{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0426502":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2023-02-14","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1950-09-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0426502\/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":" JMiinniiMiiiiiiiniiMiiiiiniiHiiiiiiiiinniMHiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiHiiiinmirrmntrmi\nToday's ExhibiUon\nProgram\nFriday's program of. events in the second day of the\nWest Kootenay Agricultural and Industrial Exhibition\nfollows;\n10:00 a.m.\u2014Opening of gates.\n1;30 p.m.\u2014Parade of High School Band.\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Floor show. :\n7:30 p.m.-r-Floor show.\nIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllilimillllllllllllllllllllllllllfl\nCommons Finishes\nSpecial Session\nWill Adjourn Today Until Feb. 14;\nMay Be Recalled Sooner if Needed\n\u2022 OTTAWA, Sept. 14 (CP)-^-The Commons, to all intents\nond purposes, today completed the work of its special, emergency session. (\nTomorrow\u201418 days after the opening of the session\u2014\nmembers will witness royal assent to some of the legislation\npassed and then Will adjourn until Feb. 14.\nThe lengthy adjournment was opposed by George Drew,\nProgressive Conservative Leader, as members tackled the lost\nitem of business on the order paper\u2014the fixing of a date\nfor calling the  House back*\ninto session.\nMr. Drew moved that members\nI be recalled by Nov. 15 at the latest.\nI His motion was defeated by a voice\nvote. A motion, by Prime Minister\nSt. Laurent fixing Feb. id as the\ndate, ..for the next sitting was\nadopted-\"on division\" \u2014 without a\nrecorded vote. Mr. St Laurent's\nmotion made it clear that members\nwill be recalled earlier if developments warrant such action.\nPrior to dealing with the adjournment motion, members\nquickly passed four bills giving\nlegal effect to the tax changes\n\"'announced In. last Tuesday's\nbudget They also passed a bill\nlimiting the $25-a-day sessional\nallowance payable to members to\nthe number of days they have\nbeen In Ottawa. They will re-\n- eelve no allowance during the\nrecess.\nIn urging a shorter adjournment\nperiod, Mr. Drew said that by Nov.\n15\" some of the most momentous\nmeetings of modern times will have\nbeen held and decisions made of\n. tremendous Importance.\nParliament should be given the\nearliest possible opportunity to discuss them.\nIt Is not impossible, he told members, that the Kremlin may be toying with the idea of \"seeking a\nworking- arrangement with the free\nnations\" and all would hope that\nthis will happen.\nBut if Russia left no doubt at\nthe meeting of the United Nations\nGeneral Assembly next week that\nIts policies won't change then great,\nnew decisions \u25a0 would have to be\nmade by-.the Western powers.\nEither way, it,was clear that by\nthe end of October new decisions\nwould, have to be made \"which\nParliament should be called on to\nconsider with the utmost dispatch.\"\nJohn Blackmore (SC-Leth\nbridge) and several other members\nprotested the increase in the tax\non soft drinks, candy and chocolate\nbars.- i ' >,\nH. W. Herridge  (CCF-Koote\nnay West)  said the C.C.F. con\n1 sldcred the Income, tax the fairest\n... of taxes,-The C.C.F. was opposed\nto hidden taxes and If In power\nwould  remove them as quickly\nas possible.\nHe reiterated requests that the\nGovernment reimpose an excess\nprofits tax and that it boost still\nhigher the tax on corporation income. The party also felt that the\ntax on personal incomes in the\nhigher brackets should be increased\nThe revenue obtained could be\nused' tor the administration of price\ncontrols- and for tha payment \u25a0 of\nsubsidies on essential goods. At the\nsame time, the higher taxes would\nhelp' to curb inflation. ;  .\ntill\nWEATHER FORECAST\nKootenay: Sunny with little\nfhange in temperature. Light.winds.\nLow and high at Cranbrook and\nCrescent Valley 30 and 70.\nVOLL     \u25a0;&,':'.   ':   ,ijk,. ;,'\u2022.}, \u00bb CENTS A  COPY NELSON,  BRITISH  COLUMBIA,  CANADA-FRIDAY  MORNING, SEPT. 1S,\"19S0\nNUMBER   123\nh Agree To Strengthen Defence\n1\u201e\n3000atEx\nHard to Beat\"\n1\n1 \u2022 You con browse arouhd Civic Centre for hours and not\nsee half of the West Kootenay Agricultural and Industrial\nExhibition.    .\nThat's what 3000 people found Thursday, and that's\nhow big the thr,ee-day fun and sight-fest has turned out to\nbe. Crowds streamed through the day long, and for the floor\nshow, at   night,   there 'was4 T\nstanding room only y^ ||^\nPark To Be\nGame Reserve!\nOpening Day\ntrade Minister\nOpens Exhibition\nCommcmd^\nBeKind Red Lines\nTOKYO, Sept. 15 (Friday) (AP)\u2014\nSouth' Korean Commandos landed\ntoday behind Communist lines on\nthe East coast of Korea while the\nReds Were displaying invasion .jitters over a naval bombardment of\nthe West coast.\n\u25a0 Today's landing, apparently aimed at cutting a coastal road, was\nmade by a battalion of South Kor-\n, eans, (possibly 1000 men) two miles\nNorjtheast of the Red-held port, of\nPohang, An American. battleship\nwas reported off Pohang yesterday.\nThe 8outh Koreans called for air\nsupport shortly after going ashore,\nYesterday U.S. 8uperforts rain-\n! ed- more air blows on the. West\ncoast, closely following up a big\nbombardment by British and American warships.\nAn air communique said B-29s\nbombed rail lines for 100 miles from\nthe Red capital of Pyongyang South\nto Seoul; where the Communist radio hinted it thought an invasion\nwas brewing.\nThe Superforts also strewed their\nbombs for 200 miles from Pyongyang Southeastward to Kumchon, a\nrear supply base for the Red troops\nalong the 125-mile war front in\nSouth Korea. ...\nBROKEN THRU8T?\nAt the critical sector of the war\nfront\u2014Taegu, the Northwest pivot\nof the line\u2014the U.S. 1st Cavalry\nCommander said today he believed\nhis men \"have broken the back of\nthe main enemy thrust.\"\nBut - Maj.-Gen. Hobard R. Gay\nquickly added that he might have to\nchange his mind. A 1st Cavalry\nspokesman said, the Americans still\ncontrol Hill 570, the, highest peak\npommanding the . Northern approaches to Taegu. But he said the\ntroops lost another hill In the same\narea.\nTuesday, B-29s blew up the Communists ..Kan-- arsenal, 15 miles\nNortheast, of Pyongyang. They returned Wedri^day ahd-bombed rail\nlines around Seou while.the warships bombarded the Inchon area. '\nThis morning's activities around\nthe war front-in South Korea included:\n1. The U.S. 1st Cavalry attempted\nto clean out Reds still remaining on\none slope of Hill 570, eight miles\nNorth of Taegu.\n2. The U.S. 2nd Division was try-\ning- to retake a hill lost Thursday to\nthe Reds about halfway between\nYongsan and the Naktong River.\nYongsan is 28 miles South and\nslightly West of Taegu.\n3. A regiment of the U.S. 25th Division, defending the South' end of\nthe line from positions 35 miles West\nof Pusan, repulsed a pre-dawn attack. About daylight, the Communists began heavily shelling that\nsector. v\nCreston Youth\nVictim of\nCycle Fatality\nFERNIE, B.C., Sept. 14-Arthur\nSommerseld of Creston was instantly killed here Thursday night\nwhen his motorcycle collided with\na truck.\n\u25a0 The accident occurred at 7 p.m.\non Dalton Avenue.\n\u25a0 -.He was employed by the Inland\nConstruction Company of Creston\nand was 18 years of age.\nHis parents Mr. and Mrs. Herman\nSommerseld reside at Camp Lister,\nthree miles South of Creston.\nWell-Known Pressman\nDies in Ottawa\nOTTAWA, Sept. 14 (CP)-W. J.\n(Bill) OCallaghan, well-known telegrapher, died here last night in\nbis 58th year, A native of Cornwall, Ont, he was a former wire\noperator for The Canadian Press,\nand for the Canadian Pacific and\nCanadian National Telegraph Com\npanics, and at one time worked in\nWestern Canada.\nTritium Discovered\nIn Ordinary Wafer\nPHILADELPHIA, Sept 14 (AP)\n\u2014The discovery in ordinary water\nof tritium, the form of heavy\nhydrogen which is the key explosive for H-bombs, was announced today'at the Research Institute of\nTemple University.\nTritium, like the other forms of\nhydrogen, is a colorless gas.\nThe reactor tritium is today said\nto cost nearly $500,000,000 a pound.\nDespite that, the water discovery\nshows no present promise of. substituting. The water extraction appears to be both less productive and\nfar more costly.\nBut there are two immediate\npractical uses for the water tritium.\nOne Is' to discover the secret manufacture of H-bombs.\n\u25a0? The other practical use is In\noceanography, to trace ocean currents right to the bottom of the\nsea. Surface waters contain more\ntritium than extremely deep water.\nLOCH NESS, Scotland, Sept. 14\n(CP) \u2014 Allan Kay an Edinburgh\nbusiness [man claims he- spotted\nthree; rnonsters\u2014not orte\u2014disport*\ning themselves in Loch Ness.\nWatching thetn through a powerful\ntelescope he said the creatures were\nracing along at 15 knots.\nNo accurate estimate of the number of spectators can be made, but\nofficials reckon that opening day attendance was well .up from last\nyear.\nThe floor show, Imported. from\nSeattle agency, was the big drawing\ncard..\nIts artists are the Razell Brothers\nthree young men who perform wonders at tumbling, pyramids and\nbalancing stunts, who become the\nKenley's when they are executing\ndaring unlcycle acts and ihe flying\nIieans when they make child's play\nout of a trapeze artistry\u2014the Lane\nTrio, and Homer the Clown, three\nyoung girls who are whizzes at\ntrampoline work.\nThe stars are Wilbur Hall and\nRenee, who didn't appear lor the\nafternoon -show; because , they had\nbeen misdirected to Kingsgate port\nof entry from, the United States Instead of Nelway. Joseph, Kary, Past\nPresident of. the Fair Association,\npinchhit for Renee. as Master- of\nCeremonies..-. ,\nThe comedy musicians, six years\nwith Paul Wbiteman's Band and\nknown also to Ken Murray Blackout\nand television fans, made a huge\nhit with the crowd. A trumpet, musical, cojns and -joke-Jag are: Renee's\nclaims to farne, arid Wilbur HaU.is a\njack of all instruments who cari.play\nany number of music-makers, even\ntwo' at a time.-. ' \u25a0\u2022 \u25a0' \u2022;'   '-. \" '\u25a0 '..   >\nFor.;'teen-agers.. and .adults'.alike,\nthe Exhibition 'displays,' competitive\nandijjon-competitiiie,'.'comrhiercla-1\nand aniateur.i industrial and hlsteri-\n.caL Were- what aroused the Interest.\nBut it was the youngsters who had\na field, .day. at the midway, which\nstill had equipment arriving at night\n-Two bands, the Nelsoiv Junior-\nSenior High Schools Band and the\nKootenay Kiltie Pipe Band, lent\ntheir music to the festivities, The\nTrail Maple Leaf Band plays Saturday.\n\"HARD TO BEAT\"\n\"I can most sincerely say that this\nshow is hard to beat anywhere in\nthe Province,\" said Hon. L. H. Eyres\nProvincial' Minister of Trade and\nIndustry^ in opening the Exhibition,\nOf the displays' of agricultural\narid industrial products, ',he said\n\"when you get agriculture and in\ndustry together today you are really\ngoing places.\" ,   ',\nThe Minister paid special trl-\nbut not alone to the directors who\nhad spent a lot of work, time and\nmoney on the Exhibition, but to\nthe exhibitors Who came year after year and did not win prizes.\n\"They make the fair because they\nhave the competitive spirit Do\nnot get away from that competitive spirit\"\nHe had verbal bouquets, too, for\nBritish Columbians who worked for\nthe growth and expansion of B.C.\nproducts. In 1949 there were 3700\nfactories making B.C. goods, employing 104,000 workers and the revenue was over $200,000,000.      -,'\n\"1 appeal to you, particularly the\nhousewives, to promote B.C. production by buying and using B.C.\ngoods,\" he said.\n\"I now declare this ' Exhibition\nofficially open and hope that its\nsuccess is better than ever, before.''\nMayor N. C. Stibbs in his address\nof welcome said that he had a feeling of personal pride in that he ha j\na band in reorganizing the Fair last\nyear. He extended a special welcome\nto the people from the district.\nWalter Hendricks. M.L.A. for Nelson-Creston,,. Introduced Mr. Eyres.\n1489 ENTRIES\nT. H. Waters, Exhibition President\nsaid: \"The slogan we have adopted,\nthe show windows of the Kootenays' aptly displays the interest\nshown by our citizens and residents\nof the district. To . illustrate this,\nthe number of entries in 1949 was\n808 while. today we display 1489.\nWe have, received fine response\nfrom the surrounding districts. It\nIs Impossible for me to mention\nthem all'but an-excellent example\nIs the fine display from our neighbor city and district Creston.\n\u2022Thl\u00ab spirit of cooperation and\ngoodwill Is a great contribution\nto the welfare of .11.\"\n\"Among the various items that\nhave- been provided for display is\nthat,of a collection of historical ar\ntides toward which much time and\neffort- has .been concentrated to\nshow the great development that\nhas taken place in this section of\nBritish-. Columbia.\"   -';'\u25a0.-.'\nNelson Board of Trade Council\nIs In favor of making Kokanee\nGlacier Park a game reserve;\nThe Council, at Its Thursday\nmeeting In the Hume, endorsed\na resolution from the Fish and\nWildlife Committee calling for\nthe game reserve In trie Interests\nof the tourist Industry. Bound\narles would be set by the B.C.\nGame Department\nKokanee Glacier Park could be\nconverted Into a first-class tourist\nattraction, the Committee resclu\ntion said. Alpine .and ski clubs\ncould be established In its confines, and Its'many lakes could\nbe made more easily accessible\nto nature lovers.\nThe Council also backed a. Fish\nond Wildlife. Committee, rccom\nmendatlon of approval of;,- the\n\"Hendricks Plan\" for reclamation\nof a portion of land adjoining\nDuck Lake.\n\u25a0US\nReds From T.L.C.\nBy JOHN  LEBLANC\n. MONTREAL,, Sept, 14 (CP)-The\nleftist fringe of the Trades and\nLabor Congress of Canada was\nhanded' two drubbings today.\nAfter a hot battle on the floor\nof Its annual convention, the Congress upheld the action of its leadership in barring six suspected\nCommunists as delegates.\nLater In the day, It threw out\nSix leftist-line resolutions on foreign   trade   policy   following   a\nsharp debate In which the o;\/pos-\nIng factions charged alternately\nthat the resolutions were Inspired\nby Moscow and that the convention was being directed by the\nUnited States 'State Department.\nVoice votes on the,two issues saw\nthe anti-Communist faction pf the\n500,000-member Congress come out\non top by about 30 to one.\nAnthpny Valente of Washington\n\u2014 International President of the\nUnited Textile Workers\u2014complained of the way these accused of\nCommunist leanings were handled.\nThree top Canadian officials of the\nU.T.W. were among those refused\ncredentials.\nSpeaking as a fraternal delegate\nfrom the American Federation of\nLabor, Valente said he hated Communism but objected to the publicity given his officials at a time\nwhen the U.T.W. has a Jurisdictional fight on its hands with the\nC.I.O. Textile Workers Union of\nAmerica.\nT.LC. President Percy Bengough,\nread a declaration pledging Con-!\ngress support for the U.T.W. against\nthe C.I.O. textile union in a repre-l\nsentation vote coming Sept. 29 in\nthe big Montreal plant of Dominion Textile 'Company.\nMr. Bengough said this support was being extended despite\n\"any lack of confidence that now\nmay exist In the present Canadian leadership of the union.\"\nHe also expressed the executive's regret at the publication\nof the names of the T.W.U.'s Ca^\nnadlan officials, which, he said,\nhad occurred through a \"leakage\"\nto newspaper men.\nThe six barred delegates whose\nappeals were turned down today\nwere:    '\nMrs. Helen Weir of the Hotel\nand Restaurant Workers' Union in\nToronto; R. F, Wright, Toronto,\nhead of the Chemical Workers'\nUnion; Jack Phillips and Donald\nGuise of the Vancouver Civic\nWorkers' Union; Sam Lapedes of\nToronto, national representative of\nthe United Garment Workers of\nAmerica, and Alex Gould, Plumbers' Union representative in Montreal.\nFor N. Atlantic Meet\nNEW YORK, Sept. 14 (AP)\u2014The Big Three Foreign\nMinisters announced.tonight that they qre agreed that immediate effective'steps must'be taken to strengthen the\ndefences of th. free world in Europe jflrid in Asia.\nThese officials of the United States, Britain and France\nmade their' announcement in an interim communique issued\nat the end of three days of prolonged conversations.\nThey will resume their talks Monday after meetings\nof the North Atlantic Treaty Council.\nEarlier today the,ministers decided upon a full discussion\nin the North Atlantic Council of the problem of recreating\nGerman military units. *~~-\u2014' '\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0\nForeign Secretary Ernest BeVIn\nof Britain and Foreign Minister\nRobert Schuman of France are\ncool to the Idea of forming German military units but they accepted at a closed meeting this\nmorning a suggestion by State\nSecretary Dean Acheson to have\na full discussion of the problem\nIn the North Atlantic Council.\nThe Council will meet here tomorrow and Saturday. It is the\nproper organization to discuss the\nuse of German manpower because\nall 12 members must agree upon\nany decisions on that point, and the\nWestern Germans themselves also\nmust agree if military units are to\nbe lofnied.\nL. B. Pearson, Canada's External\nAffairs Minister, will represent\nCanada, He said in an interview on\narrival in New York today from\nOttawa that -the time' has come to\nre-arm Western Germany \"because\nthe Eastern' Germans are already\nrearmed.\" *>\u25a0'\u25a0'\u25a0':'    -,'!\"\n. \"The.- best way to neutralize\n(Western) Germany\" is to integrate\nher in a-European system of which\nher . armed . forces would form a\npart, Pearson said.\nOPEN MIND '\n. He said Canada enters the Atlantic talks with an: \"open mind\"\non the questions of Western armament\u2014 which include suggestions\nabout1 sending Canadian troops to\nEurope. - But- he - emphasized that\nCanada's present'plans do riot in\nclude sending ground forces to the\ncontinent.\nThe Canadian External Affairs\nMinister lunched today with\nForeign Minister ,D. U. Stikker of\nThe Netherlands and was scheduled\nto dine tonight with Acheson.\nFAR EAST DISCU88ED\nThe, Big Three Foreign Ministers\nalso reviewed the Far Eastern situation,        \u25a0       '\nThere are three major points to\nbe discussed about the Far East\u2014\nFormosa, Comiriunist China and\nKorea.\nThe three ministers are concerned that there should be no\nholdup in the United Nations effort\n.In Korea. On Communist China the\nfact is that Britain recognizes Red\nChina and France and the United\nStates do not. There are-different\nviewpoints on Formosa' especially\nas to its strategic importance.       .\nPersons close jo the talks made\nit clear that Acheson, Bevin'\u25a0 and\nSchuman have not; agreed on using\nGerman forces as \u2022 a- part of '_\nEuropean army \"but? that they have\nagreed on the principle' of forming\na European defence force under a\nunified command. The shape of this\ncommand is not yet final, one point\nbeing just when the- top officer\nwould assume command. The Command will direct the training of\nWestern European forces arid indications are that the top officer,\npresumably a chief of staff, would\nibecome commarider-ih-chief in the\nevent of military action.\nH6n. L.H. Eyres, Provincial Minister of Trade and Industry, as\nhe opened the record-breaking West Kootenay Agricultural and\nIndustrial Exhibition In Nelson Thursday. \u2014 Vogue photo.\nElect Vancouver\nMan Legion Head\nWINNIPEG,  8ept.  14  (CP)  \u2014\nGroup Capt Alf Watts of Van\/\ncouver today was elected Dominion   President  of  the   Canadian\nLegion.  He  succeeds  Lt.-Col.. L.\nD. M. Baxter, Winnipeg.\nDr.   C.   B.   Lumsden,   -Wolfville,'\nN.S., was named First Vice-President, and J. K. Kennedy of Saint\nJohn, Second Vice-President.\nThe newly - elected president\npledged \"everything in my power\nduring my term of office to carry\nout the best interests of the Canadian Legion.\" .\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\n\"The Canadian Legion is not one\nperson or group of persons, but the\nentire membership, Group. Capt.\nWatts said. \"And it is only by\npressing forward together that we\ncan accomplish those things necessary for our country and for the\nveteran.\"\nSIMCOE, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014JosepV\nHerbert, McAuliffe,. 32-year-oid\nbandit who murdered two men\nwho. chased him after a Juno 21\nbank holdup at nearby Langton,\nwas sentenced today to be hanged\nDec. 19.\nBELL TELEPHONE\nTO BOOST CAPITAL\nOTTAWA, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Opposed by the City of Montreal, the\nBell Telephone \u25a0 Company of- Canada today obtained authority from\nthe Board of Transport Commissioners to boost its capital by more\nthan 842,700,000..\nIn a qne-day hearing that saw\nAssistant Commissioner Hugh War-\ndrope overrule Montreal counsel\nwho sought to have the hearing\nsuspended, the Bell Company was\nempowered to increase its capital\nfrom $390,000,000 to.8432,700,000.\nFight New Forest\nFires in Alberta\nEDMONTON, Sept. 14 (CP) \u2014\nTwenty-foUr men and two bulldozers, today were fighting four\nnew forest fires in Alberta.\nForestry officials said the worst\nfire is North of \"Sturgeon Lake\nwhere 10 men and a bulldozer are\nin action.' The other fir^s arfe.\nNorth of the Eureka Rivet, near\nLac la Biche and North of Edson.\nShould Attack\nSeaway Project\nAlone Says Chevrier\nCORNWALL, Ont., Sept.. 14 (CP)\nTransport Minister Chevrier said tonight it is,time for Canada to proceed alone with St. Lawrence Power and Waterway schemes if the\nUnited States Congress does not\nwant to approve the projects.\nAsserting that the time has come\nfor \"plain speaking\", he said:\nIf there are interests in the\nUnited States that are going to\nstand in the way of the development forever, Canadians ought to be\ntold.\nAfter we are convinced that no\nprogress can be made on-the combined scheme\u2014and unfortunately\nthat seems to be the case\u2014then I\nbelieve that Canada should consent to the reference of the (power)\napplications of Ontario and New\nYork State to the International Joint\nCommission for consideration.\n\"In that event, I personally believe that Canada should also explore the possibility of constructing\na deep waterway on the Canadian\nside of the\" boundary.\"\nOntario and New York State have\nmade a bid for development of\nthe hydro phase, of the project alorie\nbut, while the Canadian Government has indicated 'its\/ agreerrient,\nthe U.S. Government has said both\nthe hydro arid seaway projects must\ncome together. However, .the larger scheme never has.Succeeded in\nwinning approval in the US; Senate.\nMr. Chevrier made his stateirients\nin an address on the 100th anniversary of the: Union of the Counties\nof Stormont, Dundas arid Glengarry.\nOn the question of Canadian de-\nvelbpfpent of the seaway alone, Mr.\nChevrier noted that 14-foot canals\nalready exist on the Canadian side\nof the St. Lawrence and that they\ncould be deepened to 27 feet.