{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0425818":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-02-09","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1951-09-29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0425818\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" \u2014,\u2014.\nWorld Markets\nTo Be Opened'\nCanadian Gold\nPROVINCIAL\nLI 8 Hi\nmitt $fetn0\nu\n^\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY: Cloudy tonight ana\nSaturday. A few showers overnight\nand tomorrow. Little change in\ntemperature. Winds light. Low to-\nnight and high tomorrow at Cranbrook, Crescent Valley 40 and 60.\nOutlook tor Sunday cloudy\nm\nNELSON, B. 0\u201e CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, SEPT. 29, 19S1\n*>.\n?&>\/*\n5 Cents a Copy\nNo, 135\n**'%lyjXpand Creston Hop Qrowing;\nOTTAWA, Sept. 28 (CP)\u2014After-months, of negotiation,\nCanada today finally obtained the right to sell her gold oh the\nworld's free markets. But it appeared likely she will exercise that right only to a limited degree.\nA Cabinet decision on Canada's policy is expected early\nnext week, following decision by the International Monetary\nFund in Washington today to allow its 49 member countries\nfull freedom in their external\nGenerals Confer.\nOn Peace Talks\nReds Insist qn\nKaesong for Talks\nTOKYO, 8ept 29 (8aturday)\n(AP) \u2014 The future of the bus\npended Korean truce talks appeared today to hinge on confer\nences between .Generals Omar\nBradley and Matthew B. Ridgway,\nBradley, chairman of the United\nSlates Joint Chiefs of Staff, flew\ninto Tokyo last night tb discuss \"all\naspects of the situation\" with tbe\nUnited Nations Supreme Commander,\nHe came to see Ridgway at a\ntime when the Korean armistice\ntalks seemed hopelessly bogged\ndown and the Communists were\nmaking an increasing challenge to\nAllied jet air 'power.\nThere was speculation in, Washington that Bradley brought new\nhigh-level decisions, possibly involving new military operations\nevent of a total collapse of truce\nnegotiations.\nIn some Tokyo quarters, belief\nwas expressed that Bradley might\nhave been sent out to get a little\ncloser to Ridgway. It *a. recalled\nthat Ridway's Thursday message to\nthe Reds, proposing moving the\ntruce site from Kaesong to a village\nin np-mans-land, w\u201es expected\nWednesday, but was delayed a day\n\u2014reported to have been for revision.\nThe Peiping radio by late Friday\nnight still had not replied to Ridg\nways proposal to move the conference site, However, Red propaganda\nbroadcast tried \u2014 as usual \u2014 to\nblame the Allies for the breakdown\nin the talks,\nINSIST ON KAESONG\nThe Reds Friday still were Insisting on Kaesong as the meeting\nplace and showed no sinns of let\nting up on the old charge that the\nAllies had repeatedly violated the\nneutraJ;;one. at.that spot .-. \u2014\n:.'->One.'Of'lhe li.N. truce delegates,\nRear Admiral Arleigh Burke, flew\nto the U.N: advance camp at Munsan\nFriday aftenfoon. There was no Indication that his leaving Tokyo had\nany bearing on the question of re\nsuming negotiations,    .\ngold transactions.\nGovernment officials, faced with\nthe tremendous complications of\nfree-market sales after 20 years of\ngovernment supervision over exr\nports, said two main problems had\nto be considered: .'\".'.\n-1. The extreme delicacy of the\ngovernment's position in trying to\nmaintain \"a firm hand\" over gold\nexports. -V\n- 2. The question of returns to the\nproducers in view of the fact that\n' the. free'markets now may become\n\"flooded\" with gold, forcing prices\nown and making benefits to producers \"dubious.\"\nHowever, the government likely\nwill allow a limited proportion of\nCanada's annual $140,000,000 gold\nproduction to reach the so-called\n\"premium , or industrial\" markets\nwhere bar or fabricated gold earlier\nthis year brought as much as $51\n(U.S.) a fine ounce, compared with\nthe;funds fixed price of $35 (U.S.).\nMain reason underlying the offl-\ncails fears of a voluminous flow of\n.gold to the free.market is the possibility that it may upset International currency stabilization and lead to\nprice-cutting competition on gold\nbetween producing companies.\nAnother Is the funds own view\nthat increasing amounts of fabricated gold are finding their way Into\nthe hands of hoarders\u2014buying from\nthe free markets \u2014 thus draining\nthe gold from reserves needed to\nback up currencies.\nStill to be reviewed, too, is the\ngovernment's position on the main-\n- tenance of subsidies to marginal\nmines which may be given the right\nto sell production oh free markets\nIn Paris, Bombay and Hong Kong.\nThese mines may be given an alternative: Either the r ;M to sell\n, . gold at premium prices for contihu-\n: ation or subsidies. The current sub-\n\u25a0 sidy plan ends Dec. 31. No decision\n, has yet been taken on renewal.\nStarted in 1948, the subsidies have\ncost the government about $10,000,-\n000 a year. This year, the payments\nmay run to about $11,000,000.\nnn\nUN. To Act\nIn Iran Crisis\n.   . LONDON, Sept. 28 (AP)\u2014Britain\n, announced tonight she had urgently asked the United Nations Security Council to order Iran to comply\n.'with the findings of the Interna\ntional Court of Justice In the oil\nrow between the two countries.\nI   A British Foreign \"Office state\nAnient said the Security Council will\nBe asked to call on IraVi to cancel\nra order expelling some 350 Brit-\ntish oilmen from the nationalized\n\\ Anglo-Iranian  Oil  Company's re-\nI finery at Abadan.\n!   The statement said Britain considers   the   oil   crisis   a. \"matter\nlikely to endanger the maintenance\n-of international peace and security.\"\nI The statement added that Britain\nis \"reluctant to take any action\n; which might have the effect of\n-weakening 'the authority of the\nI United Nations, on whose principles\n:their (the British Governments)\npolicy is based,\"\nBritain warned that meantime,\npending U.N. consideration of the\nease, she will take \"all practicable\nsteps\" to,stop Iran from selling oil\nriow in the huge Abadan storage\ntanks to \"third parties.\"\nThe Iranian Government has\nI claimed it is. negotiating with countries including Afghanistan, Czechoslovakia, and Poland for sale of\n;the oil.\ny.\n^\/ples Shown at Fall Fair\nrr\nClocks Go Back\nAn Hour Tonight\np Anyone who arrives at church\n^Sunday an hour before the service\n\"will have forgotten to set his clpck\ni Saturday night.\nI Yes, Saturday midnight is the\n'time Standard Time is restored in\nBritish Columbia.\nI It may be a chore setting clocks\nback, but you can gain an hour's\nSleep lost last April 29 when Daylight Saving went into effect.\n[o Have II,\"\nSays of Seaway\nBy The Canadian Press\nPrime Minister St. Laurent tald\nFriday   night   the St Lawrence\nseaway    project   will be carried\nout, but the manner has yet to be\neettled.\n\"We are going lo have it,\" he told\nreporters at Quebec, where he arrived after a conference on the project with President Truman earlie.-\nin the day in Washington.\nThe prime minister told Truman\nthat Canada is willing to build the\nseaway on Its own if the American\ngovernment or appropriate state\nauthorities joined it in developing a\ncorollary water power project, said\na Washington dispatch. '\nA statement issued in the U.S. capital said both men agreed it would\nbe \"most desirable\" to undertake\nthe two projects jointly along the\nlines of the U.S.-Canadian agreement of 1041.\nCongress has been arguing over\nthe multi-million-dollar undertaking for 20 years. Legislation to authorize it at this session was pigeonholed in a House of Representative\ncommittee.\nPresident Truman's qualified approval of a Canadian-built seaway\nwas seen iri Ottawa as giving that\nproject an okay In principle but also putting the squeeze on Congress\nfor fast action* on.a joint U.S.-Canadian scheme.\nMr. St. Laurent warned that the\nvast plan to open the Great Lakes\nto deep-sea shipping would take a\nlong time.     \u2022\n\"Like Rome, this won't be built\nin a day,\" he said.\nWallgren Resigns\nAs U.S. Power Head\n, WASHINGTON. Sept. 28 (AP)\u2014\nThe long-expected resignation of\nHon. C. Wallgren as chairman of\nthe Federal Power Commission was\naocepted \"wilh genuine regret\" today by President Truman, his longtime friend.\nIt is effective Oct. 1.- \u25a0 .'\u2022  \u25a0\u25a0\nIn submitting his resignation!\nfirst tendered last Spring, the onetime Washington State Governor\nsaid only that his desire to resipn\nwas' prompted by \"personal and\nprivate reasons.\"\nPeron\nLeaders\nAVENUE.OF yiNESshown here -is.     mento,   Calif.,   general 'superintendent,\npart of Greston's-11.2-acre experimental      shipped a load of3u.p$ tp; the* tjoagtte-\nh6p~cfdp-Which'.has\" been, bo successful,'   ycently for sajnplingA.A-^smji!!'jsataptyi.-\nthat 10 ac'r,es':wltl ',be;.pla3We'c|;:n-$i|^ il^a'TJisplay- at th%.\nfor.  harvesting' next   year'. * Bl@f . Hop! . . G'feston VaHey;.'\"Jall Fair^-JH. M-. B'uckna '\nCompany, under .G. !E..Miller of\/Sacra*-      photo.  !     '\u25a0[ \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0'\"... '\u25a0  \"'\nFined on C.'garet\nSmuggling Charge\nWINDSOR. Ont, Sept. 28 (CP)~\nA Winnipeg truck driver, Peter MJ-\nneault, was at the receiving end of\nsome swift justice today after he\ntried to smuggle 1,000 Americi\ncigarets jnto the.country.\nHe was apprehended in his\nsmuggling attempt at 9 a.m. and had\nappeared in court, pleaded guilty\nand been fined $50 and costs by\nMagistrate A. W. MacMillan by\n10:45 a.m.\nCVaieA. 3&vbIl\nNelson\t\nThurs.\n_.  7.88\n\"Well in Hand\"\nEmergency situation ' In apple\norchards of Creston district had\neased considerably Friday, and\nCrestonltes described the situation !as \"well- IK' hand,\"    \u25a0\u2022'.'.-'\nAppreciation \"of. the Nelson\noffer to send a caravan Of volunteer pickers was expressed by\nBoard of Trade' officials. In telephone conversation with H. D.\nHarrison, Nelson board president.\n\"If the weather .Continues\nfavorable, we will manage without aid,\" President Harold Langston said. However, If It was\nfound help . was needed, they\nwould not hesitate to call on\nNelsoii. .-\u25a0-..\nThe emergency situation was\ncreated by the threat-of a heavy\ndrop In the Macintosh apple\ncrop. Sun-dried stems. swelling\nafter rain were breaking.\nStudents were called from\nschools as pickers, and Wednesday stores, and businesses closed\nall day to allow owners and\nstaffs members to go to the\norchards.\nCreston Fair Crowd\nNotes Indian Exhibits\n; CRESTON, B.C., Sept 28\u2014Residents and. visitors crowded-Creston Civic Centre to see the many displays on opening\nday of the \"annual Creston Fall Fair. Highlight of the first\nday was the' colorful Kootenay Indian Exhibit, featuring\nmodern and- ancient wearing apparel, fire-arms; beadwork\nand-riding-gear. (The Fair continues Saturday:)\nThe Department of-Agriculture, both-'Provincial and\nFederal, displayed\". a grand variety of cereal gfain3 3nd\nfruit crops. An entemological exhibit of district insects was\ncentre ot much comment. -,      ..........\nThe school display,'individual and classes, were better\nthan last year; with students holding 50 percent of the regular\nentries as well. . ;\u25a0>. *    .\nWinnerswill be announced over the weekend.\nDetail of Tour Train\nMakes for Comfort\nSHIPYARD PICKETS\nTAKE UP POSITIONS\nVANCOUVER, Sept. 28 (CP.) \u2014\nPickets who clashed with members\nof a rival union at Celtic Shipyards\nhere Thursday took up their positions at the boat works again today. .. ,. \u2022 \u25a0 \u25a0<.'.-,\nAn order was issued in Supreme\nCourt Thursday by Mr. Justice J, V.\nC1 y n e, restraining the:.'Marine\nWorkers and Boilermakers Industrial Union, from picketing the\nyards.\nC. H. Gillespie, company, manager,\nsaid the Marine Workers Union apparently had not yet been- served\nwith- the order.-\n\u25a0 Two men were injured in yesterday's clash, and -William- L.: White,\npresident of the Marine Workers\nUnion, was charged with assault.\nThe trouble occurred when mem.-\nbers of the Carpenters' Union,\ngranted bargaining rights , at : the\nplant after the rival union had been\ndecertified, attempted to pass the\npicket line to report for work.\nA picket was injured when allegedly knocked down and run over by\nan automobile containing a number\nof Carpenters' Union ipombers.\n. Carpenters employed at the shipyard did h6t report for Work after\nthe incident, ahd Gillespie said today, still declined to pass through\nthe'picket line,    ,,-,_. .. ,. \t\nREDS MAY TRY\nTO AVOID WAR\nBut for Tactical\nReason Only\nPearson Declares .\nMONTREAL, Sept. 2B (CP) -\nExternal Affairs Minister Pearson\nsaid tonight it may well be that\nRussia, faced with growing Western strength and unity, \"will now\nwish ... to avoid conflict.\"\nBut, he added In a major speech,\nit would be a purely tactical decision. The Soviet would pursue\nher aim of world rule through\nother channels, Including more and\nmore \"hypocritical\" peace appeals,\nAt least until the end or 1954,\nhe suggested In a speech prepared for (he National Council\nof Women, there will be acute\ndanger. There would be danger\nfor years after that\nTo his suggestion that the West's\nrearmament may already have\nachieved its .primary purpose of\ndeterring general aggression, even\nthough any letdown could be fatal,\nhe added these sobering thoughts:\n\"We are competing in both; a\nsprint and a marathon . V .it may\nbe that if we have achieved our\ndefence, objectives-by,* say, ;the end\nof 1954,\u00bb.we will have surmounted\nthe hunt acutely dangerous pel-tod.\n\"That, however, may be followed\nby the;:';lohger-term: phase of the\nconilic(,:the marathon race, which\nmay last for many years., During\nthis period, we must refuse to\nyield to the temptation to adopt\nthe policies or even the tactics of\nthose who would destroy us:-..;':\n\"We. must maintain, not as an\nemergency measure but as a normal part of national life, the level\nof defence effort required. But we\nmust also prove to 'our peoples, that\nwif tl$lizatf6h\"ts,*ortH \"thil\"'eff oft\nWhite concentrating on .thi. immediate danger\"'0f*, military, attack,\nwe must hold' out the hope \u2014\u25a0\nindeed, do more merely than -hold\n(t out\u2014of further social and economic progress.\"\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii\nKing Continues\nTo Gain Strength\nLONDON, Sept. 28 (Reuters)-\nThe King continued to gain\nstrength today, tnough doctors\nstill warned he would not pass\nthe danger period before the end\nof next week.\nThe ninth bulletin since Sunday's operation on the King's\nlung said he had had another\ncomfortable night and was making steady progress.\nThe King's lung resection could\nbe complicated by secondary\nhaemorrhage within a few days\nof Sunday's operation, one London doctor said,, but the official\nbulletins Indicated that nothing\nof that nature had taken place.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLull in Korean\nBalflefronf\nPurge Begins\nState of Internal War Declared;\nMilitary Rebels Are Ordered Shot\nBUENOS AIRES, Sept. 28 (CP) \u2014 An Army communique said tonight that most of the.leaders of the toisuccess-\nful revolt against President Juan Peron have been arrested.\nUnofficial sources added that a total of about 80 persons were\nbeing detained. \u25a0*' .?-,\nThe Army Ministry said General Benjamin Meriende'z,\nco-leader of the attempted coup, was among those under\narrest.\nW.I.U., District\nOperators\nReach Agreement\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Sept. 28 -\nRequiring only the formality of\nunion membership ratification, (\ncontract was signed here today between representatives of Kootenay\nlumber operators and the Woodworkers' Industrial Union of Canada, bargaining agents for the\nmajority of Kootenay lumber\nworkers.\nIt was a surprise move following\nunion charges of breach of faith in\nnegotiations by the Southern Interior Lumber Operators Association \/two weeks ago In connection\nwith contract renewal since the\nnew contract we(s engaged without\nbenefit of the Piovi'Hii.'l Owntois\nAssociation.\n-'Terms Include unspecified wage\nIncrease, a night shift differential,\nrevision of categories, and opening\nof agreement.for wage revision in\nMarch. The pact is retroactive to\nSeptember 1 when the: most recent\ncontract expired,\nKootenay operations In which\nInternational Woodworkers of America are certified as bargaining\nagents^ are not affected . by this\nagreement technically, since renewal of their contract, which also\n.expired AHS^*3^J1tl'll;3 in. the\nstage\" bit conciliation: at .'the coast, '\nThe hew W.I.UC. .agreement Is'\nbeing registered' -with' the Provincial Labor Relations Board.\nMONTREAL, Sept 28 (CP) \u2014\n( The   10-car  special  train   which\nwill carry Princess Elizabeth and\nthe Duke of Edinburgh on their\ncross-country tour Is being tested\ndally  In  the   Point St.  Charles\nshops of the Canadian  National\nRailways. . \u25a0\nThe. rear, car Is for the use of\nthe Princess and her husband. The\nsuit is made up of two bedrooms.\na dressing room and a bathroom.\nThe bed and dressing rooms of the\nPrincess are painted shell pink and\nhave brown carpets. Blending with\nthis scheme are dust pink damask\ncoverings and taffetta drapes. The.\nbathroom is decorated with mauve\ntile and white fixtures.\nIn the Duke's bedroom 'he drapes\nand coverings are of blue and white\nGlazec Chintz. .The woodwork is\ncream and a light brown carpet\ncovers the floor.\nBack of the sleeping accommodation is a sitting room. Its main\nfeature is a special telephone installed'for the Princess'.'.convenience.\nThe room, has an ivory ceiling and\nan' over-ail carpet of light brown.\nThe second car borrowed from the\nGovernor-General contains the sitting and dining rooms. The walls are\nsurf green, with furniture coverings\nand drapes of green.\nThe,, dining room, built to resemble a room in a small apartment,\nseats 12. The royal couple will be\nable to keep track of their tour as\nmaps of various areas can be pulled\ndown like blinds. In this car is the\noffice of LL-Gen, Sir Frederick\nBrowning, secretary to the Princess.\nA safe has been Installed in car\nNo 2 to safeguard the Princess'\njewels between formal appearances.\nOne baggage car has been,trans\nformed' lito an efficient tailor shop.\nA steam-pressing machine and all\nequipment .\"or making repairs to\ntorn or rumpled clothes has been\ninstalled.\nChef Ernest Lemleux will be In\ncharge of serving the food. W. Not-\nley, chief steward, said that enough\nfood and wines have been stored\nfor the entire tour. He is chief\nsteward for Canada's Governor-\nGenerals and has held this position\nfor 14 years\nThe train itself, unlike the royal\nblue one which carried the King\nand.Queen across Canada 12 years\nago,* is not painted a particular\nshade. The Canadian Pacific cars\nare red and the' Canadian National\ncars are green.\nCoast Forest Closure\nMay End Monday\n(VANCOUVER, Sept.. 28 (Ci3) \u2014\nThe Coast district forest closure \u2014\nwhich enters Its 10th day Saturday .\u2014 may end. Monday, it was reported here tonight\n\"The present situation in the\nwoods is good,\" said a Forest Service spokesman.\n\"The ban will probably be lifted\nMonday after Forest Minister Kenney reviews conditions.\"\nTwenty-three fires are still burning in the Vancouver Foretst district but all are under control.\n\"Steady rain throughout the district has kept the fire danger\ndown,\" said the spokesman... \"Even\nin the few places that- are still a\nlittle dry,--damp nights have reduced tbe haiard.\"\nBy JOHN RANDOLPH\nU.S. - EIGHTH ARMY' HEADQUARTERS, Korea, Sept. 29 Saturday (AP) \u2014 A lull settled over the\nrain-swept Korean battlefront Friday. It contrasted sharply with the\nrecent bitter and inconclusive battle\nfor \"Heartbreak Ridge.\" l\nRed probing attacks ^Thursday\nnight and early Friday tapered off,\nInfantrymen of both sides appeared to be taking a breather from\nthe bloody fighting on the slopes of\nthe Eastern sector.\nU.S. and French soldiers were dug\nin on the sides of the ridge, North\nof Yanggu, but the Communists still\nheld the craggy crests,\nTo   the  East  of  the   ridge,  35\nAmericans  were  rescued  from\nCommunist trap by a task force of\nU.S. and French troops.   ,\nAP Correspondent Stan Carter re\nported   that  one  member  of  the\npatrol  crept down the bed  of\ncreek   and   escaped.   His   report\nbrought the rescue task force.\nElsewhere on the front, only\npatrol skirmishes were reported.\nThe worsening weather discouraged air action. However, fighter-\n\u2022bombers from the U.S. FlfOi Air\nForce pounded Communist rail\ncentres in, East and West Korea.\nMount Etna Erupts\nCATANIA, Sicily, Sept. 28\n(Reuters)\u2014Mount Etna erupted\nsuddenly late tonight A thin\nstream of lava was pouring from\na small crater just over 7000 feet\nup on the Northeastern slopes of\nthe 10,000-foot volcano.\n\"tj\nD.V.A. Invites\nCanadian legion\nTo Prove Charges\nTORONTO, Sept. 28 (CP) - The\nDepartment of Veteran's Affairs to\nday invited the Canadian Legion to\nprove charges of \"sausage-mill'\ntreatment of war veterans in DMA.\nhospitals.\nThe charges were levelled In St.\nCatherines Thursday night by Arthur Padbury, chairman of' the\nLeglon's'tPrbvincial Service Bureau,\nat a meeting of Legion members\nfrom four Niagara district centres.\nSome 350 Legionnaires attended the\nmeeting with two members of\nParliament in the audience.\nVeteran's Minister Lapointe in Ottawa said \"every facjlity\" would be\nprovi&ed the Legion for an investigation if that body's executive felt\nthat such was required. Mr. Lapointe\nsaid:\n\"We feel confident that they will\nfind that nowhere Is there a better\nstandard of treatment for veterans\nthan at Sunnybrook Hospital.\"\nMr. Padbury's allegations concerned^ chiefly the hugfe 1500-bed Sunny-\nbrook Hospital in -North York, on\nToronto's Northern outskirts. He\ntermed it little better than \"a school\nfor Toronto University medical students. But his criticism was extended to Westminster Hospital in\nLondon, Ontario.\nDespite previous government, communiques naming former Genera)\nArturo Rawson as one of the leaders of the revolt, the1 Ministers of\nthe Interior and the Army said late\ntonight there was no information\nthat he was Implicated.\nLate tonight the Argentina Congress passed an emergency bill\nauthorizing the president to reorganize all military forces within\nthe next six months, to remove\nchiefs and appoint new ones.\nThe Chamber of Deputies approved an executive decree declaring that a state of Internal war\nexists In the country and ordering\nthe shooting of military rebels,\nPeron   issued   in' order   to- all\nmilitary  chiefs  requesting  a  full\nreport on the behavior of their units\nduring the, rising.\nIn two communiques issued tonight, President Peron thanked both\nthe Armed Forces and the General\nWorkers Confederation for their\nloyalty in crushing the revolt.\nAddressing-the confederation, the\nPresident said, the*, government;\nwould (aire info account their gesture andas a reward \"will improve\nstill -further their - social and economic conquests.\"\nTELLS CROWD OF PLOT\nPeron shouted to a mass meeting\nUnder his balcony tonigh' \u2014 telling\nthe crowd of the plot to assassinate\nhim and his wife,\nThe state radio had announced a\npre-election >, revolt flared today\nunder the leadership of two retired .generals but ^vas stamped out\nin short order, apparently .wjth.littla\nor ho.'Woodshed,: \u25a0 \u25a0' ' , \"--.*-t\n...TheVohlJ'signs,bf, violence In the\nc^it'alVere a few fist fights,. Which\nbroke out among partisans worked\nup by the' broadcasts.\nWASHINGTON WATCHES\n(Washington officials keeping a\nclose watch on the situation said\nthere was a possibility the incident\nwas staged to bring out a heavy\nvote by Peron supporters in tha\nelection Nov. 11. Peron aspires to\nbe the first president in Argentine\nhistory to suceed himself.)\nTone Weds Girl\nCLOQUET, Minn., Sept. 28 (AP)\n\u2014 Franchot Tone of the movies tonight married Barbara. Payton, the\nfilm starlet over whose affections\nhe fought with Tom Neal two weeks\nago in Hollywood.,\nThe film couple spoke their vows\nin a simple, white frame house, far\nremoved\/from the klieg lights of\nHollywood, The ceremony was performed In front of a rose-banked\nfireplace in the presence of only a\nfew relatives and friends.\nIt was the third marriage for\nboth.\n\"I'm so happy I could cry,\" Miss\nPayton told-her mother, Mrs. Lee\nRedfield when she telephoned from\nOdessa, Texas, a few minutes before the rites were said.\n\"I never felt better in my life,\"\nsaid Tone, still bearing a bloodshot\neye and swollen lips from the Neal\naffray.\nJudge Ed J. Johnson, probate jurist for the 7,663 Cloquet residents,\nand a longtime friend of the' Red-\nfield family, read the service.\nAnd, in This Corner***\nKELSO, Wash., Sept 28 (AP)\u2014Whoever baited his hook with a\n17 Jewel timepiece and lost It to a fighting Columbia River salmon\ncan get his watch back by Identifying It\nThe salmon died.\nJ, C. Alter of Kelso, found the big Balmon\u2014nearly three feet long\n\u2014at Willow Grove, West of here, yesterday. Alter tald the watch was\nundoubtedly responsible for the fish's death. The watch was still running when extracted from the salmon's stomach.\nYou see, the fisherman who tried the odd bait was no fool. The\nwatch was waterproof.\nVIENNA, Australia, Sept. 28 (Reuters)\u2014Czechoslovakia is trying\na cure* for .alcoholism, consisting of a-seven-week course of work,\nvitamins, orange juice and Marxist lectures.\nThe tale was told yesterday by a refugee who said he had undergone the seven-week treatment\u2014against his will. It seems to have\nworked, because he told reporters who offered him a drink:\n\"I could not touch It after the lessons I got.\"\nHe said patients were put to work in a special camp, given vitamins and orange juice and made to ha%r lectures on teetotalism, drink\nand its evils, and political and economic subjects.\nBRANDON, Miss., Sept 28 (AP)\u2014Comes now a mouse that can\n\u2022Ing.\nDont believe It?\nNeither did Ernest Barton, reporter on the Jackson, Miss., Clarion-\nLedger, until he heard the Inch-long creater warble yesterday. Barton said the mouse has a voice like a mocking bird.\nHe said owner Bill Bass caught the mouse after a disturbance by\nwhat he thought was a mocking bird.\nHe put it In a Jar and the musical twittering came forth.\n\"We listened sympathetically to his story, hoping all the time he\nwould go to bed and sleep It off,\" said Barton.\n\"Skeptically we agreed to go Interview the mouse,\" Barton .said.\n\"We were convinced and we got out of there fast The blamed thing\nmight have started talking.\"\n 2 \u2014 NFISON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 29, 1951\nLAST fjMES TODAY \u2014 SHOWS AT 2:00-7:00-9:00\nMlNI \u2022 PUIS \\W5i9 HSRIlNL MARIN \u2022*\u25a0**.\nExtras Late \"Newi \u2014 Cartoon \u2014 Travel Talk\nSTARTS MONDAY: \"MISTER 880\" and \"DAKOTA LIL\"\nW. troy. First Mail Carrier to Retire\nHere, 12 Years on Business Walk.\nWilliam Croy, one of the first\nletter carriers of Nelson, has retired.\nAfter seeing service with the\nPost Office for 12 years on the\nbusiness section \"walk\",.he is the\nfirst letter carrier in Nelson to be\nsuperannuated. ,\nMr. Croy, a resident ot Nelson for\nover 30 years, was previously em\nployed on the C.P.R. steamers and\nthe C.P.R. express, and served in\nthe First World War with the Mth\nBattalion and a machine gun corps,\n, He was honored by the Post Office staff at a gathering in the postmasters office during which he was\npresented with a radio.