{"@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":"1953-10-14","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0427876\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" mmw'm^^\"^^99^\nB.C. Trustees Hoist\nafcv,,' -\/'*        \u25a0 .'.-\u25a0\"\"\nBudget to $20,000\nNo \"Mill-ant\" Aim Against Teachers\nSay Sponsors; Figure \"Starting Point\"\nBritish Columbia School Trustees' Association meet-\nng at Nelson Tuesday boosted its annual budget to $20,000\nIt6 expand services and facilities and to launch a public\n^relations program. Budget\nast year was $8000.\nThe figure, 214 times the present\nIbudLet. is one-quarter ot the\njoriglnal Okanagan. proposal which\njirew fire Monday. President L. W.\nWood of the Okanagan.still eon-\nsidered it a \"paltry amount\" to\n[undertake the work needed, but\nagreed to the lower figure as a\nstarting basis.\nSponsors of the move denied\nthere was any \"militant\" aim\nfgainst B.C. Teachers Federation\nin their proposal and insisted jobs\nalready assigned to the, executive\nby the]- convention would use up\nmost of the $20,000. Nanaimo and\nOther points agreed the stated\nfigure should be larger.       \u00bb\u25a0\nIn another important move the\nConvention, asked that names of\ncandidates for trustee or representative in rural school districts be\nfiled and advertised in advance of\nannual school meetings so that\nvoters may know who is in the\nfield. Under the present system\nmany are nominated and elected at\nmeetings without previous notice\nof their candidature.\nSEEK PBNALTY\nKootenay Lake School District,\nCharging that, the \"gentlemen's\nagreement\" against approaching\nnormal itudetfts and teacher\ntrainees Is being ignored, asked for\na penalty to be imposed against\nschool, boards and Individuals violating the agreement.\nI Vancouver and Victoria said they\ndo not, as trustees, approach normal students, but in many cases the\nstudents, themselves seek positions\nIn these schools. They didn't know\niaiy answer to that.\n'.The request for a penalty carried,\nhowever.\nOpinion split sharply between\nmetropolitan  centres  and  smaller\ncities and districts on the Victoria\nproposal to take student driver\ntraining out of high schools and\n(urn it over to the motor vehicle\nbranch. Against Vancouver and\nVictoria were North Vancouver,\nOcean Falls and Penticton. End result was a resolution asking that\nschool boards be relieved of the\nresponsibility for driver training,\nbut hot stating who should\nsssume It\nThe convention endorsed Van*\ncouver's proposal that a school\nteacher returning: from leave of\nabsence be required to take physical or mental examination as a\ncondition of re-employment.\nIt also endorsed a request that\nthe government sponsor displays of\nschool work at the PNE on a provincial basis.\nBased on a Vancouver resolution, trustees asked for increased\nlay representation on the B.C.\ncurriculum committee. Only layman on the committee at present\nis Austin I. Curtis of Victoria.\nReflecting repeated differences of\nopinion between the City of Lady-\nsmith,' District of North Cowichan\nand rural areas involved, Lady-\nsmith District School Board presented three .resolutions seeking\nlegislation changes.' All three were\nendorsed and will be presented to\nthe Provincial government In one\nLadysmith proposed that a minority\nsection should'not be permitted to\nhold up and defeat estimates; in\nanother that the definition of capital expenses be changed within\nnarrow limits to include such expenditures as options on school\nsites and playgrounds; and in the\nthird to permit establishment of\nspecial funds for new buildings and\nsites within a one-mill tax rate.\nDon Jail Like Hitler\nPrison Camp Says\nFormer Inmate\nTORONTO :(CP)\u2014A -former pris-\nbner in Toronto's Don Jail said\nTuesday the jail was the ''Canadian\nisbunterpart of Hitler's j>rl_on\nSamps.\" '' * '\u2022'\nThe prisoner, who served a 15-\nday sentence for drunk driving at\nthe: jail, appeared before the Ontario Legislature's select committee\n<on reform institutions. The map's\nname was not divulged and he was\n8r^M^_M^^^.\u00bb!*ssA*v\n\u25a0' Mr.T-. charged, abusive \"language-\nby guards, an inadequate counseling system, cursory medlcal'exam-\nination, segregation ahd an unsatisfactory system of interviews with\nchaplains.-. \/\nLAST GRAIN\nLEAVES CHURCHILL\nBy BERNICE MaclVER     :\nCanadian press Correspondent\nCHURCHILL, Man. (CP)-Cap.\nada's shortcut to overseas markets\nis going into winter hibernation\nafter finishing the most successful\nseason in |ts... 23-year career .as a\nshipper of grain:   '   . -.   -\nThe shipping season at this port\non the western shore of Hudson Bay-\nclosed at 8:30 a.m. Tuesday with\nthe sailing of the motor vessel\nBerlin.\nj The Berlin's cargo brought to almost 10,750,000 the total number\nof bushels cleared in the hectic\nthree summer months that Churchill is an active port.\nThe grain rpoved- last year\u2014and\nthat was a record season \u2014'was\n8,500,000 bushels. Last year, 26 grain\n\u2022hips cleared port; this year 31.\nEight Holiday\nDeaths ih B.C.\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Eight persons are now known to have met\nviolent death in B.C. during the\nThanksgiving holiday weekend.\nThree died in traffic accidents,\none was killed in a hunting mishap,\none man\" was asphyxiate^ by domestic gas, another died in a railway\naccident, a seventh in a woods acci-\n'erW\nLatest victim was Tare Singh,\n55, bf Port Mooqy,. who died of\ninjuries suffered when a car skidded into a ditch on a hill near his\nhome.\nNelson Floyd Raphael, a CNR\ntrack man, died Sunday when a\npasenger train struck his small\ntrack speeder near Lytton, B.C.\nMaynard . Elstron Coulter, -\nschool principal, died when a\nbranch from a tree he was trimming-fell and struck him. The\nKemano fall proved fatal to Her-\nbert Klint, 26; i    '      '\nHunting, victim was 17-year-old\nDavid.Charles Robson, killed while\ndeer hunting near his Parksville,\nB.C. home.:\nThomas McDermott, 87, \u2022 of Vancouver, died when a pot boiled\nover, extinguishing the flame on a\ngas stove in his west end room.\nForty-eight persons died violently\nacross Canada during the Thanksgiving weekend in one of the worst\nrashes of holiday deaths this year.\nThirty-three were killed in traffic\naccidents.\nMost of the deaths listed \"in a\nCanadian Press survey were in On\ncisou ftuilu Hfotttf\n,'d?8QtS?\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Sunny. Little\n' change in temperature. Wind light\nLow-high at Cranbrook 28 and' 62.\nCrescent Valley 28 and 62.\nVoL S?7\n*.-\niiiiiiiiiiir- ^u^* tift\nN&SQN,'\u25a0\u25a0$. C, CAt^AbA-V^NESlJAy-rvIORNINa OCTOBER 14, 1953\nNo. 146\nwi!.; ftnS^^i^^ Predicts .\n$6 MtUwm De\/idt\nTUCSON,,. Ari*  (Ap) \u2014 jt.\nTucson Boy Scout who only recently flunked e simple track.\nIn. test passed the biggest test\nof all \u2014 saving tils own life. 7\nLost In the dangerouos Santa\nCat-lino mountains near here\nsince Sunday, 11-year-old Aug-,\nustlne Aeuna fell Baok on the\nlore he had learned In his Scout\nmanual, and It paid off. He\nwalked out of the mountains by\nhlmiejf . Monday; while 100..\nsearchers were looking for hlh.\n\"I checked the location of the\nsurt with my watch as I hid\nbeen taught to do,\"   he said,\n'.hen-1' knew  my  dlrectls5n\u00bb\\\nV(Sre right\"\nHe travelled almost 16 miles,;\nall of It on tha'beam.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nBILL PROPOSES\nTAX ON DRINKS\nMunicipalities To\nCollect Half x-\nQf 10 Per Cent      ;-\nVICTORIA (CPJ\u2014 British Columbia drinkers\" face a 10 per cent\ntax on all liquor they buy by, the\nglass In the new premises proposed\nunder the province's new liquor\nlaws.\nThe government introduced a bill\nin the legislature Tuesday night\nwhich, among other things, increases, the three per cent social\nsecurity and municipal aid tax to\n10 per cent on all drinks purchased\nin licenced premises.\nOne half of the net proceeds\nfrom the bill will go to the municipalities.\nThe bill, which contains several\namendments to the social security\nand municipal aid tax act, also\nprovides fdr the promised increase\nin the exemption of the tax on\nmeals from 50 cents tp $1.\nThe new legislation would abol\nish the present social security fund\nInto which two-thirds of the collections from the three per cent tax is\npaid.        ,\nInstead, the two - thirds will be\npaid into the consolidated revenue\nfund\/..\nThe municipalities will still receive their one-third share of all\n_^^hns.,^h;#we^^bB'of:tH?\nrevenue _roni'liquor. \u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nUnder the act the municipalities\nreceive .0 per cent of the collec-\ntions made from the tax on liquor\nwithin their boundaries.\nThe price of ieer presumably\nwill not be affected by the new tax.\nThe act exempts anything' under\n15 cents and does not specifically\nmention the 10-cent glass of beer.\nSays Many Doctors\nDrug Addicts\nTORONTO\" (OP)\u2014Dr. C. A. Rob\nerts, chief of the federal- dental\nhealth division, said Tuesday a\n\"considejable number\" of Canada's\ndoctors are driig addicts.\nHe told a meeting of the 83rd\nannual congress of correction of the\nAmerican Penal Association that\nthe \"serious waste\" of professional\ntrained men demanded action.\nAUTHOR DIES\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014Pearl B. Foley,\nauthor of several mystery novels\nand numerous short stories, died\nMonday. Her books included \"The\nGift of the Gods,\": \"The Gnome\nMine, Myster,\" \"The Octagon Crys-\ntario .where 31 persons were killed, tal'.' ahd'TheYellow Cjrcle.\"\nVICTORIA (CP)-A Elberal attempt to, in effect, force the government to borrow $10,000,000'was\ncrushed Tuesday when all but one\nof the rest of the opposition sided-\nwith the government to defeat an\namendment, 7       '\nP.,A. Gibbs (E\u2014Oak Bay) Introduced; an amendment during dis.\ncussion fn the legislature of the\ngovernment supply bill which will\ngive the government the rest of the\n$172,950,486 in estimates approved\nat the last session.\nAfter the defeat of the amendment the bill passed second reading.\nBefore . Mr. Gibbs spoke, other\nmernbers ot the opposition asked\nthat .the government allow mem-;\nbers to discuss the various esti-.\nmates that comprise the total' of\n$172,950,466 when the' bill reached;\nthe committee state in the house.\nMr. Gibbs said instead of a predicted surplus of $2,000,000 at the\nend of the fiscal year the government would likely-have a deficit\nof $6,000,000.        ''\"\u2022'\u2022;\u2022   -.\u2022     .-',\nHe moyeil \/that the estimate for\ncapital expenditure in the'estimates\napproved by the last legislature be\nreduced to'^21,384,780 from $81,-\n384,760.\nBefore the vote there; was considerable debate on whether the\nmotion was in order. But Speaker\n\"niomas; Irwin ruled that it was.\nLiberal   Leader   Arthur   Laing\ncalled, for divisions on the vote\nwhich showed that Rupert Haggen\n(CCF \u2014 Grand Forks \u2022 Greenwood)\nsided with'the four Liberals and\nthe rest of the house with the government. '\nThe legislature later again\noverrode. Liberal objections to\ngiye second reading to the equalization of assessment bill which\nwill give fair and equitable\nassessed values en all taxable\nproperties for educational pur-\n.poses. Under the bill Improve*\nments to industrial and commercial machinery can be taxed for\n. school costs. -\nThe government's j legislation to\nreduce car licence fees was also\ngiven second; reading, approval in\nprinciple,      . '\u25a0  \u2022'    .\nBefore the assessment act was\npassed, Liberal Leader. Arthur\nLaing warned the government\nwould be in serious trouble unless\nthere was a rejucltpn in taxation.\nHe said the bill meant the return\nof the \"inequitous\" personal property tax.    ....    ,....;\nAttorney-General Robert. Bonner\nsaid the bill was .hot a tax bill but\na basis for a tax,\nHe said at some time it was conceivable that the government might\ngo into income taxation but at\npresent this was' the only means\nat the government's; disposal.\nStale Funeral For\nTilly Rolston\n\u2022VICTORIA (CP) - A state\nfuneral will be held Friday for\nEducation.Minister Mrs. Tilly Rolston who died in Vancouver Monday, Premier W. A. C. Bennett said\nTuesday.\nThe funeral will be held at St.\nAndrew's Wesley Church in Vancouver at 2 pirn.   \u25a0     7. -\nAt the same time the house will\nprobably be recessed during the\nafternppn Friday to allow members\nto attend the funeral.\n- Notice that morning and night\nsessions may be called- Friday\nwere tabled in the legislature. Tuesday   ..\n'lafiire\" stood 'in solemn fi-butt.' to\nMrs. Rolston when the house sat\nearlier Tuesday-\nPremier Bennett, obviously deeply moved by the loss of his personal\nfriend, officially announced her\ndeath and the time and date of the\nfuneral, then leaders of the opposition paid tribute to her.\nMr. Bennett said Mrs. Rolston\nwas a great loss to the government\nand a great loss to the people of\nfiritish Columbia.\n' CCF Opposition ; leader Arnold\nWebster, who served on the Van-\ncouver park board with Mrs. Rolston and had known her for 35\nyears, was also deeply moved.\n.\"She will long be honored as a\nnative daughter and a good^citi\nzen,\" he said. \"She will long be\nremembered by the province.\"\nLiberal Leader Arthur Laing said\nMrs. Rolston devoted her best efforts towards everything she\nthought was good.\nDAWSON, Y. T. (CP) \u2014 John\nKlihko will be tried for the murder of William Anderson in Daw\nson Sept. 23.\nAnderson died from bullet wounds\nafter a shooting in his cabin in Daw-\nGov't Would Control\nRibbon Highways\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014A bill whloh\nwould give the government control over ribbon development on\nBritish Columbia's major highways was Introduced In the Legislature Tuesday.  .\n, Under the Mil; the.'cabinet\nwould have irib pbwer to' deslg\nnate eertaln'hlghways as \"controlled;  access  highways.\"     The\n\\ nrilnlster of' public' works could,\n\/Under; the 'slat,', \"prohibit access\nto highways except at such places\nas he mav designate.\", \"..\nThe minister would make regulations not:otherwise provided In\nthe act In order to .carryr.outlts\nprovisions,. \u25a0  \u25a0\n.yifoiiki 'Minister P As-GaglarUI\nhas said the government hopes\n-\"ii'uSo.leDlsl^trph.that.woutd\/.poe'.\nvent outlets from auto courts, resorts,'service stations and otSer\nroadside establishments from Clog,\nglng B.C.'s'costly new highways.\nYugoslavians\nTo Fight for\nReady\nTrieste\nBCHIS BILL\nINTRODUCED\nVICTORIA (CP) \u2014 A bill that\nwould give the government authority to cancel B.C. hospital insurance arrears was' introduced in the\nlegislature,. Tuesday night:      \u25a0\u25a0''\u25a0'\nIn effect, the bill regularises the\nsuspensions it made on insurance\narrears last May.\nAn \"insured benefits\" plan,' also\nannounced last May, is . also- included in the bill. Under the plan,\nregular premium payers will be\nable to accumulate not mpre than\nthree., mdnths free coverage after\n18 months.\nThe definition of \"beneficiary\"\nunder the Hospital Insurance Act\nWould' be broadened \"for the purpose of Implementing a revised\npremium.payment plan which will\nmake It earlier for persons In the\nlow income group to secure benefits,\"\nInstead of paying the premiums\nof persons in the low income groups\nthat receive free hospitalization,\nthe government will pay the hospital insurance service the cost of\nhospitalization.\nThe individual must be certified\nas entitled to health services.\nAccident Ousts \/\nDriver From Fipals\nVANCOUVilR (CP) W'An accl\ndent | which' ntay have1 cost Gerald\nMcNulty- a driving Championship,\ncost him $25 in police court Tuesday. 7, 7   7 .\nMcNulty was fined after being\nconvicted of driving without due\ncare \u00abnd attention last Sept, 4 in\nan accident which injured five. The\naccident kept McNulty out of the\ndriving; rodeo finals, which only\ndrivers with accident-free records\nfor one year may enters Up to that\ntime, McNulty was one qf thelead-\ning contenders for the province-\nwide honors.\nPARENTS POLIO VICTIMS\nPORT ARTHUR (CP) \u2014 Both\nparents of two Port Arthur children have died of poliomyelitis\nwithin the last three days. Mrs.\nVillpo Joseph Peuramaki died Friday and her 26-year-old husband\nTuesday.\nF-L-A-S-H\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The legislature late Tuesday gave approval\nIn principle to the government's\nnew liquor act which provides for\ndrinks by the glass In cocktail\nlounges and wine and beer with\nmeals.\nStorm Turns Prince\nRupert Into Venice\nPRINCE.JttlPEHT, B.C; (CP) \u2014\nA spectacular rainstorm that sent\n;tw,?]te.-.o{.r^t^^^\nCity .'streets \"caused' hundreds of\ndollars worth of damage Sunday\nwhile setting a new record in rain-\nweary Prince Rupert..  . *\nThe deluge' brought this city 3.65\ninches of rain in a six-hour period\nat night, and a total of 5.55 inches\nin the 24 hours ended at 10 a.m.\nMonday. It let up early Monday in\ntime to' give residents a sunny\nThanksgiving Day, one of the\nbrightest holidays of the year.\nHowever, a gale warning Tuesday brought- ihe threat of more\n.wind.and rain.-:'. ,\nThe city looked like a second\nVenice shortly after 4 p.m.. Sunday\nwhen the deluge started, turning\nstreets into canals and flooding\nbasements' in residential areas- on\nhillsides and- in some., sections of\nthe business area.\nU.S. Student Beaten; Anti-British,        |\nItalian Demonstrations Increase        \/M\n\u2022 By ALEX SINGLETON ... M\nBELGRADE (AP) \u2014 New anti, - Western ' violence\nattended Ihe' diplomatic furor over Trieste Tuesday. Xugo^\nslav demonstrators beat Up ari American student, man-,\nhandled \u25a0'\u00ab Yugoslav who dropped into the U.S. information\nservice;headquarters to return a book, and ripped'tod-burned;\nBritish information bulletins. ~~~\t\nIn letters. 18 inches high, the\nwords \"Entrance of Traitors\", were\nscrawled on the sidewalks outside\nthe USIS and the British reading\nroom in Belgrade despite the fact\nYugoslav militiamen were\" assigned to guard the buildings, - .\nThe American student was attacked when he headed into the\nUSIS to pick up. its daily news\nbulletin. He withheld his name,\nsaying he planned to continue his\nstudies here and feared repercussions if he was identified., A British spokesman said, \"a gang of\nthugs\" raided the British reading\nroom, tore up a whole stack of\nbulletins and burned others in the\nstreet.\nTens of thousands of shouting\nangry Yugoslavs stormed through\nBelgrade's streets Tuesday night\nfdr the biggest mass demonstration\nso far against the British-Aiheri\ncan-decision to,turn zone A of the\nfree territory of Trieste over to\nItaly.\n\"Give us rifles,\" the crowd\ncried. \"We will beat up the Italian\nthieves. Down with Italy. Down\nwith Premier Pella,,the dog. We\nwant Tito to be consulted. We will\ngive our, lives, put' we .will never\ngive up an inch of Trieste.'*\nThe demonstrations showed signs\nof increasing, rather than slacken.\ning, after the disclosure of the\nAnglo-American decision last\nThursday.\nPresident Tito has proclaimed\npublicly this country's .determination tocsend 'its \"'armed, forces into\n\u25a0Mfii&^if'Bfla^eh-'-itW.fTmw'-\noccupyihg troops into the _one.. He\nhas reinforced the ;80p0 -\"men garrison in Yugoslav - occupied zone B\nCANADIAN DOL.1.AR DOWN\nNEW YORK (CP) - The Canadian dollar-was 3-32 cept lower at\na premium of 1 13-32 per-cent in\nterms of U.S. funds. Pound sterling\nup 1-8 cent at $2.80%.    ,        -    .\nMONTREAL, (CP) \u2014 The U. S\ndollar closed at a, discount of\n1 13.-32 per cent in ternis ,of Cana\ndian funds, up 1-16. Pound sterling\n$2.76%, up %.\nof the strategic territory.   ,    ---.*\u25a0\nCOMPROMI\u00ab\nBut he has also called for a\ncompromise to prevent the grave\ncrisis from turning into a shooting\nconflict. His foreign office here\nhas demanded a four - power conference of the United States, Britain, Italy and Yugoslavia to search\nfor \"a.- solution';of the dynamite-\nladen problem. ' .7.!--\nHe and his top lieutenants were\nreported in hour-by-hour consultations at his headquarters,\nTito and nis aides met shortly\nafter the disclosure that U.S. State\nSecretary Dulles, .British Foreign\nSecretary Anthony Eden and\nFrench Foreign-Minister George\nBidault was considering the advis-\nability of placing Yugoslavia's posl.\ntion before them by sending a representative from this country,\" i\nRUSSIAN NOTES\nA special edition of the newspaper Borba, voice of the ruling\nCommunist party here, editorially\nregistered a protest against what\nit termed an attempt by \"the.big\npowers to impose their will against\nsmall countries.\" .\nThe British and American information services here remained\nopen for business despite the atmosphere of tension. - .       3,\nRussia's \u2022 entry 'into the dispute\nin notes to the United States and\nBritain and in the United Nations\ntouched off immediate speculation\nover; its diplomatic \u2014and possible\nmilitary\u2014Implications, Its proten-\ntial significance rested'upon\"'the\ntastMto. \u25a0 would .find it hazMMua;\nHs5_^J\u00a3$~ouk\"'KfS\/W's^\nitary action to, bar Italian 'troops\nfrom Triests unless he can discover what Russia would do then.\n1\nI\nAnd in This Corner i7.;\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014Health Minister Martin caused a few eyebrow!\nto lift today. He was spotted shuffling along a corridor of a govern;\nmerit building In his stocking feet.\n\"I forgot to get my shoes polished before I came to work so I sent\nthem out,   he explained. -'.'. 7;;.-v7~\nRoy McKinnon, of Price, Utah, learned Monday, : 7\nMYTON, Utah (AS)\u2014Sometimes a familiar road can fool you,\nDriving to; Myton, McKlnnon approached a bridge near here only\nto discover, too late, that the bridge was removed a year and a\nhalt ago. -.-' . -yyy\n\"I always used to cotne into Myton this way,\" he told rescuers\nvas they hauled him from: the stream; \/\".'.; . \" \"' :7\nBOSTON (CP)\u2014Shabby Chester Sargent, 60, was arrested today -\nafter he allegedly tried to steal a topcoat from a store.-\nIn his,pocket, police found a wallet containing $.11,425. '    ',    - :\nSargent was surprised at the amount. He hadn't counted his\nmoney for some time. ' ^ '' r\nHe thought he had only about $5000, '\nVIENNA (CP)\u2014The Hungarian Communist newspaper Siabad\nNep credits the invention of the helicopter to a Hungarian, Oszkar\nAsboth. The date of the achievement was .given as 1828.\nThis claim may not be' appreciated by the. Itremlln. Four years\nago Lieut. Gen. Boris N. Yurev of the Soviet Union wrote that\nUnited States plane designer Igor I. Sikorsky had profited greatly\n, in his work on helicopters because of his acquaintance: with a craft\nbuilt by Yurev. .     . ,       \u25a0      ,'.-' ,-i\nSikorsky is generally credited with'inventing the first successful\nhelicopter-in 192(,,      -    \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-.-,.' -,.?'.\nNelson Host to Hundreds at 49th Convention of BtC. School Trustees\nl\n1\nMrs. Ada Crump of Vancouver, veteran .school board memfe and;new presilJent of the British Columbia\nSchool Trustees' Association, is pictured, extreme left, as she was congratulated by H. A. Moffatt of Prince George,\nretiring president, after her:election at the associaticin's convention in Nelson Tuesday. She is the fifth woman to\noccupy that position in tfie 49 year history,of the association. The swarm of people gathered around the \u00bbgis*_.i-\ntion table (centriS) 'is only a' sirian' portion of the-.delegates -who signed on the dotted line late Sunday and early j\nMonday.Jsfcs.iCriunp is shown again (right) with her two to.weririg vice-presidents. They are R. H. Reeve ot<-\nYv;tcwia, returned te office,, and-L-W, Wood of Armstr-ongj.extreme right\u2014Vogue photos.\n..- 'x .-.-   .  ,      ':\"-. y, -\u25a0:\u25a0-\n\u25a0-.--.:    --        -'..\u25a0,   :\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0':.-. '-\n--,-.'\n mmv>wm\nP\n2\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14,1953\nyy\nmm\n'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\n':'\u25a0\u25a0\n<\u25a0\n,,\n-.:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\nTONIGHT ONLY \u2014 Complete Shows at 7i00-8i24\n(turn\nflCNKI\nersitiiN .\n.jtm'-m--m.,.\nMOORE-HAAS \u2022LANGAS\nSeoond Startling Hit \u2014 7\n\"Why Do So Many HIch Girls\nOo Wrong?\"\n'PROBLEM GIRLS'\n(Adult Entertainment Only)\nNothing can tame them \u2014 Nothing can shams thero.\nHURSDAY\nIN 3 DIMENSION\na IN COLOR RYTECHNICOLOR\nvt\nPrices: 75c, 55c, 30e. Tax Incl,\nSTARLIGHT\nDRIVE-IN\nFOUR DAYS\nWednesday-7:30 p.m. - 8:10 p.m.\nThursday-7:30 p.m. -8:10 p.m.\n, Fridoy-7:30 p.m. -8:10 p.m.\nSa.urday-7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m.\nPAlMEt IK > WILUAM REYNOLDS sdjWU.) A**^tt\nMJljj!lil|l'tNlM^\n'ii\n10 MILES BAST OF NELSON\nSchool principals may be require-\nin futuro, ir part ot their set duties,\nto submit reports to t)ioir school\nboards upon teachers on their stalls.\nTeachers aro to receive.copies ot\nthe reports,\n_ B.C,'School Trustees' Association\nto6k t|ili step today la - Ita continuing tampaign (or closer contact with\nand control of their teachers.\nDelegates generally agreed with\nthe necessity for such reports so\nthey may know how their teachers\nara doing; and B.C. Teachtrs' Federation said It was studying the tub-\n\u25a0m,---.. > -\u2022'\"\u2022 \u2022.\nOnly difference of opinion was\nwhether affected teachers should\nknow about tha reports mad* on\nthem and-the convention said \"yes\"\noverwhelmingly, \u2022\nREJECT EXTENDED VOTE\nNorthern Interior Branch urged\nthat all persons qualified to vote\nunder the provincial elections aet\nbe permitted to vote on school\nmatters now confined to, ratepayers.   Ihe branch sought to enliven\nYour Drive.ln Directory\nCRANBROOK MARYSVILLE\nFirst Shows 7i15 \u2014 All Shows Approx, 2 Hours\nI COMPLETE 8H0W8 EACH NIQHT\nTonight and Thursday\n\"ANNA\"\nSylvana Mongono\n(That Italian Bombshell)\nADULTS ONLY\nShew Timet 7il5-9i15\n44\nII\n!_-Hs-H-s___-_-l\nPAKEFIBLD, England (CP) -\nResidents ot this Suffolk vlllago\nwill keep an anxious eye on their\nchurch In storms this winter. The\ncenturies \u2022 old structure ls nearer\nth* isoa than any other in England\nand gravestones are right on tha\nedge ot a cliff threatened with erosion.\nREAD THE  CLASSIFIED  DAILY\nLett Time Tonight\nBATTLE\nZONE\nJ. Hodlok\nLinda Chrlrtlan\n4how Timet 7i15-9i15\ny^^m^^maamt^tm.\nTeacher P^^ May\nBe %equired; Wider Vote Rejected\npublic Interest In schools and to\nqualify Interested person) fpr school\noffice regardless of property.\nOpponents claimed persons who\nowned property were responsible\ntor debts, and should not be governed by non-ownors. The proposal\nwas snowed under. '\u25a0\nExecutive waa instructed to. Investigate means of co-operative advertising from a central office, hoping to cut coats developing from\nheavy advertising for teachers.\nVancouver praotloe of permitting (.ratio 10 and 11 students\n' to Issvs their olaiiroomseerly In\nslunt, while othir elesses are tek.\nIng examinations, was hit by Chll-\nliwack. amifl  general  applauses\nChllllwflck said (hat other schools\n;were required,te keep students\nIn class te the end of June^even\nthough they were not doing niuoii\nwork, and even though their serv.\nlees were required en farms. They\nalso  lost opportunities fer employment,   Chllllwack - olalmed,\nThe convention basked th* Frkser\nWHATSHAN^OMMISSIOiNl FINDS...\nTunnel Lining Cost Seven\nTimes Amount Estimated\nVANCOUVER (CP) - Concrete\nlining ot a two-mile mountain tunnel on Lower Arrow Lake' cost\n$321,438\u2014seven times -the amount\nestimated, the chief engineer of the\nB.C. Power Commission testified\nTuesday.\n. A. W. Lash was replying to tha\nWhatshan Royal Commission probe\ncounsel, C. W. Tysoe, QC, at the\nstart of the seoond week's hearings.\nHe said 6927 feet ot concrete lining wer* needed instead of the\nestimated 1165. His estimate, he\naald, would hava cost 1116,171.\nTh* final amount of lining used\nwas decided after an examination\nof th* tunnel by Vancouver geologist Dr. Victor Dolmage.\nTuesday was the beginning of the\nsecond week ef hearings before Mr.\nJustice J, V. Clyne Into two mud\nslides which crippled the huge hydro development last August.\n, Tbe second week opened with\nH. H. Griffin representing the B.C.