{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426289":{"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":"2023-02-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1950-10-04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426289\/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":" Canadian Dollar\nContinues Rise\nBy The Canadian Press\nThe Canadian dollar added slightly to Monday's gains,\nIn Tuesday's second day of open-market trading.\nIn Toronto $1 American cost $1.033\/_t compared with\n$1.05 Vi Monday and $1.10 when controls were on. Translated this means the Canadian dollar is worth nearly 95'\/2\ncents in American funds compared with the controlled 90.9.\nMontreal's closing quotation was $1.05 Canadian for $1\nAmerican. The Canadian dollar in New York was at a discount of 47\/b per cent, a value of 95Vb cents American, about\na half cent gain.\nIn London the Bank of England quoted Canadian dollars\nat 2.93 to 2.98 to the pound, off from Monday's 2.88 to 2.93,\nwhich had been set rather high. This compares with $3.08\nunder controls.     .-.-..\nBritish Gold, Dollar Reserves More\nThan Doubled Since Pound Devalued\nLONDON, Oct 3 (AP) - Britain\nanounced today its vital gold and\ndollar reserves have more than\ndoubled since it devalued the pound\nI year ago.\nA Treasury statement said the\nvital reserves soared $334,000,000 in\nthe last three months.\nThis Increase brought the fund \u2014\nthe International working capital\not the sterling area \u2014 to $2,756,-\n000,000.\nJust before, the pound was devalued from $4.03 to $2.80 in terms\nof U.S. currency Sept. 18, 1049, the\nreserves were down to $1,340,000,000.\nFor the third successive quarter Britain and Its sterling area\npartners earned more dollars\nthan   they   spent,  the  Treasury\n\\XV\u00a3\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOTENAY\nCloudy with a few showers. Light\nwinds. Low and high at Cranbrook\nSO and 50. Crescent Valley 85 and 59.\nVOLUME 49.\n5 CENTS A  COPY\nNELSON,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA,  CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY  MORNING,  OCT. 4, 1950\nNUMBER 139\nsaid. In the three months ending\nSept. 30 the surplus was $187,\n000,000\u2014compared with $180,000,\n000 In the second quarter of the\nyear and $40,000,00 In the first\nquarter.\nMarshall aid benefits contributed\n$147,00,000 to the latest jump.\n. The Treasury statement came as\nspeculation continued in many\nWestern capitals that Britain may\nsoon increase the dollar value of\nsterling.\nRumors retailed both In the press\nand financial circles suggest the\ngovernment may be thinking of increasing the pound 10 per cent\nto $3.08 In U.S. funds. Before it\nwas slashed 30 per cent to $2.80\nthe 'pound stood for 10 years at\n$4.04 in relation to U.S. currency.\nFIRE DESTROYS\nPART OF VILLAGE\nAbout 50 Reported\nHomeless; 1.6\nHomes Destroyed\nPADOU, Que., Oct 3 ,(CP) \u2014\nThe Eastern side of this small Mata-\npedia county village was destroyed\ntoday by fire, fanned by gale-\nstrength winds.\nD. H, Lancette, Canadian Na-\ntionai    Railways   station    agent\nhere,  said   late  todaj-  the   fire,\nwhich was by then under control,\ndestroyed 16 residences, two barns\nseveral    woodsheds    and    other\nsmall buildings\/ Padou Is about\n35 miles East of Rlmouski, scene\nof a disastrous fire  last Spring.\nLancette reported not more than\n50  persons  were left homeless in\nthe fire, which burned itself out\nbefore firefighters could do much\nto halt its spread.\nThe wind was blowing from the\nNorthwest and flames quickly\nraced through the Eastern side of\nPadou. The village is built like a\nsquare and there was no danger at\nany time to other sections.\nFresh Troops\nFor Communists\nU.N. Qets Mac Arthur's\nSurrender Message\nAustrian General\nStrike Called\nBy RICHARD O'REGAN\nVIENNA, Austria, Oct. 4 (Wednesday) AP) \u2014 Communists called\nfor a general strike throughout\nAustria at midnight last night and\nthe Western allies braced themselves for possible violence, sabotage and a Berlin-like blockade of\nVienna, 90 miles behind the Iron\nCurtain.\nOrders were Issued to 50.000\nworkers ln Russian-controlled factories to stay off the job. Against\nthis threat the Government issued\nrifles and steel helmets to Vienna\npolice and put all Austrian police\nand,firemen on the alert.\nTTie Communists hoped for a gen\neral strike of all public utilities\nand factories and a consequent\nbreakdown of tile' Government.\nSARK REELECTS\nOLD GOV'T\nRAINSQUALLS\nSTRIKE BERMUDA\nMIAMI, Fla, Oct. 3 (AP) \u2014 An\nAtlantic hurricane tossed RUffy\nrainsqualls at Bermuda today while\na second tropical disturbance in the\nGulf of Mexico raked the lower\nTexas coast with rising -winds.\nBermuda experienced squalls of\n30 to 40 miles an hour from the\nsmall and severe hurricane centred\nabout 200 miles West-Southwest of\nthe islands.\nSARK, Channel Islands, Oct. 3\n(Reuters)\u2014Sark, a tiny island off\nthe South coast of, England with\nan almost mediaeval system of administration, today held its first] peace and unity.\n. election since 1922 and decided that\nthe old ways are best.\nThe 326 electors virtually ignored\nthe campaign pf the New Brigade,\na new party which urged abolition\nof Sark's feudal administration ahd\ncloser ties with the British mainland. Only one New Brigade, candidate was elected.\nYugoslavia Joins\nIn Asking Peace\nIn Korea Warfare\nLAKE   SUCCESS,   N.Y.,   Oct.  3\n(CP)\u2014Communist Yugoslavia join\ned India today in asking the Unit--\nNations to try to find a comprorr.\nsolution   between  East  and  W.\nprograms for Korean peace. \u2022\nBut a succession oi inner, delegates in the General Assembly's\n60-member Political Committee piled up support for an .eight-power\nWestern plan to unite the country\nas an independent nation.\nAustralia told the Committee that\nNorth Korean resistance roust be\nsmashed and the entire country occupied  by the  U.N. to guarantee\nBy WILLIAM JORDEN\nIN NORTH KOREA, Oct. 3 (AP)\n\u2014Advancing South Korean forces\nfound ' evidence today that the\nNorth Korean Communists may be\ncommitting some of their reserves\nIn an attempt to check the East\ncoast drive North of the 38th\nparallel.\nRepublic of Korea ,(Rok) forces\ndriving North of that line on the\ncoastal route toward Wonsan captured a few fresh, weU-fed Communist troops after a fierce fight\nthis morning.\nThese prisoners were not the\nragged and hungry remnants of the\nfleeing enemy such as South Koreans have been capturing.\nThey were in good shape, and\nthey said they were part of a full\ncompany of North Koreans dug into\na hillside.\nThey looked as If the morning's\naction might have been their first,\nBy afternoon the Rok 3rd Division, which' crossed the 38th\nparallel Sunday, had moved to\nKansong, about 35 miles North\nof the,old border.\nPLAN TO STAY\nSOCIALISTS\nMARGATE, England, Oct. 3 (CP)\n\u2014British Socialists today showed\nIn three ways that they intend to\nremain Socialists:\n1. The Labor Party's annual conference gave Prime Minister Attlee\nan ovation when he said the ruling\nLabor Party .would neither water\ndown its policy nor enter into a\ncoalition government with the Conservatives;\n2. It increased the numerical\nstrength of the left-wing group on\nthe party's executive, and\n3. The conference delegates got\nexecutive acceptance of a reolu\ntion demanding that private enterprise's profits be cut.\nCanada's Airlines\nSoon Out of Red\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 3 (CP)\u2014Canada's two biggest airlines should\nbe operating \"in the black\" when\nthey stop expanding, a Federal air\nofficial said today.\nRomeo Vacon and A. D. McLean\nof Ottawa, two of the three members of Canada's Air Transport\nBoard, are holding informal talks\nwith airline representatives here,\nMr. Vachon said both Trans-\nCanada Air Lines and Canadian\nPacific Airlines are operating today \"in the red\", but \"not very far\nin.\"\n\"They are in the development\nstage. T.C.A., for instance, grew so\nfast it hadn't time to turn around.\nAs soon as they stop expanding\nthey'll be able to make both ends\nmeet.\"\nFliers Fail To Uncover\nReds' Defence Line\nJohn C. Ross (left), U.S. alternate representative to the United\nNations General Assembly hands to.; U.N. Assistant Secretary-\nGeneral Andrew Cordler.at Lake Success (Sept. 30) a copy of\nGeneral MacArthur's message calling on the North Koreans to\nsurrender unconditionally or face' destruction by U.N. forces now\nat the 38th parallel. Cordier received the message for U.N. Secretary-\nGeneral Trygve Lie.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nGreen Attacks Gov't Stand on\nTroops to Korea, Railway Strike\nDope Pedlars Get\nJail Sentences\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 3 (CP)\u2014The\ncourts began tolling off sentences\ntoday for narcotics pedlars snared\nin the biggest R.C.M.P. trap ever\nsprung against the illicit drug\ntraffic.\nThree persons, including one woman, were sentenced by Magistrate\nW. W. B. Mclnnes to jail terms and\nanother pleaded guilty to selling\nnarcotics and was remanded a week\nfor sentence.'\nAltogether, 20 were caught up in\nthe R.C.M.P. web spread throughout\nVancouver's dingy East End last\nweek.\nElmer Thomson, 28, no fixed address, drew one year and' a $200\nfine; his wife, Virginia, 18, and\nNorman Chapman, 29, no fixed address, each got six months and a $200\nfine; George Sorenson, 37, no fixed\naddress, pleaded guilty.\nSixteen others still face charges\nof selling or possession of narcotics.\nChristina Lake\nInn Burns\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 3 \u2014 Alpine\nInn, a tourist resort at Christina\nLake, was burned to the ground in\na blaze last night\nThe resort estimated to be worth\nabout $250,000 was razed In a bleze\nwhich defeated the fire-fighting efforts of the Grand Forks Fire Department and the Forestry Department.\nSurrounding sheds and stables,\nand nearby tourist cabins, were unharmed by the fire.\nThe big, rambling Inn owned by\nTed Nichols of Meadow Lake, Sask.,\nwas originally built about 1928. It\nwas used to house Japanese removed from the coastal areas during the war.\nThe R.C.M.P. at Grand Forks are\ninvestigating the fire, cause of\nwhich is as yet unknown.\nVANCOUVER, Oct 3 (CP) \u2014\nHoward Green, Progressive Conservative Member of Parliament for\nVancouver - Quadra, said tonight\nCanada has \"lost standing and has\nbeen humiliated in th\"e United\nStates\" because she has not sent\nground troops into the Korean fight,\nIn a speech on the CBC frde-tlme\npolitical series, \"The Nation's Business,\" Mr. Green said \"we have\nbeen made to appear a people who\ntalk big in conferences but hang\nback when there is fighting to be\ndone.\" . \u25a0.\nHe also touched on the railway\nstrike and \"the dangerous trend toward a one-party state.\"\nMr. Green accused the Government of bungling the Korean situation.\n-\"We know that there'are other\ntrouble centres in Asia like Indo-\nChlna and Malaya, that If a third\nworld   war   comes   our   (West)\ncoast.will be under attack and\nwo think the Canadian Govern;\ntjj ment--t Ottawa-Is. altb||(iUi\u00abr'\"tb\u00a3r\nsmug about the situation.\n\"We cannot understand why Mr.\nPearson, the Secretary of State for\nExternal Affairs, still refuses to ad\nvocate a Pacific defence pact or a\ntreaty of some kind to unite the\nDemocratic nations in that area,\n\"If he is unwilling, to do that let\nhim advocate a broadening of the\nterms of the North Atlantic Treaty\nOTTAWA, Oct.*3 CP) \u2014 The 1951\ncensus is underway in Canada's\nNorthland and its going to be a big\njob.\nMain problem for the R.C.M.P.\nwho will carry it out is the best\nmethod of tabulating some E\nnomadic Eskimos scattered across\nthousands of square miles in the\nArctic.\n 7\nRetiring Creston\nBank Manager Honored\nCanadian Destroyers\nBack in Port\nAT A JAPANESE NAVAL BASE\nOct. 3 (CP).\u2014The Canadian destroyers Cayuga, Sioux and Athabaskan are back in port, ending\ntwo weeks of Korean invasion duty\nin which they destroyed enemy\nminefields and bombarded shore\nbatteries and troop concentrations.\nSupporting the United Nations\nassault on the West coast Korean\nPort of Inchon, they spent two\nweeks guarding Ihe supply line to\nthe beachhead and escorting ships\ncarrying vital fuel and ammunition\nto the United Nations !ar._t forces.\nto cover aggression against a party\nto that treaty ln areas other than\nthe North Atlantic; and let him advocate that Australia and New Zealand be invited to join. Trouble in\nthe Pacific will always be of grave\nconcern to Canada ...\n\"Hesitation and delay have characterized the government's actions\non Korea throughout, with two re\nsuits:    . '\u25a0\u25a0.'.\n' 'First, the Canadian people have\nfound it very hard to realize what\na terribly dangerous situation faces\nthem; and\n\"Second, Canada has lost standing\nand has been humiliated in I the\nUnited States ...\n\"The policy of the Canadian Government has been to let someone\nelse do, the fighting for the first\nsix months. It is a blot on our record as a nation.\n. \"This is not in line with the courage of the Canadian people and it\nIs .particularly unfortunate \u2014 and'\n.dange'rous-^because if there should\n'b^'a 'tiitrd world -war-Canada will\nbe tinder direct attack and will require help, quickly from her\nfriends.\"\nMi1. Green said the act settling\nthe railway strike was \"a menace\nto every trade union in Canada.\"\nIt would be a precedent \"for forcing compulsory arbitration in other\ndisputes\" and it was \"designed to\nclub labor.\"\n3 LOSE LIVES IN\nSHIP COLLISION\nLady Cynthia,\nLaunch, Crash .\n. Off Bowen Island\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014\nThree lives were lost tonight in\nthe icy waters of Bowen Island\nwhen the Union Steamship Line's\ncoastal vessel Lady Cynthia was in\ncollision with a small launch.\nFour other persons were  rescued,    R.C.M.P.    and    company\nspokesmen said, with one injured.\nIdentity of the missing and rescued was not. disclosed.\nPolice said the Injured man had\none arm almost severed In the\ncollision about 14 miles West of\nVancouver city In coastal waters.\nThey said the man was transferred to a water taxi, after being\npicked up by the-Lady Cynthia,\nrushed to nearby Horshoe Bay\non the mainland and taken to\nhospital here.\nThe accident occurred about 5.30\nPST. The weather office here said\nvisibility might have been impaired\nby smoke from slash burning on\nVancouver Island.\nThe passenger-freighter, 235 feet\nlong and with a gross tonnage of\n925 tons was inbound for the Summer resort of Bowen on the East\nside of the rough Bowen Island.\nThe launch was tentatively indenti-\nfied as a British Columbia forest\nservice craft.\nSupply Arteries Blasted in North\nKorea; No Reply to Peace Ultimatum\nTOKYO, Oct. 4 (Wednesday) (AP)\u2014United Nations air\npower today blasted Red supply arteries in North Korea but\nsearched in vain for signs of a Communist defence line\nagainst South Korean forces advancing 50 miles beyond tho\n38th parallel.\nPilots claimed they knocked out 85 camouflaged trucks\nin a Red convoy moving South Tuesday from the direction of\nChinese Communist Manchuria. Carrier-based and land-\nbased   planes   pressed   wide-* ; \u25a0\nFORMER NELSON\nMAN DIES IN N. B.\nDALHOUSIE, N.B., Oct 3 (CP)\u2014\nPercival Hills, 61, a Fisheries Inspector from East Riverside, N.B.,\ndied in hospital here today after\nhis car was struck by the Eastbound\nOcean Limited of the Canadian\nNational Railways at New Mills, 12\nmiles East of Dalhousie.\nWitnesses,said the driver jammed\non the brakes when he sighted\nthe fast passenger train. The car\nstopped on the tracks. Dr. B, E.\nPotheir district coroner, decided an\ninquest would be unnecessary.\nHills was a son- of the late Mr.\nand Mrs. Henry Hills, Port Alberni,\nB.C., who were among the pioneer\nsettles of Vancouver Island. Employed by the Federal Department\nof Fisheries for 30 years, he was\ntransferred to New Brunswick from\nNelson, B.C., in 1938.\nE. MASON D. M. MACDONALD\nManagement of the Canadian Bank of Commerce at Creston\nchanged hands between the two men pictured above- last week.\nMr. Mason, left, of Va'mSouver, Is manager of the'branch, succeeding Mr. Macdonald, right, manager for several years, who retired\nFriday. ,, i '-. ,\nMr. Macdonald has been with the bank In B.C. for, the past 40\nyears, and was honored at a gathering of businessmen and friends\nat Creston last week. He was presented with a golfing -Bag from\nthe gathering and golf balls from tho bank staff.\u2014H. M. Buckna\nchfitB__      _.          - \t\nProduces Papers\nShowing Reds Seek\nTo Down U. S. Gov't\nPITTSBURGH, Pa., Oct. 3 (AP)\n\u2014A Pittsburgh judge today produced a bulky sheaf of seized documents he said proves the Communist Party in the United States\nIs a war machine which seeks to\noverthrow the Government.\nJudge Michael A. Musmanno said\nhe sent 17 documents to the House\nof Representatives' Un-American\nActivities Committee which establish the aims of the American Communists without question.\nOne paper Musmanno found \u2014\nentitled \"Guide for Speakers\" \u2014\nsaid:\n\"In Korea the people have had\nthe opportunity of witnessing the\nliberating role\u2014not only in words\nbut In deeds\u2014of the, Soviet troops\nand the Soviet occupation forces, as\ncontrasted with the enslaving role\nof American troops and the American military authorities.\"*\nMusmanno, a judge at the German war crirnes trials, has waged a\nlengthy anti-Communist campaign.\nHe is Democratic candidate for\nLieutenant-Governor of Pennsylvania-\nTALKS SELF OUT\nOF THREE CHARGES\nQUEBEC Oct 3 (CP) - Roger\nLemelin French-Canadian author,\ntoday mixed a bit of wit and sharp\nretorts to talk himself out of three\ncharges of illegal parking.\nAs he entered the chambers of\nChief Recorder Emile Morin, Lemelin took a seat and quiped \"at least\nif I'm not allowed to park I'm\nallowed to sit down.\"\nThe judge let that one go and\ndelved through the dossier.\n\"Why, you are a repeater,\" recorder Morin said. \"It doesn't make\nsense. If everyone acted this\nway . . .\"\n\"But I earn my living by opposing the rulings of the authorities.\"\nbutted in Lemelin. \"Even though I\nmay be forced to pay now and\nthen ...\" *\n\"If you continue in that tone I'll\nconvict you.\" the recorder said.\n\"If you were in my place you\nwould act no differently,\" answered\nLemelin, although he did not make\nhis \"place\" clear.\nRecorder Morin didn't say\nwhether he agreed, but the charges\nwere finally dropped.\nJohnsons Slarl\nHome Saturday\nQUEBEC, Oct. 3 (CP) - Premier and Mrs. Johnson of British\nColumbia are planning to return\nhome to Victoria Saturday, it was\nlearned today from St. Sacreirieht\nHospital.\nThe Johnson were injured Friday\nwhen \u25a0 their automobile collided\nwith another 15 miles West of here\nin foggy weather. They were returning home from the Quebec constitution talks.\nPremier Johnson suffered a fractured left hip and Mrs. Johnson a\nshoulder injury and a rib fracture.\nBoth are reported doing well.\nMrs., Johnson said tonight in hospital: \"It is' very nice here but\nthere's no place like home. Right\nnow I am looking forward to Saturday. We'll probably arrive there\nSaturday evening although that's\nnot sure yet.\"\nShe said she was feeling \"quite\nwell\" and that Mr. Johnson was\n\"coming around nicely.\"\nThe Johnsons plan to make the\ntrip to Victoria by plane and will\nprobably leave Saturday morning.\nP. C. Richards, Mr. Johnson's\nsecretary, here to make the arrangements, said the Premier's car which\nwas badly smashed in the accident\nnow was in the hands of insurance\nadjusters.\nHe said he did not know what\nwould happen to it.\nspread aerial attacks.\nThe Red radio at the capital of\nPyongyang continued to Ignore\nGen, MacArthur's ultimatum broadcast hourly since Sunday,' for the\nCommunists to surrender or face\ninevitable destruction.\nBut the North Korean high command communique broadcast today\nmade this admission:\n\"On all fronts, the People's (Communist) army is withdrawing to undertake new duties.\"\nIn South Korea, the mop-up of\ndisorganized Reds by -U.N. liberation forces disclosed evidence of\nnew Communist atrocities.\nA United States officer, Col. Fran-\nVis Gillette, said gruesome photographic proof would be sent to the\nUnited Nations that the Reds bay-\nonetted, shot and burned to death\nmore than 700 civilians, including\nchildren, at Yangpyong, 36 miles\nEast of Seoul,\n\"It will be extremely difficult\nto prevent retaliation measures In\nthe future,\" Gillette's report said.\nSouth Kore'an Marines who occupied the naval base of Mokpo in\nSouthwest Korea, reported the Reds\nmassacred 500 civilians there be\nfore fleeing the burning city.\nSouth Korean forces racing along\nthe East coast made the deep penetration into North Korea.\nNo United States troops were\nNorth of the 38th parallel but\nMarines were reported today by\nthe U.S. 10th Corps to have captured Uljongbu, within 18 miles\nof the artificial boundary, It Is 12\nmiles North of Seoul. , ''\nThe convoy of camouflaged\ntrucks which American pilots reported Southbound from -the direction of Manchuria was one of several attacked Tuesday.\"\ni Another sizeable Red convoy was\nobserved headed West toward a\nconcentration area 15 miles North\nof the 38th parallel. A third motorized Communist convoy on the East \u00ab\ncoast was lost sight of after being\ndriven to cover by rocket and jellied gasoline attacks from the air.\nTo avoid border incidents with !\nthe Chinese Reds, American planes\nare observing a 30-mlle bomb-free\nzone along the Manchurlan border.\nCarrier-based planes struck coordinated blows. A Navy summary\nsaid the raiders knocked out spans\nof three river bridges North ot\nPyongyang. The planes, from Task\nForce 77, raided \"the Western half\nof Korea North of the 38th parallel,\" the Navy said,\nThe Far East Air Force said light\nbombers ranged along the North\nKorean railway lines from midnight\nTuesday until dawn Wednesday,\nbombing supply arteries and hunting for Southbound troop movements.\nB-29s worked over a major. Sad\ntroop concentration area at.Sari-\nwon, 35 miles. South of Pyongyang.\nSome 60 American military advisers with South Korean troops\nwere under new orders not to discuss the campaign with war correspondents. They were reported\nfearful that the Reds might loose a\nflank attack. \u2022 \"\nSouth   Korean   field   officers,\nhowever, were not restricted, and\ntalked freely. \u25a0'->-\n\"We are going to the borders\nof Manchur|a,\" Lt.-Col. Jung Rel\nHlok, Chief of Staff of the 3rd\nDivision, told AP correspondent\nHal Boyle.\nJung said the main handicap was\nlack of transport. The division hoped to reach its border goal before:\nthe bitter Korean Winter sets in\nabout mid-November.\nExperts on Hospital\nAdministration to\nMeet in Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014\nExperts on hospital administration\nln B.C. will hold a four-day convention  here starting Oct. 24.\nHighlights of the B.C. Hospital\nAssociation's 33rd annual conference will be an address by Dr.\nL..O. Bradley, executive secretary,\nCanadian Hospital Council, Toronto;\ndiscussion of the B.C. Hoosital Insurance plan led by L. F. Detwiller:\nCommissioner; a talk .on federal\nhealth grants by Dr. George R. F.\nElliott, Assistant. Deputy Minister\nof Health for B.C.; and a speech on\nhospital finance by W. J. Lvle,\nmanager of hospital finance for B.C.\nHospital Insurance service,\nCoast Man Advises\nBusiness Training\nVICTORIA, B.C., Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014\nCanaman business men are beginning to feel the schools aren't teaching enough about private enterprise,\nA. E. Grauer, of Vancouver, President of British Columbia Electric Co.\ntoday told delegates to the 27th annual convention of the Canadian\nEducation Association.\nMr. Grauer said schqois should\nsend their graduates into .industry\nwith some reasonably realistic view\nof what it was all about. He.conceded, however, that the school\nalone could not mold an individual's\nviewpoint.\nMen Shortage Cause\nOf Puget Sound\nShipping Problem\nSEATTLE, Oct, 3 (AP) \u2014 The\nAlaska Steamship Company's General Manager said today that longshore gang shortages are creating a\nworse shipping situation on Puget\nSound than \"anything during the\nSecond World War.\"\nD. E. Skinner, the line's vice\npresident and manager, added:\n\"Sailing schedule's are going to\npieces; operations are grinding to a\nstop and costs are skyrocketing due\nto the abnormal vessel detention,\nwith no relief in sight.\"\nCalifornia Governor\nTakes Loyalty Oath\nSACRAMENTO, Calif., Oct. 3\n(AP) --Governor Earl Warren today sighed Into law the loyalty oath\nbill and Immediately took the oath\nhimself. .   <   '.,\nWithin 30 days, all-employees of\nthe state, cities, cbuhties and other\npolitical subdivisions must follow\nthe governor's example or b'e dropped from the payroll.    j\u00a3\nChurchill Passes\nUp Some of Income\nLpNDON, Oct 3 - (Reuters) \u2014\nWinston Churchill passes up \u00a34000\nof the \u00a35000 yearly he is entitled\nto draw from the Treasury, Government figures showed tonight.\nThe finance accounts of'public\nrevenue and expenditure showed\nthat the former prime minister\ndraws only the \u00a31000. Kearns\nyearly as a Member of Parllnrneht.