\nTop Scout leaders\nTo Attend\nDistrict Parley\n\"Scout work\" and the duties of\nvarious Scout officials will be\ntopics of discussion at the Kootenay\nDistrict Scout executives meeting\nin Creston Sunday.\nJ. R. Giegerich, assistant pro\nvincial commissioner, will be\nchairman of tbe meeting. Present\nalso will be T. W. S. Parsons of\nVictoria, provincial commissioner,\nHis Honor Judge J. O. Wilson, provincial president of Boy Scouts,\nKen Jordan, executive Commissioner, and J. V. Hirivner, field\ncommissioner.,;\nThe conference will see scouting\nofficials frOm Creston, Crow's Nest,\nKimberley, \u25a0 Trail - Rossland   and\n. Nelson take part' In the Sunday\nprogram.\nJhsL (tfarfJi&L\nCloudy skies showers and fresh\nSoutherly winds still persist over\nail sections of the coast tonight as\nan extensive low pressure area persists offshore. A system which\nmoved across the coast during the\nnight is now moving slowly through\nthe central interior and showers are\nbeing reported at many points.\nNelson .\nHalifax ....\nMontreal\nOttawa ....\nToronto ....\nWinnipeg\nRegina .\n54   43\n54   OS\nLethbridge  .\nCalgary _\nEdmonton..-.\nPenticton ._..\nVancouver ...\nVictoria\n47\n43\n40\n27\n25\n32\n26\nOS   .05\n55   .37\n54\n55\n44\n49\nKimberley  _\u00bb_,\nCrescent Valley\t\nKaslo :......._,\nGrand Forks \t\nSeattle \u201e.\t\nSpokane .; _.___.__.\nLos Abgeles .. __.....\nNew York\t\n61\n42\n40 69\n50 61\n47 64\n28 61\n29 55\n36 55\n34 65\n50 63\n44 63\n59\n57\n.02\n.92\n74   -\nG. H. JONG\n30 years experience\n, in Canada\nI Chinese Herb Remedies\nI For stomach,   bladder,\n\u25a0 sinus, nervous and skin\ntrouble.\n\u00ab17A-1it 8t East Calgary, Alto.\nPrincess, Duke\nTo See N.H.L.,Game\nTORONTO, Sept. 28 (CP)\u2014Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of\nEdinburgh will see Toronto Maple\nLeafs of the National Hockey\nLeague In action iwhen they visit\nhere Oct. 13 on their tour of Canada.'\nThe Leafs will split Into two\nteams \u2014 the Blues vs the Whites\u2014\nin an afternoon game, proceeds of\nwhich will go to charity. The royal\ncouple will attend the game for 15\nMinutes, it was announced today.\nRuling on LR.\nSought by Union\n<i VANCOUVER, Sept, 28 (CP) \u2014\nA Supreme Court ruling on the Jurisdiction and'powers, of the Provincial Labor Relations Board in decertifying the Marine Workers and\nBo11 emakers Industrial Union\n-(CCL.) in 10 Vancouver wooden\nboat, yards is. to be sought, early\nnext,week,:   * 'X:'::^:\nDuncan Crux, counsel for the union, 1 said the .application will: be\nmade as soon as necessary papers\ncan be drawn up.' He said \"The\nquestion of whether the Labor Relations Board has taken the law unto itself must be settled.\"\nThe union was decertified in the\nwooden boatyards last month when\nthe Board ruled that workers had\ntaken concerted action in refusing\nto work overtime. The Marine\nWorkers -contend their decertification was not in accordance with the\nIndustrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act,\nMeanwhile, work remained at a\nstandstill today at the Celtic Shipyards where a flare-up occurred\nyesterday, sending two men to hospital for treatment.\nBritish Columbia Packens, Limited, owners of the shipyard, obtained a temporary injunction yesterday ta Supreme Court, restraining the union from .\"watching and\nbesetting, or threatening violence\nor intimidating workers.\"\nThe injunction was served late\ntoday on William Stewart, secretary, and William White, president\npt the Marine Workers Union.\nUnion' pickets had already left\nthe yards when notice of the Injunction was posted at the gates.\nWhite said the injunction makes\nit illegal to continue picketing operations, and he said his men \"will\ncomply fUlly.\nor nmsH, coiuMBiA.un.o\u00ab   ^\nAND   S8NIM   HIOH    SCHOOLS^\nwonderful   |WB\u00bb  \"'  \u00bb\n\u25a0sssi&saks:\nbelow.\n\"olumblrt   .\"wi\".   '\"'P   \u00abBd   *\"\"\nInduilry. i\nDID VOU KNOW? - \u2022 \u2022\nin^dl* avert elHiot. \u2022' \">'< \u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\"\u00bb<\nrfuitry mown\" \"\u2022 \"\"\"' J\"? i, f, o\ni - m pm.ii- m v\"e<\"\"\"' r i*\n1 m\u00bbmi^^r\u00b0\"Mtutt\u00b0:\\\nm\nBicycles\nWrist Watches .\nTyptwrittr*\nRadios\nSewing Machines\nBishop Johnson\nConsecrated\n15 Years Ago\nBISHOP JOHNSON\nToday is the 15th anniversary of\nthe consecration of Most Rev. M. M.\nJohnson of Nelson, but His Excellency will mark the day \"on the\nroad.\"    -\nBishop Johnson is travelling today\nto Lethbridge where he will bless\ntbe new church of St Basil's Sunday. He will go on to Ottawa to\nattend a meeting of hierarchy pf the\nRoman Catholic Church in Canada.\nWhen he was consecrated in St.\nMichael's Cathedral In Toronto,\nBishop Johnson became Canada's\nyoungest Roman Catholic Bishop.\nHe was only 37.\n.The following month he was installed at Cathedral of Mary Immaculate by Most Rev. W.' M, Duke,\nArchbishop of Vancouver.\nIn 1849 he celebrated the 25th\nanniversary of his ordination to the\npriesthood, a ceremony which also\ntook place in St. Michael's Cathedral. Later the same year he was\nreceived In private audience by the\nPope, during, his traditional, \"ad\nlimina\" visit to Rome.\nAlter Rail Honoring\nMrs. R. Vyse\nTo Be Dedicated\nDedication of an.altar rail built\nin memory of the late Mrs.- Daisy\nWillard Vyse will take place at the\nChurch of the Redeemer Sunday\nevening.\nMrs. Vyse, wife of Robert Vyse,\nrefuted railroader, died Dec. 10,\n1949.- She had been an ardent\nWorker of the church since it was\nfirst established and was. secretary\nof the Church Committee and\nmember of the, choir for many\nyears.\nThe altar rail was fashioned by\nJ. Burgess, another longtime\nChurch of the. Redeemer member.\nMembers of the Vyse family will\nattend the service. Besides Mr.\nVyse, they include two sons, Horace Robert of Fruitvale; and Alfred\nWilliam of Trail, and a daughter,\nMrs. Dorothy Mary Knowler of\nFruitvale.\nAlso represented will \u00a3e the\nAncient Order of \u25a0 Foresters, for\n-Whom Mrs. Vyse was secretary for\n30 years, and the Daughters of\nEngland, Mrs., Vyse was also secretary of the latter group for many\nyears.\nPULP \u00a3 PAPER\n(INDUSTRY\nFred Wolgar Buried\nAt Crawford Bay\nBurial services for the late Fred\nWoolgar of Victoria were held at\nCrawford BayxWednesday.\nMr. Woolgar, formerly of Castlegar, died of a heart attack, 100\nyards from the highway near\nCrawford Bay. He was- discovered\nSunday by two boys.\nMr. Woolgar was expected to\narrive at Crawford Bay Friday, but\nit is believed he had difficulty in\n.finding his way after going beyond\nhis bus stop to Gray Creek and was\nstricken with the attack while trying to find his destination.\nHe is survived by two daughters\nand one son of Crawford Bay.      ,\nNew Canadians Are\nChristian Challenge\nREGINA, Sept 28 (CP) \u2014\nCanada's frontiers are not longer\nat the- end of steel, the Dominion\nCouncil meeting of the Presbyterian Women's Missionary Society was\ntold yesterday.\n\"They are right In our own community where the Christian citizens\nmust reach out to meet new circumstances,\" said Miss Frieda E.\nMatthews, executive secretary for\nNational Missions. \"The frontiers\nare really frontiers of attitude.\"\nIn communities where there were\nnew Canadians from other lands\nthere was an unprecedented opportunity for Christian women ,to\nmake a practical demonstration of\ntheir faith by stretching forth the\nhand of Christian, fellowship.\nASPIRIN\nRELIEVES\nPAIN AfJD  UlSCOMfbff'i  OI-\nCOLDS\n\\ FML BETTER FAST!\nDon Brown, Helen Dahlstrom\nThrill Hundreds in Recital\nThe rich, resonant voice of Donald Blown, whose progress has been\nwatched with interest by -Nelson\ndistrict, residents since he was a\nboy soprano, thrilled a large audience in Civic theatre Friday night\n,: He was recalled for no. less than\nfive encores after a varied program\nWhich included songs in English,.\nGerman and French from'Bach to\nFame. \u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0;.\u25a0-'\u25a0 ,'.v..\nThe audience was also treated to\nthe superb artistry of Helen Dahlstrom of. Trail who in addition to\naccompanying Mr. Brown played\nthree selections and received sound\napplause for her encore,' Paderew-\nski's Minuet\nIn lieder, Mr. Brown was at his\nbest The four songs he sang in this\ngroup, Danksagung an den Bach\nand . Am Feirerabend of Schubert\nDu Bist Wie Eine Blume of Schumann and Fussreise of Wolfe, were\nsung with feeling and faithfulness\nof melodic line..\nHe opened with Sweet One and\nTwenty, O Sleep and Honor and\nArms of Handel, adding Where'er\nYou Walk, and went on to two arias\nfrom secular cantata \"Phoebus, and\nPan\" by Bitch. .\nIn the French group were Tes\nYeux of Rabey, Faure's Apres un\nReve and'0 Vin, Dissipe la Tris-\ntesse by A. Thomasj.\nIn folk songs and ballads Mr-\nBrown displays a great deal of feeling and tonal beauty. In the concluding part of the program, he delighted his audience with The Song\nof Soldiers by V. Hely-Hutchinson,\nAe Fond Kiss and Border Ballad,\narranged by Healy Willan, Crown\nof the Year by E. Martin, and Down\nby the Sally Gardens, The Spanish\nLady, Must I Go Bound- and' The\nBallynure Ballad, arranged by H.\nHughes.  .\nHis encores , were The Garden\nWhere the Pretties Grow, There Is\na Lady, Song of the Open, Lord\nRandal and Hills of Home.\nMrs. Dahlstrom . played- Greig's\nPraeludium, Iljinsky's Berceuse and\nSchumann's Soaring,, with polish\nand deep understanding.\n.floss Fleming, President of the\nsponsoring Nelson Musical Festival\nAssociation, welcomed Mr. Brown\nback to Nelson. It was a happy coincidence, he said, that a singer who\nhas. participated in Kootenay festivals should be beard In Kootenays\nOn the 21st anniversary of founding\nof. the festivals.\nPresentation of a bouquet to Mrs.\nDahlstrom was made by Frank Pen-\nnoyer, Secretary.\nProceeds will go toward funds for\nNelson's' new grand piano wSich\nwas used for the'concert\nFOUR DIVORCE\nCASES FOR   !\nFALL ASSIZES\nNo criminal or civil cases will be\nheard at the Fall assizes opening in\nNelson Monday.\nOnly four, divorce actions are\nscheduled for the sitting, one of the\nshortest for years. It is expected to\nlast one or two hours.\nMr. Justice J. 0. Wilson of Victoria will preside.\nDivorces are sought by:    \u2022    t\nMary Josephine Ef toda of Nelson,\nfrom Gordon Walter Eftoda of Elk\nValley. Blake Allan of Nelson is\nsoliciter for the petitioner.\nViolet L. Vandergrift of Essex,\nEngland, from Lome Edward Vandergrift of Trail. .O'Shea, Garland\nand Gansner ,are solicitors for\npetitioner...\nAlice Jean Armstrong of Trail\nfrom James Burton Armstrong of\nTrail. W:\" P. Kapak. is solicitor for\npetitioner.\nMyrna Inez Sinnerud of Calgary\nfrom Herbert Sinnertid of Nelson,\nJames B. Richards is solicitor for the\npetitioner.\nWelcome Freshmen\nAt Annual Dance\nA large, enthusiastic crowd of\nyoung people Friday night danced\nto the strains of the Campus Kings\nat the annual \"Frosh\" dance, held\nto welcome all freshmen to Nelson\nHigh School.\nDecorations of balloons and\nstreamers gave the High School\nauditorium an air of festivity.\nMasters of ceremonies were\nMaureen Kennedy and Lee Spence.\nTh dance committee, headed by\nJoy McEwen, minister of social affairs, included Peggy Nixon, Anne\nMcDonald, Joan Mulloy, Wanita\nRoberts, Barbara Hyndmaii, Don\nRosllng, Gordon Halsey, Bob Gold,\nDuffy Franklin, Marvin Wilson,\nJoan Mawer, Roberta Rlesterer and\nPat Warren.\nClose to 115 freshmen joined-the\nhigh school this year and were present at the dance.\nTraHire's Mother\nDies at Vancouver\nNellie C. Askey, mother of R. D.\nAskey of Trail, died at the coast\nSept. 25 at the age of 73. She was\ntbe widow ot the late George Askey, C.P.R. engineer.\nFuneral services were held In\nVancouver.\nMR. AND MRS. SOMMERS\nWIN LEGION WHIST\nTaking first honors in Legion\nMerrymakers partner wblst Friday\nnight were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Som-\nmers. Ten tables were in play.\nSecond prize went to Mrs. S. C.\nNewell and Mrs. B. Hille. Master\nof ceremonies was Spence Newell\nwith Walter Bailey, mister of ceremonies for the danca.\nFAL8E ALARM\nA false alarm Friday at 3:05 p.m.\ncalled out the Nelson Fire Department to Observatory and Ward on\na five minute run. Offenders were\nnot known.\nJOHN MacDONALD\n... of Nelson who has been\nelected president of the Nelson District Teachers Association. The Nelson District group will be host Oct\n18, 19 and 20 to the West Kootenay\nBoundary teachers convention.\n\u2014Vogue Photo.\nChurch Youth\nName Officers,\nPlan Programs\nChurch young peoples groups in\nNelson are preparing for the new\nseason. To date, both St. Saviour's\nPro - Cathedral and Evangelical\nCovenant groups have named executives for the coming year and\nboth plan new activities,\nLeading St \"Saviour's club will\nbe Miss Lillian Cartwright. 'Vice-\nPresident will be Jack Phelps, secretary, Beverley Ure, treasurer\nLillian Anderson. Flans have been\nmade to hold weekly meetings by\nthe 20 or so members. Installation\nof officers will take place either\nOctober 7 or 14.\nAlvin Olson is the new president\nof Mission Covenant with an executive of Graham Watts, vice\npresident, Margaret. Stavast, secretary,. Gail Wall, treasurer, and\nNorma Harris, corresponding .secretary. They, as well, plan weekly\nmeetings. On their agenda will be\na rqUyjwi.th.Crwtcfti youpj people\nto He held in Jjelsoft the first Sunday in October..\nPRESS WOMEN\nPICK OFFICERS\nHALIFAX, Sept. 28 (CP)- Mrs.\nMarjorie Oliver of the London, Ont,\nFree Press today was elected president of the Canadian Women's Press\nClub.    .'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'-!\nHonorary president is Mrs. Reta\nMyers of Vancouver. Mrs.' Abbie\nLane of Halifax is hosltorian. Mrs.\nMarjorie MacKay of St. Catherines,\nOnt., was elected recording secretary.\nVice-presidents are: Mrs. A. C.\nPettipas, Dartmouth, N.S.; Mrs. W.\nE.-Colpits, Moncton, N.B.; Madeline\nLevason, Montreal; Mrs. Catherine\nMarston, Elora, Ont; Mrs. Miriam\nGreene Ellis, Winnipeg; Miss Rose\nDucie, Saskatoon; Mrs. Eve Henderson, Edmonton; Mrs. Toddle Beatty\nInman, Vancouver.\nEskimo Star\nHurt, Son Dies\nIn Idaho Crash\nEDMONTON, Sept. 28 (CP) -\nCraig Hansen, three-year-old son\nof star end Howard Hansen of the\nEdmonton Eskimos, died today at\nIdaho Falls, Idaho, from injuries\nsuffered in a car crash that seriously injured bis, father. ,\nIn a telephone' interview from\nEdmonton, hospital attendants at\nIdaho Falls said Craig was admitted about 11 p.m. last night and\ndied early this afternoon.\nThe Hansen car overturned at a\ncorner near Dubois, Idaho, at the\nfootballer was bringing two sons\nand two sisters to Edmonton.\nHansen's injuries have been diagnosed as a broken ankle, crushed\nribs and concussion, the hospital\nsaid. He was resting well, and doctors were 'not too concerned\"\nabout his general condition.\nHansen's 27-year-old sister Eva,\nsuffered a possible fractured pel-\nvis, cuts and bruises, Another sister, Ruth, 19, suffered shock and\nbruises but apparently no fractures.\nTheir condition tonight was termed\n'.'better.\" * ;\nHansen's second son, Dennis, two\nyears old, was not seriously hurt\nthe hospital said, but will be kept\nunder observation for another few\ndays.\nOdd Fellows,\nRebekahslo\nRossland Meet\nNelson Odd Fellows and Re-\nbekahs -Saturday will journey to\nRossland by special bus to attend a\nWest Kootenay District Association\nmeeting of the. Order.\nThe meeting, held to discuss business matters and extend acquaint\nanceshlp with fellow members, is\na semi-annual affair with Odd\nFellow and Rebekah Lodges from\nKaslo. Slocan City, Nelson, and\nTrail represented. Host to the\nmeeting will be Rossland Lodge.\nOdd Fellows and Rebekahs will\nhold separate meetings followed by\na banquet.\nTO JOIN SENATORS\nOTTAWA, Sept. 28 (CP) \u2014 Billy\nRichardson, fast skating rightwinger\nfrom Camrose, Alta., has been signed to play with Ottawa Senators of\nthe Quebec Senior Hockey League\nthis season.\nOwned by Minneapolis, Richardson was rated the fastest skater in\nthe United States Hockey, League\nlast season while playing with\nDenver, He scored 20 goals and 29\nassists.\nReservations Filled\nAnnounce Giants\nNEW YORK, Sept. 28 (AP) -\nNew York Giants, who started taking World Series reservations 36\nhours ago, said today the capacity\nof the Polo Grounds already was\nheavily oversubscribed qnd that no\nfurther requests would be accepted.\nThe Giant's Baseball club, one-\nhalf game behind the League leading Brooklyn Dodgers, left today tor\nBoston and the final two games of\nthe season.\nHalton Publisher\nOf Victoria Colonist\nVICTORIA, B.C., Sept 28 (CP)-\nAppointment of Seth Halton as\nPublisher of the Victoria Dally\nColonist was announced tonight by\nH. T. Matson, President of the\nColonist\n. Fred C. Barnes succeeds Mr. Halton as managing editor. The appointments are effective tomorrow.\nSandham Graves is editor-in-\nchief and chairman of the editorial\npolicy board of -the newspaper\nwhich comprises Tom Taylor, assistant editor, and Roy Murdock,\nassociate editor.\nMr. Halton came to the Colonist\nsix years ago on .discharge from\ntbe Canadian Army as a major.\nPrior to his return to civilian lite,\nhe was managing -editor of the\nMaple Leaf, Army newspaper, in\nBrussels, and London. Before the\nwar he was with the Toronto Daily\nStar. He is a native of Pincher\nCreek, Alta.\nQuebec Defenceman\nSigns With Royals\nQUEBEC, Sept 28 (CP) \u2014 Roger\nRoberge, hard-hitting Quebec defenceman, said tonight he lias accepted a two-year contract, with\nNew Westminster Royals of the Pacific Coast Hockey League, and will\nleave with his wife and three Children early next week.\nRoberge played the last two seasons with Quebec Aces of the Quebec Senior Hocke> League,    '\nSHOWING TODAY\nAND TOMORROW\nDON'T MISS IT - NOW ON DISPLAY\nEastern Canada\nIn Miniature\nA Masterpiece Hand-Carved by A. Poulin\nNO ADMISSION FEE\nOpen 2 to 5 p.m. - 7 to 10 p.m.\nA beautiful display representing scenes from early days of\nCanada \u2014 the settlers' way of life, their dress,\ncustoms, daily habits, etc.\nDISPLAY TRAILER CORNER Of WARD AND BAKER\nJ.  E.  HEMBLING\nNelson and District Branch of the\nCanadian National Institute for the\nBlind today will sponsor a tag day\nto aid work of the Institute.\nC.N.I.B. field worker, J. E. Hemb-\nling, himself blind, is pictured above,\nHe has found, it was stated Friday,\n\"that with knowledge, experience\nand patience,'blind persons may be\nled along the road of darkness to\nthe light of complete adjustment \u2014\nto life without sight>\nWith the aid of members of the\nNelson and District Branch,' Mr.\nHembling \"personifies the. Institute\nin action throughout the province,\nworking In the community to assist\nthe blind to win victory over\nblindness.\" ,\nU.B.C. Speaker\nIo Address\nFilm Conference\nDr. Norman Barton of the University of British Columbia, Da-1\npartment of Visual Education will\naddress the weekend conference of .\nthe West Kootenay Film Council.\nNelson Council will be host to\nGrand Forks, Rossland and, trail\nrepresentatives at the conference.\nBusiness sessions will be held at\nthe Catholic Hall Saturday afternoon and a banquet at Gerlgh's\nLodge In the evening. Windup discussions will, take place Sunday\nmorning.\nTopics Saturday , afternoon will\nbe: Finding the right films; previewing tor proper use; introduction, Its importance and its presentation to audience; presentation\ntechnique and making the most of\nfilms.\nFall From Horse\nFalalloHunfer\nB. C. Webber, 65; of Lodi,'Calif.,\nwas fatally injured in an accident\nwhile hunting in the Flathead district, September 21.\nWhile hunting on horseback, Mr.\nWebber was thrown to the ground,\nbreaking several ribs and puncturing a lung and possibly a kidney.\nHe was taken to Fernie hospital\nwhere he died Tuesday.\nHis wife is believed to have accompanied him on his trip.\nCKLN\n11:10 a.m.-Mon., Fri.\n\/ \\\nSAVE SYSTEMATICALLY AND\nWITH CONFIDENCE THROUGH\nLIFE INSURANCE\nFraser Tees, District Agent, 4S6 Ward St, Nelson, B.C.\nHerbert H. Peacook, Representative, Nelson, B.C.\nJa\u00bb. Skinner, District Agent, Trail, B.C.\nDonald J. Brown, District Agent, 703 Hermla Crescent Trail, B.C.\nGeorge W.-Dill, Representative, 476 Howe St., Vancouver, B.C.\nCyril Bell, Representative, Castlegar, B.C.\nG. W, Hertlg, Representative, Rossland, B.C.\nWm. F. Tyers, Representative, Kaslo, B.C.\nH. C. Webber, C.L.U., Branch Manager, 476 Howe St., Vancouver, B.C.\nEUROPE\nQUEBEC-LIVERPOOL\n\"FRANCONIA\"\nOct. 24, Nov. 17\nQUEBEC-HAVRE-SOUTHAMPTON\n\"SCYTHIA\"\nOA. 3, Oct. 31, Nov. 38\nHALIFAX \u2022 C0BH \u2022 LIVERPOOL\n\"FRANCONIA\"\nDoc. 15\nHALIFAX-HAVRE-LONDON\n\"SCYTHIA\"\nMONTREAL-LIVERPOOL\n\"ASCANIA\"\nOcl. 10, Nov. 7\nQUEBEC-HAVRE-SOUTHAMPTON\n\"SAMARIA\"\nOd. 17, Nov. 14\nHALIFAX-HAVRE-SOUTHAMPTON\n\"SAMARIA\"\nDie. 12\nXofoi, First Clou from f210. - Touni* C\/om from }U7.\nPERSONALLY CONDUCTED SAILINGS\n\"SCYTHIA\"    Nov> 3* ,rom Ouoboe vlo Havre lo SouHiompfon\nWVilllin (CoodmHn Bono Id f. Cn.il ol Curori, Tomato)\n\"SAMARIA\"   \u00b0\". '2 '\u2022\"\"> Halifax ,vla Havro lo Southampton\nwnillHIlIM (Conductor, Hsn,r O. Dlok.nty ol Cunorr), Mwl,.ol)\n\"FRANCONIA\" \"\"\u2022,5 'rom \"\"'\"ax vi\u00ab com to tiv.,P\u00aboi\nI IIHHVVI1IH       <G\u00bb*^,Edi*\u00bbdKSI\u00bbptardofCiMrd,Toreolo)\nFROM NEW YORK\n\"QUEEN ELIZABETH\"      \"0UEEN MARY\"      \"CAR0NIA\"\n\"MAURETANIA\"   \"BRITANNIC\"   \"PARTHIA\"   \"MEDIA\"\nGREAT AFRICA-INDIA CRUISEahoMEDITERRANEAN CRUISE\nand WEST INDIES CRUISES\nSoe Your Local TravelAgenti\"No one con serve youfcetter\"\nor\nCunardLine\nHMD OFFICE! 230 HOSPITAL STREET, MONTREAL\n BLACK SUEDE\nLACED\nBaUervruts\n$3.95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895 6J53 Baker St\nfull Program\nSlated for P.-T.A.\nIn Windermere\n* INVERMERE, B.C., Sept 28 \u2014\nFirst meeting ot the Windermere\nDistrict P.-T.A. for the season signalled full mean ahead for a busy\nand profitable Winter program,\nOpening the meeting P.-T.A. president, Mrs. Chris Madson welcomed\nthe hew members and the teachers\nboth those returning to the district\nand those new to the school staff.\nLady members of the staff were\npresented with attractive corsages\nand the male members received\nbuttohholes.\nMrs. Chrles Osterloh, convener\nof the hot lunch program reported\nthat Mis, Seymour will be in charge\nqf the kitchen this season and that\nthe program will begin October 1,\nShe asked for donations bf vegetables.\nMiss Alice Curtis, school principal, requested that the P.-T.A. arrange for a cross-walk to be placed\nbetween the school and the playground. A motion war, passed to\ncontact the Department of Public\nWorks to arrange this in the interests of the safety of the children.\nShe also requested the formation\nof a committee to arrange transportation for students attending sports\ntournaments at outside points and\nasked for- voluneers to supervise\nbasketball and badminton in the\nschool gym during the Winter.\nMrs. Donald Levey, program convener, outlined plans for the year\nwhich Will cover a varied and stimulating field. October meeting will\nconsist of a supper meeting to which\nP.-T.A. members from Cranbrook,\nKimberley! Golden and Edgewater\nwill be invited. Mrs. Orr Newton\nand Mrs. Jack Payne will convene\nsupper arrangements.\nA interesting film \"Jupiter and\nJuno\" was shown on the new school\nprojector purchased earlier this\nyear by the school board.   -\nWindermere Memorial Community\nCentre Shows Favorable Progress\nINVERMERE, B.C., Sept 28 \u2014\nThat the affairs of the Lake Windermere ..'. Memorial Community\nCentre at Invermere are porgressing\nfavorably was evident at the annual\nmeeting held at Invermere recently.\nWhile the Centre, had made a\nprofit of only $70 during the year\nthe amount of activity: covered and\nth,e imprvements made bespoke a\nmost satisfactory management\nMajor T. C. Bell, siecretary, re-\nporting on the year's activities spoke\nof the Memorial Plaque which had\nbeen installed and unveiled last\nNovember U. He mentioned that\nthe hall was given free of charge\nto Boy Scout and Girl Guide activities and tottie Red Cross.\nHeavy expenditures during the\nyear included re-wiring the centre,\nredecorating, refinishing the floors,\nthe purchase of theatre chairs and\npanic bolts for fire exits.\nAppreciation was expressed' for\nthe donation of an electric clock\nby Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Tegart and\nson of Windermere.    '\nMoving pictures had been a matter of concern throughout tKe year\nand revenue had dropped sharply\nfrom this source until, with the\npurchase of a new projector in\nSeptember, the board of management took over the shows with most\nfavorable results.'\nThe Social Affairs committee had\nsponsored one game's night and five\ndances; the Music and Arts- committee had sponsored four National\nFilm Board show's combined with\nlocal talent and one district talent\nshow which had been most successful, also one professional concert\nfrom C.F.c.n; which had been well\nreceived..\nThe East Kootenay Badminton\nTournament was held in the, centre\nin the Spring, the Kimberley Minstrel Show in aid of tbe local hospital and* the Flower Show, earlys in\nAugust The centre is used for dancing and music lessons by the School\nof Music and Dance.\nBoard of Management for the ensuing year which will select its own\nofficers consists of W. S. Rogers,\nA. J. Laird, E..J. Lambert, Charles\nOsterloh, Major T, C. Bell, Mrs.\nF. E, Coy, MrS. Charles Wolfe, Mrs.\nM. E. Tunnacliffe and T. N, Weir.\nIn addition members will be appointed by the School Trustees and\nstaff, the Student Council (one boy\nand one girl), the Lake Windermere\nValley Sports Club and the Ratepayers Association;    . ' \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 '\nThe Names Committee is Aubrey\nL. Young, Harry Bartle and Frank\nGreenwood..'.\nN. . Bavin's name, retiring president, was added to the honorary\nmembers who are Willi\u00bbm Weir,\nArthur Ashworth and Major T. C,\nBell.\nRanger Unit for\nCreston Area\nCRSJTON,\"\"B'C.,'Se(&''s8- tfc'\nCoL Tiylor of Vancouver was in\nCreston last Weekend conferring\nwith Reeve George Sinclair and R.\nDewar, Canadian Legion representative, and CO. Lionel Moore, in\nconnection with reorganizing Creston and other P.C.M.R. units\" into\nthe Canadian. Rangers. Lt Col. Taylor is the liaison officer for the new\nRanger groups.\nSteps have been taken to organize\nthe local Ranger unit with Lionel\nMoore as its commanding officer.\nThe unit will be built along, lines to\nparticipate in guerrilla warfare if\nthe need arises. The idea is to split\nthe Ranger unit, into units of three\nthroughout the area, all personnel\n\u25a0.equipped with the latest in army\n;-equipment \u25a0'\"..'\nj.\" Reorganization of other Ranger\nunits in the East Kootenay is now\n\u25a0 Under study, it was learned.    '\nLongtime Golden\n;Resi<ient Dies\nI GOLDEN, B.C., Sept 25 \u2014Long-\ntime resident of McMurdo near\nhere, Winnifred Beatrice Johnston\nJ died recently at Victoria where she\n(had lived for tbe past seven years.\ni She was 57 years old.\nSurviving her at their. Victoria\nhome are. her husband, John Oscar\n\/Johnston and three children, Gordon, Mary and Elizabeth. She is\n3 also survived by two sisters, Mrs.\n'Mary Brown of Ottawa and Mrs.\nFrank  Croft  of  Revelstoke,   and\n'three brothers, Herbert Fleury of\ni.Saskatoon, Stewart Fleury of Victoria and Jack .Fleury of Dldsbury,\n.Alta.\nCranbrook Teachers\nConvention Hosts\nI? CRANBROOK, B.C., Sept. 28 -\nCranbrook Teachers' Association,\nsiffiliate of the B.C. Teachers' Fed-\n;\u00abratlon at its Fall annual meeting\nfleeted William Haynes <as president, succeeding M. D: McPhee,\niwith George Ijaras vice-president,\n5MIss Joan Chubra secretary and\nJMlss Doris Hutchison treasurer.