{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426471":{"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":"2023-02-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1949-10-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426471\/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":" jjtal^'\nFor ILK. Govt\nLisrarY\nmi\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKOOJBNAY: Overcast with Ojs^fl\nsional rain, MUder, Winds Southerly\n20. Lo end high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley, 40 and 50.        1\nConservative Ho Confidence Motibn\nDefeated 353-222 in Ecoriomic Debate\n\u25a0 LONDON, Oct. 27 <CPJ, \u2014 Britain's Labor Government,\nbeset by, economic problems, tonight survived a motion of no\nconfidence by the narrowest, margin in its history iri' the\nHouse of Commons, 353 to 222. .., ,-\"'\u25a0\nThen it went on to sweep the field with its own motion\nof confidence,. 33,7 to 5, with most of its opponents declining\nto vote. The. Conservatives, headed by Winston Churchill, offered the no-eonfidence rtio-\n-.*\ntion.\nThe tests came at-'the end of two\ndays of debate on Prime Minister\nAttlee's slashes of \u00a3280,000,000\n($868,000,000) in the year's \u00a33,300,-'\n000,000 budget. These Were announced. Monday. ,'.-'\u25a0'',\nOpponents contended the cuts\nwere \"too little and too late.\"\nThe Government's brief motion\nof confidence asked for approval of\nits economy program. Princess Margaret was one of the spectators in\nthe gallery when the vote was\ntaken.\nIt was the eighth  confidence\nvote  the   Government   has  won\nsince   It took  office  more than\nfour years ago. the previous high\nmark   of   opposition   was   last\nmonth's muster of 212 votes on *\nno-confldehoe   motion   over   devaluation of the pound.'J\nBut the Conservatives have come\nnearer than that to defeating1 the\nGovernment on other motions. Last\nJanuary the Government got only a\n90-vote margin of approval of its\nrelations with Israel. Many. Leftist\nLabor Members abstained fromthat\nvote, which was 283 to 193.\n\"Defeat on a confidence vote\ncould mean the resignation of the\nGovernment, followed either by\nappointment of a Prime Minister\nfrom the Opposition or a general\nelection for a new Parliament and\na new Government. <i?\nWINDS UP DE&ATE\nChurchill called in the debate for\na general election on the grounds\nthat \"the public-at large have lost\nconfidence in this .Government's\nfinancial administration.\"\nThe Conservative leader wpuhd\nup debate for his party.        .,\/\n''The main issue before us is the\nneed for a new Parliament,\"\nChurchill said. \"The British-Government have devalued the pound,\nthey have devalued the -British\nnation but,', most of all, they have\ndevalued themselves.\"!\n\u2022 Attlee, who has announced lie\nwill not call a general election until\nnext year, closed the debate. His\n'Government's five-year term will\nexpire next July, and he is empowered to fix the voting for any\ntime before that.   ' '\nStudy New Plans for Trail High;\nSunningdale School Nearly Ready\nTHA1L, B.C.f Oct. 27 -, N?w plans\nfor Trail's W72.417 high school art\nunderstudy.    ,\u2022':\nFirst preliminary plans, to- be.\ndrafted were rejected by trustees\nand teachers of Trail School District\nNo. 11 as. \"unsuitable for the -site,\"\nSecretary-jTreasurer S. S. McDiar-\nmid said Thursday.     , :--\\ .rr':, \u2022\n\u2022Hall Smith; representative of the\n.Vancouver firm of Sharp, Thomp-\n\u2022lon, Berwick and Pratt, is; in Trail\ngoing over -tbef prellmihary sketches\n. of the classrooms and vocational\nsections with the school board.\nSite is on Shavers Bench, v\n. Foundation work pn the auditorium of the new Rossland High\nSchool is complete and work has\nstarted on the, boiler room foundation; a portion of the floor slabs in\nthe classroom wing of the $1022,\n672 building are installed.    \u2022\n.The', site Is almost completely\ndrained...\nSunningdale School will be taken\nover from the contractors within\nthe next two weeks ahd transfer of\nclasses from the East - Trail School\nstarted: A complete staff, now working on a shift system at the East\nTrail School, -is available.\nC.P.R. President\nFRENCH ASSEMBLY\nCONFIRMS BIDAULT\nAS PREMIER\n: PARIS, Oct 28 <Frlrjay)-(AP)~\nGeorges Bidault, n wartime resistance-leader who served later 'as\nFdreign Minister, was confirmed\n.eiEly-;tjp,day.:as rihej.iwiw\" Premier: Bf\nfiFtance.   '     '*\" i   -.\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\n- The vote in the National Assemb'\nly.was 367 for him and 183 against.\nHe needed only 310 votes.\n| The actibn means at least a temporary end to' France's 23-day-old\ngovernmental crisis. France has\nbeeii without a Cabinet since Oct. 6,\nwhen' the Government I of Henri\nQueuille resigned, unable to solve\nan economic deadlock caused by\nrising prices and frozen wages,\nWilliam A. Mather, President of\nthe Canadian Pacific Railway was\nIn Nelson Thursday oh a trip of\ninspection through Western Canada.\nIn Cranbrook earlier this week,\nhe went on from Nelson to Tadanac,\nwhere he spent most of Thursday.\nHe leaves Tadanac today for Castlegar,\" where he will entrain for Vancouver before going back to Montreal\nCoast Man Burned\nIn Rooming House\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014One\nman was seriously burned and eight\nothers' escaped injury early today\nin an East end rooming house fire.\nJames Fox, 75, in whose room the\nfire started when a coal oil lamp\noverturned, suffered critical burns.\nHis condition was .described as\n\"poor.\"    \u25a0\nFox' was rescued from, the flame-\nswept room by other roomers. The\nfire was confined to his room.\nBlind, Crippled,\nFound Without Food*\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct 27\u2014\n(CP) \u2014 An 85-year-old woman, totally blind and crippled, was found\ndestitute In her home here yesterday\nby police. The house was without\nheat or light, and she. had been\nwithout food tor 30 hours. Social\nService authorities have taken\ncharge of her.\nPIG IRON OUTPUT DROPS\nOTTAWA, Oct. 17 (CP>\u2014Production.of pig iron and ferro-alloys\ndropped off in July but output so\nfar this year still ls higher than last\nyear..\nThe Bureau of Statistics today estimated July pig iron tonnage at\n175,400, compared with 194,300' in\nJune and 137,900 in, July, 1948. For\nthe first seven months of this year,\nproduction was 1.310,500 tons compared with 1,219,600 in the same period last year.\nPilot Dives,\nLands,   :\nShoots Self\nCLEARWATER, Fla.,. Oct 27 (AP)\ni\u2014 A '23-year-old pilot terrorized\nClearwater .residents for, two hours\nwith wild ppwcr dives in a stolen\nplane,' then calmly landed and shot\nhimself to deatti. today.\n- Police Chief, George McClamma\nidentified the youth as Samuel W.\nWatkins,. member of a well known\nVirginia, family.-' Magistrate R. L.\nBaker pronounce^ the death a suicide.\nOfficials pieced together this\nstory:\nWatkins telephoned a girl friend\nlast night about, 11:30 and told her\nhe had decided to kill himself. Then\nhe hung up.     :\n\u25a0 Thirty minutes later frantic residents from virtually every .section\nof-town called police headquarters\nto report that a plane, flying without lights; was buzzing rooftops.\nPERFECT LANDING\nFinally Watkins flew back to the\nairport its runways lighted by the\nheadlamps of police cruisers.\nHe made a perfect landing. Police\nheard a pistol shot closed in and\nfound him unconscious with a\nwound in the temple ,a pistol on the\ncockpit floor. He died in a hospital\nwithout regaining consciousness.\nPolice Chief McClamma said Watkins had stolen 'the plane from a\nflying serviceat Clearwater Airport.\nFILM BOARD, CBC\nDETRIMENT TO FREE\nENTERPRISE BOARD TOLD\nVANCOUVER, B. C, Oct. 27-\n(CP) \u2014 Counsel Peter Wright Wednesday night conducted a sustained\nquestioning of a sharply - worded\nbrief from the Vancouver Board of\nTrade, which charged before the\nRoyal Commission, on Arts, Letters\nand Science that the Nat'onal Film\nBoard and the C.B.C. operate to the\ndetriment of free enterprise.\nIn a 1%-hour exchange, which\npushed the Most crowded session of\nthe Commission's Western tour well\npast scheduled closing time, Mr.\nWright % sought amplification of\npoints raised in the brief. Presented\nby Trade Board President T. G.\nNorrls, the brief concluded Vancouver sittings of the Commission. It\nmoved to Victoria Thursday.\n%\n<>* \u25a0       \u25a0\u25a0'    \u25a0\n%      \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -\n8CENT8 A COPY\nNELSON,  BRITI8H  COLUMBIA. CANAPA-\u00bbFRIDAY   iftPRNINO,  OCT. 28.  1948\nnumber: fli\nPlayground\nPulled jor. Uphill Area\nNelson'l\u00ab to have a new uphill Summer and Winter playground\nbecauso of the efforts of a group of citizens and cooperation of the\n-  City Council.\nThe site, the old Skookum-Tllllcum Tennis Club courts on Cemetery Road,'has been held tor years by the City for playground purposes.\nThe aim It to have the grounds graded, water ahd lights Installed\nand dressing rooomi provided for an open air skating rink In Winter,\n rr- ~\u2014;     and tennis courts and ball field In\nVOTINGLIGHT        \"\nIN WINNIPEG\nCIVIC ELECTION\nWINNIPEG, OCt. 27 (CP) *-\\ Five\ncandidates, for- City. Council and\nthree for School Board were elected\non the first, count .In- yesterday's\nCivic election. . f'',.'**'*-\"\u00a3''\n.Fourteen candidates ram'tor? the\nnine aldermanic posts and 18 for the\nnine openings on the School Board.\nAldermen -re-elected were Jack\nSt. John and James Biack in' Wfird\nTwo, C. E. Slmonite and Charles\nGraham in Ward One, all four being candidates of the Civic Election\nCommittee; and' John Blurhberg,\nC.C.F., in Ward Three.    ...\nReturned; to the School Board\nwere S..B.'Laing,in-Ward Oheand\nAdam Beck in Ward Two. Seeking\nelection for the first time, Mrs. E.\nR. Tennant was chosen in Ward\n;One.    f   .\nOffice, of .mayor was not open in\nthis election,\n63 PER CENT WANT\nDAYLIGHT 8AVING .'-\u25a0\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 27 (CP) - Daylight saving got the support of approximately 53 per cent Qf Winnipeg's electorate in yesterday's civic\nelections. '-\u25a0 ...,\nVictory for daylight saving was\nconsiderably less than that recorded\nih the last referendum in 1946 when\napproximately 65 per cent of the\nelectdrs voted In Itf favor.\nj Final result of this year's referendum was 40,384 for daylight saving and 32,969 against.\nStock Market\nPounds Ahead\nBy WILLIAM D. HORGAN\nNEW YORK, Oct. 27 (AP) \u2014 The\nStock market pounded ahead to the\nhighest level in almost a year-today.\nIt was the third advance in a'row.\nIn the three-day period the market\nvalue of all stocks listed on the Exchange has tpcreased by. more than\n$i;o\"oo,5bo;ooo. '*-''\"  . ' >\u25a0\nHeavy trading pushed leading Issues ahead fractions to more than a\npoint in the broadest market' of\n1945. Volume-expanded to the third\nhighest of the year.\nNobel Medicine\nPrize Shared by\nTwo Professors\nSTOCKHOLM, Oct 27 (Reuters).\n\u2014-The., Nobel Prize for physiology\nand medicine^was awarded tonight\njointly to Dr.Walter Rudolf Hess of\nZurich University Institute of Physiology, and Professor Emeritus Antonio Egas Moniz of Lisbon University. ' f\nProfessor Moniz, world famous\nneurologist was the first man to\ncure a mental disorder by surgical\noperation. He performed this operation in 1935. ' ..**.'.'. :\u25a0   '\nDr. Hess, 68-year-olfl eye and\nbrain specialist has been Director\nof the Physiological Institute at\nZurich since 1917.\nAnother Mysterious\nLight Seen in Sky\nBUFFALO, N. Y., Oct 27 (CP)\u2014\nA mysterious \"something,\" which\ngave off a bright light shot through\nthe sky last night, numerous observers reported. Descriptions varied\nwidely.\nIt was the second mysterious light\nwhich was reported this week. Monday residents at Hymers, Ont, 30\nmiles Northwest of 'Fort William,\nreported a \"strange streak of fire\"\nwhich zoomed through a cloudless\nafternoon sky from the Southwest.\nOn Oct 14, residents in Northern\nOntario, ,Toronto and- Buffalo; reported seeing \"a blinding, bluish\nwhite blaze of light\" and \"a big ball\nof fire with a long tall.\"   .\nOAKLAND, Calif., Oct 27 (AP)\u2014\nAn 18-year-old Oakland youth today-orally admitted .the slaying last\nSaturday night of an Oakland drug\nstore manager and his woman cierk,\nInspector Al Riedel announced..\nThe police inspector- identified\nthe youth as Jerry Newsom.\nCity Council, advised by Aid.\nAlex Sutherland of the plan, has\nauthorized use of an old street car\nfor a .dressing room, installation of\nlight and,water and use of the City\nbulldozer, .Peter Leslie was spokesman for the citizen's group that\ninterviewed the alderman..'      . ,\nEijuipnf'ent from the* former Four^\nways Park, recently sold as a tourist\ncabins site, will be moved to the\nnew* playgrounds, on suggestion. of\nAid, N. C.Stibbs.\n: \"The plan, is a-fine on'b,\" Mayor\nT. H Waters commented at'a Wednesday City Council mee'ldg, \"The\nplayground will be an asset to the.\nCity, a step forward in our parks,\nprogram;\"\n, There would be no problem as to\ncare taking, Aid. Sutherland felt\nassured. The men behind the plan\ncould be relied. on to carry out\ntheir intentions, he said. He was\nreplying to City Engineer, W. S.\n'Jackson. ' .\"\u2022 '        ,  ' \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022 .'\nC.P.R. GRANTED\nLEAVETOCARRY\nAPPEAL FURTHER\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nOTTAWA Oct 27 (CP)\u2014DI\u00ab\nsatisfied- with the site of last\nmonth's freight-rate Increase, the\nCanadian Pacific'Railway won the\nright to parry. Its case for higher\nrates before the Supreme Court bf\nCanada.\nIn a quick decision at the end of\na 8%4-hour, hearing, the Board of\nTransport Commissioners. .granted\nthe C.P.R. leave to appeal a point of\nlaw in the Board's Sept 20 Judgment\nawarding the railways an eight-percent general increase.   -\nThe &P.R.,: which with other railways asked \u25a0 for 20-per - cent rate\nboost wants the high court to rule\non whether or not the Board failed\nin its statutory duty by giving only\nan interim increase and leaving a\nfinal settlement'-' until - it has completed some further studies of its\nown and received the reoprt of the\nRoyal Commission on Transportation.:. \u201e,--,    ...\u00bb.j-.'-...   - -    y..:.-x.\nGIVEN! YEARS,\nHEAVY FINES\nTraffiCjMust\nBe Stopped,\nRujns Lives'\n$Tu00 DAILY\nVANCOUVER, Oct'. 87 (CP). -\nMaximum seven year sentences\n\u25a0 were ordered today In Assize\nCoiirt for flye men convicted of\nconspiring to distribute narcotics\nIn a Dominion-wide ring, Three* of\nthe men ware alio fined, the fines\nranging up to $10,000,\nheaviest sentence\nThe heaviest-sentence was given\nCarmen Chioyitti bf Toronto\u2014seven\nyears in penitentiary plus a $10,000\nfine or three additional years in default .\nOther sentences were:\nDan Gasberlnl: of Hamilton, Ont,\nseven years, no filie. Mike Kushman\nof Vancouver, seven years plus\n$5000 or two additional years, John\nSmokier of Vancouver, seven years\nto be served concurrently with a\nprevious three year term for narcotics possession .plus a $5000 fine or\nan aditional two years. Steve Bohach\nof Vancouver, seven years, no fine,\nCROWDED COURT\nBefore a crowded court room, Mr.\nJustice A. D. Macfarlane pronounced sentence. He told the accused:\n\"No Judge Would be doing his\nduty, without Imposing a  maximum sentence. This traffic must\nbe*stopped. It robs Individuals of\nlife ahd character.\"   .\nEvidence presented by R.C.M.P.\ninvestigators showed that members\nof the ring shuttled between Vancouver and Eastern cities with the\norganization of a business firm. Distributors were located in key points.\nThe traffic and sale of drugs 'li-\nyolved thousands of dollars a month\nwith evidence showing some sales\ntotalled $1000 a day.\nTo Ask Report on\nNelson-Euphrates\nRoad Building Plans\nRequest for a progress report on\nthe Nelson-Nelway highway program, and specifically on the Nelson-Euphrates ' section, is .to be\nsought by the Nelson Board ot\nTrade.\nThe Board Thursday, acting on a\nrecommendation of .the Roads* and\nBridges Committee, decided to ask\nWalter Hendricks, M.L.A.-elect for\nNelson-Creston, to present their request to E. C. Carson, Minister of\nPublic Works.\nInstallation- of wig-wag warning\nsigns at the Southern Transprovin-\ncial intersection with C.P.R. Railway tracks at Taghum and at Lakeside Park here will also be requested.\nMay Be First\n\"White\" Indian\nVillage in Canada\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. C, \"Oct.-27\n\u2014Metlakatla;, picturesque and historic native village 10 miles West\nof here, may soon become the first\n\"white\" Indian village in Canada.\nI Culminating years of representations and negotiations, an Enfranchisement Board will convene at\nMetlakatla, JJov.-8 for a hearing on\nthe application of the Metlakatla\nband for enfranchisement as a\nwhole.\nCompliance with the application\nwould have the effect of making\nMetlakatlans \"white\" people in ail\nlegal and citizenship respects.\nComplete Arctic Test\n-SEATTLE, Oct. 27 (AP) - The\nBoeing Airplane Company reported-\ntoday a specially-equipped B-50\nbomber has completed successfully\nArctic tests at temeprature down\nto 83 below, '      \u25a0\u2022..\nThe Company said the plane went\nthrough a two-hour test at the 83-\nbeloW temperature. It flew for prolonged periods at temperatures\nranging upwards from 40 degrees\n(Fahrenheit) below zero.\nParliament at a Qlance\u2014\nBy The (f.-inadlan Press\nThe Commons approved by a vote\nof 133 to 33 a resolution asking the\nUnited Kingdom Government for\npower to amend the constitution on\n\u2022Federal matters.\nThe Commons defeated by 136-33\na Progressive Conservative motion\nrequiring provincial approval before Parliament amends the constitution.! \"\n' Members approved by 147 to 27 a\ncombined Government-C.C.F. . motion defining the length of Parliament in peace and war.\nPrime Minister St Laurent said\nthe Government-has the right to\namend the constitution on Federal\nmatters. ,'\u25a0' \u25a0-'\u25a0'''\nHoward   Green   (PC-Vancouver-Quadra) accused the Government of trying to soften the prov-\n,  Inces for negotiations on renewal\nof tax agreements.\nSenator Wishart Robertson, Government leader, gave notice in the\nUpper  Chamber  of  a  motion  to\npermit simultaneous study of estimates in the Senate and Commons.\nFRIDAY. .\nThe Commons wilt consider Government legislation, The Senate\nwill not .sit\nOfficial Opening\nFor Cominco Rink\nSet for Nov. 29\n* TRAIL, B.C., Oct 27-Cominco\nofficials announced Thursday that\nformal .opening*; of'-the Cominco\nArena has been set for Nov. 29. , v\n;^Tiw44w'-hoajp\"i'f thfeSmbk'e Eaters will have an ice sheet 200 feet\nby 85 feet and will seat 2500 people,\ngiving them a completely unob-\nstructed view of the ice. In addition\nthere will standing room for approximately J000.\nThe occasion of the opening will\nbe the first Western International\nHockey League game In Trail' between the Kimberley Dynamiters\nand the Trail Smoke Eaters..Pre-,\nceding the game will be a ceremony\nat Which the Consolidated Mining\nand Smelting Company's gift to the\nCity of Trail will be officially handed oyer to the citizens.\nBy the opening date the arena-\nwill be completed except for minor\ndetails and will\" remain open for\npublic use from then on, it Was anticipated by a Company spokesman.\nLeague hockey games scheduled to\nbe playede here before Nov. 29 will\nprobably, be played in the old fink.\nCominco officials are planning details of the opening ceremony.\nGuests from .the; neighboring communities are expected to be present\nfor the occasion.. .\nWife of Former Czech\nMinister to Open\nOttawa Pastry Shop\n, OTTAWA, Oct. 27 (CP)\"\u2014 Mrs.\nFrantisek Nemec, wife of the former Czechoslovakia^ -.Minister to\nCanada, will open a pastry shop in\nthe capital next month.\nFor the reddish blond, vivacious\nMrs. Nemec ,the shop will, be the\nfulfilment of a dream. Ever since\nher husband resigned his appointment following the Communist coup\nin Czechoslovakia last year, she has\ntoyed with, the idea of such a\nventure. Her- husband now works\nwith the Labor Department in\nOttawa.\nMrs.\" Nemec's chef will .be J.\nFaltus, a Czechoslovak by\u201ebirth and\nnow a ^naturalized French citizen.\nMr. Faltus, who was ctjef for the\nlate President Edward Benes In\nPrague, already is on his way to\nCanada equipped with all kinds of\ncolorings, perfumes\/flavors, and\nsuch items as marzipan from Spain.\nTo Continue Drive\nFor Northern Route\nSASKATOON. Oct 27 (CP).\u2014The,\nTrans-Canada Highway System Association (Yellowhead , route) will\ncontinue tb press for a Northern\nroute for the prairie-mountain section of the proposed artery, it was\nannounced' today. , '\nSlUGAR STOCKS HIGHER\nOTTAWA, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014Stocks\nof sugar in refineries at the end of\nAugust were .higher than- they\nwere a year ago, the Bureau,of\nStatistics said -today. Raw sugar\nstocks totalled 120,209,800 .pounds,\ncompared- with 110,884,800 pounds at\nthe end'of-August, 194$ and sticks\nof refined sugar were 103,965,200\npounds compared with 45,529,200.\nCONCEDES MAM.\nGOV'TWItt\nBE RETURNED\nC.C.F. Leader Sees;\n\"No Alternative\";.\n] 8 Seats Assured*:\n14 ACCLAMATIONS\nWINNIPEG, Oct. 27 (CP) \u2014 E\nA. Hannoru, Leader of the otti-\noial C.C.K. Opposition In the Jast\nmanuooa Lcuislature, said tunignt\n'ho concedes that ths. Coalition\nGovernment Will be returned to\noi nee In the Nov. io Provincial\nelection,\n\"We haven't any alternative but\nto agree that tney (me Coalition)\nwritl ne-returned,\" he-said In an interview with tne Canadian Press.\n; A CP reporter met ttf. Hanatord\nat Stevenson Field when he arrived\nby-air from a four-day ylsit to Flip\nFlon, The Pas and Sherridon in\nNorthern Manitoba.    .\nThe C.C.F. leader read CP's-jtory\non toda^r close of nominations, reporting nhat the Coalition Government of Premier Douglas L. Campbell has 188 assured seats\u201414 from\nacclamations.        '\u25a0 , \u2022'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022\nThen the, reporter asked: \"Do ypu\nconcede, Mr. Hansford, that the\nGovernment wiU be returned, in\nview of the 18 sure seats, it now Is\nassured,\" ...\nAt first Mr. Hansford hesitated.\n\"I wculdn't \"say they were sure\nto be returned,'1 lie said. \"I nave\nnot the full Information about the\ni  Manitoba Democratic Movement\nI  think Wo must concede tnom\nsome seats,\"\n(M.D.M. was;iormed recently by\na group of former members supporting Coalition who how contend\nManitoba should' return to party\npolitics. It is not a political party\nas such and the dozen candidates\nIt supports run under. various pp.\nliticai. designations)...   \u25a0\n1%e reporter;! told Mr. Hansford\nMiD.#.' is siipjlortitfg bnly,:9briUt. a\ndozen candidates and that the C.C.F,\nitself has only 25, in the field for the\n37 seats still'.at .doubt in the'Nov.\n10 voting. One more seat, that for\niNorthern Rupert's Land, will be\nvoted tor Dec, 14.\nMORE RUNNING\nMr. Hansford said he had thought\nmore C.C.F. candidates would be\nrunftihg. He said he did not know\nthat a C.C.F. .candidate had withdrawn iri Winnipeg North and an-\nothei;. in Rockwood. He had one\nthat, instead of-running one candidate in the four-member Winnipeg South constituency, the C.C.F.\nwould have two or three there.\n, i Then the reporter put his question again.\n\"It looks as if the. Government\nwill he returned to power,\" said\nMr. Hansford.;   .\u25a0\n''We haven't any alternatlya but\nto agree that they will be returned.\nPolitical    observers    expressed\nbelief that 18 assured seats on\n' nomination day Is a  record for\nManitoba, but there were 16 ae-\nolamatlons In 1941 compared with\nvthe 14 this time. In 1945,' seven\n\u2022eats went to the Coalition by default ' \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-,: \u25a0',.,     .'\u25a0\u25a0\nThe 54-year-old Premier, head qf\nthe Liberal-Progressive, Party, was\none of seven Cabiriet ministers to\nreceive acclamation. It marked the\nthe | third successive' time that he\nhas been returned in Lakeside constituency without opposition.\nOther.Cabinet ministers returned\nunopposed' are Labor Minister\nGreenlay in Pprtagei la Prairie,\nAgriculture Minister Bell in Birtle,\nWorks Minister Willis in Turtle\nMountain, Health Minister. Schilltz\nin Mountaiir, -Provincial' Secretary\nMiller in Fhineland.v at\u00abi Utilities\nMinister Morton in Gladeton.\nThese Coalition candidates also\nwere electbd by acclamation: Harry\nRurigay in.Minnedbsa, J. F. Anderson in Falrford, Chris Halldorson\nin St. George; J. p. Argue in Delor-\naine-Glemyood, Dr. S. O. Thompson\nIn Gimll, R. H. Mooney in Vlrden,\nand D. M. McCarthy in Ste. Rose.\n. The other certain victors are in\nLansdowrte. Klllarney, Hamiota and\nWJnrjipeg SoUth. Two-candidates\ncontest, between Coalition candifl\nates are to be held in tlie first\nthree. In Winnipeg South, the opposition named only three candidates to contest the;four seats and\nthe coalition has a full slate..\nACT OF-FATE \/. .\nHOQUIAM, Qct 27 (AP)\u2014Almost\na year to the day after he accidentally shot and killed a man during\na hunting trip, Nelson W. McKinney,\n58, of Hoquiam, fell victim himself\nto a hunting accident today.\nMcKinney,, deer hunting was\nwounded while hunting 10 miles\nWest of Hoquiam.\nMcKinney shot and killed his\nbrother-in-law, Bill Edward Mullins,\nOct 24, 1948. He was later convicted of manslaughter and given a\nsuspended sentence.  -\nC.C.F. Back Gov't Resolution\nTo Ask U. K. for Transfer of Power       |\nOTTAWA, Oct. 27 (CP) \u2014 The Commons tonight passed\na Government resolution asking that the United Kingdom Parliament transfer\u25a0-fo' the Canadian Parliament the power oi\namending the constitution on matters within Federal Jurisdiction- :'i' . . '-'., -. yfk\nThe.vote, was 133 to 38 in support of the measure witty\nthe* C.C.F. -bod ,-R. Bruneali (Ind L-Prescott) supporting the;\nGovernment. '\nOTTAWA, Oct. 27'(CP)\nCommons tonight defeated a Progressive Conservative amendment\nwhich would have required Provincial approval- before Parliament\nWas given the right to change the\nconstitution on Federal matters.\nThe vote was 138 to 33 with Social Credit members supporting\nthe Progressive Conservatives while\nthe CGF and Liberals opposed the\namendment\nIt was the second formal vote\nwithin a matter of minutes on the\nconstitutional matters which! have\nbeen debated in the Commons for\nalmost two weeks.