\nAs leader- of the Conservative\n'opposition he is entitled to a further\n\u00a32000. And as a former prime minister he could draw \u00a32000 more.\nChurchill,' a wealthy landowner,\nearns most, of his income by writing.)     , J __ ; I    \u25a0 I\nMountie Purchases\nCounterfeit Bills\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 3 (CP)-A Winnipeg R.C.M.P. officer today said he\nposed as a buyer of bogus money\nand smashed a country-wide ring\nof counterfeit operators.\nSgt. P. C. Brooks said In City Police Court he offered to buy $18,0000\nworth of bogus bills for $3000.\nCharged with conspiring to utter\nforged bank notes were Lome\nObirek, Fred Ignat, Harry Ignat,\nWalter Kostick and Mrs. Helen Ko-\nstick, all of Winnipeg.\nThe charge against Mrs, Kostick\nwas dismissed. The others were\ncommitted for jury trial.\nWalter Kostick failed to appear in\ncourt Monday afternoon when the\nhearing opened. A bench warrant\nwas issued for- his arrest.\nSgt. Brooks said he feiet a man\nnamed William Ignat\\a'tia:Winnipeg\nhotel May 26 and ma.de a deal to\nbuy $18,000, worth of counterfeit\nmoney.     '-\nSince then William Ignht and two\nother men had been sentenced by a\nToronto court to two years'\nprisonment in connection with possession of forged bank notes,\nSNOW CAUSES SERIOUS\nCROP CONDITION\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014 Snow\nwhich fell In Southern Manitoba\nyesterday has created a serious crop\ncondition, the Manitoba Department\nof Agriculture said today.\nBefore the first heavy rains last\nmonth a large percentage of wheat\nwas grading No. two Northern.\nSince then quality has been lowered\nand Is likely to be deteriorated\nagain. In the Centra! West areas,\nwhere mid-August frosts occurred,\ngrades have been lower than in\nother parts Sf the province.\nJET FIGHTERS\nIN RED CHINA\nRUSSIAN-MADE\nHONG KONG, Oct. 3 (AP) - A\nconfidential but reliable report\nfrom Shanghai said today that fast,\nnew Russian-made jet fighter planes\nare operating from Hungjao Field,'\nthird Shanghai airport to be put\nback in operation by the Chinese\nCommunists. \" :\u25a0\nHungtao was the home base Of\nretired Maj.-Gen. Claire L. Ch'en-\nnault's civil  air transport  before :\nthe Communists seized Shanghai.\nThe reports identified the Russian\nplanes as Yak-15 single-seat fighters. Earlier information had called\nthem Yak-21s,\nThese Yak jets, flying daily over\nShanghai, were described as having\na top speed of 550 miles an hour,\nbut the report did not say if the\nestimate was made by a trained air\nobserver. '\nGRAIN SHIPMENTS DOWN\nFORT WILLIAM Oct. 3 (CP) -\u25a0\nGrain shipments from the Prairies\nto the head of the Lakes are down\nabout 50 per cent from last year.\nW. F. Trimble, Terminal Superintendent for the Canadian Pacific\nRailways, said today that since ths\nbeginning of the new crop year,\n.some 14,000 cars have been received\nhere. Last year, the figure for the\nsame period was 20,000 cars.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nKING WILLIAM, Va\u201e Oct, 3 (AP)\u2014Max chatted about a lot af\nthings, but he never discussed sex. .     _.\nThat's why Mr, and Mrs, R. T. Trimmer didn't know for 18 years\nthat Max was, In reality, Maxine.\nTheir pet parrot finally laid an egg,\n\u25a0 RICHMOND, Calif., Oct. 3 (AP)\u2014Cicero Wilkerson was delighted\nwith the purring sound as he started his automobile engine Monday.\nA block later, the purr had changed to furious cries.\nUnder the hood-, dancing on the hot engine block, he found a\ncat and three kittens.\nCINCINNATI, Oct. 3 (AP)\u2014It was a little early but two-year-old -\nStephanie Holmes decided today she'd find out about that business\nof Santa 'Claus coming down the chimney.\nShe climbed a ladder leaning against a 20-foot chimney at her\nhome, to Investigate how 8anta Claus does It. Later, her grandmother,\nMrs. Elizabeth Will, missed Stephanie Ann and started a search.\nThere was Stephanie Ann, clutohlng her rag doll, perched on top\nof the chimney.\nFiremen carried the little girl to safety. '\nAt last reports, Stephanie Ann still Isn't sure Just how Santa\nClaus gets down that chimney.\nSYDNEY, Australia, Oct. 3 (AP)\u2014An elephant which felt solitary\nconfinement was no way to enjoy a sea voyage created a brief uproar\nand some destruction aboard the liner Nieuw Holland.     ,\nLeaning heavily against its pen the pachyderm splintered the\nwoodwork and lumbered off for a promenade of the decks during\nthe vessel's trip from Singapore to Sydney.\nThe elephant let off some steam by wrenching the headlight\nfrom one cargo automobile and, the number plate from another. Then\na crew member lured, it back to prison. ' I- \u25a0 ,'\nMONTREAL, Oct. 3 (CP)\u2014Mrs. Margaret Nicholson wa^- quietly\nreading a novel when a man came Into the Catholic Sall6^. Club\nhere where Sheds matron, '-\n'The'man; asked (or. a spruce beer and when she returned with\nIt he snapped^'-\u25a0 \u25a0'\u25a0 ?       .\n\"This Is a stick-up; hand over your cashl\" ,,\u201e;_. _i_\nMrs. Nicholson didn't hesitate. She brought down \"Gone With tha\nWind\"\u2014all 1795 pages of It\u2014on the man's head.\nHo fled, ,.\n t\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1950\n\"An Exciting Ride Which Everyone Takes\"\n., . New York Times\n\u25a0    Dietrich at her most\n\u2022 interesting in this\ndrama of intrigue.\n***\n._*\u2022*\nciwe\nEROO*\n,M\u00bbn\u00b0\ntu9\u00bbn*\nOh\nbV\n'Vtr.jj;\n,     SECOND HIT\nGary Cooper-Marlene Dietrich in\n\"DESIRE\"\nA Day and Delightful Romantic Adventure\nTonight\nf;      Only\nSTARTS THURS\u2014The funniest filmTn 5 years\u2014\"FRANCIS'\nc\/we^\nShows at\n7:00\n8:24\naspirin;\nRELIEVES PAIN AND    '<\nSORE THROAT\nOUETOC0tDS i\nFEEL BETTER FASTI\nC. G. I. T. Penny\nCarnival Nets $32\nThe C.G.I.T. group of Trinity\nUnited Church realized the sum of\n$32 as the result of a successful\npenny carnival.\nBetween 200 and 250 people enjoyed the gala carnival and took in\nthe many booths, picture show, fortune teller, curiosity shop and hot\ndog stand. Games also proved entertaining.\nThe proceeds of the carnival will\nbe used to purchase a birthday\npresent for the church which will\ncelebrate an anniversary soon.\n24 Hour\nPrescription Service\nFresh Stock of Quality Drugs\nOpen All Day Wednesday\nNelson Pharmacy\nFEATURING   NATIONALLY   ADVERTISED   LINES\nD. M, SAMPLE, DRUGGIST\n433 Josephine St.,      Nelson, B.C.\nPhone 1203 \u2014 We Deliver \u2014.Res' 394-L\nWe never let go\nVigilance over the high quality of\n\"Black & White\" is never relaxed.\nBlended in the special \"Black & White\"\nway this truly outstanding Scotch is in\na class all itB own.\nBUCHANAN'S\nBLACK&WHITE\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nVhe Sectet ti in the dlending\nBy Appointment\nto H.M. King Ouorgo VI\nScotch  Whisky Distillers\nJames Buchanan. & Co. Ltd.\n' iv .Distilled, Blended and Bottled in Scotland\nU'\u25a0:\/''\" ' SOLD IN 26'\/2 OZ. BOTTLES\nSki Slants...\nMust Wall Year\nFor New Hill\nBy  BILL  DERIDDER\nHoorayl Winter is Just around the\ncorner and as a matter of fact work\nhad to be halted last weekend due\nto a heavy unexpected downfall of\nsnow fit course this was most annoying as all skiers just love work,\nDue to the small amount of time\nwe have left to survey, clear and\nmake ready our tow on our proposed\nnew site, the members have decided\nto use our old hill for this season, as\nit does not require much work to\nhave it in skiing shape. With what\ntime we have left before the snow\nreally starts to make a skier's dream\ncome true, we will devote our energy to our new hill so that next season we can go ahead and have lt\nready for use,\nThe Nelson Ski Club has purchased a power saw and with this\nplus our undying energy and\nstrength (joke), we can really clear\nquite a large section of timber when\nwe can get the go-ahead signal from\nthe Lands Department. If any young I\nfellows would like to learn and possibly use a power saw for a day,\nand also listen to some good yarns\nand tall tales, please turn out Sunday or contact any member of the\nmaintenance crew (makes it sound\nlike a big outfit).\nNow is the time of season when\nthose skiis should be taken down\nfrom the rafters and the attic, and\ngiven that new coat of varnish.\nCheck the steel edges, apply a new\nbase wax, and a new coat of polish\nto the ski boots. This all should be\ndone now; I'm sure you all know\nwhat it is like getting all the equipment ready a day before you go\nskiing, and wonder why every season you have to get new skis, poles,\nor boots. Well, I better nor make\nthis column too long, I would like\nto have a few readers left when\nthe skiing is really, in full swing.\nSee you on the hill.\nBest From Across Canada Coming ...\nNelson Begins Planning\nFor Student Bonspiel\nPreliminary plans for the . fifth\nannual Dominion Schools Curling\nChampionship scheduled to be held\nin Nelson Feb. 19, 1951, were discussed at a meeting of the bonspiel\ncommittee in the Civic Centre Tuesday night. A committee was set up\nto handle the championship' play.\nIt will be the first time the top\nstudent curling enthusiasts of Canada will shoot the rocks down ice\nsheets in British Columbia. Last\nyear's schools championship games\nwere staged in Quebec.\nFollowing the Provincial playoffs,\neach province from Prince Edward\nIsland to B.C. will send Its school\nchampion curler to Nelson. Contestants are expected to arrive Feb. It.\nBUSY TIME\nA full program will be planned\nfor the curlers and their escorts by\nthe committee which will keep the\nenthusiasts on the go from the time\nthey arrive until their departure\nthe following Thursday evening.\nIt is expected there will be three\ndraws each day ln the morning,\nafternoon and evening with the\nfinals being played off Wednesday\nnight.\nA committee consisting of A. B.\nGilker and Archie Blrse was appointed Tuesday night to design and\narrange for the purchase of souvenir\nplaques to be given to the visiting\ncurlers similar to the plaques given\nto participants at previous Dominion\nbonspiels. \u2022\nA committee has also been set up\nto handle accommodation for the\ncurlers and escorts.\nThe program committee is to report back to the next meeting with\na tentative program which is expected to include several complimentary dinners for the players.\nEDMONTON FLYERS\nBEAT PORTLAND\nCARNIVAL NETS $3\nEDMONTON, Oct. 3 (CP)-Ed-\nmonton Flyers tonight built up a\ncommanding lead and coasted to a\n6-3 triumph over Portland Eagles\nof the Pacific Coast League in an\nexhibition hockey game before 3000\nfans.\nFlyers, playing their first game\nof the season, scored six goals with-'\nout a reply in the first two period.s\nEagles, who had won three consecutive exhibition games against\nDenver Falcons and Saskatoon\nQuakers, got all their tallies in the\nlast period.\nThe Edmonton team was paced\nby Colin Kilburn and Roy Hexlmer,\nwho scored two goals apiec..\nAlex Pringle and Elmer Kreller\npotted the other Edmonton goals.\nGeorge Homenuke, Frankie Kub-\nasek. and Don Nixon scored for\nPortland.\nSPOKANE FLYERS\nDOWN TACOMA 4-2\nSPOKANE. Oct. 3 (AP)\u2014Spokane\nFlyers, defending champions of the\nWestern International League, defeated Tacoma of the Pacific Coast\ncircuit 4-2 tonight in art exhibition\nhockey match.\nBill McNally and George Horbe,\nnewcomers to the Spokane team,\nand the veteran Hugh Scott all\nscored in the second to give the\nFlyers the edge for good.\nCurt Simmons\nGranted Leave\nFor World Series\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 3 (AP)\u2014\nCurt Simmons, star pitcher of Phil-\nadelhpia Phillies, was granted an\narmy leave to fly back for the\nWorld Series tonight \u2014 but manager Eddie Sawyer said he would not\nseek to use Simmons against New\nYork Yankees.\n\"We will not ask to make Simmons eligible for the series,\" said\nSawyer. \"He probably will pitch\nbatting practice. He will not sit on\nthe bench during the games.\"\nCommissioner A. B. Chandler indicated that if. the Phillies did decide to ask to use Simmons, he\nwould give favorable consideration\nto the request.\nStrikes n' Spares\nLena Koehle, one of the top\nbowlers of the Atoms team in the.\nMixed Commercial League, carried\noff both ladies' high single and\nhigh aggregate honors, when she\nknocked the pins for 273 and 677,\nrespectively. Louis Wild and Harry\nKennill split the men's high single\nand high aggregate with 255 and\n631 apiece. High team was the\nAtoms crew who racked up a score\nof 2967.\nAtoms top the League with eight\npoints. The Jonella quartetle is\nnext in line with 6, Sad Sacks 5,\nand Hudson Bay 4.-\n'in Government League games,\nPeggy MacLeod bowled ladies'\nhigh single of 215 while May Mc-\nKinley and Marie Ramsden tied\nfor high aggregate with 546's.\nMen's high single went to L. Chase\nwho accounted for 242 pins and G.\nCone's 629 score took high aggregate. High team for the evening\nwas Ramsden with 2\u00a723.\nScores follow:\nATOMS\u2014H. Kennell 631, L. Kennell 468, L. Koehle 677, E. J. Waterer 579, F. Koehle 612. Total 2967.\nJONELLA\u2014I. Liness 378, Spot\n552, P. Gillott 358; T. Cole 550, G.\nMcCulloch 532: Total 2370.\nHUDSON BAY\u2014E. Laybourne\n569, W. Lawrence 34?, L. Page 421.\nA. Ward. 503, E,. Unser .400, Spot\n276. Total 2516.\nSAD SACS-D. Hunter 444, M.\nThaln 489, L. DeGirolamo 454, L.\nWild 573, D. Allan 478. .Total 2438.\nMACHINERY-D. Openshaw 467,\nF. Abtalter 334, ,P. Gorman 565, E.\nMaltby 346, L. Gorman 456. Total\n2168.\nKELLY DOUGLAS-J. Morey\n421,  T.  Sewell 404,  V.  Postnikov\n507, Low Score 381, L.  Anderson\n429, Spot 504. Total 2646.\nGOVERNMENT  LEAGUE\nCUNNINGHAM- M. McKinley\n546, B. Ramsden 543, A. Brethour\n397, L. Livingstone 271, E. Cunningham 473. Total 2230. .\nFLYING EAGLES\u2014F.. Gill 389,\nJ. Pederson 404, G. Cone 629,--P.\nMacLeod 487, B. Robinson 391. Tot.\nal 2300. \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0\nEAGER BEAVERS\u2014M. Litster\n341, D. Baker 534,' 3. Stanoski 303,\nS. Hope '321, M. Mikkelson 579. Total 2078.\nGILL\u2014E. Slen 534, A. Amundsen\n508, M. Gordon 467, J, Watson 492,\nG. Gill 537. Total 2538.\nPAUL-F.  Litster  346, F.  Stark\n502, H. Holmberg 620,, S. Boulter\n445, J. Paul 452. Total 2365.\nM. RAMSDEN-L. Taylor 382,\nA. Boyce 564, L. Chase 530, S. -How-\narth 601, M, Ramsden 546. Total\n2623.\nKamloops Edge\nVernon 5-4\nVERNON, B.C., Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014\nKamloops Elks rushed in three\ngoals in the third period tonight\nto defeat Vernon Canadians 5-4 in\nthe first Mainline-Okanagan hockey\ngame played here this season.\nElkS defeated Vernon 7-2 in Kamloops Saturday and tonight's win\ngave them top spot in the league\nwith a 2-0 record.\n8UMMARY\nFirst period\u20141. Vernon, Stecyk\n(Hochberg) 4:20; 2. Vernon, Sprage\n(Davison) 5:14; 3. Kamloops, McNaughton (Kuly) 11:25.\nPenalties\u2014Fischer, jStecyk.\nSecond period\u20144. Vernon, Hage\n(Jakes) 8:45; 5. Vernon, Wallington\n(Jakes, Sanderson) 10:15.\nPenalties \u2014 Willock, Wallington,\nSprage, Fischer, aBthgate, Formica,\nKuly, McNaughton.\nThird\" period\u20146. Kamloops, Willock Stewart) 7:26; 7. Kamloops,\nWinchester (Stewart) 12:40; 8.\nKamloops, Stewart (McNaughton)\n13:30; 9. Kamloops, Stewart (Wal-\nlock) 16:02.\nPenalties \u2014 Sanderson, Bathgate,\nWallington, Fischer.\nFORMER ROBSON\nWOMAN LAID AT\nREST AT COAST\nFuneral services for Mrs. Gertrude\nMary Mitchell, a former resident of\nRobson and widow of Arthur F.\nMitchell, were held at St. Paul's\nChurch at Vancouver Tuesday.. Mrs,\nMitchell died last week at the age\nof 74 years. ,\nShe is survived by one daughter,\nMrs. Rupert Skelton at Vancouver;\nfour Bisters, Misses Louisa and\nFlorence Wickham at Arundel, Eng.\nland; Mrs. Hannah Wickham at New\nYork; Mrs. Jane B. Smith at New\nPlymouth, New Zealand and six\nnieces and six nephews.\nInterment was in the Forest Lawn\nMemorial Park.\nVICTORIA, B. C\u201e Oct. 3 (CP)-\nl.Tourist travel in B. C. during Au-\nj gust hit an all-time high, it was re-\nI ported today by the Provincial De-\njpartmeht of Trade and Industry.\nMANY AT RITES\nFOR MRS. WOODALL\nFriends and neighbors of Mrs.\nMarcia Anne Woodall who died in\nNelson Sunday filled the Thompson\nFuneral Chapel Tuesday afternoon\nto attend her funeral services. The\nWomen's Association of. the Trinity\nUnited Church was'also represented\nat the services.\nRev. Allan Dixon, B.A.< B.D., of\nthe Trinity United Church, was officiating clergyman and there were\nmany lovely floral tributes.\nTwo hymns, \"Unto the Hills\nAround\" .and \"Abide With Me\",\nwere sung by the congregation with\nMrs. W. A. Manson as organist.\nPallbearers who carried Mrs.\nWoodall to her final rest In Nelson\nMemorial Park were George Anderson, J. J. Boyd, M. J. Hingley,\nD, B. Mcrae, Howard Thurman and\nW. Walmsley.-\nPupils Take\nTiny Tol Census\nKiddies of grade five and six of\nthe Central School were filled with\nenthusiasm as they started out on a\nnew school project Tuesday morning\u2014canvassing.\nEquipped with pencils and paper\nabout a dozen young people visited\nhomes and collected data on small\nchildren from , babies to five-year\nolds. The purpose of the campaign\nwas to find out how many youngsters would be attending schools in\nthe next five years. Thus it may be\ndetermined whether extra schooling\naccommodation will be needed.\nThe kiddies, worked in pairs, each\ncovering one block. Returning to\nthe school they filed their reports.\nThe campaign is not only educa\ntionai but the youngsters find it\ninteresting.\nThe children will continue the\ncanvass until poorer weather sets\nin.\nLee Takes Lions\nOn Park Safari\nGerald H. Lee, Principal of the\nNelson High School, took the Nelson Lions Club on an exciting\nimaginary tramp through Tweeds-\nmu)r Park country at their supper\nmeeting Tuesday.\nCarried along by his descriptive\nwords, the Lions fished in the\nbeautiful lakes; hunted geese and\ndeer in the meadow lands; set their\nsights on moose, caribou and bear\nin the wooded country and prospected in the rich mountains.\nThey also met many people from\nall walks of life and laughed, over\nhumorous incidents in the life of the\noutdoorsman.\nThe group of men Mr. Lee was\nworking, with through the Summer\nmonths prospected for veins of\ndecimated copper. Mr. Lee described in simple terms the new\nscheme of prospecting using the\nwater testing method .and the chem-,\nically' tested trees methods.\nIn concluding Mr. Lee suggested\nthat for a wonderful holiday of fishing and hunting the members try\nthe Tweedsmuir Park District.\nLumber Scale\nHigh Despite\nFire Losses\nAlthough Summer fires in the\nNelson Forest District wiped out\nseveral thousands of feet of cut\ntimber, the September scale showed\nan increase In production over the\nsame period last year. During the\nmonth, 24,823,117 feet board measure\nof 11 varieties of sawlogs were produced compared with 24,340,191\nf.b.m. for September, 1949.\nThe total brought the grand total\nto the end of September to 170,338,-\n155, a rise from last year's total for\nthe same period of 147,823,619 f.b.m,\nHighest output of sawlogs was in\nlarch, when 8,976,995 f.b.m. was\nproduced. Next in production was\nfir with 6,421,033 f.b.m. In minor\nproducts, tha output of poles and\npiling was tops even though considerably down from last year.\nStatistics follow:\nSAWLOGS:\n1949 1950\nf.b.m. f.b.m.\nFir    5,422,879    6,421,033\nCedar      1,263,806       837,454\nSpruce   4,957,454    4,818,272\nLdgepole Pine      128,210       334,806\nHemlock         2,353,089     1,074,312\nBalsam          216,729       163,293\nWhite Pine ....     1,152,528     1,515,014\nYellow Pine 610,801       635,898\nLarch       8,164,382    8,076,995\nBirch     8,318\nCottonwood   ..        61,995        48,040\nTOTAL       24,340,191   24,823,117\nMINOR PRODUCTS\nPoles and Piling\n(lineal feet)     858,702   150,838\nMine Timbers\n(lineal feet)     149,347   109,851\nMine Props\n(cords)       1,124      1,178\nHewn Ties\n(pieces)    _      5,503      8,030\nCordwood\n(Cords)            222\nFence Posts\n(Cords)          2,958      2,108\nInitiation Service\nFor C.G.I.T.\nAbout 25 C.G.I.T. members took\npart in a colorful Initiation service\nat the Trinity United Church Sunday evening.\nSome 12 girls were Initiated while\neight senior girls received their lanyards,\nMiss Carol Proudfoot conducted\nthe Canadian Girls in Training service with Rev. A. R. T. Dixon giving\nthe address. Miss Barbara Hyndman\nread the scripture and Mrs. Gordon\nAllen conducted the lanyard presentation.\n$13-75 at\nFINK'S\nFOOTWEAR\n4 BAPTISTS CONVICTED\nVAL D'OR, Que., Oct. 8 (CP)\u2014\nFour members of the Regular Baptist Faith, led by Rev. L, T, Heron,\nwere convicted here yesterday on\ncharges of obstructing traffic.\nThey were fined $40 and costs\neach with the option of two months\nin Jail. The ff>ur, who pleaded innocent, elected to serve th\u00ab. Jail\nterm.\nThe Canadian Press last night\nerroneously reported that all four\npleaded guilty.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nDo you suffer from hot fluohea, nervous tension, upset emotions\u2014due to\n'change of life' during that period when,\nfertility ebbs away, when embarrasaing\naymptoxna of thia nature may often\nbetray your age?\nStart taking Lydia E. Finkham's\nVegetable Compound to relieve such\noymptomo. No other medicine of thia\ntype for women hafl such a long record\nof Buccess. Taken regularly, Pinkham's\nCompound helps build up resistance\nagainst such middle-age distree.. A fine\nmedicine made especially for women.\nThe Women's Friendl\nNotk: Or you may prefer Lydia E.\nPinkham's TABLETS with added iron.\nLYDIA E. PINKHAM'S SSmS-SS\nSOUTH KOREAN ARMY HEADQUARTERS, Oct.. 4 (Wednesday)\n(AP)\u2014A Korean Red murder' camp\nwhere 700 Korean civilians including children were executed has\nbeen discovered near Seoul, ,an American Army officer reported today.\nTrinity W.A. Plans\nInduction Role\nPlans in connection with the Induction service of Rev, A. R. T.\nDixon, New Wesetminster, of Trin-\n, ity United Church were laid at the\nI quarterly, meeting  of  the  Trinity\nW. A. Tuesday.\nAlso, topic of discussion was the\nplans for observance of the\nchurch's anniversary. i\nNIGHT COUGH\nruining your sleep?\nHero's FAST 3-WAY RELIEF!\nDon't toss or turn from night coughing\ndue to colds. Qet Smith Brothers I\n1. Ease dry throat tickle\n2. Soothe your raw mombranos\n3. Help loosen phlegm\n\u00bb00\u00a9s\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nGcntrol Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nPRAGUE, Czechoslovakia, Oct. 3\n(AP)\u2014Czechoslovakia today accused the British vice-consul in Bratislava of spying arid demanded that\nhe and his Czech-born wife leave\nthe country within 48 hours.\nThe Weather\nSYNOPSI8\nRain fell over the coast and\ncloudiness   blankets   the   Interior.\nLight rain, is expected on the\ncoast again with\/cloudy skies and\noccasional ishowersj,in the Interior.\nMost (afternoon tetnperaturesJwjll\nb'i s%htly below the average | rar\nearly October ..which \"ranges frorji\n\u202249-at Telegraph Creek to 67 at L'yt-\nton.\nNelson       31   65\nToronto    47   68   .15\nWinnipeg       32   46   .08\nThe Pas     38   45\nRegina   :    18   48   \u2014\nPrince Albert    31   50   \u2014\nMedicine Hat     20   55    \u2014\nLethbridge       19   55    \u2014\nCalgary       23   50    \u2014\nEdmonton      22   56\nKamloops    26   57\nPenticton    24   51    \u2014\nVancouver  \/.    41   55   .07\nKimberley       14   50 \u2014\nCresceAt Valley    19   54    \u2014\nKaslo ] '.,. ..:.....,.   28   52    \u2014\nPrince Rupert    43   52   \u2014\nGrand\/Forks    25   47   \u2014\nSeattle        52   57   .30\nSpokane          30   53    \u2014\nSan Francisco    45   77   \u2014\nNew York   _.   60   81    \u2014\nWhitehotse       32   54   \u2014\nOttawa    50   68   .07\nSMITH BROTHERS BLACK\nk_M____t__$___33f__t__ttonK4Mmu^^   ...\nDROPS] Q3?\nCANMORE\nBRIQUETTES\nCanmore Briquettes give the very best heating ,\nsatisfaction, PLUS economy. It's not the cost per\nton that counts, but rather the cost for a Winter.\nLike thousands of others, you will find'it pays to .\nburn Canmore Briquettes ...\n\"CANADA'S HOTTEST FUEL\"\nAsk for, and be sure you get CANMORE Briquettes\n\u00bb\nSold Only by\nWest Transfer Co.\nExclusive Dealers Canmore Coals\nfor Nelson and District\nPhone 33\n719 Baker St. Nelson, B.C.\nIB\nsaving now\nfor next year s v\u00ab\nNow is the time to start planning for next year's\nholiday. Decide what you would really like to\ndo next summer, how much it will cost\u2014then\n.open a special savings account at the Royal Bank\nearmarked \"For Holidays Only\". Lay aside\nwhatever you can afford every pay day and watch\nyour vacation fund grow. It's a grand feeling to\nhave cash all ready when holidays roll around.\nROYAL BANK OF CANADA\nYOU   CAN   OPEN   A   SPECIAL   \"VACATION\"   SAVINGS   ACCOUNT   AT   ANY   BRANCH   OF   THE   ROYAL   BANK\n v3>]\nSPECIAL\nSHOE SALE\nof Women's Shoes\nBARGAINS \u2014  BARGAINS\nPriced at\n$2.93 \u2022 $3.95 \u25a0 $4.93\nThe SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n553 Baker St.\nNews of\nTfie 111th..\nTRAINING\nThe weekly training parade of the\n111th H.A.A. Battery will be held\nIn the Nelson Armory Wednesday\nnight\nMr. Marchmonte, Josephine Street\nhas been the most recent enlistee.