\nriStaff representatives on the.execu\ntive are Gordon Douglas for Mount\nBaker School, William Larsen for\n\/Central School and Albert Johnson for rural schools.-Chosen sal-\nrary committee members were E. V.\nC. Clode, M. D. McPhee, Mrs. Alfred Kershaw, Lewis Phillips and\nSliss Evelyn Ball. Courtesy com-\njmitee members are Miss Margaret\nMusselman and Miss Marie Murdoch, and refreshment commitee\nijnembers Miss Margaret Vander-\n.burgh and Miss Edith Clark. Susan\nTadey is press officer.\n' Cranbrook Association will be\nhost at the annual East Kootenay\nTeachers' Convention which will\nbe here October 11, 12 and 13 and\njvill Include Michel:NataI, Fernie,\nGolden, Windermere Valley, Kimberley, Creston and Cranbrook\nSchool districts' staffs. Business ahd\nsocial program for the event is being prepared, apd a provincial\nTeachers' Federation executive\nhiember will attend. .\nis.\nFrost Abruptly\nEnds Cranbrook\nGrowing Season\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Sept 28 \u2014\nExtended nearly two weeks beyond\nnormal, the growing season was\nbrought to an abrupt halt Wednesday by the season's first heavy\nfrost All but the hardiest garden\nflowers were blackened and potato\nplants shrivelled. Final raspberries\nwere picked in this area Tuesday.\nGrain harvest on St. Mary's\nPrairie, dry farming area, was\npretty Well completed earlier in the\nmonth with average yield of about\n12 bushels to the acre, below.normal Growth <ras handicapped by\na cold, wet June which suddenly\nshifted to the six weeks' intense\nSummer heat when grain was starting to head.\nHarvest by large-scale potato\ngrowers was completed in general\nbefore the first Fall frost with\nfairly good yields this year, fr&rft\ncut hay in the Summer was good,\nbut the second cut completed before\nthe frost was light Harvest was\nenough for Wintering beef livestock\nin the area, but import of hay for\ndairy stock will have to be increased, this Winter.\nBooks Collected\nFor Golden P-TA\nGOLDEN, B.C., SWpt 28 - Projects outlined at the initial Fall\nmeeting of the Golden Parent-\nTeacher Association cover activities of all school age groups. Newest project will be collection of outgrown children's books from fami.\nlies of the Columbia Valley to\nestablish a lending library \"for\nstudents at the school, with Mrs!\nRobert Clark of the teaching staff\nin charge of arrangements. The\nAssociation will also play a prominent part in the serving of hot\nlunches to school youngsters when\nit is resumed later in the Fall.\nRecreation facilitits at Golden\nCivic Centre will bf increased\nwhen the P.-fcA. installs basketball equipment for use of senior\nstudents under arrangements with\nthe Civic Centre Committee, and\nother sports equipment will; be\nadded as funds become available.\nPlayground equipment of sandboxes and teeter-totters were installed by the organization for children of the primary school.\nJoint community-government\ndental clinic for children at the\nschool in July arfd August received\nP.-T.A. help in listing of children,\narrangements for appointments and\nin office help in the clinic.\nBlood Donors Turn\nOut for Windermere\nINVERMERE, B.C., Sept,28 \u2014\nSatisfaction was expressed on all\nsides with the result of the annual\nBlood Donor Clinics in the Windermere District although the desired quota- of 200 donors is still\nan ambition rather than a realization.\nAt Edgewater 65 donors appeared for the afternoon clinic and at\nInvermere 105 registered many of\nwhom had come from district\npoints. Windermere was particularly well represented as was Canal\nFlat which was most commendable\nconsidering the distance that had\nto be covered by the donors.\nWindermere District points are\ncovered from the Calgary Blood\nDonor headquarters for reasons of\naccessibility and blood and plasma\nfor the Lady Elizabeth Bruce\nMemorial Hospital is obtained from\nCalgary. ,\nMANY ATTEND SPECIAL\nSERVICE AT NEW DENVER\nNEW. DENVER, B.C., Sept. 28 \u2014\nHarvest Festival service Ws conducted in Turner Memorial United\nChurch on Sunday morning September 23, by the Rev. David R.\nStone, B.A., of Nakusp, where a\nlarge congregation was present The\nchurch was beautifully decorated\nwith many Fall flowers and various\nkinds of vegetables and fruit which\nafter the service was donated to\nthe Slocan Community Hosptlal. The\nchoir rendered special music with\nMiss Velbna Jean George as\norganist j)\nRenata Joins Film\nBoard Circuit\nRENATA,B.C.rSept 28 \u2014 Renata\nhad their forst showing of educational films September 25 when the\nNational Film Board schedule, Self\nOperating Circuit No. 216, provided\nRenata as well as Deer. Park, Midway, Beaverdell, Greenwood, Christina Lake with films. The educational feature of these pictures is greatly\nappreciated..  \u25a0    '\nHerridge Replies\nTo 2600 LeHen\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 28 ~--H. W,\nHerridge, M.P.for Kootenay West,\nwas the special speaker at a public meeting of the CCF.\nW. Moseley was appointed chairman, and opened the meeting, and\nsaid Mr. Herridge needed no introduction to a Nakusp audience. Mr.\nHerridge was well known, having\nlived in Nakusp from early boyhood, and during his Parliamentary\noffice, had been an indefatigable\nworker for the people.\nMr. Herridge reported on the last\nsession at Ottawa, outlining the duties of members and district re-\nquirements. Many personal and individual cases had been dealt with,\nsome 6200 lettets-had been received,\nand all had received his personal\nattention.\nMr. Herridge outlined the procedure to the House of Commons,\nwhich he explained was democracy\nin action.\nOther subjects discussed were\ncost of living, price control, the\nIndian Act, universal old age pensions, new Canada Post Office Act,\nthe Emergency Gold Assistance Act\nthe Defence. Production Act the\nWeights and Measures Act veterans' Bills, B. C, Telephone, the Pipeline Bill, Columbia River survey,\nand Kootenay and district affairs.\nA hearty vote of thanks* was accorded Mr. Herridge for his informative talk and visit   '\nCranbrook lions\nRe-Elect President\n\/CRANBROOK, B.C., Sept 28 \u2014\nCranbrook Lions Club slate of officers installed for tile current year\nare Robert Willis, re-elected\npresident with Ira McNaughton,\nClarence Ryde and Howard King\nas vice-presidents, and J. S, Johnston as past president. E. E. Eck-\nman is secretary, J. R. Meredith\ntreasurer, Scotty Webster tail-\ntwister, and Hamey Patton lion\ntamer.\nDirectors are Cece Tiller, Don\nSherllng, Wilton Reilly and Duncan MacDonald.\nMain public event of the club\nis the annual rodeo for the Labor\nDay weekend which was again\nvery successful this year, in spite\nof heavy rain the opening day. A\nprofit was realized and returned\nto permanent equipment tor this\nannual show. Other funds were derived from successful sponsorship\nof the show put on by Tex Morton,\nAustralian hypnotist and entertainer.\nSTARTS MONDAY\nON\nCKLN\nA registered music teacher is qualified to advise\nyou on musical education. There is a registered\nmusic teacher in your\ndistrict.\nContact fhe Secretary,\nMRS. BAIN OLIVER\n311 CEDAR STREET,\nNELSON, B.C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPJ. 29, 1951 \u2014 3\n:',''\u2014\ncSS^^\ni colol.\nseWC-\n^M?S>** _\nm\n. $Alt \u2014>*\u2014~     grated)\nM\nSQ\n-10-\n.it-iio\n<A\u00bb\ndlllll\nSPECIALS\n2 PCE. CHESTERFIELD\n$100-50 \"\nCOFFEE TABLES\nEND TABLES\n$1\/1.75\nLAMP TABLES\n$11.93\nLAMP TABLES\n$14-73\nCOMBINATION RADIOS\n*169so\nCOAL ELECTRIC RANGES\n$299\nSUPREMACY <\nREFRIGERATORS\n*3699S\nShop a^impson'* newj'Mercfiandise Store*.... Here are your furniture and appliance needs... right-on-the-floor\n....available forimmediate delivery! - 9\nCome in today and look around. See, on display, nationally knownbrands and Simpson's brands of... bedroom\ndining room, and chesterfield suites; washing machines and ranges. Priced to respect your dollar-pressed budget.'\nThere are many good buys for you at Simpson's September Sale. You are always assured of courteous service and\nspeedy delivery... Convenient credit plans available... ' . '\nf\nisiiti\nSPECIALS\nCOFFEE TABLES\n$Q.75\nEND TABLES\n$\u00a3\u25a050\n4 PCE. BEDROOM SUITE\n*149\"S0\n2 PCE. DAVENPORT SUITE\n$152.50\nCHROME CHAIRS\n. $0-45\n*8'\n^^^^^^^^5\nMATTRESSES\n$27\"9S  '\nBILTA BED CHAIR\n$134so\nTABLE LAMPS\n$\u00a3.95\n|1HE ROBERT SIMPSON PACIFIC UNITED\n566BakerSt Phone 1490    \/\ne.M.t,\nA\n 4\u2014 N*'V\u00bbw.**\u00ab'-Y V^WS. <ATH\u00abnAY. MPT. 79, 1951\nNatural finish Woodwork\nGives Crisp Modern Note\nThe smart modern air achieved\nby the pale, natural finish on the\nwoodwork of many new homes in\nsuburban developments has set the\npace for a similar vogue in older\nhomes too, interior decorators say..\nPeople like the \"lift\" they feel when\nthe built-in shelving, doors and other woodwork of a room are treated\nwith such new light finishes as antique pine,, wheat maple, bleached\nwalnut, pale mahogany or weathered oak,\nHearth panelling In living rooms,\nwood cabinets in kitchens, inset\ndressing tables in bedrooms, and\ndoors \u2014 panelled or modernly\nsmooth-aurgaced\u2014lend themselves\nto this. distinctive treatment, The\ntrend is in harmony with the popu-\nof furniture finished in light hues,\nlarlty of furniture finished in light\nhues.\nan'abundance but actually a superabundance of light in the home;\nthey like to prolong indoors\nthroughout the year the gay illusion\nof summery brightness. It's-an attractive thought at this time of year\n\u2014and the charm endures. For such\nthe walls are painted in a pastel tint\nin a color that aontrasts with the\nwood finish. In such rooms, window\ndraperies and upholstery fabrios\n-rave similar light grounds, and tht\nfloor covering repeats the chief color of the walls in a slightly darker\nshade.\nOr a smart conservative effect Is\nachieved, using the same finishes\nthat reveal the natural beauty of\nthe grain and color of the wood,\nwith walls and furnishings of a\nmedium dark  colpr  combination.\nOol up at twgriT\nTo find his bathroom\nlooted a sight.\nYour home , is where you\nspend most of your Hie.\nTherefore, you want everything, including your,\nplumbing, as perfect as possible. Wa are ever at your\n\"service in case of emergency, Call us anytime of\nnight or day.\nKootenay\nP\/uinh'Kg&Beating fa\/',\nT.5. JEMSON\n13' BAKtR STRtET       PHONFtf*\nJl\u00bbam Hot Water & Hot Ait H<o' \u25a0\nThis is often favored in the refurbishing of an old house, retaining an\natmosphere of mellowed tradition\nwhile injecting a crisp note'of modernity.',\nIn either case; the new, interesting effect, bf natural-finish wood'\nwork has spread in widespread\nfavor through the ready availability\nof easy-to-apply stains and finishes\nthrough local paint stores and con.\ntracting painters. Rich new finishes\nin the natural color of redwood and\ncedar, the delicate hues\" ot butternut, ash and pecan, as well as the\nnew tints of the loved Canadian\nmaple, formerly custom made, now\nmay be bought ready mixed, Then\nthere are1 transparent lacquers, varnishes ahd shellacs for very light\nnatural finishes! they bring out the\nlatent charm of the wood and make\n.cleaning no trouble at all. Old coatings come off quickly with easy-\nto-use commercial removers; dingy\nsurfaces brighten up with bleaches.\nUse the new stains on unfinished\nwood furniture too. If the joints\nare snugly made, and (tie grain pattern and color uniform, you can gat\nfascinating results.\nReal estate men'\nknow. Bright, colorful\nB-H \".ENGLISH\" does\nmake homes worth\nmore because it's a\nbeautiful, economical,\nlong-lasting exterior\npaint.\nApply by\nbrushpr\nsp\u00abay.\n\u25a0bjjftoJsH*\n\u25a0JSbbj\nNelson1\nSales and Service\nLimited\n745 Baker St.    Nelson, B.C.\nKiwanians Told\nOf Coast Meet\nReport on tha Pacific Northwest\ndistrict conference of Kiwanis International was given Kiwanis\nClub at the Hume Thursday night\nAn outline of the event was presented by N. R. Sardlch, vice-\npresident of the Nelson Club,\nt Dr. Joseph Vingo also reported\non a visit to the University Club\nat Seattle, made during a trip to\nthe Coast.\nP. C. Hiles of Kiwanis Club of\nTrail was a guest and invited the\nmembers to a meeting ot his club\nIn the near future. Recently the\nTrail Club visited Nelson.\nIn a novel program arranged by\nDonald Hunter, the members enjoyed a game of bingo,\nThe B.B.C. prayer tor the King\nwas recited by the members following the meeting.\nR.A.F. landmine\nStarts Ticking\n. NURNBERCfc Germany, Sept 18\n(Reuters)\u2014Police cleared 8000 persons from their homes today \u2014\nworking desperately against the\nquiet ticking of a huge landmine\nthat has Iain dormant underground\nsince the war.\nAn excavator clearing rubble\nfrom wartime bomb hits nudged the\nhuge tank of explosive last night\nand the ticking began.\nA bomb specialist said the mine\nwill go off I-f anyone Mas to remove\nth* fuse, It it believed .to have bean\ndropped by the R.A.F. during the\nwa*\n'Os* government will decide today whether the mine should be\nblown up without being moved.\nThis would cause groat damage to\nsurrounding buildings.   \/\nWINNIPK., 8ept. 28 CCP) \u2014 A\nCanadian Iflying Instructor and a\nBritish student pilot were injured\nThursday when their Harvard\ntrainer crashed while attempting to\nland at an auxiliary landing field\nfive miles North ot Nettley, Man.\nThe plane was from the R.C.A.F.\nstation at Gimll, Man.\nThe instructor is F.O. William A.\nField, 39, of Vancouver, lie name\nof the student was withheld pending notification of his relatives.\nBoth were brought to Deer Lodge\nMilitary Hospital here. The condition of Field was described as \"dangerous\". He suffered head injuries\nand a leg fracture. Hospital officials said he had made good progress since admission.\nThe student, suffered aibrokeri::leg\nand arm..\nThe plane was- completely\nwreaked.\nStatement Issued\nOn Sunnybrook\nOTTAWA, Sept. X (CP)T-Ve\u00bber-\nans Minister Lapointe said today\nthat if responsible officers of the\nOntario Provincial Command of the\nCanadian Legion feel allegations regarding'Sunnybrook Veterans' Hospital require investigation, \"we are\nwining to give them every facility.\"\nThe Minister issued a statement\ncommenting on. allegation^ about\nthe.Toronto hospital made at St\nCatharines, Ont, Thursday, by Arthur Fadbury, Provincial Service\nBureau chairman of the Canadian\nLegion. Mr. Padbury said Sunnybrook provides treatment \"of the\nsausage-mill variety\", that suicides\nhad occurred there without investigation, and that it was a \"school for\nToronto University medical students\".\nTho giant steel and timber pier\nat Southend, England, stretches 11-3\nmiles, longest pier tn the world.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nSgfvmf Ih (?Va*fa\nM yarn atom to\ndsaoM North tmrn\nExpect    packing\nto   kwf   \u25a0 \u25a0rains*\nftpinlr m jar\nWest\nTransfer\nCo.\nPhone 33\n719 Baker St.  Nelson, B.C\nilllillliliilililllliiillllillliililliliniillli\nTo Perform\nMajor Operations\nOn Battlefield\nOTTAWA, Sept* _B (CP) -\nMedical teams equipped to do surgical operations on the battlefield\nwill leap into action with Canada's\nparatroopers in any \"defence of Canadian soil, the Army said today. .\nIt said Canada's first airborne\narmy medical unit\u2014the 37th Field\nAmbulance of the R.C.A.M.C.\u2014has\nreached an advanced stage ot preparation at Camp Borden, Ont,' -\nThe! heart of the unit's flying\ncomponent is the surgical team.\nThree such teams\u2014ona for each\nfighting Infantry battalion \u2014. are\nready to jump- into tha battlefield.\nEach surgical team, consisting of a\nsurgeon, an anaesthestlst, operating\nroom assistants and medical assistants, will drop with complete field\noperating room equipment including surgical Instruments, drugs and\ndressings.\nOften paratroops must drop into\nisolated positions where there Is\nlittle hope of quick relief, tha Arm\nsaid. Casualties cannot be evacuated\nImmediately. The .surgical 'team\nwould be able to set \"up an operating\nroom on tha battlefield.\nReady for any emergency, tha\nunit will ba able to do major surgery in the field.\ntwo Hen Injured\nIn Trainer Crash\nCreston Plans Credit\nUnion Organization\nCRBSTON, BC, Sept 18 -Following the laying of the groundwork for the formation of a Credit\nUnion, tha general meeting of organization will ba held shortly.\nThere haa been steady progress\nmade in the formation of Credit\nUnions throughout the country under the direction of the B. C. Credit\nUnion League, supervised by the\nB. C. Government and governed by\nthe Credit Unions Act.\nThe aims and purposes of a Credit\nUnion arte   ,\nt To .encourage thrift by providing a safe, convenient and attractive medium for investment\nof the savings ot its members.\nI. To assist one another with\nloans when circumstances re-\n?uire same,\no train members in business\nmethods and self government\nand to bring them a realization\nof tbe value of cooperation.\nWord haa been received that a\nB.   C.   Government   Inspector   of\nCredit Unions will ba in Creston to\nassist with the organization.\nDevaluation Blamed\nOn Extravagances\nLONDON, Sept. 28 (AP)\u2014Winston Churchill called upon Britain\ntoday to free itself from Socialism\nin order to rebuild its life at home\nand Its prestige abroad.\nIn a 1800-word Conservative\nParly manifesto, tha T6-year-oId\nwartime Prime Minister said the\nOct. 25 general election \"may well\nbe the turning point in the fortunes\nand even life of Britain.\"\n\"There must be no Illusions abbut\nour difficulties and dangers,\" he\nsaid.\nChurchill'demanded an end to\nclass warfare and a growth in national unity. He blamed the \"frantic extravagances\" of the Labor\nGovernment for devaluation of the\npound from $4.02 to :\n18, 1949,\non Sept.\nTourists Figures\nExceed All Records\nVICTORIA, B.C., Sept. 28 (CD-\nRecreational travel to-British Columbia during August this year established an all-time high for any\nmonth in\" history.\nThe total of 48,773 foreign vehicles\nentering B. C, customs ports, on\ntravellers' vehicle permits during\nthis period was nine per cent greater than tbe previous mark of 42,-\n809 set In July, 1950, and a gain of\n5099\u2014or 12 per cent\u2014over August,\n1950, when 41,874 foreign vehicles\ncrossed border points.\nAt the same time the eight-month\ntotal for 1951 reached 181,023 vehicles, compared to 169,232 In a similar period in 1950, an Increase . of\n14 per cent.\nDRAG WORKER, FLAMING\nMASS, FROM MANHOLE\nEDMONTON, Sept 28 (CP)\u2014A\ncity telephone worker described as\n\"a flaming mass\" was dragged today from a manhole turned into an\ninferno by explosion and fire.\nThe man, Alt Lewis, 55, suffered\nfirst, second and third-degree burns.\nHis fellow worker, Jack Longoz,\nsaid \"all of a sudden there was an\nexplosion and a sheet of flame leapt\nabout six to eight feet all around\nAlt\"\nJkb yiflodsihJTL Mojftui Planned Landscaping Improves\nValue and Beauty of Home\nFour Rooms and Garage\nThe combination of wrought\nIron trellis, brick, and frame\nsiding make up the pleasing\nexterior of this bright home,\nThe Interior features a large\nliving room with a fireplace,\nTha dining area Is adjacent to\ntha kltohen, and a central hall,\nway makes all the rooms readily aooesilble, Two bedrooms\nthat can accommodate twin\nbads, and an attached garage'\nsomplate tha design ot this\n' hems and make It a place of\nreal living. All It needs li youl\n, Thtis plans are published for the Interest and Information value\nonly. The Dally News cannot supply detailed blueprints or specifications. Those contemplating building homes should consult a local\narchlteot designer or builder. .\n\u2014T_J*J J \u2022\"\"* fete\nHospital Officials\nMeet in Kaslo today\nLandscaping Is a necessary part ot\na new house. It provides an attractive setting for the hot' ;e, increases\nthe value of the propert- and makes\ncomfortable and convenient outdoor\nliving possible.\nThe proper arrangement ot\nflower.! and shrubs can lend eye-\nappeal to a home and garden and\nexpress the individual character and\ntastes ot the family owning lt. Certain basic plantings are needed on\nany small property \u2014 trees for\nshade, flowering shrubs for background, seasonal flowers for that\nextra touch of color, ahd evergreens\nfor both appearance and protection\nfrom Winter winds, Of course, the\nactual landscaping pattern will de\npend on cost, lndlvldua. wishes, and\nthe surface features of the property,\n. A good, long-term landscaping\nplan will allow you to develop your\nproperty from season to season in\nkeeping with what you can afford,\nThe first step is to decide how much\nfoliage Is needed for shade. A large\nmaple will provide protection from\nthe sun in Summer, and a dash of\ncolor in Autumn, The weeping\nwillow and the small-leaf European\nlinden are ideal for moist locations,\nEvergreens, aside from providing\ncolor and wlftd protection in Winter,\nwill also.give shade in Summer.\nThe entrance to your house may\nbe used as the focal point In planning the front'', area. Neat, low-\ngrowing, shrubs on each side of the\ndoorway suggest orderliness and\nthey help to break the straight lines\nof the house.\nOpen turf areas in front and rear\nare increasing in popularity owing\nto their ease of maintenance. Flowering shrubs, such as mock orange,\nNorthern bay berry, common purple\nlilac and spirea are the ideal types\nto meet border layout problems,\nNELSON MAN TO\nU.K. FIGHTERS\nKASLO, B.C, Sept. 29-D. Ironsides of Victoria, research assistant for the B.C. Hospital Insurance\nService will attend a meeting of\nWest Kootenay regional hospitals\nhere today. ^--,\nThe conference will discuss hospital problems and draft resolu\ntions for presentation at the B.C.\nhospitals convention next month in\nVancouver. '\u25a0: j\n'Guest speakers will be Rev. A.\nL. Anderson of Nelson and Dr. J.\nS. Daly of Trail.\nSix representatives are expected\nfrom Trail, and at least five from\nNelson.\nSecret Test for\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 28 (Reuters) \u2014 Britain's new lightwight\nautomatic rifle has been secretly\ntested against the latest United\nStates and Belgian automatic Weapons, the' Defence Department disclosed today. .\nA department spokesman said the\nrifles have been tested under varying climatic conditions tor hitting\npower, accuracy and rate of fire.\nThe tests were attended by British, French, Belgian and U.S. authorities but the results were kept\nsecret. They were held in connection with the decision to seek the\nbest rifle as the standard infantryman'! weapon for Atlantic Pact\narmies, -   '\nHarvest Festivals\nWell Attended\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 28-Angll-\ncan Harvest Festival services in the\nParish of the Arrow Lakes were\nwall attended both Sundays on\nwhich they were held, Sept, 18 and\n23, notwithstanding the heavy rains\nof the 23rd. All churches in the Parish were decorated, and the response was most encouraging.\nThe Boys' Choir at St. Mark's,\nNakusp, started their season's work\nagain, but were unable to sing their\nanthem as sickness had made havoc\nin their ranks.\n* The Vicar in his sermon spoke of\nthe natural harvest as a symbol of\nthe spiritual harvest. Services were\nheld at Edgewood and Fauquier\nSept 18, and Burton, Arrow Park\nand Nakusp Sept. 23.\nHeavy Shipment of\nPeaches From Renata\nRENATA, B.c!, Sept. 28 - The\nlast of the peaches have left Renata,\n4978 crates having been shipped,\n1171 prunes and plums were also\nshipped. Barlet, Flemish Beauty and\nother varities totalled 949 boxes.\nThe Mcintosh apple estimate will\nbe lower than last year due to heavy\ndrop. Total possible estimate in-\neluding \u25a0 Delicious, Newtons and\nother varities of apples is 8000\nboxes.\nFrance Ups Steel\nPrice, Downs Coal\nPARIS, Sept. 28 (Reuters)\nFrance has decided to raise the\nprice of steel by 20 per cent, it\nwas learned in quarters close to\nthe Cabinet. The sources said a decree tp'thls effect will be published\nin a few days. The Inter-Mlnlsterial\nCouncil also decided on a subsidy\nof 154,000,000 to reduce the price of\nImported coal, the same quarters\nsaid.\nFirst Wrens\nTo Training Base\nSAINT JOHN, Sept 28 \u2014 The\nfirst post war draft of Women's\nNaval Recruits (WRENS)'will arrive in^Salnt-John from Montreal\non Tuesday morning next, enroute\nto the Cornwallis Naval Base in\nNova Scotia, the Canadian Pacific\nRailway announced today.\nThe party of 24 from principal\nCanadian cities west of and including Montreal to Victoria will get\ntheir sea legs aboard the Princess\nHelene carrying them to Digby. The\nDominion Atlantic Railway will\ntransport the naval ladies in the\nBritish Empires largest n: val base\nfor their basic training period.\nPERRY SI DING\nWOMAN BURIED\nSlocan Valley residents attended\nfuneral service at Thompson Fun\neraT Home Friday afternoon for\nMrs. Edith Mattews St. Thomas,\nwho died earlier this week at her\nPerry Siding home.\nRev. L. S. van Mossel of First\nPresbyterian Church officiated.\n'Nearer, My God, to Thee\" and\n\"Abide With Me\" were sung with\nMrs. W. A. Manson as organist.\nPallbearers were R. L. Bennett,\nDon Bird, W. S. Jones, R. K. Livingstone^ William Ramsbottom and\nDoug Hozzell,   \"'\u25a0'.\"'\nInterment was in Nelson Mem\norial Park.\nN. Zealand's Coast\nAgent Resigning\nOTTAWA, Sept. 28 (CP) - 0E. E.\nAckland,- New Zealand government\nagent in Vancouver for the last 18\nyears, is resigning at the end of this\nmonth, T. C. A. Hlslop, New Zealand\nhigh commissioner, announced here\ntoday.\nMr. Ackland is resigning \"for personal and business reasons,\" and his\nresignation had been accepted \"reluctantly.\"\nThe New Zealand Vancouver\nagent was active in assisting his\ncountrymen who passed through\nCanada in service during the Second\nWorld War, and in assisting Canadian brides of New Zealand servicemen In getting to New Zealand.\nHe was also active in tourist and\npublicity activities in Western Canada. His ' successor has not been\nnamed,\n. l \u201e    ...\nThe Netherlands has 4309 miles\nof navigable rivers and, canals.\nFRENCH MILLER Maurice\nMalllet 40, has bsen charged with\nmanslaughter In connection with\nthe \"bread madness\" which took\nfour lives and sent 35 others with\nviolent hallucinations to hospitals\nIn Southern France. Malllet was\narrested when flour tainted with\nergot (a vegetable poison) was\ntraced to his mill.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian.\nViews\nFrom the\nNews Fronts\n.. son of Mrs. K. Larrson, 324\nRobson Street, who has been in\nNelson on leave, is leaving Sunday\nfor England. He will sail from the.\nEast coast, October 5,\nL.A.C. Larrson has been transferred to the U.K, Fighter Wing in\ncapacity j of Wireless Technician.\nBorn in Vancouver, he came to\nNelson when in Grade 5 and attended Nelson schools through to\ngraduation. '.\u25a0\".' \u2022\u201e -.\"\nHe left Nelson in March 1950 to\ntrain for tele-communications in\nAylmer and Colinton, Ontario;\n\u2014Vogue Photo\nBy PAUL 8ANDERS\n(For  J.  M.  Hoberts,  Jr.,\nAP Nowo Analyst)!1\nWhatever happens in Argentina\nas :\u00ab*'. result of Friday's revolt\nagainst Peron -? whether it was\nreal or phoney \u2014 one thing seems\ncertain.'\nThe country will have a long\nstruggle before it returns to normal constitutional democracy.\nThe revolt announced by the\nPeron Government may have been\na genuine attempt of army elements to overthrow the regime,\nwhich has run into increasing dissatisfaction over an ever-rising\ncost of living.