\nPower Commission In place of Alfred Bull, QC, who withdrew Friday attar complaining .. et press\nattacks on the power commission\nand on his own professional integrity, i\nNo mention was made ot the Incident Tuesday and Mr. Griffin,\nformerly Mr. Bull's Junior, automatically took over,; . .,-_..\nMr. Griffin said a report on th*\nslides by an eastern engineering\nfirm would be on hand by Wednesday, \u25a0 : .*; .\nA letter from the mayor bf Kamloops, B.C., J. E. Pitswater, appealed\nfor further investigation of tho\nevidence that fissures in the w*U\nof the power plant tunnel wer*\nallowing water to escape and that\nthey could threaten the plant again\nIn the future.\nMr. Lash said measurement' of\nthe leskage was bdgun in 1951 but\nwas discontinued In June, 1052, 14\nmonths before the two mud slides\nknocked out th* Whatshan plant.\nHe said he believed at tha time\nthe leakage was a natural occurrence with any tunnel and* he had\nnot worried about twin streams of\nwater cutting down the mountain-\naide.   '\nHe ssid the flow was five eublc\nfeet per second and that he would\nnot have become concerned until\nsuch a flow had reached 10 or 15\neublc feet per second.\nMr. Fitzwator's. letter said tha\nhearings had brought to light a\nnumber ot facts which should ba\nInvestigated, but Mr. Justice Clyne\naaid the letter could not bo treated\nas evidence, However, ho said he\nwas certain evidence would be produced on the points covered.\nWm Not At Scene - Evdokimoff...\nJudge Manitin Denies\nRequest for Dismissal\nCASTLE\nTHEATRE\njCAITHOABi M.\nShowing Tonight and Thursday\nVan Johnson - Knthryn Grayson\n\"-ROUNDS FOR  MARRIAGE\"\n\u2022hewing at TlOO and tiOO p,m,\nfather of Trail\nWoman Dies, Coast\nVICTORIA\u2014George Thsckersy,\n61, well-known 'garageman, died\nSunday in hospital. Mr. Thackeray\ncam* to Victoria in 1936 from\nMoosejaw.\nHe is survived by his widow, a\nstepson, his father at Monte Lake,\nB.C.; a brother, Prank, Calgary,\nand three sisters, Mrs. W. Gaudet,\nKamloops; Mrs. Fred Steele, Grand\nForkes, and Mri Jack Sigsworth,\nTraiL\n.\nAn application for dismissal on\nthe basis that tho mixture found\nnear a Krestova home was not an\nexplosive was denied by Mr, Jus-\ntie* A. M. Manson on th* second\nday of a Supreme Court trial at\nNelson,- \u25a0'\"\nTha application i was made by- de-\nfenoe counsel J, A'. MacDonald after tb* noon day adjournment Tuesday.\nNick Evt-orktmoff, who said In.\nhis evident* in chief Tuesday that\nhe was a \"reborn Son et Freedom\",\nis charged with being in possession\nof an explosive with intent to cause\nproperty damage, and with being\nIn possession of an explosive under\nsuspicious circumstances,\nAn assize court jury heard two\nhours of testimony by Evdokimoff\nand one hour cross examination.\nTho cross examination will.. continue today,\nEvdokimoff told tha court he had\nresided at Krestova since 1947. In a\ntrembling voice and on the verge of\ntears, ho asked the court through\nan Interpreter to be patient and, for\n\"forgiveness\" for hesitancy because\nhe was \"nervous before a large\ncrowd of people,\" After a lengthy\ntestimony on hii personal physical\nill health, Evdokimoff unbuttoned\nhis shirt front and showed Judge\nMtnson and tha jury \"brace\" ot\ncloth whloh he wore because of\ncheat pains. \"A little after .11,\" Evdokimoff said, \"I said to Fate Mar-\nkin that! was going to bed.\" Since\n\u2022Evdokimoff's home was destroyed\nin an incendiary tire, he hsd been\nresiding at th* Markln residence In\nGoose Creek, .\nLast week, a crown witness, Alex\nPopoff, testified he had found Evdokimoff in tall grass near an abandoned Goose Creek home on the\nearly hour* ot June 28, Less than\ntwo hours later, an RCMP constable discovered a gallon jug of-\ngasoline and oil near the spot where\nEvdokimoff was allegedly seen,\n\"During the night, I heard a dog-\nbark,\" Evdokimoff said, \"and wa\ntwo (Markln and himself, didn't get\nup until Pete's wife came into tbe\nroom. She asked, 'what is the mat-\ntor? Our dog is barking outside',\n\"When she came to wake us up\nIt wai about a quarter to- three-\nWhen she came into the room she\npulled the curtain, She noticed a\nfire outside. Pete Markln said, 'I'm\ngoing ttiereYiiiid, Tm not go-\ninf, because I could net walk sufficiently well because ot my\nnerves,\"   . .\nThroughout his three \u2022 hour testl-\nmony and oress examination, Evdokimoff stood up and pat down\nevery few minutes. He told the\ncourt that he was unable to remain in one position for long, He\nthen told the court his home was\nburned early in June of 1953.\nWhen Judge Manson asked\nwhether he had any idea who burned    it,    Evdokimoff   replied,    \"I\n!.\n.     - \u25a0\u25a0\".      .\nhaven't the slightest idea. I was\nalleep\". \u2022\u25a0 V\n. An RCMP, corporal oame to the\nMarktn home and asked Evdokimoff to accompany him to an area\nwhere he .had. discovered fresh\ntracks In'the. toad,   .' ..    -\n\"He told me to put my foot alongside the track and'after just i\nmoment's glance the polloeman\nsaid; 'that's enough'. He told me,\n'you will be responsible for this,\"\nEvdokimoff continued.\nCorp\/ S.'A. Rammage, dogmaster,\ntold the court he' followed a trail,\nled by police dog Wolf, from the\nspot where Popoff allegedly saw\nEvdokimoff, into Pet* Markin's\nyard. He said he checked Markin's\nfootprint with one h* found on a\ndirt ro.d, but the two did not compare. He then checked Evdokimoff's\nand his shoe and the print \"matched exactly\", tha corporal said. Constable R. A. Brett, RCMP photographer, identified a series ot photographs taken at the scene.\nA defence witness, Joljn Evdokl.\nnvoff, brother of the accused and\nowner of tha home near which\nEvdokimoff was all allegedly found,\n\u25a0aid he had moved from the premises in December. He said he hid\nstored oil and gas In bottles and\njugi whleh were itored In the\nwoodshed, on the porch and underneath it to \"keep it away from the\nchildren,\" He pointed to the Jut\non exhibit and said that a jug like\nIt had been filled with gal and oil\nand said that ha used this type of\nmixture in the summer tlm* tb\nstart a quick fire. i\nPOUND BOTTLE8\nA Castlegar ichool teacher, Graham Smith, a witness tor the de.\nfence testified he want to Krestova\nand Goose Creek on October 4 with\nJ, A. MacDonald, ooumel for tht\ndefence, Mr, Smith aald ho \"want\nfor curloBlty to lee what tt was like,\nWhile in Goose Creek he found two\nbottles in the yard of John Evdokimoff's horn* which \"imtlltd of\nAi seoond Castlegar teacher, J, A,\nCharters, said he carried out a series of testl with gasoline, keroiene\nand oil, stating that these elements\nare not exploitvei, but fuel. However, when heat wai applied, a\nnumber of tho bottles exploded, He\nalio told ,th* court that he uses fuel\not this type to start a fire on occa.\nlion,\nEvdokimoff at tho end of his ex-\namtnatlon.in-chiof laid that when\nhe left prlion (he had been convict-\ned In IMS) he \".wore away trom\nevil dolngi and th* only thing that\nI wai engaged In doing lino* thtn\nwaa peaceful lit* and toll \u2014 honost\ntoll.\" \u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0-\nQ, Is there anything els* you\nwish to say?. \u25a0 ..\nis. That what I am apparently\nsuspected of, I have never s done,\nparticularly being a sick man.\"\nThe Evdokimof case is expected\nto be completed today.\nValley demand for uniformity of\npractice.\nPLAN BENEFICIAL\nB.C.'s textbook rental plan, besides saving thousands ot dollars\nfor parents, Is helping to boost education standards by permitting purchase of the best available books,\nP. G. iarr, Victoria, director\nof  the   education   department's\n- textbook branch told the convention that tb* curriculum eemmlttee Is no.longer handicapped In\nmaking ohanget- by the thought\n. that heavy costs will be thrown\non parents, , -   y*.;, .'.\nHe stated high' sohool students\nA*w receive for\\ft annually books\nthat formerly cost them, $40,. .\nALD. E. WALLACH\nBlitz fo Open\nRed Shield Drive\nUnd or chairmanship of Aid.\nElizabeth. Wallach, annual Red\nShield Campaign of the Solvatipn\nArmy will open Oct. 19 with a\nblits canvass of the residential area\nIn Nelson. v\nVolunteers have been sought\ntrom the various service clubs and\nother City organizations. Number\not volunteers has been disappointing so fsr and more are being\nsought.\nThe City will be divided into\ntones for canvassing In the one-\nnight blitz.\nProceeds will aid Salvation Army\nwork In providing food-and clothing for the needy. Minimum quota\nIn Nelson la $3000.\nConvention Honors\nMemory of\nHon. Tilly Rolston\nFour hundred delegates tt the\nB.C. tohool Trustees' Association\n-stood Ih silent tribute Tuesday\nte Hon. Tlllle J. Rolston, B.C.\nminister of education, who died\nMonday night, 7 ... <--' '.   \"    \u25a0\nOnly yesterday they had tele.\ngraphed her that their \"thoughts\nand ;\u00a3raytw3,;;wtft .with' htr,\n2i Per Cent Grant\nFor Every\nV.CTOWA (CP) - Th* govern-\nment Thursday Introduced a bill\nWhich would' establish a crown\ncorporation to operate end construct toll highways-end. bridges.\nUnder the act, introduced In the'4'\nlegislature by .Premier Bennett,\nthe British Columbie Toll Highways and Bridges Authority would\nbe empowered to borrow money\nto build bridges and highways and\nto charge the public tolls.\nThe cabinet could borrow up to\n$20,000,000 and' the government\nwould contribute Vh per cent .of\nthe loan 09 any project to ba held\nin reserve to meet debt charges.\nBetween three and seven members would comprise the,board.\nBrigadier Tells\nOf M Activities\nA Thanksgiving message, \"Wagon\nof God,\" was given by Brigadier\nR. W. Gage, Divisional Commander\nfor B.C. South Division of Vancouver, In his sermon Tuesday night\nwhen addressing the Sslvatton\nArmy here In Nelson.\nMr. Gage said that recently the\nSalvation Army opened a Harbor\nLight Corps In Vancouver. This li\nthe first of its kind in Canada. Their\nspecialization ls In alcoholics.\nBrigadier and Mrs. R. Oage are\ntouring the Kootenays. They will\nvisit Cranbrook and Fernie in the\nnext few days.\nThe Weather\nNELSON   \t\n..   31\nSB     -\nCrescent Valley ...\n..    30\n83     -\nKaslo   \t\n..    39\n57   '-\nGrand Porks \t\n.    22\n67     -\nKamloops  \t\n..    BO\n70     _\nPenticton  ..'.'.\n..    43\nea    -\nVancouver  \t\n\"     -1\n58   M(\n43\n50    .07\nALBANY, Calif. (AP) >-\u2022 Wee Wil-\nlie Shoemaker made three trips to\nthe winners' circle st Golden Gate\nFields Tueiday, bringing him\nwithin one victory of matching\nTony Deaplrito's United States record of 300 wins set last year.\nMrs. Crump Fifth B.C\nWoman to Head Trustee!\nMrs. Ada Crump of Vancouver,\nveteran school board member, became president of th* B.C. School\nTrustees Association Tuesday, fifth\nwoman to occupy that post in the\n40-year history ot ther association.\nShe succeeded H. A. Moffat of\nPrince George,\nNext, minister ot education will\nbe honorary president, and Dr. W.\nB, McKechnio ot Armstrong, first\npresident of the BCSTA, is Honorary, vice-president.\nVlco-prosldonts are It. H. Reeve\nVictoria, and L. W. Wood, Ara\nstrong.\nExecutive, members are Mrs\nGladys F. Ellis, Surrey; A. D. Run-\ndie, ChilUwack; Arthur Turner\nRossland; Frank Venables, Oliver)\nNext year's'convention wili's|\nheld at Pentlcton.\nPastor Comes From Saskatchewan\nPost Io Bethel Tabernacle Here\nRev. Mr. ahd Mn. Woodrow J.\nFletcher of Winnipeg will assume\npastoral duties at the Bethel Tabernacle on Sunday.\nMr. Fletcher has \"been in charge\nof the work at Spruce Lake, Saskatchewan, tor the past three years,\nhaving also been managing director\nof the Spruce Lake Summer Camp,\nwhich is the most northern of the\nPentecostal Assemblies in Saskatchewan. , i\nIn recent years Mr. and Mrs.\nFletcher have been active in evangelistic, youth camp and Sunday\nMill E. Hipperson\nFormerly Nolson, Dies\nMiss Emma Hipperson, a former\nresident of Nelson, died In Vancouver Monday. She Is survived by\none sister, Misi Jessie Hipperson\nof Vancouver, and two brothers,\nCharles Hipperson of Spokane and\nW, J. Hlpperson'of Nelson. Mr. and\nMrs. Hipperson left Nelson tor the\nfuneral which will be held in Vancouver on Thursday.\nYouth of Today Etesf in World\nCampbell Tells 400 Banqueters\nHarold L. Campbell, deputy minister of education, told delegates\nto the B.C. School Trustees' convention th|t the best of the youth\ngoing through our schools today\n\"are better than anything the world\nhas ever seen.\"\nThis, he said, despite the persistent attitude of those who claim\nthe modern day student lacks training in the essentials such as spelling and grammar.\nHe was -speaking to almost 400\ndelegatei and guests assembled in\nthe Junior High gymnasium for the\nconvention banquet Tuesday night\n\"Justification for our existence as\ntrustees and educator! depends on\ntwo beliefs fundamental and basle\nto the whole process ot formal education,\" he declared,\nMen's progress from savagery and\n\/brutality to th* present was almost\nentirely due to the fact he \"ls im-\nproveable\" by environment and\neducation, Faith in this fact wai\nthe justification for education, ho\nMid.\n\"Wo muit have faith that poverty,\ncrime, insecurity, disease, and wir\nexist because of the mil-education\nof some- people, and there must be\ntilth that tht right kind ot education can curt these ills.\"\nSoma people, he went on, advocate {hit lehoor boards ihould ba\ndone away with tnd tht government should operate the schools,\nIn Mr, Campbell's belief, education\nwould then become static, contact\nwith students would be lost, and It\nwould be \"the- greateit possibio\nmistake\u2014a tragedy.\"\nTRUSTEES BULWARK!\n\"Boards of trustees are the bulwarks of education,\" he stated. They\nshould itop and takei a .gorfd look\nat education, a general survoy, and\ndecide for themselves what la being attempted In \"thli thing\u2014formal  education.\"\nMf, Campbell suggester thlt\nboards avoid \"getting lost\" In tht\nbusiness affairs of the schools and\ndo instead a little wild thinking,\nA-little thinking ot what \"they\nwould do\" with education, In thli\nday and age, formil education la\n\"all things to all young people,\"\nHt contrasted the variety of fa-\ncultlos offered at UBC Compared\nwith the \"Science or Arts\" offered\nformerly. Many college professors\nstill refuse to realize that man\neducation haa Invaded the universities, he added.\nHe warned against education for\n\"making a. living.\" Schools which\noriginally taught the reading, writ\ning and arithmetic formula have\ngradually changed over the years\nto take care ot the demand for\nteaching of skills.\n\"You may teach skills,\" but It was\nfound, \"you may have an educated\nsavage.\"\nGermany, he pointed out, did not\nlack in the teaching of taohnlcal\nand scientific skills, her people\nwere filled with skill! tor making\na living, But much of th* present\ntrouble csn be blamed on a lack\nof skill in \"how to live.\"\nThe skills for living were kindliness, sympathy, social betterment;\nand the giving of oneself for the\nservice of others, he suggested.-\nTake a broad view of education,\nhe advised, because teachers \"are\ndoing what you would do if you\nhad time (or it,\"\nHe told ihe delegate! that criticism ihould never be relented, but\nihould be considered In an effort\nto extract the truth.\nCriticism stemming from t real\ngrievance could-bt'remedied, he\nsaid, but it wil unfortunate the\nuninformed lometimei genenllzed\nfrom isolated eilei. Somt financial\ncritics were concerned over getting\nvalue trom their money, but he laid\nha often wondered if cost-critics\nwer* thinking people.\nChairman George Mermet ot\nNelion Dlltrict No, 7 in opening\nthe program, aiked a minute's silence for tht lite Hon, Mn, Tilly\nRoliton. Very Rtv, T. L. Leid-\nbeater, Dean of Kootenay, offered\na short prayer,\nMayor Joseph Kary officially\nwelcomed all visitors to Nelion and\nH. A, Moffat ot Prince George, retiring president, thanked the City\nof Nelson for the Trustees.\nCatereri for th* banquet were\nthe Trinity United Church ladles.\n. | Some lively entertainment was\nprovided by E, J, Leveque and William Ramsay, accompanied at the\npiano by Mrs. J. S. Livingstone.\nT. R. Flint of\nN. Denver Dies\nThomas R. Flint, 69, long a resident ot New Denver, died suddenly\nat his home there early Tuesday\nmorning.\nBorn in Falkirk, Scotland, in\n1688, he- came to Canada In 1813\nand worked for P. Burns.and Company. He oame to New Denver in\n1831, and had been employed by\nNew Denver Meat Market.\nMember of the Knights of Pythias\nLodge No, 22, he was also on the\nSlocan Community Hospital Board\nfor a number of years; H* was\nprominent in church work and\ncommunity affairs.\nBesides his wife,' he Is survived\nby one daughter, Mrs, Thomas\nSteenhoft ot New Denver; one son,\nIvan M, Flint, with the RCAF at\nPenhold. Altk, one sister, Mrs.\nBlackwell of Montreal, one brother,\nand tour grandchildren,\nMRS. M. CHERNOFF\nOF THRUMS PASSES\nMrs. Marian Chernoff,' resident of\nThrums, died at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital Tuesday afternoon after a lengthy illness. Born\nin Lengham, Sask. she was 37 years\nof age. She came to this district\n14 years ago,\nBesides her husband, Alec, she ls\nsurvived by three daughters, Eileen,\nAngellne and Jeanette at home;\ntwo sister!, Mrs. Nick Nadane,\nGrand Forks; Mrs. Pete Tarasoff,\nThrums; and one brother, Mike\nStrellotf, Borden, Sask, Funeral\nservices ate to be held In Thrums.\n.    A TRIAT POJ\u00bb V<JO:\nAND YOUR FRIENDS\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n424 Front St.        j   Nelion\nBuy. Sell, Trade the. Classified Way\nSchool work in many province!\nCanada, and also in U.S.A.     -\nBefore entering the ministry, Mi\nFletcher was a pilot, officer in'to\nRCAF. He ls a graduate ot thl\nBible School in Winnipeg, Man\nMr. and Mrs. Fletcher have twi\nsons, Gordon 7, and David 3.- 7;|\n0twicL %jii}ionQ\nj For Your\nPAINTING\nPAPERHANGINC\nNEEDS\nPhone 792-X.\nThij'tdyf r'llsfiniiiit is'not published t\ndisplayed by ihe Liquor Control Botn\n'&-. Mi $% \"\nColumbia.\nOUR SPECIALTY\n\u2022 AN*: WHERE\n\u2022 ANY i\u00bbUCEA\n\u2022 ANY TIME\nAlso\nDally Freight Service\nNelson \u25a0 Trail - Castlegar.\nRossland - Fruitvale \u2022 Balm* 7\nUNITED TRUCKIN(\n& STORAGE LTD.\nStanley Street, Nelson\nPHONE 1108\nFor Comfort, Cleanliness,, Economy\nIn Home Heat.. . Order\nthe COAL that\n-\nV\nV\nIS EASILY FIRED\nDOES NOT CLINKER\nIS LOWER IN ASH\nV CONTAINS NO WASTE\nV CAUSES NO ANNOYING GASES\nOrder a load of Hooting\nSo\u00ab\u00bbfoetlon... KLBeWURN\n.    COAL...N\u00abwl\n_____________\n .\n,..\nRUBBERS and OVERSHOES\nQUALITY\not Reasonable \u00bb\"\u2022\nPRICES\nProtect Your Health ... Be Ready for the\nWet Weather Ahead\nThe SHOE CENTRE\n553 Baker St. '      Phone 895\nGray Creek Holds\nHarvest Festival\nGRAY CREEK \u2014 The hall was\nprofusely decorated for the Harvest\nfestival. A giant loaf of bread,\ngrapes and sheaves of oats were\nadded to the usual fruits, vegetables\nand flowers. Gordon Sargent\npreached.\nA choir of Mrs. Sneddon, Mrs.\nSurge and Mr. and Mrs. Webber\nsaqg an anthem accompanied by\n'Mrs. Feenie.      \u2022,.<-,\"*\u2022\nFruit and vegetables went to the\nSafvation Army in Nelson while\njam and jelly ao to Mount St,\nIrancis. '.'* \\\nTot Steers Car\nInto Hotel\nDamage $500\nTRAIL\u2014Bobbie Reiki, three-year-\nold son of Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Reid\nof 1130 Nelson Avenue, decided\nSunday mornirig that if his father\ncould drive.a car\u2014he could too.\nMr. Reid parked his car, with\nBobble in lt, in front of Trail city\nhall late Sunday morning.\nWhile dad was gone, Bobbie began playing in the front seat and in\nthe course of his investigation released the brake. The car rolled\nbackwards down Spokane Street\nand plunged Into the side of the\nMeakin Hotel, breaking through in.\nto the beverage parlor.\n\u25a0Carnage to the hotel was estimated at about $500. The car received\nonly minor damage.\nI When Mr. Reid reached the car\nhe found Bobble unhurt, although a\nlittle shaken up. The, boy then looked at him and said, \"Daddy, the\nwheel didn't come off.\"\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nvVHl{\n| ovst-mei*\nsst\/e\/ous\nPOP\nCORN\nSS5E\nSAFE MOVING\nis a SCIENCE!\nLet our trained, courteous,\nprofessional movers \"take the\nload off your mind!\" Tour\nfinest furniture, dishes and\nother possessions' will be\nscientifically packed and\nhandled with the utmost care.\nPhone for estimate.\nTransfer\nCo.\n719 Baker St.  Nelion, B.C.\nPhone 13\nGrounding In g\nCitizenship\nUrged by Herridge\nTRAIL\u2014School and home should\nwork cloSely together in preparing\nchildren tor citizenship said H. W.\nHerridge, MP for West Kootenay,\nat the eastern border conference-of\nthe Parent-Teacher Association at\nthe J. Lloyd Crowe high school,\nEast Trail, Saturday.\nMr. Herridge was addressing a\nluncheon group of executive members from B.C. and Washington on\n\"Discipline in Democracy.\"\nThe democratic nation ls stronger than\/the democracy that exists\nWithin it, he said, that strength depends on the number willing to participate In the full function of\ndemocracy.\nHe pointed out the cornerstones\not democracy as respect for the Individual and rightful property, the\nmeans tor all to take part in the\ngovernment and freedom under the\nlaw for all in speech, assembly, religion, press and association.\nNo Place For Horse\nTRAIL\u2014A modern highway la\nno place for a horse, a Fruitvale\nhorse learned Sunday night. But the\nknowledge came too late.\n; The horse was put to death shortly after being struck by a car\ndriven by Alan Mosher of Fruitvale.\nDamage to the car was estimated\nat $500.\nTHo Has Trieste\nFolk Worrying\nTRIESTE (AP)\u2014\"Does Tito mean\nit?\"\nOn streets and docks and in the\nflag-draped buildings of this city,\nTriestini are asking that question\nwondering whether Yugoslavia's\nPresident Tito really will carry out\nhis threat to march, into-this Adriatic port city if Britain and the United States turn it over to the Italians.\nThere is an outward calm in this\ncity, principal part of the zone A\nfrom which the Britons and Americans have decided to pull out.\nBut Tito's angry threats to treat\nItalian entry into the free territory\nas an act of aggression to be met\nwith force, and his movement of\ntroop reinforcements into Yugoslav zone B to back up the threat,\nare topmost in everyone's mind\nhere. '\nRECALLS  PARTISANS\nMany remember\u2014some with grim\nrecollection\u2014when Tito's partisans\nmarched into Trieste in the closing\ndays of the war at the heels bf tne\nretreating Nazis and imposed a\nreign of anti-Italian terror until\nthe Britons and Americans ordered\nthem to pull back or face attack by\nthe. full Allied might\nWhat Tito has said and dope\nabout the recent developments in\nthis predominantly Italian city has\ndone much to color and even modify the pro-Italian enthusiasm over\nthe Anglo-American decision.\n\"Of course Trieste should return\nto -Italy,\" said a young business\nman. \"This is an Italian city, but\nperhaps the Allies should not go\nright away. Does Tito mean it?\"  .\nA Trieste journalist said cautiously: \"The people here are concerned.\nYes, that is the way to say it. WI\nare concerned, but we are not panicky. Do you think that Tito would\ndare to march in?\"\nTRIESTINI PRO-ITALY (\nThere is no doubt that the great\nmajority of Triestini are pro-Italian.\nIn the last communal election in\n1052, nearly 53 per cent ofthe 178,-\n084 voters favored the pro-Italian\nparty.\nThe Communists drew 17 per\ncent of the vote; a party favoring\nTrieste independence drew 17 per\ncent and the pro-Tito party only\nthree per cent.\nSalmo Valley Signs Ebrst\nHospital Efistrict Petitions\n6??<?I\n$500 Damages In\nYahk Bridge Crash\nYAHK\u2014An. Alberta driver crashed his car into a bridge abutment\neast of Yahk Monday afternoon,\nbut he and bis four passengers escaped with minor cuts and bruises.\nDamage to tbe car was estimated\nat $500.\nHendrlck Oosterom of Lethbridge,\ndriver ot the car, pleaded guilty In\npolice court Tuesday morning to a\ncharge of driving without due care\nand attention. He was fined $30 and\n$3 costs,      -,,,'   \u25a0\nOosterom was proceeding east to\nCranbrook when he failed . to\nsafely negotiate, a turn onto the\nbridge just outside of Yahk and\nstruck the concrete pillar head on.\nTo Cease Learning\nA\nCRANBROOK \u2014 John McPher-\nson Osborne, no fixed address, appeared for preliminary hearing before Magistrate Shiell on a charge\nof attempted carnal knowledge of a\nlittle girl, and was committed for\ntrial in a higher court.\nHe was arrested and charged by\nRCMP August 21 and has been in\ncustody since then, and continues\nin custody here pending his election\nof trial in county court or at the\nspring assizes. Crown case was presented at the preliminary hearing\nby Constable Frank Fornelli, and\nthe accused offered no defence. He\nwas a member of a railway extra\ngang working in this area at the\ntime of the alleged offence.\nPROCTER-HARROP\nHospital\nImprovement District\nTONIGHT - COMMUNITY HALL\nSpeaker!: Dr. <S. R. Barrett, Harry D. Harrison,\nA. K. McAdam., Mrs. F. W. M. Drew\nSPEAKERS \u2014 PHOTOGRAPHS \u2014 QUESTION PERIOD\nTRAIL\u2014Delegates to, the eastern\nborder conference of the Parent-\nTeacher Association Saturday were\nreminded that education \"starts at\nbirth and continues\u2014or should do\nso\u2014throughout life.\" .\nIn an address, on \"Education, A\nWay of Life,\" Dr. C. A. H. Wright\nsaid \"learning Is extremely rapid\nduring the first ten years and then\ntapers off. Sometimes it stops when\na person reaches the adult stage.\nThis ls a great tragedy;\n\"The process of development of\nall faculties should grow forever.\nThe trend is ever onward and the\ndoor is always open to those with\nSufficient education.\nDr. Wright touched on the many\nforms of contribution to education\nand said that schools, universities\nand colleges should not be taken\nfor granted. \"We should look upon\nthem as joint trustees and co-operate with them as one unit.\"\nHe said that students living outside Vancouver had not the same\nopportunity to attend the University of British Columbia as those at\nthe coast. Something should be\ndone to remedy this, he said.\nNEED FOR TEACHERS\nDr. Wright also mentioned the\nneed for more and better-trained\nteachers and the importance of\nadult education at the present.time.\nDr. Wright, deputizing for Ralph\nPerry, who had been called to the\ncoast, was Introduced by Mrs. Gordon Redgrave, general chairman for\nthe conference held at the J. Lloyd\nCrowe high achool in East Trail.\nRepresenting B.C. and Washington, 100 executive members attended the opening sessions of the conference Friday.\nMembers opined that parents do\nnot know enough about Uie schooling of their children such as curricula, report cards and general\nprocedure at school. It ls the duty\nof PTA's to bring these facts before\nthe parents and the parents' duty\nto take the opportunity afforded\nthem and attend PTA meetings.\nMagician Gives\nShow at Invermere\nINVERMERE\u2014George Haddad of\nCranbrook made his second appearance as a magician-hypnotist on the\nstage of the Lake Windermere Memorial Community Centre and gave\na fine performance to an appreciative audience.\nThe first portion of the program\nwas a concentrated performance of\nmagic In which Mr. Haddad v\/ith\nhis usual dexterity mystified his\naudience with a varied repertoire\nof sleight of hand tricks and magic,\nculminating with his flqating head\ntrick which he presented for the\nfirst time on the invermere stage.\nThe second part of the performance was devoted to hypnotism, of\nwhich art Mr. Haddad is a. past-\nmaster. This was the highlight of\nthe evening and was much appreciated by the audience. The sportsmanship of the young participants\nwho volunteered for hypnotism was\nalso admired.\nMr. Haddad was assisted in his'\nperformance by Mrs. Haddad and\nW. A. Burton of Cranbrook.\nThe performance wa8 sponsored\nby the Music and Art group of the\nLake, Windermere Memorial Community Centre.\nBoys To Be Charged\nWith Entering\nTRAIL\u2014Three juvenile boys\nbroke into Sav-Mor Stores Ltd. Sunday night in Rossland, but upon be:\ning seen by passersby lost their\nnerve and ran'away without taking\nanything.\nThe trio will be charged with\nbreaking and entry by Rossland\nRCMP.