\nMr. Marchmonte previously served\nwith the United States forces.\nJames William Field has been appointed S.O.S. ,for the local battery.\nOfficer Cadet R. G. Hall has been\naccepted to attend the Command\nContingent Course, method' B,\nwhich will be held in Picton, Ont.,\nfrom Oct. 6 over a period of six\nmonths. The cadet left Nelson Monday.\nARMY CADET8\n, The army cadets In Nelson will\ntake to the hills in the vicinity of\nHall Creek this weekend on one of\ntheir training schemes.\nCadet training for the young men\nln the Kootenay area will be commenced shortly by Corporal A. F.\nFalesh, Cadet Inspector. Various\ncourses will be included on the\ntraining program. Chief instructors\nof cadets in Nelson are Captain\nWalter Elmes of the Nelson High\nSchool and Captain B. B. Crawford\nfor the Nelson Junior High School.\n8PORT8\nThe 111th bowling team Is at\npresent occupying top spot ln the\nMen's Commercial league bowling\nand this week will be out to retain\ntheir position. The cribbage tournament will get underway Oct. 6.\nStaff Sergeant C. Burton of the\nR.C.E.M.E. Inspection staff recently\ncarried out his annual Inspection\nof the local battery.\nAnother visitor was Staff Sergeant A. Bew of Vancouver who\nalso arrived on an inspection. Both\nleft for Cranbrook Tuesday where\nthey will continue Inspections.\nNORTHAMPTON, Englafld (CP)\n\u2014To attract audiences to Northampton Mission lectures,. a travelling\npriest uses recordings of crooner\nBing Crosby's voice.\nA Treat\nFor You and Vour Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House\n624 Front St. Nelson\nBuilder of 13\nCatholic Missions\nIn District, Dies\nWord has been received here by\nthe Nelson- Catholic iliocese of the\nfuneral of Rev. Stephen Flnnigan\nwho died at Ne- Westminster last\nmonth. An active worker in the Kootenay missions, Father Finnigan was\nburied at St. Michael's Church.\nHe worked in the. Nelson Diocese\nwhen it was still attached to Vancouver and was one of the great\nbuilders of the diocese. He was\nknown as the builder priest, having\nbuilt some 13 mission churches\nthroughout the Kootenay.\nFATHER SMITH\nTO KIMBERLEY\nRev. Father Lawrence Smith,\npriest here for two years, took- up\nhis new duties as assistant priest in\nKimberley last week with Rev. F.\nMonaghan. The former editor of the\nProspector, Father Smith has been\nwith the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate since 1948.\nHe went to Kimberley in October,\n1948, but returne.' to Nelson the\nfollowing March to resume his work\nas Editor of the paper.\nAlthough he has left Nelson, he\nwill continue as director of 'the\nCatholic ^Summer camp at Camp\nLourdes on the West Arm of Kootenay Lake.\nCranbrook Business\nChanges Hands\n- CRANBROOK, B.C., Oct 3 \u2014\nRex Speedy Delivery, owned .and\noperated for the past year by C. E.\nNelligan, has been bought by Stanley McNeil. The business was started four years ago by Rex Colmar,\nwho sold it to L. M. Agar. Mr.\nNelligan bought it from tim.\nMr. McNeil was longtime operator of Stan's Super Services Station.\nWynndel Votes $5 to\nSt. John Ambulance\nWYNNDEL, B.C., Oct. 2-Regular\nmeeting of the Wynndel Women's\nInstitute was held in the Cooperative building on Thursday 28th,\nSeptember with 11 members and a\nnumber of visitors present.\nThe committees gave their reports. The Secretary reported on a\nletter written to the Public Works\nDepartment asking that sjde roads\nbe put in shape before Winter and\nthat the road outside school be repaired, so that the danger of dust\nfrom traffic be.eliminated, also that\nthe school zone sign be placed in a\nmore advantageous position. Matter\nof printing on feed bags that can be\nreused was discussed and the Secretary was Instructed to write the\ncompanies and ask that washable\nwriting be used.\nA letter, from St. John's Ambulance was read asking for a donation\nand $5.00 was voted this cause.\nSecretary stated that the tea collection from this meeting usually went\nto the Institute for the Blind.\nFollowing the meeting a social\nwas held, with a sale table which\nquickly sold out Donation envelopes\nfor,the hospital were opened and\n$21.78 realized. Refreshments were\nserved by the committee, cakes be\ning donated by Mesdames Rose\nShaw, Pat Schade end C. Abbott.\nTea collection was $5.00.\nKimberley Family Leaves for Chemainus\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, T950 \u2014 3\nOre Pours From Old Workings to\nBring Busy Times for Kaslo\nMISS GAIL HACK, MR. AND MRS. HARRY HACK AND MRS.\n  \u2014Charles Wormlngton photo.\nTo Cadet Course\nIn Picton, Ont.\nw\nOFFICER CADET R. G. HALL\nWell known ln Nelson and\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct. 3 - Mr.\nand Mrs. Harry Hack and Mrs,\nHack's mother, Mrs. A. Molsson\nwere geusts of honor here at a\nnumber'of social gatherings prior\nto leaving for Chemainus where\nthey will make their home.\nMr. and Mrs. J. S, Riddell entertained at a supper party, vases\nof Fall flowers decorating the\ntables.  D.  Gold  Jr.,  proposed ' a\ntoast to the trio, and gifts were\npresented to them. Dancing rounded\nout the evening's entertainment\nKimberley and District Junior\nForest wardens also bade farewell\nto Mr. and Mrs. Hack at a gathering\nIn K.P. Hall, where R. Anderson\nmade a presentation. Mr. Hack was\nan ' enthusiastic leader, and Mrs.\nHack also helped the boys in many\nways.\nOver 100 Brownies\nAnd Guides Start\nCranbrook Program\nCranbrook, b.c, Oct 3\u2014More\nthan 100 Guides and Brownies have\nreassembled to start their Fall program and appointment of their officers is nearing completion. Each\nof the three Guide companies has\nstarted its weekly meetings, and\nBrownie schedule is being arranged\nto conform with the shift system in\noperation at Central School which\nalternates fortnightly between morning and afternoon.\nThis is the first Fall term to open\nIn the Guides' own hall, which was\nrebuilt from the Rod and Gun Fish\nHatchery through efforts of the\nadult Guide Association. The Association has already resumed its pro\ngram of aid in practical matters and\nhall administration. Mrs. D. W.\nBlackett is president, Miss Muriel\nBaxter secretary, Miss t_. K Paterson treasurer, Mrs. George Gilbert-\nson in charge of the uniform pools,\nand Mrs. V. C. Brown chairman of\nthe building committee.\nMrs.F. W. Purvis was recently\nappointed Acting Guide Commissioner and expects an official visit\nhere next week from Provincial\nCommissioner Edith Quinnell who\nwill meet' the Guide Association and\njGulders.\nThis year Irenfe Kearns Is captain\nof tho First Company with Doreen\nGifford lieutenant and Zo Brown\nacting lieutenant. Winane Glover is\ncaptain of the Second Company with\nBeverley Jean Ellis lieutenant, and\nMrs. Brian Clarke is captain of the\nThird Company. Mrs. Clark headed\nBy THOMA8 A. REEDY        I were about 20 tanks built lower the Guide Camp during the Sum-\nBERLIN, Oct. 3 (AP) \u2014 An Am- than anything he had seen while In nier at Rosen Lake where \u2022 extra\nerican   Congressman   has   pierced combat in both World Wars\u2014about badges were earned.\nRussia's Iron Curtain in Germany three feet high but armed with long    Brown Owl for the First Brownie\nand returned undetected with an guns. i pack j3 Mrs. Richard Shiell, with\neye-witness account of new Soviet     Chatham   speculated   the   tanks Tawny Owl Mrs. Murray MacFar-\nbaby tanks and Jet planes. might be almost immune to ordin- lane,   and   two   graduate   Guides,\nThe adventure was reported by ary fire from weapons which could Gerry Davidson and Noreen Gordon\nRepresentative Thurmond Chatham not lower their muzzles enough to as Brown Owl and two more grad-\n(Dem. N. C), who came to Berlin aim at the low tanks. uate Guides, Sharon Sang and Lyn\nwith a group of Congressmen tour-1    At the end of the trip, Chatham Mitchell as Tawny Owls.\ning United States defence points in sa|d, the Russian donned civilian  .       \u2014.\t\nEurope. Chatham In an Interview clothes again and brought the Con- \u00ab!_._.* JU _._._\u2022\/_\u00bb 7__._.\ndescribed a 50-mile jeep ride Into gressman back to the West. VSIOnr ivtuSCOr _binc\nthe Soviet zone, which bristles .with   !_\n250,000 Russian troops. He visited\na new air base and an infantry Toddy \"Awfu' Waste\nCongressman Pierces\nSoviet Iron Curtain\ntank compound.\nSouth Slocan who has been accepted u^TZZrZe   .o^rfef 0f Gl\"'d Sc0*ch\"\n\u00a3_M& -fTT^^r and Sue shooifng as a spy\" LONDON  Oct 3 (CP) - Take\ncourse, method B, which begins n ThHe congressman said he was e1ual Portions of Scotch, French\nPicton, Ont. Friday of this week. escorted on the trip by a Russian vermouth and drambule, mix with\nRaymond left Nelson Monday for oHlcer he befriended while they,ice' addin? a *3\"eeze of lemon peel\nthe six-month course. both were doing \u201eal-on work dur. and you have a \"Braemar\" cock-\n\u201eu\u201ePnP.U.\" C\u00a3Ar?\\ \u00b0\"ic\u00ab.r of '!_e lnB the Second  World  -\n111th Battery, R.C.A., of Nelson, he SATELLITE  FRIEND\ncompleted one phase of the com-     Chatham told this story:\nmand contingent course at Victoria     He recognized the Russian, in civ-\nthis Summer. | nian  ci0thing,  in\nHe was also one of the few select-, night club,\nWar.\ntail.\nThis, Is only one of the  many\ndrink mixtures  given  In  a  new\nissian mciv-iScots  Publication  devoted  to  the,     ........\nWest  BerUn1 merits and history of Scot whisky. I moderate installation  cost  a  zinc\n'    The book also tells, for the bene-1 circuit could produce, a zinc con-\nRecovery Studied\nThe Northern Miner reports that\nthe Hedley Mascot management is\ngiving consideration to including a\nzinc recovery circuit ln the 175-ton\ndaily flotation riant at its Giant\nMascot subsidiary at Spillimacheen\nThere is an appreciable zinc content\nin the ore,\nDecision to place the property ln\nproduction was based on lead content of approximately eight per\ncent. It is now indicated that at a\n\u2666   Tha Kaslo-Slocan. District Is ex-\nI periencing the highest activity in 3Q\nyears.\nWhile only a few new mines have\n| been opened up, with the exception\nof the Besecker property at Woodbury, every old mine in the District\nbeing worked, and a string of\nloaded trucks tp Trail, Whitewater\nand other loading points are continually rolling, notes the Kaslo\nKootenaian.     .   .\n\"Ainsworth, the oldest mining\ncamp in the Kootenays, has again\ncome into her own, The Ainsmore\nCompany at Kootenay Florence is\nstill operating double shifts, while\nthe Yale Mining Co., which has a\nstring of claims, is busy getting\nready for high production. The\nScranton, on Woodbury Creek, is\nalso shipping regularly, and every\nman in Ainsworth Is out on various\nmines making their leases pay\nwell.\" <\nOn the East side of Kootenay\nLake at Riondel, the Consolidated\nMining and Smelting Company Ltd,\nis spending millions on the famous\nBluebell Mine,, which is described\nas \"having every prospect of becoming a second Kimberley.\"\n\"Up South :Fork, the old Cork\nProvince has several trucks hauling\nto Whitewater daily, and the new\ncompany is now planning a mill for\nthemselves. The Flint and the new.\nAtomic Mining Company have oth\ner mines which are being opened\nthis year.\"\nADDING MILL\nUNIT\nAt 12-Mile on Kaslo Creek a crew\nof 12 men is at work on the Utica,\nwhile the Whitewater mill at Re-\ntallacj- is hard at work handling\nthe Company's own ore and doing a\nrushing business concentrating for\nother mines. The new sink-float\nplant at Whitewater opened last\nJune Is recovering from 20 to 40\nper cent more zinc and double the\ntonnage from the tailings dumps.\nAn additional unit is now being installed to take care of the growing\ncustom work. Other regular shippers are the Selkirk Mining Company and the old Bluebird, up in\nthe Jackson Basin.\n\"At Zincton! the Lucky Jim continues to prove one of the largest\nzinc producers in B. C. They have\nbeen operating on a three-shift basis for the,past eight years.\nThe boom is much more evident\nup at the old Sandon camp. The Vi\nolamac has produced heavily during the past year. The management;\nis now putting in a ball mill to recover a higher percentage of their\nzinc. The Silversmith, Gem, Black\nColt and Ruth-Hope are other Sandon mines that are again In the eya\nof the public.\nActivity is also evident around\nSilverton, with the Standard and .\nKelowna   Exploration   Companies\noperating   with   large   crews   of\nworkers.\nOre trains roll to Kaslo daily,\nand the train and barge service is\nbusy each day handling the ore\ncars,\n\"The ore trains are rolling down\nto Kaslo daily, and the train and\nbarge service Is busy every day\nhandling the ore cars, which, with\nthe lumbering and logging shipments, make big business at the\nKaslo C.P.R. depot.\n\"There is every Indication,\" notes\nEditor C. R. Fahrni, '-'that the next\ntwo or three years will see good\ntimes at Kaslo, and the business in\nthe city will reflect the activity in\nthe mines and in the woods.\"\nEASES BREATHING...\nSYDNEY, N.S. (CP) \u2014 Seventeen parking meters on this city's\nbusy St. George Street are being\nremoved because business men were\nsuffering. They said the meters\nwere an inconvenience and especially interfered with the loading and\nunloading of vehicles.\nRELIEF\nfrom HAY FEVER and\nASTHMA\n\u2022 Inhale the soothing horbal\nvapors of'Kellogg's Asthma\nRelief \u2014 Breathing becomes\nmore free and natural;\n\u2022 Brings effective relief even to\nchronic Asthma and Hay Fever\nsufferers. Over 60 years in use.\nAvailable in cigarette form, if desired \u2014 Ask your nearest dealer.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nNORTHROP ft LYMAN CO. LTD., TORONTO\nv Kir. 1854 5K-I\nKELL0GGS\nASTHMA\nRELIEF\nNEW DELHI, (CP) - An English\ntheatrical company, under the auspices of the British Council, is\nscheduled to arrive here in November for a three-month tour. The\ncompany's business manager already is busy booking theatres.\ned to take the Army Cadet Course     \"He threw his arms around me \u00ab of the many who do not know, i centra <: for a material addition to\nheld at Banff, Alta., a.course which and we had a good talk. He asked the correct way to make whisky.netr\u2122rns on tne ore\nhe completed with success. | if I would like to take a trip with toddy: V.;: ,.,:     , Offl^ls r^ort ^opess on min\nA graduate student of the Nelson him and I accepted.\" j    Take  \u00bb  heated  glass,  Insert  a; Installation s well in line with the\nHigh School,  where he  took  an     The next day the Russian took spoonful  of  sugar  and  sufficient schedule calling for start of produc-\nactive part in its many activities, he Chatham to the Soviet sector of bollinS water to dissolve, add half tion before the end of the year.\nis employed with the C.P.R. I Berlin, put on the uniform of a se-1 a glass of whisky and stir with sil- \t\nThe officer has previously served1 nlor Red Army officer and took i'\u2122 spoon, pour in more boiling\nwith the local battery as a gunner.! JeeD from the Russian motor pool.lwa*fr and t0P that with whisky.\nOn completition of this course he!    He barked his way through halfk. An awfu waste o guid scotch,\nwill return to the battery.       .       a dozen check points, explaining his,\"\"> recipe writer admits.\nHe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. G.'American companion as a friend ~\"~\"   ~~    ~~\"\nHall, South Slocan.\u2014Alice Stevenson from  one  of  the  East  European i\/iWRFPI BY CkMW MPITC\nphoto. seatellite countries. MMMMH .NOW MULI.\nAt an airfield completed only six' KIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct 3\u2014Clear-\nweeks before, Chatham said he saw inK sk'es today melted most of the\nnew Jet planes with swept-back five inches of snow that fell here\nwings that appeared to him as sleek on Saturday and early Sunday but\nand fast as the latest American cool temperatures give a feeling ofj\ntypes. i Winter. Hills about are still covered\nLOW-BUILT TANKS land hunters look for improved hunt-!\nAt another base, he said, there ing conditions, i\nThe Pause that Refreshes\nFLITWICK, Bedfordshire, England (CP) \u2014 Estimated by British\nmuseum experts to be 130,000,000\nyears old! fosils of an extinct snaillike fish, and an oyster-like shell of\na gryphea were found here recently.\nCivic Revenue Up\nFor Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct 3-City\nTourist Camp revenue to the end\nof last month totalled $10,417.05,\nslightly down from the $10,722.96\nfor the same period in 1949, the\nsuperintendent reported to City\nCouncil.\nCity Works Superintendent Emil\nEriekson reported satisfactory water\nsupply conditions for the month\nwith daily surplus runoff at 1,968,00(1\ngallons. During the month the department connected nine new water\nservices. Two blocks of street were\nsurfaced with the city's own equipment, and six new blocks of cement\nsidewalk built. Other sidewalk work\nprepared for concrete Is being held\nup by the cement shortage.\nCity Electrician George Burch reported a further 15 per cent gain in\nconsumption of electricity at 444,320\nkilowatt hours, compared with\n640 k.w.h. for the same month last\nyear, and a net gain of 51 active\nmeters by the city for 1950 so far.\nBuilding permits of estimated\nvalue of $15,557.50 for 40 projects\nwere issued by the city during the\nmonth. City pound fees were paid\nfor 14 head of cattle found wandering at large.    ,\nThe city airport served 80 aircraft for landings and departures\nduring the month, with 52 of these\nscheduled Canadian Pacific Airlines\nflights. City works project of extending the runway at th airport\nat both ends got under way during\nthe month and is progressing well.\nFOR FLAVOUR WITH ZEST\n.10-\nAatborbcd .oilier tl Coci-Cols tn der eonlricl tillfi Coei-C.la ltd,\nMcdonald jaM company ltd.\nNELSON, B.C. PHONE 1055\nHP\nSAUCE\nIS BEST!\nSee the New Remington\n&up&L- riter\nMAKE THE iu^fcfi\/t-riter SAVINGS TEST\nIN YOUR OFFICE \u2014 PHONE FOR FULL\nINFORMATION\nNELSON BUSINESS MACHINES\nPhone 940 and 16I-Y-1 P.O. Box 412\nTEX MOWATT - FRANK HARDING\n\u2022 AUTHORIZED\nREMINGTON RAND AGENTS\nHowe Confident of\nDollar Stability\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014Trade\nMinister Howe today expressed\nconfidence the Canadian dollar\nwill continue to rise and \"perhaps\neventually\" reach par with the\nUnited States dollar.\nHe said he is looking forward to\na decline in the cost of living with\nthe rise in the Canadian dollar's international value. And he said he\nwas not displeased with the gain in\nvalue of the Canadian dollar on the\nfirst day it was placed on the open\nmarket.\n\"It is too early to tell, but we\nthink it will rise higher before it\nsettles down,\" he said.\ni J The only way to find the proper\nvalue of the dollar was \"to let it\nfree to find its own level.\" It had\nbeen \"undervalued\" at 90 cents.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nTremendous\nCoffee Savingf\nSave as much as 401 a lb\nby switching to the wonderful\nAUAST.Htet\nfastent Coffee\ntnack 6t\/tva\/\nCoffeePeople\/)\nr*\nYou'll never know how good \"Instant\" coffee can be\nuntil you try new Instant Chase & Sanborn!\nYou'll agree \u2014 it takes real coffee people to turn out\na real \"instant\" coffee. Once you've tried the new Instant\nChase & Sanborn you'll know what a wonderful success\n\"Instant\" can be!\nSuch marvellous true-coffee flavor comes welling up\nas you pour the hot water! Rich! Robust! Full-bodied!\nAnd to think that this splendid coffee savea you so much\nrime \u2014 so much trouble \u2014 so much MONEY!\nYes, at today's prices you save up to ttO cents a\npound over regular coffee! So don't wait an instant Get\nnew Instant Chase & Sanborn Coffee now! Enjoy lt at\nmeal-time \u2014 for delicious quick cups of coffee any time!\n(SO QUICK! Mate ft\\\nJ ihtfecufifJbstL\nads\/f}otu\/dter\/&\nSO CON1\/\u00a3M\u00a3NT\/\nM> messucofyfot^\n\u2014A\/oj^romc\/sf\n71\nWhat a SAWmf\nAs much as 40*a\/b.\nove'r regcr\/ar coffee.\nInstant\nWlSt*! The only\"lnsH,nt\"cofke\nh^^^T \u00a3 %S0%. backed by 85 years erf coffee experience\nI\n \"WSWWtW\"\n4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1950\n*ress Women\n[Stumped by\nCurrency\nBY KAY REX\nLONDON, Oct. 3 (CP)\u2014A pound\nJ note won't fit into a bill-fold made\nf'-for dollars. A handful of shillings\nand pennies are heavy enough to\nburst   the   sturdiest   Canadian1\nchange-purse.\nThese are some of the \"dollar dif-\nJ.'_icult.es\" nine Canadian newspaper\n(.women have  to  cope with on  a\n1 three-week tour to' find out what\n_:;es British Industry tick.\n\u25a0 The women are here as guests of\nthe dollar exports board of Britain\nI and   the   Canadian, dollar-sterling\nI board.\nThe problem of translating dollars into British money crops up\nevery time you spy a pretty dress in\na shop window with what looks like\n| a low price tag. But the tag stands\nfor pounds, not dollars.\nUp to this week-end each pound\nwas worth about $3.08 in Canadian\nmoney, but the rate is expected to\nfluctuate  now  that the  Canadian\n!| dollar has been freed to find its own\n\u25a0 level.\nMost   of   us still breeze blithely\nalong, multiplying pounds by three\nand shillings by 15 to get a rough\n..equivalent in dollars and cents.\nThus   a   velour   hat   priced   at\n\u00a33 10s. would be worth nearly $11.\n' Stockings   are   advertised at five\n.shillings six pence but you can bet\nyour bottom dollar \u2014 pound, rather\n\u2014that they aren't nylon.\nThose are usually sold on street\ncorners for more than \u00a3 1 a pair.\nThsuUsdvaiL\nbif SkuUio. UihssisX:\nVatican City has its own railway\nitation, post office, coinage and ratio.\nSo rich\na little\ngoes   ,\na long\"\/\nIM20\nDOLLY   AND   OUTFIT!\nJust about everything your darling wants\u2014in ONE pattern! A\nbeautiful 9-inch dolly and so many\nclothes\u2014what a thrill!\nShe can dress dolly for each day's\ndoings! Pattern 557 has 9-in. doll\ntransfer; clothes patterns.\nLaura Wheeler's improved pattern makes crochet and knitting so\nsimple with its charts, photos and\nconcise directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept., 212 Baker\nStreet. Print plainly PATTERN\nNUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS.\nNew! Household accessories to\nknit! Motifs to paint on textiles!\nSend twenty-five cents today for\nour new Laura Wheeler Nee'dlecraft\nBook. Illustrations of crochet, embroidery patterns plus many fascinating hobby ideas. And a free pattern is printed in the book.\nWINNIPEG, (CP) \u2014 Value of\nWinnipeg's building program this\nyear is 25 per cent higher than in\n1949. Permits issued to date by the\n\u25a0city's engineering department total\n$12,189,400. For the corresponding\nnoriod last year, the total was $9,-\n754,100.\nNew Denver...   |\nNEW DENVER, B.C. \u2014 A dance\nwas sponsored by the Community\nClub Playground Committee in the\nBosun Hall Friday when over 100\ndanced to old time and modern\ntunes. The Parent-Teachers Association provided refreshments and\nwere served by Mrs. T. M. Boham,\nMrs. S. C. Robinson, Mrs. P. J. McCrory, Mrs. A. C. Peterson and Mrs.\nMichael C. K. Struve.\nMrs L...M. .Burkett is a patient\nln Slocan. Community Hospital.\nMrs. Martha A. Smith is a patient\nIn Slocan Community Hospital.\nIwao Saruyama left for Calgary\nto attend Technical School,\nT. Pradoiini of Zincton is a patient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nJohn M. Harris of Sandon is a\npatient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Dudley Hunn vis\nited friends at Needles.\nJack McDonald of Creston Valley\nis a patient,in Slocan Community\nHospital.\nGeorge Kado left for Vancouver\nto   attend   business   college.\nWalter Greavison of South Slocan\nis a patient in Slocan Community\nHospital.\nFred H. Angrignon was a Kaslo\nVisitor where he accompanied his\nmother, who left for Lardeau to\nvisit her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. Archie Greenlaw.\nTom Nielson of Slocan City is a\npatient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nMrs. J. A.. McDonaugh was a\nNelson visitor to see her mother,\nMrs. C. Trozzo, who was ill.\nMr. and Mrs. George McKay of\nTrail and the latter's sister, Miss\nAlbertine Choquette of Nelson,\nwere guests of Mrs. A. D. Kelsall\nand her daughter, Miss Florence A.\nMoss, and visited Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Taylor, old time friends.\nPeter Johnson of Slocan City\nhas ben discharged from Slocan\nCommunity Hospital.\nMrs. Thomas R. Flint and William Rhodes motored to Rossland\nand were accompanied back by the\nformer's daughter-in-law, Mrs.\nIvan M. Flint and son Allan.\nMr. and Mrs. W. W. Wardrobe\nhave left for Kamloops where Mr.\nWardrobe will work for the B. C.\nPower Commission.\nMr. and Mrs. Andrew Schnaebele\nand daughter 'Sharon .visited\nfriends in Nakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. Clifford Uphill bf\nFernie have purchased the Newmarket Hotel from Mr. and Mrs.\nJoseph Mikita.\nMiss F. I. Hamilton and Miss M.\nClench, Missionaries of New Denver, held service for the Jepanese\nresidents in St. Mark's Anglican\nChurch at Nakusp.\nWOMEN GENERALS\nNOT UNLIKELY\nWINNIPEG (CP) - What about\na woman general?