\nOr it may have been encouraged\n\u2014or even staged \u2014 by the administration to provide a new campaign issue for the Nov. 11 elections, in which Peron is a candidate to succeed himself. Such\nmanoeuvre is not new in South\nAmerican! politics,\nA revolution at a convenient\ntime \u2014 if pUt dpwfl \u2014 gives a\nSouth \"AmerlOan Government an'\nexcuse for crushing the opposition.\nIn many ways mdre progressive\nthan most of the other Latin American republics, Argentina has\nfollowed the pattern of force and\nviolence in politics through many\nof its 141 years of independence,\nAfter it won its independence\nfrom Spain in 1810, Argentina experienced 100 years of lntermltent\npolitical warfare. Those years included more than 20 years of dictatorship in one stretch under Juan\nManuel de Rosas, one of the harsh,\nest rulers in. Latin America's turbulent history.\nIt wasn't until 1851 that Argentina became stable enough to enact a federal constitution. .The\nsecret ballot was introduced only\nin 1910.\nIn the 20 years after the adoption of the secret ballot, Argentina\nfor a time seemed on the road to\neffective democracy. But graft became widespread ahd the army\nleaders decided they again, should\nbecome.the arbiters of the country's politics. .\n..' A successful military.revolt in\n1930 relmposed the old pattern: A\nmilitary government announced it\nwould clean house, then re-estab\nltsh constitutional government. An\narmy general was re-elected constitutional president in 1931\u2014with\nmilitary support. A civilian, Roberto M. Ortiz, followed in 1937\nOrtiz had popular support and\ntried hard to establish honesty in\ngovernment and democratic practices in elections. '    , ,\nBut a fatal illness forced Ortiz\nout of office in 1940 and his successor, Ramon Sv Castillo, was\nswept from power b\"y another army\nrevolt in 19^3. Again army leaders\nsaid graft and corruption forced\nthem to act'.\nThe 1943 revolution brought\nJuan D. Peron to the centre,of the\nstage\u2014and apparently be Intends\nto stay there as long as he can\nmanage.\nHog-Trailer Hit by\nTrain, Men Injured\nEDMONTON, Sept. 28 (CP)-^r A\nC.N.R. passenger train scattered\ntrailer-load of hogs along 125 yards\nof track In a level-crossing accident\nlast night.\nTwo men in the cab of the cattle\ntruck, Roy Tomashewsky and Nick\nLuchko of Andrew Alta., were se-\nverly injured.\nThe hogs, thrown from the wreck,\nmilled around the scene, squealing\nfrom their injuries. Police shot nine\nand three others were killed\noutright\nL.A.C. INQMAR LARRSON\nEasf Kootenay\nWeeklies Open\nNews Exchange\nCRESTON, B.C., Sept. 28 - East\nKootenay's four weekly newspapers have formed an association\nfor the exchange of news and\npictures.\nThis \"progressive step In Journal- .\nism\" was taken at a meeting here\not newspaper representatives, who\nstated the action was \"In the interest Of the general newspaper\nreading public\"\nAt the meeting were Walter\nMansfield and David Kay, Cranbrook Courier; Ernest Moss, Kimberley News; Victor Rail, Fernla\nFree Press, and H. K. Legg, Creston\nReview. Mr. Legg was made chairman and Mr, Mansfield secretary.\nA news service to be sent by\nwire or mall will be started immediately, lt was decided. Stories\nand pictures will oarry the initials,\nEKNS, East Kootenay News Service.\nEstablishing of a photo-engraving service either by separate\nprivate enterprise or by the papers\nwill be studied.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nHigh Explosives\nParked by Bridge\nWINNIPEG, Sept1 28 (CP) - A\nquantity of nitro-glycerlne and\nsome detonating caps \u2014 enough* to\ncrack 50 safes\u2014were discovered on\nThursday beneath one end ot the\nNorwood bridge in the heart of\nWinnipeg. Police said the explosive\napparently had been cached there\nearly this year by safecrackers.\nAn expert removed the explosive,\ncontained In four small- bottles, and\ntook it to iStoney Mountain, Man.,\nwhere it was detonated. A motorcycle escort accompanied the police\ncar carrying the explosive through\nWinnipeg traffic.\nThe bottles had been hidden between the bridge structure and a\nnew retaining wall. An explosive\nexpert said that If traffic vibration\non the bridge had set it off damage\nwould probably have been lpcal\nalthough the blast would be powerful.\n\"\u00abn\nTime\nChanges\nTonight\nSee CKLN\nSchedules   \u00a5\nDist. Governor to\nVisit Creston Lions\nCRESTON, B. C, Sept. 28-\nThirty-slx members of the Creston\nLions Club heard routine reports of\nfuture activities and also a zone\nmeeting report by Gordon Thorpe,\nChairman of the zone.\nFred Martello read the final fi-\nnancial statement of the, carnival.\nHe also gave an audited account of\nthe club's financial standing.\nPresident H. K. Legg reported\nthat the -District Governor would\nviBlt Creston October 10.\nDana White, the Entertainment\nChairman, stated there would be a\nladles' night in the form of a Hallowe'en party. '\nI ;l. I    II     fill M ft If    I ft A N t    I   |  ,|   |   S\n: NIAGARA- tt^HtJin**\n\"        are made qultklyl\n:        |\nPUBLIC DRINKING\nBRINGS 30 DAYS\nAlexander J. McDonald, of no\nfixed abode, pleaded guilty in City\nCourt Friday to a charge of consuming liquor in a public place.\nThe charge arose when McDonald\nwas apprehended by police Thursday night drinking from a gallon\njug of wine on Baker Street.\nHe was fined $50 or in default of\npayment, 30 days by Magistrate\nWilliam Brown.\nMcDonald took the 30 days.\n' If your n**d li r*ady cash,\nyour Niagara man will help you\nto secure quickly Hit bait typo\nof loan for you. Thtra's no\ndelay or rod-tap* at Niagara\nFlnanca .., many loans being\nmad* tn 20 mlnutoi. Four loan\nplans hav* bean designed for i\nyour convonlonco and repayment! can b* ipread over many\nmonth,. Rates ar* reasonable\nand loam, up to $1,000 ar*\nlife-Iniured at no extra colt.\nt\\ private Interview Is walilni\nfor you whenever you call \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nand th* friendly quick-strvlc*\nwill surprise you.\n\u25a0 IAGARA\nTUilinSsSj  <ma.mmtnimmm*K\nSuite 1 660 Baker St\nPhone 1095\nSIS   l|    I MINIS*   I* INI    I   I   I I II\nThere's a lifollme ef comfort ahead\nwhon-you insulate your homo with\nFibtrglas, And Flbarglas saves on\nyour fuel bills (\u00ab Hut It loan pays\nfor Knit.\nneres\nnot\/*\/tiff Mt\nFOR KEEPING\nBUILDINGS WARM\nIN WINTER\nAND 000L\nIN SUMMER\nfasutote fir Ufa with\nFiberglas BUILDING INSULATION\nMADE  IN  CANADA\nWON'T ROT   \u2022   WON'T BURN   \u2022   WONT SETTLE\nWON'T SUSTAIN VERMIN\nNELSON WOODWORKING CO.\n273 Baker St. Nelson, B.C. . Phone 1150\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij\n \u25a0--,,\nIt Pays To Buy Quality'\nKODIAK\nSebago-Mocs\nMEN'S- .\nLOAFERS\nRich,   brown   Calf leather.\nLeather  sole,  Neolite heel.\nCushioned insole.\n\u2022     B and D widths.\nSizes 6-11.\n'12.75\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1002\nLONDON (CP)\u2014Suggestions that\nI motorcyclists in Britain should, wear\n[ crash helmets have been made in\nI British newspapers. In the first\nI levefl months this year .53 motorcy-\nI clists were killed, compared with\nBin the same period last year.\nPrexies of Women's Clubs\nTold to Follow, Not Push\nNEW YORK, Sept. 28 (AP) -\nThere are 5,500,000 women's clubs in\nthe United States.\nAnd at least half their presidents\ndo not know the bjisic parliamentary\nrules tor conducting a meeting, says\nAlice F. Sfurgls, author, of \"Sturgis'\nStandard Code of Parliamentary\nProcedure!\"\nMrs. Sturgis, a recognized \u2022parliamentarian, had been studying the\nprocedure of a group of national\norganizations. One of the first things\nthat struck her was the astronomical\nnumber of groups in every U.S. com\nm'unity. The next was the need for\na knowledge of recognized rules\nof procedure.\n\"D0'8 AND DONT'S\"\nFor the millions'of women who\nthis year will; preside at meetings\nof their local clubs, she suggests\n10 rules on how to be a good\nchairman:.\n1. Don't use the club for your\npersonal glory. If you put the good\nof the organizaion first the personal\nplaudits will follow.\n2. Don't keep on being president\n81 Paula Ittttrt auptrdj,\nMinister: Rev. A L. Anderson, B.A,  B.D.,  S.T.M.\nDirector of Music: Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, B.A.. A.T.C.M.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014RALLY DAY SERVICE\nJoint service of church and Sunday School. Music\nby the Boys' Choir, with Donald Brown, soloist.\nThe Sacrament of Baptism will be administered.\nThe Nursery Class will meet in-the Manse.\n7-30 pm-\"THIS IS CHARITY\"\nMusic by the Senior rfioir . ,-\u2022,,'\u2022\nThe Women's Association will meet on Monday in thn   \u2022,\nVenlry nl three o'clock. ,  - -        \"4..\ninttiijj Ihtttrifc QUptrirfr\n' Josephine and Silica Streets\nMINISTER: REV. ALLAN DIXON. B.A.. B.D.\nOrganist and Music Director: Mrs. C. W. Tyler\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 anu\u2014Sermon:.\n\"FAITH, ACTIVE IN LOVE\"\n' Anthem By Senior Choir\n7:30 p.m.-\"A HELPING HAND\"\nPrroinjttrUttt Cfjurrlj to .(Hanafta\nFIR8T PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH\nKootenay and Victoria Streets\nMinister: Rev. L. S. van Mossel. B.A.\n-   \u2022 Organist: Mrs. W. A. M8\"\"1011\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday Sohool\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Worship\nEVERYBODY WELCOME-\nafter.your term is over. Give the\nnew leader a chance.\n3. Be sure you understand the\nbasic - policy of your organization,\nand follow it. ..'\n4. If you have an unpleasant duty\nto perform, do it outside the club-\nmeeting. Don't use the rostrum as a\ncentre for a cat-and-dog fight,\n5. Follow, don't push. Your Job is\nto carry out the wishes of all the\nmembers, not to bend (hem to your\nown wlll..'-\n8KIP TECHNICALITIES\n6. Watch principles Instead of\ntechnicalities. You need to know\nthe rules of parliamentary procedure, but remember -that the reason\nfor rules is to facilitate business,\n7. Remember that the president of\n\\ club is in the position ot a judge.\nDon't take sides with one faction\nagainst another.- '\n8. Don't campaign your own Election. If you have tb fight for the\nchairmanship, you probably are not\nyet ready for it.\n9. In presiding, be sure: that there\nis a quorum present, that eveyone\nunderstands each motion, that\nplenty of time is given to discussion,\nthat the vote is taken accurately,\nthat the will bf the majority is\ncarried out and the rights .of the\nminority protected. \u2022\n10. Observe the rules of parliamentary procedure and you will be\nsafe from legal difficulties, avoid\nlawsuits and misunderstandings.\nWillow Point W.A.\nPrays for King\nWILLOW POINT, B.C., Sept. 28\n\u2014Women's Auxiliary to St. And-\nrews'-by-the-Lake closed its meeting in church room with a- prayer\nfor recovery of the King.\nA shower of food articles was\nreceived for a Christmas parcel for\na clergyman in England.\nMrs. H. Hankln was named delegate to the annual deanery meeting at South Slocan Thursday. Mrs.\nB. Townshend will also attend and\nany other members wishing to go.\nA Summer sale brought in $112,\nmembers were informed. Secretary\nreported a donation of $5 to the\nSunday School yah.\nRobson W.I. Buys\nKitchen Equipment\nROBSON, B.C., Sept. 28 \u2014 Decision to bu\u00a3 cups and saucers and\nteaspoons for its kitchen was made\nby Robson Women's Institute at\nits first'Fall meeitng at the home\nof Mrs. R. W. Chalmers.\nA parcel of tea is to be sent\noverseas.\nAfter business, which included\ncommittee reports, Mrs- Chalmers\ngave a demonstration on how to\nbone a chicken, :\n7bsdkcAa\u00a7L\n#tn$i fltyurdj at\nA Branch of tbe Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School \u2014 9:45 a.m\nSunday Service \u2014 11:00 a.m.\nSUBJECT \u2014\n\"REALFY\"    \u2022\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8:00 p.m.   .\nReading Room open dally, 3-5,\nExcept Wednesday\nAll Cordially Welcome\nftratlapitat\n1       (Elptrrij\nCottonwood and Fourth Streets\nRev. Thep. T. Gibson. B.A.,\nPastor.\n.10:15 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:15 a.m.\u2014Morning Worship\nMr. J. A. Bracken, preacher.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening-Service\nTuesday, 7:15\u2014B.Y.P.U.\nWednesday, 8:00\u2014Mld-Week\nMeeting.   .\nFriday, 7:00\u2014Explorers,\nSaturday, 10:30 a.m.\u2014Mission\nBand.\nfull Ckaprl\nBmrtttB\nEAGLE HALL\nPastor: Rev. Paul Lade\n7:30 p.m\nSUNDAY\n- Evangelistic Service\nHOLDING  FORTH\nTHE WORD OF LIFE\nEihrngfltral\n\u00a7 \" .     \u25a0 \u25a0    '\nJUaaum (Enwnatti\nBaker and Hendryx Streets\nVERNON K. LUND, Pastor\nCONFIRMATION SUNDAY\n10:00   a.m.\u2014Sunday School '..\n11:00  a.m.\u2014Confirmation  Exercises  .\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer Time\n7:30   p.m.\u2014Confirmation   Program.\np.m. SS Teacher's\nI p.m, Y.P.S.\n7:30   p.m.   Prayer\nMonday, 7:3\nMeeting\nTuesday! 7:3\n..Wednesday,\nService.\nSaturday. 7:30 p.m. First Service\nof Fall Youth Rally, Rev. H.\nJ.\" Ness, Speaker\nWELCOME TO A FRIENDLY,\nSPIRITUAL CHURCH IN THE\nHEART   OF  NELSON.\n708 Baker Street 1\nREV. I. M PRESLEY, Pastor\nSUNDAY -\n0:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning   Devotional\nService.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic Meeting\nTUESDAY -\n8:00 p.m \u2014Prayer   and   Bible\nStudy.\nFRIDAY -\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Young Peoples\n(C.A.'s)\n\\<ftlptrrij ot\ntljp Htbnmn\n(Anglican)\nFAIRVIEW\nCANON W. J  SILVERWOOD\nA.K.C.. B.Sc Vicar.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday  School   and\n'   Bible Class.\n11:00 \"a.m.\u2014Holy Communion.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Dedication of Memorial to Mrs. R. Vyse\n3:30 p.m.\u2014South Slocan. ,     ,\nEASY WOODWORK\nIT'S ' EASY\u2014this woodworking!\nTransfer'the design on plywood or\ntempered masonite. Jig-saw around\nit. Paint in features. Result\u2014a handsome sign fpr your lawn or for a\nChristmas gift!\nPattern C689: transfers and directions for two lawn signs.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\nin coin's (stamps cannot be\ncepted) for this pattern to Nelson\nDaily News, Needlecraft Dept., '266\nBaker St., Nelson. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME,\nand ADDRESS.\nSend Twenty-five Cents more (in\ncoins) for our Laura Wheeler\nNeedlecraft Book. Illustrations of\npatterns for crochet, embroidery,\nknitting, household accessories,\ndolls, toys ... many hobby and\ngift ideas. A free pattern is printed\nin the book.\n&altmtum Antttj\n513 Victoria Street\n' LIEUT. H. LEWIS\nLIEUT. W. McKENZIE\n8UNDAY\u2014\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting,\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evangelistic Sersice.\nEVERYBODY WELCOME\nNAKUSP; CGIT\nNAMES SLATE\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 28 \u2014 Miss\nDoreen Woldi-um has been elected\npresident of Nakusp Canadian Girls\nin Training for 1951-52. ;\u25a0\nMiss Katherine ' Lang is vice-\npresident; Miss June Brown, secretary; Miss Yvonne Steenhoff, treasurer, and Miss Margaret Spiers,\npublicity convener. M\u00ab, D. R. Stone\nand Miss Joan Brown are leaders.\nPlans are under way for a display\nof handicrafts to be held by the\ngroup at Shelter Bay.\nNAKUSP L.A.\nHAS TEA, SALE\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 28 \u2014 Mrs.\nThomas Mitchell, president, welcomed guests to the annual harvest sale ai\u00a3d tea of Ladies' Auxili-\nary to St. Mark's Anglican Cljurch\nin parish hall. '\nHome baking of members was\nreadily sold under salesmanship of\nMrs. J, Norris, Mrs. R. McWhirter\nand Mrs. M. Balrd.,Fruit and vegetable sales were handled by Mrs.\nR. J. Humphris and Mrs. Ed Lodge.\nTea arrangements were made by\nMrs.,M. Embree, Mrs. D. Spiers,\nMrs. R. J. Armstrong, Mrs. Falkiner and Miss F. Kerr.\nI.O.D.E. Executive\nMeets Next Week\nTORONTO, Sept. 28 (CP) - The,\nNational Executive Committee meeting of the Imperial Order Daughters\nof the Empire will be held here\nWednesday.\nPreviously the meeting was set\nahead to Oct. 10 to avoid conflict\nwith the originally-planned dates of\nthe Royal Tour. But with the tour\npostponed a week, the National\nOffice has fixed the new date.\nJhsLWthltt-ol\nSACRED HEART CHURCH at South Slocan was the\nsetting for the marriage of Helena Aben, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. M. Aben of Bonnington, and-George Victor Gerlinsky, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Gerlinsky of\nCavell, Sask. They are shown here with Henry Aben,\nbest man; Mrs. Aben, matron of honor, and Theresa\nTroyn, flower giri.\u2014Renyrick photo., '\nPythian Sisters Post\nKimberley Drama Cup\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Sept. 28 \u2014\nAnnouncement that Temple No. 27,\nPythian   Sisters,   is   awarding   a\nNews of the Day\nSmall business for sale. Living accommodations available. Ph. 364Y2.\nPLAYMOR  \u2014 4  HOUR8  OF\nDANC|NQ\u2014TONIGHT\nRotary luncheon, Monday, October 1, Hume Hotel, 12:15 p.m,\nMAC'S COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY  ALL  THE  WAY.\nDon't waitjintll after' the fire,\nINSURE NOW Blackwood Agency.\nHot  peanuts  and  hot   buttered\npopcorn anytime at Waits.\nGet your hunting and fishing license at Jack Boyce's Men's Shop.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable reoairs\nat moderate prices,\nTo add to your holiday pleasures,\ntake along a box of FRESH CANDY\nfrom qRAY'S.\nMONAMEL in handy 2 oz. size \u2014\n12 bright colors and clear \u2014 29c.\nBURN8 LUMBER CO.\nHave you a gun you would like\nto trade\u2014 \u25a0\nJACK BOYCE  MEN'S  SHOP\nHolland   Bulbs\u2014Just  received\nLarge Selection1\nMAC'S   FLOWER   8HOP\nHolland and B.C. bulbs. The best\nquality obtainable at \u2014\nCOVENTRY8\u2014PHONE   962\nNew shipment ladies good quality\nhousedresses, all sizes\u2014$2.95:\nTHE   CHILDREN'S   8H0P\nELECTROLUX\nCLEANERS AND POLISHERS.\nPHONE 1108 OR 553\n8PECIAL \u2014 150 PAIRS SHOES,\nREG. TO $15, NOW $2.95, AT\nFINK'S.\nSCOTT'S TIRE SHOP\nVULCANIZING\nTRADE IN YOUR OLD TIRES\n507 VERNON ST. \u2014 PHONE 1122\nDANCING WITH MUSIC BY THE\n\"MODERN AIRS\" AT EAGLES\nHALL TONITE 9 TO 12\u2014COME\nEARLY.\n' C.C.M, Bicycles for all ages. Men's\nand ladies', boys' and girls', standard and balloon tired models.\n'   HIPPERSON'S.\nFOR SMARTER 8H0ES FOR\nNATURAL WALKING, BUY 'NATURAL BRIDGE'. AAAA TO EEE,\n$15.00,. AT JINK'S.\nHollywood Beds\nComplete    with    headboard,    box.\nspring and spring-filled mattress\u2014\n$97.00\nSTERLING  HOME  FURNISHERS\n.  WATCH REPAIRING\n\u2022IS A JOB FOR EXPERTS\nOur Work assures your Satisfaction\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\n491 Baker Street\nInsulation, Weatherstrip\", Window\nGlass, Putty, Soot Destroyer, Furnace Cement, etc. Check your requirements now!\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nNOTICE\n. All members of Kootenay Lodge\nNo. 18, and-members of Queen City\nRebekah' Lodge No. 16, who are\ngoing to District meeting in Rossland today, are requested to meet\nat I.O.O.F. -Hall. Bus will be leaving at 12 o'clock sharp.\nFor your weekend readihg, drop\nin at. VALENTINE'S for the latest\nin good magazines and Pocket\nBooks,\nRubber floor tile in many attrao-\ntive colors. Tile and linoleum laying expertly done.\nT. H. WATER8 A CO. LTD.\n101 Hal) St., Nelson, B.C., Phone 158\nLingerie in nylon, tricot and non-\nrun jersey; beautifully made and\nfinished ;most reasonable in these\ndays of high prices. Orders taken\nnow may be delivered up to Aug. 31\nTICKNER TAILORS- PHONE 10T\ntfor fast and easy preparation of\nmashed, riced or strained fruits and\nvegetables, try a Foley Food Mill\nIdeal for jams, and jellies, applesauce, creamed soups, infants' and\ninvalids' foods, etc..   .\nHIPPERSON'S\n2  only  10-pce.  bedroom  suite's,\nwaterfall design $199.50 each.   C.\nWe buy and sell new and used\nfurniture.\nHOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE\nPHONE 1560 - 413 HALL 8T.\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nSPECIAL -\nWOODEN\nCLOTHES LINE PULLEYS\n29c EACH\nMc & Me (NELSON) LTD.\nIRENES\nNEW f ALL HAT8 IN THE\nLATE8T 8TYLE8\nSPUN   MATERNITY, DRE88E8\nAT $7.95    \/\nHOU8EDRES8ES'AND   8M0CK8\nAT $2.96\n8IZE8 14 TO 62\nTHE . NELSON BADMINTON\nCLUB will hold its first meeting of\nthe season Tuesday Oct. 2 at 7 p.m.\nin the Civic Centre Hail'. Everyone\ninterested please turn out for the\nshort meeting to be followed by\nbadminton play. Come and see the\nnew plastic \"bird\" designed to reduce the cost of play considerably,\nFILM   COUNCIL.CONFERENCE\nWest Koot. Film Council Conference Sat. and Sun. Sept. 29 and\n30. The Theme is \"Proper Use of\nFilm\". Sessions to be held in Catholic Hall, Mill St. Registration of\ndelegates 2:30 p.m. Public cordially\ninvited to attend.\nIN   MEMORIAM\n_ McDonald, David, in loving memory.\nGone, dear father, gone forever-\nHow we miss your smiling face.\nBut you left us to remember,\nNone   on   earth   can  take  your\nplace.\nA happy home we once enjoyed,\nHow sweet the memory still-\nBut death has left a loneliness, .\nThe world can never fill.\nSadly missed by your loving wife,\nsons William and Joe arid four\ndaughters, Mary, Lily, Irene and\nNellie.\nCARD OF THANK8\nWe wish to thank our many\nfriends for their acts of kindness,\nwords of sympathy and floral tributes during our recent sad bereavement.\nMr. John St Thomas and Family.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank our many\nfriends and neighbors for their\nkind.expressions of sympathy and\nfloral tributes in the loss of our\nbeloved husband, son and brother.\nMrs. Elaine Wigg, Mrs. A. Wigg\nand family, Mr. and Mrs. Anderson.\nsenior drama trophy with smaller\ntrophies for tb,e best actor and\nactress in the senior group, has\nbeen made.\nBecause the Kimberley Drama\nClub embraces both junior and\nsenior groups, a\" committee of four\nhas been set up to define what will\nconstitute a senior class.\nThe committee consists of Mrs.\nHarold Sims for Pythian Sisters,\nMiss A. Mercer, A. Bate and Major\nM. J, Evans.'*\nPythian Sisters have named to\ntheir trophy committee Mrs. Paul-\nin Birrell, Mrs. May Scott and Mrs.\nDoreen Jones.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 29, 1951 \u2014 5\nModernize Your Home\nWith on\nINLAID\nEspecially designed for you and' your home. Quotation\ngladly given, All installations guaranteed.\nAT\n^Aec\/nfl^\nNelson Social\nRobson W.A. Holds\nTea, Bake Sole\nROBSON, B.C., Sept. 26 \u2014The!\nWomen's Association of Robson\nCommunity Memorial Church sponsored an Auftjmn tea and bake sale\nin the church hall. ,\nA bake table, superfluity table\nand fish pond attracted visitors.\nGladioli and other flowers decorated\ntea tables.     \" . '\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Campbell\nof New York were recent guests\nat the home of their uncle and aunt,\nMagistrate William Brown and Mrs.\nBrown, Victoria Street, while en-\nrbute to sailing for Johannesburg,\nSouth Africa-where they will be\nmaking their home. They were accompanied to Nelson from Trail by\nMr. Campbell's mother, and aunt,\nMrs. V. M. Campbell and Mrs. D. D.\nTownsend who also were guests of\nthe Browns. \u2022'\u2022\n\u2022 Rev. A. L. Anderson of St.\nPaul's United Church attended the\nKootenay Presbytery meeting in\nKijnberley.\n\u2022 St. Saviour's Mother's Club\nmembers met in Memorial Hall\nThursday when Mrs. F. B. Pearce\nand Mrs. F. Jasper were co tea\nhostesses.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. WF. H. Wilson,\nSilica Street, have as guests Mrs.\nWilson's brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mrs. L. DickW of the\nReeves MacDonald mine.\n\u2022 The United W.M.S.* Study\nGroup met at the-home of Mrs. Max\nCoventry, 1716 Stanley Street, with\nMrs. M. T. Harris presiding. Mrs. J.\nC. Chambers, Mrs. H. .A Custer and\nMrs. '3j A. Wilson gave a very Interesting introduction of the new\nstudjr on Canadian Missions. \"From\nLakes to Northern Lights\". Mrs. W.\nR. McDonald was in charge of refreshments. A guest was Dr. Alice\nHawker, a formers Medical Missionary in India..   1'.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. H. McLean, 613 Front\nStreet, is visiting her parents, in\nCranbrook.\n0JUOA. lip, Wiih.\n938er^w\nHOLIDAY DATER!\nGet off to a wonderful start for\nAutumn activities! Get this, pat-\nternl New sleeves, new angle to the\nmandarin collar, new slant to the\nside-entrance pockets, new flirt to\nthe skirt\u2014everything's new and so\nbecoming to YOU! You need-this\ndressl\n' Pattern 9388 in sizes 12, 14,16, 16,\n20; 40. Size 16 takes, 4% yards 39-\ninch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend THIRTY-FIVE CENTS\n(35c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIJf), care of Nelson Dally\nNews; Tattern Dept., Nelson.\nNew Denver Group\nGreets President1\n' NEW DENVER, B.C., Sept. 2t \u2014\nNew Denver Past Chiefs' Club\nwelcomed back its president, Mrs.\nPearl Depretto, who has been ill,\nat its September meeting at the\nhome of Mrs. J. E. Kennett.\nMembers - decided to buy a\nwreath for Remembrance Day service, and also to buy goods for\nbazaar of Lucerne Temple, Pythian\nSisters. New visiting committee\nconsists of Mrs. tila Thomlinson\nand Miss Beatrice Bell.\nAfter the, meeting, members\nplayed \"500\", with Miss Marjorie\nButlin winning first prize and Mrs.\nMae Taylor, consolation.\nAlthough foxes had existed in\nEngland from earliest times, the\nsport of fox-hunting did (not become popular until the 17th century.\nLOVELY HATS\nALL STYLCS AND COLORS-\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\n.'\u25a0'',.    By MRS.-M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Dr. and Mrs. T. M Auld,\nNelson Avenue, Fairview, leave by\nmotor today for -Vancouver where\nthe doctor will attend the Annual\nMedical Doctor's Convention.\n\u2022 Mrs,   C.   E.   Jofgensen,' Bid,-\nCedar Street,, was - a -delegate, from\nSt Paul's United Church to the\nKootenay  Presbytery  meeting .'in:\nKimberley.\n\u2022 James Waldie, Cottonwood\nStreet, is visiting relatives in the\nOkanagan district;\n\u2022 Visitors in Nelson Included\nMr. and Mrs. J. C. Hooker of Victoria, former residents of Nelson,\nwho are visiting\u25a0' with: their sons,\nC. W- Hooker and Earl Hooker and'\ntheir family.\n\u2022 Dr. Alice Hawker of Vancouver is visiting at the home of her\ncousins, Dr. Annie Smith and Miss\nMay Smith, 215 Innes Street.\n\u2022 Commander R. T. Dean has:\nreturned from Shaughnessy Hospl-,\ntal and is with his daughter, Mrs\/'\nG. A. Butting, Eighth Street, Fair-:\nview.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. A. C. Laughton, Second Street,- Fairview, have\nhad as guest Mrs. Laughton's mother\nMrs. Eurby Sr., of Grand Forks who\nis enroute home from Kimberley\nwhere she attended the Kootenay\nPresbytery meeting.\nDESMOND   T. \".\nLITTLE WOOD\noptometrist\nSuccessor to J. 0. Patenaude\nPHONE 293 NELSON, B. C.\nPhone 889\nTQWLER\nFuel A Transfer\n\"\"\u2022    Nelson, B.C.\nMODERATELY\nPRICED\/\nSTORAGE\nWHY TAKE A CHANCE ?\nYour most precious effects are\nperfectly safe in our hands. Take\nadvantage of bur clean, dry,\nspacious warehouse where you\n\u25a0may store your belongings for as\nlong as you wish.\nPHONE 1106 TODAY\nARROW Van & Storage Ltd.\n\"    212 STANLEY ST., NELSON\n JMamt latlg Jfa\u00bbB\nEstablished April 22. 1802\nBritish Columbia's*\nMosl interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by tho\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mail\nPost Office Department, Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\n:    Saturday, September 29,1951\nCreston Orchard Emergency\n: Nelson Board of Trade spoke for\nall of Nelsoii when dt offered to organize assistance in the emergency\nthfit struck in Creston apple'orchards.