\nThe boys smashed a window In\nthe rear of the building and entered by reaching through and unlatching the door.\nPeople passing by on the sidewalk saw them in the store and the\nboya dashed out when they noticed\nthey were being watched. Police\npicked them up Monday.\nSALMO \u2014First signatures\nby property owners of Salmo\nValley went on to hospital\nimprovement, district organization petitions T u e s'd a y\nnight. \u2022 (\nSigning of the petitions culminated a public meeting in\nthe Junior-Senior High School\nat which- four speakers were\nheard describing conditions\nat Kootenay Lake Qeneral\nHospital, the need for a new\ndistrict hospital and the, procedure involved in formation\nof a hospital district.\nMiss Elsie Suran, R.N., told of\nnursing conditions and patient care\nproblems at the present hospital.\nThe number of patients admitted\nin 1052 were over 300 more .than in\n1951. This represented a full extra\nmonth's admissions, figures in '53\nindicate that admissions will increase by another 300. These figures\nIndicated that 14 months of patient\ncare were being crowded lhto the\n12 months-\u2014 such was the demand\non the hospital. '.J.\nThree display boards of contrasting photographs showing conditions\nat KLG Hospital as compared to\nthose in a modern hospital were\nused by Dr. G,. R. Callbeck to\nillustrate the problems of caring for\npatients in an overcrowded and\nobsolete building. He related a\nnumber ot personal experiences as\nfurther illustration.    ., > \u25a0\"\nA. K. McAdams, Kootenay Lalce\nHospital Society director,; Mrs. F.\nW. M. Drew, organizing secretary,\nahd R. H. Procter, co-ordinating\nchairman of the hospital district\norganizing committee, also spoke\nand answered questions.\nProperty owners will also be\ncontacted by canvassers.\nThere were always points of\ncontroversy in a project of this\nsize, said Mrs. Drew. \"You will\nhave your opinions on the question\nof site, perhaps, or design, or\narchitect, or size,\" she continued.\n\"There will be opportunities for\nyour trustees to bring up these\nmatters. The Hospital Board will\nwelcome suggestions and consider\nall constructive Ideas. If the basic\nprinciple of the people of the district joining with the people of the\ncity to build our new hospital\nseems reasonable, then do not hold\nup the petition because every little\ndetail is not to your individual\ntaste.\nURGES BIG APPROACH\n\"This is a very big project; let us\napproach it in a big way, with\nreadiness to modify our individual\nwishes and opinions so that the\nundertaking can go forward without unreasonable delay.\"\nMrs. Drew said when she first\nwent to work at the hospital four\nyears ago ahe found it \"woefully\novercrowded, terrlby Inconvenient,\nand working conditions, especially\nfor the nurses and the maintenance\nstaff, exceedingly poor. But I was\nnot then coftylnced that something\ncould not be done about it all. I\nthought perhaps the old building\ncould be patched up, modernized,\nenlarged, given a face lift and a\nnew lease of life. As I worked\nthere, however, and became more\nfamiliar with the conditions, saw\nthe overcrowding getting worse\nmonth by month, and year by year;\nas I noticed the strain on the doctors and nurses, I realized that\nnothing much could be done with\nthe old hospital.\n\"Then I learned about the reports\nof architects and contractors, and\nof the fire marshal's order, the\nverdict has come from so many\nquarters: 'Kootenay Lake General\nHospital has had its day.'\nNOT BLANK CHECK\nSigning of the petition was not\nsigning a blank check. It simply\nSignified approval of the formation\nof an improvement district The\nbusiness of the district would be\ndone through the men and women\nelected as trustees. But there must\nbe a hospital district before there\ncould be a new district hospital, so\nif the listeners agreed that spreading the cost of the large district\nwas the fairest way of financing\nthe community share under present\nlaws, then signing the petition was\nthe answer.\nMrs, Drew a_so' explained in\ndetail the petition forms.      '\nWindermere Tot\nIII With Polio\nINVERMERE \u2014 A six-year-old\nWindermere girl is under treat\nment in the Lady Elizabeth Bruce\nMemorial Hospital here for a severe ease of bulbar polio. This is the\nfirst case reported in the district\nthis year. Last year there were\nfive eases.\nFruitvale Resident\nEnjoys 90th Birthday\nFRUITVALE - Mrs. G. Ross\nentertained recently a few old and\nintimate friends in honor of her\nhusband's 90th birthday. Mr. Ross\nreceived many expressions of best\nwishes throughout the day.   \/\nMr. and Mrs. G. Ross are old\ntimers ot Fruitvale, have lived here\nfor over 40 years,' coming from\nEngland. This year they celebrated\ntheir 61st wedding anniversary.\nFOR SALE\nSHIPLAP OR\nDIMENSION LUMBER\nPhone or Call\n8. P. POND\nNelson, B.C.\nWorkers Flee\nBunkhouse Fire\nTRAIL, B.C.\u2014Ten men, asleep In\ntheir bunks, dashed to safety Sunday when fire gutted a bunkhouse\nof Stone and Webster, Canada, Ltd.,\nat the Waneta Dam project.\nThe bunkerhouse serves 28 men,\nmost of whom Wme away for the\nweekend. The inside-of the bunkerhouse was ruined.     -\n0ne7rman dived head-first\nthrough a ground floor window and\nsuffered only, superficial cuts.. The\nremaining nine men ware unhurt.\nINVERMERE. \u2014 Some wives In\nInvermere i bring' home, not the\nbacon, butithe bear. Two adventurous and, energetic housewives in\nthe village after thefailure of their\nbetter halves to \u25a0 provide venison\nsteaks for dinner took it upon\nthemselves to obtain such a tasty\ndish for themselves.    \"\nEach shot a deer and on a later\noccasion one bagged a fine specimen, a threeTyear-old black bear,\nnear the village limits. The enterprising wives are Mrs. Sandy\nDobbie and Mrs. Gordon Cleland\nand it is Mrs. Dobbie who will\nhave a bear rug in her home.!\nP.S. The husbands have still to\nbag their first trophy of the\nseason.\nBirds Minus Plumage\nBrings Hunter Fine\nKIMBERLEY \u2014 In an unusual\nGame Act charge in district police\ncourt here Anthony Eliuk pleaded\nguilty to possession of birds without plumage. Purpose of the regulation, which forbids skinning or\ncompletely plucking birds when\nthey are shot before they are-\nbrought in, is to allow identification of the type of bird shot. Fine\nwas $10.\nMagistrate V. M. Bourne also levied fines of $25 each on L. A. Massle and E. E. Richardson of Marysville, each of whom laid Information for assault charges with actual\nbodily harm after an encounter\nwith each other.    .\nOfficers Chosen\nFor New Denver,\nSilverton P-TA\nNEW DENVER - The first meeting of the New Denver-Sllverton\nPTA was held at the Lucerne\nJunior - Senior High School recently. ' The meeting started with\nthe election of officers for the\ncoming season. They are as follows:\nPresident, A, R. McGorman; vice-\npresident,, L. P. Todd; secretary-\ntreasurer, Mrs. R. Foirhurst; ways\nand means committee, Mrs. J, H.\nMcDonaugh; publicity, Mrs. Selena\nMcGorman; publications, Miss\nThelitis Clarke; refreshments, Mrs.\nMabel McCrory; membership,. Mrs.\nW..E.Jenks. iv_\nThe Program Committee.position\nwas left open.for the time being.\nFollowing the election of officers\na short business meeting was held,\nIt was decided that the Orchard\nPTA group should be invited to the\nnext meeting. After the business\nwas. completed refreshments were\nserved at , which time the new\nteachers were introduced.\nComer Stone For\nNew Citadel Laid\nTRAIL\u2014Brigadier R. W. Gage,\ndivisional commander of the Salvation Army in, British Columbia, officiated at the.laying of the corner\nstone for the new citadel here Saturday afternoon.\nThe service begaf with a musical\nsalute by the Army band.\nBrigadier Gage, introduced by\nSecond-Lieutenant J. Ban, express?\ned his thanks to Mayor E. G. Fletcher, A. D. Turnbull, A. G. Jenkins\nand Paul Smith for their help in\nthe project.\nMayor Fletcher brought greetings\nfrom the City of Trail. He congratulated the Army on their work,\nand stated that further efforts will\nbe put forth to raise the remainder\nof the money needed for the project\nDr. B. P. Sutherland, administrative assistant at the smelter,\nbrought greetings from the GM & S\nCo. of Canada, Ltd.\nDuring the ceremony, a copper\nbox containing a copy of the Trail\nTimes, a copy of the Salvation\nArmy magazine, \"War Cry,\" and\na number of coins were embedded\nin the corner atone.\nThe program ended with a dedicatory prayer and benediction by\nRev. J. Taylor, who expressed the\nProtestant denomination's joy at\nseeing the building being erected.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14,19S3 \u2014 I\nPower Production Early\nIn 1954 Waneta Object\nWANETA \u2014 Initial power pro\nductlon at Waneta is Scheduled for\nearly 1954 and lt Is expected that\napproximately six months will see\nLucerne Pupils\nElect Council\nNEW DENVER rr At the Lucerne\nJunior-Senior High-School Council\nelection President Reg. Broughton\nwas re-elected as also was secretary, Mary Ami Avisoh. Barry\nMorrison was elected vice-president; Jeannette McDonough, treasurer.   ,    -\nAt the High School Council Conference, held in Nelson, six students from the . Lucerne Junior-\nSenior High School'were present;\nRoWena Bradshaw, Jeannette McDonough, Walter Welch, Barry\nMorrison, Tonl Kagayama, and Reg\nBroughton.\nCHARGED WITH NOT\nPAYING BOARD BILL\nCRANBROOK \u2014 Appearing In\ncity police court on two charges of\nbeating board bills totalling $70,\nRonald Didyk pleaded guilty and\nwas remanded by Magistrate Richard Shiell for sentence. One was a\nhotel bill and one a cafe bill. He\nhad come here recently from Taber\nseeking employment]       \u2022\nall construction and installation\ncompleted at the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company's Waneta power plant project.\nOf a total 375,000 cubic yards of\nconcrete estimated for the:dam and\npower plant, only 15,000: cubic\nyards'remain tb be placed. Practically all ot this is for the dam\nstructure,\nWork on the head gates Is progressing with three partially complete. The spillway gate guides ire\nbeing set.1 All-of,the eight tailraee\ngates are in place. J-:\nIn the power plant, work on:Ui>\nscroll case, speed ring, pit lifter\nand generator foundations for No. 1\ngenerator unit is complete and\ngood progress Is being made :.n\ninstallation of scroll case and.speed\nring for No. 2 generator unit: The\ntif.bines. are scheduled to arrive at\nthe project by early November. jAt\npresent the project is employing\nabout 8B0 men.     7 ;\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING\n\u00ab. HEATING\nCOMPANY LID.\nA Complete Plumbing\nand Heating Service\nPhone 666\n351 Baker St. Nelson. B.C\nis my wandering\nad tonight?\nThat's a fair question and deserves a factual\nanswer. When you buy newspaper advertising you\nhave an investment in every copy of the paper\nthat carries your sales message because the circulation of the newspaper is also the circulation of\n, your advertising. So, what you get in return for\nyour advertising dollars depends on the newspaper's circulation. In order that you may buy\nspace in this newspaper as you would make any\n*The Audit Bureau of Circulations is a cooperative, nonprofit\nassociation i of 3,450 advertisers,\nadvertising agencies arid publishers. Organized in 1914,\nA.B.C. established a definition\nfor paid circulation, rules and\nstandards'for measuring clrcula\ntions and methods for auditing\nand reporting circulation FACTS.\n\u2022ttp\nsound business investment, we hold membership\nin the Audit Bureau of Circulations,* well known\nto advertisers and publishers as A.B.C. Only publications With paid circulation-evidence that people want the \"paper-are eligible for memberahdp.\nAS regular intervals one oif the Bureau's large\nstaff of experienced circulation auditors comes to\nour office to make a thorough audit of our circulation records. The FACTS that he obtains as a\nresult of the audit are published in A.B.C. reports\nwhich tell you; How much circulation we have;\nWhere it goes; How obtained. How muoh people\npay for our paper, and many other FACTS that\nyou need in order to KNOW wfiat you get for\nyour advertising money.\nIt's never necessary for our advertisers to ask,\n\"Oh, where is\" my wandering ad?\" They get the\nIACTS from our A.B.C. report and KNOW. Ask\nfor a copy today.\n^Nelson Daily New\u00a7\nWt?\nA.B.C.   REPORTS - PACTS   AS  A   BASIC   MEASURE   OF   ADVERTISING   VALUE\n\"\t\n \u2014_ . _\n '\npppsw\nS&\nEstablished April 22, 1902\n'   , British Columbia's\n\u2022Most fnterosling Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED.\n266 Baker Street  Nelson.  British Columbia.\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall,\nPost Offico Department, Ottawa.\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PBESS AND\n: THE AUDIT BUHEAU OF CIRCULATIONS.\nWednesday, October 14, 19S3\nPriority For West Arm\nBridge Essential\nReports persist at Victoria and\nVancouver that the Agassiz-Rosedale\nbridge over the Fraser will be the first\nto receive attention under the hew\nbridge buildling authority, to be established through a new bill already given\nfirst reading in the 'Legislative Assembly. It probably.,is timely for the\nWest Kootenay to renew its bid for\npriority attention when new bridge\nbuilding is considered.\n- Those who worked to circulate a\npetition for the West Arm bridge on\nthe Southern Transprovincial Highway did a fine service, and Hon, Wesley D, Black, MLA for Nelson-Creston,\ncertainly did a job in presenting the\nwishes expressed in the petitions before the House. The member's contention that the government should build\nai part of its highway program the\napproaches to major bridges, constructed under the authority, and\nshould pay a direct subsidy toward\nejtch undertaking, was more than reasonable. That it has been accepted as\n\u2022such, at least in part, is evident in the\nfi'ct that the hew legislation provides\nfor a direct 2% per cent grant toward\neach project. \u00bb\u25a0\u2022,.,-,.. ,- . . . . '\ni Reasons for assuring priority consideration for projects in this'area are\nobvious. Financing power of the new\nauthority or commission has.been!set\nat $20 million. Projects of the size necessary to bridge the water gaps on\nNo- 3 Highway alone will not be many,\nin number under such a financing\nlimit. The West Arm bridge alone, it is\ncontemplated, would cost $1.5 million.\nThe economic and travel advantages that wiU^ spread through the\nentire district by better highway facilities hardly need retelling, A bridge'\nhere is an improvement that will enhance travel completely North to, tha\nLardeau; it will be an improved connection with the East Kootenay even\nwithout consideration of the fact that\nit will replace anjmpeding cable barge\non the Southern Transprovincial Highway. It would end the. great lineups of\ncars that this weekend and on every\nbusy day for months have piled up on\nboth sides of the Nelson-Ndrth Shor?\nferry approaches.\nof the people to know what's going on\nabout them. And governmental officials have not always been so pure\nand open faced as they like to make\nthe people believe in their handling\nof news that concerns the public. It\nhas taken, and will continue to take,\nconstant vigilance on the part of the\ncommunications media in this country,\nto ferret out the facts, to resist attempts at suppression of information,\nand to hold public officials accountable for their public acts,\n.We have seen in many countries\nabroad what happens when dictatorships arise and benevolent rulers want\nto decide what is best for the people\nto Vnow about their own business.\nAmong their first steps ih their rise to\npower is their zeal to control the channels of communication, to withhold information that could be considered unfavorable to their aims, and to propagandize the public.\nOne great influence being exerted\ntoday in behalf of the people's right to'\nknow is the daily newspaper. As long\nas it continues to merit the confidence\nof its readers, it will remain free. And\nas long as it remains free, the people\nwill have access to the information\nand opinions they need in order to\nmaintain their own individual and collective freedom,\n __i\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AQO\nFront the Nelson Dally News, October 14,1948\nCity Engineer H. p. Dawson is to take a\nweek's holiday\u2014and devote lt to drawing up\nplans for post-war rehabilitation projects In\nNelson, including installation of 'storm sewers, .improvement of the waterfront and continuing the improvement of the city's water\ndistribution system.\nThe RCAF Band from, Edmonton, which\nis making a tour of East and West Kootenay\nin connection with the Fifth Victory Loan\ncampaign, arrived at Chapman Camp from\nFernie this morning.\nThe Right To Know\nCanadians have never been subjected to the same sort of governmental! censorship and restrictions on the\nfreedom of the press that have been\ncommon in nations that have become\ntotalitarian. There* is little immediate\ndanger today of the federal authorities\nputting any serious' curb' on the\npeople's right to know.\nYet freedom of information has\nbeen taken for granted so long in this\ncountry that it is well fo be reminded\nevery now and then how well off we\nare because of our traditions that have\nprovided us this freedom.\nThere have been many minor attempts, of course, to restrict the .ight\n25 YEARS AOO\nProm the Nelaon Dally News, October 14. 1028\nA service lamp which it used by the Toe H\nClub, and which was ordered by the Trail\nbranch, has now been secured, and will arrive\nin Trail shortly.\nThe Bonnington badminton season opened\ntodav.\nThe bi-monthly meeting of the Church\nAuxiliary was held at the home of Mrs, J.\nMurray, Bonnington, when needlework was\n> done for. the Christmas sale of work.\nM YEARS AQO\nProm the Nelson Dally News, Oetober 14,1903\nRumors were flying around the streets\nboth Monday and Tuesday that another extremely rich strike had been made at Poplar,\nbut so far nothing definite has been reported.\nA large sllvertln bear was shot Sunday\nafternoon at the May and Jennie mine on\nFortv-Nlne Creek.   \u25a0\n0. W. Stead came in yesterday from the\nStar mine for supplies. Work ls progressing\nat the property In a moat satisfactory manner,\nand the bunkhouse and mill will soon be ready\nfor use.\n?Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names ot persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this service.\nQuestions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL o^oept-\\vtiert:thart Is obvious\nnecessity fpr privacy. Y ,\nReader, Cranbrook\u2014What date was Chaka\nMlka held In Nelson?\nJuly li\u201e1914:'\"',;' \u2022  .\nIpterested, Wardner\u2014Is there a water branch\ndepartment, dealing with water questions\nIn the Kootenays? If so, please print name\nand address,\nR.   Pollard,   Water   Rights   Department,\nCourt House, Ward Street, Nelson.\nL. P. W\u201e Trail\u2014How many branches are there\nof the United Nations\u2014I mean councils,\ncommittees, and so forth?  \u2022\nThe General\" Assembly, composed of representative j of - di) member States, works\nthrough six main Committees: First Committee, Political and Security, including regulation of armaments; 'second Committee, Economic and Financial; third Committee. Social,\nHumanitarian, and Cultural; fourth Committee, Trusteeship, Including non-self-governing\nterritories; fifth Committee, Administrative\nand! Budgetary; sixth Committee, Legal. The\nAssembly haa also established procedural\nstanding ad hoc committees. The Security\nCouncil is composed of five permanent members, China, France, the United Kingdom, the\nUnited States, and the Soviet Union The Economic and Social Council ls authorized to\nenter into agreements with specialized agencies for the purpose of bringing them into\nrelationship with the United Nations. Such\nagreements with the following are in force;\nInternational Labor Organization; Food and\nAgriculture Organization of the United Nations; UNESCO; International Civil Aviation\nOrganization; International Bank for Reconstruction and Development; International\nMonetary Fund; World Health Organization;\nUniversal Postal Union; International Telecommunication Uulon.\nCurious, Salmo\u2014I have dug up my gladiolus\nbulbs, and some of them are being eaten\ntip by little worms. What can I treat them\nwith so that they won't rot?\nThe only thing to do with those bulbs\nalready eaten is to throw them away. If there\nare any not yet showing signs of being affected, spray with 10 per cent DDT before\nstoring in dry place. Another method is to\nstore bulbs in bags in which naphtha flakes\nhave been placed.\nE. M., Gray Creek\u2014Could you quote for me\nthe verse, and name of author, of the following, which ls all I can remember?\n.the author is W. E. Henley, the poem,\n\"Invlctus\". Owing to copyright laws we are\nunable to quote the complete poem (which Is\ncontained in all Henley collections, in most\nlibraries), but here ls the verse;\n\"It matters not how Strait the gate,\nHow charged with punishment the scroll,\nI am the master of my fate,\n, I am the captain of my soul.\"\nGrowing a Beard\n(Brookvllla Recorder and Times)\nWhile being confined to a prison camp\noften promotes the idea of growing a beard,\nas the facial foliage of the released prisoners,\nfrom Korea testifies, it isn't an absolute necessity. However, a 50-year-old French farmer\nmust believe thst solitary confinement is better for the whiskers, ss he emerged from a\n. barn loft at his home after distressed relatives\nhad been looking.for him for a month\u2014his\nexplanation being that he wanted to grow a\nbeard in private!\nPress Comment\nDEFINITION   DEPARTMENT\nWOMEN\u2014A good woman inspires a man,\na brilliant woman interests him, and beautiful\nwomen fascinate him; the sympathetic woman\ngets him.\u2014Women's Home Companion.\nNothing ls possessed save in appreciation,\nof which thankfulness is the Indispensable\nIngredient.\u2014W. J. Cameron.\nEnglish Emigrants\nlosj; Towa.d Canada\nNOTTINGHAM, Eng, (CP.-One\nhundred prospective Canadian immigrants have - banded together In\na plan to settle in Alberta, i\nThe group has formed an association which will charter a plane\nfor the crossing in 18 months' time.\nThe members are contributing to\na fund to be held tn reserve for\nCanadian rainy days and are scheduled to get to know one another\nfairly well .before ;le.avln|.'''.7:'\n| The pro) ect should simpUfy ,'ad-\njustment snags,- Fred Coiiplarid,believes. He and his wife originated\nthe idea, which has. the - blessing\nof Canadian settlement'. officials.\nThe group plans to settle at Edmonton. \u2022\nCurrent meeting place for'the association ls In a school.: The principal hasn't decided yet. whether\nhe'll Join the party.   \u2022;.-'<' .\nThis Week\nat Victoria\nAdjust - or\nGoodbye to\nThe Trustees\n-7^\u2014F.B. PEARCE\nGems of Thought\n.     THANKSGIVING\nSlntf >unto the Lord with thanksgiving;\nsing praise upon the harp unto our God,\n\u2014Psalms 147: 7.\n*''*.*\nOn Thanksgiving Day no servile labor\nmay be performed, and thanks should be offered for the increase and abundance of His\nfruits upon .the face of the earth.\u2014Elisabeth I,\nQueen of England.\n.- r * \u25a0    a      *\nAre we really grateful fpr the good already received? Then we shall avail ourselves\nof the .blessings we have, and thus be fitted\nto receive\"\" more.\u2014Mary BaV-r Eddy.\n*      *      *\n.   Eyery   new   discovery   must   necessarily\nraise in us a freEh sense of the greatness, wisdom and power of God.\u2014Jonathan Edwards.\n\u25a0    *      *      *\nFor hearts,that are kindly, with virtue\nand peace, - ,\n. And not seeking blindly a heard to\nIncrease,\n% \u2014Walt Mason.\nYour. Horoscooe\nStay on your guard today, too, as you are\nlikely to run into trouble in business or love\naffairs. Do not expect sympathy in any crises,\nbut be prepared to stand on your own feet.\nIt's Been Said\n.   .Rapidity does not always mean progress;\nsnd hurry is akin to waste.\u2014C. A. Stoddard.\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nI.SIH..W o s sw_< m.\najaaa\nBy Jimmy Hado\nAll DAY LONS TWE KIDS (30 AROUND\nTRPPIMG OVER TUEIR D\/Wa-INS SHOELACES-TIE 'EM TWE\/ DEFINITELY WOt\u00abiT\u00ab\nstemmm\nUntil five minutes before bedtime,\nthat is'- then thej.y-put knots in 'em\nMOUDiNl COULDNY UNSCRAMBLE-\nToday's Bible Thought\nIn ancient times men believed in\nthe divine right of kings. Modern\n\"men venerate no office that is dishonored by cruel and unjust acts.\nIt Is not enough to overthrow weak,\nInadequate rulers. Their successors\ncan also win contempt.\nHe poureth contempt upon\nprinces, and weakeneth the\nstrength of the mighty.\n\u2014Job 12:21.\nCbwt Met\nIt ain't race p.-Judioe that divides folks most. In every race I\nknow, the rich ones separate from\nthe poor ones like they had a contagious disease.\nThe fourth week found the Legislative Assembly going  full  steam\nahead. Three' night sittings  in  a\nrow, which lasted in one case until\none In -the morning. I do not know\nwhat the big rush is, but I guess\nthey are in a hurry to get rid of us.\nIt is a week since the. Labor Minister, Lyle Wicks, made his contribution   to  the  debate.   His   talk\nsounded   very  similar  to that  of\nother labor ministers I have heard\nsince my first session, inasmuch as\nall the changes that are to be made\nin the Acts concerning labor will\nbe made- at the next session. -Since\n1949 trade unions have consistently\npetition the government with briefs\nrequesting changes in the Acts, and\nan inquiry committee   toured   all\nover the province in. 1951 to meet\nwith labor and management, nevertheless, he says we are still go-\nlng to have more   conferences   to\nfind out what labor and management want in the way of .changes.\nAny ohangSs to the Compensation Act has gone the same road.\nHe says that they are   going  to\nstudy It with a view to bringing\nIn changes at the next aesalon.\nThey Intend to ask labor   and\nmanagement to submit brlefa on\nthe   changes   neceaiary.    Rather\nstrange when we Just got through\napepdlng   $200,000  for   a   Royal\nCommission    headed   by    Chief\nJustice Sloan. The pity of It all la\nthat many are living on very small\ncompensation  pensions,   which\nshould have been Ihcreated years\nago, while government, keep putting   off   until   tomorrow   what\nshould be done today. They have\nappointed  a   \"counsellor\"   under\nthe   Compensation   Act.   Anyone\nwho feels he la not getting a square\ndeal with the Board can take hla\noase up with the counsellor. I will\nbe surprised If thla helps any, because he haa no power to. direct\nthe Board, only to request.\nFINISHED IN FOUR YEARS\nThe  Minister  of  Public- Works\nspoke, and stated that he hoped the\nSouthern Trans-Provincial Highway\nwould be finished in the next four\nyears. Sounds like a statement we\nhove heard before, but it is. bound\nto be finished sometime,   so   let's\nhope this statement is correct.\nThe debate on the speech from\ntha thrdne waa oloaed on Thura-\nday evening. Ran Harding, MLA\nfor Kaslo-Slocan spoke last  for\nthe CCF. He took the government\nto task for not taking more- and\nearlier action to deal   with   the\nproblem of the Sons of Freedom,\nalong with a very good aummary\nof other Itema of discussion,  Mr.\nBonner, the attorney general) waa\nthe final speaker, He  la a very\ngood debater, and gave a summary of what hla department was\ndoing In Clie way of both punitive\nand oorraottve measures   In   the\nprocess ef keeplhg law and order,\nThe Doukhobor problem took up\na good deal of hla time and   he\nstated that the moat of the reoom\nmendatlon.   of  the Consultative\nCommittee would be Instituted as\nquickly aa possible. He did not\ngive any satlafactory reason to me\nwhy there has been auch a delay\nIn this matter,\n\u2022rtie changes In the Elections Acf\nwas tobled yesterday. It is a complete new act, and after briefly\nglancing through .it, I think it is\nquite an improvement over the old\none. The-alternative vote ls to pass\non into history as far as B.C. goes,\nwhich I am sure no one will weep\nover. I am disappointed that they\ndid not adopt the federal method of\nenumeration but that may come\ntoo. l\nEMPHASIS ON BIG TOWNS\nWe have just started on the discussion of the Liquor Bill, which\n\u25a0undoubtedly will be\\ a long one. If\nthe Bill stands sb it is now I am\nsure that very little change will be\nnoticed except in Vancouver. The\nwhole Act seems to be concerned\nwith making changes In the large\ncentres, with little thought of the\nsmall towns and villages.