{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426332":{"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":"1950-10-21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426332\/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":" Korean War Near\nEnd-\nParatroopers Land North of Capital\nTo Rescue American Prisoners of War\nBy-RUSSELL BRINES.\n(Associated Press Tokyo Bureau Chief who flew in Gen\nj MacArthur's plane for the 'chutists' drop.) \u00bb\n| TOKYO, Oct.  21   (Saturday) (AP)\u2014Two battalions of\nUnited  States parachute  troopers  jumped  unopposed   into\n[North Korea between the fallen capital of Pyongyang and\n' :  fthe Manchurian border Friday\n[Burned-\u00abufArea ^***^*\u00bb\nFails fo Uncover\n[Missing Plane\nEDMONTON, Oct. 20 (CP) -\nI Closer aerial investigation of a\nI burned-out area on a timbered slope\n160 miles South-Southwest of Grande\nI Prairie, Alta., today failed to intricate, it was caused by the crash bf\nla civilian aircraft missing since last\n| Saturday with five men aboard.\nThe burned-out patch was found\nI earlier in the day by a searching\n[Dakota aircraft. The R.C.A.F. sent\nI two more planes out for a closer\n\u25a0 look arid their pilots said it wasn't\n[caused by a plane crash. The miss-\nling plane was on a 250-mile flight\nI from Grande Prairie to Edmonton.\nI The burned out area is 35 miles of the South Korean 6th Division,\nx&\nWEATHER FORECAST\nMostly clear. Frost in the valleys,\nWinds light. Low and high at1 Cranbrook 82, 45; Crescent Valley 35. 50.\nSunday outlook sunny.\nVOLUME 49\n6 CENT8 A  COPY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY  MORNING, OCT. 21, 1950\nNUMBER 153\nHurricane Wrecked Car\nof Gen. MacArthur.\nThe United Nations commander\nsaid after the surprise operation:\n\"The war is very definitely coming to an end.\" .\nHe did not amplify.\nThe 'chutists had two missions:\nTo block escape of die-hard North\nKorean Communist troops still\nbattling United Nations troops in\nand around secured Pyongyang, and\nto rescue American prisoners of\nwar.'\nThree thousand parachute troops\nfloated down from 80 big transport\nplanes onto flat land near Sukchon\nand Sunchon, each roughly 3D miles\nNorth of Pyongyang rnd 80 miles\nSoutheast of the Manchiirian border.\nAmerican 1st Cavalrymen advanced 30 miles North of Pyongyang\nand linked up with the paratroopers\nat Sunchon.\nThe newly-landed paratroopers\nwere reinforced by leading elements\n(South of its projected route.\nAnother aerial check, on smoke\nI reported to have been seen rising\nI from the shore of Smoky River,\n[ yielded negative results. Bush fires\nI are reported burning in the area,\n[ 55 miles South of Grande Prairie.\nOther; ground and aerial searchers\n[today concentrated on an area 80\nj miles Northeast of Edmonton where\n[ numerous persons have reported\n[low-flying aircraft, smoke and flares.\nI Thirteen R.C.A.F. and nine civilian\n[planes were up today.\nThe Air Force has Investigated\nI more than 100 clues to date.\n'The employer, of two of the miss-\n[tag men' offered a $1000 reward for\nI discovery of the plane and its\nj occupants.\n[age Increase\n[For Woodworkers\nVICTORIA, B.C., Oct. 20 (CF)\u2014\n'Five hundred members of Local\n405, Woodworkers' Industrial Union\nof Canada, have been granted a 12Vs\ncents an hour across-the-board\n\u25a0wage Increase under terms of a new\nwork contract signed with the Interior Lumber Manufacturers' Association, the B.C. Labor Relations\nBogrd announced\u2022 todays.*-'\u2022\u25a0\u2022. \"\nfie '.new'.agreement also provides\nfor payment of time and one-half\nfor work performed on Saturday\nafternoons and Sunday.\nCARLOADINGS DECREASE\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014Car-\nloadings on Canadian railways de\ncreased during the week ended\nOct 14 to 81,323 cars, compared\nWith 89,308 cars for the previous\nweek, but were higher than the\n17,619 cars for the corresponding\nWeek a year ago.   \u25a0\nFor Hallowe'en\nThe South-Korean troops .inked up\nwith the Americans at 8 p.m. Friday\nat Sunchon only six hours after the\n'chutists made their drop.\nAn Eighth Army spokesman said\nthe 6th Division's rapid move probably cut off many enemy troops and\nset the stage, for a South Korean\ndrive to the Manchurian border.\nAfter   watching   the   first  airborne  operation  of the   Korean\nwar from his constellation plane,\nMacArthur said:\n\"I didn't see any opposition. It\nlooks like It was a complete sur\nprise. It looks like we closed the\ntrap. Closing that trap should be\nthe end of all organized resist-\nance. The war Is very definitely\ncoming to an end.\"\nAir observers said the only Red\ntroop   movements  they  could   see\nafter the drop were North of Su-\nchon and Sukchon.\nThey saw none between the drop\narea and Pyongyang to the South.\nThus the Reds may have succeeded in pulling out all but last-ditch\ndefenders from'their one-time capi\ntal.\nBad weather forced delay of the\nairborne operation from Thursday.\nAP Correspondent Leif Eriekson\nreported from U.S. 8th Army head\nquarters, in Seoul, the Southern\ncapital, that if the drop could have\nbeen made Thursday it would have\ntrapped a much greater bag of flee\ning Reds.   \u25a0' - \u25a0 ; ,,''.'   '\nPREMIER ESCAPED\nitarth Korea's Red Premier, Kim\nII Sung, apparently escaped to Manchuria or Siberia. His Soviet-trained\ngeneral staff and political advisers\nalso have fled, probably to wage\nmountain guerrilla warfare against\nU.N. mop-up forces.\nThe delay of the drop also may\nhave cut the chances of the parachutists to achieve their second\ngoal\u2014the rescue of American prisoners of war.\nSome captured Americans had\nbeen prodded out of Pyongyang\n'toward   Manchuria  by the   Reds\njust before Am* Iran, British and\nAustralian forces stabbed Into the\ncity,\nThree hungry, bearded and tattered survivors of a death march from\nSeoul to Pyongyang told the story.\nThey had escaped their captors and\nrejoined American forces in Pyongyang.\nThey said the group sent North,\nand themselves, survived a \"death\nmarch\" of some 303 American prisoners from Seoul to Pyongyang in\nlate September and early, October.\nDu-lng  the   march, they  said,\nAmericans died \"like files\" from\nstarvation, cold,  pneumonia and\ndysentery.\nT'hose    who   fell    down    were\nbeaten and bayonetted by their\nRed guards. How many died they\ndid not know.\nThe three survivors had dropped\nthrough a trap-door into a Pyongyang schoolhouse basement and\nhidden there since Saturday.\nThe paratroops began moving immediately toward SUnchon, 30 miles\nNortheast of Pyongyang, and Sukchon, 28 miles Northwest of Pyongyang. By road, the towns are ap\nproximately 35 miles from Pyongyang.\nChuted down to them were 105-\nmm Howitzers, special types of 90-\nmm guns, jeeps and trailers. It was\nthe heaviest equipment ever drop\nped in combat.   '\nAmerican fighter planes rocketed\nand strafed the jump site in the\nbroad Taedong River Valley for 45\nminutes before the -men began to\nlean.\nThe United Nations commander\nreturned to Pyongyang airfield after watching the drop, returning to\nTokyo after a 35-mlnute stay there.\nNew U.K. Food Pacts\nIn Sight for Canada\nA puzzled policeman views the little he can see of a fellow officer's car under a pile of cement blocks,\nThe wall of Ra'y's boatyard In Miami, Fla., collapsed during the storm. The hurricane left a trail of Injuries,\none death and property damage estimated at $5,000,000 or more. (AP WIREPHOTO).\n$410 looled From\nNelson Home\nHarry Hughes, Nelson barber,\nwas short some $410 in cash early\nFriday morning, following a burglary at his home at 524 Second\nStreet,\nThe thief or thieves Involved had\napparently forced open a basement\nwindow and made their way to the\nfirst floor of the house. Mr. and Mrs.\nHughes were asleep at the time and\nthe thief is believed to have made\nhis way into a bedroom taking Mr.\nHughes' trousers in which the\nmoney had. been left.\nThe thief gave himself away as\nhe was making his escape through\nthe basement when he knocked\nover a couple of bottles on the\nstairs.. The noise awakened Mrs.\nHughes who immediately woke her\nhusband.\nMr. Hughes went Into the basement finding only his trousers on\nthe floor\u2014minus the money, and\nthe thief gone. A wallet in a back\npocket had been untouched. He\nnotified police about 1:25 Friday\nmorning.\nNEWSPAPERS GET\nB. C. BINGS\nFOR DYING MAN\nCHICAGO,  Oct. 20  (AP)\u2014Bl\nKatanac, 33 near death In Hlnes\nVeterans Hospital from leukemia,\nsaid recently he'd like some BJng\ncherries,\nHis wish was relayed to the\nChicago Dally News, which asked\nIts correspondents and BO other\nnewspapers to help find some of\nthe out-of-season fruit,\nToday, Katanec had his pick\nfrom nearly 35 pounds of Blngs\nsent by - T. W. Tldball and his\nneighbors of Penticton, B.C. and\nan . anonymous Traverse City,\nMich., orchardlst,\nOn the theory that a pretty girl\nshould stay pretty, even on Hallowe'en, makeup man Max Factor Jr. designed these bewitching\nHallowe'en masks In Hollywood.\nThe \"mask\" on model and actress\nJane Grant (upper) Is all done\nwith eyebrow pencil and a few\ngummed-on sequins, while the\nspider on her cheek Is done with\nspirit gum dusted with, glitter.\nModel Barbara Ludwig (<pwer)\nwears a butterfly-shaped \"mask\",\ndone In eye makeup and drawn\nion with a . broad oil painter's\n'brush.\u2014AP Wlrephoto. '\nNew Hurricane Bears\non\nMIAMI, Fla., Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014A\nnew hurricane\u2014generating winds\nup to 90 miles an hour near Its\ncore\u2014bore across the Gulf of\nMexico, tonight toward the rich\nSt. Petersburg-Tampa area on\nFlorida's West coast.\nIt Was headed East-Northeastward at 12 to 15 miles'an hour\nfrom a point 240 miles Southwest\nof Tampa.    .  '    \u00bb   .\nWinds of hurricane strength\u201475\nmiles or higher\u2014were reported in a\nnarrow band on the East side of the\nstorm, but gales extended 125 to 150\nmiles from the centre..\n\u25a0If it continues its expected .course,\nstriking. the Gulf Coast sometime\nafter midnight, it will be the second\nhurricane .to hit Florida this,;week.\n'.-'.-..'\u25a0 8tormwarning haatyquWreri Ih\nthe Weather Bureau hero said\ndangerous gales will sweep all\nthe Florida peninsula,'\nThe hew storm was born In the\nsame low-pressure system which\nbrewed the violent hurricane that\nbattered Inland late Tuesday and\nearly Wednesday over Miami.\nThe 125-mile winds of the South\nFlorida storm killed three, persons,\ncontributed to the death of three\nothers, injured 100, left about 300\nhomeless and inflicted damages of\n$15,000,000 to $20,000,000, most of it\nin the Miami-Hollywood-Fort Lau\nderdale areas.\nDisaster committees were ready\nfor action tonight i nthe Tamap-St\nPetersburg area., -j,\" .- ,. 1:7\n\u25a0 'That section has pever'-fetperienc-\nthe fuirfor'ce of a hurricane.\nMALANIK TO\nHANG JAN. 17\nJudge Says Accused\nWent to House\nWith Intent to Fight\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 20 (CP)-Henry\nMalanik, 48-year - old Winnipeg\nplumber today was sentenced to be\nhanged Jan. 17 for the murder of\nDetective Sergeant J, E. Sims last\nJuly 15. The jury was out 40 minutes.\nMalanik,   dressed   In   a   neat\nbrown suit, white shirt and brown\ntie, took the verdict with the same\ncomposure    he     had     displayed\nthroughout the four-day trial.  \u00ab\nWhen asked by Mr. Justice J,\nJ. rielly, Court of King's bench.\nIf he had anything to say before\nthe death sentence  was  passed\nMalanik replied In a low voice:\n\"No your honor.\" His gaze then\nshifted momentarily to the floor.\nIt was only while waiting for the\njury' to return to the box that the\naccused man showed any sign of\nstrain during the trial. He buried\nhis head in his hands for a short\ntime.\nIn his charge to the jury, Judge\nKelly outlined the evidence*^ the\nfatal shooting in a Northend Winnipeg home, where Sgt, Sims and\ntwo other detectives went before\nmidnight to investigate an earlier\nfight\nShortly after they arrived, Sgt,\nSims was shot in the abdomen and\ndied in hospital about six hours later of the shotgun wound.\nJudge Kelly told the jury that if\nthe accused went to -the Argyle\nStreet home to either-cause bodily\nharm or injury to a person in the\nhouse, and if perchance he killed\nSgt. Sims or some other policeman,\neven though he did not intend to,\nthen he Was guilty of murder.\nHe also told the jury that they\ncould consider the theory of the\nCrown that Malanik had gone .to\nfight ;with- Adol(!h.;Kafk&,.ovsr the\n'affections of his wife,' Olga.'The\nshooting occurred in Kafka's home.\nHeirlooms Leave Haven in Edmonton\nWarehouse for Home in New York\nFrench Forces\nMobilize Against\nVietminh Troops\nBy SEYMOUR TOPPING\nSAIGON, Vietnam, Indo-Chlna,\nOct. 20 (AP) \u2014 Seasoned French\nforces dug in with heavy armor today along the Hed Ri Ter Delta while\nreinforcements were moBilized to\nbolster new positions for a stand\nagainst Communist-led Vietminh\ntroops from the mountainous North.\nForced out of five frontier posts\nby strengthened Vietminh forces,\nthe French were aligned in open\ncountry on the Northern rim of.the\ndelta, backed by tanks, artillery and\nplanes.\nBy CAMERON JAMES\nCnadlan Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014 A\nBelgian baron's heirlooms that figured in a two-continent treasure\nhunt today were ordered returned\nto their owner, Baron Cassel van\nDoom of Brussels, now living in\nNew York.\nBehind the simple court order lies\na bizarre tale with settings in a\npalatial Brussel's mansion and a\nsmall frame house in the tiny village of St. Albert, eight miles North\nof Edmonton.\nIts actors include Nazi officers, a\ntrusted family retainer, a mysterious\nart collector, representatives of an\ninsurance company and the employ-^\nees of an Edmonton warehouse.\nThe heirlooms, consisting of 22\noil paintings by 18th and 19th century Flemish and French painters,\na landscape by John Sargent, famous American painter, and assorted statuary and gilded clocks, in\n1939 were among the furnishings of\nBaron van Doom's Brussels' estate,\nThey were valued at close to $75,000.\nWhen the Germans swept into the\nlow countries in 1940, the Baron escaped to an unoccupied country. In\ncharge of his mansion he left Jules\nTutelaire\u2014the trusted family retainer.\nHigh-ranking Nazis selected the\nbaron's home as their personal quarters. Jules stayed on as a servant\nafter they moved in.\nSometime between 1940 and 1945\nhe removed the paintings and oth\n\"Quns and Butter\"\nBoth Wanted\ner pieces from the'house and turned them over to Luclen Bral, another Belgian.\nFrom 1945 to 1949 the story Is\nsketchy, However, Jules was arrested, found guilty of theft and\nIs now serving five years.\nIn August 1949. Bral came to Canada, rented a house at St. Albert.\nWith him he brought several large\npacking cases filled with paintings\nand objects of art\nOne day, shortly after his arrival,\nhe arranged to take out $75,000 Insurance on them. The same day fire\nbroke out in'his house and four of\nthe paintings were destroyed, the\nothers slightly scorched.\nThe next day he notified the Insurance companv (Phoenix of Hartford). When a fire mashal and the\nR.C.M.P. began investigating, Bral\ndisappeared. The heirlooms were\ntaken to an Edmonton warehouse\nand stored.\nThe Insurance companv, next\nheard from Bral In Europe when\nhe tried to collect the Insurance,\nThe company refused payment\nsaying that the Insurance had not\ngone Into effect at the time of\nthe fire.\nFinally, this year the Edmonton\nwarehouse wanted-.to make more\nroom, arranged to find Bral through\nnotices in European papers. The\nBaron, also saw the, notice, got in\ntouch with the warehouse company\nand identified the paintings' and\nother items as his. Bral then wrote\nand acknowledged the Baron's claim.\nBral, or \"the art collector\", as\ncourt officials here call him, Is now\nbelieved to be in South America.\nThe. heirlooms are in the basement\nof Edmonton's courthouse and will\nhe sent to Baron van Doom later\nthis week.\nSee Signed Contracts for Bacon,\nCheese; Preliminary Talks Held\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 New United Kingdom food\ncontracts are in sight for'Canada.\nA Government official said today that preliminary talks\non the signing of new 1950 Anglo-Canadian food agreements\nhave been held.\nThere are indications, he said, that the United Kingdom\nGovernment will reverse a previous decision to buy next year\n>on ^e opef) mar|<ef. ancj agajn\nsign fixed contracts for bacon\nand cheese.\n\"The British definitely have indicated they want our cheese and\nbacon,\" he said.\nIt still was too early to Indicate\nhow close the new contracts will\ncome to 1950 prices and quantities.\nPrices and quantities will be negotiated at talks to be held later this\nyear.\nBritain this year is paying 25 cents\npound for Canadian Cheddar\ncheese being requisitioned for export, and 29 cents a pound for bacon, Since costs of production have\nincreased, it was possible that Canada may ask for higher prices next\nyear.\nCurrently, the Government Is\noffering higher prices than It receives from Britain In order to obtain sufficient quantities to fill\nthe contract. The price on bacon\nrecently was Increased from 32(\/2\ncents to 33% cents, The price the\nGovernment Is offering on cheese\nIs 28 cents, basis seaboard deliveries.\nHowever, even with these price\npremiums the Government has not\nyet received the full amounts to\nfill the agreements. With three\nmonths to go, it has shipped about\n55,000,000 pounds of cheese, to fill\na contract which calls for a minimum of 77,000,000. Officials are confident this amount will be obtained\nThey are not so confident that the\nbacon contract will be filled. Even\nwith higher prices, the supplies have\nonly trickled in. Of the 60.000,000-\npound contract, only 20,000,000\npounds have been shipped.\nTable Resolution\nFor Reduction\n(n Gasoline Price\nVICTORIA, B.C., Oct 20 (CP)\u2014\nThe anticipated one-cent reduction\nin the price of gasoline won't come\nuntil next week..\nThe Provincial Cabinet met\nThursday afternoon to consider a\nresolution from Dr. W. A. Carroth-\ners, Chairman of the Coal and Petroleum Board, suggesting an immediate cut in the price of gas but so\nfew Cabinet members were present,\nthe matter was tabled to be brought\nup again Tuesday.\nLiberal members of the Cabinet\nare attending the provincial con\nventlon ot Young Liberals at Harri\nson Hot Springs.\nDegrees for\nDistrict Students\nAnglicans to Seek\nTighter Controls\nBy FORBES RHUDE lin motion by the Korean War are!^kM \u25a0 \u2022   \u201e__ e\u201elB-\nCanadlan.f'ress Business Editor    sufficient,  then probably we cani WH LlqUOr dales\nThe \"guns or butter\" phrase Is continue, to have a fair share of VANCOUVER, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014The\nagain becoming part of current \"butter\" along with \"guns.\" If. I British Columbia government will\nlanguage, meaning of course that( though, there should be another! be petitioned to tighten control on\nIf a country wishes to make war'outbreak such as Korea, then it is liquor sale and seek better methods\nmaterial It cannot make as much likely  our  \"butter\"  will   be  cur-, of distribution, the Anglican Pro\nH.L Stimson Dies\nCOLD SPRING HARBOR, N. Y,\nOct 20 (AP)\u2014Henry L. -Stimson,\n83, Secretary of State under President Hoover and War Secretary\nunder three other United States\nPresidents, died at his home here\ntoday.\nA member of his family said\ndeath resulted from a heart attack.\nHe had been troubled with a heart\nailment since he left public office\nin 1945.\nHe broke his hip severa^ weeks\nago and was in the hospital a\nmonth.\nHis wife and members of the\nfamily were with him when he\ndied.\nA  native of New York City,\nStimson was a Walt Street law\nyer all his life, except when he\nserved In the Cabinets of Pres\nIdents William H. Taft, Herbert\nHoover,   Franklin   B.   Roosevelt\nand Harry S. Truman.      ,\nHis  first public  office  was  as\nUnited   States   attorney   for   the\nSouthern. District   of   New   York\nfrom 1906-09.\nHe ran for Governor of New\nYork on the Republican ticket in\n1910 but was defeated.\nThe next, year, President Taft\ncalled him to Washington as Secretary of War and launched him\non, a career that was to bring him\n.international attention.\nIn 1927 he was named Governor-\nGeneral of the. Philippine Islands.\nStimson returned to the Cabinet\nin 1929 as President Hoover's first\nand only Secretary of State, serving in that post untiK Franklin D.\nEoosevelt: became President in\n1933, ,    \"\nRoosevelt called him back to\nservice in 1940 as- a Republican\nCabinet Minister\u2014to his old post\nof- Secretary of War. He held that\nposition throughout the Second\nWorld War..\nStimson stayed on briefly when\nPresident Truman took office in\nApril,, 1945, as Roosevelt's death,\nbut retired, in September of that\nyear.      -\nVANCOUVER, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014\nAmong 400 University of British\nColumbia, students to receive degrees at Fall congregation ceremonies tomorrow are the following:\nFrom Trail:\u2014Ernest G. Glover,\nB.A. B.S.W. 2nd Class; Raymond J.\nKirker, B.A. passed; Robert D.\nPeebles, B.A. passed.\nFrom Nelson: \u2014 Rosalie Triggs,\n84A;\u201e M.S.A.;'dairytog; ..Wm. J.\nGordpfv'B.' Com passed 2hd 'Class;'\nWarren N. Ferguson, Bch Laws,\npassed.\nFred H. Hancock, Rossland; Sam\nB. Jacobs, B. Com passed, Kaslo;\nPeter Graham, B.A., Bch Laws,\npassed, Cranbrook.\nCampbell Abandons\nTry to Break Speed\nRecord This Year\nCONISTON, England, Oct. 20\n(AP)\u2014Donald Campbell today abandoned his efforts to try to set a\nspeedboat record this year.\nCampbell ordered- his boat, the\nBluebird II, prepared for the journey home at the end of a day of\nunsuccessful attempts to break the\nrecord of 160.3235 m.p.h. set this\nSummer by Stanley Sayres in\n\"Slo-Mo-Shun IV\" on Lake Washington.\nNEWSPRINT PRICE\nINCREASE MAY BE FELT\nBY READER. ADVERTISER\nTORONTO, Oct. 20 (CPI \u2014 Roy\nH. Thomson. President of the Canadian Daily Newspapers Association,\nsaid today that rising newspaper\ncosts \"cannot result otherwise than\nin increased\" costs being passed on\nto the newspaper reader and advertiser.\"\nCommenting on price increases\nrecently announced by two newsprint mills. Mr. Thomson'said in his\nopinion a general price increase.in\nnewsprint could not be absorbed by\nthe publishers.\nof other things,\nActually, to date, the phrase is\nbecoming \"guns and butter,\" indicating a belief that Western countries may both re-arm and maintain their high standards of living.\nThe answer, of course, depend.1!\nupon how efficiently we produce\nand upon how many \"gtans'\"\nneeded.\nDespite the high activity which\nexisted before the Korean fight-\n. Ing started, there was a certain\namount of slack that could be put\nInto added production. And,\nfaced with a necessity, It Is always possible to do a little bet.\nter than we have been doing.\ntailed sharply. . I vlncial Synod of B.C. decided at the\nIt is a grim matter that the thing closing sessions Thursday.\nmost people abhor, war or the\nthreat of war, has in the last few\nyears added temporarily to the\nprosperity to\" the more fortunate\ncountries.\nWe have learned that if we keep\nare oeople busy' producing then we\nhave prosperity. But we haven't\nlearned how to keep people busy\nindefinitely without extraordinary\nstimuli.\nIt can be hoped that we keep on\nlearning and that ultimately we\nshall\nThis Came following the social\nservice report which deplored, increased use of liquor in the province.\nNelson water level 7.68.\nIf the re-armament programs set m\\ threatened.\nFORT WILLIAM, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014\nPlans  to  form  a  \"new   province\nleague\" which will work for establishment of an  11th  province in\nknow   how  to  keen   peoole; Northwestern    Ontario    were    an-\nbusy all over the world producing nounced today by Alf Batters, Presl-\nfor one another\u2014without war, real dent cf the Fort William Natural\nResources Board.\nFernie Lad in No\nRush to Get Home\nCALGARY, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 A 12-\nyear-old runaway boy from Fernie,\nB.C., is in no hurry to go home.'\nPicked up in Edmonton recently,\nhe was placed aboard a Trans-\nCanada Air Lines plane and. sent off\nto rejoin his parents. The plane was\nheld up in Calgary' because of bad\nweather. When' take-off time arrived, the boy was nowhere to be\nfound.\n.A few hours later police picked\nhim up downtown and bedded him\"\ndown in a boarding house for the\nnight Today R.C.M.P. escorted him\naboard a T.C.A. aircraft, watched\nuntil it took off for Vancouver.\nFIRE TAKES TOLL\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Oct. 20 (CP)\n\u2014A pre-dawn tenement' fire\nbrought death or injury today to\nnine members of the Raines family\nthe West business-residential\nsection of this old capital.\nThe families of Jack and Fred\nRaines lived in a wooden, three-\nstorey building. Jack's wife and\nthree sons lost their lives, but he\nescaped by leaping from a second-\nstorey window. Two others of his\nfamily suffered first degree burns.\nFred Raines and daughter Elizabeth died in the flames, discovered\nbefore dawn. A tenth person, Bride\nDelaney, also was injured.\nIt was the most vicious fire In\nthis old city since the* Hull Old\nPeople's Home blaze of 1048 when\n34 elderly persons died in an early-\nmorning outbreak in bitter weather. Some 100 persons\u2014mostly Canadian service men \u2014 perished in\nflames when a Knights \/of Columbus hostel burned down on a wartime night In 1942.\nFARMERS FEAR\nEND OF\nFREIGHT SUBSIDY\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 Farmers today expressed fear that the\nnine-year, $145,000,000 freight subsidy on Western feed grains may\nbecome a victim of the Government's economy drive. .\nH. H. Hannam, .President of the\n400,000:member Canadian Federation of Agriculture, said reports\nthat the subsidy plan may be discontinued have persisted for the\nlast 10 days.\nIn Toronto, D. E. Stauffer of\nBright, Ont, President of the United Cooperatives of Ontario, said\nit has been learned \"on good authority\" in Ottawa that the Federal\nGovernment plans to discontinue\nthe subsidy.\nHe predicted its removal will\nmean increases in the price of pork,\nmilk, eggs and other household\nstaples.\nThe Agriculture Department\nwhich administers the plan, said,\nhowever, it had no orders to discontinue payments. Whether there\nwould be changes in the future was\nfor the Cabinet to decide.\nThree Former Curling\nChamps in\nEdmonton Bonspiel\nEDMONTON, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014\nBilly Rose of Sedgewlck, Alta,,\ntoday entered the Second Annual\nAssociated Canadian Travellers'\nAutomobile Bonspiel, scheduled to\nget under way here Oct. 30.\nRose's entry brings to three the\nnumber of former Dominion curling champions who -will compete\nfor the car prizes. Rose won national honors In 1946. The others\nare T. (Frenchy) D'Amour of\nTrail, B.C., and Cliff Manahan,\nEdmonton's two-time winner.