\nThe offer was. primarily the earnest\nextending of a-helping hand to a neigh-1\nbor. Nevertheless, it helped to emphasize the absolute interdependence\nof the communities of Kootenay one\nWith the other, and the interlocking\nof interests that exists,\n.-' \/  - '\u25a0':'\u25a0'\u25a0\nIt does not take an emergency, of\ncourse, to point up these features, for\nthey are visible to all but the most\nshortsighted.   : '\nHappily, the situation at Creston\nseems about to be licked by the expediencies adopted there in a show of\ntypical good community spirit. Because of this success it is easy to look\nback and see that even such emergencies have their good sides in the manifestations of inter-community spirit\nand neighborliness they bring forth.\nAbbott Overshoots\nThe Target Again\nFinance Minister Douglas Abbott,\nwho seems bent on setting some kind\nof a record for wrong guessing, now\ntells us that he .has wrong-guessed his\nbudget surplus by $480 million. He\nhad budgetted for a $30 million surplus\u2014and increased Canadians' taxes\non the basis of such a budget. Instead\nhe finds that with the year only three-\nquarters gone, he has a surplus of 15\ntimes his estimate, $500 million. The\nyear previous he closed his books with\na $203% million surplus after budget-\nting for a $15 million one.\n. Canadians, who are finding it hard\nenough to find money for their own\nnecessities, are going to question a\npolicy that makes it necessary* for\nilhem to provide money for giant\n.budget surpluses. \u201e\n\u25a0). Ottawa argues that taxation drains\noff cash that would create added inflation tendencies. This is not true of\n.Such taxes as the increased sales tax.\nThis hidden levy was upped by 25 per\ncent this year, and it added to the price\nOf a good many commodities a family\nmust buy. It has an inflationary, not\n' ah anti-inflationary result \u2022,\n'Canadians are willing to carry the\n\"load if it's necessary. But they can't\n; be expected to accept for long the misleading-that is coming from the Federal Finance Department,\niLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\n-Letters may bo published over a nom\nde plume, but the actual name of the\nwriter must bo given to the Editor as\nevidence of good faith, Anonymous letter*\ngo In the waste paper basket\n.---'.   v- \\ -'. -\nRailway Unions  \u2022 \u25a0  \u25a0\nTo fife E4\"9.K\nSir\u2014The following letter- which appeared\nin a Vancouver newspaper over the signature\n\"20-Year Railroader\" so closely approximates\nmy own feelings that I am requesting its publication as a letter: \\\n\"Last Fall we had a nation-wide railway\nstrike beause'railway unions asked for a magnificent 10 cents per hour wage increase and\nthe 40-hour week. The apparent weakness of\nthe unions encouraged the railways to buck\ntheir request, and, as toe unions had to stick\nto their guns as they bad left themselves no\nroom lor negotiation, the strike resulted, followed by the famous Kellock Award, whereby\nthe pien had to go back to work1 with a seven-\ncent raise ($14 per month), tising themselves\nto this scale for two years in the face of rapidly rising living costs without, any escape\nclause tp take care of the rise in the cost of\nliving.\n\"This water transport workers (happily\nfor them) were excluded from this totalitarian\ntype of legislation, with the result that these\"\nlatter employees are now able to negotiate\ncontracts bringing them $25 or more per month\nIncrease, with the 40-hour week, and a cost-\nof-living clause providing for \"further in-\n-creases. ...\n\"Compare the railway union settlement of\nseven cents per hour to the 25 cents, 36 cents.,\nand more increase currently being awarded\nin the shipbuilding, construction and other\nIndustries.\n' \"It seems that the railways have a growing need tor mpre militant unions. The present\nrailway union, executives are big men. They\nfraternize freely with railway executives, attending their \"social'functions, etc. They discuss\nthe problems of their menfbers with the rail-\n! way executives leisurely and conservatively,\ntaking two years or more to negotiate a contract and keepltig their demands to an absolute minimum so as not to antagonize these\nrailway executives.\n\"The result of all this Is that the railway\nworkers are'now in a far worse position than\nthey were before the strike, and are day by\nday falling farther and farther behind other\nworkers in-their standard of living.\"\nANOTHEB RAILROADER.\n? Questions 1\nOpinio any reader. Names of persons\ni asklno questions will net bo published,\nthere Is no oharge fpr this service.\nQuestions WILL .NOT BE ANSWERED\nBY MAIL except where there Is obvious\nnecessity for privacy.\n-\u25a0\u25a0:  '*'.' '.\u25a0<'\u25a0'-: '\u25a0\"-.''   ' \u25a0 ' -'''\u25a0.. ;,Y' .' ''\nReader, Cranbrook\u2014How does one cover, flow-,\ners with, wax to keep, them through the\n..'Winter?   -       ,.,.' X '* ;,iv' - :'-;'\n,   Dip in melted parafflne wax just hot\nenough to remain fluid,; Flowers should be\ndipped one at a time, held by the stalks and\nmoved about for an instant to get rid of\nbubbles. Ficesh cut flowers, free from all moisture, are said to make excellent specimens\nwhen treated in this way.\nMrs. 3.' Wi, Trail\u2014Please'publish'names'at\nLieutenant Governors of all 10 Provinces.\nAlberta, Hon, John James Bowlen; British\nColumbia, Col. the Hon. Clarence Wallace;\nManitoba, Hon, Roland Fairbaim Mc Williams,'\nK.C., LL.D.i New Brunswick, Hon. D. L. McLaren; Newfoundland, \"Hon. Lieut-Col Sir\nL. C. Outerbrldge, Kt, C,B,E\u201e LL.B, D.S.O.;\nNova Scotia, Hon. John Alexander Douglas\nMcCurdy, M.B.E., D. Eng.j Ontario, Hon.Ray\nLawson, LL.pl, D.Cn., L\u201e. Qyeen's Park, Toronto; Prince Edward Island, Hon, T. William\nL. Prowie; Quebec, Hon. Gaspard Fauteux,\n-P.C,  LL.D.,  D.D.S.,   L.D.S.;   Saskatchewan,\nHon. J. M Ubrich, MP. \"...    \/\nMm: C, J. D\u201e Wynndel\u2014I should like to apply\nfor position as cook in Alaska. How cab\nI find out particulars? \"\u25a0\u2022;-..--.:\nWrite to the Chamber of Comerce, Juneau,\nAlaska.   '-' \"'\u25a0 i ..'.,\" i>.\nStudent, Trail\u2014We are obliged to H. E. Hohde,\n' Sirdar, for reminding us that the surname\n\u2014apart, from the House name\u2014of the\nRoyal Family was Guelph before it was\n'\u25a0  changed to Windsor,,,\nIndonesians Gel\nBy KENNETH LIKES\nJAKARTA, Sept 28 1AP> \u2014 Of\nAsia's non-Communist nations, Indonesia has been most soft-hearted\nwith the Reds\u2014until'the last few\nweeks. Now the island Republic is\nshowing sighs of getting, tough.\nHer first firm fnove was signing\nthe Japanese peace treaty.\nPreviously' she had followed India's example and ducked taking a\nstand,.on.any big .issue between the\nSoviets and their opponents. She\nhad been the most Consistent follower'of th'e Indians' \"third-force\"\nneutrality.\nIndonesian leaders voiced growing disillusionment In neutrality's\nchief spokesman, India's Premier\nNehru; His unrelenting-attitude in\nthe Kashmir dispute has been the\nchief cause tor questioning of his\nIdealism. '     \/\nThe Indonesians moved,with surprising . toughness recently when\nthpy refused landing permits for\nabout 20 Consular reinforcements\nfor the- Chinese Communist Embassy.\nIn mid-August the Indonesian\narmy started a mass roundup of\n1000 Communists.       \" '\u25a0\u2022\nThe dramatic sweep thwarted a\nforeign-directed plot to overthrow\nthe Government It was explained\nOfficially.'*.\nSome Far-Eastern observers feel\nthat the Communist High Command\nmay-be quietly directing one of its\nmain efforts in Indonesia while\nworld attention is diverted elsewhere: R is reasoned that the Communists pre weary of costly wars\ndragging on in such comparative\nwastelands- as' Indo-China and Korea. Hero is a far richer target\nrange,-where the prizes are-oil, tin\nand'rubber.\nLobkinft Backward.'\n10 YEARS AOO\nFrom Thej Pally News of, Sept. 29, 1041\nDoubles bowling team ot Mrs. J. T. Slndel\nand T. S. Jemsori Sunday. Won the E. Y. Brake\nMemorial Cup for .Nelson Lawn Bowling Club\ndoubles tournament with a final of 13-10.\nFair Pla^\n- Your Horoscope\nAffairs relating to uncles and aunts must\n.be attended to. Journeys and communications\nare in order. Make your' presence felt favorably by others. A new week begins, Be ready\nto face it with the knowledge that your alms\nand desires are fully understood, Defer new\nstarts, This is a time for caution.\nIt's Been Said\nThrice is he armed that hath his quarrel\njust; ahd four times he who gets his fist in\ntust\u2014Henry Wheeler Shaw. '\nWhat the world seems to be suffering from\nis the Jack of a little whdlesome honesty. The\npromise that is made and fulfilled, the bond\nthat is worth its taee. value, the word that is\npledged and honored, these are within the\nreach pf all mortall. Yet how rare they seem.\nThere caanever be two standards of honesty.'\nAn indivadual is honest or is not. Likewise, a\nnation has character or it has none. The simple\nstandard of fair dealing'when applied to the\nissues ot the day, great or small, acts as an\nadd test showing the false from the true. By\nthat standard there is a good deal wrong with\nthe world, nor is it easily to be remediejjl.'\nIf. this is true of the remedies of nations,\nwhat about the Individual? Society as'a whole\nis the sum of many individuals. If there is to\nbe any improvement in human kind it must\nstart with the individual, spread to the group,\nand go on until it has affected the whole fabric\not society tor the better. There have been examples enough of rot and decay, of bad faith\nand malfeasance, of the grim progeny of hate\narid its dragon seed\u2014envy, malid'e and spite.\nThe world is In desperate nped of their pppo-\nsltes; good Will, fair dealing and a little human\ncharity. Honesty may npt cover it all, but It\nwould be a powerful contribution to the times\nin which we live; a.light in dark places, and\na gyide to be followed. -\nIt is a brief enough journey that all travel,\nfrom the cradle tp the grave. It is a one-way\njourney, and tor the individual there is no.\nreturn. Individuals, like ships at sea, psss one\nanother and then are lost In their several dls- .\ntances, While the human tide rolls between.\nHow do they treat one another? What contribution do thpy make to their day,'to their\nfellow men? Into each life the record Is graven, piece by piece. For what men do they\nbecome. Stripped of its frills, character Is the\nslow deposit of deed upon deed for the length\nof a lifetime. And lt is the deeds that count.,.\nGood intentions. pave few, if any, roads to\nheaven, It is easy enough to proclaim that this\nis a \"rotten world\". The real .question, however, is what did we, severally and jointly, do\ntoday to make it any better?\u2014Victoria Daily\nColonist\n25 Y|AR8 AqO\nProm The Dally News of Sept. 29, 1920\n\u25a0Ivan DaLashmutt of Spokane, formpfly\nSuperintendent of the Standard Silver-Lead\nCompany, is a visitor in Nelson. \u2022\nMiss Oliver Whyte, United Church Deaconess, returned yesterday from Kaslo,   \/\nDr. Douglas -Barclay ot Kaslo attended\nthe meeting of the Medical Board held in\nNelson.\n40 YEARS AQO\nFrom The Dally News of 8ept, 29, 1911\nF. O. Gamble, Provincial Engineer of\nRalalways, is Iri Nelsop.frsm Victoria.\nNelson. Cit| 'Bsrid^onf toe cpnjest at the\nFair against Lethbridge and Cranbrook for the\nhighest quality band at the Exhibition.      .\nLeslie Bealby won first prize in the Pip-\nvlncial Government apple packing* contest at\nthe Fair.\nRising Costs Raise\nNewspaper Prices\nNEW YORK, Sept. 28 (AP) -\nDaily newspaper prices are swinging upward all over the milted\nStates as costs of publishing in\ncrease steadily, .'\u25a0 .\nThis upward trend has-been under way for several months. Large\nand small newspapers alike have\nfound a price boost necessary. The\ntrend is country-wide.\nPublishers say the higher costs of\nputting out a newspaper are responsible. They cite greater newsprint\ncosts, higher salaries and larger\nbills.for distributing,\nIn Memphis, Tenn,, the Commercial Appeal and the* Press-Sclmltar\nraised subscription prices, effective\nMonday. The former's weekly rate\nfor daily and Sunday editions goes\nfrom 40 to 45 cents. The tatter's\ndally editions only go from 25 to\n80 Cents, '\nSunday papers in many cities\nhave gone from 10 cents to 15 cents,\nand in some cases to 20 cents,\nVerse\nWild Roses\nRECENT ANNOUNCEMENT by\nU.S. Air Force officials In Washington that the world's first'atom-,\nlo-powered airplane has reached\nthe construction stage, brings Into spotlight Dr. Andrew Kalltlns-\nky, who for the past five years\nhas Jockeyed tho slide rule'In the\natomlo plane project Former\nchief engineer of the Nuclear Energy Power for Alrpraft projeot\nat Oak Ridge, Tenn., the 37-year-\nold scientist, who fled from Russia with his family whon he was\nfive, during the revolution, was\nresponsible for the Idea of a turbo-jet nuclear A-plane engine,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nIntl. Monetary Fund\nReleases Gold Curbs\nWASHINGTON, Sept. 28 (AP)-The International Monetary Fund today abahdbned,its curbs against world saled\nof fabricated gold for more than the official monetary rate of\n$35 an ounije, \t\nThis price for gold la the cornerstone for free-world currency evaluations and monetary exchange\nrates.' ' \u25a0       .   .'..\nThe fund for years has proclaimed\nfor its 49 member nations\u2014includ-:\nIng Canada\u2014a policy\" of curbing\npremium-price sales, of gold processed or fabricated ostensibly tor\nindustrial purposes,\nThe fund has protested that in.\ncreasing amounts ot this fabricated\ngold are finding their way into the\nhands of hoarders, thus draining\nthe gold from reserves needed to\nback up currencies.\nToday's announcement, in effect,\nsaid the fund still favors a policy\nof curbing such transactions but\neach 'member will now be free to\nhandle-the matter as it wishes.\nThe now policy, outlined In a\nstatement by lyar Rooth, managing director of the fund, says \"we\n.found that the position of different countries varies so widely\nthat It would be Impracticable for\nall-members to make uniform\nmeasures to make the 1947 gold\nstatement (curbing premium price\nsales) effective.\"\nUnder the new policy, Rooth\nsaid, \"members are riot bound to\nany particular procedure for\nhandling'their external transactions in gold.\"\nTogether in the twilight we wandered through\na wood,\nOur love as yet unspoken, but deeply under-\n' stood.     .\nI plucked a tiny wild rose which graced the\nwoodland glade,\nAnd with the fragrant ottering this vow to\nher I made;.     \"    . - '      \u2022\n\"The red rose symbolizes Jove, and, dearest,\nHI could, -'\nFor you'I'd gather every wild rose blooming\niri this wood.\"\nI placed the flower above her heart and bade\n,.   that she retain\nThis simple token of my love 'til we should\n,meet* again., .. \" .-,\nShe knelt and fromtoe rambling briar a fair\nand pudding flower\nShe took In turn to Pledge her love for me\nthat twilight hour.\nTogether we picked roses to troth each other's\n\u25a0   heart;\nThen on the ruthless winds of fate we two\nwere swept apart.;     ..\nI gaze with sadness on the flower her tender\nhand caressed,\nAnd off I'll gather In my dreams, while stars\nare bright abpve,       ,     \u25a0 \u25a0 <.\nWild roses by the basketful to bear unto my\nSugar Factories\nStart Beet Digging\nLETHBRIDGE, Alta., Sept.- 2t-\n(CP)\u2014Officials of Canadian Sugar\nFactories Ltd. at Raymond today\nsaid beet digging has started in the\nLethbridge Northern district and\nwill Increase as weather arid field\nconditions permit until operations\nbecome general next week.\nT. Georgia Wood, General Manager, said starting of the Raymond,\nPicture Butte and Taber factories\ndepends on stockpiling of beets in\nthose areas. Tentative dates are\nOct, 3-4.\n, \"Each factory will be governed\nby the volume of beets available in\nits.district,\" said Mr, Wood.     \u2022\nChief Justice Visits\nRoyal Roods Cadet\n.VICTORIA B,C Sept. 28 (CP>-\nOrie of the first passengers up on\ndeck of the trans-PqO-Oc mptorship\nAorangl -when she arrived here\nearly today from Australia and New\nZealand was Rt. Hon. Thibaudeau\nRinfret, Chief. Justice of Canada,\nreturning to'Canada after four\nmonths' absence on official business.\n\u25a0 \"The trip was wonderful,\" he\n.commented with a grin of, fond re:\ncollection. \"But tp be back In Canada,\" he smiled even wider, \"I'm\nso glad! I'm overwhelmed.\nHis lordship left Canada May 25.\nHe went first ot London where for\nfive, weeks he sat on the Judiciary\nCommittee . of the Imperial Privy\nCouncil, and then proceeded to Sydney, Australia, where he represented this country at a Commonwealth\njurists convention held during August.'      \u2022\"   ':\nThe chief Justice, who Is 72, did\nmost of his travelling by boat and\nerijoyed every minute ot it\nChief Justice. Rinfret left the boat\nhere to see his grandson Claude, an\nAir Force cadet at Hpyal RoadB\nJoint Setvices, \"College. Claude's*\nfather is Hon. Gabriel Rinfret, Canada's postmaster general,\nJapan Prepared to\nSign Fishery Pact\nTOKYO, 8ept. 28 (Reuters) -\nJapan has assigned officials to\nprepare negotiations for a fishery\npact with Canada and the United\nStates, expected to start here\nabout Oct 20, Japanese' newspapers reported today,\nlove.\nTheyH Do It Evety Time\nl*tr**wj(> IMMMl\nJpAMO\nVHZWOSO APBSO QUMBLE\nON THE\/4MATEUR WIBJT SMOlV ,\nGOT NOT AUWBLE\u2014\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nBut mmn mcbwrsh.m^ijmoniicat,\nra\/ed the ampl\u00a3st tome\nmo vjoh first Prize at that-\n-I. F. MOORE.\nToday's Bible Thought\nThis promise was fulfilled. 4 rebellious people were Indeed given\nanother ehanps.-rl will return Jerusalem in mercy.\u2014Zeth. 1:18.\ndunl ML\nStrikes Spread\nIn Defence Work\nNEWARK, N. J., Sept. 28 (AP)-\nMushrooming strikes in key New\nJersey defence plants spread today\nfrom the aircraft to the rubber Industry and threatened oil production. \/ '\nWell over $1,000,000,000 in defence\nproduction was halted by walkouts\naffecting more than 18,000 workers.\nWhile Federal mediators moved\ninto the walkout of, 10,000 Wright\naeronautical workers, in Wood-\nRidge and Garfield, some 3000\nUnited Rubber workers (C.I.O.)\nshut down the U.S. Rubber Co.\nplant in Passaic at midnight.\nState officials moved to avert a\nstoppage of 2200 workers at the\nBayonne refinery of Esso Standard\nOil Co., in mediation sessions here.\nPrisoners'Fate\nMakes Sad Story\n' SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 28 (AP)\n\u2014The most .tragic story In Korea\ntoday is the plight of 10,000 prisoners of war, General Executive F. H,f\nKing of The Associated Press said\ntoday. ., ,\n\u25a0 \"It's going to become more tragic\nas Winter closes ini\" he predicted\nin a report to the Associated Press,\nManaging.Editors' Association.'     |\nThe editors also dug into probi\nlems of city editors, prepared resolutions1 condemning President Thi-\nmail's sweeping security of lnfor.\nmation order to civilian'.agencies,\nand condemned the iriiprlsonnlent\nof AP correspondent William N.*\nOatls in Czechoslovakia.   '.       f\nKing said American prisoners behind Communist lines were In nee*.\nof \"quick aid\". He recently returned.';\nfrom   a   10-week  tour  of  Asian .\ntrouble areas. ,'..\":\n\"Nobody thinks the Chinese Reds\ncan provide for the prisoners,\" he.-:\nsaid, \"It isn't a question if they are \u2022:\nwilling;, they haven't got the ma-',\nterial to   provide   warm   Winter\".,\nclothes for their, prisoners.\"\nKing told the managing editors;\nthe Important thing about the KolB\nrean cease-fire talks is that theMt-v\nmile war front.is only one phase ori\nthe Asian', situation. . ,,     8\nThe real front, he said, is, the\n1400 miles from Hokkaido, Japan, to 'A\nHong Kong. The line runs through\nthe Philippines into Indonesia ahd 'i\ndown into the Southwest Pacific to 1\nAustralia and New Zealand.\nAlbertan To Enter '\nAnglican Ministry\nVANCOUVER. Sept. 28 (CP)(\"\u2014.\nMontague M. Bigham, 30, native of\nFerlntosh, Alta.,. will be ordained.\nto the ministry tomorrow.\nHe completed 20 operational\nflights with, an R.C.A.F. heavy,,\nbomber squadron |n Europe before :\nentering'University\u25a0 of British Co-,\nlumbia. After'graduating in arts, he' \u25a0\nstudied theology at the Anglican\nTheolfgical College here.\nHe will be ordained. byRt Rev.,\nBishop Godfrey Gower, at St. Mich- -\nael's Anglican Church.\nVideo Increases flame of Canada's.,,\nPopular Radio Star, Alan Young\nBy BOB THOMAS-.\nHOLLYWOOD, Sept. 28 (AP)-^\nCorrect me if I'm wrong, but it\nappears that Alan, Young is the\nonly performer to star full-time In\ntelevision and the movies and make\na go of each field.\nThe soft-spoken young Canadian\nperforms on a half-hour comedy TV\nshow every week, a back-breaking\nchore which many older comedians\nPrime\" MlnlsteT 8hlgeru Yoshl-'N11.?0* \"\"dortake., In addition, he\nda had preliminary talks with\nCanadian and U.S. officials at the\n.San Francisco peaoe conference,\nElectrical Manufaclurers Blame\nCredif Restrictions for Slump\nEmmie says she never has heard\nof anybody gettin' Insulted on account of atteridln' to their own\nbusiness.\nStarting with 28 orchestral concerts in 1035, the Australian Broadcasting Commission now produces\nmore than 500 annually.\nBy FORBES RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nThe makers'Of stoves, refrigerators, radios, and tbe various other\nthings that come under the heading\nof \"electrical appliances\", feel that\nthe Government has made lt top\ndifficult for people to buy their\nproducts.\"\nThey feel the Industry Is being1\nmade to bear too heavy a part of\nthe fight against inflation; that, in\nfact 'credit restrictions arid excise\ntaxes, in their present degree, do\nnot fight inflation; that people are\nspending their money anyway on\nlower-priced goods, without being\nable to buy higher-priced articles\nwhich they need.\nThese views were expressed yesterday at the annual press confer-\nence given by officials of the'Canadian Electrical Manufacturers' As-\nsoclatlon In connection with the Association's annual meeting at Niagara Falls, Ont. W. C. Cannon of\nToronto presided.\nHere are some other points expressed in the general discussion:\nCurrent production in electrical\nappliances is down by more than\none-half from the same time last\nyear, This Has led to layoffs, Employment has been kept at Its present level only by producing more\ngoods than are being sold. This cannot be continued indefinitely, ahd\nthe industry is fearful of losing its\ntrained personnel, which it may\nneed later tor defence orders.'\/\nThe electrical industry In general,\noutside its appliance divisions, is\nbusy in the fields of apparatus and\nsupply.\n. Nevertheless, the Industry this\nyear has felt the effect of United\nStates and British competition under what.it considers unfair conditions,\nIn the first six months ot this\nyear imports of United States refrigerators were about 30 per cent of\nCanadian production, Last year, 41,-\n258 United States radios, with a retail value of $1,250,000, were brought\nIn, and, it was stated:\n\"No check whatever is made on\nthese sets to determine if they meet\nour electrical standards at the time\nof entry.\"\nIn regard to British and European\ncompetition in such products as un\nderground cables, hepvy generators,\netc, it was stated that British wage\nrates iri' the electrical Industry are\none-third the rates paid In Canada.\nThese low wages, it was stated,\nare made possible by British subsidies ori food which, in effect constitute an- indirect subsidy to British industry through making lt possible fpr it to pay lower wages. \/\nwork's a five-day week ori his\ncrowded movie schedule.\n> He recently,finished a musical,\nand now is playing the lead in\nGeorge Bernard- Shaw's \"Androcles\nand the Lion\". Shortly after he finishes, he will start at Paramount in\neither 'Bad Sack\" or \"Military Policeman\" with Bob Hope.\nHow does he maintain his crushing schedule?\n\"CJean living,\" he smiled.\nALSO YOUNG\nBut that didn't sound like the\nwhole answer, and Young admitted\nthat perhaps his youth has something to do with it. Aat any rate,\nhe puts |n every day Including Sunday on his career, as well as several evenings. He spends all day\nSunday, sometimes until midnight,\nworking with his TV writers oni 'I\nthe-scrlpt t ;::\n''Orie, reason'Young falls to complain 'of overwork is because of his j\nyears of virtual inactivity. Thanks\nto TV, those years'are over.\n\"A couple of years ago I was\nstarving professionally,\" he recalled.\nI was about ready to pack up and '\ngo back' to Canada.\" He had done,\nthree pictures (\"Margie\", \"Chicken'\nEvery Sunday\" and a \"Belvedere\"'\nfilm in 3t4 years at 20th-Fox and I\nwas released. His. radio, show ha'd-i\nsputtered to a stop. Then TV put |\nhim back in show business.\n\"Only two weeks after my first I\nshow, the offers from studios started\nto'come in,\", he rertiarked. \"Eveh'l\nFox wanted to see some of the films -\nof my show. I was happy when j\nHarry Ackerman, the boss at CBS,\ntold them, 'Look\u2014you had him for]\nfi years; if you couldn't.Jind out]\nthen what he .could do, you'll never]\nknow.\"',\nYoung1 attributes his film activity]\nentirely to TV.\n\"It's like having a screen test every Tuesday,\" he said. \"I1-can denial\nonstfate* what I cap dp. Why.-oqal\nof the executives at Paramount told ]\nme he had never heard of me until J\nhis kids made him look at my TV |\nShow.\" Ay \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\nMEMBERS of R.C.A.F. 412 Transport Squadron, from which crewmen have been selected to'\nfly C-5 aircraft carrying Princess Elizabeth and\nPrince Philip on' the flying portions of their tour\nIn Canada in October, stand beside the luxury\naircraft now undergoing overhaul. Left to right\nare: Wing, Com. Bob Trickett 38, of Winnipeg,\nofffoer commanding the squadron; Sqdn. Ldr,\nStswart Cowan, 31, Winnipeg, pilot; Lit. Lieut\nLes Hussey, 28, Ottawa, co-pilot; Fit Lieut Bob\nThorndycrift 32, Vancouver,  navigator;  Flying\nOfficer Douglas Stonchouje, Toronto, an original |\nmember of tha crew, who will  be on training\nCourse during the tour and hat been replaced by I\nFit Lieut Ken, A. Wark of Richmond Hill,'Ont;\nFit Sergt, Edgar Benolt 35, Ottawa, flight engl- i\nnear; Sergt Glrard  Mlgnault, 31, Quebec City,\nstsward; and L.A.C. Walter Deer, 24, Hamilton, air\ntraffic assistant .\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\n DODGERS, GIANTS TIED...\n18th Pennant Clinched by Yankees\nKapak Sees Brighter Days for Sport,\nNeed of Leaders; Long-Lost Cup Found\nTo the Sports Editor:\nSir\u2014I notice in the Nelson Daily\nNews   about   a   Senior   Bpsaball\nTrophy, last and West Kootenay,\nwhich has been missing since 1080.\nI aita going to describe this situation\nas well aa I can.\n:V   In  1940 we  organized  a  West\nKootenay League with Trail, Rossland Fruitvale and Nelson. I was\n' very much interested to (ind out\nwhere tbe Trophy was. When Trail\n'.dropped out of the League about\nmid-Summer, I- .ad an idea that\nTrail still held the Trophy, but all\nI could find out was that It had been\nbroken.\n1   The Trophy was sponsored some\n-\u2022years ago by the Allan Hotel In\n\u25a0: Rossland and I began a search for\n\u2022it   \u2022\u25a0' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:, \u25a0       \u2022:-.\n;'. About three weeks ago I found lt\nin Trail through a friend of mine.\nLeague and that Salmo Is figuring\non a good baseball club next season.\nFruitvale will be very muoh Improved and they are oeturning to\nPUT company, so It will make a good\nLeague. The highway* are In good\nshape and we will nave no trouble\ntb lind friends in these cities and,\ntowns,\nI So the baseball crown is again going to be in circulation.