\n^Retire?? Wmdsor\nCrownAttorney\nInspectors Investigate City's\nVice, Blgme Police Commission\nTORONTO, Sept. 14 (CP)-The\nOr.taiv.iv Government today firel\nCrpwri Attorney E. C. Awiey rf\nWindsor and excepted the \"gracious\"\noffer of two pcl.ee commissioners\nwho i>el<e*e. their resignation w.'ll\nhelp speed reorganization of Windsor's polite force.\nThe decision, announced in a\nstatement by Attorney-General Porter, cime on the heels of a report\nwhich said vice has \"flourished\" in\nWindsor end that police officials\nmust hi aware of its existent;.\nThe report was by two Provincial\nPolice Inspectors who, made _ seven-week study of law enforcement\nin the bcrder city.\nIt said that Judge A. J. Gordon\nand Lfigisuate A. W. MacMiilan,\nmembers ol the three-man Police\nCommission, \"offered to retire\",and\nthat the Government. accepted - their\noffer.\nREPORT MADE PUBLIC\nTORONTO, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Two\nProvincial Police Inspectors leport-\ned today that vice \"flourishes\" in\nWindsor and that they must assume\nWindsor Police Officials know about\nit-\nIt includes bawdy houses \"in close\nproximity to the police station\" and\nwholesale betting and gambling,\"\nthey said. Some of it was connected\nwith.;the \"big time gangster syndicate\". In neighboring Detroit.\nIn a hard-hitting, 8000-ivord report, Inspectors W. H. Lougheed\nand Frank C. Kelly told what they\nsaw and heard during a seven-week\nstudy of law enforcement .n the\nborder city.\nNo Time for Thinking\nOf Increasing\nIndemnities - Premier\nOTTAWA, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Prime\nMinister St. Laurent said today in\nthe Commons the day may come\nwhen members should study the\nquestion of increasing parliamentary indemnities,'but, he does not\nthink this is the time for such a\nstudy.\nHe believes the public feels at\nthis time that members should be\nthinking1 about the situation of the\ncountry as a whole rather than of\nthemselves.\nCANADA TO HEAD\nINTERNATIONAL BANK\nPARIS, Sept. 14 (Reuters)\u2014Canada was elected to the chairmanship of the' International Bank and\nMonetary Fund at today's closing\nsession here of thr^ organization's\nannual conference.\nAnd in This Corner\nGRANDE PRAIRIE,- Alta., Sept.\n14 (CP)\u2014Crop damage^ caused by\nhail, mid-August, snowi arid frost\nand near-drought conditions.'during July has promptediithar Qrande\n(Prairie Municipal District tb.applj\nfor aid under the Federal Prairie\nFarm Assistance Act.\nLIVERPOOL, Sept. 14 (Reuters)\u2014A plumber, told to climb up a\nladder and through a bedroom window to open the door for a woman\nlocked out of her apartment\u2014followed instruction\u2014and was attacked\nby her angry husband, he said. . -   .    \u25a0\nThe husband, James Doyle, told a court, \"I wakened up and\nthought he was a housebreaker.\"\nHe was acquitted of assaulting Plumber William Ball, who said\nthat Doyle grabbed him by the scruff of the neck and the seat of the\ntrousers, lugged him downstairs and flung him out of the front door.\nBISHOPS STORTFORD, England, Sept. 14 (Reuters) \u2014 Edward.\nParish argued In court here today that his automobile might be a little\nout of date but was still \"quite roadworthy.\"\nBut the Magistrate fined him \u00a35, ($15.50) when police testified\nthat the fenders were hanging loose, the steering gear was tethered\nwith string and wire, the dashboard had to be pushed forward to let\nthe door shut, the road showed through holes In the floor and there\nwas grass growing on the roof.        ,   .\nQUINCY, 111., Sept. 14 (AP)\u2014Wren Jeffers, 40, stepped out of his\nsmashed automobile with two broken fingers today although his car:\nRan off the road on a curve;   \u25a0\u25a0-\u2022\u2022\u25a0\nHit the stone steps of a, tavern;    .,       ; \u25a0 , \u25a0'-.-\u25a0\nKnocked down a clump of fir trees;\nHurtled' 20 feet into the air and tore down telephone lines; \u25a0. -\n. Hurdled over a parked car and landed on a corner of the tavern;\nRipped off the tavern sign, some shingles and smashed a vestibule;\nPlowed into three parked cars and damaged the fronts of each.\nROME, Sept 14 (Reuters)\u2014Dr. Mario Praz, a Rome University\nCrofessor. today published this menu of the first dinner he had In\nondon during a recent visit.\n>    \"Hors d'oeuvres: Violet and orange sludge.\n\/     ,\"P6tage a la relne: A kind of wall paper paste.\n\"Chapron rotl, sauce bordclalso: Impossible to gather to what\nanimal this purllsh, fibrous yet viscous meat belonged . . , probably\nIt waa:a ohiow of Al Caponc.\n,   , \"Ice cream: A silver of cold soap melting In a stew of disintegrated'\n;p|\"W\u00ab,'!j M .\n'.vl\n 2'-. NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, JEPT. 15, 1980\nTONIGHT - SATURDAY \u2014 Complete Shows\" 7:00 -9:00\n', BlneM bi GOnDOH DOIHiWS . PmtaM br HARRV JOE BROWD\nExtra \u2014 Latest News - \"Ragtime Bear\"\n\"Rassling Match of the Century\"\nc\/m\\\n. .-\u201e._ The salary of the Chief Justice of\n\u25a0j'flSanada is $20,000.  ,'\n\u25a0%\n%\nNatural Hearing\nIs yours with the high-fidelity\nmiCRonic\nWlcio tonal rango find great amplification moke tho MICRONIC hearing aid\n04 roeoptivo oi you want It, whin you\nwant It. An all-livont unit so light and\nemail that It l> worn instead af carried.\nSensibly priced, it'l fully guaranteed.\nMICRONIC HEARING AID\nBox 39 Nelson, B.C.\nthis Fall brings you\nDresses Worth\nLooking at\nPost Office\nDisplay Bigger\nThan al P.N.E.\nThe Post Office Department display in the West Kootenay Exhibition in Nelson is bigger than that\nof the Pacific National Exhibition\njust ended in Vancouver.\nTheme pf the exhibit, 26 feet long\nand 10 feet high, is the close association between the Post Office and\nthe Canadian home.\nFrom'a little girl posting a letter\nin a suburban street letter box to\na woman reading it in her comfortable Jiving room, the theme is\nclearly conveyed by the effective\nuse of color and lighting\u2014end lifelike models, Various means of\ntransporting mail are symbolized\nby the use of model aircraft, steamer and train.'\nOnly a few parts of the exhibit\ncame from the P.N.E, A. Jl. Davies\nof Victoria, Public Relations Officer for the Post Office Department, obtained the rest and assembled the display in Nelson.   ,\nWillow Point Fancier\nLeads Poultry Show\n. A. M. Banks of Willow Point, who\ndisplayed several fine breeds of\npoultry In the West Kootenay Exhibition, captured the majority of\nprizes awarded at Thursday's judging. Winners of the poultry display\njudged by R, H. McMillan follow!\nLeghorn pullet\u20141. A.'M. Banks,\nWillow Point.\nNew Hampshire pullet\u20141. Mrs.\nH. Sanders, Nelson.      .\nRhode Island Red pulleM. A,\nM. Banks, Willow Point; 2. A, M,\nBanks, Willow Point.\nLeghorn-Hampshire cross pullet\nrc-1. Mrs. C. S. Duff, Willow Point;\n2. A. M, Banks, Willow Pqint,\nLeghorn hep\u2014}. Mrs. H. Sanders,\nNelson.\nNew Hampshire hen\u20141. Mrs. R.\nMills, Nelson; 2. L. Facchina, Shore-\nacres.\nCockerel, any breed--l. Mrs. R.\nMills, Nelson; 2. Mrs. H. Sanders,\nNelson,\nPullet, any other breed\u20141. A. M.\nBanks, Willow Point; 2. Mrs, H.I\nSanders, Nelson. ,   I\nHen, any other breed^-l, A. M.\nflanks, Willow Point.\nUtility pen, light weight--. Mrs.\nH. Sanders, Nelson.  '\u2022 .;\nUtility pen, heavy weight\u2014i; Mrs.\nR; Mills, Nelsoni 2. H. H. James,\nSouth Slocan.\nSpecial, best bird in show \u2014 1.\nMrs. H. Mills, Nelsori..    ... ',\nBantams:\nAsiatics, one pair -- 1, A. M,\nBanks, Willow Point; 2. A. M-\nBanks, Willow Point. ...\nEnglish, one pair\u20141. A.M. Banks,\nWillow Point; 2. A. M. Banks, Willow Poipt. ,\nMediterranean, one, pair\u20141. A. M.\nBanks, Willow Point; 2. A.. M.\nBanks, Willow Point.\nDucks:\nBest drake\u20141. A, M, Banks, Willow Point; 2. Alfred Ife, Jtfelson.\nBest duck\u20141. A. M. Banks, Wil-\nlow Point; 2. Alfred Ife, Nelson.\nPlneons!\nBest pair of homers-^1, Dave Pa-\nsacreta, Nelson. ,\nHome\nMETAL PRICES\nNEW YORK, Sept, 14 (AP)\u2014Spot\nnonferrpus metal prices today: Copper.22% to 24% cents a pound, Connecticut valley. Lead 18 cents :\npound, New York. Zinc 17% cents\na pound, East St. Louis. Tin $1.01%\na pound, New York.\nm.\nPRESCRIPTIOnS\nYou will find our\nmodern prescription\ndepartment well-\nstocked ...\nFOR 24-HOUR\nPRESCRIPTION SERVICE\nPhone 1203 Night Calls - 394-L\nWe fill YOUR prescription\nexactly as YOUR doctor orders\nNelson Pharmacy\n'FEATURING NATIONALLY ADVERTISED LINE8\nD. M. SAMPLE, DRUGGIST\nPhone 1203\n433 Josephine St.\nWe Deliver\nRes 394-L\nPrize winners in the home cooking section of the West Kootenay\nExhibition, .judged Thursday by\nMrs. S. C. Colman, follow:\nAngel cake, unlced\u20141, Mrs. David Cathcart, NelBon; 2, Mrs. M, Well-\nwood, R.R.1, Nelson.\nSponge cake, unlced\u20141, Mrs. Inez\nEchmier, Nelson; 2, Mrs. L. Maurer,\nNelson.\nPlain white butter cake, unlced\u2014\n2, Mrs. M. McNown, R.R.1, Nelson.\nChocolate 'one layer cake, unlced\n\u25a0J, Mrs. M. N. Affleck, Nelson; 2,\nMrs. H. Sanders, Nelson.\nSpice cake, unlced\u20142, Mrs. H.\nSanders, Nelson.\nDate and nut loaf, uniced'-l, Mrs,\nK. Cameron, Nelson; i, Mrs. B.\nSanders.\nLight fruit cake, uniced\u20141, Mrs.\nH, Sanders, Nelson; 2, Mrs. K. Cameron, Nelson.\nDark fruit cake, unlced\u20141, Mrs.\nM. McNown, R.R.l, Nelson; 2, Mrs.\nK. Cameron, Nelson.\nCake doughnuts, half dozen, un.\nsugared\u20141, Mrs. M, Wellwood, R.R.l\nNelson; 2, Mrs. K. Cameron, Nelson.\nJelly roll\u20141, Mrs. K> Cameron,\nNelson; 2, Mrs. T. Crowe, Salmo.\nShortbread, one large cake\u20141, Evelyn. Linton, Nelson; 2, Mrs. P. P.\nClark, Nelson.\nOatmeal cookies, half dozen\u20141,\nMrs, F. P. Clark, Nelson; 2, Mrs. D.\nC, Mattice, Nelson..\nTea biscuits, half dozen\u20141, Elizabeth McEacneran, Nelson; 2, Mrs.\nW. A. White, Nelson.\nRolled cookies, three kinds, two\nof each\u20141, Margaret Doerksen, Nelson; 2, .Mrs. y. p. Clark, Nelson.\n' Drop cookies, three kinds, twp of\neach\u20141, D. Kearns, Nelson; 2, Mrs.\nA, MacKay. Nelson. '\u25a0\nPastries, three kinds, two of each\n\u20141, Mrs. F. P. Clark, Nelson;' Mrs.\nJ. A. Street, South Slocan,\nCream puffs,' six not filled\u20141,\nMargaret Doerksen, Nelson; 2, Mrs.\nJ, A. Street, South Slocan.\nMacaroons, six\u2014Mrs, W. A. White\nNelson; 2, Evelyn Linton, Nelson.\nCup Cakes, six\u20141, Mrs. T, Crowe,\nSalmo; 2, Mrs. K. Camerpn, Nelson,\nMatrimonial, cake, six squares\u20141\nMrs. Ivan E. Lewis, Nelson; 2, Mrs,\nJ. A. Street, South Slocan.\nPlain bran mdlfins, six\u20141, Mrs,\nG. B, Willis, Nelson! 2, Mrs. J. A,\nStreet, South Slocan,\nLayer cake, iced\u20141, D. Kearns,\nNelson; 2, Mrs. T. Crowe, Salmo,\nDecorative icing for party cake,\njudged for decoration only\u20141, Mrs,\nInez Echmier, Nelson; 2, Mrs. Edith\nBrown, Nelson.\nPIE8\nApple\u2014J, Mrs. E. J. Cameron, Nelson; 2, Mrs. G. Anderson, Nelson.\nRaisin\u20141, Mrs. L. A. Skapple, Nel.\nsen; 2, Mrs. G. B. Willis, Nelson.\nLemon\u20141, Mrs. K. Cameron, Nelson.\nCANDY\nFudge, three kinds, two ot each\n\u20141, D. Kearns, Nelson; 2, Mrs. J.\nA, Street, South Slocan,\nHard Candy, three kinds, two of\neach\u2014Mrs. Ivan Lewis, Nelson.\nChocolates, half dozen\u20141, Mrs. R.\nKeffer, Nelson; 2, Mrs. K. Carpenter.\nBREAD\nWhite, one loaf\u20141, Mrs. J. Blafina\nNelson; 2, Mrs, K, Cameron, Nelson.\nBrown, one loaf^-1, Mrs. A, Hopkins, Nelson; 2, Mrs. George Fred-\neriksen, Nelson.\nWhite bread buns, six\u20141, Mrs. Mf\nWellwood, R.R.l, Nelson; 2, Mrs. J;\nChess, Nelson.\nParker house rolls, six\u20141, Mi's. D,\nC. Mattice, Nelson; 2, Mrs. T. Crowe\nSalmo.\nCinnamon rolls\u20141, Mr?. E. J.\nCameron, Nelson; 2, Mrs. F. p. Clark\nNelsori. \u2022' ' \u25a0\n8PECIAL PRIZE8\nLoaf of white bread\u2014J. Mrs. E.\nHunter, Nelson; 2, Mrs. M. Well-\nwood, R.R.1, Nelson.\nLoaf of whole wheat bread\u20141,\nMrs. A, E. Hopkins, Nelson; 2, Irene\nM. Fink,\nWhite cake, iced\u20141, Mrs. A. E.\nHopkins, Nelson; 2, Mrs.'.Cf. Vecchio,\nNelson,\nOpen Hunting\nOn Grouse\nToday the hunting season begins\nfor grouse.\nIn the Fernie, Columbia and\nCranbrook Electoral Districts and\nin that portion of the Nelson-Creston Electoral District situate and\nlying East of Kootenay Lake and\nRiver open season on Blue, Franklin tm4 Ruffed or Willow Grouse\nextends from September 15 to September, 30.\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014The\nCanadian Legion is planning a\nseries of pilgrimages to European\nbattlefields, naval bases, air force\nstations and cemeteries.\nWatch These 4\nCommon Troubles\nOf Babyhood\nDon't let your baby frot needl-iily ftrom\nteething fevor, -onjtipatipn, bar pains in\nStomach or bowels and weakening ctiges-\nivc upsats. Get & box of BabyTs Own\nTablet*. Tbey help to aulckly dear oijt\nharnif ul waetM, erino baby's teething fever,\ntsweeten eour little atomacha and relieve\nsimple fever. No \"sleepy\" atunVno dulling\neffect, Easily crushed to n powder If desired, Baby's Own Tablets have been used\nwith confldenea and oucceno for over 60\nyearn by mother*, Only 38* at druggists.\n0 00\nWiffiKiiprfteitan]\n,..the tea with the* flavour most folks\nlike best! Rich and robust, yet soothing, satisfying...Canterbury's flavour\nis just the way you like it Enjoy a\nsteaming cup often, Everybody who\ntries Canterbury likes it!\n\/'t costs tfoukss at SAFEWAY\nKimberley Lady\nDies at ?7\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Sept, 14 r-\nFuneral services were held here\nTuesday for Mrs. Frances Park, 77,\na former resident of The Lac du\nBonnet district, Manitoba. For the\npast three years Mrs. Park made\nher home with her daughter, Mrs.\nKen Smith of Kimberley.\nServices were conducted from\nthe funeral parlor, Rev. A. R.\nEagles1 officiating.\nPallbearers were her three sons,\nWilliam and Ray of Kimberley,\nWallace of Vancouver, her ..soU'in-\nIaw and grandson, Joe and Joel\nRochon of Kimberley, and E, McLellan. Interment was in the Kimberley Cemetery, many lovely\nflowers being laid on the grave.\nMrs. Park was born in Lltjle Britain, Manitoba. Following her marriage in 1897 she and her husband\nresided first at Kenora, Ont, then\nat Lac du Bopnet, where they lived\nfor 40 years,\nSurviving are four daughters,\nMrs. J. Rochon and Mrs. K, Smith\nof Kimberley, Mary and Ethel of\nWinnipeg; and five sons, William\nand Hay of Kimberley, Wallace of\nVancouver and Harry and Cecil of\nLac du Bonnet, Her^ husband died\nin 1943, j\nBritish Labor fo\nNationalize Steel\nChurchill Condemns\nPlan, Expect Row\nLONDON, Sopt. 14 (Rcutcrs)-\nPrlrne   Minister   Clement  Attlee\nannounced today the Labor Government I, going ahead with its\nplans to  nationalize the'British\niron and steel Industry.\nAttlee also stated in the House of\nCommons that appointments to the\nSteel Board which will run the industry will be made Monday, Oct, 2.\nWinston churchlli, Opposition\nleader, at once gave notice that\nthe Conservatives would put forward a motion tonight condemning the Government's action.\nThe motion would \"regret that\nat this most critical period In\nour national safety and affairs\nabroad\" Britain by thla act cf the\nGovernment should be \"plunged\nInto the fiercest political controversy at home.\"\nChurchill asked for a debate op\nthe question next Tuesday.\n, Today's development means the\nhitherto calmly-conducted emergency session of Parliament called to\ndjscuss defence will probably blow\n.up into one of the biggest rows yet\nstaged between Government and\nOpposition,\nHerbert Morrison, leader of the\nHouse,- agreed to a debate Tuesday.\nIn the Opposition view, if the\nChurchill motion is carried, the\nGovernment would be obliged to\nresign.\nSome political quarters predicted\nthe Government decision to proceed\nwith steel nationalization immediately may cause an Autumn general\nelection,\nThe Steel Nationalization Act,\npassed in the last Parliament, provides for, the iron and steel industry\nto be taken over by the State Jan.\n1, 1951\u2014or at any time within a\nyear from that date.\nSeed Harvest\nNear End\nIn Boundary\n. Harvesting of seed crops in the\nGrand Forks area is rapidly near:\ning completion under ideal condi\ntions, reports the horticultural\nnewsletter.\nThe weather has been bright and\ngenerally warm for this time, of\nyear, but the nights were getting\ncolder and a few near frost. A few\nlow pockets had received their first\nfrosts. , -\nIn the harvesting of the seed\ncrops, onion head cutting is finish'\ned and nearly all carrots have been\npulled for drying, Some fields have\nalready' been threshed. Yields\npromise to he considerably better\nthan in' the last two years.\nLettuce is being pulled for drying'and a little already threshed,\nSome flower crops are still UP\"\ndisturbed in the fields but portu-\nlaca, mignonette, hollyhocks, poppies, African daisies and petunias\nhave mostly been harvested,\nOnion bulbs continue to market,\nbut no carrots or potatoes are as\nyet dug. Potatoes are ripening off\nfast and some devining has started.\nIn the fruit?, Empire Reds have\nmoved to market and Wealthie? are\njust starting, but size is hard to get.\nMcintosh apples are coloring well,\nbut. size is lacking also. First\norchards are getting started on\npicking. It appears that Winter\ninjury to these orchards has caused\nunusual early ripening. Prunes are\njust ready for picking.\nKimberley Legion\nElects Richardson\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., Sept. 14 -\nElection of officers for the Kim'\nberley Branch pf the Canadian Legion saw the following assume\noffice: President, A. T- Richard'\nson, First Vicej-President, H. C,\nShaw; Second Vice-President, J. H.\nBrpadhurst, Third Vice-President,\nA. Richmond; Executive, J. Ayres,\nRev. A. R. Eagles, T. McLay, Jr\u201e\nW. H. Barber, A. Tait, M. Gillies,\nG. A, perry, H. Thompson, R.\nMcRae,    .\nSt. Laurent Denies\nNewspaper Charge\nOTTAWA, Sept, 14 (CP)--Prlme\nMinister 8t. Laurent laid today In\nthe Commom that If tho Government decides to Increase the\nforces available for mt In Korea\nor elsewhere above 15,000 men\ntha decision will be placed before\nParliament,\nHe drew attention tg an article in\nLe Devoir, Montreal newspaper,\nwhich he said accused him ot misleading the Canadian people with\nrespect to the number of men Canada would send to Korea.\nThe charge was \"absolutely false\".\nThe newspaper had stated that the\nGovernment had said it would need\nabout 6000 men for Korea, but an\nOrder-ift'Council made public last\nSaturday fixed the number -at 15,-\n000.\nGOVERNMENT        .\nPLANS\nThe Prime Minister ssld the Government plans with respect to the\nKorean force were made known to\nthe public and to Parliament.\nHe explained why the figure of\n15,000 had been fixed. The armed\nbrigade being trained will consist\nof about 5300 men. The Army will\nalso train replacements. About 9000\nmen had enlisted for the special\nforce. There had to be added to that\nfigure 1000 men who are being\ntransferred to the special force from\nthe regular Army.\nThere were about 1000 men in the\nNavy now serving with the three\nCanadian destroyers in Korean waters. They would be replaced by\nothers when the destroyers are recalled for refitting.\nIn addition, there are about 1000\nmen serving in the R.C.A.F. air lift\nfrom the United States to Japan.\nProvision was made for replacements.\nMr. St. Laurent said that in all lt\nwas estimated that about 15,000 men\nwould be .required to see that the\nthree contingents operated efficiently.\nBUY B.C. PRODUCTS,\nIS EYRES'PLEA\nPurchase and Use of British Columbia products is 'the greatest\nencouragement residents can give\nto manufacturing in this Province,\nHon. L. H. Eyres, Minister of Trade\nand Industry, told Nelson Board of\nTrade Council Thursday in the\nHume.\n\"The day is gone when B.C\ncould ship its raw materials out of\nthe Province for return in the form\nof finished goods,\" ha said.\n\"I don't believe any Province in\nCanada has as much to work with\nin natural resources as British Columbia.\"  ..  ,\nThe picture of industry in B.C.\nthis year was heartening, he said,\nwith new construction everywhere\nand products of most areas well\nabove average. British Columbia,\nhe added, was exporting to 100\ncountries and Importing from\nGenerally, imports and exports\nwere striking more of a balance,\nMr. Eyres had praise for the\nmembers of the 130 Boards of\nTrade or Chambers of Commerce\nIn the Province. '\nThey were of the same mind with\nthe Pepartment of Trade and In\ndustry in attempting to increase\ndevelopment and secure markets.\nW. G. Brodie. Chairman of the\nB.C. Products Bureau of the Van\ncouver Board of Trade, which has\nentered an exhibit in the West Koo'\ntenay Agricultural and Industrial\nExhibition now showing in Nelson:\ntold members.that the exhibit was\na \"token.\"\nThe Weather\nNELSON   48 77 -\nSt,  Johns    47 63 \u2014\nHalifax   41 63 \u2014\nWinnipeg     48 63 .04\nRegina  32 53 .13\nEdmonton    -9 72 \u2022*\u2022\nVancouver     55 60 \u2022\u2014\nKimberley  32' 70 ~\nKaslo   40 70   , \u2014\nPrince George  34 72 \u2014\nGrand Forks   33 79 \u2014\nSpokane   42 71 \u2014\nWhitehorse   32 71 \u25a0 \u2014\nFrom Factory to You\nBABY CHENIUE\nBEDSPREADS\nLOWEST   PRICE   IN   CANADA.\nBeautiful first quality, completely\ntufted. No sheeting shewing. All\ncolors, double or single bedalzcs.\nFlowered or solid patterns. (5,00\neach. Sent COP- plus postage.\nImmediate money.back guarantee.\nOrder one, you will order more.\nTown * Country Mfg., 6330\nMountain Sights St., Montreal,\nQuebec.\nEighteen manufacturers were\nrepresented, he said, out of 240\nactive members of the B.C. Products Bureau. He hoped that in the\nfuture additional space would be\nallotted the Bureau in the Exhibition, so that all could display their\nproducts,\nR. C. Foreman, field representative of the Bureau, paid tribute to\nExhibition organizers. \"The Chairmen deserve a tremendous amount\nof credit for their work,\" he said.\nG- H. Downton, Vancouver Board\nof Trade member and one of the\nexhibitors, was also Introduced,\nalong withS. Salvador, President\nof Creston Board of Trade.\nBACKACHE?\nWhen every sudden move brings short,\n-harp twinges-Ht'a time for Dr. Chgoe'i\nKidney-Liver Pills. Thousands find quick\nrelief from backache, painful joints,\nkidney and liver disorders by taking this\nproven remedy. By combining 2 treatments in l-~Dr. Chase's work on bpth\n\u25a0   in    i _     \u25a0  kidneys and liver\nDE-CHASE'S I ff&*\u00bb\"\u00a5-\u00ab|\nKIDNEY-LIVER PILLS\nMeCAUL PATTERNS\nNOW AVAILABLE      .\\\\\nSale of Shoes\n$1.95\n\u2014 FINK'S \u2014\nNEW YORK, Sept. ia (CP) M\nTheodore F. M. Newton, former .\nCanadian newspaper man and veteran of the diplomatic service, has\nbeen appointed director of inform\nmation of the North Atlantic Defence organization, it was announced toiiight,\nHUNTERS\nATTENTION\nSee Our Display of\nRifles\nShotguns\nAsk About Our\nSPECIAL .30-06\nONLY $59.00\nS\u00ab6 Baker St.-Phone 1490\nBOYS'\nWIN\nTHIS\nRALEIGH \"Clubman\"\ncompletly equipped with 3 speed\nSett and Dynohub lighting,\nsystem,\nA Hot bicycle bye famous English\nCompany., .will be yours If you\ncon write a winning essay of 250\nwords. Or your choice of many\nother fin* prises. For full details\n\u2022bout the contest, free literature la\nhelp you got started undo complete\nlist of prlies, ,,|uit print your name\nand address In the form below and\nmail Immediately\u2014no obligation.