\nAnd in This Corner \u2014\nIN THIS CORNER :  SADENTWDKWTD\t\nSAN JOSE, Calif., Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Southern Pacific Railroad men\nreported a \"gunman\" was firing at trains on the San Francisco-Los\nAngeles run.\nPolice caught the culprit ... a 16.year-old boy armed with a\nslingshot and a pocketful of naw beans.\nThe boy said he Just likes to shoot at the wheels. Trainmen said\nhis beans frequently hit windows, frightening passengers.\nNEW BRUNSWICK, N.J.. Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Motorists in nearby East\nBrunswick looked twice at the town police car.\nA coffin inscribed with the words \"He. was a careless driver,\" was\nattached to its roof.\nBOSTON, Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Patrons of the Hanover Street Casino burlesque theatre today had a free encore\u2014and some said It was more\nInteresting.\nFire broke out In an adjoining building as the girls of the ensemble\nwere dressing after the show.\nWhen smo,ke poured In\u2014the girls poured out, Most of them ran out\nas they were. \u2022\nA crowd gathered\u2014but didn't watch the firemen.\nCHARLESTON, W. Va., Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014The fish in this story not\nonly got away, but took along a hunter's squirrel.\nRaymond Craft m Ell^view shot a squirrel in a tree while hunting\nalong the Poca River. The animal dropped inlo lhe Water.\nThe squirrel had barely hit when a big muskie broke the surface,\ngrabbed the squirrel and disaopeared.\nThat's what Craft paid, anyway. \\\n 2 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 21, 1950\nLAST TIMES TODAY \u2014 Shows at 2.00 - 7.00 - 9.08\nmilNTATIOIt OP\nRoborUouii Stovonion't\nrrasurc\nIsland\n\"BEAVER ISLAND\"\nA trule-llfe adventure, \u2014 Print by technicolor.\nC\/WC\\\nStarts Monday\u2014\"THE DAMNED DON'T CRY\" (Adult)\nChild Must Be Equipped So Able to\nMake Own Decision Says Sociologist\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 20\u2014 Young\n\"\"\"people of today make most of their\nj3.wn choices regarding moral and\nfacial problems and for that rea-\n'so'n they must be trained to cope\n\u25a0 with this responsibility at an early\nage. That was tho advice given\nby Dr. Paul H. Landis, Professor of\n\u00bb; Rural Sociology, Washington State\n\\ College, in an address last night at\n\",'ta public meeting in Trail High\n.^chool   auditorium.   This   meeting\n. marked the opening of the West\n,, kootenay and Boundary Teachers\n\"convention  which  is continuing.\nChairman J. H. Gagnon welcom-\n.  ed the visiting teachers and intro-\n-duced Aid. F. Sindcll who, on behalf of Mayor E. G. Fletcher, ex-\n\u25a0 tended Trail's welcome.\n.\".. The United States and Canada\ntoday were changing rapidly from\nan agricultural to an urban society\nand modes of thought and education, must of necessity change also,\nsaid. Dr.  Landis.\nA child, Dr. Landis said, must\nbe given every chance to make up\nhis own mind, to learn values, to\nweigh right from wrong, in other\nwords the parents must let the\nchild think for himself and not do\nthe thinking for him.\nThe transmission of indepepd\nence in this urban age should be\nmade gradually, the child was\ntaught to become an individual and\nto think as such, he learns the\nvalue of money through earning it,\nand in that way, pointed out Dr.\nLandis, he has become independent\nby the time he is an adult. But, he\nwarned, on the other hand if you\ndo not allow, him to think for himself when he reached maturity he\nwould have to start learning how\nto live in this new world and that\nwas a long and tough task.\nMarriage was a subject that\nshould be left up to the . people\nconcerned. Parents could not arrange marriages for the good of\nthe children, without first consulting the children. If the child in his\nyouth has had the correct chance to\ndevelop his own power of reason,\nhe would make the correct choice\nwhen the time came.   .\nThe Trail High School Band under R. R. Potter, entertained the\naudience.\nLawns, Trees\nO.K. Gardeners\nForte, Club Told\nThe Nelson Garden Club, meeting Friday night, dlscusSed pre^\nlimlnary plans for a banquet to be\nheld Nov. 10.     \u25a0\nMembers of the club, their husbands or wives, and speakers during the year and their wives or\nhusbands will attend the banquet in\nthe Hume. Over 40 are expected to\nbe on hand.\nPrizes will be presented to win.\nners in the Better Garden Contest\nat the banquet.\nP, ft, Jones, Secretary of the Club\nexpressed his thanks on behalf of\nthe executive for the fine work .carried out during the year by the\nclub. The Banquet was an appreciation of their work, in putting on\nthe rose show and flower display\nat the West Kootenay Fall Exhibition in September.\nFLOWERS BRIGHTER HERE\nFrank Holt, City Gardener gave\nthe members a resume of his trip to\nVernon where he spoke to the garden club and agriculturists. He also\nbrought greetings from Vernon horticulturists.\nAlthough Mr. Holt enjoyed his\ntrip all the way, he said that the\nVornon country \"has nothin on the\nKootenay\" He felt that the quality\nand color of flowers in the Okanagan City didn't come up to those\nin Nelson.\nGardeners in Vernon specialized\nin lawns and evergreens, he said,\nanjl did not go in for flowers, When\nshown pictures of a few of Nelson\nlovely flower gardens, garden club\nmembers there were astonished, Mr-\nHolt said. One Vernon gardener\nthough, had halt a million gladioli\nbulbs including 300 varieties of all\ncolors. The irrigation method was\nused in watering gardens.\nDuring his visit, Mr. Holt toured\nthe outlying area and saw thousands\nof cherry and peach trees. killed1\nby the severe Winter frost. He also\nvisited the Bullman processing plant\nthere.\nCastlegar Kiwanis\nCASTLEGAR. B.C., Oct. 20\u2014Gus\nLeitner was elected president of\nthe Castlegar Kiwanis Club when\nthat group held its annual meeting\nhere.\nOther officers named were first\nvice-president, Robert Sommers;\nsecond vice-president, M. B. Dalton;\ntreasurer. J. A. Williams, and board\nof directors, Ralph Kerr, Robert\nWaldie, William Waldie, Eearle\nEtanford, Cyril Bell, Clifford Brown\nand Gilbert' Fowler.\nTRAIL BOARD TO\nADOPT NEW NAME\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct 20\u2014The Trail\nBoard of Trade has decided to\nchange its name to the Trail Chamber of Commerce, but the old\n\"Trade Board\" tag will stick probably until the end of this year.\nSeveral speakers at the Eoard's\nOctober meeting said that it was a\ngeneral trend amongst Boards of\nTrade to change their titles.\nThe Board will apply to the Secretary of State for permission to\nchange the name.\nLAYING OF\nRIVERSIDE MAIN\nBEGINS MONDAY\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 20 \u2014 Replacement of a water main in the Riverside Avenue area will get under\nway next Monday night.\nSouth end of the avenue will be\nalmost blocked to traffic, but crews\nwill not begin digging for the main\nuntil after 11 p.m. to allow night\nshift workers to cross the East Trail\nbridge. They will stop work at 6\na.m. U'uesday morning to again allow\nshift workers to pass.\nWorkers will lay a eight-inch cast\niron main in a 1000-foot sector\nreaching from the bridge on the\nsidewalk side of the street to the\nmid-1800 block. The remainder of\nthe main was replaced a few years\nago. Crews have already started\nplacement of a two-inch line on the\nopposite side of the avenue, reaching from the bridge to the end of\nthe concrete rationing wall to service homes on that side.\nWarfield P. T. A.\nReturns President\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 20 \u2014 The James\nL. Webster Parent-Teacher Association at Warfield this week elected Mrs\" George Deadmarsh as Pre-,\nsident for the coming year.\nOthers elected were Mrs. H. C.\nGieferich, first vice-president; Mrs,\nJ. D. Pearson, second vice-president;\nMrs. M. F. Edwards, secretary; Mrs.\nJ M. Heaps, treasurer; Mrs. John\nMilien, hospitality; S. E. Cains, literature; Mrs. Forothy Smith, sunshine; Mrs. W. K, Schultz, publicity;\nC. R. Shire, program; Charles Warrington, ways and means; Mrs. H.\nH. Armour, membership; Mrs. T.\nA. Rice, historian; E. B. Broad-\nhurse, sports and Mrs. Gordon Bell\nmagazine.\nDuring the meeting the group\nplanned to sponsor an elocution\nclass with Miss Janie Stevenson of\nScotland, now living in Nelson, as\ninstructress and W. B. Fromson,\nschool principal in charge of arrangements.\nThey also discussed plans for\nsponsoring a concert by the Trail\nMale Voice chorus Nov. 3.\nClippers Blast\nKerrisdale 9-3\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 20 (CP)-Na-\nnaimo Clippers, breaking loose for\nfive goals in the second period,\nhanded Kerrisdale Monarchs a\nbeating tonight when they downed\nthe Kerries 9-3 in Vancouver.\nThe game was highlighted by a\nthird period fight between Nanai-\nmo's big Rusty Waldriff and Kerris-\ndale's slender Gwen Lovett.'Both\nreceived five-minute fighting penalties.\nLineups;\nNanaimo^ MacManus; Waldruff,\nMontgomery; O'Hara; Rucks, Petro-\nvich. Subs\u2014Kirk, Watt, Goureau,\nWarwick, Carr, Shamlock, Defelice,\nClovechuk.\nKerrisdale\u2014Pion; Fennell, Abel;\nWilson; Richadson, Lovett. Subs-\nSchmidt, Bastion, Ramsden, Gaw-\nIhrop, Smith, Neilsen, Mutcheson,\nRobson.\nSummary;\nFirst period: 1. Nanaimo, Pitro-\nvich (Waldriff) 1:02; 2. Kerrisdale,\nSchmidt (Fennell) 13:07; 3. Nanaimo, Rucks (O'Hara, Kirk) 16:17; 4.\nNanaimo, O'Hara (Pitrovich, Watt)\n18:54.\nSecond period: 5. Nanaimo, Defence 2:25; 6. Nanaimo, Shamlock\n(Waldriff) 14.23; 7. Nanaimo, Rucks\n(O'Hara) 16:04; 8. Nanaimo, Pitrovich (Kirk, O'Hara) 16:23; 9. Kerrisdale, Lovett (Schmidt, Wilson)\n18:47; 10. Nanaimo, Clovechuk\n(Shamlock, Carr) 19:12.\nPenalties\u2014Mutcheson, Fennell.\nThird period: 11. Nanaimo, Gour-\ndeau 7:30; 12. Kerrisdale, Lovett\n13:45,-\n,. Penalties \u2014 Lovett (major and\nminor), Waldriff (major and mior),\nKirk, Pitrovich.\nlYi a\"! \"i a TH m 1i \\ i11 1i~n|\nOFFERING YOU A\nOne Stop\nStore Service -\nI\nMelneczuc Wins Better\nQardens Qrand Award\nTen Nelson gardeners Friday\nnight were announced as winners\nin the Annual Better Gardens\nCompetition held during thei Summer months.\nGrand championship in the general gardens section was won by\nWilliam Melneczuk, 21? Chatham\nStreet, an ardent member of the\nclub. Last year's winner was William Young.\nGeorge Eckmlor, 407 Nelson Avenue, was winner of the Draper\nCup for general gardens with second prize going to William Young,\n721 Chatham Street, and third prize\nto Mrs. J. Carlson, 1008 Observatory\nStreet. Last year's cup winner was\nMr. Melneczuk.\nIn the lawn and boulevards sec\ntion, T. Dolphin was presented first\nprize, and Mrs. J. C. Mulr, 1323\nStanley Street, second prize.\nA. V. Rowley, 1113 Front Street,\ntook first prize in the vegetable?\nand lawns section while William\nForest, 208 Chatham Street, was\njudged second.\nC, Dalntort, High Street, and W,\nG. Wslford, 711 Elwyn, won first\nand second prizes, respectively,, for\nthe rockery section,\nGardens were inspected about\nfour times during the Summer and\nfinally judged by Andrew Amot\nand Frank Holt,.\nPrize? will be presented to the\nwinners at a banquet to be held\nnext month,\nKing Scout Badge Received . . .  .\nNelson District Groups' Projects\n\"Good Scouting\" Says Deputy Chief\nSHIFT CURLERS\nNAME NIVEN HEAD\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 20 f The Shift\nCurling Club here named Johnny\nNiven, former Nelsonite, as their\nnew president for the 1950-51\nseason. Don McKinnon was installed\nas Vice- President while B i 11\n(Shorty) Long was returned as\nSecretary-Treasurer. ,\nP. F. Mclntyre was named patron\nand Frank McQiiire and BUI Charters form the draw committee.\nShift curlers this season will get\nat least two tries at the game a week\nfor a season's membership while\nextra games will be scratch games.\nThe club will stage open house\nfrom Oct. 30 to Nov. 2. Closing date\nfor curling applications has been\nset at Nov. 3.\nWilford Graves\nDies af Fruitvale\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Oct. 20\u2014Funeral services for Wilford Graves, a\nresident of Fruitvale, will be held\nfrom the United Church here today with Rev. D. W. More official*\ning.\nWell known here, Mr. Graves died\nin Trail-Tadanac Hospital Thursday\nnight after a lengthy illness. He was\n42 years old.\nHis wife was the former Violet\nPalmer of Willow Point\nA resident here for 15 years, Mr.\nGraves had been employed with the\nCM. & S. Company as machinist.\nBesides his wife, he is survived\nby two daughters, Doris, 14, and\nGail, 0; one son. Gordon, 6; one sister,\nMrs. Rdg. Eriekson at Vancouver;\nand two brothers, Arthur at Victoria and Edward in Vancouver.\nTo Name School\nAttendance Area\nRepresentatives\nAttendance Area meetings open\nto the public will be held in various\npoints throughout School District\nNo, 7 for the sake,of chojsing Attendance Area representatives from\nwhich a Trustee is elected.\nThe meetings start Monday and\nwill continue through until Nov. 4.\nThe schedule for the Area Attendance meetings follows:\nOct. 23\u2014Harrop and Procter.\nOct. 24\u2014Willow Point and Longbeach.\nOct. 30\u2014Queen's Bay and Balfour\nat Balfour.\nOct. 31\u2014Blewett.\nNov. 1 \u2014 Taghum and Sproule\nCreek at Taghum Hall.\nNov. 2\u2014Nelson extra - municipal\nattendance area.\nNov. 3~Sheep Creek; and Ymir.\nNov. 4\u2014Reeves - MacDonald, Erie\nand Salmo.\nCURLING CLUB\nBEGINS DRIVE\nNelson Curling Club has begun its\nannual drive for members.\nThe Club has a new incentive for\nincreasing its membership this season, for it has had to raise its fees\nto meet an increase from $2800 to\n$3400 in rental asked by the Civic\nCentre Commission. The new fee\nincludes rock rental, however. The\nClub can accommodate up to 250\nmembers.\nSweden has practically no losses\nfrom forest fires, according to Dean\nThorsten Steffert of the Stockholm\nForestry School.\n52 EMPLOYEES\nSHARE $600\nIN J.P.C. PRIZES\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 20- During\nthe month of September, a total of\n?600 was won by Cominco employees in the form df Joint Production\nCommittee awards.\nThe two highest awards of $50\neach were won by Patrick O'Neill\nof the Refinery and Charlie DeGirolamo of the Ammonia Group. Mr.\nO'Neill suggested that alterations\nbe made to the cooling tubes in the\nSilver Refinery. This suggestion realized considerable improvement\nin production methods and working\nconditions. Mr, DeGirolamo suggested the installation of a hoist\nwhich would eliminate the necessity of carrying heavy equipment\nup. a steep flight of stairs, High\nsafety value was given to this idea-\nJ. R. Dean of the Sullivan Concentrator in Kimberley won a $25\naward plus a special $25 safety\naward prize. He suggested that an\nadditional exit door be installed in\nthe coach used to carry crews to\nthe underground crushing chamber. This eliminates the danger\nof men being trapped in case of an\naccident.\nAwards of $30 were won by Ed\nDrader of the Refinery, and P, B.\nLoewen of the Sullivan Concentra\ntor, while $25 awards were won by\nA. E. Ross and C. P. Reddick of\nthe Sullivan Concentrator in Kimberley.\nThese awards and others ranging\nupwards from $5 brought the September total of J.P.C. winners to 52.\nARCING LAMP\nBRINGS FIREMEN\nFiremen were called to an arcing\nlamp at the corner of Silica and\nWard Streets,' Friday night about 3\np.m. The City Electric Department\nwas called and the disturbance was\nsoon cleared.\nCominco Makes\nBase Metals Find\nEDMONTON (AP)\u2014The Edmonton Journal says today in a news-\npage story that huge deposits of\nbase metals have been revealed by\ndiamond drilling along the South\nshore of Great Slave Lake In the\nNorthwest Territories.\nThe newspaper says that \"Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company which with Ventures Ltd.\ncomprised a team that was engaged\nin similar work in the area in 1949\nis reported to have indications of a\nlead-zinc ore body of 900,000 tons,\n\"This' is regarded as about half\nthe volume that would be required\not establish a large industry in the\narea but still sufficiently encouraging to warrant a more intensified,\nsearch, i\n-'\"If sufficient ore- were found, one\nof the needs would be a large concentrator, requiring an outlay of between $4,000,000 and $5,000,000. Al\nso, major power development would\nbe involved, along with the construction of a 400-mile railway.\"\nBoy Scouts, Cubs, Guides and\nBro\\frnies of Nelson were reviewed\nby Jackson Dodds, C.B.E., Deputy\nChief Scout of Canada, in Nelson\nFriday, and later leaders and other\ncitizens attended a banquet in\nhonor of Mr. Dodds at the Hume.\nThe coveted King's Scout badge\nwas presented tq Jergen Monk, First\nSalmo Troop, by Mr, Dodds'at the\nreview at the Civic Centre. The Deputy Chief Scout also presented the\nFirst Class Badge to William Hark-\nness of the First Nelson Troop and\nto Ernest Mason of the Second Nelson Troop, Scoutmasters of the boys\nwere Chris Hanson of Salmo, Gerry\nTownsend, First Nelson Troop, and\nGordon Pickard, Second Nelson\nTroop.\nThe 15-year service star was presented to Scoutmaster 4 Piekard,\nwhose service dated from* the time\nhe joined the Cubs, became a Scout\nand then a leader.\nMr, Dodds, Lieut-Co. G. E, Sim-\nmonds of the Administration Department at Ottawa, and J, V.\nScrivener, Field Commissioner for\nProvincial Boy Scout headquarters,\nwere welcomed by the boys and\ngirls, who went through their re-\nspectlve opening ceremonies.\nMr. Dodds toured their ranks,\nchatting with each member and\ncommenting on their badges and the\nneatness of their uniforms, then\nmade himself acquainted with leaders of all groups.\n\"GOOD SCOUTING\"\nIh an address, he stressed the\namount of good the Nelson units\nwere doing in rendering public service and good turns such as plant,\ning of seeds along Nelson District\nhighways and making their year\nly contributions. Up to the present\nthese contributions have been made\nto kootenay Lake General Hospital, the group members denying\nthemselves favorite pasttimes in order to present needed materials to\nthe hospital.\nSuch actiyis were \"good scouting\" and were far reaching in their\nbenefits,\nFollowing the presentations, the\nScout Taps was sung and the visiting party left for the banquet\nMr. Podds, main banquet speaker,\nalso made another presentation,\nthis time a St. John Ambulance Association diploma to Tom Foster,\nCubmaster of the Sixth St. Saviour's Cub Pack. Mr. Dodds' speech\nwill be reported Monday.\nOther speakers were K. R. Yale,\nPresident of the Nelson and District\nBoy Scouts Association who welcomed the guests; - Mayor N. C.\nStibbs, who welcomed the guests on\nbehalf of the City of Nelson; Very\nRev. T. L. Leadbeater, Dean of\nK o o t e n ay; Lieut-Colonel Sim-\nmonds, aod D, L. Ure, District\nScout Commissioner, who was\nChairman.\nAmong others invited to the head\ntable were Walter Hendricks,\nM.L.A., Nelsqn-Crestpn; Dr, N, H.\nJennejohn, J, J. McEwen, p, H. Hoskins, C, n. Bland, H, Butterfield and\nMrs. Stibbs. i\nMore.than 70 people attended the\nbanquet.\nSinging of \"O Canada\" was accompanied by J, B. M, Barnum, and\ngrace was led by Rev. A..R. Dixpn.\nThe visitors will tour the West\nKootenay Power and Light Company plants Saturday and will be\nguests of Comjhcp at a luncheon at\nthe South Slocan staff house.\nAgent for\nMcCALL\nPATTERNS\nFINK S\nMrs. W.J. McKim,\nLong of Nelson,\nPasses al Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 20 \u2014 Funeral\nservice will be held here Saturday\nfor Mrs. Ida Florence McKim. aged\n72, long a resident of Nelson who\ndied in Trail-Tadanac Hospital\nThursday.\nMrs. McKim canje West to Nelson\n38 years ago from Welsford, N.B.,\nwhere she was born March 10, 1878,\nand moved to Trail eight years ago.\nBesides her husband, Walter J.\nMcKim, she is survived by three\ndaughters, Mrs. Gerald Brown of\nSpokane; Mrs. Jack Miller of Rossland, and Mrs. Robert Haggart of\nTrail; and one son, Earl of Vancouver. She was predeceased by a\ndaughter, Margaret, in 1948, and by\na son, Albert, earlier this year.\nThe Weather\nSynopis:\nSunny weather is expected over\nthe Southern Coast of British Columbia.\nConsiderable cloudiness persists\nin the Southern Interior but the Improvement will spread slowly Eastward in the next 24. to 36 hours.\nJfelson  .'.    42   50   -\nHalifax    47   62   -\nMontreal      39   48   \u2014\nToronto    :    44   55   \u2014\nWinnipeg     37   42   .01\nRegina       S3   38   t-\nSaskatoon      27   34\nNorth Battleford    24   33   .11\nMedicine Hat     31   34   .06\nCalgary    21   31   .11\nEdmonton     19   38\nKamloops       37   48\nPenticton     43   53    \u2014\nVancouver     47   52   .03\nVictoria       44   54   \u2014\nKimberley  ,    38   42   .17\nCrescent Valley     44   55   .19\nPrince Rupert  32. 47   \u25a0*\nPrince George       8   40\nSeattle       47   55   .02\nSpokane     47   52   .64\nLos Angeles     58   67\nNew York     63   70\nWhitehorse      17   38\nOttawa      37   48\nNOVELTY DANCES,\nPRIZES AT ANNUAL\nGYRO HOEDOWN\nAll decked out in overalls and\ngingham dresses was the crowd at\nthe' Gyro Hoedown, Friday night\nwhen they swung and promenaded\ntheir partners around the hall to\nthe tune of old time music.\nA refreshment booth convened by\nMrs. H. Lupton, assisted by the rest\nof the Gyrettes, was a popular spot\nfor the square dancers.\nH, Lupton, President, acted as\nMaster of Ceremonies.\nNovel dances and prizes were\nenjoyed by the merrymakers and\ntwo live chickens were given as\nprizes.\nOthers in charge of the big dance\nwere P. E. Poulin, James Riley,\nRobert Emory, Dan Crozier, Donald\nThompson, J. G. Watson, Ken\nMoRoryeand Alex Freeman.\nC. MOLINA, TRAIL\nLAID AT REST\nTRAIL, B. C, Oct. 20-Requiem\nMass for Cesare Molina, resident of\nTrail for 21 years who died this\nweek was held from Saint Anthony\nof Padua Church here Friday morning with Rev. Father George Hart\nofficiating.\nMr. Molina died in Trail.Tadanac\nHospital Wednesday at the age of\n71 years.\nBor nat Taino, Province of Milan,\nItaly, ln 1879, he had lived in Canada for theJpast 50 years,    .\nPrior to retiring about three\nyears ago he had operated a grocery business for 19 years. He was\nalso a. member of the Columbo\nLodge.\nHe was predeceased by a daughter, Mrs. Inez Toppano who died\nIn Coleman years ago arid survivors include his wife Maria, one son\nMichael in Rossland; four daughters, Mrs. E. Daloisc, Mrs. R. Cacc-\nhione, both of Trail, Mrs. William\nPasquale of Vancouver and -Mrs.\nA- Montalbetti of Coleman, Alta.\nPRESCRIPTIONS \u2014 DRUG PATENTS\nSICKROOM SUPPLIES \u2014 STATIONERY\nCANDY \u2014 MAGAZINES ~ TOBACCO\n-      OPEN SATURDAY \u2014 TILL 8:30\nOPEN SUNPAY \u2014 2 TO 5\nEMERGENCY CALLS \u2014 PHONE 394-L\n\"youh. JoAiAML qI disalik\"\nHelsdn Pharmacy\nFEATURING   NATIONALLY   ADVERTISED   LIN1.S-\nfr; M: SAMPLE, DRUGGIST\n433. Josephine St.,      Nelson, B.C.\n''; Phone ,1203'-e-j We -Deliver -- Res. 394-L\nHeroic, Legless Labrador\nWoman Returns to Nursing\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld., Oct. 20 (CP)\n\u2014Mrs .Elizabeth Kirkina Mukko,\nlegless for 57 years and without\nartificial limbs for the last 27 of\nthem, is returning to her nursing\nduties at Rigolet, Labrador, with\nnew limbs \u2014 thanks to R.C.A.F.\nand United States fliers at Goose\nBay.\nThe 59-year-old mother sailed\nfrom here for her Labrador home\naboard the coastal vessel Kyle.\nShe's returning North \"to answer\nany call I get tq act as midwife\nand- nurse.\"\nShe was two years old when her\ntrapper father, worried about his\nsick wife, left the family cabin at\nlie inn\nnil ill\nG. H. JONG\n30 years experience\n.In Canada\nChinese Herb Remedies\nFor   stomach,   bladder,\nsinus, nervous and skin\ntrouble.\n8I7A 1st* St East. Calgary, Alta.\nWinter's Cove, near Rigolet, to get\na doctor. Caught in a' blizzard, it\ntook him four days to make the trip,\nand when he returned it was to find\na new baby dead and Elizabeth on\nthe floor with both legs fro?en.\nGangrene had set ih.\nHe cut off her legs below the\nknees with an ax, then stood her\nin a flour barrel. The flour stemmed\nthe bleeding.\nThree years later Dr. Wilfred\nGrenfell took her to his hospital at\nSt. Anthony,'Nfld; ..He had liny artificial limbs made for her.Later the\ndoctor took her to Nfew York, where\nDr. John McTavish('a Scottish surgeon, performed 18 operations on\nher legs and named her Kirkina\nLater she married\u2122 trapper. By\nthen Dr. Grenfell w\u00bbtjs dead and,\nhaving no money for legs, she hob.\nbled about on stumps' protected by\npads.\nFAMILY WIPED OUT\nShe raised a family of seven\u2014un- Labrador\ntil 1918, when-an influenza epidem-' Toehrs.\nic killed her husband and six of\nher children\nShe .dug the graves and buried\nthem all, performing the funeral service, as she was the only one in the\nsettlement who could read or write.\nLife became tame for Mrs, Mukko\nso she studied nursing at the St,\nAnthony hospital, then served as\nnurse and mid-wife for anyone\nwithin 35 miles of her home.\n\"I brought 32 children into the\nworld,\" she says proudly, \"and never\nlost a mother or baby.;\"\nRecently Dr. Tony Paddon, in\ncharge of the St, Anthony hospital,\ntold H.C.A.F. and American filers\nat the Goose Bay airbase about Mrs.\nMukko. They chipped in and sept,\nher to St John's for new artificial\nlimbs\n\"It's nice to hive artificial legs\nagain after being without them for\n27 years,\" she said as she walked\naboard the coastal vessel, bound for\nahd    more   service   lo\nSEVEN FINED\nUNDER GAME ACT\nGame Act violations including\ncatching and killing red f jsh during\nspawning time, carrying loaded\nfirearms in a vehicle, and carrying\nfirearms without a license brought\ncharges against seven men in B\nGame Division.'\nJ. Semeniuk and W. Pasmen of\nFauquier, charged by Game Warden\nP. D. Ewart of Trail with catching\nand killing redfish (Kokanee! during spawning time, appeared before Parker Williams, Stipendiary\nMagistrate, were fined $10 and ?2\ncosts each.\nA. A. Phelps of Deer Park was\ncharged with two violations by\nGame, Warden Ewar. For carrying\nloaded firearms in a motor vehicle\nand carrying firearms without a\nlicense, he was fined by Stipendiary\nMagistrate W. H. Taylor at Castlegar, $10 and $5 costs on the first\nviolation and $10 on the latter.\nR. C. lyicQqair and S. Nixon of\nNakusp Were charged by Game\nWarden R. A. Rutherglen of Nelson\nwith carrying loaded firearms in a\nmotor vehicle, They-appeared before Stipendiary Magistrate A, R\nBidard and were fined $10 and $5\ncost each.\nW, Maccaim of Munroe, Louisiana,\nwas charged by Game Warden J. V.\nMackill of Invermere with carrying\nloaded firearms in g motor vehicle.\nHe appeared before A. Chisholm,\nStipendiary Magistrate, and was\nfined $35 and $4.50 cost\nNative Sons Top\nPrairie Juniors\nLETHBRIDGE, Oot. '20 (CP) -\nLethbridge Native Sons tonight\nmoved into sole possession of first\nplace in the Western Canada Junior Hockey League with a comparatively easy 6-2 win over Regina Pats, Western Canada representatives in the Memorial Cup\nfinals last Spring.\nBilly Dea and Jerry'Towle led\nthe Sons with two goais' apiece,\nJack Rollingson and Cal Hockley\nscoring singletons. Centre Ken\nMcDonald picked up three assists\nfor the winners.