\nI brought up the question In\nregards to the fruit checking stations outalde the Creaton. I waa\nasaured that In future they would\n' not atop 'passenger cars to find\nout If they were oarrylng fruit.\nI forgot to mention that Frank\nHoward, MLA\/ for Skeena, gave\nhla,maiden apeech a week ago.\nFrank Is a. native of Kimberley\nand Tarn sure that aome of hla\nfriends will be\/interested to know\nhe Is doing a good Job.\nWith this passing thought I will\nsay so long for this wtek:.\n\"A tortoise on the' rlghlv'track\nwill Mat.-'a! racer on., the wrong\npath.\"     \"''\"'\u25a0     \"':\u25a0'\"'    ,-   '\nLeo T. Nimsick, MLA.\n(Editor's notei This space la\nprovided as a public service. The\nsame privilege for reports to constituents Is accorded every member of the Leglalatlv* Aaembly\nof Kbotenay-Boundary;)\n7 It seems1 that, as civilization advances, - institutions\\ ale created,\nhave a spread of usefulness'. and\nthen decline, either because they\nare no longer of use, or''because\nthey failed to adapt themselves io\nthe changing conditions.\nBoards of School Trustees are\none of our .cherished democratic\ninstitutions, and the resolutions, on\nthe agenda for their convention\nshow only too well that they are a\ndeclining influence in the educa-\ntional world.\nIt Is, of course, only'too easy to\nlay the blame on the Department\nof Education or the Teachers'.Federation, but wha>; have the Trustees\ndone, or failed to do, which has\ncontributed, to this-decline? .\nFirst of all, they have failed to\nkeep abreast of the development of.\nmodern educational methods.. Few\nIf any have availed themselves of\ntheir right to visit schools. True, a\nresolution asks that others besides\nteachers be on the currieuium committee, and \/ th is ls a democratic\nright; but hove any .trustees'been\nat pains to study the existing curriculum? '\nLOS8 OR BARTER\nBureaucracy ls most undesirable,\narid one or more resolutions testlfv\n.to the belief that the Department\nof   Education   has   token   powers\naway from the Trustees. Did they\ntake them, or did the Trustees barter them for grants? It ls a law of\ncommerce that the holder of BI per\ncent of the stock controls the com-\nnany. Do trustees believe that if\nthe Government provides 60 per\ncent of the money that lt will not\nexercise i*s controlling power?\nThe  Department la  concerned\nwith only one thing, creating a\nsucceaaful educstlon system, and\nalthough'  It   la   neither   particularly democratic nor progreaalve,\nno one oan possibly contend that\nIt haa failed In thia respect, This,\nIn our expandlnq achool svatem,\nla eomethlng to be proud of.\nOne resolution expresses fear of\nthe growing power of the B, C.\nTeachers', Federation. But Trustees\nthemselves  contributed  largely to\nthe browth of the BCTF. Up to the\nbeginning of the last war the Federation   was   neither   particularly\nstrong, nor Influential. During fhe\ndepression teachers took substantial cuts in salary; but during the\nwar years, when prices were rising,\nTrustees refused either to give a\ncost of living bonus or raise salaries. Out of this Injustice rose a\nFederation determined never again\nto allow teachers to be treated with\ncontumely.\nAs for the prlnclnals, Trustees\nclaim, and .with justice, that they\nare particularly responsible to the\nBoards. But the Boards drove them\ninto the Federation because they\nnave them no assurance that the\nBoards would treat them with\neither Justice or generosity.\nBut It Is good to see from the\nresolutions that Trustees want the\npositions of principal and vlce-prin\ncipal defined. These are the persons\nfrom whom Boards derive information regarding schools, ond it is\nmost desirable' that mutual confidence exist. And the desire to have\nprincipals report to the Boards has\nmany merits, among others, that\nthe teacher, if not satisfied, can\nappeal to the Inspector. At present\nteachers have no appeal.\nThere are three groups engaged\nin our education system: 'the De-\nnartment, the teachers and the\nTrustees. Education ls a matter of\nco-operation, not a battle between\nthese three, The Department and\nthe teachers will undoubtedly survive, sbut. whether the Boards do\ndepends upon their ability to adjust themselves to our changing\nconditions. Otherwise, goodbye to\nthe Trustees.\nBut no one really Wants that to\nhappen. We need an elected body\nclose to the people and interested\nin education. That body must, however, have the influence and prestige Which comes from a broad\nknowledge of education, possess\nwisdom and understanding, ond e\ndesire to co-operate with both the\nDepartment of Education and the\nteachers, to the lasting benefit 'of\nthe children in our schools.\nTomnKal hfo\nSoaks Britain\nLONDON (API-Torrential rainstorms today flooded highways and\nrailroads at halt a dozen places lh\nand around London and poured\nInto basements of low-lying\nThames-side houses.   .....    ,\nThousands of commuters were\nBtranded until emergency transportation went into effect, Hayf the\naverage rainfall for October\u2014normally one-;of London's wettest\nmonths\u2014fell'In the 12 hours up to\n9 a.m. to4ay.\nFrom ari\nOldtimer's\nNotebook\nBy R. G.JOY\nHistorian,  Nelaon and  District\nOldtlmera Association\nJ. Leeming has passed away and\nI thought a few lines about him\nwould not be amiss. He' was one\nof those men who' delved Into the\nLardeau Country when prospecting\nwas one of the main features in\nfinding tha natural resources that\nmake for the prosperous condition\nof the Kootenays and mode of living\nof at the present day.\nI knew J. Leeming when he and\nhis wife were bringing up their\nfamily of young citizens. Leeming\nwes one of our prospectors. He\nwas also fond of hunting. He was\nabout after the Gold Hill and Poplar Creek excitement had.passed\nand the finding of gold at Poplar,\nCreek saw two railway companies\nvlelng with one another to get there\nfirst so as to control most of the\ntonnage offering,\nThe Hawthorn brothers had built\na store building and staked ground\nthat had a strata of diatomaceous\nearth which when ground up forms\nthe scouring parts of cleaners for\nkitchen sinks, baths, etc.\nThe old-timer was the cause of\nbringing Mr. Eardly Wllmot, a nephew of Sir Eardly Wilmot who\nresided at one time at Crawford\nBay, to the area. The nephew was\nin the Ceramic Department of Natural Resources et Ottawa. He\nlooked over the area and confirmed\nthe reports of amateur geologists,\nprospectors, etc, that it was DE\nand could1 be used for cleaners of\ndifferent kinds. By the way if he\nIs still alive he ls perhaps one- of\nthe bigwigs at- Ottawa'Department\nof Mines.\nIn the Immediate vicinity waa a\nprospector called \"Greasy Mobbs\"\nwho was driving a tunnel looking\nfor a body of lead-zinc ore which\nhe thought would bring him a fortune.\nMr. Leeming was hunting in the\nvicinity of Mobbs' property and he\nslipped and accidently uncovered,\ntwo inches of lead ore several feet\nlong. He covered it over with\nbrush, earth, etc., thinking of going\nover the ground and locating it as\na\" mineral claim. Many a two-inch\nstringer of Galena is lead to a large\nbody of pay ore. One Instance was\nat the great Slocan Star Mine\nwhere a Cornish miner used to take\nout the ore by the single jack-ham\nmer. He told-Phil Rahal that the\nsuperintendent should follow this\nto the high-grade streak. In time\nthey did'so and one of the largest\nand richest bodies ot ore was found\nin the Slocan Star. Leeming and\nI often thought of going to, the\nLardeau and rediscovering the two-\nInch streak. He Went alone, tried\nto find it, but failed.-\nCOSSACK ADVENTURE\n, John Reuckert who died suddenly\non Oct. 3 was known by a larga\ncircle of friends. He came to- Nelson\nabout 29 years ago and acquired\nneatly a block of land northwest\nof the Mountain Station Mlow the\ntrack. At the time of his death\nmost of hla friends thought he was\nnearly 90 years of age. The land\nand rocky on which was a small\nwhich he purchased was rough\nframe house with no windows or\ndoors. As soon as possible he\nplanted Hollyhock flower seeds so\nas to provide some food for honey\nbees. Later, he commenced recovering honey and in o few yeors he\nhad as many as 20 duplicate hives.\nI He also bought a honey separator.\nHe made\nBOAC fo Cross\nCanada on     \u25a0{\nWorld Flights   I\nCALGARY (CP)-British Over..\nseas Airways Corporation will be\nflying across Canada as part of its\nrOund-the-World-air route in 1*\nmonths, Sir, Miles Thomas, chair,\nman of BOAC, said here today;  !t\nSir Miles said Service from Moi\ntreal to^Vancouver w\/s expect*\ntd start with the Comet jet \u25a0\\h''l\nmonths and with the Britannia till\nbo-Jet in two years.  ,\nThe British airline does not intend to compete with Canadian ah!\",\nlines for MontreaI\u00bbVanc0uver trap!\nfie, but hopes to pick up passenger\nin Montreal for Tokyo or in Vai\ncouver for London.\nSir Miles Was in Calgary on a\ncross-country tour to learn about\nCanada \"because Canada is One of\nthe countries that will develop most\"\nstrongly in the air,\".\n'\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 \";\nFire Mysterious\nBELLEVUE, Altai (CP)-Investl.\ngators are probing the ruins of tha:\nHillcrest-Mohawk coal mine in the\nCrow's Nest Pass where a mysterious fire caused an estimated ?50O,-\n000 damage Sunday,\nThe. fire destroyed the cleaning\nplant and mine tipple at the mine,\nclosed 18 months ago. The loss wai\ncovered by insurance,''       7 M\nCompany officials said \"there\nsomething  mysterious\"  about\nblaze. No fires had been kept buri\nlng at the mine after; lt was clOsi\nand all electricity had been cut i.\nBellevue ls 70 miles west ot Let!\nbridge.\nDEATHS\n. Kelowna, B.C. \u2014 Archie Blae!\n7S, for 85 years city'chemist afcjS\nnlpeg,     ,; \u2022 ,; ...\nWinnipeg\u2014John E. Myers; 59,':\ngrain broker who played a big pa\nin building up the Winnipeg Bit\nBombera.rugby club. 7\"\nCARDIFF, Wales (Reuters)^Slt\nEwen L. Maclean,'leading British\nsurgeon, obstretician and gynaecologist.\nbusiness. He solicited customers\nfar from his home and Its seen.\nthey were satlsfield.\nI had many chats with Jphn and\nfound'him very entertaining and\nhospitable.\nMr, Provis, a retired soldier front\nthe First Great War, and John were\nfriendly and would exchange their\nexperlehifei In Europe.. Mr. ProM'l\ntold me that .John was a membe\nof an Uhlan regiment, suddenly attacked by a huge force of-Rue\nslan Cossacks. John escaped one\nmade his way to, Lavonio. Frlent\nProvis and John often spoke of 7\nniece and a farm probably in Ger\nmany to which Reuckert sent somi\ncash, the receipt of which was nevei\nacknowledged, ahd John though\nboth fcssh and farm were confis\ncated.\nAfter John's escape from the Cos\nsacks he evidently worked his wa]\nto the Baltic Sea and secured passage to Canada and on to Nelson\nA very considerable time he wa)\nemployed by a local contractor\nT. H. Waters.    ' ,\nJohn was very fond of orchestri\nmusic . He and his friends vrett\noften seen at Nelson Symphohj\nconcerts. John told me he at on\ntime in his old country wasti\ncellolst, -\\y\nThe shire horse, world's lsrges\nwork-Horse, usually weighs arouni\n2000 pounds.\nIT MAY BE\nYOUR LIVER\nIf life's not worth living\nit mny be your liverl\nIt's \u25a0 fact! It UIcm up to two pints of liver\nbilo a day to keep your dlgoativo tract In top\nshape! If your liver bile i\u00bb not flowing freely\nyour food may not digest... gas bloats up\nyour stomach ... you feel constipated and\nall the fun and sparkle go out of life. That's\nwhen you need *__ rj\u201e\u201e_... \u201e\u201e.__\u201e _, \u201e,.\nLiver Pills.. Theee famous vegetable pllli\ngentle Carter's Little\n- \u2014 -imous vegetable   '\"\nhelp stimulate the flow of liver bile.\nitioning properly\nye ere here again!\nsucceas of' his\" honey ' WttU Liver pillsoShand.\nKEM-GL0\n\u2022\u25a0'\u25a0-, 1U0I MASK KOV.\nTHE MIRACLE LUSTRE ENAMEL\nCUTS DOWN PAINTING FATIGUE\nSHORTENS PAINTING TIME IN KITCHEN AND BATHROOM\nONE COAT COVERS MOST SURFACES\nOnly two coats over\nbare wood or plaster\nResists steam, grease,\nchipping...takes\ncountless scrubbing!\nColors range from\ndelicate pastels to\nrich, deep tones\nKEM-GLO LOOKS AND WASHES LIKE THE\nBAKED ENAMEL ON A NEW REFRIGERATOR\n7.7\n'.\u25a0:\u25a0\nMM\n\\\n .-;     ; : \u2122\"\nc3^09\n\"it Pays To Buy Quality\"\nNEW 7\nFall Styles\nPlain Pumps, Cushion Insoles,\nHi Heel) Platform \"Soles,\nCalf Leathers.\nColors: Blue*, Red, Black, Green.\nWiidths AAtoB\nSixes 41\/2 to 9\nR.\n7.50\nANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\n-      Established 19027\nGray Greek\nI   GRAY   CREEK-The., Women's\nI Club met at Mrs. LaPlante's home.\nPlans were made for a Pot-Luck\n. Supper.\nMr. and Mrs. Perkins from Victoria have been guests of Mrs.\n. Feenie.-\nJim and Jean Oliver and boys\n.from Kamloops made a surprise\n. visit tp their parents here.   ,\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\n'y' .:\u25a0'\u25a0. tf'Vsi'.'.-..-' -,-V,-\n\u00a7.-._jj4e!aei-teria\n< PHONE 827\nPIERCING LEG PAINS\nAre your leg pains Sice a knife driving\n,:ttroagh<hevfleshJ Do they make it hard\n; lor you to straighten your leg? Thousands\n\u2022ecommend Templeton's T-R-C's for\nsrolck tefief of piercing, stabbing Sciatic\npain. Youtooicangetiellef with T-R-C's.\n\u00ab5c tlilS at drag counters. mm\nNel\nson\nfi!H\na\n1\nThero Is no need noir\nto administer drastic,\noM-faahioned laxatives\nwhich mar shock a\nchild's system and leave\nthem fee-inn weak and\nlistless.   Tit   the   new\nespecially Sot children,\nfrom 8 to IB Tears* by\nthe makers of Baby's\nOwn Tablets\u2014yonr\nassurance ot a reliable\nproduct They go to\nKwork at once to help\n\u2022sweeten \\ tbe stomach,\nrelieve distress and brine about a\nthorough performance of the bowels in\na gentle manner, Get s jackasro today at\nyour druggist, -,.-.'.\u25a0.\u25a0. .')..-,.'''.\nPHONE 144\nTO GERMANY . . . Mrs, Jack\nClarke left by plane last week for\nGermany, to join her husband, who\nis stationed there with the RCAF,\n* \u2022 *\u25a0 i *\nAT CONVENTION . ...:Mrs. Mildred. lavender of Port Renfrew,\nschool trustee for Sooke, who Is attending the School Trustees Convention here; is the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. Robert Kelley, Baker Street.\ni.   ss    s,\nTO HARROP . . . Miss Ida Cate-\nnacci and Miss Kay Batehelor spent\nthe weekend at Harrop with Miss\nAudrey Maida.\n* \u2022   *\nFROM VANCOUVER  . . . Miss\nBlanche Nadeau and Miss Barbara\nNadeau of Vancouver spent a few\ndays In -Nelson with their parents,\nMr. ahd Mrs. R. Nadeau, 615 Victoria Street.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nSPOKANE TRIP ... Mr. and\nMrs. George Kaiway and family,\nVictoria Street, have returned from\na few days in Spokane.\n* *   \u00bb\nFROM PORTLAND . . . Norman\nLaurltz of Portland, Oregon, is visiting his mother, Mrs. M. Laurltz,\nMaple Street,\nss    \u2022    *\nFROM CRANBROOK... Mr. and\nMrs. A. V. Scrlbner and family of\nCranbrook, visited Mrs. Scribner's\nfather, J. E; Hamson, Hoover Street\nand Mr.. Scribner's mother, Mrs.\nScribner, Annable Block, for the\nThanksgiving weekend,   \u2022\n. *    \u2022    ss\nFAMILY PARTY ... Mr. and\nMrs. W. J. Smiley, North Shore, had\nfor Thanksgiving dinner, Monday\nnight, their family as a going away\nparty for their daughter, Mrs. Robert Wilson, who, with her.tfamily Is\nleaving for Edmonton to join her\nhusband.\n* *  *\nFROM PRINCETON . . . Mrs. M.\nTowriss; Kootenay Street, has returned from a 10-day visit with her\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Towriss\nand Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Pringle, of\nPrinceton.\nHospital Auxiliary\nWelcomes Newcomer\nNEV7 DENVER \u2014 The regular\nmeeting of the New Denver-Slocan\nCommunity Hospital Ladies' Auxiliary was held in the home of\nMiss Marjorie Butlin, the president,\nMrs. John Taylor, In the chair, with\n12 members and one visitor present.\nMrs. Taylor welcomed Mrs. W.\nMott as a new member and'Miss,\nSarah McGrath as a visitor. Report-\nwere read by Mrs. James A. Greer,\nMrs. C. Parker, Mrs. James Drape,\nMrs. W. G. Thrlng, Mrs. E. F. An-\ngrignon.\nMballardS\nPETFOODS ^\nVariety Is the Spice ofa-dog's-llfeiaat'ctrah\/\ntbt taste-tempting, health-giving variety that\nwill keep him in tip-top condition. Nothing's\nbeen changed but the added taste appeal. So,\nno matter whether your pet's preference be\u2014\nREGULAR, CHICKEN or LIVER-he win\nstill be getting precisely the same Dr. Ballard's\nbalanced blend of proteins, mineral, and\nvitamins, tn every flavour. Ask your grocer for\nDr. Ballard's 3 flavour pet foods to-day.\nHOT OFF THE PRESS!\nHere's the book pet lovers have been waiting for I\nOne hundred and twelve gaily Illustrated pages .  .\njamyackedwithimformaitvenvttertalontltecaret jl\nhousing, feeding and training of pets. Mailing\ninstructions on every Dr. Ballard's product     . r\n.SEW FOI YOU* COPY TODAYI W\nMABRIED 'HSflffl?%^'--'li.r.'-'TOdf4tfs;'TiiOTiw Kosiancic, now of Crescent;Valley. The bride is the former Marjorie Do erfaon. From left tbright, top row-lusher,\nEdward Guenard, best man, Kenneth.Doerkson, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas- Kosiancic,\nmaid of honor, Joanne .Wysk, usher, Raymond Kosiaricic. Bottom row\u2014junior bridesmaids, Shirley and Lillian Kosiancic, flower girl, Margaret.Kosiancic, junior bridesmaid, Eileen Kosiancic\u2014Vogue photo. 7\nQueen1 s Frock for Coming Trip\nKept Secret THI Worn PtdMely\nPoint Institute\nTold of Journey\nWILLOW EONIT\u2014An interesting\ndescription of the various countries\nof Europe was given by Mrs.- N. C.\nStibbs of Nelson, who addressed\nthe Willow Point Women's Institute\nOctober meeting.\nMrs. Stibbs, who with Mr. Stibbs,\nrecently visited Europe during the\nCoronation, told also of scenes and\nher impressions of the crowning\nceremonies, and of a. visit to Edinburgh.\nIt was decided Mrs. A. M. Banks\nand Mrs. L. LeRoy will be' conveners fof a card party next week.\nReport on formation of the Kootenay Lake Selkirk health unit was\ngiven.\nA shower of jamSj jellies, canned\ngoods brought a good collection for\nMount St. Francis and the Hostel\nfor the Aged will be remembered\nat Christmas.\nThe convener for the sick waB\nasked to send flowers to any member who was a patient in Kootenay\nLake General Hospital.\nMrs. D. Philpot and Mrs. F. Searle\nsreved refreshments.\nProcter Church LA\nResumes Activities\nPROCTER\u2014Mrs. ,H. A. Pearson\nof Sunshine Bay was hostess to the\nLadies' Aid of Procter United\nChurch for the first meeting of\nthe season. Twenty-one members\nattended and three new'members,\nMra S. Ryan, Mrs. P. A. Ritchie\nand Mrs. T. Wickstrom were welcomed.\nA committee headed by Mrs. A.\nOgden was chosen to decorate the\nchurch for the Harvest Festival to\nbe held Sunday. Mrs. Norman\nMacLeod and Mrs. J. Riley were\ndetailed to order material'for bazaar sewing. Mrs. F. Bonacci was\nthe winner of the attendance prize.\nThe hostess served a delicious\nlunch, assisted by Mrs. D. H. Butler and Mrs. W. A. Henke.\n^mS^'^ROTSW^i\u00abi\u00bb**\nFarewell Party for\nRobson Residents\nROBSON \u2014The Robson Evening\nGroup at their annual business\nmeeting for October at the home of\nMrs. Sutherland, finalized plans for\na Fall bazaar.\nA farewell party was held to wish\ntwo members good luck in their\nnew home, Mrs. Nora Rerry, who is\nmoving to Rossland, and .Mrs. F.\nHoives, who is moving to Castlegar.\n- .\nGer(ijnation...\n\/ft*\nYotfu. never get\nthin, Ught-bodle-\nw\n,Mm5c from a Carnation caa\n^It whips lu*\u00ab^*\n\u00abfiee, fruits \u2022***\u00a3*!\nbrand can. Get eamauon-\nAlWAYS KJLt-BODIBD.\nMAKBTHIS7 0AYTEST\n\u2014 for just one week, use\nCarnation Milking\n^r present brand. Ona\nS\u00a3 tave used Carnauon,\nleare sure that no otto\nb'and will satisfy 1^\nA Canadian  Product\niVANRATEP\nMllK.\n*_>IKliuSID-l\nBy MURIEL NARRAWAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON (CP)\u2014A host of personal chores and decisions confront\nthe Queen these days, typical of\nthe problems facing persons leaving home on a long trijJ.\nPacking is to be done to fit a\nschedule of varied activities, climates and means of travel. Presents hav_ to be bought for the\nfamily that will be celebrating\nChristmas without her.\nWhen she boards the plane for\nthe flight to Bermuda Nov. 23,\nstarting an Australian tour lasting\nsix months, she will have chosen\nthe jewelry and clothing inside the\nlightweight luggage purchased for\nher 1951 Canadian trip. There must\nbe enough to last until she boards\nthe chartered liner Gothic at Jamaica, Nov. 27. It must be suited\nto the occasions before her and\nbefitting for a Queen,\nSUMMER DRESSES\nMost of her clothes are ready\u2014\nwith the exception of a few final\nfittings and the inevitable hard-to-\nmake decisions even- queens leave\nfor the last moment. Conscious of\nthe variety of weather she will meet\non fills' around-theiworld journey,\nshe has sought advice on clothing\ncolors and materials from diplomatic sources of the countries concerned.\nOne thing is certain\/The weather\nwill range from warm to downright hot until she gets back home\nnext May\\ She is expected to wear\nmany silk and nylon materials of\ngossamer weight and she's picked\nat least a dozen off-the-peg cottons\nranging in price from \u00a34 to \u00a38.\nAs she did on her Canadian tour,\nthe Queen will probably include' a\nlot of ballet-length evening dresses,\neasier to wear and less bulky than\nthe embroidered crinolines she has\nmade famous.\nAlready packed are crinoline, hat\nand shoe boxes and the heavy,\ncrested black and brown leather\nsuitcases that have been in the\nWindsor family for more than a\ngeneration. Appended are lists detailing contents and position inside.\nADVANCE TIPS GUARDED\nOne subsidiary problem has been\nthat, as usual, the Queen has less\nfreedom to change-a chosen -outfit\nthan most of her subjects. That, is\nbecause the clothes' and color she\nwill -wear at a certain function\nclosely-concern women well ahead\nof time. The custom prevents wives\nof officials and diplomats from the\nembarrassment' of choosing something clashing or closely Identical.\nThe knowledge goes, however, to\nonly a chosen few. Other than that\nher garments are secret until she\nappears in them, when details are\nreadily given out by the designer\nconcerned.\nMAKE-UP PROBLEM\nThe problenj of hot-weather\nmakeup has been considered care-,\nfully to provide the Queen with\nthe different Shades. and types required for her \"English rose\" complexion in any climate. Adviser is\nAustralian-born Thelma Holland,\nWho has looked after the Queen's\nbeauty problems since 'teen-age\nand who was responsible for the\nQueen's natural beauty on Coronation Day.     ~~    ,\nThen there are presents, an important last-minute task. One will\nbe a birthday present for Prince\nCharles, five years old on Nov.. 14.\nBoth he and Princess Anne Will\nget personally - selected departure\npresents from their mother \u2014 she\nnever leaves it, to anyone else\u2014and\n'there will be others during the\ntrip, chosen en route or selected\nbeforehand.\nPHONE  144  FOR  CLASSIFIED\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RE8ULT8\nPHONE 889\nTowler Fuel\n$ Transfer\nSocial Group\nCelebrates\nINVERMERE \u2014 The 25th annual\nmeeting bf the Windermere Ladies'\nSocial Club was celebrated with\nseversl charter members present,\nincluding the first president.\nOriginally called St. Peter's Anglican Guild the group later became undenominational but continued to assist all community\nchurches. Gifts to the hospital and\nwelfare work in the community\nhas been undertaken each year.\nFirst president was Mrs. A. M.\nChisholm. Mrs. Lloyd Tegart,\ncharter member who has served as\npresident for 15 of the 25 years, has\nbeen elected again this year. - The\nfirst secretary was Mrs. Ray, Ball,\nnow of White Rock. Present; secretary is Mrs. J. M. Cummings, who\nsucceeds Mrt. Walter Hart; who\nserved in that capacity the past six\nyears.\nMrs. Newton Heads\nWindermere Guides.\nINVElVMERE-^Mrs, R. Orr New.\nton of Invermere was ejected president of the: Lake-Windermere Girl\nGuide Association at the annual\nmeeting held'at the Lake Windermere Memorial Community Centre.\nShe. succeeds Mrs. Roy Lake who\nhas been president for the, past four\nyears.\nVice-president is Mrs. W. H. 0_e-\nland. Mrs. W. G. Lockhartwas reelected as secretary-treasurer. Other\nmembers of the executive are Mrs.\nMargaret Fuller, Mrs. Ziedrlch.Mrs.\nT. D.: Foyston,' Mrs. Jack Payne,\nMrs. Chroha and the district commissioner, Mrs. T. N. Weir.\nMrs. Lake, reported that the' annual mother-daughter- banquet in\nFebruary had been one of the outstanding activities of ihe group, and\nthe annual rally held in May at\nWindermere Beach had been most\nsuccessful.\nChief fund raising activity had\nbeen the refreshment concession at\nthe July 1 Lions' Day celebration.\n. Mrs. Lockhart reported the association in god financial standing.\nGIRL GUIDES ACTIVE\nThs district, commissioner, Mrs.\nWeir, reported 16 Guides registered\nin the company and 30 Brownies in\n.the pack but-five Brownies are\ndue to go up to the Guide company this month. She paid tribute\nto the fine work being 'done by the\nGuide-ts. Activities have included\ntwo church parades, the annual\nmother-daughter banquet, attendance-at the Remembrance Day and\nCoronation celebrations, the Brownie Coronation tribute of a garden\nat the Community Centre, the rally\nat Windermere Beach when Brownies from Kimberley, Chapman Camp\nand Edgewater were guests of the\nlocal pack, and attendance of Guides\nand Brownies for the crowning of\nthe May Queen at Edgewater in\nMay, ,\nMrs. Weir asked that-funds be\nmade available this year for the\ntraining of guiders. The association passed a resolution to donate\na new toadstool to the Lake Windermere Brownie Pack.\nSulphur matches began to replace\nflint and steel early in the 19th\ncentury.\" \u2022\nBug one\nfor the\nfor the\nTABLE\nGreenwood WI\nStartsin\nChristmas Cheer\nGREENWOOD \u2014 The -regular\nmeeting ot the Greenwood women's\nInstitute was held at the home ot\nMrs. M: Holm, with Mrs. N, Mac-\nNab, the president, in the chair.\nTbe WI are planning to sponsor\na tag day for the blind, to be held\nduring the'month of October,\nThe ladles are also planning a\ncard party, the first card party of\nthe season,\nThe WI will also.be! caterers for\nthe wedding reception of one of\ntheir members, Miss Jean Roylance.\nQuite a few of the members and\nalso non-members have taken wool\nand are making socks, etc., for the\nChristmas Cheef parcels.\nRefreshments were served by\nMrs. Holm.\nMiss M.B. Peters\nMarried in U.K.\nGRAY, CREEK-A wedding- of in-\nterest to Gray Creek residents took\nplace at St. Swlthuii's Church,\nWoodbury, Devonshire, recently\nwhen Miss Melodie Brooke Peters\nwas married to Mr. Raymond Warwick Harry Reid.\nFollowing the, ceremony, ft reception was held \/'at Bystock House,\nthe residence of Mrs. Duckworth\nBradshaw..\nMr. and Mrs. Reld plan to spend\nthe winer in England and then go to\nMalaya.\nMrs. Reid spent much of her youth\nat Gray Creek.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14,1953 ~- 3\nFruitvale W.I. to\nVisit Salmo Branch\nBBUITVALE -Mrs. H. Godin\nwas hostess to members of the\nWomen's. Institute at her home\nWhen- six members were present.\nThe report from recent sale showed that: $23.75. was realized. The\nSembers accepted the invitation of\ne, Salnw :WJ.\\ to visit with: them\ntoward-the end of the month.\nMrs. D. E. Mason volunteered to\nmake the W.I. block for the provincial W.l.'_ullt.\n' 'Mrs. C.\/Moyrer, In hef report on\nihe Garden Club,' stated, that 10\nchildren.'had completed the season,\nthree others\" were disqualified as\ncontestants because they had not\ntended their gardens She said she\nhad.invaluable help from Mrs. C.\nRogers and Jack Porgeter, who\njudged.the gardens, The club won\nsecond place In the garden .club display at the Fruitvale Fall Fair.\nThe president, Mrs. Godin and\nsecretary, Mrs. A. Endersby, were\nappointed to interview the hall\ncommittee regarding the fulfillment\nof the hall - committee's promises\nwhen the WJ. invested in the hall.\nMrs. Endersby was the winner of\nthe hostess prize.