\n- The first vote was 147 to 27 in\nfavor of a combined Government-'\nCCF amendment to the address asking the United Kingdom Parliament for power to amend the constitution on Federal.affairs.i\nLater, two other amendments\nwere ruled o\\<t bf order before\nPrime Minister St Laurent rojse to\nclose the debate..\nJohn Blackmpre (SC-Lethbridge)\nmoved that the speaker leave the\nchair so that the address could be\n| studied by a committee of the :WhoWj\nThe House. The motion was ruled out,!\nof order on the grounds thai,there\/\nis.no provision in the rules for*\nstudy of an address by a committee?\nof the whole House.\nT.    L,    Church    (PC-Toronto\nBroadvjew)  moved that the ad^'\ndress   not  be  adopted.   Speaker\nRoss Macdonald ruled It out of\norder on the grounds that It was S\nstraight    negative    motion    that\nwould have the same effect at f,\nnegative vote against the address,^\nIn debate on the address, Stanley\nKnowles     (CCF-Winnipe$    North;\nCentre\/moved an amendment that-\nwould- prevent   Parliament   from\nprolonging its 6wn  life  and  that,'\nwould require the holding of a sea*'\nslop at least once a year.     -\n\u25a0 Prime Minister St. Laurent acf\ncepted the principle of the imendfj\nment but he; moved ,a sub-amfrndl-.i\nment making it clear that- Parlia-i\nment's life could be. proiopged in:,\nwartime by a two-third majority-;\nvote of the Commons.\n.The vote was asked by the CCF-';\nonly the Progressive Conservatives;\nvoted against the amendment        f\nPLANE CRASHES\nIN TAKEOFF;\nSIX KILLED\nLONDON, Oct, 8 (Friday) \u2014\n(CP) \u2014 Six persons were feated\nkilled when an amphibious plane\n1 belonging to the Imperial Oil\nCompany of Canada, crashed\nwhile taking off at tondon airport\nearly \"today and burst Into flames.\n-The (plane, a Grumman twlri-\nenglned Mallard, was bound for\nRome. ' '\u25a0\nVisibility ot tho tlmo.was about\n66>tyard*f v'*\"-''*':f\"'\" ;*\">-' :\nThe  plane  had  seven  persons\naboard.  One was taken  to the\nhospital, while six bodies' were\nrecovered, ' ..\nB. C. Runs Close        \\\nSecond to Quebec\nIn Savings-Bond Race\n\u25a0OTTAWA, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014Quebec,\nwith 65.3 per cent of the total 1948\npayroll sales in the bag, is,out ih\nfront in the 1849 Canada Savings\nBond race, the Bank of Canada reported today.\n^British Columbia Is running Quebec a close second with 85:23 per\ncent of the 1948 payroll sales completed in the first week of the campaign which began Oct. 17.\nNet Debt Reduced\nOTTAWA, Oct. 27 (CP) '*- Canada's net debt has been reduced by\n$262,798,521 : since Dec. 31, 1948, it\nwas disclosed today In a retUrn\ntabled in the Commons for Ross\nThatcher (CCF~Moose . Jaw). At\nSept 30, 1949, the debt was\n$11,495,881,920.\nInspector Duncan\nWell Known in\nDislricf, Retires >\n.VANCOUVER, Oct. 27 (CP). -\nInspector Gordon J. Duncan of the;'\nBritish** Columbia Provincial Police '\nv\/iiV. retire next month. During'a:*\ncolorful .career,- he served with tcjl\n-pq-iofftotoe-for 3ff*'year's ar\"d\"before''\nthat was with the R.C.M.P.\" fbr lone\"\nyears,      ',\nInspector Duncan is well known-\nin East and West Kootenay, having.\nfirst yisited Nelson in 1?10 and serv-\ning 1 as District Constable at Cian-:\nbrook-1920-24. He was back in Nel\u00ab.;\nson again this year when, from Aug-1\nust 29 to October,22 he was relieving-*\nInspector  R.   S.  Nelson who was\naway on sick leave. Inspector Dun-.'\ncan. has many friends iA the district\nsome of whom served' wlth-him in \u25a0\nthe old North-West Mounted Police.\nIncreased Dairy\nOutput Indicated\nOTTAWA, Oct*27 (CP). \u2014 In- -\ncreased production in the dairy Industry, hard hit by drought and poor \u2022\npasture conditions during the Summer, was indicated today bythe'Bu-\nreaii of Statistics.- \u25a0   .\n' It reported September was 'jex-\u2022'\u2022'\nceptionally favorable1' for milk pro:\ndUction across the country and that\nfarmers will have enough feed for\nWinter needs despite 'a lighter hay\ncrop, f \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0' \\ -.'\nAnd in This, Comer \u2014\n-,;.;. WINNIPEG, Oct 27 (CP)\u2014lis against Manitoba law to beat your\nwife, mister, but you don't have to take any back talk from your\nin-laws      .--;,\"\n. These were two of the legal aspects of matrimony explained to a\nmarriage' clinic last night by H. G.' Harvey Smith, K.C., executive\nmember of the Manitoba Law Society.\nAlthough-the beating custom is centuries old, lt has no legal status\nIn Manitoba, Mr. Smith said. But when ln-laws come to stay, the law\nWill back you up if you tell them where to go. You dont have to:\nsupport them. \u25a0      \u2022\nYou do have to provide the little woman with necessities as long\nas she lfves With yoU. That will include food, clothing and shelter\u2014or\neven a mink coat\u2014depending on your \"station of life.''\n... But happily, you are the one who determines your station of life, j\nIf the little help mate has $1,000,000 in her own right and you want to\nsupport her, Mr. Smith said, you just explain, \"we're going to live in a\nlittle three-room, cottage,\" and she has to.llve there.\nWho says it's a woman's world?\nYORK, England, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014The Arcfiblshop of York wrote today.that Mexico denied him the freedom of attire ho was permitted,\neven In Russia, f '-..\nThe Rt. Rev. Cyril Foster Garbett reported In a diocesan letter\nthat on his reedpt trip to North America he had intended visiting\nMexico. But, he %ald, he was told he wouldn't be allowed there unless\nha dressed as a layman In keeping with Mexican law,\nHe cancelled his visit.\n.     TORQUAY, Wales,- Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014Inside a box of tomatoes delivered to fruiterer, George Clow was a pencilled message:\n- \"Looking for husband I am 26, good income; please apply to this\naddress . . .\" J.-'-.     '.\nSaid Clow; \"\u00ab am,a happily married man but the idea\u2014and tbe\n'good income'\u2014may appeal to some bachelor.\"\n. EDMONTON, Oct 27 (CP)\u2014Attention Calgaryl Edmonton had a\nstampede today that officials at the city's airport think rivals that of\n. Calgary. The Impromptu affairs; started when three airport 'maintenance men teamed up In a, truck to chase a yearling heifer, an escapee'\nfrom the stockyards who was looking for betten) grazing lands.\nPlight traffic was held up 20 minutes as the motorized cowhands\nroared around the field after the heifer. Finally, one of the cowhands,\nBill Watson, laiooed the heifer with a piece of rope, and It was carted\noff the field to the sound of cheers of hundreds of spectators. --,\n. . VICTORIA. B.C., Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014A. R. Hooper is a strong booster\nfor checkroom service at rummage sales,\nMr. Hooper went to a sale the other day to see if there was a\nbargain in overcoats. He took-his own off to try one. for size. It didn't\nfit, so he departed, absent mindedly leaving his own coat on the pile\nof clothing. When he returned some time later to pick it up he found\nhe had contributed lt to the cause. It was sold for two bucks.\n :\u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949\nTonight-Saturday\u2014Complete Shows 7:00-9:15\n'GARY COOPER  ,\nMADELEINE CARROLL1\nPRESTON FOSTER\nPAUlEnt GODDflRD\nROBERT PRESTON\n\u25a0HornMi\nfB\/uwW9\nCIVIC\n[rail Sets Up Committees as Step\ntoward Parent-Teacher Association\nTRAIL, B.C., Oct. 27 - Trail\nparents and teachers Thursday\nnight and set up five provisional\nI committees as the initial step in\nforming a' Parent-Teacher Association here:\ni An organizational meeting in the\nCity Hall attended by folk from\neach of the five school areas heard\ntalks by Mrs. C. E. Bradshaw - of\nNelson, Provincial District organizer, D. G. Chamberlain, Principal\nof Rossland High School, Mrs. C, J.\n(il}tchel) of Rossland P.T.A., and\nMrs. Walter Beech of Fruitvale\nP.T.A.\nMrs.  Bradshaw,-in  representing\nI the provincial organization, was replacing Mrs. D.W. McLeod, President of B.C. Parent-Teacher Association, ^'ho was called back to Vancouver by her husband's illness..\n.The provisional committees,\nI which will go to school principals\nior permission to set up individual\nbranches, are: \u25a0'....\n- Central School\u2014Mrs. J. H. Curtis,\nI Mrs. F. Sindell, Mrs. R. Hanna, Mrs.\nASTHMA SUFFERERS\nGet welcome relief frbm the wheezing,\nsneezing, gasping struggle for breath\ncaused by A6thma. Take RAZ-MAH,\nspecially made to relieve Asthma misery,\n'Helps you sleep and work In comfort\nDon't lose another night's Bleep. Take\nRAZ-MAH today. 60c, J1.25.     \u25a0'  R-33\nwor\nAnd Have Our\nMany Year?\nof Experie..-\nHelp You\nSOLVE;'';:\nTHESE\nPROBLEMS\nJohn   Jackson   and   Mrs.   Joseph\nLanduccl.\nJ, L. Webster School \u2014 William\nFronson, Mrs. G. McCallum,, Mrs.\nS. Mitchell, Mrs. R. Perry, Mrs. M.\nDeadmarsh, Mrs. D. MacDonald,\nMrs. R. Leonard and Mrs. A. Gill.\n* High School-rMra. Les Reid, Mrs,\nH, M. Watts, Mrs. G, Ridgeman,\nMrs. - H. Goddard, Mr. and Mrs,\nHuntley Gordon and Geoffrey Colls.\nTadanac School\u2014Mrs. 0, H. Gill,\nE. H. Gautschi, Miss H. Buchanan,\nMrs. E. G. Randall and B. A, Johns.\nEast Trail School\u2014Miss J., W.\nFish, .Mrs. V. Mqhoruk, Mrs. G.\nBenzles, Mrs. G. Jeffares, Miss M.\nBeveridge and Mrs. G. Graham.\nMrs, Gordon jRedgraves was appointed Secretary,' while Dr. C. H,\nWright was chairman of the. public\nmeeting. -f'.- %'\nie...\nWEST\nTRANSFER CO.\nPhone 33     P.O. Box 116\nNELSON, B.C.\nLondon Schoolboy\nCharged with\nMurdering Child\nLONDON, Oct. 27 (AP)-A 12-\nyear-old schoolboy was charged today'with murdering a boy qf four.\n. The Sccused, George Crick, appeared in Ealing Juvenile Coui;t\nwith his father while police search,\ned the Brent River, shores for the\nbody of Stanley .Graves,\nA hearing was.set for next-Wednesday.\nPollci   mrUlil'i  i'uvi- no hint  of\ni In   motive and  did  nut s.iy bow\nlhey_. knew\" the child wai dpad. -\n\u2014\t\nCanadian Bakers\nWarned of\nStandardizalioi\nInstalled at\nPropane Plant\nNelson's new propane plant ls\ntaking 'final shape. With the compressor Installed, all that remains Is\nthe installation of a vaporizing unit\nand housing for the two units and\nthe piping.\nOpening date tor the plant will\nbe delayed because a nearby oil\ncompany's unit must be moved farther away from the storage tank.\nNo opening date can yet be established.\nC. H. Smith of the Kootenay Pro-\npane . Gas Company, making the\ninstallation, has agreed that in the\nevent that the City exetends its gas\nniains, and fla company's customers\nwish to connect with the City service, he will cancel contracts with\nthem. The Gas Committee reported\nthis agreement to the City Council\nWednesday. \u25a0,-.',,\nClerics Disagree\nTORONTO, Oct: 27 (CP)\u2014Staid-\nardizatioh'df bread and ita ingredients may be established by,the end\nof the year, Arthur. May, Secretary\nof the Canadian National Council\nof Bakers, told the Independent\nMaster Bakers' Association, meeting, here yesterday.\nA new law, discussed by. the Federal Health Department and the\nNational Council of Bakers, will,\nmake it compulsory for bakers to\nuse 25 per cent raisins, bf weight,\nin a raisin loaf, he said, and milk\nloaves will contain -six per cent\nmilk..\nTo Complete Talks on\nEdmonton Paper Mill\nEDMONTON, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014The\nAlberta. Government expects soon\nto complete negotiations,with Montreal interests promoting the con-,\nstruction of a $12,000,000 paper mill\nnear. Edmonton, but no agreements\ncovering the project or timber rights\nhave yet been signed,\nIn Montreal, R. 0. Sweezey,\ninvestment broker who has been\nconducting negotiations on the\n.scheme, said it was proposed to\nbuild a mill whose main output\nwould be newsprint. It was to \"be\nlocated on the North bank of the\nNorth Saskatchewan River on the\nEastern outskirts.of Edmonton'. Its\noutput was estimated at 200 tons\nof newsprint daily, and it Iwould\nemploy 350 persons.\nClassified  Ads Get  Results\nSabbath and Man\nVICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 27 (CP)-\nOnly one Victoria - cleric today\nspoke in agreement with Anglican\nArchbishop Philip .Cartington who\ntold a Toronto Church meeting\nWednesday there was nothing in\nthe Bible to support Sunday being\nkept holy*\nIn agreement was Rev. Hugh\nCampbell, Minister of the Seventh\nDay Adventlsts here, who agreed\nwith Archbishop Carrington that\nSaturday was the seventh day\nwhich the biblical commandment\nsaid should be the day of rest.\n\"Nowhere in the Bible' is it laid\ndowry\" that worship should be done\non Sunday,\" said the Archbishop In\nToronto. -     ..'. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'   '\nA measure of disagreement was\nexpressed by Rev. George Biddle,\nRector of St. John's Anglican\nChurch and President of the Victoria Ministerial Association, who\nsaid: \"I think that in all probability the Archbishop was speaking bn\nthe, spur of the moment,\" 'f\n\u25a0\u2022. \"If our Christian civilization is to\niplay a good role in the world, then\nI think-we have to try to,save the\nChristian Sabbath.\"\nSLOCAN TEACHERS\nHEAR REPORT ON\nDISTRICT MEETING\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C., Oct 27 -\nThe meeting of the Slocan Valley\nTeacher's Association held In the\nSlocan City' Elementary School\nheard F. Tessmdn ot New Denver\nreport, on the Teacher's Convention\nheld in Rossland and on activities of\nthe District West Kootenay Council.\nOther reports from various committees were also discussed.\nCoffee was.served by Misses A.\nStorgard, Y. Iwase, M. Geeland and\nMrs. T. Hlgashi.\nTO DEMONSTRATE\nSIDEWALK PLOW\nNelson City , Council members,\nwho.Jong have been studying sidewalk snow removal methods and\nequipment, will be able to see a\nrotary sidewalk snow plow in action\nshortly.\nThe equipment, to be demonstrated by Nelson Farmers Supply\nLtd., also has a power brush attachment for sweeping up sidewalks\nand roadways.\nCity Council decided Wednesday\nto provide a requisition so that the\nsupply company could import the\nsnowplow and brush attachments'\nfor 8!IS h.p tractor unit. The attachments were unavailable without a\nCity requisition.\nBeautiful New--\nComing Iri suede or calf In colors green, brown, black,\n: y''A'9AM.r:'    ?C>95   -\n-Tr       and... \\f\nFREE pair of high grade NYLONS\nwith every pair of shoes purchased at the price of\n$8.95 or over..\nMEZZANINE\nSHOE FLOOR\nFink's Ready-to-Wear New\nDress Goods Department\n$2.98\n54\" wool crepe*.\nAll. colors\t\n54\" wool flannels. Cf BA\nAll colors. ...',  ?*\".*V\n54\"   coatings.   Green,   wine,,\nbrown, grey and CA 7K\nnavy.          *\u2022\u00a7\u25a0#*\nE~>m*. $3.\u00bbj\n7   FINJCS ,\n38  rayon orepei.\nAll colors\t\n59\" taffeta. Navy,\nturquoise.\nYard. ,....,....;.\nRayon sheen 88\"*\nwide. Yard .     ....\nNylon (*eer. 42\".\nAll iplors. Yard ...\n$1.00\nwhite and\n$1.95\n$1.50\n$1.79\nSisjadi}*-iD,-Wm)i*\nBUUD02JER CHARGES\nRental charges of $70 and $50, respectively for cleanup work by-the\nCity bulldozer it the Nelson Golf\nand Country Club and- at the Civic\nCentre Recreation Grounds, w\nset by Nelson City Council.\nNelson-Cranbrook' &\u2022 Nelson-Balfour a few rough sections; Kootenay\nBay-Kuskanook good; Kuskanook \u2022\nCreston and Creston to M4 East fair;\nM4-M7 East of Creston construction;\nmuddy if wet and one mile detour;]\nM7-M18 good, but two detours due\nto abridge constructionibut.no ddajr,\nRemainder 'to Cranbrook fair lo\ngood.\nNelson-Kaslo\u2014Fair to good. M18-\nM20 construction, but no delay. .\nNelson-Monashee\u2014Good to fair.\nNelson-Nelway \u2014 M0 - M8 some\nrough sectlbhs.. M8-Nelway good.\nNelson - Trail - Paterson \u2014 Construction M18-M21 and paving M25|\nM27. Remainder to Rossland good.\nRossland to Paterson some sections\nunder construction.\nRossland-dascade\u2014Fair.\n. . \u25a0\nSPEAKER MAY USE\nNELSON STORY\nIN FUTURE TALKS\nStuart Richardson, recent speaker before a meeting of the Board\nof Trade here, states in a letter to\nMayor T. H. Waters his pleasure in\nhis trip to Nelson. ...\n, Prior to leaving Nelson, Mayor]\nWaters presented Mr, Richardson\nwith a Nelson's Golden , Jubilee\nbooklet. He found the story of romance and adventure intriguing, he\nwrote. He would find the .informs\ntion useful in his platform appear-\nances, he intimated.\n'\u2022\"One good thing that this trip\nhas done for me is to give me a\npicture'of conditions in other parts\nof the country than Quebec. Because of Information like this which\nhas been given to me, I can speak\nwith \\ authority.\"\nIn closing Mr, Richardson said it\nwas a nice exeprlence for him to get\nto Nelson and that it was always\nnice to talk to a good and receptive audience.\nMr. Richardson, Northern Electric public relations man, spoke on\n\"The True North\", here and at\nTrail.\nTruman Stales\nNo National\nEmergency Yet\nWASHINGTON, Oct. 27 (AP) -\nPresident Truman said today no national emergency yet exists in\neither the coal or the steel strikes\nto warrant his intervention now.\nHe said he will not hesitate to\nuse the emergency provisions of the\nTaft-Hartley Act if such an emergency, does develop.\nThe President also rejected t\nsuggestion that the fact-finding\nboard which functioned in the steel\nstrike be reconvened for further\nrecommendations.       ,\nHe said that board has done its\njob and added that no othei; board\nis to be appointed,\nThis advertisement is obt published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board ot\nby the Government of British Columbia. .\nEngineer to Check\nCabin Construction\ncon.\nA check of tourist cabin\nstruction at the former FOurways\nPark site by City Engineer W. S.\nJackson has been ordered by Nelson City Council to assure conformity with building regulations. Complainants had indicated that the\nconstruction was : not completely\nfollowing plans previously approved\nby City authorities, Aid. Alex Suth;\nerland advised the Council Wednesday. , -'\u2022'\u25a0';\u25a0\nThe Engineer will also make' a\nreport on requirements needed' to\nrehabilitate the .Vernon. Street corn-\nfort station. It was in poor repair,\nAid. Sutherland reported.\nFuneral Held for\nRossland Woman\nMrs. Louie May Haydden of Rossland died October 25. She i\u00a3 sur-\nard.her father who lives in Van-\nvlved by her husband Samuel How-\ncouver, two daughters, Shirley Ann\nand Evelyn Diane, two sons, Howard Edward. and Alfred Stanley,\none brother, - Edward Nelsoh, and\none sister Mrs. G. A. Cuthbert, both\nof Vancouver.   ., >\nThe funeral was held Thursday\nafternoon at Rossland. Internment was in Mountain View Cemetery.   . *   -., ',\nMany Out for\nJoymakers Social\nA large cro*d turned out for\nJoymakers social Thursday night,\nThe whist winners wore Mrs. R.\nManegre ana W, Gold, first, Mrs.\nCharles Openshaw and Mrs, Doris\nLang, second, and Mrs. A. Wallace\nand O, D. Maclntyre, third.\nRefreshments and dance followed.\nTake Up Option\nOn Possible\nHospital Site\nTwo offers ot land as possible\nsites for proposed hospital construction are in the hands of Nelson\ncivic authorities.\nOffer of an option of lands on\n11th and 12th Streets in Upper\nFairview was accepted by the City\nCouncil Wednesday. The Sisters of\nSt Anne, a letter from the Sister\nSuperior said, were willing to\ndonate the site if the City reimbursed the order for the sewer\ninstallation serving the area, at. a\npossible cost of- $0000,' and permitted use of the facility in perpetuity, The City would also pay\ncosts Involved ih the property\ntransfer. There was no charge for\nthe option, '.:,\nThe Council was advised that an\noffer of 10 acres at another site had\nbeen received. The- two' would be\nconsidered along with others when\nthe time for a decision arose, Mayor\nT. H. Waters declared.\n$150 Each Offered\nFor Old Street Cars\nAn offer of $150 each for old\ntrams of the replaced Nelson street\nrailway has been placed with the\nCity.       .\nCity Clerk W. A., Gordon told the\nCity Council Wednesday he believed the bidder proposed to fit\nthem with rubber-tired wheels as\noutfit cars'on construction Jobs.\nNo action was J taken by the\nCouncil; the offef will be considered along with others when they,\nare received.\nWe are showing an amazingo range of\nWinter Goats\nDozens of beautiful styles \u2014 all sizes. Prices\n$2950 to $79 sq\nCoats all chamois lined. Colors wine, green, ,\n' \u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0 brown, black, grey and blue.\n.... , . .-,      \\- \u25a0-, .   ,\nBlouse Special\nFine quality silk Crepe. 14 to 20., $^.95\n\u25a0'Price' _...__ . '\u25a0 mm   ,'\nFall Dresses\nSilk$ and wools. Smart styles.\n'\u25a0      Sizes VA to 20, 38 to 44, 1 BVi- to 24V.\nf SA.95 $1Q.9S\nPurses\nDozens and dozens of smart handbags. So Irresistible and so inexpensive! \u25a0\n$\u00abJ.95     $_V95     9 AM\nWoods' Nylon Hose\nBlack seams and heels. $^.2S\nPair -.\u201e;.:..;..\u201e ': -' '   JL\nSkirts,\nNever before' have we shown si icii a variety of,\nstyles and materials.\nSweaters\nEvening\nSkitts!\nThis Is the sweater\" season. Choose now from, our\nlarge stock of pullovers and cardigans.\nBlack taffeta. Sizes\nBlackbengaline,\nSizesl2to.l8\n'_ *16\n12 to 18.\n$1^.95\nIFINK'S Ready-to-Wear\nThe Weather\nSYNOPSIS:' Strong wind! ooour-\nred over the North Coast but.thsy\nshow signs of decreasing. The storm\ncenter lies over the Queen Charlotte Islands and is expected to\nmove inland. The trailing edge of\nthis disturbance will pass over, the\nVancouver Island area. Kain spread\nfrom'the Coastal areas into the Interior of the Province. Temperatures\nare expected to be somewhat higher\nat most Interior points. Mild unsettled weather will persist over the\nProvince in the wake of this storm.\nNELSON  42   50 105\nSt. JohnB  36   51\nMontreal i... 34   46\nToronto ..' \u201e\u201e\u201e.\u201e\u201e.._. 32   52\nWinnipeg   \u201e .... 34   44\nRegina  ..'. .,....\u201e 30   58'\nLethbridge  . 44   58\nCalgary \u201e 34   56\nVancouver .. ;  48   52\nVictoria. \u201e 47   61!\nKimberley  30   53\nCrescent Valley :..-..\u201e 32   46\nKaslo \u201e 36   48\nSpokane ........'....:..... 39   51\nChicago \u201e_ 31   59   \u2014\nLos Angeles  :.. :... 47   79   \u2014\n.26\n.02\nURGES DEFINITE\nLOT SALE POLICY\nSuggestion that'the City establish\na definite policy in the Bale of lots\nhas been forwarded by Aid. Alex\nSutherland. The Alderman saw.\nbenefit,.considering the shortage of\nbuilding property, of making known\nwhat lots the City for sale and of\nputting them up for bid.\nHe spoke at a City Council meeting Wednesday, afternoon at which\nsale of two sidehill lots on Gore\nStreet at $110 each to J. StDennis\nw,as approved, - .-' '\nOKAY LOT SUBDIVISION\nPermission to subdivide a Hall-\nVernon Streets corner\" lot was\ngranted K. H. Grenfell by City\nCouncil. Three, new stores are' going up on the property on which, is\nalready located a cafe' business\nbuilding, The subdivision was\nrecommended by City Engineer W\nS. Jackson.   '    ,\nCANADA, RUSSIA\nEXCHANGE VERBAL\nBLOWS IN U.N.\nLAKE SUCCESS, N. Y\u201e Oct. XI\n(CP)\u2014Canada's Health Minister\nand Russia's Foreign Minister once,\nmore traded verbal thrusts today in\nthe United Nations, this time about\nBishops and Guerrillas.\nPaul Martin, acting head of tha\nCanadian delegation In the absence\nof- b. B. Pearson, External Affairs\nMinister, asked Russia's Andrei Y.\nVishinsky if ho believes a Bishop\nhas any less right to expect clemency from a court titan a Greek\n|\u00a3uerrilla has.\nThe question was hurled in the\npolitical committea nf the U. N. Assembly -which has been bogged\ndown in an involved debate started\nby Vishlnsky.\nThe Russian delegate proposed\nthat ths 59-member committee demand the suspension of death sentences against^ eight' underground\nworkers sentenced Oct, 13 by i\nGreek Military Court.\nFour More Victims\nFound on Noronic\nTORONTO, Oct. 27 (CP) \u2014 The\nbodies of four more vldtims of the\nSept 17 fire I that destroyed the\nsteamship Noronic at its berth here\nhave been identified, coroner's officials said today;   ' -|'\nIdentified dead .now total 109.\nTen persons are still unaccounted\ntor. The body of a woman found on\nthe -ship last Monday during salvage operations is still unidentified.\nTruman Signs\nAlaska Army\nExpansion Bill\nWASHINGTON, Oot V <AP)-\nPresldont Truman today signed *\nbill calling for a 87,603,212 expansion of the Army's Alaska Communication Syotcm. - -\nThe program will Include m*\nconstruction of buildings arid Installations at 28 points In Alaska\nand at Adak In tho Aleutians.\nGRIP FIX\nJust load your camera with\nKodak Super-XX Film and\n\u25a0JsePhotofloodlampSjoruse\nK6dak Verichrome fllm with\nPhotoflash. See w iodayj\nVOGUE STUDIO\n460 WARD ST., NELSON, B.C.\nNow I\nHate to\nCROW\nAbout\nThis!\nBUT-\nYou should the eggs thai are layed\nin our poultry house\n\u2022   '-- You see,-the Boss feed.\nTHRIVO\nLaying Mash\nThe production is amazing Thrive!\nThe 19% Protein Mosh\nBRACKMAN-KER\nA DIVISION'OF:\n SKATING SHOES\nby SAMSON\ni\/Ladies' fancy __ $15.95\nladies' Tube _-_ $12.00\n\"Misses' Fancy _i_ $12.00\nMen's Tube I.'  $10.50\nBoys' Tube -___ $ 8.95\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nNET $88 IN\nNAKUSP TAG DAY\nNAKUSP, B, C, Oct 27\u2014Tag Day\nto help.the'Canadian Institute for\nthe blind was.held Saturday .under\nthe auspices of the Parent Teacher's\nAssociation when $8.50 was given\nfrom Brouse and Nakusp.   \u25a0\nCollectors were Public-School pupils June Gardner, Wayne'Gardner,\nKen Stanley, Roberta Bobson, Shirley Cars'en, Emily Hurry, Robert\nMcMullen, David Thexton, Douglas\nHurry, Yvonne Gregory,' Jeannett\nHenke, Francis Urbin; Joe Surina,\nLorna Aalton and Nelson Woldum.\nFour New Members\nIn Nelson Board\nApplications for membership by\nfour Nelson business men were accepted without ballot by the Nelson\nBoard of Trade Thursday. The new\nmembers are Joseph W. Graham,\nManager of the Bank of Commerce\nand successor to J. R. McLennan,\nretired, Ernest Collinson, Nelson\njeweller, James Riley, Nelson Manager for Arrow Van and Storage Ltd.,\nand A. J. Shankland, of Campbell,\nShankland and Irmie, accountants.\nGuest at the luncheon meeting\nwas Russell Joyce of Creston.\nA welcome to H. E. Thain, attending his first meeting' following a\nlengthy illness, was extended by\nPresident T. D. Rosling.\nDo you want that-\nHallowe'en   Party\nto be a grand success?