\nTwo directors of the Imperial Defence College visiting here shied\naway from commenting when asked\nwhether women would ever be eligible for the commonwealth military staff college,\nJ. G. Ward, civilian member of\nthe directing staff, was a bit more\nvoluble ori the subject but suggested the field for women would be\nhighly limited.\n\"There is probably just about ohe\nwoman in the military field in England who would be admissible,\" said\nMr. Ward. \"That is the brigadier of\nthe Women's Army Auxiliary\nCorps.\"\nWynndel...\nWYNNDEL, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nE. Andestad returned last week\nfrom a motor trir to Spokane,\nCoulee Dam and other U.S. points.\nMiss Fltchett of Harrop was a\nvisitor here last week, guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. C. O. Ogilvie.\nMr. and Mrs. K. MacFarlane of\nMichel were guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nR. Andestad.\nMannie Hess and Bill McDonald\nof Parsons were visiting their families here during the weeeknd.' \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. u, Craven and Betty\nLou, who have been visiting at\nGrayburn, Sask., have returned\nhome on Sunday.\nMiss Olga Hagen ol Calgary is\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. A. Hagen.\nMrs. C. Olson is staying with relatives at Salmo.\nMrs. F. Hess of Cranbrook was a\nvisitor here with relatives during\nthe weekend.\n\u25a0 Mrs. L. Abbott was a visitor to\nTrail last week.\nMrs. J. J. Firth and Miss Mary\nFirth left on Friday for Lethbridge,\nAlta.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nThree Hostesses at Camp Lister Shower\n,CAMP LISTER, B.C., Oct. 3\u2014Mrs.\nEric Sommerfeld, Mrs. .ugo Som-\nmcrfeld and Mrs. Arthur Sommerfeld were hostesses at a miscellaneous shower for Miss Ida Herman, October bride-elect,\nDeer Lodge hall.\nDecorations were mauve and yellow streamers and vases of Autumn\nflowers.\nA bassinet trimmed in yellow and\nmauve and filled  with  gifts  was\nheld in' presenter' by Mrs. Arthur Sommer-\nIfeld to the future bride.\nGODERICH, Ont. (CP) \u2014 Sermon\nsubject of Rev. Ian Burnett was\n\"Stand Guard.\" Shortly after the\nservice, Mr. Burnett received a\nphone call from his home in Ottawa\nthat his-, house had been robbed\nduring his absence. ,    ...\n. PRINCE ALBERT, Sask. (CP) \u2014\nFinn Rowle-Hanson, associate professor of the College of Agriculture\nat Voelbekk, Norway, is studying\nNorthern Saskatchewan's flora. He\nis gathering botanical speclmans on\na Canada-U.N.E.S.C.O. fellowship.\nRossland\nNow! Proof that\nI   BRUSHING TEETH\nRIGHT AFTER EATING\nWITH\nCOLGATE DENTAL CREAM\nHELPS PREVENT\nTOOTH\nResearch shows that decay is\ncaused by mouth acids which are\nat their worst after meals. When\nyou brush your teeth with Colgate's right after eating, you\nhelp remoye mouth acids before\nthey can-harm enamel.\n2 Years' research by\nLEADING UNIVERSITIES\nproves thai test groups\nbrushing teeth right after\neating with Colgate Dental\nCream showed amazing\nreduction in tooth deeayl\nUnder the direction of eminent dental\nauthorities, one group of college men\nand women always brushed their teeth\nwith Colgate Dental Cream right after\neating\u2014while another group followed\ntheir usual dental care. The average of\nthe group using Colgate's as directed,\nand using Colgate's exclusively, was a\nstartling reduction in the number of\nnew cavities\u2014far less tooth decay. The,\nother group developed new cavities at\na much higher rate.\nFURTHER PROOF\nFROM SCHOOL CHILDREN\nLeading Canadian dentists examined\nand directed over 8,000 school children\nin corrective dental habits. In addition\nto diet changes where required, the\nchildren were  asked to brush their\nteeth after each meal.\nThe results! 16% fewer .children with\ntooth decay!... Caviti'es\"d;for\/j>ed from\nan average of 5 per child to juft over 31.\n... 53% more children received dental .\ncare that prevented either loss of {ecth '.\nor serious dental, troubles later ibHtfeit,\n. . . The number of -children, yim>.iii)\ndefects-increased by 2()0%i 'l,\\\\^i'^\nCLEANS YOUR BREATH\nAS IT CLEANS YOUR TEETH!\nScientific tests prove that in 7 out of 10.\ncases, Colgate's instantly stops . bad\nbreath that originates in the mouth!\nColgate's active penetrating foam gets\ninto hidden crevices between teeth-\nhelps clean out decaying food particles\n\u2014stops stagnant saliva odors\u2014removes\nthe cause of much bad breath!\nSirdar ...\nSIRDAR, B.C, \u2014 Frank Haffner,\nBud Seed, Joe Busk and Stan\nBrooke of Vancouver, were duck\nhunting here.\nMrs. Hornseth has returned after\nattending the Hotelmen's convention, and also visiting her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Hearn at Northfield,\nVancouver Island, who celebrated\ntheir 31st wedding anniversary dur\ning her stay.\nMr. and Mrs. M. MacBeath have\nreturned with their infant son, who\nwas born Sept. 14 at Penticton.\nMrs. Tibbie has left for Spokane\nto visit her sister.\nMrs. L. V. Rehmann and Gertrude\nwere visitors to Nelson on Saturday.\n0A\u00a3AA, lAfL U)iik\nTrlaMut VrlaMht\nROSSLAND, B. C. \u2014 Rossland\nPythian Sisters attending the Grand\nChief's visit to Kootenay Temple\nNo. 37 at Castlegar on' Friday were\nMrs. Frank MacKenzie,: Mrs. Cecil\nOlmsted, Mrs. Percy Palmer, Mrs.\nEd Walters and Mrs, J. Hadley Conroy. i'\nGrand Chief Mrs. Mary Gold of\nVancouver who is on her official\ntour of Kootenay Pythian Sisters\nTemples, left here on Sunday for\nMichel. While in this district Mrs.\nGold was guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nFrank MacKenzie.\nMiss Bernice Santori has returned\nfrom a holiday in San Francisco and\nOakland, Calif.\nAfter visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Olmsted, Mrs. G. W. Delany left for\nMedicine Hat. She. will visit with\nher'son at Brooks,-Alta.\nPHONE (144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nHELP YOUR CHILDREN\nAVOID TOOTH DfCAYI\nIpiis't tha't\"your children'\n\u25a0always brush their teeth right.\nafter eating with Colgate\nDental Cream. They'll love\nColgate's delicious double-\nminty flavor, so it's easy to get\nthem to use Colgate's correctly.\n&*\u00aes&\n> Guaranteed by \u25a0'\u25a0\nI UousckCcpIn)\nALWAYS USE\nCOLGATE\nDENTAL CREAM\nfight after eating\nHELP PREV-NT\nTOOTH DEC\n49C      79C\n94W\nSl?ES 34-48\nFIGURE FLAT\/TEflY\nFor fashion\u2014and a beautiful figure, sew this! -Forward-Swept neckline pjupges to slenderizing zigzag\nof bijttons. ;Skir,t,is'-all' grace and\ncharm withva soft\/drape!\nPattern 9420 comes in sizes 34, 36,\n38, 40, 42, 44, 40, 48. Size 36 takes\n4% yards 39-inch fabric.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(25c) in coins (stalnps cannot be accepted) for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews. Pattern Dept., address.     \\\nNEW season styles for youl Send\ntwenty-five cents (coins) for our1\nMarian Martin Fall and Winter Pattern Book. Fashions for the young\nand young in heart plus Christmas\n.ideas galore! A free pattern of a\n.tjlouse to make from a yard of 39-\ninch fabric is printed ill the book.\nME. Ihm^ tffia\u00a9\nTRIPLE\nCUSHION\nREINFORCED WITH\n\u25a0o-Ut&rt\nThese and other exclusive features will\nimpress you with the, durable construction of\nthe mBIMM, Triple-Cushion\u2014but Sjuff wait\nuntil you actually experience its Feathersoft\ncomfort\u2014a lasting glorious comfort that you\ncan 6njoy down through the years at not more\nthan \"One Cent a Night\". The Triple-\nCushion < is available in two qualities at\n$49.50 and $69.50 with Matching Box Spring\nat small extra cost\nNowhere a mattress more soundly constructed. See, from the cut-away portion\nillustrated above, how effectively the fine\nnetwork of Flex-o-lator protects the padding from the coils, thus eliminating sag,\nlumps, and coil feel. See the layer upon\nlayer of soft felted cotton. Note the\nsmooth, easily cleaned surface, and the\nabsence of dust-catching tufts.\nARKHIL\nEDGING IIMITED\nWINNIPEG  :i:;REQINA>   SASKATOON,   -   CAIGARY ;-   EDMONTON\nNowFeatured\nat leading\nFURNITURE and\nDEPARTMENT\n'<      STORES   \u2022\n>\n 1.1S\n\"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nHeadquarters for\nOFFICIAL\nBOY SCOUT\nHI-CUTSahd\nOXFORDS\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nJunk Clothing\nIs Bane of\nSalvation Army\nNelson Salvation Army Corps is\never grateful fo contributions of\nclothing for the district's,needy \u2014\nbut not for clothing which is ont-of-\ndate or so patched that it should be\nthrown away.\nArticles such as old hats or badly-\nworn shoes, coats or dresses that,\nare definately old fashioned are\nnot what the Salvation Army,wants\nLieut. Austin Millar said Tuesday.\nA number of the people requiring\nclothing are unable to sew, he. said,,\nand are sensitive about appearing\nin outmoded garments that are\nlabelled as \"hand-me-downs.\"' Of\nless value still is the.garment that\nhas beqn darned and mended until\nit is unfit for anyone to w6ar.\nThe Nelson corps gives, away\naround 3000 garments yearly, and\nalready this year has distributed\nmore than 2000.\nBut since January at least 60\ntons  of  useless  articles  such  as\nold clothing and shoes and battered lampshades have had to be\nthrown away. Time and money Is\nlost,  It Is explained,  In  sorting\nand discarding unsuitable goods.\nThe Nelson corps, unlike those in\nlarger centres, does not accept old\npapers, piagazines, torn books and\nso on.\nNearly 250,000 people visited Edinburgh for this year's Edinburgh\nfestival; about 400,000 tickets were\nsold.\nNelson\nSocial. . .\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n' \u2022 Mr. and Mrs.\/ Arthur Lakes,\nof Spokane accompanied by Mrs.\nLakes' sister, Mrs. Drury Darley of\nVictoria, nee Flossie Johnstone, ex-\nresident of Nelson, arrived ir. town\nMonday evening,\n\u2022 Mr. .and Mrs. W. J. Robertson\nhaye returned to Youngstown, Alta.,\nafter visiting Mrs. Robertson's sisters, Mrs. George M. Benwell and\nMrs. E. J. Waterer.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. Rowley, Stanley Street, have had as guests their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Charles King and family of\nTrail.\n\u2022 Mrs. O; Lang, Victoria Street,\nwho has been a patient in Trail-\nTadanac Hospital has returned home.\n\u2022 SL Saviours Mother's Club\nmembers met in Memorial Hall\nwhen tea hostesses were Mrs. W. H.\nWood, Mrs. M. Lund, Mrs. F. Jasper\nand Mrs. J. Hamlet.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Harold, 924\nVernon Street, have returned from\nspending their vacation in Vancouver and Victoria.\n\u2022 Mrs. H, H. Pitts, Nelson\nAvenue, Fairview, has left to visit\nin Vancouver at the home of her\nson and daughter-in-law, Dr. and\nMrs. H. H. Pitts.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. B. Stark, who has visited\nher parents and also visited Mr.\nStark's parents, Mr, and Mrs.\nCharles H. Stark, Carbonate Street,\nleft yesterday for her home in .Toronto. Her ' husband, who accompanied her to Nelson where he\nspent \u25a0 a fortnight made a business\ntrip to Vancouver and Winnipeg\n\u25a0enroute home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J. Lawrence\nSmith, 207 Behnsen Street, have as\nguest, Mrs. Smith's sister, Mrs.\nPeters, who arrived from Victoria\nMonday to spend a couple of weeks\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Triggs. 211\nWillow Street, are holidaying (in\nSpokane,\n\u2022 Mrs, J. P. McLaren has as\nguests her brother-in-law and sis.\nter, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Lan-\nnox of Coring California.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Willecke\nof Salem, Ore., ar visiting Mr. and\nMrs. C. E. Jorgensen, 815 Cedar\nStreet, for a few days. Mrs. Willecke\nis Mrs. Jorgensen's sister, and the\ncouple are en route to Medicine\nHat.\nPICKLES\nare easy to make..\nGive your pickles that tangv\nI goodness through the magic of\n| I Colman's mustard. You'll find\n(j several, easy-to-make mustard\nE pickle recipes, in our book,\nR \"Culinary Art\". For your free\njleopy, write to Reckitt & Col-\nif mah (Canada) Ltd., Station T,\nJ \"jMontreal.\nI\nI\nLodge-Biker Wedding Held in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C.j Oct 3\u2014The Jormer\nBetty Anne Biker, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. B. Biker of Trail and a\ngranddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.\nJ. E. Biker of Nelson, and Norman\nClark Lodge, son of Mr! and Mrs.\nN, C. Lodge of Caldwell, Idaho, were\nprincipals in an attractive wedding\nin Saint Francis Xavier Church here.\nRev. Father D. O'Carroll officiated,\nThe bride made a charming picture in her gown of nylon sheer\nover .taffeta with a brief close-\nfitting jacket. Styled with a stand-\nup collar, the jacket featured tiny\nself-covered buttony to the waistline in front. The long tight sleeves\nbuttoned into a flared cuff which\nrepeated the line of the collar,\nHer veil of illusion net, which\nhad been worn by her mother at her\nwedding, was held by a wreath of\norange blossoms, fashioned in\n. mother-of-pearl, and she carried a\nbouquet of lemon yellow gladioli,\nMiss Janet Biker, as her sister's\nonly attendant, wore a gown of\nfrosty white embroidered organza\nstyled with a low neckline and\npuffed sleeves, A soft blue headdress matched her elbow length\ngloves and bouquet of daisies.\nMr. William Lodge, the groom|s\nbrother, was best man, and ushers\nwere Mr. John Mathews, Mr. Irvine\nMathiesonand Mr. Dick Lint.\nA reception was held at the home\nof the bride's parents.\nFor her honeymoon trip the bride\n' wore I a grey wool tailleur with a\nmatching felt cloche and red accessories.\nMr. and Mrs. Lodge are making\ntheir home in Caldwell, Idaho. The\nigroom is ,a graduate of the School\nof Business Administration of University of Idaho, which the bride\nalso attended.\n4\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1950 -~:M\nMothers Warned\nAgainst Smoking\nNear Children\nSmoking by mothers ranks high\namong the causes of eye accidents\nto very,young children, a medical\nconference here\" was told.\nMothers, were warned not to\nsmoke while feeding, dressing or\notherwise ministering to such chil\ndren\u2014and also to keep lighted\nclgafets well beyond reach.\nFathers were warned, too, against\nsmoking \u25a0 while holding children\nover their shoulders.\nThe seriousness of the hazard was\nexplained by representatives of the\nDistrict of Cplumbia Society for the\nPrevention of Blindness. The organization .'is putting on an exhibit of\nchildren's eye injuries during the\nannual scientific assembly of the\nDistrict of Columbia Medical Society\nRepresentatives of the exhibiting\nsociety \u2022\u25a0 said eye burns due to\ncigarets rank high among the single\ncauses of eye' injuries seen among\n\"very young children\" at two\nWashingtpn hospitals.\nMR. AND  MRS. NORMAN CLARK  LODGE\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30c line, 40c line blackface type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nLadies' Auxiliary to F.O.E. meet\ntonight at 8:00 p.m.\nAll sizes in kiddies' snow suits,\npriced from $6.25 at\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nFresh popped corn any hour of day\n.at WAIT'S\nColman's\no.sf-      __\nMUSTARD\nBIG DEMAND FOR\nSOCIAL WORKERS\nOTTAWA, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014 Miss\nMarjorie L. Moore of Winnipeg, National president of the Canadian\nAssociation of Social Workers, told\na meeting here of the Association's\nBoard of Directors that they had a\nreal responsibility in helping recruit\nnew social workers in Canada.\nShe said there was growing demand for qualified personnel in the\nsocial field. Another important role\nfor the Association improving welfare services and developing new\nservices.\nOfficers elected\" for the 1950-52\nperiod included Kathleen C. Mor-\nrissy, Fredericton, N.B., and Eleanor\nJ. Bradley, Vancouver, vice-presidents.\nPilchards have not been caught\nin any quantity off Canada's Pacific coast since 1946.\nSee Our Windows for\nMid-Week Specials\nat the\nButeherteria\nPHONE 527\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\nDAVID NYSTROM\nExperienced painter and paper-\nhanger. Sample Book. Ph. 750-R.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't llx lt,\nthrow it away. Prompt service on\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nWe buy and sell used furniture-\nantiques. HOME FURNITURE EXCHANGE. Phone 1560. 413 Hall St.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nEnough insurance in sound companies is sound business. See\nBLACKWOOD AGENCY.     \"\nHobbs Bathroom Mirror Cabinets,\nmodern design, pastel shades. $12.50\nat BURNS LUMBER CO.\nRecreational Council meeting City\nHall Thursday, 8 p.m. All interested please attend.\nWhy not give us a call to Increase\nyour.fife insurance protection to\nday?-C. W. APPLEYARD.\nThe regular monthly meeting of\nthe Canadian Legion .will be held\nThursday, Oct. 5, at 8 p.m. All members please attend.\nSTART YOUR DAY'S WORK\nttZUHG \"READY TO GO\"\n-WITH POSTUM\nSwitch fo Postum \u2014 avoid tea and coffee. Those beverages contain\ncaffein \u2014 a drug that may cause you nervousness, indigestion or sleeplessness. Postum contains no ca\/fein - cannot possibly interfere with\nyour sleep, or otherwise \"slow you up\".\nEn\/oy Postum \u2014 for its grand satisfying flavor - and for the money it\nsaves you - up to lj. a cup compared to other hot beverages I\ncontains\n'no caffein\nA Product of Gener-I.__._5\nGrand selection of cheflille bedspreads. Priced from $9.50 to $18.50.\nMo & Mc (NELSON)- LTD.\nFlannelette striped and figured,\n59c and 69c yard.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\nDROP IN AT VALENTINE'S\nAND PICK UP YOUR BULBS FOR\nFALL PLANTING \u2014 A GOOD SELECTION ON HAND.\nDEANERY MEET\nIS TOPIC OF\nKINNAIRD W.A.\nKINNAIRD, B.C., Oct. 3 \u2014 Kin-\nnaird Anglican .Women's Auxiliary\nat a meeting at the home of Mrs.\nJ. Robinson, was told by Mrs. A. S.\nHorswill of Castlegar of plans for\nthe coming deaneryimeeting to be...        .,. ,-, - .\nheld  in  Castlegar  under  auspices!.he cellm* were \"moved by Mrs.\nof Castlegar and Kinnaird W.A.S. L\u00b0\u201en5. and  given to the'8uest oi\nArrangements   for   the   meeting\n\"Stork\" Party\nHeld in Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. . - The\nliving room of Mrs. Gerry Long's\nhome was gaily strung with useful\nitems for, a baby when Mrs.\" Long\nand Miss Nancy Plotnikoff enter-\ntainea at a \"stork\" party for Mrs.\nEgar Jensen.\nA high chair was presented by\nMiss, Plotnikoff to \"Mrs. Jensen for\nthe 29 guests attending, and after\nsupper the small gifts hanging from\nB.C. Girl Awarded\nGuides Gilt Cross\nTORONTO,. Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014 The\nGirl Guides Gilt Cross has been\nawarded to Donna Jean Dodds, 15,\nof the First Allenby Company of\nAllenby, B.C., the Canadian Girl\nGuides Association announced today,\nDonna Jean won the award fo:\nher bravery in rescuing two sisters and a brother from a fire In\ntheir home last March 25. She was\nleft in charge of her ll_-year-old\nsister, another sister, 9 and a brother. When , an overheated stove\nstarted a fire, Donna Jean wapped\nher baby sister in a blanket and ran\nfrom the building with her, ordering the other two children to escape\nwithout waiting to dress.\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PLAN\n*\n10% DOWN\n10 MONTHS TO PAY\nYour $ $ $ Buy More at Freeman't\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE  116 -  NELSON,  BrC.\nCamp Lister...\nCAMP LISTER, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. Rita.\nSieg, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sleg and\nMrs. A. Sommerfeld all of Chicago,\n111., are guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Max Rother.\nMr. and Mrs. R. W. Graber and\nson David of Huscroft are visiting\nrelatives at Elrose, Sask.\nMrs. H. Hubick and baby of Saskatoon, Sask., are guests of the\nformer's mother, Mrs. M. Ross.\nMr, and Mrs. Seb Flagle and children of Kimberley were guests of\nMr, and Mrs. Seb Kopp.\nMr. and Mrs. Vince Adamskl of\nAberfieldie, B'C, are guests of the '\nlatter's mother, Mrs. R. E. Beard.\nLONDON, (CP)-^Greatest attrac\ntions at the British Food Fair were\nthe free food stands. One small boy.\nate 22 corned beef sandwiches in\none sitting.\nwere completed.\nA gift of spoons was acknowled-\nhonor.\nGam .s prizes were  awarded to\nMrs. G. Besso, Mrs. A. Sdae, ..Miss\nKID HOCKEY\nGeneral meeting, Women's Institute Rooms, Civic Centre, 8 (O'clock\nThursday, Oct. 5.\nCURLERS ATTENTION\nThe annual Fall meeting will be\nheld in City Council chambers at\n8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 6th.\nAll makes of standard typewriters\nrented. D.-W. McDerby, \"The Typewriter and Adding Machine Man,\"\n554 Stanley Street, Nelson.\nThe time is now\u2014plant your Fall\nbulbs. We have a good selection.\nGRIZZELLE'S FLORISTS\nAND GREENHOUSES\nNELSON, B.C.\nPatients In the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital can have the Dally\nNews sent to them every morning.\nPhone 144, Circulation Dept., Dally\nNews.\nLadies' white figure skates, sizes\n5 to 8. Finest quality soft leather,\nfirm, padded narrow heel, :padded\ntongue and Canadian'Club blades.\n$20.00 pair.'\u2014 HIPPERSON'S.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces, hot\nand cold, air ducts cleaned by\nvacuum, chimneys topped, thimbles\napplied or stopped. Prices reasonable. Pounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 968-X noon and evenings.\nged from Mrs. J. Dutton and an Molly Hatlevik, Mi.i Jean Jensen,\napron donated by Mrs. BB. Calkin.!Mrs. Molly McLaren and Miss Lil-\nThe articles will form the nucleus iIian Plotnikoff.\nfor a sale to be held in the near\nfuture.    ,\nThe next meeting October 23 will\nbe held at the home of Mrs. Gordon Reith.\nPythian Sisters'\nChief Entertained\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 3 .\u2014.The\nPast Chiefs association of Pythian\nSisters entertained here for Grand\nChief Mrs. Mary Gold of Vancouver\nat the home of President Mrs.\nFrank MacKenzie.\nThe evening was spent, with piano\nmusic by Mrs. Ernest Draper, and\ngames and a musical-contest.   ,\nMrs. MacKenzie presented Mrs.\nGold with'a gift, from the association, together with a card inscribed\nwith the names of those present.\nBazaar in Store\nROSSLAND, B.C., Oct. 3\u2014Bazaar\npreparations were ..continued' by\nmembers of St. Margaret's Circle of\nSacred Heart Catholic \"Church\nmeeting at the home, of Mrs. D. B.\nHaymond,\nThe Circle will meet next at\nthe home of Mrs. L. Brewer.\nLONDON, (CP) \u2014 Conservative's\nin suburban Southgate gave Dr.\nArthur, Till M.P. a four foot axe \u2014\n\"to cut Labor Government expenditure.\" ';-..'\u25a0:.\nWatch tor Out\nWeekend Specials\nBRADLEY'S\nMEAT MARKET-Phone 832\nSPECIAL\nFOR SATURDAY\nDresses: Sizes 11 to 44\nRegular-$12.95 to $22,50\nfor $7.95 and $12.95\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\n|\\OOTENAY     V ALLEY    \\\\J\/\\mt\nWynndel Girl Feted\nWYNNDEL, B.C., Oct. 3 \u2014 Mr.\nand Mrs. J. J. Firth ertertained a\nnumber of friends at their home,\nhonoring their daughter, Miss Mary\nFirth, who is to be married in Lethbridge Saturday. Music and singing\nwere on the entertainment slate.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED.\nDESMOND   T.\nLITTLEWOOD\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor To J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293        NELSON, B.C.\nBEST YOU\nBYBR ATB\n^FoHSoM-TbHiTe.,\nCRISP- TENDER\n'j0\u00a3T\u00ab^Jt>Ei.icioiia\nPOPCORN\n(2\u00bb-\nDELICIOUS POTATO DISHES\nYOU CAN MAKE IN A JIFFY\nMashed potatq! Shepherd's pie topping! Potato soup!\nIn a matter of minuteSj with practically no work, you can now serve\nappetizing potato dishes. Just get the\nremarkable new food product called\nFrench's Instant -Potato\u2014now at\nyour grocer's. Then do Hub:\nWait till dinner is ready. Then\nbring some salted water to a brisk\nboil, add mill, and French's\nInstant Potato as directed on\npackage. Stir until potato bas\nthickened as desired; add butter\nand whip until light and fluffy.\nThai's all\u2014 y% cup makes 4 to\n5 servings a. delicious mashed\npotato at onlj-afew cents a serving.\nSHEPHERD'S PIE TOPPING.\nMashed potato as prepared nbovo\nmakes a grand topping for Shepherd's\nPie, meat pies, and baked dishes.\nPOTATO SOUP.To 3 cups very hot\n(not boiling) milk, stir in gradually Jf\ncup French's Instant Potato. Stir\nover low heat until mixture thickens.\nSeason with onion salt; pepper and\nbutter. Serves 3.\nTry this magic new product loon.\nYou will find French's Instant Potato\nin the canned vegetable: section at\nyour grocer's.        .\n7\nJunior figure skating outfits. Soft,\nwhite leather boot on fine quality\nblades. Unexcelled value at .$12.00\npair. Sizes 11 to 2. Buy now 'while\nour stock is complete..\nHIPPERSON'S.\nNOTICE\nPLANT YOUR FALL BULBS NOW\nSEE ADVT. ON PAGE  9\nGRIZZELLE'S FLORISTS AND\nGREENHOUSES\nNELSON, B.C,\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral, services for the late\nFrederick Nelson McEwan will be\nheld from the Thompson Funeral\nHome Thursday at 2 p.m. Rev. A. L.\nAnderson of St. Paul's United\nChurch will officiate and interment\nwill be in Nelson Memorial Park.\nChest Drive Goes\n\"Over the Top\"\nA'ICTORIA.'Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014 Victoria's- unique Community Chest\ndrive for $181,000 is over the top.\nThe electrifying statement came\nfrom John MacCormac, co-chairman\nof the drive, just before 1 a.m. today.\nAt that time, the actual cash from\nthe speedy three-hour campaign\nhad rolled up a total of $165,619.54.\nThat did it, MacCormac jubilantly\nannounced. With pledges, out-of-\ntown donations, and donations from\nbranch.firms of Provincial and Do\nminion firms, the big total was assured.- \u2022 : V\n\u25a0 Actually,-1 the 2000-odd workers\nchiselled slightly on their, three\nhour drive. Business firms in: the\ndowntown area were canvassed\nduring business hours.\n.Flying time for the -R.C.A.F. in\n1949 - was approximately 113,000\nhours.\nNKSM0\n'IV':\nDelight your family with a wonderful pumpkin\npie! Enjoy their compliments when they taste\nthe tender, light-as-air pastry\u2014so easy, with\nMonarch Pie Crust Mix. You just add water,\nthat's all\u2014for'Monarch's superb mixes are\ncomplete\u2014the short-cut:way to time savings\nand perfect results.\nil ii lin if\nI II IE II H\\W II\nI\nkill\ni |i i\n'\" Hi!\niintr\n1\nMIXES\nTry the other superb Monarch Mixes soon:\n\u2022 CHOCOLATE CAKE \u25a0>\u2022 GINGERBREAD\n\u2022 WHITE CAKE \u2022 TEA BISK\n100%    GUARANTEE!\nCARRIES    MAPLE    LEAF    MILLING'S\n Established April 22,1902\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nI Published every morning except Sunday by the\nI NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED\n|26B Baker fetreet,  Nelson, British  Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPost  Office  Department,  Ottawa\nI MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\n| THE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nWEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1950\nAs'It Was Intended\nThe award of the Nobel Peace Prize\n[ to Dr. Ralph Bunche has properly won\nwide acclaim. Seldom, indeed, in the\n50-year history of the Nobel Prize has\nj there been greater popular approval of\nthe choice of the selection committee.\nDr.   Bunche's   achievements   in   the\n| cause of peace have been substantial,\nbut there can be little doubt that his\npersonal qualities have been recognized as well. He is best known for his\nsuccess in mediating the Jewish-Arab\nconflict in Palestine, following the assassination of Count Folke Bernadotte.\nDr. Bunche is the grandson of an\nAmerican Negro slave. Born in humble\ncircumstances, in Detroit, and left an\norphan early in life, he has overcome\nthe enormous handicaps of race and\npoverty to win world-wide renown.\nBefore the war, he had had a brilliant\nacademic career, and was a professor\n* of political science when he entered\nGovernment service after the outbreak\nof war- He had been with the State Department for three years when he\njoined the United Nations staff in 1947.\nHis patience, persistence and skill\nin the understanding of human nature\nwere rewarded when, after 10 months\nof effort, he carried out his task in Palestine. Dr. Bunche believes profoundly\nin the United Nations idea, and it has\nbeen his privilege to do much to further its aims and bring to practical\nterms the ideals it expresses. One reason why this award of the Nobel Prize\nhas been so generally approved is that\nin a sense it expresses the thanks of\nall men of good-will for the great work\nDr. Bunche has done. This is in the\ntruest spirit of Alfred Nobel's motives\nwhen the Prize fund was set up.\nMigration\nThere have been decades of fruitful\nresearch, but science has not stripped\nthe aura of mystery from the annual\nmigration of the birds. No one knows\nwhy redwing blackbirds spend the\nWinter in .the Southern States, or why\nbobolinks choose to make the long\njourney to the lowlands of Paraguay.\nThe mystery of migration. was undoubtedly pondered by puzzled men\nthousands of years ago. Not only do\ncertain' bird species travel the skyways\nin great flocks; animals and insects also\nmigrate over land routes in instinctive\nresponse to an imperious summons.\nA part of the distinctive spirit that\nis Autumn is linked with the flocks\nof birds that practice manoeuvres over\nmeadow mowings and above sun-\nbrowned pastures. Birds that have kept\nin pairs during the Summer now join\nwith others to form large flocks for the\nSouthland flight. The Arctic tern\nwings its way from Antarctica to the\nArctic in Spring and returns in the\nFall\u2014a distance of some 11,000 miles.\nThe golden plover travels about 8000\nmiles. Sometimes we forget that it is\njust as truly a migration when a ruffed\ngrouse moves leisurely down from a\nhigh mountainside to a lowland pasture swamp to spend the Winter\nmonths.\nSome scientists believe that in 'ancient eras the bird population in the\nTropics became overcrowded. Certain\nspecies began to fly Northward in the\nSpring to better feeding grounds. Here\nthey raised their young, and when Fall\nchill tempered the air, parents and\nyoung returned to ancestral Tropical\nhaunts; Over hundreds of thousands of\nyears these routes became instinctive.\nBut why do some small birds like\nchickadees, nuthatches and downy\nwoodpeckers spend the cold Winter\nmonths with us, while larger, more\npowerful birds wing'their way toward\nthe Gulf?\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may be published over a nam\ndo plume, but the actual name of tha\nwriter must be given to the Editor as evidence of good faith. Anonymous letters go\nIn tho waste paper basket.\nSeeks News of School Chums\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I wonder if you coul'd spare a little\ntime and space for a born Nelsonite who has\nbeen lonely for her home town'for many years\nand would li)ce to renew a few acquaintances\nwith former school chums and others who remember Charlotte Lillian Parker, ex-pupil of\nthe Nelson Public School and Junior High\nSchool.\nNo doubt most of my chums are married\nnow, so I don't even know their names; but if\nyou could print my letter some may read and\nwrite me a few lines.-1 promise no letter shall\n. go unanswered.\nI have been away from Nelson since the\nSpring of 1934, except for two brief visits. Is\nit too much to hope that some of my old\nfriends still remember me, and would care to\nwrite?\nI am especially interested in news of Josephine Riley, Kathleen Thiel, Evelyn Wallen,\nBessie Langill, Berry Bergmann, Dora Dyck\nand Pearl Leggltt. I wonder how many are\nstill in Nelson?\nLILLIAN GORDON.\nR.R. No. 1, Kamloops.\nLooking Backwards\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Oct, 4, 1940\nFull Council support for the Board of\nTrade fight against the application of, the\nGreat Northern Railway for permission to\ndiscontinue passenger train service between\nNelson and Spokane was assured at a special\nmeeting of the City Council Thursday night.\nMrs, Hugh W. Robertson, Rosemont, was\nhostess to members of St. Saviour's W.A. in\nthe Memorial Hall yesterday, when those pres-'\nent were Mrs. J. G. Holmes, Mrs. Harry Eper-\nson, Mrs. S. C. Latornell, Mrs. E. M. Long,\nMrs. J. Dee, Mrs. F. H. Stringer, Mrs. T. Dolphin and Mrs. J! Draper, \"\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom The Dally News ot Oct, 4, 1925\n.Forestry Branch reports for the Southern\nInterior for the week ending yesterday showed\nthat no fires were burning in the District, although 16 new ones were reported during the\nweek;\nL. W. Humphrey, M.P., returned last evening from Creston, where he went to open\nthe Creston Fair.\nHarold Lakes returned last evening from\nthe Lardeau District.\n40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom The Dally News of Oct. 4, 1910\nSnow showed on the hills yesterday morning, the result of heavy precipitation and a\ncool night. John Smallwood, who came in from\nBird Creek yesterday morning, reports three\ninches of snow on his claim.   '\nCharles A. Gram of Spokane has pur- \u25a0\nchased 7000 acres of land on the North Fork\nof the Salmo RiVer North of Erie.\nIt's Been Said\nThe greater part of men have no opinion,\nstill fewer an opinion of their own, well reflected and founded upon reason.\u2014Johann\nGottfried Seume.\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader, Names of persons\nasking questions will nbt tot published.\nThere Is no charge for this iervl.ce. Questions WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BY\nMAIL except where there Is obvious necessity for prlvaoy.   \u2022\u2022 '\u2022\nR( S., Nelson\u2014Please print names and addresses of anyone who buys Angora wool.\nWe presume any woollen mills would be\nInterested, such as Fairfield and Sons, 3178\nKingsway (near Joyce), Vancouver, ' B.C.;\nWool Combing- Corporation of Canada Ltd.,\nToronto; Bissenger and Co., Vancouver, B. C;\nBlyth Woollen Mills, Blyth, Ont\nE. A. Q\u201e Fernie\u2014I am planning to rent a\nhouse. Do I have to ask Rent Control\nwhat to charge? \/\u25a0*,\nIt all depends on circumstances. We would\nadvise you to make inquiries.\nP. P. P., South Slocan\u2014Please give me an\naddress ln Alberta that collects and buys\nantique automobiles.\nWe are unable to do this, as there must\nbe so many. Your best plan would be to consult a directory and write to the firms that\nseem to you suitable.\nVerse\nThat Little Ditty\nMy hair Is growing grey around the temples,\nMy fingernails are chewed down to the quicks,\nMy shattered nerves are screaming like a\nbrass band full of monkeys;'\nBut the song is in my mind, and there it sticks.\nI heard it for the first time on the radio\nlast evening.   .\nI hummed it to myself all day and night;\nI found I couldn't help it, for the darn thing\nhad me conquered,\n' And now it's nothing better than a blight.\nI've run around the block until I'm dropping,\nIf a ten-ton truck should hit me, this I know,\nThat no matter what should happen there's\nno stopping\nThat little ditty ruining my soul.\n-HELEN ANDREWS.\nLardeau, B. C,\n 1 ___\nBullets Not Too Small\nBecause big game bullets fit loosely ln\nrifle barrels, every year ballistics experts hear\nfrequent comments that the bullets are too\nsmall.\nSeeking the cause of a missed shot, or\nsometimes out of idle curiosity, a sportsman\nsticks the bullet of a loaded cartridge in the\nmuzzle of his rifle and finds it easily goes\ndown as far as the mouth of the cartridge\ncase. Nine times out of ten he assumes the\nbullet is top small. This definitely is not the\ncase. '    . *\nIn actual shooting, the bullet \"seals\" the\nbore so that none of the burning powder gas\ncan escape through the grooves of the rifling,\nWhen you hit the top of a full tin can\nwith a sledgehammer, the top is pushed down\ncloser to the bottom and the sides bulge out\nThe same thing happens with a bullet\nWhen the trigger is pulled the burfllng\npowder produces sudden pressure of many\ntons per square inch, and something has to\ngive. The powerful gas pressure on the base of\nthe bullet causes it to shorten Its length and\nincrease its diameter until the bore of the rifle\nis completely filled.\nIn firing a rifle, it is not until this contraction, and expansion, called \"bullet upset\",\nis completed that the bullet begins to move up\nthe barrel.\nYour Horoscope\nExcellent aspects prevail today., Ferret out\ndesired information and you probably will\nfind research simple at this time. Do not take\nneedless risks in any of your affairs in your\nnext year, but circumvent any possible difficulties by care, tact and vigilance. Great energy and enthusiasm are expected to develop\nin the child who is born today.\nAnd I will luve thee still, my dear,\nTill a' the seas gang dry:\nTill a' the seas gang dry, my dear,\nAnd the rocks melt wi' the sun;\nI will luve thee still, my dear,\nWhile the sands o' life shall run.\nI      \u2014Robert Burns; A Red, Red Hose.'\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nto!.*-, v. i mm o-_t\nBy Jimmy, Hado;\nW MAY6EITS NOT HOARDING-    fw PUT\nMl  PUT IN THE GROCERy STORE   6 WE Cf\nfl!   5f$MmV$ STOCKS^   ^i0^NTomrF\nI f   WITH ENOUGH STUFF Rj& -W** P\u00b0ST OFFICE-\n|     A TROUPE CFACROEvAT^ '\nToday's Bible Thought\nLove needs no policeman.\u2014Tho\nlaw of the spirit of life in Christ\nJesus made me free from the law\nof sin and death.\u2014Rom. 8:2.\nClwnldhL\nI don't take any credit for beln'\ntrue to Pa. After I found out what\nmen were like, I never saw another\none that I could o' put up with.\n\u00bb ,\u00ab\u201e' ,.,__ tSxeSKSS BV- glCATC, Int. HP-LI, SKlrrV StAtAVSa.\n\u25a0     'V \"\nr. .\nFLIN FLON, Man. (CP) - The\nFlln Flon Glee Club already is rehearsing for Its Christmas concert.\nFeatured on the Yuletide program\nwill be .Brahma' r.iebeslieder\nwaltzes.\nTito\/ok. \"SoAMfL\u2014\nVivien Leigh Reminisqes on\nEarly Days as Scarlett O'Hara.\n.  By BOB THOMAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Oct 3  (AP)  -\nWhat 4o you suppose happened to\nScarlett O'Hara after Hhett Butler\nwalked out on her? -\n\"I think she probably became a\nmuch better woman,\" suggests Vivien Leigh, who played' the role in,\nHollywood's most successful moyie.\nBut I don't think she .ever got\nRhett Butler back.\"\nMiss Leigh, like the late Margaret Mitchell, author of the book,\nHas been asked such questions by\nfans ever since \"Gone' With the\nWind\" came out I got her to reminisce, about the famous role over\nlunch ln her dressing room.\nSOUTHERN  BELLE\nAGAIN ,,.<\u25a0':\n' The actress wa; dressed ln tlte\ncostume of a Southern belle, but\nthis time t more modern ono\u2014\nBlanche Dubois ln \"A Streetcar\nNamed Desire\",    . <    ,\n\"It's hard to remember a role of\n10 years ago when you're so\nwrapped up in one you're doing\nnow,\" she said. .\"But of course, I\ncouldn't forget Scarlett.\n\"I wanted, to play Scarlett since\nthe first time I read the book. That\nwas in London, when I was appearing in an unsuccessful play . . .\nBut in 1938 I came to America. It\nwas only to be a two-week visit.\nThey hid already started \"Gone\nWith the Wind', shooting the fire\nscenes -with doubles for Scarlett ln\nvarious sizes, ..since they didn't\nknow who would play her. Myron\nSelznick took me out on the set and\nIntroduced me to his brother, Da\nvid. He asked me if I would like to\ntake a test.1;\nSURPRISE\nSELECTION\nShe made tests of various scenes\nfrom the book, and on Christmas\nDay was told she had won the role.\nThe selection was a surprise to most\npeople, and drew some complaints.\nMiss Leigh has seen the picture\nthree and a- half times. Although\nshe considered lt her best film role,\nshe doesn't like to look at it.\n\"I don't like to see myself on the\n12-Foot Boat Ends\nVoyage to Haifa\nHAIFA, Israel, Oct. 3 (Routers)\u2014\nAn American newspaper man has\nreached Haifa in a 12-foot sailing\nboat after covering 4000 miles in a\nthree-year, cruise around Europe.\nS. Crlshton of Alameda, Calif., left\nSweden in the 38-year-old boat,\nRoblnate, and called at 48 ports on\nhis way around the continent,\nchanging companions 18 times.\nWith him when he arrived Sunday\nwas R, Mowbray of England.\noriginally\nAdolph    Hitler    was\ntrained as an architect.\nscreen,\" she remarked. \"I keep realizing how much better I could\nhave done.\"\nMay Divert Flow of\nAssiniboine River\nPORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man,,\nOct. 3 (CP) \u2014 The Federal Government is surveying the. possibility of diverting part of the flow of\nthe Assiniboine River into Lake\nManitoba to help prevent recurrence of this May's Manitoba floods.\nThe diversion would reduce tha\nquantity of water entering the Red\nRiver in Winnipeg.\nProbable route of the man-made\nchannel would be from a point on\nthe river near Portage La Prairie\nto the lake-, about 15 miles. Surveys\nare also being made with a view\nto possible creation of water-shortage reservoirs on theoipper reaches\nof the Assiniboine.\n~PHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED '\n0T Seagrams w* Sure\nSeagram's \"V.O.\"        Seagram's \"83\"\nSeagram's Crown Royal\nSeagram's King's Plate     Seagram's Special Old\nthis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Boardor by the Government of British Columbia\nTNE RX.A.F. 1$ SERVING CANADA'S FREEDOM AT HOME AND ABROAD\n\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0>:\u25a0:\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>:\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'' . \u25a0\u25a0&&\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0;*\u25a0\u25a0 . .':-.;:'...:....\"..: \u25a0'\u25a0>:': .SsSx\nr#r   __\n\u2022qptfi\nIttctt *-____. **\u00ab*?\n'flk\nAIR FORCE\n***** 9b* 4&W\nToday, airmen of Canada are serving\nwith the men of other United Nations\nprotecting world freedom\u2014your\nfreedom.\nCanada needs, more young men at\nonce to serve in the Royal Canadian\nAir Force as\nYour job in the R.CA.F. is important to\nCanada,- to the United Nations, to peoples everywhere in the wor(d who live under the threat oj\naggression.\n0 PILOTS\n0 RADIO OFFICERS\n0 NAVIGATION OFFICERS\nYou earn the respect of every Canadian citizen.\nvhen you of er your services. In addition, you gain)\nlife of action, an opportunity for promotion, a\nchance to fit yourself for the future.)\nDo your part to help Canada do her part\nRoyal Canadian Air Force\nGET THE FACTS-MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY\nor\nR.C.A.F.  RECRUITING  UNIT,\n1021   W.  HA8TING8  ST.,    VANCOUVER,  B.C.\nPHONE:  PACIflc 6730\nPlus, null m, srltheul tUtfllus, \/sill part\/aim ngertfag enlistment riqislrmnts end spsnlisgsiseie mtUHe tn its HCA.P.\nI\nI\nI\n!\nConsult the Career Counsellor at your nearest R.C.A.F.\nRecruiting Centre, and find out whether you can qualify.\nGet all the details of how you can get into Aircrew at once.\nC*.    14\nNAME fPleuePrint)..\nSTREET APDRESS....\nCITY PROVINCE..\nEDUCATION (bj grads ind pretince)\t\n \\\u00a3ii*\nSPORTS\nJhL Spo\/dsL fcljSl\nBy CLIVE FLEMING\nWay back at Nelson's last mld-\nlummer game between the Kimberley   Dynamiters   and   the   Leafs,\nflddie Wares left his opinion1 that\n' a puckster could skate, he might\nJe able to play hockey. And skating\ndefinitely the big thing at the\nLeaf workouts now. For the third\n(freight  night  almost  all   Eddie's\nlharges have been doing Is skate,\nIkate and  skate some more,  and\npen start all over again.\nt The strenuous workouts are show-\nng  a  benefit  as  the  tryouts  are\nforking into shape,  but defonce-\nhan Jim Drew and forward Kay\nJtrate, (pronounced Straa-tee), still\nlook to be the cream of the crop.\nVhlle club officials aro still wait-\nng for several newcomers, players\nIre daily arriving in tho fold, including   another   unexpected   pair\npesterday.\nThe two are Herman Merkowski,\nrangy   defenceman,   and   Wally\nllryciw, a lanky rightwinger. Mer-\nIowski performed with the Prince\n\\lbert Mintos, who eliminated Trail\n|unior Smokies to reach the West-\nIrn Canada Memorial  Cup finals.\nT^e stands 6 foot 1 inch, and tips the\nIcales at the 180 pound mark. One of\nJiis teammates, Joe Palyga is worlc-\nng out with the Trail Smoke Eaters,\nWally Hryciw is a 5 foot, 11 inch,\n60-pound forward from the Crow's\n.est Lions. Last year when Scotty\nflunroe's Lions played an exhibi-\nlon game here, he decided to try\nmt with the Leafs.\n'RIMS LINES\nWares has thrown the axe at three\nilayers,    eliminating    defencemen\nted Wassick. Tommy Shrieves and\nvinger Johnny Arichuk, who was\nrying a comeback. Still 23 will be\nvorking out.\nPreparations are still progressing\nor the benefit game for Leaf centre-\nnan Bill Vickers Saturday night. A\neturn engagement with Trail will\nle played in the Smelter City the\nollowing Tuesday.\nLocal pucksters Jimmy Todd and\n^awrence  Ludlow  have  returned\nhis advertisement is not published ot\nisplayed by the Liquor Control Board\nir by the Government of British Columbia\nfrom the. Lethbridge Native Sons\ntryouts. Todd had earlier related\nthat there were 11 centremen. trying out. Although it was rumored\nthat Lethbridge had a far better\njuvenile setup than before, he said\nhe'd return to Nelson if he failed to\nmake the grade. Another local product, Kenny Coskey is still in Lethbridge along with Norm Hyssop who\nwas on the club. last season. Trail\nblueliner Red Weir is going over\ngood in the Alberta centre.\nTO CROW\nJohnny Bachynskl, currently\nworking out with the Maple Leafs\nwill leave soon to try out with the\nCrow's Nest Lions.\nLee Hyssop and Mickey Maglio,\nalthough training with the Leafs,\nwill shortly leave for the New York\nRovers. Maglio may be forced' to\nkeep his wrist in a casCfor as much\nas six months, with the possibility\nof an operation being necessary.\nErnie Gare, who was advised to\nchange from defence to forward by\nthe New York Rangers, is finding\nthe skating tough, and .is, already\ncontemplating a return to his defence position.\nIn the baseball world, we've found\none National League supporter\nbrave enough to call the Phillies to\ncop the World Series. He's radio announcer Bill Anderson, who calls\n\"Phillies in seven games.\"\nThere are plenty of fans behind\nthe Phils, but they fear the Yanks\nhitting power.\nElk \"Al Home\"\nIn Lardeau\nThe Kootenay's D.P.s of the animal\nkingdom, 29 elk which B.C. Game\nDepartment move'd from Alberta to\nthe Lardeau, are doing all right for\nthemselves.\nIt's been nearly a year and a half\nsince the elk were transported to\ntheir new grounds, and from reports\nthey're in fine condition. Quite a\nnumber of calves were spotted this\nSpring.\nJust a few days ago an elk was\nseen in the Kaslo area, and another\nbetween Riondel and Crawford Bay.\nThey may have come from the\nLardeau, but on the other hand the\nlatter may have wandered over\nRose's Pass into Crawford Bay from\nthe St. Mary's River country in East\nKootenay.\nB.C. Game Department officials\nare interested in the elk's welfare\neven at this time, but they figure\nit will be three or four years before\nany appreciable increase in their\nnumbers can be expected.\nThere is every possibility that\ntheir numbers will increase. It isn't\nthe first time that the B.C. Game\nDepartment has experimented with\nelk.\nElk were planted in the Penticton\narea 25 years ago. When the herd\nincreased sufficiently, numbers were\nmoved to Princeton, Adam's Lake\nand the Queen Charlotte Islands,\nSo the Lardeau herd has probably the same likelihood of spread\ning out. This has been the case\ncloser to home with East Kootenay\nelk. For the first time there was a\nthree-day open season this Fall\n(Sept. 15 to 17) on elk ln the Creston\narea, which had migrated from farther North.\nFights\nMilwaukee\u2014Joe Miceli, 145, New\nYork, outpointed Ike Williams,\n142%, Trenton, N. J. (10).\nProvidence, R. I.\u2014Joe Rindone,\n154%, Roxbury, Mass., outpointed\nRalph Zanelli, 157%, Providence\n(12).\natkow\nHARD WEAR COUNTS\nGo to your outdoor Job wearing Leckle\nWork Boots and you're all set for tough\ngoing underfoot. Their moisture-\nresistant leathers will help keep your\nfeet warm and dry in all\nweathers and you can count\non them for rugged wear\nand long-lasting comfort.\nYou'll easily find a style\nto suit you at your\nLeckle dealer's.\nKonstanty Phillies' Choice\nFor Starting Pitcher Today\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014 The World Series off\nbaseball opens here tomorrow with a strange touch of drama\nsuddenly added today to the usual frenzy.\nPhiladelphia Phillies, champions,of the National League,\nselected as their starting pitcher to oppose New York Yankees,\nthe American League champions, a man who never started a\ngame all season \u2014 Jim Konstanty,\nThe Yankees will start Vic Raschi,\nwho won 21 and lost eight for the\nA.L, champions during the regular\nseason. Phillies' Manager Eddie\nSawyer's choice of Konstanty by tomorrow night will either be known\nas a stroke of genius or a sad mistake.\nKonstanty, a great relief pitcher,\nhas  saved   many   games  for  the\nPhillies at the finish but In 1950\nhe never began one, He holds the\nmodern   record  ai  relief  hurler.\nWith a won-lost-record of 16-7 for\nthe season, he worked 74 times In\nfireman roles. ,\nThe affable 33-year:old played\nwith Toronto Maple Leafs of the\nInternational League In 1948, winning 10 and losing 10 in 46 games.\nAlso brought in from the Toronto\nfarm club for the hottest World\nSeries in years were pitcher Jocko\nThompson and outfielder Jack Mayo.\nThey were admitted to the Philadelphia line-up in exchange for the\nYankees' right to use utility man |i|l I\nPERFECT WEATHER J'M   KONSTANTY\nMeantime, the city of Philadelphia surrendered itself with childish glee to baseball. Bright-red\nPhillies pennants are all over town,\nA warm sun shrouded in a slight\nmist made for perfect weather.\n. The forecast for tomorrow: cloudy\nand cooler, temperature in the 70s.\nPhiladelphia   partisans\u2014the   fact\nthe Phillies won.only one pennant\npreviously and that in 1915 makes\nthem more violent than ordinary \u2014\nhope the experts are wrong in pick\ning the Yankees to win in short\norder. Odds favor the New York\nteam from 1 to 2 to 5 to 12 for the\nSeries. First quotation on the opening game also favored the Yankees,\n9 to 5,\nEvery ticket for Shlbe Park's\ncozy' 34,000 seats was sold long\nago, except for 3000 rush seats\noffered at each game. Scalpers\noffered tickets In blocks four for\n$20-$50 apiece.