\nJack McDonald and Eddie Lit-\nzenberger were the Regina marksmen,\nFourteen penalties were called,\nseven to each club. They included\nmajors to Steve Arisman and Bernie Grebinsky for fighting in the\nthird period and a major to Pat de,\nfenceman Joe Sauve for fighting.\nMEDICINE HAT, Alta,, Oct. 20\n(CP)\u2014Left winger Norm John\nson seored 50 seconds from the\nend1 to give Moose Jaw Canucks\na 4.3 decision over Medicine Hat\nTlgen In a Western Canada Jun\nlor Hockey League game marred\nby a third-period frea.for-.all and\nserious Injuries.\nMedlolno   Hat   centre   Jimmy\nDryden,  an   Edmunton   product,\nsuffered a 'skate out one-half Inch\nfrom  his  left eye  In tho third\nperiod and was taken to hospital.\nThe accident was the second suffered by the 'Hat six during the\nnight. Regular goalie Buddie Noon,\nalso originally from Edmonton, was\nsent to hospital when he too suffered a bad cut above the eye in\npre-game practice. He was replaced  by  juvenile  netminder  Billy\nAnderson of Carman, Man.\nThe third period was highlighted\nby a wide open free-for-all involving 15 members of both teams and\nseveral spectators.\nThe win allowed Canucks to va\ncate the League cellar and move\nInto third place, one point ahead\nof Crow's Nest Pass Lions and Calgary Buffaloes, It was the second\nstraight loss for the Tabbies, who\nhave lost their two starts. -\nOther Moose Jaw scorers were\nRed Oak, Fred HuquI and Dave\nBanting, Ron Craven, Bruce Cooke\nand Len Haley netted Medicine\nHat markers.\nNamed Provincial\nSuperior of St. Ann\nSister Mary Dorothea, S.S.A. has\nbeen appointed Provincial Superior\nof the Sisters of St. Ann in British Columbia.\nSister Dorothea replaces Mother\nMary Ludovio who has been transferred to the Mother House at La-\nchine, where she will be a member\nof the General Administration,\n\u25a0 Mother Ludovio played a leading\nrole in the building of Mount St\nFrancis Infirmary at Nelson.\nUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll^\ndbi*L     1\n|     Exotic Pool    -     Bar    3\/\n$5.00 per day 5\ns Write for Free Brochure 5\nHollywood, California \u00a7\njjiliiiiiiillliiiilliiliiiiiiiillliiiillllili_i.;\nSAVE\nIfllw\nROUND-UP\nSAVINGS.'\nP\u00bb8 ft Uxl-tt-eM far tmvtHlnf ttfwclotr\n**M Gwy.KHrnd It ,lh,ht the realty ftfe\ntrtrtt \u00abrtat el tfe yceil\n\u2022 SPECIAL WEEKEND  i\nEXCURSIONS   f\nFrom Nelson To\nTRAIL    $2.5C   \/\/\nVANCOUVER .... J18.0C      \"\nConlofl MM but\nCftyhound \u00ab*M| for\nM UlMnwrian r\u00ab-\nGREYHOUND\nTechnically speaking, a prune is\na variety of plum which dries without spoiling.\n^   X\n:    ASTHMA\nAND HAtf F'C V'f iR-,!\nConsult your local druggist or\nBreatheasy Distributors Ltd,,\nVancouver,  B.C.\n\u25a0\u25a0\nRIFLES\nWE STILL HAVE A VERY GOOD SELECTION\nOF NEW RIFLES\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\nModel\n70\n94.\n62\n99\/\n644\n647\nEAL\nB\n'D\n190\n151M\n530\nWinch.   \t\nWinch.\t\nWinch.  ^ i.\nSqvoge _\u2014lr_\nHusquqrna __\nHusquarna __\nBritish   __^_\nB.S.A. \u201e 2\nB.S.A. \u201e\nMossberg\t\nMossberg _.\u201e_r_\nStevens, dbl. bl.\n30\/06 ond 270 Cal.\n\u25a0 30\/30 Cal.\n' .22 Cal.\n300 Cal.\n270 Cal.\n30\/06 Cal.\n303 Cal.\n,303 BR. 30\/06 Cal.\n303 BR. 30\/06'Cal.\n16 Ga.\n.22 Cal.\n12 Ga.\n1 Box Shells with each Rifle\nA VERY LARGE STOCK OF\nAMMUNITION\nAll Calibres    .   .\nWRITE OR WIRE\nMICKEY'S CYCLE\nand SPORT SHOP\nPHONE 172 GRAND FORKS, B.C.\n+\n RUBBER\nFOOTWEAR\nfor all the family\nMEN'S \u2014 LADIES'\nBOYS' \u2014 CHILDREN'S\nThe SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n653 Baker St.\nDiapers for\nGreek Babies\nOTTAWA, Oct, 20 (CP)\u2014Dr. Lot-\nfa Hitschmanova leaves tomorrow\nfor Western Canada in search of\n13,000 diapers;\nShe is the fervid executive director of the Unitarian Services Committee of Canada and she wants the\ndiapers for Greek babies.\n. Dr. Hitschmanova was in Greece\na few months ago and she saw mothers using old newspapers and rags.\nShe told the story when she returned to Ottawa and quickly got\ncontributions equivalent to 1000 diapers which are going forward next\nweek. According to her survey the\nurgent need is for 11,000 more.\nThe Committee does all kinds of\noverseas relief work but her mission\nright now is for diapers.        \u25a0\nDr. Hitschmanova will make her\nappeal in speeches at Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Vancouver, Saskatoon and a number of other points\nto be arranged later.\n$150,000 NET\nFOR SHEEP CREEK\nThe Sheep Creek Gold Mines,\nLtd., liquid position during the three\nmonths ending Aug. 31 have improved by $456,500 after providing\n$37,500 for the dividend of two cents\na share paid July 15 of this year.\nInformation to this effect has been\ngiven to shareholders in a letter\naccompanying the two-cent-a-share\npayment of early this week.\nThe company's Zincton operation\nis milling from 350 to 400 tons daily\nand the Paradise mine is showing a\nfair profit on a nhie grade of ore,\nTreatment problems are said to\nhave been overcome.\nCombined profit before deprecla\ntion and income tax in the three\nmonths ended Aug. 31 was $150,000.\nTO WHOM\nIT MAY CONCERN\nI suffered from heart trouble,\ncaused by strained nerves, severe pains in my left arm and\nshoulder. I tried many things but\nreceived no help. I took treatments from' N. Cramer. It is\nwonderful the help that I have\nreceived. Now I have- no pains\nand my heart is In normal condition.\"\u2014\nMrs. J, Lawrence, Creston, B.C,\nSee N. Cramer, R.M.\nYou will get wonderful results.\nOffice hours from 10 to 10.\n310 Carbonate Street, Nelson\nEuropean people who do not understand English \u2014 We speak\ndifferent languages.\nOLD MASTER\nsays,\nKEEP YOUR KITCHEN\nWELL ENAMELED\nHere's a painting tip that's\nstrictly, for the men in the\nhouse! I Y'know men\u2014there's\nno use trying to persuade the\nlittle woman that those stains\nyou made on the kitchen\ntable the other night when\nthe boys wore In\u2014are only\nfruit juice! She knows better!\nBut\u2014you could have avoided\nany explanation by finishing\nyour kitchen in Enamel.\nThere's a finish that just\ndoesn't show stains\u2014can be\nwashed 'til the cows come\nhome and still retain all its\nhigh gloss and colors! Enamels come in beautiful, glowing colors that are a delight\nto any housewife!\nHow about re-doing your\nkitchen soon\u2014in Enamel from\nyour local hardware or paint\nstore? Ask your dealer today\nfor color charts and information on how to do the job.\nFor larger jobs see your paint\ncontractor.\nTHE B.C.  PAINT CLUB\nUS W. Pindar it. \u2022 V.ncouv.r, B. C.\nBoswell Apple\nGrowers Lose\nWild Heavy Rains\nBOSWELL, B. C, Oct. 20 - The\nheavy, rains of'the past two weeks\nare' delaying apple picking and\ncausing considerable loss, just when\nthere is a demand for large quantities for export to Britain.\nOne grower reports losing several hundred boxes of good Mcintosh Reds through not befog able\nto pjck them with such continued\nrains.\nROSSLAND YOUTH,\nL. E. DIMOCK,\nLAID AT REST\n.ROSSLAND, B. C, Oct. 20\u2014Funeral service for Leonard Edward\nDimock was held Tuesday afternoon from .St. Andrew's United\nChurch, with Rev. T. B. McMillan\nconducting the rites. Son of Mr. and\nMrs. G. W. Dimock of Paterson,\nLeonard died in hospital here Saturday morning in his nineteenth\nyear.\nOrganist at the service was Mrs.\nEdgar Jamieson, and the hymns\nsung by the large congregation\nwere \"Nearer, My God, to Thee\"\nand \"Rock of Ages\". There were\nmany floral tributes.\nPallbearers, all young men, were\nJimmy Williams, John Williams,\nJack Glover, Robert Glover, Donnie\nGlover and Robert Watmough, Interment was in Sunnyside Cemetery.\nNew Denver K.P.s\nEntertain Ladies\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Oct. 20-\nKnights of Pythias Lodge No. 22, on\ntheir regular meeting night in their\nCastle Haall, entertained the Pythian Sisters and friends.\nAbout 40 attended a picture show(\nTile film \"No Man Is an Island\"\nwas shown through the courtesy of\nthe New Denver High School Principal, Fred B. Tessman, with the\nHigh School projector.\nHealth Service\nEstablished in Nelson\nA physical health service has\nopened in Nelson with the arrival of\nN. Cramer, R.M., here to make her\nhome. She comes to Nelson after\nsome years in the East Kootenay at\nKimberley, Fernie and Creston.\nThis latest addition to Nelson professional services, the registered\nmassaeure is establishing on Carbonate Street.\n0AUA. lip. Wiih.\nTTlaAicut mudlti\n9317 SIZES   34-50\nSLIMMING SIDELINE\nIt's yours \u2014 and no mistake! New\ndraped collar, sideline, and set-in\nsleeves with interesting turnback\ncuffs are designed especially to flatter and slim you!\nPattern 9317: sizes 34, 36, 38, 40,\n42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 takes 3-li\nyds. 3!)-in.; % yd. contrast.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(25c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for each pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\nSTYLE NUMBER.     .\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., 214 Baker St.,\nNelson, B. C.\nNEW season styles for you! Send\ntwenty-five cents (coins) for . our\nMarian Martin Fall and Winter Pattern Book. Fashions for the young\nand young In heart plus Christmas\nideas galore; A free pattern of a\nblouse to make from a yard of 39-\ninch fabric is printed In the book.\nNelson m Trail\nRossland Freight\nJ. C. MUIR\n9\nPhones:   Nelson 77; Rossland 171; Trail 1001\nConnections for:\nSALMO \u2014 KASLO \u2014 CRESTON \u2014 NAKUSP\nPublic Health\nSupervisor\nMISS ALICE BEATTY\n. newly appointed Public Health\nSupervisor for the West Kootenays.\nMiss Beatty succeeds Miss Margaret Cammaert, Trail will be Miss\nBeatty's headquarters.\nNew Carpet\nFor Nakusp\nAnglican Church\nNAKUSP, B. C, Oct. 20 \u2014 St.\nMark's Anglican Church here will\nget a new carpet through a gift\nfrom Mrs. C. S. Leary to its Worn\nen's Auxiliary.\nA letter of thanks was ordered to\nbe sent to Mrs. Leary at the organization's October meeting at the\nhome of Mrs. J. Addison.\nMrs. M. Embree was appointed\ndelegate to the deanery meeting at\nCa'stlegar Tuesday.\nMrs. Embree, Educational Secretary, read the diocesan president's\naddress given at the annual meeting held recently in Vernon, calling on members for prayer and\ncontributions of time, work and\nmoney.\nAndrew Sime, Yahk\nOldtimer Dies\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct 20-Andrew Sime, age 83, well-known resident of Yahk for 25 years, died\nWednesday in the hospital a few\ndays, after he was brought from\nYahk by Cranbrook ambulance. He\nhad served as deputy returning officer for Yahk polling station in\nelections for many years.\nA native of Scotland, he came to\nCanada ln 1909, and in 1924 settled\nin Yahk district where he farmed\nuntil his retirement. He was a member of the Liberal Association, and\nalso had been a Mason. He was single\nand had no relatives in the district.\nVICTORIA LEAGUE HOSTESS\nTO CANADIANS IN BRITAIN\nTORONTO, Oct. 20 \u2014 Victoria\nLeague, London, England, extends\nInteresting facilities for hospitality\nto Canadians, and particularly to\nyoung men and women of the Dominions, travelling to GreatBritain.\nThis organization, which has been\nset up solely for the purpose of\npromoting friendship between\nGreat Britain and the. Dominions,\nhas branches throughout England\nand other parts of the British Commonwealth, with headquarters located at 38 Chesham Place, Bel-\ngrave Square, London, England.\nThe National Chapter of Canada,\nImperial Order Daughters of the\nEmpire, is associated with the Victoria League, and it is through the\nNational Hospitality Committee of\nthe I.O.D.E. that these facilities are\nbeing presented ta Canadians,\nMrs. S. E. Wedd, I.O.D.E. Hospitality Convener, who recently returned from Great Britain, states\nthat the Victoria League has entree\nto functions and ceremonies of intense interest, which are taking\nplace every day in the City of London and elsewhere throughout the\ncountry, and that the League will\ngladly extend invitations to overseas visitors.\nVictoria League has a large membership of persons who are wiling\nto help arrange tours and personally act as guides. Visitors may-obtain meals at a nominal charge in\nthe League's canteen and snackbar, where concerts, and dances for\nyoung people are frequently held-\n23,810 More Passengers Carried\nOn District Ferries in September\nPassenger traffic on the four dls-1\ntrict ferries increased. by 23,810 j\npassengers during the month of,\nSeptember when ,143,997 were\ntransported on Kootenay Lake and\nColumbia River. Some 120,187 passengers were carried during the\nsame period last year.\nThe largest Increase was seen\non the Castlegar Ferry when 73,-\n788 passengers were taken across\nthe Columbia River during the\nmonth compared with 59,703 last\nyear. The Nelson ferry was next\nin line with an increase of 6619\npassengers over last year's total of\n49,053.\nCar traffic on the Castlegar ferry\nalso surpassed that of last year\nwhen 24,113 vehicles were transported compared with 17,881 last\nyear, an increase of 6232, On the\nNelson ferry 2552 more cars made\ntrips across the West Arm; 20,635\nwere counted for the month -com-\nMoy\nle\n\u2666 \u2666 \u2666\nMOYIE, B.C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Janning of Maple Creek,\nSask., were visitors at the home of\ntheir son-in-lanw and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. R. Johnson. After\nspending several days they left for\nVancouver and Victoria, B.C. where\nthey will spend some weeks before\nreturning to their home.\nMr. R. A. Smith of Moyie is confined to the St. Eugene Hospital at\nCranbrook, where he had a major\noperation last week. It is reported\nhe is doing well and may be able to\nreturn home during the next week.\nMrs. T. V. Hogarth returned during the week from Vancouver,\nwhere she had been visiting with\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. L. M. Gernaey.\nMr. ahd. Mrs. H. Wright had as\ntheir guests their son who is in the\nNavy and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nH. Wright. After spending a three\nweeks visit they left for their home\nat Victoria accompanied by Mr.\nWright's sister, Grace.\nMr. and Mrs. Jimmy Campbell\nand daughter and sons, and Mrs.\nGarden, mother of Mrs. Campbell,\nand her grandson, George Garden,\noil of Chapman Camp, motored to\nMoyie on Sunday and called at the\nhome .of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Smith.\nThe Moyie Community Box Social held Oct. 14 was successful. The\nauctioning netted the sum of $24.\nEveryone enjoyed games of cards,\nsinging- and other entertainment.\nThe evening was sponsored by the\nchildren, in aid of their Christmas\nfun.\nJ. C. Hembling of the Canadian\nNational Institute for the Blind\nfrom Vancouver; B.C. and district\nnurse were in Moyie on Tuesday.\nMiss Alice Botterell of Creston\nspent Thanksgiving at the home of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Botterell.\nKuskanook Mud Slide\nCovers Highway\nBOSWELL, B. C, Oct. 20-A mud\nslide came down Wednesday near\nKuskanook, closing the highway. It\ntook the local road crew several\nhours to get it clear fdr the ferry\ntraffic.\nChildren's Party\nPlanned at Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B.C., Oct. 20\u2014The Nakusp Board of Trade have set Dec.\n21st as a tentative date for the Annual children's Christmas tree.\nA selection of Christmas films\nhave already been booked which includes \"The Three Bears\", \"Screwball\", \"Sinbad the Sailor\", \"Here\nComes the Circus\" and \"Story in a\nTea Cup.\" Donations from the community are being solicited.\nFound Not Guilty\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 20 \u2014\nCharged with securing a motor vehicle through false pretences, Clarence Hubbard of Marysville was\nfound not guilty when he-appeared\nhere in County Court before Judge\nH. W. Colgan. He elected speedy\nhearing when he was committed\nfor trial on the charge following\npreliminary hearing in late September in Kimberley district R.C.M.P.\ncourt.\n$20.25 Netted at\nNakusp Bake Sale\nNAKUSP, B.C., Oct. 20\u2014The dinner meeting of the Women's Auxiliary to the Arrow Lakes Hospital\nscheduled to take place at Mr. and\nMrs. Walter Maxwell's Shemogue\ncabin at Telegraph Bay, owing to\nunfavourable weather, was held at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nMaxwell.\nIt was reported that $20.25 was\nmade at the October bake sale. The\nnext bake sale will be held on November 4th with Mrs. C. H. Horrey\nand Mrs. George Baird in charge.\nMrs. F. B. Maxfield and Mrs. V.\nC. Smith were appointed as hospital\nvisitors for the month.\nNew Denver ...\nNEW DENVER, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and\nMrs. Fred B. Tessman and son Terry left for Trail to attend the Dis\ntrict Teachers' Convention.\nMrs. William Anderson of Slocan\nCity is a patient in Slocan Community Hospital.\nMiss Marion Boss left-for Trail,\nwhere she will attend the District\nTeachers' Convention.\nA. E. Carter has been discharged\nfrom Slocan Community Hospital,\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Vestrup and\ndaughter, Judith, returned from a\nholiday in Spokane.\nMrs. T. Sakamoto has been discharged from Slocan Community\nHospital.\nAlbert George, after visiting Mrs.\nD. Johnson and Peter Johnson, returned to Kimberley.\nMrs. W. George Teir, who was\nvisiting her.mother, Mrs. M. E. Ayl\nwin, and other relatives, left for\nTrail, where she will visit her sister, Miss Nellie E, Aylwin, before\nreturning to her home in Vancouver.\nMiss Joy McPhail left to attend\nthe District Teachers'- Convention\nat Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. William Kernaghan\nhave left for Salmon Arm, and Mrs.\nFleming for Oliver, after attending\nthe funeral of their aunt, Mrs. Martha Ann Smith, and spending a day\nwith Rev. Dr. and Mrs. Douglas P.\nWatney of Vancouver.\nHeads Teachers\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY,\n, OCT. 21, 1930 \u2014 3l\nGeorge Keenleyside Named Liberal\nPresident for East Kootenay\npared with 18,083 last September.\nCai1 traffic on tho M. V. Anscomb, main Kootenay Lake ferry\nalso climbed. During August 4176\ncars were, transported across the\nlake, an increase of 1275 over last\nyear's 2881,\nIncreases were seen In nearly all\nother ferry traffic.\nStatistics for August follow:\nCASTLEGAR\n1849    1950\nNo. of round trips    3,235    3,661\nNo. Passenger Cars ..'17,881   24,113\nPassengers    50,703   73,788\nTrucks    :    9,332   11,317\nTrailers        158       184\nBuses       720       717\nMotorcycles         265       282\nRigs          25 4\nLivestock            30       111\nNELSON FERRY\nNo. round trips ...!    2,450    2,483\nPassenger Cars   18,083   20,635\nPassengers   49,053   55,772\nTrucks       5,044    6,752\nTrailers  \u201e      124 '    132\nBuses       496      463\nMotorcycles  _.       37       172\nRigs         \u2014 2\nFreight In tons     2,271    3,339\nLivestock              15        27\nHARROP-LONGBEACH\nNo. Round Trips     1,233    1,444\nPassenger  cars      1,266     1,589\nPassengers     4,209    5,433\nTrucks         533       636\nTrailers           10 8\nBuses  \u201e     170       174\nMotorcycles         95        99\nRigs   .*       \u2014 2\nFreight in tons      280VS 224%\nLivestock         3        10\nM. V. ANSCOMB\nNor round trips       120       124\nPassenger cars     2,881    4,176\nPassengers     7,222    0,004\nTrucks       604    1,016\nTrailers  -       50       104\nBuses       128       124\nMotorcycles         14        19\nFreight in tons      473 Vi   1,523\nLivestock         4        \u2014\nMRS. tLVA G. KETTLEWELL,\nnewly-elected President of the\nNelson District Teachers' Association for 1950-51.\nsMrs. Kettlewell succeeds Frederick Middleton of Salmo.\n\u2014Vogue  Photo\nNelsonite at Course\nLearns Canadian\nPlant Is Planned\nJust returned from the United\nStates, where he took a two-week\nrefresher course, is Aid. N. R.\nSardich, Nelson representative of\nthe Gardner-Denver Company (Canada) Ltd.\nAlderman Sardich attended sessions at the Company headquarters\nat Quincy, 111., La Grange, Mo, and\nDenver, Col.\nWhile a' Quincy, he learned the\nGardner-Denver Company is opening a branch plant in Brantford,\nOnt. The new. plant will for the\npresent time be confined to inspection, servicing and assembly of its\nproducts made in the United States,\nbut will later be expanded to include some manufacturing.\nH. G. Myers, Chairman of the\nBoard of Directors, said the plant\nwill have approximately 18,500\nsquare feet of floor space. About 30\nto 40 men will be employed in a\nshort time. Products to be assembled\nwill include compressors and other\nequipment manufactured for mining,\ngeneral construction and oil well\nfields.\nWhile ln Missouri, Alderman Sardich visited the home of Mark Twain\n(Samuel Clemens) at Hannibal, and\nalso toured the great cave where\nTom Sawyler, Huckleberry Finn,\nIndian Joe and other famous Mark\nTwain characters made their headquarters.\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 20 \u2014\nDelegates from all parts of East\nKootenay numbering about 120 attended the annual meeting here of\nthe East Kootenay Liberal Association and discussed district affairs.\n\u2022James Byrne, M.P. for Kootenay\nEast of Kimberley outlined legislation at the special session bf Parliament, and reported on government\npolicies. Dealing with district affairs he urged continuation of the\ncurrent organization work in locals,\ndistrict associations and the federal\nassociation on the basis of the- new\nconstitution. .   -\nK. N, Stewart of Fernie, member of the advisory board of the\nLiberal Association, reported on\nboard meetings he had attended in\nthis capacity at Victoria and Ottawa during the past year. Thomas\nKing of Golden, longtime member\nof the legislature for Columbia riding, also spoke briefly. He and Mrs.\nKing were congratulated by the\nmeeting on their 49th wedding anniversary which they marked Tuesday.\nUnanimously chosen honorary officers were Hon. Senator J. H. King\n7ksidk\u00a3M$L\nbi^&wha. UJhsdaJL\nTo Stop Visitors\nTo England for\nMedical Attention\nLONDON, Oct. 20 (Reuters)\u2014Immigration officers ,have been told to\nrefuse admission to foreigners coming to Britain merely to get free\ntreatment from the National Health\nService. The new policy was announced yesterday by Health Minister Aneurin Bevan, who has often\nfaced criticism that the taxpayer\nfoots the bill if people visit Britain\nto get operations \"on the cheap.\"\nBoswell...\nBOSWELL, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Thomson of Nelson were\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. Ken Wallace\nduring the week, George Thomson\ngoing on to Washout Creek, Sirdar,\nfor the pheasant season opening,\nand also for some duck shooting.\nK. Wallace was a visitor to Nelson to attend the funeral of his\npast comrade, Art Oliver, with\nwhom he was in France in 1917.\nSong Service Held\nAt New Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Oct. 20\nTurner Memorial United Church\nchoir held a song service Sunday,\nwhen a full church enjoyed the\nspecial music. Mrs. L. R. Campbell\nwas organist, assisted by Miss Vel-\nma George.\nNEEDS  BUT 2 SKEINS\nChase chills with this newest fashion\u2014a favorite on campus, at home,\nat parties. Jiffy knit shoulderette is\na straight strip.\nKnitted on wooden needles of two\nskeins of knitting worsted. Pattern\n808 has directions.\nSend TWENTY-FIVE CENTS In\ncoins, (stamps connot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews-, Needlecraft Dept., 214 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, B.C. Print plainly\nPATTERN NUMBER, your NAME\nand ADDRESS.\nNew! Household accessories to\nknit! Motifs to paint on textiles!\nSend Twenty-five Cents (coins) for\nour new Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Book. Illustrations of crochet,\nembroidery patterns plus many fascinating hobby ideas. And a free\npattern is printed in the book.\nPresident, and Rt. Hon. Louis St\nLaurant and Premier Byron Johnson Vice-Presidents.\n-The meeting elected George Keenleyside of Golden, East Kootenay association president. He is also president of the Golden and the Columbia Liberal Association. Vice-\nPresidents will be elected, one from\neach of the.four Provincial Associations, while automatically on the\nexecutive are the four Provincial\nAssociation Presidents, Past President Jdhn Wirth of Kimberley, Mr.\nStewar as advisory board member,\nMr. Byrne, M.P., Walter Turnbull,\nNelson-Creston M.L.A., and Mr.\nKing. The meeting elected Armand\nLauzon secretary and James Buchanan treasurer, both of Kimberley.\nOther ' nominations were George\nHad(Jad of Cranbrook. as president\nand Ralph Foreman of Invermere\nSecretary.\nNext general meeting was set for\nApril under a constitution clause\ncalling for quarterly general meetings. Because of the size of the constituency this clause will be amended at that time, with Mr. Keenleyside to appoint a constitution revision committee ln the meantime.\nThanksgiving Service\nAt New Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Oct. 20\u2014\nThanksgiving service. was held ln\nSt. Stephen Anglican Church Sunday, when Rev. M. C. T. Percivall\ntook for his text the 145th Psalm,\n15th verse: \"The eyes of all wait\nupon thee; thou givest them their\nmeat in due season.\"\nThe church was decorated by\nmembers with vegetables, fruit and\nflowers. There was a large congregation.\nAfter the service all fruit and\nvegetables were taken to the Slocan\nCommunity Hospital.\nMoyie Veteran Dies\nMOYIE, B.C., Oct. 20\u2014111 for many\nmonths, Jimmy Holisted d'ed at the\nCoast. He was a veteran of the Sec\nond World War and was well known\nin this district, having spent many\nyears here before enlisting in the\nArmy.\nHe is survived by two sisters, Mrs.\nClive Bateman in Moyie and Mrs.\nB. Ballrttine at the Coast.\nNakusp..\u00bb\nNAKUSP, B. C\u2014Miss A. Bowes,\nwho has been guest of her niece,\nMrs. B. Bernheisa of Salem, Ore,,\nhas returned to her home.\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. S. Stanley left\nfor Quebec, where they will attend\nthe Canadian Weekly Newspapers\nAssociation meeting.\nMrs, Ellen Brown of Nanaimo and\nMrs. M. Bouchan of Trail, who were\nvisiting the Eastern Star Lodge, left\nfor Nelson and Creston.\nKarl Pakula left for Okanagan\nLanding, where he is employed.\nMrs. Walter L. Maxwell, who has\nbeen appointed delegate to attend\nthe convention of the B. C. Hospital\nAssociation, to be held in Vancouver, left Saturday.\nDr. and Mrs. F. B. Maxfield have\nas guests Mrs. Maxfield's parents,\nMr. and Mrs. M Craig of Foam\nLake, Sask.\nMrs. E. C. Johnson and Mrs. D. E.\nJohnson left for Nelson for several\ndays.\ni E. B. Gates of St. Leon came in to\nNakusp with his recently built\n\"Swish of St. Leon\" motorboat this\nweek.\nMrs. D. Ritchie and three young\nchildren left for South Slocan, to\nmake their future home.\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014Teachers from\nNakusp attending the school teachers convention in Trail are Mr. and\nMrs. Hugh Bolstad, Mr. Lloyd\nFriedman, Miss Betty White, Miss\nMary Kirk and Mr. H. Leonard.\nMrs. W. Wright left Thursday for\nNelson enroute to Vancouver via\nKettle Valley railway.