\nRatepayers Hear\nWindermere\nSchool Report\nINVERMERE. B. C, Oct 27\u2014\"You\nare minding your o#n business\" V.\nS. Kimpton, chairman of. No. 4.\nWindermere School District- told\nratepapers at the annual meeting at\nthe, Athalmer-Ihvermere School for\nthe combined attendance' areas of\nRadium; Sparkling Creek and Ath-\nalmer-Jnvermere Schools.\n\"Your-business is the education of\nyour children and the encouraging\nattendance. at this annual meeting\nproves your acceptance of it\" Attendance was the largest in some\nyears,   : ., '.\"*\u25a0'\nRepresentatives elected were Mrs.\nIan Weir and Oswald Young' for\nAthalmer - Invermere attendance\narea, Edward ofr Radium area and\nS. A. Laird for Sparkling Creek\narea.\n\"Presenting thd report from the\nBoard.of Trustees Mr. Kimpton said\nthere are 14 teachers employed In\nthe district an increase of tw.o,\ncaused by. the re-opening of the Galena School and 'by the addition of a\nsixth teacher to the Athalmcr-In-\nvermere School staff.\nHe said it may be necessary to\nre-open the Radium School closed\nduring the past few years. Two\nschool buses, purchased during the\nSummer, are Bringing children to\nthe Athalmer - Invermere School\nfrom Edgewater, Windermere, WU-\nmer and West Road points. >\nA motion was passed that the\nInspector's report on scool administration be available to the ratepayers at the annual meeting.\nG. W. Appleby was Chairman of\nthe meeting. ,'\nFormer Resident\nOf Cranbrook Dies\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oot. 27 \u2014\nThe ' death , occurred. from pneumonia at North Battleford, Sask.,\nOct. 19 of Dr. Keith W\"8800. oge\n45. tHe was born here, elder son bf\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Wason and had\nall his preliminary schooling here.\nHe studied dentistry at the University of Alberta and following graduation was married here to the\nformer Margaret Home.\nThey went to. Battleford about\n1930 when he opened a dentistry\npractice. He was a dental officer In\nthe Canadan Army overseas during\nthe war and returned (to North\nBattleford in 1940 to resume his\npractice. Tir had recovered recently\nfrom a   lir-nken ankle.    '\nHis wife and daughter, Marley,\nsurvive him at their home, and a\nson Keith at St. John's College,\nWinnipeg,' and also his brother,\nNorman Wasson In Edmonton,\nBEST WISHES TO BE\nEXTENDED SLOCAN BOARD\nNelson's best wishes for success\nwill be extended by letter to the\nnewly-revived Slocan Valley Board\nof-Trade by the Nelson Board. The\nSlocan group will be holding its first\nmeeting following reorganization af-\nter.a lapse of aeveral,years..Tuesday.\nTORONTO\nNOV. 15 to 23\nFARE and ONE-HALF\nFOR THE ROUND TRIP\nTICKETS ON SALE\nfrom stations in British Columbia\nNOV. 7 to 14 inch\nRETURNING!\nLv. Toronto until Nov. 24\nSleeping \u00bbnd Parlor Car Privilege!\nat usual rates.\nFull information from any A sent. \u2022\nWORLDS    CREATE5T   TRAVEL    SYSTEM''\nHIRAM\nWALKERS\nSPEClAOLD\nCANADIAN WHISKY\nBOTTLED IN BOND\nThis advertising is hot published or displayed; by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government :ot' British Columbia.\nTo Speak Here on\nTrinity Church\n59th Anniversary\nThird Canadian\nWilh Second\nSweepstake Ticket\nPEMBROKE, Ont., Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014\nA third Canadian with a ticket on\nGood Taste in yesterday's Cambridgeshire Handicap turned up today in this Upper Ottawa Valley\ntown. '\/\nShe wos Mrs. Margaret Kearns, a\nsaleswoman in a clothing shop, who\nStands tb collect $31,000 in Irish\nSweepstakes money due to the-second-place showing of the horse,\nOther Canadians holding $31,000\ntickets oh Good Taste are W. E.\nBrain, inspector for a Toronto rubber company, and Harold Black-\nmore of London, Ont., a telephone\ncompany clerk.\nLt Col. Rev. W. C. Mawhlnhey\nThe speaker at the 59th anniversary services of Trinity Church next\nSunday will be Lieut-Cql. the Rev.\nW. C. Mawhinney, minister of the\ncongregation in the years 1.26-35.\nCol. Mawhinney has had a dis-\nposted, to eHadquarters Second Cathe First Great War as Military\nSecretary for the British Y.M.C.A.,\nthen as-a Padre in France and later\nwith the Army of Occupation in\nGermany. In the- Second Great War\nhe was called up in November 1939\nand appointed Senior Chaplain with\nthe rank of Major, Military District\nNo. 12, comprising all of Saskatchewan with headquarters in .Regina.\nHe was transferred to the. Fifth-\nArmoured Division as Senior Chaplain and went overseas with the\nDivision In .1941. He was promoted\nto the rank of Lieut.-Col. and\nposted to Headquarters, Second Canadian Corp serving as Deputy\nAssistant Principal - Chaplain. Upon\nreturning to Canada Col. Mawhinney took over the post of Command\nChaplain of the Pacific Command\nuntil discharge October 1946. '\nClothing Exchange\nArouses Interest-\nIn Kimberley P.T.A.\nKIMBERLE'., B.C., Oct. 27 \u2014 The\nKimberley Parent-Teacher Assocla\ntlon's Clothing Exchange has been\nopen,for the last three Saturdays\nand ls arousng considerable interest\nPatrons bring one used article and\nexchange it for aonther, the smalt\nservice charge not exceeding $1,\ngoing to swell PTA funds.\nThe project Is the work of the\nWays and Means Committee, under\nthe. Chairmanship of Miss T. Young;\nMRS. H. LUNN\nHEADS CRANBROOK\nLEGION AUXILIARY\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct 27 \u2014\nThe Ladies', Auxiliary to Branch 24\nCanadian Legion, has started Its\nFall program, and elected its officers for the year. Opening events\nto raise funds are a series of card\nparties in the Legion clubhouse.\nThe Auxiliary elected Mrs. Henry\nLunn as President, Mrs, V. K, Eb-\nerlein and Mrs. M. Forrest, Vice-\nPresidents, Mrs. William McNeil\nsergeant-at-arms, and Mrs, I. R.\nGeorge, standard-bearer. Executive\nmembers chosen were Mrs. J, F,\nLunn, Mrs.A. J. Conroy and Mrs.\nG. Wood with Mrs. Reg Watson, social convener.\nAt a recent meeting the Auxiliary\npresented a past president pin to\nits first president, Mrs. Vera Chown\nas an emblem of office and acknowledgment of, valuable service.\nBoard to Oppose\nRadio Licence Boost\nOpposition to any Increase In radio licence fees as proposed for the\nCanadian Broadcasting Corporation\nwill be raised by the Nelson Board\nof Trade. ' \u2022        '\nThe Board at Its luncheon meeting\nThursday approved recommendation of the Public Affairs Committee\nthat it take this stand. No action concerning the recent Increase in hospital insurance premiums was contemplated.\nKimberley Auxiliary\nHolds Card Party\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct. 26\u2014The\nLadies Auxiliary to Union 651 held\nlast week, prize winners being as\nfollows:- s-\nWHIST: Ladies, Mrs. Desjardlns,\nconsolation, Mrs. R. T. Richardson.\nGents: Mrs, I. Frame; consolation\nMrs. T. Evans.\nCRIB: Ladies, Mrs. E. Gelling. Consolation Mrs. F. Courog. Gent, B.\nShannin, consolation, Mrs. G. Amos,\nMrs. E. Lee was convenor of the\naffair. \u2022 .\u2022'.'\n(233\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949 \u2014 S\nFALL and WINTER NEEDS\nfor the WORKING MAN!\nA SUPER \"Bay\" VALUE!!\nBlue Denim bib overalls, regular 4.75 value, 7%.oz.\ndenim, high back style, regular pockets. ^.99\nSizes 36 to 44. Each    \u00a3m\nMACKINAW JACKETS\nHeavy all wool, stag style jackets, double weight\nthroughout, styled with regular pockets with game\npocket at back. Color grey. | A-SO\nSizes 36 to 44. Each    IV\nWORK PANTS\nflail and Winter, weight, English hairline dress pants.\nExtra good, firmly woven quality \"wool and cotton\nfabric. Well cut in full fitting sizes. Finished with\nfive, pockets, belt, loops and button front. ^-SO\nSizes 30 to ,44. Each     ,.    I\nWOOL SHIRTS\nColorful plaid check designs, all wool, two breast\npockets, full fitting sizes. 14% to\" 17. <%\"'s\nAssorted colors. Each ......    O\n8TANFI ELD'S\nCOMBINATIONS\n\"Red Label,\" \"Grey Label,\" wool combinations. Unshrinkable, full button front. Guaranteed C-93\nfull cut to Size. 36 to 44. Each .....!    J\nDOESKIN WORK SHIRTS\nCheck \"Doeskin\" cloth in extra heavy weight. A big\nrugged shirt for the man outdoors in the coldest\nweather. Finished with double yoke, faced JJ .93\nsleeve vents and two pockets. 14% to 17%.   3\nALL WOOL SOCKS\nPenman's 3% lb. wool knit work socks, grey with\nwhite toe and heel. Medium sizesv QC\nEach  . O J\n,:.n-, i\nHORSEHIDE MITTS\nCream tanned horsehide, soft arid pliable,      **.63\nelastic inset at cuff. All sizes. Each     JL\n.Wool liners 69fJ .     .    .\nJUMBO KNIT SWEATERS\nExtra heavy'sweater coat made from good quality ajl\nwool yarns in a big, burly Jumbo knit stitch. Has full\ndecker shawl collar, two pocftets, close fitting -1.95\ncuffs. Sizes 36 to 44. Each     \/\nINCORPORATED   2*? MAY 1670.\n\"        NELSON, B.C.\nWest Fernie Opens\nCommunity Mall\nFERNIE, B.C, Oct.' 27 -Residents of the unorganized territory\nof West Fernie, just across the river\nfrom the city of Fernie, now have\ntheir own substantial community\nhall for meetings, indoor sports and\ndancing, due to the energy and en-\nterprise of the community's Amateur Athletic Association and work\nof its own people.\nA substantial two-room school\nhouse not in use for several years\nwas transferred in early Spring to\nthe Association On application, provided lt be converted to community\nuse. Since then a Handful of volunteers have worked at it to add kitchen and lavatory at rear, convert\nlt into a single room, lay an excellent dance floor, panel the walls\nand decorate it artistically. For this\nWinter a large heater will be used,\nbut the Association plans a furnace\ninstallation next year.\nThe work was volunteered and\nmoney for materials to the amount\nMiscellaneous Shower\nFor kimberley Miss\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct 27 -\nMiss Lulgla Manarin, bride-elect of\nthis month was honored recently\nwhen Mrs. A. R, Unwin and Mrs.\nGus Nord entertained at a miscellaneous shower, the party being\nheld at the home of' Mrs. J. Erickson.\nWhist was played with Mrs. G.\nWanuk coming first, Mrs. P. Cimo-\nlal, second and Mrs. Nord third.\nConsolation went to Mrs. Nils Pearson.\nThe guest of honor received\nmany lovely and useful gifts.\n\"Here we go 'round the mulberry\ntree\" is correct\u2014mulberries do not\ngrow on bushes.\nof oVer $500 was donated by Fernie\nand West Fernie people and businesses. Additional money was raised through sports and social events.\nA card party and dance for Fernie and West Fernie people officially opened the hall last week.\nFirst Aid Classes\nStart in Kimberley    \u2022\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct. 27 \u2014 The\nannual First Aid classes held under\nthe direction of Kimberley Centre\nof St. John Ambulance Association\ncommenced in the various centres\nearly this month.\n- Classes are held at McDougall\nHall, K.P. Hall and Lower Blarch-\nmont School, Kimberley; Oughtred\nHall, Chapman Camp; Bird's Hall,\nMarysville and Flrehall and Masonic Hall, Cranbrook.\nQualified St. John Ambulance Association instructors are In charge.\nThe classes are open to anyone interested in taking first 'aid, not just\nto Cominco employees, and also to\nthose who,wish to continue working\nfor advanced awards.\nTests will be held following the\nclasses and awards will be obtained by those qualifying. Attendance\nof at least six of the eight classes\nis necessary.\nMiss A. Curtis Hedds\nWindermere Teachers\nINVERMERE, B. C, OctW*^ ]\nWlnderemere District Teachers' Lo-1\ncal4 of B. C. Teachers' Federation j\u00ab\nis headed again by Miss Alice Cur-i,\ntls\u201e Principal of the Athalmer-In-1\nvermere School, Secretary Is MlSs-j\nBeverley Douglas and Treasurer^\nMiss Gladys Thomason.\nThe organization includes teachers t\nin eight District Schools from Canal\nFlat on the South to Galena on the \u00a7\nNorth.\n-fJ PROTECTION\nBell by Classifies\u2014 Bo Satisfied I\nSUPPLY\n.fiJfPi HALIBUT\nLIVER.OIL CaMiAi.\nPATTERN-9231 sizes 34-sT'\nmahim*7ni\u00bb0n*\nALL-PURPOSE FROCK\nYour Fall button-trimmed casual!\nLook at that collar, the softened\nyokes, the pockets, and know that\nthis is the most flattering, neatest,\nmost slenderizing dress!\nPattern 0231 comes in sizes 34, 36,\n38, 40, 2, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size 36 takes\n.4% yards of 39-inch material.\nThis easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit Complete, lllustrate'd Sew\nChart shows* you every step.\nSend TWENTY \u2022 FIVE CENT8\n(25c) in coins (stamps cannot be\naccepted) for thi* pattern. Print-\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS.\nSTYLE NUMBER.\nSend your order to MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNews, Pattern Dept., 266 Baker St.\nNelson, B.C.\nSend your order to MARIAN;\nMARTIN, care of 'I'elson Dafly.\nNews, Pattern Dept, address.\nJust out -our Marian Martin\nFall and Mater Pattern Book!;\nSmart, hev clothes to sew at home.\nGift ideaj b. the score. Send twenty-\nfive cents \u2022\" coins for this book\u2014a\nFree Pattern ls printed In the book\n\u2014a new wssltil to wear wlth'slcirts\nanl cresset!\nVeiwui v v UtaJotft.\nTHESE FOR FRIENDBI\nWelcome gift for' homekeepers!\nEasy spare-time crochet in the delicate spider-web design. Large doily\n20 inches in No. 30 cotton.\nUse spider web doilies in any\nroom. Easy crochet In fine or heavy\ncotton. Pattern 737; directions.\nLaura Wheeler's improved pattern\nmakes needlework so simple with\nits charts, photos and concise directions.\nSen<< TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. In\ncoins .(stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Daily\nNews, Needlecraft Dept, 266 Baker\nSt, Nelson, B.C. Print plainly PAT\nTERN NUMBER, your NAME and\nADDRESS.\nGood newsl Send twenty-five\ncents more in coins, tor our Laura\nWheeler Nr dlecraft Book, 104 illustrations of your favorite needle\nhobbies Begmner.easy designs and\nideas worthy of an expert's attention. Free needlework pattern ls\nprinted in the bookl\nPILES\nYou can't expect relief from piles\nunless you remove the baslo cause\nwhich lies deep Inside the body.\nPYLTONE TREATMENT; a liquid\ntaken orally, Is compounded of\nIngredients selected especially for\ntheir ability to heal and remove\nthis deep-seated, cause. Hundreds of\nsatisfied PYLTONE'users are your\nassurance of .results with the first\nbottle or the' price refunded Immediately. PYLTONE, $1.76'at.all\ndruggists.\nThe sentiment of your gift of gifts finds perfect\nexpression in a Bridal Wreath \u2014 for here is\ncomplete perfection in diamonds of glorious\nbeauty..'. guaranteed for color, cut, brilliance\n' and flawless quality! Truly, you can't buy a\nbetter diamond . .. and your Bridal Wreath\nI'eweller also gives you free insurance, bride's\nibok and 4-Point Guarantee.\nDIAMOND   JUBILATION J^-\n* WtTH FBATUk&LOCK\nA Ihy, nmented pt* twtngl wf Hi\nM tola riMgt I* perfect bamtty.\nK\nCollinson's Jewellery Store\nNELSON, B.C.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949\n[Tast^':Repit>^.\nTOMORROW'S DINNER\nSpinach Soup\nBeef Pie with Potato Top\nButtered Limas >\nFall Combination Salad\nSpecial French Dressing '\n-    Chilled Honied Apple Sauce  '\nCoffee or Tea        Milk (Children)\n' Include enriched or whole grain\n:bfead or rolls with butter or mar-\nVgorlne.\n(All Measurements Level; Recipes\nServe Four)\n.'BEEF PIE WITH POTATO TOP\nCut 1 lb. boneless stewing beef\nInto l-in. cubes, Dredge with 3 tbsp.\n-\u2022flour and lVt tsp. salt. Melt 3 tbsp.\nJ'dripplngs or other fat In a 2-qt. Kettle. Add Vt c. thin-sliced onion and\n\"the meat, and brown all over. Then\nadd 4 c.  boiling water or liquid\ndrained  from  cooking vegetables,\nand simmer about l',_ hrs., pr until\nI the meat ls almost tender. Add 1 c.\nsmall-diced raw carrot's, 2 to 3'c.\n\u25a0celery cut in Vt in. lengths, and 2 c.\njmall-diced potatoes. Cook until the\n'-vegetables are done, about 20 min.\nlonger. Then add- -1 o. ,canned or\ncooked   green   peas.   The   liquid\nshould be largely evaporated. If\nat this point the texture does not\nseem to be thick enough for a meat\npie, add 1 tbsp. flour stirred -smooth\n\u25a0|n 1 tbsp. cold water, and boil a\nminute.   Transfer to a 2-qt.-slzed\n: casserole or baking dish. Cover with\nBy IDA BAILEY ALLEN\nmashed potato (no lumps). Fluff it\non with a spoon. Brush with 1 tbsp.\nmilk. Place in a hot oven, 400-425\nF. about 16 min., or until the potatoes e\u00ab a pretty golden brown.\nFALL COMBINATION SALAD\nCrisp and shred enough lettuce to\nmake 3 c. Add Vz c. fine-diced celery, 1-3 c. fine-chopped mild onion\nor scallions, 1 c. chopped tender\nraw carrots, 1 large sweet green\npepper, cored, seeded and chopped\nfine, and 1 c. cubed firm ripe tomato.\nSprinkle over 1 tsp. salt and mix\nwith a for1).. Then add a scant V. c.\nspecial French dressing. Toss uhtii\nthe vegetables' glisten. Serve at\nonce.\nSPECIAL FRENCH DRESSING\nBeat 1 egg white stiff and fold in\n2 tbsp. sugar. Combine % tsp. dry\nmustard, 'A tsp. salt, Vt tsp. paprika, Vi 0, vinegar, 2 tbsp. chill\nsauce and mix well. Add this vinegar mixture alternately to 'the\nbeaten egg white, with 1 c. salad oil,\nbeating after each addition. Las-\nchop enough raw onion to make 1\ntap.; peel and slice Vi section garlic;\nadd . whole all-spice, and tie in a\nbit of cheesecloth. Let stand in the\ndressing several hours to season,\nthen remove. Thin the dressing as\nneeded with water to the desired\nconsistency. Makes nearly 1 pt. and\nwill keep several days in a covered\njar under refrigeration. Stir before\nusing.        \u25a0\nBeauty Hints\nBy {DA JEAN KM*\nI   -'   \u25a0 i\nExercise Useless Without Diet;\nDiet Useless Without Exercise\nExercise can help you to look\n-.Slimmer and feel  years younger.\n: It's a combination, figure-fixer and\n\u25a0tonic, But what you Want to know\nIs\u2014will it slim the hips?\nWhile I'm answering that-question, I'll toss in the answers to the\nOther most frequpni, inquiries con-.\ncerning exercise ...     .       ;.\nWill it take inches off tho hips\nwithout a diet? Yes, but not as\njnuch as with a dni' Tin i ist n? ii\nls this\u2014exercise thai brings thi big\nhip muscles vigorously into action\nrestores iono, and well-toned urns\ncles are more compact: and measure\nslimmer..However, If your Iwelght\nls more than 10 pounds above nor\nrnal, then you need to clip calories\nSO the stored fat can be called into action. .\nCan a large bust li. reduced w'lh\nexercise?  The  nnswoi   is nu.  The\nFretty\nFeVerish Baby\nGets Needed Rest\nThere In no need to upend worried dnyn\nand sleepless nights when baby is fretty,\n: restless or feverish due to teething, constipation, stomach upsets or some similar\nminor til. Baby'ft Own Tablets almost always sivo prompt relief so that the iltUe\nono soon becomes restful and contented.\n' Baby's Own Tablets havo been the standby with careful mothers for over 50 yean.\nInexpensive, aweet-tastlni:-promptly effective and always reliable\/Easily crushed\nto a powder, if desired. No \"sleepy\" stuff\n-.-no dulling effect. Got a pncltngo of Baby'a\nOwn Tnbleto today at your druggist and\ni nave them on hand to help you, as well as\nyour baby, set needed rest. Only zj t.\nbust is not composed of muscle. If\nthe \"size of the bust ls influenced' by\nfatty deposit, then bringing the\nweight down will reduce the bust,\nThe role of exercise is to tone.the\nsupporting muscles, When this\nmeasurement is heavy, a bra should,\nbe worn while exercising . . . having the support from underneath,\nno binding above.\nStart easily with about, 5,minutes\n.1 day for the first week and grad\nnnl ly increase in time and, vigor. If\nyou ilu not h.ivo a strong bin It\navoid all'twisting movements. Never exercisr in a riiof't or get in one\nfollowing exercise. \"The room may\nbe Warm; but \"have some fresh air,\nBeginners*;would do Well to lie\ndown for.10 on 15 minutes following exercise, wa.'mly covered. Re\nlax'...\nFollow tin rules, take it slow and\neasy.'and a'bit- of -daily exercise,can\nhelp you to feel like .a million dollars, tax free. \"\nQold Coast Nears\nSelf Government\nLONDON, Oct. 26 (CP) -^The\n4,000,000 inhabitants of Britain's*\nrich gold coast colony advanced a\nstep near self-governmented today.\nA report by an all-native committee, tabled In both - Houses ot\nParliament, recommended virtual\nhome rule for the strategic, cocoa\nproducing colony on the West coast\nof Africa. The 3_-man committee\nurged creation of an indirectly\nelected two-chamber legislature and\nan executive council Including eight\nAfrican ministers.    -\nMARKET\nMEATS       GROCERIES\nPHONE 1177     -     -     Free Delivery\nQuality Meats at Low Prices!\n\u2022 Prime Rib' Roast EW_ 60*\n\u2022 Blade Pot Roast ^ _.    40*\n\u2022 Pork Roast shoulder, it,       57*\nI 4 lb...averagef\n* Young Fowl\n* VOal   KOaSt Shoulder, Ib. \u201e\u201e\u201e\n* Veal Stewitibkis. \u00ab=. ___\n* Lamb Liver \u00a3nd!\" !**^\nI * Beef Short Ribsu...\t\n39'\n42*\n25*\n35*\n30*\nFRESH   FISH\nit: HALIBUT STEAKS u, 40*\nif SOLE FILLETSS\"\"*:: 45*\ni EASTERN KIPPERS ib 37*\nOysters, Crabs, Smelts, Shrimp\nCrab Meat and Mushroom\nFor Service and Satisfaction Phone 1177-1178\nCominco, C.P.R.\nOfficials Visit\nSullivan Mine\nKtMPEBLEJY, B.C., Oct. 26-CPP\nand Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company officials today vlplted\nthe Sullivan-mine and concentrator,\nparticular attention being given to\nthe new \"sink arid float\" Installations; Luncheon was served at the\nChapman Camp cookhouse, the\nparty leaving later for Trail enroute\nto Vancouver.\nThe tour was directed by H. H.\nDiamond of Trail, General Manager of Cominco, and included CPE\nPresident W. A. Mathers, blrector\nSellers, Public Relations Chief\nCampbell and G. Bailey, Vice-President in Charge of Western Lines.\nConsolidated' officials were, W. *.\nSwanson, Chief Geologist, E. M.\nJewltt, Manager of Mines, C. O.\nStiles, Chief Engineer, J,, rj. Giegerich, Mine Superintendent and S.\nE. Banks, Mill Superintendent.\nRecommission\nCranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Oct. 27 \u2014\nThe Department of Transport Civil\nAviation branch radio range station\nXC at Cranbrook, former link iri\nthe cross-Canada flying route, has\nbeen recommlssloned for this purpose. It ha; been operating- continuously since the station here closed\nlate last Spring, but its use in landing procedures was not authorized\nAt that time construction of a similar radio range station Northwest\nof Radium Hot Springs was planned to move the main course\nNorthward.\nWith the recommissioning last\n\u25a0eek the range was re-calibrated\nand the North leg of its four directional sound beams shifted slightly\nto link with the Calgary station;\nNorman Hadley of the Department\nTechnical Staff was iri charge. 'At\nthe same time the radio fan marker\nat the-North end of Moyie Lake\nwas checked as a factor in letdown\nprocedure for instrument, landings\nof aircraft at the:,Cranbrook and\nKimberley airports.\nCranbrook is ihe linking range\nstation brtwci'ti Cresccni V.illry\nind i owlc> on ihi Southern route\nvi.i Lethbridge. During Hid Sum\nmer* Trans-Canada Airlines' : two\nSoutherly .flights dally \u25a0 have gone\nacross the Kimberley range eight\nmiles North. With the decommissioning Cranbrook station'\u25a0will be\nthe guide for this, and for the two\nVancouVer-Calgary \u25a0 flights daily,\nCanadian Pacifief 'Airlines';;\" two\nflights daily will also be guided by\nthe North: leg, between {Cranbrook\nant! Calgary.\n: A. B. Wilkinson, C.P.A. Manager.\nAgent for. Cranbrook ,wili be in\ncharge of the airport remote con\ntrol operation of XC which is past\nthe North end of the airport, and\nthe Kimberley Department of\nTransport range crew with J. A.\nDolg, officer in charge, will look\nafter the station maintenance. Its\noperations are automatic and con\ntinuous.      \u2022N\nNAKUSP DRAMA\nCLUB PLANS PLAY\nNAKUSP, B. C, Oct. 27 - The\nmeeting, of the Nakusp Drama Club\nheld at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nHugh Bolstad,. decided to put on a\nplay for the 40th anniversary party\nof tne Women's Institute.\nArrangements were also made\nfor three one-act plays before Dec.\n25.\ntOT\u00a9 ProMeiopis \u2022\n-.,  ?y JANE ATKINSON\nWay to Regain Self-Respect and\n'Wife's Trust Up to Man Himself\nWindermere lo\nVole Nov. 21 on\nSchooteylaw\nA man who writes' me that his\nfirst wife died, leaving him with a\nlittle girl now eight years old, complains that he is In-a \"most ijiffl-\ncult .situation.\"\n\"I remarried,\" he says, ''and due\nio financial problem; my wife and\nI had many fights. Finally, I walked out arid refused to give her any\nsupport. I became acquainted with\nanother woman who flattered me a\ngreat deal, and I decided to divorce\nmy- wife,' who is honest, trustworthy and has very fine principles.. .;\n'Now I realize my mistake, and\nhow mean I was. This other woman\nlacks character, otherwise she\nwouldn't go out with a married\nman. She doesn't have the moral\nStandards my wife has, and I believe she wouldn't be able to teach\nmy, daughter to grow up to be a.\nwoman of high ideals, I would like\nto break up this friendship, but\nam in dreadful f^ar pf the consequences, as I did prorjiise to marry\nher. .\n\"Wh?t shall I do?\"\nJust why this character should\nconsider that it shows up a woman\nin a bad light to go out with a married man when it never seems to\noccur to. him that, as the, married\nman, in the case, he was the worse\nof the two in no doubt having made\nthe advances that started the whole\nthing, Is reasoning that I cannot\nfollow.\nBIG JOBS\nThe only sound. answer to this\nman's question \"What 'shall I |lo?\"\nis to say that he needs to give his\nattitudes, standards, moral principles and whole philosophy ot life\na thorough overhauling. That ls a\nbig job arid will take, a long time.\nIf he Is really sincere in wonting\nto make himself oyer, he had better ask bis wife earnestly and humbly if she would be willing to take\nhim back, let him have another\nchance to, cooperate with her in\nmaking a happy home and be patient and understanding enough to\nhelp him in his effort to grow into\na better person.   '   .\nAs for iiis \"dreadful fear\" of the\nconsequences of telling the other\nwoman that he wants to be rid of\nher, for heaven's sake, let him pull\nhimself together and be straight?