\nHotel rooms were even harder to\nfind than tickets to the games.\nFor the Yankees this Is old stuff,\nthey have won 16 American League\npennants and 12 World Series, including 1947 and 1949.\nThis series will mark a high in\nsports audiences. Television has\nboomed since last Fall with more\nthan 5,0000,000 receivers now in\noperation reached by stations linked\nby coaxial cable. Through television\nthe Series will be' brought to an\nestimated 38,000,0000 people who, the\nexperts say, will watch all or part\nof one or more games.\nTelevision rights to the Series\nbrought a fantastic $800,000. Radio\npaid another $175,000. The money\ngoes to the office of Commissioner\nA. B. Chandler. Baseball players\nare still wrangling over whether\nto demand part of this as an addl\ntion to the customary series prizes\nor whether to bolster their pension\nfund with It\nBritish Soccer\nLONDON, Oct. 3 (Reuters)\u2014Hibernian defeated Aberdeen 5-1 in\ntthe Scottish League Cup soccer\nquarter-finals today. Today's game\nbroke the deadlock caused by two\nprevious tie games between the\nteams.\nHibernian next meets Queen of\nthe South in a semi-final in Edinburgh, Saturday. .\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Bill Cain runs\na cafe in London's Bermondsey\ndistrict. But he makes such a good\ncup of tea, that surrounding streets\nare blocked with the trucks of\nthirsty drivers. The local road\nsafety committee complained and\nnow drivers may have to park\nelsewhere.\nWORLD SERIES\nFACTS, FIGURES\nBy The Associated  Press\nContestants: Philadelphia Phillies, National League champions,\nand New York Yankees, American\nLeague champions.\nSeries: Best four of seven games.\nGames: First two at Shibe Park,\nPhiladelphia, starting today (Wednesday, Oct. 4); third, fourth and\nfifth (if needed), at Yankee Stadium, New York; sixth and seventh\n(if needed) at Shibe Park. Play is\non successive days with no break\nfor travel.\nStarting Times: 10:00 a.m. PST\nfor all weekday games; 11:05 a.m.\nfor the Sunday game in New York.\nAttendance: Complete sellouts\nfor all games at Shibe Park (seating capacity, 33,166) and Yankee\nStadium (67,000).\nBetting Odds: Yankees 1-2 fav\norite for the Series, Yankees 9 to 5\nto win the opener.\nWeather Prospects: Cloudy, cool\ntoday: temperature Ih the 70s,\nPrice of Tickets: At Shibe Park,\nbox seats $8.75, reserved seats\n$6.50, bleachers $1, no standing\nrOom sold; at Yankee Stadium, box\nseats, $8, reserved seats $8, standing room, $4, bleachers $1.\nRadio Broadcast: Mutual Net\nwork, Jim Allen and Gene Kelly\nannouncing.\nTelevision: ABC, NBC and CBS\nnetworks, \u25a0 Jim Britt and Jack\nBrickhouse announcing.\nProbable pitchers: Yankees, Vic\nRaschi (21-8); Phillies, Jim Konstanty (16-7).\nUmpires: Jocko Conlan (NL)\nplate; Bill McGowan (AL), lb\nDusty Boggess (NL), 2b; Charley\nBerry (AL), 3b; AI Barlick (NL)\nIf; Bill McKinley (AL) rf.\nBraves Send Haefner\nTo Seattle Post\nNEW YORK, Oct. 3 (AP)-Hill\nPrince, the 1950 three-year-old\nchampion heir-apparent, loomed today as the horse to upset Calumet\nFarm's monopoly in the famed\nJockey Club Gold Cup at Belmont\nPark.\nThe $50,000-added affair, to be\nrun for the 31st time Saturday, has\nbeen won for two straight years\nby Calumet. Calumet has won four\nof the last eight Gold Cups.\nGREAT YARMOUTH, England\n(CP) \u2014 Shooting parties are out\nalong Norfolk coast to shoot seals,\nThe seals are spoiling local fishing.\nWhiz Kids'Fever Hits Philadelphia\nBy  JACK  SULLIVAN\nCanadian Press 6taff Writer\nPHILADELPHIA, Oct. 3 (CP)\u2014\nCuff-notes on the World Series:\nWhen Philly Manager Eddie\nSawyer dropped his bombshell announcement today that relief ace\nles opener against New York\nJim Konstanty would start the Ser-\nYankees tomorrow, a sports writer\nasked him about his starting\nhurlers.\n\"Oh, they'll be In the bull pen,\"\nthe likeable Sawyer explained.\nIncidentally, this will be the first\nstarting assignment for the bespectacled Philadelphia Whiz Kid since\nhe left Toronto Maple Leafs of the\nInternational League at the end of\nthe 1948 season. Jim, who has\nserved as fireman for Philly pitchers the last two 'years, had a 10-10\nrecord with the Leafs in '48,\nA NICE GUY\nAnd Sawyer, dubbed a \"nice guy\"\nby sports writers in the National\nand American Leagues, proved just\nthat at Shibe Park this afternoon\nwhen his kids were put through a\ntwo-hour batting and infield workout. Sawyer didn't see it because he\nwas busy answering questions\nthrown at him by a group of sports\nwriters around the ,third\u00bbbase. line.\nHe answered every question affably and an outsider would almost figure the Phils were going\nthrough a routine session before a\nregular league game instead of\nbuild-up for Philadelphia Phillies'\nfirst World Series opener in 35\nyears.\nTi|e likeable one-lime college\nprofessor has made a \"bum\" out of\nLeo Durocher, Manager of New\nYork Giants. Fans recall Leo's now-\nfamous statement at start of the\nseason: \"Nice guys finish last.\"\nAN OMEN?\nIn keeping with the Whiz Kids'\nfever that has hit this city of brotherly love, the Garden State race\ntrack at nearby Camden, N. J., ded\nicaled its opening program to the\nPhillies. Each race was named after\na Philadelphia player,\nThe $5000 fifth-race feature was\nknown as the \"Whiz Kids.\" A\nstarter was a three-year-old named\n\"Danger Ahead.\" Yes, it was an\nalso-ran.\nWOT, NO TICKETS?\nThe shortage of World Series\ntickets is reminiscent to a Canadian\nof the annual scramble for , Grey\nCup ducats, but they can be had\nhere 'for a price\u2014anything from $45\nto purchase of an automobile.\nA used-car dealer came up with\nthis newspaper advertisement today: \"World Series tickets given\nfree with each car sold.\"\nDisease Appears\nIn Lardeau Deer\nThe odd case of \"liver fluke\", a\ndisease common to white tail deer\nfrom the Atlantic West, has been\ndiscovered in the Lardeau.   '\nGame Department , officials say\nthe disease is caused by fresh-water\nsnails in sluggish water. There have\nbeen other instances of the disease\nin British Columbia, and although\nfairly serious, it does not spread.\nWhenever cases are reported to\nthe Game Department, an attempt\nis made lo obtain specimens of internal organs which are sent to\nCoast laboratories for examination.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1950\nLove of Game, Sportsmanship First\nIs Aim of New Kid Hockey Plan\nCommercial\nLeague Schedule\nAs the 1950-51 bowling season\ngets Into full swing, two new league\nschedules have been drawn up.\nPlay in the Men's Commercial gets\nunder way on the Nelson alleys\ntonight while the Friday Mixed\nCommercial Leaguers will take to\nthe alleys Friday night.\nSchedules follow:\nMen's Commercial League:\nOct. 4\u2014Rigby vs Behnle's; C.P.R,\nGeneral Office vs Bankers; Cuthbert's vs Transfer.\nOct.- 11 \u2014 C.P.R. vs Cuthbert's;\nTransfer vs Bennie's; Rigby vs\nBankers.\nOct. 18 \u2014 Bennie's vs Bankers;\nCuthbert's vs Rigby; Transfer vs\nC.P.R.\nOct. 25\u2014Rigby vs C.P.R.; Transfer vs Bankers; Bennie's vs Cuthbert's.\nNov. 1 \u2014 Bankers vs Cuthbert's;\nBennie's vs C.P.R.; Rigby vs Transfer.\nNov. 8 \u2014 Bennie's vs Transfer;\nBankers vs Rigby; Cuthbert's vs\nC.P.R.\nNov. 15\u2014Cuthbert's vs Rigby; C.\nP.R. vs Transfer; .Bankers vs Bennie's.\nNov. 22\u2014C.P.R. vs Bankers; Rigby\nvs Bennie's; Transfer vs Cuthbert's.\nNov. 29\u2014Transfer vs Rigby; Cuthbert's vs Bankers; C.P.R. vs Bennie's.\nDec. 6\u2014Cuthbert's vs Bennie's;\nRigby vs C.P.R.; Transfer vs Bankers.\nDec. 13 \u2014 Bankers vs C.P.R.;\nTransfer vs Cuthbert's; Bennie's vs\nRigby.\nDec. 19 \u2014 Bennie's vs Transfer;\nBankers vs Rigby; Cuthbert's vs\nC.P.R.\nJan. 3\u2014Rigby vs Cuthbert's; CP.\nR. vs Transfer; Bankers vs Bennie's.\nMixed Commercial schedule:\nOct. 6\u2014Hudson's Bay vs Kelly\nDouglas; Sad Sacs vs Machinery;\nAtoms vs Jonella's.\nOct. 13\u2014Sad Sacs vs Atoms; Jonella's vs Kelly Douglas; Hudson\nBay vs Machinery.\nOct. 20\u2014Kelly Douglas vs Machinery; Atoms vs Hudson's Bay; Jonella's vs Sad Sacs.\nOct. 27 \u2014 Hudson's Bay vs Sad\nSacs; Jonella's vs Machinery; Kelly\nDouglas vs Atoms.\nNov. 3 \u2014 Machinery vs Atoms;\nKelly Douglas vs Sad Sacs; Hudson's Bay vs Jonella's.\n. Nov. 10\u2014Kelly Douglas vs Jonella's; Machinery vs Hudson's Bay;\nAtoms vs Sad Sacs.\nNov. 17\u2014Atoms vs Hudson's Bay;\nSad Sacs vs Jonella's; Machinery\nvs Kelly Douglas.\nNov. 24\u2014Sad Sacs vs Machinery;\nHudson's Bay vs Kelly Douglas;\nJonella's vs Atoms.\nDec. 1 \u2014 Jonella's vs Hudson's\nBay; Atoms vs Machinery; Sad Sacs\nvs Kelly Douglas.\nDec. 8\u2014Atoms vs Kelly Douglas;\nHudson's Bay vs Sad Sacs; Jonella's\nvs Machinery.\nDec. 15\u2014Machinery vs Sad Sacs;\nJonella's vs Atoms; Kelly Douglas\nVS ^Hudson's Bay.\nHill Prince Named\nTo Upset Calumet\nFor Belmont Gold Cup\nBOSTON, Oct. 3 (AP)-Boston\nBraves assigned Mickey Haefner,\nveteran lefthander, to Seattle of the\nPacific Coast League today as part\npayment for pitcher Jim Wilson.\nThe 38-year-old Haefner was\nused mostly as a relief pitcher by\nthe Braves after they bought him\nfrom Chicago White Sox for the\nwaiver price late in the season. His\nrecord in Boston was no victories,\ntwo defeats.\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014May the undersigned members of the Nelson Amateur Hockey\nAssociation be allowed, through\nyour paper, to clarify their stand\non the kid-hockey situation in Nelson?\nAt the general meeting of all\nhockey players,* under the jurisdiction of the N.A.H.A., held on June\n19, 1950, a motion was passed to the\neffect that all players participating\nin kid-hockey be redistributed so\nthat all teams would be balanced\nand of equal strength. This motion\nwas left to the new executive to\ncarry out.\nFollowing the motion a new executive was elected, the members\nof which were bound in good faith\nto carry out the above motion.\nIn future executive meetings It\nwas discovered that the previous\nmotion was ultra vires since intention of an amendment to the\nconstitution of the N.A.H.A. must\nbe given in writing one month\nprevious to the annual meeting.\nSuch a notice had not been given.\nAs a result of the above' motion\nand despite its unconstitutional nature the executive still felt that it\nshould be regarded as a directive\nfor future organization of teams,\nDuring the months which have\nelapsed since the general meeting\nsome dissatisfaction became evident. The Fairview Athletic Club\nasked that it be allowed to exercise its prerogative of having the\nmatter brought up before either\nthe Executive Council or the players. For this reason a special meeting was called on September 30\nto get an expression of opinion\nfrom the players and coaches. A\nvote was taken at this meeting and\nthe result showed that 41 players\nwere opposed to the idea of pooling players while 35 players favored the idea.\nHaving taken office with instructions to carry out the above directive, and the principles of which\nthey were in favor, the undersigned members of the Executive\nfeel that they must resign and give\nplace to an executive favorably inclined to the expressed wishes of\nthe players who were present at\nthe special meeting of September\n30,\nThe Executive would like to explain for the parents of the players\nand for interested parties the principles underlying the motion,\nIn the past Individual players\nhave been placed on teams they\nwished to Join. Once a player\nwas signed to a team he could\nnot transfer fo another team\nwithout the permission of the\nExecutive. Anyone starting hockey In Nelson would\" naturally\nlook for the team which offered\nthe most In the way of equipment, coaching, team prestige,\nbanquets, plaques, prizes, otc.\nWith this system some teams\nhave had decided advantages, depending upon sponsorship, coach-\nes, and past successes,\nWith years the movement has\ngrown Into a maohlne In which\nscores of 16-0 and 20-0 are Indicative of team balance. Where\none coach or sponsor was willing\nto spend personal funds for such\npreferred Items, another coach or\nsponsor, of necessity, could not.\nAs a result of this many good\ncoaches and sponsors have been\nlost to kid-hockey. Today only\nabout three or four coaches are\navailable because of this system\n\u2014a system which could well use\na  dozen  competent  coaches.\nAs a result of such one-sided\ngames and general treatment\nmany fine prospective hockey\nplayers have been lost to Nelson. Sponsors have been difficult to find because of the lack\nof player Interest and doubtful\nsportsmanship values. From\nplayer resentment of such Ine-\nqualities has grown bitterness, so\nevident in rough hockey. Because\nthe player on a weak team lost\nheart ind the player on the\nstrong team was never extended\nthe general quality of hockey\nhas suffered In Nelson,\nThe Executive would also like to\nexplain Its proposed system which\nis used in other hockey centers,\nTrail being cited as an example.\nIn this system players are redistributed at various times to keep\nteams balanced. Thus a, team which\nis too powerful for the others in\nthe league may be weakened by\nthe, transfer of one player to another team. Critics might say that\nthis would destroy the competitive\nspirit. It would depend largely on\nwhether a player played for the\nlove of the game or the desire to\nbe on the winning team. The former is what we want! The latter is\nnot conducive to the better ideals\nof good sportsmanship. A player\nwho is loo strong for others in his\ndivision would be moved to a higher division where he would be\nforced to play good hockey to keep\nhis position in that division. This\nwould . improve the individual's\nbrand of hockey.\nAID, NOT SPONSOR\nIn the proposed system there are\nno team sponsors. Sponsorship\nwould be by the N.A.H.A. but any\nindividual who wishes to assist\nhockey would be welcomed. This\nwould allow Nelson citizens who\nCAN NOT afford to equip a team\nan opportunity to give some help.\nWe feel  that most of those who\nhave helped kid-hockey ln the past\nwould not withdraw, their present\nsupport because they cannot sponsor an individual team.\nThe responsibility of team\nchanges would rest upon the Executive and the coaches concerned,\nThis system which has been used\nsuccessfully in Trail has Indeed\npaid off In numbers of participants\nand a high calibre of players.\nHere is a system conducive tn\ngood, clean hockey; a .system in\nwhich the game is played for Hit\nlove of the game and sponsorship\nis given genuinely so that all boys\nmay have an opportunity to participate in sport. We feel that the\nfact that sponsors have felt much\nunfairness In the system in the\npast has resulted In loss of sponsors in some cases and lack of interest in those still helping. These\nmen have paid good money that\nboys can enjoy clean sport. Their\nreturns have not Justified their ex-\npenditures.\nIn order that a new executive\nbe selected the retiring executive\nhas called a general meeting for\nThursday. It Is hoped that all genuinely interested will show their\ninterest by their attendance.\nVery truly yours.\nBEN   CRAWFORD\nSYD ROGERS\nTY CULLEY\nJOHN  HOUSTON\nJACK  HORSWILIi\nFRED MADDEN\nColgate\n; Guarantees Faster'.\n; Smoother Shaves'.;\nWtr$5f,\n\"or Double\nYourMoneyBaek;\nJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHl\nbb m\nBy Popular Request    -\nYour 1950*51 Season   Z.\nHOCKEY    =\nTICKETS     :\nMay Be Purchased on the m\nNew Purchase Plan    -\nCommencing October 2nd \u25a0\n20 Games     -\nONE EACH WITH KAMLOOPS, KELOWNA,        J\nKERRISDALE, VERNON and NANAIMO m\nFOUR WITH  KIMBERLEY m\nFIVE WITH SPOKANE m\nSIX WITH TRAIL . \u25a0'\n\u2022 .5\n$8.00 DEPOSIT \u25a0\nSecures one of the best seati in tha Arena for every _\u25a0_\nhome league game. Two installment! of $6.00 each _\u25a0\nassures you of the same seat for all playoff games. _\u25a0\nOCTOBER 12th Is the last day for 1949-50 Season _\u25a0\nTicket Holders to secure the same seats they held \u25a0_\nfast season. \u25a0*\n\u25a0i 11 ii i \u25a0 \u25a0 i \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 i \u25a0 11 nT\n1950*51 ARENA OPENING\nSKATING SESSIONS\nTUESDAY and THURSDAY\nTiny Tots: 2:30 - 4:00 Children: 4:00 - 6:00\nWEDNESDAY\nGeneral Skating: 2:00 \u25a0 4:00 Adults: 8:15-10:15\nFRIDAY\nAdults: 8:15 \u25a0 10:15\nSATURDAY\nChildren: 10 a.m. - 12 a.m.\nBILL VICKERS NIGHT\nExhibition  Hockey Game\nTRAIL SMOKIES vs.  NELSON   LEAFS\nSATURDAY 8:30 p. m.\nAdults 75^ Children 2S\u00a3\nGET A PREVIEW OF THE LEAFS\nEntire proceeds to Bill Vickers in appreciation of his\nefforts in the past.\nFigure Skating\nWednesday \u2014 4:30-6:00 p.m.\nSaturday \u2014 8.-00-10.-00 a.m.\nSunday \u2014 12:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.\nShinny Hockey\nTuesday -^.8:00-9:00 a.m.\nFriday \u2014,*4.0Q-6:00 p.m.\nSaturday -H? 12:30-1:30 p.m.\nBantam Root \u2014 1:30-3:30 p.m,\nBig \"3\" Hockey\nPractices    i\nTuesday \u2014 9:00-10:00 p.m.\nThursday \u2014 8:00-10:00 p.m.\nSunday \u2014 2:00-4:00 p.m.\n*P\n L\nI\n'L\nA\nB\nN\nE\nR\nSURPRISIN* SMITH IS TH' NICEST\nFELLA IN TH' WORLD.':'' HIS FEET\nBIN POUNDED TO A JELLY EW THEM\noVZ-DOGPATCH CANCIM'GALS\u2014,\nArYVET HE. GOES ON DANCIN'\/fj\nfcp^mj ^VIFA SMILE.r\/>>\u00ab\nAH'D BE DEE-LIGHTEP\nT'DANCE WIF-V-V MRS,\"\nCLODHOPPER.<'y\u2014-p J$\niSSk  HOME FURNITURE CO. LTD.\n\u25a0IVj-fr SEE THE STRAIGHT LINE POWER SPARTON WASHERS\nNELSON\nB.C.\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\n^\n\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'.'.\u25a0''\n6^\n\u201421-      .\/\nLd^\u00b0lto^\nm (&(M^\nwmem\nVAwtrS: \u25a0 \u25a0 MM  .\noW^Jyyj\nCam-, p        \\r-rr C^2\nAnobiwoh\u2014\u25a0\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nConvert Inchon Tide Left This Landing Craft Stranded\nSeated In his hut In the port\ncity of Pusan, a South Korean\nemployee of the 8th Army headquarters Is shown reading a Bible\nas he prays for the birth of a\nnew, free Korea. This Korean Is a\nself-dlscdlpllned Methodist.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nThe 30-foot tides which prevail at Inchon have\nleft landing craft high and dry at low tide on sticky\nmud. But this L.C.M. stuck higher ahd dryer than\nall the rest of the assault craft when she grounded\non the overturned hulk of a sunken Korean chip\nwhich effectively blocks Inchon harbor. Tfi\u00ab receding tide left her In the precarious position seen\nhere.\u2014Central PreBs Canadian.\nMadame Chiang Inspects Her Troops\nSafe After Crash in Labrador Bush\n- M'-v\\- \".'\"\u25a0\u2014~ '\nAn Inspection of troops of the antl-Communlst Nationalist Chinese army Is made by Madame Chiang Kai-shek, wife of Generalissimo Chiang. Madame Chiang shares his exile on the Island of Formosa, now protected against Red Invasion by the U.S. 7th Fleet,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nPhilippine Troops Arrive in Korea\nCapt. James E. Joyner, navigator of the Ill-fated U.S. bomber\nthat crashed In the wilds of Labrador, smiles with relief upon hit\nreturn to Goose Bay, Labrador. All 16 men who were forced to parachute from their bomber were safely rescued by helicopter.\n, \u2014Central Press Canadian\nPirsi Philippine troops to Join the U.N. fighting forces In Korea\nare shown holding flowers presented to them by enthusiastic South\nKoreans, on the arrival of the Philippine troops at the dock In Pusan*\nSouth Korea.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nVERDUN, Que. (CP) \u2014 The Verdun Rotary Club has presented the\nschool for crippled children with a\n$1000 gift. This was the fourth such\ngift, which has been given anually\nsince the club was formed ip 1946.\nLONDON, (CP) - John (Bit\nMoore, retiring after 30 years' se:\nvice in the House of Commons,\npresented with the Imperial Servic\nMedal for \"faithful service\". \"Bil\noperated the Press Gallery .elevate\nON THE AIR\nWEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1950\n7:00\u2014News\n7:03\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madam\n8:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n8:15\u2014Western Tune's\n9:45\u2014World Baseball Series\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:tf\u2014News\n12:23\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Wednesday Serenade\n1:30\u2014Musical Program\n1:45\u2014Our Children\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B. C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n2:45\u2014Ladies' Choice\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Don Messer's Islanders\n3:30\u2014CC-LN Pacific News\n3:40\u2014Itivertimento,\n4:00\u2014Jimmy Shields\n4:15\u2014Music by Goodman\n4:30\u2014Maggie Muggins\n4:45\u2014Something in Harmony\n4:55\u2014C.K.L.N. Reports\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:45\u2014To Be Announced\n6:00\u2014Dinner Date\n6:30\u2014R.C.A.F. Sports Cast\n6:35\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014CBC Wednesday Night\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Men, Women and Books\n10:30\u2014Collectors' Items\n11:00\u2014New Concert Orchestra\n11:30\u2014St Francis Hotel Orch.\n11:55\u2014Ngws Nite-cap. \u25a0(\nCHESHAM,. Buckinghamshire,\nEngland . (CP)\u2014During a football\nmatch between Chesham and Morris\nMotors' teams in the Football Association\"-. Amateur Cup, the\\Morris\ngoal keeper lost his spectacles. The\ngame was held up while spectators\nand players looked for them.\nTHURSDAY, OCT. 5, 1950\n' 7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News       \" '\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madame\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Wife Saver\n10:00\u2014Time Signal and Train Time\n10:01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n10:15\u2014Tel Oliver Show\n10:45\u2014Invitation to the Waltz\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Song Parade\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:15\u2014News\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Report from Parliament H.11\n1:00\u2014News\n1:01\u2014Thursday Serenade\n1:30\u2014Bernie Braden\n1:45\u2014Putting on a Play\n1:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n2:00\u2014B.C. School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Musical Program\n3:00\u2014News\n3:01\u2014Mid-Afternoon Listening\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Western Five\n3:30\u2014CKLN Pacific News\n3:40\u2014Divertimento\n4:00\u2014Musicale Program\n4:15\u2014Ed McCurdy\n4:30\u2014Treasure Island\n4:45\u2014Young Man With a Song\n4:55-CKLN Reports\n5:00\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:15\u2014Superman\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:45\u2014Time Out\n6:00\u2014Your Hit Parade\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup <\u2022\n7:30\u2014Eventide\n8:00\u2014Music with Jack Bristowe\n\u25a0 8:30\u2014Barry Wood Show\n' 8:45\u2014Radio .Cartoons \/ .\n9:00\u2014Winnipeg Drama       .     \u25a0'.;\n9:30\u2014Vancouver Concert Orch.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Escape\n10:30\u2014Pacific Pianoforte        . ,.'\u25a0'.-'\n11:00\u2014George Crows Orch.\n11:30\u2014St. Francis Hotel Orchestra\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Cap\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nhhuh lamina\n__dde_i_i nnnui-j\nL1HUB   laHHHHL.\nan HoranH ma\nHHaBBB   Q__BH\nai_is_u__i_i_i I\nmmm houieiih\nhhi3 ana iml.\nats i_iu__i__t_ __!__\n-_l3Kil_l_ia   HUBH'\nHBIUUH   HEIRIHH\nACROSS     3. Strange       19. Those who\n1. Deer-like       4. River speak many\nanimal (Chin.) languages\n6. Former S. Half an em   21. Goddess of\nnameofNIo   6. Intrude dawn\nS. An order wrongfully  24. Liberates\n11. Dry 7. So. Am.       25. Ransack\n12. Country tuber thoroughly\n(S. Eur.)       8. Edge of       26. Undivided\n14. Employ woven fabric 27. Pastry des-\n15. Low-lying    10. Trouble serts !\u2022\"?\ntract of land 11. Flightless    29. Greek letter   Ttiterdsy'i Anstrer\n17. Norse god bird 32. Italian poet\n18. Famous       13. Independent 33. American 40. Polo\nAmerican         kingdom          Indians              41. Little girl\nwriter and        (Arab.)       34. Dip slightly        43. Hebrew\nlecturer       15. Small               Into water month\n20. Quantity. opening      37. Exclamation       44. Masuriutt\nof paper       16. Noah's boat      of disgust (sym.)\n22. Writing fluid     .   ___________________\n23. Theater sea* 7\/\/AC ' i'   S \"\" <_ ' k~V\/\n24. Building\nelevation\n27. City In\nPoland\n28. Ladder\ncrossbar\n29. Apple seed\n30. Ostrich-like\nbird'\n31. Paid attention\n35. Girl's nick\nname\n36. Wading bird\n38. Macaw\n39. Sarsaparllla\n41. Small cut\n42. Native of\nNew York\n,45. Man's nickname (poss.)\n46. Foundation;\nDOWN\n1. American\nInventor\n2. Bay window\nDAILY CKYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work it:\nA X YD L B A A X B\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In.thls example A Is used\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-1\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints-.];\nEach dav the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nOBNK   ONN,   VPLQNR.N   VBLD   N|\nI  V O POC!   VPLQ   NR,   \\j   KRLNR,   VOTNR-\nI   PRE   YTCFOI \u2014QNRYHCQQNU.\nYesterday's Cryptocjuote: WISDOM HAS TAUGHT US TO BE\nCALM AND MEEK, TO TAKE ONE BLOW, AND TURN '\nOTHER CHEEK.\u2014HOLMES.