\nMrs. M. Hoy and Mr. Fred Weller\nwere holiday visitors to Nelson Friday.\nCominco Workers\nInvest $461,550\nTADANAC, B.C., Oct 20 - With\na day and a half remaining ln tha\ncurrent Canada Savings Bond sales\nat Comlnco's plants, latest figures\nshow a total for the Tadanac and\nWarfield operations of $376,850. Ths\naverage purchase per applicant is\n$218.\nAt the Kimberley operations, tha\nfigure is $84;700 with an average\nsale of $214.\nThe grand total so far Is $481,550\nLast year, employees bought i total\nof 600,000.\nThis adyeitisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor, Control Board or by ths\nGovernment of British Columbia.\nAnnouncing the Opening of Our\nNEW OFFICE\n407 HALL ST.\nNELSON, B. C. ;\nNelson Business Machines\nAUTHORIZED\nREMINGTON RAND AGENTS\nPhone 1495\nP.O. Box 412\nfdmgih GOING ?\u00a34ces\nASSAULT CASE\nDISMISSED\nA charge of common assault laid\nagainst Jack Lee of Nelson by Mah\nToy was dismissed in City Police\nCourt Friday morning because of\nlack of evidence.\nWilliam Brown, Police Magistrate,\nheard the case.\nSTARTS TO WORK }\nI IN 2 SECONDS ,\nASPIRIN\n^   \u25a0    -iMDi' Jmk* <t\u00ab 'm cahao'a   \\  ^\nV   RELIEVES DISCOMFORT Of4\nI COLDS\ntm BETTER FAST!\nFor Rolling Your Own Try\nTty'M VIRGINIA FIM CUT\n^*w\n 4 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 21,1950\nm\nI '&.\nNIAGARA\nYou can get a\n$$0 n\nMM\nLIFE INSURED LOAN\nAT NO EXTRA COST\nFOR ANY AND EVERY PURPOSE\nDoctor, Dcntisl, or Hospital Bills\nCoal or Fuel Oil     Houie Repairs\nMoving Expenses '\nTaxes or old Bills, etc,\n;; '. If you hava a money prahlom\n' er would life financial aJvlct free,\n\". phona or cetf forfay.\nSafe Root Cellar Can Be\nBuilt With Drain Tile\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE\nSUITE I\n560 Baker St.        Ph. 1095\nAn inexpensive and efficient root\ncellar for a small home garden can\neasily be made trbm a 24-inch drain\ntile, sunk In the earth and closed\nwith an Insulated cover, which may\nbe opened at will for the removal\nof any part of the contents and replaced without difficulty.\nA working .drawing of this device accompanies this discussion.\nA. 24-inch tile will accommodate\nsix and a half bushels of fruit and\nvegetables. The cover may be made\nof wood, larger than the tile, but\nprotected with hardware cloth to\nkeep out rodents and insulated\nwith-many thicknesses of paper or\npadding. A pad of insulating material to fit just under the i cover,\nwhere it is easy to remove and replace, may be used where temperatures fall very low.\nCrops which will keep well in\nthis storage include carrots, beets,\nturnips, rutabagas, potatoes, apples\nand cabbage. The tile should be\nplaced in'a well drained place convenient to the kitchen. It may be\nused during the Summer for storing eggs, milk and butter, and for\nthe small garden makes a clean,\nsafe and inexpensive root cellar.\nIn preparing boxes or pits for\noutdoor storage, the box or pile of\nvegetables .should be covered with\nsix inches of hay, straw or leaves,\nthen with six to eight Inches of\nsoil.\nVegetables  and  fruit placed  in\nrr drainage materials-\nHow To Build Root Cellar With\nDrain Tile.\nstorage must be frfce from decay\nor injury and neither too old, -nor\nimmature. They should be harvested after frost has stopped their\ngrowth, but should neyer be stored\nif they. have been frozen. Avoid\nvegetables with bruises or skin\npunctures, as decay will start from\nthese and never store vegetables\nwhich are wet.\nDo not cover vegetables ln earth!\npits until the soil temperature has\ncooled off and do not close your\nstorage tile tightly until the temperature within has.dropped to 40\ndegrees.\nChoose Own Colors for Home\nFor Harmony With Personal Touch\nIt is better to live ln colorful surroundings to your heart's content,\neven if your home looks like a circus in the eyes of others, than to be\nInfluenced to use colors you don't\nreally like. , '\nThat is the advice given by Henri\nBeaulac', interior designer and decorator, in an article in the C-I-L\nOval. Mr. Beaulac, who has studied\nin (fcnada and ln the United States\nunder a Provincial Government\nburdary, has won several Canadian\nand U. S. awards for work in his\nfield.\nDon't lose sight of your home as\na whole, the artist cautions. One\nroom may be decorated in good\ncolor harmony, but colors.in other\nrooms or hallways may clash with\nit. A certain continuity should exist\nfrom one room to another.\nWhatever room you. plan to decorate should have a unity of coloring. The decorator calls this unit\n\"local tone\". A foom may be green,\nred or blue in local tone, with other\ncolors subordinate to, yet bringing\nout or softening the local tones.\nWho should decide on this basic\ncolor? It Is best for the person living in the room to make the final\ndecision, says Mr. Beaulac. However, the basic color may be suggested by a decorator, or by the\ncoloring of existing walls, or by a\ncarpet one wants to keep. For example, suppose you own a blue car-1\npet, but find that blue carpets have\ngone out of fashion. Attention can\nbe diverted from Us color by using\ndeeper blues on the walls, pr using\nentirely contrasting tones to distract the attention..\nIn general, well lighted rooms\nshould be given dark tones, and\nvice versa. And although colors in\na room may vary in their intensity,\nthe base color should remain unchanged. For instance, from indigo\nblue to periwinkle blue, the base\nstill remains blue, It the celling is\nsmooth and the walls rough, the curtains of glazed percale, all the same\nshade, the difference of texture will\ngive the impression of a variety of\ncolors. Accessories and furniture\nwill give,the complementary notes\nnecessary to make the room pleasing to the eye.\nColor can play a thousand tricks\n\u2014enlarge rooms, lower ceilings,\nstimulate people or depress them.\nBut a particular color does not necessarily produce the same effect on\neveryone. A certain color makes us\nhappy because it is associated in\nour memory with a happy event.\nThere is no use trying to fight\nagainst such preferences.\n\"Let us choose the colors that\nplease us,\" says Mr. Beaulac, \"without paying attention tp what other\npeople say, and we will invariably\nachieve harmony with a personal\ntouch.\"\nNew Housing Project Considered\nBy Cranbrook to Fill Urgent Need\nGRANHTinntr. ti   r.   _w  *\u00bb    \u00ab   \u25a0\u2014-<\t\nLawn Owner Should Attack\nSnow Mould Late in Fall\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20\u2014Snow mould\nis a common fungus disease on\nturfed areas throughout Canada. It\nT. H. WATERS GO. LTD.\nSERVICE - QUALITY ALWAYS\n\"NELSON'S PIONEER BUILDERS\"\nHURRY!\nHURRY!\nHURRY!\nGET YOUR STORM SASH\nORDERED NOW\nto assure delivery before colder v\/eatlier arrives.\nWe can equip;your home with quality-made and\nexpertly-fitted storm sash.\n\u2022    OUR    PRICES    ARE    RIGHT   TOO    \u2022\nWe offer a complete building service.\nPhone 156\nNelson, B. C.\n101 Hall St.\nusually occurs in the early Spring\nwhen the melting snow provides\nthe cool, moist conditions which\nfavor the development of the causal\norganism. It may also occur during\nthe Fall and Winter months.\nSnow mould is familiar to many\nlawn owners under a wide variety\nof names such as \"Winterkill\",\n\"snow blight\", etc. It first appears\nas a white cobwebby mass on the\nsurface of the turf. This later becomes a dirty greyish or black color\nand the grass under it becomes\nstraw-brown. The disease frequently kills the grass completely, but\neven when the damage is less severe, it can cause considerable harm\nto the appearance of the lawn, since\nthe infected areas are slow to start\nSpring growth and the weakened\ngrass permits the encroachment of |\nweeds.\nSpring treatments are not effective in controlling snow mould,\nsince the injury usually takes place\nbefore the snow melts. Brushing\nthe lawn, as commonly practised to\nremove the cobwebby masses, may\nassist the recovery of the turf by\npermitting better penetration of\nsunlight and air, but it does not\nreduce the degree of injury caused\nby the disease.\nSnow mould can be prevented by\napplying suitable fungicides'as late\nas possible in the Fall, just before\nthe first lasting Bnow. Over 40 fungicides have been tested by the Division of Forage Plants, Central\nExperimental Farm, Ottawa, and\nonly those containing mercury as\nthe active ingredient have given\nsatisfactory control. Turf fungicides\ncontaining mercury are readily\navailable, and should be applied in\naccordance with manufacturers' directions. These materials are extremely poisonous and should be\nhandled with caution.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAcadia Uranium       .42\nAkaitcho         1.35\nAnglo Huronian ..\nArjon\t\nArmistice  ,..\nAtlas Y K\t\nAubelle\t\nAumaque \t\nAunnr\t\nBagamac   \t\nBarymin .\nBase Metals ....\nBevcourt \t\nBidgood Kirk\nBobjo\t\nBoymar Gold .\n9.75\n.43\n.10\n.1614\n8 Y>\n.33\n3.10\n.27\n.90\n,50\n.40\n.6 Ys\n.11\nWt.\nPamour\t\nPaymaster\nPend Oreille .\nBralorne     7.05\nBrewis R L 12\nBroulan ...\nBuffadison\nBuff-Red Lake\n.11%\nBuffalo Ank      1.72\nBuff Can  '   .30\nCampbell R L      2.30\nCan Mai 74\nCariboo Gold       1.35\nCastle Treth \u201e      .74\nCantral Patricia       .74\nCentral Pore 21\nCentremaque       .12\nCheskirk   13\nChestervllle   68\nCochenour      1.85\nCoin Lake  15\nConiaurum  82\nCons.Beatty        71%\nCons Min & Smelt  121.50\nConwest       1.80\nCroinor    : 39\nDelnite      1.40\nDetta R L  16\nDiscovery 35\nDome     16.25\nDonalda  59\nDuvay\nEast Malartic !\nElder Gold\t\nEldona\t\nElsol \u201e\nEureka \t\nFalconbridge  .\nFed Kirk\n1.08\nMVt\n .._     8.55\nPicadilly 41\nPickle Crow      1.85\nPore Reef \u201e      1.04\nPowell Rouyn     1.24\nPreston E D      1.53\nQuebec Lab 21\nQuebec Man      l.\u00a3_\nQueenston  _,       .87%\nQuemont  _   26.50\nReeves Mac ..\nRegcourt\t\nSan Antonio\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u201e Oct. 20-A\nfurther housing project, this time\nnot limited . to veterans, is under\nconsideration for 1851 by the City\non a Dominion-Provincial-Municipal financing basis, if response to\npreliminary application is large\nenough to warrant 30 to 40 houses.\nThe fully-occupied 30-house veterans' subdivision solved the more\nurgent housing-needs when it went\ninto operation in January, but adequate housing is still difficult to secure here. The proposed new project would provide homes on a purchase or rental basis for permanent\nresidents fully employed desiring to\nimprove their housing conditions,\nbut unable to meet the necessary\ndown payment for building under\nthe National Housing Act, or to undertake private construction.\nIf the project is undertaken it\nwill offer three basic designs of\nhomes for various sized families on\neither rental or long-term, finance\npurchase basis. The City has had\nforms printed for those interested\nto fill in and file.\nRegistration by this method does\nnot bind the applicant to take the\nhouse, but is largely to indicate the\nvolume of interest in the project,\nGovernment agencies recommend\nfiling of twice the number of applicants before any action is taken on\nTIME, DON'T PEEK\nDon't waste heat, when you are\nusing an electric roaster, by lifting\nthe lid to watch or test the foods\nunnecessarily. Peeking won't help\nyou! Use reliable- recipes and observe their temperature and timing.\nimplementing' the plan, to allow for\nchanges of plans or residence by\napplicants. Since construction would\nbe on a - mass-production basis, a\nminimum of 30 to 40 homes would\nhave to be built to be economically\nsound.\nProviding interest is sufficient to\nplan in more detail, area under consideration for the homes adjoins the\nveterans' housing projdet to the\nSouth, where bushland three blocks\nwide and three blocks long has now\nbeen included in City limits. Right-\nof-way extending 12th Avenue into\nthis area, and' cross blocks have\nbeen cleared, and extension of public utilities of water, sewer and\nelectricity from the veterans' area\nwould be comparatively easy.\n'TaeA^HX-rW\nCUT THIS OUT... MAI LIT\nWE WILL CALL AND GIVE YOU A\nFREE ESTIMATE\nWE CAN \u2014\n1. Stop icing on eaves,\nhome. >\n3. Create comfortable living conditions in your\n2. Cut fuel bills 30% to 50%.\nHOW?\nROCK WOOL INSULATION\n1. Cuts drafts.\n2. Stops loss of heat.\n3. Is completely fire proof.\nWHY?\nIT'S MADE FROM ROCK\nSend this to\nArctic Insulators\nWe Serve the Kootenays\n1524 Vancouver St., Nelson, B.C. Phone 251-Y\nALL WORK  GUARANTEED*\nWe Blow It In or Batt It\"\nSannorm   24\nSen Rouyn  \u2014 5\nShawkey \t\nSherritt Gordon  '._     2.58\nSilvermiiler  90\nSilanco\nSiscoe \t\nSladon Mai \t\nStarratt Olsen....\nSteeloy  \u201e\nSteep Rock\t\nSurf Inlet\t\nSylvanite\nFrobisher  ;  2 76\nGiant Yel\nGIVE CARPET A CHANCE\nGive longer life to that new wool\ncarpet of yours. A rug cushion or\npad keeps the carpet from hard or\nuneven surfaced floors and absorbs\nthe shock of traffic. Your carpet\nwill look more luxurious and feel\nbetter underfoot, too.\n. THAXTED, Essex, England (CP)\n\u2014 Rev. Jack Putteril, a Socialist,\nprotested that a bright red telephone booth outside the 15th century church here hurt his eyes. The\nbox was repainted green.\nPHONE 33\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n719 BAKER ST. NELSON, B. C.\nLocal and Long Distance Moving\n\u2022  PACKING      9 SHIPPING      Q  STORAGE\nGillies Lake ..' <\t\nGod's Lake\t\nGoldale\t\nGoldcrest   \t\nGold Eagle\t\nGold Arrow'\t\nGolden Manitou      4.95\nHardrock 32\nHarricana       .8 %\nHasaga   34\nHeva   11\nHollinger  ;    11.00\nHomer Y K 6 %\nHosco 7 Ys\nHudson Bay .'.       ,54\nInspiration -. 39\nInt Nickel     37.75\nJacknife      ' .6 Yi\nJack Waite  15\nJoliet Que     1.03\nKayrand 30\nKenville    21\nKerr Addison    16.50\nKirkland Lake     1.10\nLabrador,      5.90\nLake DUfault       1.11\nLake Rowan       .10\nLakeshore \u201e      9.90\nLake Wasa  .- 67\nLamaque      6.75\nLapaska 4\nLcitch  \u201e     1.08\nLingman  (new)  29\nLittle Long Lac. .'. 42 '\nLouvicourt       .24\nLynx 15\nMacDonald  88\nMacassa         2.22\nMacLeod Cock _   \u2022 2.52\nMadsen R L     2.37\nMagnet  24\nMalartic G F       2.50\nMarcus G 12%\nMclntyre     57.75\nMcKenzie R L 47\nMcMarmac       .17\nMining Corp    16.85\nMosher L L       .13%\nMylamaque       .18%\nNegus      1.03\nNew Bidlamaque 6\nNew Calumet      2.31\nNew GolcVue 20%\nNow Lund     2.31\nNew Mar Bouyii      2.31\nNew Thurbois 10%\nNib        .4\nNicholson    28\nNipissing'  |  1.15\nNoranda    74.2\u00a3\nNormetals     4i80\nNorseman \u25a0.       .15\nNorzone 6\nO'Brien .,      1.52\nOgama : 20'\nO'Leary    '   .17%\nOmega        1.19\nOmnitrans ...\u201e 4 %\nGrenada  :.'..,         '-%\nOrlac   i     I,        4   '\nOsisko      i.\u00abi\nTeck Hughes     2.65\nThompson-Lund\t\nTorbrit  \t\nTrans Cont Res _..;\t\nUnion Mining\t\nUnited Keno  _....\nUpper Canada\t\nVentures  \t\nVicour\t\nViolamac ,\nWaite Amulet     10.50\nOILS\nAnglo Can     5.00\nA P Consolidated 45\nAtlantic Oil-     2.70\nB A Oil    30.00\n1.57     Cal & Edmonton  -    8.05\n55%  Calmont      1.03\n.28     Central Leduc      3.00\n.7 Yi Chemical Research       1.10\n.46     Commonwealth Pete '   2.00\n7.50     Dalhousle ., : 38\n5 % Davies Pete         22 ,\nDecalta    17\n7.10     Del Rio     1.32\n.8 % Eastcrest   '. 7%\n.34 i  Federated Pete     5,25\n.20     Globe          .60\n.10     Highwood  ;    - .13\n.18     Home    14.85\n.4 % Imperial Oil  _    29.15\nInter  Pete       14.00\nLeduc West      1.11\nMid Cont 5\nNat Pete     1.67\nNew Pacalta 8 %\nOkalta        1.81\nPacific Pete      7.90\nRoyalite    13.50\nRoxana     \/ .37\nTower Pete 41\nUnited Oils ...'. 50\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi .'.       43\nAlgoma Steel  :       26\nAluminum         8\nArgus        9%\nAtlas   St       12%\nBathurst   Powet   38%\nBeattie Bros  .\".       11%\nBell Telephone .'.       39%\nBrazilian       22%\nB C Forest .,...,.       5%\nB C Packers A       14\nB C Packers B        9%\nB    CPower A' .       31%\nB C Power B _     4.75\nB C Pulp :      164%\nBrown Co          8%\nBrown Co pfd       128\nBruck Silk A       18'\/4\nBruck Silk B         9\nBuilding Products      32'f.\nBruns A       39'A\nBurns B  ..      26%\nBurrard  A ,        8%\nCanadian Celanese        44%\nCan Cement      48\nCa nPackers A       39\nCan Packers B        29%\nCanadian  Bakeries       IOV4\nCanadian   Breweries      21%\nCanadian Caners _     23\nCanadian Car & Fdy'       15%\nCanadian Car & Fdy A       ZlVi\nCan  Oil         17%\nCanadian Dredge        29%\nCanadian Ind Alcohol     4.40\nCanadian Steamships        25\nCanadian Marconi       13\nCanadian Pacific Rly      26%\nCanadian West Lmbr        6%\nCockshutt      21%\nCoast Copper     1.40\nCons Mining & Smelt     122%\nCons Paper       31\nDist Seagram'       28%\nDominion Bridge       55%\nDominion Foundries   ,. 38%\nDom Steel & Coal B       27%\nDominion Stores        12%\nDom Tar & Chem       27 H\nDominion Textiles     13\nEddy Paper    \u25a0  17%\nFamous  Players  '.       16%\nlanny Farmer -     33%\nDon't play around with your\"\nplumbing! Let Freddie Do It.\nHe guarantees the quality of hli\nwork and promises never to\novercharge. Call Freddie In case\nof emergency.\nKootet.\nT.S.JEMSON\n351 BAKER STREET      PHONE 666\n^eam^HotWator & Hot Air Healing\nPlumbing Installations'& Supplies\n273 Baker St.\nforkEeping\"\nbuildings warm\nin winter\nAND COOL\nIN SUMMER\n\/ttsu\/ate foe Iffy with\nFlBERGi,AS BUILDING INSULATION\nMADE   IN   CANADA\nWON'T ROT   \u2022_  WON'T BURN   \u2022   WON'T SETTLE\nWON'T SUSTAIN VERMIN\nNelson Woodworking Co.\nTher\u00ab'\u00ab a lifetime of comfort ahead\nwhen you insulate your home with\nFiberglai. And Fiborglot saves on\nyour fuel bills io thai It ioon pays\nfor itsalr.\nPhone 1150\nTheCYCLOSoH.-\nOIL BURNER\nis SCIENTIFICALLY DESIGNED and PRECISION ENGINEERED ... to insure lifetime efficiency, highest economy\u2014easiest op-\noration. The designers of the \"CYCLOS\" Oil\nBurner for furnace conversion offer a completely efficient, precision-engineered unit\nthat eliminates the shortcomings and defects\nof all earlier oil burners and also incorporates many entirely new features, including . . .\n\"CONTROLLED DEGREES\nof HEAT\nHere is an entirely new feature that will appeal to those whose experience has been\nlimited to older type burners. With the\n\"Cyclos\" both Oil and Air intake can be regulated at Low, Medium or High or at any\ndegree of heat in between, thus insuring just\nthe amount of heat required. The air intake\nis thus synchronized with the oil intake for\nperfect, economical combustion.\nThis burns No. 3 oil retail 20c per gal. approved by the Fire Marshal of B.C. and Insurance Underwriters Association.\nWe still have oil storage ranks\nand can make immediate\ninstallation of oil conversion in\nyour furnace.\nFind out how easily a\n\"CYCLOS\"\ncan be installed in\nYOUR FURNACE\nBENNETTS LTD.\nMACHINE SHOP\n324 Vernon St.\nPhone 593\n \"It Pays to Buy Quality\"\nAir Step\nBlack Suede\nStep-lji\nPUMPS\nCuban heels, platform soles and\nopen toes. Blue leather' trim,\n'   Widths AA-B. Sizes 5-9.\nPrice $11.95\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\nMrs. Gummow\nTo Visif Institutes\nMrs. S. E. Gummow, Superintendent of British Columbia Wopjen's\nInstitutes,' will be visiting Nelson\nOct. 28, Mrs. R. A. Custer, Presl-\ndent or the Nelson Women's. Institute told members at their meeting\nFriday afternoon.\nMrs. Custer plans to entertain\nMrs. Gummow and Women's Institute members at her'- home.\nAfter visiting the Nelson Club,\nMrs. Gummow will visit the Granite, Road Women's Institute, Saturday night.\nMrs. Gummow is visiting\nthroughout the District and will\ngo' on to Boswell. .   ,\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nto. fattl* Itht ted (Mpirrlf\nMinister:, Rey.,A. L. Anderson, BA., B.D., S.T.M.\nDirector bf Music: Mrs. 1. J. S. Ferguson, B.A., A.T.C.M.\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School for Juniors and older.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School for Primary and younger.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"WORKING OUT SALVATION\"\n; .'.-'-. Boys' Choir Will Sing.\n7:30 p.m.-\"VANITY, SAITH THE PREACHER\"\nMusic by the Senior Choir' .\nMonday, 8:00 p.m.\u2014Excelsior Club Meeting at home of\nMrs. A. T. Richards.\nBt. \u00a7autm\u00abr'fi i$frtf-(Eatljriirai\n(ANGLICAN)\nDean Thomas L. Leadbeater, D.D.\nTRINITY XX\nT\n: 8:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n! 9:45 a.m.\u2014Children's Church\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n\"COflPORATE ACTION\"'\n*|i,j' 3:00 p.m.\u2014Willow Point\n\u25a0 Si. 7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\n\u2022THE GOSPEL AND WORLD ORDER\"\nChurchmen's Club gathering in the Memorial Hall\nafter tjje Evening Service\n:4\nSnttttg HLmteb QtyurrJ?\nJosephine ahd Silica Streets\nMINISTER: REV. ALLAN DIXON, B.A., B.D.\nOrganist and Music Director: Mrs. C. W. Tyler\n9:45 a.m.\u2014 Sunday School.\n11:00 a.m.-\"THE CHRISTIAN-A DIVINE PARADOX.\"\nSr. Choir: \"Light of the World.\"\n7:30 p.m.\u2014''HOW MUCH IS.ENOUGH!\"\nSr. Choir: \"In Heavenly Love Abiding.\"\n8:45 p.m.\u2014Young. Peoples' Meeting. The topic: \u25a0\n\"Boy Meets Girl.\"\nPresbyterian Church in Canada\nFIRST  PRESBYTERIAN  CHURCH\nKootenay and Victoria Streets\nI        Minister: Rev. Thomas Murphy, B.A;, Th.M., Th.D.\nI Organist: Mrs. A. W. Manson\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday School AsBembly'for Church Service\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sermon\u2014Dr. Murphy preaching,\nmm fltyttrrfj nf\n(EljriHt &ripttttat\nA, Branch of the Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mass.\nSunday School \u2014 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service \u2014 11:00 a.m.\nSUBJECT \u2014\n\"PROBATION   AFTER\nDEATH\"     \u2022\nWednesday Testimonial .Meeting\n8:00 p.m.\nReading c Room open dally,\nExcept Wednesday\nAll Cordially Welcome\n3-5,\nlira!\nStanley Street\nREV. THEO. T. GIBSON, B.A.,\nPastor,\n11:00\u2014Combination Service of\nWorship and Church\nSchool. Classes for all;\nand Sermon:\n\"THE HAND8 OF JESUS\"\n7:30\u2014Evening Service       -\n\"ONE THING WELL DONE\"\n(Nehemiah, Part 4)\nWednesday, 8 p.m.\u2014Midweek\nMeeting\nFriday, 3:15\u2014Mission Band\n3:45\u2014Explorer. Club\n7:'30\u2014Young People's\nSociety.\nEuangpltral\niliaBuitt (Emtntmtl\nBaker and Hendryx Streets\nVERNON K. LUND, Pastor\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Bible School.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014\"SURE DEATH,\nUNLESS\u2014\"\n7:15 p.m.\u2014Prayer Vespers.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014\"GROWING  UP,\"\nTuesday, 7:30 p.m.\u2014YPS.\nWednesday, 7:30 p.m.\u2014Prayer\nMeeting.\nFriday, 7:00 p.m.\u2014Hi-League..\nSaturday. 1:00 p.m.\u2014Confirmation Class.\nQJJji? \u00a7alitattmt\nArmg\n513 Victoria Street\nLieut, and Mrs. A. Millar\nSUNDAY \u2014\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holiness Meeting\nSpeaker\u2014Capt. T. Powell.\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Sunday School\n7:30 p.m. \u2014 Speaker Rev. Dr.\nThomas Murphy.\nWEDNESDAY \u2014\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Prayer Meeting.\nFRIDAY fi\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Home League.\n(Eljurrlj at\n% JKriirrmrr\nI Anglican)\nFAIRVIEW\nCANON W. SILVERWOOD\nA.KC, B.Sc, Vicar.\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Sunday School\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Holy Communion\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Evening Prayer\n3:30 p.m.\u2014South Slocan .\nJfuU-dnajifl--\nfbmnttB\nEAGLE HALL\n\u25a0  Pastor: Rev. Paul Lade\nSUNDAY:\n7g0 j>.m.\u2014Evangelistic Service\nWhere the Word of God Is\nPreached as \"It Is Written.\"\nNelson, Trail Interest in Rites\nNelson, the groom's birthplace,\nand Trail, - home of his parents,\nshare interest with,Alberta points\nin the dojible ring wedding in Bethel United Church in East Coulee,\nAlta., when the former Hester Ann\nLawrence, daughter of Mr. and Mrs,\nJames Lawrence, became the bride\nof Howie John Desireau, son of Mr.;\nand Mrs, A. A. (Sid) \"Desireau of\nTrail. Rev. A. G. S. Edworthy officiated.\nThe bride, given in marriage by\nher father, wore a-gowii of slipper\n'satin which featpred a net yoke\nwith ' fitted bodice, lily-pointed\nsleeves, and hemline frilled with\nbows arid-lace.\nA coronet of orange blossoms held\nher veil in place. Her bouquet was\nof red roses with trailing, rosebuds\ntied with white satin bows. .A string\nof pearls, a gift of the groom, waa\nthe bribe's only jewelry.\nMiss Shirley Lawrence, attending\nher sister.as. maid of honor, wore a\nformal gown of blue taffeta with a\nfull skirt and net yoke. Her ensemble was,completed with matching mitts and chapel veil, and her\nbouquet was of pink carnations:\nMiss Gudrun Benzon, bridesmaid,\nwore a formal gown of pink taffeta\nwith a net .take and sash. Completing her ensemble were pink lace\nmitts and' a' chapel, veil, and she\n.carried a bouquet of pink carnations, i\nAttending the groom were Messrs.\nJimmie and Marshall Lawrence. Mr.\nGordon Campbell and Mr. Herschel\nLawrence ushered.\nMiss Evelyn English p]ayed the\nwedding music. During the signing\nof the register, Mrs. Herschel Lawrence, accompanied by, Mrs. AHen\nGrieves, sang.\nA reception for 50 guests was hehi\nat ,the home of the bride.\nMrs. Lawrence chose for her\ndaughter's wedding a dark grey\nfraille afternoon dress with navy\naccessories. Her corsage was of pink\nroses.\nMrs.; Desireau was attired in an\nafternoon dress of turquoise crepe\nwith black accessories. Her corsage\nwas of yellow roses.\nA three-tiered wedding cake centred the bride's table.\nFor her honeymoon, the bride\nchose a royal blue suit with navy\naccessories, which was topped with\na white gabardine shortie coat. She\nwore a corsage of red roses.\nMr. and Mrs. Desireau will reside\nin Calgary, where the groom will\ncomplete his course in mechanical\ndrafting. ,\u201e.il\n(allie Prices\nShow Recovery\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 Cattle\nprices made a substantial recovery\nthis week froril the recent downward movement, the Agriculture Department reported today in its\nweekly livestock review. <\nGeneral paying rates were 50\nCents to $1.50 above the previous\nweek, with some sales as much as\n$2 higher. Offerings, while heavier\nthan in the previous 'week, were\nsharply below the same week\nyear ago and very moderate for the\nseason.\nExport buying, except for the\nrail strike period, was the smallest\nfor any week this year, but domestic demand was such that supplies were readily cleared under\nbrisk trading. .. \u25a0  t\nEastern calf markets moved up $1-\n$2, and lambs scored advances of\n50.cents.to $1.50. Hog prices were\nunchanged except for a decline of\n$1-$1.50 at Winnipeg.\nMR..AND MRS. H. J. DESIREAU\nUS. Honeymoon for\nNelson'Fernie Couple\nFERNIE, B. C. - In Holy Family\nChurch, Fernie, nuptial Mass was\ncelebrated by Rev. Father Cheevers\nfor the wedding of Florence Theresa, second eldest daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Michael Amantea of Fernie, and John Baptiste Vecchio, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. John Vecchio of Nelsdn, B. C.