\nforward and definite for once, Let\nhim tell her plainly what his deciy\nsion is, and then have the gumption tq stick yrith it, no matter how\nshe carries on. If he hasn't the\nbackbone.to take,this first obvious\nstep in breaking'off with the old\nlife qs a prel'mlnory to starting1 a\nnew one, then there's no use in Tils\ntrying to take the rest of my advice, for he'll never make- the\nBrade. \u25a0\nGarfield Hopes To Do \"Peer Gynt\"\nJoan Crawford Wants a Musical\nBy BOB T.HPiyiAS\nHOLLYWOOD, Oct. 27 (AP) \u2014\nJohn Garfield, back at work after a\nserious injury, is making plans for\nan Americanized \"Peer Gynt\" on\nthe stage.\n\"Paul Green is writing a new version of the Ibsen play,\" he reports.\n\"I rriay.do it on the stage next year.\nIf it works ot, I'd like to make a\npicture .of it.\"\nGarfield returned to \"The Big\nFall\" this week after a three-week\nabsence. He. was sin\u2022-. hospital after\nstraining i mu dp on his heart in a\ntennis sgame;' His* doctor: said the\nactor may resimii noinki] activities,\nbut nu Innnis foi a'youi. -\n'-\"'After 10 days in the hospital, Garfield grew n lpatient II mil mi mj\nclothes,\" he toW Ilie muse. \"I'm\ngelling out of here.\"\n\"Now, Mi   Garfield,;' w.i'i the an\nswer, \"you may get away with that\nstuff in the movios.-biitvit's- riot very-\nconvincing in a hospital.\"\nSOME NOTES\nJoan Crawford has stopped work\non her schoolmorm yarn until she\nfinishes \"The Victim'-'. She still\nhopes to make it. Her plans for a\nmusical are up in the air, but she\nwould like to try a comedy, as a\nchange from her steady dramatic\ndiet. She'd also like to do another\nco-starrer with Clerk Gable, as what\nactress wouldn't?\nDale Evans is getting into hubby\nRoy Rogers' act. She'll have Dale\nEvanv cowgirl outfits for kids on\nthe market for the holiday trade.\nSHORT TAKE8\nMrs. Alan Young has made reservations at tllenilale Sanitarium for\n\u20225iin.il of hci lust child, around\nNov. .5. He's \"tlie Vancouver film-\nradio comic\n.Robert, Cummlngs does one fart\nscene in 'iThe Petty Girl'' in which\nhe plays 14 characters, from Frankenstein's Monster to Scarlett\nO'Hara. He plays a quick-change\nartist, needless to say; !\nINVERMERE, B, C OcC 27-De-\ntalla of the money by-law which\nratepapers of No. 4 Windermere\nSchool District will vote on Monday, Nov. 21, were revealed by\nSchool Board Chairman V. S.\nKimpton at the annual ratepayers\nmeetings., .     '.'.\"\nThe building of tour district\nschools is included in the bylaw,\nEdgewater (now.under construction\nthrough the emergency plan) with a\none room addition to the present\none room'school, a new one-room\nschool at Brisco, a new two-room\nhigh school with activity room'for\nAthalmer-Invermere apd a new one\nroom school for Windermere.\nCanal Flat, had \u00bb new two room\nschool yast year. All attendance\nareas in the district have had their\nneeds considered Mr. Kimpton\npointed, out. Wilm^r, Windermere\narid Edgewater High School students will benefit from the proposed\nnew high school for Athalmer-Invermere.      ;\nThe activity rpom for the high\nschool is necessary for use as a\nschool auditoriuiri, for, music,\ngamin, \u2022physical education and the\nserving of hot lunches. It can be\nused by all grade; for school assembly when, necessary.\nMODERN DESIGN\nAll proposed schools are of mod'\nern design and construction occor-\ning to plans approved by the local\nSchool Board, the District School\nInspector and the Department of\nEducation.\nThe entire building program will\nnot be attempted Immediately\neven though the ratepayers approve\nthe money by-law., Brisco School,\nwhere the need is immediate would\nbe the first built-with the others\nto follow as necessity 'and conditions advocate,\nThe .Doetor.\nBy HERMAN N. BUNDESSN. M,\nOperate for Gallstones Early and\nAvoid Complications Years Later\nI am of ten. asked if an operation\nfor gallstones may not be postponed or even avoided altogether.'Reluctant to undergo surgery, many\nsufferers from this ailment hope\nthat another means can be found to\ndeal with It. I am afraid, that this\nis wishful thinking. Once .stories\ndevelop in the gallbladder, operation seems to.be the drily way'of\nrelieving the symptoms, although\nsmall stones may pass out on occasions. Other forms of treatment do\nnot, apparently, decrease the number of attacks nor lessen their severity. ' ' *\" .\nDIAGNOSIS NOT DIFFICULT\nA diagnosis of continued, inflammation of the gallbladder with gallstones is, as a rule, not difficult, In\nthese patients there are attacks of\npain in the right, upper part of the\nabdomen. The pain passes into the\nback and upward into the* right\nshoulder. The pains are often so\nsevere that a narcotic drug must\nbe given to relieve them. A? a rule,\nthey are accompanied by sickness\nat the stomach qnd vomiting. There\nis often tenderness along the right\nlower rib margin. These patients\nhave a history of excessive gas for-\nKimberley 'Pioneer Lodge' Expected\nHospital W. A. Plans\nSocial a. Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C\u201e Oct. 27 \u2014 The\nOctober meeting of the Women's\nAuxiliary to the Arrow Lakes Hospital was held at the home of Mrs.\nHarry Maxwell. Visitors'were Mrs.\nJohnson and Mrs. Hugh Bolstad.\nThe Booster prize was donated by\nMt?. M. Baird and won by Mrs. G-\nBalrd. , ' . .\n. Mrs. H. Couling arid Mrs. T. Maxwell were appointed on the visiting\ncommittee for next month.\nArrangements were made to hold\na social evening at the home of\nMrs. H.. Maxwell.\nLunch 'was served by Mrs. Max\nwell and Mrs. V. Smith.\nCreston Man Dies\nIn Penticton\nCRESTON, B. C, Oct.* 27\u2014Word\nwas received of the death of John\nWilliam Flett, 64, in Pentictori.\nSept. 27.\nIn 1942 Mr, Flett moved here and\ndid custom earth moving work..\nLast May he left for Vancouver to\nreceive medical , treatment and\nwhile returning to Creston passed\naway in Penticion. -\">-.'\nHe is survived by his wife and\none daughter in Creston, a daughter Ethel and another daughter,\nMrs. Sylvia Hall of Vancouver. A\nson Wesley was killed in Italy in\n1944, also three brothers and two\nsisters. Funeral services were, held\nin Penticton with interment in Penticton Cemetery.\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct. 28-Kim-\nberley's \"Pioneer Lodge\" a community project to house the city's\npensioners, will be completed by\nOctober 31, the City Council was\ninformed at.-. its regular session.\nPlans are under way for the holding of a tea here early in November so that the public may visit the\nbuilding, prior to its occupancy.\nFollowing a Community Cb,est\nmeeting last week It was decided\nthat the Home Board should consist\nof one member from each of the\nfollowing: ,'\u25a0'\nSoroptomists, Rotary Club, Lions,\nCommunity Chest, Board' of Trade,\nand Council.\nJ. Jarvis reported that owing to\nshortage of certain materials he had\nbeen unable to complete alterations\nordered on the cleaning plant. He\nwas granted a few days extension\nand ori engineer will inspect and\npass on work done to date.\nWorks Department, water and\nsewer reports: all listed extensive\npipe 'laying work done in various\nparts of city and'satisfactory progress being made.\nThe Light Dept. report showed\ncontinued extension of services in\nMarysville. Wire stringing was continuing on 8tH Avenue Lois Creek\nSubdivision and meters being-' installed in this area.\nONE FIRE\nOne chimney fire:was reported,\nno damage being listed, the Parks\nBoard minutes showed: net \u25a0 take at\nArena .would  be   shared  by  the\nBoard 70 per cent, Dynamiters 30\nper cent. -\nOne license application for professional hosiery repairs was granted. The clerk was instructed to prepare a bylaw enforcing yearly\ncleaning of chimneys.\nThe September police report listed 36 prosecutions, 34 convictions,\nfines totalled $617.00,\nPOUR CONCRETE \u201e    -:.\nConcrete will be poured,a? soon\nas \"possible for the new sub-station\nbases. The clerk. reported' ' all\nMeadowbrook residents In area applying for electricity had paid\ndeposit. If the city is unable to\ninstall this service this year, these\npeople will receive six per-cent\ninterest ori their deposits until purchase of materials..\nThe city will take action to have\nHedlund House declared unfit for\nhabitation, following a request from\nthe sanitary officers.\nA report from the.Government\nCommission ori school taxes is expected shortly.\nThe Legion was granted permission to hold their usual parade\nand Armistice service in theatre.\nA suggestion from the Provincial\nGovernment that'the city: pay bo\nmuch per person per year for drug\nservices will be discussed further-\nBylaw Number 127 Street? and\nTraffic Bylaw received its first and\nsecond reading.\nThe 1948 revenue of Alberta crude\noil producers amounted to $35,127,-\n761.\nOld \"New Look\"\nRetains Popularity\nPARIS; Oct; 26 (AP)\u2014A lingering\naffection for the now-old \"New\nLook*' silhouette was surprisingly\nevident today iii the mid-season collection, presented by Molyneux..\nAlthough suits and woollen day\ndresses were slim and trim, dressier\nafternoon and cocktail frocks kept\nthe small waist, tight, simple bodice\nand widely-flaring or fully-gathered\nskirts which made news as the. New\nLook.\nDevaluation and revaluation of\nEuropean- currencies haven't affected prices a bit at Molyneux, a\nspokesman'said.'\n\"Our clientele is too international, and it would be just too complicated,\" he explained.\nThe price range for some 40 models in the. new Fall-Winter collection is roughly $200.to $300.\nMolyneux has a weakness for\nwhat might be called the Indian-\nclub, or \u2014 more flatteringly \u2014 the\ndouble-diamond silhouette, achieved\nby a pyramid shoulder line, sharply\nnipped-in waist, and hips exaggerated by drapery, the skirt narrowing\nto a sheath at the 'bottom.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\n\"Spook Suit\" toDiscourage Visitors\nGet Relief From your\nTIRED FEELINGS\nNERVOUS SPELLS\nLiven Up\u2014Feal Younger\nTliotinnnda htivo been overjoyed nt tho rc-\nmiltn 9 HtUe peppinir ap with Dr. Williams\nFink Fills accomplish. Contains general\ntohlfca often needed by men and women\nwho feel old and whose bodies are lacking\nin certain essentials vital to enemy ana\nvigor. Start on your way to feeling peppier\n\u2022nd livelier with Dr. Williams Fink Villa\nthis very day. At your druggist.\nNot a rtaliowi'en mask, but a oeituliie'Oriental \"spook suit\" Is\n._t_'._l-,ui_..r ........I+I-,,..   ..,M*h   fHlnMnnnH   vldtnt.fi  tn   \"I pslvn\".   tho\nthis grinning apparition wnicn Trigmenea viinors: ^o -i-esiyn . \u00abib.\nestate of Alexander Leslie near Kln<jBVl|le, Oht. With the death of\nhis widow,\"an auction of the estate's fabulous contents li belnp held.\nCurious spectators at the estate's' two' mansions, which few persons\nhad ever visited, saw the treasures collected by Mr. an.tr Mrs. Alexander, Leslie in four years of globe-trotting. FOr two jeneratloni the\nLeslies had continued to build additions to their ma'niloni and to\nadd to the curios from all over the world. They are said to have set\nbooby traps for Intruders, arid carried revolvers to discourage visit-\n\u201ero \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nMa J. Gen, Anthony C. MoAuliffe\n(above),'who said \"Nuts\" to the\nGermans at Bastogne, has been\nnamed Chief of the Army Chemical'Corns by President Truman.\nFIELD DIRECTOR\nFOR JUNIOR\nRED CROSS HERE\nMiss Beverly Smlthsori of Vancouver; Field Director for the Junior Red Cross, Is visiting Nelson\nSchool District schools this week.\nHer work is to ericourage the organization qf Junior Red Cross,\nbranches In schools where they do\nnot exist, and to stimulate interest\nin existing branches.\nPrior to coming to this district,\nMiss Smithson visited the Big: Bend\nand East Kootenay. - She will go\nfrom here to Trail, into the Arrow\nLakes, and Okanagan areas, and to\nPrinceton before returning to Van-\ncottyer.\nAgreement Reached\nBetween Corsair\nOwners and Union\nVICTORIA, B. C, Oct. 27 (CP)-\nAn agreement has been reached between Pacific Cruise Lines, owners\nof the luxury cruise ship Corsair,\nand the Canadian District of the\nSeafarers' International Union\n(A.F.L.) it was reported today by\nthe Victoria S.LU..representatives,\nDetails of the agreement which\nbring to an end an Involved dispute between Seattle and Vancouver Mariners! Unions arid the owrir\ners, will not be available until the\nCanadian S.I.U. officials and coni;\npany officials have signed the\nagreement...\nThe Corsair Which has been In\ndrydock ' at Esquimau undergoing\n\u25a0cleaning and painting by Yarrpws,\nLtd., is leaving, the .drydocl^ today,\nmotion and Indigestion, and. often .\nfind that eating  fatty foods and\nleafy vegetables cause digestive upsets.\nAn X-ray of the gallbladder will\noften show the presence of the\nstories. If the X-ray does not show,\nthe presence of the stones, operation still may. be indicated if medical treatment does not relieve the\nsymptoms. ' '\nX-RAY EXAMINATION\nMany patients inay, have gallstones without symptoms of any\ndegree of severity. If such stones\nshould be1 discovered by X-ray examination, it would seem advisable\nthat the gallbladder be removed because complication may occur even\nthough the stones are not producing\nsymptoms.\nIf operation is not performed in\nthe case of gallstones, the 'patlept\nmay reach 60 or W-years of age\nand then find himself In serious\ntrouble with severe symptoms such\nas jaundice, due to the collection of\nbile coloring iri the blood. Such patients unquestionably would be\nbetter off if they had had the gallbladder removed at an earlier age.\nThe best time for the removal of\nthe gallbladder when stories are\npresent is when the diagnosis ll\nfirst made and before complication! -\nhave occurred,\nExcellent\nQuality\nProduct of\nCO-OPERATIVE\nWINE GROWERS ASSOCIATION\nOF SOUTH AFRICA\nnn* advertisement Ik not published or.\nIlsplayed by tho Liquor Control Board or.\nby the Government ot British Columhlo.-'\nCat extra travel mH\u00abi,\nto spend ta route.\nGREYHOUND\ndays of ploMiire, extra felkrt\nforte art traillHonol with . , \u00bb.\nFor FREE colourful travel\nfolders, fares and schedule\nInformation, see your local\nAgent or write: Travel Bureau\nGreyhound Bus Depot, Nelson.\nONLY\n\u25a012\n80\npno Way\nTO\"\nCALGARY\nFROM\nNELSON\n8AVE 10%\nBuy Return Tickets\nj$\/g$|\nServe film a mmlu\n'\u2022\/\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 bs-\nIndoors or out, your man will especially like a steaming cup of fragrant\nCanterbury\u2014the tea that let's him\nrelax. Bfnjoy hearty Canterbury with\nhim\u2014it's the traditional blend moat\nCanadians prefer.\n' ai(lfraxfrw4>&\n^SAFEWAY\n \/23*Y\nQuality\"\nSilver\nEvening\nSANDALS\nwith platform soles ^and HI\n.ubah heels; Sizes AV2 to\n3'\/2. AAto*..\n$8.95 - $10.50\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS IN FQOTFASHION\nEstablished 1904\nair Executive\nauded by Board\nExecutive members of the Nelson\nstrict Industrial Exhibition and\n11 Fair Association were honored\nests at luncheon by the Nelson\nard of Trade Thursday.\nPhelr efforts as leaders in the\n:cessful move to. revive the Fall\nr-were lauded. The fair Was'a\n:cess \"because a great many in-\n'iduals put a groat deal of effort\nJind it,\" declared Robert Foxall,\nse-Chairman- of the Board's Agrl-\nIture Committee.\nChe guests were Josepji Kary,\nesident; Donald Mollisbn, Vlce-\nesldentj and Cary Mutchelor,\neasurer. S. J.,Livingstone, Secre-\n\u25a0y, out-'Of 'town on business, was\nable to attend.\n.'bigger and better exhibition and\nr was ahead for next year if- the\nne .cooperation that made the. 19*49\nrtval; a success was forthcoming,\nd Mt. Kary. The' Asociatlori had'\nne cash and assets on hand, and\n'anizatlon\"as foundation on which\nbuild for the 1950 fair, his iinan-\n1: accounting showed,\nitr. Kary creditted the aid of varus Nelson District organizations,\nlyor and City Council, service\nlbs, various Individuals, F. H. W.\nenter and the Agriculture section\nthe Board of Trade with impor-\nit roles in the fair's success.\n>HONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nKimberley P.T.A.\nTo Be Child\nWelfare Meet Host\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Oct. 27 - On\nSaturday,. Oct. 29, the Kimberley\nParent-Teacher Association will be\nhost to all interested in child welfare, the occasion being the first\nParent-Teacher Institute ever held\nin the East Kootenay.\nMornlnR discussion groups will\nhear MI'S. -D. W. McLeod, President\nOf the B, C. Association speak of\n\"Functions of the P.T.A.\" while\nMiss Marjorie Smith of.the U.B.C.\nDepartment of Extension will take\nas her topic \"Group Discussion\nTechniques.\"\nLuncheon speaker will be F. P.\nLevlrs, Inspector of. Schools for\nCranbrook, Fernie and Creston. His\ntopic will be \"Recent Trends in\nEducation.\"\nFrom 2:00 to 3:30 p.m. there will\nbe a panel discussion on the Institute theme, \"The P.T.A. and the\nCommunity,\" with L. H. Garstln,\nVice-Principal of the High School\nas Chairman. Panel members will\nbe Mrs. McLeod, Miss Smith, Mrs.\nH. W. Poole. Mrs. R. Aikins and C.\nRendle, principal ot Cranbrook\nHigh School.\nInvitations hove been extended to\ninterested people from Golden to\nKimberley \u00bband from Fernie to\nCreston and a good attendance Is\nexpected.\n11HE\nCORK\nJOtlVTfMfi\n'_\u2014*\u00bb\u2022 TOR --\u00ab*\/J\nWtWEMl\nvlftlW\njAtuvwa\n*'   POPS\nASK  TOUR  GROCER\nJohn Downey Dies\nAt Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Oct. 27 -\nResident of Cranbrook district 26\nyears John Downey' died in the\nhospial here at 82 years. He was a\nsawmill worker at Lumberton from\n1923' until the operation closed\ndown, and has lived here for the\npast- three years.   ';\nJfe was born and grew up at\nSheenboro, Que. In 1900 he took his\nfamily to Saskatchewan and farmed at Lonlgan and Humboldt until\n1923 when they continued to this\ndistrict.\nHis wife and 64 descendants survive him, five daughters, Kathleen Desharnals and Gladys Griffiths, Cranbrook, Jane Miner, Spokane, Florence Murray, Wenatchee,\nand Margaret Knaus, Sinnetts, Sask.\nand three sons, Pat ot Sudbury,\nOnt., and Vincent and Joe in Cranbrook, 45 grandchildren and one\ngreat-grandchild. Funeral services\nwill be Friday at St. Mary's Church.\nA Rosary service took place Thursday evening at McPherson Funeral\nHome. 1\nURGES DRIVE FOR MEMBERS\nA drive for Increased membership\nIn the Nelson Board of Trade was\nurged at the Thursday luncheon\nmeeting by President T. D. Rosllng.\nHe hoped to see the enrolment considerably Increased by the time of\nthe 1950 annual meeting.\nINCLUDE THEM IN YOUR\nOVERSEAS GIFT PARCEL.\n..-\u25a0if\n\u2022 CHOCOLATE CAKE MIX\n\u2022 WHITE CAKE MIX\nWE imUGHTFUL CHOICE FOR \"RATIONED\" FRIENDS\nUTCHERTERIA\nSpecial Boiling Fowl: Freshly dressed, JJ (?<\n4 Ib. average, lb. ......\u201e...::.:....   3 J\nShoulders of Young Lamb: Rolled oh request, lean,\nLb       \u2014 45<S\nShoulders of Young Mutton: Loan, Ib. ...\u2014-........ 28<\nPYTHIAN SISTERS'\nGRAND CHIEF\nHERE TONIGHT\nMrs. Pearl -Palmer of Rossland,\nGrand Chief of the-Fythian listers,\nJurisdiction of British . Columbia,\nwill make her annual official visit\nto the Nelson Pythian Sisters Friday\nnight\nA banquet honoring the Grand\nCMef wiU be held-by the Nelson\nlodge.\nFrom Nelson, Mrs. Palmer will\nvisit Salmo, then return to Rossland.\nW.J. Riley, Formerly of Nelson,\nReturns lo Manage Arrow Van Lines\nMayor ol Nelson;\nEngland, Sends\nBest Wishes\nThe Mayor of Nelson, England,\nFrederick RycrcJt, has extended\ncompliments ahd good wishes to the\ntownspeople of. that city to Mayor\nT. H. Waters and citizens of Nelson,\nin a letter to Mayor Waters brought\nto him from England by J, T. Brown\nof Nelson. Mr. and Mrs. Brown have'\njust returned from a visit to England.\nIn his letter, the Mayor stated\nthat the people of Nelson, England,\n\"do not forget the generosity of your\ncitizens in sending the splendid parcels of food which my predecessor,\nAlderman George Rushton, undertook the responsibility of distributing.\"\nMayor Rycroft also. tells -of-the\npleasant talk he had with Mr. Brown\nand that he learned much from him\nof the life \"in your Nelson.\"\nAUTUMN COLORS\nHIGHLIGHT\nTRAIL TEA, SALE\nTRAIL, B.C.,-Oct. 26\u2014Rich colors of Autumn highlighted a tea\nand sale sponsored by Trail Temple\nNo. 3, Pythian Sisters and attended\nby crowds of TraUltes.\nGuests were received by Mrs. H.\nMcKay, Most Excellent Chief, while\nMrs. T. Alty, Mrs. T. Riley, Mrs.\nE. Howard and Mrs. W. Bradshaw\npresided at the urns. At the fancy\nwork table was Mrs. W. Owen,\nMrs. W. Fynn and Mrs. L. E. Davies;\nknitting, Mrs. T. Ewjtig; home cooking, Mrs. E. Clayf Mrs. A. Partridge, Mrs M. Clelland, Mrs, E.\nClarke, and Mrs. D. Shannon: white\nelephant stall, Mrs. W. E. Walllng-\nIngton, and Mrs. S. Holland; tick-\nels, Mrs. D. Duffus \u2022 and Mrs. D.\nRobertson.\nMrs. D. Wilson rendered \u25a0 piano\nselections during the afternoon,\nwhile tea tables were arranged by\nMrs; D. Downie.\nServlteurs were Mrs. S.' Boss,\nMrs, G. Ioanin, Mrs. Phillis Wolfe,\nMrs. R. Butcher, Mrs. A. Toupln,\nMrs. D. Roberts and Mrs, S. Downie.\nJ. W. Riley, Manager of the'Nelson\nbranoh of the Arrow Van and Stor-\nige Ltd., previously was In the\nracking, moving and storage in Nelson.- -   \u25a0 -.-..'\". '.\u25a0'\nIn his five years experience in\nthis line, he worked' filet at Calgary\nand then at Nelson, where he remained until i one year ago. From\nNelsoh he' went to the Vancouver\nArrow office, and now ls back In\nNelson Social\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, W. P. Kapak,\nFront Street, have returned from\nSpokane. They were accompanied\nhome by Mr. Kapak's sister and\nchildren, Mrs, .7. ,M. Armstrong,\nRose and her children, David and\nDawn, formerly of Larkspur, Calif.,\nwho will be In Nelson on an indefinite visit with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs, Pi Kapak, Vernon Street.\n\u2022 'Mrs.. E.' Smith, 719 Victoria\nStreet, has returned from Crescent\nValley where she was guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. William Winstanley.\n\u2022 Mtb. C, E. Lister returned Wednesday night from Vancouver where\nshe spent a week. Mrs, Lister was\naccompanied as far as the coast by\nMrs. S. E.' Maddocks and Mrs: W. G.\nSterling, who, are Visiting their\nrelatives in coastal cities.'\n\u2022 Mrs. J. W. Longworth, Medical\nArts Apartments, has returned from\na vacation in Winnipeg, Man..\n.\u2022Mrs. W. Leahy, Upper Granite\nRoad, entertained* members of the\nGranite Road Circle of the Cathedral of Mary Immeculato at her\nhome, Wednesday afternoon, when\nthe prize winners were Mrs. Lust\nahd Mrs, William Muraro.\nMrs. D. W. McLeod, President\nof British Columbia P.T, Federation,\nwho was in the city returned Thursday, having been called by the illness of her husband in Vancouver.\n\u2022 Charles GIgot, Front Street, ls\na patient in the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital; .\n\u2022 Mrs. R. Langbecker, who came\nto town owing to the death of her\nfather, George Llpsack, returned\nWednesday to her home at Goose\nBay; Ore,\n\u2022 Mrs. J. F. Bunyan of Peterson\nls spending a few days in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Gordon Allan of Vancouver, formerly of Nelson, Is guest .Of\nher son and daughter-in-law,' Mr.\nand Mrs. Gordon Allan, 614 Cedar\nStreet.\n$500 DAMAGE IN\nNORTHSHORE\nCAR COLLISION\nAn estimated $500 damage resulted from a car collision on the North\nShore near Crescent Beach Wednesday shortly, after 1 p.m., it was reported Thursday.\nD. M, McGeer of New Westminster, identified as driver of the first\ncar, was said to have slowed,his\ncar near Crescent Beach to ask\nnearby workmen road directions\nwhen a second car, said driven by\nJohn P. Milne, residing at Castlegar,\ncrashed into the rear'of McGeer's\nautomobile.\nMr, Milne suffered a head cut\nand minor bruises, but McGeer was\nuninjured,\nTne North Shore highway was\nalso the scene of a second car accident Thursday afternoon between\n4 and 5 p.m. when a car, attempting\nto pass a second auto, went Into a\nditch on the North side of the'road\ncoming to rest on its side. The car\nwas not damaged.   .        -.-\"\u2022     -'\nLoin Roasts and Chops of young Mutton:     Aftt\nLb. __: : -.:    TTV\nSirloin, T-Bone, Round Steaks and Roosts: Good\nyoung steer, Ib. , I \u2014......\u2014.\u2014\u2014- 65\u00a3\nPot Roasts good young steer, all cuts, Ib    \u2014 40\u00abJ\nYoung Beef Liver:\nLb. .\t\n40*\nMRS. W. K. BROWN\nDIES AT CRESTON\nCRESTON, B. C\u201e Oct. 27 \u2014 A\nwell known and respected, resident\nof Creston slhce 190B, Mrs. W. K.\nBrojvn. passed quietly away at the\nhome of her sister, Mrs. R. S. Sevan last Sunday morhing, at the age\nof 86 years.\nMrs. Brown came to Creston In\n1905 on a visit staying two months,\nShe made a second visit in 1908,\nmarried W. K. Brown the same\nyear in Nelson.\nShe is survived by three sisters,\nMrs. Davis, Coeur d'Alene,' Idaho;\nMrs. Morgan, Alabama, U.S.A.; and\nMrs. R. S. Bevan, Creston Her husband predeceased her in 1937\nFuneral services were held from\nSt. Stephen's Presbyterian Church\nwith the Rev. N. G. Robertson off!\nelating.\nLean Boiling Beef: Lb.\t\nLean Stewing Mutton: Lb.\n25*\nIS*\nHot Roasted Chickens, Fresh English\nStyle Crumpets   ,\nSATURDAY ONLY\nArrange now to send that CHRISTMAS PARCEL OVERSEAS. We are smoking hams and bacon especially for\nthese parcels.\nPHONES 527-528\nFREE DELIVERY\nApartment Explosion\nInjures 14\nDALLAS, Texas, Oct. 27 (AP)-\nAn explosion Tuesday night\nwrecked a four-family apartment\nbuilding in a housing development,\ninjuring 14 persons.\n\u2022 Leroy Shannon, 28, said the explosion occurred In his apartment.\nHe said he had no idea as to what\ncaused it.\nSu-Lette\nPace-Moker Formula\nSLIPS\nat\nFashion First\nJust arrived .\nNew Fall Coats,\nDresses and Hats\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nNelson as branch manager for the\nfirm.\nThe Arrow Van and Storage will\ncarry oh the business of the Williams Transfer, purchased by the\nArrow Transfer Co,, Ltd., of Vancouver. \"\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\n'Gordon J. Williams, former manager of the Nelson office, has been\ntransferred to Vancouver as manager there.\nFreeman Furniture Co.\n- :       .. v  ..\nThe House of Furniture Values\nYour 111 Buy Mom at Freeman's\nIt's not very serious liv fact\nIt' nice.\nIt's something we have to break\n\u25a0 the ice,\nLOUNGES\nfrom   $59.50   up    f\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nt Mrs, June Young, Ward Street,\nhas returned from a week \"In\nSpokane,\n\u2022 Mrs. H. Harding, 617 Latimer\nStreet, has left to reside in Haney.