\nKNOX CHURCH AID\nPLANS BAZAAR\n, NI.W DENVER\u2014The Knox Presbyterian, Church Ladies' Aid held\ntheir meeting at the home of Mrs.\nHarry T. Butler Oct. 8. The president, Mrs. Butler, was in the chair\nand eight members were present\nChristmas cards .were sold among\nthe members.. Plans for the annual\nbazaar and.tea towards the end of\nOctober were.made'\nON OUR BUDGET PLAN\n10% DOWN\nBalance 18 Months\n30 Guests Attend\nFaloski-Haber Rites\nGREENWOOD\u2014A quiet weddingij\ntook place Oct. 10 when Mrs. M.'\nHa-ber and Mr, P, Falkoski were\nmarried.  Mr. J. A. B. Adams of St.\nColomba's United Church officiated.;\nat the home ceremony., 7 '\" .'-\nMr.  and Mrs.  J.  MacLean  Sr.\u25a0 '.\nsupported the bride and groom. .\nApproximately 30 guests attended\nthe reception which wen held' at;:\nMr. Falkoski's home. Mr. J. fawns\nplayed the pipes at the reception.\nMEATHEASY\nRelieve* c4ithma\nINSTAHTLV!\nAsk About MonoyBack Pus-sate*\nAt Leading Druggists\nTwo Invermere\nBabies Baptized\nINVERMEREr-At a baptismal\nservice at the Church of the Canadian Martyre at Athalmer Sunday, Oct; 4, the infant son of Mr.\nand Mrs. P. L. Conroy of Athalmer\nreceived the names of Barry NialL\nRev. Father Agnellus officated and\nthe godparents are Mr. and Mrs-\nWayne Lacy of Invermere.\nOut-of-town guests were > the pa-;\nternal grandparents of the tiny\nprincipal, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Con-,\nroy, of Kimberley, and a cousin,\nLynda. A dinner party at the Coronation Hotel was held in honor of\nthe occasion.\nGordon Frederick-.infant, son of\nMr. and Mrs. Frederick Hunt of\nInvermere received his names at\na christening ceremony the same\nday at the Church of the Canadian Martyrs. Rev. Father Agnellus officiated. Godmother is Miss\nKatheryn Hecher of Invermere.\nFriends Hold Shower\nFor Fire Victim\n\\FRUITVALE - .The Women's\nInstitute and Legion Ladies' Auxiliary were co-hostess at a miscellaneous shower for Mrs. R. Cedar-\nholm, who lost all her household\nbelongings by fire in the summer.\nThey expect to move Into their new\nhome shortly.\nGames were played, with Mrs. H.\nHiggins, Mrs. G. MacKenzle and\nMrs. H. Godin in charge.\nThe guest of honor received many\nuseful things'for her home.\nWatch for OuH\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY *\nMEAT MARKET - Phone St-\nl&im^3\n\"IVe toiled lots of instant coffee\nbefore, but this tastes just like\nyou've brewed it yourself 1\"\nFolks'll be surprised, and no '\nwonder, because .'. ..to make\nI Borden's Instant Coffee, we brew\ncoffee, just tbe way yon do at\nhome. When the flavor's perfect,\nwe whisk away the water by a\nmagic vacuum process. Result!\npure coffee crystals, 100% pure,\nno dextrose fillers. You just add\nback boiling .water to recapture\nthat grand coffee flavor we brewed!\nNo grounds! No pot to wash!\nA small jar gives as many cups\nas a pound of ground coffee,\nsaves yoa about 40c. The large\ni oz. jar caves yon even motel\n1 \u25a0 * .\nTttyWMktftfiesr,\n\u25a0frotojhe eoffeepot-\natiJytHi\u00a3fiVEVPT040t\napmtt\/\/\nGet \"Birthday Cake\" Quality everyjime yon bake\n:\n:\n\u25a0  \u25a0\n-.\nBake-day blues are banished, thanks to\nPurity Cake Mix . . . the mix^ that\ngives' yoa \"Birthday Cakev quality\nevery time. With a special \"double-\nt-ixer\" process, Purity blends its fine\ningredients thoroughly and uniformly.\nAdd a fresh egg for \"home-made\" good.\nhess. Rely on Purity Cake Mix\u2014enjoy\nat no extra cost. -\nA Product of HJMTY flOUS UIUS UMITIO, oho Millars of PUWV VITAMIH\nfNsticHfo ftow, fi\/wnr c\u00ab csusr mix, rwiri oats and woNft\/i reeos\n\u2014\u2014jj : :\u2014__ __\u2014: __\n..\n w***<**^^^\n* \u2014NELSON DAILY NEWS, WIDNISDAY, OCT; 14,1953\n>  ii,     >ffii..i-i.|,||i, k<yi<m. <\u25a0\"!\u25a0.' i;i'.\u00abv'i\"\"'*-^)-\u00bbfT?-i^\".f,7 m,,ii-ii..i \u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ii_ \u25a0\u25a0_\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0 \u25a0 4.1,;,\n\u25a0 \u25a0;: -'''Sysif^^\n\u25a0\u2014\u2014\nWP\nDoctors Give Warning Against Too\nMuch Optimism Towards Polio Cure\nI WASffltfatOlT (AJ)-Research\nauthorities told Congress Monday\nthe public has developed a false impression about polio and warned\nthat science still is a long way trom\npreventing- or curing the disease.\nPREPARE FOR INCREASE\nIn tact, they said the paralytic\ntorm of polio is expected to increase in the next tew years despite much progress in laboratories.\n7 With that warping, private and\ngovernment research leaders ended\nhearings by the House ot Representative, interstate commerce committee on polio and Other major destructive diseases,\nI   Dr. Albert Sabln of Cincinnati,\n. O* Said wide publicity on polio\nvaccine discoveries has left a 'else\nimpression th*t \"we're at the end ot\n\u25a0 the road; a  solution  has , been\nfound,\"\n'Actually, Sabine and other ex:\nperts said, ntore research, more efforts ahd mote funds will be needed\nin the next 10 years than Wert employed in the last 10 if polio IS td\nbe conquered.\nThe scientists said that Dr. Jonas Salk, developer ot the experimental vaccine, would he the first\nto disparage over-optlmistio and\npremature olalmsr Salk's laboratory\ndeveloped vaccine has been successful in experiments with animals\nand with about 70 children and\nadults.\nToAuor Mines\n.TIMMINS, Ont. (CP)-Some 300\nminers went on strike at.' Aunor\ngold mines Tuesday, the latest wage\nwalkouts that have closed .molt\nmines In the rich Porcupine gold-\nfield. More than 6000 men now art\nidle.\nAn announcement by the United\nSteelworkers of America (CIO-\nCCL) said; \"The men were called\nout on strike at 3 p.m.\" Aunor is a\nsubsidiary of the giant Noranda,\nQue., which aliy> ls closed by a\nstrike.'\n1 Only three gold mines are operating in the area\u2014Paymaster, Dome,\nand Pamour.\n|   Wood Vallor.ce\nHardware Co. Ltd.\n393 Baker St.\nPhont 1630\nGENOA (AR) \u2014 Col. ISr John\nHunt, leader of the -British expedition that conquered Mt. Everest, Was awarded Genoa's Christopher Columbus trophy Monday, a\nhand-made ship model with silver\nsails and marble hull. The award\nis made each year by Genoa for an\noutstanding- sports feat.\nWith 48,000 miles already logged Is\nDavid Linker, two, Seen with his parents, Mr. and Mrs, Hal Linker.\nDavey has been travelling with his parents alnoe he was a few\nweeks,eld, and airplane-flights and train rides are Just routine te\nhim now. His father Is a travel-film cameraman who hops from\nIceland to Pakistan or from Cuba to Borneo as though the far\nplaces of the world were next-door lots,\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nASK FOR Scotland's Favourite Son...\nJOHNNIE\nWALKER\nBORN 1820 \u2014\nSTILL GOING STRONG\nFINE OLD SCOTCH\nDistilled,\nBlended and\nBottled in\nScotland\nContents 26J_ os. , |._\nJohn Walker & Sons Ltd, Scotch Whisky Distillers, Kilmarnock, Scotland\n1 This advertisement is not published ot displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nKifly Hawk Soared an Incredible\n10 Feel, Stayed Up 12 Seconds\nBy VERN  HAUQLAND\nKITTY HAWK, N.C, (AP) - A\nsharp wind whistled across the\nbleak sand dunes, past the two sagging, unpainted sheds on the flat,\nand on up the barren slopes ot Kill\nDevil hill. ,   -  \u25a0-,\nSix men and a youth were gathered around an odd-looking contraption on the ground. One crawled\nonto the object\u2014a sort of overgrown\nkite on sled runners\u2014and stretched\nout full length.\nAn engine throttled up, two large\nfan blades whirred and the machine\nlurched unsteadily along a wooden\nrail, a single track across the sand.\nFIRST PLIGHT\nThe miracle of the birth of aviation was about to happen.\nOrvllle and Wilbur Wright,'brothers from Dayton, Ohio, wera about\nto achieve, here on the lonely North\nCarolina seacoast, man's first flights\nunder engine power.\nOrvllle was aboard, on this historic morning, Dec. 17, 1903. As\nthe propeller blast pushed the craft\ninto the wind, Wllburn ran alongside, steadying a wing.\nThe machine'gained speed. Forty\nfeet along the 60-foot rail Ihe\nclumsy craft lifted magically. It was\noff the ground, fighting its way\ninto the gale.\nThe plana\u2014man's first airplane-\nrose to a. height of about night feet,\ndipped uncertainly, soared incredibly to about 10 feet, then settled to\nthe ground. Orvllle climbed out,\nand the brothers measured the dis-\ntancer-120 feet.\nLA8TED 12 8ECONDS -\nSaid Orvllle, later:\n\"This flight lasted only 12 seconds, but It was nevertheless the\nfirst in the history of the world\nin which a machine carrying a m_n\n:\nHere is another opportunity for you to adopt\nthis tried and tested system of saving money.\nCanada Savings Bonds never drop in value.\nIf cash is needed you can get back the full face\nvalue of your bond, plus accrued interest, anytime\u2014at any bank in Canada.\nYou can buy Bonds for cash; or if you prefer,\nthe Royal Bank will arrange for you to buy them by regular\nmonthly instalments out of income. The procedure is simplicity\nitself. All forms and full information available at every branch.\nTHE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nNelson Branch: P. H. Hoskins, Manager      Cranbrook Branch: P. M. Irwin, Manager\nhad raised itself by its own power\ninto the air in full flight, had sailed\nforward without reduction of speed\nand Had finally landed at\nHall To Plead Guilty;\nExpects Death Sentence\npoint\nas high as that from which lt\nstarted.\"\nThe 200-foot flights followed immediately. On the fourth try Wilbur\ncoaxed the plane through the air\nfor 90 seconds, 892 feet from the\ntake-off point,\nThen a gust of wind caught the\nwings, bowled the machine ever.\nThere was a sharp sound of splintering wood and metal. The \"Kitty\nHawk Flyer\" would make no more\ntries this winter. But Its plsce in\nhistory already was secure,\nNEWSPAPER ITEM\nThe Wrights acknowledged that\ntheir own Interest in flying started\nfrom a newspaper account In 1890\nof the death of Germany's Otto\nLlllenthal in a - gliding accident.\nThey learned to their amazement\nthat Lilionthal, having discovered\nthe superior lifting qualities of\ncuVved surfaces, had made some\n2000 flights\u2014the best for 1200 feet\n\u2014in gliders of his own design.\nThey also were influenced by the\nwritings of Britain's Sir George\nCayley. who, before his - death In\n1807, suggested ' that -a machine\nmight fly with the aid of a propeller driven by an engine.\n- The Wright brothers in September, 1900, took their first glider to\nKitty Hayrk. Their progress was\nbarely enough to encourage them\nto continue. Their actual gliding\ntime was only about two minutes.\nNext July they were back with a\nglider almost twice the size of any\nbefore flown. They made several\nhundred fllghts^-one as. far as 389\nfeet\u2014but found the new machine\nmuch more difficult to control than\ntha earlier model. '\nREADY POR MOTOR\nIn Dayton, they improvised a\nwind tunnel\u2014the first to yield accurate results. By August, 1902,\nthey were back at Kitty Hawk with\na new glider more than twice as\nefficient\u2014thanks to the wind tunnel studies.\nThey were ready for the next\nproblem\u2014application ot a motor,\nTheir first propellers, designed\nentirely from their calculations,\nproved one-third more efficient\nthan any previously built. With\nthe aid of mechanic Charles E. Taylor, they hand-tooletj a 480-pound,\ntour-cylinder engine producing 12\nhorsepower.\nTheir first, try at powered flight,\nDec. 14,1903, was unsuccessful, possibly because of Insufficient wind.\nTheir initial success came three\ndays later.\nREPORTS DISBELIEVED\nMeagre reports of the flights\nwere widely disbelieved, for some\ntime. Nevertheless, in ' 1904 the\nbrothers built a new plane and flew\nin that' year\u2014in semi-secrecy, near\nDayton\u2014109 times, for distances up\nto three miles and flights as long\nas five minutes.\nIn 1908 Wilbur, abroad, was amazing all Europe with sensational\nflights in France. Orvllle, at home,\nwas demonstrating to'the army Its\nfirst plane, a craft which would\ncarry a passenger and stay aloft for\nmore than a nhour.\nWilbur died of typhoid fever In\n1912. Orvllle lived on until 1948\u2014\nto see flight become common place\nand the airplane a major transportation link, and a military .weapon in\ntwo world wars.\nBy FRANK CRAWFORD\nItWSAS::Cixy..(4JP),i'Th'e tMr\nHoppers who idiot and tolled a six-\nyear-old bojr. and 'their collected\n$000,000 ransom from his parents\nWere brought back here Tuesday\ntn face the death pehSlty.- .7;.7,y ':\n7 Carl Austin Hall, 34,: said he\nwanted to plead guilty find expected\nthe death sentence, |t was lie'who\n\u2022shot little Bobby Greenlease, son\nof Kansas - City's millionaire automobile dealer. Robert C. Greenlease, 71s Then he set out brt the\nplan to collect the ransom.\nBut Mr\u00bb. Bonnie .Heady, who\nhelped prepare; the child's lime-\nfilled grave even before she stole\nhim away from his private. school,\nwas stoical, She once had hoped\nshe might get off with a lighter\nsentence\u2014it she were caught. 7\nMISSING M00,00O,w   -..,>.\nWhether.that meant she knew\nwhere the missing ,5300,001. of the\nransom money is, - officers could\nnot or would not say. Half of the\nmoney was found In Hall's possession when his spending spree in\nSt Louis brought about his arrest\nOct. 6, eight days after the kidnapping.\"     '\u25a0\u2022  ,\nBut Hall says he things she had\nthe money and probably lost it\nduring a heavy drinking bout In\nSt.'Louja.... -     v 7\nBefore they were brought back\nhere Tuesday, Mrs, Heady toldya\ncell-mate in St. Louis .details of\nthe killing. Her only regret,, she\nsaid, was that she hadn't been able\nto get her hands on the ransom.\nShe added that she had'hoped\nshe might get- a light sentence,\nmaybe 25 years, thst could have\ngot her out of prison on good behavior In seven years. '\n\u2022BEAT HIM'      .\nShe told, too, how the little boy\nhad put up a fight when he realized he Was to be killed,\n\"Carl had ot beat him with his\nfists,,knocking out two ot his front\nteeth. Then he shot him.\"\nBut there seemed no chance Mrs.\nHeady would get off lightly. There\nare federal kidnapping charges,\nMissouri State kidnapping charges\nand murder charges in Kansas\neither filed or soon to be filed\nagainst both Mrs. Heady and Hall.\nA federal grand Jury was summoned here to speed along an indictment and trial.\nMra. Heady, in whose flower\ngarden at St. Joseph, Mo., the boy's\nbody wss burled, said she put the\nfinishing touches on the kidnap\nplan. Hall said he had spent at least\ntwo years hatching his scheme,\nTHREE 8HOTS\nWhy the kidnappers killed the\nlittle boy never has been revealed.\nThe text of their confessions 'has\nnot been released. Presumably,\nsince only the two were Involved,\nthey felt they couldn't or didn't\nwant to guard him during negotiations with the family.\nLittle Bobby never had a chance\nfrom the time Mrs. Hesdy posed\nIT\nas his aunt and whisked him away\nfrom the Notre Dam* de Sion\nSchool'to a waiting ttm.\n. Hill shot him three times, missing twice before the fatal idiot,.It\nwas one of those bullets, imbedded\nin the floor mat of Mrs. Heody'a\nstation wagon that finally brought\na confession from them.\nKIDNAP CLAIMB\nThen they set about collecting\nthe ransom. It took six days of\nwriting and phoning representatives\nof the family before the (000,000\nwai tossed over a bridge to be\npicked up by Hall. Robert Ledterman of Tulsa, Okie,, a business\nassociate ot'Greenlease, said the\n89-pound money bundle hod been\nthrown out once before but the\nkidnappers couldn't find It and he\nhid to go back and get lt himself.\n, And at least IS different persons\ntried to muscle in on the money,\nLedterman said. They represented\nthemselves as the kidnappers and\ndemanded ransom of $5000 to\n$390,000. The demands totalled $1,-\n500,000.     '\nThe legel procedure to try Hall\nunder tha Lindbergh law, and possibly put him in the gaa chamber\nwas already in progress. Calling a\ngrand Jury lessened any chance\nof a legal allp-up.\nThe same was planned for Mrs.\nHeady as It became evident she\nhad more than a helper's part in\ncarrying out the plot. William\nRosenthal, Mrs. Heady'a lawyer,\nhas not indicated what defence he\nplans. Hall still has no lawyer.\nMichael O'Brien\nStill Homeless\nBUENOS APHS (API-Michael\nPatrick O'Brien, who has been\nShuttling, about the world looking\nfpr a country that, would receive\nhim, arrived here Tuesday, tied tape\napparently stil) kept him from a\npromised haven in the Dominican\nRepublic..- t\nO'Brien -arrived aboard the\nFrench liner Bretagne from Montevideo, Uruguay, tnd was promptly\nlocked In his cabin.\nThe highly-publicized wanderer,\nwhose last known occupation was\nas a bartender in the Orient before the Communists took over\nChina, said Monday at Montevideo\nthe Dominican Republic hid opened its door to him. Dominican\nofficials In New. York confirmed\nhis statement. But the Dominican\nembassy here aald it had received\nno Instructions to grant O'Brien entry to the republic..\nLOOK1D UP AGAIN\nArgentine Immigration officials\nexamined O'Brien's papers but\nmade no move to permit him to\nland so he could take another ship\nfor a Dominican port.\nO'Brien, who escaped from China\nwith Red Cross papers, shuttled by\nferry between British Hong Kong\nand Portuguese Macau in the China\nsea for 10 months without getting\npermission to land at either port.\nThe Brazilian consul In Hong Kong\ngave him a visa for Brazil in July,\nbut when he arrived at Rio de Janeiro Brazilian authorities had changed their minds.\nREAD THI CLASSIFIED DAILY\nGEN. WEST THINKS\nKOREAN WAR OVER\nTOKYO -.(AP); -Maj.-Gen. M> AA;\nR. West former commander of the\nCommonwealth Division in Korea,.\nsaid Tuesday he does not expect the\nKOrean fighting to break out again.\ntt it does, lt Wll be a \"much bigger\ndeadlock than we had before.\"\nWest tbld a press conference that\nthe Communist and United Notions\nforces have constructed stronger\ndefence lines since the truce.\nWest leaves Japan Friday for a\nlecture tour to'milltary groups In\nAustralia, New . Zealand, Canada\nand the United States, Then he\nwill return to England for assignment at the Imperial Defence College.\nThe 47-year-old general led tht\nCommonwealth division, which in- !\neludes Canada's 25th Infantry Brigade, for.'a year in Korea. He waa\nsucceeded by Maj.-Gen. H. Murray.\nThe Commonwealth Division  \"is j\nthe best division I've ever seen or\nheard of,\" West said.\nLONDON (CP) - Despite the :\nCoronation festivities Britain's 300\ntravelling carnivals expect to report losses when the season end*\nShortly. The Showmen's Guild,\nblamed poor weather and television.\nMail Maus Slay\n15th White Man\n\u25a0NAIROBI, Kenya (Reuters) -\nCol, Reginald Turner, 78, slashed\nwith a panga knife while In bed\nin Nairobi Sept 27, has Idled: tn\nhospital. He is the 15th White Kenyan to be murdered by the Mau\nMau this year..:; 7      V,v\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Among contributions to the Westminster Abbey\nfund, to finance urgent repairs,\nmore than \u00a32180 has been raised\nin Malaya,\nCalgary Thief\nHits High Spots\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014Judging from\nweekend activities, nothing is sacred to' a Calgary car thief.\nHe \"hit the Jackpot\" by stealing\nthe cars of both Chief Justice C. J.\nMcLaurln of the Supreme Court of\nAlberta and Det. Harold Barefoot\nof the elty police.\nThe car of the chief justice ls\nstill missing.\nThe police officer's vehicle, e\n1950 sports model, was taken from\nin front of his home early \"Monday. It was recovered later, parked\nacross the street from the chief\njustice's residence.\nThe chief justice's car .was missing from Ita parking spot at the\nside of the house.\n^Before abandoning Det. Bare-\nfoot's est the thief removed a\nradio, shotgun shells and other articles.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nmm\nFREE\nmany\nmadians keep\nwarm with oil?\nMore than. 4 millions. Oil is used in the fornacei or hesten\nof more than a million Canadian homes\u2014better than aw\nin four,     v\nOil plays a large and growing part in oar everyday firing-\nHow many of these questions about it can yoa answer?\nHow does Canada rank among the\nnations in known oil reserves\u2014\n8th?\nnth?\n21st?\n*\nHow many barrelf of oil (3 J gallons to a barrel) do yon think\nCanadians \"use in a year\u2014\n8millions? 165 miliums?\n300 millions?\nIn the past 10 years, the average\nwholesale prices of all CMmmod.-\nties have risen 85 per cent. Have\nprices of Esso gasolines risen\u2014\nmote?      less?      about the same?\n. Energy produced at Niagara Falls\neach day is equal to that in 9,000\nbarrels of crude oil. Prairie oil\nfields now produce energy equal to\nhow, many \"Niagaras\"\u2014\n2? lit        18?\nTaxes take a big part df a company's income. How would you\nsay Imperial's 1952 tax bill com-\n- pared with its dividends?Wai it\u2014\ngrttttr?    Itss?    about the some?\nI\nI\n*\nFar down tbe list a fete years age}\nCanada stow ranks eighth. Except\nfor a group of Middle East countries\n\u2014Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and Saudi\nArabia\u2014only tbe U.S4 Venezuela\nand Russia have larger reserves.\nLast year 16i million bamls \u2014\nabout one gallon each day fer every\nman, woman and child. Canada\nuses twice as much oil as she did\nsix years ago;\nMuch less; The average wholesale\nprice of Esse gasolines across Canada\nis up about one-third as much as\ntbe average for all commodities.\nThe energy of the oil produced tit\ntbe western oil fields each day is\nabout 18 times that generated at\nNiagara.\nTastes were $5S millions; about Hi\ntimes dividends to shareholders\nFor each dollar of income, Imperial\npaid lot in taxes and 4t in divb\ndends. Tax figures de not include\ngasoline tales tax paid at thepumpi\nIMPERIAL Oil LIMITED\noil makes a country stronf\n \u25a0\u25a0  '\n wmwmwmwmw\n\u25a0'^t^^PpH^^\naft\nCARL OLSON\nRANDY: TURPIN\n. Currently training for their world middleweight title fight ara\n' England's'champion, Randy Turpin, and-the U.S. middleweight\nking, Carl (Bobo) Olson. The bout will be held, at New York,\n. Ootober 21s The world middleweight orown has been vaoant since\nSugar Ray Robinson left the ring.\u2014Central Press Canadian photos.\n$5000'\n: | VANCOUVER (CP) -Dicic Topping, a curling wizard from British\n. Columbia's Okanagan Valley, led\nhll' rink to a double win Monday\n.and a clean sweep of the major\n. prizes in the $5000 British Empire\nGomes bonspiel here.\nOf the six events in the double-\nbarrelled draw, Topping won two,\n.Vancouver curlers won three and\nthe  other  was  captured  by  Bill\n.Allen and his cowboy-hatted curlers\nfrom Olds, Alta.\n'\">. Aside from the, prizes, Topping's\nUSED FOLDING CAMP\nBEDS\u2014$3.50\nDOUBLE BUNK BEDS\n$5.80\nUSED MATTRESSES\n(to fit above) $2.00\n\u2022\nUSED MINE CARS and\nMINE RAILS, going cheap\nROLL ROOFING, medium\nweight, lit gradef with\ncement and nails.\nA roll $3.98\nWe ttill have a few good\nused wood and coal heaters,\nat reasonable prlcei.\nDon't forget, our prlcei on\nplumbing supplies and fixtures are the lowest In the\nKootenays.\nCOLUMBIA\nTrading Co.\n902 Front St.    Phono 1S11\nrink and the finalists in all event-\nreceive an expenses-paid invitation\nto return here in 1954'for a special\n\"world series\" of curling In the\nfdur days -prior -to the empire\ngames.\nThey'll engage the four top rinks\nin this winter's Dominion championships, the Dominion's .top two\njunior rinks, and two rinks from\nScotland for the world's curling\nChampionship.\nDOWNED' VANCOUVER FpURS\nTopping, with Bill Croft and Herb\nLemke of Summerland and Ernie\nCaughlin ot Oliver, defeated Frank\nLaw and rink ot Vancouver 11-5 In\nthe bonsplel's final match.\nTopping swept past R. V. David\not Vancouver 13-8 In the other primary final and was never in\ntrouble.\nOlson Says Turpin\nAwkward FigHfer\nASBURY PARK, N.J. (AP) -\nCarl (Bobo) Olson called Britain's\nRandy Turpin an \"awkward\" fighter Tuesday as he breezed through\nfour rounds in preparation for their\nOct 21 world middleweight title\nmatch in Madison Square Garden.\n\"Ray Robinson was a better fighter In every way,\" said Olson, who\ntwice battled Sugar Ray.\nOlson's knowledge of Turpin ls\nlimited to watching the movies of\nRandy's second bout'with Robinson In which the British ' negro\nwas stopped,\nOlson is not taking Turpin lightly. He ls conditioning himself,\ntor a rugged 15-round battle. \"An\nawkward feljow is kinds hard, to\nhit,\" he said, \"Sometimes they\ngive you more trouble than a Robin-\nSon.\"\n10-Pin Bowling\nGets Under Way\nTen-pin bowling at the Legion\ngot off to a good start Tuesday evening when about a dozen people\nturned up to use. the alleys,\nThe entertainment committee of\nthe Legion hopes that more will\nshow up Thursday.\nChoose your partner,\nand have a Coke\nLook around; The familiar red\ncooler is only steps away, ready\nto refresh you with the unique\nflavor of ihe world's favorite\nsoft drink...delicious Coca-Colai\nsfsWslswIfssd bstlif el Coca-Cola undif sonlmtl wills Cum Colo Ud.\nMcdonald jam cd, ltd.\nNELSON, B. C. PHONE 1055\n\"Cob\" Is e rtalsliiH gtejSfc\n *- , ,\t\nWlngy Johnson's\nHere Tonight In\nWhen Nelson Maplo Leafs enter-'\ntain Spokane Flyers it Clvlo Arena'\ntonight In the Western International\nLeague lid-lifter for-the two clubs,-\nGeorge' (Wingy) Johnson will bo\nat the. helm-of the Flyers.,\nJohnson came to Spokane this\nseason to take over the coaching\nduties held last Season by.Scoop\nBentley, ,\n.Johnson comes via Seattle and\nTacoma of. the Weitern\/ Hockey\nLeague ahd holds the distinction of\nhaving played 13 yeari In professional hookey. ,\nJohnson \"is a right winger and\nplayed last season with- the Tacoma Rockets. He standi .five feet\neight Inches and tips the scales at\n163 pounds. .\nHe is 33 years of age and was\nborn in Si, Charles, Manitooa, Juiy\n30. After playing his last amateur hockey with the Saskatoon\nQuakers he turned pro with Providence in 1910. He later played\nwith' Kansas City, Cleveland ana\nNew Haven before hooking up with\nCoqch Muzz Patrick and Tacoma\nMidway through the 1948-49 sea-\nSon.\nJohnson has always been a prolific'goal scorer, scoring 20 or mora\ngoals seven different times and in\n1949-50 with Tacoma tired home\n46 goals and amassed W scoring\npoints.\nHe is one of the halt dozen\nplayers In the WHL who has scored\nWu or more times in the league's\nfive-year pro hlatory.\nUp to tne pfesent time he hai\nscored 146 goals and 3.1 points in\n303 games, better than .a point a\ngame, which ls tops tor any Tacoma player.\nLast season he finished 17 in the\nscoring race and although he has\nnever been cnosen tor the first\nall-star team, \"Old Pro\" has been\nnamed to second and third-place\ndream teams.\nIn the Flyer net will be Oerry\nFodey, last season's runnerup to\nJohn Soiiak for the goal tending\nhonors. On the blue line will be\nBernie Qreblnsky, lorn Hodges and\nJohn Reeve of last year's club, with\nDanny McDougall, ex-Smokie player and a newcomer, R. Lake.\nRed TUson will.centre the first\nline of Bill i Ramsden and Hugn\nScott, while the second line will\nsee Gino Rozzlnl centreing Doug\nToole and Bill McNally.\nOther players making the trip to\nNelson will be H. Lundmark and\nFrank Carlson, both newcomers to\nthe Flyers.\nCoach Willie Schmidt of the Nelson Leafs stated that Boomer Rodzlnyak would be between the pipes\nwith Jim Malacko, Marsh Severyn,\nErnie Gare and Bruno Pasqualatto\non defence.\nForming one line will be Red\nand Fritz Koehle centred by Clay\nLavell, and Lee Hyssop will centre\nBill Haldane and Jimmy Lowe.\nForming another line will be Don\nAppleton, Mickey Maglio and Neil\nMcClenaghan. Herb Lovett' will\nalso be dressed for the game.\nEsk't Halfback\nCalled by Army\nEDMONTON (CP) - Ordered by\nhis Oklahoma draft board .to report for an American army medical,\nhalfback Billy -Vessels of Edmonton Eskimos left today for the\nUnited States to clarify his military status.\nAccompanied by Eskimos coach\nDarrell Royal, the 21-year-old Vessels went to Great Falls, Mont,\nto talk with draft board officials\nthere. Special permission was given\nfor the switch to the Montana\ncentre.\nVessels, one of the sensations of\nthe Western Intel-provincial Football Union in his first season with\nEskimos, is the second leading\nscorer with 60 points made up of\n10 touchdowns. Last year with Oklahoma Sooners he won the Hels-\nman trophy after being voted the\nNo. 1 U.S. college football player\nand was the top draft choice of\nBaltimore Colts.