\nThe bride was gowned in a floor-\nlength beautiful dress of ivory velvet with long embroidered veil, her\nbouquet being a cascade of red roses. The rhinestone necklet and earrings to match, which she wore, was\na gift from the bridegroom.\nThe bridesmaid was Miss Violet\nAmantea, .sister of the bride who\nwas dressed in a floor length gown\nof powder blue net. She carried a\nbouquet of pink and white carnations. .\nThe groom was attended by Mr.\nJeff Harjridge.\nAt-the reception in the evening\nwhich Was held in the King Edward Hotel, banquet room for a\nlarge number of guests, the toast\nto the bride was proposed by Father Cheevers- and the toast to the\nbridesmaid was given by Mr. Jeff\nHartridge. For the honeymoon trip\nto Spokane and other U.S. points,\nthe bride's travelling dress was of\nred wool and she wore a corsage of\nwhite carnations.\nOut-of-town guests at the Oct.\n9 event were Mr..and Mrs. J\u201e.Vecchio, parents and brothers of the\ngroom; Mr. and Mrs. Trinca, Mr. and\nMrs.- Townshend, and Mrs. Maglio,\nall of Nelson and Mrs. Messina of\nCalgary.\nThe bride was formerly employed\nin the. ladies' wear department of\nBride-Elect Feted\nAt Shower\nMiss Norma Budett, bride-elect\nof October, was honored at a sur-\n\u2022prise miscellaneous shower held at\nher home. M'ss Burdett's marriage\nto Michael Vecchio takes place in\nNelson Saturday,\n. Games were played during the\nevening after which refreshments\nwere served. About 20 attended.\nHighlight of the evening was the\npresentation of many beautiful and\nuseful gifts to-the bride-elect.\nThose arranging the shower were\nPatsy MacDonald, Margaret Leslie,\nKitty MacDonald and Blanche Mc-\nLen assisted by Iris Sanders.\nContinue Attempts\nFor Meetings in\nShipyard Strike\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 20 (CP) -\nProvincial Labor Relations Board\nofficials continued today their attempts to arrange a meeting between striking shipyard workers'\nrepresentatives and officials of.\ntwo strike-bound Vancouver shipbuilding firms.\nThey reported they failed yesterday to obtain any definite agree-\nj ment in separate talks with Union\nj and'Company representatives, but\nhope tb bring the two parties face-\nto-face later today. '\nDREW TO WEST TOUR\nOTTAWA, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 George\nDrew, Progressive Conservative\nleader, will leave here this weekend to fill several speaking engagements in Western Canada.\nResearch en Synthetic milk from\nvegetable proteins is being carried out in India.\nii'tlffl Qtabmtarl*\n708 Baker Street\nREV. I. M. PRESLEY, Pastor\nSUNDAY \u25a0\n9:45 a.m-\n11:00 a.m-\n7:30 p.m.-\nTUESDAY \u2014\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Bible Study\nFRIDAY \u2014\n8:00 p.m.-\nA Cordial\nAt All\nSunday School\nDevotional Service\n\u25a0Evangelistic meeting\n-Young Peoples (CA)\nWelcome Awaits You\nof These Services:\nLEGION WOMEN TO\nCASTLEGAR SOCIAL\nSome 22 members of the .Ladies\nAuxiliary to the Canadian Legion,\nNelson Branch, will attend a social\nat the monthly meeting of the.Castlegar Auxiliary Tuesday..\nThe women will make the trip\nby a chartered bus and will meet\nwomen from the Trail Auxiliary\nwho have  also  been invited.\nIt \u25a0 was previously reported that\nthe women had been invited to attend the opeping of a new Ladies\nAuxiliary Branch. However, the\nCastlegar Branch has been operating for several years.\nTrites-Wood, Fernie. The groom was\nborn in Fernie and received his edu-\ncatoin in Holy Family school and\nFernie High School prior to the\nfamily moving to Nelson in 1936.\nHe is a'veteran of the Second World\nWar, having served 4% years in the\nCar\/adian Army.\nNelson\nSocial.\nBy MR8, M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mrs. E. M. Mundy, 701 Hoover\nStreet, leaves today for Trail where\nshe and- her sister, Miss -Frances\nWard, will remain until'after'Christmas holidays when they plan on\nleaving to spend the. remainder of\nthe Winter in California.\n\u2022 Mayor N. C. Stibbs and' Mrs.\nStibbs, Silica Street, had as.guest\nduring the Kootenay. Presbytery,\nRev. Thomas D, McMillan of Rossland.,    '\n\u2022 Rev. Father J. J. Cheevers of\nFernie, Bev. Father Edward .Doyle\nof Creston, Rev, Father E. A, Frank\nof Nakusp were in the city to attend\nthe deanery, meet Thursday. -';-.\n, o Mrs. E. Lawrence, 824 Carbonate Street, who visited friends in\nCalgary, has returned.' -\n\u2022 Rev.' Father R. F. Cragg.of\nGrand Forks and Rt. Rev. A. K.\nMclrftyre of Rossland were among\nthe clergy attending the deanery\nmeet in Nelson Thursday.\no Mr. and Mrs. Jemson, Nelson\nAvenue, Fairview, have had as guest\nRev. E. W. More of East Trail, who\nwas in town as delegate to. the Kootenay Presbytery.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. C. Grummett, Annable\nBlock, has returned from a month's\nholiday in Medicine Hat and Calgary.\no Miss Margaret Maco, who was\noperated on at the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital Thursday, is progressing favorably.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Lakes,\nwho have spent the past few days\nin the city, return to Spokane today.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Fink,\nMrs, Stanley liostock and Fred Irvine motored to Trail Thursday\nwhere they visited Ven. Archdeacon\nFred H. Gratfam.\n\u2022 .Mrs. Joseph Hawes of Ainsworth returns to Ainsworth today\nafter visiting her mother, Mrs. Harry\nHouston, Fairview. Mrs. Hawes was\naccompanied by her daughter, Miss\nDorothy Hawes.\n\u2022 Rev. Dixon and Mrs. Dixon,\nJosephine Street, have had as guests\ndurifig the Kootenay Presbytery,\nRev. McDaniel, hev. J. Horick of\nCastlegar and Mr. Dukelow of\nMichel. ; .\n12*5*1\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 21, 1950 \u2014 5\nKinsmen Ready\nFor First\nOlfactions\nWith the .Kinsmen Club's annual\nKin'auction of the Air series due\nto start Tuesday night,' final details\nare being ironed out. ,\nNew talent and old favorites of\npast Klnauctions will feature en\n\u25a0tertainment,. and \"good response\"\nfrom Nelson and District merchants and 'businessmen in merchandise and cash donations is reported.\nThe Klnauctions will be broadcast over CKLN from the Capitol\nTheatre, the first on Tuesday and\nthe others Oct. 30, Nov. 7 and Nov,\n14.\nCommittees follow: '\nB. Sutherland, General Chairman; W. C. Hancock and G. C.\nWallach, co-chairmen; E. T. Stromstead and J. C. Muir, merchandise\nand advertising; S. M. Redrpond\nand B; Sutherland, tickets; M. B.\nHyalls and A. K. McAdams, desk;\nE. Dawes, W. A. Duckworth and\nG. C. Wallach, telephones; J. H,\nNuyens, Dr. T. H.' Bourque and J,\nE. Keegan, in charge of auctioneers.\nJ. Stewart, W. C. Hancock and\nAid. T. S. Shorthouse, entertainment; Fred Morris and Fred Leno,\ntreasurers; Allan Barton, property;\nJ. F. Jamieson, J. H. Nuyens, Dr.\nT. H. Bourque and J. E. Keegan,\nMaster of Ceremonies; E. Dawes, J.\nStringer, F. Leno, M. Buerge and\nG. Harvey, merchandise team captains.\nMllllllllllllllllllllimillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNews of the Day\nRATES; 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nllllllllllllMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nHarvest  Dance  Playmor Tonlte.\nOld Time and Modern tunes.\nKinette Bake Sale, Saturday, November, 25-\nLET'S GET UP A PARTY FOR\nTHE SHRINE BALL NOV. 10TH.\nMAC'8 COFFEE AND MILK BAR\nQUALITY ALL THE W^Y\nRUSSIAN MUSICAL FILM\nEagles' Hall, Sun., Oct. 22nd, 8 p.m.\nDANCE EAGLE HALL,\nEVERY SATURDAY NIGHT\nFresh popped corn any hour of day\nat WAIT'S\nUkrainian Mass, St. Joseph's Convent Chapel, Sun. Oet. 22rtd, 10 a.m.\nDANCE AT TAGHUM SATURDAY\nOCTOBER 21st \u2014 NEW  MUSIC\nFOR  BULBS SEE\nVALENTINES'\nKeep  November , 10th, for First\nAnnual Shrine Dance at the Civic.\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..\nParis Gold Trading\nMore Subdued\nPARIS, Oct. 20 (Reuters)\u2014Rumors circulated during the week that\nthe treasury was considering imposing taxes on gold dealings or possession of gold but bullion circles\nsaid these projects had been dropped.\nDemand for gold, especially Napoleons, was evident at the beginning of the week and the market became firmer ip view of developments in Indo-China.\nA vote of confidence in the French\nAssembly, however, made the tone\neasier. Generally trading this week\nwas more subdued than of late.\nNo Serious Price\nBreaks for\nB. C. Lumber\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014\nThe British Columbia lumber industry has no record of drastic\nprice breaks or order cancellations,\nexporters said last night in commenting on reports from the United States Pacific Northwest, that\nthe American market has gone bad.\nSources acknowledged that the\nbooming lumber market across the\nline had softened a good deal in the\nlast few months but no serious\nrepercussions were forseen in the\nnear future.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014Officers and employees of the Canadian\nNational Railways have subscribed\na total of $89,970 to the Manitoba\nFlood Relief Fund, it was announced\ntoday.\nSPECIAL\nMen's  tube  skates,  size 12, $10.\nPhone 352-Y.\nPLAN FOR SPRING \u2014 PLANT\nBULBS NOW. GRIZZELLE'S \u2014\nPHONE 187.\nRotary Luncheon meeting Monday, October 23rd, Hume: Hotel,\n12:15 p.m.    j\nGirls' ski slacks, all sizes. $2.95\nand $3.75.\nTHE   CHILDREN'S SHOP\nBulbs\u2014Bulbs, We still have most\nvarieties left but they are going\nfast, COVENTRY'S.\nSHAMROCK  GRILL\nTODAYS SPECIAL\nHUNGARIAN GOULASH\nDANCE AT AINSWORTH\nTONIGHT.\nFITCHETS ORCH. \u25a0 '.\n' REFRESHMENTS    '\nCRUDE BLACK SYRUP MOLASSES IN 214 LB. TINS FOR\nSALE. NELSON FARMERS' SUP\nPLY LTD.\nLINO-GRIP \u2014 Liquid Adhesivr\nfor laying linoleum, \u2014 Gal. $2.25 -\nQuart 75c.\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nHATSI      HATS!      HATSI\nand more smart hats have just\narrived at     .\nADRIAIJ4  MILLINERY, '     ,\nLarge assortment of English rayon   table   cloths   with   napkins, to\nmatch. Priced from $1.95 each.\nSTERLING HOME. FURNISHERS\nDon't forget the Halowe'on Dance\nat Eagles Hall, Oct. 31. Prizes for\nbest costume. Proceeds in aid of\nCancer Fund.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix It,\nthrow it away. Prompt service on\nwatch work; fullyi guaranteed.\nBridge   Cookie   Cutters,   Angel\nFood Cake Pans, Upside Down Cake\nPans, etc.\nWOOD VALLANCE HARDWARE\nNOTICE - -\nElectric power will be off on the\nNorth Shore from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.\non Sunday, Oct. 22nd.\nCITY OF NELSON.\nDon't wait for cold weather. Replace those broken window panes\nnow. We have all standard sizes of\nglass or cut to your measurements.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nWhen you purchase that typewriter or adding machine from D,\nW. McDerby you get absolutely\nfree service for two years. D. W.\nMcDerby, 554 Stanley Street, Nelson\n. WATCH REPAIRING    .\nIS A JOB FOR EXPERTS\nOur Work assures your Satisfaction\nH ft'SUTHERLAND\n491 Baker Street\nBUY\nON OUR\nBUDGET PUN\n10%. DOWN-\n10 MONTHS TO PAY\nYour $ $ S Buy More at Freeman'!\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 -  NELSON, B.C.\nW.l. DONATES $10\nTO CRIPPLED\nCHILDREN'S HOME\n' Nelson \u25a0 Women's Institute decided -at their October meeting\nFriday afternoon to donate $10 to\nthe Queen Alexandria Crippled\nChildren's Home in Victoria., This\ndonation is made each year by the\norganization.\nMrs. R. A. Custer, President, an-.\nnounCed that the 175 pounds of\nwool to be made into blankets had\nbeen sent and that Kelly. green\nwas the color specified in the order.\nBishop Clark Rests1\nAt Home After Illness\nRt. Rev. F. P. Clark, Bishop of tho\nKootenay, has returned home from,\nthe East Kootenay after becoming\nill In Kimberley. he was a patient,\nat the McDougall Hospital.\nBishop Clark will rest at home\nfor a while.\nIan Greenwood Takes\nVernon Girl as Bride\nIan Frederick Greenwood, son of\nMrs. H. M. Greenwood and the late\nMr. Greenwood of Nelson, and tlje\nformer Doreen Margaret Leonard,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. P.\nLeonard of Vernon, were principals\nin ah attractive double-ring wedding Friday at 7:30 p.m. at Vernon.\nRev. L. A. C. Smith read the service in All Saints' Anglican Church,\nwhich was decorated with bronze\nand red chrysanthemums.\nThe groom, a graduate of University of B. C., is a former Prime\nMinister of'Nelson High School.\nA heavy white crepe satin gown\nen. train, styled with a fitted bodice,\nlow neckline inset with net and full\nskirt, was chosen for the bridal ensemble. Her satin Juliet cap held a\nshoulder-length veil, and she carried a white prayer book encircled\nwith roses.\nMrs. J. P. Leonard Jr., as matron\nof honor, wore a heavy ice-blue\ncrepe-back satin gown with a fitted\nbodice, short full cape and bouffant\nskirt, and Miss Wilma Orom, bridesmaid,- was in yellow marquisette\nover taffeta with'a fitted bodice and\nfull skirt. Both wore Juliet caps.\nSharon Stroud wore a fullrskirted\nmauve taffeta.goyrn trimmed with\nwhite lace as flower girl.\nMr. Don Weatherill was best man,\nLOVELY\nFALL HATS AND\nCOATS\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nNelson Art Club will commence\nportrait and landscape class Oct. 24,\n2nd year woodcarving Oct, 30, also\nbeginners woodcarving class, For\nfurther information Ph. 230-R.\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\n|\\ootenay   Valley   Ltairy\nand Mr. Ron Lyons and Mr. Ian;\nCame ushered.the guests. Loretta\nUnwin was soloist\nA.Y.P.A. SERVES\nAt a reception in I.O.O.F. Hall,\nmembers of the Vernon Anglican\nYoung People's Association acted, aa\nserviteurs.\nBefore leaving for a honeymoon\ntrip to Banff, the bride changed to\na beige suit with forest green accessories, complemented by-a corsage of roses.\nVernon will b,e the newlyweds'\nhome.  .\nDESMOND. T.\nLITTLEWOOD-\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuccessor To J. O. Patenaude\nPHONE 293        NELSON, B.C.\nA Treat\nFor You and Your Friends\nCHINESE DISHES\nOUR SPECIALTY\nOpen 4 p.m. to 4 a.m.\nChungking Chop\nSuey House \/\n624 Front St. Nelson\nThe BEST in Chocolate Candy-\nCream Centre, Nuts, Nougats, Liquid Centres, Cherries. Your special\nfavourite\u2014made as only we know\nhow. GRAY'S.\nMake your poultry houses and\nbarns warmer and brighter with\nWindolite, the better glass substitute. Also ideal for storm, windows\nand for closing in porches, etc.\nHIPPERSON'S.\nMASQUERADE\nCanadian Legion Oct. 31. Prizes\nfor best costumes and comic, also\ndoor prize, Good music, dancing\n9:30-1. Admission, ladies 50c, gents\n75c. .'      ''\u25a0'..\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY\nSPECIAL\n2-PC. PROTEX PAD SETS\n'\u25a0'\u25a0      FOR ONLY 79s      ,\nMc & Me (NELSON) LTD.\nODDFELLOWS AND REBECCAS\nWEST KOOTENAY DISTRICT ASSOCIATION MEETING 2 P.M. TODAY, SATURDAY, OCT. 21ST, IN\nODDFELLOWS HALL, NELSON,\nB.Ci BANQUET AT 6 P.M. ALL\nMEMBERS WELCOME.\nW. A. Triggs, Hon. 8ec.\ncardofthank8\nwe wish to thank sincerely all of our friends\nfor the beautiful flowers,\nkind letters and messages\nof sympathy sent to us in\nthe recent loss of our\nlovincj.hi.sband and uncle,\nalso sincere thanks to dr.\nn. e. morrison and dr. g. r.\nbarrett and staff of the\nkootenay lake general\nh08pital for their efficient and untiring care.\nMrs. a. d. oliver\nand nieces.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nFuneral service for the late Ida\nFlorence McKim will be held this\nafternoon at 1,30 from-CIark's Fun-\noral Chapel, Trail. Rev. ,W. D. More\nwill officiate. Interment in family\nplot, Mountain Ciew Cemetery.\nIhe name on youriJiano..\nThe piano on which your children play their first simple\nmelodies will become a treasured companion ... to soothe   .   ,\nthem in many moods, to delight friends and family.\nFor more than a century, craftsmen of the Heintzman family .#\nhave created pianos-of exquisite tone and quality.   If\nyour piano bears the name Heintzman, then you, your\n' children and grandchildren will have a treasured\ninstrument for many years to come.\nHEINTZMAN  PIANOS\nSEE   THEM   AT\nHEINTZMAN & CO. LTD.,\nCalgary, Alberta. .,\nALSO AT\nMcKay and Stretton\n\u25a0'-,,'.   Nelson, B. C.\n\"OkND\nSandy's Music Shop\nTrail, B. C.\n\u00bb\n I-\"'\"'\u25a0\nEstablished April 22, 1002\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED\n- 266 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPost Office Department, 'Ottawa\n; MEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND '\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF' CIRCULATIONS\n..:';    SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21,1950\n-     Our Unfilled Contract\nIf a Canadian were to be served at\nhis breakfast with Igst week's entire\nBritish bacon ration, he would be far\n' from impressed. The modest allowance\nhas been reduced from four to three\nounces.\n, We should feel a personal concern\nin this matter. Ottawa contracted, The\nToronto Globe and Mail reminds, to\n|| supply Britain with 60,000,000 pounds\n\"of bacon this year. Up to the end of\nSeptember we had sent only 17.3 million pounds. The unfilled part of the\n\u00a7 contract would thus provide about IVz\npounds of bacon for every adu.lt bacon-\nconsuming Briton. In other word?, it\nwould supply him with that extra\n| ounce for 24 weeks. ,\n;'\u25a0 .The British Food Ministry said the\nreduction would be temporary. Therefore,^ we were fulfilling our contract,\nor even if the Food Ministry had any\nassurance that it would be filled on\ntime, there need have been no reduc-,\ntion of the meagre'ration. There might\neven have been a welcome increase.\nGovernment policies which have systematically discouraged the production\nof bacon in this country have thus\nrobbed not only the Canadian farmer,\nbut the British breakfast plate,\n\"Whole Structure\nOf Society Endangered\"\nThe Government, says a news story,\nhas earmarked $36,000,000 to buy motor\nvehicles for the Defence Department.\nThirty-six millions! It seems bus\nyesterday, recalls The Ottawa Journal,\nWhen this country fought a bitter general election over the issue of whether\nit-should, spend $17,000,000 to build a\ntranscontinental railway.\nAnd this $36,000,000, for motor vehicles alone, is but a drop in the bucket\nof projected armaments; there are to\nbe orders as well for warplanes and\nships, for big guns, little guns and ammunition, for electronic and' electrical\n, equipment, for textiles,'to make uniforms, for expanded factories to make\narms. Within months the whole' business \"will be at the rate of hundreds of\nmillions of dollars annually, perhaps\n..exceed a billion.\nMuch of this swollen cost is due to\ninflation, We hear a lot about the growing cost of living; of the more we pay\nfor food and fuel and shelter. But\nprices have jumped, too, and continue\nto jump, for everything that goes into\ndefence\u2014a sort of high cost of survival\n\u2014With resulting danger. The danger\nthat what we earmark in expenditure\nfor the Atlantic Community's defence\nand fpr our own will buy far less than\nWe expected; that what will be necessary for adequate defence will snowball into sums either beyond our taxing capacity or into something else as\ngrave.\nWe have promised Europe $300,000,-\n000 worth of arms. But if motor vehicles  for our  Defence Department.\nalone are to cost $35,000,000, then Just\nhow much will $300,000,000 mean for\nEurope in the way of all sorts of arms;\nguns heavy and light, planes, electronics, other equipment?\nIn the United States this problem-\ninflationary cpsts for defence needs\u2014\n, is bringing concern. Washington is discovering that sums appropriated for\ndefence needs before Korea are now\nwholly inadequate to buy what was\n\u2022planned; that within a few months\nprices of some war materials have sky-.'\nrocketed. '       .\nLittle wonder that- IB European\ncountries in the Marshall Aid Cbuncil\nhave put out a memorandum on the\ndanger of inflation. These nations, beginning to get oh their feet economically, and compelled to rearm (neces- <\nsitating their having to import armament materials), have begun to wonder what will happen to them when\n1952 sees the end of Marshall Aid. Thus\nthey say, ahd understandably, that inflation could make it impossible for\nthem to rearm, and therefore could\n\"endanger the whole structure of society\".  \u25a0\n, To sum up: The gravest problem\nbefore the Governments of the U.S.\nand Canada at this time is the inflation\nproblem: not merely the high cost of\nliving but the high cost of survival.\nAnd the high cost of the last could be-,\ncome so high that it would imperil'\nsurvival. \u2022 . .      .\n? Questions?\n- A Contender as\n\"Miracle Drufc\"\nPenicillin, streptomycin, aureomycin, chlo-\nromycetyn'. .. The list goes on and on. Heralded as miracle drugs, they come and go,\nrender outstanding service against disease,\nonly to'be pushed aside by a newcomer with\neven greater potentialities of service.\nThe public stands by, awed by the magle\nof it all. They read of. them, speak of them,\nhear tales of their wonders, but very few can\nunderstand the whys and hows of such drugs.\nAll we know is that they do seem to perform miracles. In the spirit of competitlsn,\nthe public mind pits one against the other.\nThis is \"the\" greatest, it is said. But look at\nwhat these others can do, is the reply.\nA refreshing note was recently introduced\ninto the argument and illusion about miracle\ndrugs. Writing in a national magazine, one\nbrave soul burst the bubble in a most decisive\nmanner. He nominated a newcomer as the\nvery greatest of all time, in the past and, probably, in the future.\ni His candidate is aspirin, the humble, retainer on the bathroom shelf.\nTrue, it snatches back no lives from the\nJaws of death. It does not cure infectious diseases against which medical science has been\nhelpless since time began. It is not flown by\nairplane thousands pf miles to' a lonely fafm-\nhouse to restore life which was but three seconds from expiring. No one takes its picture\nor writes nice things about it.\nBut it has a. wonder all Its own. It Is\ncheap, safe, non-toxic, and modest. Eor, as the\ngreatest pain-killer of our day, it is one of\nevery family's best friends. Yet no one knows\nhow lt works. It just plugs ahead, doing a\ngrand job. -'->:\nAs the mqit versatile drug in the world,\naspirin'seems well-qualified to claim title as\nthe miracle drug of the century.\u2014The Spokesman-Review;\n. Your Horoscope\nSubstantial gains and many pleasant surprises may materialize for you in the time\nahead. A good nature is foretold for today's\nchild. -\u25a0\nFOR SUNDAY, OCT. 22: Good influences\nshould predominate for you, and your monetary position Improve. A keep personality\nshoujd develop in a baby born today.\nIt's Been Said\nOn  rumor's tongues  continual  slanders\nride.\u2014William Shakespeare.\nA Frenchman claims a moustache 22\ninches Jong, which goes to show what happens\nwhen you don't shave,\nOpen to any reader, Names of persons\nasking questions will not-bo published.\nThen Is no charge' for this service. Questions WILL. NOT BE AN8WEREt> BY\nMAIL except where there Is obvious necessity for privacy.\n\"Curious\", Creston-JtJ. W\u201e Nelson, has kindly\nsent us tha following information on animals that do not require -water:\n\"Among animals that never (Irlnk, the\ngroundhog, or woodchuck, could be included,\n.They must be able to.obtaln ep'ough mosture\nfrom- their food, which is preferably green\nclover, young grain, etc.\"\nR. L. R\u201e Naitusp-^-Is the song \"Mona Lisa\"\nwritten for the painting by Leonardo da\nVinci, or is it written ior a girl who re-\n-..   sembles the painting? .   :-_ _   ,\nIt must have been written iter a girl resembling the pa)nting,; judging by the words\n. . . \"You're so like''the lady with the mystic\nsmile...\"\nB, P., Salmo\u2014Could you ^lve me any Information on the value pf.an East India, Com-,\npany half-rupee issued in 1840?\nConsult R, R. Brown, 425 Baker Street,\nNelson.\nMrs. A. a. E\u201e Nakusp\u2014Ij there anyone ln\nNelson who decorates and sella \u25a0 wax\ncandles?\nWe. would advise you to write to tjie\nHandicraft Centre, Hall Street, Nelson.\nLooking Backward\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom the Dally News of Oet. 21, 1940.\nA beautiful, silver trophy to be competed\nfor annually by Nelson service club curling\nrinks, was presented to the Nelson Gyro Club\nby William Day, President of R. S. Day and\nCo. of Vancouver. \u25a0 \u25a0';\nWarm praise for Nelson District was\nbroadcast through Canada Sunday when the\nCanadian Broadcasting Corporation ln cooperation with the Federal Director of Public\nInformation presented another in the series,\n\"Carry On Canada\".\n25 YEAR AGO\nFrom the Dally News of Oct. 21j 192^,\nCreston, B.C.\u2014On'e of the two men who\nrobbed the Imperial Bank of Creston of $8500\nthis afternoon, was captured late today and\n$2700 of the loot was recovered, police announced here tonight, A posse of 15p men is\nsearching for the other man .on Goat Mountain, 80 miles from here.\n\"Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Robertson, Rosemont\nhave returned from a.motor trip to the coast,\nThey were accompanied by Mrs. Fred Robertson of Victoria.\n40 YEAR8 AGO\nFrom the Dally News of Oot. 21, 1910,\nSeveral hunting parties are heading for\nthe Lardeau country these days, loaded for\ngrizzly, cariboo, deer or goat.\nA party consisting of J. Fred Hume,\nGeorge Thurman, George Douglas and Duncan\nMcGillivray left by the Kokanee, yesterday\nafternoon, enroute to Howser Lake and the\nLardeau.\nRising on the North side of Vernon street\nnear Josephine Street is a fine building consisting 6i a four-story frame structure on\ngranite foundations which is being erected by\nJohn Burns & Son for James Malcolm, the\nHall Street blacksmith.\nVerse\nDid Grandma\nEver Tell You?\nDid your grandma ever tell you, as you sat\nupon her knee,\nAnd she ran a comb so gently through hair\njust freshly curled,\nThat the rain was from the angels up in\nHeaven cleaning house,\nAnd throwing out the water on the world?\nDid she tell you that the thunder was the\nfurniture they moved\nAs   they   dusted   in   the   corners   of  their\n~ Heavenly domain?\nNow this story that I've told you must be kept\nin confidence, .\nFor it's Grandma's secret of the thunder and\nof the rain..\n_ \u2014HELEN ANDREWS.\nA Smile and a Walk in the Rain\nWould ShowYoufh\nHow io Have Fun\nPresident Truman greet* two' San Francisco\ngirls with a friendly smile nn'ho passes them during\na walk In the rain. Tipping his hat Is a secret\nservice  man.\u2014AP'Wlrephoto. \u2022\nCanadian Economy Strengthened\nWl!h Alberta Oil Industry\nBy  FORBES  RHUDE\nCanadian. Press Business Editor\n. . , in current Canadian oil history, events are dated as \"before\nLeduc\" or \"after Leduc\".   .\nFor it was the discovery of this\nfield South of Edmonton Feb. 13,\n1947, that started Canada on the\nway to what it is hoped will be\nself-suffiency in oil.\nWhat the discovery has meant to\ndate was outlined Thursday by G.