\n0 Mrs. Cliff Goodkey, 670 Silica\nStreet, has returned from a holiday\nIn the Okanagan district.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Glen Grant, Medical\nArts Apartments, ls a patient in\nKootenay'Lake General Hospital,\n\u2022 Mrs. David McDonald of Salmo and her daughter Miss McDonald\nare leaving for Alberta points.\n\u2022 Frank Gouchor, R. Buerge,\nCharles Beltner, H, Perdue and R. G.\nJoy left by carfor Nakusp Thursday\nafternoon on a short visit.\n, \u2022 Commander and Mrs. R. A.\nSmith of Longbeach and F. H. W.\nChanter of Willow Point were dinner guests at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. Fred Blakeman, Front Street,\nWednesday evening. An enjoyable\nevening was spent In showing\nmovies of Mr. and Mrs. Blakeman's\ntravels.\nF. Dplrymple, Mrs.\nVan Ruyskensvelde,\nWhist Winners\nMrs. A. van Ruyskensvelde and\nF. Dalrymple were first whist winners at the Ladies Auxiliary to the\nCanadian Legion social Wednesday\nnight. Second prize winners were\nMrs. J. Dawney' and E.^. Elliott.\n- A committee consisting of Mrs.\nC. O. Anderson,, Mrs. A, D. Oliver\nand Mrs. E. S. Elliott assisted by\nMrs. L. Browett served' refreshments after which two colored films\nfrom the National Film Board, \"The\nStory of Oil,\" and \"Trappers of the\nSea\", which pictured lobster fishing, were enjoyed.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\/\nNews of the Day\nRATES: 30o line, 40c line biaok face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nOLD   NEW8PAPER8  10o A    Bingo   tonight   8   p.m.   Catholic\nBUNDLE. NELSON DAILY NEWS. Hall.\nDANCE TONIQHf.jp.'' a\nEagles Hall\nIt It's worth owning, it's worth\nIn luring. See BLACKWOOD AGCV\nBINGO \u2014 TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\nElectrical   contracting \u2014 wiring\nalterations \u2014 hot water heaters.\nMoKAY A 8TRETTON-Phone 844\nRibbons for any and all makes\nof typewriters and adding machines.\nD. W. McDerby, \"The Typewriter \u00ab\u2022\nAdding Machine Man\", 554 Stanley\nStreet, Nelson, B.C.\nIt BUTTERFIELD can't fix it,\nthrow lt away. Prompt service oh\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nWill those interested in painting\nclasses, conducted \\y Mr, Garner.\nPhone Miss Etter, 1074-X this week.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.\nGlass Blocks\u2014Something new and\ndifferent Enquire about their many\nuses, many patterns to choose from\nat T. H. Waters Co., Ltd., 101 Hall\nStreet, Nelson, B. C\nGYPROC \u2014 Fireproof Wallboard\n,\u20144'x8'. sheets \u2014 6c per Sq. Ft. at\nBURNS LUMBER A COAL CO\nATTENTION EAGLES\nSpecial meeting tonlte. Provincial\nPresident attending.\nWabasso 42\" pillow tubing. Bleached\n,  Yard 05c at\nSTERLING HOME, FURNISHERS\nAlterations and experienced dressmaking. Orders taken at TOT-N-\nTEENSHOP.\nMASQUERADE DANCE In\nPROCTER TONIGHT\nGood eats, good music. Free Ferry.\nKINAUCTION COLLECTION\nOFFICE, Capitol Theatre, open\ntoday, 1:30 to 5:15 p.m.\nFor that sweet tooth in your\nhome, .VALENTINE'S offer every\nthing,from fine brand chocolates to\nall-day suckers.\nKObTENAY ROOFERS - A better\nroof, at a lower price. All work\nguaranteed. Estimates free. Phone\n658-L-l.\nGranite Road Women's Institute\nare cancelling their Children's Hallowe'en Party because of the Kins\nmen's. Party,\nCLAN MeLEARY HALLOWE'EN\nPARTY FRIDAY OCT. 28th 7VP.M.\nMEMBERS AND FAMILIES IN\nVITED.\nRid  your  house  of mice  with\nNoxall Mbuclde. Simple to use, no\nmuss or fuss; only 25C package.\nHIPPERSON'S\n\u201e5upe\u00bbjScot(!h. -4-iply. -fingering,-.6\nounces'for 97c. PK Old' English\nfingering, 4-ply, 6 ounces for $1.29.\nTHE CHILDREN'8 SHOP\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949 \u2014 S\n\"Spalding'' badminton equipment.\nSteel-shafted racquets $13.50 and up.\nWood-shafted racquets $7.50 and\n$10.00.' Top Flite shuttlecocks 50c\neach.\u2014HIPPERSON'S.\nKiwanis Enjoy\nAccordionists\nSomething new in entertainment\nwas shown the Nelson Kiwanis Club\nat their dinner meeting Thursday\nnight in the Hume, -Five Nelson\nyouths, four playing accordions and\none accompanying on the piano,\ncomblited to make a pleasant\nmusical evening, '\nMrs, K. Howard, Misses Enid and\nBeverley Prlme.Miss Viola Gustaf-\nson-and Bob Robinson were the\nyoung artists. Four lively group\npieces were playedpwhfle two solos\nby Beverley Prime on the accordion\nwere enjoyed. Enid Prime's talented\nplaying on the piano was well\nreceived. ,\nInduction ceremonies were held\nfor one; new member, AI Cawley.\nCAR CARAVAN\nFAVORED FOR\nGOODWILL TRIP\nA car caravan to carry a good-\nwill party, of District Boards of\nTrade members to Vancouver and\nNew Westminster next Spring, was\nfavored, J A, Bracken, Secretary,\ntold the Nelson Board of Trade\nThursdya', He was reporting on the\nexecutive meeting of the Associated\nBoards of Trade of Eastern British\nColumbia...\nThe alternatives were to charter\na plane or to travel by train, but it\nwas felt, said Mr. Bracken, who is\nalso Associated Boards Secretary,\nthat more flexibility would be provided through car travel. Delegates\ncould then vary the length of their\nstay at the Coast to suit individual\nwishes.\nTho goodwill trip was originally\nscheduled for Nov. 17 and 18, but\nit was felt that it would conflict\nwith opening ceremonies for the\nHope-Princeton Highway Nov. 2.\nMr. Bracken is arranging details\nfor Nelson Board members planning to attend the Highway opening next week.\nHe also informed members of an\ninvitation, to the Pacific Northwest\nTrade Association annual meeting\nat Spokane Nov. 14 and 15. The\nNelson Board is associated with the\nTrade Association through the affiliation of the Associated Boards,\nRAY LAMP FOR\nWARD FROM\nSOROPTIMISTS\nThe purchase of an ultra-violet\nray lamp for the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hosiptal children's ward\nwas decided upon at the meeting\nof the Nelson Soroptimist Club at\nthe home of Miss Irene Laughton\nTuesday night.\nIt was also decided that a donation of $10 be sent to the Cenotaph\nFund and that the Club would send\na Christmas food parcel and a\nChristmas cake to their sister club\nIn Croydon, England.\nBecause the next dinner meeting of the Soroptimist.? was scheduled for Nov. 11, a decision was\nmade to hold it on Nov. 18.\nRefreshments, were served by\nMiss Leona Boss,\nFor the Working Man. \u2014 Wool\nShirts, Gloves,- Pants, Mackinaw\nClothing, Rubbers, Sox.\nSee Our Window\nWADES'\nNow is the time to make up\nXmas food parcels. Full line of\ncanned meats and provisions for\noverseas.\nFAIRWAY MEAT MARKET\nPhone 1177, 1178\nSPECIAL 11 SPECIAL 11\nSuperior quality centre back\nMuskrat coats, $349\nGREENWOOD FUR8\n580 Baker St., Nelson .\nFrom Trapper-to Wearer\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces, hot\nard cold air ducts cleaned by vacuum, chimneys topped, thimbles applied or stopped. Prices reasonable.\nPounder's Chimney Service. Phone\n1028-Y. during the day, 968-X after\n6. p.m.\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nONLY \u2014SPECIAL\nSALT AND PEPPER SHAKER\nSETS WITH PLASTIC TOP\n9c\nMe & Me (Nelson) Ltd.\nTRAVEL THE SCENIC ROUTE BY\nBUS TO 8POKANE,\nvia Salmo-Nelway. Buses leave Nelson Bus Depot Daily 6:10 a.m. except\nSundays. Return from Spokane 9:30\np.m. dally. Make, round, trip in OI^E\nPAY \\yith stop-over in Spokane of\n4% hours. Connections at Spokane\nfor East, West or South. Enquire at\nyoUr local Depot. '   ,\nHUSBANDS! This is important to you!\nSAVE TIME!      SAVE TROUBLE!\nBest of all      SAVE MONEY!\nSurprise your wife this Xmai with a beautiful glft>from\nFREEMAN'8 collection of choice commodities. Yes,'we havo\nmany suggestions to assist youl Don't forget our handy LAY-\nA-WAY PLAN: Holding all purchases'tilt Xmail ;   .,\nDrop in and see us\nFreeman Furniture Co.\n, THE HOUSE OF FURNITURE VALUES\nPHONE 115 NELSON, B.C.\nC.C.C. Elects\nNew Officers\nROBERT A. BRYCE\nMONTREAL, Oct. 27 (CP) -\nRobert A .Bryce, of Toronto today\nwas elected President of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, succeeding Henry G. Birks of Montreal.\nFrancis G. Wlnspear of Edmonton\nwas elected national Vice-President,\nsucceeding Mr. Bryce. John H.\nBrace of Montreal, Vice-Chairman\nof the Executive. Committee for the\nlast year, was elected Chairman,\nsucceeding A. G. Partridge of Toronto. The Chamber permanent staff\nis headed by D. L. Morrell, Execu\ntive Secretary, at Montreal head\nquarters,\nE. C. Wood.of Montreal and N. R.\nCrawford of Toronto were elected\nVice-Chairmen of the Exeoutive.\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nIVootenay Valley Daiky\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"BUILD B.C, PAYROLL8\"\nChildren\nThrive on\nPacific\nDoctors recommend Pacific\nMilk for Infants formulas\u2014\nand thousands of testLo\nials prove thg\ncorrect\nyoui^\ncers.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated and Vacuum Packed\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIllllllll\nype&oiHt iv&L\\\n75 Lodge Members,\nVisitors. Honor\nVisiting Lodge Head\nAbout 75 members, visitors, Odd\nFellows- and their wives and Theta\nRho Girls sat down to a banquet\nin the I.O.O.F. Hall Monday night\nin honor of the official visit of the\nRebekah Assembly. President of\nB.C., Mrs. Olive We*bb of Chilllwack. -fi.\nTalks were given by several\nGrand Lodge officers, after which\na lodge meeting was held. Following an interesting talk by Mrs.\nWebb, the honored guest was presented, with a lovely gift by Noble\nGrand of the Lodge, Mrs. Sadie McClelland. Mrs. Ellen McAvinn,\nPresident of the Past Noble Grand\nClub, also presented her with a,gift.\nCommittee in charge was Mrs. J.\nWood, Mrs. T. Bambrlck, Mrs. David Proudfoot, Mrs. F. Andrews, Mrs.\nMcAvinn and Mrs. A. H, Whitehead.\nMrs. H. B. Penny,'\nConvenes\nW. I. Banquet\nThe banquet put on by trie Nelson\nWomen's ...Institute on their 40th\nAnniversary held in the W.I. rooms\nWednesday night, was convened by\nMrs. H. B. Penny, President. Those\nhelping were Mrs. F. E. Cartwrlght,\nMrs. G. E. Edey, Mrs. J. Fox,-Mrs.\nJ. Dawson, Mrs. J. A, McNab, Mrs.\nC. H. Crowe and Mrs. C. A. Moir.\nMrs. J. Draper and Mrs.' F. E.\nWheeler set ' and decorated the\ntables. ;\u25a0;-'\u25a0\n3 patterns of Spode dinner ware,\nlust   received.   \"Tree,   of   Life\"\n'Florence' 'and \"Dimity\" patterns.\nCOLLINSON'S JEWELER ,\"\"\"'\nWe buy, sell and exchange used\nhousehold articles on cash basis. See\nus before you sell. NELSON EXCHANGE, 520 Vernon St\nWhy not list your house with C.\nW Appleyard today. We can often\narrange a cash deal through our\nmortgage facilities.\nSA1AM\nTEA\nOutstanding Quality* Delicious Flavour\nassise'!\nN\u00a3W! SMI-new! cw&t\nAWTAsrwmi went' ,\nYOU'll It aiAD you changed to\nKellogg'a Bran Flakes. Toasty-crisp\nIn milk. Fresher, we guarantee it...\nTRY THEM AT NO RISK. If Kollogg's\naren't fresher than other bran flakes,\nsend empty carton * to Kellogg'a,\nDept! 4-A, London, Ont. Get double\nyour money back!      '\nMltDlY IAXATIVE. Contains enough\nbran to help regularity, many folks t\nflndl Try them.\nW'iyay\nItg&t\nAiOTHezM\/ows XjffxBsr\/\nBRADlEY'S\nMEAT   MARKET\nGERM FREE MEATS\u2014YOUR PROTECTION WITH\nULTRA-VIOLET RAY LAMPS\nWeekend Specials\nMild Cure Corned Beef, CTQ*\nr.holr.i. cuts, boneless. Lb .*....    tf ^\nChoice cuts, boneless. Lb\nPot Roasts,\nRound Bone.\nLb. .......\n44c\nHamburg, fresh,\nLb......  -35c\nLamb Shoulders,\n' Rolled on Request.\nLb. ....... 55c\nCod Fish, lb. 30c\nSAVE\nON OUR DAILY SPECIALS\n \u25a0pi\n\u25a0\u25a0\n$felom latltj N*m*.. A Snowy Tran^naaa ^Questions ?|Opportiiiiify Better Than Security\nv* <\u2014_- -_ ^ Under Regimentation and Controls\nEstablished April 22.  191).\nPublished overy morning except Sunday by th*\nNEWS PUBUSHING COMPANV   LIMITED,\n166 Baker Street Nelson.   British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Malt\nPost Office  Department  Ottawa.\njtalBE_t 0]F THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nFRIDAy, OCTOBER 28, lfi49,\nDivorce Rote Turns\nThroughout, the entire Dominion,.\n, fewer divorces were granted in 1948\nthan in 'the \"previous years. The decline\n,was the fi.si interruption in a steady\nupward climb that had begun in 1940.\nAltogether 6881 divorces were granted\nin the Dominion in 1948, ,a decrease of\n16 per cent from the 1947 total of 8199.\nThis, however, was a rise of no less\nthan 290 per cent over the 1940 figure.\nIn 1940 the rate was 20.8 divorces per\n100,000 population. In 1948 the rate was\n59.5, compared with 65.3' in 1947.   .\nOntario led the Provinces (in 1948\nwith a total C;f 3107' divorces\u201445 per\ncent of the all-Canada total. British\nColumbia was second with 1683, Alberta had 651, Manitoba, 477, Saskatche^\nwan, 333, Quebec, 292, New Brunswick,\n211, Nova Scotia, 78, and Prince Edward Island, 49. \u2022\n, Immunization, Weapon\nAgainst Scourges\nThe Canadian Medical Association\nhas appealed'to the general public to\nmake every week an immunization\nweek.'   ,\n\"We all. need to be reminded again\nand again that smallpox,''\u25a0 diphtheria,\nJetariu's and'whopping cough can cer-\njprevented by immunization,\ncommunicable.:\nfied  to render\nM.A: said.\n\"These factiMIMUFbee-) so wil ilci.i-,\nonstrated in Canada that we are npt'\nto.assume ihat the diseases themselves ^\nlipvo been eliminated  This is mi! flic\ncase, and it is only by etui nnl vigilance\nand by practice oJ tho simple procedures of immunization that these_con--'\nditions are not scourges again.\n\"Immunity Is not conferred automatically nor by any legislative act. It\n.requires the participation of parents\n(From the Qaloary Herald)\nThe decision on the route to be followed  -\nby ths Trans-Canada Highway has been taken.\nat last; by agreement between Alberta and\nBritish   Columbia,   the   highway   will   run\nthrough Calgary, Banff and the Big Bend.\nWhile at first glance this solution seems\nto offer Calgary certain advantages, we cannot applaud the selection of a rout which suffers from so many disadvantages. We have already stated In these columns our reasons for\nbelieving that the highway should hove followed the Southern route through Lethbridge\nand the Crow's Nest Pass.\nWe presume that before the decision waa\nfinally made, all relevant 'factors were considered and that both the Alberta and British\nColumbia Governments have schemes ready\nfor the monumental Job of keeping the Big\nBend section of the proposed highway open\nduring the Winter months.  \u2022\nAnyone who thinks this is going to be\neasyis deceiving'himself and, incidentally, deceiving the taxpayer who will have to meet, the\ncost of snow-clearance and other expensive\nforms of maintenance. West of, Banff, and\nespecially on the Western slopes of tha watershed, the average snowfall is exceptionally\nheavy.\nAt Lake Louise and Revelstoke it ls of the\norder of 130 or 140 inches a year. At Glacier, a\natatlon on the CiPIR. main line West of dplden,\ntha annual overage is a staggering 300.2 inches\n\u2014more than 32 feet of snow. Many stretches\nof the C.P.R, line have had to be protected by\nlong inowsheds; and it ia probable that a\nhighway traversing tho same country would\nhave to be protected in the same way.\nIf the solo.purpose of the Trans-Canada\nHighway ls to attract tourists, then it may be\nargued that this Is of no consequence since\ntourists appear only in the Summertime. But\nwe believe the main purpose of the Highway\nto be tht strengthening of our economy, and\nit will be just ns vital a link in January as in\nJuly.   '    f\nMeanwhile, the two Provincial Governments concerned have been rebuilding the\nCrow's Nest Pass route Into a first-class highway without benefit ot Federal aid, and we\nbelieve that this road will still carry the bulk\not the traffic regardless of whether lt li actually called the Trans-Canada Highway or not.;\n.. If Federal funds enable another main artery to\n* be built,. Little will have been lost.\nWe must be forgiven if we find pleasure\nIn the complete rout of the Edmonton advocates of the. Vellowhead Pass, though reports\n\u2022   suggest that, noisy protests are being prepared\nup North**. We hoped that'Mayor Harry Ainlay\nand his cohorts would have learned?,by this\/\ntime that petty local interectu ought In havo',\nno placo in such mattei , hut it seem wi wcii\n.'wrong. Edmonton,. evidently,;nceds moj'.c-umi'*\ntn i,niw un. ' '\".-',''\nildren.\nwe\nis   only\nfectively.\"\ndoctors   and   nurses,\n.and active immunizing'\njiese requirements\nit measure, and it\n\u25a0 to   use   them   ef-\nArbitration\nThe civilized way of determining-\nthe conditions under which, men and\nWomen earn their livelihood will pre-\u25a0\nvail lortg after the threats of violence,\nand tije actions which cause hardship\nand want have spent themselves in\nvain physical attacks on government\nand community . In Australia at the\nmomeht, a big fight is being waged to\nlave industrial arbitration from attacks\nby the Communists. Their idea is simple. Arbitration by an independent\nbody on industrial conditions improves\nthe lot of the worker and he becomes\ncontented. If he is contented he is not\nIn revolutionary mood. Therefore arbitration must go. So the Communists\nhave set out to discredit arbitration\nand to replace it by direct action as a\nfertile source of disruption, and -the,\ncoal Strike was a move in Ihe cam-\n; paign. *       ,,   -.    ' -      .\nOpen to any reader. Names ot persons\nasking question) will not bo published.\nThero It no ohorgo tor thli lorvlco duet-\ntion. WILL NOT BE ANSWERED BV\nMAIL oxoopt where thero Is obvious noooi-\n\u2022Ity for privacy-\nin\n' A, Rii&jW Mocksinisi\n, '   Tako it from Dr.  Peter .1. Stelntrohn, a\ns-'Hortford, Conn., specialist, the human hotly is\ntimelier than generally believed, and needs-;\nonly a little common iense ran to km p It fit\n;,;:ond functioning.\n:    ' Not only' can the body take au nntonlshing'\namount of punishment and still perform, but,\nsays Pr. Steincrohn in the American, it has an .\ninfinite capacity to improvise, manufacture =\nand repair itself.\n.,   The unfortunate accident that befell Jus-fi\ntice William Douglas while horseback riding\nIn Oregon's mpuntains recently illustrates the\n, vjlsdom of Dr, Steincrohn's words. Although\nhe suffered 13 broken ribs, was crushed'by his\nhorse, rolled down an embankment in rugged\nterrain, and did. not reach a hospital tor agon-\nizing hours, the Justice recovered satisfactorily. '. '\" :-:|\n' His case alone underscores the Illimitable\nreserve of the body. As further proof of the\nbody's durability, Dr. Steincrohn points out\n'that the average man can get along without\nhis gall bladder, spleen, tonsils and appendix;;\n\"can dispense yith one of his t\\vo kidneys, one;:\nj of his two lungvtwo of his four or five quarts):\n:of blood, two-fifths of his; liver, most of his\u00a3\n-sstomach, four, ot: his -.^feet\/ofjsmalljintestinef\nhalf of his brain, and still live.\n' \u2022'\u25a0' \"Even after'we stop breathing, our bodies'-\nare so durable they. refuse to give up the\"\nghost,\" says Dr. Steincrohn. \"Our brain survives anywhere froni a few seconds to 15 minutes, and continues, to send out brain waves\nduring that time; bur heart muscles last 20\nminutes; eyes, 30 minutes; oars, one hour; arm\nand leg muscles, tour hours; blood molecules,\n18 hours; bones', three days; skin, five days.\"\nWhile the body is tough, Dr. Steincrohn\nwarns that it needs cooperation. The indtvldu-'*\nal's Job is to be reasonably careful and to heed\nf warnings, because, he says, \u25a0 \"chances are ail-,\n-your machine needs to put it in good shape is\nsimply to have your doctor.tighten a,,nut'ory\nfi:-.bolt here and there.\"       .'        -. .    -\nJ. W\u201e Rossland\u2014What Is the difference\ntime between B. C. and Chicago?\nTwo hours\u20149 a.m.- Vancouver is approximately 11 a.m, Chicago. '\nReader, Nelson\u2014Who was lt said; \"My method\nis, to take the utmost) trouble to find the\nright thing tb say, and then to say it with\nthe utmost levity ...\"?\nGeorge Bernard Shaw, in Answers to Nine\nQuestions,\nCook, Kaslo\u2014Would Like a recipe for glazed\nsweet potatoes and pineapples.\n_ Six sweet potatoes, ono tablespoon butter,\none tablespoon flour, quarter cup brown sugar.\nBoll potatoes in salt water, remove skins and\ncut in haj-f-'nch slices, Drain can of pineapple,\nsave syrUp, arrange fruit and potatoes In layers\nuntil dish is full; melt butter, blend with flour,\nbrown sugar and pineapple Juice, cook until\nthick, then pour over contents of dish. Bake in\nhot oven for 20 minutes,\n,A. H., Grand Porks\u2014Who won the Pulitzer\nNovel Prize In 10217\nEdith Wharton, for \"The Aga of Innocence\".\nWorker, Trail\u2014Please give me headquarters\naddress of the American Federation of\nLabor.\nNinth Street and Massachusetts Avenue,\nN.W, Washington I, fife\nD. D., Nelson\u2014What ls tha nearest station to\nMorln Creek, Sask.?\nMeadow Lake, C.P.R.\nWriter, Creston\u2014Who is the President of the\nCanadian Authors' Association, and what\nls their address?   ,\nWill R. Bird Is President! headquarters'\n'.address is 49 Rosedale Road, Toronto.\nLooking Backwards\n10 YEAR8 AGO\n-uFrom Tho Dolly News of Oct. 27, 1939\n,   ,    Turning out a car of match blocks a day,\nOS well as lumbar, the W, W. Powell Co. Ltd.\n-plant I-, running \"full blast\" foi the fiist time\nin' five years, stated li. K Hm ton, Manager,\nFriday -\n, .,   .\"The \"Nelson   School-Board Friday  night\npasred a resolution lo be sent tn Hon. Dr. G\nW. Well, Minister nf r-.dueallon, lecommend-\n\u2022' ing that ,i course in aeronautics be provided In\n^Nelson Illiih School.\nHon, Mrs. K. A, Aylmer of Queen's Buy\nvisited Nelson  Friday.        . . \u2022\nBy DEWITT MACKENZIE\nAssociated Press Newt Analyst\nGen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower, in\nhis capacity as President of Columbia University, has urged his big\narmy of students to seek opportunity rather than seourlty.\n\"The best Aamnle 6t perfect security,\" h'e said, \"is a man serving\na life term In a Federal prison.\"\nOf course, everybody wants reasonable security, But what terrifies\nthe average citizen of any country\nwhich encourages,private initiative\nis the thought of a regimented se\ncurlty\u2014a security which puts him\non the self-same plane with everybody else\u2014a security which he\ncan't escape because It's just too\ndarned good,\nCHANGING DAYS\nOne encounters this thought In\nmany quarters these changing days.\nI ran into an interesting example\nof lt down in the. subterranean\nlabyrinth of passages and stores\nbeneath New York's Rockefeller\nPlaza In' which the AP headquarters building stands. Among the\nshopkeepers bf the underground\ncity is Joseph Suozzi, a friendly\nItalian-American Of 72 who runs\ntwo shoe-shining and quick repair\nestablishments\u2014apparently on a\nvery profitable basis, too. I dropped\nin on him for a shine and found\nhim fuming over a newspaper\nheadline.\nGREAT  OPPORTUNITIES\n\"Why is It,'-' he exploded,,\"that\nthere are people, many of them\nfrom foreign lands, who are out to\nREOINA (CP) \u2014 The Junior\nChamber- of Commerce, has long\ncampaigned for water to be piped\ninto Regina from Buffalo Pound\nLake, on the South Saskatchewan\nRiver. So some members of thi\nChamber sprinkled, watef ironrthl\nlake on the CltMftJJStoi^iAr'-.vi\nminutes. They \u25a0Mht,.th'\u00ab water i)\na tank truck,\nturn this wonderful country ot opportunity into a totalitarian State?\nHeaven itself couldn't - provide\ngreater opportunities than this\nwonderful country. They, should\nhave had my experience!\n\"If Immigrants told their children\nof their own experiences, there\nwouldn't be so many subversive\nelements at work., Here we have\nfreedom and opportunity. Freedom\nis the ability to-develop as one\nwants. There ls no regimentation.\"\nDeanna, Fourth\nWife; Divorces\nSecond Husband\nLOS ANGELES, Oct. 27 (AP)-\nDeanna Durbin, Winnipeg - born\nsinging star, today divorced her second husband, movje director Felix\nJackson. >-f,\nShe testified that Jackson simply\nwalked out on her. However, she\ntossed in a few Instances of mental\ncruelty to support her petition for\nan Interlocutory decree. The couple\nwas married in Las Vegas, Nev.,\nJune 13.1945, and Miss Durbin, who\nwas the 47-year-old Jackson's fourth\nwife, said they had been separated\nsince Jan. 6,1947,\nThe 26-year-old singer, who recently has grown slightly plumpish,\nwas married, once before, but divorced in 1943 from Vaugn Paul,\nalso a film executive.\nDeanna was granted full custody\nof her 3-year-old daughter, Jessica\nLouise. \"'....\ns\nFINE   OLD\nNAVY RUM\n'#&*\u00ab   Vh* Spirit\n, Bfilled md Shipped if\nALFRED LAMB S-SON I\u2122 London.Enqland\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n85 ', l-Arts ARO\n\u2022' - r.-oni Tlio Dally New\u00bb of. Oct, 28,1924\n\u25a0 \"  An oicliord survey of the entire Province\nhas been announced. The last survey In tha\nKootenays was in 1921.\n:'   Tuesday   evening  in   St.   Paul's   United\nChurch, the St. Paul's Mission Band rendered\na fine program of recitation and dialogue.\nSaturday morning a car crashed into the\nfront window of the Standard Cafe, causing\n\u2022 slight damage. .\nMr. and Mrs. J. Df Kerr and daughter\n-; Irene of Longbeach were city\/shoppers Satur-\nday.    > ,-,     \u2022\n10 YEARS AGO\nProm The Dally News of Oct. 28, 1909\nThs  immediate   construction  of  ah  important stretch of railway in the Boundary\ndistrict is announced. This will open up a\nnumber of mines,\nR.M. Winslow, head of the Horticultural\nDepartment, Is at present In Nelson on a trip\n-\u25a0; of inspection throughout the District.     ,.\nMrs. Fred Burden has .returned,, from an\ni .unded visit to St. John and other,points In\nthe Maritime Provinces.\nYour Horoscope\nYour next year should see no startling\nchanges, but be one of even and steady progress. This should also be true of the child who\ncomes into tha world at this time.\n1\nThey'll Do It Every Time\nhmimmd k, I NM MM'-.\nBy Jimmy Hatlo\nURBINE AMPERE IS A BIS ENGINEER\"\nHE INSTALLS GENERATORS\nANDOTHER SUCH 0EAR\u00bb.\u00ab\nM\\jT what- co you think can\nW     DRIVE HIM BERSERK ?     ,\nfRYINS TO SET Hl\u00a3 LISHTER TD WR6-\nIt's Been Said\ny *All the good things of this world are no\n\/further good than as they are of use; and what-\n,ever we may heap up to give to, others, we\nenjoy only as much as we can make useful to\nourselves and: others, and no more.\u2014Daniel\n, Defoe.\n\u2014 r ;\u2014\nIt Happened Today\n'90A.D.