\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nOKANAGAN SENIOR\nKamloops 2, Kelowna 4\nOKANAGAN-WIHL\nKimberley 1, Vernon 3\nONTARIO JUNIOR A\nSt. Catharines 3, Quebec 2\nKitchener 4, Gait 3.\n2 PITCHERS FOR CUBS\nCHICAGO \u2014 (AP) - Chicago\nCubs today announced purchase ot\nthe contracts ot right-handed pitch-\nera Jim Brosman and John Pyecha\nand three other players from their\nSpringfield, Mass., affiliate.\nGEORGE JOHNSON\nFernie Golfers\nWind Up Season\nFERNIE\u2014Closing-day activities\nof the Fernie Golf and Country\nClub took the form ot a members' luncheon, followed by a mixed\ntwo-ball foursome competition. Mrs.\nAgnes Lawes teamed .up with Tony\nServello to cop the season's final\nevent. Mrs. Mildred Cameron and\nWilliam (Buster) Underwood were\nsecond.\nPrizes were presented by Mrs.\nJean Polomark, ladies' .club president, and Mrs. D. Homqulst, chairman competitions committee, to the\nwinners of the various competitions staged during the season.\nThe complete list ot winners follows;\nWilson Cup\u20141, Mrs. Jean McKay; 2, Rose Miller.\nTrites Cup\u20141, Mary Potorniak;\n2, Mrs. Martha Chester.\nWood Cup\u20141, Mrs. Nick! Cltra;\n2, Mrs. Mary Traska.    .\nWood Cup consolation\u20141, Mrs.\nJean McKay; 2, Mrs. Gladys Osman.\nEclectic competition\u2014Mrs. Mary\nTraska,,\nEclectic competition, secondary-\nMrs. Rose Miller.\nHerchmer Cup\u20141, Mn, Agnes\nLawes and Dick Pauls; 2, Mrs. Dorothy White and Tony Servello.\nMen's championship \u2014 Frank\nHughes.\nMen's first flight\u2014Irv Morgan,\nMen's second flight\u2014Jim Littler.\nMen's third flight\u2014Ed Bakken.\n\u25a0 Men's fourth  flight\u2014Tony  Servello.\nMen's fifth flight\u2014Fred Bennett.\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nBrooklyn \u2014 Joey Klein, .147,\nNew York, outpointed Rockey Cas\nsilo, 147; Chicago, 10.\nNew Britain, Conn.\u2014Orlando Zu\nlueta, 134, Cuba, outpointed Bobby\nEnglish, 137, Fall River, Mass., 10.\nHolyoke, Mass. \u2014 Brian Kelly,\n138V<, Niagara Falls, Ont., outpointed Bobby, Timpson, 134, Youngs-\ntown, Ohio, 8.\nBerlin, N.H.,\u2014 Tony Percy, 154,\nMontreal, outpointed Smitty Hicks,\n160, Portland, Me., 8.\nBrooklyn \u2014 Joey Morena, 137 >b,\nNew York, outpointed Bobby Du-\nFour, 134, Montreal, 4.\nSenior\nTONIGHT-8 P.M.\nSpokane Flyers\nvt.\nNelson Maple Leafs\nTickets On Sale at kootenay Stationers\n10 a.m. to 12 Noon -\nCivic Contra: 12:15,p.m. to 5 p.m.\nFREE PARKING FOR TICKET HOLDERS IN THE\nRECREATION GROUNDS\n'at atmm am a iSSSSSZ\nWan. Banft For\nSki Championships\nEDMONTON (CP)-Tne Alberta\nAmateur Skiing Association wants\nto stage the 1050 world's championships at Banff.\nAt the semi-final meeting of tho\nWestern Canada Association here\nduring the weekend It was disclosed the A AS A has applied to\nthe Federation International de Ski\nfor the right to hold the championships. .--.\nDelegates decided that in western Canada juveniles will be 12\nand 14 years old and juniors 15\nand 18.\nRoberts, Poole\nBig Four Scorers\nTORONTO (CP) - Gene (Choo\nChoo) Roberts and Ray Poole, a\ncouple of Imports who have put\nthe fopt back into Canadian football, are the Big Four scoring\nleaders at the three-quarter mark\nof .the schedule. They've scored a\ntotal of 82 points on kicking.\nRoberts, who joined Ottawa\nRough Riders last year after playing one season with Montreal Alouettes and before that with New\nYork Giants heads the scorers with\n64 points on five touchdowns, five\nfield goals, 23 converts and one\nsingle.\nStatistics compiled by The Canadian Press show Roberts, who\nscored '19 points in Riders' double\nloss to the Alouettes during the\nweekend, in a clear 11-polnt lead\nover Poole, kicking star from New\nYork Giants who folned the Als\nthis season. Poole has 53 points on\ntwo touchdowns, eight field goals\nand 10 converts. '\nSTONE THIRD\nAvatus Stone of Riders, an early-\nseason Pace - maker,, dropped a\nnotch from second to third place\nwith 47 points.\nChuck Hunsinger, also of the Als\nand formerly with Chicago Bears,\nla fourth with 35 points, five up on\nLou Kusserow of Hamilton Tiger,\ncats who came to Canada this\nseason after playing with Columbia University.\nCanadian - born Tip Logan of the\nTiger-Cats Is'in Sixth place with\n28 points on three field goals, 17\nconverts and two singles.\nJohn Mancos of Kitchener-Water\nloo Dutchmen leads Ontario Rugby\nFootball Union scorers with 58\npoints, 22 up on Bobby Lee of\nSarnia Imperials.\nGino Fracas and Jacques Belec\nof the University of Western On.\ntarlo Mustangs lead the Intercollegiate scoring race. Fracas has\nscored four touchdowns and seven\nconverts In two .games for a 27\npoint total and Belec ls next with\n11 points on two touchdowns and\na single.\nSASKATOON (CP) \u2014 Saskatoon\nQuakers edged New Westminster\nRoyals 2-1 in a Western Hockey\nLeague game here Tuesday night.\nVernon miips\nDynamiters M\nVERNON-Kimberley Dynamlt\nera fell 3-1 before Vernon Canadiana here Tuesday night, their second loss in a row during a swing\nthrough the Okanagan end of the\nWestern International Hockey\nLeague circuit \".   -\nOnly'Buck Kavanagh was able\nto beat Sofiak in the Vernon net.\nHarms, Davidson and Agar flicked the rubber past Dynamiter goalie\nBetker.\nUNE-UPBi '\u25a0'  ~'< i\nKimberley\u2014Goal, Betker; defence, Johnlton, Craig, Andrew,\nHughes; forwards, Hockley, Mathews, Kavanagh, Sullivan, B. Mellor, Campbell, Bell, R. Mellor, Lilley, McNlven.\nVernon\u2014Goal, Soflak; defence,\nStecyk, Ballance, Busch, McLeod;\nforwards, Harms, Jakes, Luccblni,\nDavidson, Miller , Butler, Agar,\nBidoskl, Tarnow, Mackay.\nSUMMARY: '\nFirst period: 1, Vernon, Harms\n(Jakes) 4:43; 2, Vernon, Davidson\n(Butler, Miller) 13:30. Penalties:\nAndrew, Hughes, Harms.\nSecond period: 3, Vernon, Agar\n(Ballance, Tarnow) 17:24, Penalties:\nHughes, Harms,\nThird period: 4, Kimberley, Kavanagh (B. Mellor) 8:12. Penalties:\nB. Mellor, Tarnow, Stecyk.\ni N.,..iwi<  Xi' y i..Y<j, v.'-.i-is.s.swAY, cr. in, ivSst-\nONE OF THE \"400\"       \u2022   By Atan Mover\nYanks Draw Two\nFrom Farm Team\nNEW YORK (AP)-The world\nchampion New York Yankees Tuesday brought up Vic Power and\nElston Howard, Negro stars, from\ntheir Kansas City farm team in\nthe American Association,-\nPower and Howard, two of eight\nplayers promoted by the Yankees\nfrom their vast minor league organization, will be the first Negroes\neyer to wear a Yankee uniform.\nPower, a strong right hand hitter who plays Infield aa well as\noutfield, captured the American\nAssociation batting title this season with a .340 average. The 23-\nyear-old, who played mostly in left\nfield this season, also paced the\ncircuit with-217 hits and 324 total\nbases.\nHoward, a fleet-footed flychaser,\nbatted .286 In 139 games.\nSix ot the eight players come\nfrom Kansas City; the other two\nwere brought up from Birmingham of the Southern Association.\nThe Kansas City boys Include\npitchers Mel Wright and Wally\nBurnette, catcher Lew Berberet and\noutfielder Bill Vlrdon, The Birmingham hopefuls are outfielder\nEmil Tellinger and Hal Smith.\nTen major league clubs now have\nNegro players  on their roster.\nCranbrook, Kimberley, Creston,\nBonners Form New Hoop League\nCRANBROOK - Highly popular\nsport of past years due tor renaissance, basketbalUn a four-team\nIntermediate league' among men's\nteams from Creston, Bonners Ferry,\nKimberley and Cranbrook has\ndrawn up a 36-game schedule of\nFriday and Saturday games to plsy\ninto next March with a month's\ninterval for the Christmas holiday\nseason.\nGeorge Skelton of Cranbrook Is\nleague organizer. Cranbrook- entry is Hornets, coached by Bill\nRiley, and made up of experienced\nplayers from other centres now\nresident here, and promising ex-\nhigh school players of the past two\nyears. Basketball floor in the\nMount Baker School has made the\nsport possible here after a long\nlapse without any basketball accommodation.\nCreston will play the league's\nopening game at Cranbrook Friday, Oct 16,. with Kimberley Invading Bonners the following evening to launch the schedule, and\neach team will play nine games as\nvisitors and nine home games. The\nschedule ends March 6, to be followed by round-robin playoffs.\nSchedule runs:\nOct 16\u2014Creston at Cranbrook.\nOct. 17\u2014Kimberley at Bonners.\nOct. 23\u2014Cranbrook at Kimberley.\nOct 3D\u2014Kimberley at Creston,\nOct. 31\u2014Cranbrook at Bonners.\nNov.   6\u2014Bonners at Cranbrook,\nNov.   7\u2014Creston at Kimberley.\nNov. 13\u2014Kimberley at Cranbr'k.\nNov. 14\u2014Creston at Bonners.\nNov. 20\u2014Cranbrook at .Creston.\nNov. 21\u2014Bonners at Kimberley.\nNov. 27\u2014Creston  at  Cranbrook.\nNov. 28\u2014Kimberley at Bonners.\nDec.   4\u2014Bonners at Creston.\nDec.   5\u2014Cranbrook at Kimberley.\nDec. 11\u2014Bonners at Cranbrook.\nDee. 12\u2014Creston at Kimberley.\nJan. ... 8\u2014Kimberley at Creston.\nJan.  9\u2014Cranbrook at Bonners,\nJan. 15\u2014Creston 'at  Cranbrook.\nJan. W-^Bonners at Kimberley.\nJan. 22\u2014Cranbrook at Creston.\nJan. 23\u2014Kimberley at Bonners,\nJan, 29\u2014Bonners at Creston.\nJan. SO\u2014Cranbrook at Kimberley.\nFeb.   J\u2014Kimberley at Cranbrook.\nFeb.   6\u2014Creston at Bonners.\nFeb. 12\u2014Bonners   at  Cranbrok.\nFeb. 13\u2014Creston at Kimberley.\nFeb. 19\u2014Kimberley at Creston.\nFeb. 20\u2014Cranbrook at Bonners.\nFeb. 26\u2014Creston at Cranbrook.\nFeb. 27\u2014Bonners at Kimberley.\nFeb.   5\u2014Cranbrook at Creston.\nFeb.   6\u2014Kimberley at Bonners.\nCiiisniion.\nALL WELDERS\nAnd Anyone Interested in Welding\nMR. KEITH HAMEL\nof tht\nLincoln Electric Co. of Canada Ltd.\nWill Hold a\nWELDING CLINIC\nThurs., Oct. 15-8 p.m.\not\nThe Selkirk's Equipment and Supply\nCo. Ltd.\n520 Loke St.\n(Next Door to Forestry Building)\nSubject:\nMAINTENANCE WELDING and Reloted Subjeeti\nEvery welder and those interested in welding\nare urged to attend \t\nSpomorod  by Your  LINCOLN WELDEALER\nThe Selkirk's Equipment and Supply\nCo. Ltd.\nmamasasmaamasaaaassaaaaaaaaawsmaammaaaaaaaaaaaaaamaa\nJOCKll   _\nMAenmr\nttrcWMIri*\nTurpin Expects\nTo Beat Bobo'\nGHOSSINGEH, N.Y. (AP)\u2014Brit-\naln'a Bandy Turpin, who haa been\ntiffing with British sports writers,\nsaid he expects to beat Carl (Bobo)\nOlson on Oct. 21 and hopes to knock\nhim out.\nHe made the statement at hla\ntraining camp at the Orossinger\nCountry Club Tuesday after a London sports columnist quoted him\naa saying he would \"pack\" and\n\"clear out\" If he was upset before\nthe world middleweight title tight.\nGeorge Whiting, columnist for the\n.London Evening Standard, cabled\nhla paper that Turpin told him: \"I\nam in no mood to be messed about.\nIf anybody tries anything, I shall\npack my bags and catch the first\nairplane home, world championship\nor no world championship.\"\n\"I am looking forward very eagerly to this fight,\" said Turpin in\nhis statement. \"I hope to win by\na knockout Jbut even it I don't\nknock him out I expect to win by\na decision.\n\"Sure, I might have laid something like that (Whiting's Interview), added Turpin. \"You know\nhow we talk sometimes. I merely\nsaid that if I was bothered too\nmuch I could pack up and go home.\nBut up un.il now I haven't been\nbothered and I don't expect to be.\"\nBritish writers who have come\nto Interview and watch Turpin\ntrain have reported that the European middleweight champion has\nbeen \"moody\" snd \"churlish.\"   .\nBombers' Assistant\nCoach Resigns\nWINNIPEG (CP) - President\nKarl Slocomb ot Winnipeg Blue\nBombers said Tuesday the club\nhad accepted the resignation ot\nStu Clarkson, 34-year-old assistant\ncoach since May, 1952.\nSlocomb told a press conference\nno replacement would be made to\nfill the vacancy.\nClarkson told reporters after the\nconference that he had resigned\n\"for the sake ot club harmony\" as\nhe and Trafton didn't see \"eye to\neye\" on many occasions.\nNO IMMEDIATE PLANS\nHe said he thought the Bombers\n\u2014now tied for second-place with\nSaskatchewan Roughriders In tht\nS'estern Interprovinclal Football\nnion standings \u2014 had the player\nmaterial to \"go all the way\" to\nthe Grey Cup. 77\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBuy, Sell, Trade the. Classified Way\nPhone 75\nCollision Repairs\nPaint Jobs\nDamage Ettimatei\nSuperior Motors\n(Nelion) Ltd.\nDodgo \u2022 DeSoto\" Dealer\nOpp. Post Office on\nVernon St\nThe SHOE CENTRE\n553 Baker St. Phone 895\n\t\nStamL,..\n \u25a0\u2014\n8 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14,1953\no&a\nLISSIFIKIIHIS\nPERSON TO-PERSON WANT ADS\nTOR QUICK RESULTS!\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nBUYZATT\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Louis Buyzatt, Box 42, Nelson, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOct. 10, a son.\nAVIS\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Robert\nAvis, WinUw, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, Oct. 10, a son.\nHAGYARD-To Mr. and Mrs. Hilton Hagyard, 103 High Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOct. 10, a daughter.\nSHROEDER\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nCarl Shroeder, 140 Baker Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\npet. 10, a son. - \u25a0'\"\nBOVAIRE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bovalre, Procter, at Kootenay\nLake General Hospital, Oct. 11, a\nson.      .\nDENTITH-To Mr. and Mrs. Norman Dentith, 116 Chatham Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOct. ll, a son.\nGRUNDY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Donald Grundy, 019 Josephine Street,\nat Kootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOct 12, a daughter.\nAHCURE\u2014To Mr. and sirs. An\ntonio Arcure, 707 Palls Street, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nOct. 12, a son.\nHOOBANOFF\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nBill Hoobanoff, 1216 MacQuarrie\nAvenue, at Kootenay Lake General Hospital, Oct. 12, a son.\nTHOM\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. John\nThorn, 910 Edgewood Avenue, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital\nOct. 12, a daughter.\nHEDSTROM\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nCarl Hedstrom of Silverton at the\nSlocan Community Hospital, New\nDenver, Oct. 9, a son.\nHELP WANTED\nWOODWORKING MACHINE Operators; experienced. Union wages\n\u2014Winter work. Hy-Grade Mill-\n- work Ltd., Saskatoon, Sask.\nYOUTH REQUIRED FOR PRINT-\ning shop. Whimster's Commercial\nPrinting, 507 Ward Street.\nHELP WANTED\u2014FEMALE\nTWO, WOMEN TO TELEPHONE\nfrom thefr own homes. Pleasant\nprofitable part-time work with\nexcellent chance to establish a\npermanent business with steady\nincome. Apply for full particulars to P.O. Box 552, London,\nOnt.\nWANTED \u2014RELIABLE MIDDLE,\naged woman to look after two\nsmall children. Must be fond of\nchildren; Phone Mrs. Miller, 1214.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY\nHAVE $1500.00 TO INVEST IN\nsmall business. Apply Box 6636,\nDaily News,\nFOR SALE \u2014 STANGHERLIN'S\nGrocery, including 5-'room house\nattached to store, 112 Silica St.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nFIREWOOD CUTTING WANTED\u2014\n$2.00 per cord. Will fall and\" saw\nin stove lengths and pile. Have\nown chain saw and tools. Must be\nwithin working distance of-Nelson. Write Box 6820, Dally News.\nSECONDICLASS STEAM ENGIN\neer, B.C. papers, wide experience\nIn power-house work. Box 6735,\nDaily News.\nFOR YOUR WOOD-CUTTING\nneeds, phone Willow Point Store,\n714-X-l..  \u25a0\nMAN WITH TRUCK AND TRAIL-\ner-for hauling contract, John\nEvin, Brilliant, B.C.\nCAST-IRON KITCHEN SINK\nwith drainboard; galvanized pipe,\n\u25a0Hi\" and W', tor. sale; cabinet\nradio, electric. Phone 396-Yi\nGENTLEMAN WANTS POSITION\nas night clerk. Write Box 58, Nelson, B.C.\nDRESSMAKER ALTERATION^ A\nspecialty. Phone 1678-L.\nAGENTS WANTED\nGOOD DISTRICT OPEN TO SELL\nRawleigh Products. Write Raw-\nlelgh's, J1535, Winnipeg, Man.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n,- NOTICE TO CREDITORS\nESTATE OF VEIKKO WILLIAM\nKOSKI, DECEASED, INTESTATE.\nNOTICE IS HEREBY GIVI.N that\ncreditors and others having claims\nagainst the estate of the above\nnamed deceased,, who died near\nValUcan, in the Province of British\nColumbia on or about the 5th day\nof September, 1953, are hereby required to send particulars of the\nsame, duly verified, to the undersigned Administrator of the estate\nof the said deceased, at the Court\nHouse, Nelson, B.C., on or before\nthe 25th day of November, 1953,\nafter which date the said Administrator will distribute the assets\nof the said estate, having regard\nonly to the claims of which he has\nthen received notice.\nDATED at Nelson,' British Co-\nlumbai, this 30th day of September,\n1953.\nTHOMAS G. C. FOX,\nBy His Solicitors,\nIRVING & SIMMS.\nMACHINERY\nNATIONAL MACHINERY CO.\nLIMITED    '\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR: MINING,\nSAWMILL, LOGGING AND\nCONTRACTORS' EQUIPMENT\nEnquiries Invited\nGranville Island. Vancouver 1, B.C\nFOR SALE-1 TABLE SAW WITH\n1% h.p. Westinghouse motor. 2\nsaws, one moulding set, 1 gummer\nand 1 grinding stone. For use on\n110 or 220 current. Phone 249-Y-l.\nFOR SALE\u2014ONE MOODY DRAG\nsaw; two blades. One 7 h.p. Fairbanks stationary engine, and other articles. MacKinnon, R.R. 1,\nNelson, B.C.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\n42. Disembarks\n43. Poker stake'\n44. Within\nSOWN\nt.A substance\nused to\nflavor tWOQs\nt. Betty\n3,Coin\n(Swed\u00bb\n4. Depart\n5. Reap\nt. Trouble\n7. Russian\nname\n8. A short He\n9. Crouched\nIn fear\nlit. Guided\n13. Tablets\n15. Liberate\n18. River\nfcHtatjr\nW. British\nessayist\nahd\nstatesman\n21. Ornate!.\n__. June-\nbus\n14, An\nindirect\nintlrna-\nUoa\n25. Early\nsilver\ncoins (_ftr_)\n27. Scrutinize\n29. Exclamation\n31.In that\nplace\nS3. Macaw\n(Bras.)\nfiEIHHIil   BUI\nHHEina   I--1W\nHIl_!_.f_   BE\nasm    wivi\n3_E@ni_!_@\n_.!__!   H\nfiHgiiS-inii\nHI-llsTE-   I'll-lW\n_S0\nLVJ!:'\nniai-\nin;:\nrM-'.K\n\u25a0-;.'-.!:,\nSHH   H\n3__@__-.G_\nEl@   HP!\n3      [_l___S\n\u25a0sinans\naiannin\ni_,g!_a_i\nai-iaaia\nHtlHSB\n\",aai_H\n'H4\nttattttea'a Aaama\n34. River\n(Sib.)\n35. Paradise\n37, Penitential\nseason.\n30. Corrode\n40, Kitchen\n' utensil\nIC, Measure\n(Chin.)\nACROSS\n1. Ornamental\nfastening\nfor a\njacket\n5. Girl's nam\n_.I_ght-\neolored,\nmild cigar\n10. Competitor\n12. Contest\nof speed\n13. King's\nresidence\n14. Climbing\n' plant\n15. Obese\nW.Man's\nnickname\n17. Negative\nreply\n18. Unit of\ncapacity\n(Egypt.)\n20. Degrees\nin a scale\n22. Mine\nentrance\n26. Weird\n27. \"The State\nof \"\n28. Draw with\nforce\n29. Fruits et.\nthe oak\n30. Man's name\n32. Guido's\nlowest\nnote\nS3. Malt\nbeverage\n30. Female\ndomestic\nfowl\n37. Sign of :\nthe zodiac\n38. Rescue\n40. Founder of\nPennsylvania\n41, Near\n(poet)\ndaily emptoqeom-nutft pnl U wo* ifc\nAXYD LB A A X R\nHLONQrELLOW\nOne letter simply atands fer another. In tMs example A as eaat\nfor the three L'o, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters, apos.\ntrophies, the length and formation of tbe wdMf a\u00bb at MM*\nEach day the code letters are different.\n',  A esvUatteta ejtatatbm\n3 . 8 * it Jc R 8-' \u25a0\u25a0\u20228 8- S   ,* 8 8\" 8 *-\u25a0 I. '* '\nBX     HJWK     I(Xrt     J    S.J-O.BI1B\nIJTXPW    X.R'V.S- '.8J^XI,lTP.\u00bb'\u00bb'W.r\nTPFII.lt W...W UIK\nf(\ni\n3\n1\n%\n^\nIf\nP\n(f?f\n\\\nto\nH\nh\nft\n5\nii\n.\n%\nis\n%\n16\ni\u00bb\n%\nW\n|\n___!\n\u00a7\n_o\nat\n%\nEt\n29\ntfi\n26\nVA\nS7\n28\n%\na\ni\nW\nrCi\nto\"1\nat\ni\n*\nn\nab\ni\nat\n%\nir\n91\n\u25a0\u00bb\n\u00a7\n40\nlii\n1\n*\n%\n\u25a0w\n%\n\u2022H'\n%\nl<W4\nyesterdays Cayetefaattt. TOW WW MOV\nTHAT I NEVER TRH3D 10 -MM. JM BONHff\n8HAW. :;: \u25a0:.\u25a0:':.-''.    .\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nNEW GOCSE AND DUCK\nfeathers for sale. Only breast and\nbody feathers with natural down\ncontents. No wing or tail. Goose,\nJ2.00 per lb. Duck $1.80 per lb.\nP. S. Gross,'' Pincher Creek,\nAlberta.\nFOR SALE\u2014I LARGE CHESTER:\nfield which may be converted\ninto double bed; .'inner spring\nmattress. Phone 1455. [\nCOLEMAN CIRCULATOR OIL\nheater; slightly used. 50,000 b.t.u.\nNew $178. Snap for $125.00. Fred\nChursenoff, Slocan Park, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014ONE C.C.M. THREE-\nwbeeled tricycle; one child's toy\nelectric organ; both likefnew. \u2014\nPhone 1477-X: 7    \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\nLARGE CIRCULATING OIL\nheater, 5-gal. capacity, excellent\ncondition; $55.00. Box 6932, Daily\nNews.\nPIPE   -   FITTINGS   - TUBES -\n' Special low prices. Active Trad-\nlng Co. 935 E. Cordova S|- Vancouver.\nFOR SALE\u2014ONE PAIR BLACK\nboys' figure akates and Lionel\nelectric train. Phone 629-Y.\nFOR SALE \u2014 BOYS' C.C.M. Bicycle; very good condition, $30,\nPhone 718-Y. -\nFOR SALE\u2014DUCK BOAT. CAN-\nvas covering on cedar planking.\n824 Nelson Avenue.\nFOR SALE\u20141 PR. SIZE 13 BLACK\ntube skates and'l pr. size 13 girls'\nfigure skates. Phone 1326-L.\nFOR SALE-MAYTAG WASHING\nmachine, Guelph stove. Apply 304\nBehnsen St., or phone 344-L-3.\nFOR SALE\u2014GOOD CHEER FUR-\nnace; complete with pipe. Phone\n944 or 607-Y.\nCRESS CORN SALVE\u2014FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist Sells Cress.\nUSED IRON-HORSE GAS MOTOR\n\u2014 Phone 96-L-l.\nFOR   SALE \u2014 WHITE   ENAMEL\nSpencer range. Phone. 1462-X.\n1 PR. BOYS' SIZE 5 TUBE SKATES\nv $4.00. \u2014 Phone 718-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE. W- WIDDOWSON & CO., AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH S.  ELMES, ROSSLAND, B.C.,\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Rep.\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nR K COATES, STE. NO. 8, 373\nBaker St., Nelson,' Phone 1118.\nB.C. Lands Surveyor.\nS. V.  SHAYLER,  P.O.  BOX  252,\nKimberley, Phone 54.\nB.C. Land Surveyor, Engineer.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C. Surveyor, Engineer.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine   Shop.   Acetylene   and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding. Phone 593, 324 Vernon St.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nBUY YOUR BABY CHICKS THIS\nyear. from the Appleby Poultry\n; Farm, Mission City, B.C. We have I\nover 7000'extremely healthy aid'\n.properly conditioned!Breeders on\nour own farm. Our baby chicks,\nare produced only from our own I\nstock In White Leghorns, White\nRooks, New Hampshires and |\nCrosses Catalogue on request.\n\u2022 POULTRYMEN \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\nINVESTIGATE THE AMAZING\nNEW \"TURBO'-JET\" EGG? CLEAN-\nERS. For prices and Information,\nwrite Rolla's Hatchery, 1609 Trans\nCanada Highway, New Westminster, B.C. Mail address\u2014Box 245,\nWhalley, B.C.      .\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, RJR.\nNo. 15, New Westmin-ter,, B.C.\nPhone Newton 60-L-3. '\nFOR SALE\u2014COW; JUST FRESH-\nened one week with second calf.'\nG. Polenekoff, Slocan'Park, B.C.\nRENTALS\n1\" ROOM   SUITE,   FULLY   FUR-\nnished,   steam   heat,   also   one.\nhousekeeping room with kitchei\n111 Baker St.    ,\nCOMFORTABLE DOUBLE ROOM\nwith use of kitchen. Reasonable.\n' Phone 306-Y.\nHOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS   FOR:\nrenl. General heat. Electric stoves.\nNorth Shore Motel, Phone 1684.  '\nFOR RENT-JTWO LARGE ROOMS\npartly furnished, upstairs. North\nShore; 6% miles. Phone 462-L-2.\nFOR RENT \u2014 SELF-CONTAINED i\ncottage at Willow Point. Phone\n1635-L-l.\nROOM, CENTRAL, FOR Businessman, in nice home. All conveniences. Phone 457-R after, 3.\nMODERN HOUSE, OUT OF TOWN\nclose to school. Reasonable-rent.\nApply Box 6259, Daily News.\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u20142-ROOM,\nhouse. Apply No. 9 Ymir Road,\nor phone 980-L-l.\nROOM FOR RENT, CLOSE IN. \u2014\nPhone 247-Y.\nWANTED   MISCELLANEOUS\nTOP MARKET PRICES PAID FOR,\nscrap iron, steel, brass, copper,\nlead, etc. Honest grading, Prompt\npayment made. Atlas\" Iron Ss Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St., Vancouver, B.C. Phone PACiflc 6357.\nWANTED\u20141 PAIR USED CHILD'S\nskates, size 7 or 8; also 1 pair!'\nused women's skates, size 7 or 7%.\nPhone 1342-X.\nWILL TRADE LARGE TRU\nand trailer for smaller one.\nPhone 1669-Y.\nWANTED \u2014 CLEAN COTTON\nrags. Must be 12 inches square\nor more. Daily News.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nQN THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS ... 1240 on the dial\n.(Pacific Standard Time)\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1953\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:15\u2014Sports News\n7:20\u2014Warren's Wigwam\n7:30-rNews\n7:35\u2014Warren'a Wigwam\n8:00\u2014Newa\n8:10\u2014Sports News\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Serenade\n8:55\u2014Sports News\nOiOO-i-Morning Devotions    ' '\nl:15-tEarl Warren Show\n10:00\u2014Morning Music\n10:15\u2014News\n10:20\u2014Morning Music\n10:30\u2014Story Parade\n10:45\u2014Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014Shut-In Show\n11:15\u2014Homemaker Harmonies\n11:45\u2014Decoratively Speaking\n11:50\u2014Consumer's Corner\n12:00-HNoon Special\n12:15\u2014Sports News\n12:20\u2014News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Chat With Listeners\n1:00\u2014Man in the Kitchen\n1:15\u2014Hollywood Calling\n1:30\u2014Falrview Shopping Guide\n2:00\u2014Liberty Special\n2:15\u2014Clean-Up Time\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Sacred. Heart\n3:30\u2014Afternoon Varieties\n3:45-r-The Record Album\n4:15\u2014Other Voices, Other Places\n4:30\u2014Jubilee Road\n4:45\u2014Music Picture Lady   -\n5:00\u2014Report from Parliament Hii\n5:05\u2014Pacific News\n5:15\u2014Int. Commentary\n5:20\u2014Behind the News\n5:25\u2014Spotlight on a Star\n5:45\u2014Sports News\n5:50\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Musical Program\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News -\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30-CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Recital      \u2022 '\n10:30\u2014Sports Roundup\n10:45\u2014Starlight Ballroom\n11:00\u2014Around the Town\n12:00-NEWS Night Cap.\nCBC PROGRAMS\n(Mountain Standard Time)\nTHURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1953\n7:00\u2014Fisherman's Broadcast\n7:15\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:30\u2014Ne'wB\n7:35\u2014Musical Minutes\n7:40\u2014Morning Devotions\n7:55\u2014Musical March Past\n8:00\u2014News .\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill' Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n-:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited \"\n9:45\u2014Famoui Voices\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15-Hi\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Walts\n11:00\u2014Kate Aitken\n11:15\u2014Kindergarten of the Air .\n11:30\u2014A Man ahd His Music\nl;:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:65\u2014Five To One\nliOO-^-The Concert Hour\n2:15\u2014Today's Guest\n2:30\u2014Trans-Canada Matinee\n3:15\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:30\u2014Program Resume\n3:45-Hit Parade\n4:\n4:\n4:\n5:\n5:\n5:\n5:\n:15\u2014As Tunes Go By\n30\u2014The Hudson Bay Expresi\n45Vralking to Teens '   \u25a0\n00\u2014Something in Harmony\nlS-^Internatlonai Commentary\n20\u2014CBC News and Weather\n30\u2014Father Knows Best\n6:00\u2014John, and1 Judy'\n6:30\u2014Wayne and Shuster\n7:00\u2014News       \u25a0\n7:15\u2014News Roundup  '.\n7:30\u2014Eventide ,'.\u25a0,'.-..    .\n8:00\u2014Don't Destroy\n8:15\u2014The Jefforsoni.n Heritage\n8:45-rAs I Know Him.\n9:00\u2014Vancouver Concert Orch.\n9:80\u2014Winnipeg Drama\n9:00\u2014Thursday Playhouse\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Mld-Week Review\n10:30\u2014Nocturne\n.-\n\u25a0\nm\u00ab^<iitm\n am\npmOfyjo-pmo^mNrADi,\nFOR (WICK'RESULTS!\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Claiiilled Ads- -I p.m.-\nPhont 144\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n\u20220:*>'f *\">.'.*?