\nTills essay contest t\u00bb sponsored by the Pulp and Pajwr\nIndustry of British Columbia' to remind th. Younger\n\u25a0Generation af tho increasing Importance of tho Industry\nanil tho major rol.it play, in tha daily Uvea of all ic\/io livo\nin this great province.\nIH &*ltl$JL!L_.\u00a3i*\nj CANADIAN WW \u00a3 PAPER AStJ'N. (WESTERN BRANCH)\ng 60S Dominion Bldg.   -   Vancouver, D.C.\nj     Send ContMt Information and J.lteraturo toi\nName \u2014. __^ , ,   ,\u201e-,\u201e' \u201e ,..   \u201e,, , ..,,- -\u00bb\n[_ ArjAwj.\u2014^\u2014j. '''\u25a0 \u25a0_,_,' _.; '\"'\u2014\u00ab\u2014'\u2014\u25a0jm~ _: -i.'\" zsti.\nMitchells Win\nTo Extend Series\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept. 14-\nCranbrook Mitchells beat Kimberley Union.3-3 here tonight to put\nthe inter-city Softball playoffs in\nthe best-of-five series at two for\nUnion and one for Mitchells and\nextend it to a' fourth game at\nKimberley Friday.\nCranbrook led from the second\nInning when they got 3 runs on a\nsingle, a-walk and .two errors. Kimberley was blanked to the seventh\nwhen two hits, a walk and a fielder's choice netted three but stopped\nright there, while. Cranbrook in-\ncreased.'thelr margin.\nI kimherley had\/.15 men on ba.se,\nan4! Cranbrook 10 iri the course of\nthe'game, '\nKimberley  000 Q00 3U0\u20143   4  i\nCranbrook- .,.,. 031 00Q 01x\u20145  \u00ab  3\nBatteries \u2014 Jim Sberrltt, Butch\nZalt   (3), and Gaudrey.\nRed SteylK.and Allie Hughes.\nUmpirest-Sipj Sharkey, Art Bouchard, aha Alec Bell.\n'4 \u00bb,\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED   'I\nONE MINUTE NEWS\n\\   ABOUT   \/\n\u25a0 JOHNS -MANVIlI.g\n.^\u25a0\u25a0HiHH    tL I.J L      lUt.l.ii '111. HJ.IJ.J!\n3000 Degrees\nIs Really Hot\nA woman considers her oven\nas \"very hot\" at 450 degrees.\nAnd so that ^uch temperatures\nmay be reached and held with\na minimum of fuel, alt modern\npvens are fully insulated\nImagine then, the insulation\nrequired for industrial \"oven\"\ntemperatures as , high as 3000\ndegrees!'\nThe problem of developing\ninsulation . to withstand such\nterrific heat was solved by the\nJohns-Manville Research Lab.\noratory in the world. For over\n90 years, Johns-Manville has\nbeen foremost in. the develop-,\nment of insulation's to meet industrial temperatures ranging\nfrom 3000 degrees above to 400\ndegrees below zero.\nWhenever you need expert in,\nsulation service, contact Johns-\nManville, 1206 Homer St., Vancouver, or see your J-M distributor.\nIn Nelson Your Dealer la\nNelson Machinery\nEquipment  Co.\n214 HALL ST. PH. 18\nCOCA-COLA\nNow\nSells for\nPer Bottle\n6 bottle carton 36t\nPills Deposit\n(Prices Include New Excise Tax)\nAuthorized Bottler of Coca-Cola under contract with Coca-Cola Ltd.\nMcDonald Jam (Company Ltd.\nNELSON, B.C.\nPHONE 1055\n Women's\nBLACK JODPUR PUMPS\nlow cuban heel.  Made\nby \"Slater.\" AA-B. 4V4-11.\nPrice $12.50\nTHE SHOE\nCENTRE\nPhone 895\n553 Baker St.\nDairy Products\nPrize winners in the honey audi    Honey, extracted In one pound\nlirv nrnrfttpta confirm \u00ab* tk*\u00bb iir_.u4.Ii~\u2014.\n-RISTOL, England (CP) \u2014 Residents of suburban Kingswood have\nbeen forced to keep their windows\nclosed recently \u2014 even In a \"heat\nwave. Reason: Swarms of bees have\ninvaded the district.\ndairy products section of the West' jars:\nKootenay Exhibition:\nDairy butter, one pound prints\u2014\n1. Margaret Doerksen, Nelson; 2.\nMrs, J. Blazlna, Nelson.\nCottage cheese\u20141. Mrs. J. Blazlna, Nelson; 2. Mrs. H. Sanders,\nNelson, '\nEggs, Mown, 12\u20141. H. H, James,\nSouth Slocan; 2. S. F. Fisher, Bonnington Falls.\nEggs,- white, 12\u20141. Mrs. H. Sanders, Nelson.\nAmber, three jars*\u2014 1. H, H.\nJameS, South Slocan; 2.. Roy -.\nLewis, Nelson,\nGolden, three jars\u20141. Mrs. R. A.\nGrimes,. R.R. 1, Nelson; 2, Miss\nRuby Bate, Nelson.\nGolden, three Jars\u20141. Mrs. R, A.\nGrimes, R.R. 1, Nelson; 2. Roy E.\nLewis, Nelson. .\nComb honey, Langstroth frame,\ntwo of each, wrapped In cellophane\n\u20141. James A. Street, South Slocan;\n2. Miss Ruby Bate, Nelson.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nThis qdvertisemerSt is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board of by the\nGovernm\u00b0nt of British Columbia;\nCanned Fruits\nAnd Vegetables\nClosing Prices\nMINE3\nAcadia Uranium - .59\nAkaitcho  1.19\nAtrial Larder ..\u00bb.'.  .24\nAnglo Huronian  9.75\nArjon ..;. .'.  .30\nAtlas Y K  ,   .18\nAumaque  .....:  .. .23\nAunor  '. -....: :  . 3.05\nBagamac.  ..'. ...  .25\nBase Metals     .01\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\n323  VERNON  ST.\u2014PHONE:  35\nCHEVROLET & OLDSMOBILE\nSALES & SERVICE\nThe toughest ever\nyou'll admit\nKeep working\nafter others quit!\nPrize winners in the canned\nfruits and vegetables class of the\nWest Kootenay Exhibition:\n.Peaches, one pint\u20141, Mrs. J. M.\nDeGirolamo, Nelson; 2, Mrs. E. M.'\nMcLachlan, Nelson. .'   , i   ,\nPlums, yellow,\"one pint\u20142, Mrs,\nM. McNown, R.R. 1, Nelson. .\nPlums, red, one-pint\u20141. Mrs. K.\nCameron, Nelson; 2. Mrs. R. H.\nMaber, Nelson,, \u25a0\nPears, one pint\u20141. Mrs. Ivan\nLewis, Nelson; 2. Mrs. E. M. McLachlan, Nelson.\nRaspberries, one pint\u20141. Mrs. J.\nM. DeGirolamo, Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nRoss Fleming.    s\nStrawberries, one pint\u20141. Mrs. K.\nCameron, Nelson; 2. Evelyn A.\nLinton, Nelson. I\nCherries, one pint\u20141. Mrs H.\nTalbot, Nelson; 2. Mrs. R. H. Maber,\nNelson.\nApricots, one pint\u20141. Mrs. Ross\nFleming, Nelson; 2. Mrs. R. H.\nMaber, Nelson.\nCollection of five fruits, one pint\neach\u20141. Mrs. K. Cameron, Nelson;\n2.- Mrs. J. M. DeGirolamo, Nelson.\nPeas, one pint \u2014 1. Mrs. Ivan\nLewis, Nelson; 2. Mrs. Edith Dill.\nCorn, cut from cob, one pint \u2014 2.\nMrs. Ivan Lewis, Nelson.\nPole  beans\u20141. Mrs.  J. Bktzina,\nNelson; 2. Tilly Chernoff, Nelson,\nCarrots, one pint\u20141. Mrs. Edith\nDill, Nelson; 2. Mrs. Ross Fleming,\nNelson.        .\nWax beans, one quart\u2014I. Mrs.\nEdith Dill, Nelson; 2, Tilly Chernoff, Nelson.\nTomatoes, one quart\u20141, Ivan E.\nLewis, Nelson; 2. Mrs. Louis Santor,\nNelson.      '\nCorn on cob, two quarts \u2014 2,\nMrs. M. McNown, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nCollection of any five vegetables\n\u20141,  Mrs. H.  Sanders,  Nelson;  2.\nMrs. M. McNown, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nCanned meatt and fish:\nSalmon, one pint \u2014 1. Mrs. K.\nCameron, Nelson;  2.  Mrs,  K.  W.\nSkilton, Nelson.\nBeef, one quart\u20141. Mrs. H. Sanders, Nelson; 2. H. H. James, South\nSlocan.\nChicken, one quart \u2014 1. Mrs. M.\nMcNown, R.R. 1, Nelson;  2. Mrs.\nGeorge Frederiksen, Nelson,\nPickles! '\"' . \".'\nDill,  one  quart\u20141.  Mrs.  Harry\nWassick,   Nelson;\nSantor, Nelson.\nGreen   tomato,\n2.   Mrs.   Louis\none   pint \u2014 1,\nEvelyn Linton, Nelson; 2, Mrs. L.\nG. Catley, Nelson. .''\/\nMustard, one pint \u2014 1. Evelyn\nLinton, Nelson; 2, Mrs. Louis Santor, Nelson.\nMixed, sweet or sour, one pint\u20141.\nMrs. Ron Nash, Nelson; 2. Mrs. K.\nCameron, Nelson,\nChili sauce, one jar\u20141. Mrs. Peter\nMarkin, Nelson; 2. Evelyn Linton,\nNelson.\nCatsup, one bottle\u20141. Mrs. Edith\nDill, Nelson,\nBeef, one pint \u2014 1. Mrs. K.\nCameron, Nelson; Mrs. H. Sanders,\nNelson.\nOnion, one pint\u20141. Mrs. R. H.\nMaber, Nelson; 2. Mrs. C. S. Duff,\nWillow Point    .\nCollection any five pickles \u2014 1.\nEvelyn   Linton,   Nelson';   2.   Mrs.\nGeorge Frederiksen, Nelson.\nJams:\nApricot, one \u25a0 jar \u2014 1.\" Mrs. M.\nMcNown, R.R. 1 Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nLouis Santor, Nelson.\nBlack currant, one jar\u20141. Mrs. E.\nMcLachlan, Nelson; 2, Mrs. M.\nMcNown, Hit. 1, Nelson.\nPlum,, one jar\u20141. Mrs. Louis\nSantor, Nelson; 2. Mrs. R. H. Maber,\nNelson.\nRaspberry, one jar\u20141. Mrs. E. E.\nHopwood, Nelson; 2, Mrs. J. C.\nHughes, Nelson.\nStrawberry, one jar\u20141. Mrs. E.\nMcLachlan, Nelson; 2. Mrs. E. E.\nHopwood, Nelson.\nJellies:\nGrape, one jar\u20141. Mrs. J. Blazlna, Nelson; 2. Elizabeth McEach-\nern, Nelson.\nCrab apple, one jar\u20141. Mrs. E.\nMcLachlan, Nelson; 2. Mrs. R.\nKeffer, Nelson. ^\nRed currant, one jar\u20141. Mrs.\nLouis Santor, Nelson; 2. D, D. Lythgoe, Nelson,\nBlack currant, one jar \u2014 1. Mrs.\nJ. M DeGirolamo, Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nIvan Lewis, Nelson.\nMarmalade, any variety, one jar\n1. Elizabeth. McEachern, Nelson;\n2. Mrs. Louis Santor.\nSpecial prize\u20141: Mrs. J. Blazina,\nNelsOn; 2. Mrs. Ron Nash. Nelson,\nBevcourt      .4014\nBobjO    .      .l2Yt\nBralorne     6.70\nBroulan .'. 58\nBuffadison .\u25a0\u201e...; 12%\nBuff-Red Lake .: 5%\nBuffalo Ank     1.49\nBuff Can       .20\nCampbell R.L ...    2.18\nCariboo Gold    1.15\nCastle Treth\nMcMarmae ....\nMining Corp\nMoneta\t\nMosher ,1, L ..\nMylama'que   ..\nNegus..:\t\nNew Calumet.\n.11%\n10.00\n.32\n.12\n.14\n1.04\n2.25\nNew Goldvue 2d\nNew Jason  ...\u00bb       .29 V4\nCentral Patricia\nCentral Pore\t\nChestervllle  \t\nChimb G\t\nCochenour ;\nConlaurum\n  2.10\n....... .71\n..._ .20\n..... .10\n \u201e .76\n  1.56\n ., 71\nCons Beatty  .49\nCons Min & Smelt  118.15\nConwest   1.82\nCroinor  .43\nDetta R h  .8y\u00ab\nDiscovery '.  .41\nDome r.  14.75\nNew Lund\nNicholson\nNoranda ....\nNormetals\nNorseman\nO'Brien   ....\nO'L'eary\n2.40\n. .40\n72.50\n4.70\n.12\n1.47\n19%\nOsisko ....:\u00bb...    1.27\npamour\nPaymaster \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPlcadilly   !.,.\nPickle Crow\t\nPioneer   \t\nPore Reef\nDonalda  _....\nEast Malartic \t\nElder Gold \t\nEldona  .1\t\nEast Sull \t\nElsol\t\nEureka \t\nFalconbridge \t\nFed Kirk ..:\t\nFrancoeur ...._.\u201e..,\u201e\nFrobisher   \t\nGiant Yel\t\nGold Eagle.\nGolden Manltou\nHardrock ......\u201e\u201e...,\nHollinger    .\u201e\u2022.....\nHudson Bay .._\u201e.'\nInt Nickel\t\nJoliet Que\t\nKayrand\t\nKelore ,\n.54\n1.55\n7.50\n.57\n.23\n.6\n.53\n6.90\n.4%\n.9\n3.15\n7.10\n.11\n2.87\n.31%\n9.75\n56.75\n38.50\n.68\n.28\n.10\n.16\n16.35\n.94\n\u2022'.13\n5.90\n! 1.09\n.7\n...   10.50\nLake Wasa - 63\nLeitch\t\nLingman (new)\nLittle Long Lac\nLouvicourt .....\nLynx\t\nMacDonald \t\nMacassa\t\nMacLeod Cock ...\nMadsen R L ....\nMagnet\n 94\n  .56\n  9.00\n.... -.67\n.... 1.76\n.... 2.35\n  .62\nPreston E D s.  1.45\nQuebec Lab .,\u201e .23\nQuebec Man  .........:  .90\nQueehston  .94\nQuemont  24.25\nReeves Mac .....'.  4.60\nRegcoiirt  .4%\nHoxana .\n.38\nTower Pete  ....       .50\nUnited, Oils ......\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitlbl\nAlgoma Steel ...\u201e,\nAluminum  .\u00bb.\u201e.\u201e.\nArgus .\u25a0'....\nAtlas St\n.48\n39%\n24\n90\n8%\n11%\nRoche L L\nSan Antonio\t\nSen Rouyn\t\nShawkey\t\nSherritt Gordon.\nSigma ..:\t\nSUvermiller\t\nSilanco \t\nSlscoe \t\nSladon Mai,.\n.7\n2.60\n.24\n.23\n2.20\n6.95\nStarratt Olsen \t\nSteep Rock      4'oij\n.16\n.42\n.65\n.46%\nSudbury Cont.\nSurf Inlet \t\nSylvanite\t\nTaku River ...\nTeck .Hughes\nToburn\nKenville .-.\u201e....:\u201e\u201e..\nKerr Addison ....\nKirkland Lake ..\nKirk Townsite ....\nLabrador \t\nLake Dufault\t\nLake Rowan .....\nLakeshore\nMalartic G F _.\u201e., ....\nMclntyre __\nMcKenzie R L .....~   \"!\u00ab%\n1.03\n.28\n.38\n.16'\n.19\n.62\n2.18\n2.24\n2.17\n.24%\n2.35\n58,50\nTorbrit......\t\nTowagamac\t\nTrans Cont Res..,\nUnited Keno \t\nUpper Canada ....\nVentures   .,..'.\nViolamac  \u201e\nWaite Amulet ....\nOIL8\nAnglo Can\t\nAtlantic Oil\t\nB A Oil\n  .4\n....\u201e .11\n  1.21\n.\u201e..::. .9\n.\u201e...\u25a0\u201e 2,60\n  .33\n  1.05\n....... .13\n........ .45\n  9.30\n.  2.07\n  8.40\n  .35\n  10.25\n 1. 5.25\n....... ' 2.97\n  30.35\nCal and Ed  \u2022 8.25 .\nCalmont  .92\nCentral Leduc  2.25\nChemical Research  \u201e 1.10\nCommonwealth Pete _ 1.86\nDavies Pete  .23\nDel Rib    1.17\nFederated Pete  5.25\nGlobe 63\nHighwood  * .13%\nHome '.!..\/. 1  16.65\nImperial Oil  \u201e  28.85\nInter Pete  13.50\nLeduc West  \u201e  1.05\nNat Pete \u201e..\u201e.\u201e.. 2.40\nOkalta   ii .'. \u201e  1.85\nPacific Pete  7.45\nRoyalite  14.25\n    iii,:\nBathurst Power  .34\nBell Telephone     40%\nBrazilian     23%\nB C Electric :..  90\nB C Forest    4.85\nB C Packers A  14%\nB C Packers B  10\nBC Power A   30\nB C Power B \u201e 4.35\nB C Pulp  \"\u25a0; 145\nBrown Co  5%\nBrown Co pfd  113%\nBruck Silk A  '.  19 .\nBruck Silk B ..' 7%\nBuilding Products ..;.: ; 29%\nBurl Steel   18\nBurns A \u201e.....\u201e  40-\nBurns B  \u201e.  27\nBurrard A  '.'.  8%\nCanadian Celanese  \u201e 41\nCan Cement   41%\nCan Malting  , 50%\nCan Packers B  \u201e... 30%\nCanadian Bakeries  8%\nCanadian Breweries .' ....... 22%\nCanadian Canners  20\nCanadian Car & Fdy  13%\nCanadian' Car & Fdy A  1714\nCan Oil  17\nCanadian Dredge   24\nCanadian Ind Alcohol ........ 10%\nCanadian Marconi  3.95\nCanadian Pacific Rly  21%\nCanadian West Lmbr \u2022 6%\nCockshutt \t\nCoast Copper\t\nCons Mining & Smelt\nCons Paper\t\nDist Seagrcm \t\nDom Foundries\t\nDom Steel & Coal B ....\nDom Stores\t\nD.om Textiles \t\nEddy Paper\nM<]\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 15, 1950 \u2014 3\nRefuse lo Change\nChurch, Lose\n$10,000 legacy\nTORONTO, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Two\nToronto men said today they hav\u00ab\ndecided against changing from the\nRoman Catholic to the Protestant\nfaith to obtain bequests of $5000\neach.\nThey were named as .heirs In tha\nwill of their aunt, Arribia Llla\nGoing of Peterborough, Ont., on\ncondition that they became Protestants, '\nIf only one of the men\u2014John\nDavid Bradley, 23, employee of an\noil.company trucking department,\nand Brian Michael Bradley, 21,\nfirst-year medical student at\" University of Western Ontario, London\u2014changed to Protestantism, he\nwas to receive the entire $10,000.\nSince neither intends to join a\nProtestant church, the money will\ngo to the pension fund of the Unit- \u25a0\ned Church of Canada.\nRoosville Farmer\nLaid to Rest\nFERNIE, B. C, Sept. 14\u2014Hegl\nnald S. Phillips, aged 75, lifetime\nresident of Roosville district, died\nrecently in Fernie Memorial. Hospital. He was born at Roosville,\nwhere he farmed all his life until\nhis retirement, when he continued\nhis home there. He is survived by\nhis wife, a daughter, Catherine, and\na son, Edward, at Roosville., He was\nburied 1 there following Requiem\nMass which was sung by. \u25a0 Father\nSullivan of the St., Eugene Mission.\n\" He was' a .son of Michael Phillips,\nwho came from England to East\nKootenay'in the late 1800's to become the -district's first white settler. He was Hudson's Bay Company representative for East Kootenay, and is credited with discovering the coal resources which led\nto establishment of this major coal\nproduction area in the Province.\nMassey Harris pfd ....\nMercury Mills      '\nM & 0 Paper .\n18%\n1.75\n119%\n27,\n'25%\n37,\n22'\/s\n10%.\n11%\n18\nFamous Players _ -      16%\nFanny Farmer       33%\nFleet Air '.     1.75\nFord A  ; \u201e      55%\nGatineau    '.  17%\nGatineau 5 % pfd ..-.      105%\nGen Steel Wares       19%\nGoodyear      95 i\nGoodyear pfd  '. 53%\nGreat Lakes   \" 21%\nGreat Lakes pfd       47\nGypsum Lime      20 .\nH R MacMlllan A .\u201e  '  13%\nH R MacMiilan B :...,     14\nImperial Oil ..........     29\nImp Tobacco       12%\nInt Metal  .   37\nInt Nickel\nInt Pete\n32%\n4,00\n.             23%\nMont Loco  ...-\u25a0.. :...       19%\nMOore Corp       81\nMcColl Frontenac        16%\nNat Steel Car\nOgilvie Flour\nPage Hershey\nPowell River\nPower Corp\nRuss Industries\t\nShea Brew .'. : :.\nSicks Brew .\u201e\nSirnpBons A  \u201e\u201e\".;\u25a0\nSimpsons pfd\u00bb.\t\nSoutham\nSteel of Canada .....'.\t\nSteel of Canada pfd \u201e\t\nStandard Paving ....:\u201e.,\u201e..\nStandard Chemical' 1\nTaylor Pearson  ,....\nUnion Gas of Can \t\nUnited Corp B  ...,._.Z\nUnited Fuel A.\nUnited Steel\nH Walker\nWestern Grocers A\nWeston   George   \t\nWinnipeg Electric com ......      .,.\u201e\nWinnipeg Elec pfd  ;     100%\n24%\n22\n47%\n58\n18%\n20%\n15%\n21\n31%\n99%\n20%\n28\n28%\n15\n9'\/s\n7\n16%\n30%\n66\n8%\n49%\n34%\n25%\n37%\nthis Foil brings you\nFruit Results\ngood\/?ear\n10&6\/IV6\nTIRES\nPrize winners in'the Fruit Section in the West Kootenay Exhibition follow:\nApples, plate of five-\nWealthy\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson;\n2, G. .Frederiksen, R.R.l Nelson.\nMcintosh\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson;\n2, E. L. Bealby, Nelson.\nCox Orange\u20141, G. C. Ward, R.R.l\nNelson; 2, G. Frederiksen, R.R.l,\nNelson.\nJonathan\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson,\nRed Delicious\u20141, E. L, Bealby,\nNelson; 2, Mrs. V. E. Howard, Nelson.\nDelicious\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson\n'2, G. Frederiksen, R.R.1 Nelson.\nWagener\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson\n2, E. L. Bealby, R.R.1 Nelson,\nStayman\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson,\nSpy\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson.\nRome Beauty \u2014 1, R. Oborne.\nRobson.\nNewtowns\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson.\nAny other variety\u20141,'R. Oborne,\nRobson; 2, G. C. Ward, R.R.1, Nelson.\nTrays, to consist of one layer of\napples in flat to'resemble top of\napple box. \u2022\nRed delicious\u20141, H. H. James,\nSouth Slocan.\nMclntosh-l, R. Oborne, Robson-i    FRUITVALE, B.C., Sept.  14\u2014St.\ncol ectlons-^ Pa r   0nUed ch    h was,fined to\nBest three places Fall varieties\u2014lno^lrf(\u201e   w\u201ej,.,j \u201e_   ._!___,.\n1, R. Oborne, Robson; 2, Mrs. M.\nItalian prune \u2014 1, G. C. Ward,\nR, R. 1, Nelson; 2, R. Oborne, Robson.\nMiscellaneous fruit\u2014\nBlackberries, one hallock on\nplate\u20141, Mrs. V. E. Howard, Nelson; 2, G. Frederiksen, R.R.1 Nelson\nStrawberries, one hallock on\nplate\u20141; Mrs. M. R. Hollington, Nelson; 2, Mrs. David Cathcart, Nelson.\nGrapes, outdoor, two bunches\u20141,\nR. Oborne, Robson; 2, Robert Morrison, Nelson.\nCollection of nuts\u20141, Mrs. R. A.\nGrimes, R.R.l Nelson.\nCollection of fruit\u2014\nTo consist of at least 10 plates\nnamed varieties; any other variety,\nnamed\u20141, R. Oborne, Robson; 2,\nG. Frederiksen, R.R.l, Nelson.\nResults in Flowers\nAnd Pot Plants\nMany Attend Last\nRifes af Fruitvale\nFori. C. Dilling\nMcNown, R.R.1, Nelson.\nBest four plates Winter varieties\n\u20221, R. Oborne, Robson,\nPears, plate of five\n\u2022 Anjou\u20141, E. L. Bealby, Nelson;\n2, R. Oborne, Robson.\nBartlett-1, Mrs. H. Talbot, Nelson; 2, G. C. Ward. R.R.1, Nelson.\nClapp's favorite\u20141, R. Oborne,\nRobson; 2, Mrs. M. Wellwood, R.R.1\nNelson.\nFlemish Beauty\u20141, R. Oborne,\nRobson.\nAny other variety\u20141, R. Oborne,\nRobson.\nDamspn\u20141, G. C. Ward, R.R.l,\nNelson.    .    .\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCO. LTD.\n323  VERNON  ST.\u2014PHONE:  35\nCHEVROLET & OLDSMOBILE\nSALES & SERVICE\nDiscovers Home\nSkin Remedy\nThis clean stainless antiseptic\nknown all over Canada as Moone's\nEmerald Oil, is such a fine healing\nagent that Eczema, Barber's Itch,\nSalt,Rheum, Itching Toes and Feet,\nand other inflammatory skin erup^\ntions are often relieved in a few\ndays.\nis so antiseptic and\npenetrating that many old. stubborn\ncases of long standing have yielded\nto Its influence.\nMoone's Emerald Oil Is sold by\nMann's Drug Store and druggists\neverywhere to help rid you of\nStubborn pimples and unsightly\nskirt troubles\u2014satisfaction or money\nback.\ncapacity Wednesday with friends\nand neighbors who had gathered to\npay their last respects to Alfred\nGerald Dilling, whoSe sudden death\noccurred at his honie Sept. 10. Death\nwas due to a blood clot. There was\na profusion of flowers, banking the\nalter and on windows.       .\"\u2022:\nBorn in Delhi, Indiana, 46 years\nago, Mr. Dilling came to Fruitvale\nin 1038, and operated the Fruitvale\nButcher Shop. Of cheery disposition\nhe was always ready' to lend a\nhelping hand. He was interested In\nall community projects, but perhaps his keenest interest was the\nBoys and Girl's Calf Club. He was\na charter member of the Fruitvale AOTS Men's Club.\nBesides his widow, Mabel, he is\nsurvlyed by five brothers, Harvey of\nFruitvale, Paul and Ivan, both of\nTrail, Richard of Sheep Creek and\nEugene of Lloydminster, Sask. and\nmany nephews and neices.\nRev. D. W. More officiated at the\nservices, hymns sung were \"Nearer\nMy God to Thee\" and \"Unto the\nHills\". Mrs. Peitzeche presided at\nthe organ. Interment was in the\nfamily plot In the Fruitvale Cemetery.\n1   Pallbearers, all intimate friends of\nMoone's Emerald Oil is pleasant | the  family,  were Walter Duncan,\nto use and it is so antisec-tle and Robert Davis, Leon Simmons, Adam\nCruikshank,' Alfred   Nuttall   and\nRalph Leckett.       ';\nBusiness associates formed the\nhonorary pallbearer 1. line\u2014Otto\nSchewe, Charles (Harrett, James\nCullen, Andrew Nelson, Frank Var-\nseveld, Andy Zuk, Alvin Olsen and\nGordon Leitch. \u201eV.   \u00a3\u25a0\t\nPrize winners in the flowers and\npot plants section of the West Kootenay Exhibition.\nFor amateurs only.\nAntirrhinum.   (Snapdragon),  two\nVases,  three  spikes  eaeh \u2014 1.  C.\nDainton, Nelson; 2. Mrs. E. E. Hop-\nwood, Nelson.\nAsters:.\nDouble, three blooms, one color\u2014\n1. Robert Morrison, Nelson; 2. Fred\nW. Leno, Nelson.\nSingle, six blooms, mixed colors\n\u20141. Mrs..R. H. Maber, Nelson; 2.\nA M. Binks, Willow Point...\nChrysanthemums, collection \u2014 1.\nG..R. Der, Nelson; 2. Mrs. E. W.\nSmith, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nDahlias: ' . ,\nCactus, three blooms\u2014-1. A. Sinclair, Nelson; 2, Mrs. H. Sanders,\nNelson, > ,\nDecorative, large, three blooms\u2014\n1. C. Stainton, Nelson; 2, Mrs. R. H.\nMaber, Nelson.\nDecorative, small, three blooms\u2014\n1. A. Sinclair, Nelson; 2. G. K. Der,\nNelson. \u2022\nBest collection \u2014 1, A. Sinclair,\nNelson; 2. C. Stainton, Nelson,\nEverlasting flowers, collection \u2014\n1. Mrs. R. H. Maber, Nelson.\nGladiolus:\nWhite,  cream  or bluish   white,\nthree spikes\u20141. G. K. Der, Nelson.\nPink shades, three spikes\u20141. G.\nK. Der, Nelson.    ,\nRed shades, three sjilkes\u20141. Mrs.\nH. Sanders, Nelson,\nMarigolds: .\nFrench, six blooms\u20141. C. R. Mattice, Nelson; 2, Mrs. E. E. Hopwood,\nNelson.\nAfrican, any variety, six blooms\nt-1. filly Chernoff, Nelson; 2. A\nM. Banks, Willow Point.\nPetunias:\nSingle, any color, six blooms\u20141.\nA M. Banks, Willow Point; 2, Mrs.\nR. H Maber, Nelson.        \u2022   '\nDouble, any color\/six blooms\u20141.\nAM. Banks, Willow Point; 2. Mrs.\nR. H. Maber, Nelson.\nRoses:\nVase of six roses, three colors\u2014\n1. Mrs. J. C. Laughton, Nelson; 2.\nMrs. R. H. Maber.\nOutdoor grown, separate colors,\nthree blooms\u20141. Mrs. J. C. Laugh-\nton, Nelson; 2. Mrs. David Cathcart,\nNelson.\nBest collection\u20141. Mrs. J. A. C.|\nLaughtdn,' Nelson,\nStocks, mixed colors, six blooms\n\u20142. Mrs. R. H. Maber, Nelson.