\u2014Alfred the Great, King\nof England, died. 1336\u2014Harvard\nCollege founded by Act of Legislature, Massachusetts Colony. 1728\u2014\nCapt. James Cook, English Naval\ncaptain and explorer, born, 1886\u2014\nStatue of Liberty,, New York harbor, dedicated. 1941\u2014In World War\nII, Italy Invaded Greece.\n(hint ML\nShe's askin' fifty thousand for\nalienation of affections, but it\nsounds silly to me. If affections can\nbe alienated, they ain't worth two\ncents.\n' t.\n \/*>36\"\n(imberley Lawn\nlowlers\n^resented Cups\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Oct 28-A\niclal evening and presentation of\nrizes was held, recently at Chap-\nen Camp Curling Rink when the\n\\yri bowlers wound up a most suc-\nsssful season. Bingo was played,\nIter which H, R, Banks presented\nrizes to the following winners.\nAULT'S CUP\n1. H. C. Pearson (skip) Mrs.\nharnok, John Pearson, Mrs. L.\nvans.\n2. J. McLelland (skip), Mrs. Bur-\nIws, G. James, Mrs. Williams.\nUGHTRED CUP\n1. J. McLellan (skip), Mrs. A.\nirans, E. Bepson, Mrs. A. Brown.\n2. J. Kelly (skip), Mrs. Douglas,\n, Douglas, .Mrs. Kelly.\nANADIAN   MARYSVILLE\nDTEL'8 CUP\n1.. James Pearson (skip), Mrs. A.\nrans, H. Bidder, Mrs. Williams.\n2.   H.   C.  Pearson   (skip)',   Mrs.\nmglas, Ed. Benson, Mrs. Olmack.\ninsolation: L. James (skip), Mrs.\nfans,- \u2022\"':.'-.'\u2022\u25a0\nH. BANK'8 DOUBLE8\n)MPETITION f\n1. J. McLellan, Mrs. H. Douglas.\nI E. Benson, Mrs. H. G. Pearson.\nOakland, Calif. \u2014 Mario Trigo,\n9, Los Angeles, and Chief White-\niter, 137, Oakland, drew, 10. (Top\ngular bout on Ezzard Charles-\njly Smith exhibition card.)\nHockey Scores\nBy Tho Canadian Press   '\nCAPE BRETON SENIOR\n, North Sydney 8, Sydney 1.\nMARITIME SENIOR\nSaint John 4, Halifax 7.\nMoncton 8, Amherst 3. \u2022\nQUEBEC SENIOR \" I\nOttawa 2, Quebec 4.\nMontreal 2, Shawinlgan Falls 1.\nQUEBEC JUNIOR\nRoyals 5, Verdun 0.\nValleyfleld 1, Canadiens 7.\nEASTERN CANADA SENIOR\nNorth Bay, 6, Cornwall 6.\nBasketball Revived ,\nAt Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Oct. 27 \u2014\nBasketball, formerly a rnajor sporf\nin Kimberley, but in recerit years\ndormant apart from school .competition, is being revived for adults.\nJim Kelly has been'named Athletic Association Organizing Chairman, assisted by Doug Cole of the\nCanal Flats Natural Resources\nCamp. Around 30 men, former\nplayers, have expressed interest in\nforming teams for regular league\nplay. Enough Women have also\nshown interest to form at least two\nteams.\nJunior Basketball is thriving\nwith five boys' teams from Kimber\nley ond Chapman Camp, lined up\n<or league play in the school audi\ntorium. Kimberley has three basketball floors.\nAmateur Athletic Sports Director\nBill W'lcox is supervisor of all. He\nalsb plans to resume the popular\njunior and senior square dance\nclasses at McDougall Hall in November.\nm*\nSittin   yi Wishloi'.\nWon't change your fate,\n. _-   The P-ord provides the ftMn' '\u2022 '.\nBut YOU got to dig de bait\nAlways Carry a Complete Stock of\nQUALITY\nTACKlEf\nThe Tackle Used and\n.Preferred.by Expert\nFishermen\nGIBBS TOOL AND STAMPING WORKS\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nDISTIiUP,   ll-HO-P   AND   I0TTUD   IH   SCOTLAND\n5 advertising is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nitrol Bodrd or by the Government of British Columbia.\nNew Leader Among 60| fijijuj^ fioMJiML\nTtoiit Derby Entries\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949\nWhen Pete Oiby of Queen's\nBay boated his 19 pound, 8 ounce\nfighter on October 20 he finally\nbroke tho flve-month-loiig lead\nof Phil Stunian of Tensed, Idaho,\nin the Gyro Kootenay Lake Rainbow Trout Derby,\nStuman'c 17 pound, 10 ounce\ntrout, caught on May 25 at Kaslo,\nwas finally beaten when the\n\"whopper\" caught by Osby In\nQueen's Bay was weighed In at\nFisher's Paradise with Roy Fisher\nas witness.\nRobert V. Alexander \u25a0 of Park-\nwater, Wash, helped to prove that\nthe big ones are biting by pulling\nin a fish.identical to that of Phil\nStuman's on October 3. His 17\npound, 10 ounce Kamloops trout,\nwas caught oh a'Gibbs Yellow Plug\nat Campbell Creek, was weighed' in\nand witnessed by V. T. Craig at\nCamp Paradise.\n326 ENTRIES\nSixty entries recorded In the past\ntwo weeks bring the total to date\nto 320, eight less -than the total for\nthe year of 334, last year. With still\na month to go in the derby last\nyear's total may be left far behind,\n^Entries in the past two weeks\nfollow:\nG. J. Alexander, Prosser, Wash,\n17 pounds, 4 ounces, on a No. 5\nGlendoh Stewart at the Inkpot,\nSept. 25 ;weighed -in by Monty\nArmstrong, Kaslo.    .'\u2022'\u25a0'\u25a0*-   .    ,\nRoy Wrights, Spokane, Wash.,'17\npounds, on a Pearl Pink in Kaslo\nBay, Oct. 11; weighed in by Monty\nArmstrong, Kaslo.\nPete Osby, Queen's Bay, 16\npounds, 14' ounces, on a plug in\nQueen's Bay, Oct. 19; weighed in\nby Ollie Fisher, Fisher's Paradise,\nEarl Sund, Fairfield, Wash., 16\npounds, 13 ounces, on a Phantom\nFlattie at Sawmill Bay, Sept. 22;\nweighed in by Monty Armstrong,\nKaslo.\n.1. A, Maber, Nelson, -16 pounds,\n12 ounces,- on|a plug at the Lime\nQuarry, Oct. 16; weighed in by C,\nM. Suitor, West Lake Cottages,\nClarence Christiansen, Creston, 16\npounds, 7 ounces, on a Bear Valley\nat Wolfe Creek, Oct. 2; weighed in\nby W. L. Wilson, Sanca Park Resort.\nB. .Cross,. Fairfield, -Wash.; 15\npounds,; 14 ounces, on a Phantom\nFlattie at Kaslo Lighthouse, Oct. 10;\nweighed ;in- by Jack .Armstrong;\nKaslo.\nArt Hill,\" Riondel,* 15 pounds, 13\nounces, on a, plug al i Lilena Bay,\nSept. 21; weighed lit by J. W.\nRuins, Ainsworth.\nDr. Kuk Brown,-\u2022 Grandview,\nWash., 15 pound;, on a Phantom\nFlattie, ot Powdci Creek, Sept. 23;\nweighed In by Minify Aimstrong,\nKaslo.\nBasil Aflmi-i-, Queen's Bay, 14\npounds, 8 ounces,;on, a Gibbs Martin\nplug at. KootenayvBay, Oct. 21;'\nweighed ln.by P. S Woods, Kootenay Bay.\nJohn Bowl\u2122, Balfour, 15 pounds,\n11. ounces,On-* a Gibbs*. No. 4 at\nIrving Creek, Oct, 13; weighed In\nby Roy Fisher, Fisher's Paradise.\nWalt Enzler, Fairfield, Wash., 13\npounds, 8\" ounces,, on a Martin\nYellow. . Silver \u2022 Scale'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 at- Powder\nCreek, Oct. 13; weighed in by Monty\nArmstrong, Kaslo.\nRoy Wrights, Spokane, 13 pounds,\n2 ounces, on a Martin Herring\nScale, at the Mile Point, Oct. 11;\nweighed in by Monty Armstrong,\nItaslo.\nEarl Sund, Fairfield, Wash., IS\npounds, 2 ounces, on a Phantom\nFlattie at. the Inkpot, Sept. 22;\nweighed in by Monty Armstrong,\nKaslo.\nMrs. M. Shaeffer, Spirit Lake,\nIdaho, 13 pounds, 1 ounce, on a\nLucky Louie on the Main Lake,\nOct. 5; weighed in by C. M. Suitor,\nWest Lake Cottages.\nJ. Bringsli, Nelson, 13 pounds,\non a Tartan Plug, centre of Main\nLake, Oct. 12; weighed in by A. C.\nMathewson, Shram Cottages.\nDr. Kirk Brown, Grandview,\nWash., 12 pounds, 13 pounds, on a\nPhantom Flattie at Powder Greek,\nSept. 22; weighed-,In by Monty\nArmstrong, Kaslo.\nW. E. Alexander, Yellow Spring,\nOhio, 13 pounds, on a Phantom\nFlattie at Hods Point, Sept. 24;\nweighed in by Monty Armstrong,\nKaslo.\nW. E. Alexander, Yellow Springs,\nOhio, 12 pounds, 12 ounces, on a\nGlendon Stewart No, 6 at powder\nCreek, Sept. 29; weighed in by\nMonty Armstrong, KaslO.\nJ. Patrick, Creston, 12 pounds, 12\nounces, on a Wander No. 5 at Snow\nShed, Sept. 25; weighed in by Roy\nCummlngs,  Cummlngs  Camp,\nGrant Hall, South Slocan, 12\npounds, 10 ounces, on a Gibbs Stewart No. 5 at Kaslo Creek, Sept. 28;\nweighed in by W. N. Hogg, King\nGeorge Hotel.\nFritz Hansen, Nelson, 12 pounds,\n5 ounces, on a Gibbs F.S.T. at\nQueens Bay, Oct. 10; weighed in by\nOllie Fisher, Fishers Paradise.\n\u25a0 Basil Aylmer, Queen's Bay, 12\npounds, in a Gibbs Ruby Set at\nKootenay Bay, Oct. 21; weighed in\nby R. S. Woods, Kootenay Bay.\nS. T. Antoniuk, Trail, 11 pounds,\n12 ounces, on a Mirror Spoon at\nKootenay Bay, Oct. 3; weighed in\nby O. C. Thomas, Balfour Boat Livery.\nMrs. Colleen Notton, Spokane,\nWash., 11 pounds, 10 ounces, on a\nRoy Self No. 4 at San Creek, Sept.\n27; weighed in by W. L. Wilson,\nSanca Park Resort.,\nPete Osby, Queen's Bay, 11\npounds,, 8  ounces,  on  a  plug at\nQueen's Bay, Sept 20; weighed In\nby Roy Fisher, Fishers Paradise.\nS. T. Antoniuk. Trail. 11 pounds,\n8 ounces, on a plug at Kootenay\nBay, Oct,-3; weighed in by 0. C.\nThomas, Balfour Boat Livery.\nEarl Rawllngs, Teltoa, Wash., 11\npounds, 8 ounces, on a plug at\nMurphy Creek, June 11, weighed in\nby V. T. Craig, Gamp Paradise,\nR. E. Robinson, Creston, 11\npounds, 6 ounces, on a, Heddon\nRiver .Runt, at Sanca, Sept, 4;\nweighed in by L. E. Wilson, Sanca\nPark Resort.\nE. G. Davis, Riondel, 11 pounds,\n4 ounces, on a Gibbs Egg Wabbler\nat Riondel, Oct. 20; weighed in by\nR. S. Woods, Kootenay Bay,\nC. Wilson, Bonners Ferry, 11\npounds, 3 ounces, on on F.S.T. No. 4\nat Snow Shed, Sept. 28; weighed in\nby Roy Cumroings, Cummlngs\nCamp. ..-\u25a0\u2022'\nEarl Sund, Fairfield, Wash., ll\npounds, 2 ounces, on a Phantom\nFlattie at the Inkpot, Sept. 21;\nweighed in by Monty Armstrong,\nKaslo,\nW. Enzler, Fairfield, Wash., 11\npounds, 2 ounces, on a Phantom\nFlattie at Powder Creek, Oct, 12,\nweighed in by Monty Armstrong,\nKaslo.\nEarl Rawllngs, Tekoa, Wash., 11\npounds, on a plug, at Schroeder\nCreek, June 15; weighed in by V. T.\nCraig, Paradise Camp.\nW. Waddell, Trail, 11 pounds, on a\nRosegard, at Pilot Bay; Oct. 2;\nweighed ih by O. C. Thomas. Balfour Boat Livery\nL. R. Mosher, Nelson, 10 pounds,\n2 ounces, on, a Sea King Plug at\nLime Quarry, Oct. 8; weighed In\nby D. E. Walsh, Holiday Inn.\nBasil Aylmer, Queen's Bay, 10\npounds, on a Gibbs Martin Plug at\nKootenay Bay, Oct. 21; weighed In\nby R. S. Woods, Kootenay Bay.\nJohn Bowles, Balfour, 9 pounds,\n14 ounces, on a Game Guide Gobbler\nat Queen's Bay, Oct. 13; weighed in\nby Roy Fisher, Fisher's Paradise.\n;, W. Waddell, Trail, 9 pounds, 14\nounces, on an F. S. T. at Wilson\nCreek, Oct. 10; weighed in by Mrs,\n0. C. Thomas, Balfour Boat Livery.\nW. Kapak, Nelson, 9 pounds, 14\nounces, on a Phantom Flattie at Pilot Bay, Oct, 15; weighed in by A.\nCi Mathewson, Shram Cottages.\nJ. Bringsli, Nelson, 9 pounds, 9\nounces, on a.hbme made plug at P1-.\nlot; Point,. Oct 9; weighed in by; Ai\nC. Mathewson, Shram Cottages. \u25a0\nrt. Smith, I reston, 9 pounds, 4\nout\" i-;,; on n Utimbei Plug at Lime\nQuarry, Oct. 16; weighed in by Mrs.\nii. t'.-Thomas, Balfour.Boat Livery.\nw En\/Jer, Fairfield, Wash.,. 9\npounds, mi a Martin Plug, at the\nfoli pot, Srpt, 23; weighed in by Monty Armstrong, Kaslo.\nP. A. Nnlton, Spokane, Wash.\", 8\npounds, 14 ounces, on a Canadian\nWonder;i:at.'Sanca,- Septi.28, weighed\nio by W. h. Wiluin, Sanca Park Re-\nsort   '       '\nMatt Bradshaw, Rocky Mountain\nHouse, Alta,, 8 pounds, 10 ounces;\non a Gibbs Bear Valley at Irving\nCreek, July 10; weighed in by O.\nG.- Thomas, Balfour Boat Livery.\nRoy Wrights, Spokane, Wash., 8\npounds, 8 ounces, on a Martin Herring Scale plug at Deer Creek, Oct.\n12; weighed in by Monty-Armstrong,\nKaslo.\nJ. Hays, Idaho Falls, Idaho, 8\npounds, 3 ounces, on a Wee I^oule\nPearl Pink, at Hods Point, Oct 12;\nweighed in by Monty Armstrong,\nKaslo.\nC. F. Grant, Procter, 8 pounds, on\na Gibbs Stewart spoon at Irving\nCreek, Sept. 25; weighed lh by D. E;\nWalsh, Holiday Jljp.\nEarl Rawllngs, Tekoa, Wash.. 8\npounds, on a plug at Murphy Creek,\nJune 11; weighed in by V. T. Craig.\nParadise Camp.\nEarl Eund, Fairfield, Wash., 7\npounds, on a Phantom Flattie, at\nthe Inkpot, Sept. 21; weighed in by\nMonty Armstrong, Kaslo,\nJ. Bringsli, Nelson, 6 pounds, 13\nounces, on a Gibbs Plug, in the\nmiddle of the Lake, July 31; weighed\nin by A. C. Mathewson, Shram Cottages.\nJ. H. Lewis, Spokane, Wash., 6\npounds, 4 ounces,- on an Idaho W, T.\nC. at Sanca, Sept 17; weighed in\nby Earl Wilson, Sanca Park Resort.\nFrankrDay, Nelson, 6 pounds, on\na No. 3 Wander Spoon, at Lime\nQuarry, July 2; weighed In by O. C.\nThomas, Balfour Boat Livery. -\nBruce Cross, Fairfield, Wash., 6\npounds, on a Hanson plug at Hods\nPoint, Oct. 13; weighed in by Monty\nArmstrong, Kaslo. .\nEarl Rawllngs, Tekoa, Wash., 6\npounds, 12 ounces, on a plug at Su\ngar Bowl, June 11;' weighed in by\nV. T. Craig, Camp Paradise.\nEari Wilson, Sanca, 5 pounds, 10\nounces, on a Placsko Wizard, at Sanca Creek, Sept. 22; weighed In by\nW. L. Wilson, Sanca Park Resort\n,C. J. White, Kaslo, 5 pounds, 8\nounces, on a Double X at the Light\nHouse, Sept 1; weighed in by Monty\nArmstrong, Kaslo.\nBy OLIVE FLEMING.\nAnother suspension will likely\noomo after Wednesday night's\npenalty-riddled game between Spokane Flyers and Nelson Maple Leafs.\nThe victim, Bull Waldner, served\ntwo penalties, one for hooking, and\nthe other for tripping, had a penalty\nshot because of his actions (on Bill\nVicker'a score), and finally a match\npenalty.\nWaldner carried the* puck into\nthe Leaf zone, and Mike Fischer\nrode him along the boards into the\ncorner. When Waldner got loose, he\nswung his (tick back at Fischer,\nabout elbow level. Nothing else was\ndone, and no one was the least bit\nhurt, but the Spokane mon was given the supreme penalty, and will\nlikely Join teammate Lome Nadeau\nand Moose McNaughton of Nelson\non the Indefinitely suspended list\nThis scribbler can't help but feel\nthe penalty li a little severe in his\ncase.\nBefore the game, the referees\nwere Instructed to clamp down on\noffences of any kind, right from the\nstart. If they called them strictly to\nrules, there would have been many\nmore in the penalty box. But at that,\n73 minutes were handed out including two majors, a misconduct and\na match penalty.\nFROM THE RULE BOOK\nThis again brings up the question\nqf the difference bptween the match\nmisconduct penalty,, and the match\npenalty.\nA match penalty, the severest penalty in the rule book, is handed out\nfor three reasons: attempt to injure,\nkicking, and deliberate Injury. The\nplayer 'a removed, for the balance\nof the game. The offending team is\nshorthanded five minutes for ah attempt to injure, or kicking, and\nshort ten minutes when there is deliberate Injury. The deliberate injury penalty is not handed .out for\nFights\nBy The Associated Press\nPhiladelphia \u2014 Harold Johnson,\n177, Philadelphia, outpointed Jimmy Bibins, 18Q%, Cleveland, 10.\nGlasgow, Scotland \u2014 Manuel Ortiz, 124, EI Centro, Calif., outpointed\nJackie Paterson, 1?4, Scotland, 10\n(non-title).\n> Jut labile the \u25a0nothing, haaMnij fumes of\nMINARD'S, tnd fed tlie\nquick relief. Get n bottle\ntoday, fteep it lioi.dy,\nM|HARD'S\ni,\u00bbB8E ECONOMIC*!. SIH 65C\nfisticuffs although a player may take\na oovera beating. A minor penalty\nmay also bt tacked on for anything\nthat preceded the final act.\nMatch misconduct penalties do not\nleave a team shorthanded, but the\nplayer or coach concerned is suspended for the remainder of that\ngame, \"A match misconduct penalty\ndoes not Incur automatic suspension\nexcept for that game,\" but the particulars are to be reported to the\nLeague President by the referee.\nAn incident involving a match\nmisconduct penalty when the player\nreceived, a suspension was when\nCliff Kilburn, onetime Kimberley\nDynamiter goalie took after the referees after Kimberley lost the playoff; to Nelson In the 1946-47 semifinals.\nSTANDOUTS\nGetting back to the Wednesday\nnight game, the two Koehle's looked\ngreaWPesky carrot-top Red Koehle,\nwas rewarded with two goals ahd\none assist\nBill Snider, former Nelson Maple\nLeaf, was Spokane's standout scoring two bf Spokane's goals, and assisting on the third. .\nDinny McManus definitely didn't\nlook up tb his predecessor in the\nSpokane nets, Ron Pickell, who returned to Seattle. Bill Vickers had\nlittle trouble on his. penalty shot,\nwhich he lobbed high in the rigging,\nafter faking twice. He isn't any too\nhot on screened drives either. McManus didn't look too good, either,\nwhen Bill Haldane streaked in on\nhim, probably \u2022 remembering how\nHaldane alsmost cut his head off\nwith a drive in the second period.\nBill slapped the puck hard, and lt\nhit the edge of the goalie's pad,\notherwise the score would have\nbeen 7-3.\nHarry Barefoot was kicking himself around for letting In the first\ngoal, which Snider slid along the\nice.\nMONTREAL, Oot 27 (CP) \u2014\nMontreal Canadians and Detroit\nRed Wings tonight were locked\nIn a first place tip In the National\nHockey League following Toronto\nMaple Leafs 2-0 shutout over the\nMontrea|ars here and Detroit's\n3-1 victory over Black Hawks at\nChicago,\nLeafs victory sent them to within\none point of the league leaders.\nFor more than 58 minutes big\nBill Durnan in the Montreal nets\nheld up the whole Canadien team.\nThe Leafs were on the prowl\nearly and they gave the Montrealers\nno rest The Torontonians, controlled the puck almost throughput,\nfar outshot Canadiens and checked\nthem so relentlessly the home team\ncould seldom get an attack' organized.\nThe break came at 18:13 qf the\nlast period just after Ken Mosdell\nqf Canadiens drew a major penalty\n10 Fined for\nGame Offences\nInfractions of the Game Laws are\nb e 1 n g severely ''cracked down\nupon\" this year, Eleven cases have\nbeen reported in the Nelson, Creston\nand Kimberley.areas. They follow;\nIvan Peacock of Rowland and\nAdam Thomas of Trail pleaded\nguilty before; Stiperiiliary.Magistrate\nParker Williams in Trail to charges\nof carrying 'loaded; rifles In*a*car\nat Nelway 'on Oct. 15. They were\nfined $15<-.each; and, costs. Charge\nwas laid by Game Warden P...- D,\nJlwart. \u25a0\nRalph West of Castlegar pleaded\nnot guilty to a ;charge of firing a\nShotgun over the West Creston\nHighway on Oct. 15, before Stipendiary Magistrate Guy. Constable\npf Creston. He was found guilty and\nsentence, was suspended for one\nyear on the accused entering into a\nrecognizance on his own surety in\nthe amount of $500, apd , costs.\n0harge\"was \"laid by George X.\nLines, Game Warden.\nIvan Axten of Creston pleaded\nnpt gyil'y before Stipendiary' Magistrate Guy Constable to 'a charge\nof carrying, a firearm without first\ntaking out a license to carry it but\nwas proven guilty and was fined\n$10 and costs, Charge was laid by\nGame Warden Lines on Oct 17.\nEarl Tooze of Creston pleaded\nguilty before a Creston Justice of\nthe Peace to a charge of carrying a\nloaded gun in a truck, and was\nfined $10 and costs. Charge was\nlaid by Game Warden Lines on\nOct 23.\nHugo Summerfeld of Camp Lister\npleaded, guilty before Stipendiary\nMagistrate Guy Constable of Creston to a charge of carrying a loaded\ngun in a car, and was fined $10 and\ncosts. Charge was laicj by Game\nWarden Lines on Oct. 13.\nCLOSED SEASON ,\nDr. Ralph C. Pronger of Kimberley pleaded not guilty to a charge\nof killing a prairie chicken during\nclosed season before Stipendiary\nMagistrate R. T. Richardson, but\nwas found guilty and fined $25 and\ncosts. Charge was laid by Game\nWarden J. W. Bayley on Sept. 29.\nG. M. Lester of Kimberley pleaded\nguilty before Stipendiary Magistrate R, T. Richardson to a. charge\npf carrying a loaded gun in a car\nand was fined $10 and costs. Charge\nwas laid by Game Warden Bayley\non Sept, 29.   .\nOscar A. Loberg pleaded guilty\nbefore Stipendiary Magistrate R. T.\nRichardson to a charge of killing a\nruffed grouse during closed season,\nand was fined $50 and costs. Charge\nwas laid by Game Warden H. Tyler\non Oct 10.\nJack Shaw of Kimberley pleaded\nguilty to a charge of shooting a cow\nmoose. Sentence was suspended due\nto the fact' that he had previously\nwounded a bull moose and shot the\ncow by mistake. He immediately\nreported the incident to a game\nwarden. Charge was laid by Game\nWarden Tyler on Oct 10.\nJohn L. Schofield of Kimberley\npleaded guilty before Stipendiary\nMagistrate A. W. Chrisholm to a\ncharge of carrying a loaded gun in\na car and was fined $25 and costs.\nHe also pleaded guilty to a charge\nof killing a ruffed grouse out of\nseason, and was fined $25 and costs.\nCharges were laid by Game Warden\nTyler on Oct. 10.\ncustoms receipts\nAthighleVeV\n''ICTORIA, B.C., Oct. 27 (CP) \u2014\nExports through British Columbia\ncustoms ports are continuing at a\nhigh level despite 'concern over\nworld'trade Conditions.\nThe. Provincial Bjjrsau.-.of Economics and statistics reportedToday\nthat exports for August had totalled\n$38,225,253, compared with $26,704,-\n228 for August, 1948.\nDuring the first eight months of\nthis year exports through B.C. customs ports were valued at $305,312,-\n550, a gain of more than 20 per cent\nover the corresponding figure for\n1948.\nOrganize Creston\nYouth Hockey\nCRESTON, B. C, Oct. 27 - A\nmeeting to negotiate on ice times\nthis Winter at the Civic Centre will\nbe, held NOv. 7, when the,Civic\nCentra Committee will meet with\ntemporary officers of the Creston;\nValley Amateur Hockey Association to iron out a schedule f or.Org-\nanized hockey of. boys.\nAs announced previously, all\nboys meeting the|14-year age limit,\nwill In rivm katini li nn il\nthey cannot skate anil those thai\ncan will bt given mdimontary in\nstruction In the matter of team\nwork! and regulation pee-wee hock-;\ncy.\nAlready the Creston Review Limited has placed a trophy for; annual\ncompetition in the  valjey league!\nBud Weeks, .Father Doyle, and\nRev. Robertson- have'volunteered\ntheir services as instructors.\nDistrict Men\nShoof Moose\nHunting In the Caribou District\nfor moose is definitely good, according to one Nelson hunter.\nArt pe(d, 712 Hoover Street, and\nhis brother,,on a hunting trip about\n72 miles North of 183-Mile House in\nthat district, shot a moose and reported having seen at least five\nothers brpugh't out in the two days\nthey were hunting.\nThey themselves shot a 700 or 800\npound moose, With practically perfectly matched horns, approximately 29 Inches in width. It was only a\nyoung one, about three years old.\nBen Reid of Salmo, his brother,\nwas with .\"him on the week-long\ntrip, and as both saw the animal at\nthe same time, two shots were fired,\neither of which would have been\nenough to kill it\nIt was shot over the Thanksgiving\nweekend, and snow was failing\" in\nthe thick brush country through\nwhich they were hunting at the.\ntime. The rolling hills; thick brush\nand open spaces made it an ideal\ngrounds for moo;e.\nBr odd Nabs ShMout;\nWings in Top Sfcot Tie\nDenver Baseball\nPlayers Honored\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Oct 23-\nFnday evening, a.supper was sponsored by the Japariesp (Orchard)\nbaseball fans In honor of New Denver baseball players. Approximately\n175 sat down to supper prepared by\nLadies of the Orchard.\nThe hall was very artistically dec-,\norated. The long tables were set with\nvases of late Autumn flowers.\nProgram Chairman was Robert\nSuzuki. Minute silence was passed\nfor the late Robert. Butler a baseball player.\nSongs were sung by Eddie Nishi-\nda\u201e Miss Yaeko Nishimuna, Shimo-\nda Yakyiku, Miss Pat Oka and M'ss\nKyoml Kawagoye,\nGuest speaker were E, fi. Adams\nand James Draper. A solo was rendered by Miss Lily inouye..      ,\n;Address of thanks to the ball team\nwas givenby Walter G; Thring and\nby Thomas R. Flint,   .\nSongs were also, sung,.by .Miss\nEleanor Kondo, Dr. S. i'. Robinson,\nOtoko Funa, Mis-, Lily .I|iouye\u201e\nMisi Yaeko N shin una and Bob\nKumano. . ,\nCommunity Miip.mK was enjoyed\n\u00abilli Wi,. w. G. 'i lu in,; and Mrs\nTed  W. ( I nkc-.li Hit piano.*     --:*\nThe tables weie eleaied foi a\nilano   winch lasted until midnight\nHOCKEYSCORES\nA.H.L.\nBuffalo 1, Indianapolis 2. --.\n... St. Louis 5,'New Haven i.\nTHUNDER BAY JUNIOR\n:   Fort William Canadians. 5; Port\nArthur Juniors 11.\ntot high-sticking Bill Juzda and\ndrawing blood,\nSid. Shtlth and Ken Reardon\nscrapped for the puck well Inside\nthe Montreal blue line, Fleming\nMackell swooped in and drove the\npuck past Durnan On a close-in shot\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014Scoring\u2014None.\nPenalties \u2014 Reay,  parllko   (2),\nReardon (major), Harvey, Timgren,.\nBoesch.\nSecond period\u2014Scoring\u2014None.\nPenalties\u2014Boesch (2). -.\nThird period\u20141. Toronto, Mackell\n18:12; 2, Toronto, Watson 19:42.\nPenalties\u2014Juzda, Harvey,' Mosdell (major), Kennedy, Reardon,\nCHICAGO, Oct. 27 (AP)\u2014Detroit\nRed Wings moved into a tie with\nMontreal for. first place in , the\nNational Hockey League . tonight\nwith a 3^1 victory over Chicago\nBlack Hawks before 12,819, one of\nthe smallest crowds in several years\nhere\nGoalie  Harry  Lumley  had  a\nahutqut oolng for him until half\nway  through   the  third   period,\nwhfn Doug Bentley hit for the\nlone   Chicago   goal.   He   had   29\n-saves to 25 for Fraqk Brlmsek.\nSUMMARY\nFir:! period\u2014^coring\u2014None.\nPenalties\u2014Gadsby, PaveJIch.\nSecond period\u20141. Detroit, Dewsbury (Ho^ve) 1:30; \u2022\u25a0 Detroit, Howe\n10:31.\nPenalties\u2014Gadsby, Martin.\nThird period\u20143. Detroit, Lindsay\n(Abel) 3:24; 4. Chicago, Bentley\n(Moslenko, R. Conacher) 9:07.\nPenalties\u2014Gadshy, Black, Guidolin.\nI NELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\n323  VERNON  ST.\u2014PHONE:  35\n!    CHEVROUT &  OLDSMOBILE\nSALES & SERVICE\nTate thfs message\nright to Heart\nsryou want your\n>ir to start I\nedger\u00bbW>t.\nA Goodyear battery\nIn your car\nProves itself the best\nbyfar.\nFar -file Regular Guy,.\nA rugged shoe for the fellow\nwho wants that sharp look\nIn footwear'-.'. . these solid\nHems will keep their appear-'\nance for many months bf\ncomfortable wearing.\nPMfW\nTOW fOR A\nBATTERY\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\n323  VERNON  ST.-PHONE:  35\nCHEVROIET  - OIDSMOBILE i\nSALES \u2022& SERVICE\n On the A!r\nFRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949\nCKLN\n1240 ON I'HE DIAL\n1:00\u2014Sign on and Oh Canada\n7:01\u2014Top ot the Morning   '\u25a0'.\n8:00-CBC News \u2022\n8:10\u2014BUI Good Sports\n8:15-^Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You Madame   -\n3:00\u2014BBC News\n1:15\u2014Western Tunes   .\n0:45\u2014Ogilvie Kitchen\n\u00bb:00\u2014Time. Signal and Train Time\n1:01\u2014Ellen Hatris      *\n1:15\u2014Old Favorites\n0:45\u2014Music Kitchen  .