\nIn 1040 when Fruitvale won the\nplayoffs, it should have been given\nto Fruitvale. In 1950 Rossland won\nthe championship. I think that lt Is\nup to the League President to accept\nI the responsibility  of  giving  the\n| Trophy to the winning team, who\nI deserves it very much. I hope that\nI from now on we hold better understanding and enjoy better sports\nthoughout trie Summer seasons,\n.    I hear stories around, that Trail\nwill be In the League again next\nSummer. I am glad to bear that and\nI will be glad to see them back In\nthe West Kootenay line-up, I heard\n: too, that Kettle Falls,, and Colville,\nWash,,  would like  to  join this\nReynolds' No-Hit\nGame Wins\nBy OAYI.I TALBOT\nNEW YORK,, Sept, 28 (AP) --?\nNew York Yankees swamped Boston Red Sox twice today to clinch\ntheir 18th American League pen-\n\u00ab.-\u25a0-\u25a0.-..                   .  ,   <          | ant In 30 years, but tho feat almost\nfor some reason sports have gone, escpe,, notice as Allie Reynolds\ndown badly In the last.ftw ypars.1 t,.,i\u00abi-H-uil '\t\nbut will come back strongly again\n(vo pan be sure. 1 am glad to see\nthat Jlmmle Allan- is back to his\nhorn* town, So Is very active among\nyoungsters in sports, and a supporter of ladles' sol (ball.\nNext Summer? w\u00ab pan look for\ntwirled his second no-hit gamp ot\nthe season in the opener.\nNever before in the American\nLeague and only once before In the\nhistory of the major leagues had a\nhurler paralyzed enemy batsmen\ntwice in a  single campaign.  The\nward to a lot of youngsters taklna1 Zm ,Mn* lril **** bombers dress-\nparfinspprt,onlyCy wiu'\u201e\u00abd|ilft-g ro0^ alter \u25a0'\u00ab\u2022 \"\" *-'\"\nlittle isupport. as well as poaches.\nWithout the leaders lt is not possible\nto produce good sports of any caliber. Our ball park will be shining\nnext year,\nOur young volunteers are going\nto take the fence down in the left\nfield which is only 260 feet from\nthe home plate, If the weather permits, -they are going tp start Monday,\nOur olty lathers are working bard\nto build something for tbe young\nmen and women. They have a good\nidea what young athletes need in\nthis city.\nIf it is good weather Sunday, it\nwill be the deciding day of the\nBaseball Championship and as well\nthe Trophy which has been missing\nfor years will be in Nelson for the\nfirst time since 1090.\n.Good luck, women softballers in\nCastlegar, Sunday,      .\nv Pete Kapak.\nLEGION, TRANSFER\nCLASH SUNDAY\nIN FINAL GAME\nThe Legion and Transfers Nines\nwill clash at noon Sunday In the\nfinal Nelson Fastball League game\nof the season;\nKeith Loewen will be on the\nmound for the Legion, while'the\nTransfers are sending out George\nBarefoot The final of the best-of-\nthree series will decide the title. -\nHill Prince Faces\nTough Test Today\n, NEW YORK, Sept 28 (AP) -\nChristopher T. Chenery's Hill Prince\nwill tackle the toughest assignment\nsince his comeback at Belmont Park\ntomorrow when he meets seven\nrivals in the $25,000-added New\nYork handicap.-j\u25a0 \"-\u25a0-- ': \u25a0\"\nA co-feature is Of* $25,000-added\n(Matron Stakes, a rich offering which\nshould go far in determining the\n''two-year-old    championship    for\nlillles.*        i\n: .< Hill Prince was sidelined some\n.eight months this year following\na leg injury suffered on the West\n'coast last Winter However, he\nshowed a return to top form last\nMonday In winning a mile allowance race here.\nStrikes n' Spares\nMEN'S COMMERCIAL LEAOUE\n(WEDNESDAY)\nPaced . by Syl Benedettl arid\nSteve Hoblick, the Occidentals\ntook top spots in all departments\nthis week. Hoblick registered the\nhigh aggregate at 633 while Benedettl took singles honors with 207.\nThe team highs were 1013 and 2733\nrespectively. '.,\nTeam results; .\nSportsmen 4; Transfer No. 2, 0\nMachine Shop 2; Bennie's 2\nOccidentals 4; Freight Shed 0\nVARIETY LEAOUE\nBee Breeze of the Dreamers\nscored the high aggregate this\nweek with 620 while Francis Boy-\nchiik and Hazel Leaning followed\nwith. 608 and 603 respectively. High\nsingles went to Miss Boychuk with\n256 while Norma Lang was runner-\nup with 248.\nMad Haters took team honors\nwith a single of 861 arid an aggregate of 2464.\nTAKES WOMEN'S GOLF\nI TORONTO, Sept. 28 (CP) - Mrs,\nH. W. Soper of Montreal Kanawakl\nI.Club won the Canadian Women's\nI Senior Golf Championship > at the\nI Toronto Golf Club today. She carded 188 in the 36-hole competition,\nI eight strokes in front of Mrs. G. E.\nHackney of the Selgnbr^Club. Mrs.\nHackney was another ef\nESKIMOS STAR END\nSEVERELY INJURED\nEDMONTON, Sept. 28 (CP) -\nHoward Hansen, star end With- the\nEdmonton Eskimos, has been severely Injured in a car accident at\nIdaho Falls, Idaho, and will be out\nof action for the season. Word of\nthe accident was received today by\nteam manager Al Anderson. I\nHansen, en route from Salt Lake\nCity with his family, suffered a\nbroken ' ankle,  crushed  ribs  and\nconcussion. Other members of the\n.family also are reported injured.\nI \u00ab,..aii m\"\" t'V'T .\"\u00bb\"'\u00bbtroke\u00ab They are at Sacred Heart Hospital,\nV i \u00a3     '  \"J\" **** ot Toronto Maho Falls,\nf xork Downs. Injury of Hansen struck a heavy\nblow at the Eskimos, robbing them\nof one of the finest two-way ends\nplaying in the Western Football\nConference this year.\nThe speedy former back with\nU.C.L.A. was a top man on offence\nand defence for the Eskimos and\nwas the best tackier in the West\nthis year.\nWest Koptenay Senior\nroom after the big . Indian\nwhomped the Sox 8-0 even eclipsed\nthe tumult ot,the \"victory celebration\" which followed Vic Rasohl's\n11-3 triumph in the decider.\nThe'triumphs boosted the Yanks'\nlead to 34 games over second-\nplace Cleveland and eliminated- the\nIndians from the race, The Yanks,\nhave three games to play and the\nIndians two. The . victories also1\nclinched second place for Cleveland,\nPhiladelphia    Phillies   bam*\nfrom behind to pin a 4-3 defeat\non Brooklyn Dodgers In a night\ngamp and shove the Dodgers Into\na tie with the Idle New York\nGiants for first place In the National   League   pehnarit   battle.\nWillie (Puddlhhead) -Jones lashed a ninth-Inning single to score\n>   Richie Ashburn from secohd and\ngive the Phillies their viotory.\nBoth the. Brooks and the Giants\nhave two games to play, j\nReynolds,, scoring his  17th  decision ot the year, permitted only\nfour Boston men to reach tlrst base\non passes and choked  them  oft\nthere. He gave the bemused Sox\nnothing   remotely   resembling\nsafety.\nThe righthander's other no-hitter\nthis season was pitched against his\nold teammates, Cleveland Indians,\nJuly 12 at Cleveland..The only\nother hurler to notch a pair In the\nsame campaign was Johnny Vander\nMeer, the storied lefthander. who\npitched two in succession for Cincinnati\/back in 1038.\nRaschi gave up six hits, but he\nstrung the last three of them over\nthe final seven Innings and never\nhad a worry after his teammates\npiled seven runs across in the second chapter. It was his 21st win of\nthe year against 10 defeats, -\nIt,.was;in every respect, a tremendous afternoon for ,C a s ey\nStengel's ''hitle's's, wonders.\" Of the\n23 hits they showered about -the\nstadium, three werp home runs.\nWhen Joe DiMagglo powdered his\n12th homer of the year with two\naboard in the second game the\ncrowd of 39,098 gave him an ovation. ;   :    \u25a0\nThe Bombers' final three games\ntomorrow and Sunday against the\nRed Sox here will mean nothing.\nThey could lose all three and still\nfinish ahead of Cleveland, even if\nthe Indians sweep their remaining\npair with Detroit.\nReynolds never \"had an anxious\nmoment throughout his great performance. His fast ball was crackling'from the start and his cruve\nchopping off the corners, When he\nstruck out three bf the first five\nmen to face him it was evident that\nthe Chief had his stuff,.      '\nThe Phillies, fought an uphill\nbattle to down the Dodgers. Andy\nSemlnick's home run with one ori\nin the eighth had tied the score\nfor the Phillies as Carl Ersklne\nfailed to hold, a three-run lead.\nThe Dodgers, playing cautiously\nafter losing, a similar lead in\nBoston Thursday, got all their runs\noff Karl Drews.\nFriday night's defeat finally reduced Brooklyn's once-huge lead\nto nothing. At one stage this season they had a 13%-game margin,\nonly to see the onrushlng Giants\ncatch up.\nALLIB REYNOLDS\nNEW YORK, Sept. 28 (AP) -\n\"I knew if all the time,\" Allie,\nReynolds said with a-slow, grin,   I\nThe husky. New York Yankee\nrighthander was referring to the\nprogress of his Second no-hitter of\nthe season, against Boston in the\nfirst game of today's twin bill.\n\"How could I help It?\" he added.\n\"The scoreboard was right there.\"\nSitting In his little cubbyhole in\nthe locker ?oom as flash bulbs popped in his face and reporters tossed\nquestions, Reynolds explained his\nperformance to the best of his ability, \/although remarking that he\ncould \"give better answers In a\ncouple of hours,\"\nWas he upset by the dropping ot\nTed Williams' foul by Yogi Berra in\nthe ninth inning, a fumble which\nprolonged the agony for the breathless fans?\n\"No,\" he said simply, \"1 was just\nafraid I had stepped on Yogis' hand.\nI asked him arid he said I didn't.\"\ncountry and camo In With two\nmountain goat two elk and one\nmule deer. Bill Harrison, Edge-\nwater guide, returned from Kootenay River headwaters with one\nelk as trophy for his .hunter.\nGordon McKay, Invermere guide,\nhas four hunters from Seattle up\nToby' Creek and they have\nalready reported four elk and,\none goat\nMild weather has kept the game\non higher levels but recent storms\nmay have driven them down. Duck\nhunting in the Windermere district\nhas been fair.\nWANTED: SNOW-Natfll-JHichel\nhunters have had little luck iri big\ngame line, It's expected conditions\nwill improve as soon as the white\nstuff blankets the mountain tops,\nMyles MacLeod and Mike Slem-\nko of Natal, however, bagged a\nblack bear at the base of Mils. Hill\non the highway between Natal and\nHpsmer, while hunting big game.\nSleroko'stshot missed the mark so\nMacLeod picked the fellow off.\nGREAT EXPECTATIONS\nLee Straight Vancouver Sun out-\ndoorsman-columnist, says many of J\nour B.C. ducks, particularly in\nOkanagan and Kootenays, come\nfrom tha Peace River area, The\nPeace crop this year, was \"superb.\"\nCheyv^lah Man Catches\n21-Pounder at Kaslo\nIt'i on, the kootenay Lake Fall season, and from the\nlook of things some whoppers will be taken b09t-w.se be-\nfo*fe Winter oloses in,; .        \u25a0\u25a0 \u2014\nBest news Is from Kaslo, where,\naccording to Fred Jones, a 21-\npound Kamloops was caught- not\nlong ago by Naive Sety, Chewelah,\nWash,, sportsman, and a 20-pounder\nonly yesterday by a Californlanv\nSety also had 14,13, nine and five\npounders to his credit before heading South. C. Evans ot Northport,\nWash,, reeled in a 15 and a seven\npounder, and Mr. and Mrs,' Bud\nCreighton of Verdale,. Wash., Who\nhave been at Kaslo four or five\ndays now, parted two 12 pounders,\na 10 pounder and two five pounders\nand smaller Kamlpops from their\nunderwater haunt's. H. Elwell,\nanother visitor from the Golden\nState, took in a 15 pounder and\nless hptty Kamloops, Dr. Leonard\nWilson of Trail has been having\nconsistent luck at Kaslo as well;\nWhile Fred was unravelling, he\ntold about Bruce Tate, ex-Nelson-\nlte, and Andy Johnson of \"Vancouver creeling more than 70 trout\n(all from 10 to 14 inches long) in\nfour days up Fry Creek.\nAt Balfour, two Callfprnians who\nhie themselves there every season\nboated 10-and seven pounders, and\nW, R. Davis of Rdssland was displaying a nine-pound Kamloops. A\n14-pounder was caught- by a Balfour resident, Jack Feachey,\n\"SKUNKED\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. \u00bb, )9&\nCoast Takes Lacrosse\nted; Bruising Game\n''     lilillriAliliuli     \u2014    .   -'    \u2014 -\nVANCOUVER, Sept 28 (CP) \u2014\nVancouver Combines crushed Peterborough Petes 12-7 tonight In\na brutal -checking third game of\nthe best-of-seven Canadian la-\norosso final. Vancouver leads the\nseries 2-1 with the fourth game\n-  scheduled fpr here Monday.\nThe Combines tore loose in the\nthird quarter and outscored the Easterners 7-2 to take an almost Insurmountable 11-6 lead. It was all\nsquare at 4-4 at the half.\nPenalties helped to finish oft. Peterborough, They drew 22 minutes\nIn fines compared to 16 for Vancouver. They lost their: star defence-\nman, Harry Whipper, for five min-\nCombines checked the heavier Pe-\nterboroughs off their feet The Tim- \u2022\nbermen outshot the Westerners 29-\n26 but Combines charged them so\nhard that the big majority of shots\nwere' wide ot the mark..\nThree Combines scored two goals\napiece \u2014 Bert Tlcehurst, Bus By-\nford and Ernie Smith. Singles went\nto razzle-dazzle Gogle Stewart, Ed\nHamson, Harry Buchanan, Roy Cav-\nallln, Sam Sakich, who made bis\nfirst appearance in the aeries, and\nAlex Mackay.\nHprry Whipper, special target tor\nVancouver's -. thundering checking,\nstill .managed to rip through for two\ngoals. Dootch JVitarelli, Denny Pe-\n ...... 9wua. wuviui -vnureiii, uepny pe-\nutes in the crucial third period and terso, Curly Mason,   Bob   Thorpe.\nCombines   poured   through   their and Russ Slater got the others for\nweakened defences. Peterborough.\nGiants Postpone\n\"Thank You\" Dinner\nNEW YORK, Sept. 28 (AP) -\nThe New York Giants' \"yburdid-a-\ngreat-job\" dinner has been postponed with the hops It can be a\nvictory dinner.\nClub officials originally planned\nto throw the players a dinner\nThursday and thank them for making a great try for the National\nLeague pennant.\nBut when the Giants plosed In' on\nBrooklyn Dodgers it was decided\nto postpone the get-together until\n'the pennant is decided. '\nIn fact, from one end of the lake\nto the* other, the resort people describe the fishing as \"improving,\"\nI'll take their word for it even\nthough we bucked waves from\nQueen's Bay to the outlet Thursday without as much as a strike.\nNO OFFENSE MEANT - Regulation prohibiting Parrying of\nfishing tackle without a licence\nisn't Intended as n \"nuisance\" regulation, the Game Branch has advised us. No one will be hooked\nWalking down the street' with\nnewly-bought tackle or who isn't\nobviously going fishing immediately. It' merely gives power to\ngame wardens to prosecute If there\nis evidence a person has been fishing or Intends to fish, and he\ndenies It >\nNIMROD ACTION . .. From In-\nvermere comes word that all first\nclass guides In the Windermere district have hunting parties in the\nhills and the first parties are reporting back with .trophies. A large\nnumber of American hunters have\nalready arrived and many more\nare scheduled.\nE. 0, Phillips has had a party\nof American hunters In the headwaters   of   Windermere   Creek\nor\nDodger Trio\nMen's Commercial League Schedule\nBALL SCORES\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nBoston ii    000 000 000-0   0\nNew York ....   202 102-Olx\u20148 10\n\u00bb\nFollowing is the first half of the\n1851-52 season schedule:\nMONDAY NIGHTS\nOct, 1:\n7 p.m.\u2014Teachers vs. Standards;\nSpoilers vs. Transfer; Farmers vs.\nVijos.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Bankers vs. Superior!\nNationals vs. Scholars; Brewers vs.\nLumber Jacks.\n10 p.m.\u2014Partsmen vs.  Madden;\nScholars   Grads   vs.   111th   Bty.J\nQueen's vs. Hardwaremen,\nOct Si\n7 p.m.\u2014Lumber Jacks vs. Spoilers; Partsmen vs. Farmers; Scholars\nGrads vs. Bankers,\n8:30\u2014Nationals vs, Queen's; Standard vs., Brewers; Madden vs.\nTransfer. \"..., '.\n10 p.m.-Yl]os vs. 111th Bty.; Hardwaremen vs. Superior; Teachers vs.\nScholars.' '\npCt.15i '\n7 p.nV-Superlbir vs. Madden;\n111th Bty. vs, Scholars; Lumber\nJacks vs, Hardwaremen.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Teachers vs. Partsmen;\nSpoilers vs, Scholars Grads; Queen's\nvs. Farmers.     \u2022\n10 p.m.\u2014Standards vs. Bankers;\nNationals vs. Transfer; Brewers vs.\nVijos. v\nOct. 22:   ..\n7 p.m,\u2014Spoilers vs. Teachers; Vijos vs. Nationals; Partsmen vs.\nStandards.\n8:30 p.m. \u2014 Lumber Jacks I vs.\nTransfer; Brewers; vs. 111th Bty.;\nBankers vs. Madden*.\n10 p.m.\u2014Hardwaremen vs. Farm-,\nPrs; Queen's vs. Scholars; Scholars\nGrads vs. Superior, ';\u25a0 >\u25a0 ,\n.... - _.  ..Oct 20: .     .,.. ..,.-,,,-\nFarnell, Scarborough (4), Taylor [   7 p.m.\u2014Bankers vs. Brewers; Su-\n(7)\u201e and Robinson; Reynolds andiperior vs^ Partsmen; Transfer, vs.\nSUNDAY\n1:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.\nNELSON PEERLESS 9\nvs\nROSSLAND CUBS\nFirst Game Decides Championship\nSecond Game Exhibition Game\nBE A SPORT\nSUPPORT YOUR SPORTS\nBerra.\nBoston .:,..    210 000 000\u2014 8  \u00ab   !\nflew York ;.'.  070 008 Olx;\u201411 13  (\nWight, Masterson (2), Stobb (2),\nNixon. (7), and Moss; Raschi and\nBerra. V   '\nChicago  :....   046 011 dOO-6 12\nSt. Louis  , 100 000 100\u20142   7   _\nHolcombe and Sheely; Mahoney,\nSucheckl (2) Medlinger (8) and\nBatts. :\u25a0\u25a0}' '   . \u2022 '\nChicago     100 100 010 1-4 15   1\nSt Louis  ...   002 010 000 0-3   9   0\nJudson and Wilson, Sheely (8);\nPillette, Paige (8) and Batts.\nPhiladelphia^ Washington postponed, cold,\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn ,    110 01Q 000-8   8   0\nPhiladelphia     000 001021\u20144 10   0\nErsklne arid Campanella; Drews,\nHansen (7) and Semlnick.\nCincinnati    040 000 000\u20144   6   1\nPittsburgh    100 020 000\u20148   8   0\nWebmeier and Howell; Yophim,\nWerle (2), Wilks (9). and,McCullough.\nLITTLE WORLD SERIES\nMilwaukee (AA) at Montreal (IL)\npostponed cold weather.\nMOSCOW, Sept 28 (AP) \/- The\nSoviet claimed another world record today for its speedy women\nrunners.\nIt was announced here that tour\nRussian   women   were, timed   in\nj 1:39.7 for the 800-metre relay. That's\n11.3 seconds faster than the listed\nScholars Grads,.\n8:30\u2014Queen's vs; Vijos; Hardwaremen vs. Teachers; Lumber\nJacks vs. 111th Bty.\n10 p.m.\u2014Sholars vs. Standards;\nMadden vs. Farmers; Nationals va.\nSpoilers.\nNov.''6: H\n7 p.m.\u2014Vijos' vs. Scholars Grads;\nHardwaremen vs. 111th Bty.; Madden vs. Nationals. ,\n, 8:30 \u2014. Superior,, vs. Standards;\nFarmers vs. Spoilers; Partsmen vs.\nScholars.\n10    p.m.\u2014Queen's   vs,    Lumber\nJacks; Brewers vs. TeacherS; Transfer vs. Bankers.\nNoV. 12:   \u2022\n7 p.m.\u2014Hardwaremen vs. Bankers; Nationals vs. Brewers; Queen's\nvs. Spoilers.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014ParUmen vs. Lumber\nJacks; Scholars vs. Superior; Transfer vs. Vijos.\n10    p.m.\u2014Madden    vs.    Teachers;\nStandards vs. Scholars Grads; 111th\nBty. vs. Farmers.\nNov. 19;      [\n7 .p.m.\u2014Nationals vs. Farmers;\nTransfer vs. Standards; Scholars vs.\nLumber Jacks.' ,\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Madden vs. Brewers;\nPartsmen vs, Hardwaremen; Scholars Grads vs. Queen's.\n10 p.m.\u2014111th Bty. vs. Spoilers;\nSuperior vs. Vijos; Bankers vs,\nTeachers. \u2022 >\nfclov. 26:\n7 p.m.\u2014Madden vs. lllth Bty.;\n-. - \u2014-1 Farmers vs. Teachers; Superior vs.\nworld record of l:41i set by a Dutch Brewers. ..\nteam s^ven years ago. I   8:30-Scholars vs. Scholars Grads;\nBankers vs. Teachers; Hardware-\nmen vs, Spoilers.\n10 p.m.\u2014Lumber Jacks vs. Vijos;\nTransfer vs. Partsmen; Standards\nvs, Queen's,\nDec. 81 *\n7 p.m.\u2014Scholars Grads vs. Lumber Jacks; Brewers vs. Spoilers;\nHardwaremen vs. Madden.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014lllth Bty. vs. Bankers;\nVijos vs, Partsmen; Nationals vs.\nTeachers. '   .  '\n10   p.m.\u2014Superior   vs.   Queen's;\nFarmers vs, Standards; Scholars vs.\nTransfer..\nDec. 10:\n7 p.m.\u2014Scholars vs. Vijos; Standards vs. Madden; lllth Bty. vs,\nTeachers.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014Hardwaremen Vs. Nationals; Transfer vs. Queen's; Farmers vs. Brewers.\n10 p.m.\u2014Scholars Grads vs. Parts-\nmen; Spoilers vs, Bankers; Lumber\nJacks Vs. Superior.\nDeo. 17! \/\n7 p.m.\u2014Transfers vs. Superior;\nQueen's Vs. Partsmen; Vijos vs.\nScholars Grads.\n. 8:30 p.m.\u2014Farmers vs. Bankers;\nLumber Jacks vs. Standards; Teachers vs. Scholars Grads.\n10 p.m.\u2014Brewers vs. Hardware-\nmen; lllth Battery vs. Nationals;\nSpoilers vs. Madden.\nWEDNESDAY NIGHTS\nBY MURRAY R08E\nNEW YORK, Sept. 28 (AP) \u2014 National League president Ford Frlck\nhanded Brooklyn \"Dodgers and their\nrooters some good news today \u2014\ncash fines but no suspensions for\nJackie Robinson, Roy Campanella\nand Preacher Roe.\nFrlck, newly-elected Commissioner of Baseball but still acting as\nchief of the senior loop, fined Robinson and Campanella $.100 each and\ntagged Roe with a $50 penalty for\ncreating a rumpus outside the umpire's dressing room in Braves field\nThursday. The scene came after the\nDodgers had dropped a costly and\ncontroversial 4-3 decision to Boston.\nSeveral 'Brooklyn players had\nkicked the door of the umpire's\nroom on the way to their adjacent\ndressing chambers. A police guard\nwas called. The players were still\nfuming over ejection ot Campanella\nby Umpire Frank Dascoli in the\neighth Inning.\nHad Campy remained In .the'\ngame, he would have bad a chance\nto bat in the tying run in the ninth\ninning. Instead, pinch-hitter Wayne\nTerwUliger grounded out\nDascoli thumbed the stocky Negro\ncatcher out of the game when Campy protested a close play at the\nplate, permitting Boston's Bob Addis to scOra with the winning run.\nWhen Campanella threw his\nglove on the ground, Dascoli waved\nhim out The other Dodgers were\nwaved oul later.\nFrick took no action against Campanella for his actions on the field\nbut he imposed the tines on the\nthree \"for causing scenes In the runway and in front ot the umpire's\ndressing room after the game and\nIn the presence of fans and opposing\nplayers.'\".-.\nStandings\n,        By The Canadian Press\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBrooklyn   \u2014\u201e....   94  68  .818\nNew York \u2014    84  58   .618\nSt. Louis _ \u201e.\u201e    78   72   ,523\nBoston  _.\u201e   TO   78   ,500\nPhiladelphia   .:_\u2014X...   73   79   .480\nCincinnati   .........._    67   85   .441\nPittsburgh       88   89   .414\nChicago.    61   80   .404\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew .York ....\u201e....; 95* (8\nCleveland .._   82  80\nBoston    .\nChicago ....\u201e:\t\nDetroit _.\nPhiladelphia _\u00ab.\nWashington ...:_.\nSt. Louis\t\n87 64\n80 72\n72 80\n68 88\n61 90\n51 101\nBoll Game Squeezes\nOut Alouettes; Riders\nOut To Break Tie\nBy the Canadian Press\nBaseball has shoved right out of\nthe park ona ot six games scheduled\nthis weekend in Canada's two major\nfootball leagues, '. \\> -.-\".\"\"\n' Montreal Alouettes lost their role\nof Sunday hosts to Toronto Argonauts of the''Big Four Union when\nMontreal Royals, champions ot the\nInternational Baseball League, decided to use Delprlmler Stadium\nSunday for thejr Little World Series\nwith, Milwaukee -Brewers ot the\nAmerican Association.   \u25a0\nThe powerful Hamilton Tiger-'\nCats, leading the East's Big Four\nby four points, invade.Ottawa today for a tiff with the Rough Riders.\nIn the Western Canada Football\nConference, the flast-sledding Edmonton Eskimos, in front by six\ncomfortable points, have a Saturday\ndate at home with Saskatchewan\nRoughriders while Winnipeg Blue\nBombers visit the Stampeders in\nCalgary.\nRegina goes to Calgary and Winnipeg moves North to Edmonton for\na pair of games Monday.\nThe game will give Roughriders\na chance, to break their three-way\ntie with Argos and Als for second;\nplace in the Union.\nNo Talk ol\nHockey Price\nBoost Yet\nThere is still no move to boost\nsenior hockey prices in Nelson\nalthough advances have been announced In Trail.\nCominco Arena has effected a\n25-cent increase for middle section\nseats, formerly $1, and will also\nboost adult rush tickets 10 cents.\nIn addition. Ice rental rates have\nbeen raised from W to tt per hour\nand students public skating tickets\ntipped from 25 cents to 35 cents.\nMayor N. C. Stlbbs said the question of a similar hike here was a\nmatter fpr a new Civio Centre\nCommission, expected tp be named\nnext week.\nTUNE IN\nCKLN\nMonday, Friday;\u201411:10 a.m.\nSept. 26:   ;*\u25a0':...'\nOccidental vs. Freight Shed; Carmen vs, Bennie's;  Sportsmen. vs.\nTransfer No. 2.\nOotlj \u2022\nBennie's vs. Sportsmen; Transfer\nNo. 2 vs. Occidental; Freight Shed-\nvs. Carmen.\nOct 10:\nOccidental vs. Carmen;  Sportsmen vs. Freight Shed; Transfer No.\n2 vs. Bennie's.\nOct 17:\nFreight Shed vs. Bennie's; Transfer No. 2 vs, Carmen; Occidental vs.\nSportsmen.\nOct. 24:\nCarmen vs. Sportsmen; Occidental vs. Bennie's; Freight Sheds va.\nTransfer No. 2.\nOct 31:\nOccidental vs. Transfer No.  2;\nCarmen vs. Freight Shed; Sportsmen vs. Bennie's.\nNov. 7: ...\nSportsmen vs. Freight Shed; Bennie's vs. Transfer No, 2; Carmen vs.\nOccidental.   N\nNov. 14:\nBennie's   vs.   Carmen;   Freight\nShed vs. Occidental; Transfer No,\nvs. Sportsman.\nNov. 21:\nTransfer No, 1 vs. Freight Shed;\nSportsmen vs. Carmen; Bennie's vs.\nOccidental.\nNov. 28i\nSportsmen vs. Occidental; Freight\nShed vs. Bennie's; Transfer No. 2\nvs. Carmen,\nDec. 6:\nCarmen vs. Bennie's; Transfer No.\n2  vs,   Sportsmen;   Occidental   vs.\nFreight Shed.\nDeo. 12i '\nOccidental vs.  Transfer   No.   2;\nCarmen vs, Freight Shed; Sportsmen vs. Bennie's.\nDec. 19:\nFreight Shed .vs. Sportsmen; Bennie's vs. Transfer No. 2; .Carmen vs.\nOccidental   '\nUSED CARS\nTHAT YOU CAN DEPEND ON\nAt Peeblet It'll\nQUALITY ALWAYS REGARDLESS OF PRICE\nGet What You Expect\nSEE US SEE US SEE US\nSPECIAL CLEARANCE\n1947 Dodge Sedan. $1395.\n1949 Chevrolet Sedan. $1675.\n1947 Plymouth Sedan. $1425.\n1938 Ford Coach. $395.\n1934 Chevrolet Coach. $250.\n1937 Ford Pickup. $375.\n1949 Plymouth Sedan\nLow mileage. A-1 shape, air conditioning\nColor blue.\nNEW CARS AND TRUCKS\n1951 Fargo 3-Ton Special '\n170\" wheelbase.. Color red. '\n1951 Fargo 2-Ton. 152\".\n1939 Plymouth Sedan\nHeater, radio, good rubber.\nTop class condition.-\n'Choice of colors on\nNEW PLYMOUTH SEDANS\nAND CLUB COUPES\nUSED TRUCKS\n1948 FARGO Vs. TON EXPRESS\n1940 FARGO PICKUP\n1939 DODGE CHASSIS AND CAB\n? or with Va ton box.\n4 TO 5 YARD ALL STEEL BOX WITH\n7\" HEAVY HOIST\n\u2022 Ready to mount\n : '.\u2014-    I\nLet us appraise your car for trade In allowance on a new Chrysler built car or truck.\n,\\ If    CALL US TODAY\nPEIBLE\/MOTOR\/\nCHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH \"FARGO - DUNLOP TIRES\"\n-9=w\/090 \u2022 <7uettm.%(?.\n \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\nv.\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nI\nH\nE\nN\n*R\nY\nK\nI *\nN\nG\nO\nR.\nC.\nM.\nP.\nJ\nI\nG\nG\nS\n-^S-B*^Pi^\nTHE NEI7VE OF\nTHOfT Glly--TI?WNG\nTO KEEP ME\nFBOM BUYING\nA WALNUT\nSHGEPDEG\n^S\u00ab\/YOU HAVE\nTHB ROOM FOR VOUI?\nBROTHEE'DUSKUM\"\nALU FIXED UP UKB\nA SHIP? WHY??\nHE VMS MULCTED\nMTOTHEklAW-\nSOIVWWTHIM\n\u2022TO FEEL AS F\nHBWEEEOMA\nBATTLESHIP ,'i'\n-ISU'TITWOkBERFUL?\nBRCTHB? \"BfcfMY\" IH THE\nABMY-AWD 'DUMaiM\" W\nTHE KIAW\u2014lt WONT BE\nL0N6 BEFORE WE'LL\nHAVE TO; CALL THEM\nGENERAL AHD ADMIRAL *\nTHE7W6HT>iONORABLE SIR DENY8 L0W80N, Lord Mayer.\nof London, escorted by Mayor Vincent Impeilltterl, Is shown walking up the steps of the New.York City Hall for the official reception.\nBehind, them are Lady Lowson and Mrs. Impeilltterl.'The City extended a warm welcome to the visiting Lord Mayor and his wife,\nIncluding the ticker tape parade up Broadway. The Lord.Mayor Is\ncompleting a good-will tour of Seven countries and 76 cities. He told\nhis City Hall audience that everywhere he went he found \"enormous\nenthusiasm!* for the plan of uniting against Communism.\u2014Central\nPress. Canadian.