\nSweet Peas:\nTwo vases, six spikes each\u20141.\nMrs. Robert Pickering, Nelson; 2.\nMrs. David Cathcart, Nelson.\nSix different colors,  six  spikes\neach\u20141. Mrs. David Cathcart* Nelson; 2. Mrs. Robert Bennett, Nelson.\nZinnias:\nLarge, four spikes, separate colors, one vase\u20141. Mrs. H. H. James,\nSouth Slocan; 2. Mrs. A. M. Banks,\nWillow Point.\nFour blooms, separate colors, two\nvases\u20141. Mrs. A. M. Banks, Willow\nFantasy, or Shaggy, six' spikes,\nmixed\u20141. Mrs. A. M. Banks, Willow Point; 2. Mrs. R. H.. Maber,\nNelson.     '\nLilllput, six spikes, mixed \u2014 1.\nMrs. R.' H. Maber, Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nA. M. Banks, Willow Point,\nCollection of annuals, hot less\nthan eight varieties\u20141. Mrs, A. M.\nBanks, Willow Point; 2. Mrs. R. H.\nMaber, Nelson.\nBaskets, vases or bowls, any natural foliage allowed:\nRoses, one basket arranged for\neffect\u20141. Mrs. J. A. C. Laughton,\nNelson; 2. A. M. Holmes, Nelson.\nRoses, one vase or bowl arranged\nfor effect\u20141. Mrs. J. A. C. Laughton, Nelson; 2. Mrs. David Cathcart,\nNelson.\nDahlias, basket arranged for effect\u20141. C. R. Mattice, Nelson.\nDahlias, vase or bowl arranged\nfor effect\u20141. Mrs. David. Cathcart,\nNelson; 2.. Mrs. Smidt, Nelson.\nGladiolus, basket arranged for\neffect\u20141. G. K. Der, Nelson.\nGladiolus, vase or bowl arranged\nfor effect\u20141. G. K. Der, Nelson; 2.\nMrs. H. Sanders, Nelson.\nChrysanthemums, best basket\u20141.\nMrs. A. Wallach,, Nelson.\nChrysanthemums, best vase \u2014 1.\nG. K. Der, Nelson; 2. Robert Morrison, Nelson.\nMichaelmas Daisies, best vase or\nbowlJ-l. C. Dainton, Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nA. Wallach.\nPot plants:\nBegonia, one plant, flowering\u20141.\nMrs. W. A, White, Nelson; 2. W. P.\nMelneczuk.\nBegonia, one plant, foliage\u2014 1\nMrs. C. S. Duff, Willow Point.\nBegonia, tuberous\u20141. Mrs. E. E.\nHopwood, Nelson.\nGeranium, double, one plant \u2014 1.\nMrs. Smidt, Nelson.\nGeranium, single, one plant \u2014 2.\nW. B. Melneczuk, Nelson.\nFoliage, other than above class,\none plant\u20142. James Kemballj Nel-.\nson.\nOpen competition:\nAsters, best collection, not less,\nthan 24 blooms, six shades and\nthree varieties \u2014 1. H. H. James,\nSouth Slocan; 2. Mrs. R. H. Maber,\nNelson.\nCarnations, outdoor grown, collection\u20141.  Robert  Morrison,  Nelson; 2. Mrs. R. H. Maber, Nelsori.\nDahlias, display\u20141. A. S. Read,\nNelson.   '\nGladiolus, collection, not less\nthan ten named varieties\u20141, A. S.\nRead, Nelson.\nRoses, collection, not less than\nsjx colors or varieties\u20141. Mrs. J.\nA. C. Laughton, Nelson.\nGladiolus,   basket,  arranged  for |\neffect\u20141. Mrs. H. Sanders, Nelson.\nBasket of cut flowers, arranged\nfor effect\u2014 1. H. H. James, South\nSlocan; 2. Mrs. A. Wallach, Nelson.\nTable decoration, centre piece of\ngarden flowers\u20141. Mrs. J. A. Street\nNelson;-2. Mrs. E; W. Smith, R.R 1,\nNelson; 3. Mrs. F. P. Clark, Nelson.\nSpecial display of cut flowers\u20141.\n38%\n12%\nKelvinator  18\nLake of Woods  26\nLaura Secord _ 15\nLoblaw A  33%\nLoblaw B  '   33%\nNOW-She's Got Exciting\nZIPand GLOW\"\"w,\"\"M\nDon't .envy her charm or radiant health! Make it\nyours the way thousands of.pale, listless, anemic\npeople are dotng-with Dr.'IVillianis Pink Pills. ***\"\nrevitalking . and  enriching your bloodstream,\nDr*. Williams Pink Pills may bring you new pep,\nenergy, joy in life \u2014often in only 30 days. So\nstart today! Get back \"in the pink\" with.\nOR WILLIAMS PINK PILLS\nHis*.\nBuy wisely\nWhy waste good money paying big car prices\nfor a lot of extra weight and space you really\ndon't need. Why cripple 'your budget buying\nextra gasoline? Thrifty motorists from coast to\ncoast find that the HILLMAN MINX has all the\ncomfort, safety and performance an average\nfamily could want for pleasant motoring.\nBetter still you don't have to sacrifice beauty or\nquality to enjoy low cost economy. Hillman has\nall three. It's one of the trimmest can on the\nroad... handles like a charm In heavy traffic or\nout on the open road. Looks right, feels right\nanywhere. , \u2022        *\nThe new \"Plus-Power\" engine gets away fast,\ntakes hills in a hurry and gives up to 35 miles\nto the gallon\u2014a saving you'll enjoy every time\nyou drive..\nTome In and see what a handsome, well\nequipped car the HILLMAN MINX really is.\nOn display today. You'll like it.\nGet your money's worth**.drive a\nA ROOTES GROUP PRODUCT\nPoint; 2. Mrs. H. H. James, South! A. S. Read. Nelson; 2. Nelson Gar'\nSlOCSn* ldan Clifh.  X  Crizsualla's. '\nHILLMAN TrtLruc\niKrttooBPS...nottooSAMLL...jurt RIGHT\nROOm MOTORS (CANADA) UMJTEDi\nCcnMiilonolrM fcr thi fto-hi Group ond fi.vif tWuetl\nH-od Offict, 170 Sty II., T-rtnli, Out... W\u00abttrfl Offlct,.17M H.iiI-q. St. I., Vtnttt\nuvti D.C. \u2022 latltra OfflM, Montrto! Airport, Dorvol, P.O.\n5 E R V IC E     FROM     COAST     TO     C, O A S T     IN     CANADA\nDISTRIBUTOR:     \u2014\nMcDERMOTT'S (VANCOUVER) LTD., 845 Burrard Street, Vancouver B. C.\nDEALER: i\nKOOTENAY MOTORS (1949) LTD., Nelson, B.C.\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 15, 1950\nTIIjdvul $oj^-~\nScreen Writer Much Maligned,\nLooks Like Actor, Dresses Well\nBy BOB THOMAS profession. 'lake Hunald MacDou-\nHOLLYWOOD, Sept.  14  (AP)\u2014\nw\nTime now to give a few thoughts\nto that species of Hollywood life\nknown as the screen writer.\np '\u2022 The movie scrivener is a much-\n\" maligned gent. He is branded as\n.., everything i from   a   soul-selling\nhack to heaven' knows what, and\n\u25a0  Is often pictured as having wild\n\"hair,  loud  shirts  and  two swim-\n.  m'ng pools. .\n:.:-\u25a0 Actually, the screen writer is a\n:   ci .if tsman who wbrks hard at his\n&r7~\ngall, He wears neat suns with white\nshirts and owns but one swimming\npool, he ia good-looking enough to\nbe an actor. Which ho was until he\ndiscovered he could make more\nmoney with a typewriter. '\nPETJ0KE8\nLike actors who have their favorite performances, writers have\npet wisecracks. MacDaugall was\ntelling me his favorite, which was\nborn in Joan Crawford's house.\nMacDougall, Producer Jerry Wald\nand Director Mike Curtiz were vis.\niting the actress to' discuss \"Mildred Pierce,\" They were ushered\ninto a beautiful den with walls and\nfurniture of leather.\n\"Hmm,\" said the writer, \"this\nmust be like living in a wallet.\"\nNobody laughed. MacDougall\ntried to put the line:iri the script\nand was told it wasn't funny. He\ntried to inject it into three other\nscripts, but it was always tossed\nout. Finally he managed to slip it\ninto \"June Bride\".\nIt got a big laugh,\" he added\nhappily.\nAND PRIVATE ONES\nFilm writers also cherish their\nown private jokes which don't get\nin the script.' One of MacDougall's\npets was a comment on a moth-eaten film script about \"an air squadron. Borrowing an old cliche, he\nsaid: \"You can't sen* the boys up\nin that script; it's murder.\"\nSilverton....\n;   VERY GIFTWORTHY\n5 .\/These for gifts; A thoughtful\n! choice loi a homekeeper \u2014 linens\n'^decorated   with   crochet  and\nquisite embroidered flowers!\n\u2022\"\".   Easy   embroidery' and   crochet.\n...-.Pattern 835; transfer 6, motifs 7x9%\nv inches; crochet directions.'\n',..   Laura Wheeler's improved pat\n\"\"tern makes crochet and knitting so\nsimple with its charts, photos and\n.-. concise directions.\n\u2022'\u25a0-..   Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in\n' coins (stamps cannot be accepted)\nfor this pattern to Nelson Dally\n'News. Needlecraft Dept., 212 Baker\n,> Street.   Print   plainly   PATTERN\n\"   NUMBER, your NAME and AD-\n\u201e, DRESS.\nNew! Household accessories to\n.,,,-, knit! Motifs to paint on textiles!\n'-\u25a0'\u2022Send twenty-five, .cents today for\nour new Laura Wheeler Needlecraft\nBook. Illustrations of crochet, embroidery patterns plus many fascinating hobby ideas. And a free pattern is printed in the book.\nQaam* lAfL With.\nVnivaatL WlttiiitL\nE. Kootenay Golf\nTourney Played\nOn Fernie Course\n-\"ERNIEi. B. C., Sept 14\u2014Winner\nof the first annual East Kootenay\n'Golf Tournament, which was staged\nat Fernie's highly scenic course,\nwas Frank Hughes of Fernie, who\nmet Jimmy Marasco of Fernie in\nthe: finals and beat him on the 96th\nhole. Hughes was also winner of the\nprize for low nine at 35. Johnny\nZaporozan of Fernie was winner in\nGroup B, and Norman Gill of Fernie in Group C.   .\nMrs. George Thompson of- Ward-\nner wort, the ladles' championship\nin. finals against Mrs. J. O.'Connlck\nof Fernie, and she also toolf ladies'\nprize for low nine at 46. Mrs. John\nHunter of West Fernie won .the\nGroup 'B championship for ladles,\nand Mrs. Frank Hughes of Fernie,\nGroup C championship.\nGay Birthday Party\nFor Robson Boy\nROBSON, B.C,, Sept. 14 - On\nFriday' Graeme Hane3 of Robson\nwas guest of honor at a weiner and\ncorn roast held at Pass Creek to\ncelebrate his 11th birthday. There\nwere IB guests.\nAfter everyone had their flu of\ncom and weiners the three layer\nbirthday cake which had been decorated by Miss Jean McGregor, was\nlighted and everyone joined in\nsinging \"Happy Birthday\", Then a\ncolorful array of balloons were let\nloose from a nearby tree much to\nthe delight of all the youngsters.\nThe evening closed with Graeme\nbeing the proud receiver of marly\nlovely gifts.\nSILVERTON, B.C. - Miss Doreen Nordby of Vancouver is spending a vacation with her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. Detta.\nMrs. R; Hambly Sr.,. has left to\nvisit friends in Nelson.\nMr. .and Mrs, F. Parsons entertained a number of friends Saturday evening honoring the latter's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMis. C. S. Bowens, Who have since\nleft for Vancouver and Vancouver\nIsland points, before returning to\ntheir home in Sacramento, Calif.\nW. Kennedy of Trail was guest\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs.. M.\nKennedy.\n...Miss Thelma Johnson, who has\nbeen holidaying with her parents,\nMr; and Mrs,' T. Anderson, has left\nto visit relatives in Trail, en route\nto Her home in Vancouver,\nMr. and Mrs. G. Ward have left\nfor their home at Longbeach, after\nbeing in charge of the Selkirk Hotel dining room for (he past few\nmonths, :.,-..-,\nMrs. G. Lockhart and son Gordon,\nex-residents of Silverton, were renewing acquaintances in town recently, en route to their home in\nVancouver.\nTommy Marcus, who spent the\nSummer holiday months with his\ngrandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L, Lind-\nstein, has returned to his home in\nVancouver.\nMr. .and Mrs. G. Fleming of Vernon were recent guests of Mr. and\nMrs. C. Cave.\nMrs. D. F. MacDiarmid'has returned from a short visit to Salmo,\nwhere she was the guest of hen\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. M. MacDiarmid, and also attended the Grindrod-Larsen wedding.\nMrs, C. Schmidt, who spent the\npast month visiting her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. W. Mc-\nEwen in Vancouver, returned on\nMonday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Scaia have returned from a few days' visit in\nNelson, guests of the latter's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Wood.\n\u25a0Mrs. Norman Brookes of New\nDenver, has been the guest of Mrs.\nC. Cave for the past few days,\nMiss Dollie Irving, who Reaches\nat Vernon, spent the holiday weekend with her brother-in-law and1\nsister, Mr,, and Mrs. G. Hegberg.\nMrs. S. Dewis has returned to\nher home following a month's holiday spent with relatives in Nanaimo.\nMr. and Mrs. R. T. Avison, Mary-\nAnn and Andy have returned from\na week's visit to Vancouver. They\nwere accompanied to the Coast city\nby Mrs. A- Erickson, who has been\ntheir guest for the past motnh.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Evans and family, who spent a vacation with their\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Peachey,\nhave returned to their home in\nKImberely,   ,\nMr. and Mrs. T. Anderson have\nreturned from a holiday, trip to\nVancouver. They were accompanied on-their return by their daughter, Miss Thelma Johnson, who will\nspend part of her vacation here;\nMiss  Darlene .Ward  of  Nelson\nEntries First Class at\nArrow Park Annual Fair\nNAKUSP, B. C, Sept. 14^-Arrow\nPark Agricultural Societies Annual\nFair was held at Arrow Park Saturday, Sept. 9, In the new Arrow\nPark school, with the kind permission of the Arrow Lakes School\nBoard. Formerly held in the Community.. Hall, which over the years\nhas become inadequate for the purpose, the new school was a forward\nstep, for the entries in each section\ncould be laid out where they were\nseen more .easily.\nThere was quite an lnorease in\nthe number of' entries over-last\nyear, and the Calf Club and poultry-pet sections gave an increased\ninterest in the Fair, besides making\nan imposing swing toward better\nproduction and quality in these\nfields..Many local and outside firms\n.made generous gifts toward prizes,\noutstanding amongst which was a\nsilver, dish in the school section for\nbest all-'round work, won by Irene\nKarlsteh, who received it at the\nhands of.W. Addison, Manager of\nthe Bank of Commerce,\nThe next best item was the calf\ncontest^ won by. Virginia Karlsten,\nwho had the best calf, while Eleanor Henke won the purebred calf\noffered by the Society for the best\nattendance and interest in the Club,\nas well as best progress in judging\nand showmanship. Home craft sections were judged by Mrs. H. Por\nter and Mrs, F. Orr of Burton, the-l whole project.\nother sections all .being judged, by\nR. Anderson and T. Swales of Nel:\nson, Toward the close, the judges\nwere invited to speak on their part\nin the judging after a few introductory remark's by Mrs. Lv Gibson,\nPresident of the Society, Re'v..,Ti\nMitchell extending the thanks and\nappreciation of the Society to- all\nwho helped in the success of the\nFair.\nAll the Judges offered encouraging and helpful criticism, complimenting all entrants on their work\nand the Society for its progressive\nefforts for the betterme,nt of the\nCommunity..\nThe new Fair\u201eslgn hanging over\nthe; gate of the school was the gift\nof Miss Hartt, and J, Fattenson very\nkindly loaned his barns for the use\nof the livestock sections. Notwithstanding an exceptionally dry Summer and the ' consequent' poorer\nquality of much garden and fruit\nitems\/ the entries were extremely\ngood, and some Wonderful floral\ndisplays were entered by' A. J.\nHarrison of Nakusp and Mr. Duckworth of Arrow Park, both good\ngardeners and keen competitors.\nA well-supplied lunch counter\nwas in operation, in the hands of\nthe ladles of the Society, where a\ngood meal was obtainable. Every\nthing was sold out, bearing good\ntestimony  to  the  success   of  the\nRaise $54.45 at\nNakusp Ladies'\nAid Harvest Sale\nNAKUSP, B.C., Sept. 14 - The\nSeptember meeting of the United\nChurch Ladies Aid was held at the\nhome of Mrs. Victor Smith onTues-\nday, with 20 members present. Mrs.\nRobert S. LaRue presided, Mrs.\nSmith was in charge of the secretary\nwork and Mrs. P. R. Henke the\ntreasurer's accounts.\nThe President thanked the members for' their help in the church\ncleaning, the harvest home donations, and at the sale and afternoon\ntea.''    -.\nReports were received and all\noutstanding accounts were ordered\npaid. Mrs. P. Hurry and Mrs. H.\nHainsworth were appointed visitors\nfor the month, janitors, for the\nmonth are Mrs. V. Smith and Mrs.\nS.Mlllward.\nThe treasurer's report for the\nharvest sale and tea was $54,45.'\nAfternoon tea was served by the\nhostesses Mrs. S. Mlllward and Mrs.\nR. S. LaRue. .The next meeting will\nbe held at the .home of Mrs. B,\nMcRobert on Oct. 10th.\nGloria Greensword\nEntertains on\nTenth Birthday\nKASLO, B.C., Sept. 14\u2014On Monday Gloria Greensword entertained\n15 of her young friends on the occasion of her tenth birthday. A\nprogram of games and contests were\nenjoyed, the winners of the contest\nbeing Doreen Bacon, Carol Ringheim, Florence Bedwell, Camella\nSmith, Mary Jane Abey and Linda\nPerkins.    '   \u2022   ' ,\nA luncheon was served on the\nlawn, which included ice cream\nand a decorated heart-shape birthday cake, lighted with ten tiny pink\nand white candles,\nAfter luncheon the party was\ntreated to a ride on the merry-go-\nround at the visiting circus in Vimy\nPark.\nInspector Hyndman Visits\nKaslo Schools* District\nNew Yorker's Body\nReturned Home\nFrom Cranbrook   .\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Sept 14-\nHarold Douglas Allen, aged 46, of\nBrooklyn, N. Y., died in St. Eugene\nHospital here Monday, where he\nhad been. a patient for the past\nmonth. The body is being shipped\nto New York for funeral services;\nHe was one of a tourist party\nof. four travelling through here\nwhen he became ill in mid-August.\n\u25a0His condition did not seem serious,\nand the rest of the party continued\ntheir trip, He is survived by-his\nwife in New York. He was a detail\nman for Wernek Dental Supplies\nManufacturers in New York.\nPresentation to\nMrs. W. Phillips\nAt Woodland Hall\nBALFOUR, B. C\u201e Sept. 14\u2014The\nregular meeting of the Women's Institute was held in Woodland Hall\nWednesday,-with 19 members present. --.:,-\nThe financial statement was given\nby Mrs. McGillivary, who reported\n$50 raised by the quilt and. $21 on\nthe strawberry tea, which, was\nadded to the building fund.\nPrizes were arranged for th?\nchildren's garden competition, with\nMrs; W. S. Course and . Mrs. M.\nWellwood chosen as Judges.\nMiss Jeanette Thomas of Nelson\nwon the quilt.\nMany more ladies of. the district\njoined the members at tea in honor\nof Mrs. W. Phillips, who leaves for\nCalifornia shortly. The guest of\nhonor was presented with a purse\nas a token of esteem from the Guild\nladies and the Institute members.\nKASLO, B.C., Sept, 14 - The\nBoard of Trustees of Kootenay\nLake School District No. 8 held\na meeting on Monday under Chairman J. Cochran with School Inspector E. E. Hyndman in attendance.\nAccounts for the month of August were passed for payment. An\nallotment of $50 was made for the\npurchase of kits for arts and crafts\nin the Kaslo schools.\nThe resignation of A. E. Cousins\nas caretaker of the schools was\naccepted with regret. Don Cunningham was appointed pro tem until\na permanent caretaker has been\nappointed.\nR. W. Jones was appointed driver\nof the school bus for the conveyance of pupils, from Shutty Bench.\nOwing to the increasing number\nof pupils from Mirror Lake, the\nBoard is considering bus service for\ntheir accommodation.\nAs previously reported, Miss J.\nEby of Victoria as teacher of grades\nVII and VIII has been replaced by\nMiss M. Hanson of Falrbrldge, Van\ncouver Island, Mr. Hyndman paid\nar) inspection visit to the school at\nthe North end of the lake on Tues-\nKaslo Ladies' Aid\nHonor Mrs. Papworth\nKASLO, B.C., \u2022 Sept. 14-St. Andrew's United Church Ladles' Aid\nheld a meeting in the Manse on\nWednesday afternoon with about\nsix members present. Mrs. J. C,\nHarris acted as Secretary for the\nmeeting.\nThe Treasurer, Mrs. J. Papworth,\nread a satisfactory report. After\nroutine business was completed,\nMrs. Papworth, who is leaving\nKaslo in the near future,, was pre\nNEW DELHI (CP)-Indian geol*\nogists have discovered large chrom\nite deposits in the Keonjhar district\nof Orlssa. Their nearness to the\ncentres of the iron and steel industry and to the port of Calcutta gives\nthem added importance.\nday, including Johnston's Landing\nschool, the Bowser school, Jewett\nschool and the school at Lardeau-\nCOLGATE'S NEW DEODORANT\ngives yon\nWilli PROTECTION!\nChecks Perspiration\nQuickly - Effectively   >\nStops Offending Odor\nInstantly -.Safely\nRubs In easily, quickly, Mild,!\ngentle for normal skin,\nsafe for. clothes.\nBARRINGTON, N. S. (CP) \u2014\nWinds of 125 miles an hour were\nclocked on the wind gauge of Dr.\nJ. R. Gallagher during a hurricane\nthat raked this Southwest coast\nNova Scotia village recently.\nThe Korean Peninsula is about\n00 miles long and 135 miles wide.\n'eea\\\nTasty with sandwiches\nSmart Looking Hats of fur\nfelt and velvet, beautifully trimmed. \u2014 See our\nmatching Gloves and\nHandbags. \u2014 Also long-\nlasting sheer Phantom\nNylons \u2014 latest in style,\nbest in quality.\nAdrian Millinery\nPHONE 1346\n259 BAKER ST.\nSILVERTON ANGLICAN\nGUILD RE-CONVENES )\nSILVERTON., B. C, Sept. 14-The\nregular monthly meeting of the Silverton- Women's Anglican Guild\nwas held on Thursday evening at\nthe' home of Mrs. F, Parsons, with\n11 members and two visitors, Mrs.\nM. Brown of New Westminster,, and\nMrs. N. Brookes of New Denver\npresent. Various routine matters\nwere dealt with, and it was decided\nto hold a social evening once\nmonth during the coming season to\nraise funds for the organization.\nUpon adjournment of the meeting,\nrefreshments and a social. hour\nwere enjoyed.\nLatest figures give the population\nof the Union of South Africa as 11,-\n410,349.\nsented with a. photograph album |\nand a silver- spoon -as a remem-\nspent the holiday\"weekend with her] brance from her co-workers of the\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Ward,       j church aid,., i -_   ..\nMr. and Mrs. W. Peterson have;    Mrs.  A.  Carlson  of  Mirror,' as\nleft for the Whitewater Mine at Re- hostess, served refreshments, assist-\ntallack, where they will make their\nhome.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Mills have\nreturned from a holiday motor trip\nthrough the'Blg Bend and Windermere country.       \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 ,  \u25a0\nMrs. T. M. Leask motored to\nCastlegar, en route to Vancouver\nby plane, where -she will visit her\ndaughter, Miss Jean Leask for the\nnext week. ' '\u25a0\u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. R. W. O'Grady have\ntaken up residence in the Mc-\nNaught cottage,\nJ. J. Wallace, who spent the past1\nweek as the guest of his mother, j\nMrs. M. Wallace, left to visit his\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs, G. Grimwood at Salmo, en\nroute to. his. home in, Vancouver.\ned by Mrs. W.\nSCOUTS COMMENCEMENT\nSILVERTON, B.C., Sept. '14 -\nTuesday evening saw the commencement of Cub and Boy Scout\nactivities in the Municipal Hall,\nwith Cubmaster D. Schieck and\nScoutmaster E. Hall in charge.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\n9101\nSIZES\n10-16\nSEW-RIGHT FOR T_ENS\nHas Real Appeal, Teener! It's\nperfect for Club doings. Bows sure\ngsV, ohs from, the boys, and this\n\u25a0nr.,il little pockety frock makes a\nWonderful Impression!\nPattern 9101 comes In Teenage\nBines 10, 12, 14,, 16. Size 12 takes 3%\njt\/ardB. 35-inch;' % yard contrast.\nThis easy-to-use, pattern gives\nperfect fit. Complete, Illustrated\nSew Chart shows you every step.\n... Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS\n(25c) in coins (stamps cannot be ac-.\ncepted) . for this pattern. Print\nplainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,\n\\ STYLE NUMBER.\nSend . your , order to 'MARIAN\nMARTIN, care of Nelson Daily\nNewsj Pattern Dept., address.