\nL. Stewart, President of Imperial\nOil, Ltd., in an address to the Calgary Canadian Club. Said Mr. Stewart, in part:\nBefore Leduc the estimated proven oil reserves in Alberta were\n45,000,000 barrels; today there can\nbe no question that they are well\nabove 1,000,000,000 barrels.\nBefore Leduc there were 525 producing wells in Alberta with a\ndally productive capacity of 19,000\nbarrels a day; but substantially all\nwere ln Turner Valley (South of\nCalgary) where production Is declining and where, it is estimated\nonly 34,000,000 barrels of recoverable oil remains.' ,\nToday there are > approximately\n1800 wells capable of being operated in Alberta, and new wells are\ncoming in at a rate of two or three\nevery day.\nBefore Leduc there was only one\nimportant oil-field in the Province.\nToday there are, for. instance, Leduc- Woodbend, Redwater, Golden\nSpike, Excelsior, Stettler, -Normand-\nville. The first two at least rank\nas major fields' in' any- oil man's\neye. Flint, Acheson and Big Valley\nare  such  recent  discoveries  that\nthey are yet to be evaluated, but\nit is' conceivable that one or more\nof them may prove to be major\nfields.\nBefore Leduc, Prairie refining\ncapacity was 40,000 barrels daily,\nof which less than half was supplied\nby Prairie production. Today there\nis 70,000 barrels daily of light crude\noperating capacity which can be\nsupplied by Prairie crude,\nBefore Leduc, oil exploration and\ndevelopment expenditures in the\nCanadian Prairies were at the rate\nof about $12,000,000 'a year; this\nyear,they are estimated at better\nthan $12,000,000 a month.\nBefore Leduc, the revenues of the\nAlberta Government from 'oil exploration and development activities were about $1,000,000 yearly;\nfor the first five months of the current fiscal year they are estimated\nat $27,000,000.'\nMr. Stewart also clteS as results of\nLeduc:\nStrengthening of the Canadian\neconomy in general and of .the Alberta and Prairie economies in par.\nticular; development of a great new\nindustry in Albetta second only to\nagriculture; establishment of hundreds of new businesses; wider employment; higher living standards;\nment .services #nd last year the\npeople of Alberta saved some $15,\n000,000 in their bill'for gasoline and\nother petroleum products\u2014an average saving of $17.20 a person.\nPerhaps, after his recital of what\nLeduc has done! Mr. Stewart might\nalso have suggested that Alberta\nmake Feb. 13 an annual holiday and\ncall it \"Leduc Day\" or Oil Day\".\nTfljOVJUL ^OUXfL^\nJosephine Hull Makes- Big.Hit\nIn Film Version of \"Harvey\"\nBy BOB tHOMA8\nHOLLYWOOD, Oct. 20 (AP) \u2014\nHollywood is trying to do its best\nfor the U.N. forces fighting in Korea, I found in a talk with Stan\nRichardson, head of the Hollywood\nCo-Ordinating Committee.\n\"Our major operation'has been\nat the Fairfield-Suisun air base in\nNorthern California,\" said Richard-\n\"That is the most immediate\nj They'll Do It Every Time\nBy Jimmy Hatio\n\"TiR\/TOTELLaywHEEL,\nTHE SHOP SET-UP MAH,   .\nAN\/THING -AND HE'LL\nJPMP-4LL OVER you-\n, RUN IT, Y'DUMB   x\n\/^\u00a9\/WlTWERH^lN'TJ\nNOTHW'WROWfl WITH\nTHAT MACHINE.' WHEN _\nI SETA MACHINE OP,\\\nIT'S OP! DON'T TELL\/\nME HOW TO RUN.\n'I TELL m.\nIT OON'T\nRUN RIGHT.'\nITLLR4LL,\n.4PART!\nToday's Bible Thought\ni We may rate very high In our own\nesteem, but miserable failures when\n' examined by God. Some of us are\nnot pursuing any of these goals with\nreal oonvlctlon. We will not arrive\nat perfection. \u2014 Follow after righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness.\u20141 Tim. 6:11       -\ntiwUdist\nneed, since the wounded are flown\nin there and the replacements flown\nout. Such stars as Alan Ladd, Ruth\nRoman, Keenan Wynn, Shelley Winters, Janet Leigh, John Lund, Audrey Totter, Vic Damone and Howard Keel have gone up.\"\n\"Hollywood is trying to fulfill other requests for appearances, but\nthat is difficult. The U.S.O. has been\ninactive, and there is no source of\nfunds to supply transportation for\nthe talent. Thus far the Army has\nmade no move to co-ordinate requests and Supply transportation\nand housing.\nAl Jolson, the first entertainer to\nhit Korea, had to pay his own way\nacross the Pacific, Bob Hope managed to get a couple of planes for\nhis  big  troupe  by  appealing  to\nm\n\u25a0^\nJhen when your\nprediction comes true\nHE SIVES you THE OTHER\nBARREL\"-WITH AH\n-4UPIENCE YET*\"\nvAi^npowaiicxitMoH*^\n. rTELL M9U TO HUH IT SlOW>      vj\nP0^A%'\n1432 W. 64*\u00abl|j\nAN' E4$y?i NOW WOK WHAT\nVOU DONE! IT'S ALtyoUR\n.FAULT .'IP yoittJA 0NLV,\n1 LISTENED TO ME\u00abBUT\nYOU KNOW IT 4\nercErc.-\n^A\nm\nDoc says involuntary muscles are\nthe, ones that move without being\ndirected by the brain. I reckon he\nwan thinkln' about Ida's tongue.\nThe Douglas fir flagpole presented by British Columbia to the\nFestival of Britain ia 108 fest high.\nWashington. A group of performers\nfrom the.Masquers Club chartered\ntheir own bus to entertain at Camp\nCooke, Some 200 miles away.\nOAP8ULE REVIEW\n\"Harvey\" has been faithfully recreated in the film version, The\ncharm of the play has been brought\nlo the screen, and all audiences\nshould find it highly satisfying.\nJames Stewart, as the companion of\nthe six-foot rabbit, seems to have\ntrouble getting into the. role, but\nfinally manages to make it, Josephine Hull as his fluttery sister is\nthe hit of the show.\n\"Chain Gang\" Move\nLibrary Books.\nALLIANCE, O., Oct. 20 (AP) \u2014\nA \"chain gang\" of college students\nmoved 65,000 books across' Mount\nUnion College's campus here so their\nnew $600,000 library won't have that\nbare look at dedication today. The\nvolunteers formed a chain from the\nold library to the :iew four-storey\nbuilding. Librarians at each end\ndirected the flow of volumes.\nN o 38th Parallel in My Book\n-Bishop, In The St. Louie Star-Tlmei.\nREGINA, Oct. 20 (CP)-Why do\npeople drink alcohol? Rev. R, W, K.\nElliott aays it's because they are\nover-tired, bored, lazy, or under too\nmuch pressure in business life.\nMr. Elliott, Superintendent of\nMissions in the. United Church for .\nSouthern Saskatchewan and Alberta, was speaking last night at\nthe 37th Provincianl convention of\nthe Women's Christian Temperance\nUnion.\nHe said young. people drink because they are fearful of'faclng\nlife's problems or are under the\ndelusion the|r \"can't have any fun\nwithout liquor\". *\u25a0\nMr. Elliott said the main problem is not alcohol\u2014\"It's life.\" Modern society had not gone far enough\nin its: fight against alcohol.\n\"We, are just negative. We only\nsay, 'Don't drink,' We haven't shown\nyouth how to have fun without\ndrinking.\"    '\nAt a W.C.T.U. banquet earlier,\nMayor Garnet Menzies of Regina\nand Premier T. CDouglas of Saskatchewan brought greetings to the\nconvention, and said they never\ndrink alcohol in any form.   .\nConvict Tries to\njmrnif Suicide\nWhen Escape Futile\nJACKSON, Mich., Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014\nA convict made a desperate escape\nattempt via- a sewer at Southern\nMichigan prison yesterday and tried\nto kill himself when it was futile.\nTrapped by hot water in a storm\nsew^r, lifer Reece A. Lawson plunged a knife into his chest.\nOver his head were 10 tons of\ncoal. Prison guards and employees\ndug through it tb free the fugitive\nfrom what could have been a self-\nchosen grave.\nLawson, 49, serving life for a Detroit policeman's murder in 1947,\nstole off from his prison plumbing\njob in mid-afternoon and crept into\nthe sewer through a small opening.\n, Deep in th^sewer, 500 yards from\nwhere he started, he was trapped\nby hot water, issuing as waste from\nthe prison cannery.\nGuards heard his screams as they\nwere searching for him.\nEscape apparently was1 impossible.\nThe sewer leads only to a precipitous well outside the prison yards.\nWithout a ladder Lawson could\nnever have emerged.\nCharred Bones Found\nIn Root-Cellar\nOAK POINT, Man., Oct 20 (CP)\n\u2014Fire-blackened bones found in a\nburned root-cellar have been tenta- ,\ntlvely identified by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as the remains\nof Eugene'C. Lyle, 50, missing from1;\nhis homestead since last Saturday.\nA bullet was found in the head.\nDistrict Coroner G. Paulson of Lun-\ndar,, Man., said, the bachelor died\nfrom a \"gun blast,\" There was a\n,22-calibre pistol beside the body.\nAn R.C.M.P. spokesman i;i Winnipeg said there is no indication at\nthe momen*. of foul play. The gun\nhas been sent to Regina for examination at the R.C.M.P. crime laboratory.\nPush-Button\nStrike Over\nMELBOURNE, Oct 20 (Reuters)\n\u2014 The Melbourne firemen's pushbutton strike is over, Premier J. G.\nB. McDonald announced last night.\nArbitration is to be sought in the\ndispute, brought to a head by the\ndismissal- two weeks ago of 18 fire;\nmen who refused to push buttons\nevery 10 minutes. If they failed to\nring in, the emergency signal sounded: The push-button system will be\nsuspended for the first seven days\nof the arbitration hearings,\nJunior Red Cross\nTo Help Blue Babies\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 Two\nblue babies from one family are to\n,be helped by Manitoba Junior Red\nCross.\nThe children are Leona Penner,\n5%, arid her,.brother 'Richard, 8%.\nWith their mother, Mrs. P. -H. Penner of suburban North ,'Kitdonan,\nthey will leave Saturday' night for\nToronto Sick Children's Hospital.\nThe tots suffer from a congenital\nheart condition which results in insufficient blood circulation.\nNew\nNEW\nNEW\nBURGESS\nFLASHLIGHT\nBATTERY\n|*S|AIED IN, MASTIC , lis\nf     AND STEEL\n1 * CHROME PROTECTED\n'. * IONO LIFE\n* FRESH POWER\n1 * GUARANTEED BY  THE\nMAKER . .. BURGESS\n[for   thojo  e-x-\n[ hours    of    b\nI light, when you\nI inilil   on   the\nI now BURGESS\nI flashlight\n! b o I I o r y.\nm\nPHONE 144 FOR,CLA8SIFIED\nSpecial\nRuled Forms\nWe are equipped to handle\nany special ruled form, no\nmatter how Intricate. Our\n\u25a0 \u25a0_ Bindery Department Is one of\n\u2022 the best equipped; in the\nI n ter I or of B. C, apd is\nsupervised by on experienced\nworkman.\nIf you have any of these\nproblems, why not discuss it\nwith Printers who have made'\no study of this work-for years. *\nPHONE CALL TO\n144\nWILL BRING OUR REPRESENTATIVE\n- -        Or Write\nNELSON   PAILY   NEWS\n. (?      \u25a0 \u2022\nCommercial Printing Department\n'   Xr     '\/\u2022      \u25a0      $\u25a0\n'If ft'e Printing $6ufmeW'\u2014 Consult Us\"\n'.'        f.   Ill\"\n SPORTS\n>\u2022 SpoJtiL \u00a3m.\n\\ ;^-#'      By CLIVE FLEMING %>r     W.\nBy CLIVE FLEMING\nBurly Ron Collings will be watching the galne tonight from tho sidelines as the strengthened Trail\nfemoke Eaters moke their' first\nleague appearanco here. Ir. the first\nberiod Wednesday night, Collings\nbruised his hip badly, and will be\nbut for at least a week, but trainer\nSteve Cameron says he'll be ready\n[Thursday when the Vernon Cana-\nlians are here for Nelson's first\n|aste of Mainllne-Okanagan hockey.\nIt will mean that Ernie Gare will\nj)o in action tonight against the\npmokies.\nPlaying goal for Bobby Kirk will\nbe Johnny Sofiak who answered the\npmokie coach's SOS when he wasn't\nImpressed by Bobby \u2022 Bartlett, who\nplayed good goal last season.\nStrangely Bartlett was on his way\nIo Nelson last year, but since the\nXeafs had Harry Barefoot on hand,\nbe went right through to Trail.\nEddie Wares had contacted Sofiak,\nbut the ex-baskatoon notminder\nfurned up'in Trail.\nSee that Harry Barefoot subbed\ntor Bev Bentley in the Regina nets\nlhe other day, but still the Caps\n(vent winless. Regina won their\nTfirst game from the Quakers last\nplght, by a 3-1 score.\nNowadays it seems easier to transfer players from pro hockey to\nhmateur clubs than from one CAHA\nplub to another. Regina Caps have\nRay Sandelack, Bill Jenkins, Bill\nSamsden, Johnny Harms, George\nMien and Scotty Cameron signed\n|up, all reinstated from pro hockey-\nSaskatoon on the other hand is\n(sweating it out over transfers of\nBill Heindl and Larry Zeidel from\n|the Quebec Hockey circuit.\nTrail almost had a, little trouble\nSecuring Bobby Kromm's release\nfrom North Sidney, and the Smokies\nwanted some reimbursement from\n|ihe Calgary Stampeders for the\npervlces of WIHL scoring leader Don\nAnderson, who is currently at the\n[top of the Prairie scoring heap.\nNanaimo Clippers wouldn't release\n5tew Hendry, Stamps sub goalie,\nintil they got a suitable replacement.\nEdmonton junior hockey bosses\nnay create a little stink in the\nPrairie junior puck circles yet. For\nhe second consecutive year the Ed-\nnontonians application to enter the\nWCJHL was rejected, and at times\nthe Alberta Amateur Hockey Association, loaded with Edmonton\nmoguls, threatened to break up the\nleague. Now it is reported that if\n~oach Morey Rimstad needs players,\nEdmonton might force the return\nif several EAC productgs who have\njot secured releases. Regina, Cal-\n\"Looking Ahead\"\nanswers thousands of career questions. It's packed with information\non job opportunities. Write for your\ncopy today!\nL. J. CAVE,\nBox 300, Lethbridge, Alta.\nNTERNATIONAI.  CORRESPONDENCE  SCHOOL!\nCANADA;   LIMITED\nOEPT.   15I6C.  MONTREAL.   CANADA\n'loose land mo free career Information.\nWdren\t\n\"Jty. Province.\ngary and Medicine Hat have two\napiece, and Lethbrluge and Crow's\nNest have one Edmontonian apiece\nwho could be pulled back to the\nAlbert:- capital.\nThis should create a little more\ndislike between minor pro hockey\nand the Western Canada Senior\ncircuit: it is reported that Edmonton\nFlyers are paying rightwinger Roy\nHeximer $250 per week, a coo $1000\nper month.'. he pro league. who are\ntaxed heavily, have trouble aplenty\ncompeting with the salaries of the\ntop \"amateut\" circuits who hide\nunder the protective cloak of the\nCAHA to escape paying the huge\ntax levied on professional sports.\nThe determined New Westminster\nAdanacs have sent the Mann Cup\nfinals to the limit, edging Owen\nSound fl-- in the sixth game of the\nseven game lacrosse series, Seems\nto me that when lacrosse was living\nin Nelson, 6-5 would be the score\nafter one quarter, not four.\nJohn Willox, a coast basketball\nreferee, will conduct his basketball\nschool at the Civic Cenfre gymnasium Monday evening in his one\nnight stand here.   '\nEdmonton Moves\nInlo First Spot\nTie With Quakes\nCALGARY, Oct. 20 (CP)-Edmonton's undefeated I'lyers whipped\nCalgary Stampeders 4-2 tonight and\nmoved into a first-place tie with\nSaskatoon Quakers in the Western\nCanada Senior Hockey League. It\nwas Flyers' third victory in three\nleague starts\u2014all against Calgary.\nFlyers, who received great goal-\ntending from Ray Frederick, were\nnever headed as they scored singletons in the first and second periods\nand split the third period's four\ngoals.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u20141, Edmonton, Pringle (Anderson) 14:15.\nPenalties\u2014Barry (2), Clark, Krel-\nler, Gilhooley.\nSecond period\u20142 Edmonton, Mcr-\nluk! (Anderson, Pringle) 3:30,\nPenalties\u2014Barry (2), Doug Anderson, Watt, Campbell.\nThird period\u20143, Calgary, Finney\n(Anderson, Pechet) 10:37, 4 Edmonton, .Pringlo (Merluk, Anderson)\n12:02, 5 Edmonton, Kilburn (Barry)\n13:22, 6, Calgary, Anderson (Finney,\nSawchuk) 15:30.\nPenalties \u2014 Campbell, Colville\n(minor and Misconduct).\nAdanacs Tie Lacrosse Series\nDEADLOCKED AT\n3 GAMES EACH\nWeather Crescents'\nFourth Quarter\nRally for 6-5 Win\nBy LORNE BRUCE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nTORONTO, Oet. 20 (CP)\u2014\nNew. Westminster Adanacs\nedged Owen Sound Crescents\n6-5 here tonight to deadlock\nthe Canadian Senior Lacrosse\nfinals at three wins apiece.\nThe seventh game will be\nplayed here Sunday.\nBob Lee's Adanacs, facing elimination, played their best game of\nthe series and just managed to\nweather a fourt. quarter Owen\nSound rally that produced three\nquick goals,\nGOALIE HURT\nThe Eastern champions lost their\ngreat goalie Lloyd (Moon) Wooton,\nmidway through the first quarter\nwhen the netminder lost his balance\nand put all his 205 pounds and\npadding on one foot. It was believed\nhe may have broken an ankle bone.\nBut Doug Favell of .Hamilton\nTigers, spare goalie for, the series,\nplayed an outstanding game for the\nremainder of the contest, blocking a\nshower of shots from the determined\nWestern champions.\nWooton stopped, five shots before\nhe was hurt and Favell blocked 26.\nGordon Pogue, giving one of his\nbetter displays, stopped 29 in the\nNew Westminster nets,\nA crowd of 2984 paying fans saw\nthe desperate Western champions\nrun up a 5-2 lead by the three quarter mark and boost it to 6-2 shortly\nafter the fourth opened.\nThen the Eastern cnamplons rallied for three quick goals but\ncouldn't get the tieing marker while\nholding Adanacs scoreless.'\nHarrison  Smith was top  New\nWestminster scorer with two goals.\nReo Jerome, Bob Bremner, Jake\nProCtor   and    Mike   Munro   all\ncounted once for Adanacs.\nOwen Sound scorers were Don\nMcWhirter, Doug Gillespie, Harry\nKazarian, Don Cahipbell and Russ\nSlater.\ntaps Win First\nGame; Down\nQuakers 3-1\n%\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 21,1930 \u2014 7\nid\nNew Big Four League Opens Play\nSunday When Leafs, Rangers (lash\nThe Police Gazette's world's heavyweight championship belt Is\nbeing presented here to Ezzard Charles who licked Joe Louis last\nmonth, by the Gazette's publisher, H. H. Roswell In New York, as\nformer heavyweight boxing champ Jack Dempaey looks on. That\nbelt will belong to Charles only as long as he can keep It away from\nLouis' clutching hands. For rumors have It that the Brown Bomber\nIs going to keep on fighting until he gets one more shot at his heavyweight title.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nStrikes V Spares\nREGINA, Oot. 20 (CP)\u2014Regina\nCaps scpred their first victory' ln\nthe Western Canada Senior Hockey\nLeague by dumping the Saskatoon\nQuakers, 3-1.\nCaps had lost their first three\nstarts ln the still-young, season. It\nwas Quakers' second loss in five\nstarts,\nBev. Bentley was back In the\nnets for Regina, He played the\nfirst two games but was replaced\nIn the third by Harry Barefoot,\nBut the squad were without the\nservloes of forwards Toby Brown,\nGordle Stascson, Larry Popeln\nand Bob Holmes. They used Defencemen Blackett and Cece Allen up front.\nDespite the lack of scoring in the\nfirst period, the 2054 fans were\ntreated to lots of action when a\nfight broke out between Bill Kyle\nof Caps and Howie Milford of Quakers. Kyle was given a two-minute\ncross-checking'penalty, while Milford drew a major for fighting.\nA second fight broke out in the\nmiddle session, and Goalie Bentley\nand Herb Lovett also put on a boxing bout in the final frame Each\ndrew a minor penalty, with Blackett\nserving Bentley's.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014No score.\nPenalties\u2014C. Allen, Staley, Heindl, Kyle, Milford (major).\nSecond period\u20141, Regina, Mc-\ndougall (Cameron) 5,45, 2 Regina,\nSandelack (CCT), (Kyle, Hauck)\n!;03.\nPenalties\u2014Ramsden, Zeidel (2),\nHeindl (misconduct), McCullough\n(major), C. Allen (major), Sandelack. i'.!'.'\u25a0\nThird period\u20143, Regina, Blackett\n(McDougall, Jenkins) 9:26, 4 Saskatoon, Shabaga (Bentley, Lovett)\n19:40.\nPenalties\u2014D. Bentley (served by\nBlackett), Lovett'\nBecause of the increasing number of players wishing to participate in the Nelson Big Three Hockey League, organized last season\nfor the enjoyment, of both fans and\nplayers, the League has expanded\nand will now be calle dthe Big\nFour.\nThe tour-tea.ms are made up of\nboth Senior B's and Juniors, following the pattern set by the Nelson\nAmateur Hockey Association which\nrecently organized a pooling system\nfor their players to enable all kid\nenthusiasts to take part in the ice\nsport.\nFirst game of the new league is\nscheduled for Sunday afternoon at\nthe Civic Centre arena when the\nLeafs and Rangers clash.\nNamed after the National Hockey\nLeague clubs the teams will be\nknown as the Maple Leafs, Rangers,\nBlack Hawks and the Bruins.\nHeading the league as President\nis Fred Madden while other officers are Bill Wicken, vice-president; B. Whitfield, secretary-treasurer; Jack Brinley, Bill Burns, Ron\nNash and Doug Winlay, executixe;\nFootball Weekend\nFor Governor Warren\nSACRAMENTO, Calif., Oot. 20\n(AP)\u2014Gove'rnor Eearl Warren Is\ngoing to have \"a football feast If\nthings go right\" this weektnd.\nHe told reporters today- he\nplans to see these games:\nO. K. McClatchy High vs Stockton High here tonight;\nCalifornia vs Oregon State at\nBerkeley tomorrow.\nCollege of the Pacific vs Loy-\naola at Stockton tomorrow night.\nSanta . Clara vs Nevada here\nSunday.\nWhy didn't he attend a big Sacr\nramento High School game last\nnight? \"Just too tired,\" the governor replied.\nHeindl, Zeidel\nAwarded Saskatoon\nMIDLAND, Ont., Oct. 20 (CP)-\nThe Canadian Amateur Hockey Association has > awarded defencemen\nBill Heindl and Larry Zeidel to\nSaskatoon Quakers of the Western\nCanada Senior Hockey League,\nGeorge Dudley, C.A.H.A. Secretary,\nannounced tonight.\nThe C.A.H.A. had suspended\nHeindl and Zeidel for jumping the\nQuebec Senior League to play with\nthe -Saskatoon Club. The players\nappealed their suspension and a\nvote of the C.A.H.A.'s Board of\nGovernors awarded them to Saskatoon.\nSHERBROOKE,   Que,,   Oct.  20\n(CP)\u2014An offlolal of Sherbrooke\nSaints   of   the   Quebec   Senior\nHockey   League  tonight  recommended that the circuit-withdraw\nfrom    the    Canadian    Amateur\nHockey   Association   beoauie   of\nthe   C.A.H.A.'s   handling   of  the\ncases of defencemen Bill  Heindl\nahd Larry Zeidel.\n\"I was at the C.A.H.A. meeting\nin Toronto where it was decided\nthat no player'would be allowed\nto transfer to another team without first obtaining a release from\nthe   team   with  which   he   played\nthe previous season,\" said business\nManager Forest Keene,\n\"By its action in, this case, the\nC.A.H.A. has shown it is unreliable and that it will not keep its\nword. I would be in favor of having the Q.S.H.L. withdraw from\nthe C.A.H.A.\"\nVariety Club League;\nHigh single\u2014Vi DeLucrezio, 310.\nHigh Aggregate\u2014Vi DeLucrezio,\nCO. *\nHigh team\u2014Bombers, 2663.\nThe league standing follows:\nBowling Bees, 8; Deadend Kids, 7;\nFlying Floozie, 7; Bombers, 7; Humdingers, 6; Mad Hatters, 4,\nBOMBERS\u2014V. DeLucrezio'660, M.\nStangherlin 630, G. Olund 413, L.\nChapman 494, V. Pacard 259, handicap, 207\u20142663.\nFLYIN' FLOOZIES\u2014N. Benedetti\n446, M. Benedetti 393, B. Maloney\n, 0. Cassan 522, V. Lapolnte 446,\nhandicap 114\u20142424.\nHUMDINGERS-D. Norfield 646,\nL. Meakins 432, H. Leeming 437, B.\nIceton 439, H. Pearson 501\u20142348.\nBOWLING BEES\u2014L. Elphick 435,\nC. Fletcher 588, T. Bird 339, M. Ar-\nnot 472, B. Breeze 470, handicap 51\n\u25a02355.\nMAD HATTERS-E. Christian 314\nD. Fawcett 362, M. Wells 514, R. Ross\n438, G. Macrone 642,-2270.\nDEAD END KIDS \u2014 E. Facenholtz\n359, H. Smith 461, M. Laughton 516,\nM. Whltelock 446, E. Milne 399-2181\nder 422, F IOU1 463, F. Boychuck\n331, E. Vansacker 408, spot 216\u20142320\nMOORE\u2014M, Ross 577, G. Culley\n479, B. Clark 433, M. Parker, 394,\nB. Moore 541, spot 126\u20142550.\nR, Peloso, leBgue statistician; N.\nHIckman( advertising; R. Wassick,\nE. McLachlan and F. Boyar, schedule committee; and Bill Freno, referee.\n. Personnel ot the four teams follows:\nMaple Leafs, managed by Bill\nWicken\u2014D. Kennedy, Rich Wassick,\nF. Kuhn; F. Smith, L. Dyke, A. McDonald, N. Hickman, R, Peloso, Gus\nFortln, B. Malcolm and Buzz McDonald.\nRangers, managed, by Bud Whitfield\u2014B. Freno, Red Wassick, G.\nSmith, A. Davis, Stringer, Bill Hunter, D. Winlaw, J, Ludlow, E. Mc-p\nLachlan, F. Start and R. Turner.\nBlack Hawks, managed by Les\nHufty\u2014Madden, B. Koehle, P. Mores, Dunsmore, Mclnes, C. Chris-\ntenson, F. Hufty, F. Boyar, G. Wei-\nbourne and R. Brown.\nBruins, managed by Bob McDonald\u2014Shrieves, Dunsmore, Longdon,\nJ. Todd, L, Irwin, D. Porteous, ,R.\nNash, M. Porteous and J. Perrler.\nPlayers whose names are not listed and who wish to play have been\nasked to contact Hud Whitfield.\nKootenay, Visiting Anglers Bring\nIn Over 150 Lbs. Fish in Week\nHave ARROW\nHandle Your Move!\nLet ii be an automatic choice to call the firm\nthat specializes in moving furniture,\nARROW SERVICE is built around its staff of highly\nskilled furniture moving operators, using only equipment specially designed for the safe and efficient\nmovement of household effects.\nMOVING BY ARROW is so easy, all YOU have to do\nis telephone NELSON 1106, every detail of your\nmove will then be handled in an, efficient and economical manner.\nLET ARROW MOVE YOU\nPACKING\nCRATING\nSHIPPING\nSTORAGE\nLONG DISTANCE\nVAN MOVEMENT\nPOOL CAR SHIPMENTS\nARROW Van & Storage\nSucce.Dors to Williams Van Lines\n613 WARD ST., NELSON\nDALLAS, .Oct. 20 (AP)-Charles\nDewitt, Vice-President of St. Louis\nBrowns, says minor league baseball\nwill be killed if major league\nbroadcasts continue,\nHe told some 80 baseball leaders\nfrom nine minor leagues, meeting\nhere Thursday to discuss realignment in Ihe Southwest, that \"major\nleague game broadcasts are making\nbig league fans-J-not fans of your\nhome-town clubs.\"      \u25a0\nSenior Ladles League:\nHigh single \u2014 Sonny Augustine,\n282.\nHigh aggregate \u2014 Jessie Gentles,\n729.\nHigh team\u2014Chursinow 2583.\nCHURSINOW\u2014H. Morris *52, E.\nKennedy 523, P. Winlaw 533, Low\nScore 438, D. Chursinow 628, spot\n9\u20142583.\nKUHN\u2014Low Score 369,' I. Nadeau\n473, S. Augustine 561, P. Gentles 493,\nA. Kuhn 548, spot 120\u20142564.\nM. IRVINE\u2014V. Allen 437, M. Bat-\nley 525, M, Bringsli 514, N. Byres\n353, M. Irvine 431, spot. 180\u20142440.\nSTEWART\u2014Doe 282, R. Kuntz 482,\nM. Paterson 448, F. May 484, C.\nStewart 584, spot 186\u20142466,\nMANN\u2014K. Zabawa 518, C. Eberle\n302, V. Blaney 282, M. MacDougall\n391', S. Mann 373, spot, 258\u20142124\n\u25a0 McLEAN \u2014 G. Procter 513, A.\nBarefoot 328,. F. Parker 463, C. McGinn 358, G. McLean 532\u20142194.\nWATERER \u2014 M. Sinnerud 275,' L.\nSpiers 469, R. Browne 545 J. Abrosslmo 474, D. Waterer 523, spot 63\u2014\n2349.\nLOCATELLI\u2014W. Stern 370, M.\nLeeming 496, B. Storey 186, F. Porteous 521, I. Locatelli 461, spot 231\u2014\n2265.\nGENTLES-A. McGinn 342, K.\nClinton 349, A. Skilton 393, H. Storey\n515, J. Gentles 729, spot 42,-2370.\nKOEHLE\u2014Collinson 429, Amsdorf\n534, Kennell 547, Butler 422, Koehle\n406, spot 126\u20142464.\nPETERS-F. Boyce 480, Z. Schnel-\nMen's Commercial League:\nHigh single\u2014Yo Hamakawa, 282.\nHigh aggregate \u2014 Arvid Snieder,\n691.\nHigh team\u2014Bennie's, 2826,\nThe League standing follows: Ben-,\nnie's, 16; Bankers, 12; Rigby, 11;\nC.P.H., 9; Transfer, 7; Cuthbert,.5,\nBENNIE'S\u2014B. Schneider 558, W.\nAbrosimo 623, T. Sewell 396, J. Reis-\nterer 558, A. Schneider 691\u20142826.\nTRANSFER\u2014Jim Gold 318, Joe\nAmatto 368, Jim Hudson 442, Andy\nAnderson 417, Hank Forster 544,\nspot 255.-2344.\nC. P. R.\u2014A. Gackle 368, low score\n480, M, J. Boyes 424, K. K. LePage\n373, J. Cherrington 509\u20142154,\nBANKERS-E. Wheeler 600, J.\nClark 403, T. Trehearne 439, D.\nSqkes 487, S. Gordon 608, low score\n354, handicap 2857-2576.\nRIGBY\u2014George Bond 457, Gilbert Johnson 509, Bob MacDonald\n680, Yo Hawakawa 618.\u20142244.