\nIHitrtbiM by Klnj Featur<| Syn_l\u00abt\u00bb\/ '\nt\n UT7\nJ PFRSOHQ-PERSON WANT ADS\n\\    FOR QUICK RESULTS \/\nkN\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ado\u20145 P.M.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\nISTENSON-To Mr. and Mrs. Reg-\nlaid Stenson, 1514 Stanley Street,\nj Kootenay Lake General Hospital\nfcpt. 8, a son,\nICHERNENKO\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nIhn Chernenko of Blewett at Koo-\nInay Lake General Hospital Sept.\nla son. ^\nIVLAHOVITCH \u2014 To Mr. and\nIrs. William Vlahovitch of South\nlocan at Kootenay Lake General\npspital Sept, 10, a son.\n\u25a0KOEHLE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Rob-\nIt Koehle, 921 Observatory St. at\nOotenay Lake General Hospital\nbptll, a daughter.\nHALL\u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Fred\njail of Remac at Kootenay Lake\neneral Hospital, Sept. 12, a son.\nICONROY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs: Irv-\nle Conroy of Castlegar, at Koote-\n\u00aby Lake General Hospital Sept. 12,\n(daughter.\n[JORDAN\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. John\nIrdan of Taghum at Kootenay\nfcke General Hospital, Sept. 13, a\nBughter.\n(LEADBEATER \u2014 To   the   Very\nlev. and Mrs. T. L, Leadbeater, 920\n;anley Street, at Kootenay Lake\neneral Hospital, Sept. 14, a daugh-\nr.\nHELP WANTED\nTen   Loggers,    Fallers,\nSwampers,  Teamsters,\nBull Rope Men.\n_.gmbert Lumber Ltd.\nKaslo, B. C.\nWANTED\u2014COOK. FOR LOGGING\ncamp; 20 men. Ph. Nakusp 2-L\ncollect, or write Big Bend Lum-\nber Co., Nakusp.\nPERMANENT   JOBS   FOR\"\n15   MINERS  AT   REEVES\nMACDONALD,\t\n% ANTED A TRACKMAN AND A\ntimberman. Emerald Mines, Sal-\n_ mo, B.C.\t\nWANTED \u2014 MINERS AND TIM-\nbermen. Apply Western Exploration Co., Silverton, B.C.\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED WAIT-\nresse-:*New\"Star Cafe.\nAGENTS WANTED\nIAKE EXTRA MONEY EASILY.\nSell Name-on Christmas and\nEveryday card assortments at best\nvalues with highest commissions\nfor you. Unequalled values in\nmore than twenty Christmas\nItems\u201421 card Deluxe Christmas\nbox, Panorama Stand-up cards,\nCanadian scenes pictures, personal cards, notes and napkins,\nChildren's three dimension books,\nTelevision Tom Thumb books,\nnursery rhyme cards, stationery,\ngift wraps, personalized gift ribbon, ding-dopg bells, also Everyday assortments including plastic-\ncards. Write today for catalogue\nand samples NOW. Name-on Sta.\ntionery Company Limited, Dept.\nB2, 63 Yonge Street Arcade,\nToronto.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nlelson Building Contractors\nBuilding and remodelling. Specialize in architecture. No jobs\ntoo large or too small. 1323\nMcQuarrie Ave. Phone 364-X-3.'\nOSITION WANTED BY AN EX-\nperienced comptometer and\nswitchboard operator, and general\noffice  work.  References.  Apply\nbox 1318 Daily News.\t\n[OUSEKEEPER REQUIRES Position with old couple, or motherless-home. Good cook and manager. Apply Box 694 Daily News.\nOB WANTED TRUCK DRIVING.\nWill not mind long distance. Job\nmust be steady. Box 1214 Dally\nNews.\t\nPANTED-HOUSEWORK BY THE\nhour. Phone 657-X.\t\nBUSINESS  OPPORTUNITIES\n'OR SALE \u2014 LUNCH COUNTER\nand magazine stand. Apply Box\n867 Daily News.\t\nfalann lailg Jfetua\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 Insertions.\n$1.56 line per muiiih  (26 consecutive insertions) Box numbers  lie extra.  Covers  any\n'    number of insertions.\n'PUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS. Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst  Insertion.  16c  per  line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n' 10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates:\nSingle Copy  $   .05\nBy Carrier, per week,\nin advance  .25\nBy Carrier, per year 13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month         1.00\nThree months  _._.   2.50\nSix months      4.50\nOne ye^r       8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month     -    1.00?\nThree months     3.00'\nSix months   \u25a0\u25a06.00\nOne year    :,:..   12.00\nWhere extra postage* Is required\nAbaVR ratee nlun an_ta_a.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nLAND REGISTRY ACT\n(Section 161)\nIN THE MATTER OF LOT 15,\nof Lot 787, Kootenay District, Plan\n1329.\nProof having been filed in my\noffice of the loss of Certificate of\nTitle No. 52481-1 to the above mentioned lands in the name of Marie\nBlanche Choquette and bearing\ndate the 4th May, 1945. I HEREBY\nGIVE NOTICE of my intention at\nthe expiration of one calendar\nmonth from the first publication\nhereof to issue Provisional Certificate of Title in lieu of such lost\nCertificate. Any person having any\ninformation with reference to such\nlost Certificate of Title is requested\nto communicate with the undersigned.\nDATED AT NELSON. B.C., this\n25th day of September, 1950.\nL. A. McPHAIL,\nDeputy Registrar.\nDate of first publication September 27th, 1950.\nMACHINERY\nimers\nWe are distributors for:\nCATERPILLAR\nEQUIPMENT\nJOHN DEERE\nFARM MACHINERY\nSKAGIT LOGGING HOISTS\nAND DRAG LINES\n' JOY COMPRESSORS AND\nALL MINE EQUIPMENT.\nYOUNG LOGGING\nEQUIPMENT\nKOHLER LIGHT PLANTS\nConsult Us for Your Needs\nTractor and ,\nEquipment Co.\nPHONE 930 BOX 119\nNELSON, B.C.\nMINE \u2014 MILL \u2014 LOGGING\nINDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES\nWAUKESHA GAS AND DIESEL\nENGINES AND POWER UNITS\nACME AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLY\nLTD.\n611 BAKER ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nS84 ROSSLAND AVE.,\nTRAIL, B.C.\nCONTRACTORS -  SAWMILL -\nLOGGING & MINING\nEQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nGranville Island MA. 1251\nVancouver, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 MASTER DEEP\nwell pump, complete with pressure tank. Pumps 1500 g\/h at\ndepth 50'. Also suitable for\nshallow wells. Unit powered with\n1.4 H.P. G.E. motor. Apply R.\nWadey Box 31, Kinnaird, B.C.\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT, D-4\ncat, equipped for excavating,\nroadbuilding, etc. C. Ross, phone\n588-R or 1376-L, Nelson.\nCATERPILLAR D-4 WITH BLADE\nand Bucyrus-Erie M> cu. yd. shovel\nfor sale. Interior Contracting Co.\nLtd., Penticton. B.C.\n15 K.W. DIESEL LIGHT PLANT.\nNew condition. Bayes Equipment\nCo., Cranbrook, B.C.\n210 PORTABLE AIR COMPRESS-\nor for rent. Phone 1043-Y.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS  AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.  W.  WIDDOWSON   &  CO.   AS-\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson.\nft   S.   ELMES,   ROSSLAND.   B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Represent\nENGINEERS  AND  SURVEYORS\nD.  A CURRIE, B.C.   LAND SUR-\nveyor, Rossland. Phone 348.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST,\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n.NEW'\nAUSTIN!\nEARLY DELIVERY\nMcHARDY   AGENCIES   LTD    IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135\nBULLDOZERS, TRUCKERS, ETC.\nBULLDOZING, TRUCK HAULING,\nsand and gravel. Contract H\nHarrop   Phone 117.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS  LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene, and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding.\nPhone 593 324 Vernon St\nHARDWOOD FLOORS, SANDING\nFLOOR SANDING\nA H. Shneves, 1018 Falls St\nArmstrong Tiles supplied and laid.\nNelson. B.C. - Phone 1567\nTHE BEST\nIN USED CARS\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1948 Pontiac Sedan\n1949__Ford Tudor\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1950 New Bodge Pickup\n1946 Hudson Sedan\n1946 Plymouth Sedan\n194-9 English Ford Panel\n1937 DeSoto Sedan\n1938 Ford Convertible\n1939 Hudson Coupe\n1935 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1940 Chevrolet Sedan\n1939 Chevrolet Sedan\n1934 Chevrolet Coupe\n1940 Ford Coupe\n1941 Ford Sedan\n1941 Ford Coach\n1947 Dodge Pickup\n1934 Plymouth Sedan\n1946 Ford Truck\n1938 Ford Truck\n1935 Ford Sedan\n1935 Chev. Pickup\n1937 Plymouth Sedan\n1934 Oldsmobile Sedan\nSpot Cash for Late\nModel Used Cars\nTERMS AND TRADES\nEMPIRE\n803 Baker St Phone 1135\nImmediate\n1950\n2-DOOR\n1950\nand\nUSED CAR\nand TRUCK\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\n1934 FORD ROADSTER, RADIO,\nheater and good' rubber. A-l condition. Phone 1001-L after 6,\n1936 FORD %-TON. D4.CK AND\nbox, rebuilt engine; good shape.\nPhone 451-Y.\nFOR SALE, NEW HUDSON AUTO-\ncycle, A-l condition. Ph. 434-R4.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n'.:\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0: THE\nBEST BUY\nA large beautifully constructed house in Fairview.\nFour good bedrooms, living\nroom, dining room, modernistic kitchen and bathroom.\nTwo bedrooms on ground\nfloor .and 2 upstairs. Full\nbasement, hot water heating system. Situated, on 2\nlevel developed lots.\nFOR SACRIFICE SALE\n$9500\nSOME TERMS\nSEVERAL   OTHER   GOOD\nBUYS IN 2 BEDROOM\nHOUSES\nDUPLEX HOUSE\nWITH 3 EXTRA LOTS\nGood building site. Ready\nfor immediate occupancy.\nCapable of income up to\n$85.00 to $90.00 per\nmonth.\nFOR QUICK SALE\n$5000 Cash\nSOME FINANCING HELP\nMAY BE HAD.      .\nPHONE HERB PEACOCK\nAT 68\nRobertson, Hilliard,\nCartel I Realty Co. Ltd,\nReal Estate \u2014 Phone 68\nInsurance \u2014 Phone 1112\nFOR SALE\u2014NICE HOME. CEN\ntral location, entrance hall, large\npanelled living room, fireplace,\nkitchen with inlaid linoleum, pantry, 2 bedrooms and bath off central hall, space for 2 rooms upstairs, furnace, gas water heater\nand gas combination range incl.,\ngarage under house. Immediate\noccupancy. Phone 62.\nFOR SALE\u2014BEAUTIFUL CABIN,\nSyringa Creek, B.C., Arrow Lake.\nPrivate, completely , furnished,\nsilver, linen, Beauty Rest beds,\nSummer and Winter kitcjiens,\nbath and flush. Rugs, furniture,\ntools, gun's dock, etc. Inquire\nSam Stewart, 1506 Pine Ave.\nTrail, B.C.\n43 ACRES, WILLOW POINT; 10\nacres cleared. Large house, 3 pee.\nbedroom; hot and cold water.\nSmall house, good barn, 3 chicken\nhouses. Abundance of water, piped, Beautiful view. Price reason\nable. Box 1460 Daily News.\n1949 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Ford Custom Sedan\n1948 Dodge Sedan\n1941  Pontiac Sedan\n1949 Ford \/i-fon\n1947 Ford 1-Ton\n1947 Mercury 3-Ton\n1935 Chevrolet Vi-Ton\n1950 Vincent H.R.D. Motor\nBike'. Only 4740 miles,\nfor $900,\nBeacon Motors\nGenuine Ford Parts Depot\nPhone 678-9 Nolson,  B.C\n\"BETTER  BUYS AT  BEACON\"\n i_ij LL^__\u2014^\nWRECKED   1939  INTERN^TION-\nal truck located at Wigfnton Motors,   Nelson. ^Forward   bids  to\n\/General Exchange Insurance Corporation. Calgary.\n1942 FORD 2-DOOR COACH AND\n2-wheel trailer with steel box.\nApply 713 Baker Street.\n(Continued in Next Column;\nFOR. SALE <- NEW 4 ROOMED\nhouse and bathroom, full basement, electricity, variety young\nfruit trees, small chicken house\non Vs acre. Good bus service to\nNelson. Write to G. Sicotte, R.R.\nNo. 1, Nelson, B.C.    '\nFOR SALE - 20 ACRE FARM. 7\ncleared. 4 room house, barn,\nchicken house. Piped water. 500\npullets included In price. Also 1\nhorse, 1 milking cow and 6 mos\nold heifer. Fruit trees, garden.\nPrice $6000. Box 5866 Daily News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 6 ROOM MODERN\nbungalow on Granite Road 1 mile\nfrom City. 1 acre land. Orchard\nFor details apply C. Stewart, 504\nLake St. No agents.\n6 ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE \u2014\nBathroom, also some furniture,\nsealers, garden tools, etc. Apply\n608 Innes Street.\nNINE ROOMED DOUBLE HOUSE\non four lots for sale. Garage and\nfruit trees. Apply 301 Carbonate\nStreet.   .\nFOR SALE \u2014 NEW, MODERN\nhouse. Terms. Ready to move into.\nClose to school. S, P. Pond, Nel-\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\n.\u00ab\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb*\u00ab\u00bb\u2014-_\u00bb.j*-\u00bb_\u00bb_\u00bb_\u00bb\u2014^i\u00bb.--\nBULBS\nHYACINTHS .\nwhite - pink \u2022 blue\nBedding size for outdoor\nplanting   r. 20c each\nTop size for inside\nculture   ...35c each\nTop size especially prepared\nfor early flowering 40c each\nPAPERWHITE NARCISSI\nFor inside culture ln water\nor soil    2 for 25c \u2014 $1.50 doz.\nDAFFODILS\nKing Alfred\u2014large golden yellow\nVon Sion\u2014the best double\ndaffodil\nLa Fiancee\u2014cluster type narcissi\n$1.50 doz.\nEmperor, Olympia\u2014both good\nyellow\nEmpress, Victoria\u2014Bi-color -\nyellow and white\nMme, de Graaf\u2014white\n90c doz,\n.NARCISSI\nFOR OUTSIDE PLANTING\nDuchess of Westminster, Bernardino, Early Surprise, Conspicuous,\nBonfire, Red Beacon\n75c doz.\nTULIPS    '\nKeizerkroon \u2014 single early, crimson with yellow margin\nDante\u2014double early red\nMarschal Neil\u2014double early, canary yellow\nPeach   blossom \u2014 double   early,\npink\n$1.25 doz.\nCrown Imperial Triumph Tulip-\nred with yellow margin\nTelescopium Triumph Tulip\u2014reddish violet-\nVan der Erden Mendel Tulip-\ncrimson\n$1.00 doz.\nThe above tulips are suitable for\n\" either outside or for indoor culture\nDarwin tulips\u2014B.C. grown\u2014mixed colors  50c doz.\nDarwin tulips\u2014B.C. grown\u2014separate colors     75c doz.\nDarwin tulips \u2014 Holland grown\u2014\nseparate colors .     $1,00 doz.\nCottage tulips\u2014B.C. grown\u2014mixed colors  50c doz.\nCottage tulips\u2014Holland grown\u2014\nyellow $1.00 doz,\nDUTCH IBIS\u2014Wedgewood\nBlue ..   , $1.00 doz.\nSPANISH IRIS\u2014Mixed\ncolors 75c doz.\nSNOWDROPS  75c doz\nCROCUS\u2014Blue, yellow ... 50c doz!\nCROCUS\u2014Mixed colors ... 40c doz.\nREGALE LILLIES ........... 35c each\nWhen remitting please add 3%_tax\nto above prices,\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n509 Hoover Street\nNelson, B. C.\nServed Nelson and District\nSince 1899\nFOR SALE \u2014GRAVENSTEINS\nand Wagners. Pick them yourself, $1.00 per box. About 1 mile\nfrom Ferry, A. H. Hopkins, R.R. 1,\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT \u2014SMALL FARM\nwith 3 room cottage about 5 acres\ncleared, wonderful' producing\nsoil, plenty fruit of all kinds,\nchicken houses, tarn, would give\npart time work. Box 688 Daily\nNews.\nCOTTAGE FOR RENT\u20143 ROOMS\nand bathroom partly furnished.\nVery reasonable rate for Winter\nmonths. Three minutes walk from\nNelson ferry. Phone 738-L2 after-\nnons and evenings.\nFOR RENT\u2014FULLY FURNISHED\nfully modern cottage including\nwater, light, gas stove. Steam\nheated. Windsor Cabins, 821 Nelson Ave.\nWANTED \u2014 HOUSEKEEPING\nroom or small furnished suite by\na C.P.R. single man, Box 1313\nDaily News.\nFURNISHED LARGE BED - SIT-\ntlng room and kitchenette; suitable for quiet office or working\ngirl. Phone 335-X.\nFOR RENT AT SOUTH SLOCAN\u2014\n4 room apartment; modern. Apply\nMrs. J. D. Yeatman.\nTWO ROOM PARTLY FURNISH-\ned suite for rent. Apply 723 Silica\nSt\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 4 OR 5\nroomed house; in or near Nelson;\nreliable tenants. Phone  667-L4.\nFULLY FURNISHED MODERN\ncabins at monthly Winter rates.\nFerry Auto Court. Phone 387-R-l,\nFOR SALE\u20147-ROOM HOUSE SIT-\nuated on 2 lots, 100x120 ft. Fruit\ntrees and large garden. Apply\n1024 Carbonate Street.\n11-ROOM HOUSE, $150 REVENUE\na month, modern. 1 block from\nBaker St. Phone 1140-Y.\nNEW 5-ROOMED HOUSE, BATH-\nroom. 1 acre, garden, fruits,\nchicken house, shed. Ph. 1140-Y.\nFOR   SALE,\u2014 2   CULTIVATED\nbuilding lots. Phone 745-Y-2.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE \u2014 8 MALE GOLDEN\nCocker pups. Mrs. J. Nixon, South\nSlocan, B.C.\nBLACK COCKER SPANIEL, 6\nmonths* male, $15.00; or will trade\nfor a Scotty. Armitage, Salmo,\n2 ROOM SUITE FOR RENT, ALSO\ngarage. Apply 814 Victoria St,\nSMALL HOUSE, FOR RENT AT\nWillow Point. Phone 461-R-l.\nBEDROOM   FOR   RENT.   CLOSE\nIn. Use of hot plate. Ph-. 653-R.   '\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. CALL AT\n.Vernon St., or phone'371-Y.\nWHITE ENAMEL COAL RANGE,\nlarge oil heater, 23 sq. yds. Inlaid\nLinoleum all good condition. Also carpet sweeper, boy's skates\nsize 2. Apply 324 Nelson Ave. or\nPhone 257-Y morning or evening.\nFOR SALE \u2014 ONE SET NEW\nencyclopedia books, never used,\ncheap for cash, showcase, store\nfixtures, one table, 77 Freight\nDepot, 321 Baker St,\n% BED WITH SPRING AND MAT-\ntress and sniall mantle battery\nradio. Apply 408 Houston Street,\nevenings. \u25a0\nFOR SALE\u2014ALMOST NEW CON-\nve'rtible stroller baby carriage\nand 10 coil electric steam radiator.\nPhone 1322-L.\nFOR SALE\u2014$75 MAYFAIR COAL\nand wood range. Cream and black\nenamel. In excellent condition.\nPhone'1395-R.\nFOR.SALE-TWO BURNER\nelectric stove with oven, in- good\ncondition. Highest offer takes it.\nBox 37, New Denfrer, B.C.\nCOAL AND WOOD KITCHEN\nrange. Good .condition. Extra hot\nwater jacket; $50.00, Apply -1.12\nMcQuarrie Ave., or phone 1033-X.\n2 NEW CUSTOM-BUILT 30-06 AND\n300 Sav. big game rifles. Never\nused. See at Fisher's Paradise or\ncall Balfour 2-X.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES, SPE-\nclal low prices. Active Trading\nCo.. 935 E. Cordova St.,\nVancouver.\nSTEAM   HEATER,    BATTERY\n. mantle radio; electric steam iron.\nPh. 584-X3 or call at 1624 Falls St.\nSNiGLE BED, SPRING AND MAT-\ntress, $20.00. Child's dresser, $8.00.\nPhone 279-X.\nGIRLS'   WHITE   TUBE   SKATES,\nsize 12, for sale; also Black Heat\n' electric heater. Phone 517-X.\nFOR SALE \u2014 FUEL SHED. NEW.\nDuroid. roof. Worth $200.00. Will\nsacrifice. Phone 1379-R.\nGOOD COOK STOVE AND SMALL\n. heater.  The   two  $35.00.  Phone\n804-R3.\nFOR SALE\u20141 PH. BOYS' HOCKEY\nskates, size 7; good condition.\nPhone 525-H2.\nBLUE DOLL BUGGY (6, YR. SIZE)\nbrown fur coat, size 16; biege wolf\ncollar. All reasonable. Ph. 1359-X\nPIANO, HENRY HERBERT, Excellent condition. Phone 632-L1,\nMrs. Wright.\n2 ROOM CABIN FOR RENT, UN-\nfurnished. Apply 1004 Third St.\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY, 2 OR 3\nbedroom house. Phone 482-R.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT \u2014 CLOSE\nin. Phone 1011-Y.\nAICRAFT FOR SALE\nAIRCRAFT FOR SALE - 1942\nTigir Moth C. of A. till, J<ily 1851.\nTop overhaul just completed,\nspare engine and , parts,. Price\nsnap at $850.00.' Apply: Helen\nHarrison, Cranbrook Flying Services, Cranbrook, B.C,\nGUNS FOR RENT-JACK BOYCE\nMen's Shop.\nThe  MICRONIC HEARING  AID\nSales \u2014 P.O   Box 39\u2014Service\nG.E.    OIL   BURNING   ATTACH-\nment. Apply V. Fink.\t\nFOR SALE - LARGE NEW SPEN-\ncer heater. Apply 907 Fifth St.\nBEATTY   WASHER   FOR   SALE,\ngood condition. $35. Phone 766-R,\nFOR SALE \u2014SAWING MACHINE.\nPhone 1276-X.\nFOR SALE \u2014 3-PIECE CHESTER-\nfield suite. Ph. 916-Y after 5:30\nMAROON   \"SUNSHINE\"   PRAM\nfor sale. Phone 919-Y.\n2 PAIRS SKATES, SIZES 6 AND 9.\nPhone 508-R3.\nNELSON DfUVf NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1950 \u2014 9\nCalgary Livestock   '\u25a0'-\nCALGARY, Oct. 3 (CP)-Trading\nat the Calgary Stockyards was hone\ntoo brisk this morning, although\nprices were generally steady at\nMonday's sharp decline of from $2\nto $4. .        .      \u25a0\nGood stock calves and heavy feeder steers were showing most of the\ndecline,   '.\nThere were 37 cattle and 30 calves\nplus 1280 head over from Monday's\nauction offered at this morning's\nsale.  ' .   '.. :   .\nHogs sold Monday at $29 A grade\nat yards, and sows at $19.50 live-\nweight at yards. Good lambs were\nselling at $1 lower at $24, and good\newes were 50 cents lower at $12\nto $13.\nFair to medium butcher, steers,\n$22 to $24.\nMedium to choice butcher heifers,\n$21 to $23.50.\nGood cows, $17.50 to $18; common\nto medium, $16.25 to $17.25. Canners\nand cutters, $13 to $16,\nGood bulls, $21 to $22; common to\nmedium, $18 to $20.50:'\nGood to chpice veal calves, $26.50\nto $27.50; common to medium, $20\nto $25.\nGood stocker and feeder steers,\n$24.50 to $26; common to medium,\n$18 to $24.\nWinnipeg-Grain\nWINNIPEG,  Oct. 3   (CP)-Win-\nnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, 84%.\nBarley\u2014No. 1 feed, 1.28%.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Copipany\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C.\nCAR OF FENCE POSTS 6% FT. x\n18 Inches. State price. Write 3017\n2nd Avenue, Trail, B.C.\nWANTED\u2014SMALL, LIGHT ROW-\nboijt. Phone 1276-X,\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J, P. MOR\nBan. Nelson. B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD FOR Business girl; may share room. Separate- bed; good location. Phone\n620-Y.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor young business man in modern home on Oct. 14th. Box 5684\nDaily. News.\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor young business man.,Close in.\nPhone 1382-X.\nMarket Trends\n,NEW YORK, Oct. 3 (AP)-Pr'ofit-\ntaking cut into gains today in an\nactive session.\nPrices started off at the 19-year\naverafce high point reached yesterday at the close, but selling was\napparently almost from the beginning.\n\u25a0The radio television group, which\nhas been a favorite on the buying\nside in the last few weeks, held to\nthe downside most of the day.\nCanadian issues dropped, with\nMclntyre losing 31, Distillers Seagram %, and Dome Mines' Vs. Hiram Walker added %, ahd International Nickel %. Canadian Pacific\nwas unchanged,\nTORONTO (CP) \u2014 Industrial\nstocks climbed strongly today, continuing yesterday's late gains.\nKey Issues jumped ahead briskly\nbut the advance slowed to a halt in\nlater dealings. Generally, gains\nabout doubled losses, and ranged up\nto niore than a point.\nBase metals brightened mildly despite considerable downward pressure,\nWestern oils started strongly, but\ndipped under mild selling. Gains\nandlosses were about balanced, and\nhi a narrow range. .\nGold stocks weakened slightly\nfrom yesterday's advances. Senior\nproducers held firm, while a selected list of juniors dropped pennies.\nMONTREAL (CP)-Selllng pre*,\nsure countered .a steady demand\nnear the final hour today to halt\nthe advancing security list,\nA moderate list of utilities and\nsenior oils added fractions. Banks\nwere firm.\nA solid list of plus signs dominated the Industrial section. Mlneg\nand Western oils showed a mixed\ntrend.\nCalgary and Edmonton brightened\nthe oils with a Tlse of 30 cents at\n$8.40, and Dome Oil was up 25\ncents at $16.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014South African gold shares prices tumbled today.\nMany Issues came under pressure\nfrom Johannesburg and from local\nsources, and losses were severe in\nsome instances. The falls were accompanied by nervousness concerning the future of sterling with the\nmarket in the grip of revaluation\nfears. Final levels, however .were\noccasionally above the lowest.\nGoethe spent 50 years, on and off,\nwriting his \"faust.\"\nCyCVt\/AfM&fc\nBLUE   SUNSHINE   BUGGY   FOR\nsale. Phone 426-Y.:\nLOANS\nFAST\nAUTO LOANS\nQuick Service. Owner's Signature only requirement. Each\nloan life Insured. Several repayment plans for your convenience.\nNIAGARA\nSuite 1 560 Baker St.. Nelso-\nFINANCE COMPANY  LIMITED\nPhone 1095\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN~\nsurance Co.. D L. Kerr, Agent\nCRESS CORN SALVE FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist sells Cress..\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.P,R\nDepot. Clean rooms a\"nd modern\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single. $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles. Vancouver, B.C.\n10 CENTS I BIRTH CONTROL IN-\nformation and catalogue of hygienic supplies. Write Western\nDistributors, 61-L Ray Building.\nVancouver.\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mimeo and bond\npaper andean fill any order Immediately. Daily News Printing\nDept.. Nelson, British Columbia.\nBOATS and ENGINES\nSALE\nBargains in outboards and\nair cooled motors.\nUSED\n3.3 H.P. Evinrude   $ 75.00\n5.4 H.P. Evinrude    150.00\n2.2 H.P. Evinrude      60.00\nNEW\n5 H.P. Gladden air-cooled motor\n$150.00\n' 2% H.P. Gladden air-cooled motor\n$95.00\nThese motors are ideal for Woodcutting,  pumping, spraying  and\nboats. Tney will not, last at these\nprices. Order now.     ,J-,\nKASLO  MARINE  SERVICE\n'        Box 392\t\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nTEAM   OF   LOGGING   HORSES\nfor sale complete with harness.\nAbout   3,000   lbs.   Apply   White\nBear Lumber Co,, Ty'e, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 SMALL HORSE\nwith harness outfit. Apply Mrs.\n1 Lang, Hall Siding,\t\nYOUNG JERSEY MILK COW FOR\nsale, first calf. Freshened Sept. 7.\nF, F.-Chernenkoff, Taghum, B.C.\n75   HENS,   SOME   LAYING,   $1.50\neach. C. Healey, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON  BUSINESS  COLLEGE\nDay and Night Classes\np.rA  KlfilTZER IS A GUV\n[WITH AN INTERF_WQR1XY_\nCOMPLEX..\nWe Don't\nMean to\nButt in ...\nbut if you're looking\nfor everything fine\nin the gas qnd oil\nline, be sure to\ncome to us.\n, \u00ab*\u00ab,,\u00bb\" -mt\u00ab_~Wf mwets '\u00bb*\nmm\nLTD.\nPHONE43  NELSON,B.C.\nFORD TRACTORS   DEARBORN IMPLEMENTS\nSpecial\nRuled Forms\nWe ore equipped to handle\nany. special   ruled  form,  no\nmatter   how   intricate.   Our ,\nBindery Department Is one of.\nthe   best   equipped   In   the\nl.rvt e r i o r of B. C, .and is j.\nsupervised by an experienced\nworkman.\nIf you hove any of these\nproblems, why not discuss it\nwith Printers who have made\na study of this work for years.