\n' NEW season styles for you! Send\ntwenty-five cents (coins) for our\nMarian Martin Fall and Winter Pattern Book. Fashions for tho young\nand young in heart plus Christmas\nideas galoref A free pattern of a\nblouse to make from a ya,rd of '39-\ninch fabric is printed in the book.\nNOTHIMSHHSTOMmil\nSO LOW ASM CHS HIS\nNABOB\/\n \\W\n\"It Pays To Buy Quality\"\nBlack and Brown\nSuede\nGold Studded\nWedgie\nSandals\nSizes 4 to 9.\n$g95\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLEADERS   IN   FOOTFASHION\nEstablished 1902\n\"Little Woman\" Has Come\nInto Her Own at Exhibition\nFruitvale Friendly\nClub Resumes Meets\nFRUITVALE, B.C., Sept. 14\u2014The\nfirst meeting of the Friendly Club\nfor the Fall season was held at\nthe home, of Mrs. Murray Wilson\nwith 11 members present.\nA social hour was spent with\nmembers doing sewing and knitting. The hostess prize was won by\nMrs. Fred Cole.\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nPASTEURIZED\nMILK\nIS SAFE FOR CHILDREN\nIVootenav   \"alley   L#airi\nEVENING GOWNS\nAT LOW SALE PRICES\nMilady's Fashion\n*\u25a0  Shoppe\nHeinz\nCOOKED\nIN\nCREAM SAUCE\nWITH   CHEESE\nNelson\nSocial. . .\n\u2014By MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. Johnson of\nBakersfieid, Calif., who have been\nvisiting Mrs. Johnson's son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. *R.\nH, Bayne, 1123 McQuarrie Avenue,\nhave returned to their home.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. E. L. Dewdney have returned from visiting for\na fortnight in Victoria. They accompanied their son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Dewdney of Trail.\n\u2022 Very Rev. Father A. K. Mclntyre of Rossland was a visitor at\nthe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. A. Ryley, 703 Silica\nStreet, visited in Creston at the\nhome of her son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Ryley.\n\u2022 Members of the Ave Maria\nCircle of the Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculate met Monday night at\nthe home of Mrs. H. Wickstrom,\n919 Stanley Street, when 12 members were present, the prize going\nto Miss Kay Schewaga.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Willis of\nPeep O Day on the North Shore\nhave as guest Mrs. J. J. Fingland\nof Vancouver, formerly of Trail,\nwho is spending a week here.\nMrs. W. A. Clarkson\nInitiated Into\nDenver Legion LA.\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Sept. 14\u2014At\nthe first regular meeting of the\nseason for the Ladies' Auxiliary, Canadian Legion, Branch No. 101 held\nin the Legion Rooms Tuesday Mrs.\nWynne A. Clarkson was initiated as\na new member. She offered to be\nofficial delegate to the Zone Convention which will be held in Grand\nForks Sept. 30 and Oct. 1.\nThe Sick Visiting Committee report was given by Mrs. L. Camp-\nLeave it to the woman to put on a good show.\nIt seems as if all the handiwork Nelson district women have tolled\naway at in the last five years has been pooled and neatly laid out in\nthe'wnmen's section of the West Kootenay Exhibition in Nelson. And\nwhat handiwork it is! ' '\nIn everything from shellcraft\njewelry to opulent lace tablecloths,\nthe women have entered the products of their nimble fingers, whether they be for competition or just\nfor display purposes.\nAnd where there's competiti6n,\nit's mighty keen. Take in the Women's Institute section, from West\nKootenay Women's Institutes\u2014Salmo, Kaslo, Nelson and Granite Road\n\u2014have displays that would have the\naverage person scratching his head\nif he had to do the judging. First\nplace went to Kaslo W.I., second to\nNelson W.I. and third to Granite\nRoad W.l., and between them all\nthere is every conceivable item in\nhomemaking.\n\"The Work of Mercy Never Ends\"\nis the banner that the display of\nthe women's work committee of\nNelson branch of the Canadian Red\nCross Society carries, and the display fits the motto to a T. Bandages for the Blood Transfusion Service, and expertly made children's\ngarments they fashion for relief\nwork of the Red Cross testify to the\nhours that members of the small organization give to the cause.\nLadies Auxiliary to Nelson branch\nof the Canadian Legion is another\norganization that is proud of the\nfine garments its members turn out.\n\u2022The sign over their table, laden\nwith hand-made baby clothes, stuffed toys and so on, says the exhibits\nare only a \"sample\" of the work\ndone by members but there is plenty\nthere to start a bazaar.\nA vivid reminder to mothers of\nthe value of immunization and disease dangers is a well-arranged\npublic health display, complete with\nphotographs and pamphlets. \"Public Health Is Your Health\" is its\nbig catch-phrase. \u25a0 ,'i\nAltogether, with exhibit upon exhibit ,\u00bbof hooked rugs, quilting,\npunchwork, needlework, cross-stitch\npetit-point, shellwork, leatherwork,\nknitting, embroidery, weaving and\nsewing, there's some fine piece of\nwork of artistic design to catch the\neye eyery minute.\n\"\"An example of the Exhibition\nspirit of individual women is an\narrangement of begonias grown for\nexhibition by Mrs. C. E. Bradshaw\nof Nelson. Scarcely a spectator passes them without a word of admiration. From Vancouver; has come a\ndisplay of jewelry made from oddments by Mrs. F. Marapodi.\nThe teen-agers and younger, too\nare not to be .outdone In the wo-\n- men's  section.  They  contributed\nto Its success with sewn and knitted  articles and  dressed   dolls-\neven the boys.\nBut the best picture of West Kootenay women in action is a weaving\nand spinning demonstration and display. Interested spectators can see\nthe weaving from the threads on\nthe loom to expertly-manufactured\ncurtains and towels.\nDonald Francis, Former Resident\nOf New Denver, Marries at Coast\nNEW DENVER, B.C., Sept 14 \u2014\nNew Denver interest attaches to\nthe wedding in Marpole United\nChurch in Vancouver of Donald\nWard Francis, son of Dr. and Mrs.\nArnold Francis of Ganges, formerly\nof New Denver, and the former\nAnne Leonora Short, daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. S. Short. Rev. E.\nBishop officiated.\nA white slipper satin gown with\nbell, for the month of July and inserts of Chantilly. lace, a full\nMrs. P. J. McCrory for the month skirt, fitted bodice and sweetheart\nof August. A Legion Picnic report ^neckline was worn by the bride.\nwas given by Mrs. H. T. Butler.\nFinal arrangements for the Fall\nbazaar which will be' held Septem\nber 23 were made.\nFollowing the meeting the Branch\nmembers joined the Auxiliary\nLadies for refreshments which were\nserved by the hostesses, Mrs. L.\nCampbell, Mrs. P. McCrory and\nMrs. W. Howe.\nKaslo*. \u2666\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Scotty Wilson left\nfor Vancouver where he Will enter\nthe, Shaughnessy Military Hospital.\n\u25a0Mrs. Charles Bowker is spending\na few days in Nelson.\nHh_\nWf\nI\nI\nPancak\nancaices\ni\nGOIOCN\nSVftOP\nTHE B.C. SUGAR REFINING CO. LTD.\nVANCOUVER,  B.C.\nIli\nA-\nWrite B.C. Sugar Refining Co. Lid., Vancouver,\nB.C., lor your copy of Rogers' Golden Syrup\nRecipe Book.  It's Free!\nHer embroidered lace veil was\nheld by an orange blossom head\ndress, and she carried a bouquet of\nTalisman roses,\nMrs. H. Wallbaum, as matron of\nhonor, was gowned in orchid net\nover taffeta, and carried pink\ncarnations and mauve asters, and\nMiss Vera Corvish, bridesmaid;\nwore blue nylon marquisette over\ntaffeta and carried pink carnations. Both attendants wore matching floral headdresses.\n,   Mr.. Allan Francis supported his\nNeedlework Results\nbrother, and ushers were Mr. Harry\nWallbaum, also an ex-resident of\nNew Denver, and Mr. Roy White\nhead.\nA reception was held in Georgia\nHotel.\nThe bride donned a green dressmaker suit with brown suede accessories and a corsage of pink\nrosebuds for a wedding trip to\nSanta Monica,. Calif.\nWomen from several West Kootenay centres shared the many\nprizes awarded for the colorful\nneedlework on display at the West\nKootenay Exhibition. Judged by\nMrs. W. Rollerson and Miss M.\nCampion, the section's list of the\nprize winners follows:\nLaces and crochet:\nFilet crochet doily\u20141. Virginia\nMoline. Rossland; 2. Mrs. E. C.\nFouracres, Nelson.\nFilet crochet set\u20141. Evelyn Oul-\ntun, Nelson.\nOpen crochet doily\u20141. Mrs. Irene\nReibin, Taghum; 2. Mrs. Louis Santor, Nelson.\nOpen crochet set\u20141. Mrs. E. C.\nFouracres, Nelson; 2. Mrs. E. Hunter, Nelson.\nFilet lace tablecloth\u20141. Mrs. F.\nMoline, Rossland; 2. Mrs. E. C.\nFouracres,  Nelson.\nMedallion lace tablecloth\u20141. Mrs.\nM. Welwood, R.R. 1, Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nK. W. Skilton, Nelson, and Mrs. O.\nChristenson, Nelson.\n, Article with crocheted edge \u2014 1.\nElizabeth McEachran, Nelson; 2.\nMrs. Irene Reibin, Taghum.\nTatted article \u2014 1. Mrs. J. J.\nFrench, Nelson; 2. Miss M. Mc\nLaran.\nTatted edging\u20141. Mrs. L. Maur-\ner, Nelson; 2. Mrs. G. C. Burns,\nNelson.\nHousehold  linen:\nEmbroidered pillow slip\u20141. Mrs.\nC. R. Gyman, Nelson; 2. Mrs. Inez\nEchmier, Nelson.\nColored embroidered article \u2014 1\nMrs. C. R. Gyman, Nelson; 2. Miss\nLena M. Rupp, Makinson, B.C.\nWhite embroidered article \u2014' 1.\nMrs. C. R. Gyman, Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nA. M. Barrell, Nelson.\nWhite cutwork article\u20141. Mrs. R.\nMills, Nelson; 2. Mrs. J. Zanon,\nNelson,\nEcru cutwork article\u20141. Mrs. H.\nCarlson, Kaslo; 2. Mrs. A. Dixon,\nNelson.\nDrawn work article \u2014 1, Annie\nTelatoff, Blewett; 2. Mrs. Peter Sa\nliken .Thrums.\nHardanger work \u2014 1. Mrs. R.\nMills, Nelson; 2. Mrs. C. H. Chat-\nfield, Nelson.\nChildren's clothing, to fit up to\n12 years:\nGirls' dress, any material\u20141. Ellen A. Hawkins, Bonnington Falls;\n2. Tot 'n' Teen Shop, Nelson.\nSmocked article\u20142. Mrs. George\nFrederikson, R.R. 1, Nelson.\nFruitvale. \u2666.\nFRUITVALE, B.C.\u2014David Wick\nof Vancouver is visiting his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. D. Wick. ,\nRenewing acquaintances in Fruitvale were Ronald and Audrey La-\nmond of Trail.\nMiss Betty Rothwell has returned\nto Creston after attending the wedding of her brother, Douglas,\nDonald Lightheart of Vancouver\nis staying in Fruitvale while attending Trail High School.\nIllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nNews of the Day\nRATES! 30o line, 40c line black face type; larger type rates on\nrequest. Minimum two lines. 10% discount for prompt payment\nIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIII\nRevising your Insurance? Let us\nhelp you. BLACKWOOD AGENCY.\nBINGO TONIGHT\nCATHOLIC HALL\nShamrock Grill\nToday's special\u2014Fish and chips.\nDancing at the Playmor\nSaturday night.\nFresh popped pop-corn\nWAIT'S\nMen's  bicycle  for  sale.  Phone\n777-R-I or apply 718 Nelson Ave.\n1949 CHEV. SEDAN.\n124 HIGH  ST. PHONE\nDAVID NYSTROM\nExperienced painter and paper-\nhanger. Sample Book. Ph. 750-R.\nWe buy and sell jised furniture\nantiques. HOME. FURNITURE EXCHANGE. Phone 1560. 413 Hall St.\nIf BUTTERFIELD can't fix It,\nthrow it away. Prompt service on\nwatch work; fully guaranteed.\nBring that valuable timepiece to\nCOLLINSON'S for reliable repairs\nat moderate prices.'\nSmart new Winter coats, Station\nWagon coats and snow suits.\nTHE CHILDREN'S SHOP\nSew-Rite Tailors. Alterations and\ndressmaking. Norah Martin, Phone\n1528. 550B Stanley St.\nFresh popped pop-corn\nWAIT'S\nA shipment of finest quality Belgian shot guns just received. 12\nguage, hammerless, double-barrelled.\u2014HIPPERSON'S.\nViyella socks. Sizes 5 to 9. Made\nIn England. Will not shrink.\nTOT-'N'-TEEN  SHOP\nWelcome to the Exhibition Visitors\nCongratulations to Winners\nTHE CRAFT CENTRE\nA large stock of lamp shades in\nall shades.\nSTERLING HOME FURNISHERS\n; Mattress covers by Manchester.\nCut full to allow for shrinkage.\nSize 4'6\". Price $2.95.\nMc & Me (NELSON) LTD.\nFor faded awnings., !or any canvas\njrticles. SETFAST CANVAS PAINT\n\u2014Quarts $2,35.,l\nBURNS LUMBER CO.\nEverything in stove-boards, stove-\nguards, stove-pipes and elbows,\nfurnace cement, asbestos paper, soot\ndfisfrnver.   etc.\u2014HIPPERSON'S.\nFresh popped pop-corn\nWAIT'S',\nWhen you purchase 'that typewriter or adding machine from D.\nW. McDerby you get absolutely\nfree service for two years. D. W.\nMcDerby, 554 Stanley Street, Nelson\nNELSON-CRESTON\nPROGRESSIVE-CONSERVATIVE\nMEETING\nSept. 19th, Canadian Legion Hall\n8 p.m. for selection of delegates to\nVancouver convention.\nChimneys, stoves, furnaces, hot\nand cold air ducts cleaned by\nvacuum, chimneys topped, thimbles\napplied or stopped. Prices reasonable. Pounder's Chimney Service.\nPhone 968-X noon and evenings.\nNELSON   BUSINESS  COLLEGE\nNight Classes\nThe College will be open on\nMonday evening, September 18th,\nfrom 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. for\nregistration. No night students accepted after October 2nd.\nYou are invited to a FREE LECTURE on Christian Science entitled\n\"CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: GOD'S\nANTIDOTE FOR TROUBLE\" by\nPaul Stark Seeley, C.S.B., of Portland, Oregon, member of the Board\nof Lectureship of The Mother\nChurch, The Firsl Church of Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mass., at the\nCAPITOL THEATRE, SEPTEMBER\n19, at 8 P.M. Sponsored by First\nChurch of Christ, Scientist, Nelson.\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to extend our sirfcere\nthanks to all our kind friends and\nneighbors for their help and sympathy during our recent bereavement in the loss of our dear mother\nand grandmother, Mrs. M. E. Thom.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Gordon\nand Family.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nChild's coat and hat\u20141. Mrs. W.\nAtkins, Nelson; 2. L. Wallace, Nelson.\nChild's two-piece suit\u20141. Mrs. L.\nG. Catley, Nelson.\nPlay clothes for beach\u20141. Mrs.\nJ. C. Hughes, Nelson.\nAdult clothing:\nAny type apron\u20141. Elizabeth McEachran, Nelson; 2. Mrs. H. Carlson, Kaslo.\nCotton or silk dress\u20141. Elizabeth\nMcEachran, Nelson; 2. Mrs. F.\nBlakeman, Nelson.\nLady's coat or sillt\u20141. Mrs. B. C.\nAffleck, Nelson.\nMen's sportswear\u20141. Mrs. K. W.\nSkilton, Nelson; 2. Cornelia dejong,\nNelson.\nMen's pyjamas \u2014 1. Mrs. T.\nSvendsen, Nelson.\nKnitted or crocheted wear:\nLady's or men's patterned sweater\u20141. Jessie G. Burges, Nelson; 2.\nAda Richland, Nelson.\nKnitted socks, plain\u20141. Mrs. E.\nJ. Cameron, Nelson; 2. Mrs. Ernest\nRich, Nelson.\nKnitted socks, patterned\u20141. Vera\nStallwood, Nelson; 2. Louise Mer-\nmet, Nelson.\nKnitted or crocheted shawl\u20141.\nMolly Eustace, Nelson; 2. Mrs. M.\nFrench, Nelson.\nKnitted gloves\u20141. Mrs. J. Comls,\nRed Deer, Alta.; 2. Anne Norring-\nton, Crescent Bay. .\nKnitted mitts\u20141.\" Elizabeth Mc-\nEacheran, Nelson; 2. Mrs. R. Oborne, Rossland.\nQuilts,  bedspreads,  afghans:\nApplique work quilt\u20141. Mrs. W.\nW. Sheffield, Nelson; 2. Mrs. M.\nLuciak, Nelson.\nCrocheted bedspread \u2014 1, Mrs.\nLouis Santor, Nelson; 2, Mrs. Mary\nLuciak, Nelson.\nKnitted bedspread\u20141, Mrs. J. H.\nMcKinney, Brilliant.\nAfghan, knit or crochet\u20141, Mrs.\nF. Moline, Rossland; 2, Mrs. Mary\nReggin, Nelson.\nRugs:\nYarn rug, hooked\u20141, Mrs. Irene\nReibin, Taghum; 2, Mrs. V. C.\nOwen, Nelson,\nRag rug, hooked\u20141, Mrs. Mary\nHouston, Nelson; 2, Mrs. J. Stout,\nNelson.\n(WeavlnflPtreadle or box loom):\nHand woven place mat set \u2014 1,\nAnnie Telatoff, Blewett; 2, Mrs,\nIrene Reibin, Taghum.\nHand woven hand towels, two\u20141,\nMrs. Agnes Davis, South Slocan; 2,\nArts, Crafts Display\nTalent Revelation\nThe display of arts and crafts,\nrevealing the endless skill and\nwork of residents throughout the\ndistrict, made up one of the feature\nattractions at the West Kootenay\nAgricultural and Industrial Exhibition, officially opened Thursday.\nTable upon table drew hundreds\nof visitors all eager to view every\narticle possible.\nWinners among the numerous\nentries, most of them by Nelson's\nown artists and craftsmen, were\njudged by E. Ostrom, W. Ramsay,\nM. Sterling and A. E. Pittaway:\nOil colors\u20141. Mrs. A. W. Lym-\nbery, Gray Creek; 2. C. W. Apple-\nyard, Nelson.\nWater colors\u20141. Ann Norrington,\nCrescent Bays 2. Mrs. .H. Thorpe,\nNelson.\nPencil and charcoal drawing\u20141.\nMrs. A. W. Lymbery, Gray Creek;\n2. A. Malhieson, Nelson.\nTooled leather handbag\u20141. Mrs.\nRoss Fleming; 2. Mrs. J. A. Street,\nSouth Slocan.\nTooled leather project other than\nhandbag\u20141. Mrs. Bennie Schneider,\nNelson; 2. Mrs. L. Maurer, Nelson.\nCarved leather handbag\u20141. Mrs-\nBennie Schneider, Nelson; 2. Mrs.\nL. Maurer, Nelson.\nCarved leather project other than\nhandbag\u20141. Mrs. Bennie Schneider,\nNelson; 2. Mrs. L. Maurfcr, Nelson.\nHand-sewn leather gloves \u2014 1.\nPercy f! Millis, Nelson; 2. Ann\nNorrington,. Nelson.\nHand-sewn or thronged moccasins\u20141. Percy F. Millis, Nelson; 2.\nMrs. L. S. Hope, Nelson.\nNon-itooled project, any leather\u2014\n1. Percy F. Millis, Nelson; 2. E. B.\nLindley, Nelson.\nJewelry of any metal\u20141. Mrs. F.\nMarapodi, Vancouver.\nMetal foil repouise (tooled metal\nfoil)\u20141. H. G. Gilhooly, Nelson.\nModels, any project\u20141. Clayton\nCrow, Salmo; 2. G Stenberg, Nelson.\nPlastics, any project\u20142. E. B.\nLindley, Nelson.\nPottery project, fired\u20141. Beverley Lythgoe, Nelson.\nPottery project, with self-setting\nclay-1. Mrs. C. H. Chatfield, Nel-\nson; 2. Mrs, Bennie Schneider, Nelson.\nPottery jewelry, with self-setting\nclay \u2014 1. Mrs. Bennie Schneider,\nNelson; 2. Beverley Lythgoe, Nelson.\nNeedlepoint article, wools \u2014 1.\nMrs.''Edith Brown, Nelson; 2. H. G.\nGilhqbly,Nelson.\nNeedlepoint article, silks or cot-\ntonsil. Gordon Webb. Nelson; 2.\nMrs. Fred Morris, Nelson.\nShellcraft, jewelry\u20141. Mrs. H.\nCarlson, Kaslo; 2. Dorothy Rogers,\nNelson.\nShellcraft, any other\u20141. Mrs. C.\nMcKittrick, Nelson; 2. Mrs. W. J.\nThe taste1 s the test for tea!\nCanadians buy more Salada\nthan any other brand.\nTEA\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 15, 1950 \u2014 5\nheted dress\nn; 2, Mrs.\ni two-piecealit\u20141, Mrs. A,\nMcCubbin, Nelson.\nWodB carving\u20141. Gordon Webb,\nNelson; 2. Mrs. S. Wyles, Nelson.\nWhittled project\u20141. Gus Minne-\nart, Winlaw; 2. Pat Wilcox, Nelson.\n. Wood inlaid article\u20141. F. C. Col\nlins, Nelson; 2. Gordon Webb, Nel\nson.\nWood, any other project\u20141. W. J.\nColeman, Nelson; 2. Gordon Webb,\nNelson.\nToy or animal made from felt or\nother material\u20141. Mrs. S. M; Ped-\nerson, Nelson; 2. Mrs. Joyce Stewart, Nelson.\nSpecial prizes for embroidered\npicture\u20141. Mrs. R. F. Guillaume,\nTrail; 2. Mrs. G. A. Stewart, Nelson,\nNovelty work\u20141. R. Cochrane,\nNelson.\nTextile painting\u20141. Mrs. Phyllis\nEdwards, Hemac.\nGlass painting \u2014 2. Margaret\nDoerksen, Nelson.\nNovelty lamp\u20142. Mrs. Bennie\nSchneider, Nelson.     .\nDyed leather product \u2014 1. John\nGlagolett, Slocan Park.\n. Photography:\nPortraiture \u2014 1. Phil Robinson,\nNelson; 2. Mrs. B. C. Afflec^c, Nelson.\nStill life\u20141, John deJong, Nelson;\n2. J. M. Jenkins, Nelson.\nAnimals and pets\u20141. Phil Robinson, Nelson; 2. G. K. Der, Nelson.\nLandscape\u20141. J. M. Jenkins, Nelson; 2. Phil Robinson, Nelson.\n12 snaps mounted\u20141. Mrs. Allan\nSmith, Nelson; 2. D. D. Lythgoe,\nNelson.\nJuvenile section, 16 years and\nunder:\nShellcraft jewelry\u20141. Ray San1\nders, Nelson. \u2022\nModel aircraft\u20141. Marvin Wilson,\nNelson; 2. Harvey Fleury, Nelson.\nModel ships\u20141. Lionel Kearns,\nNelson; 2. Harvey Fleury,- Nelson.\nModels, any other \u2014 2. Harvey\nFleury, Nelson.\nPen and ink drawing \u2014 1. Ray\nSanders, Nelson.\nPoster, size 11 x 14 inches\u20141. Ray\nSanders, Nelson.\nMrs. Peter Saliken, South Slocan.\nHand woven' knitting bag \u2014 1,\nMrs, Agnes Davis, South Slocan.\nAny other hand woven article,\nspecial\u20141, Mrs. A. M. Barrell, Nelson; 2, Mrs. Agnes Davis, South\nSlocan.\nInfants' and children's wear, up\nto six years:\nCarriage cover \u2014 I, ' Mrs. R.\nOborne, Robson; 2, D. D, Lythgoe,\nNelson.\nBaby's sweater and bonnet \u2014 1,\nMrs. A. A. John, Trail; 2, Elizabeth\nMcEachern, Nelson.\nBaby's bootees\u20141, Mrs. Ernest\nRich, Nelson; 2, Tot 'n' TJeen Shop,\nNelson.\nChild's knitted or\n\u20141, Evelyn Oulton, Ni\nA. A. John, Trail.\nChi\nA. Johrl;\nThrift class:\nChild's garment made from worn\ngarment\u2014\nHeavy weight\u20141, L. Wallace, Nelson; 2, Mrs. W. Atkins, Nelson.\nLight weight\u20141, Mrs. J. Nedelec,\nNelson; 2, Mrs. R. Oborne, Robson,\nArticle for household use made\nfrom used flour or sugar sack \u2014 1,\nMrs. Louis Santor, Nelson; 2, Mrs.\nIrene Reibin, Taghum.       '\nJunior section, made by 15 years\nand under\nAny type of dress\u20141, Beverley\nIrwin, Nelson; 2, Joanna Perasso,\nNelson.\nAny knitted article of clothing\u20141,\nMiss. Mary Henricksen, Nelson; 2,\nBeth Stenson, Nelson.\nAny type of sewing or knitting\ndone by a boy\u20141, Ray Sanders,\nNelson.\nA doll dressed by exhibitor\u20141\nMiss Betty Duff, Willow Point.\nSpecial prizes:\ncenterpiece crochet\u20141, Virginia\nMoline,-Rossland; 2, Evelyn Oulton,\nNelson.\nCenterpiece knitted \u2014 1, Verna\nSamo'roden, Thrums; 2, Mrs. Carl\nSaalfeld, Kaslo.\nTablecloth linen center\u20141, Mrs\nR. Mills, Nelson; 2, Mrs. L. Maurer,\nNelson.\nCrochet apron r- 1, Mrs. E. C.\nFouracres, Nelson; 2, Virginia Moline, Rossland,\nBedjackets \u2014 1, L. Facchlna,\nShoreacres; 2, Cornelia deJong,\nNelson.\nChild's sweater\u20141, Mrs. A. Waters, Nelson; 2, J. Smith, Nelson.\nMen's trousers\u20141, Mrs. S. M.\nPederson, Nelson; 2, Mrs. S. M.\nPederson, Nelson.\nMen's sweaters \u2014 I, Mrs. W.\nWyles, Nelson; 2, Mrs. S. Korbin,\nNelson.\nFeather comforter\u20141, Mrs. Mary\nLuciak, Nelson.\nWoven rug\u20141, Mrs. Irene Eeibin,\nTaghum.\nNovelty crochet\u20141, Mrs. Louis\nSantor, Nelson; 2, Mrs. E. C. Four-\nacres, Nelson.\nCushion top\u20141, Anne Savinkoff,\nThrums; 2, Mrs. Mary Luciak, Nelson and Mrs. Peter Saliken, Thrums.\nSilk embroidery on silk\u20141, Mrs.\nPeter Saliken, Thrums; 2, Mrs.\nIrene Eeibin, Taghum.\nOn Your Way\nTo the Fair\nDrop into our store and\nsee our exhibits on modern living.\nFreeman Furniture Co.\nPHONE 115 \u2014 NELSON\n\"The House of Furniture Values'*\nBRIGHTON, England (CP)-W.C.\nCompton paid 38 shillings (nearly\n?6) for some paintings at an auction\nsale. One, a floral study, bore the\nsignature of a well-known Dutch\nartist and Compton has learned it\nmay be worth \u00a35000.\nthis Fall brings you.\nLingerie Worth\nBuying\nSPITZBERGEN, Norway (CP)\u2014\nSvalbardposten, the world's northernmost newspaper, published a\nspecial 50-page issue to observe the\n25th anniversary of Norway administration of this Arctic archipelago.\nllllllllllHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMMIllWmtt\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROL-8\"\nHandy\nIn Every\nKitchen\nYes, you'll agree too, that\nPacific's satisfying richness\nis grand, and good for you.\nThe milk of a hundred uses,\nyou'll find a can of vacuum\npacked Pacific Milk very\nhandy around your kitchen.\nPacific Milk\nVacuum Packed and Homogenized\nitammBMinnawmuii\n1224 STANLEY STREET NELSON, B.C.