\nLlla Casemoro, one of the top\nwomen bowlers on the' Hudson's\nBay team, dumped the pins for\n376 on Thursday night's mixed\nCommercial games to. set a new\nrecord for ladles high single. Llla\nnarrowly missed a perfect 450\n\u2022core when she fumbled the 10th\nframe. She alio took high aggregate with 693.\nMen's high single and high aggregate\u2014Archie Macrone 330 and 788,\nHigh team\u2014New- Grand Royals,\n2948.\nIn the league standings the Royals\nedged into top spot moving the\nNews crew down to second spot in\na tie with Fleury's. The Royals now\nhave 18 points; Daily News 15\nFleury's 15; Palm No. 1, 14; Safeway 13%; Cuthbert's 11; Hudson\nBay 10%; Palm No. 2, 7; Alf's 6;\nSterling 4; lac, 4, and Nationals 4.\nScores follow:\nNEWS\u2014N. McDonald 371; L. John-\nsen 526; B. Jarbeau 453; D. Kidd\n350; L. Gagnon 560; Spot 156. Total\n2416.\nFLEURY'S-G. Macrone 680; A.\nStevenson 40J; A. Stevens 489; S.\nNeedham 444; A. Macrone 788. Total\n2789.\nCUTHBERT - E. Niven 458; T.\nPerry \u2022 576; C. Ronellen 348; D.\nMacrae 583; E. Macrae 571. Total\n2536.\nHUDSON'S BAY \u2014 B. McCubbin\n492; B. Perdue 505; H. House 552;. L.\nCasemore 693; B. Fowles 668. Total\n2810.\nPALM NO. 1-B. Day 522; K.\nZabawa 566; S. Zabawa 357; J. Day\n548; M. Stoutenberg 519; Spot 45.\nTotal 2647.\nNATIONAL-B. Riddell 477;. L.\nGri 349; B. Moore 505; B. Kelly 479;\nL.' Page 400. Total 2210.\nI.A.C'S\u2014B. Birks 501; M. McGinn\n420; E. Jorden 375; ,A. Darwin 450;\nH. R. Mills 624; Spot 195. Total 2565.\nSAFEWAY\u2014B. Waight 582; A.\nHallman 506; Q. Wright 596; D. Lunn\n516; W. Hallman 652. Total 2852.\nPALM NO. 2-B. Will 534; T. Ro-\nFinancial Solution\nSought for\nBaseball Videocasts\nOAKLAND, Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Directors of the Pacific Coast League\nagreed today that videocasts of\nbaseball either must be restricted or\neliminated until a satisfactory financial solution is reached.\nThe problem will be attacked\nagain at the annual major-minor\nleagues meeting in St Petersburg,\nFla.\n'KASLO, B.C., Oct. 20 - Though\nOld Man Winter is just around the\ncorner the Kootenay Lake is still\nupholding its reputation as a top\nfisherman's grounds.\nProof of this was seen last week\nwhen ,Kaslo and American anglers\nhooked over 150 pounds of fish. And\nwith the price of meat the way it'is\ntoday, who wouldn't settle for\nsizzling fish steak?\nThe largest fish taken was an 18\npound Rainbow trout caught at\nParadise Camp by Red Evans, a\nvisitor from Spokane, Another American sportster,  C.  A.  Blckle  of\nHOCKEY SCORES\nBy The Canadian Press\nW.p.8,H.L.\nEdmonton 4, Calgary 2\nSaskatoon 1, Regina 3\nM.J.H.L.\nWinnipeg Monarchs 4, Winnipeg\nCanadlens 2\nW.C.J.H.L.\nRegina 2, Lethbridge 6\nMoose Jaw 4, Medicine Hat 3\nMARITIME SENIOR\nCharlottetown 6, Halifax 2.\nQUEBEC SENIOR\nChicoutimi 7, Montreal Royals 4.\n8ENIOR O.H.A.\n\u2022 Kitchener 1, Hamilton 3.\nJUNIOR  O.H.A.\nOshawa 5, Guelph 4.\nGait 3, St. Catharines 1.\nToronto, 7, Windsor 4.\nSt. Michaels 4, Barrie 10.\nP.C.H.L.\nNew Westminster 5, Vancouver 3,\nReardon Says Kids\nWrong to Quit School\nAt 16 for Hockey\nFORT WILLIAM, Oct. 20 CCP)-\nKcnny Reardon says one of the\nbiggest mistakes a kid can make is\nto quit school at 16 to'play hockey.\nReardon, roving goodwill ambassador for Montreal Canadiens, said\ntoday in an interview that professional hockey can provide a\nprofitable career for a boy with\nability. But at 16, he said, no one\ncan tell whether .-.boy has the making of a big-time player.\n\"Anybody who says he can watch\na 16-year-old player in action and\npredict his future is plain crazy.\nSome kid may look like a million\ndollars at that age and turn out a\nflop.\"    ...\nTensed, Iowa, landed a 16-pound\nbeauty. ! i\nMaurice HolHday, Kaslo fisherman, boated a double catch of the\nbig ones. He accounted for 16 and\n14V4 pound Rainbows, and \"he brings\nin fish every day.\"\nAt Allsebrook's Camp, Ed Howels\nfrom Spokane hooked a 15 pound\nRainbow beauty. His second catch,\na Dolly Varden, weighed in at eight\npounds.\nG. Armstrong also reported some\ngood catches. Mr. Hulbert of Lewis-\nton, Idaho hoolrcd a 12 and 13%\npound Rainbow while his companion\na Mr. Sater scaled his catch at 14% -\u25a0\npounds.\nAnother angler whose luck is still\nholding out is Une Alexander of\nProsser, The enthusiast brought in\ntwo Rainbows scaling 12 and 13\npounds.\nSKATING\nTODAY\nCHILDREN\n10:00 A.M. \u2014 NOON\n.'llllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllM'IIIIIIIIIIIIillllllllllll';\nHOCKEY\nNIGHT\nin Kootenay\n5:05-8:30 p.m.\nmano 478; M. Will 453;-M. Collett\n519; B. Elsmore 536. Total 2520.\nALF'S\u2014J. Edwards 402; M. Hood\n402; A. Edwards 445; S. Coskey 473;\nL. Hood 532; Spot 105. Total 2359.\nSTERLING\u2014F. Townsend 475; B.\nMills 478; D. Burns 374; B. McDonald 538; M. Burns 292; Spot 336.\nTotal 2493.\nROYALS - F. Yarley 636; G.\nKoehle 597; L, Loewen 495; D.\nChursinow 540; C. Chapman 680.\nTotal 2948.\nmtan\nM POPULAR\nPRICE\nOLD RYE WHISKY\nThll advertisement is not published or\ndisplayed by the liquor Control Bosul ot\n\u00ab\u00a5 the Government of British Columkto\nDial\nT240\nTONIGHT  I\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilin\nChuck Rayner, New York Ranger goalie, Is shown trying to\nsmother the puck after S'ld Abel (12), of the Detroit Red Wings had\nattempted to poke It Into the net for a score. Tony Leswick, with\n\u25a0tick held high, Is seen leaping over his teammate Rayner trying\nto rough the Red Winger up. Frank Eddolls (at left) Ranger defence-\nman, Is the guy sitting It out on the Ice. The Detrclters edged out\nthe New York team, 3-2, In the National Hockey League's opener\nat Detroit.\u2014Central Press Canadian,\nCURLERS\nFive Months Curling for $20.00\nincluding Rock Rental\nMembership List Now Out\nSign Up at\n7 TAXI WOOD, VALLANCE HDWE.\nALBERT'S BARBER SHOP\nor Phone\nMr. J. H. Long at 7061-2\nKIMBERLEY   DYNAMITERS\nHOCKEY\nTONIGHT 8 p.m.\nTrail Smoke Eaters\nvs.\nNelson Maple Leafs\nGame 2\nADVANCE\nRESERVE SEATS SALE\nOF 600 GOOD SEATS\nTODAY\n10:00 a.m. \u2014 6 p.m.\nCIVIC CENTRE OFFICE\nSeason Tickets Now $19.00\nReserved Seats $1.00\nAdults Rush 75c Students 35c\nKERRISDALE   MONARCHS\n JSST9  HOME FURNITURE\nJLIfjX JUST ARRIVED!    LARGE SHIPMENT OF  PICTURES.\nCO. LTD.\nSEE OUR WINDOW\nNELSON\nB.C.\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\nK\nI\nN\nG\nO\nF\nR.\nC.\nM.\nP.\nB\nL\no\nN\nD\nS\nb'\nC\nR\nE\nT\nA\nG\nE\nN\nT\nD\nO\nN\nA\nL\nD\nD\nU\nC\nK\nB\nU\nZ\nz\ns\nA\nW\nY\nE\nR\nG\nG\nS\nHATS\nCLEANED\nTODAY\naJui^i\n&$$>\n\u25a0 \u00ab]?5rtp\n!IaL\n11 {^n\n\\\u00a7y ^mSB\njllillll?\nJi^JiH\nmJ^ S*p c?'\ndfiflafiP       \"\"'\u2022';.   Carl-  r.IO-2!\nHBB5?                          And\u00ab ioom \u2014\nDEAR- IT'S TOO BAD THAT VOU\nHAVEN'T THE ARTISTIC ABILITY\nI HAVE-I'VE JUST FINISHED,\/V;\nBEAUTIFUL PAINTINQ.AMD'PuT\nIT IM THE MAID'S ROOM TO\nCHEER HEB UP!!\nMAGSIE-DID MDU HAVE A   .\nFIGHT WITH THE MAID AND I\nFIRE HER-OR DID SHE\nQUIT ? SHE'S eOW' DOWN\nTUC ^TCCCT  WITH   Al I '\nTODAY'S Neur Pictures\nHeld by Police\nSnapshot Contest Winner\nEnnls Glllum (above), 26, a talesman, sits with his wife, Irene,\nIn Detroit, Mich., police headquarters, after the bludgeoning of four\nwomen and two children. According to Homicide Detective Sgt. .\nEdward Jacques, the only reason Glllum could give for going berserk\nwas \"being crazy drunk\". One victim, Mrs. Dorothy Julian, 47, died\nof wounds.\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nFrost Presents U.K. Tickets to Plow Champs\n fffP\u00ae\t\nThis picture of Joseph Wasllausliae of Waterbury, Conn., blowing smoke rings for his daughter Shirley, won for him the grand\nprize In the National Newspaper Snapshot Contest. The grand prize\nwas $1000, and In addition Wasllauskas won another $600 for winning\nthe Class B (young people and adults) section of the contest. A Rol-\nlelflex camera with a remote control attachment was used to make\nthe picture at f.22 at 1\/25th of a second with two flashbulbs.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto\nRed China Regime Hailed in India\nCongratulating winners of a four-week tour of the United Kingdom, won at the International Plowing Match, Is Premier Leslie\nFrost, of Ontario. He presided at the presentation of awards held In\nthe arena at Beeton, Ont, Hugh Leslie, Georgetown, Ont,, left, was\nchampion tractor man. Herb Jarvis, Aglncourt, won laurels with\na horse-drawn plow.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nThe first anniversary of the Communist regime In China was\nobserved In the capital of India by the Chinese Embassy with great\npomp and ceremony. The day-long observance was climaxed by a\nreception for more than 1000 guests, Including the Prime Minister of\nIndia, diplomats of countries which have recognized Red China, CabN\nnet Ministers and high-ranking civil and military offlcals. In this\nscene, General Yan Chung-Hslen, Chinese Ambassador, greets Pandit\nNehru, Prime Minister of India, at' the reception.\u2014Central Press\nCanadian. .    __\nRough Treatment\nFor Cheating Dentist\nNOTTINGHAM, England, Oct 20\n(Reuters)\u2014A dentist, whose name\nwas not revealed, got a bit of rough\ntreatment himself from the state-\noperated dental service yesterday.\nDental treatment is part of Britain's\nhational health scheme.        '*\nThe Nottingham health executive\ndrilled into the dentist for:\n1. Removing 19 teeth from a patient's mouth when only one needed\nattention. The executive ordered\n$380 docked from his pay.\n'. Giving treatment under unhygienic conditions. A further $70\nreducted.\n3. His own appearance \"leaving\nmuch to be desired.\" The committee\nsaid an inspector found him wearing \"a ver;- worn and dirty suit\"\nand he had not shaved. He was told\nto smarten up.\nPHONE  144 FOR CLASSIFIED.\nU.B.C. Enrollment\nDrops 15 Per Cent\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014Figures released by the University of\nBritish Columbia today show enrolment this year has dropped 6394\nstudents, more than 15 per cent below last year's registration.\nAmong the 7500 students attending last year more than 2000 or 27\nper cent, were war veterans. Thi?\nyear vaterans make up only 15.5\nper cent of all students. .'\nYugoslavia Seeks\nAid of U.S.\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 20 (AP) \u2014\nYugoslavia formally asked the United States today for aid in meeting\na food shortage resulting from\ndrought. '.''..\nA letter handed to State Secretary\nDean Acheson said the Yugoslavs\nrequire $105,UOO,000 of outside help.\nGold Price Down\nOTTAWA, Oct 20 (CP)\u2014The P14\nnance Department today announces\nthat the gross price of $36.918437 pen\nfine ounce will be paid to gold pro4\nducers this week for gold deposit!\ned at the mint The price last weelf\nwas $36.96875.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nPermanent Loan     '\nCLIFTON, N.J.,- Oct. 20 (AP) -\nLakeview Savings and Loan Association officials yesterday went\nthrough all the trouble of making\nout loan papers for a man who only\nwanted' to rob them.\nWhen the papers were all drawn\nup and the offjee was clear, the customer produced a gun and collected\n$3085 iri a large paper bag he had\nbrought along.\nON THE AIR\nSATURDAY, OCT. 21, 1950\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n,7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30-News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Show Case\n9:00\u2014News\n. 9:01\u2014Western Hit Parade\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n0:30\u2014The Stamp Collector\n9:45\u2014The Answer Man\n10:00\u2014Train Time and Time Eignal\n10:01\u2014Bandstand \\\n10:15\u2014Notice Board .\"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"\n10:45\u2014News\n10:55\u2014Sport News\n11:00\u2014Folk Songs . \u2022\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Saturday Magazine\n1:00\u2014Saturday Serenade\nl:30-^London Studio Melodies\n2:00-:-Dance Music\n3:00\u2014News ,   ,-\n3:01\u2014Saturday Teen Beat\n3:29\u2014Train Time\n3:30\u2014Saturday Pops Concert\n4:30\u2014Sports College\n4:45\u2014Memo From Lake Success\n5:00\u2014News\n5:05\u2014N.H.L. Hockey\n7:00\u2014News .\n7:10\u2014Sport News\n7:15\u2014Saturday Barn Dance\n7:30\u2014Square Dance\n7:45\u2014Saturday  Barn   Dance\n8:00\u2014Prairie Schooner\n8:30\u2014Dance Music\n9:00\u2014John Sturgess\n. 9:15\u2014Armdale Chorus     \u2022\n9:30\u2014Can You Top This?\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Trocadero Orch.\n10:30\u2014Request Program\n11:30\u2014St. Francis Hotel Orchestra\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Cap\nSUNDAY, OCT. 22, 1950\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n9:00\u2014News\n9:15\u2014Music for Meditation\n9J30\u2014Harmony Harbor\n9:59\u2014Time Signal and Train Time\n10:01\u2014B.C. Gardener\n10:15\u2014New3\n10:30\u2014The Way of the Spirit\n11:00\u2014News\n11:03\u2014Capital Report\n11:30\u2014Religous Period\n12:00\u2014Your Invitation to Music\n1:30\u2014Church of the Air\n2:0tF-Footlighters\n2.30\u2014Critically Speaking\n3:00\u2014John Fisher\n3:15\u2014News: Weather\n3:30\u2014Vancouver Symphony Orch.\n4:00\u2014Overture Please\n4:30\u2014My Uncle Louis\n5:00\u2014Sta\u00ab; Time\n6:00\u2014National Sunday Evening Hr.\n6:45\u2014Hour of St. Francis\n7:00\u2014News\n7:10\u2014Weekend Review\n7:30\u2014Family Theatre\n8:00\u2014Stage 51\n9:00\u2014Salvation Army\n9:30\u2014Vesper Hour.\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Preachers Diary\nE. Berlin Youth\nJailed One Year\nFor Dancing Samba\nBERLIN, Oct 20 (AP)-Egon Sander, 22, was sent to' jail for two\nyears by an East German court today for dancing the samba.\nThe East German district court at\nPima; Saxony, ruled that the samba\nwas \"endangering to the life of the\nstate.\" Sander was arrested while\ndemonstrating the South American\ndance to friends at a public dance.\nDAILY CROSSWORD mmm\nACROSS\nFestive\nCalm\nBlends by\nmelting\nGood-by\n(Sp.)\nBeginning\nTread\nheavily\nAt home\nA color\nAssam\nsUkworm\nClique\nMeasure of\nlength ,\nNickel\n(sym.)\nJourney\nMonkey\nCigarette\n(slang)\nTibetan\ngazelle ,\nPlundered\nPresent\n-Ahead\nCut. as grass\nHumble ,,,'.\nBirds, ag\na class -\nBend the head\nIn greeting\nPersonal\npronoun\nSorrow\nRecipient\nof a gift\nSudden\nshower\n(Scot.)    >\nCorrect\nThe Orient\nSalamander -\nDOWN\nOne who\noperates ft .\nmachine gun\n2. Long-eared 21. Excavate\nquadruped    24. Chum\n3. Ogle\n4. Showy\nflower\n5. Son: prefix\nto Scotch\nnames\n6. Not working\n26. Morass\n27. Pall\nhandle \u25a0'\n29. Jewel \u25a0\t\n31. Highways\n32. Call on for\naid\n7. One who lies 33. Put on, as\n8. Masquerade      clothes\nUI3HI3KI HUB0H\nHHflft   HHHUHH\ncm   HHtan aa\nHHHBHia   HI5IBI3\nranaHUHfi am\nHKH   I'JHH\nera Miaerati'B\nOHHB E1BHHH15\nI3H HE1HB HW\nHHntflBH   OHDIU\nHBI3HB aaaaB\naniHRiH hbubb\nrobe\n9. Insert surreptitiously\n11. Country\nIn\n\u2022Europe\n16. Canine\n19. Little,\nquarrel\n35. Instigate\n36. A'sturdy\nwoolenv\nfabric .\n39 Chief Norst\n: god. \u2022 \u25a0\n42. Pen-name\nof Charles\nLamb\nYesterday's Answ\n43. Habitual\ndrunkards\n45. Large,\ncupola\n48. Soak\nflax\nBO. Fresh\nswell ;\nDAILY CRYPSOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAX Y D h B A AX R\nIs LONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A It used j\nfor the three L'a X for the two O's, etc, Single letters, apos. j\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all hints. |\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nBRIO   1   BUZFV   UK   RIGGTSLDD   ORLTZJ\nRIZAUSC    KUZLOLFFD.' \u2014GUI*\nYesterday's Cryptoqiiote: PRAY, GOODY, PLEASEvTO MOD.'!\nERATE TOE RANCOUR OF YOUR TONGUE\u2014O'HARA.\n.   PlsUlbulll ty Klnj Fnturt? ByatlMs\n . JO-PERSON WANT ADS\nFOR QUICK RESULTS,\/\nPhone 144\nDeadline, for Classified Ads\u20143 P.M.\nPhone 144\nBIRTHS\n(ANDERSON\u2014To Mr. and Mrs.\nfalllam Anderson bf Slooan City,\nVsiocSn Community Hospital, New\nlenyer, Oct, 18.a son.\n',HELP WANTED\n\u25a0ALES - SERVICE REPRESENTA-\nltive Nelson and area, to handle\nI sales and service of prominent\n|line of electrical appliances\n[through Hudson's Bay Co. store.\nI Must be between 26 and 45 years\nI of age, married, have car and\nI proven ability in contacting the\nI public, Apply D. R. Roberts, Personnel Dept., Hudson's Bay Co.;\nI Ndlsdn. Time 10:30-1?:Q0 a.m., 3:00-\n15:00 p.m. Date, Saturday, October\n121st, 1950.\nJTANTED\u2014INSPECTOR TO MAKE\n\u25a0 Insurance report on a fee basis\nI for Nelson and surrounding dis-\nI trict This is a good opportunity\nI for a retired person or one with\n| a great deal of time on his hands.\nIA  car would  be very helpful.\n[Applicants must know the district\nyery well. Our representative will\nbe in Nelson early next week. On\nyour application, please give address and phone no. for immediate contact. Box 1740 Daily News.\nPUBLIC NOTICE\nIALE COOK TO HANDLE LOG\nglng crew up to 20 men. I.W.A.\nUnion wage. Apply Timber Dept.,\nCrow's Nest Pass Coal Co, Ltd.,\nMichel, B.C.\n1ECHANLC WANTED FOR\ntruck\/repairs. Must be a welder.\nSteady' year round work. $250\nper month. Dewis Transport and\nGarage Co. Ltd., Silverton, B.C.\nPANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED WAIT-\nresses.New Star Cafe,\nSITUATIONS WANTED\njelson (3uj|ding Contractors\nBuilding and remodelling, Specialize in architecture. No jobs\ntoo large or too small 1323\nMcQuarrie Ave. Phone 364-X-3.\nIOOK NEEDS POSITION. PLEASE\nwrit^ full particulars to Pat\nWoolsey, Creston, B.C.   .\nCANTED \u2014 OFFICE CLEANING.\nPhone 1312-L-\t\nVANTED\u2014HOUSEWORK BY THE\nhour. Phone 657-X.\nRENTALS\nIOTTAGE FOR RENT-3 ROOMS\nand bathroom, partly furnished.\nVery reasonable rate for Winter\nmonths. Three minutes walk from\nNelson ferry. Con Cummins. Ph.\n738-L2 afternoons and evenings.\nWanted \u2014 garage, one car;\nby the month; vicinity of Blue\nTop Auto Court Phone Blue Top,\n' No. 2 Cabin.\nI ROOM WINTERIZED COTTAGE\n'for rent. Partly furnished. Apply\nWm. Bailey, Willow Point. Phone\n482-R2.\n-ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT, Hi\nmiles from Nelson on Blewett\nhighway. Apply P. K. Reibin, 661\nBaker Street.\nVANTED TO RENT\u20142 OR 3 BED-\nroom house for family with 3\nchildren anytime up to 1st of\nyear. J. W. Rogers, Tye, B.C.\n.OR RENT\u2014REVENUE PRODUC-\ning house. Centrally located. Ap-\nply Box 1543 Dally News.\n'OR RENT \u2014 SINGLE HOUSE-\nkeeping room and garage. Applv\n\u25a0 711 Carbonate St\nESTATE OF FREDERICK NELSON\nMcEWAN, DECEASED,\nALL PERSONS having claims\nagainst the estate of Frederick Nelson McEwan, deceased, who died\non the 2nd day of October, A.D,\n1950, at Nelson, British Columbia:\nare required to send the same verified by declaration to the undersigned executor, Hiram Albert Mc\nEwan, 224 Silica Street, Nelson,\nrBitish Columbia, on or before the\n21st day of November, A,D. 1950,\nafter which date distribution of the\nestate will be made according Jo\nlaw having regard only to the\nclaims of which the Executor shall\nhave had notice,\nDATED at Nelson, British Columbia, this' 11th day of October,\nA.D, I960.\nHIRAM ALBERT McEWAN,\nExecutor.\nIN THE MATTER OF THE\nBANKRUPTCY OF KASCANEL\nGENERAL DISTRIBUTORS LTD.,\nNELSON, B.C.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS OF\nFIRST MEETING,\nNotice is hereby given that Kas-\ncanel General Distributors Ltd..\nNelson, B.C, made an assignment on\nthe Uth day of October, 1950, and\nthat the first meeting of Creditors\nwill be held oh the 31st day of October, 1950 at 2 o'clqck P.M. in the\nCourt House, Nelson, in the Prov-\nice of British Columbia.\nDated at Nelson, B,C. this 16th\nday of October, 1950.\nD, STDENIS. Trustee,\nBox, 196, Nelson, B.C.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nHOUSES\nApplication  for Clerk,  Assessor\nand Colleotor for Village of Salmo.\nMust attend weekly meetings. State\nqualifications and salary expected.\nApplications to be received, by the\nundersigned by Oct. 25, 1950.\nA. W. HEARN,\nChairman of Commissioners,\nSalmo, B.C.\nfOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nRIFLES\n303 cal. British Enfield Repeaters\n26\" barrel. Nitro-proofed and thor.\noughly checked. Expertly reblued,\nOil finished walnut stock. Condition perfect. Appearance as new,\nA reliable hunting rifle for only\n$37.50. Also \"Modified\" British Enfield .303 cal. (26\" barrel). Repeaters in excellent condition $27.50.\nSatisfaction guaranteed or money\nrefunded. C.O.D. orders accepted.\nWith purchase of rifle box 48\ncartridges $2.50. Eastern Sporting\nEquipment Co., 1320 Bank St., Ottawa, Ont. - - -     \u25a0\u2022\u25a0:\u25a0\u25a0     \u25a0     \u25a0  \u00bb'\nFOR SALE \u2014 WHITE : ENAMEL\ntable top gas range. A-l condition,\nAlso McClary gas water heater.\nPhone 735-L.\nHUH SALE\u20142 BATTERY RADIOS,\n1 four, 1 five-tube. Both good.\nBoth for $30.00. 410 Josephine St..\nPhone-799-R.\n% BED WITH SPRING AND MAT-\ntress and small roahtle battery\nradio- Apply 408 Houston Street,\nevenings.\n2 is EW CUSTOM-BUILT 30-00 AND\n300 Sav, big game rifles. Never\nUsed, See at Fisher's Paradise or\ncall Balfour 2-X.\nBURNISHED APARTMENT FOR\nrent Immediate occupancy. Ap-\nply Phillips Motel, Hall Mines Rd.\n. EDROOM FOR RENT. CLOSE IN.\nPhone 1011-Y.\n'OR  RENT\u20143   ROOM   MODERN\nhouse. Apply 610 Front Street\nIEDROOM FOR RENT,'213 VIC-\nI toria Street.\n10DERN    CABINS,     WINTER\nrates, phone 289-Y1.\nrtWS - FITTINGS - TUBES, Special low prices. Active Trading\nCo..    933    E.    Cordova    St.\n* Vancouver.\nFOR SALE FOR $75\u2014McCLARY\ncoal and wood range in cream and\nblack enamel. Apply 301 Latimer\nStreet City.\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nVANTED \u2014 REGULAR PICTURE\nframing mitre box. Creston Paint\n& Wallpaper Store, Creston, B.C.,\nPhone 268;-\niUSTOM PLANING\u2014DIMENSION,\nshiplap or boards. See West Coast\nDistributors, Anderson D a i r y\nFarm, Granite Road.\nHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron. Any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company.\n916 Powell St., Vancouver, B.C,\nVANTED \u2014 CEDAR POLES AND\nfence posts. Al Malda, Box 1119,\nCastlegar, B.C.\nIHIP YOUR HIDES TO J. P. MOR\ngap, Nelson. B.C.\nfalamt iaUjj toa\nClassified Advertising R.iteoi\n15c per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecut|ye insertions,\nlie line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per muiith  (28 consecutive insertions) Box numbers  lie extra,   Covers  any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (LEGAL)   NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc\u201420c per line,\n]   first insertion.  16c per  Una\nI   each subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\ni Subscription Rates:\ni Single Copy  \u201e... $  .05\nBy Carrier, per week,\nin advance.  ._    .23\nBy Carrier, per year  13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month        1.00\nThree months  -... ...   2.50\nSix months  ,    4.50\nOne year          8.00\nUnited Stales, United Kingdom:\nOne month        1.00\nThree months     3.00\nSix months    8.00\nOne year 12.00\nWhere extra postaQe Is required\nAbove rates plus postage\n4.    '\nFOR SALE\u20142 WHEEL HOUSE\ntrailer, fully equipped. All the\ncomforts of home. Peebles Mo-\n\"  Ltd., Nelson, B.C.\nA'S'TRAL APT. FRIDGE FOR\n{ale, used 2 months $125. Write or\ncontact J, Barlow, Ainsworth,\nB.C.\nFAIRVIEW --NELSON AVE,\nOne of Nelson's better family homes\u20143 bedrooms on\nthe ground floor, large living room, dining room, fireplace, most modern bathroom and kitchen. Upstairs\n\u2014one large bedroom and\nstore room, full basement.\nDrive-in garage, oil-fired\nautomatic furnace, two fully landscaped corner lots.\nThis is one .you must see.\nPrice $10,500\nSome terms pvailable.\nCEDAR AVE. - CLOSE IN\nOhe of the cutest houses in\nNelson. Two bedrooms,\nbathroom, kitchen, spacious\nliving room, dining room,\noak floors, Fully modern\ndwelling. Built post-war.\nFull basement,, automatic\noil furnace. This is a bargain.\nPrice $6100\nFor these and Other desirable City\nand North Shore Properties See\nR. D. P. GILDAY\nThe - -\nGi May Agencies\n542 Baker St. Above Gilker's\nPhone 1460\nReal Estate     \u2014   ' Insurance\nMACHINERY\nWe are distributors for:\nCATERPILLAR\n'     EQUIPMENT\nJOHN DEERE\nFARM MACHINERY\nSKAGIT LOGGING HOISTS\n. AND DRAG LINES\nJOY COMPRESSORS AND\nALL MINE EQUIPMENT\nYOUNG LOGGING\nEQUIPMENT\nKOHLER LIGHT PLANTS\nConsult Us for Your Needs\nTractor and\nEquipment Go.\nPHONE 930 BOX 119\nNELSON, B.C.\n$4200\nA 3-bedroom older type home; Excellent close-in location. 6 minutes\nfrom my office. $1500 %3\/IOA\ndown. Balance like rent  \u00abI\u00bb\u00ab\"VV\nVery neat,'new, nearly-completed\nhome, at 6-mile, with about Yi of\nan acre.\nSome terms\t\nA Really Nice\nBungalow\n2 good bedrooms, lovely livingroom.\nBright white breakfast nook and\nkitchen, Sun Porch. 3 beautiful lots,\nlawns, flower and fruit CC3flA\ntreet. Some terms -PUOVV\nSmall attractive looking house. 3\nbedroms upstairs, kitchen and pantry, 2 livingrooms etc, Situated on 2\nvery lovely lots in garden lawns,\netc. $2000 down\nwill handle \t\nWhile the above is not a new type\nhouse, it is a small comfortable,\nfamily home.\nSeveral good lot?, Some ffQ\u00a3ft\nterms, from ,,:.  \u00abJ>\u00bbOU\nFor sale 3 bedroom old-type house,\nstone foundation. Need? some fix\ning. Some terms. S^fi'lO\n$4650\nFOR SALE \u2014STEVENS DB. 12-\ngauge shotgun, New in '48. $45\ncash. Ph. 855-R.\nGIRLS' WHITE FIGURE SKATES,\nsize 514, as pew. Also boys' hockey\nskates, size 7. Phone 1029-X.\nFOR SALE\u2014PORTABLE 8 INCH\ntilt arbour bench saw $75.00. Box\n1095 Daily News.\nTELESCOPE    SIGHTS    AND\nmounts. Jack Boyce Men's Shop.\nFOR SALE\u2014MEN'S SKATES, SIZE\n8. Very good condition. Ph.915-X,\nCHILD'S   C.CM.   TUBE   SKATES,\nsize 12. Phone 982-X.\nThe  MICRONIC HEARING AID\nSales -   P.O   Box 39\u2014Service\nMEN'S FIGURE SKATES, SIZE 6.\n$7.00. Phone 91.\nHUNTING?\n303 British Enfield 6-shot Service\nRifle only $27.50. Specially adapted\nfor deer hunting. 26\" barrel. Clean\nappearance. Smooth operation. A\nreal bargain. You cah't lose. Order\nCOD. If you don't like it return it\nat our expense for immediate cash\nrefund. Box 48 cartridges $2.50 with\npurchase of rifle. Williamson Mail\nOrder Co., Firearms Division, P.O.\nBox 1305, Ottawa, Ont.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWANTED-6 -FRESH COWS OR\ndue to freshen. Write particulars\nfirst letter to Box 1084 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE \u2014 FAT WHITE LEG-\nhprn hens for table use; $1.10 for\nquick sale, as are, ptjone 802-Y.\nApply  Wm.  A.  Osachoff Perry\nSiding. \t\nPuL'wsi'S FOR SALE\u2014READY TO\nlay. Phone 126.\nFOH SALE\u2014WEANER PIGS, $12.\nS. Green, Box 99, Fruitvale, B.C.\n2   COWS   FOR   SALE. \u2014 APPLY\nSteve Zwolski, Willow Point, B.C.\nC.W.Appleyard\n& Co.\nCITY PROPERTY\nINSURANCE\nLIFE - FIRE - CASUALTY\nInsurance Dept.\u2014T. C. Lambert\nViola McGinn, Secretary\nEstablished 38 Years\nMODERN HOME\n5 Rooms and Bath. Fireplace, Full\nBasement, 2 Corner Lots cultivated.\nsaie6.!\"....!!\"015.        $5800\nTERMS\nF. A. Whitfield\n302 BAKER\nReal Estate      \u2014      Insurance\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,\n7 ACRES OF GOOD LAND ON\nNorth Shore, 3% mi. from ferry.