\nPHONE CALL TO\n144\nWILL BRING OUR REPRESENTATIVE\n'    Or Write\nNELSON   DAILY   NEWS\nCommercial Printing Department\n:\n\"If It's Printing You Need \u2014 Consult Us\"\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, WEDNESDAY, OCT. 4, 1950\nOur Money Says ...\nPHILADELPHIA\nYOUR BEST BET\nis\n* Gillette Blades\n* Gillette Razors\n* Gillette Shaving Creams\nMANNr\u20ac\nflfi^^i^i w% *_\u00bb\nSardines Return lo Portuguese\nCoast After Years oi Absence\nBy LAI8 TIEVE8\nLISBON, Oct. 3 (Reuters)\u2014Sardines, after an absence of 214 years\n\u2022re back again off the Portuguese\ncoast in such numbers that the\nmarket is glutted.\nThe canning industry and domestic consumers are unable to keep\npace with supplies; the surplus is\nbeing sold for manure.\nSome days, so many ships arrive\nin port laden with sardines that\nfishermen are unable to sell them,\neven for fertilizer. The people do\nnot want to take them away even\nfree of charge.\nSardines are sold in the local\n'lota\" (fish market) by the fishermen as soon as they'have landed\ntheir catch. Priority of purchase\ngoes to the canning factories. When\nthese have taken all they want, the\nremainder of the catch is loafled on\ntrucks to be taken to towns and villages throughout the country.\nSome 20,000 men are engaged, in\nfishing sardines; another 20,000\nworkers, mainly women, are employed canning them and the whole\n- ponulation eats them.\n.   Most of the 182 canning factories\nhad been Idle since last January\nuntil the sardines returned in the\nlatter-part of August. Now, all the\nfactories are working to capacity,\nmany of them for 24 hours a day.\nBusiness is good. Most' factories\nare selling their output to American importers who pay higher than\nnormal prices to ensure priority of\ndelivery.\nThe sardines which the Portuguese are now eating are the sort\nthey like best\u2014the small ones. They\nconsider that the small one are the\nmost tasty. They have a proverb\nwhich says: \"Among women and\nsardines, the smallest ones are most\nsought after.\"\nThere are differenfces of opinion\nas to the accuracy of this proverb\nregarding women\u2014but opinion here\nis unanimous Insofar as sardines\nare concerned. ' \"\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE   SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St Phone 361\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n&IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n6(0 Baker 8b Phone 235\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE 25\nOIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIMIIIIIIIIII\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall St Phone 146\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nF.T. HUNTER\nPlumbing and Heating\nPhone 1389-Y\n516 Hall St.       Nelson, B. C.\nMAKE   YOUR   CtOTHES   LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST   KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nWANTED\nGARAGE\nPREMISES\nSUITABLE  FOR\nAUTOMOBILE\nSALES AND SERVICE\nCRANBROOK\nKIMBERLEY  DISTRICT\nRENTAL\nRENTAL PURCHASE\nArrangement Preferred\nPlease Reply Giving:\nGeneral Discription of\nPremises and Facilities\nLocation\nTerms\nWhen Available for\nOccupancy v\nReply to Box C.A.\nNelson Daily News\nMyron Kuyzch\nAppeals to\nSupreme Court\nOTTAWA, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014 The\nSupreme Court of Canada today\nconsidered an appeal by Myron\nKuyzch of Vancouver from a decision given by the British Columbia\nCourt of Appeal Involving legal action he took against a coastal marine union.\nCounsel for the officers of the\nunion submitted that the Supreme\nCourt of Canada lacked jurisdiction to rule, in the case, because the\nB. C. Appeal Court decision was\nnot final. This was taken und.er\nconsideration by the Justices, and\nthey will render a decision onlhat\npoint tomorrow. Should they uphold-the counsel's contention, the\ncase will end.\nKuyzch was expelled from the\nMarine Workers and {Joilermakers\nIndustrial Union, Local No. 1, and\nbrought an -action in- the Supreme\n\u25a0Court of British Columbia In which\nhe won damages for $5000. The\nCourt also issued an injunction by\nwhich Kuyzch was to be declared a\nmember of the union in good standing.\nKuyzch later charged' that the\nunion had refused him a card and\nhe had been debarred from its\nmeetings. He launched a new action which resulted ln the sten-\ntencing to jail of two union officers,\nW. L. White, the President, and W.\nA. Stewart, the Secretary-Treasurer, for contempt,\nThe officers appealed their sentence to the Appeal Court of British Columbia, which quashed the\nconvictions, ruling that refusal to\nissue Kuyzch a union card could\nnot be construed as contempt.\nKuyzch now is appealing to the\nSupreme Court of Canada against\nthe B. C. Appeal Court's decision.\nPublicity Chief,\nCNR, Retires\nMONTREAL, Oct. 3 (CP) \u2014 Retirement of Walter S. Thompson as\nDirector of Public Relations, Canadian National Railways, and appointment of G. Herbert, Lash to\nthat post, was announced today by\nDonald Gordon, C.N.R. President.\nMr. Thompson, for 28 years Director of Public Relations for the\nNational system and its subsidiary\ncompanies, joined the Grand Trunk\nas head of that railway's Press Department in 1914. Born at New-\ncastle-on-Tyne, Oct. 22,1885, the son\nof a Scottish newspaper editor, he\nretires this month under the pension rules of the Company.\nHe worked in Fleet Street, London, with the St, James Gazette,\nThe Daaily Express, The Evening\nStandard, and The Observer, and\nhis newspaper career took him to\nAustialasia before he came to Canada in 1911.\nNew Anglo-German\nTrade Agreement\nBERLIN, Oct. 3 (Reuters) \u2014 Harold! Wilson; president of the'Board\nfit Trade,-, yesterday announced a\nnew Anglo-German trade agreement\nwhich is expected almost to double\ntrade between Britain and her colonies and West Germany. Goods exchanges are expected to reach about\n$500,000,000.\n15 Candidates\nNamed in Federal\nByeleclions\nOTTAWA, Oct. 3 (CP)-Fifteen\ncandidates\u2014four of them in the\nQuebec constituency of .Rimouski\nwhere an acclamation had been expected \u2014 were nominated lo\ncontest the four, federal byelections\nscheduled for Oct. 16.\nIn. Rimouski, three last-minute\ncandidates entered before official\nnominations closed.\nThe by-elections will be a battle\namong Liberals, unofficial Liberals\nand Independents in three Quebec\nseats \u2014 Rimouski, Joliette-L'As-\nsomption-Montcalm and Montreal\nSt. Mary's.\nThe Progressive Conservative and\nCCF. parties are running candidates only in the Ontario constituency of Welland, made vacant through\nthe death of Labor Minister Mitchell.\nNominated in Welland were Dr.\nW, H. McMilland, Liberal; Sam\nHughes, Progressive Conservative:\nMelvin Swart, C.C.F. and Mel Doig,\nLabor-Progressive.\nIn Rimouski. a seat made vacant\nby the death of Gleason Belzile, parliamentary assistant to Finance Minister Abbott, Maurice Tessier, a Rimouski lawyer, was nominated several weeks ago as the official Liberal candidate.\nThe last-minute' candidates were\nJoseph Hervey Rousseau, Trois Pis;\ntoles, and Rene Cazes of Rimouski,\nwho listed themselves as Liberals,\nand Lucien Robitaille of Rimouski,\nwho said he would run as an Independent.   .''\u25a0';.\u2022\nNominated   In     Montreal    St.\nMarys' were O'Nell-Leonlde Gin-\ngras, Insurance agent, Republican\nparty; Emll Naud, publicist, Independent Liberal; Ignace Deslaur-\nlers, lawyer, official Liberal; Hector Dupufe, civil employee, Independent Liberal, and Pierre Areh-\namboult, tailor, Independent.\nThe seat was made vacant when\nthe  sitting , Liberal member, Hon.\nGaspard Fauteux, former commons'\nspeaker, was appointed lieutenant-\ngovernor of Quebec.\nMaurice Breton of Jollette, official Liberal candidate, and Wilfrid\nGuertin of Repentigny, Independent, are contesting Jolitte, vacated\nwhen Georges Emile Lapalme resigned to take over Liberal party\nleadership in Quebec.\nAn additional commons vacancy\nwas created Saturday through the\ndeath of-J. L. Douglas, Liberal member fqr the Prince Edward Island\nconstituency of Queens.\nFour Mining Claims\nRecorded, Five\nCertificates Issued\nVive certificates of work were\nissued and four mineral claims were\nrecorded in September.\nCertificates were isseud to:\nOle Johnson Bakka of Salmo for\nassessment work on the Spokane. . J\nGeorge Maitland of Remac for\nwork on the Don V and Iron Side.   |\nJ. Fisher of Nelson for work on'\nthe Mammoth No. 5 and Mammoth I\nNo. 6.\nMineral claims recorded included\nthe Victory Fractional, on Bennett\nCreek about one quarter mile above1\nSheep. Creek and the Lucky Jim]\nFractional one-third mile above'\nSheep Creek, both by J. Sapples. '\"|\n- Yellow Deer and Boulder Creek'\nZinc were located by William Bon-'\nderoff of Salmo on a creek flowing\ninto Boulder Creek.\nW. E. Marshall of Trail was issued\na certificate of work on a placer-\nclaim. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.\nKootenay Aviation Enthusiasts\nAt Council Meet\nTORONTO STOCKS\nMINES (Closing Pricea)\nAcadia Uranium\nAkaitcho ...:\t\nAnglo Huronian .\nArjon\t\nArmistice .'. ....\nAumaque\t\nAunor   \t\nBagamac    ...\nBase Metals\nDr. Ray Shaw of Nelson and Gordon DeVrlse of Beaverdell,\nB.C., are shown just after they landed at the Halley airport to\nattend tho meetings of the International Northwest Council of\nAviation at Sun Valley, Idaho, last weak.\nCanada Must Share World Burden\nAs Natural Resources Increase\nBy FORBES  RHUDE\nCanadian Press Business Editor\nCanada is in a prosperous condition. This is being proven by the\nfirm showing o'f her dollar in its\nnewly-uncontrolled  position.\nShe is in a strong position because she has raw materials which\nthe world needs and because, by\nand large, she has had sound management.\nAlso, she has a growing population which is buying increasing\namounts of the things produced j\nwithin the country.\nAdded to these is Industrlaliza-1\nHon\u2014speeded up by two ( world\nwars and the continuing discovery\nor development of resources, such\nas the oil discoveries In Alberta in\nthe last three years,\nSERIOUS SIDE\nThis bright picture has a more\nserious side. Canada is likely to\nfind, for Instance, tha't It will bring\nadded responsibilities in the coming months and years. Thus far in\nthe present century she has lived\nup to her responsibilities as much\nor more than any country, and she\nwill be expected to continue to do\nso.\nThere has been some talk recently that the Canadian dollar may\nbecome more valuable than the\nUnited States dollar. This would be\npartly because of American need\nfor things we have, and partly because in recent years our Government has been able to take in more\nmoney than it has been spending,\nwhile the United' States, because of\nheavy expenditures both at home\nand abroad, hasn't been able to do\nthat.\nThe Canadian dollar1 for brief\nperiods in the past has been worth\nmore than the American, and it\nmight happen again, but there are\nstrong factors operating against\nthis.\nFor the moment, let us envision\nthat the Canadian dollar does go to\nthe higher position. What, then,\nwould be the reaction of the United\nStates? Almost certainly it would\nbe an expectation that we take\nover some of the world burden\nthat she has been carrying the last\nfew years.\nCanada, in fact, in the Immediate\npost-war years, did take over perhaps more than her share of world\nresponsibilities, until she was in\ndanger of going broke doing it. She\nhad to slow up, and the United\nStates understood that; for, difficult\nthough American public opinion\nmay sometimes be, in the main she\nhas been an understandign neighbor.\nBut just1 ln case we ever entertain such an illusion, we wouldn't\nhave an understanding neighbor if\nwe waxed fat while she went relatively lean.\nActually, there can be little prospect of such an extreme picture,\nbut it points up that we are likely\nto be expected to increase our share\nof the world burden as our abilities\nincrease.\nLondon Press Hails\nCanadian Expansion\nLONDON, Oct, 3 <CP.-.Canada's\ndecision to free the dollar gave\nBritish newspapers a peg today for\nsome kind words about.the Dominion's great potential strength.\nIn one of three articles, The Financial Times\u2014under the,heading,\n\"Canada's I n d u s t r I a'l Strength\"\n\u2014spoke of- the potential resources,\neconomic strength and era of \"confident expansion\" facing the Dominion.\nThe Dally Graphic, In a four-column illustrated article, talked of\nthe Canadian North as \"possibly the\nrichest storehouse of natural wealth\nin all the world\" and pleaded with\nBritain to buy more from Canada.\nIt echoed Sir Wilfrid Laurier's\nprediction that the 20th century belongs to Canada.   .\nMao Tze-Tungrs Threats Out of\nKeeping With Verbal Statement\nBy DEWITT MacKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nSouth Korean forces have continued to push above the 38th parallel despite Communist China's thinly-veiled threat of intervention to\nsave her Red comrades.\nAmerican planes also have been\nblasting at North Korean troop concentrations and other strategic targets above this .\"deadline.\"\nThus it would seem that the\nUnited Nations forces aren't particularly impressed with the seriousness of Communist Premier Chou\nEnlai's fiery blast during the weekend.\nNext to Communist leaders Mao\nTze-tung, Chou Is the most powerful figure in Red China. An important announcement by him can't\nbe thrust aside lightly.\nHowever, in the present Instance\nI believe we are justified in saying\nthat Chou was speaking with the\ntongue of Moscow. In short, he\nwis dispensing Russian propaganda\nAll the \"Comforts\" of Home\nwhich also suits China's purpose.\nThis merely confirms what long\nhas been apparent\u2014that Mao, Chou\nand the other Chinese Communist\nleaders have decided to follow\nRussia's lead. Thus it isn't a question of whether it would be- to\nChina's advantage to intervene in\ni Korea, but whether it would suit\nMoscow's general program.\nORIGINAL CLAIM\nChou's present position Is especially interesting in view of his\noriginal claim that Chinese Com-\n' munism had nothing to do with\n- the Moscow brand, but was purely\nagrarian. I had a long talk with him\nI in Chungking during the last war,\nI and he labored diligently to convince me of this point.\nI I wasn't convinced, but if anyone\nI could have done the trick it would\nbe Chou. He Is a persuasive man\nof much culture and with a striking and likeable personality.\n1 As regards General Chou's weekend threat, it is of course true that\nboth China and Russia are greatly\ninterested in Korea. The Peninsula\nbase touches both Manchuria and\nSoviet Siberia\u2014close to the great\nRussian naval port of Vladivostok,\nHowever, despite Chou's grim\nlanguage, it isn't likely that the\nChinese will Intervene at this late\ndate.\nIf they had intended to take\nhand, they would have done so long\nbefore this.\nA guy who believes In making the best of things li'Cpl. Donald G.\nCarrlco, Toronto, Ohio. Despite being holed up. on'-'tho Waegwan\nfront In South Korea, Carrlco takes advantage ofajull In the fighting to catch up on his reading. If he gets hungry, his cooking utensils\nare hanging on the tree (right) behind him, and If enemy shows, he\nhas a .50 calibre machine-gun to take care of that, too.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian. -   , , . \u2022 .\nFlames Destroy\nQuebec Village\nPAftOU, Que, Oct. 5 (CP)\u2014Fire\nfanned by a wind of gale proportions today destroyed the Eastern\nside of this small village in Mata-\npedia County about 35 miles East\nof Rimouski.\nE. H. Lancette. Canadian National Railways agent here, said the\nfire, now under control, destroyed\n16 residences, two barns, several\nwoodsheds and other small buildings.\nHe reported not more than -5.0\npersons were left homeless as a\nresult of the fire, which burned itself out before- firefighters could do\nmuch to stop it.\nThe wind was blowing from the\nNorthwest, and flames swept down\nthe Eastern side of the village in a\nmatter of minutes.\nThe village is built like a square,\nand there was no danger at any\ntime to other sections.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n 50\n      1.30\n \u201e    B.60\n.44\n 16\n 28\n...;...     3.00\n 26\n.45\nBelloterre       4.50\nBevcourt _      .44,\nBobjo       1U4\nBoymar Gold  10\nBralorne        6.85\nBuffadison   11\nBuff Can   ..,       .24\nCampbell R L       2.05\nCan Mai        :...      71\nCariboo Gold      1.40\nCentral Patricia  70\nCentral Pore _     .19\nCentremaque  12\nChesklrk     , ~   ' .11\nChesterville   -      -74\nCochenour      1.57\nConiaurum ~     .70\nCons Beatty  49\nCon M & S  118.50\nConwest      1.85\nCrestaurum       -14\nDelnlte       1-35\nDiscovery - 38\nDome       16.35\nDonalda ...  :.. _      .53\nEast Malartic -    1-59\nEast Sullivan  \u201e    7.35\nElder Gold  58\nEldona -      -25\nFalconbrldge     6.70\nFrobisher      2.80\nGiant Yel     7.05\nGod's Lake --   .35\nGold Eagle  \u00bb      .13\nGolden Manltou  _    5.60\nHa.drock    * 30\nHedley Mas       .40\nHollinger    .'.    11.15\nHudson Bay    53.75\nInt Nickel\nJack Waite ._\t\nJoliet Que \t\nKayrand \u25a0 .-.\nKenyille\t\nKerr Addison \t\nKirk-Hudson Bay\nKirkland Lake \t\nKirk Townsite\t\nLabrador ..:\t\nLake Dufault\t\nLakeshore  \t\nLake Wasa . \t\nLamaque\t\nLeitch\t\nLynx\t\nMacDonald  .....\nMacassa\n3B.75\n.18\n.71\n.24 Vs\n.17\n16.25\n.50\n.95\n.14\n5.90\n1.07\n10.25\n.68\n5.50\n1.05\n.18\n.582\n2.15\nMacLeod Cock     2.30\nMadsen R L _    2.11\nMagnet ...! \u201e      .23\nMalartic G F '...    2.00\nMarcus G 15\nMclntyre     58.25\nMcKenzie R L 42\nMcMarmac ...; 14^t\nMining Corp  -   1675\nMosher L L -      .12.4\nMylamaque \u2014      .17\nNegus   \u00bb    1.10\nNew Calumet  _    2.07\nNew Goldvue         .22\nNew Jason 24\nNew Lund        2.30\nNew Thurbois .\nNicholson  \t\nNIpissIng  ....\nNoranda .\n.10\n1.00\n73:50\n4.35\n.13.4\n.45\nTrans Cont Res..\nUinted Keno ....\nUpper Canada ...\nVentures\t\nViolamac\nWaite Amulet  .\u00bb..\nOILS\nAnglo tan\t\nAtlantic Oil \t\nB A Oil   ....\nCal & Ed \t\nCalmont\t\nCentral Leduc \t\nChemical Research\nDalhousie    .....\nDavies Pete\t\nDel Rio \t\nFederated Pete\t\nFoothills   \t\nGlobe   \t\nHome\t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Pete\t\nLeduc West\t\nNational Pete\t\nNordon \t\nOkalta  ,...\t\nPacific Pete  _\nRoyalite _.\nRoxana\nTower Pete \t\nUnited Oils \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltlbi' \t\nAlgoma Steel  .\u201e.__*...\nAluminum  _\u201e\nAtlas St. _\t\nBeattie' Bros  ......\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian\t\nB.C. Electric \t\nB.C. Forest \t\nB.C. Packers A\t\nB.C. Packers B \t\nB.C. Power A \t\nB.C. Power B  .'.\t\nB.C. Pulp \t\nBrown Co\t\nBrown Co. pfd \t\nBruck Silk A  ...\t\nBrucvk Silk B\t\nBuilding Products \t\nBurl. Steel \t\nBurns A\t\nBurns B \t\nBurrard A  __.,\nCanadian Celanese\t\nCan. Cement\t\nCan. Malting\t\nCan. Packers A _.L.\nCan. Packers B .'\t\nCanadian Bakeries \t\nCanadian Breweries \t\nCanadian Canners\t\nCanadian Car & Fdy\t\nCanadian Car & Fdy A .\nCan. Oil\t\nCnadian Dredge\t\nCanadian Ind Alcohol ...\nCanadian Steamships\t\nCanadian Marconi\t\nCanadian Pacific Rly\t\nCanadian West Lmbt\t\nCockshutt\t\nCoast Copper\t\nCons. Mining & Smelt .\nCons. Paper\t\nDlst. Seagram \t\nDom. Bridge \t\nDom. Foundries \t\nDom. Steel & Coal B\t\nDom. Stores\t\nDom. Textiles \t\nEddy Paper .\nNormetals ....._ _.\nNorseman ....; .\t\nNorth Can\t\nO'Brien   .'.      1.45\nO'Leary  : -      .19\nOmega -      .13.4\nOslsko  .............      1.2,4\nPamour  .'. 92\nPaymaster    .'.,_      .70\nPend Oreille     8.50\nPIcadlllv    6754\nPickle Crow      1.80\nPioneer -    2,75\nPore Reef        .98\nPreston E D      1.48\nQuebec Lab  22\nQuebec Man      1.76\nQueenston ...: 93\nQuemont     24.75\nSan Antonio      2.55\nSen Rouyn\nShawkey \t\nSherritt Gordon\nSilvermiller \t\nSilanco\t\nSiscoe \t\nSladon Mai  ,\nStadacona\t\nStrrratt Olsen .\n.24%\n.24'\/\n2.60\n.98\n.15\n.41\n.65\n.39\n.55\nSteep Rock    - 4.00\nSylvanite      1.23\nTeck Hughes      2.55\nTorbrit      1.10\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nBegins New Life\nFamous Players\t\nFanny Farmer\t\nFord A\t\nGatineau :\t\nGatineau 5% pfd \u201e\nGen. Steel Wares _\nGoodyear pfd  ....\nGreat Lakes ..\u201e.\nGreat Lakes-pfd \t\nGypsum Lime\t\nH R MacMiilan A\t\nH. R. MacMiilan B\t\nImperial Oil \t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nInternational Metal ..\nInternational Nickel\nInternational Pete ....\nKelvinator\t\nLaura Secord .:\t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nMaple Leaf Milling ....\nMassey Harris \t\nMassey Harris pfd ....\nMercury Mills \t\nM & O Paper \t\nMont. Loco  ,\nMoore Corp.\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMcColl Frontenac pfd .\nPage Hershey\t\nPowell River \t\nShawinigan \t\nShea Brew\t\nSicks Brew \t\nAngelikl (the only name she\nknows), a 12-year-old orphan,\nholds her doll closely a\u00ab she arrives In the U. 8. from Greece.\nAngelikl Is deaf, dumb and blind,\nbut will start her life anew under\nthe guidance of the Helen Keller\nInstitute. She was brought to Eng-,\nland from Greece eight months\nago, through the efforts of the International Help for Children, a\nBritish organization under whose\nsponsorship she was sent .to the\nStates\u2014-Central Press Canadian.\nSimpsons pfd\t\nSoutham\t\nSteel of Canada  \u201e\nStandard Paving\t\nStandard Paving \t\nStandard Chemical\t\nTaylor Pearson . \t\nUnion Gas of Can  _.\nUnited Fuel A \t\nUnited Steel \t\nH. Walker\t\nWestern Grocers \t\nWestern Grocers A \t\nWinnipeg Electric com \t\nVancouver Stocks\n(Closing Prices)\nMINES\nBralorne\t\nCariboo Gold\t\nInt C & C   \t\n.40\n0.00\n2.08\n7.50\n44\n10.00\n5.45\n2 95\n29.85\n6.45\n1.21\n3.65\n1.09\n.42\n.23\n1.63\n5.80\n5.80\n.62\n15.85\n29.35\n12.50\n1.02\n2.36\n.10\n1.90\n8.00\n13.85\n.36M,\n.48%\n.58\n23%\n88.50\nny*\n12\n38%\n23 Mi\n90\n5.00 '\n14%\n9.4\n31\n4.25\n... 159\n-7.4\n... 121%\nley*\n9\n30%\n16%\n38\n27.4\n8.4\n45\n49\n50\n40\n30y4\n12\n20.4\n21\n14.4\n17,4\n17\n27\n10%\n25\n4.40\n21%\n6%\n18%\n'1.49\n119\n29\n25%\n53\n38%\n25Wi\n11\n12\n18%\n16\n33%\n53%\n17%\n107%\n19%\n62%\n24%\n46%\n20%\n14%\n14%\n29%\n13\n39%\n36%\n12%\n17%\n14%\n33%\n32%\n10%\n35\n35\n4.45\n24%\n19.4\n82%\n17%\n99\n49%\n6P%\n26%\n11%\n200%\n99%\n20%\n28V.\n14%\n14%\n19%\n6%\n17%\n57\n8%\n52%\n33\n34%\n37%\nAQUASCUTUM\nRaincoats\nMADE IN ENGLAND\nThese are tops\nin rainwear ..,\nPOPLINS and\nGABARDINES\n'27\nup\nEmory s Ltd.\nTHE MAN'S STORE\nRECORD SUGAR BEET\nCROP FOR MANITOBA\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 3 (CP)- Th\nManitoba Department of Agrlcul\nture today estimated the 1950 suga\nbeet crop at 155,250 tons, a recor\nfor the 11 years the Industry ha\nbeen established in the province,\nCanadian exports and Imports c\nraw and dressed furs are almol\nexactly balanced.\nHedley Mascot\t\nHighland Bell \t\nKootenay  Belle  \t\nPend Oreille\t\nPioneer Gold\t\nQuatsino   \t\nReeves MacDonald\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSilver Standard \t\nSurf Inlet\t\nVanaiida   \t\nWestern Exploration ..\nWestern Uranium \t\nOILS\nAnaconda       \t\nA P Consolidated \t\nCalgary & Edmonton\nCommonwealth \t\nHome   \t\nMercury\nPacific Pete  \t\nRoyalite   \t\nVanalta \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries \t\n1.35\n.28\n.41\n.89\n.65\n8.70\n2.65\n.12\n4.05\n1.25\n2.00\n.12\n.12\n.17\n.74    |\n.13\n.50\n8.50\n2.20\n16.00\n.18\n8.10\n.13%\n.37 |\n4.00\nHeigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St\nPhone 327\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhone 1302 446 Ward St\nA.C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nMedical Arts Building\n.    SUITE 200\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nFor  Dependable\nPAINTING and\nPAPERHANGING\nBee\nMurphy Brothers\nPhone 555\n745 Baker St\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORING\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St Phone 63\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal  and  Paint Work Special.)\nllllfimiiiMHHIIllllllllllllllllimillllf\nSatisfaction Guaranteed on\nEllison's Vita B\nAll Purpose Flour\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTD.\n11111riri\u25a011111ri111111111\u25a01111i11111111u m t r f\n1111 m f r 11' 11111: i e g \u25a0 11 \u25a0 1111 \u25a0 11111 ii 111!,\nDonald E. Hunter\nOPTOMETRIST  .\n431 Baker St. Phone 33|\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiil\nREXALL\n\"REXILLANA\"\nfor Tickling Coughs\nA pleasant relief when your |\nthroat is irritated and you have J\na dry hacking cough,\n55<i per 4 oz. Bottle\nSold only at Your Rexall Storel\nCity Drug Co.\n\"Nelson's Dispensing Chemists\"!\nBox 460 Phone 341\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials\u2014228.29, off .05.\n20 railroads\u201469.02, off 1.06.\n15 utilities\u201440.69, off .12.\n65 stocks\u201482.82, off .44.\nNew Shipment of\nLarge  Size\nDresses\n18!\/2 to 32|\/2\nDISTINCTIVE STYLES\nSEE OUR\nWINDOW DISPLAY\nIRENE'S\nMILLINERY AND\nDRESS SHOP\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_1950_10_04","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0426289","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"}]}}