\nPrices Effective Friday and Saturday\nTomato Soup\nCampbell's; 2 tins 230\nCoffee\nFancy Santos; Lb. _ 820\nPork and Beans\nM'kn's Best; 3 tins 390\nJavex Bleach\n32 oz. size 160\nOxydoi\nLarge pkg. ._.  350\nPeanut Butter\n4 lb. tin   $1.05\nTomatoes\n28 oz.; 2 tins   450\nQUALITY MEATS\nBABY BEEF SPECIALS i\nRUMP ROASTS:\nLb   750\nSHOULDER ROASTS:\nLb. \u2014. 58^,\nBeef Stew\nBoneless; Lb. 500\nSide Bacon\nSliced;  '\/_ lb  380\nHamburger\nLb.  450\nMeat and Cheese\nLoaf Lb. 550\nPHONE 1188\nDELIVERY SERVICE\nThem isa Ct\/XiSVB StSMrfireifety taste\ni; \/' \"''     \u25a0-. -, i ' ''   <* CB \u2022\n JMumt latltj \u00a33Vw*\n'      Established April 22,1802\nBritish Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by the\nNEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED\n265 Baker Street, Nelson, British Columbia\nAuthorized as Second Class Mall\nPost Office  Department,  Ottawa\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS\nFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1950\nSeoul City Sue\nAs might have been expected, a\nKorean War edition of the last war's\n\"Tokyo Rose\" has appeared on the\nscene in conquered Seoul, her dulcet\nbroadcasts in \"good American English\" beamed on the G.I.'s. As might\nbe expected also, the G.I.'s promptly\nnicknamed her \"Seoul City Sue\".\n,Her identity is unknown, but probably the G.I.'s would be first to acknowledge she is no'guesswork propagandist, says'The Toronto Globe and\nMail. She did indulge in a cliche about\n\"promiscuous bombing of schools and\nstrafing of farmers,\" but they she\nsweetly urged the American soldiers\nto \"return to your corner ice cream\nstores in the United States.\" A civilian\nmight think she could have chosen a\nmore exciting attraction, but from a\nKorean viewpoint, ice cream might be\nthe most exciting thing in the world.\n\"Seoul City Sue\" avoided the mistake of tryirig to scare the troops out\nwith ..stories about overwhelming\nforces facing them. Instead, she took\nthe other extreme with communiques\nthat were almost defeatist in tone. She\nspoke of \"attempted\" North Korean resistance and \"aggressive\" American attacks which were costing the North\nKorean army heavy casualties. There\nis the old saying that \"whom the gods\nwould destroy they first make mad.\"\nEvidently \"Seoul City Sue\" believes in\nmaking them feel comfortable instead.\nIt might be a good idea to have her\nvoice piped into this continent, where\nthe illusion of a pushbutton war\nagainst a pushcart enemy dies hard.\nThe propagandist effort of \"Seoul City\nSue\" was not thought out by ragged\nand unlettered \"gooks\".\nB.C. A colonnade with no less than 33\ntaverns has been unearthed, and\namong the \"modern\" toys it yielded\nwere dice, so like those of today that\nworkmen irresistibly started rolling\nthem.\nWe might be amazed if we could\nknow how completely the genius of\nlong ago has served our amusement\ntoday. We have, of course, excelled the\nancients in devising time off to enjoy it.\nSame Games, More Time\nTo Play   .\nEvery so often in our times, people\nIndulge in a mild form of insanity over\nsome \"brand new game\". Usually they\nare surprised when it turns out to be\nmerely a replica or slight variation of\nsomething very old. But, granting that\nthe instinct to play is as old as any\nhuman impulse, we should not be\nshocked if the forms of play predated\nus considerably. Even the \"ball game\"\ndates from Homer's time.\nAway back in 1560 Pieter Brueghel\nthe Elder painted a picture reputed to\nshow 154 different games being played\nby Flemish boys and girls. A photographer studying it recently, records\nThe Toronto Globe and Mail, was intrigued to find the close resemblance\nto games of today. Even in Brueghel's\ntime some of the games he illustrated\nwere already of ancient origin, such as\n\"London Bridge\", supposed to have its\nancestry in the appeasement of the\nwater spirit with a forfeit, human or\notherwise, at the opening of a new\nbridge.\nNow the archaeologists have been\nhaving a field day in Corinth, which\nwas the \"Paris\" of old Greece long\nbefore the Romans overran it in 146\nLETTERS TO\nTHE EDITOR\nLetters may be published over a nom\nde plume, but the actual name of the\nwriter must be given to the Editor as evidence of good faith. Anonymous tetters go\nIn the waste paper basket,\nMrs. Eddy Denied All\nClaim to Feminine\nIncarnation of Deity\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I was interested to note in the Sept. 9\nissue of your good daily that there was an\nitem regarding Mary Baker Eddy, the discoverer and founder of Christian Science.\nThe statement was made that Mrs. Eddy\nregarded herself as \"the incarnation of the\nfeminine principle of Deity\". This statement\nis diametrically opposed to the facts. Nowhere\nIn her writings does Mrs. Eddy Indicate that\nshe entertained any such belief, and there is\nno authentic Information elsewhere to support\nsuch a statement. The fact is that Mrs. Eddy\nfound lt necessary to issue categorical denials\nof similar assertions made by misinformed\npersons so that the correct teachings of Christian, Science on .the subject would be made\navailable to the public. One such was published in The New York Herald In a letter\nshe wrote in reply to Mark Twain when she\nstated: \"I believe in one Christ, teach one\n? Questions ?\nANSWERS\nOpen to any reader. Names of persons\nasking questions will not be published.\nThere Is no charge for this service. Questions WILL NOT BE AN8WERED BY\nMAIL except where there Is obvious necessity for privacy.\nGourmet, Nelson\u2014Have you the recipe for\n' Russian borscht? '\nOne bunch beets, one cup tomatoes\u2014fresh\nor canned\u2014four cups water, one small onion,\nhalf-pound breast of beef (or salt pork, if preferred), one tablespoon lemon Juice, quarter\ncup sugar, quarter teaspoon salt, four eggs,\nPare beets and cut into long strips, drain tomatoes over beets, not letting any seeds\nthrough, add water. Put in onion and meat,\ncut into small pieces, and simmer for about 30\nminutes. Add lemon juice, sugar and salt, boil\none-half hour more, Beat eggs with pinch of\nsalt, add the hot borscht to this, a little at a\ntime, stirring well to prevent separation.\nServe at once while very hot.\nMother, Trail\u2014Please repeat address of doll\nhospital in Vancouver.\nDoll. Hospital, 105 East Hastings Street,\nVancouver.\nPsychic, Creston\u2014How does one get a licence\nto read teacups?\nApply to the City Clerk of the town In\ntvhich you intend to practise.\nVegetable Results\nIt Has Vanished\nWoo'den Indians to mark cigar stores are\nhaving a big revival, and tobacconists are\nwheedling them from museums and private\ncollectors. The nickel cigar that was the wooden Indian's contemporary can't even be found\nin a museum any more,\u2014Detroit Free Press.\nGold and War\n'(The Northern Miner)\nAnother large-scale war, if lt gave signs\nChrist, know of but one Christ. I believe in     of being a prolonged one, would lead to the\nbut one incarnation, one Mother Mary. I\nknow that I am not that one, and I have never\nclaimed to be. It suffices me to learn the\nScience of the Scriptures relative to the subject.\" (The First Church of Christ, Scientist,\nand Miscellany.)\nJ. LINGEN WOOD,\nChristian Science Committee on\nPublication for British Columbia.\nPress Comment\nMORE ARE  MARRIED\nThe number of married people in the\nUnited States is now at an all-time high. It Is\nestimated that there are almost 75 million\nmarried men and women\u201414% million more\nthan only a decade ago.\nMarried people, moreover, have risen not\nonly in absolute number but also in proportion to the adult population. At present somewhat more than two-thirds of the population\nat ages 15 or over is married; the proportion\nmarried was three-fifths during the period\n1890-1940.\u2014Metropolitan life Bulletin.\nA SENSIBLE MOVE\nBritish Columbia motorists are going to\nsave a lot of unnecessary bother at the end of\nthe year. Their present car licence plates, with,\nthe addition of a small tab, will be used again\nin 1951. After that, a semi-permanent five-year\nplate will be issued.\nThis is a sensible move. \u25a0.-'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:'\nNot only does the longer-lived plate eliminate a messy annual chore for the motorist,\nbut it saves metal.\nOther Provinces might well follow the\nB. C. example\u2014Financial Post:\nSeptember is the last month for sleeping\nout, warns The Printed Word of Toronto.\n\"Most people have slept oiit, in one or another\nof the wars of these times, or during a camping trip, or when it was too hot to sleep inside. Deliberately moving out for the night\nfrom a bed that suddenly is revealed to be\nsumptuous requires imagination, fortitude and\na lot of getting-around-to-itness. The effort is\nworth while, and September is the last good\ntime for it in 1950. It is worth while to stir\nyourself up by finding again that the sky is\nnot Just a still picture hung above the street\nlight, but' that it has depth and movement.\nSleeping out, you renew your spirit in pon-\nderings. Your' back may be a bit stiff in the\nmorning, but the rest of you will be on better\nterms with your environment.\"\nshutting down of gold mines nearly every\nwhere in favor of total war. In tha recent\nconflict the United States gave us an example\nof their attitude, and in the struggle the\nexample would be widely followed, if not\ndictated by the people upon whom the\nWestern World leans for military guidance\nand support. You will recall that in 1942\nWashington ordered the American gold mines\nclosed down. (In Canada all forward development work was ordered stopped).\nHowever, in the event of war the temporary fortunes of the gold mines would be of\nsmall moment. If the conflict were of a lasting\nnadure, with victory only secured at the cost\nof enormous millions upon millions of lives,\nand through the destruction of cities and\nproperties upon a-scale that our Imagination\ncannot envision, the disruptions and disturbances to political and financial systems would\ndwarf any calamity befalling a single industry. Our lives, if they are left, and our\nway of living them, would be utterly changed.\nSystems and organizations of society would\nhave to be reconstructed from the ground up.\nLet us hope that if war comes it will be\nquickly decisive.\nAs for gold, we can read from history\nhow it has survived through centuries of\ncalamity and terrible catastrophe. It is linked\nto the deepest instincts of human nature and\nhuman nature seems \"unchanging in its\nessentials, as is shown by the very fact that\nhuman beings continue to contemplate, conflict in spite of all the dreadfulness of the\npast and the dire promise of the future.\nDo not conclude that World War Three\nmust be considered an early inevitability. War\nmay be-avoided for decades. To us it would\nseem wise to continue with our dally tasks\nand to proceed upon our aspirations. We have\nbeen given the great and fortunate gift of\nnot knowing what the morrow Is to bring\nforth. Let us use it.\nIt's Been Said  \u2022\nHe that is overcautious will accomplish\nlittle.\u2014Schiller.\nYour Horoscope.\nToday begins a busy, active and interesting year for you. Look toward travel and new\nfriends, A child born today should be shrewd,\nsubtle and clever, and will accomplish outstanding things.\nResults of Judging In the vegetable section of the West Kootenay\nExhibition, follow:\nBeans, scarlet runner, 12\u20141, F. H.\nW. Chanter, R.H.I. Nelson: 2, H.\nH. James, South Slocan,\nBeans, pole, 12\u20141, F. H, W. Chanter, R.H.I -Nelson; 2, Mrs. M. Well-\nwood, R.R.1 Nelson.\nBeans, Kidney green, 12 \u20141, G. C.\nWard, R.R.1 Nelson; 2, Cornelia de-\nJong, Nelson,'\nBeans, Kidney Wax, 12\u20141, Cornelia deJong, Nelson; 2, Mrs. E.\nMcLachlan, Nelson.\n' Beans, broad, 12 \u2014 1,. Mrs. M.\nMcNown, R.R.1, Nelson; 2, Mrs. J.\nBlazina, Nelson.\nBeets, Globe, six\u20141, Mrs. R. H.\nMaber, Nelson; 2, R. C. Wright, Nelson.\nCarrots, intermediate, six\u20141, E.\nL. Bealby, Nelson; 2, Peter Sbukin,\nNelson,\nCarrots, short, six \u2014 2, Mrs. R.\nH. Maber, Nelson.\nCabbages, early pointed or- flat,\ntwo\u20141, A.-G. Smith, Nelson; 2, Mrs.\nR, H. Maber, Nelson,\nCabbages, late, flat or round; two\n\u20141, Nick Maglio, Nelson; 2, F. H.\nW. Chanter, R.R.l, Nelson.\nCabbages, red, two\u20141, Mrs. M.\nMcNown, R.R.1 Nelson; 2, Nick Maglio, Nelson.\nCabbages, Savoy, two \u2014 1, Nick\nMaglio, Nelson; 2, Mrs. M. McNown,\nR.R.1, Nelson.\nCaulifloVvers, two \u2014' 1, Robert\nMorrison, Nelson; 2, Mrs. H. Sanders, Nelson.\nCorn, sweet, six \u2014 1, Mrs. M. McNown, R.R.1, Nelson;; 2, Roy E.\nLewis, Nelson.\nCucumbers, garden, two\u20141, E. L.\nBealby, Nelson; 2, Mrs. Louis Santor, Nelson.\nCucumbers, pickling, 12 \u2014 1, Mrs,\nN.| McNown, R.R.1, Nelson; 2, L.\nFachinna, Shoreacres.\nCelery any variety, threer-1, Nick\nMaglio, Nelson; 2, W. H. Norgrove,\nNelson.\nKale, two\u20141, Mrs. Louis Santor,\nNelson; 2, Mrs. R. H. Maber, Nelson.\nLeeks, two\u20141, Nick Maglio, Nelson.\nOnions, red, six\u20141, Nick Maglio,\nNelson.\nOnions, yellow, six\u2014 1, Robert\nMorrison, Nelson; 2, William Forest,\nNelson.\nOnions, Spanish type, six\u20141. A.\nSinclair, Nelson; 2, D. Perasso, Nelson.\nParsnips, six\u20141, W. H. Norgrove,\nNelson; 2, Mrs. R. H. Maber, Nelson.\nPeppers, red, six\u20141, Mrs. Louis\nSantor,   Nelson;   2,   Nick  Maglio,\nNelson.\nPeppers, green, six \u2014 1, Robert\nMorrison, Nelson; 2, Mrs. Tom Clem,\nNelson.\nPeas, 12' pods\u20141, Peter Shukln,\nNelson; 2, W. H. Norgrove, Nelson.\nParsley,  one  bunch\u20141,  William\nForest, Nelson; 2, Robert Morrison,\nNelson.\nPotatoes, Netted Gem, six\u20141, E.\nL. Bealby, Nelson; 2, Mrs. M. R.\nHollington, Nelson.\nPotatoes, Eajly White, six\u20141, Mrs.\nH. Sanders, Nelson; <   *,\nPotatoes, Late White, six\u20141, F.\nW, Leno, Nelson; 2, Mrs. H. Sanders,-\nNelson.\nPotatoes, Early Red, six\u20141, M. N.\n(Slim) Porter, Nelson; 2, Mrs. H.\nSanders. Nelson,\nPumpkins, garden, two\u20141, R. C.\nWright, Nelson; 2, Roy E. Lewis,\nNelson.\nSquash, Hubbard, two\u20141, Mrs. A.\nE. Hopkins, Nelson; 2, G. Frederiksen, H.R.I, Nelson.\nSquash, Acorn, two\u20141, F. H. W.\nChanter, R.R.1, Nelson; 2, Robert\nMorrison, Nelson.\nTomatoes, ripe, six\u20141, F. J. Hawkins, . Bonnington Falls; 2, Mrs, G,\nB. Willis, Nelson.\nTomatoes, green, six\u20141, Mrs. J,\nBlazina, Nelson; 2, Mrs. Louis Santor, Nelson.\nTurnips, Winter  (table), three\u2014\n1, Mrs. M. McNown, R.R.l, Nelson.\nVegetable marrows, two\u20141, R. C.\nWright, Nelson; 2, F. H. W. Chanter. '\nCollection of vegetables:\nQuantities as per single entries,\neight varieties\u20141, E. L. Bealby, Nelson; 2, F. H. W. Chanter, R.R.1,\nNelson; 3, William Forest, Nelson.\nFIELD PRODUCE\nMangels, Long, five\u20141, Mrs. M.\nWellwood, R.R.l, Nelson.\nSwedes, Globe, five\u20141, Mrs. M.\nWellwood, R.R.1, Nelson.\nPotatoes,  10 pounds  commercial\npack:\nGems\u20141, E. L. Bealby, Nelson; 2\nF. H. W. Chanter, H.R.1, Nelson.\nWhite\u20141, Mrs. H,,Saunders, Nel-\nson; 2, H. H. James, South Slocan,\nSpecial largest pumpkin or squash\nby weight\u20141, Mrs. M. R. Hollington, Nelson.\nThe capital of British Honduras\nis Belize, with a population of 21,886\nem\\\nPLAY REFRESHED\nThe attraction at the sideshows of the\nmidway this year will be a reformed Communist who won't discuss it.\niTheyil D6)It?Ev.ty Time\n-v      By)J_tamy\/I_atloi\n-\/MEM IT'STUE KIP w\u00ab0S\u201e^t\u00a3^'\/\n\u25a0me sitor.\u00ab*THERes nothing to it, -\n\\m%m ro eoop oi' mom Am pop*\nToday's Bible Thought\nThe time was ripe, but humanity\nwas not ready for Him. We have\nhad near two thousand years more\nto get ready, He would make a\nlovely guest; we should welcome\nHim.\u2014When the fulness of the time\ncame, God sent forth his Son, born\nof a woman.\u2014Gal. 4;4.\ndunLZfat\nmtkl^{^'51 ^\nThis happy couple have found a way to enjoy an extra-\nspecial holiday every year. How? They set enough money aside,\neach payday, in a B of M savings account to cover the expenses\nof one vacation day. This way, they avoid any last minute worries\nabout ready cash. What's mote \u2014 they don't have to compromise\nby cutting down their holiday or going to a second-choice spot\nSTART BUYING YOUR '51   VACATION  NOW\nAT THE B of\nONE  DAY AT A TIMB\nMake sure you'll have all you need to do everything you want.. \u25a0.\ndon't let short funds spoil your fun. It's far easier \u2014and surer \u2014\nto provide for your next vacation this 'savings' way,      t\nBuy one day of your 1951 holiday this payday.. .Open\na \"Sunshine Account\" at your neatest B of M branch.       MMSM\nBakk of Montreal '\nCanada* *?(n4t \u00a3W\nBRANCHES in NELSON and DISTRICT to serve you\nNelson Branch: JAMES B. M. BARNUM, Manlier\nOpen Thursday & Friday\nOpen Monday & Tuesday\nRICHARD. ELLIOTT, Manager\nKaslo (Sub-Agency):\nNew Denver (Sub-Agency) I\nCastlegar Branch:     .  .\t\nKimberley Branch! JAMES MUIRHEAD, Manager\nRossland Branch i E. F. BARNES, Manager\nTrail Branch: GORDON CAMPBELL, Manager\nFruitvale (Sub-Agency) I Open Friday\nWORKING    WITH    CANADIANS    IN    EVERY    WALK    OF    LIFE    SINCE\n1817'\nBi-ia\nBOOST THAT POWER-WITHIN AN\nHOUR!\nMotor Rythm added to your\noil steps up compression . . .\ngives smoother engine performance . . . increases gas\nmileage. Get the genuine\nWhiz Motor Rythm.\nI reckon modesty Is out of style,\nbut, there's somethings I'll do without if I can't find a woman clerk\nto wait on me. , .;'\u25a0\u25a0 .'\u2022'\nThe United Kingdom has guaranteed to buy all surplus Australian\neattle for 15 years.\nR. M. Holllnnshood Co. of Canada Llmltod\nSobs Offlco: Fnclotiosi\n1130 Boy SI., Toronto Bowmonvllle, On!.\nMAINTENANCE   CHEMICALS   SINCE   1888\n SPORTS\n[M\nLamotta-Dauthuille\nRematch Sought\nBy JACK HAND\nDETROIT, Sept. 14 (AP) \u2014 Jake\n-amotta's desperation knockout of\nFrance's Laurent Dauthullle with\n13 seconds to go and the world\nmiddleweight title flying across\nthe sea has stirred talk of a rematch.\nMontreal wants the return for\nNovember, even on an over-the-\nwelght basis, after last night's\ndramatic finish at the Olympia\nStadium.\nAlthough Jake is committed to\ndefend his crown against Sugar\nRay Robinson at Chicago during\nthe second week of February, he is\nTree to talk non-title matches.\n\"Robinson la my next defence,\"\n\u2022aid    Lamotta,   \"but   I'll   fight\nDauthullle   over the  weight  In\nMontreal   If the  price   Is  right.\nThey'll  have to give me a big\nguarantee. And I mean big.\"\nLamotta, with three stitches in a\ngash under his left eye, planned to\nreturn to New York with his wife\ntonight.\n\"I'll find out in a week or two\nwhat they have lined up for me at\nMadison Square Garden,\" said Jake,\n\"I'm supposed to have a November\ndate. I'd like to have one more\nfight this year, non-title.\"\nPromoters Eddie Quinn and\nRaoul, Godbout were bidding for\nihe Iiamotta-Dauthullle return at\nthe Montreal Forum where the\ngame Frenchman has made his best\nfights.\nYankees Down Tigers\nRevised W.I.H.L\nSchedule Soon\nA new Western International\nHockey League schedule of games in\n1050-51 season will be announced\n1 is soon as possible.\nA tentative schedule was released last week, but several changes\nhave necessitated the drawing up of\na completely new list of games.\nThis advertisement is not published oi\ndisplayed by the Liquor Control Board of\nBY the Government of British Columbia\nAb Box Relurns\nTo Football\nAfter 12 Years\nBy JACK SULLIVAN\nTORONTO, Sept. .14 (CP)-A'o\nBox, the slender guy. with the powerful punting leg who kicked Toronto Balmy Beach and Toronto Argonauts to Canadian Senior Football\nChampionships in the dim past, has\ndone it. He will play\u2014so he says\u2014\nwith Montreal Aloucttes, kicker-\nshort Grey Cup winners.\nThe idea of a comeback\u2014he left\nthe game 12 years ago\u2014is nothing\nnew to the 41-year-old Box. touted\nonce as one of the best forward-\npassers and kickers developed in\nCanada. He has kicked the notion\naround the last three years and decided to give it a forkeeps whirl\nlast night.\nThe so-sad Als, not even a shadow\nof their 1949 Canadian championship selves, shopped around for a\nkicker and the finger was put on\nBox, busy operating a Summer camp\nin Northern Ontario. He agreed to\nterms and Eric Cradock, Toronto\nstock-broker and Als President,\nsaid he will be in town tomorrow\nfor the formal signing and then\nshuffle off to Ottawa for Montreal's\nSaturday date with the Big Four\nRough Riders.\nRETAINS BRITISH\nWELTERWEIGHT TITLE\nSWANSEA, Wales, Sept. 14 (AP)\n\u2014Eddie Thomas, 146, retained his\nBritish welterweight title tonight\nby decisioning fellow Welshman\nCliff Curvls, 143%, in a dull 15-\nrounder.\nThe crowd of 18,000 yawned and\nbooed. The referee threatened to\nthrow both boys out of the ring\nif they didn't speed up the action\n20m mate way\nfo wax your cor!\nFour Home Runs\nLift New York\nInto Top Spot\nBy STEVE ROBERTSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNew York Yankees thundered into first place in the\ndramatic American League\npennant race Thursday by\nturning back Detroit Tigers\n7-5 before 20,853 fans in\nDetroit.\nHome runs by Joe DiMog-\ngio, Johnny Mize and Cliff\nMapes   turned   the   tide   of\nbattle in the Yanks'  favor\nafter the Tigers had clawed\nVic Raschi for four runs in\nthe   first  inning.   The   loss\ndropped the Tigers into sec\nond place, a half-game behind New York, \u2022\nRaschi   settled   down   after   the\nfirst   inning   and   permitted   only\nfour hits the rest of the way to gain\nhis   20th   victory.   Raschi   is   the\nAmerican League's second 20-game\nwinner. Bob Lemon of Cleveland is\nthe other.\nThe Tigers put together three hits,\nthree walks and a fly ball for their\nfour-run first-inning assault. Raschi\nwalked home the first two runs.\nWHITE SOX BEATEN\nChicago White Sox defeated Philadelphia Athletics 5-2 in the only\nother American League day game.\nThe Sox scored all of their runs in\nthe first inning.\nA scheduled night game between\nWashington   and   Cleveland   was\nrained out.\nWIN DOUBLEHEADER\nIn the National League, Brooklyn\nDodgers took both ends of a double-\nheader from Cincinnati Reds,. 6-3\nand 5-2. Home runs by Gil Hodges,\nBilly Cox, Bruce EdwardJ and Carl\nFurillo featured the Brooks' opening victory. Rookie Ted Tappe of\nthe Reds poled a pinch-hit home\nrun in the eighth inning in his first\nmajor league at bat.\nPreacher Roe gained his 18th victory  in  the nightcap  but  needed\nhelp  from  Ralph  Branca  in  the\nninth when the Reds loaded the\nbases with one out. Branca fanned\ntwo pinch-hitters to save the game.\nNew   York   Giants   split   a\ndoubleheader   with    Pittsburgh\nPirates, winning the nightcap 6-1\nbehind Jim Hearn after dropping\nthe first game to Murry Dickson,\n7-1.\nWally Westlake was the big gun\nfor the Pirates in the opener, driving in three runs on his 20th homer\nand a single. Monte Irvin led the\nGiants drive in the finale, knocking in three runs on a homer and\nbases loaded single.