\nTORY'S REPAIR 8HOP.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix lt,\nthrow lt away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.\nTRAIL BUSINESS COLLEGE\nComplete Secretarial Course.\nEnrol Any, Time.\n625 Victoria St., trail. Telephone 84.\nQUEEN'S BAY.\nHospital district meeting 7 o'clock\ntonight, home Mrs. Quentin Wishaw.\nNew shipment of 27\" Axminster\nhalls runner. Two beautiful colors\nto choose from; Priced trom $4.95\nyard at.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nYour i stainless steel copper - clad\npots and pans cleaned in a jiffy\nwith \"Samae\" Miracle Cleaner. For\nbrass, bronze and chrome also.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nELECTRIC POWER WILL BE OFF\non all the North Shore Saturday\nmorning, Oct. 17, from 1 a.m. to\n8 a.m. and on Sunday morning,\nOct. 18, from 7 a.m. to 9 a.m.\nCity of Nelson,\nGood selection of used Bedroom\nSuites and used Washing Machines\nnow in stock.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture,\nHOME  FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\n418 HaU St.\nSee the new English deep-colored breakfast and luncheon sets, in\nfour attractive, gay colors, and\nmodern shape, these are priced at\nonly $6.95 per 20-plece set, or as\nopen stock. - HIPPERSON'S.\nw\n16INTO N\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody and Paint Work a Specialty\nHoigh\nTru-^Art\nBeauty\nSolon\nPhon* 8E7\n,676 Baker St\nQUALITY\nBRANDS\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by Mrt liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL if RAlNINa\nMedical Arts Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n516 Kootenay St       Phona .36)\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nRECORING     \u25a0:'.\nJim's Radiator Shop\n516 FRONT ST. PHONE 68\nHAVE rOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n,:,\\   tt mt'-\u25a0\"'\u2022\u25a0\u2022-'.;,.., \u25a0\nNolson Upholstery\n|MB Hall Street' Phon* 141\nPreliminary\nreadier Training\nIs Proposed\nFaced' by a growing shortage of\nteachers and consequent employment of persons lacking top qualifications, B.C. School Trustees As.\nsoclation will ask the provincial\ngovernment to set up a committee\nto make a full study of the Increasingly serious \u25a0 Situations\nThe study would include supply\nof teachers, qualifications, salaries\nand So-on,\nCariboo's proposal that the De-\npartment of Education consider establishing , preliminary teacher\ntraining courses Jti high schools,\nto encourage students- to go into\nteaching and ultimately Increase\nthe number of teachers was endorsed by the trustees convention\nhere Wednesday.\nNew setup for election\u00abof the\nBCSTA executive emerged from\nthe, convention.\nBasically it provides for district\nbranches\u2014there are-seven.at pre.-!\nenKto elect representatives to the\nexecutive instead of choosing them\nfrom the floor ot the convention.\nIt also Increases the executive committee from four to seven.\nPower has been - given the\nexecutive to appoint a full-time\nsecretary-treasurer and other officials as needed. <\nS0-\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG (CP)-Winnlpeg\ngrain cash prices:'\nOats\u2014No. I feed, .69.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, .94%.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\na IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n576 Baker 8t      \u2022     Phono 236\nAsk Vour Grocer for\nEllison's U-Bake Bread Mix\nWhole Wheat or White\nIt makes excellent\nhome made bread\n-PHONE 236\nELLISON MILLING\nst ELEV. CO, LTD.\nCheek Up On Your\nNECKWEAR\nRequirements\n4ook over your own tie\nrack \u2014 need one or two!\nto match certain shirt? of\nsuits, Then come sonji;\nlook ot our tie racks.'\nHundreds bt .beautiful\nties in richest colorings of\nony season.\n$1.00 to $3.00\nEmory's Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\n571 Baker 8t.        Phone 81\nRemains of a castle built by the]\nBishop of Salisbury in 1132 are\nstill seen at Devizes in. Wiltshire,\nEngland.\nHave tha Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nREX.ALL   GROOMING   AIDS\nBATCHELOR\nShaving Cream  \u201e 65e\nAfter-Shave Lotion 95c\nCream Hair Tonlo ...\u00bb76e\nDeodorant ..,_.. 66c, 860\nSold Only at Your Eexall Store\nCITY DRUG\nCOMPANY '\n\"Nelson's Modem Pharmacy\"\u25a0\u25a0'\nPHONE 34\nHfOVID YOU 8F\u00a3\/FPJ?\/r~\n\u25a0    -'-\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0   ; '.;-\u201e-.-^-: .'\u25a0   . \u25a0-,    ;\nl-THERE ARE BLACK, GREEN, \u00a3 WHITE ICEBERGS\nIcebergs drift from the north and then they melt away;\n'' but our reputation for GOOD USED CARS is growing\nevery day.\nUSED CARS\n1952 VANGUARD Sedan\n1951 PACKARD Sedan\n1950 CHEVROLET Sedan\n1948 CHEVROLET Sedan\n1947 PLYMOUTH Coach\n1947 CHEVROLET Sedan\n1947 MERCURY Sedan\n1948 PLYMOUTH 5 Passenger Coupe\n1950 CHEVROLET FLEETLINE Sedan\nTRUCKS\n1950 CHEVROLET 3-Ton Dump Truck\nBox and Hoist.\n1950 CHEVROLET Vi Ton Pickup\n1946 MERCURY Vi Ton Pickup\nWEEKEND SPECIALS\n1948 Plymouth Sedan , $800\n1947 Ford Coach  $300\n1939 Dodge Coups ; $280\n1941 Chevrolet Vi Ton . $380\n\u20221942 Dodge '\/_ Ton Panel ___________ $280\nCOMPANY   LIMITED\nLOCATED AT 323 VERNON ST.\n\"y-i:\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1953_10_16","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427709","@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":"1953-10-16 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1953-10-16 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\/1.0427709"}