\n, SPEED RACE.VETERAN, Frank Smith's hobby of building and\nracing motorfaoata proved disastrous when he was killed In a C.N.E.\nspeedboat race recently. The 65-year-old Kingston, Ont, man died\nInstantly when, after cutting throttle on his craft, Nlt-WIt II, he was\nstruck from behind by another craft driven by George Fulford Jr.,\nof Brockvllle, Ont Race officials ruled the acoldent, first fatality of\nthe Canadian powerboat racing season, as \"unavoidable\". The photo\nshows rescuers pulling the Kingston man from the water, while\nthousands of spectators watehed.-Oentral Press Canadian,     ,-:-..\nON THE AIR\nCKLN PROGRAMS . . . iho on -the dial\n..-..    ,''       PACIFIC STANDARD TME :\n..     SATURDAY,\n7:007-Mews\n7:05\u2014Top of tha Morning\n7:30-News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning .\n8:00\u2014News\"\n8:10-i-Sp6rts News\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Show Case\n8:55\u2014Meal of the Day\n9:00-4fewa \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'',\n8:01\u2014Western 'Hit Parade ; \u25a0\u25a0\u2022'\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Stamp Club\n9:45\u2014Songs of tha West\n9:59\u2014Time Signal\n10:00\u2014B..ndstand\n10:15\u2014MinUet\n10:30\u2014Saturday Review\n10:55--Weather\n11:00\u2014Opera Stars and Stories\n12:00\u2014Notice Board\n12:15^-News \u2022\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Folk Song Time\nSEPT. 29,1951       '\n1:30\u2014Studio Melodies\n2:00\u2014Trans-Canada Bandstand\n8:0b-Hew*'\n3:01\u2014Saturday Teen Beat\n3:88\u2014Train Time\nSiDO-rfiaturday Pop Concert\n4:30\u2014Music From tbe Films '\n, 5:00\u2014Saturday Magazine\n5:30\u2014Sports College\n5:\u00ab-*-United Nations.-,\n8:00\u2014News -.   '. \u25a0\u25a0>':\n6:05\u2014Sports Page   .\n6:80\u2014Cavalcade Ot Melody-\n7:00i-Prali:ie Schooner\n7:30\u2014Let's Square Danes\n8:00\u2014Columbia Collection\n8:30\u2014Saludos Amigos\n9:00\u2014John Sturgess\n9:15-*-Songa byrAudrey FarneH\n9:30\u2014All-Request Program\n10:00\u2014Newp\n10:15\u2014Trocadero Orchestra\n10:30\u2014All Request Program -'.\n10:55\u2014News Nite Cap   '\u25a0\nSUNDAY,\n9:00\u2014British News\n9:15\u2014News\n9:30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n9:69\u2014Time Signal'\n10:01\u2014B.(i Garden*\n10:15\u2014Just Mary\n10:30\u2014To Be Announced\n10:45\u2014To Be Announced\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Capital Report\n11:30\u2014Religous Period\n12:00\u2014Your Invitation to MuslO\n1:30\u2014Critically Speaking-\n2:00\u2014Fiddle Joe's Yarns\n2:30\u2014Jake and the Kid\n3:00\u2014S.S. Marigold ;,   .\n3:15\u2014Newa and Weather\n3:80\u2014Vancouver Symphony\nSEPT. 30, 1951.\n4:30\u2014To Be Announced\nSiOO'-Chorale \"\n6:30\u2014Sunday Serenade\n8:00\u2014Drama\n8:30\u2014Noel Coward Show\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10-rWeekend.Revlew\n7:20\u2014Our. Special' Speaker\n7:30\u2014Salvation Army ' 'I\n8:00\u2014Geoffrey Waddlngton\n9KXr-rOrgan Reveries,\n9:30\u2014Vesper Hour\n10:00-rNews       ,\n10:15\u2014Hour of St Francis\n10:30-CKtN Sport Report\n10:45\u2014Musicale\n10:55\u2014News Nite Cap\nCBC PROGRAMS\n' PACIFIC STANDARD TIME\nSUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1951\n:30\u2014Sunday 'Morning Recital\n:00\u2014BBC News\n.-15\u2014Music for Meditation\n30\u2014Harmony Harbor   -\n:00\u2014B: C. Gardener\n15-Just Mary\n:3ft-Musical Playroom\n:45---Heroes of Faith\nOOr-News\n03\u2014Capital Report\n30\u2014Religious Period\n.00\u2014Your Invitation'to Mupie\n:30\u2014Church of the Air\n00\u2014Music I Like\n:30\u2014Critically Speaking\n:00\u2014Musical Program\n;:15\u2014News      .\n:20\u2014Ask the Weatherman\n:27\u2014Weather Forecast\n3:30\u2014Roll Back the Years\n4:bOr-Chorale\n4:30\u2014Affectionately,. Jenny\n5:00\u2014Whispering Strings\n5:30\u2014Little Symphonies ;.|.'\n6:00\u2014Ghost Stories\n6:30r-Noel Coward Show\n7:00\u2014News    ....\n7:li>-Weekend Review\n7:20-Khir Special Speaker\n7:30\u2014Solway String Quartet\n6:00\u2014Winnipeg Concert Orch.\n8:30\u2014Linger ^Awhile\n9:0O-=Ch'amber Music      .\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014In Those Days\n10:30\u2014Songs and Singers\nll:0O-rPrelude to Midnight\n12:00\u2014News > .\"\u25a0\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good.\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n\" 8:45\u2014Anything Goes\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Aunt Lucy .\n9:30\u2014Laura Limited\n9:45\u2014Your Music Appointment\n10:00\u2014Morning Visit\n10:15\u2014Tbe Happy Gang\n10:45\u2014Musical  Kitchen '\n11:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n12:15-LNews\n12:25\u2014Showcase\n6:00\u2014Lux Radio. Theatre\n12:55\u2014Five to One\nliOO-i-The Concert Hour\n2:00\u2014Easy Listening\n2:30\u2014Musical Program\n2:45-jCooklng School of the Air\n2:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014Don Messer's Islanders    -\nS:30^Strike It Rich  \u2022\nMONDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1951\n4:0O\u2014Sunshine Society\n4:30\u2014Stories of Famous People\n4:45\u2014Music for JuniorS\n5:00\u2014International Commentary\n5:10rrAlberta Pipeline'\n5:80\u2014Songs and Singers\n5:45\u2014Young Man With a. Song\n5:55\u2014News\n6:00\u2014Lux Radio Theatre\n7:00\u2014Newsi\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte\n8:00\u2014Michael Radchenka\n8:15\u2014Duo-Pianists\n8:30\u2014Summer Fallow'\n9:00-rSummer Fallow\n9:30\u2014Tony the Troubadour\n9:45\u2014Radio Cartoons\n10:00\u2014News     ,\n10:15\u2014Provincial Affairs\n10:30\u2014Don't. Destroy\n10:45\u2014Ed McCurdy\n11:00MJ.N. Today\n11:15\u2014Hot Air\n| U;S7-.New\n__ JAR08LAV KONVALINKA, the freedom-loving Czech engineer\nwho sped Ilia family, friends and a number of other Czechs through\nthe Iron Curtain Into West Germany In a daring escape from-Com-\nmunlst-r.uled Czechoslovakia, Is shown with one of his children, as\nhe reported on his adventure. West.German authorities negotiated\nthe return ,of some; of -the \"unvyllllng- riders\" aboard (tHe -freedom\ntrain, but Drained asylum to some -3 passengers and crew members.\nKonvallnka told West German authorities arid the press that Communist terror in Czechoslovakia Is mounting dally. He has been\noffered.a home In Canada by a fellow,countryman, now a naturalized\ncitizen.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nPLUCKY POLISH GIRL, Stlnlslawa Nalejwyne, above,Cwlth\nthree Polish friends gambled her life for personal liberty and won.\nShe and her fiancee, 8. Zlemba, plan to marry soon, now they are\nsafe In Canada. Inspiration to flee from Red tyranny to Canada\nstemmed from ('Voice of America\" radio broadcast\u2014Central Press\nCanadian. ;\u2022 '-' ;-, .\nLittle Headway for\nPrairie Harvesting\nWINNIPEG, Sept 28 -Very Bttle\nheadway was made wtih harvesting\nover the past.week in the Prairie\nprovinces the Canadian Pacific Railway Agricultural Department reported Thursday in its weekly summary of the crops over tjie previous\nseven-day period.\nManitoba with 98-per cent of Hi]\nwheat cut and 46 per cent threshed I\nor combined was best. For Saskatchewan, the figure was 43 per centI\nout. 21 per cent threshed or com-]\nbined 18 per cent   ,  . \u25a0\nThe Dead Sea in the Jordan Valley, 1290 feet below sea level, ill\nthe lowest land area on the globe. I\nDAIkY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nl.Fuel    .\n4. Constella-\n- tion\n7. Valise'\n8. Kind of bun\n10. Creed\n11. Aromatic\nspices\n13. Cooks in\nan oven\n15. Bird of\npeace\n16. Goddess of\nharvests\n(It.)    \u00bb\u25a0>':\n17. Take supper\n19. Veterinary\n(abbr.).\n20. Obnoxious\n'plant\n22. Measures\nof length\n24. Aloft\n26. Depart\n27. A middleman\n31. Agreement\n85. Macaw\n(Braz.)\n36. Kind\nof dog\n38. Regret'\n39. Belonging\nto me\n41. Abundance\n(Colloq.).\n43. Meaning.\n45. Regulate*\n46. Siberian\nriver \u25a0    '\n47. Epochs  .\n48. Soak flax\n49. Southeast\nby south\n(abbr.)\nDOWN\nl.Fat\n2. Helps\n3. Blemishes\n4. sWtlfy\n.6, Highway\n6. Wall recess\nT.Feel\n9. Pry\n10. Bird\n12. Places\n14. Add up\n18. Wooden phi\n21.CoAfer\nknighthood\nupon'\n23. Apex'-'\"\n25. Vitality  .\n27. Crowds\n28. Bay\nwindow\n29. Flag\n30. Floor\ncovering\n32. Fragrant\nsmells\n33. Heals\n34. Elevations\n(golf)\n37. Movable ,\nbarriers '-,.-\nai-iaes niiiojsi\naiasao aHiaus\natiHaa HHUiaiJ\nw&    au Ban\naaas aaa he\naaaiaBaa\naa hhb bbsi:\naaa hb    am.\nSIHEIHS   HHDaii\nSHama Ean-j--\nbebb mamrn\nVcBterdny'i Answes j\n4*. Serf\n42. Coins (It.)\n44.Corrode    .\n20\n27\n35\n39\n45\n28\n\\\\w*\n27\n48\n\"^\n40\nIS\n4*\n2C\n<2\n30\n41\ni2\n5\n&\n26\n47\n49\n^\n23\n38\n12\n33\n34\n*a\nDAILY CBYKTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work ii:\nA XYD LBAAXR\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is used j\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apoa* j\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. [\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nR    WRBKN    BK    TCROH    BW    NQBTH\nW R B..K.N    B K    X R QK \u20140,F O H.\nTcsterday's   Crypoquote:   THE -BNWILLING WIFE  GIVEWl\nTO A MAN IN MARRIAGE, JS HIS EN6MY\u2014PLAUTUS.\nsiiutbutea tarxuui nstuRi anmuf* *\"\n )53\n1 PFRSOHFO-PERSQUWAflTADS\nI    \/fl? QUICK RESULTS \/\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u20145 p.m.\nDbWKES-To Mri.andMrs. Lloyd\nI Dowkes, Nelson, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, Sept. 'tl, a daugh-\n:;-'ter..'v;';'*,    VV.'.r\na\u00ae   VOYKIN\u2014To-   Mr.    and    MrB.\nliWilliam Voykln, Vallican, at Koote-\nI  nay Lake General Hospital, Sept\n,! 27, si daughter.\n:\u25a0'  MERZ\u2014TO Mr. and Mrs.. George\nt\\ Marz, Ainsworth, at Kootenay Lake\n[General Hospital; a son.\ni KONKlN^To Mr. and Mrs. Wasil\nyKonkln, Crescent Valley,.at Kootenay Hake General Hospital, Sept 28\na daughter.,\nBIJRNS\u2014To Mr, and Mrs\/ John\nBurns, Jr., of Ainsworth, Sept, 24,\nat Victorian Hospital, Kaslo, a\ndaughter,   : \u25a0 ..'\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nPhone 144\nWANTED - TUNNEL OR ROCK\nwork. Have own complete equipment. Can start on or before Oct.\n' 1st, Box 4488,. Dally News,\nYOUNG MAN WANTS STEADY\njob as truck driver or delivery\nman around city. Apply Box 4930,\n.Daily News.   '\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nWANTED\u2014LIGHT OFFICE WORK\nor Clerking in dry-goods store.\nReliable,.honest; can be trusted.\nP.O. Box '18, Nelson, B.C.\nHOUSEKEEPER REQUIRES\ncharge of motherless home' or\nwith,lady alone.:Good cook. Ap-\nply Box 4540, Daily News.\nTOP MARKET PRICES 'PAID FOR\nscrap iron, steel, brass,' copper,\nlead, etc. Holiest grading. Prompt\npayment made, Atlas Iron & Metals Ltd., 250 Prior St.; Vancou-\nveh B.C. Phone Pacific 6357.\nSHIP US X.OUR SCRAP METALS\nor iron. Any quantity, top prices\npaid. \/Active Trading'Company.\n918 Powell St., Vancouver. $, C,\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES\/BICYCLES\n.(Continued)\nCEDAR POLES, ALL CLASSES\nand lengths Larch poles. Glacier\nLumber Co., Box 460, Nelson, B.C.\nJ.   P.\nMIDDLE-AGED. WOMAN, Bit\nperienced, will baby-sit any time.\nPhone 920-R;\nHELP; WANTED\n.,\" ,CITY OFNELSON\nApplications wlU be received by\nI the undersigned up to September\nA2S, 1951, for the position of Permanent members of the Fire Department. Apply giving, age,'height and\nweight, together with references.\n\".,' , W. A. GORDON,\n. .. City Comptroller,\nCity Hall, Nelson, B.C.\nSALESMAN. WANTED,\nH Piano salesman to work East and.\n\/'West Kootenays. Must be expe-\n, rienced salesman, though not ne-\n1 cessarlly piano. Excellent opportunity for man of good character,,\n'. initiative and trustworthy. Apply: in person or by letter to\n. Heintzman & Co., Ltd.,' Calgary,\n., Alb'eijta. \"'.-\n; WANTED \u2014 2 GENERAL DUTY\n'.,-' nurses immediately for modern\n12 bed hospital  15 miles from\nBanff.    Excellent    environment.\nSalary $150.00' monthly plus full\nmaintenance, 3 weeks yearly holi-\n'.-.   day with pay. Please write or\n.,,' wire  Secretary,  Canmore  Hos-\npital, Canmore, Alberta.\t\nWANTED AT ONCE-3 EXFERI-\n'   enced bus drivers for one month's\nwork in Nelson commencing Oct.\n1,   1951.   Must  have   Class   \"A\"\nchauffeur's licence. Wages $1.30\nper hour, 48-hour Working week.\n'Interior Stages Ltd. Phone 1100,\nTrail, B.C,\n|- ASSISTANT HYDRAULIC ENGIN-\neer required for the Nelson office\nof the Water Rights Branch. Per-\nmanency on completion of Satis-\n'    factory (probation period. Apply\n\u2022   to R. Pollard, District Engineer,\nCourt House, Nelson, for further\ninformation.      -\nWANTjajr-EXPBRIENCED STEN-\nographer. Typing and shorthand.\nExperience on dictaphone preferred but not essential. Reply in\n< own handwriting,, stating experience and salary expected. Box\n4900, Dally News.\nWOMAN BABY SITTER AVAIL-\nable afternoons and evenings.\nPhone 1412-R.   , \/ ' *\nRELIABLE WOMAN WILL DO\nbaby sitting or part time work.\nPhone 1J32-L.\nSET OF POWER SAW. FALLERS\nwould like position. Ph. 1298-L.\nSecretory-Treasurer for\nVictorian Hospital, Kaslo\n.Duties   to  commence   Nov.   1st.\nSalary $175 per month. Apply to\nMr.    Charles    Lind,    Chairman\n'Victorian Hospital, Kaslo.\n\/WANTED \u25a0-- ONE MAN TO CUT\n\" brush along road and clear for\nbulldozer. Pay ten dollars a day.\n- Pay own room and board.- Silver\nRidge Mining Co., Sandon, B.C,\n| WANTED _ CARETAKER   FOR\nthe  Golf Club.  For particulars\napply. L. M. McBride, phone 51,\nor B. Townshend, phone 714-L1.\nl;,WANTBD-\u00abINTELLIGEN1r YOUTH\nin late teens required for general\nwork In furniture store. Apply\nHome Furniture, 640 Baker St,\n| ^fOUNG MAN TO LEARN BIND-\n, ery trade. Day work. Apply in\n.person to J. J. Boyd, Nelson\nDally News.\n[MINERS AND MINERS HELP-\ners wanted for contract stoping\nand development Yale Lead and\nZinc Mines, Ainsworth.\t\n[WANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED WAIT-\nress. Part-time or full-time. Apply\nBowladrome.\n[\u25a0WANTED \u2014 3-MAN CREW FOR\n1 loading jammer. Apply Glacier\nLumber Co. Ltd.\n.     PUBLIC NOTICE\nNOTICE   TO   CONTRACTORS\nSEALED TENDERS for the Gen-,\neral Contract including. all trades-]\nendorsed \"Tender for Construction\nof St. Andrews Peace Memorial\nChurch, Trail, B.C.\" will be received by the Corresponding Secretary, Extehtion . Committee, St.\nAndrews Church^ Trail, B.C., at\nor before 5:00 p.m., Wednesday,\nOctober 24, 1951. P. O. Address: Mr.\nS. C. Montgomery, c\/o Engineering\nDivision, The C. M. & S. Co. of\nCanada, Ltd.; Trail B.C.\n.Working Drawings and Specifications. will be available at and\nafter 2:00 p.m., Monday, October 1,\n.1951, at the offices of the Architects,\nSharp & Thompson, Berwick, Pratt,\n1553 RobSon Street, Vancouver, B.C.,\nand 929 Spokane Street, Trail, B.C.\nThe work consists of a brick-concrete and laminated wood arch\nstructure.\nA .certified check payable to the\nowner for Five Percent (5%) of\nthe tender submitted must accompany each and every tender and\nshall be forfeited if the party tendering declines to enter into contract when called upon to dp so. j\nOn award and signing of the contract the successful tenderer shall\nfurnish to the Extension Committee, a Surety Bond equal to Fifty\nPercent (50%) of the contract. One\nreceipt of this Bond the certifed\ncheck submitted with the tender\nwill fe returned.\nThe Extension Committee reserves the right to reject any or\nall tenders without. explanation,\nNo tender having any qualifying\nclauses whatsoever will be considered.\nA deposit o< Twenty-five Dollars'\n($25.00) is required for^each set-of\nplans and specifications, and will\nbe returned upon receipt of same\nin good condition.\nSHARP &  THOMPSON,\nBERWICK,  PRATT\nFor the Extension Committee\nSt. Andrews Peace ,\nMemorial   Church,\n- \u2022 Trail. B.C.\nDATED AT VANCOUVER,\nB.C., this 29th day of\nSeptember, 1951.\nSHIP   YOUR   HIDES   TO\nMorgan. Nelson,'B.C.        ,     .\nWANTED-PIANO TO; RENT OR\nstore. Phone 329-L, .'..*.'-   - ;.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n1949 METEOR. SEDAN-$1650. -\nGood tires', air conditioner, .rubber undercoated, low mileage. For\nfull particulars phone Trail 53\nfrom 8 to 8 p.m. or write to Victor\nBilesky, 2268 6th Ave., Trail. Car\nwill be shown In Nelson ii requested. , '\nFORSALE - '49 INTERNATtON-\nal KB 2 Panel Delivery.: Low\nmileage, good rubber. Direct re-\nplies to Star Grocery,\nPROPERTY. HOUSES, FARMS\nETC.. FOP SALE\nN (Continued),\ns.e;e.;\nThe NEW\nFOR SALE - 1950 FORD CONV,\nExcellent condition. ' $2480. E.\ni McGregor, Greyhound Lines, Nelson. '\u25a0\"       \u25a0' '. \u25a0\u25a0-   -' \u25a0 -. ''\u25a0'-'  \u2022\nFOR SALE\u20141949 METEOR COACH\nwith radio, heater and good tires.\nIdeal family car. Ph. 48-L~after 6.\nFOR SALE-4950 ANGLIA COACH\n2000 mi. Mrs ,. C. A. Cbutts; Cottonwood Store No. 24 Ymir Rd.\nFOR SALEt-BEST '35 FORD-IN\ntown.'Seeing is believing, Apply\n302 Sixth St., phone 1316-R.\nWANTED FOR CASH-4-WHEEL\ndrive Willys .Jeep, in good condition. C. P. Hollm, Creston, BlC.\nThe Best.in\n\u2022Used .Gars\nNew   1951 Austin Sedan\n1951  Hillman Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949. Chevrolet Sedan\n1942 Dodge Sedan\n1942 Ford Sedan\n1941 Dodge Sedan\n1941 Fprd Sedan.\n1941 Chevrolet Sedan\n1940 Pontiac Coach\n1940 Chevrolet Coach\n1938 Dodge Coupe\n1938 Ford Coupe\n1937 Dod^e Coupe\n1935 Chevrolet Sedan\n1933 Ford-Coupe\n1939 Nash Sedan\nFOR ;SALEr-LATE '49 AUSTIN\nSedan,: $1300 or nearest offer Ph.\n1I28-X,\nSouth- Nejsoe\nA whole block, four streets from\nbus, with 2 good, modern bungalows. This can be bought in\nwhole or in part. It is a really\ngood investment and' worth\nyour Investigation. The price\nis ' reasonable. Details on re-\n. quest.. '\nGore-Street '\nA good 2-bedroom bungalow on\nwell-located double lot. There\nis a sizeable mortgage transferable to acceptable CfiKAft\nbuyer. Price ............ \u00abW,UU\nFor inspection of these and\nother city ahd suburban'dwellings, farms and businesses, see\nR. D. P. GILDAY .\n;\u25a0\u25a0;:\u25a0\" The:\nMACHINERY\njencies\n542 Baker. St. Phone ,1460\nReal Estate and Insurance Agents\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nETC., FOR SALE\nHUNTER'S SPECIAL!\n\u25a01949 AUSTIN PANEL $550\n1\/3 down and it's yours\nNOTICE OF TENDER\nACENT8 WANTED\nMAKE MONEY FASTI BY SELL-\nInfe Christmas Cards that are\ndifferent and better, such outstanding boxes as White Christmas, Winter Wonder World. Samples on approval. Colonial Card\nCo., Box 71, Station J, Toronto\n8, Ontario. \t\nWANTED: RELIABLE MAN AS\n-Rawleigh Dealer. Experience not\n'necessary. A fine opportunity to\nstep Into profitable business\nwhere Rawleigh Products have\nbeen sold for years. Write Raw-\n;   leigh's Dept WG:i-153-183, Win-\nnipeg.                -\t\n$35.00 IN TEN HOURS. MEN, WO-\n; men, sell part, full time locally.\nEntirely new home electrical\nproducts sell themselves. You\ntake orders and cash deposit, we\nship to the customer. Write Dept.\nE 70, P.O. Box 294, Hamilton, Ont.\nSealed tenders addressed to the\nundersigned and endorsed Tender\nfor the Construction of Customs\nExcise Residence facilities at Kings-\ngate, B.C., will be received by the\nDepartment.\n' Flans, specifications and forms of\ntender may be obtained upon request from the Chief of Accommodation Branch, Customs and Excise\nDivisions, Department .of National\nRevenue, Ottawa.\nTenders will hot be considered\nunless made on these forms and in\naccordance with the conditions set\nforth therein.\nEach tender must be accompanied\nby a certified check On a chartered\nbank in Canada payable to the Receiver General of Canada as specified in the form of tender for 10%\nof the amount of the tender.\nThe Department, through the\nChief of Accommodation, will supply blueprints and specifications of\nthe work on a deposit of the sum\nof $10.00 in the. form of a certified\ncheck payable to the order of the\nReceiver General of. Canada. The\ndeposit will be released on return\nof the blueprints and specifications\nwithin a month from the date of\nreception of tenders. If plans and\nspecifications are not returned\nwithin that period, ihe deposit will\nbe forfeited.     ,\nD, Sim,\nDeputy -Minister.\nUsed Trucks\nNew ~\n1951 Austin Countryman\n1949 Austin Light Delivery\n1946 Ford Light Delivery\n1949 Ford I Ton Flat Deck\n1946 Ford 1 Ton Express\n1941Fargo Light Delivery\nTERMS AND TRADES\nEmpire Motors\nPh. 1135      803.Baker St.\nAUSTIN SALES AND SERVICE\nLISTING.\nFOR SALp\n\" 114-storey house, about 12 years\nold Ground floor, has living\nroom, oak floors, fireplace; 2\nbedrooms and bathroom; kitchen wired for range; room for\nbedroom upstairs. Cement foundation, full basement and cement floor. 3 attractive view\nand garden lots; \u20ac<v7*trt\nfruit, etc. ...   <PO\/OU\n. SOME TERMS\nA chance to buy. a heat little\nhome. Furnished with very nice\nfurniture, including a modern\ngiano. % of an acre, dose to\n\u2022yro Park. Ideal for young\ncouple or retired people. Modern bathroom with shower; 1\nbedroom, bright kitchen with\ndinette. Beautiful view windows; Summer patio overlooks\nFairview and lake <t\/1 Rflrt\nSome terms.   .. \u00abP?OUU\nFurniture is .worth at least\n$1200; all a young couple needs.\nThe above property vjas listed\nwith us on Wednesday and sold\non Friday for all cash. \u2014\nWhy not list your property with\nUs for quick action.\nC.W.Appleyardl|\n\u25a0\u25a0& Co. 'Ltd,\nFire, Car and General Insurance\nEstablished 39 Years\nPh. 269^-Box 28-392 Baker St\n- Insurance Manager\u2014\nT. C. LAMBERT\nFAMILY RESIDENCE\n8   rooms   and   Lath.   Cement\nfoundation. t^ftO\nClose to: schools .. .      \u00abP\u00ab\u00bb\u00abWW\n7 *ROOM HOUSE\nFully    modern,    full   cement\nbasement, hot water heating 12\n. lots, 2 . ih the   city   Excellent\nsoil. To close estate CftKftft\n: will sell for .      -     W?UU'\n', pash or Terms\n\u25a0RESIDENCE '\n6,rooms and bath, centrally, located, full basement', hot water,\nheating,   recently   redecorated\ninside'and out: <Sfii?nft\n\u2022 Priced for quick sala'j'oovi,\nF A. WHITFIELD\n302 Baker St.        \u25a0    Phone 312\n.   At Your Service\n\u2022. Car,and Fire Insurance -,\n30 Years Real Estate Business '\n\u2022HART\nKathanode Propulsion\nType Batteries\n.    for ,  *   \u2022-.'.\"-\n. ,.  V *;\u25a0; :\nMining Locomotives\nIndustrial Trucks\nand Other MotiVe\nPower Purposes\n' 20 years of 'progressive\ndevelopment is the main\nreason why Hart batteries\nare always in demand\nWE CARRY IN. STOCK\nALL THE WAN, TED-\nSIZES AND CAN GIVE\nYOU IMMEDIATE SERVICE.\nPHONE 18\nOH WRITE TO\nNelson Machinery\nCompany, Ltd.\n214 Hall St        Nelson, ,8 C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. \u00bb. 1951 \u2014 9\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS\nFOR SALE-1 WOOD AND COAL\nCook-stove,  good  condition, $20;\n' also 1 Roy Thermo oil heater,\ngood condition,, $45. Phone 767-Y\nor call at 1807 Stanley Street.\nt'6R SALE - FAWCETT WOOD\nfurnace, suitable for 5 or 6 room\ndwelling; good condition. Apply\n1317. Columbia: Ave., Trail,' :6r\nphone Trail'834-X,      \u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0*,-\"\u25a0.   .-',\nFOR SALE \u2014 BLONDE DINETTE'\nsuite: 'table, four chairs, china\ncabinet;    bed    chesterfield    and\n' chair   Phone ^998-L.   '    -\nLARGE DUO-THERM OIL SPACE\nheater, used 1 year, $110.00. Phone\n1492-L.\n\u00a3 R, WATKINS QUALITY FRO-\ndiicts. Phone Spencer C, Colman\nR;R. 1, Nelson,   .\nPIPE\u2014 FITTINGS - TUBES SPE-\ncial low prices. Active Trading Co\n835 E Cordova St., Vancouver.\nNORGE OIL BURNER AND MC-|\nClary furnacette. 911 Stanley St.,\nor Phone 101-\nViolamac Opens\nOre on Jlh level\n. Operating profit of $51,274.90^.for\nJuly and August was realized by\nViqlaMac Mines (B.C.) Limited,\ndross receipts during this period\nfrom 584 tons of silver-lead-zinfi ore\nproduced by the Victor Mine near\nSandon, amounted to $95,925.25. This\nore has come mainly from 5-level\nwinze and.from 7-level drift\nOre has now been opened in 7-\nlevel drift for 170 .feet, with an\naverage thickness of 3.5 feet. When\na connection has been made between 3 and 7 levels, ore will then\nber mined from both these levels\nto continue shipments of high grade\nto the smelter and lower grade will\ngo to the mill.\nMICRON 1C HEARING AIDS.-\nWrite P.O   Box U8. Nelson. B.C\nFOR   SALE - 12-GAUGE   SHOT-\ng'in. Phone 743-X1 after 6 p.m.\nFOR   SALE - GENUINE   DUCK\npUnt. Phone.548-R.\nFOR SALE-GUHNEY OIL.RANGE\n$140. Phone 1348-R.\nCRESS CORN SALVE-FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist Sells Cress.\n:\\\nSALE\n6 rooms and bath, full basement, hot yater heat, connected to propane gas main.\nPriced for quick sale' at\n$6500. Come and have a\nlook, i \u25a0\n613 CARBONATE ST.\nPHONE 507-Y\nIDEAL FLACE TO BUILD TOUR-\n1st cabins or subdivide. 10 acres\non main highway to Trail, 6 ml.\nfrom Nelson. 5-room house an.d\nout; buildings. Box 4956 Daily\nNews..   .;'\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTHE SNOWSHOE RANCH OF-\nfers you the finest in registered\n\u25a0 Polled Shorthorns. For information,  write C Flick,  Edgewood\n.P.O.\t\nFOR SALE - TWO HIGH PRO-\nducing Holstein cows to freshen\nsoon, and one purebred Holstein\nBuU. E. E. Linville, Lardeau,, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014SPRING CHICKENS j\ntVs to tVs lbs. live weight. Ph.\n608-L3.\nCattle wanted \u2014 highest\nprices paid by Dick Kleef, R.R. 1,\nNelson. Phone 387-L-4.\nFORI  SALE-SEVEN-WEEK-OLD\npigs. M 6. Hougen, Robson, B.C.\nProvincial Government of\nBritish Columbia\nDepartment of Public Works.\nNelson-Creston District.\n' KOOTENAY LAKE FERRY\nREDUCED SERVICE\nEFFECTIVE OCTOBER 1st, 1951\nAs indicated when the extended\nservice was put into effect on the\nabove ferry on, June 1st, 1951, the\nlate night trip leaving Balfour -at\n10:30 p.m. daily and leaving Kootenay Bay at 11:45 p.m. dally (Pacific\nStandard Time) will be discontinued commencing October 1st,\n1951.,\nFrom this da'te until next Summer\nthe ferry will make six round trips\ndally, the last trip leaving Balfour\neach day at 8:00 p.m. and Kootenay.\nBay at 9.15 p.m. (Pacific Standard\nTime).\nR. G. Harvey.       j\nDistrict Engineer.1\nUSED\n\"TRUCES\n1\u20146x6 International Truck\n6 Wheel Drive, 361 Cubic Inch\nMotor, All Steel Civilian Cab.\nEquipped with Twin Cylinder,\nHydraulic Hoist and 8 yard\nSteel Dump Body. Front End\nPower Winch.' Will sell with or\nwithout Hoist and Body. Truck\nin almost new condition.\n1\u2014-,KS7 International Truck\nEquipped, with Cam and Roller\nHydraulic Hoist and, Steel\nDump Body. Recently reconditioned.\nHOUSE FOR SALE, SIVERTON,\nimmediate  occupancy.  For  fur-\n, ther information apply C. Cave,\n' SilveEtoh\nFOR SALE - MODERN HOUSE\nsmall fruit farm. Clpse to Castle-\n,gar    Apply   John Call. Robson,\nUsed ..'\u25a0\u25a0'  \u25a0\/ ,\nEquipment\nl\u2014D 4400 Caterpillar diesel   pow^r. unit.   C,om- ,\npl;tely overhauled.\n1\u2014RD 6 Caterpillar Tract-'\nor with Letourheau\ncable angle dozer.\nI\u2014Caterpillar No. 11 mot-\n\u2022or grader. A-l condition\n1\u2014 210 C.F.M. Portable\nCompressor.\n1\u2014395 C.F.M. heavy duty\nsemi portable compres-\n' v sor on skids. *\n1 \u2014J o h n* Deere crawler\ntractor with dozer and\nwinch.\nAlso new and used\nGasoline or,Diesel\nElectric Sets\nFOR SALE \u2014 BEACH 4-BURNER\ntable top gas range, $90. PH, 838-L-\nQUEBEC-TYPE      CIRCULATING\nhontrfr 8!j5, Phone 1395-R. \" .-.'\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\n;: ALBERTA -\nOPPORTUNITY\nContinued 111 health forces Immediate sale of one of Central Alberta's largest General Motors\ndealerships handling all lines.\nVery large mixed farming area.