\nSAIN PITCHES WIN\nJohnny Sain became the third\nBoston pitcher to win 19 games as\nhe pitched the Braves to a 7-4\nvictory over Chicago Cubs. Warren\nSpahn and Vern Bickford are the\nother 19-game winners. Bob Elliott\nand Sam Jethroe homered for the\nBraves. Andy Pafko, Hank Sauer\nand Roy Smalley hit homers for\nthe Cubs. ,\nThe National League - leading\nPhils kept six games in front of\nthe pack when they eked out a 3-2\ndecision over the Cards. A ninth-\ninning single that scored Eddie\nWaitkus provided -the margin of\nvictory.\nThe blazing and amazing Browns\nwon their eighth in a row by outclassing the powerful Red Sox 6-3\nin the first of three games that may\nhave a bearing on the hot American\nLeague pennant chase. Dick Starr\nallowed Boston only seven hits, including Ted Williams' eighth-\ninning pinch double that drove in\na run.\nGives a \"diamond shine\" ... guaranteed\nbrighter, tougher, longer-wearing than\nany other auto wax!\nEven after hours of hard rubbing,\nno other wax can match the finish\nthat Car-Plate gives so quickly\nand easily. Johnson's Car-Plate\nneeds no rubbing to make it\nshine. Just spread on the cleaned\nsurface ... let it dry . . . then\nwipe lightly. That's all there is\nto putting on a Car-Plate shine!\nIMPORTANTl Car-Plate Is a wax\u2014not a cleaner!\nBefore you tpply Johnson j Car-Plate, your car must be jpotles-lr\nclean-_nd free of traffic film and oxidized paint. For quick, thorough\ncleaning of your car, ujed Johnson's Carnu .,. sold wherever Cvr-PJaio\nis sold. (\n\"JoIir\u2014iV, \"Carnu\" and \"Car-Plate\" are trademarks of\n.. Johnson & Son, Ltd., firamford, Oniarj'o,\n_&_,\nBaseball Scores\nAMERICAN\nWashington at Cleveland postponed, rain.\nPhiladelphia    100 000 010\u2014 2   6 .1\nChicago,  500 000 OOx\u2014 5 10   0\nShantz, Kucab (2) Kellner (7) and\nAstroth; Cain, Aloma (8) and Niar-\nhos.\nNew York  031 201 000\u2014 7 10   1\nDetroit  400 000 100\u2014 5   7   0\nRaschi and Berra; Newhouser,\nWhite (5) and A. Robinson.\nBoston    s... 002 000 010\u20143   7   2\nSt. Louis   200 003 Olx\u20146 10   0\nNixon,   Kinder   (7),   McDermott\n(8) and Batts; Starr and Moss.\nNATIONAL\nPittsburgh   .... 001 002 004\u2014 7 15   0\nNew York .... 000 100 000\u2014 1   8   2\nDickson   and   McCullough?  Jan-\nsen, Kramer (7) Jones (9) Spencer\n(9) and Westrum.\nPittsburgh  100 000 000\u2014 1   6   1\nNew York .... 013 000 llx\u2014 6   7   0\nMcDonald, Lombardi (8) and R.\nMueller, McCullough (8); Hearn and\nWestrum.\nChicago  000 111 100\u2014 4 10   0\nBoston'    010 330 OOx\u2014 7 11   1\nHiller, Lade (5) Dubiel (5) Kllpp-\nstein (7) and Sawatski; Sain and\nCooper.\nCincinnati   110 000 010\u2014 3   7   2\nBrooklyn     400 101 OOx\u2014 8   90\nHaffensberger, Smith - (1) Byerly\n(8) and Pramesa, Howell (7); Palica and Edwards,\nCincinnati   010 010 000\u2014 2   8   0\nBrooklyn    040 010 OOx\u2014 5 12   1\nErautt, Wehmeier (3) and Howell; Roe, Branca (9) and Edwards,\nSt. Louis    001 000 100\u20142   9   1\nPhiladelphia  .. 002 000 001\u20143 10   2\nBrecheen, Pollet (4), Brazle  (7)\nand D. Rice; Meyer, Konstanty (7)\nand Seminick.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nMontreal 3, Baltimore 2\n(Best-of-seven   semi-final   series\ntied 1-1)\n, Jersey City 4, Rochester 10\n(Best  four-bf-severi   series   tied,\n1-1) '\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nSt. Paul 3, Indianapolis 4\n(Indianapolis leads best-of-seven\nseries 3-0)       .-!\\. '\u25a0       a\/,\nThe Papers- Are Signed\nJoe Louis (left) and Eizard Charles (right) cross pens In New\nYork after signing \"the papers\" for their world heavyweight title\nfight (Sept. 27) at Yankee Stadium, New York City. In center I,\nChairman Eddie Eagan of the State Athletic Commission.\n ' \u2014(AP Wlrephoto.)\nBall Standings\nBy The Canadian Pi-ess\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nPhiladelphia   84 53\nBrooklyn  76 57\nBoston     75 59\nNew York   75 61\nSt. Louis   69 67\nCincinnati   58 77\nChicago     56 83\nPittsburgh     51 87\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nNew York\nDetroit   87\nBoston  86\nCleveland     81\nWashington   59\nChicago     54\nSt. Louis   52\nPhiladelphia     47\n94\n.613\n.571\n.560\n.551\n.507\n.430\n.403\n.370\n.635\n.623\n.579\n.434\n.386\n.377\n.333\nFOR THE BEST\nASBESTOS\nBRAKE\nLINING-\nASK FOR\nJOHNS-\nMANVILLE\nT-178\n\\\nThree More Sign\nWith Canadians\nMONTREAL, Sept. 14 (CP) \u2014\nThree more players, bringing the\ntotal to six, signed contracts today\nwith Montreal Canadiens of the\nNational Hockey League.\nThe latest to sign are Wingman\nFloyd Curry and Defencemen Glen\nHarmon and Hal Laycoe. Other's already signed are Elmer Lach, Billy\nReay and Butch Bouchard.\nOct. 4 Set for\nOpening of\nWorld Series\nCINCINNATI, Sept. 14 (AP) -\nMajor league baseball today Completed the preliminary arrangements and set the date.for the 1950\nWorld Series\u2014If there are no ties\nin either pennant race.\nThat \"if\" looms as a big word In\nview ot the ncck-and-neck race\namong Detroit, New York and Boston for the American League\/flag.\nIf the season ends according to\nschedule Sunday, Oct. 1, the series\nwill open Wednesday, Oct. 4, in the\nhome park of the National League\nwinner.\nIf two teams tie in the American\nLeague, a one-game playoff will be\nnecessary and Baseball Commissioner A. B. Chandler said that\nwould mean a oncday delay in the\nstart of the series.\nIf three teams tie in the American, or if there is a tie in the\nNational League, the start of the\nseries will be delayed even more.\nThose latter '.'its\" weren't even\nconsidered at today's meeting.\nThe National League has a best-\nof-three game system for deciding\nplayoffs and Chandler pointed out\na deadlock necessarily would mean\na series delay of at least two days.\nJust how the American League\nwould go about settling a three-\ngame tie would have to be decided\nby that league itself.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. IS, 1950 \u2014 7\nKaslo Golfers\nHold Novelty\nTournament\nKASLO, B.C., Sept. 14-A novelty\ntournament was played on Sunday,\nwhen each player played each club\nin turn, teeing off with the driver.\nR. D. Foreman of Ainsworth won\nthe men's flight with F\u201e Aydon as\nrunner up, Mrs. Eleanor South captured the prize for the ladies with\nMiss Margaret MacDonald and Miss\nSpencer-Smith bringing in an\nequal score. In the playoff Miss\nMacDonald beat Miss Spencer-\nSmith to be awarded the runnerup\nprize. i\nRefreshments were served during\nthe afternoon by a committee of\nthe Ladies' Auxiliary.\nPHONE  144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nPHONE   144   FOR   CLASSIFIED\nClint Albright\nReturning to Hockey\nNEW YORK, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Clint\nAlbright, who quit hockey a year\nago after one successful season as' a\nrookie left winger with New York\nRangers, today advised Manager\nFrank Boucher he will report Monday at Rangers Lake Placid, N.Y.,\ntraining camp.\nThe bespectacled 23-year-old Winnipeg winger tied with team-mate\nPentti Lund for most goals scored\nby a N.H.L. rookie in 1948-49. Each\nhad 14.\nAlbright remained in Winnipeg\nlast year to complete his education\nat the University of Manitoba. He\nearned an engineering degree.\nreline jour irakes now\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquoi\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\n\" I T ' S.  T H E    TOBACCO    THAT    COUNTS\nWatch for the BIGGEST PARADE\nphone 144 for Classified\nOFTHE YEAR\n\u2022.. eight days and ever 4,000 miles long\nSept. 17 to 24\nThis \"parade\" will take place in citift and towns of all ten\nProvinces. On display will be Canada's Army. These are some\nof the men who stand ready to defend the freedom of Canada\nand democratic nations everywhere against aggression.\nTake this opportunity to meet and salute Canada's men In\nthe Active and Reserve Forces. Visit the public exhibits and\ndemonstrations in your district. You will be proud of the men\nand machines that make up Canada's Army.\nAt the same time you will probably realize the need for more\nmen, more equipment. You will understand why Canada is now\ndoing everything possible to strengthen our Active and Reserve\nForces \u2014 why we are asking young Canadians from coast-to-\ncoast to visit their nearest Recruiting Depot or Armoury at once.\nArmy Racrulttna Office, Bellevue Bldrj., Spring Gordon Head, Halifax, N.S.\nNo. 2 Personnel Depot, Woodstock Road, Frodariclon, N.B,\nNo. 3 Personnel Depot, Hut 4], Covofloidt, Quebec, P.O.\nNo. 4 Personnel Depot, 711 Shorlirooke St. W., Montreal, P.Q.\nRoom 2019, \"C\" Building, tlsgar St., Ottawa, Ont.\nNo. 5 Personnel Depot, Artillery Parle, Bagot St., Kingston, Ont.\nNo. 6 Personnel Depot, Charity Park, Douglai Drive, Toronto, Ont.\nNo. 7 Personnel Depot, Wolselty Barracks, Elisabeth Street, tondon, Ont.\nNo. 8 Personnel Depot, Fort Osborne Barracks, Winnipeg, Man.\nNo. 9 Personnel Depot, National Defence Bldg.,\nWinnipeg & Eighth Ave., Regina, Sask.\nNa. 10 Personnel Depot, Currht Barracks, Calgary. Alta.\n-Headquarters, Western Command, Klngsway Ave., Edmonton, Alta.\nRecruiting Office, 475 Howa Street, Vancouver, B.C.\n\u2022   No. 12 Personnel Depot, Buckmaster's Field, St. John's, Newfoundland\n iatf\nPHONE\n1012\nHONE FURNITURE CO. LTD.\nSTORE-WIDE SPECIALS FOR THE FAIR\nNELSON\nB.C.\nH\nE\nN\nR\nY\n<^SiP\u00a7P\nI i\u00ab V 1\ni\nI3S'\n-R-i-j...\n^sm\nA\/OrVUTTLE BOBBY41cr\/,V\/$H IS \u00a3\n&o\/m m repay mpart softs of\n;\/?AMPDAD'S MWNESS,\u201e.Ifa 60W&\nTO GErHISKiUERJ?,.    ,\n~~ WHEWfTHIS IS HEAVy.PA\nTODAY'S News Pictures\nThree More Newsmen Killed in Korea\nBritish Troops in\nKorean Action\nROSECRANS\nEMERY\nINOUYE\nTwo International News Service and Central Press Canadian\nwar correspondents have been reported killed in a transport plane\nexplosion In Japan. A U.S. Air Force report listed Charles D. Rose-\ncrans, Jr., and Frank Emery among the 11 dead in the plane's blast.\n-Also killed, according to the Air Force announcement, was Ken\nInouye, movie cameraman for Telenews, who wa3 the first newsreei\nman on the Korean front, and who scooped everyone with first\nscenes of the war.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nBeauty Queen of\nAll Italy\n:1\u00a71\nBest Dog in the Show\n^v\\\\-.v.;.'\\:v''-^\"'^--*'\":v-'-':'-:-:L\nMM\n\u25a0.............\nNewly arrived British troops\nare shown marching to a train-after their arrival at the South Korean port of Pusan, They wer\u00bb\ntent right to the battlefront, taw\naction within a few days.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nBlack Marketeer\nJudged the best dog In the Canadian National Exhlbitlt\nIs this English setter, \"Prune's Own Blue Moon\". Owner Jack Thorn-\ndyke, Oakvllle, Ont., Is shown with him.\u2014Central Press Canadian.\nON THE AIR\nSATURDAY, SEPT. 16, 1950\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Hits and Encores\n8:30\u2014Show Case\n8:45\u2014Saturday Musicale\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Western Hit Parade\n9:15\u2014Saddle Serenade\n9:30\u2014The Stamp Collector\n9:45\u2014The Answer Man\n10:00\u2014Train Time and Time Signal\n(0:01\u2014Bandstand\n10:15\u2014Notice Board\n10:45\u2014News\n11:00\u2014Folk Songs\n12:00\u2014News\n12:03\u2014Saturday Magazine\n1:00\u2014Saturday Serenade\n1:30\u2014London Studio Melodies\n2:00\u2014Ballet Club\n3:00\u2014This Week\n3:14\u2014Train Time   .\n3:15\u2014Three \"J's\"\n3:30\u2014Living  1950\n4:00\u2014Today's Music\n4:30\u2014Show Business\n5:00\u2014Music From the Films\n5:30\u2014Sports College\n5:45\u2014Memo From Lake Success\n6:00\u2014News\n6:10\u2014Dinner Date\n6:30\u2014Cavalcade of Melody\n7:00\u2014Chamber   Music   Society   ol\nLower Basin Street\n7:30\u2014Square Dance\n8:00\u2014Prairie Schooner\n8:30\u2014Saturday Barn Dance\n9:00\u2014Soirees a Quebec\n9:30\u2014Ray Norris Quintet\n10:00\u2014News\n10:15\u2014Dance Music\n10:30\u2014Request Program\n11:30\u2014St Francis Hotel -Orchestra\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Cap\nFRIDAY, SEPT. 15, 1950\nCKLN\n1240 ON THE DIAL\n7:00\u2014News\n7:05\u2014Top of the Morning\n7:30\u2014News\n7:35\u2014Top of the Morning\n8:00\u2014News\n8:10\u2014Bill Good\n8:15\u2014Breakfast Club\n8:45\u2014For You, Madame\n9:00\u2014News\n9:01\u2014Betty and Bob\n9:15\u2014Western Tunes\n9:45\u2014Famous Voices\n10:00\u2014Time Signal and Train Time\n10:01\u2014Ladies' Choice\n10:15\u2014Elwood Glover Show\n10:45\u2014Robin Hood Musical Kitchen\n11:00\u2014News\n11:05\u2014Song Parade\n11:30\u2014Aunt Mary\n11:45\u2014Notice Board\n12:15-=News\n12:25\u2014Sports News\n12:30\u2014Farm Broadcast\n12:55\u2014Report From Parliament Hill\n12:59\u2014News\n1:00\u2014Friday Serenade\n2:00\u2014CKLN Presents\n2:30\u2014The Little Show\n2:45\u2014Housing Remarks\n2:56\u2014Women's Commentary\n3:00->-News\n3:01\u2014Inside Story\n3:11\u2014Train Time\n3:15\u2014Bernie Braden\n3:30\u2014CKLN Pacific News\n3:40\u2014Divertimento\n4:00\u2014Canadian Health Story\n4:15\u2014Sacred Heart\n4:30\u2014Sleepy Time Stories\n4:45\u2014Don Mes'sers Islanders\n5:00\u2014Stars and Starters\n5:30\u2014News\n5:40\u2014Strikes and Spares\n5:45\u2014Superman\n6:00\u2014God's World\n6:15\u2014Report from Parliament Hill\n6:30\u2014R.C.A.F. Sport Cast\n7:00\u2014News\n7:15\u2014News Roundup\n7:30\u2014Parlow String Quartet\n8:00\u2014Music by Eric Wild\n8:30\u2014It's Murder\n9:00\u2014Continental Moods\n9:30\u2014Beat the Champs\n10:00\u2014News\n10:30\u2014Canadian Chamber of Com\nmerce Convention\n10:30\u2014Canadian Short Stories\n10:45\u2014Canadian Novelists\n11:00\u2014Hot Air .-\n11:55\u2014News Nite-Cap\nU. S., Britisjh Jets\nCollide in Air\nMARHAM, Norfolk, England,\nSept. 14 (Reuters)\u2014An American\nand a British jet fighter collided in\nmid-air here today, killing both pi\nlots.\nThe American plane, an F-84\nThunderjet single-seater fighter,\nwas attached to the American 20th\nBomber Group. It, was on a routine\nflight.\nThe British plane was a Meteor.\nForges Way From\nEast to* West\nEDMONTON, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Roy\nHubbard is a man who literally\nforged his way West.\nYesterday he told the court how\nhe did it 'a ,\nI'Beginning In Toronto and wc-rk-\/\ning West through Hamilton, London, Windsor, Brandon, St. Boniface\nYorkton and Saskatoon he would\nopen Post Office Savings Branch\naccounts in each place for $1. A\nstroke or two of the pen raised the\n$1 to $90. Hubbard would then make\n| a withdrawal of $40\u2014the amount\nvarying with the state of his finances.\nHubbard, who is also known as\nJames Slater or James Stfmson, wai\nj sentenced .to three years In peniten\nj tiary. His undoing occurred at We-\ntaskiwin, 50 miles South of Edmonton. Police estimated he had received only $325 for his penmanship.\nIndia expects to import 335 railway locomotives this year.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED.\nivilss Italy of 1950\", 17-year-old\nAnna Marl Bulgalrl, of Rome, triumphed over 61 contestants from\nmany parts of Italy to win tho\ncoveted crown,\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\nJOHANNESBURG (CP) - Two\nUnited States tourists thought that\nKruger National Park was one of\nthe most interesting places they had\never seen, They nave sent $930 for\na fire observation tower to be erected in the reserve.\nSidewalk shops like this operate openly In Pusan, and a flourishing business Is done by the native merchants. In this Instance an\nenterprising Korean boy display!\ntobacco, cigarettes, gum and\nmints, It's Illegal, of course, but\nno one pays much attention.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian\n\u2022Before the Cunard liner Lusl-\ntanla sailed on her fatal New York-\nLiverpool trip in 1915, Germans\nhad .inserted advertisements in\nAmerican papers advising against\nsailing in her.\nDAILY CROSSWORD\nACROSS\nI. Weakens\n5. Deed..\n9. Coronet\n10. Wall\ntapestry\n'12. Nut\n14. Rs,ve\n15. Music note\n16. Observes\n18. Depart\n19 Dull pail\n21. Virginia\n(abbr.) ,\n22 French coin\n23. Beam\n24. A.pprehend\n26 Ship-\nbuilding\nJlty\n29 Faith\n31. Female\nsheep\n34 The turmeric\n35 District\nAttorney\nI abbr.)\n36. American\nIndian\n37 Whether\n38. Case for\ncarrying\nsmall\narticles\n40. Mulberry\n41 River (Ger.i\n44. An herb\n46 Closes, as a\nhawk's eyes\n48. Turn aside\nthrough fear\n19 Web-like\nmembrane\n10. Metallic  '\nrocks\n','     DOWN\n\u00b0 .ivPrincipal\n- constituent\nit quartz\nUHt-HH   HHr-JHl-\nmtsima uiel'hm\naaiaatfu tiaun\nIffilH   HHUH0HB\nHHWHB\namain hh mm\nHPMHH   fflUHHII\nUP]!-   OH   HHinil\nHBHHIII\nlai'J-IHHMH   I1HH\n<HS\nDAILY CRYPTOQJJOTE\u2014Here's how to work It:\nAXYDLBAAXR\nLONGFELLOW\nOne letter simply stands for another. In this example A Is usei\nfor the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, apos-\ntrophies. the length and formation of the words are all hint*\nEach day the code letters are different.\nA Cryptogram Quotation\nTMEOL     UWMTEF    JILFLPWF     Pf\nFJWWJBF    FOJB    IF    L W I L O F\u2014U P M H R G.\nYesterday's Crjptoqiiole: NO PLEASURE IS COMPARABLE!\nTO THE STANDING UPON THE VANTAGE GROUND OF\nTRUTH-BACON.\n. p-trlbuted by King Features Synilsis*\n tWa\nh\nPhone 144\nDeadline for Classified Ads\u2014-5 P.M.\nPhone 144\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - RESIDENT CARE-\ntaker-Janitor for Canadian Legion\nNelson. Married or single immaterial but mus,t be ex-serviceman, State former employment,\nmarital status and salary expected. All applications in writing\nplease to Sec-Manager, Canadian\nLegion, Nelson not later than\nWed. Sept. 27.\t\nFIRST-CLASS AUTO MECH-\nANIC WANTED AT ONCE.\nAPPLY NEW DENVER\nGARAGE CO. LTD., OR\nPHONE 20, NEW DENVER.\nARROW LAKES HOSPITAL, NA.\nkusp, B.C. Twenty bed well,\norganized hospital has immediate\nopening for two general duty\nnurses. Salary $175.00 per month,\nboard $30.00. Apply Matron.\nWANTED \u2014 A GIRL WHO IS\nwilling to work for advance position. Assistant in office and\nshipping dept. Apply in own\nwriting. Box 486 Daily News.\nWANTED \"\u2014 YOUNG MAN FOR\nwarehouse, typing and pay roll,\nreply stating age, education and\nsalary expected. Box 355 Nelson\nDaily News.\t\nBOY WANTED AS HELPER IN\npressroom for 5 weeks' work, Apply to A. Brown, Daily News,\nafter 9:30 p.m.\t\nBOYS \u2014 DAILY NEWS ROUTE\nopen. Will net approximately $25\nper month for hustler. See Mr.\nHay, Circulation Dept.     \t\nWANTED \u2014 PLASTERER AND\none or two helpers- Several weeks\npatching job. J. M. Harris, Sandon,\n\u25a0 B.C. \t\nWANTED\"\u2014 C.ASHIER   AND   A\nI experienced   waitress.   Apply\n,- Golden Gate Cafe.\t\n.WANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED WAIT-\nresses. New Star Cafe.\n\u25a0**-,\u2014\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNelson Building Contractors\nBuilding and remodelling. Specialize in architecture. No jobs\ntoo large or too small. 1323\nMcQuarrie Ave. Phone 364-X-3\nWILL TAKE CARE OF SMALL\nboy or girl in Fairview, for young\nmother if she desires to work.\nPhone 267-Y.\t\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY AND\nFARM SUPPLIES, ETC.\nWANTED   \u2014   WORK   HORSE,\ndriver or pony. Must be quiet in\n|  wagon in all kinds of traffic, suit\nelderly people. Age, weight, price.\nTom Taylor, Kaslo, B.C. \t\nfeMALL PONY AND 3 GOATS FOR\nsale,  1  milking  goat,  2  young\n. ones,  fresh middle  of January.\nPhone Hall Siding.\t\nIvIILK   COWS   FOR   SALE,   TO\nfreshen   in   October.   Apply   G.\nLeitch, Box 46, Fruitvale, B.C.\nFOR SALE \u2014 JERSEY COW. F. F.\nChernenkoff, Taghum, B.C.\nSCHOOL AND INSTRUCTION\nNELSON BUSINESS COLLEGE\nDay and Night Classes\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nASSAYERS AND   MINE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nE W. WIDDOWSON & CO.  AS-\nsayers, 301 Josephine St., Nelson,\nH.   S.  ELMES,   ROSSLAND,   B.C.\nAssayer, Chemist, Mine Represent\nENGINEERS AND SURVEYORS\"\nD. A. CURRIE, B.C. LAND SUR-\nveyor, Rossland. Phone 348.\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, 218 GORE ST.;\nNelson, B.C., Surveyor, Engineer,\nINSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE\nMcHARDY  AGENCIES  LTD.  IN-\nsurance, Real Estate\u2014Phone 135,\nbulldozers, truckers, etc.\n'Bulldozing, truck hauling,\nsand   and   gravel   Contract   H\nHarrop. Phone 117.\t\n MACHINISTS ~\n\" BENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine Shop, acetylene and\nelectric welding, motor rewinding\nPhone 593 '     324 Vernon St.\nSTEVENSON'S MACHINE SHOP-\nSnecialists in mine and mill work,\nMachine work, light and, heavy.\n708 Vernon St.. Nelson. Phone 98\nHARDWOOD   FLOORS,  SANDING\nFLOOR SANDING\nArmstrong Tiles supplied and laid.\nA. H. Shrieves, 1018 Falls St\nNelson. B.C. \u2014 Phone 1567\n\u00a3%lamt Satly _fotUB\nClassified Advertising  Rates:\n15c per line first insertion and\nnon-consecutive insertions,\nlie line per consecutive Insertion after first insertion.\n48c line for 6 consecutive insertions.\n$1.56 line per month  (26 consecutive insertions) Box numbers  lie extra.  Covers  any\nnumber of insertions.\nPUBLIC   (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:\nSingle Copy  $   .05\nBy Carrier, per week,\nin advance      .25\nBy Carrier, per year  13.00\nMail in Canada, outside Nelson:\nOne month    1.00\n'Three months  -    2.50\nSix months    4.50\nOne year    8.00\nUnited States, United Kingdom:\nOne month         1.00\nThree months    3.00\n' Six months  ,....'.    6.00\nOne year        12.00\nWhere extra postage Is required\nAbove rates plus postage.\n;..:.'.    fevv\nPUBLIC NOTICES\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIN THE MATTER OF\nTHE ESTATE OF\nJOSEPH EDOUARD ROULIER\nDECEASED\nand\nIN THE MATTER OF THE\n\"TRUSTEE ACT\"\n.Take notice that all creditors and\nothers having claims against the\naforementioned Estate' are required\nto send in their claims to the undersigned on or before the 14th day of\nOctober, A.D. 1950 at the CouVt\nHouse, Nelson, BC. after whicli\ndate I shall be at liberty to distribute the assets of the said Estate\nto those entitled thereto.\nDated at Nelson, B.C. this 13th\nday of September, A.D. 1950.\nMontague Edward Harper,\nOfficial Administrator.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES,   BICYCLES\nNEW\nAUSTIN!\nEARLY DELIVERY\nThe Government of\nThe Province of British Columbia\nDepartment of Public Works\nNEEDLES-FAUQUIER FERRY\nThe Needles-Fauquler Ferry will\nlie closed down on the morning of\nSeptember 17th from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m-\nfor Ferry replacement.\nSigned, M. C*. STRUVE,\nDistrict Engineer.\nNew Denver, B.C.\nSeptember 9th. 1950.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE\nWe have received several\nnew listings, which are, in\nour estimation, splendid\nvalue. We think we can satisfy you on nearly anything\nyou would require.\nBefore buying, be sure and\ncontact Herb Peacock, 532\nWard Street or Phone 68.\nWe will be glad to show you\nour wide selection of listings.\nAlso we are specialists in\nInsurance Problems.\nRobertson, Hilliard,\nCattell Realty Co. Ltd\nReal Estate \u2014 Phone 68\nInsurance \u2014 Phone-1112\n\u25a0L\nIN FAIRVIEW    .