\"+*<\u2022\u2022\u2022\nIMMEDIATE\nDELIVERY\nNew Austin\n'.SOMERSETS\nCREAM     BLUE     GREEN\ni  1053 Packard Clipper\n1953 Austin Convertible\n,;   1953 Ford Fordor\n.   1952 Austin Somerset\n1952 Studebaker Sedan\nj   1952 Chevrolet Sedan\n1951 Austin Convertible\n1951 Austin Devon\n1951 Monarch Coupe\n1950 Austin Devon\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1950 Pontiae Sedan\n1949 Austin Devon\n1949 Hillman Sedan\n| 1949 Ford Sedan\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Ford Tudor\n1937 Ford Coupe\n1937 Chevrolet Sedan\n1936 Dodge Coupe\nCOMMERCIALS\n1952'Studebaker Pickup\n.   1951 Austin Pickup\n\"   1950 Studebaker Pickup\n| 1949 Ford Pickup\n1950 Austin Countryman\n1949 Austin Panel\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1947 Ford Pickup\nTERMS AND TRADES    .\nAUSTIN\n|;     SERVICE AND SALES\n|.  'EMPIRE\nMOTORS\n803 Baker St.   Phone 1135\nNelson, B,C.\n\u25a0 ji j.**.       *    <*\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\n1953 Henry J. Corsair\n1952'Austin Somerset\n1952 Chevrolet Coupe\n1951 Pontlac Coach\n1950 Austin Sedan\n1950 Mercury Coupe\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1949 Chevrolet Tudor\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1946 Pontiae Sedan\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1937 Ford Sedan\n1934 Ford Fordor\nCOMMERCIALS\n1952 Studebaker Pickup\n1950 Ford Pickup\n1948 Chevrolet Vi Ton\n1950 Austin Panel\nCASH    TERMS    TRADES\nJo\u00bb Longon, Manager\nEMPIRE\n600 Blpck Vernon Street\nNelson, B.C.\nLOG HAULERS\n'44 Reo Logger with 18-ton Willock\ntandem trailer, 427 cu, in., cont.\nmotor, .-ipeed trans,, 8-speed aux.,\nSeattle bunks, water tanks and air\nbrake, this unit hss $3000 worth\nof nearly new 11.00x20 tires on it.\nReady to go te work. \u2014 Complete\nfor only $8900.\nUSED TRUCK CENTRE\n421 Kingeway FA183?\nlf\"8 BJC-Ui.' THI NORTON FIA-\n-therbed\" nominator Com* la and\nsee this famous motorcycle, the\nholder of the Isle of Man T.T it\nKootenay Motorcycle Sales and\nService, Box 3S0. Castlegar; phone\n2601 \"The Shop of Friendly Ser\nvice.\"\n(Continued hi Next Column)\nAUTOMOTIVE i\nMOTORCYCLES.   BICYCLES\n(Opmtnuedl     \u25a0\n-Now On Display\nTHE NEW\nMONARCH-\nMONTEREY\"\nat\nMel Buerge Motors\nWith Automatic Trans.-\nPower Steering, Power\nBrakes, Electric Windows,\nete.\nNew Fords, Monarchs\nNew Consuls, Zephyrs\nNew Ford Pickups\nfor\nIMMEDIATE DELIVERY\nOUR BEST SELECTION IN\nUSED CARS THIS ^EAR\n1953 Austin Sedan\n1952 Pontiae Coach\nTorpedo\n1952 Ford Sedan\n1952 Dodge Sedan\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan, Blue\n1951 Chevrolet'Sedan\nGreen.\n1951 Chevrolet Coach   \"\n1951  Pontlac Coupe\nTorpedo.\n1951 Chevrolet Sedan\nDelivery\n1950 Plymouth Coach\n1950 Ford Sedan\n1949 Pontlac Se,dan   '\n1949 Monarch Coupe\n1948 Plymouth Sedan\nV947 Chevrolet Sedan\n1947 Monarch Sedan\nDEALS THAT ARE STEALS\n1946 Ford Sedan \u2014 $700\n1941 Ford Pickup \u2014 $300\n1941  Pontiae Sedan\nDelivery -t $200\n1939 Chevrolet Sedan\n$300\n1937 Pontiae Sedan \u2014 $75\n1935 Ford Codch \u2014 $100,\n1928 Model A Pickup\n$100\nUSED TRUCK BARGAINS\n1952 Mercury 3 Ton\nDump, body and hoist\n1952 G.M.C. Pickup\n1948 Chevrolet Vt, Ton\n1941  Ford Piqkup \u2014 $300\n1928 Model A Pickup\n- $100    '\nENGLISH UNITS\n1953,-Austin Sedan\n1950'Hillman Sedan\n1950 Vanguard Sedan\n1949 Thames Panel\nel Emerge\n\u25a0\u25a0WeWW w+.a?m>e\u00bber',mym+>+\u00ab*+ taat^m'afy\nMEW     V\nAND     \u25a0\nEXCLUSIVE\nLISTING,,\n' FAIRVIEW\nBUNGALOW\n\u25a0<    IDEALLY SITUATED.\nBEAUTIFULLY\nLANDSCAPED\nFour rooms and bath, all large\nand bright. Birch floors and\nplastered. Modern kitchen and.\nwired for range, Full basement\nwith piped hot-air furnace. Extra bedroom or playroom completed in basement, Insulated\nand heats on live tons,\nSeparate garage ahd workshop.\nEasy entrance, Fifty foot lot.\nHouse built seven years. First\ntime on the market.\nPhone for appointment to view.\nPRICED RIGHT FOR\nQUICK SALE AT\n$12,900 On Terms\nor $12,600 Cash\nT.D,Rosling\nReal Estate and Insurance\n568 Ward St. Phone 7J7\n608 Vernon St      Ph. 1744\nFORD \u2022 MONARCH\n1946 HUDSON SUPER 6. BRAND\nHew re-conditioned motor. New\npaint job. In excellent mechanical\ncondition. $675.00. Phone 046, or\nwrite Box 172, Nelson.\nFttR\" -At*'- '48 StKbteBAltEit\nChampion. Low mileage. Air con\nditloner, defroster, overdrive, ra.\ndlo. Oood condition. Phone 109.\nIBS SALB-H.(.l3*!\u00bbI-8.Wtt*\u00abL\ncar trailer, licenced, $99,00. Write\nBox (936, Daily News.\nFOR SALE-'47 I.ODC-E'COACH.\nIf you are looking for a car in\nA-l mechanical shape, ph. 443-B-\n*6i. SAlte-lfo'WttBoh CtfS-\ntomline. Phone 492-R.\nj_ ii i, \u25a0\u25a0 ss; i   \"   smmmmfmjmmm^\nMwxi Baili. Stews\nClassified Advertising Retail\nUe per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive Insertions\nHo line per consecutive insertion after first insertion\n' 48o Una for I consecutive insertions\n11.96 line tor month (20 consecutive insertions)  Box numbers lie extra   Covers any\nnumber of insertions..\nPUBLIC   (LI.GAL,   NOTICES.\nTENDERS, etc.\u201420c per lino,\nfirst insertion  10o per lino\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   U.SS\n10% rOR PROMPT PAYMENT\n\u25a0Subscription Ratesi   ,\n(Not Mere Thin Listed Hurt)\nBy carrier, per weak.\nla advance        SO\nBy carrier, per yeu $19-60\nUnited States. United Kingdom!\nOn* month            f 1SW\nThree months           179\nSix pionths       790\nOne year 1800\nMall In Canada, outside Nelson'\nOne month              100\nThret months  \u201e\u201e    3,7)\nSix months   .....    (.90\nOne year  10.00\nWhere extra postage Is mnulrerj,\nabova rates plus postage.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, PARM5\nFOR SALE-TWO CHOICE LOCA-\ntions on Riondel Road, 300 yds.\nnorth of Trsns-Provineial Highway. Each lot contains 82 acres\nwith 220 yds. of lake and road\nfrontage. $600 down; total $1800,\nLiberal terms. W. Fraser, rtoote-\nnay Bay.\nFOR SALE-OtJE OF THE LOVE-\nHost homes in Nelson. This home\nmust be seen to be appreciated.\nTo view please phone 1378 -H or\ncall at 908 Nelson Avenue, Half\ncash will handle,\nFOR SALE-lu AC_taS WITH \"UN-\nfinished house; but comfortable\nto live in. Water piped in house,\n9 miles west on highway.- Write\nBox 3(7,'Nelson; B.C.\nFOR SALE - CHOICE, LEVEL\nproperty, 2\/9 acres, close to city\nlimits on Salmo road. Potential\nmotel or home site, Write Box\n6701, Daily News.\nforced tb SUE ttaWM-\nable 3-bedroom house. Oood location. Full basement; automatic hot\nwater heat. Immediate possession.\nBox 6938, Daily News.\nFOR SALE \u25a0- 1-4 ROOM HOUSE\nfully modern; 1-3 room house,\nfully modern. Apply Wm. A\nHenke, Procter.\nFbR'SAHA-'-ButtsMa im\n60 x 120, outside city limits, 1\nblock from bus. Phone 1099-L, or\napply 206, View Street.\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBefore you buy look over the\nfield... compare them all.\nWfiy not drop in-today ahd\ntest-drive one of the new\nINTERNATIONAL\nTRUCKS\nnow on display il\nCentral Truck\n& Equipment Co. Ud.\nm Front St.\nPhone 1400 Nelson, B.C\ni_\nLOST AN^ FOUND   .\nVOtlf-iS'iXBD \"'V|liVET : \u00a5utis&\ncontaining return bus ticket to\nTrsils and somo \"(honey. Flndtr\nplease phone 1310-V\nclntty of 1821 Falls St.j~\u00ab$nteli>.\ntog driver'* licepee, papers and\n' soma cash, Phon* 201.\n\u00a35Sf\n-'-MA-i-i-tOW-J-SUrt!:\nelse, Baker St., Nelson. Reward.\nPhone ltt oreall at Dally Ntwi,.\nPBRSONAL\nMICRO NIC HEARING AIDS,-\nWrite PO Box.39 Nelson BC\nsurince Co., D if; Kerr. Agent\nWW* HOWLOPTOTB'CCT\nDepot Cloan rooms lad reasonable rates Vancouver. B C\nmm&k lArats aiowggs\ntive.  3  weeks'  supply $2,00;  9\nweeks' $3,00. \u2014 .At'all druggists.\nn\nAussie House\nCANBERRA (AP) \u2014 Commerce\nMinister John McEwen Tuesday introduced Into Uie Ho\\iso of Representatives a bill for ratifyiiu[ the\nInternational Wheat Agreement,\nHe said that in view ot tha heavy\nworld wheat stocks, Australia's export quota, of 48,000,000 bushels under the three-year agreement could\nprove Important to the welfare ot\nthe country's wheat industry.\nDebate was adjourned.\nRenewal of the IWA was agreed\nupon between major wheat importing and exporting countries last\nAugust. It sets a minimum price of\n$1.85 a bushel and a maximum of\n$2.09.\nBritain refused to sign the new\nagreement, claiming the maximum\nprice waa too high. She since has\nbeen buying wheat In the world\nmarket.\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK (AP) - A lot \"of\nirregularity finally translated itself\ninto a slightly lower movement.\nCanadian stocks were lower,\nCanadian Pacific and Distillers Seagram fell, International Nickel and\nHiram Walker eased and Dome\nMines,was unchanged.\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014Prices were\nhigher in moderate trading toward\nthe close.\nWestern oils led with a rise of\nmore than IH points oA the exchange's index. Other groups were\nalso higher..\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Fractional\nadvances ruled In quiet, afternoon\ndealings.\nHudson Bay Mining rose and\nGeneral Dynamics added but other\nchanges were small.\nLONDON (Reuters) \u2014 The London was dull.\nBritish government stocks lost\nfractions and in a generally easier\nindustrial section brewery shares\ncame in for selling following news\nof the decline in beer consumption\nIn the United Kingdom.\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES \u25a0\u201e\nBeaver Lodge'\t\nBralorne .\u201e\t\nCanusa  -\nCariboo-Gold ,\t\nEstella  \t\nGiant Mascot ,\t\nHighland Bell\t\nFae Eastern Gold\t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Border \t\nQuatslno\t\nReeves Mac\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilver Ridge .-\t\nSilver. Standard \t\nVananda\t\nVan Rol \t\nWestern Ex \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\nWestern Tungsten\t\nOILS\nAnglo Can \t\nA P Cons \t\nCalmont ::.\t\nHorn*  ,\t\nMercury --,-,\t\nOkalta Com\t\nP\u00bbo Pete ,,,\t\nRoyalite \t\nVgnalta   \u201e\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCapital Estates\t\nInt Brew B\t\n.70\n3.00\n.oavi\n.09\n.28%\n.49\n.33\n.10\n1.00\n-04V4\n.27\n1.43\n.90\n.10\n.74\n.01%\n.04\n.32\n1.30\n9.19\n.93\n1.12\n,7.00 .\n.10%\n1,80\n9.09\n12.79\n28.29\n4.00\nT0^NTO STOCKS\n,.--..; (Olellng Prices)\nm:nm , ,      \t\nArssdiB Uranium s,      .14\nAmetlOjm Y K  ..;\u201e...:,...._     .21\nArmistice   ...,,.'. .,\u201e 16\nAtlas Y K 17\nAumetlMe  :.- 30\nAlitor - \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-. -     2.79\nBarymin ,     1.35\nBobjb    .,. ..\u201e..,.'. 33\n\u00a7r(slorne  ........\u2014    3.00\noliffan ,...... ..........     .16*4\nCampbell R L     7.09\nCan Mri       ..-   ' ,40.\nCastle Tre(h s .....r.^.\u2122  ,3.40.\nCheittrvllle ,     ,39%\nChimo 0 i* -, .....   .1.10\nCons M St 8 .  .....-,..   23,05\nColli  Dhoovery^ .., j....-    3,35\nDatteRL .,.., ---.\u201e      ,17\nDome' -....: ...-:.i-  15.38\nDonalds ....,.-..,..... ,  .47%\npuvey .:*,;\u201e...,-..,.7 : .81\nBait M\u00bbla_ tie .\u2014.     IM\nEast'Sullivan     4.19\nEastern Metals  ,\u2014    1,14\nElder Oold  ,  .40\nEsttlla   ..      .39\nEureka ., .: 78\nFaWonbrldga ........... ...   14,25\nrrdbisher - \u201e     4,80\nGiant Yel     8.40\n004* Lake       .92\nGoldcrest \u25a0. .....'\u201e.,      .15%\nGolden Manitou      1.09\nHardrock...: ,.  -_ 10\nHorricona       12\nHaiaga --\u201e..;      .28\nHolllnger   .........   11.75\nHomer YK 28\nHudson Bay   39.00\nInspiration     1.81\nInt Nickel  -   37,85\nJollet Que  :., --..    .25\nKerr Addison    18.35\nKlrk-HudSon Bay -      .88\nKlrkland Lake    . MS\nLabrador    , .,.-...'..'.'..\u2022.   0.40\nLake Dufault J\nLakeshqre  ,.\u2014....\n\u201e\u201e......\u201e...    5,88\nLamaque  .......\nLexlndln\t\n -    4.08\n\u201e, 11\nLineman (ntw)\t\n..,;      .20\nLittle Long Lie\t\n       .48\nMncQssa   .... \u201e..,.;.\u201e\n     1.58\nMacLeod Cock \t\n      1,29\nMedian It L ..'.\t\n     1.50\nMalartie G F\t\n 10\nMclntyre 'Pore \t\n    53,80\nMcKenzle R L .\u2014\n.,._.       ,30\nNegus  v\t\n 11\nNew Bidlamaque .\n.18\n      1,55\nNew .Mylomoquo \u201e\n 80\n    83.23\n     2,88\n \u201e      ,18\nO'Leary   \t\n 19\n 38\nPamour  \t\n 74\n.....,:....,...   27,00\nPreston-.E D\t\n     2,45\nfluebeo Lab \t\n.,.-\u201e,\u201e 14\nQueenston \t\n....-s.-. 38%\nSan Antonio    \u201e\n      1.99\nSherritt Gordon ....\n     4.20\nSUvermlller  \t\n       .71\nSilanco\t\n-v \u00bb\n....*       ,38\nSiscoe  \u2014\nStadacona \t\n SO\nSteeloy   \t\n       :10%\nSteep Rock   \t\n     8.00\nSudbury Cont \t\n 23\nTeek Hughes      1.00\nTorbrit      1.15\nTrans ConLRei 80\nUnion Mining 16%\nUnited Keno  ., .'. 16%\nUnited Keno     '0,40\nUpper Canada-     1.08\nVentures   ....    14.29\nViola'mao     2.24.\nWalte Amulet     9.79\nOILS\nAnglo Can  .'.     8,18\nA P Cons '\u2022 ,-      .33\nB A Oil    17.87%\nCal Ss Ed     8.93\nCalmont  ,     1.12\nCdn Atlantlq     4.65 '\nCentral Ladue     1.61\nCentral Explorers     4.35\nChemical Research      1.12\nDalhousie        1.80\nFederated Pete     4.30\nHlgbwood Sr  13\nHome     7.25\nImperiel Oil ,    28.00\nInter Pete  ,    19,62%\nKroy     1.18\nMacDougal Segur Ex -.-\u2014      .15\nMid Cont .;.. 14\nNat Pete  ;     1.97\nOkalta \u201e    1.81\nPoo Pete      9.75\nRoyalite  ,    13.00\nRoxana       ;15\nUnited Oils  .'. 75\nINDUSTRIALS\nAluminum   43\nArgus \u201e...' n%\nAtlas St _  14\nBell Telephone   86%\nBrattlHh     10%\nBuilding Products    86%\nCan Melting    51\nCsn Steamships    78%\nCan Briweries   19%\n1 ll\n\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab'\nBOND SALES FIRMER\nMONTREAL'(Ci?) - Provincial\nIssues were slightly firmer Tuesday\non Montreal bond markets. Government bonds held steady in light\nvolume. The corporate market was\ngenerally unchanged with the exception of CPR, up a trifle.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY (CP) \u2014 Trade was\nslow.on 1105 head of cattle and\ncalves on offer on the Calgary livestock market Tuesday. Good to near\nchoice 'butcher steors and heifers\nwere 25 to 50 cents lower, Good\nbutcher steers over 1105 pounds\nwere being discounted around $1\npar: hundredweight.\nHogs Were steady at $32 end sows\nheldet 17-78.-7\nGood to near choice butcher\nsteers 10-17.60; common ot medium\n10-19.78; good to nasi choice butch-\"\nir helfersi 4-10; eommon to medium\n10-13.76; goad cows 0-0.50; common\nto medium 7,28-0.75; canners and\ncutters 8-7; good bulls $.50-10.\"%';\ncommon to medium 1-9! food stqek-\ner ud feeder steed 15-16,30; common to medium 10-14.75; good to\nchoice veal calves 16-18; (pmmqn\nto medium 10-15,75.   '\u25a0\n.-VINNIPBO GRAIN\nWINNIPEG (CP) - Winnipeg\ngrain cash prices:\nOats, No. 1 feed, SW,\nBarley, No, 1' feed, 94.\nIngle-lraiar\nInveslsin\nRedwaler Field\nWWDON (CP)\u2014The v\u00bbit'An|lo-\nIranian Oil Company Tuesday announced its entry Into tht Canadian\noil -field. - ?-.... .\":'-,\n. A wholly-owned subsidiary- called D'Arcy ' Exploration Co. Ltd,,\nWill Invest about $5,000,000 for.23,\nper cent of th\u00bb, Triad Oil Company\nLimited of Calgary. Triad is a Canadian company farmed In 1051 with\nproperties in Albert*, Saskatchewan\nend the Wil)istOn basin-\nIts production, mainly'from'the\nAlbert* Redwater field, yiat 871,000\nbarrels tor the year ending Nov, 3,\n1953,     ' .        \"\nTerms of the deals presumably\narranged on sVYislt by Anglo-Iran*\nlah officials to Alberta this summer, include tha subsidiary's right\nto purchase additional shares\namounting to not less than 59 per\ncent of Triad shares.\nTo date It Involves purchase by\nD'Arcy of 1,250,000 shares and $825,-\n000 worth of 4% per cent convertible notes. D'Arcy will purchase\nlater In two equal Instalments another 600,000 shares and $360,000 bf\nnotes.\nTriad will continue to operate as\nbefore but with two extra directors\nnominated by D'Arcy and two or\nthree sddltloanl technical staff men.\nIts current capital consists of $$,-\n888,000 of, 4% per cent- convertible debentures and more' than 5,-\n740,000 shares of no par value, quoted on the Calgary and Toronto stock\nexchanges.' 7 > \u25a0.-.\n. The fransaotions have been ap-\n5roved by the British treasury and\nie necessary dollars frjed.\nArmy Man\nTurns Io Easel\nLONDON (CP)-Hey'there, Lord\nAlexander\u2014move that easel over\nand make way for another army\nman turned amateur painter.\nThat was the word Monday at\ntha Canadian joint staff In London.\nThe reason: One of the paintings\non show at the 66th annual exhibition of the Royal .Institute of\nOil Painters is a still life, by 36-\nyear-old Brig. R. W. Moncel, who\nstarted paintings only two yeari\nago,; i.\nNot only that \u2014 Brig. Moncel's\neffort ls on display in the gem\nroom, reserved for outstanding\nworks. The exhibition opened\nSaturday. '\u2022'   \u2022\nBrig. Moncel, army member it\nJoint staff headquarters, goal to\nOttawa in December to become\ndeputy chief of the general staff,\nCanadian Army, tht youngest mm\never to hold the post.\nAn army spokesman said that in\ncombining a military career with\npainting on the sldt ht appears to\nbe following Field Marshal Viscount Alexander, Britain's defence\nminister, who had three paintings\nIn last year's Royal Academy exhibition.\nLord Alexander's paintings, all\nwith Canadian backgrounds, were\ndone when he was in Ottawa as\ngovernor-general,\nCan Canners  _\u201e  27\nCan Car tt Fdy A  18\nCan Celanese  26%\nCan Pac Rly ._,  23%\nCoekshutt -.,.  10%\nCons UltS  22%\nDist Seagram '..  25%\nDom Foundries - 13%\nDom Steel & Coal B .:  11%\nDom Storey  16%\nDom Tar & Chem     7%\nDom Textiles      7%\nDom Magnesium  12%\nFanny Farmer   20\nGatlneau   20%\nGatlneau 8% pfd   102%\nGreat Lakes -  1B%\nGypsum Lime  33\nImperial Oil   28\nImp Tobacco   '.. 10%\nInt Nickel  ,  37%\nInt Pete  18%\nLaura'Secord   14\nLoblaw A  38%\nLoblaw B   41%\nMassey Harris       7%\nMcColl Frontenae   24\nMont Loco  13%\nMoore Corp   23\nNat Steel Car  24%\nPage Hershey  69%\nPowell River  :  23%\nShawlnigan  i,  37%\nSioks Brew  24\nSimpsons A \u2014 \u2014 13%\nSteel of Can - 80\nUnion Gas of Can - 30\nUnited Steal  12%\nWinnipeg Gas ;.; \u00ab%\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNES!\nWORLD-FAMOUS \u00bbC|tNTIST, Professor Auouste PIcoaro, who\ntl years ago was the flnt than to rlaa high enough abovt tht earth's\nsurface Info the stratosphere, established a nev* underwater depth\nreeordi.off the coast of Italy. In an especially constructed oratt^-i\nbathyscaphe-built^ by the Italian government to hie, design, W\nfs9-V-.i-.nri> ftsA, no. hn-t,   hm...... ,\u201elsk   us.  \u2014    -.  ..\u2014._\u25a0_    .\"'.''-\n_....,\u2014._..._....,,, \u201e, \u201elo ,.\u201e,,ull .uvos-rsssiEsisi io nin design, tn.\n69-year.old-8wlii.born professor -with hit son,. 31-year-old Jaeques,\no'.-W.i!,'? tj\u00bb Mediterranean Sea off the epast of the IslandSft.;\nPons*, 10,834 feet, te break the reoord of 8989 feet set six weeks ago\nby two Frenchmen, Two miles under the surface ofthe sea there\nIs a grave-like calm and ttygian blackness broken only by ghostly-\nfMckers of phosphorescence hinting at unknown forpit ef lift.\n\"There', nothing else to see,\" reported the professor, seen tenti*\nwith son right, and unidentified sailor, following their returna\nIslands\u2014Central grits Canadian, .\nure.\nnfrsi\n3L\nRye Provinces Idnore %\nCivil Defence Allotment\nOTTAWA (CP)-FIve of Canada's\n10 provinces hava not touched a\npenny ot more than $3,000,000 In\ncivil defence funds offered to them\nby the federal government In 1903\nand 1953, Maj.-Gen. F. F. Worthing-\nton said Tuesday,\nThe wartime tank expert, now\nnational civil defence co-ordinator,\nsaid Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Jalad could have had the\nmoney on a \"matching grant\" basis.\nHe explained that the federal government la willing to put up one\ncivil defence dollar for. every dollar put up by'the provinces.\nGen. Worthington said In an interview that Ontario and Quebec whose\nannual \"allotment\" of federal civil\ndefence funds is $492,008 and $483,-\n081 respectively, think that tha federal government should shoulder\nthe entire expense of civil defence\nacross tha country.\nYEARLY BA3I8\n\"They have refused to touch a\npenny of tbe money offered them,\"\nhe said. \"The grants are available\non a year-to-year basis but. do not\naccumulate. This means that they\ncould still draw from their 1953\nallotments.\"\n. New Brunswick and Nova Scotia\nhave not aiked. for any, federal\nfunds yet, the general said, j because they believe they should be\nallowed to raise their \"matching\"\nfunds in any way they see fit.\nThe federal government reserves\nthe right to approve or reitct the\nratio of provincial and. municipal\ncontributions, Normally, this split\nls fairly even, Ht cited a.typical\ncase: i\n\"The province decides on a $30,-\n000 civil defence projects. We .will\npay $15,000 and the remainder is\nusually shared by the province and\nthe municipality concerned.\"\nNew Brunswick and Nova Scotia want to handlt their own financial arrangements without any federal \"intereference,\" he said.\nThe case of Prince Edward Island\nis different, the genersl said. Although, the province has on paper\na $7874 yearly, quota in federal\nfunds, it has decided the amount is\nso small that lt can ba raised looally\nwithout federal assistance.\n80 PER CENT\nOf the other five provinces, British Columbia and Alberta have utll.\nized their full quota ot federal\nfunds. Saskatchewan and Manitoba\nhave requested and received about\n80 per cent and Newfoundland\nabout 40 per cent, tht general aald.\nTho annual quotas for tht- 10\nprovinces, totalling $1,445,699, '*re:\nNewfoundland'832,078, Prince\"Ed-\nword Island $7874, Nova Sc'dtia\n$65,606, New, Brunswick \u25a0 $45,050,\nQuebec $438,001, Ontario $493,00..\nManitoba $83,367, Saskatchewan\n$86,038, Alberta $88,848, and British Columbia $132,616. -j\nGen.. Worthington, commenting\nen the Ontario and Quebec contention that all civil defence expenditure's should be shouldered by tht\nfederal government said:\nRESPONSIBILITY   , C\n\"Wt tee! the\"- ll * diitinet.irt-\nsponsiblllty at each level of government and with every conumiT\nnity. This responsibility must,en-\ntail a financial outlay as well\"\nCivil defence officials had agreed\nthat Second World War experience\nin the United Kingdom showedtthat\npublic co-operation ls greatest when\nlocal communities are given a high\ndegree of responsibility for :their\nown defence. 7\nH.B. Oil, Gas Co. 3\nElects President    \/.:-'-J\n-WINNIPEG (CP) -Director, of\nthe Hudson's Bay 'Oil and Gas Co.\nLtd, Tuesday announced the election of R. C. Brown of Calgary as\ncompany president. He succeeds L.\nF. McCollum of Houston, Tex,, president of tha Continental Oil Com-,\npany ot Deleware, who becomes\nchairman of the board.        ..,.!\nMr, Brown, formerly vice-president,, coiitlnuos as a dlrector-Jand\ngeneral manager. \/.    7\nThe company ls owned 78 per\ncent by Continental Oil and 25, per\ncent by the Hudson's Bay Co. -   .\nCLASSIFIED ADS QET RESULTS\nit!\nSENSATIONAL\nNEWS!! '   .\nFor CAR OWNERS\nFIRESTONE'S\n_Tows. and Country- ;\nWIHTK MTMAD'- \"\nTIRES\nFor\nExcellent\nTraction\nIN SAWPUJT OR NATURAL RUBBER\nBUYNOWM\nAT\nSUPERIOR TIRE SHOP\n'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-'\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0'.: .-'.,   VOUR FIRI8TONE DEALER\nS07 Vernon St. Phone 1027\n-mmammmm^mmmmeam^^^mtsamsasm iil i\nr\\\nROLLER CHAIN DRIVE!'\nA\nS\nMORSE ROLLER CHAIN AND SPROCKETS\nIn tingle and multiple widths\n(Stock! Carried in Nelion) \\\nSILENT CHAIN DRIVES\n(Available lor Immediate Delivery in Standard-Widths)\nMALLEABLE CHAIN AND ATTACHMENTS\nin standard malleable and promal typos\n_ (Stocks Carried in Nelson)\nVIE BELT PULLEYS     :\nIn single and multiple grooves\n(Stocks Carried in Nelson)\nVIE BELTS\nfrom 30 inches to 30 feet in cUeumferenco\n(Stocks Carried in Nelson)\nFLAT RUBBER BELTING\n(Stocks Carried in Nelson)\nWe ore Specialists in transmission machinery\nand invite your enquiries on all types of drives.\nSPEED REDUCERS, ROLLER AND BALL BEARINGS,\nBABBITTED BEARINGS, COLLARS, COUPLINGS\nSPECIAL DISCOUNTS TO SAWMILL AND      .\nMINR OPERATORS\nDEALER  INQUIRIES WELCOMED -'.\nThe Selkirks Equipment\nD-r\nAND SUPPLY CO. LTD.\n520 Lake St. i > \\        Phone 1590\n7    \"Mort\" Browne, Manager\n^\u00bbPJM>\u00ab\u00bb^MM\u00ab--tJI_SHSIinilll HUE \u25a0 I IIIII\n\"'\u25a0\"'\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0  \u2014\n_\n .\n10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 14,1953\nGENTU\n' mmtiAeBim.it\/aUir    \u2022    \"\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\n: f&ct\/iM\n\\ronmnD-To-WAve\n_   mi\/*\/\n\u2666.*\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\n**\u00ab*\n\u2022. Mil NORMAL HMRf\n.%,. \u00ab\n.at       \t\neM&-V TON!   OJVs;\u00bb VQU \u00ab CU8T_H_.J-AQs?. rSHMANttMT\n**\"*\/\u00a3\nskis\nMa mi mi\nANN\nDRUGS LTD\u00ab,\nejpt\nMedicine Shows New View ol Atom\nAj Beneficent Friend to Cretins\n'    By ALVIN S. MeCfOY\nlAWRENCE, Kas. (APJHUWle\nMarilyn just wasn't making it,\n5 -from tlie day of her \/birth she\nhad been flatness, torpid, failing to\nrespond to light or to objects dangled before her. She didn't eiy\nnormally, wouldn't eat and had to\nbe force-fed. Fluids had to be\ninjected under her skin to keep\nher flabby little body from drying\nout.\n: Her abdomen wae swollen, her\niace eneresslonless.\n^.Hovr Marilyn was changed into\n| normal baby, rescued' from Me\nin a mental institution, is, part of\n.the eaciting story of o new set of\ntools that atomic science has given\nto medicine.\nThe tools are the radioactive isotopes.\nI An Isotope is a form of a chemi-\nial element differing slightly in its\njnolecular weight from the usual\nmake-up. Radioactive simply means\n1 that the isotope has been bombarded\nwith atomic particles until it ean\nemit radioactive rays.\nSeveral elements are being hammered into radioactive isotopes in\natomic reactors and under atom-\nsmashing machines like the cyclotron and betatron. Principal ones\nto date: Iodine, phosphorus, gold.\n. Children with baby Marilyn's\nsymptoms usually are diagnosed\naa having one of two conditions,\n'cretinism or mongolism.\nCretinism iB caused by lack of\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSolon\n'Phone MT\n6T6 Baker Bt\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nI      OPTOMETRIST   -\nVISUAL TRAtNlNG\nMedioal Arts Bulldlm)\nSuite 306 Phone 141\nITHOMPSON\n1    HINCRAL HOME\n?A\u00bb^Wsr\nH6 Kootenay St       Phone Ml\nI BRICKLAYING\nI    (Fire Brick Work)\n(Fireplaces)\n(Briek Veneer)\n\u2022 Block Laying\n\u2022 Tile Setting\no Glass Block Setting\n\u2022 Cement   Contractors\nPhones\n1553 and 1048\nFAME\nBRICK\nConstruction\nCo., Ltd.\nTrail, B. C.\n458 Buckna St.\nCapital Memo\nSocial Credit, said' Mr, Tomlinson,\nis \"it\", with a, capital \"I\" and \"so\nhere yte are,\" a government.\" Thus\nspoke North Vancouver's Mr. Tom'-'\nlinson, and he looked completely\namazed that, all of a sudden, he\nshould be part of a government.\nOppositionists were struck dumb\nat the Tomlinson explanation ot So-\ncial Credit,-and so, dumb were'they\nslruck,v,that not'one word did they\nutter. So surprised were they that\nthey were unable to oven snicker\namong themselves. !\nSir. Torhllnson- stayed with the\nhustings' talk he had earlier deplored, and announced that it\nthere's any loss of B.C. markets,\nwhy, blame the Coalition Government Well now,- Mr. Tomlinson,\nis it as easy as that?\ndevelopment of the thyroid gland,\nwhich hugs the Adam's-apple,' while\nthe baby is growing in its pother's\nbody. Untreated, it leads' to permanent brain injury and lifelong\nmental incompetence\u2014but it can be\ncured.\nMongolism is due to poor functioning of many glands. There is\nno known treatment. Victims usually die In childhood.\nMarilyn's family doctor suspected\ncretinism and referred her parents\nto Dr. Homer L. Hiebert In Topeka,\nKan.\nDr. Hiebert gave Marilyn some\nwater containing a tiny quantity of\nradioactive iodine. Mysteriously\nwhen Iodine is introduced into the\nbody it makes a rush for the thy.\nroid gland.. The amount of iodine\nthe gland will absorb Indicates\nhow big it is.\nGEIGER COUNTER\nBut how to tell how much Iodine\nis absorbed?. That's where atomic\nscience comes in.\nDr. Hiebert held'a geiger counter\nover Marilyn's thi-oat. In a few\nseconds it clicked out the story:\nShe had less than 10 per cent of\na thyroid. The diagnosis\u2014cretinism.\nThe rest was easy. Marilyn was\ndosed with hormone extracted from\nanimal thyroids' to' make up for\nwhat her own glad failed to produce.