\n1:00\u2014Kindergarten of the Air\n1:55\u2014Five RoseB Kitchen\n1:20\u2014Gildersleeve\n1:25\u2014Concert Corner\n2:15\u2014Stirling News\n2:25\u2014Sports Cast\n2:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Concert\n1:30\u2014Waltz Time\n1:45\u2014Commentary\n2:00\u2014National School Broadcast\n1:30\u2014Your Little Show\n1:30\u2014Peerless News\n1:15\u2014Train Time\n3:30\u2014Divertomento\n1:00\u2014Bernie Braden\n1:15\u2014Ed MacCurdy\n1:30\u2014Sleepy Time Stories\n1:45\u2014Merry Go Round\n5:00\u2014Morgan Show\n5:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:45\u2014Bill Good\n6:00\u2014Happy Time >*\u25a0\u25a0'\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00-CBC News\n?:15\u2014CBC Roundup\n7:30\u2014Old Timers\n8:00\u2014Radio Scrap Book\n8:30\u2014Vancouver Theatr*\n9:00\u2014Eric Wilde\n9:30\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n1:00\u2014Peebles News\n1:15\u2014Parliament Hill  '\n1:00\u2014Sign Off. The King.\nCJAT\n.10 ON THE DIAL\n6:30\u2014News\n635:\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Good Morning^ Neighbor\n7:25\u2014Your Hymn for the Day\n7:30\u2014News        '    i\n7:35\u2014Good Morning Neighbor\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:10\u2014Here's Bill Good       \"\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014Laura Ltd. :;.-\u25a0\u25a0\n9:00\u2014Coffee Timo\n1:15\u2014Aunt Lucy\n9:30\u2014Five Roses Kitchen\n0:35\u2014Housewives Hit Parade\n10:00\u2014Homemaker's Club.\n10:15\u2014Happy .Gang .     ,\n10:45\u2014Rita Martin Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News ,\n11:05\u2014Music for Milady\n11:45\u2014Eddy Arnold\n12:00\u2014Luncheon Concert\n12:30\u2014News\n12:45\u2014Saddle Rockln' Rhythm\n1:00\u2014Afternoon Recess\n1:45\u2014Comm: Women's Talk ,\n2:00\u2014School Broadcast\n2:30\u2014Waltztime\n2:45\u2014Claire Wallace\n3:00\u2014Brave Voyage\n3:15\u2014CJAT Goes Calling\n.'4:00\u2014Bernie Braden\n4:15\u2014 Club Calendar\n4:30\u2014Old Corral\n4:45\u2014Superman\n5:00\u2014News\n55)5\u2014Supper Serenade\n6:00\u2014Song of Love\n6:15\u2014Four M Ranch\n6:30\u2014Family Theatre\n7:00\u2014CBC tfews\n7:15\u2014CBC News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Toronto Symphony \"Pop\"\nConcert\n8:00\u2014Gestin' with Kestin\n8:30\u2014Bon Ton Serenade\n8:45\u2014Doctor's.Orders\n9:00\u2014Holland Today and Tomorrow\n9:15\u2014Canada at Work\n9:30\u2014Talk\n9:45\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n10:00\u2014News   ,\n10:05\u2014Sports Cavalcade\n10:15\u2014Natalie Minunzio    .\n10:30\u2014Meditations .  :\u2014\n10:45\u2014Reverie\n11:00\u2014Hot Air\n11:30\u2014Hot Air\n11:55\u2014CBC News\nSATURDAY, OCT. 29, 1949\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014Sign pn & O Canada\n7:01\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014CBC News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Pick of the Hits    -.\n8:30\u2014Story Time\n9:00\u2014BBC News\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014Saturday Story\n1C:00\u2014Train Time and Time Signal\n10:01\u2014Bandstand\n10:15\u2014Notice Board\n10:45\u2014Peerless News\n11:00\u2014Festival of Choirs\n12:00\u2014Folk Music\n12:30\u2014Lonrjon Studio\n1:00\u2014Journey Into Melody\n1:30\u2014BaUett Club\n2:00\u2014To Be Announced\n2:15\u2014Musical Program\n2:30\u2014Encores\n3:00\u2014This Week\n3:14\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014News Week-End Listening\n\u2014Divertimento\n3:45\u2014Sports Review\n4:00\u2014Voice of Canada\n4:15\u2014Lake Success (   -\n4:30\u2014Sports College       '\n4:45\u2014Sacred Heart\n' 5:00\u2014News, N.H.L. Hockey\n5:30\u2014Sacred Heart\n5:45\u2014Sports College\n6:00\u2014CBC News\n6:10\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Local Sports News \u25a0\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade  of  Melody\n7:00\u2014Old Favorites\n.7:30\u2014Ava Maria\n8:00\u2014Prairie 'Schooner\n8:30\u2014 All Request Hour\n9:30\u2014Barny and Orchestra\n10:00-rPeebles News\n10:15\u2014Dance Music\n1030\u2014Plantation Jubilee\n11:00\u2014Sign Off The King\nRose petals have provided material for perfume since the days of tht\nancient Egyptians, Greeks and Romans.\nTODAYS News Pictures\nAnswers Critics  . Tommy Is Still an Orphan\nU. S. Federal Judge Harold Medina closes hla briefcase In his\nohambers In New York after the\n39-weeks' trial of 11 members of\nthe Communist Party hierarchy\nhad been found guilty of plotting\nto overthrow the U. 8. Government. The Judge, who demonstrated a Job-like patience throughout\nthe trial, had his Innings Immediately after the verdict was returned. He cited five of the defence lawyers for contempt of\ncourt and gave them Jail sentences\nranging from 30 days to six\nmonths. They will appeal.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nYour Friends\nWon't Wish To\nRecognize You\nIf you want to look your worst\nfor Hallowe'en, here Is an example of what can be done to\nfrighten even Draculal First you\ncram a \"Wig on backwards, so the\nhair falls over the face. Then trim\nthe locks Just under the eyes, giving a sheep-dog e'feot. Don't worry about being able to see,, as you\ncan peer through the bangs. Then\ndraw eyes, complete with lashes,\non your cheeks with an eyebrow\npencil. Use nail whiting for the\nwhites. Or, If you're not so good\nat drawing, cut eyes from a magazine and paste them on, and border these with eyebrow pencil\nlines. Lipstick the lower Up In a\nbroader and fuller pattern than\nusual. But make the rouging of\nthe upper lip thin to the point of\nnear Invisibility. %\n\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nRoughest Crossing\nIn 41 Years,\nSays Queen's Crew\nPARIS, Oct. 27 (Reuters)\u2014 The\nQueen Elizabeth arrived at Cherbourg 24 hours, late today after a\nTransatlantic voyage which one of\nthe crew described as \"the roughest crossing in 41 years at sea.\"\nMost of the 400 passengers who\ndisembarked said they had been\nviolently seasick. Nobody was injured; but several objects were\nsmashed in the fierce Atlantic gale.\n(.en. Hoyt 8. Vandenberg, U.8.\nAir Force Chief of Staff, testifies\nbefore the House Armed Services\nCommittee In Washington, D. C,\nIn answering Navy criticism of\nAir ForCe policies. Ho said that If\nthe United 8tates cuts down on\nstrategic bombing strength, then\nRussia will be free to concentrate\non developing offensive power.\n\u2014AP Wlrephoto.\nCase Closed\nSix-year-old Tommy O'Neill, a ward of the Children's Institute\nat Aon Arbor, Mich., holds out his arm for a blood test which proved^\nhe Is not the missing son of Mrs. Arthur Thompson of Dayton, Ohio. \u2022\nThe son was believed kndnapped In October, 1944. Tommy, who, like\nthe missing son, has a nicked ear and webbed toes, had fingerprints,;\nfootprints and blood tests taken to prove his parentage. Mrs, Thomp- \u25a0\nson, heartbroken at tho result of the blood test, wants to adopt Tommy ]\nanyway. v . \u2014Central Press Canadian.\nPose for Closeup\nBritish society photographer Antohy Beauchamp and d\\% bride\nactress Sarah Churchill, pose for a closeup after their marrlagi In th\nflower-decked home of Alfred W. JoneB at 8ea'Island, Ga. The au\nburn-haired daughter of Winston Churchill, Britain's.wartime'Prim\nMinister, and her new husband are scheduled to leave for New YOrl\nby plane \"for a little bit of honeymooning.\" \u2014AP Wlrephoto\nPipeline Approved\nOTTAWA, Oct. 27 (CP) \u2014 The\nSenate Transportation Committee\nWednesday approved a Bill which\nwould incorporate the Prairie\nTransmission Lines, Limited.\nPreviously proposed as the Prairie Pipeline Company, the Company\nseeks to build a pipeline to convey\nnatural gas from Alberta to. V\ncouver  and  Northwestern  Xlnlf\nStates points.\nThe route favored by the Col\npany is similar to one proposed]\nthe Alberta Natural Gas Compaf\nwhich has its Bill of incorporatl\nbefore the Commons. The laf\nBill has already passed the Senl\nDAILY  CROSSWORD\nACROSS\n1. A son of\n' Aaron\n6. Pin for\n.   meat\n0. Dips, as\nwater\ni. Game on\nhorseback\n(2 Gang\n13. A servile\ndependent\n(5. Openings\n(Anat.)\n16 Walking\nstick\n17 Measure\n(Chin.)\nt8. Velvety\nfabric\n20. Twilled   .\n(abrlc\n21 Half an cm\n22 River I Scot.)\n23 Frees\n24 Fish\n25. Evening sun\ngod (Egypt.)\n26 Rip\n28 Perish\n29 Like\ntl. Linen   .\nvestment\n(Eccl )\n32 Small\nanchor\n34: Exist\n35 Insect\n36 Anglo-Indian\ncoin Ivar.)\n37 Ascends, as\na ladder\n39 Flowerless\nplant\n40 Genuine\n41. Greenish\nfinch\n42 Plant ovule\n43 Prepared\nfor use .\nDOWN\nRoom\nrecess\nUnproductive\nPerfect\nChop\nPronoun\n\u2022Whirls\nCornmeal\nbread\nRiver\n(Turkestan)\nMarked,\nas leather,    30\nwith a too!    32.\nFemale\nhorse \"33.\nPinches\nPrompted,    -5.\nas an actor\n19.\n20.\n23.\n24.\n25.\n26.,\n27.\n28.\n20.\nSmell\nBorder\nStagger\nPart of a\nlocomotive\nSlope\nFlaps\nChooses\nPortuguese\nnavigator\n(var.)\nOne of an\norder of\narachnids\nThin\nPossessed\nof knees   ::\nMusical.'.:-,:-..\ndrama\nAdhesive.;;:\nmixture\nHHB1HH   HHUll\nHH-'IB.H   HHBL!\nHUHIffl HUinr-im\nam 13HHWI31MH\nOU     laBQH\nHnnsuca oninHH\nHHtHSHH   0HHH\nuHsiti    uu\nHHinaraiaH \u25a1-*-'\nHHBBB   HHBHH\nHHEIH   LVUMU.i\niiiiijii arjui-'i'\nYeiterdiy'l Anil)*\n88. Part\n-of\n\"to be'\n19. Charge\n\u25a0 fi'    for\nservlcea\n41 Senior\n(abbr.)\nZ\u00ab\n34\n37\nIf\n2<V\nZ7\n[40\n42\n5\n30\n7\/.\ni\u00a3t\n32\n28\n25\n22\n1\nzo\n23\n11\n8\n35\n3&\n29\n30\nDAILY CRYPTOQUOTE\u2014Here's how to work It: j\nAXYDLBAAXR\nIs  L O N,G F E L LO W\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A ls i\nfor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apfl\ntrophies, the length and formation of the words are all\nEach day the code letters are different\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nHJNR     O P F    P     LOJIFPTK\nN P W M !\n ft $w\n1ASSIFIED\nPHONE 144\nHELP WANTED\nHELP WANTED\nlifor office work at once,\njlng not necessary but\nh; schbol education es-\nitial. State pge, educa-\ni, experience and, give\n'tie'number to Box 3900,\nIson Daily News.\nfrEt) \u2014 YOUNG MAN'WITH\ngh school matriculation, to\nrji the radio'service business.\n1st be genuinely interested, and\nferably with, some knowledge\nfcadlo. Box 3658 Daily News,\nTO WORK IN NEWSPAPER\nice. Office experience- .riot\nsessary. Some typing ability an\njanta.ge. Apply to C. W. Rams-\ni; Daily News,\nERDBNCED WAITRESSES\nhted; Apply Standard Cafe\nTED-^-BXPERIENCED WAIT-\nles, New Star Cafe.\n\u25a0Jed'AI ONCE\u2014WAI'\n?ly Golden Gate Cafe.\nITUATIONS WANTED\nTRESS.\n3N FORD TRUCK WITH\n(raullc dump. For hire by the\nx or contract. Work anywhere.\n[te Box 3903 Daily News.\nito v- 6Y RELIABLE w\u00ab\nit baby aittlng by the hr. or\n1 or othar part time .work,\nme 374-R-l or 794-X-2,\nSALE, MISCELLANEOUS\n.-SALE - 2 PRS: BOYS' OR\ns' skates, D's; 1 pr. boy'a hockey\n&, 8'si hockey pants; shin pads;\nby*\u00bb black raincoats, 10. and 12\n.1 boy's large wagon. Phone\n-X after 6.\n\u2022iffe* ST.3WART WAKNEK\nJery radio. New modeL-orlglnal\nce $60, sacrifice $23. English\nlfll, perfect condition $30. Phone\n9-R\n^ Mtxifa WOOD FOR SALE\nH or 18 in. length. $14 a cord\nIvered. Apply Dick Kleef,\nL No. 1. Phone 40I-L-4-,\n.SALE \u2014 DINEWE,- CUM-\nta bed, t chest-drawers, end\nIlea,   lumber,   ta-   and   2x6.\nLatimer St Phone 750-L.\njbaiuner oi. rauue ,uv-\u00b1j.\nit 4.2-Y-2-BIRCH,, FIR ANU\nlarac wood. Place your orders\n'.for winter.\niBOYCE GUN EXCHANGE-\nji for sale, exchange and for\nit and expert gun repairing.\nSALfc-Ott BUAtrttl HEAT-\nPractlcally new. Reasonable.\nme 128.\n, LADIES' TUbE SPATES!\n. 514 and 8\u2014$6.00 a pair.\n\u20224th St. City.\nSPRINGFIELD ' SPORTING\niu, as new. $65.00. Also men's\nItes, size 9, $9.00. Phone 287-Y.\n-WlftlNGS- TUBES, \u00a7JFE-\nlow prices. Active Trading\n918 Powell St, 'Vancouver.\n\"SALIE - SIZE 42. TUXEDO\n)erfect condition. Ph. 1117-L,\n'BIRD CAGE FOR SALE, $6.25.\nme 1277-L.\n'Sale - mAn'S 61kE..LiKis\n| Phone 132-Y.\n_   &.C.A.   VICtOR   RADIO\nsale, short wave. Ph. 722-R-2.\n<TED,  MISCELLANEOUS\n\u2022 US YOUR SCRAP METALS\niron. Any quantity. Top priow\nd. Active Trading Company.\n; Powell St, Vancouver, B. C.\nf YOUR HlifiS TO J. 1>. kilS-\nNelson. R C -\nOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nExpert Flying\nInstruction!\noil at the Salmo Flying Clubl\nlot's Licence at half cost!\nMake use of the,present\ngovernment subsidy!\nTor particulars contact\n38. RICE, SALMO, B.C.\nSON  BUSINESS COLLEGE\nDay, and Night Classes....\nBUSINESS AND\nFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nCHIROPRACTOR8\nLIN-McLAREN, D.C, CHIRO\notic X-Ray, ,Spinography,\nind theatre Bldg. Trail, Ph. 328.\nA88AYERS AND  MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES \u2022\nWIDDOWSON & CO. AS-\nbw; 301 Josephine St, Nelson.\nELMES, ROSSLAND, B. C.\nayer, Chemist Mine. Represnt.\nDIAMOND DRILLERS\nONAL DIAMOND DRILLING\nLtd, Drilling and Bit Serv-\nBox 508, Rossland. Ph. 420.\nINEERS AND SURVEYORS\nSEN AND CURRIE, B. C.\nid Surveyors, Mining and Civil\nineers, Rossland, Kelowna,\nrid Forks. Ph. Rossland 884.\n) C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.,\nson, B.CI, Surveyor, Engineer.\nRANCE AND REAL E8TATE\ntRDY  AGENCIES  LTD.' IN-\ntnce, Real Estate-r-Phone 185.\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nichine Shop, acetylene attd\nIc welding, motor rewinding.\n\u25a0Vernon St.. Nelson. Phone SB.\n593 ,-'    324 Vernon St\nENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\ncialists in mine and mill work,\nihine work, light and heavy.\nSALES AGENTS\nBrush Sales \u2014 J. C McKim.\nte Box 123 -Phone 799-R.\nPUBLIC NOTICES\n\u25a0  Province of British Columbia-\nDepartment of Public'Works\nKASLd-NBW DENVER' ROAD\nThe Kaslo-New Denver Road will\nbe closed 'between New. Denver and\nThree Forks on Friday, October\n28th, at 8100, a.m. for one day to\nfacilitate blasting of a rock bluff.\n,'  Signed; \"  :' .\n:     \u00ab      '.    J. A. DENNISON,\n. \"'District, Engineer.\nNew Denver, B.C.,\nOctobet 26th, 1949.\nPERSONAL\nWAWANESA MUTUAL FIRE insurance Co., D. L Kerr, Agent.\nSPENCER SUPPORTS , FOR\nstyle arid comfort Ph. Mrs. T, A.\nGibsori, 1436. .    ..    ,\nALMER HOTEL, OPPOSITE C.p.Rr\nDepot Clean rooms and modern\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single, $2-50 to\n$3.00 coubles. Vancouver, B.C.\n10 CENTSI BIRTH CONTROL IN-\nformation, arid catalogue of hygienic supplies. . Write Western\nDistributors, 61-L Ray Building,\nVancouver,     .\"f\";;,\nBRAND NEW PRODUCT.-NEED-\ned by Women everywhere. Sample\n$1. Information Free. FILLER'S\n-MAIL ORDER HOUSE, 4404 N,\nMcVicker Avenue.,. Chicago 34,\nIllinois. -.' .   ,\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUG .,'SUN-\n' dries, 19 Deluxe assorted $100\nmailed: in plain sealed ,wr.ipper\nFinest quality.' tested, guaranteed.\nBargain catalogue free. Western\nDistributors.,Box 24RN, Regina\nEVERYDAY LOANS\nTO\nEveryday People\nFOR\nEVERYDAY NEEDS\nAt Niagara you'll appreciate the\nfriendly, quick way you get a\nloan No other company has as\nwide a range ot plans to choose\nfrom. Almost anyone can get\nthe cash they need the way they\nwant lt at Niagara. Your life is\ninsured at no extra cost\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY LIMITED\nEst'd. 1930\nSuite 1, 560 Baker St. Nelson\n.    Phone 1,095    \u2022  .\n.  fRENTALS.\nFOR RENT ON NORTH SHORE-\n4-room cottage with toilet. Partly\nfurnished. 3 min. walk from ferry,\nPhone Con Cummins, 44, afternoons or evenings.\n.'OK RENT - 2.ROOM FURNISH-\ned, cabin for Winter mos. Immediate occupancy. Lakeside\nBungalow Court; 805 Nelson Ave,\nMODERN APARTMENT IN NEW\nhome', private entrance, -.block\n\u25a0 off  Baker  St.  Business   couple\npreferrtd Apply 713 Victoria St,\nFOR RENT\u20143 ROOM SUITE FUR-\n. nlshed or unfurnished.' Apply 401\nSilica Street\n:BBGENT\u2014WANTED FURNISHED\nSuite for young couple.' Phone\n1127-X.\nFOR RENT\u2014FURNISHED CABINS\ncentrally heated. North Shore\nMotel. Phone 387-L4.\nFOR RENT \u2014 CLEAN, 2-ROOM\nfurnished cabin. Box 3673 Dally-\nNews. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022',\nSMALL HOUSE FOR  RENT  AT\nWillow Point; Phone 461-R1.\n4 ROOM HOUSE FOR RENT. IM-\nmediate occupancy. Phone 517-Y.\nROOM FOR RENT, CENTRALLY\nlocated. Phone 653-R.,'\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES. ETC.\nMORRHILL, KENNELS RE7G'AT\nstud.' Champion Alberta. Gunner,\nred and white Alberta Call. Me\nCharlie, black. Puppies: Red and\nwhite,' blacks, buff. $25; to $50,\nPercy Morris, owner. Box 518,\nGreenwood..B C\nFOR SALE-AMERICAN COCKER\nSpaniel Pups (Registered), two\nmonths old. Pedigree and price on\nrequest. F. J. Harbinson, Fernie\nB.C.     .-\nMatm lailg Sfatoa\nClassified Advertising Rates:\n15c .per line first Insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions.\nlie Line per consecutive'Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 8 consecutive insertions.-\n$1.56 line per month (26 consecutive insertions) Box numbers lie extra. Covers any\nnumber of insertions. .\n\u25a0 PUBLIC (LEGAL) NOTICES,\nTENDERS, Etc.\u201420c per line,\nfirst insertion. 16c per line\neach subsequent insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSubscription Rates!\n' Single; Copy  .'..'.... .'$   .05\nBy Carrier, per week, \u25a0\nin advance'      .25\nBy Carrier, per year   13.00\nMail In Canada,.outslde Nelson: \u2022\nOne month  ...\/.'..., '..   1..00\nThree months -    2.50\nSix months  '.    4.50\nOne year     8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne\" month    1.00.\nThree ihonths    3.00\nSix months  _    6.00\nOne year  :.... 12.00\nWhere extra postage Is required:\nI        Above rates plus postage.\nAUTOMOTIVI\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\n.*J**.*.***77i**.**..*i^\nHighest-Value's\n1940 FORD\n5 passengerXoupe '\n'\u25a0\u25a0 '.}\u25a0 $1075 '   y\n'1947 PONTIAC\nSedan-'\nRadio, Heater \u2014 Like new\n$I90'0    \u25a0-\n1936 FORD.SEDAN\nV$600\n1940, CHEVROLET,\nSedan\n\u25a0; \/$io5o ,\n. Today's*-\nSPECIAL\n1947 DODGE\nLight Delivery\n'     $115\u00a3>   ; '\nQueen City- ,\n' Motors Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nDont forget te pick up your\nFord Jig saw puzzle.\n1 New Austin'\nA-90 Convertible     \/\n1948 Ford.Caoch\n1947 Ford Coupe.\n1947 Standard Tourer\n1939 Chev Sedan\n1947 DodgS Sedan\n1938 Dodge Coupe\n1948 Austin Coach\n# 1934 Plymouth Sedan\n1935 Chev Sedan\n1.930 Dodg? Sedan- .-..\u201e..\n1939, \"Ford 1. D.    ' . .'\n'1938 Chev L.D.\n1941  International 2-ton\n1936 Studebpker 1 ton\n1\"936 Dodge Panel y% ton\n1930 Pontiac L.D.\n1935 Dodge L.D:      \u2022\nTERMS, arid TRADES\nEmpire Motors\n\"Phone 1135   803 Baker St.'\nMACHINERY\nTractors \u25a0\nDiesel Engines '\nGenerator Sets\nFrom 15 to 300 K.W.\nMotor Graders\nScrapers f\nARE AVAILABLE\n-IMMEDIATELY\nOHDEH YOUR\n\u25a0WIMTER TRACKS NOW\nFinding  ;!:.\n.\u2022   Tractor\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\nVour Caterpillar, John Deere,\nSkagit, Joy Headquarters\nNELSON CRANBROOK\nCONTRACTORS - SAWMILL' **\nLOGGING & MINING\n;'\u25a0    EQUIPMENT-   .   ,\nSEND YOUR ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL MACHINERY\nca LTD.\nGranville Island     '      MA 1251.\nVancouver, B.C.\nBOATS and ENGINES\n\/NEW BOAT\n,     FOR sale:x-\n22' foot, 8' beam. Sacrifice price.\nSee It on display at\nPeebles Motors:\nNelson\nSAVED FROM MUD    -\n,ST.'-VITAL, Man. (CP) \u2014 WM\nBooth considers he has had a narrow escape from death. Caugr\/t in a\nthick marsh during the heaviest October rain on record, he struggled\nsix hours in mud up to his hips before being rescued by,Dr. Gordon\nGraham and Charles French ot Norwood,\nTORONTO STOCKS\nmines'\nAkaitcho ..._......_._\nAmal Larder ...._.\nAnglo Huronian ...\nAtliui,Y.K.:..............\nAumaqu# \u2122;^_^\u2122.\nAunor  :.\u201e\t\nBatymln .-. ^-^\nBase Metals ...\"\t\nBevcourt ....._...\u201e.\nBonetol\n....      .IB\n... 9.25\n- ..m\n IB\n.... 8.00\n._       .66\n_      .21%\n.-      S.1\n_      .84\n...-    .80 j'\n\u2122      .54%-\n\u2122      .'28*>\n\u25a0J.1 2.10\ni_ 8.35\ni.'\"' ..70\nCariboo Gold'.i. \u201e.~..' l.\u00ab\nBoymar Gold ...\nBroulan\t\nBuffodison\t\nBuff-lo Ank\t\nCampbell R. L...\nCan. Mai. ..........\nCastle Trth.\nCentral. Patricia\nChestervllle .ii......\nCoast Copper ....\nCochenour.,.......\u2122\nCoin Lake \t\nConlarum    \u201e.\nCons. Beatty\t\nConwejt ..;;.;,.C-\nCrblnor'.\n.................\n1.90\n.95\n1.60\n- .85\n8.85\n21\nlfflB.\n.60.\n1.15\n.50\nDehiite' _..     1,75\nDiscovery..... \u25a0    _ , -. .80\nDom^  .\u2122.....f\u00bb...\u00bb..... 20.50\nDonalda    \u201e......'..    .55%\nDuquesne \u201e., ,....   1.06\nDuvay  .       9%\nEast Malartie    2.03\nElder Gold 40%\nEldona-....: .........y...    .48\nEast SulL i    4,50\nEureka  _._     .42>i\nFalconbrldge\u2122  \u201e..   4.50  .\nFroblsher ......i. \u201e\u201e .....   2.20\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nwelditig. Portable welding equipment tor ileld, work. Stevenson's\nMachine Shop, 70S Vernon St.,\nNelson; B. C.\nD4 CAT. FOR RENT OR CON-\ntract Equipped for- excavating,\nroad building, land clearing, etc.\nC. Rosa, Phone 688-R, Nelson.\n\"ATLAS\". 8 IN. BENCH SAW\n. with 1 H.P. motor, \"Beaver'1\nJointer, 1-3 H.P. motor. As new.\nPhone 611-R-l.   ' \u25a0\n15 K.W. 110-220 VOLT. A.C. DIESEL\nGenerator Set, with switchboard.\nTop shape. Bayes Equipment Co.\n1 MAN POWER SAW FOR SALE.\nApply F Brown, Occidental Hotel.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n6 Room House\nci\nTROUT DERBY\nFISHING\nSPECIAL   V\n'27 Bulck Sedan. Ready to go.\nA big catch for only CIVS\nA little bait    *,\u00ab,S>\n1947 CHEV. SEDAN FOR SALE.\nRadio, heater and seat covers,\nnew rubber. Apply 702 Pine St.,\nNelson, B.C.\nTRAILta. FOR SALE, 8x12 FT.\nfurnished. Immediate possession.\n. Can' be seen on Fell\" and 7th St.,\nNelson, B.C. \u2022\n1946 MERCURY 2 TON TRUCK\nfor sale. In good condition. Phone\n612-X.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1936 PLYMOUTH\nFordor Sedan. Very good condition, $650. Phone 370-L.\nLIVESTOCK. POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES. ETC.\nWANTED\n10 Good\nMust be fresh or due to\nfreshen before December\nH. Harrop\nFOR SALE\u20141 TEAM OF HORSES,\n1 gelding, 10 years old, one bay\nmare, 5 years old' weighing approximately 1600 lbs. each. Price\nnext to give-away. Wm. W.\nMarkln, Winlaw..\nFOR SALE\u2014160 HAMPSHIRE\nhens, 2 yrs. old. $1.60 each. Box\n3583 Dally News.\n1 OLD HORSE FOR SALE, $15.00.\nApply Box 3671 Daily News.\nose in\nImmediate occupancy. Dwelling\non two lots has living toom,-\ndinlng room, kitchen, three bed-\n. roonts and bathroom.,Part basement,, stone and cement foundation.  -\nPiilce. \u25a0:'\u25a0\u2022\n$3250\nFOR APPOINTMENT PHONE\nMISS FRISBY\u2014717\nT.B.RosIing\nBox 283\n: Ward St.\nFOR- SALE - 8% ACRE FARM,\n6% miles from Nelson on main\nhighway, $3500. Terms could be\narranged .5-room house, full basement. Apply Mrs. H. Zlbert, Tag-\nhum, B.C.\nO'Leary  ...  \u201e    .19\nOsisko  _....._..: -    .95\nPamour ..,\u201e...    1.45\nPaymaster 35\nPend Oreille ...     5.75\nFOR SALE - 7 ROOMED HOUSE,\nalso furniture, including chesterfield and chairs (new condition),\nDavenport, etc. Call at 1123 Front\nSt, between 2 and 8 p.m.\nHOUSE AND TWO LOTS I'OR\nsale in Salmo, $750.00. Map 622A,\nBlock No. D, Lots' 10 and 11. Mrs.\nW, L. McClure,,1757 Casitas. Ave;,\nPasadena 3 Calif.\nHOUSE FOR SALE. FULL PAR-\nticulars, at 516 Carbonate-St\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nHALF SHARE IN A THRIVING\nsash and door' factory being sacrificed for $6000.00 due to ill health.\nUnlimited possibilities for the\nfuture. This business will bear\nthorough investigation. Experience necessary. Write Box 807,\nCastlegar, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u2014THE SELKIRK Hotel, Silverton. B.C., fully licenced,\nmodern. For details apply to Mrs.\nRuth Barnes, Silverton, B.C.\nPLUMBING AND TINSHOP FOR\nsale, complete set of tools, also\nbuildings and lot.G. K. Suther-\n-\u25a0 land. Box No. 615, Kaslo, B.C.\nNEEDLES TAXI FOR SALE. Going concern. 'New car. Apply H.\nMarcoli? Needles. 1B.C,\nROOM AND BOARD\nBEDROOM FOR RENT WITH 2\nsingle beds. Breakfast if desired.\nPhone 423-R.\nROOM WITH MEALS. CLOSE IN.\nBusiness man preferred. Ph. 995-Y\nROOM    FOR   RENT    WITH    OR\nwithout board. Phone 493-R.\nFOR ROOM AND BOARD PHONE\n; 837-R.\nLOST AND FOUND\nWOULD BOY WHO TOOK RADI-\nator cap from Plymouth car in\nfront of New Grand Hotel, please\nreturn it tp New Grand,Hotel.\nLOST - LADIES' ROYCE WRIST\nwater* with link bracelet on Baker\nStreet near New Star Cafe Tues.\nnight. Phone. 1159-L..\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nFRUIT TREES, . ORNAMENTALS,\nand roses. See H. C. Came, Agent\nfor Layritz Nurseries. Phone -312.\nWrite Box 37. Nelson, EX\".\nGiant Yel.\nGod's Lako   \t\nGoldale _...,..,\u201e.,.,\nGolden Manltou -\u201e....\u201e\nHallnor ....__ ...-\u201e_..\u201e.,\nHardrock  ,.__'__.._i,__,\nHasaga >....i ~.~- ..\nHedley Mas. ; .r.....'.\t\nHeva  p,\nHolllnger  , \u201e'.. _.,\nHudson. Bay\t\nInspiration  .'\t\nInt. Nickel\t\nInt Uranium _,\nJoliet Que  \t\nKerr Addison ............\nKirk-Hudson Bay .......\nKirkland Lake\t\nKirk. Townsite  ....\nLabrador , .........j.....:......,\nLake Dufault ........_..........\u201e,\n6.55\n,     .39 *\n.  ,im\n.   2.04\n,4.00,\n. '   31%\n. , .52\n.    .37\n.12-\n. 11.00 \u25a0\n. 46.76  \u2022\n.     .39\n. 32.75\n.     .15\n.     .52-\n. 17.85 \u2022-\n.    .61 -\u2022\n;    1.44\n.-'    .12%\n.   5.10\n. ' .83 .\nLakeshore _  14.75\nLake Wasa     .48\nLamdque '  ..*.i\u201e......   6.75\nLeitch ._J! ............   1.18\nLingman '\/. _ \u201e 36\nLittle Long Lac \u201e 64\nLouvicourt 15\nMacassa  .-,    2.80\nMacdonald 43\nMacLeod Cock     1.50\nMadsen R. L    3.30\nMagnet ;      .20\nMalartic G. F. \u201e     3.15\nMelntyre\nMcKenzie R. L..\nMining Corp\t\nMoneta ..'.\t\nNegus\n67.50\"\n.65\n. 12.85*\n.     .41\n2.20\nNew Calumet   .'\u201e    1.40\nNew Goldvue .\nNew Jason......\nNicholson.........\nNipisslng ....._.\nNoranda \u2022'.\t\nNormetals \t\nO'Brien'....\n.25\n:\u2022' .56,\n.82\n1.07\n64.50\n.2.75*\n2.10\nPlck'e Crow .\nPioneer .\nPowelTRouyn\t\nPreston \u2022a.-D ...\nQuebec- Manltou ...\nQuebec Lab\t\nQueenston ......\t\nQuemont,\t\nReeves Mac\t\nSen, Rouyn\n. .2.05\n. 3.55\n. 1.10\n. 2.03\n. .66\n. .19\n. .62\n. 19.75\n. 2.21\n.37\nSherritt Gordon ...2.50\nSigma  :     7.75\nSiscoe\nSiadon Mai.\nStadacona ...\nSteep Rock .\nSylvanite v\n.31\n.74\n.59\n2.20\n1.83\n3.40\n1.20\n.50\n58%\n3.05\n3.60\n5.75\nTeck Hughes ..\u201e, ,\nTorbit  \t\nToburn \t\nTrans Cont Res \u201e,\nUnited Keno\t\nUpper Canada \t\nVentures \u201e..;\u201e_.\nWaite Amulet ..\u201e.\u201e..; y    9.40\nOIL8\nAnglo Can    4.60\nAtlantic Oil _.....  \u25a0   .95\nB. A. Oil : 26.00\nBritish Dom. 24\nCalgary and Edmonton .... ;   7.60\nCalriiont      ,43\nChemical Research _ .-\u201e..    .58\nDalhousie :.\t\nDavies Pete ....\nDecalta .'.