\nTwenty miles to nearest General\nMotors dealer on hard surface\nhighway half way between Edmonton and Calgary. Fully modern frame and stucco garage, 10,-\n000 sq ft., built 1948. Heavy; Imperial Oil gallonage. Easy terms\nto right buyer. Phone or wire\nowner, . \"   \"\n'  s' R HANSEN,\nINNISFA1L, ALBERTA '\nPOOL ROOM FOR SALE\"\nVernon Street.:\n515\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co, D  L-.'Kerr. Agent,\u25a0','\nALMER HOTEL. OPPOSITE C.P.R\nDepot. Clean rooms and moderate\n- rates $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2.50 to\n. $3.00 double's   Vancouver.  B , C,\nM'TiSMTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint mimeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order immediately. Daily News Printing\nDepK Nelson, British Columbia.\nMENI PERSONAL DRUG SUN-\ndries: 25 deluxe samples, $1.00\nMailed in plain, 'sealed wrapper\nFinest quality, tested,, guaranteed.\nBargain Catalog free. Western\nDistiibutors, Box 1023N, Vancouver. B. C.\nRENTALS\nProperty'!\n1\u2014KS7 Interrtationdl Truck\n178   Inch   Wheel Base, Reconditioned.\nI\u20145-Ton G.M.C.  Truck'\nSuitable for Logging Jammer.\n1\u20144-Ton WC 20 White\ntruck\n120 H.P. H.P. Motor, 178\" Wheel\nBase. Reconditioned, throughout. Equipped with Hydraulic\nHoist and Body. Will sell with\nor without Hoist ahd Body.\nFour suites completely furnished, plus a three-roomed suite\nfor. owner \u2014 unfurnished.' Revenue: one hundred and thirty\ndollars per month. Close in and\nalways full up. Grand deal for\nretired cc-uple who need a little\nextra money. Situated on two\n25-foot lots; full basement and\ngood furnace. % At ft ft\nFor quick sale ..., \u2022POQW\nSome terms oh this one;\nA lovely, small, 4-roomed bungalow, situated on 2 25-foot lots,\nclose to bus line, Splendid location for retired or young, couple.\nEquipped with oil furnace. You\nshould see this one. CCRAf)\nSelling price  ;.... *\u00ab>\u00ab>\u00ab\"\nEarly occupancy and some\nfinancial help could be bad.\nWe have sold most of our listings, so would appreciate you\nlisting your, property with us\nif you want quick actionl We\nhave buyers with cash for 3 and\n4- bedroom places, which are\nfavorably located. Give us a try.\nRobertson, Hilliard,\nCattell Realty Co. Ltd.\nPhone 68 532 Ward St\nWANTED TO RENT BY YOUNG\nmarried ^couple, no children, two\nor three room furnished or unfurnished self contained suite.\nBox 4756 Daily News pr phone\n3 from 8 to 5 p.m-\nFOR RENT\u2014SMART FURNISHED\nhome, close in; lmmed. possession.\nPhone 995-Y Monday, Oct. 1st.\nWANTED-HOUSEKEEPING, RM.\nfor two girls,, close In. Apply Box\n: '4576 Daily News.\n|JOR. RENT\u20142-RM. COMPLETE-\nly furnished suite for bachelors.\nPhone 1354-R.\nTractor & Equiprrtent\n7     Co. Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 119 P.O. BOX 119\nAll Types and Sizes of\nSHOVELS and\nLADIES I DUPREE: PILLS. IM-\nproved Formula Dupree Pills to\nalleviate pain, nervousness, and\ndistress associated with monthly\n, periods. $3.00 per box. Also Cotes\nTriple-Strength Pills. $5.00 per\nbox. \u25a0: Western Distributors, Box\n1023 AN, Vancouver. B C-\n'ROOM AND BOARD\nFOR ROOM AND BOARD APPLY\n920 Edgewood Ave., or ph. 359-R,\nROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN-\ntletnan. Phone 248-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA88AYER8 AND MINE'\nREPRESENTATIVES\nWANTED-2 OR 3-RM. FURNISH-\ned suite for 2 business girls, im-\nihediately. Box 4780, Daily News.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT FOR LADY\n\u2014Phone 157-L;\nFOR RENT\u20142-RM. APARTMENT,\nunfurnished. 214 Vernon Street.\nFOR RENT\u2014MODERN HOUSE IN\nProcter. Box 4927, Daily News.\nFOR SALE-rS-BEDROOM STUCCO home on 2'corner lots in Fair-\nview. Now vacant; also, 1-room\ncabin' With fuel shed. Price $4000.\n$2000 cash, some terms. Apply\nHall, 816 Gordon Road.\nTRUCK & TRACTOR LTD.\nNelson, B.C. Phone 1030\nFOR   SALE-1939  FORD  TUDOR\n_Sedan. 1950 moior  Phone 1543-L.\n(Continued in next column)\nRoom semi bungalow, one\nblock from Baker St. Concrete\nbasement, furnace, 2 or 3 bedrooms, bathroom. IVt lots. $3500\ncash will handle. Phone 431-Y.\nFOR- SALE\u2014TIMBER LIMIT, 160\nacres, Cedar Valley, 5 miles West\nof Fernie. Cheap for cash. Apply\nBox 4886 Dally News.\t\nFOR SALE\u20143-BEDROOM HOUSl\non bus route. Garden, fruit trees,\n3 lots; one of city's finest views.\nS'lM. ?hon\u00ab fi'l-X\ni\n(Continued in next column)     j\nBfalami Sailg Nmhb\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive' insertion after first insertion,\n48c line for 6 consecutive inser-\n, tlons. s\n$1.56 line per month (28 consecutive insertions). Box numbers  lie extra.' Covers any\nnumber of Insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)  NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst insertion.  18c  per lipe\neach subsequent Insertion.\nALL   ABOVE   RATES   LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription  Rates:\nSingle copy ._   $   .09\nBy carrier, per week,\nin advance        .25\nBy carrier, per year .       13.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month         $ 1.25\nThree  months :,_      8.7S\nSix  months  7..50\nOne year       ...-    15.00\nMall in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month.      ..       1.00\nThree * months-   2.75\nSix months . 5.50 *\nOne year '  10.00\nWhere extra orr'^ge IS required,\nabove rates plus postage.\n1\u2014Diamond T 6x6.\n,3\u20141945 International 6x6's.\n3\u2014K-il 8 whoel International\nTrucks with or Without\ndum'p bodies.\n1\u2014141 hp Chrysler Marine Engine with power outlet on\neach end.\"\nWE BUY AND SELL ALL\nSIZES  OF TRUCKS'\nMlrte Accounting Service.\nPhone 1229-R-l, Nelson, B.C.\nE. W. WIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nH. S.  ELMES,  ROSSLAND,  B.C.,\nAssayer, Chemist Mine Reg.\n. AUTO, WRECKEBT~^~~\nDAVIES TRANSFER AND AUTO\nWrecking. Phone Rossland, 171\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYOR8\nR W. HAGGEN. Land Surveyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer.\n\u25a0\u25a0' Grand Forks and Rossland.\nyour  needs ^ with   us   or\nuipr\u20144 \u2014\nList         uo   w\nequipment you have to sell\nWe may be able to assist you\nM. S. DUJARDIN\nTRUCKS and  EQUIPMENT\n2208 Broadway   Everett, Wash.\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL\nLOGGING & MINING\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\n\"   ,     EQUIPMENT\nCO., LTD.\nGranville Island M.A. 1251\nVancouver, B C\nBOYD C AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.\nNelson, B.C, Surveyor. Engineer.\nINSURANCE AND REAL E8TATE\nMcHARDY AGENCIES LTD, IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 185,\nLIVESTOCK  DEALERS'\nWE BUY OR SELL LIVESTOCK-\nContact H. Harrop; Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nWINCHES - CARCO TRACTOR\nWinches, Braden Truck Winches,\nSingle and Double Drum Loading\nWinches. Bayes Equipment Co..\nCranbrook, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u20141200w 32v ONAft\nlight plant, complete with bat-\nterles. Box 323 Kimberley, B.C.\n~    BENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop,  acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 SU Vernon St\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK,; Sept, 28 (AP) \u2014 A\now-trading session left a broad\n'mixture of small gains and losses,\ni Transactions totalled only around\n1,300,000 shares, lowest in a month.\nCanadian issUes were higher. Mclntyre gained Hi, Canadian Pacifie\nand International Nickel were each,\nup Vs. Distillers Seagrams dropped\nVt, while Dome-Mines and Hiram \u2022\nWalker were unchanged. '\nTORONTO (CP)-Prices continued mixed and irregular.\nSelective buying in. producing\ngold issues, base metals and Western oils boosted the turnover,to\nabout 3,400,000 Shares. Leading industrials were also active.-\nSteels found moderate support after m.'d-session weakness. Utilities,\nagricultures, constructions, refining\noils, banks, textiles, manufacturing\ncompanies, retail stores and miscellaneous Industrials were mixed.\nFoods weakened:\nMONTREAL  (CP) \u2014 Industrials   \\\nsettled.in a mixed price path near\nthe close following early firmness..\nTrading was moderately active.  -\nAdvances and declines generally\nranged to a point \"or more, while\nmany securities were unchanged.\nLosers were Consolidated Smelters, down 1% points to 180^, Consolidated Paper 1 to 41, Asbestos\nIVs to 69, and International Power\n1 to 71.\nL6NDON (Reuters)\u2014There was\nmore than the usual weekend reluctance to extend commitments.\nMarket men Were expecting'the\nWeekend to be a crisis period, and\nwere content to keep positions even\ndespite a fairly widespread feeling\nthat the short-term trend of prices\n.will'be downwards.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY. Sept. 28 (CP)-Trede .\nwas moderately active on light receipts on the Calgary Livestock\nMarket. Nrf strictly choice butchers\nwere available in the 437 cattle and\ncalves on offer.\nButcher steers and heifers were\nIn good demand at steady prices.\nCows were fully steady, with odd\ntops at $28. Bulls were about steady.\nGood, light stocker and feeder\nsteers were 50 cents to $1 lower and\nfair to medium kinds $1 or more\nlower for tbe week. Vealers were\nsteady. \u00bb\nHogs advanced 25 cents Thursday\nto close at $30.23; while sows were\nsteady at $17. Good lambs gained\n25 cents at $30.25, and good ewes\nwere steady at $17 to $18.50,\n: Good , to near-choice butcher\nsteers, $33 to $34.50; common to medium, $27 to $32.50.\nGood to near-choice butcher heifers, $31.50 to $38; common to medium, $2\u00ab tp $31.\nGood cows, $26 to $27.50; common\nto medium, $23.50-to $25.60; .canners\nand cutters, $18 to $23.\n.Good bulls, $26.50 to $27.50; common to'medium, $24.50 to $26.\nGood stocker and feeder steers,\n$31.50 to $33; common to medium,\n$26 to $31.\nGood to choice veal calves, $34 to\n$37; common to, medium, $28 to $88.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINES (Closing Prices)\nCariboo Gold ....'. I.........\nHighland Bell ~\nInt C *-C..:-:...,\u2014^\u2014\nKootenay Belle \u2014__\u2014\nPend Oreille ,\u2014\u201e-..\u201e-\u201e,.\nPioneer Gold  \u2014._\u2014\nPremier Border ....___\u2014\nQuatsino '.\nCLASSIFIED DISPUY\n'OATS tfnd ENGINES\n13H-FT. SEMI-V BOAT, 52\" BEAM,\nfirst class condition; complete\nwith oars, fish-pan, car-carrying\nracks. Suitable for 10 h.p. outboard' Will sell Martin \"40\" outboard, also in first class conditioh.\nBoat is' at Camp Paradise, Kaslo.\nR. T. Garland, 219 Diana Crescent,\nTrail, B.C.\nOCT A\nup\u00ab\u00b0 $1,000 tfAN\u00ab'ra\nIAGARA\nReeves MacDonald .\nSheep Creek,\nSilver Ridge\t\nSilver Standard.\nVanada  \t\nVan Rol\nWestern Exploration.\nWestern Uranium .\nOILS.\nAnaconda ._\nAnglo Canadian ...\nA P Consolidated..\nINFORMATION WANTED\nFIFTY DOLLARS WILL BE PAID\nby the undersigned for informs1\ntion leading to the conviction of\nthe party who'stole -a, goat at\nLemon Creek.\u2014W. B. DeWolf.\nFINANCE COMPANY LID\nSUITE 1*\nPhone 1095    560 Baker St.\nCalgary & Edmonton __\nCalmont           ,\nCommonwealth\t\nMercury   \u25a0\nOkalta Com *'*-,,\nRoyalite X.\t\nVanalta  .'. \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlberta Dist ...__\t\nAlberta Dlst V.T. I\t\nCapital Estates    .-,._,.\nInt Brew \t\n1.35\n.88\n.43\n1.15\n10.78\n2.10\n.34\n.58\n8.80\n1.70\n22\n1.70\nJ8\n.84\n1.58\n4.85\n.16\nT.00\n.50\n18.00\n1.85\n8.50\n.1914\n175\n18.00\n.48\n8.35\nS.35\n20.00\n4.25\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 28 (CP)\u2014Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feedi 82%.\nBarley-1.25H.\nSt. Ann's Day in Middlesex. Ja-\n:.ca. Is the reputed landfall  of\n\u2022i3tu-her C   umbla May'3, 1494,\non ona of his later voyages. .\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials 271.1 off .15 or .05\nper cent.\n20 rails\u201484.76, off .36, or .42 per\ncent   '\nis utilities\u201445.67. up .05, or .11\nper cent\n-  pi stocks\u201498.13, off .12, or :12 per\ncent\n m\n10\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, SEPT. 29, 1951\n| Millions Already Have Changed te   1\niltfo-Smear\nRundle Praises\n\u00bbt\u00bb\nWomen ao wild over this\namazing lasting lipstick thai\nstays oh\u2014arid on\u2014and on!\nHere it ia-the entirely new-\nkind-of lipstick that positively,\nwon't smear off on cups,\ncigarettes, teeth\u2014or the object   '.\nof your affections 1 Yet, Hazel\nBishop's amazingly Lasting\nLipstick removes easily with\nsoap and water, or Cream,\nGoes on smoothly and\ncomfortably\u2014gives lips\nexciting, radiant lustre I\nCtl Haiti Blihop No-Smiar llpiltelc In\nyour own flattsring Iaihlon-right shod*.\n\u00a7>KP\u20ac STORE\nPraise for the \"amazing\" hospl\ntality of the Kootenays was tendered the Nelson Board' of Trade\nThursday by William A. Rundle,\nchairman of the Vancouver Board's\ntransportation bureau.\nMr. Rundle - was referring to his\nvisit of last month when 18 members of the coast bureau made a\nwhirlwind nine-day tour' of 27\nKootenay centres. .    ;    ,.\nHe paid special tribute to the\nNelson Board for courtesies extended his group, especially when\nit had arrived here on a Sunday.\nMy. Rundle, who with his wife\nwas renewing acquaintances here\nafter a boat trip up the main lake\nto Lardeau, thinks the Kootenay\nscenery rivals that of the Banff\narea, He suggested we would do\nwell to publicise this asset more\nwidely, especially the boat trips up\nthe Arrow and Kootenay lakes.  '\nHe.saw- for Nelsoh a \"great\nfuture\" with; the value of metals\nstaying at current levels.\nOther guests at the luncheon\nmeeting were Howard Green, M.P.\nfor Vancouver Quadra; Rev. and\nMrs. Thomas Mitchell, president of\nthe Nakusp Board of Trade;. J. A.\nDoran and W. -A. Shilbock of the\nKelowna' Board; Jack Morgan,\nrepresenting the Junior Chamber\nof Commerce, and O.-G. Mclntyre\nand G. B. Beatty of Salmo.\nA. G. Pentland, representing the\nSheep. Creek Gold Mines, was\ngranted membership without ballot\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINE8 (Closing Prices) ,'    '\nApadla Uranium       .24\nArlon,.;.,;..., .'..\u201e\u201e. .____     .1BV4\nAtlas Y, K. .,.,...      M\nBevcourt ....._.\nBoblo *........\u201e_\nBralorne,.. ...\nBrewls R. L,'.\nBroulan X.XX\nBiiffadison ......\nBuffalo Ank.\nBuff, Can. _,...\nCalliman  ........\nCan. Mai\t\nCariboo Gold\nCentral pore\nCenremaque _\nChesterville ....\nChimp G. ...\nCochenour .._..\nConlaurum  ....\nCons. Beatty\nCM &S ........\nConwest ;\u201e; i\nCrolnor\nCbarlesVKingsley, English author\nyi)\\a died In 1875, was. rector of the\nYmir\nDancing\nEVERY\nSaturday\nMight\nMICKEY MeEWEN\nAND HIS\n\"MELODY MAKERS\"\n. Come and Meet Your\nFriends in Ymir\n'   DANCING 9 TO 1\n,      ADMISSION 750\nlittle church at Eversley, Hamp.\nshire, for 32 years.\nG. R. (Bob) Pickering\nPainting and Decorating\ni      Free Estimates '\nPHONE 44-R2 \u2014 BOX 218 .\nGRANITE ROAD\nJ. A. C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nVISUAL TRAINING\nMedical Arts .Building\nSuite 206 Phone 141\nNELS0NCAFE\nOWNERS TO\nMOVE TO CALGARY\nMichael Smith, proprietor of the\nGolden Gate Cafe for the past six\nyears, said farewell to the Nelson\nBoard of Trade Thursday.\nMr. and Mrs. Smith will leave\nNelson In mid-October and plan to\nreside in Calgary after a holiday.\nIn addition to his Bohrd oflrade\nactivities, Mr.  Smith  was also a\nDetta R. L,..__._\nDiscovery ,. .\u2122\u201e\nDome      \t\nEast Malartic ...\nEast. Sullivan ......\nElder Gold\t\nEldona __\nEstella....:.:...._...._..\nFalconbfldge  \t\n.Giant YeL ,..\u201e.,_...\nGod's' Lake  \u201e...\nGold Arrow\t\nGolden Manltou\nHalcrow ................\nHallnor _\nHardrock _...\t\nHasaga ;.,..*,_.\u201e__\nHeva\n,17\n6.75\n.86\n1,31\n.11\n1.50\n-,S8;\n.42\n.65\n1.40 i.\n' .18^4\n,   .15 ,\n-.-.  .83\n.17\n1.63\n'.B7\n.38\n180,75\n4.15\n.31\n.15\n.33\n19,85\n.1.13\n9.05\n.62\n,?1\n1.60\n10.75\n12.00\n.38\n-.17%'\n7.45\n.11\u00ab\n2.55-\n.12%\n.45\n.14 '\n15.00\nHollinger \u201e.\u201e\u201e\nHudson Bay ._.,.___..  65.00\nInspiration\nInt.'Nickel\nJoliet Que.\nKayrand ...\nKenville\nKerr- Addison ....._..\u201e\nKirkland Lake\t\nLabrador ...L\nLake Dufsuit ...\t\nLakeshore  \t\nLake Wasa ....\u201e ;.\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nThe Kootenay's Favorite\nDonee Rendezvous\nTONIGHT\n4 HOURS OF\nDANCING\n9 to!\n.     On  B.C.'s Finest\n, New Maple Dance Floor\nPrescriptions filled\/accurately, quickly, and\nof the best quality drugs , . . free delivery.\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPHONE 25\nBAKER ST.\n^\/Automatic Oil Heat\n\u2022 I that RADIATES!...\nColeman\nRADIANT-CIRCULATOR\nMODEL NO. R32\n\u2022 Beautiful Grille \u2022 Automatic Draft\nCbblnetl Control!\n\u2022 Automatic Fuel \u2022  Duroplastlc Finish\nControll\n$82.95\nmember of the Kiwanis and Shrine Sf'iv\n\u201ei,,u\u201e Marcus O,\nciubs-\nCleanup Divulges\nValuable Painting\nAIX-LES-BAINS,  France,   Sept. New Jasori\n28 (Reuteps)\u2014A valuable painting New Lund\nby the 17th century'French artist Noranda ..\nEustache Le Sueur has been dis- Normetals.\nNegus\t\nNew Calumet\nNew GoldyUe\ncovered in a junk shop at Vienne Noraohe\nIn the Rhone Vallfiy,\nVincent Pettazii, an, amateur\npainter, paid 2500 francs (about'\n$5.50) for a dusty frame..He was\nabout to knock.out its dirty canvas\nwhen a \"hunch\" persuaded him to\nclean It up. Cleaning revealed the\nsignature of Le Sueur.\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\n.,  at the: '\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall Street Phone 146\nMAKE YOUR CLOTHES LINE'\nOUR TELEPHONE UNE   \u2022\nWEST KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1176 - 182 BAKER 8T.\nHaigh\nTVu-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nPhone 327\n576 Baker St.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED A REPAIRED\nREGORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St Phone 63\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditor*\n576 Baker St\nPhone 235\nOUR LOW PRICE\nHipperson Hardware Co. Ltd.\nWe  Serve  the-Welt    .\nWith-Ellison's\u25a0\u25a0 Best\nWHOLE WHEAT AND\nVITA B FLOUR\nPhone 238 or Call .\nEllison Milling & Elevator\nCompany, .Ltd.\nLamaque\nLeitoh -\t\nLittle Long Lac .\nLouvlcourt ...........\nMacDOnald..\u201e..-__\nMacassa ,....,\nMacLeod. Cock...\nMadsen R. L. -.\nMagnet  ...-..,;.\nMalartic a. F. ...\n,37\n41.50\n.51\n\u2022  .18V4\n.22\n17.65\n.75\n8.55\n.75-.\n9.05 .\n-.36\n6.00\n1.05\n.83\n.35\n.88\n2.00 '\n2:90\n2.30\n.41\n2.10 :\n.10%\n72.00\nT. W.: 8, PAR8ON8\/ PROVINCIAL 8C0UT\nCOMMISSIONER, of Victoria, chats pleasantry\nwith Cubs during his first official visit to Nelson.\nCubs stand at attention, listening eagerly to the\ncommissioner's words of praise of the Nelion Scout\ntroops ahd Cub paoki, \"V.\nMclntyre     .\t\nMining Corp  _.... 19%\nO'Brien : \t\nCLeary  ...:,......._\u201e_\nOsisko  ,\"._\nPamour ____\nPaymaster  :....._.\nPickle Crow ._.\t\nPioneer .......... .._,\nPlacer Dev* .' _...'.\nPowell Rouyn ..\u201e...._\nPreston E. D. \u2022-\t\nQuebec Lab -..\nQuebec Man ....._._.\nQueenston ..........\t\nQuemont  ..,. ...,.\u201e_\nSan Antonio X.\nSen. Rouyn ...... ...\nShawkey   _..'\nSherritttrOrdon\t\nSigma  ..-.\t\nSilvermiller   \t\nSilanco ...'_ _.\n\u25a0Slscoe \t\nSladon Mai ..\t\nSylvanite .\u201e......\u201e.\nTeck Hughes _..\nThompson-Lund \t\nToburn \t\nTombill\t\nTprbrit\nTrans Cont Res ..\nUnited Kenp ... *\t\nUpper Canada.\n.85\nM\n.41\n.12\n1.60\n43.80\n6.10\n.ft\n1.36\n.22\n.84\n.87\n.68\n1.67\n2.35\n.'45%\n1.10\n1.60\n.33\n3.50\n.52\n28,50 -\n2.60\n,21\n.11%\n4.00\n7.00\n1,50\n.25\n'..73\n.45%\n1.35\n-2.20'\n'   .fi\n.27\n.85\n2.00.\n.69\n15.0.0 .\n1.1\nNizam Sells Jewels\nWorth S28 Million\nNEW DELHI, Sept 28 (Reuters)\u2014\nThe .Nizam of Hyderabad is putting\nthe fabulous -family Jewels., on the\nauctlpn blOck\u2014he says he'd rather\nhave' the cash. .\nHe gratis , to save only a few\ntreasures,' as family-heirlooms and\nfor us? on state occasions.\nThe rest, fill threetrunks, goes to\nthe highest bidder. Total value Is\nput at $28,000,000.\nIncluded in- this glittering mass Is\nthe 180-carat Jacob diamond, one of\nthe largest In the world.   :\nThe enormous egg-shaped, diamond, large as a crystal paperweight\nwas bought by ihe Nizam's grandfather in the United States 73 years\nago. Dealers fear it is too big to\nfind a buyer tbdaj.-Its value is.esfi-\nmated at between $3,000,000 and\n$4,000,000.\nThere are few men In the world\nwho cuold pay sucjh a price for'a\nsingle jewel these days. But unless\na buyer is found it may have to\nbe carved up into several lesser\ndiamonds of more marketable value,\nThe Aga.Khan is understood to\nhave offered $2,000,000 for the\ndiamond,' ;.*.\nThe Nizaqi says he is selling his\njewels to form a money trust for\nhis grandchildren....\nAlthough he owns leveral strong\nly-built modern safes, he has always\nkept the jewels in three ciid tin\ntrunfcs.covered with cobwebs,\nPearls lie jumbled in cardboard\nshoe-^boxes to be.brought out into\nthe light from time to time so they\n.will not lose their color.\nThe- Nizam himself' has always\nlived in spartan simplicity, shuffling through his palace halls in shoes\nsplit at the seams, wearing threadbare, clothes; ;','  '     -\nThe sale of the Nizam's jewels\nwill probably take place etiher in\nParis or in Switzerland, where.im-\nport coiiditlons are rnost favorable.\nThe jewels Include some bt the\nfinest emeralds iri India, for .green\nis the Hyderabad; Royal Family's\nreligious color.. - :\nNow In the vaults of a Bombay\nbank, they will be put on the market\ngradually: as conditions offer the\nmost favorable prices.\nVentures^...  ...  14.25\nViolamac   '. _\u201e_\u201e._.._... ,96\nWaite Amulet ._....\u201e_.,.... 12.35\nOIL8  -\nAnglo Can _..___..\u201e 6.90\nA P CoUsolidated  \u201e'.. .49\nAtlantic Oil _.... 3.20\nb. a. -on...;. _:.' 21.25\nCalgary & Edmonton  15.85\nCentral Leduc\t\nChenjical Research ..\nCommonwealth Pete\nDalhousie\t\nEastcrest\t\nFederated Pete ....^\u201e...\nHighwood \t\nHome\n2.36\n1.18 ;\n3.25\n.40\n.22\n7.60\n;23%\n15.50\nImperial Oil ...1  40^35\n395 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nPhone 497\nWE DO...\nDEVELOPING\nPRINTING\nENLARGING\nPORTRAITS\nCOPYING\nCOLORING\nFRAMING\nOoquuL\nSLuduoA.\n460 Baiter St.\nNELSON, B. C.\nInter Pete ,\nMacDongal Segur\nMid Cont.\t\nNat. Pete\t\nNew Pacalta\t\nOkalta- ,\nPacific Pete.._\t\nROyalite .'.\t\nRoxana  ...\nTower Pete :.....\nUnited Oils  _.\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi _.\nAluminum .......\t\nArgus ......'. \t\nAtlas St  .._..\nBeattie Bros.\t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian   \t\nB.C. Forest  .1\n9-C. Packers A\t\nB;C. Packers B\t\nB.C. Power A ..\t\nB.C. Power B __.\nBrown Co. '.\t\nBrown Co. pfd\t\nBrack SUk A\nbuilding Products.\nBurL Steel........_\t\nBudrns B \t\nBurrard A\nCan. Cement X\t\nCan. Malting \t\nCan. Packers A ____.j\t\nCan. Bakeries  \t\nCan. Car & Fdy\t\nCan. Oil  _^_\nCan. Celanese    ...   \u201e.,,\nCan. Dredge  _\u2014___\nCan..Pacific Rly . .. ,\u201e.,\nCan. West Lmbr . . . ,\u201e ,\nCockshutt\nC M & 8 \t\nCons. Paper _.\nDist Seagram .\n21.15\n'   .47 I\n,48%\n8.20\n2.10\n2.75\n0.00\n17.75\n.25\n.44\n.75\n19%\n110\n14%\n22\n12%\n88%\n26%\n8%\n18\n< is ;\n2014\n5%\n15%\n120%\n21%\n35 ,\n20%\n53\n'7%\n88\n52%\n89\n10%\n15%\nM\n69\n68%\n83%\n12\n39%\n180%)\n41:\n26%\nDom. Bridge ..\u201e_..._..\u201e....\nEddy Paper :....\t\nFamous Players\t\nFleet Air ...\u201e; ;..\u201e..\u201e\nFord A...\t\nGatineau \u201e\t\nGatineau 5% pfd ..\nGen. Steel Wares\t\nGreat Lakes\t\nGreat Lakes pfd :.......,\u201e...\nGypsiim Lime ....;\t\nImperial Oil .\n63\n25%\n1.6%\n2.05\n51\n18%\n101\n18\n17%\n50\n27%\n40%\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nAccurately\nCompounded\nMed. Art. Blk.\nPHONE 25\nImp. Tobacco ...; .:.\u201e...,..,. -    11%\nInt. Nickel\nInt. Pete\nKelvlnator _\t\nLoblaw A\t\nMaple Leaf Milling.\nMassey Harris\t\nM & O Paper ....;....\nMcColl Frontenac ...\nNaf Steel Car\t\nPage Hershey ..... .\nPowell River.\n41%\n-21%\n15\n\u202232\n8%\n- 14\n33 .\n39.\n29\n63\nPower Corp ..:       28%\nRuss. Industries :\t\nShawinigan\t\nSicks Brew ;...:.-.;..\nSimpsons A\t\nSimpsons pfd\t\nJSteel of Canada .. \u201e.;\t\nSteel of Can pfd \u201e.\nUnion Gas of Can ...\u201e..\nUnited Corp B ;...\u201e\nUnited Fuel A\t\nUnited Steer:\t\n25%\n'38%\n20\n33%\n94\n35%\n35%\n20%\n45\n58\n10%\nLet Us     \u25a0\nDEVELOP and PRINT\nYOUR FiLM\nWe give you best result*\nfrom your exposure.\n8 HOUR  8ERVICE\n\"At Your Rexall Store\"\nCity Drug Co.\nNelson's  Modern  Pharmacy\nPhone 34 Day \u2014 807-R Night\nBOX 460    .        '\nPhiico Radio\n-       Sales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302 446 Ward St.\nNELSON, B. C.\nTonl Twin, Kathtene Oeseente, toysr\nwt\nrot\"\nDEATHS\nV By The Canadian Press\nALEJCANDRiA,   Egypt - Abdel\nFattah   Yehia  Pasha,   75,  former\nEgyptian pflme-minister... .\nCOLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. 'X\nErnest A.'Vogt 40, prominent rocket\npropulsion expert,\n\u2022 LONDON\u2014Sir Robert J. Thomas,\n78, former Liverpool shipowner,\nABOARD S.S. PRETORIA CASTLE AT SEAS\u2014George Cheliotl, 62,\ndirector of British General Electric.\n-LONDON-Lord Badeley, 77, for-\nmer clerk of the parliaments.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St. \u25a0-      Phone 361\n.   Have the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nTime to\nChange\nChilly enough now to;\nthink of heavier under-.\nwisar.   '\nWe Have\nAll styles and sizes.\n\u2022 Viking Mello Fleece\n\u2022 Stanfield's\n\u2022 Moodics\n\u2022 Mercury\n\u2022 Harvey Woods\nEixidry's\nLIMITED\nThe Man's Store\nWiHTLEY, Yorkshire, England\n(CP)\u2014Rev. E. H. Knell of Christ\nChurch wrote in his parish magazine that while the aged and in-\nfirm cahoot always be expected tai'\nkneel in church, ''there-issurely no\nexcuse for the younger generations!!\nJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHi\nDONALD E. HUNTER\nOPTOMETRIST\nGilker Block\n542 Baker St.  .X'ffu \\S2fk.\nillliilllllllillllilllHIIIIIIllllillllllllllIji\nDon't Throw\nThat Radio Our...\nBring it to us and we'll\nmake a new radio out\nof it, giving you years of\nservice.\nWELLS\nService Shop\nPhone 1115\nNELSON, B.C.\nWATCH REPAIRS\n\u2022 AH WORK GUARANTEED Q\ne REASONABLE PRICES\n\u2022 PROMPT SERVICE     A\nSUTLER*\nJEWELLERY\n1U\nNelson\nPliarmaey\nPhone\n^ 433 Josephine St. ^'i.\nWhy Pay More?\nUSED   CAR VALUES\nTO OUT OF TOWN CUSTOMERS\nwho purchase any of the used cars of trucks listed\nbelow. TWO DAY hotel accommodation will be\nSUPPLIED FREE.\n1950 PLYMOUTH\nSeat covers _\n$'\n1995\nTo the Citizens of Nelson, B.C.\nNotice is hereby given to the Citizens of Nelson that\nwe the undSriigned will discontinue our Nelson City\n-Service operation at 12 o'clock midnight on the 31st\n, day orpctbber, 1951, subject to the consent of the\nPublic -Utilities Commission.;\n' Any objectibns to this notice must be filed within\nfourteen days with the Superintendent of Motor Carriers; Public Utilities Commission, 1740 Georgia Street\nWpst,.Vancouver, B.C, \u2022  .'-.'.*\u25a0\u25a0\nInterior Stages (Nelson) Limited\nNelson, B.C., September, 28,\n1951\nSUPER VALUE\n1950 AUSTIN\nSEDAN\nOne owner, low mileage.\n$1350.00\n1940 PACKARD SEDAN.\nPriced at '\n1937 FORD..\n'  Radio, heater, good tires.\n_'775\n'506\nPONTIACS   NOW ON DISPLAY      BUICKS\nIO CI GMC 14-TON\nVAUXHALLS IVll        '    PlckuPS\nWIGINTON MOTORS Ltd.\n'   1\n1 Phone 122\nNelson, B. C.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1951_09_29","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0425818","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Company, Limited","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"Nelson Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}