\nMarilyn was two and a half\nmonths old when she was taken to\nDr. Hiebert. Now, at 15 months,\nshe's a lively, happy and chubby\nlittle girl with every prospect of\nliving out a normal and useful\nlife.\nMost astonishing and most heartening to parents of babies like Marilyn ,is the way she made up for\nlost time after starting almost from\nGcVatch at two and a half months.\nDr. Hiebert- case report said:\n\"The child sat up at eight and a\nhalf months, developed her first\nteeth at 1-1 months. She stood at\nten and a half months,, holding,\nand began to say words at IS\nmonths, and stood alone at 12\nmonths.\"\nJust about what a baby normal\nfrom birth would be doing.\nTRAINING NEEDED\nRadioactive therapy, however, requires considerable training.\nPhysicians must learn diagnosis\nand management of patients. Hospitals must be equipped with isotope laboratories. There is a critical shortage of the physicist technicians who measure doses and install laboratories.\nDespite these handicaps, the use\nof isotopes is just about doubling\neach *\/esr. Eventually mony general practitioners may be able to\nuse \"tracer\" doses in diagnosis in\ntheir own offices..\nBesides spotting thyroid disturbances, isotopes are being used to\ntraok down brain tumors and certain types of heart disease; to alleviate some kinds of cancer and\nto treat a variety of other human\nailments. Dr. John B. Stansbury\nof the Harvard University school\nof medicine calls them \"the most\nimportant medical discovery since\nthe microscope.\"\nRadioactive phosphorus is used\nto treat a condition known, as\npolycythemia vera, an excess of\nred blood corpuscles, and leukemia\nor blood cancer.\nCancer of the male prostate gland\nand swellings in the abdomen and\nchest cavity are being treated with\nradioactive gold.\nRadioactive Iodine is being used\nin large doses to slow down overly\nactive thyroids\u2014sometimes making\nsurgery necessary. #\n' Treatment with these isotopes\nmust be carried on cautiously, however. The fays destroy cells, which\nlimits their use in cancer treat\nment.. -.-\u25a0'\" \u25a0'\n\u2014\u2014TBY JAMES K. NESBITT-\nVICTORIA\u2014Despite aU the talk\u2014and the writing-rthat\nthis has been a dull legislative session\u2014when we analyze\nsome of the sayings of MLAs it becomes indeed an extremely\ninteresting session. There has been, as a matter of fact, some\nvery good legislative debate, and some moments of intense\ndrama. It's just that it hasn't been as.rougtoand-tUmble as\nheretofore. '.-\u25a0-'.'\u25a0   ,\nTake, the speech of Social: Creditor, the Rev. Mr. Parker of Peace\nRiver, tor instance. It had lots of\ndrama in it. The Rev. Mr. Parker's\na big,' boyish type of man, always\nsmiling and genial, generous-hearted. .\n'He told us about the Peace River\ndistrict, that wonderful district of\ngrain fields, oil wells, coal fields.\nIt's a great place, is the Peace, said\nMr. Parker, but, do you know, Mr.\nSpeaker, there aren't any roads in\nthe Peace River district. Everybody\nlooked astonished at this. No roads?\nNo, Mr. Speaker, no roads, only\nmule trails. That's what Mr. Parker\nsaid\u2014and he should know.\nThen, suddenly, Mr. Parker remembered\u2014oh, yes, Mr. Speaker,\nthere's a bit of,pavement in the\nPeace River district, after all: 6.5\nmiles of pavement and it runs from\nDawson Creek to\u2014now, where do\nyou suppose, Mr. Speaker? Why, to\nthe liquor store in Pouce Coupe.\nMr. Parker said he'd sure like some\npavement to his church, but, oh, no,\nonly pavement to the liquor storel\nMr. Parker painted, a picture of\nsuch grim road conditions in the\nPeace River country that MLA's\ncould see the people up there, unless they trek back and forth between the liquor store, swallowing\ndust in summer, Up to their necks\nin gumbo in winter,\nAnd then, having rid himself of\nthe troubles of folk in the Peace\nRiver, Mr. Parker, went for a bit\nof a swim in the pool of politics.\nHe thrashed about, and insisted on\nkicking up a great splash all over\nthe Liberals. He didn't bother with\nthe CCF. He said, said Mr. Parker,\nyou know, Mr. Speaker, the Liberals have only four members left\nin the Hduse? And do you know\nwhy, Mr. Speaker? Mr. Parker an.\nswered his own question. Because,\nMr. Speaker, they've finally reaped\nwhat they've sown\u2014and Mr. Parker\nsaid, believe him\u2014It's a crop failure.\nWRITES MEMOIRS\nPARIS (AP)\u2014The Aga Khan announced Monday he has completed\nthe first'volume of his memoirs.\nThe work which he began last November will total about 120,000\nwords. The author, wealthy Moslem leader, said he has suggested\nto his, publishers that lt be called\n\"from the reigh of Victoria to the\nreign of Elizabeth.\"      \u2022\nColumbus was the first white man\nto sight the delta of the Orinoco\nRiver on his third voyage in 1498. Dally News.\nNorth Vancouver's S.C. Mr.'Tom-\nlinson said that to him it appears\nthat legislative speeches are noth\nlng but remnants of election\nspeeches. Mr. Tomlinson didn't\nthink he liked this fact\u2014and, of\ncourse, it is a fact. He ssid personal\nprejudices among politicians should\nbe left at home, on the hustings,\nnot dragged into the legislative\nchamber, that marble-pillared, blue\ncarpeted repository of the province's\nhighest law-makers.\nHowever, despite such high-\nsounding sentiments, Mr. Tomlinson\nhauled into the House some of the\nhustings' talk. He said oppositionists are always asking what's Social Credit, and that oppositionists\nsay Social Crediter's don't even\nknow themselves\".\n\"And do you?\" barked Burnaby's\nCCF Mr. Winch.\nMr. Tomlinson, figuratively, if not\nliterally turning his political nose\nup at Burnaby's Mr. Winch, said\nhe would explain Social Credit. It's\nquite simple, said J_r. Tomlinson.\nCCF Mr. Harding ofKaslo-Slo\ncan, the ablest legislative debater\nin the House, had,- apparently, taken note of Mr. Tomlinson's explanation of Social Credit, about it-being\n\"it\" with a capital \"I\" and all that\nsort of thing. Mr. Harding evidently\ndidn't think much of Mr. Tomlin.\nson's explanation, though he didn't\nmention Mr. Tomlinson.\nMr. Harding, all .frustrated-Uke,\nsaid he wishes to goodness that\nsomebody or other, anybody, could\nplease tell him what Social Credit\nmeans. Oh.oh, oh, how-he'd love>to\nknow, he being a curious type;\nThat's what he said. Here he goes\naround, he said, asking Social Crediters-what's Social Credit, and all\nhe gets from Social Crediters, ih\nan answer are a few flowery phrases\nwhich don't make any sense to him,\nno sense whatsoever. That's what\nMr. Harding said, Mr. Speaker!\nMr. Harding finally sat down,\nsaying that he supposed he'd neve-\nknow what Social Credit ls, and\nmeans\u2014so, what's the use of worrying, Mr. Speaker?\nReturned To Jail\nJAMESTOWN, N.D. (CP)\u2014Donald Blackwell. Argyle, 81, a Canadian soldier from Nelson,\" B.C.,\ncharged with kidnapping a 38-year-\nold expectant mother, has been declared sane after three weeks of\nmental examination at a North\nDakota state hospital'.\nThe charge was laid against Argyle, who was stationed at Regina\nsince early spring, after he allegedly hitched a ride with Mrs. Albert\nGeigle of Strasburg, N.I). A physician who later attended Mrs. Geigel\nsaid she had cuts on the hands and\nhad been assaulted.\nT. E. George of Jamestown, attorney for Argyle, who released the\nexamination result, said hospital\nauthorities indicated Argyle was a\n\"borderllne'Vcase.\nArgyle, who has been returned\nto jail at Linton, N.D., will appear\nIn court Oct. 28. Bail was set at\n$25,000.\nf uy, Sell, Trade the Classified Way\nCCF Down, Reds\nUp in Popular\nVole Preliminary\nOTTAWA (CP)\u2014The popular\nvote In the Aug. 10 general election was 5,640,837, chief electoral\nofficer Nelson Castohguay reported\nTuesday in a preliminary tabulation'.\nDespite the highest registration\nof qualified voters in Canada's history, the popular vote was under\nthe reeded 5348.971 of the 1949.\nelection, ,f\n.The survey, compiled -from reports of-.returning officers showed\nthe. Progressive Conservatives, Social Credit and Communists improving on their' 1948 showings,,\nwith the, Liberals and the CCF\nparty getting smaller popular votes.\n'Candidates running under miscellaneous affiliations sdao .dipped.\nThe preliminary c'ouht is based\non the number of unspoiled ballots counted for each candidate. It\ndoes not Indicate precisely the number who voted, since electors In\ntwo'double-member ridings epch\nhad two votes. Spoiled ballots,\nnot yet added up, might bring up\nthe turnout by another 85,000, sbqut\n1 per cent of the total.\nThe record registration this year,\nMr. Castonguay said, was 8,384,178.\nExcluding electors,in the two ridings where there was no voting\nand estimating the number who\nvoted in the double ridings, he calculated about 88. per cent of those\nable to exercise their franchise did\nso.\nThe 1953 registration compared\nwith the previous high of 7,893,629\nin 1949. The percentage voting in\nthat year was 74.' The high is 16\nper cent, in 1917, 1930 and 1945.,\nIn the 1953 popular count, the\nchief electoral officer's figures show\nthe Liberals with 2,819,038 against\n2,929,391 four years ago. -\nThe Progressive Conservatives\nobtained 1,751,673, up from 1,742,276\nin 1949.\nThe CCF, though the party Increased ita Commons representation substantially, slipped to 636,191\nfrom 7B2.410.\nSocial Credit made the biggest\ngain in votes, from 139,815 to 305,-\n080, chiefly on the strength of votes\nIn British Columbia.\nIn the case of Liberals, Progressive Conservatives and Social\nCredit, the count includes independents of those groups.\nThe Communists, who ran a record 100 candidates, increased their\nVote to 59,693 from 32,623 in 1949.\nIdleness Cause of Riots\nClaim Prison Wardens\n&Y\nNews of the Day\nRATE8: 30c line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates tn\nrequest Minimum two lines, 10% discount for prompt -payment\nFine supply of Mrs. Gray's and\nMoir's Chocolates at WAIT'S.\nDR. BROCK (Chiropractor). 32 yrs.\npractical experience, i- Phone 9.9.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL \u2014 8:00 P.M.\nSheffield Bronze Powder\u201420c tube.\nBURNS LUMBER GO,\nORDER YOUR FIREWOOD NOW.\n4-FT. SLAB OR CUT. PH. 330-L.\nFIGURE SKATERS\nSeason Tickets at Gilkers' Ltd,\nHunting and Fishing Lleenees.\nJack Boyce Men's Shop.\nBlack loam for sale, $3 yard delivered, while It lasts. Phone 1497-L.\nEAGLES DANCE THURS., ACT. 16\nEveryone welcome. Admission 75c.\n9 p.m. to 1 a,m.   Mello-Aires Orch.\nReserve Sat., Nov. 21st, for the\nTrinity Church Service Club bazaor,\nsale of home-cooking, snd tea.\nBROWNIE8 AND GUIDES BAKE\nSALE\nSat., Oct. 24th, at 9 a.m. at Mc & Mc.\nFor Sole\u20141937 Oldsmobile Convertible. Good rubber and engine.\nPhone 608-L-3 after 5:00 p.m.\nFurnaces and Stoves Cleaned\nPounder Chimney Service\nPhone 1541-L.\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 8HOP,\ntor Sale\u2014Late 1949 Ford Sedan.\nA-l condition. Can be seen at\nShorty's Repair Shop, Nelson, B.C.\nTrade your old tires at\n8UPERIOR  M0T0R8\nTire Department\n8UNDAY, OCT. 18 \u2014 7:30 P.M.\nDon Beattie and St. Paul's Boys'\nChoir in Sacred Recital in St. Paul's\nUnited Church. Silver collection.\nPatienti In Kootenay Lake General Hospital can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 144, Circulation Department\nStill a few patterns available In\nInlaid Linoleum at clean-out prices\n\u2014 79c and $1.79 per sq. yard, at\nHIPPERSON'S.\nYou need a Sardia Nurseries Catalogue as a guide to fair prices\nwhen buying plants. Free, on request. Sardis Nurseries, Sardis, B.C.\nSTART 8AVING\nInvestors' Syndicate of Canada Ltd.\nJan S. M. Harts\nR.R. 1 \u2014 Phone 289-X-3 \u2014 Nelson\nNELSON LITTLE THEATRE\nRegular meeting tonight. 7:45, at\n922 Fifth Street (corner Gordon\nRoad). All cordially welcome.\nSee the new Fawcett oil heater.\nTorrid   heat   at  its   best.   Priced\nfrom $76.50.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nH BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow It away. Watch work promptly done and fully guaranteed at\nreasonable prices.\nWomen's Institute meeting Fri.,\n16th, at 2:30 p.m\u201e Civic Centre.\nGuest speaker: Mrs. Ross. Visitors\nwelcome. \u2022  7\nStill a few patterns available in\nInlaid Linoleum at clean-out prices\n\u2014 79c and $1.79 per sq. yard, at\nHIPPERSON'S,\nCHURCH  OF THE  REDEEMER\nSunday next,  Harvest Services.\n8:00 a.m.\u2014Hoiy Communion\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Family Service\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Festal Evensong.\nKOOTENAY WE8T CCF.\nReserve Sat., Oct. 24, for a reception for Mr, and Mrs. H..W. Herridge in Memorial Hall, Nelson. \u2014\nSupper 8:30 p.m.. Social evening\nfollowing.\nGood selection of used Bedroom\nSuites and used Washing Machines\nnow in stock. 7- .\nWe buy and sell new. and used\nfurniture.   7\nHOME  FURNITURE   EXCHANGE\n41. Hall St,\nNot Enough\nCharacters\nSays Professor\n'TORONTO (dfy-r Dr., Sidney\nSmith, president ot fhe University of Toronto,, said Wednesday\nthere are not enough \"charicters\"\nin Canada.\nHe urged incoming students in\nan address at the fall opening of\nthe university to develop \"a crit\nleal spirit that can stand up\nagainst all the dreary platitudes\nand pallid insanities that assail\nus.\"\nHe said he was not praising\neccentricity for its own sake\u2014\n\"although Canada could easily\nsupport some more 'characters.'\"\n\"Every day we are adjured\nthrough,pictures, print and propaganda to pursue the same goals,\nadmire the same people, enjoy the\nsame pastimes, wear the same\nclothes and think the same\nthoughts. There are hundreds of\nclubs and societies\u2014political, social, professional. Industrial and\neven cultural\u2014wnich. tend to submerge the individual in the tide of\nconventional mediocrity.\n\"The most valuable member of\nsociety is the man or woman who\nhas Uie capacity for dissent, who\nsets up a resistance to mass move\nments and mass ideas.\"\nTOROtfcTQ (CP) \u2014 A United\nStates prison official Tuesday told a\nc ..ference of American prison wardens that enforced idleness is a\nmajor cause of prison riots. Coincident-ally, a Canadian warden told\nthe same group Monday that the\npolicy of paying prisoners tor\nprison work bad helped, keep Canada's eight federal: penitentiaries\nriot-free since 1932.     .\nRichard A. McGee, a member\nof the American Prison Association's committee that investigated\nthe recent wave of U. S. prison\nriots, said Tuesday that unless a\nprison had an. agricultural or industrial -program, about 40 per cent\nof the prisoners have no constructive work; to do. . '\nHe said the opposition of pressure\ngroups attempting to eliminate any\nkind ot competition has resulted in\nrestrictive legislation, both state\nand federal, which forces U. S.\nprisons to keep men in Idleness\nwhile they deteriorate physically,\nmentally and morally.\nR. M. Allen, warden of Portsmouth penitentiary In Kingston,\nOnt., told the American. Prison Society's 83rd congress of correction\nthat Canada had been free of riots'\nin federal prisons for 21 years be\ncause prisoners were paid for work\nIng and were fed in their cells Instead of large dining halls.\nHe said some rigid controls were\nrelaxed several years ago in Cana-\ndian prisons and the privileges still\nare a novelty.\nPrisoners in Canadian penitent!\narles carried their meals on trays\ntrom the kitchen to their cells.\nThe U.S. warden, questioned Mir.\nAllan about the policy of i'every\nprisoner on the payroll\" and the\nextent of political interference In\njail administration:\nFEW REPEATERS\n\"There is no political interference at all. in the administration\nof penitentiaries, and except tor\none warden ahd one superintendent\nall our wardens and superintendent-\nhave been In the service for more\nthan 30 years,\" he told them,\nUp'to seven or eight yeara ago,\nC a n a d a's penitentiaries were\n\"pretty well punatlve.\" Since the\ninstitution of recreation, regular\npay for prison work and a general relaxing of restriction, the percentage of repeaters bad dropped\nfrom 43 to 39.\nMr. Allan told the congress that\nprisoners receive 10, 15 or 20 cents\na day, depending on the grade\nthey are assigned on the basis of\ntheir attitudes and co-operation\nwith tbe jail staff and other prisoners.\nThree cents of each day's pay\nmust be set aside in comulsory\nsavings, The balance may be spent\nfor candy, tobacco and other extras from the prison canteen, including bread and sandwich spreads\nto give the prisoner a night snack\nin his cell. The money a prisoner is allowed to spend in the canteen must be earned from prison\nwork.\n\"The Coat\nof Mail\nm\nLegislature May\nRecess for\nRolston Funeral\nVICTORIA (CP)\u2014The legislature\nmay recess on the day of the funeral of Education Minister Tilly\nRolston who died Monday night,\nit was reported here Tuesday.\nMeanwhile, Premier W. A. C. Bennett expressed regret over the death\nof the minister in a statement:\n\"Mrs. Rolston is a great loss to\nthe government. She was the first\nwomen cabinet minister with port-\nfolion ot only In B.C., but in all\nCanada.\n\"She was an outstanding native\ndaughter of our province.\n\"Her life has been one of service.\nAfter she had raised her own family, she gave unsparingly of her\ntime arid energy to advancing in\npublic all that was best for protection of home and family life,\n\"Mrs, Rolston has been very ill\nfor over a year and the way she\nhas carried pn has been a great\nencouragement to all.\"\nThe premier gave no indication\nwho would replace Mrs..Rolston.\nAll opposition leaders expressed\nsympathy.\nCCF leader Arnold Webster said:\n\"British Columbia will long remember the ready smile and friendly greeting of Mrs. Rolston. She was\na vital part of the community.\"\n\"Her enthusiasm for life and her\nspirited advocacy of causes in which\nshe believed affected all with whom\nshe worked.\"\nHe said the fact she occupied the\nposition of minister of education\nwas a \"well-earned tribute to one\nwho hsd spent'so many years in so\ntive public service.\"\nLiberal leader Arthur Laing said\nMrs. Rolston had made a great contribution to her oity'ahd her province.\n\"In politics she was a great\ntrouper.\" ,\n\"For two years she carried a load\nwihch would hove made lesser persons quit cold.\"\n\u00ab Dr. Larry Giovando, lone Progressive Conservative in the house said\nshe was a \"womait, of Jier convictions.\"\n. \"She made a great contribution\nto the woman's realm in B. C.\nthrough the various organizations\nwhich she headed.\"\nDuke Due for a Deed\nOf Seeing at Kitimat\nSTORM WINDOWS AND\nCOMBINATION DOORS\nWe can equip your home with\nfuel-saving storm sash and.combination- doors; Don't delay, have\nthat extra comfort now. Just call\nT. H. WATERS A CO. LTD.\nPhone 156 \u2014 101 Hall St \u2014 Nelion the east, now pours westward to\n\u2022   By  DAVE  8TOCKAND\nVANCOUVER (CP)\u2014Let Prince\nPhilip toss away his schedule: give\nhim a hard hot, a sturdy pair, of\nboots, a good guide and use of an\nairplane.\nDo all this and there still wouldn't be time for him to take in\neverything at the Kitimat' aluminum project on British Columbia's\nindustrial frontier. ITie scenery\nalone could keep a man busy for\nweeks, just looking,\nKitlmat ls the name of the tidewater township where the Aluminum Company of Canada's smelter-\nwill begin turning out its first,\naluminum ingots shortly before the\nDuke of Edinburgh arrives in Canada July 29.\nBut Kitimat means many other\nthings, too.\nThere is a hollowed-out mountain\nat Kemano, encasing the huge turbines which will power the $450,-\n000,000 project. The hole carved in\nits heart is big enough, probably,\nto hold .much of Buckingham Palace. '..-.-.' ' '\u25a0,'\"\u25a0\nThere is the 40-mile transmission\nline over the mountains-from Kemano to Kitlmat, built by men who\npitched camp in deep snow, in the\nSummer months, tb get it over the\nmile-high summit of Kildala pass.\nGo east from tidewater into the\nland of lakes with the Indian names\nof Ootso, Tahtsa and Eutachuk, to\nthe grand canyon of the Nichako\nRivers ' . 6\nBottling up the canyon is the\nbiggest dam of its kind In the Commonwealth. So the water from these\nlakes, which nature made flow-to\nprovide the reservoir of power that\"\nis the No. 1 requirement in the production of aluminum.\nAnd there ore the men, thousands\nof them, who are doing the work\nwhich is changing Kitlmat from\nblueprint to reality, and there's the\ncountry they are challenging.\nIf he goes by air, Prince Philip\nwill get a 400-mile flight north\nfrom Vancouver over, the fiords and\nforests of the snaking British Columbia cpastlnie .\nThere are mountain peaks\naplenty at Kitlmat, where black\nbears amble down to the construction camp cookhouses for a morning snack, But there's also the\nKitimat valley, big enough and flat\nenough to hold a modern city of\n50,000 popuiation once the trees are\ncleared and maximum production\nreached.\nAt Kemano the mountains rear\nstraight out of the sea. And from\nthem waterfalls plunge hundreds\nof feet into the Pacific from cloud-\ncovered glaciers never touched by\nman.\nKitimat has received its Incorporation and today has a reeve and\ncouncil like mtich older and less\nspectacular communities.\nBut judging by the men turning\nKitimat into an aluminum kingdom, he needn't worry about running into any stuffy receptions.\nAhd if he has a bit of time to\nspare at either Kitimat or. Kemano\nhe can try his luck at fishing.\nMaybe he'll ctrtch one of those\n49-pound salmon the workers have\nbeen hooking these lost few years,\na few hundred yards from their\nbunkhouses.\n__-\nfrom the\nNews Front\nBy J. M. ROBERT8, Jr.\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nThe best that anyone may be\nable to do now about the Trieste\nterritory may be to run in into a\nunified internationalized z.one,\nbringing Yugoslavia and Italy together In its management Insteed\nof trying to divide it between them:\nThis would have nothing to do\nwith the original peace treaty idea\nof an independent free territory\ngoverned under United Nations\nauspices. Russia brought that up\nagain Tuesday in the UN. She can\nobstruct things like that too easily.\nYugoslav and Italian participation In management, however,\nmight turn out to be a horse of\nanother color. Britain and the\nUnited States Might even be able\nto step out, If the things were\nworked out' right leaving only\nFrance as mediator. Or Austria,\nan important commerce - shed for\nthe-port, might be included.\nTROUBLE SPOTS \u2022\nIt's not a vers* appealing idea.\nThe world has had enough Dan-\n-igs and Tangiers, always Potential trouble spots.      ,   ;'\/\nThe Western powers would much\nprefer to see the thing settled\nalong present lines with Yugoslavia retaining zone B, south of\nthe ancient, and Italy formalizing her present de facto incorporation of the city\u2014zone A\u2014within\nher political and economic system.\nBut'Tito says, he'll start moving\ntroops Into zone A at the same\ntime Italy does. Most people think\nhe's bluffing. They think he's fighting for a bargaining pojftjcii)\". $iey\nremember that British and American troops will still be there.\nDANGER0U8\nThe trouble is that it's too dangerous to rely on estimates which\ncould turn out to be wrong in such\na , critical. situation. It Tito can't\nwin his bargaining position, main-\ntehace of face might force him\nto take dangerous gambles.\nMany Yugoslavs, including Tito,\nhave indicated there is a bargaining position,\nThey indicate they are not so\nmuch actually concerned with possession of' the port as with two\ncorollaries:\nFirst and above all, they dislike\nseeing Italy with a bridgehead on\nthe eastern side of the Adriatic,\nand fear that it would be used\nprimarilyMn an attempt to push\nItalian control down the coast into\nzone B and even possibly beyond.\nThey haven't forgotten Mussolini's\ninterest lh Albania and the eastern\nshore during the last war.\nSecondly, the port iself is lm.\nportant to Yugoslav trade, and\nthey want access-to it. A friendly,\nagreement \u2014 which could -prove\nvery profitable for Italy \u2014 would\nsatisfy Tito on this point.\nGUARANTEES\nIf, there were some means, then,\nof giving Yugoslavia satisfactory\nguarantees against what she calls\nItalian expanlonism, and If \"Italy\nwould renounce claims to the Italian settlements in zone B, agree,\nment along present lines would\nnot seen too difficult.\nBut the matter has now gone\nbeyond the limits of a problem of\nactualities, and the politics, cultures, national pride and irredent-\nism of both nations has been in\ninvolved. Both governments have\ngot themselves into positions which,\nshould they get caught compromising, would cause them serious political trouble at home.\nThe danger of putting their\narmed forces face to tape at the\nroadblocks which now divide the\nterritory has become only tod obvious. Britain and the United\nStatea originally had In mind that\nIt would face the two countries\nwith' the necessity of a practical\nsolution on the basis of the status\nquo, Tempers are too high for that\nhow.\n. Infants should be Immunized\nagainst whooping cough, diphtheria,\nlockjaw and smallpox by the, time\nthey are six months old.,    -'\n. Our Stock of\n\"KNIT SHIRTS\"\nHAS ARRIVED\nKeep comfortable in a\nCOAT OF MAIL\nPrice\n\u00ab\u2022*\nEmory's Ltd.\n' the Man's Store\n571 Baker        Phone 31\n'53toDateHa$\nBeen Good Year\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Canada's\neconomy, continued to grow in the.\nfirst half of 1953, chiefly because\nCanadians themselves were buying\nmore, the Bank of Montreal says in\nits current business review. y\nIn the first six months of the yeari\nproduction, employment and retail,\ntrade teached peek levels, but lower farm prices and stiff competition\nabroad hormed some industries,\n\"Nevertheless taking the ecom\nomy as a whole, good fortune has'\nfar outweighed bad,\" the review\nsays.\nOne yardstick of this growth ll\nthe increase in employment, the\nauthors explain. Only 90,000s per-\nsons\u2014or 1.6 per cent of Canada's\nlabor force of 5,500,000\u2014#ere looking for jobs in July,\nPAY RATES HIGHER\nMoreover, 20 per cent less workers were on short-time ,and rates of\npay continued to rise to each an\naverage-of $1.36 an hour at midyear.\n\"With more people working more\nhours at higher rates, the total pay\nof air wage and salary earners was\nup 10 .per jentover last yete.\nthe review notes. ..\nCanadians not only earned more,\nhowever. Their dollar also bought\nmore\u2014at least early in the year,\nPaced by falling prices of meat\nand fish, the cost of living droppi '\nslowly but, significantly, and\nMay was Vk 'per cent lower thai\n12 months before.\njaljiiigvfarm prices, living fan\nera; less to spend, ^eem partly\nMamie for an-18%-per cent drop ii\nfarm   equipment   output   betweer\nthe first and second quarters of th\nyear, the authors say.\nFLEURY'S   Pharmacy\nRote\n.03 Baker St\nMed. Arts BIK.\nPHONE \u00bb\nAccurately\nCompounded\nPrescription!\nPhone tl\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED d REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n616 FRONT ST. PHONE 61\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n\u2022-\u2022 at tho.       .\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 146.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountant!\nAuditors\nS?t Baker 8t Phone \u00a3M\nw\nIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\n'   PONTIAC - BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nBody anfi Paint Work a Specialty\nHavo the Job bone' Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815*\nEUiion'i\nU-BAKE BREAD MIX\nMakes delicious bread the easy\nand quick way.\nTry a paokage today\nELLISON  MILLING\n4 ELEV- CO. LTD.\nTUSSY SPECIAL\nMidnight Cologne, 2 oz.\nMidnight Lotion, Z oz,\nBOTH FOR 75c\nSold Only at Vour Rexall Store\nCity Drug\nCOMPANY\n\"Nelson's Modern Pharmacy\"\nP1HON.-M\n,1.\n\u25a0 ':.'.\u25a0\u25a0\n^^^^m\\WaaWfii^^^^M^ii^i^i\n\u25a0   ''    \u25a0-.-,  ;'-'-7..-7-\n'\",'\u25a0\u25a0\n:\"'\u25a0:;,,!\n_____\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1953_10_14","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0427876","@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":"1953-10-14 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1953-10-14 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"Nelson Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0427876"}