\t\nEastcrest\t\nFoothills\t\n.51\n.31\n- .14,\n64\n3.45\n65\nGlobe   ..'.\t\nHighwood _.. ,\t\nImperial Oil : __,.. 20.7*5\nInter Pete  -.. Sjtf 10.00\nMid Cont  3i\nNat Pete .....\u201e.\u201e\u201e\u2122....\u201e.._\u25a0....\nNew Pacalta ..'.\t\nNordon\t\nOkalta _.\nPacific Pete\t\nRoxana\t\nRoyalite'\t\nTower Pete '\t\nUnited Oils\t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbltibl ..,...\u201e..\u201e\nAlgoma Steel ......\nAluminum^.\t\nArgus ..' ...I...\nAtlas St......\t\nBathurst.Power \u201e\nBell Telephone \u201e\nBrazilian  ;\t\nBrew and, Dist .\nB.C, Electric\t\nB.C. jorest _\nB,C. Packers ,A _\nB,C. Packers B\t\nB.C. Power A\t\nB.C. Power B ......\n4%\n.44\n.10W\n2.02\n3.50\n.43\n9.59\n-.41\n.10\n'  20\n13%\n84%\n7%\n'VI\n22%\n'4214\n-19%\n.16\n90%\n2%\n12y4\n6%\n28\n3Vt\nMarket Trends\nLONDON, Oct. 27. (Heuters)-A\nhall-hearted .ally in British Government stocks was short-lived to-\nday. The section developed fresh\nweakness on renewed selling which\nput prices, Jower by 1 to 1% points,\nOther sections of the London\nStock Exchange were mostly easier, reflecting the falls in gilt-edged.\nLeading industrials were marked\nlower,.but tobacco shires proved resistant and occasionally firmer.\nTrading was again small in Industrials, and.over all there.remained\na strong element of Caution,   '\u2022 v\n. TORONTO, Oct 27. (CP)-Prices\ncontinued climbing on the heaviest\ntrading in about three weeks on the\nToronto Stock Exchange today. Industrials rolled upward-Into hew\nhigh ground for the second successive session, and golds and base met-\nals found brisk support, Western\noils were strong in early dealings\nbut showed signs of slipping toward\nthe close as profit-taking appeared.\nVolume was about 1,300,000 shares.\nMONTREAL, Oct. 27 (CP)-Trad-\ning went along at a good clip and\nkey issues showed improvement on\nthe Montreal Stock Exchange and'\nCurb Market today.\nGains ranged from fractions to\naround a point,'but many gains gar.\nnered earlier In the day were\ntrimmed down.   ' ,\nNEW YORK, Oct 27 (AP)-Heavy\nbuying drove the stock market to a\n19'49 high, today. \\ , '.,.   . *\nGain?- ranged from fractions to\nmore than a- point in one of the\nbusiest sessions of the year.\nVANCOUVER, Oct. 27 (CP)\u2014All\nstocks showed fractional gains ih\nactive trading today, on the Vancouver Stock Exchange. Sales for\nthe morning totalled' 72,472 shares.\nOils continued active, while industrials and mines also shajed In\nthe firmer trend. GKlds, too, showed some advances.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nMINES\nBrnloine  , 10 55 ,\nCanusa     \"             ...:.'.....: .'.' '   .12\nCariboo Gold 150\nGolconda                             . 25\nGrandview  19\nHeilley Mascot  -....\u201e.......,... .37\nHighland Bell .<:.  .57\nfnt C & C ..:.........,.......  .20\nKenville    .05%\nKootenay Belle,  .35\nPac Eastern Gold  ;    .06\nPend Orrilte               5.70\nPioneer- Gold   3.65\nQuatsjno    >.....y. y..,.y   .06\nReeves MacDonald* .._. 2.40\nSheep Creek  1.15\nSilver Ridge  \u25a0  .14\nSurf Inlet   ' .08%\nOILS\nAnglo Canadian , .... 4.60\nCal & Edmonton  7.40\nCalmont        ;  '45,\nCommonwealth  .90\nDalhousie  .52\nEast Leduc   \u201e.  .23\nFoothills  3.40\nGlobe  .. .66\nHome    .(  13.00\nMcLeod       .11\\\nMercury   .13\nNational Pete   ' .43\nPacific Pete ,,.. 8.50\nRoyalite :...... 9.45\nSouthwest Pete  .45\nVanalta :....\u201e._ .21\nYulcan    .'. .27\nWest Leduc  :.  .66\nINDUSTRIALS\nB C Telephone ....... 'J. 102.25\nCoast Breweries  3.65\nNeon Products   13.75\nUnited Distilleries  ;. .\" 25.00\nUNLISTED  MINES\nWesteA Exploration   ...   .. .25\nDOW JONES AVERAGES \u2022\n30 industrialS7-19b..., up 1.28. -\n20 rails\u201449.10, p .47.\n\u202215 utilities\u201438.81, up .09.\nB.C. Pulp _.........\nBuilding Products  \u2014\nBurns: A ~\t\nBurns B  ..........\nBurratd A \t\nCan. Cement \t\nCan. Malting  .\u2014\nCan. Packers A \u2014\nCan. Packers B \t\nCanadian Bakeries\t\nCanadian Breweries  .....\nCanadian' Canners ;......\nGypsum Lime i\nH R MacMillan A :\t\nCanadian Car and Fdy\t\nCanadian Carand Fdy.A'....\nCan! Oil .'....-..\t\nCanadian Steamships ..'.\t\nCanadian Celanese   ...\nCanadian'Ind Alcohol\t\nCanadian Marconi\t\nCanadian Pacific Hly'...;....,.\nCockshutt\t\nCoast Copper .........\t\nCons. Mining and Smelt.....\nDist Seagram  _.\nDom Stores ' -\nDom Tar and Chemical\t\nFamous Players\t\nFannj^Farmer \". \u2014......\nFleet Air, .....\nFord A , \u2014'. ..\u2014\nGatineau \u2014\u2014\u2022\nGen Steel Wares ....:.. \t\nH R MacMillan B ..\t\nImperial Oil .._..\u201e\u201e.\nInjp Tobacco ...\nInt. Metal\t\nInt. Nickel '...'.\t\nLoblaw A\t\nLoblaw B :.....:\t\nM and O Paper .\t\nMoore Corp  ;...\u201e_,..-.\nPowell River'  ..,_...\nPower Corp  ....:\t\nRuss. Industries..., '\u2014....\nShawinlgan .-...\u201e_.\u201e.\u2014\nShea Brew. ,\u2014....\t\nSicks Brew. -.'\t\nSoutham\t\nH.Walker \t\nWeston George\n87\n33V4\n27\n16\n8\n34%\n48%\n33 .\n20%\n7%\n23%\n20%\n16%\n9%\nUVi\n15%\n15%\n15\n24%\n' 10%\n1.9\ni6y4\n14\n1.10\n104\n19%\n33Y4\n20%\n15%\n39\n1.60\n25%\n17%\n16%\n- 7%\n20%\n14%\n26%\n33%\n31%\n31%\n16\n1'iVt\n,41\nWt\n17%)\n25%\n-13%\n21%\n'20%\n33%\n-24%\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949\nNakusp * * *   ,\n\u2022NAKUSP. B. C. -^ Mr. and Mrs.\nErllng . Johnson \u25a0 and daughter,\nChristina, and Mrs. Johnson's\nmother, Mrs. E. M. Coulter, have\nreturned from Trail.\nMrs, Charles Jenson and young\nson, Ronnie, have returned from\nJfelson where' they were guests of\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Hopkins.\nMr. and Mrs, J. Harris of Castle-\ngar have token up residence In Nakusp '        \"\nDonald Elder has left, for Naramata where he will attend th* Stu\ndent Christian Training School.\n' Mrs. E. C. Johnson was a'visitor\nto New Denver Sunday visiting\nMrs. James Draper, who ls a patient in Slocan Community Hospital. *\n- Rev. B*: S. S. Hartlfey held United\nChurch services;, in New Denver\nSunday.\nMrs. WfJ. Dougan of Trail who\nhas been guest of her parents, Mr.'\nand Mrs. G. H, Gardner of Glenbank, has returned to her home.\nMr. and Mrs. A. B. S. Stanley\nhave left for Vancouver to attend\nthe annual convention of the B, C.\nDivision Canadian Weekly Newspapers' Association,\nMrs, M. JL. Barke left. Wednesday\nfor Calgary where she will Spend\nth.e Winter months, guest of' her\ndaughter and son-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs.. Norman Graftt,\nRev. Thomas and. Mrs. Mitchell\nreturned from Nelson ,where they\nattended the Deanery meeting.\nThey were accompanied by Mrs. R,\nJi Humphrls of Nakusp who was\ndelegate. ;\"f '-y.*:.'.-\"\u25a0\u25a0\nFete Cavedln of Chase, B. C, is\nguest of Mr. ahd Mrs. D. E. Johnson.\nDistrict 'Phone\nInstallations\nContinue Upward\nTelephone installations by the\nB.C, Telephone Company, in various Kootenay centres have shown a\ncontinuing upward trend since the\nbeginning of the year,   ,\nGreatest increase since Jan. 1\nwas seen in Nelson where installations rose from 2892 to 3039 while\nfrqm August to September eight\ntelephones were installed. The sec\nond highest increase was seen in\nTrail where 123 additional 'phones\nwere Installed. However (rom Aug,\nto Sept. 1 the number of telephones\nin Trail dropped from 3784 to 3778.\nStatistics follow:\n-  '   , .   Jan.   Aug. Sept,\n1949   1949   1949\nB*lfour> ..:.......\u201e.       30      32      33\nGrand 'Forks      837    355  ' 358\nGreenwood        70      72      72\nInvermere \u201e... ' 152    173    177\nKaslo   :      163     167    163\nNakusp -.,     129    150    154\nNelson     2892  3031 3039\nNew Denver      132    142    142\nRossland' '   849    913    914\nTrail  3658'  3784   3778\nKootenay Telephone' Co. Ltd.\nstatistics:'\nCranbrook     783    804    832\nCreston      533    559    567\nFernie       337    342    345\nKimberley     498    619    623\nMichel'       71      73      73\nToll stations        2       2?\nCrawford Bay\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C. \u2014 Mrs.\nFleck, Leslie and George Fleck and\nNancy Nespiak of Camp Lister visited Mrs.,Jameson,; .;\nThe Junior Badminton Club practised on Saturday afternoon with\nMrs. Robinson and Mrs. Nyberg as\nsupervisors.\nA large turn out was in the hall\nSaturday night to see the film \"The\nHoneymoon,\" starring Shirley\nTemple'.' Many pedple came from\nBoswell, La France and Grey Creek.\n; Nels Seldon who works for Glacier Logging visited his' home at\nCreston over the weekend.\n\"Walter Glacier of Wynndel who\nhas been visiting Bill Davidson here\nhas returned to his home.\n', Mr. and Mrs. Gola and Kenneth\nand Mrs. Rae Draper visited Creston.\nBoswell. * *\nBOEIWELL, B.C.-MTB. Fred Lord,\nwh has been the guest of Mr. and\nMrs. J. Pryke, has left for her home\nin Vancouver, En route she will vis-\nIt her brother, R. A. Peebles in Nel-\nBbn... . \u25a0':,.\nS. S. Frank is, staying a few days\nin Nelson. . \",',\"\nThe-Boswell Orchestra were at\nRiondel, for the dance on Friday\nnight Quite _ few local residents\naccompanied them and enjoyed a\npleasant evening.\nC. H. Bebbington has left to visit\nhis son Stanley in White Salmon,\nWash.','      ''\nEd Bainbridge wap in Nelson over\nthe weekend. .  '\nMrs. C. pebbington has as her\nguests, Mr.' and Mrs. W. Gell of San\nDiego, Calif.   -'-'\nWindermere Guides\nVisited By Division\nCommissioner\nINVEREMERE, B. C, Oct 27 \u2014\nGirl Guides of.the Lake Windermere\nCompany and' Brownies of the Lake\nWindermere Pack were visited by\nDivision Commissioner, Mrs. Jasper\nWolverton of. Kimberley, Kimberley\nDivision Commissioner, Mrs. M.\nThomas and Trainers Mrs. Don\nMunday of Vancouver and Miss,\nGrace Nichols bf Vernon,    'i   '\nFollowing a brief meeting with\nthe local Guide and Brownie leaders and.the*President of the local\nAssociation, Mi's. Roy Lake, the\ngroup went on to the Lake Windermere Memorial Community Centre\nwhere th\/sy attended- a Brownie\nmeeting and later me't.i the Girl\nGuide group which took some training routine from Mrs. Munday.\nCALGARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, Oct 27, (CP)\u2014Trade\nwas fairly active and prices mostly\nsteady on the Calgary livestock\nmarket this morhing, though there\nwas little change In general conditions. Buyer pressure was evident\non all' common to fair classes, of\nkillers. Medium to good killers,\nhowever, continued scarce, and\nprices.were steady:..- .. \u2022\"*\/\nCows were ih load demand at\nabout steady prices. Better grade\nstockers\"and feeders-were.also steady, but fajr'to medium kinds,were\nabout 50 cents lower. A percentage,\nof common quality cattle and calves\nwere selling as boners at 10 to 12\ncents.\nThe Dominion Livestock Markets\nService reported yesterday's saleable receipts, as- 1246 cattle, 220\ncalves, 389 hogs, 18B sheep. Today's\nsaleable' receipts: 283' cattle, 10\ncalves.     '\nHogs sold yesterday at $27.50 for\nA's at yards and plants. Sows, $16.50,\nlive weight.    .   ' -\nGood lambs, $19 to $20; good ewes,\n$8 to $8,50....    . ,   \u2022\u25a0       ..:.\nGood to choice butcher steers, $19\nto  $20;   common to, medium,  $16\ntO:$18. '%\nGood tb choice butcher heifers,\n$17 to $18; common to medium,'$14\nto $18.\nGood cows, $12.75 to $13.50; common to medium,. $11.25 to $12.50;\ncanners and cutters,* $8 to $11.\nGood bulls, $14 to $15; common to\nmedium, $12 to $13..\nGood to choice'-veal calves, $17 to\n$18; common to medium, $14 to\n$16.50.\nGood stocker and feeder steers,\n$16.50 to $18; common to medium\n$14 to $16.'\nTo Talk on China\nAnd World Peace\nDr, James . G. Endicott, former\nmissionary in China, will address\nthe citizens of Trail and district on\nHie subject \"Chins and World\nPeace\" in the. Trail Memorial Hall\nMonday night\nDr. Endicott, who is the cousin\nof Trail's well known Dr. W. J.\nEndicott Ib a noted authority on\nChinese affairs. He was born in\nWest China where his father was a\npioneer missionary.\nA veteran of World War I and a\ngraduate ofthe University of Tor- .\nonto in Arts and Theology. Dr.\nEndicott and his wife went to China\nas-missionaries of the United Church\nof Canada In 1925. For 22 years he\nwas'a preacher and teScher there\nand partly at the West Union\nUniversity in Chengtu.,\nReturning to China from furlough\nin 1944, Dr. Endicott was shocked\nat the deterioration of the Chiang\nregime. He spoke at popular demori-.\nillations*, for peace and reform,\nduring the period when it was\nhoped full scale civil war could be\nprevented. From that period until\nthe present he had urged the church\nto face the issue in China and take\na stand for peace and: against\ncorruption and oppression. He resigned from the .mission and later\nfrom the ministry after he had been\ncriticized for making such statements which were said to be un-\nsuitable for a missionary.\nPUBLISHES NEWSLETTER\nSince returning to Canada, he has \u00bb\nbeen lecturing and writing on the ,\nmeaning of the present struggle in\nChina and in 1948 began to publish .\nthe Canadian  Far Eastern. Newsletter, giving information gathered\nfrom sources \"in. China and Hong\nKong,   and   commenting   on   the\nattitudes to China as revealed in\nthe Press of this continent.    -'\nHis purpose has been \"to awaken\nCanadians as citizens and churchmen to their responsibilities in the .\nsituation.\" In the Fall of 1948; Dr.'\nEndicott was among a small group\nin Toronto who initiated a Peace\nCouncil for that city and later a\nnational movement to coordinate the\nefforts of people across Canada who\ndesired to work for peace against\nthe threat of war.\nAs corchairman of the provisional\ncommittee of the Canadian Congress\nfor Peace, along with Rev. I. G. .\nPerkins of Toronto, Dr. Endicott has\nbeen assigned the duty of touring\ncities across the country, speaking\non behalf of this movement\nBall\noux..\nBALFOUR, B.C.\u2014Bert McDonald\nreturned- home after spending the\nSummer months at Tinnley Falls\nand Other points in the Yukon.\nMrs.' K. Chandler is spending a\nfew days visiting friends in Nelson \u25a0\nand Trail.\nBy way of bon-voyage, Mrs. McKay (Grannie) entertained at, the\ntea hour in honor of Mrs. A. H.\nNoakes who is leaving.for a six\nmonths holiday in England.\nChester, common ending for English town names, comes from the\nRoman word, castra, meaning camp,\nsince many were originally Roman\ncampsites. '\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nNelson Farmers'\n\" Supply . '.;\nShow you the easy way\nto good eating.\n_!\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, OCT. 28, 1949\nGe^the\nPor treatment of head oolds, core throat, bronchitis! coughs,\nwhooping cough and laryngitis\/ there Is' nothing more effective*\nthan \u2022'\u2022'.' '\nDeVilbiss Electric Steam Vaporizer\nIt-\nIs never too hot to'i\"\u00bbtidli  '\nShuts off automatically\nProvides an even, medicated vapor'\nIs easy tb clean\nIs safe, convenient to use\nIs quickly effective\nf   Price   $4.50\nMANN'S\nDRUG STORE\n$100 Scholarship\nSet for Students\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Oct 26-The\nregular meeting of Sullivan Mine\nChapter'I. 0. D; E. last-week deeded tp establish a |100 scholarship for, any Kimberley students\nwho wish to enter U. B. C. after\ngrade 12. Mrs. T. McCallum was appointed Chs'rm air of the Scholarship\nCommittee.\nPlans were made to send two $10\nXmas parcels to two families in\nEngland while $25 was donated to\nthe; National I.-Q.-D. B. Scholarship\nEndowment Fund.\nSeventy-five yards of flannelette\nand eleven pounds of wool were\nordered to make garments for needy\nchildren In England.\nMrs. R. Overton was Initiated as a\nnew member.\nHostesses were Mrs. D. Harrison,\nassisted by Miss D. Bentley.\nHONOR G. FRIEAKE\nON SULLIVAN\nMINE RETIREMENT\nMARYSVIliE, B. C, Oct. 26.154\nResident ot Marysville and employee at the Sullivan Concentrator\nat Chapman Camp for the past 25\nyears, George Frieake' reached retirement recently, and to mark this\nrepresentatives of Cominco, the operating company, his fellow workers ot the mill, and officials.of Local 651', Union of. Mine, Mill ahd\nSmelter Workers had a party at\nOughtred.. Hall at Chapman Camp.\nH. R. Baijks, concentrator super-,\nintendent, presented him -with a\nclock.on. behalf of the. company.\nFellow workers combined, oft 'if.wal-\nlet filled with money, presented by\nHarold Andrews, and his union local gave him.a cheque,' presented\nby Union Secretary James MacFarlane. .\nj (Mr. and Mrs. Frieake established\ntheir home' in Marysville' many\nyears ago and will continue to live\nthere.;- -. '\u2022'.'\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0-\nReao the Classifies\u2014It  Pays\nHoffman Pleads\nFor Continued\nAidloEurope\nMONTREAL, Oct 27 (CP) \u2014 W*\u00ab\ncan compress more progress into\nthe -'next quarter-century than\nachieved in the last half-century,\nPaul G. Hoffman declared today' in\non address to the Canadian Chamber\npf Commerce.\nMr. -Hoffman, Administrator of\nthe United States Economic Cooperation Administration, and\ntherefore the chief figure in carrying out the European Recovery Program, made it clear that this pro'\ngress will depend upon the restoration of Europe.\nPEOPLE WERE HUNGRY\nMr. Hoffman recalled that, when\nMarshall Plan aid to Europe started, the Kremlin was on the march;\nPeople'were hungry. Much of Eur-\nAbout 80 per cent of the population of Pakistan is directly or Indirectly dependent on the cultivation\nof land for their living,\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\/\u25a0\u2022Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE SERVICE\n91? Kootenay St   ,      Phone 361\nFor Dependable\nPAINTING ond\nPAPERHANGING\n\u25a0','; 'See\nMurphy Brothers\nPhone 655\n745' Baker St.\nYES \u2014 Your, New Wave\nbound to be  MORE STYLISH,\nLA8T LONGER and\n,        LOOK LOVELIER\nat the\nHAIQHTRU-ART\nA Large Selection of\nLighting\nFixtures\nfor trie home,- office,\nond etc.\nReasonably priced\nSmith\nElectric\nPHONE 2S8\n; Animal products, including musk\nand ambergris, go into some perfumes and a great number of scents\nare obtained from coal tar.\nFLEURY'5  Pharmacy\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Blk.\nPHONE .5\nChildren's \u25a0\nWINTER-tyEAR\nFor ploy ond best\nThe Children's Shop\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED  A   REPAIRED- f\nREOORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St    .    '.'.'.   Phone 63\nIRENE'S\nEnd ofthe Month\nSpecials\nDRESSES -\nSpecial Prices\n$9.95 and $10.95\nChenille BED JACKETS\nIS*5'95:..... :  W.W\nNylon WONDER-BRA\nRegular $1.95. - JK\/L\nSale            \"\"T\nLASTEX GIRDLES\nTwo-way, size smalL        7K\/*\nReg. $2.50. Sale ...    \u25a0\u2022*\nWomen's Pumps\nCut. from durable;browri calf. Styled in that ever popular platform sole with cubdn heels and novelty instep\nstrap. Sizes 5 to 8. Medium widths. $\"f.50\nPair __: __- \"..  , . f    .\/\nNELSON SHOE CO., LTD\nPhone 1114\n411 Baker St.\nHIGH QUALITY\u2014MODERATELY PRICED\nMall Orders Qlvan Prompt Attention\nSee the Mew\nWEBER PIANOS\nMODELS\nonly $fvdi.l.00\nIn Stock\nDistributed throughout Canada by\nHeintzman Co- Ltd.\nMcKAY & STRETTON LTD.\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\n8-PC. WATERFALL BEDROOM OUTFIT\nAnd it can be yours so easily! Just picture your bedroom \\vitR this handsome waterfall suite in rich veneers and large sparkling mirrors. It's hard to believe\nthat such fine furniture, plus all the extras can be\nhad for such a small sum! .\t\n*\n\u2022SO\n\u2022 Full Size bed\n\u2022 Chest of drawer*\n\u2022 Vanity\no Restful mattress\n\u2022 Buoyant slat spring\n\u2022 Pair of pillows\nHome Furniture\n640 BAKER ST.\nSEE\nOUR\nD\nI\nS\nP\nL\nA\nY\nS\n(Nelson) Ltd.\nPHONE 1032\nKIMBERLEY TEA\nWELL PATRONIZED\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. Oct, 26\u2014The\nSt. Andrews Society tea held 'to the\nMark Creek store last week under\nthe convenorshlp of Mrs. Park was\nwell patronized and a most satisfactory suth.ot money was raised,   \u2022\nPouring were Mrs. Christina Shea\nand Mrs. W. Hay, Sr.: while sefvl-\nteurs were Mrs. T. McLay, Sr., Mrs.\nA. Watson, Mrs. W. Brown, Sr., Mrs.\nH. Martin, Mrs. G. Scott and Mrs. R.\nJohnson.\n, The home cooking stall, was in\ncharge of Mrs. R. Davidson and Mrs.\nJ. McLayf While the kitchen\narrangements Were, cared for, by\nMrs. T. Duncan, Mrs. C. Duncan and\nMrs. A. Smith.  , . \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nope's plant equipment was in disrepair. Now:'\n\"On the economic front I can report that the people of Marshall\nPlan nations'now haVe a sustaining\ncjlet... people 'are*' working and\nworking hard. That'is the meaning\nbehind the figures that Western\nEuropean production, Including\nWestern Gorman, now is up 20 per\ncent above pre-war.' It is up 40 per.\ncent in Britain... .\n, \"The standard of living In Western Eui\"ope is considerably higher\nthan that of Russia. It must be Kept\nhigher.\" Mr, Hoffman asked -that\nthe United States and Canada refrain from < imposing restrictions\nwhich would retard-low Imports to\nthe Western Hemisphere.\n\"I believe It we remain strong\nand If Europe becomes string, and\nIf we remain united; the evil plans\nof the men of the kremlln will\nfall so utterly that Russia hqrself\nwill cease to' be a Slave State,\"\nHoffman concluded.\nJeffreys\nRadio Sales & Service\nScientific  Radio  Repairing\n446 WARD^ST.       PH. 1302\nNELSON, B.C.   -.\u25a0 >\nSECOND   HAND  TIRES\nVALVES GROUND\nOVERHAULING-TUNEUP8    v\n8at)sfaqt|on Guaranteed\nMANN'S REPAIR SHOP\nPhone ~3.2-iI\u20142021 Stanley Street\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPHONE 81*\nSTROMBERG-CARLSON\nRADIOS\nJeffrey Radio Service\n440 Ward St.     .       Phone 1302\nNelsoh, B.C.    .\n>r greater comfort this winter, and for thrifty fuel, savings too,\nhere are supplies to seal out the cold, and to heat more efficiently\n:-\u00abside \u25a0..'. .priced at a saving. !\nf\nNlllUCE CEMfNT\n'\u25a0'\u25a0'\"    i\nIn 1 lb. tint i-\u2122 SSfi\nSTOVE LINING\nIn 2'\/2 lb. pkgs- __._ 45 <!\nSwedish\nFireplace\nDogs\nin 2 designs\nfrom $15.70\nIn Felt, Rubber Covered, '\nMetal and Wood Stripping\n,   From 65c pkg.   '\nFIREPLACE SCREENS\nSTOVEPIPES\nElbows 45 deg. and 90 deg.\n; Tees r Tapers\nThimbles, etc.\nSOOT\nREMOVER\nA quick, sure\neasy to use\npreparation that\nremoves soot\nquickly from oil\nburning hollers\n. and furnaces.\nin several types and\nfrom $7.25\nRed Devil\n500 tin\nWindow Glass.\nGlaziers\nPoints\nv Putty ,\nPutty Knives\nStove Polish\nStove Pipe\n'Enamel\nMcClary\nRanges\nElectric\n,\u2022\u2022: Heaters\n11\nstyles\nWyr-O-Glass\nlv\nflffl\nllliH\nISrol l i t-iH tl \\l\nWindowlite\nCut Tacks\nCenco Door\nCovers\nFurnace\nScoop\n30 in. D Ml.\nSteel blade\nlO'\/jxlS\n, $1.45.\"','\nCast Clean\nOuts\nCoal Hods\nMcClary.\nHeaters\nElectric\"\nJanitors\nSTOVEBOARDS\nIn various sizes from $2.15\nSTOVE GUARDS\nTo protect that wall\nMedium size $3.65\nStove\n- Shovel\n- Body- and\nhandle   In   one '\npiece. Corners\nare corrugated\nfor   greater\nstrength.- Black\nfinish. Length 14\nInches.\n- From    35c\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCOMPANY LIMITED '\nPhones 26-27 Wholesale\u2014Retail Nelson, B.C.\nHeads Kimberley\nStudents Council\nC_tANBROO__, B.' C, 6ct. 27 \u2014\nPlowing'into the year's activities\nthe 300 students at Cranbrook High\nSchool have elected Tommy Dbol-.\ning as their Student Council President, Eleanor Armstrong ns Vice-\nPresident, Pamela Burton as Secretary, Bob Wall as Treasurer,'and\nBob Doollng, Athletics President,\nwith U G. Truscott of the staff,\nAthletic Advisor.\nThe seven divisions iii the school\nelected as their representatives on\nStudent Council Bob Meshwa, Bob\nWillock, Iris Hall; Kay MacDonald,\nPaul- Yakovich, Gerry Dixop and\nMarjory.. Wills. \u25a0:'      .-fi\nDivlsldn-of the! student body into\nAlpha, Beta and Gamma houses for\npoints competition in scholastics,\narts and'spbrts has been completed\nand Alpha house members have\nelected Eugene Smith as their captain. Beta House chose Lindell\nBrehm and Gamma House chose\nMary Florentlno. Infra-mural cbm-\np'etitlon for the annual house trophy has already started.  .\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nMAKE   YOUR   CL,OTHES   LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST KOOTENAY\n\u2022STEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175-18? BAKER 8T.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIPIIIIUIIIII\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY   RECOVERED\nat- the\nNELSON UPHOLSTERY\n413 Hall 8t   \u25a0.'..'      Phone 14.\n' iniHiiiHiiiiinii iiiiiiiiiiiii\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n;fi\\ & IMRIE\nChartered Accountants.\n;    Auditors\n660 Baker St. Phone 236\nLet George Do It\nELECTRICAL WIRING\nand; REPAIRS\nGEO.G. BOYES\nPhone 768 R\u2014420 Houston  St,\nTRY ELLISON'8\nVITAB\nALL PURPOSE FLOUR\nSatisfaction Guaranteed\nELLISON MILLING CO. LTD,\nGeneral\nElectric\n'\u25a0:.' Tank Type '.\nVacuum Cleaners\nComplete with attachmenta    .\n$94.50\nNelson Electric Co.\n' Authorized GE Dealers\nPhone 260 -        574 Baker St.\nSOMETHII\nNEW\nWbrwqMm\\\nSoJCkL\nHere's something new.\nsock of nylon and woe\nshrink resistant, ma<\nwith a hand embroider*\nmonogram. Blue, favi\nand canary.\nEmory's Ltc\n.THE MAN'S STORE,\nWIGINTON\nMdTORSLTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C.   TRUCKS.\nMetal and Paint Work Spec\nJ.A.CLAUGHK\nOptometrist\nMEDICAL ARTS BUILDIf,\nSuite 208\n\u25a0 \u25a0 w\u00bb winy wi\u00bbyi\u00bbi\u00bb wimpm\"\nHALLOWE'EN\nKOVILTY\nSATURDAY\nNovelties, Noisomokei\nFun galore\nIt's the last regular Satun\ndance of the .season\nFor special dance nigl\nat the Playmor-\nThe Gift of a Lifetime\nBulova for Accuracy\nOther models, pricedfrbm $14.50 up\nW. G. VALIN -Jeweller\nPHONE 1149 HA BAKER SI\nyy inter Is coming.\nI gnition systems should be overhauled.\n|\\|ever neglect your differential lubricant.,\nI ransmissions need special cold weather lubricants, I\n[ rigine oil should be changed to Winter grade now.\nJ\\ ememberl Defrosters and wipers protect you in Wint\nI nspection Of starter and choke is important. *\n\u00a3ero weather strikes fast. Be prepared-\nfc xtra Winter protection is yours when you drive in to\nNELSON TRANSFEI\nCompany, Limited\n\u25a0 .   \" . the largest and most completely equipped\ngarage in the Interior of B.C.\n35    PHONE    35\n%*-,#\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_1949_10_28","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0426471","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"}]}}