\nON THE LEVEL\n2 bedroom bungalow, close to\nbeach and park. Full basement,\npiped hot air heating, good\ngarden and lawns. Some terms.\nGOING AT $6500\nThe Gilday\n642 Baker St. Phone 1460\nREAL ESTATE \u2014 INSURANCE\nFOR SALE - 20 ACRE FARM. 7\ncleared. 4 room house, barn,\nchicken house. Piped water. 500\npullets included in price. Also 1\nhorse, 1 milking cow and 6 mos.\nold heifer. Fruit trees, garden.\nPrjce $6000. Box 5866 Daily News.\nFOR SALE \u2014 NEW, 5-ROOM\nhouse with bathroom. Built on\nsolid cement base (30'x20'). In\nquire price \u2014 finished or un\nfinished. Phil. Merry, Silverton,\nCOMFORTABLE HOME AND\ngood revenue one block from\nBaker Street. Excellent investment. Phone 478-X.\nNEW 5-ROOMED HOUSE, BATH\nroom. 1 acre, garden, fruit trees,\nchicken house, woodshed. Phone\n1140-Y. j' | : ;\nFOR SALE - 6-ROOMi HOUSE,\nbathroom, stone foundation aVld 3\nlots. Phone 619-L or call 608 Innes\nSt.\nWANTED \u2014 FOR CASH. FIVE OR\nsix room house in Nelson. No\nagents. Apply Box 902 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE\u20143 ROOMED HOUSE,\nCottonwood City, No. 15. Cheap\nfor cash. Write Mrs. A, Davidoff,\nCrescent Valley.\n4 ROOM HOUSE FOR SALE. 4\nlots. Assorted fruit trees, outbuildings and good garden. Apply S. W. Barclay, Ymir, B.C.\nWANTED-3 OR 4 RM. COTTAGE,\nstate lowest price. Box 516 Daily\nNews.\nFOR SALE \u2014 SANDON HOTEL,\nSandon,   B.C.   Apply   1212   Hall\n, Mines Rd\n11-ROOM HOUSE. $150 REVENUE\na month. Modern, 1 block from\nBaker St. Phone 1140-Y.\n2   GOOD   BUILDING   LOTS   ON\nObservatory St. Phone 423-R.\nFOR  SALE\u20142 GOOD BUILDING\nlots in Fairview. Phone 745-Y-2,\nTHE BEST\nIN USED GARS\n1950 Ford Sedan\n1950 Dodge Light Delivery\n1949 Austin Sedan\n1947 Pontiac Sedan\n1949 Ford 2-Door\n1949 Austin Pickup\n1947 Plymouth Sedan\n1946 Hudson Sedan\n1947 Pontiac 5-Passenger\n1949 English Ford Panel\n1939 DeSoto Sedan\n1938 Ford Convertible\n1939 Hudson Coupe'\n1935 Oldsmobile Sedan\n1934 Chevrolet Coupe\nJ 930 DeSoto Sedan\n1929 Graham Page Sedan\n1946 Ford Truck\n1938 Ford Truck\nSPOT CASH FOR LATE\nMODEL USED CARS\nTERMS  AND  TRADES\nEMPIRE\nMOTORS\n803 Baker St Phone 1135\nIN GOOD\nUsed Cars\n42 Chev. Suburban.      SkQ^ft\nA beautiful buy  v'-\u00ab\npticeT^t\u2122: $300\n48 International tt j OCA\nPanel. Priced at  v I \u00ab\u00abW\n36 Ford Coupe %3'tf)\nDelivery. Priced at  \u00abP<J<JV\n47 Fargo Dump Truck. 2 speed\nrear axle. <t | \"frit\\\nGood rubber  $ ' ' ov\n34 Ford Pickup. %9ftft\nPriced at   <J>_.UU\n34 Ford Sedan. $3(1(1\nPriced at JPOUU\n38 Chrysler Imperial.    CR7R\nPriced at   \u2122   \u25a0\n39 Mercury Sedan.        CBOE\nPriced at   -JJO_-_i\n38 Chev. Coach. \u00ab7<I(1\nPriced at  .JM OU\nRigbyMotors\n518 Vernon St.,   Nelson, B.C.\nMACHINERY\nWell See\nat\nFOR SALE, MISCELLANEOUS\nTRANSFER\n.     COAL\nRosedale, Egg and Lump.\nHillcrest Furnace\nSAND and GRAVEL\nGENERAL HAULING\n-   PHONE 1126 '\nFair\nDistributors for\nCATERPILLAR\nJOHN DEERE\nSKAGIT HOISTS\nJOY MINE EQUIPMENT\nATHEY LOADERS\nTRACKSON EQUIPMENT\nYOUNG LOGGING TOOLS\nKOHLER LIGHT PLANTS\n& Equipment Co. Ltd.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 930 Box 119\nSKILTOOL\nPOWER TOOLS\n110 and 32 Volts\nFor Factory, Home and Farm\nWrite for free catalogue\nElectric Equipment\nCo. Ltd.\nCalgary \u2014 Edmonton\nRegina \u2014 Saskatoon\nCONTRACTORS   -   SAWMILL  -\nLOGGING & MINING\nEQUIPMENT\nCO.  LTD\nSEND  YOUR  ENQUIRIES TO\nNATIONAL  MACHINERY,\nGranville Island MA. 1251\nVancouver, B.C,\nCUSTOM MACHINE WORK AND\nwelding. Portable welding equipment for field work Stevenson's\nMachine Shoo, 708 Vernon St.,\nNelson. B.C.\nFOR HIRE OR CONTRACT. D-4\ncat. equipped for excavating,\nroadbuilding, etc C. Ross, phone\n588-R or 1376-L, Nelson.\nCATERPILLAR D-4 WITH BLADE\nand Bucyrus-Erie M: cu. yd. shovel\nfor sale. Interior Contracting Co.\nLtd., Penticton. B.C.\nFOR RENT OR SALE\u2014D8, D7. D6\nand D4 cats with 'dozers and\nscrapers. A. G. Bayes Construction, Cranbrook. B.C.\nPERSONAL\nFULLER BRUSH SALES, SERVICE\nPhone 79D-R. Box 123\n120 BASS I HONER PIANO AC\ncordian, A-I shape, $365 new,- for\n$150. Saw mandrel 48\" with pulley $20.00. Heavy logging tongs,\n$18.00 new, for $8.00. Barrel fuel\npump, like new, $7.00. Brick lined\nheater, small 4 lid and oven cabin\nstove, 30\" circular saw, some\nshafting, and 20 ft, 4\" iron pipe,\nall very cheap. Some used bricks\nand 2 new glaced flues, 8\"x8\",\nPhone 1282-L, 518 Sixth St.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Sept. 14 (CP)-Whlle\nthere was a large offering of cattle\nat the Calgary Stockyards this\nmorning, good butcher steers and\nheifers were scarce. Cows were\nstrong to 50 cents a hundredweight\nhigher for the week,\nHogs were about '50 cents higher\nat $31 a hundredweight for A-\ngrade; sows, $19.25.\nGood lambs, $25; good ewes, $13\nto $13.50. '\nYesterday's saleable receipts: 897\ncattle, 113 calves, 166 hogs and 67\nsheep. Today's saleable receipts: 226\ncattle, 51 calves.\nGood butcher steers, $27.50 to\n$28.50; common to medium, $22\nto $27.\nGood cows, $21 to $22; common to\nmedium, $13.50 to $20.60; canners\nand cutters, $15 to $18.25.\nGood bulls, $23.50 to, $24; common to medium, $20 to $23,\nGood to choice veal calves, $27.50\nto $29; common to medium, $20\nto $27.\nGood stocker and feeder steers,\n$27 to $28; common to medium, $21 j\nto $26.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 13, 1M0 \u2014 f\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Winnipeg grain cash prices:\nOats\u2014No. 1 feed, 89%.\nBarley\u2014No. I feed, 1.48%.\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 industrials ..!  224.48 up 1.06\n11 railroads     66.87 up   .11;\n15 utilities     39.06 up   .021\n65 stocks    80.65 up   .25\nThe camel Is not native to Egypt,\nbut was introduced at an early\nperiod.\nMore Troops From\nBritain to Korea\nLONDON, Sept. 14 (Reuteri)-.\nBritish troop reinforcements (or\nKorea are to be flown to the Far\nEast almost Immediately, the Air\nMinistry announced today.\nTransport planes, each carrying\nabout 36 men, Will leave an R.A.F.\nstation In Wiltshire, taking about\neight days to reach Japan.\nFrom there the men will be\nmoved to Korea under United\nNations arrangements.\nPHONE 144 FOR CLASSIFIED\nONE McCLARY \"GARRY\" WOOD\nand coal kitchen range, $15.00.\nOne McClary circulating wood\nand coal living room heater, $25.00\nOne Vaugban Drag Saw. Come\nand see it working, $100.00. Sam\nFisher, Bonnington Falls,\nFOR SALE - SHOW CASES,\nchairs and tables, empty tool\nchest, large veneer chest, record\ncabinet, wash tubs and bench,\nstove pipe and board, saws. Apply 77 Freight Depot, 321 Baker\nStreet.\nPIPE - FITTINGS - TUBES, SPE-\ncial low prices. Active. Trading\nCo., 935 E. Cordova St.,\nVancouver.\nFRIDGE FOR SALE \u2014 GOOD\ncondition. Also 8 day clock.\nPhone 77 or apply 201 Terrace\nApts.\nFOR SALE \u2014 ENTERPRISE\nkitchen range for sale, reasonable.\nPhone 387-Y-3.\nFOR SALE \u2014 420 FT. OF I INCH\ngalvanized pipes. Apply P. J.\nLebedoff, Glade, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u201448 BASS \"ACCOR-\ndiana\" accordian, like new. phone\n671-L after 6.\nVancouver Stocks\nClosing Prices\nMINES\nBralorne     6.85\nCariboo Gold      1.20\nGrandview   ',.:.., 30\nHedley Mascot 48\nHighland Bell 95\nInt C & C  \u201e 30\nKootenay Belle  70\nPend Oreille     9.15\nPioneer Gold     2.45 \u2022\nReeves MacDonald     4.70\nSheep Creek     1.30\nSilver Standard _ \u201e    2.17\nSurf Inlet       ,10\nVananda        .14\nWestern Exploration        70\nOILS\nAnaconda 11\nAnglo Canadian     5.40\nA P Cons  _ 53\nCalmont  : 28\nGlobe 65\nHome       16.75\nMercury       '.15%\nOkalta Com       1.85\nPacific Pete \u201e      7.55\nRoyalite     14.50\nVanalta  34\nMEN'S AND WOMEN'S SUITS\ntailored to measure. Jack Boyce\nMen's Shop.\nThe  MICRONIC  HEARING  AID\nSales -   P.O   Box 39\u2014Service\nWHEEL - CHAIR\nPhone 72S-R.\nAND    GUITAR.\nFOR  SALE -  VIOLIN  OUTFIT,\nprice $15. Phone 1332-R.\nWALNUT   VENEER   DINETTE\ntable. Phone 1197-X.\nFOR   SALE-GIRLS'   GREEN\ncoat with hood, size 12. Ph. 252-L1\nGOOD BABY  BUGGY $16, HIGH\nchair $10. Ph. 855-R. 261 Baker St.\nCUSTOM BUILT HEARING AIDS\nand supplies. Phone 608-R3.\nRENTALS\nFOR RENT \u2014 1 4-ROOM COT-\ntage, furnished. Also 1 one-room\ncottage, furn. or unfurn. By\nmonth on 11th of Sept. 1 Block\nfrom bus line. Apply Baker's\nGrocery,\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED\nhousekeeping . room. 'Private entrance. Phone 992-X or apply 75\nHi'gh St.\nWANTED TO RENT \u2014 TWO BED\nroom house by Gov't, employee.\nUrgent. Box 904 Daily News.\nSMALL FARM TO RENT AT\nYmir. Lots4 of water and fuel,\nW. Thompson, Ymir.\nBEDROOM FOR RENT \u2014 CLOSE\nin. \"Phone 653-R.\nFOR RENT \u2014 SMALL HOUSE AT\nWillow Point. Phone 461-R.\nWAWANESA  MUTUAL  FIRE insurance Co., D. L. Kerr, Agent.\nCRESS BUNION SALVE - FOR\namazing relief. Your Druggist\nsells Cress.\t\nLm_h HOt_l, opp6site C.P.R.\nDepot Clean rooms and modern\nrates. $1.50 to $2.00 single. $2.50 to\n$3.00 doubles. Vancouver, B.C.\nLOANS\n10 CENTS I BIRTH CONTROL IN-\nformation and catalogue of hygienic supplies. Write Western\nDistributors. 61-L Ray Building.\nVancouver.\nFOR SALE \u2014 BEST OFFER FOR\n1940 1-ton Ford. Closed box, built\nover, express delivery body. Good\nmotor, new rubber, brakes re-\nlined, heater. Box 511 Daily News\nATTENTION SCHOOL BOARD\nSecretaries. We have a large stock\nof newsprint, mlmeo and bond\npaper and can fill any order Immediately. Daily News Printing\nDept., Nelson, British Columbia.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1940 THREE TON\nFord. Flat deck with rollers. Long\nwheel base and double reduction\ngears. Avis Bros., Perry Siding,\nB.C.\n4\u2014900x20 10 AND 12 PLY TIRES\nand tubes as new, $100.00 each,\ntire and tube. Can be seen at City\nTire Service, Nelson or Kinnaird\nService.\nFOR SALE \u2014 1031 BUICK SEDAN*\n\"Good- motor and rubber. $110,00\nor nearest offer. Box 334 Daily\nNews..\nFOR SALE - 1949 MERCURY Vi-\nton truck. Heater, radio, covered\nbox. Only 8000 miles. $1600. p.\nEdwards, Remac, B.C.\nFOR SALE\u20141928 DODGE SEDAN.\nMechanically perfect. Exterior\nvery good. Phone 323-X.\nBEST OFFER TAKES '40 FORD\ndeluxe sedan. A-l shape. Phone\n161-L-2.      .\n1947 4-DOOR MERCURY SEDAN.\n19,000 miles. A-l condition. Original owner. Phone 1021-L.\nFOR SALE - '39 FORD SEDAN.\nBody good, motor new, accessories. $900. Phone 1378-L.\nFOR .SALE \u2014 1937 FORD SEDAN.\nGood condition. Phone 1123-L.\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nB.S. STRAWBERRY PLANTS OF\nImported stock, $4 per 100; Wash,\nrasp, cane, 75c a doz., $5 per 100,\nWalnut Grove Nursery, 1418 Vancouver Street\nMEN'S PERSONAL DRUG SUN-r\ndries, 19 Deluxe assorted $1.00,'\nmailed in plain sealed wrapper.\nFinest quality, tested, guaranteed.\nBargain catalogue free. Western\nDistributors, Dept N \u2022 821 Davie\nSt.. Vancouver.\nBOATS, ENGINES, ETC.\nFOR SALE\nRACING BOAT\nFOR SALE\nThree point hydro, Miss Mercury, 1949 Kootenay Lake\nTrophy holder. Complete with\nmotor or hull alone: Trade or\nwhat have you? ,,\nSPEEDWAY SERVICE\nAND GARAGE\n920 Farwell St. \\   \"Phone 834\nTRAIL, B.C. \t\nFOR SALE - ONE JOHNSON\nlive H.P. outboard motor, 1940\nModel TD in new condition. Cash\n$150. Phone 613-X.\nFOR SALE \u2014 2% H.P. OUTBOARD\nmotor Phone S99-L.\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST \u2014 ORANGE AND WHITE\nPersian kitten in vicinity of\nGordon Road and 7th St. Phone\n1272-R.\nLOST \u2014 AT   HIGH   SCHOOL,\nMan's Bulova Curvex wrist watch.\n. Reward. Phone 1029-X.\nPHONE  144 FOR  CLASSIFIED\nLOANS\nFOR ANY VALID PURPOSE\nNIAGARA FINANCE OFFERS\nYOU A DEPENDABLE, TIME-\nTESTED LOAN SERVICE.\nYOU CAN GET FROM $50 TO\n$1000 WITH A WIDE CHOICE\nOF REPAYMENT PLANS.\nYOUR LIFE INSURED AT NO\nEXTRA COST,\nNIAGARA\nFINANCE COMPANY  LIMITED\nEst'd. 1930\nSuite 1, 560 Baker St., Nelson\nPhone 1095\nWANTED, MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor. Iron. Any quantity Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company\n916 Powell St., Vancouver. B.C.\nSHIP YOUR HIDES TO J P MOR\ngan. Nelson, B.C\nCLASSIFIED DISPLAY\nBEFORE YOU BUY ANY\ni';'fi? SMALL TRACTOR\nSEE THE POWERFUL\n5-H.PGRAVELY-\n\\ the world's finest, yet molt\nj modoratoty priced Garden\nf Tractor. Comploto lino of\nexclusively deiigned. power\ntools foi every Garden,\n- tawfl end Field job..\nTRACTOn\n\"ne\"\/FREE BOOKLET\/\nNelson Farmer's\nSupply Limited\n524 Railway St.\nPhone 174 Nelson\nYOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER\nEXTENDS A HEARTY\nWELCOME\nTo All Visitors\nAttending the\nWEST KOOTENAY EXHIBITION\nQueen City Motors Ltd.\nFord-Monarch Sales and Service\nPHONE 43 NELSON, B.C.\n\"Captoh Modern's in town;\n)H\n,,. and he's a winner wherever\nhe goes. Nest time try Captain Morgan\u2014extra smooth\nand flavourful\u2014Canada's largest selling rums\nCaptaMoipi\nGOLD LABEL RUM MtA'5&6t\n' Hk-nil.tlin Cuuuht I'ruin Direful ly Selected Rare Old Rums\nhy Capuiin Martian Ruin Distiller's Limited.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia.\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES, ETC.\nWANTED - MALE AIHDALE\npup. Will give It good home. A.\nLeaf. Taghum.\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOAHD AVAILABLE\nfor young business man, Close in.\nPhone 1392-X.\nNEW\nCruiser\n22'x 8' - 97 H.P.\nNew Chrysler\nMarine Engine\nWater   cooled.  Clutch,  forward\nand reverie shifts.\nWill Trade In\nCar \u2014 Truck \u2014 Boat\nSACRIFICE PRICE\nInquire Today\nPEEBLES\nMOTORS hd.\nPhone 1090     Nelson, B.C.\nTO\nWIN\nONE YEAR'S\nSUBSCRIPTION\nTo\nThe Nelson Daily News\nAbsolutely Free\nSimple? Well Say\nAll you do is visit our display booth at the exhibition and\nestimate the number of 10 page papers in the roll of\nnewsprint on display.\n;\u25a0\"': \"\u25a0\u25a0' .    \u25a0' ,\u25a0\u25a0 ' ; ..\u25a0)\n\"BRITISH COLUMBIA'S MOST INTERESTING NEWSPAPER\"\n 10 \u2014 NELSON DAILY NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPT. 15, 1950\n\"\"It's Time\nTo Change\nfrom\nBathing Caps to Hot Water Bottles\nInsect Repellents to Frosst's 217 Tablets\nSun Tan Lotion to Yardley's Hand Cream\ncooling drinks to Phillips' Milk of Magnesia\nlight salad luncheons to\nNyal Halibut Liver Oil Capsules, $1.49 per 100\nchange at\npIANN s\nDRUG STORE\n\u2022 WESTON-SUPER-MARE, England\n(CP)\u2014F. Parsons, a retired tax Inspector, played the football pools\nfor years without luck.' He died recently\u2014four days after winning\n\u00a311,000 ($34,000) in a pool.\nTHOMPSON\nFUNERAL HOME\n\"Distinctive Funeral Service\"\nAMBULANCE   SERVICE\nM5 Kootenay St Phone 381\nSchool\nCases\nJUST THE THING TO\nPUT YOUR BOOKS IN\nMade on a strong cedar\nframe. Centre lock and\nend catches. Fibre covered, metal corners.\n14\"\n$2.75\n16\"\n$3.25\nWadsA!-\nDesfroyers in\nNaval Action\nSuffer No Loss\nOTTAWA, Sept. 14 (CP)\u2014Defence\nMinister Claxton indicated today\nCanada's destroyers off Korea have\nsuffered no losses.\nAt the same time, he read a\nmessage from Gen. MacArthur\ncongratulating the Canadian naval\nforce and Its Commander, Capt.\nJ. V. Brock on their skill and cooperation and Inviting senior Canadian Naval Officials to come out\nand see how good they are.\nOctober 9 To Be B.C.\nGeneral Holiday\nVICTORIA, B.C., Sept. 14 (CP)\n\u2014Monday, October 9, will be a\ngeneral holiday throughout B.C.\nthis year.\nThe Federal Government set\nthat date as Thanksgiving Day\nearlier and the Provincial Government now has proclaimed It a\nholiday under the Factories Act.\nThis means workers In Industry\nwon't toll at their Jobs In addition to civil servants, store wot-k-\ners and others covered under\ndifferent statutes.\nWalker Sfalemenf Good Pep Talk,\nBui Musi Prepare for Hard Fight\nBy DEWITT MACKENZIE\nAssociated Press News Analyst\nThe biggest current news of tha\nKorean war is the fighting talk\ngiven United Nations forces yesterday by Lt.-Gen. Walton Walker, Allied ground commander, in which\nhe forecast a U.N. offensive soon..\nThe General added the optimistic\nprediction that \"as soon as we start\nforward and break the crust in\nfront of us, the enemy will fold. We\ncan feel a weakening of the enemy\nnow ... In some positions they actually are pulling out.\" _\nThis comes as a welcome surprise^\nbecause it's only 10 days ago that\nthe Allied forces were facing a desperate situation as the result of\na powerful Red offensive on the\nEast coast in the corridor leading\nto the vital supply port of Pusan.\nNaturally the General gave no\ndetails. However, we are entitled to\nassume that movement of troops\nand equipment from the United\nStates and Allied countries has been\naccumulating strength for U. N.\nCommander-in-Chief MacArthur.\nGeneral Walker's \"pep talk\" to\nthe troops presumably reflects\nsomething of this sort. However, we\nprobably shall be wise to reflect\nthat it WAS a \"pep talk\" and not\nlet our imaginations carry us beyond wjiat he actually said.\nIn sizing up the situation, it must\nbe remembered that hundreds of\nthousands of seasoned and well-\nequipped Chinese.and Manchurlan\ntroops are reported available to reinforce the North Koreans if necessary. Indeed, the indications ' are\nthat a virtually inexhaustible\nstream of Communist forces could\nSmall Bush Fire\nAt Trevor Street\nA small bush fire just outside of\nthe Nelson City \u25a0 limits on Trevor\nStreet summoned firemen out at\n12:12 p.m. Wednesday. The fire was\nextinguished without causing any\ndamage.\nbe kept coming down through the\nNorth Korean funnel against Mac-\nArthur's men.\nWhether this will happen presumably depends on Moscow's de\nclsion. Such a development could\nproduce another genera! conflict,\nand It is safe to assume that Russia\nwill be chary on that account. She\ndoesn't want another world war-\nnot now, anyway.\nThis is* speculation which only\ntime can answer. Meanwhile, although we can feel satisfaction in\nthe current news from Korea, I\nthink we shall be wise Ito gird ourselves for a good deal more, fierce\nfighting.\nJ. A.C. LAUGHTON\nOPTOMETRIST\nMedical Arts Building-\nSUITE 200\nPhilco Radio\nSales and Service\nJeffery Radio Service\nPhono  1302\n446 Ward St\n\"ARDENAACNE\nLOTION\"\nBy\nE-IZABETH ARDEN\nA day and night treatment\nfor pimples.\n'   Bottle $1.50\n\"Sold only at your Rexall Store\"\nCity Drug Co.\nPhone' 34 '       Box 460\n\"Nelson's Dispensing Chemists\"\nIranian Airways\nPlane Clashes\nTEHERAN, Iran, Sept. 14 (Reuters)\u2014Nine persons were killed today when an Iranian Airways plane\ncrashed  on  takeoff here.  It was\nbound for Jidda in Saudi Arabia.\nThe dead, all company personnel,\nIncluded five Persians, one Briton,\none South African, a Frenchman\nand a Greek. There were no passengers  aboard.\nCHRISTCHURCH, N.Z. (CP) -\nThe son of a Canterbury district\nfarmer looks forward to a financial\ncareer. He sold wool, that at five\ncents a pound had been bought 30\nyears ago to fill mattresses, to a\nlocal dealer for 43 cents a pound.\nMen's\nWORK BOOTS\nMade of good quality full-grain uppers. Double neolite soles and rubber heels.\nDesigned to give dependable wear on outside jobs.\nModerately Priced:   '\n$5.50 and $6.00\nThe NELSON SHOE Co. Ltd.\n411 BAKER STREET NELSON, B.C.\nSIMMS\nQUALITY\nBRUSHES\nEverything for the home-owner to clean-up\nand fix-up for fall...'at money-saving prices!\nBAPCO\nPAINT\nPRODUCTS\nPAINT\nBRUSH\n-!\/2-lnch\n$1.00\nHand formed\ncupped\nbristles.\nHighly  polished nlckled ferrule, clear lacquered  beaver\ntall    handle.\nLAWN\nIf\nBRUME\n\u25a0 \u25a0\n$1.35\nWMm\nHas  flexible\nIt's   light   In\nmetallic  teeth.\nweight yet\ntough   and\nspringy.  Rakes\nwithout  tear\nA\ning up grass\nroots.\n''Mh\u25a0;.\nDUST\nPAN\nWindow Glass\nIn standard sizes, or cut to size\nGLAZIER'S PUTTY AND POINTS\nHANOI GARDEN CARTS\nGARDEN WHEELBARROWS\nPAINT AND VARNISH REMOVER\nShingoloen Roof Paint\nALUMINUM  ROOFING\nSIDNEY  ROOFING  PRODUCTS\nPAINT CLEANERS\nWALLPAPER CLEANER\nAmerock Cabinet Hdwe.\nLIQUID LINSEED SOAP\nPASTE   OR\nLIQUID\nWAX\nFor a  high\ngloss polish on\nfloor or furniture,  use  II-\npollshlng   or\nquid self-\npaste style\nwax,\nSTEP-\nLADDERS\n$3.65\nS.foct height\n.We   have\", the\nfinest, safest\nstep-ladders:\nSteel trussed\nhard wood\nconstruction,\ngrooved safety\nstep treads.  .\ni','ls_=\/ip\nu\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nPhone 1530\nCompany Limited\nWholesale-Retail\nNelsori, B.C.\n'Heigh Ho>\nCome\nto the\nFair!\nWe hope everyone enjoys\nthe Fair and invite you\nto visit our store for the\nFall showing of BETTER\nmen's clothing.\nREMEMBER\nALL  MAIL  ORDERS\nPREPAID\nEmory's Ltd.\nBOX 100\nNELSON, B.C.\nRADIATORS\nCLEANED & REPAIRED\nRECORINQ\nJim's Radiator Shop\n301 Ward St ;    Phone it\nValues to\n$100\nin Prizes\nA FREE PRIZE GIVEN AWAY\nEVERY DAY AT OUR BOOTH\nBe sure and visit1 our booth at the Exhibition and Perhaps\nyou'll take home a beautiful gift, Absolutely Free.\nAll you have to do is guess the number of turns our turntable makes in a day.\nuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiimiiiiiiiii\nHAVE YOUR FURNITURE\nEXPERTLY RECOVERED\nat the\nNelson Upholstery\n409. Hall St. Phone 140\n1111111111 111! 11II III lllll I \u25a0 IKMIlllrl IIIII t III\nF. T. HUNTER\nPlumbing and Heating  ,.\nPhone 1389-Y        '1\n516 Hall St.       Nelson, B.C\nFLEURY'S Pharmacy\nPrescription!)\nCompounded\nAccurately\nMed. Arts Bill.\nPHONE 25\n1ST DAY\nBED THROW\n2ND DAY \u2014\nROCKER\n3RD DAY-\nSPRING FILLED MATTRESS\nHOME FURNITURE\nPHONE 1032\n640 BAKER ST. NELSON, B.C.\nWIGINTON\nMOTORS LTD.\nPONTIAC \u2014 BUICK\nG.M.C. TRUCKS\nMetal and Paint Work Specialty\nI \u2014\nHave the Job Done Right\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nMAKE   VOUR   CLOTHES   LINE\nOUR TELEPHONE LINE\nWEST    KOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\nPHONE 1175 - 182 BAKER ST.\nFor  Dependable\nPAINTING and\nPAPERHANGING\nbee\nMurphy Brothers\nPhono'655 745 Baker 8t\nHaigh\nTru-Art\nBeauty\nSalon\nCAMPBELL, SHANKLAND\n& IMRIE\nChartered Accountants\nAuditors\n660 Baker St. Phone 235\nWe serve the West with\nEllison's Best Flour\nTry our All Purpose Brand\nELLISON MILLING AND\nELEVATOR CO. LTD.\nThe New\nBENDIX\nAutomatic Washer\nIs On Display in Our Window\nAnd in Our Booth at the Fair\nSEE THIS FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER    .\nTHAT IS NOT BOLTED DOWN\nOnly $249.50\nUSE OUR EASY PAYMENT PUN\ncKAY & STRETTON LTD.1\nELECTRICAL APPLIANCES\nPHONE 544\nQUICK!\nGuaranteed Repairs\nDrive in, and drive out with tip-top efficiency.\nLet our mechanics improve your car's efficiency!\nTop notch equipment for lubrication, motor\ntune-ups, and everything your car might need\n\"automotively\"! Save yourself from major repair\nbills ... get your car checked now!\nNELSON TRANSFER\n(\nCompany, Limited\nhe largest and most completely equipped\n\\     garage in the Interior of B.C.\n35  PHONE 35\nb\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1950_09_15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0426502","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"}]}}