\nOrchard, small fruit arid'-wood\nlot. Excellent year around water\nsupply. Will sell all or in 2 lots.\nPhone 782-X?.\nFOR SALE\u2014CHOICE FAIRVIEW\nbuilding location, lot and a half,\nexcavated for fpll basement. Snap\nfor cash. Phone 1361.\nFOR SALE \u2014 5-RM BUNGALOW.\nFull basement with furnace, two\ncorner lots. Close to schools and\nbus lines; Phone 397-R.\nNINE ROOMED DOUBLE HOUSE\non four lots for sale Garage and\nfruit trees. Apply 301 Carbonate\nStreet.\nFOR QUICK .SALE-HOUSE, 5\nrooms apd bath. Also bicycle in\ngood condition. Apply 204 Robson Street.\nFOR SALE\u2014LOTS. APPLY TO D.\nMaglio, 1019 Latimer Street\nIF  IT  IS\nPumps or\nPump Parts\nYOU REQUIRE,\nLOOK US UP\nRemember we are\n.        distributors for\n^urnps and Power Ltd.\nWho   manufacture   pumps\nfor  Oil   purposes.\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment Co.\n314 Hal! St. Phone 18\nMining,  Milling  and  Sawmill\nMachinery, Building and\nContractors' Supplies\n\"Jf It's Machinery You Want\nconsult us.\"\nMINE - MILL - LOGGING\nINDUSTRIAL SUPPLIES\nWAUKESHA GAS AND DIESEL\nENGINES AND POWER UNITS\nACME AUTOMOTIVE SUPPLY\nLTD.\n611 BAKER ST,\nNELSON, B.C.\n. 584 ROSSLAND AVE-,\nTRAIL, B.C.\nCONTRACTORS   -  SAWMILL -\nLOGGING * MINING\n.'\u2022   EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD\nSEND  YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nGranville Island MA 1251\nVancouver, B.C.\nAUTOMOTIVl\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n\u2022r\"T'+*?*~-#'~*i~'^'+'~+-+-m-*-~\n. immediate\nDelivery. ';:\nUSED CAR\nSPECIALS\nNew\n1950 Aystln A-40 Sedan\nNew\n1950 Austin A-40 Station\nWagon\nNew\n1950 Austin A-4Q Pickup\n1950 Studebaker Sedan\n)950 Pontiac Sedan\n1950 Chevrolet .5 - Passeiv\nger Coupe\n1948 Plymouth Sedqn\n1947 Dodge Sedan\n1947 DODGE\n21\/2-TON\nSpecial\n$1200\n1947 G.M.C. 2\/2-Ton\nDymp\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1947 Mercury Sedan\n1947 Dodge Pickup\n1946 Mercury Pickup\n1939 Chev Sedan\n1938 Ford Convertible\n1937 DeSoto Sedan    .\n1939 Hudson Coupe\n(935 Ford Sedan\n1935 Chevrolet Express\nDelivery\n1940 Studebaker Coupe\n1935 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1934 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1934 Plymouth Sedan\nTERMS   AND   TRADES\nEMPIRE\n803 Baker Street,\nNelson, B, C.\nAUSTIN SALES AND SERVICE\nWe have the\nCAR YOU WANT\nqt the\nPRICE YOU WANT\nTO PAY\ni95o jsrasr* $2100.\n1MB SEW   \u00bb850\nI950|asaetdan'\u201e   1500\nWhere Economy Counts\nmoto^t. hoo\nI937\u00abs5pS   500\n|Q?\u00a3 Ford Coupe. Good JOS\n1 *F.My running nrder        -~*V\n' running order\nIQ\/I9 Plymouth\n1 \u00bbf i. Sedan\t\n1125\nIQJ9 Chev. Suburban. Ideal for\n191* ught and farm trucking.\n1932 FORD COUPE\nSPECIAL for the next\nTHREE days\n$175.00\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT, D*\ncat, equipped for excavating,\nroadbuilding, etc. C. Ross, phone\n588-R or 1376-L, Nelson.\nCATERPILLAR D-4 WITH BLADE\nand Bucyrus-Erle Ys 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.\nCOATS and. ENGINES\nROWBOAT WANTED. MATCRAPT\n\"Fisherman\" 15 ft. * 4 ft. 4 in.\nbeam preferred. Must be in first\nclass condition. AllsebrooH, Kaslo.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nA8BAVERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE.  W   WIDDOWSON  & CO.  AS.\nsayers. 301 Josephine St., Nelson\nH.   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\nIN8URAN0E AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY   AGENCIES,  LTD.   IN,\nsurance, Real Estate-^Phone 135.\nBULLDQZERS, TRUCKERS, ETC.\nB{JLLDO?!NG, TRUCK HAULING,\nsand and' gravel, Contract. H\nHarrop. Phone 117. v\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhona, 593 324 Vernon St.\n' ATTENTION\nTRUCKERS\nI947ffip\u00b0'3-T\u00b0\"   1500\n1944^::: nso\nThis Week's\nSpecials\nI93IS10     $fo0\n.1934 821,      175\nIQAA Bulck Special. Radio,\nI OiW healer, etc,     I I Sfl\nNew car condition ....     ! * \"\"\nSKODA AND TATRAPLAN\nSALES AND SERVICE ,\nAcross frpm The Bowladrome\nFOR SALEr-'4? %-lTON CHEV.\ntruck. Extra forward gear for\nheavy work. Perfect condition.\nReasonable low price includes 7\ntires, steel welded body. Phone or\nwrite Liberty Food Store Limited.\n1842 FORD 2-DOOR COACH AND\n2-wheel trailer with steel box.\nApply 713 Raker Street.\nFOR SALE\u2014'40\" PLYMOUTH 'SE-\ndan, Good condition, 804 Second\nSt. Phone 597-L3 evenings.\n(Cont nura In Next Column;\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n135*\n(Continued)\n\u00bb\u25a0**\u2014-\u00bb\u25a0\u2014^-*\u2014\nlate\nvery -\n1950\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 21, 1990 \u2014 9\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORGYCHS,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\n2-DOOR\n1950\nand\n1950\nUSED CAE\n1949 Chevrolet Sedan\n1949 Ford Custom Sedan\n1941  Pontiac Sedan .\n1948 Mercury J4-Ton\n1947 Ford Mon\n1947 Mercury 3-Ton\n1935 Chevrolet '\/2-Ton\n1950 Vincent H.R.D.\nMotor BiKe. Only\n5000 mile?, for $900\nBeacon Motors\nGenuine Ford Parts Depot\nPhone 578-8 Nelson, B.C.\n\"BETTER BUYS AT BEACON\"\nImmediate Delivery\nNEW DODGE\nDF4-52 14,500 LLB. G.V.W., 152\"\nchassis and cab\"' Red.\n2-speed axle, brake booster,\ndeluxe cab, air control, Delivered price\n$296,3.25    \u2022\nPLUS 3% TAX\nCUTHBERT\nMOTORS Ltd.\n~+***+*r*+*+~**r**\nof the\nUSED CARS\n\"DRIVE A BARGAIN\"\n1949 Dodge 4 door Sedan,\nlow mileage, spotless condition, one private owner.\n1948 Plymouth 4 door Sedqn, low'mileage, show-\nrgpm condition, one prl^\nvote ovyner.\n1947.Plymouth Club Coupe\nlow mileage, new tires,\nradio heater, fog lights,\n1942 Dodge 4'door Sedan,\nreconditioned motor, A-l\ncondition, good tires, two-\ntone green.\n1939 Dodge 4 door Sedan,\nremanufactured motor,\ngood tires, heater, lovely condition.\n1935 Dodge 4 door Sedan,\nA-l condition Inside and\nout. real value,    '\nCuthbert\notors Ltd.\n*mr~&**++^+**\nMODEL F 155\n1949 FORD'\n6 WHEEL TANDEM\nThis, truck must be sold\nat sacrifice price. Owner\nmust return to Coast.\nVehicle suitable for lum-\nher haul, logging or\ndump work. Has steel\nbox   with   demountable\n.sides 8\" St,.Paul..RD.\nhoist. Good rubber.\nMileage under 20,000.\nTruck working on ore\nhaul qt present. Purchaser may take over hauling if desired. Can be\nfinanced.\nContact C. Stiles qt\nKootenqy Belle Gold mine\nor Queen City Motors,\nNelson.\n(Continued in Next Column)\n(Continued tn Next Column)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\n(Continued)\n183? FORO COUPE WITH '46 WER-\ncury motor. Heater, radio, jpot-\nlight, good rubber. Good condition. Snap at $500.00. Phone 962\nbetween 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.\nFOR SALB-1848 WHITE TRUCK.\n178-in. wheelbase, A-l shape; 31,-\n000 miles. Trade on car or prop-\nerty. Apply Box 1912 Dally News.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE IN-\nsurance Co., D. L Kerr, Agent.\nCRESS CORN SALVE FOR SURE\nrelief. Your Druggist sells Cress.\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE CP-R.\nDepot. Clean rooms and 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 ot hygienic supplies. Write Western\nDistributors, Gl-L Ray Building,\nVancouver.\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries, We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mlmeo and bond\npaper ana can fill any order Im*\nmediately. Daily News Printinf\nDept., Nelson. British Columbia.\nSTUBBORN SKIN AILMENTS W\nspond to \"Kleerex\" quick healing\n' salve\u2014Eczema, Psoriasis, Rashes.\nImpetigo, Ringworm. Has helped\nthousands\u2014should help you too,\n50c, $1.09. All druggists.\nUNWANTED HAIR\nEradicated from any part of the\nbody with Saca-Pelo, a remarkable discovery of the age. Saca-\nPelo contains.no harmful ingredient, and will destroy the hair\nroot\n\u25a0LOR-BEER LABORATORIES\n679 Granville Street\nVancouver, B.C.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nFOR SALE\u2014PUREBRED LABRA-\ndor puppies, 2 months old, malei\n$25.00, females $15.00 (one female\ngolden, one golden with black\nmask) Registered black Labrador\nfemale, 18 months old. One purebred Springer female,10 months,\ndark liver and white. Apply Pon-\nderosa Egg Farm, Marysville, B.C.\nPART LABRADOR FEMALE PUP.\n4 months old. Phone 727-R.\n6-MON.-OLD   TERRIER  DOG.   \u2014\nApply Wm. Thompson, Ymir, B.C.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD AVAILABLE\nfor young business man, Close in,\nPhone 1392-X.\nBOARD AND ROOM AVAILABLE\nin modern home for young business man. Phone 443-L.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST - BED COCKER SPANIEL.\nFinder please phone 414.\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE\nDay and Night Classes\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 20 (CP)-Win-\nnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, 80.1.\nBarley-No. 1 feed, 1.31%.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials 230,33 off ,50\n20 railroads 69.93 off .68\n15 utilities 40.82 off .06\n65 stocks 83.46 off .33\neSfmtfy*\nfjsdhA.\nthereS a piece in the raper\naboutaman in south america\nwho traded his wife for a\nhorse-isn't\nthatawfuu1\nBUTOEE, I'D LIKE! J^  BlrtSPEEWSAlDIFl'D\nTO HAVE A     1 >TAK6 My \u00b0*R Wl SI\nOktA, li&sd tfoAL om, Asa>ndiiwnsij\u00a3 to fiun. dtik, Tl&w\nSee These Bargains Today\nNew\n1950 Plymouth\n1950 Vt. Ton Fargo\nImmediate Delivery\n!\nUsed Trucks\n1948 Forgo 3 Ton\nNew Motor, A.1\n2-Speed Axle\n1948 Mercury\nTudor\nOne Owner\nPerfeot Shape\nSATURDAY\nSpecials\n1938 Chev % Ton\nFlat beck  $395.00\n1948 Forgo 2 Ton\nMileage 29,000\n2-Speeej Axle\n' Highway Run\n1942 Plymouth\n4-D Sedan\nThis car Is Perfect\n1938 Dodge 4-D\nHeater, Good Shape\n1941 Plymouth\n4-D Sedan, A-1\n1940 Ford 2 Ton\nA-1 8hap, Good Rubber\nFlat Deck or Dump\n1934 Ford Panel\nIn Very Good Shape\nDAY OR NIGHT\nPHONE 1Q9Q.\n24 HOUR POWER WRECKER\nDAY OR NIGHT,.\nPHONE 1090 !\u25a0'\/\u25a0\nCHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH - FARGO - DUNLOP TIRES\n-<7j\/IOhs\/090 * c?U\u00a3rio*t.<S.C.  -~   .\n \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nTO \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, OCT. 21, 1950\nThe Answer Is \"Yes\"\nto the hundreds of customers who comment on the activity\nand the changes In our store and suggest that Christmas might\nbe the reason.\nOur Christ-mas and Fall stocks are rapidly rolling In.\nAs quickly as possible, we are changing our appearance from a smart drug store to a veritable Fairy-land\nof Christmas Gifts.\nYARDLEY - GAGE - RUBINSTEIN\nCOPP CLARK - RYERSON - McLEOD\nCARLETON - BARBARA GOULD\nThese and many more of the important manufacturers of\nCanada are filling our shelves with new, fresh and attractive\nItems to tempt you to do your Christmas shopping early \u2014 at \u2014\nMANN'S\nDRUC STORE\nInternational\nMedical Student\nGroup Possible\nMONTREAL, Oct. 20 (CP) -\nPossibility of setting up an International Medical Students' Organization was discussed today by the\nCanadian Association of Medical\nStudents and Internes at third-day\nsessions of its four-day 14th annual\nconvention here.\nThe Association, holding Its convention at the University of Mon-\ni treal, was told that Canadian students and Internes are affiliating\nthemselves with the British Medical Students' Associations as a preliminary step toward international\norganization.\nHowever, a letter from a representative of the British group was\nread suggesting that the time \"w.as\nnot ripe\" for international affiliations, but rather national bodies\nshould be ' further strengthened\nfirst.\nThe Association voted to survey\nduring the coming year the possibility of standardization of times\nwhen universities grapt medical\ndegrees\u2014five of 10 Canadian universities with medical schools grant\nthem only after completion of a\nyear's interneship.\nPower Restored in\nN.S, After Nine-\nHour Interruption\nSYDNEY, N.S., Oct 20 (CP) \u2014\nPower was restored i Cape Breton's\nindustrial belt early today following a nlne-hqur interruption caused\nby overloading nt the lines and a\nprolonged dry spell.\nThe steel and coal area was plunged Into darkness last night, forcing\ncancellation of work at the Dominion Stee' and Coal Corporation's\nplant here and half a dozen coal\nmines In the area.\n^CLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nDonald E. Hunter\n,     OPTOMETRIST\n431 Baker St. Phone 333\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nFall and Winter\nRequirements\nWORK\nCLOTHING\nG.W.G.\n8.  E. WOODS\nPRIDE OF THE WEST\nUnderwear\nand\nWool Sox\nSTANFIELD'3\nPENMAN'S\nHANSON\nRUBBER\nFOOTWEAR\nNORTHERN \u2014 WOODSTOCK\n(Makers of Barflex)\nWatson Gloves and Mitts\nWADES1\nU.N. Flag in\nToronto Schools\nTORONTO, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 The\nUnited Nations flag is to be displayed in all Toronto public and secondary schools, Education Director\nC. C. Goldrlng said last night. The\nflag in each school will probably\nbe hung on a wall in a prominent\nplace \"to remind students of the\norganization and the work it is\ndoing.\" .\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\n676 Baker St\nPhone 327\nMAKE   YOUR   CLOTHES   LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST    KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 \u2014 182 BAKER ST.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n'    Satisfaction Guaranteed on\nEllison's Vita B\nAll Purpose Flour\nELLISON MILLING\n& ELEVATOR CO. LTt\u00bb.\niiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii\nWhy Pay More?\nPacific Air Lift\nExpected to Continue\nAfter Korea War Ends\nHONOLULU, Oct. 20 (AP)\u2014Maj.\nGen, Laurence S. Kuter, Unite:!\nStates Military Air Transport Service Commander, today predicted\n\"extensive and further development\nof U.S. troops and material\" in the\nFar East after the Korean war.\nGen. Kuter ,en route home from\na global tour of U.S. air bases, said:\n\"The Pacific air lift will continue\nindefinitely after the end of the\nshooting war in Korea.\"\nTractor Will Kill\nMan Says 88er\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 20 (CP.-An\ngus M. McKay of Suburban North\nKlldonan who. has lived all his\nlife In Manitoba, celebrated hio\n88th birthday today,\nAnd this former farmer said he\nprobably wouldn't be here if\nthere'd been tractors In hlB youth,\nHe always used to rest himself\nwhenever he fed his farm horses,\nBut tractors don't need a break.\n\"The tractor will kill the man,\"\nhe said,\nPropose Factory-\nBuilt Houses\nLONDON, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014Members\nof Parliament today received blueprints of a single-storey, aluminum\nhouse which sponsors claim could\nbe Tented at a shilling a week under\nGovernment- Subsidy.\nThe dwelling would be factory-\nbuilt and would have 600 square\nfeet of floor space.\nPlans and information on the proposed house were mailed yesterday\nto Parliamentarians, town councils,\ncounty councils, chufch leaders and\nbuilding trades-union ; officials.\nSponsor of the idea is Robert Tar-\nran, former Yorkshire builder who\nhopes to produce 10,000 of the new\nhouses annually at a factory in Perth\nScotland.\nTarran said last night at a press\nconference in Perth that the house\ncould be let at a subsidized rental\nof one shilling (15 cents) a week.\n(Persons renting houses or apartments today pay anywhere from\n\u00a35 ($15) to \u00a312 a week, although\nthose who obtained accommodation\nbefore or during the war sometimes\npay as little as \u00a32.)\nTarran's solution for the housing\nproblem has some novel features,\nThere is no bath, but a small, cupboard-like structure just off the\nkitchen has a shower. The toilet is\noutside.\nSavings are made in restricted use\nof wood and plumbing. Only half \"a\nstandard of soft wood is used compared with IH to two standards allowed by law.\nTORONTO (CP) - Industrials\nstarted mixed, declined with losses\nup to a point apd then firmed towards the close.\nThe setback followed four days of\nsteady advance to new high average levels. Activity.was brisk and\nthe volume was about 2,960,000\nshares.\nPapers and liquors led the decllen\nutilities, agricultures, constructions,\nfoods, retail stores and manufacturing companies were mostly mixed. Banks, steels and refining oils\nbrightened.\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Bile.\nPHONE 25\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal .and Paint Work Specialty\nUSED  CAR VALUES\nTO OUT OF TOWN CUSTOMERS\nwho purchase any of the used cars or trucks listed\nbelow. TWO DAY hotel accommodation will be\nSUPPLIED FREE\n1949 Pontiac Sedan   fio-rc\nAir Condition, Sun Visor, tH.Pi\/t\nSeat Covers        *|MU# sj\n1947 Plymouth Coupe env\nRadio and Heater       k^i JLjLsJ\n1941  Chevrolet Sedan cotc\nRadio, Heater, Seat Covers  A     Jf: \/ \/ sj\n1946 Chevrolet 3-Ton WW\nTwo Speed Axle \u00ab|M\u00ab\/*\/V\n1937 Chevrolet Va-Ton 53OQ\n1937 Ford 4-Door      $700\n4-Door  Sedan     tjstl \\st\\sl\nNOW ON DISPLAY\n1950 Pontfacs - Vauxhalls\nand G.M.C. Vz-Ton Pickups\nWiginton Motors Ltd.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE  SERVICE\n515 Kootenay St. .ph'une 381\nA Radio is the\nmain source of\nentertainment\nin your home.\nDon't neglect it,\nHave it checked\nregularly\nat\nWELLS\nService Shop\nNELSON, B. C.\nVancouver Stocks\nMINE8\nBralorne  ...... .. 7.00\nCariboo Gold \u201e 1.40\nGrandview  .30\nHedley Mascot  ',40\nHighland Bell go\nKootenay Belle  , .65\nPend Oreille  8.50\nPioneer Gold  2.40\nQuatsino   ,0614\nReeves MacDonald  4.00\nSheep Creek   1.23\nSilver Ridge 10\nSilver Standard   2.10\nSurf Inlet \u201e ,12\nVananda  .:.... ,12\nWestern Exploration _ .65\nOILS   i\nAnaconda  12\nAnglo Canadian  B.00\nCalgary & Ed  8.10\nCalmont '.   1.07\nCommonwealth  2,00\nHome  . 15.00\nMercury ..\u201e  16.00\nOkalta dom  1.85\nPacific Pete __ 7.80\nRoyalite  13.85\nVanalta   .35\nVulcan 30\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Breweries ....'.  \u2022 4.20\nCapital Estates .. , 22.50\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhono 1302\n446 Ward  St\nMarket Trends\nNEW YORK, (AP)\u2014A hand-picked group of low-priced stocks attracted vigorous support in a generally lower market today.\nThe main body of stocks settled\nInto lower price ground after an\neafly try to advance fizzled- out The\ndecline was due more to jaded buying appetites rather than aggressive\nselling although profit taking operations did play a part in the setback.\nMONTREAL (CP) \u2014 Securities\ngenerally moved a shade lower after an irregular start today. Changes\nwere minor and a few of the early\ngainers held on to their leads although they were trimmed somewhat. Activity was light\nMONTREAL, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 New\nGovernment of Canada issues attracted attention on the bond market\nas the rest of the list drifted a shade\nlower in dull trading.\nLONDON (Reuters)\u2014Movement\nwas quiet. Rising prices ln domestic\nissues today followed a good public\ndemand for first grade stocks.\nTextiles and rayons added to recent advances and there were improvements in tobaccos, stores and\nelectrical equipments. British Government stocks .were fractionally\nhigher where changed with the. institutions again reported as operating,\nVANCOUVER, Oct 20 (CP) \u2014\nTrading was mixed today.\nDel Rio lead the oils up .03 to 1.34\nfollowed by Princess up .01 to 61.\nHome was off .15 to 15.00 and Anglo-\nCanadian off .10 to 5.00.\nBase metals were stronger with\nWestern Uranium up .05 to .80.\nU.N. Aggression Policy Most\nPowerful Organized Peace Move\nBy DEWITT MACKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nThe United Nations' adoption of\nthe plan to halt aggression anywhere and everywhere, by force if\nnecessary, represents the most\npowerful organized peace move\never made.\nIt tacitly recognizes that until'\nhuman nature is changed mankind\nIs gping to resort to war at times,\nand must be restrained,\nIn effect it acknowledges that\nthere will be occasions when only\nforce, or a display of force, can\nturn the trick.\nThis far-reaching project Is given\nteeth by a provision requiring that\nU. N. members place specified\nunits of their armed forces at the\ndisposal of the peace organization\nto meet crises. It represents a perpetuation of the emergency measure under which the U. N. was\nable to send its own forces Into\nKorea to end the aggression from\nthe North,\nPASSAGE ENSURED\nTrue, the program still has to go\nthrough the formality of being passed by the General Assembly. However, the big majority by which it\nwas adopted In the Assembly's Political Committee ensures its passage in the larger body.\nJust 50 years ago the world saw\nthe first meetl\u00bbg of -nations ever\nassembled   to   discuss   ways   and\nYouth Wounded After\nAttack on Woman\nMONTREAL, Oct. 20 (CP) \u2014 An\noff-duty Montreal city policeman\nearly today shot and wounded in\nthe face a youth who, police said,\nwas escaping after trying to attack\na 30-year-old married woman near\nher suburban Verdun home. '\nPolice identified the 22-year-old\nyouth as William l3rady who was\nin a Verdun hospital with a bullet\nwound below the right cheek bone;\nThey said a charge of assault with\nIntent will be laid against the suspect.\nConstable Marcel Chonler of the\nMontreal force fired the shot after\nthe youth brandished a lighter shaped like a revolver.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St Phone 63\nF.T. HUNTER\nPlumbing and Heating\nPhone 1389-Y\n516 Hall St.       Nelson, B. C,\ni \u25a0 t iiiiiii i i in \u25a0 in 111 ii in r iiiii \u25a0 im it mill n\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat  the\nNelson Upholstery\n409 Hall St                Phone 149\n\" <\u2022 III III! I 111 I til 11)111 Mil 111111M\t\nHUNTERS,\n... if you can't find\nthem, you can't get\nthem. '\nPhone 122\nNelson, B. C.\nGome In and see our supply of\nGerman, French and Japanese\nBINOCULARS\nCo m pie te I y-coated optics\n. increase    light    transmission\nand eliminate glare.\n6 power: $24.75 and $79.50\n8 power: $33.75, $47.50\n$55.00, $67.50, $200 and\n$125\n10 power: $55 and $100\nUoqiti Studio\n460 Ward St. Nelson, B. C. Phone 106\nTONITE\nHarvest\nDance\nIt's the fun fest.\nof the season.\nOLD TIME\nand Modern Tunes\nTip-Toppers Meet\nIn Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 20 (CP)\u2014Forty\nof Winnipeg's tallest\u2014normally accustomed to looking down their\nnoses at the populace at large\u2014saw\neye to eye today.   .\nThey're members of the Y.M.C.A.'s\n\"Tip-Top Club\", formed last night.\nOnly membership requirement is\nheight and plenty of it; more than\nfive feet, 10 inches, for girls; more\nthan1 six feet for boys.\nAim of the club is to help tall\ngirls find suitable dancing partners.\n\"Tall people don't feel at home\nat ordinary socials,\" said one young\nlady.\nOnly similar group In Canada Is\nToronto's Tip-Toppers Club formed\ntwo years ago, which has some 70\nmembers. In the United States at\nleast 10 cities have clubs with\nmembers pushing six feet.\nFormation of the Winnipeg clubs\nwas brought about by Ken Williams\nwhose six feet seven inches, equipped him well for the Job.\nmeans of maintaining peace. That\nwas In 1899 when 26 countries met\nat The Hague and adopted a \"convention for the Pacific settlement\nof international disputes.\"\nThis was followed in 1907 by the\n\"second peace conference,\" when\n44 states\u2014representing virtually all\nthe independent\/countries of the\nglobe\u2014reaffirmed the convention\nand added to It.\nThe next step\u2014and It was a seven-league stride\u2014was the creation\nof the League of Nations at the end\nof the First World War. That did\nsome good work, but it failed in the\ngreat emergencies because It lacked the courage\u2014and the means\u2014to\ntake forceful action against aggressors.  -      \u25a0\nMORE PEACE  MOVES\nIn an effort to bolster the League,\nthe Locarno Pact was forced in\n1925, with the primary Idea of preventing any further German-\nFrench upheavals. Then in 1928,\n.because the League of Nations did\nnot completely abolish war, 59 of\nthe 65 Independent countries of the\nworld signed the Paris Peafce Pact\nfor \"renunciation of war.\"\nThese peace moves were followed\nby disarmament conferences,\nProbably It has required all this\npatient and persistent SDade work\nto prepare the way for the historic\nemploymqnt'-'of sanctions by force\nto halt aggression. In any event it\nhas remained for the U. N. to make\nthe first concerted application of\nsuch sanctions.\nPerhaps it is too much to hope\nthat this will prevent any further\naggression. But It is the most powerful move in that direction yet\nmade.\nNYLON\nSHIRTS\nfor dress\nLonger Wear\nEasy Washing\nQuick Drying\nNo Ironing\nGet one of these White\nShirts. Your wife will appreciate no ironing, easy\nwashing. You will like the'\nsoft feel and good lodks.\n$9.95\nat\nEmory s ltd;\nThe Man's Store\n\u25a0   \u25a0 m\nPEMBROKE, Wales '(CP) \u2014 Mn\nA. Purser's weekly egg ration wai\nmarked as usual \"fit for humar\nconsumption.\" But one of the eggi\nturned out to be china.\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Aceountanti\nAuditors\n660 Baker St Phone 238\nDANCE\nProcter Community Hall\nTONIGHT,  OCT. 21,  1950   \u2022\nSponsored by\nNelson Ukrainian Group\nModern and' Oldtlmt Music by\nJack and His Rythm Pali\nDANCING 9 \u2022 12\nAdmlssloni Gents 76c \u2022 Ladles 60o\nFOR   DEPENDABLE\nPAINTING AND\nPAPERHANGING ,\nSee\nMURPHY'S\nPhone 655 745 Baker St.\nJ. A.G. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nMedical Arts Building\nSUITE 200\nNothing Nicer Than\n\"YARDLEY'S\"\nWE  HAVE  A  COMPLETE\nSTOPK OF THESE\nPOPULAR TOILETRIES\nCREAMS - LOTIONS\n. and DISPENSER'\nBATH SALTS\nBODY POWDER\nLAVENDER MEAL\n\u25a0 '\u25a0 ;etc.\nAt Your Rexall Store\nCITY DRUG\nCO.\nNelson's Modern Pharmacy\nPhone 34  Day \u2014 807-R  Night\nBOX 460\n'Our special menu Is sure to please Mother and\n\"the entire family!    A Wide selection of entrees,\nPf jnoludlng all your favorites. Priced rlghtl     \u25a0',....\nTry Our SUNDAY SPECIAL\nLuncheon _i_\nDinner\t\n12 Noon to 2.00 P.M.\n. S.4S P.M. to 8.00 P.M.\nHUME Dining Room\nPhone 787\nNelson, B, C.\nWELDING\nELECTRIC and ACETYLENE\nPORTABLE  EQUIPMENT FOR  FIELD  WORK\nCERTIFIED WELDERS - PRECI8ION  MACHINISTS -\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP\nPHONE 98\nNIGHT  PHONES\n708 VERNON 8T.\n1394-R OR 740-R\nKootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital\n14th Annual\nFruit and Vegetable\n\u2022 Drive\nThe Board of Directors wish to thank all those\nwho donated so well to this year's drive.\nWe may have missed collecting some of the donations in the different routes, if so we are sorry, but\nif you care to drop us a note we will make arrangements for picking them up\u2014THANK YOU.\nGEORGE TURNER\nPresident\nL CRUICKSHANK\nSecretary\n. You are going\nfo have fo ,\u201e,\u201e\u201e\nWinterize YOUR CAR\nsometime . . . 'ttM\nSo why not do it\nnow?\nIt doesn't cost\nany more ... and it\nmay save considerable\ndamage to your car.\nDODGE - DESOTO DEALERS\nOpposite Post Office and Hume Hotel\ni\ni -\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_21","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0426332","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"}]}}